News Feed 20100315

Financial Crisis
» Audit of Federal Reserve Inches Closer
» Credit Union: Puh-lease Take Your Money
» Dodd Unveils Plans to Expand Fed Powers Over Banks
» Greece: ECOFIN Discusses 25-Bln Euro Plan, Press
» Greece: 60% Families in Debt, Worry About Losing Home
» Italian Banks Look at Islamic Finance
» Italy: 2009 Export -21.4%, Islands -39.5%
» Social Security to Start Cashing Uncle Sam’s IOUs
» U.S., U.K. Move Closer to Losing Rating, Moody’s Says
» Welcome to the United States of Iceland
 
USA
» ¡Obamanos! Hispanics, Blacks Bail on President
» Are Islamic Forces Astroturfing for Obama?
» Could This Ad be Reid’s Downfall?
» Free World Lawyers Fight Back Against Islamist Lawfare
» Gitmo’s Indefensible Lawyers
» GOP Lawmaker: White House Job Offer to Sestak Would Have Been a ‘Crime’
» Obama’s Ideology Threatens America
» Toyota Hybrid Horror Hoax
» Wake Up America! Democrats Hate ‘Democracy’
 
Canada
» McGuinty Sticks it to Ontario — Again
 
Europe and the EU
» Crucifix: Malta to Join Italy in Appeal
» EU Wants Protection for Red-Fin Tuna by May 2011
» France: Regionals; Sarkozy Punished, PS and Le Pen Up
» France: Sarkozy Punished; PS in the Lead, Surprise by Le Pen
» France: 2nd Round Regional Elections; Only 4 Regions in Doubt
» France: Regional Elections; Definitive Results for 1st Round
» Frank Gaffney: “Geert Wilders, The Anti-Fascist”
» Gouda: Criminal Moroccan Capital
» Italy: Container Shift From Roro to Lolo Being Examined
» Spain: Catalan Parliament Rules Against Nuclear Depot
» Sweden: Reinfeldt Denounces Genocide Vote
» UK: Body of Labour MP, 53, Discovered After ‘Sudden Accidental Death’
» UK: Boy, 6, Has Eye Glued Shut After Nurse Bungles Treatment to Cut Head
» UK: Man Wearing ‘Freedom or Die’ T-Shirt Stopped at Airport
» UK: Police Face Legal Threat Over Stop and Search for ‘Unfairly Targeting Ethnic Minorities’
» UK: Pupils Given Sleep Lessons After Study Finds Some Teenagers Having Only Four Hours a Night
» UK: Psychopath ‘Killed Young Father at Party’ Just Weeks After Being Freed Over Brutal Attack
» UK: School Children to Undergo Annual PE Tests to Measure Their Fitness
» Vatican: Here’s a Perfect Secretary of State. But From a Century Ago
» WYD: ‘Actors for the Pope’ To be Cast by Spanish Church
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: 22 Serbian Orthodox Monasteries Restored
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Prison for Violent Husbands is Against Koran, Mufti
» Egypt: Maimonides Synagogue Reopening Ceremony Annulled
» Egypt: Ports Closed Yesterday Due to Weather, Suez Traffic Low
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Interview With Son of Hamas Founder
» Israeli Envoy: U.S. Ties in ‘Crisis of Historic Proportions’
» Jerusalem Synagogue Inauguration; Tight Security
» The Palestinian Authority Walks Out of Talks With a Big Smile on Its Face
 
Middle East
» EU: Fuele Urges Ankara to Normalize Relations With Cyprus
» Italy-Lebanon: UNIFIL Contingent Protects Tyrus Site
» Lebanon: Foreign Aid, USD 304 Mln in Jan-Feb
» Man Treated at Hospital After Having Sex With Animals in Kuwait
» NATO: Top Israeli Gen. In Ankara for Conference on Terrorism
» Syria: Govt Aims to Attract Investors From Arab Countries
» The Petraeus Briefing: Biden’s Embarrassment is Not the Whole Story
» Turkey: Share of Foreigners in Istanbul Stock Exchange Drops
» Turkey: Recognise Religious Communities, European Council
 
South Asia
» Ahead of Visit, Obama Reconsiders Indonesia Military
 
Far East
» Is China’s Politburo Spoiling for a Showdown With America?
 
Immigration
» Birth Tourism in US on the Rise for Turkish Parents
» Egypt: Israeli Attempting to Cross Border Arrested
» Greece: Human Traffickers Arrested
» Israel Authorises Egyptian Border Security Barrier
» Italy: Return of Rianceinfestival, With Cinema and Music
 
Culture Wars
» Don’t Mess With Texas … Textbooks!
 
General
» Only Climate Deceptions Matter in the Post-Fact Society

Financial Crisis


Audit of Federal Reserve Inches Closer

U.S. Rep. Paul has been trying for review of transactions for years

A proposal on which U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, has been working for much of the last decade is getting close to reality: an audit-the-Federal Reserve requirement that has been approved in the U.S. House and is pending in the Senate as an amendment to a piece of financial reform legislation.

“They’re still negotiating,” said a spokeswoman for the congressman’s office. “We’re very hopeful that it’s going to be included, maybe … by the end of next week.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Credit Union: Puh-lease Take Your Money

Members with only savings accounts viewed as costly

Nevada Federal Credit Union has a deal for big savers: Withdraw your money and you’ll get a bonus.

The credit union, one of the largest in Nevada, figures that deposits from members who don’t have a checking account, mortgage loan or any other products are expensive.

Brad Beal, chief executive officer of Nevada Federal Credit Union, estimates that about 1,600 of Nevada Federal’s 85,000 members only use the credit union for savings.

The financial institution typically uses member deposits, including certificates of deposit and money market accounts, to make loans, which typically bear higher rates than deposits.

Beal figures those interest-bearing accounts are a money-losing proposition in Nevada’s current depressed economy.

“We don’t have any loan demand right now,” Beal said.

The credit union is investing in short-term Treasurys and earns about one-quarter of 1 percent on those government securities on average, but it was paying 0.4 percent to customers with savings.

In addition, the credit union expects the National Credit Union Administration to boost deposit insurance premiums by 0.15 percent to 0.4 percent this year.

For each $100 million in deposits, that premium increase will increase Nevada Federal’s costs up to $400,000 yearly, Beal said.

While Nevada Federal is well capitalized, reducing deposits also will increase its net worth as a percent of assets. Beal said that is a secondary reason for reducing total deposits.

It’s an unusual strategy. Another credit union manager said the strategy makes good sense in the short term but Nevada Federal also may be unable to get the members back again when demand for loans resumes.

Starting Monday, the credit union has cut the variable interest rates on deposits held by members that only save money to zero.

“We’re losing money, and they are not making money,” Beal said.

So the credit union will pay these savers a $25 bonus for withdrawing amounts between $25,000 and $49,999. The bonus jumps to $50 for amounts up to $74,999 and goes to $75 for larger sums.

The credit union staff, he said, will help the savers find another place to park their money.

[Return to headlines]



Dodd Unveils Plans to Expand Fed Powers Over Banks

A new Democratic Senate bill to tame the financial markets would give the government new powers to break up firms that threaten the economy and would force the industry to pay for its failures.

Legislation unveiled Monday by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd falls shy of the ambitious restructuring of federal financial regulations envisioned by President Obama or contained in legislation already passed in the House.

But the bill would still be the biggest overhaul of regulations since the New Deal. It comes 18 months after Wall Street’s failures helped plunge the nation into a deep recession.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: ECOFIN Discusses 25-Bln Euro Plan, Press

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 15 — This morning, the Greek press reports that a 25-billion euro bailout loan to cover the Greece’s needs in the coming two months drafted by European Economic Commissioner Olli Rehn has been proposed to the Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN). Also according to the Greek press, several EU countries — Germany, Holland and Austria — are not specifically against the rescue plan, but do however have “reservations” and are calling for “very strict conditions”. “The EU is proposing a 20-25-billion euro support plan,” was the headline of economic daily Naftemporiki, according to which, Rehn “has completed the rescue plan” for Greece and will present it today to the European ministers. However, it was added that “reservations were expressed until yesterday particularly by Germany, Holland and Austria, while France strongly supports the plan”. Socialist daily To Vima reported along the same lines, writing that the ECOFIN meeting should “approve Rehn’s proposals” to guarantee Greece’s imminent needs “if the main objections” from several countries are overcome. Slightly less optimistic was another socialist daily, Ta Nea, which reports that Giorgio Papandreou’s government “does not expect spectacular results” from the ECOFIN meeting, and also pointed out that the possibility of resorting to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is still open. Economic online daily, Reporter, spoke about a “financial thriller” regarding the outcome of the ECOFIN meeting, with conflicting disclosures and statements in recent hours on the timeframes and forms of the rescue plan drafted by Rehn. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: 60% Families in Debt, Worry About Losing Home

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 15 — Six out of ten families in Greece are in debt and eight out of ten have problems paying back loans and credit card bills, according to a study by Kappa Research. According to the press, the study, presented during a seminar at the World Consumer Rights Day, revealed that 45% of those interviewed fear losing their home because they are not able to pay their mortgage. Greek Minister for the Economy Loukas Katseli announced the imminent implementation of a program to help families with serious financial difficulties. Labour Minister Andreas Laverdos announced that thanks to a special card, the unemployed will be able to obtain 20% discounts at stores and supermarkets. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italian Banks Look at Islamic Finance

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 15 — Islamic finance and its rules will be the focus of a round table discussion organised tomorrow in Rome at Palazzo Altieri by Banca UBAE and Italian bankers’ association ABI. During the encounter titled ‘Islamic Finance: commercial, regulatory and fiscal aspects for a rapid integration in Italy’, Claudio Porzio’s study on ‘Islamic Banking and Finance: contracts, managerial aspects, growth prospects in Italy’ will be discussed. Among the guests scheduled for the event are Biagio Matranga (Banca Ubae), Raffaele Rinaldi (ABI) and Senator Nicola Rossi (PD). Islamic finance, which absorbs more than 30% of the private sector savings in Muslim countries, today represents an “ethical” way to conduct financial operations, which due to the economic crisis, is gaining increasing attention from the international community. Various Western countries are working to promote Islamic financial instruments, not only to develop economically, but also to support social integration with the immigrant communities present in the country. This was confirmed by Marco Ferrario, the General Manager of Banca Ubae, who said that “the international financial community is increasingly interested in developing Islamic compliant products, from Islamic bonds issued in 2005 by the World Bank in Malaysian currency for 260 billion dollars, to the recent decision by British market officials of the Financial Services Authority (FSA), which authorised both the Islamic Bank of Britain and the European Islamic Investment Bank”. In this context, Prozio’s study represents an analysis on Islamic banking, which explains not only the legal-economic mechanisms regulating its activity, but also compares the Islamic and Western financial framework, underlining similarities and differences. Created in the mid-1970s in the Middle East, Islamic banking is based on three fundamental rules derived from Sharia law: a ban on increasing capital with the application of interest rates, considered a form of usury; sharing risks and profits between the lender and the debtor, and the requirement for all financial transactions to be back with real assets. Increasing exponentially in recent years at a rate of 15%, this form of “ethical” finance, 20 years after issuing its first bond, has reached an overall turnover equal to1% of the global financial market. While the number of Islamic banks in European countries is on the rise — in Great Britain alone there are already five — and the issuing of sukuk bonds compliant with Islamic law by Western institutes, specialists are working to integrate the two systems, simplifying cooperation. A necessity that Muslim countries have been pushing for, but which presents several difficulties due to the ban on applying interests to loans, an essential element of the Western financial system. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: 2009 Export -21.4%, Islands -39.5%

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 15 — In 2009, the value of Italian exports dropped by 21.4% on the year due to sizeable year-on-year reductions in trade flows both headed for EU countries (-23.7%) and, to a lesser extent, towards non-EU ones (-18.1%). All territorial divisions — reported Italy’s national statistics institute ISTAT in its statement on Italian regional exports — suffered a decline in exports, with reductions over the national average for Italian islands with -39.5% due to a sharp reduction in the value of sales abroad of refined oil products; for the southern part of the country (-23.5%) and for the north-eastern section (-22.6%). Declines lower than the national average were instead seen for the North-West (-20.4%) and the Centre (-15.2%). In the fourth quarter of 2009, compared with the previous quarter, there was a positive variation for exports for Central Italy (+1.2%), overall stability for Italian islands and a decline for the North-West (-2%) and the North-East (-1.9%). Concerning regions, in 2009 — compared with the previous year — all saw a drop in exports except for Liguria (+9.5% due to a sharp increase in sales abroad of transport vehicles). Concerning the regions that contribute the most to foreign trade flows, the sharpest drops were seen by Sardinia (-43.9%), Sicily (-37%), Abruzzo (-31.7%), Marche (-24.5%), Veneto (-23.5%), Emilia-Romagna (-23.4%), Puglia (-22.9%), Piemonte (-21,8%) and Lombardia (-21,2%).(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Social Security to Start Cashing Uncle Sam’s IOUs

The retirement nest egg of an entire generation is stashed away in this small town along the Ohio River: $2.5 trillion in IOUs from the federal government, payable to the Social Security Administration.

It’s time to start cashing them in.

For more than two decades, Social Security collected more money in payroll taxes than it paid out in benefits — billions more each year.

Not anymore. This year, for the first time since the 1980s, when Congress last overhauled Social Security, the retirement program is projected to pay out more in benefits than it collects in taxes — nearly $29 billion more.

Sounds like a good time to start tapping the nest egg. Too bad the federal government already spent that money over the years on other programs, preferring to borrow from Social Security rather than foreign creditors. In return, the Treasury Department issued a stack of IOUs — in the form of Treasury bonds — which are kept in a nondescript office building just down the street from Parkersburg’s municipal offices.

Now the government will have to borrow even more money, much of it abroad, to start paying back the IOUs, and the timing couldn’t be worse. The government is projected to post a record $1.5 trillion budget deficit this year, followed by trillion dollar deficits for years to come.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S., U.K. Move Closer to Losing Rating, Moody’s Says

March 15 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. and the U.K. have moved “substantially” closer to losing their AAA credit ratings as the cost of servicing their debt rose, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

The governments of the two economies must balance bringing down their debt burdens without damaging growth by removing fiscal stimulus too quickly, Pierre Cailleteau, managing director of sovereign risk at Moody’s in London, said in a telephone interview.

Under the ratings company’s so-called baseline scenario, the U.S. will spend more on debt service as a percentage of revenue this year than any other top-rated country except the U.K., and will be the biggest spender from 2011 to 2013, Moody’s said today in a report.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Welcome to the United States of Iceland

It’s time to start paying attention to the financial sinkhole that Iceland is trying to climb out of — the view from inside of it is eerily similar to our own.

An Icelandic savings bank, Icesave, had attracted billions in deposits from hundreds of thousands of British and Dutch citizens, due to the phenomenally high interest rates it offered. Icesave collapsed in 2008, for much the same reason Lehman Brothers, WaMu, and hundreds of local savings banks did: its bankers used their cash to make complicated, bad, leveraged investments, mostly on real estate.

The British and Dutch have made their citizens whole, bailing out Icesave after it became clear the Icelandic government didn’t have the resources to do the same.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


¡Obamanos! Hispanics, Blacks Bail on President

Minorities disappointed as ‘hope,’ ‘change’ fail to deliver

President Obama is losing his core constituencies as black and Hispanic minorities have begun charging that candidate Obama lied to them with his message of “hope and change,” Jerome Corsi’s Red Alert reports.

“Having raised expectations with a charismatic presidential campaign, the Obama White House is now under pressure to deliver results to the blacks and Hispanics who voted for him in record numbers,” Corsi wrote.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Are Islamic Forces Astroturfing for Obama?

Leaving America far behind in the Hell of Socialized Medicine, this Sunday Obama will cut and run on his Pacific trip heading for his alleged Indonesian homeland.

Americans will face the nightmare of socialized medicine with its chief architect having departed the arena.

[…]

Is there much more to the story of how Obama will remove himself from the scene of protest in America to go willingly into a scene of protest in Indonesia?

The Islamic group Hizb ut-Tahrir has been organizing protests in Indonesian cities against Obama’s pending trip to their country.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Could This Ad be Reid’s Downfall?

Strategist who took down Dukakis targets senator’s link to Arab money

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., will soon be facing a public-relations nightmare in his bid for re-election: a TV ad campaign produced by the same strategist whose “Willie Horton” commercial spoiled Michael Dukakis’ 1988 presidential hopes.

Floyd Brown, author and president of the Western Center for Journalism, created the infamous “Willie Horton” commercial accusing then-Massachusetts Gov. Dukakis of being soft on crime.

[…]

Brown’s ad, however, points to Murren’s business partner, the ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. The ad claims Al Maktoum used slave labor to build similar structures in Dubai and that the slave-labor bosses and union-labor bosses are now working together to get their financial friend in Washington re-elected.

[…]

Brown responded in a statement announcing the new ads, “Education and other essential services are being cut in Nevada because of MGM and Al Maktoum’s unwillingness to pay the cost of gaming regulation. While at the same time they shortchange the Nevada budget, they are pouring resources into making sure that their favorite political protector, Senator Harry Reid, is re-elected. These connections begin to explain why Harry Reid, the so-called poor public servant from Searchlight, is now a multi millionaire.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Free World Lawyers Fight Back Against Islamist Lawfare

A groundbreaking conference was held on March 11, 2010 at the New York County Lawyer’s Association in downtown Manhattan, just half a block from Ground Zero. More than 200 people packed a standing room only space to hear legal experts define how jihadists are using both domestic and international laws to undermine the credibility of the free world’s legal structures so that they can be replaced by Islamic laws.

Our own laws and values become a tool of war for jihadists. Therefore, understanding lawfare, the use of the law as a weapon of war, is vital to protecting our liberty.

Here are the key points in the jihad campaign against our democratic legal system:

[…]

Go on the offensive. Seize the moral high ground. Expose fake “facts.” Expose the whole agenda. Lose the fear of appearing to be “Islamophobic” and bigoted. Capture the bad guys and support the good guys. Do not cede national integrity to international law, which must be understood as being based on a weaker set of agreements than national law, and therefore, less binding.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Gitmo’s Indefensible Lawyers

Legal counsel to some of the detainees went far beyond vigorous representation of their clients. Doesn’t the public have a right to know?

On the evening of Jan. 26, 2006, military guards at Guantanamo Bay made an alarming discovery during a routine cell check. Lying on the bed of a Saudi detainee was an 18-page color brochure. The cover consisted of the now famous photograph of newly-arrived detainees dressed in orange jumpsuits—masked, bound and kneeling on the ground at Camp X-Ray—just four months after 9/11. Written entirely in Arabic, it also included pictures of what appeared to be detainee operations in Iraq. Major General Jay W. Hood, then the commander of Joint Task Force-Guantanamo, concurred with the guards that this represented a serious breach of security.

Maj. Gen. Hood asked his Islamic cultural adviser to translate. The cover read: “Cruel. Inhuman. Degrades Us All: Stop Torture and Ill-Treatment in the ‘War on Terror.’“ It was published by Amnesty International in the United Kingdom and portrayed America and its allies as waging a campaign of torture against Muslims around the globe.

“One thread that runs through many of the testimonies from prisons in Afghanistan and Iraq, and from Guantanamo,” the brochure read, “is that of anti-Arab, anti-Islamic, and other racist abuse.”

How did the detainee get it? More importantly, who gave it to him?

Majeed Abdullah Al Joudi, the detainee in whose cell the brochure was first found, told guards he received the brochure from his lawyer. An investigation by JTF-GTMO personnel revealed that Julia Tarver Mason, a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, had sent it to Al Joudi and eight of the firm’s other detainee clients through “legal mail”—a designation for privileged lawyer-client communications that are exempt from screening by security personnel. Worse, the investigation showed that Ms. Mason’s clients passed it to other detainees not represented by Paul, Weiss lawyers. In all, more than a dozen detainees received a copy.

At Guantanamo, “legal mail” is strictly limited to correspondence between counsel and a detainee that is related to representation of the detainee, privileged documents and publicly filed legal documents. But even “legal mail,” according to the rules mandated by Judge Joyce Hens Green in a 2004 protective order, prohibits lawyers from giving detainees information relating to military operations, intelligence, arrests, political news and current events, and the names of U.S. government personnel. Lawyers are forbidden from discussing other detainee cases not directly related to the representation of their own client.

The Amnesty International brochure, handed out at a human rights conference in London, was a political advocacy screed in clear violation of that order, which was formulated to protect force security. Maj. Gen. Hood made a command decision. He banned the Paul, Weiss lawyers from access to Guantanamo. The DOJ notified the firm.

Paul, Weiss immediately went on the offensive, backed by what one former Defense Department official, who requested anonymity, called “an armada of habeas attorneys.” They sued the government, demanding that it defend the decision to eject lawyers from Gitmo, making the straight-faced claim that the Amnesty International brochure was a legitimate “report” that was “directly related” to their clients’ defense. But their bottom line argument amounted to this: A military commander at a secure overseas military facility in a time of war couldn’t remove disruptive lawyers who were inciting captured enemy detainees and endangering the safety and security of military personnel unless he first got permission from a federal judge.

In a sworn affidavit submitted to the D.C. District Court and obtained by the writers of this article in a Freedom of Information Act request, Maj. Gen. Hood did not equivocate when it came to the Amnesty International pamphlet. “The very nature of this document gives tremendous moral support to those who would strike out against our country,” he stated. “It is not a factual report. Instead it is filled with second and third hand accounts, photos of protests that were staged, inflammatory photos from Iraq and provocative story captions.”

Maj. Gen. Hood noted that many of the captured al Qaeda terrorists held at the camp had been “specifically trained on the Manchester Manual [an al Qaeda training manual discovered at a safe house in Britain],” which “encourages detainees to claim torture and abuse.” He warned that “[e]xamples and vignettes of alleged abuse of other detainees” could be used “to fabricate their own claims of abuse and torture.”

In fact, from al Qaeda’s perspective, the Amnesty International brochure was better than the Manchester Manual. It cued detainees that the abuses at Abu Ghraib “were not an aberration.” The brochure told them that images from the Iraqi prison were consistent with “numerous allegations of torture and ill-treatment reported from detention centres in Afghanistan, Iraq and at Guantanamo Bay.”

The message to the detainees was clear: If you want to claim you are being tortured, here is a vast menu of examples from which to choose…

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



GOP Lawmaker: White House Job Offer to Sestak Would Have Been a ‘Crime’

A GOP lawmaker says that the White House committed a “crime” if it offered Democratic Rep. Joe Sestak a federal job in exchange for dropping his primary challenge to Sen. Arlen Specter, D-Pa.

“That would be a crime to offer anybody a federal job,” Rep. Darrell Issa, the top Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, told Fox News on Friday.

For example, the California Republican said it would be a crime if he offered a staff job to anyone to help him win an election.

“It’s the same for the executive branch,” he said. “You can’t promise ambassadorships to contributors and even worse, you cannot manipulate the races by saying we’ll give you something else if you drop out. You can’t do it.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Ideology Threatens America

During what can only be hoped will be the final struggle between the socialist and capitalist approach to health care the debate is focused on the cost of Obamacare, its impact on the nation’s economy, its legislative over-reach, and the fact that it will ration care.

If Obama wins, America loses. The “reforms” will ultimately end up killing people who would otherwise have survived illness or injury if it is implemented. Beyond that, Obama’s efforts to control large segments of the economy will pick up momentum.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Toyota Hybrid Horror Hoax

“On the very day Toyota was making a high-profile defense of its cars, one of them was speeding out of control,” said CBS News—and a vast number of other media outlets worldwide. The driver of a 2008 Toyota Prius, James Sikes, called 911 to say his accelerator was stuck, he was zooming faster than 90 miles per hour and absolutely couldn’t slow down.

So why did he do it? Sleuth work at the Web sites Jalopnik.com and Gawker.com reveals that Sikes and his wife Patty in 2008 filed for bankruptcy and are over $700,000 in debt. Among their creditors is Toyota Financial Services for a lease on a 2008 Toyota Prius, with value at time of bankruptcy of $20,494. The Jalopnik Web site shows a copy of Toyota’s secured claims form, though when Jalopnik questioned Sikes by e-mail he denied being behind on his Prius payments.

Sikes also has a history of filing insurance claims for allegedly stolen items that are slowly coming to light. In 2001 he filed a police report with the Merced County Sheriff’s Department for $58,000 in stolen property, including jewelry, a prosumer mini-DV camera and gear, and $24,000 in cash, according to Fox40 in Sacramento. His bankruptcy documents show a 2008 payment of $7,400 for an allegedly stolen saxophone and clothes.

For what it’s worth, Sikes owned and operated a Web site called AdultSwingLife.com. More salacious material on this man will continue to pour in.

But the press conference alone makes it clear Sikes’ story didn’t wash. Journalism schools are supposed to teach that skepticism is paramount. “If your mother says it, check it out,” goes the old adage. Yet comments on Web sites across the country reveal that practically everyone thought the Prius incident was a hoax—though they couldn’t prove it—except for the media.

They have been as determined to not investigate Sikes’ claims as Sikes was to not stop his car. It’s a Toyota media feeding frenzy and the media aren’t about to let little things like incredible stories and readily-refutable claims get in the way.

[Return to headlines]



Wake Up America! Democrats Hate ‘Democracy’

Among the many absurdities proffered by Barack Obama sycophants in the media and throughout the liberal establishment is the notion that Obama possesses great leadership qualities. Throughout his public life he has consistently proven himself to be the antithesis of leadership. And ever since the “healthcare” debate reached its present impasse, he has resorted to the manner of pettiness and bullying that would embarrass any truly great leader of the people.

Consider the contrasts between Barack Obama and Ronald Reagan. Though Reagan advanced ideas that were initially met with skepticism by the public, his sincerity and ability to relate to the people eventually won them over. Of course none of his success could have been possible, had any issue in question been a truly bad idea. It was not merely Reagan’s power of persuasion (as grudgingly credited to him by the left), but rather the power of his ideas that prevailed.

Obama, on the other hand, has never had either a worthy agenda or a good presentation. His skill at reading from a teleprompter, while vastly overrated by the obsequious press, long ago became obvious in its reality, and quickly lost any luster with the American people. Likewise, the utopian “hope and change” claptrap on which he rode to victory in 2008 daily portends to be the doom of the nation if even a single putrid vestige of it prevails. After only fifteen months of the Obama Administration, any overrated bloom has vanished from this contrived “rose.”

Yet while his public approval poll numbers have plummeted, they remain significantly higher than those of the Congress, the image of which has been defined over the past two years by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-NV) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D.-CA). Overwhelmingly, the American public regards them with suspicion and contempt, and for good reason.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


McGuinty Sticks it to Ontario — Again

The new harmonized sales tax (HST) is set to take effect on July 1. It’s not so much a harmonized tax as it is a new tax on services and some goods. The “you won’t pay a penny more in taxes” premier is set to raise taxes again as Ontarians will be paying 8 per cent more on such things as haircuts, legal fees, veterinary care and a whole host of things that people won’t realize they have to pay until they see it.

[…]

Many of these employees will continue to work in the same office as they are working in now and at the same desk. Although they will hardly notice the transition, they will have “technically” lost their provincial government jobs. And this of course means severance pay. These employees will receive up to $45,000 each for giving up their provincial paycheck in return for a government of Canada one. Despite the fact that these employees will not lose anything, the taxpayers will fork over an estimated $25 million to Dalton McGuinty’s union buddies.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Crucifix: Malta to Join Italy in Appeal

(ANSAmed) — VALLETTA, MARCH 15 — Malta is to join Italy in appealing to the European Court of Human Rights against the decision to ban hanging crucifixes in classrooms at state schools. Speaking in Parliament, the Maltese Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi said that the country has already informed European institutions of its disapproval on the European Court’s ruling in the matter. The Maltese government has also formally asked Strasbourg for permission to take part in the hearing on Italy’s appeal. “We insist on the principle that no state that has maintained certain values and traditions for a number of centuries, can be forced to change them on account of one individual’s objection”, said Gonzi, repeating that the majority of Maltese citizens did not want crucifixes removed from public places. The Prime Minister’s words were also echoed by the head of the opposition Labour Party, Joseph Muscat. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Wants Protection for Red-Fin Tuna by May 2011

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — The EU has come down officially in favour of placing red-fin tuna under protection and to monitor coral harvesting as part of the Cites Convention for the protection of endangered species. For this type of tuna, it would be matter of banning international trade before May first, 2011. The coral industry, which employs 4,000 in Italy, will come under EU control in 18 months’ time. Bpth cases have been subjected to delays and exceptions at Italy’s request and measures are to be taken to define compensation for loss of earnings for Europe’s fishing workforce and crafts-workers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Regionals; Sarkozy Punished, PS and Le Pen Up

(ANSAmed) — PARIS — Nicolas Sarkozy’s right-wing party suffered a harsh blow in the first round of regional elections held yesterday in France, with Martine Aubry’s Socialist Party (PS) and Jean Marie Le Pen’s extreme-right National Front making great strides in the polls marked by record levels of abstentionism. Socialists have raked in between 29.1% and 30% of votes, while the UMP party under the current president will have to make do with between 26.7% and 27.3%, according to estimates provided by the TNS-Sofres and OpinionWay institutes. In the second round of voting this coming Sunday, the PS will be able to count also on the votes of the Greens and the radical left, against a right which is running alone. The left, which has been governing 24 out of 26 French regions since 2004 (including overseas departments), hopes to bring in a sort of “grand slam” and win in the only regions still in the hands of Sarkozy — Corsica and Alsace — in order to regain credibility against a right suffering from Sarkozy’s decline in popularity, which over the past few months fell to its lowest level ever (60% had a negative view on him according to the latest public opinion poll). A noteworthy recovery has instead been achieved by Jean Marie Le Pen’s extreme-rightist party the National Front, which is now the fourth largest national party with over 10% of votes (between 11.2 and 12%), well above what was seen in the last general and European elections. According to the online edition of the Le Figaro daily, the National Front’s coming to the fore was what truly “spoiled the party” of the polls. Also MoDem, the centrist party under Francois Bayrou, has had to acknowledge defeat after the first round showed a large decline in popularity, raking in less than 5% of votes. Also down by almost 5 points compared with the EU elections in June were the Greens of Europe Ecologie, under Daniel Cohn-Bendit, which also achieved 11.4%. Another important element seen in this round of voting is abstentionism, which reached a record high with over one out of every two voters boycotting the elections entirely. According to the latest figures, 53% of those holding the right to vote did not even show up at the polls. In the first round of the last regional elections in 2004, abstention had stood at 39.16%. “The lack of participation in this round of voting does not mean that we should draw conclusions at a national level,” said Prime Minister Francois Fillon. “Contrary to all forecasts,” continued Sarkozy’s second-in-command, “nothing is therefore to be assumed concerning the second round of voting in numerous regions. Anything can happen.” “The French population have placed the Socialist Party well ahead of the others. We have seen a historic result, and I would like to thank the millions of electors who have given us their votes,” said Socialist leader Martine Aubry. Following the release of the preliminary results, Sarkozy called an emergency meeting in the government and reiterated that these regional elections cannot have national consequences: this despite the fact that he himself had persuaded 20 of his ministers to stand for office, which resulted in the voting being a sort of test, the last large-scale election before the presidential ones in 2012.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Sarkozy Punished; PS in the Lead, Surprise by Le Pen

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 15 — Nicolas Sarkozy’s right-wing party suffered a harsh blow in the first round of regional elections held yesterday in France, with Martine Aubry’s Socialist Party (PS) and Jean Marie Le Pen’s extreme-right National Front making great strides in the polls marked by record levels of abstentionism. Socialists have raked in between 29.1% and 30% of votes, while the UMP party under the current president will have to make do with between 26.7% and 27.3%, according to estimates provided by the TNS-Sofres and OpinionWay institutes. In the second round of voting this coming Sunday, the PS will be able to count also on the votes of the Greens and the radical left, against a right which is running alone. The left, which has been governing 24 out of 26 French regions since 2004 (including overseas departments), hopes to bring in a sort of “grand slam” and win in the only regions still in the hands of Sarkozy — Corsica and Alsace — in order to regain credibility against a right suffering from Sarkozy’s decline in popularity, which over the past few months fell to its lowest level ever (60% had a negative view on him according to the latest public opinion poll). A noteworthy recovery has instead been achieved by Jean Marie Le Pen’s extreme-rightist party the National Front, which is now the fourth largest national party with over 10% of votes (between 11.2 and 12%), well above what was seen in the last general and European elections. According to the online edition of the Le Figaro daily, the National Front’s coming to the fore was what truly “spoiled the party” of the polls. Also MoDem, the centrist party under Francois Bayrou, has had to acknowledge defeat after the first round showed a large decline in popularity, raking in less than 5% of votes. Also down by almost 5 points compared with the EU elections in June were the Greens of Europe Ecologie, under Daniel Cohn-Bendit, which also achieved 11.4%. Another important element seen in this round of voting is abstentionism, which reached a record high with over one out of every two voters boycotting the elections entirely. According to the latest figures, 53% of those holding the right to vote did not even show up at the polls. In the first round of the last regional elections in 2004, abstention had stood at 39.16%. “The lack of participation in this round of voting does not mean that we should draw conclusions at a national level,” said Prime Minister Francois Fillon. “Contrary to all forecasts,” continued Sarkozy’s second-in-command, “nothing is therefore to be assumed concerning the second round of voting in numerous regions. Anything can happen.” “The French population have placed the Socialist Party well ahead of the others. We have seen a historic result, and I would like to thank the millions of electors who have given us their votes,” said Socialist leader Martine Aubry. Following the release of the preliminary results, Sarkozy called an emergency meeting in the government and reiterated that these regional elections cannot have national consequences: this despite the fact that he himself had persuaded 20 of his ministers to stand for office, which resulted in the voting being a sort of test, the last large-scale election before the presidential ones in 2012.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: 2nd Round Regional Elections; Only 4 Regions in Doubt

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 15 — There are only four French regions which are yet undecided between Nicolas Sarkozy’s right-wing party and the Socialists (PS), who mathematically took a clear lead in the rest of the country in the first round of regional elections held yesterday. In the second round this coming Sunday, the PS will also be able to count on the votes of the Daniel Cohn-Bendit’s Greens party, as well as various radical left-wing ones, against a right running alone. In the first round of voting yesterday, no candidate received the required “50+1” of votes. However, barring last minute surprises, the outcome of second-round voting is all but to be taken for granted in 18 out of the 22 regions of metropolitan France. The only cases in which there is any true doubt are the following regions: Champagne-Ardenne, Franche Comté, Alsace and Corsica, where the last word on who will govern has yet to be had. The Socialist’s Party cherishes hopes for a “Grand Slam”, in which it would win in the only regions still in Sarkozy’s hands — Corsica and Alsace — in order to regain credibility against a right suffering from Sarkozy’s decline in popularity, which over the past few months fell to its lowest level ever (60% had a negative view on him according to the latest public opinion poll).(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Regional Elections; Definitive Results for 1st Round

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 15 — The Socialist Party has been confirmed as the victor in the first round of regional elections held yesterday in France, with 29.1% of the vote compared to French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s right-wing UMP, which took in 26.1% of the vote, according to definitive election results issued today by the Interior Ministry. Jean-Marie Le Pen’s far right-wing party National Front also confirmed a “comeback” with 11.5% of the vote, placing fourth behind Europe Ecologie (12.3%). The Left Front (Front de Gauche) received 5.9% of the vote, and centrist Francois Bayrou’s MoDem took 4.2%. Voter turnout was low, with 53.6% of registered voters not taking part in the election. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: “Geert Wilders, The Anti-Fascist”

At a time when President Obama insists that the most pressing threat facing America is the growing cost of health care, a recent speech in Britain’s House of Lords by Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders is a salutary reminder of what is really endangering us all: The rising tide of Islamic supremacism codified by authoritative Islam in the brutally repressive law of Shariah — the law of Saudi Arabia and Iran among other Islamic states.

For pointing out that danger and striving in his native Netherlands to counteract it, Mr. Wilders is being reviled and slandered. Condemnation from the Islamists is to be expected. Ditto the attacks from their friends on the political Left. Unfortunately, he has also recently been sharply criticized by several prominent and influential American conservatives. On Fox News last week, Glenn Beck called him “a fascist,” Bill Kristol said he was “a demagogue” and Charles Krauthammer described him as “extreme, radical and wrong.”

With all due respect to my friends in the media, let me paraphrase the late Senator Lloyd Bentsen: I know Geert Wilders, Geert Wilders is a friend of mine and Geert Wilders is no fascist, demagogue or extremist.

In fact, at great personal cost and with extraordinary courage, Geert Wilders has been trying to save his country from the true fascists of our time, those whose demagoguery is unmistakable and whose extremism is all too real: Shariah-adherent Muslims in the Netherlands, in Europe more generally and in the wider world — including, increasingly here in the United States.

Now, I have had my disagreements with Mr. Wilders — primarily about the way he sometimes characterizes the problem posed by Shariah. But let there be no doubt: He is committed to protecting freedom and Western civilization in an era when too many are choosing the easier course of ignoring the gathering threat being posed to them by Shariah-inspired, fascistic Islamic supremacism…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Gouda: Criminal Moroccan Capital

An analysis by Dutch police has shown the Dutch city of Gouda is home to the highest percentage of criminal Moroccans.

At the request of the home affairs ministry, the Dutch national police force last year issued a report ranking 181 municipalities according to the severity of the Moroccan problem there, Binnenlands Bestuur, a trade publication aimed at civil servants, reported on its website last Friday.

Dutch police listed a total of 14,462 Moroccan criminal suspects from all municipalities where five or more Moroccans were suspected of committing at least one crime in 2007, 181 cities in all. Police limited the list to Moroccans of whom it was “convinced they committed a crime,” the report, entitled Analysis of Moroccan perpetrator populations in Dutch municipalities, reads.

The list represents 8.1 percent of all registered suspects in the Netherlands, of whom 57.1 percent are native Dutch. The report does not mention any statistics regarding other ethnic groups. In absolute terms, Amsterdam leads the pack when it comes to ‘criminal Moroccans’: 2497 of the 14,844 arrested criminals in the Dutch capital were of Moroccan origin. Surprisingly, Gouda turns out to be the town with the biggest Moroccan problem in terms of repeat offences. Moroccan suspects between 12 and 24 years here commit an average of 1.4 crimes. The criminal Moroccan population is also relatively the largest in Gouda. Of all residents 12 years and older, 0.55 percent are criminal Moroccans.

According to the report, the home affairs ministry ordered the investigation at the behest of a convention of the mayors of 22 municipalities that took place in October 2008. The results have been used to distribute funds available to combat the problem.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Container Shift From Roro to Lolo Being Examined

(ANSAmed) — GENOA MARCH 9 — “A switch from the Roro system (loading by tugboats) to the Lolo system (container transport) is undoubtedly more advantageous and consequently we are examining the methods which can allow this change with the aim of writing down all the benefits that operators will gain from this transition”. The statement was made by Riccardo Mollo, a director of the Region of Liguria during a meeting for the Terconmed project in Genoa. The aim is to improve the performance of naval container transport in the context of coastal navigation. The project leader is Valencia with the Feports Foundation, a research facility with a participation by the Community of Valencia and the port authority, which are very active in European projects. Liguria is a partner together with Calabria and Sicily. Mollo stated that “This meeting of the pilot committee will allow us to gain a series of common data and set up a network between partners, who will have port authorities as their main contact, but above all will constitute a method of work in common for operators of a system that will link Greece to the Marseilles port authority, to Spain, to the Italian regions, to Slovenia, seeing that the community of Koper is also involved”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Catalan Parliament Rules Against Nuclear Depot

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 11 — A large majority of the Catalan Parliament has today upheld the construction ban on a nuclear waste stockpiling depot to service Spain’s 11 nuclear power stations. The ban was supported by the three governing parties, the Psc, Erc, Icv-Eu, and by Convergencia i Union, while the PP and the mixed group abstained. The resolution empowers the regional government to take all necessary administrative and legal measures to help the Catalan Parliament’s decision “prevail” over those made by the municipalities, which have volunteered to host the nuclear dumps. Among these is the municipality of Ascò (Tarragona), which already has a nuclear power station of its own and which applied under the terms of an invitation for tenders issued by the Industry Ministry. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Reinfeldt Denounces Genocide Vote

Sweden’s Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt called his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on Saturday in a bid to distance the Swedish government from a parliamentary vote which recognized the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide.

Reinfeldt called Erdogan, who had previously cancelled a planned state visit to Sweden after the vote, to voice “his sadness and say that his government absolutely did not share the decision,” Ankara said in a statement.

Blaming the vote on “domestic politics,” Reinfeldt said his government was “ready to do the necessary so that this unfounded decision does not harm bilateral relations,” according to the text.

The Swedish prime minister also assured Erdogan that the parliament’s move did not weaken Stockholm’s support of Turkey’s EU accession ambitions.

Going against the government’s advice, the Swedish parliament voted by a narrow margin on Thursday to recognise the “genocide of Armenians” and other ethnic groups, during the breakup of the Ottoman Empire.

Ankara quickly recalled its ambassador and cancelled a visit by Erdogan to Sweden after the vote, which came just days after a similar move by a US Congressional panel.

In remarks to Sweden’s TT news agency, Reinfeldt said that he had expressed to his Turkish counterpart “regrets following the parliament’s decision because it politicizes history.”

According to the Turkish statement, Erdogan “strongly insisted on the disappointment” felt in Turkey over the vote, while recognizing that the government was against it.

He also called for “measures to repair the situation.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK: Body of Labour MP, 53, Discovered After ‘Sudden Accidental Death’

Labour MP Ashok Kumar has died, his office said today.

He was found this morning at his home in Middlesbrough, a spokesman said, in what was being treated as a ‘sudden accidental death’.

[…]

A spokesman for Cleveland Police said: ‘Police were called to an address in Marton, Middlesbrough, at 12.30pm today, Monday 15th March.

‘Officers entered the property and found the body of a man in his 50s.

‘He was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics.’

He added that it was too early to rule out the possibility of foul play.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Boy, 6, Has Eye Glued Shut After Nurse Bungles Treatment to Cut Head

A six-year-old boy was left blind in one eye for almost a week after a surgical glue applied by a nurse to close a head wound dripped into his eye.

Lewis Farrell screamed in agony as the glue closed his eye shut during treatment at a hospital casualty unit for a cut forehead sustained in a playground fall.

Today his mother, Becky Lewis, told how she fears the child may suffer permanent damage to his sight after the hospital blunder.

She accused staff at Selly Oak Hospital in Birmingham of being more interested in covering up for what they had done than apologising for the error.

Mrs Lewis said: ‘The nurse asked Lewis to sit upright before squirting glue on to his head. She made no effort to stop the glue dripping down.

‘Then as she turned around, it dripped into his eye. They should have realised something like this could have happened.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Man Wearing ‘Freedom or Die’ T-Shirt Stopped at Airport

London’s Gatwick Airport has apologised after a man wearing a T-shirt with the slogan “Freedom or Die” was asked to turn it inside-out because it could be threatening, a spokesman said Monday.

Lloyd Berks, 38, was stopped by security officers as he headed for a family skiing holiday in Austria, according to media reports.

“When I went through the metal detector, first they told me to take my trainers off, then they took my wallet off me. Then the guy who checked me told me to turn my T-shirt inside out,” he said, cited by The Daily Telegraph newspaper.

“He said: ‘Some airlines get a bit worried by T-shirts with what you have got on, it might be a bit threatening’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Face Legal Threat Over Stop and Search for ‘Unfairly Targeting Ethnic Minorities’

Police forces have been warned that they could be sued because stop and search powers are being used ‘disproportionately’ against ethnic minorities.

The Government’s equality watchdog claimed today that black and Asian Britons were still being unfairly targeted.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission said it could not rule out taking action for breaches of the Race Relations Act.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Pupils Given Sleep Lessons After Study Finds Some Teenagers Having Only Four Hours a Night

Moody teenagers are being given lessons in how to sleep properly.

Experts say the sulks and grumpiness of the teenage years aren’t just the fault of hormones — but that a worrying number of young people are not getting enough sleep.

To counter the sleep crisis, pupils at four schools are being taught about the importance of going to bed on time and avoiding electronic gadgets such as mobile phones, laptops and games consoles in the bedroom at night.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Psychopath ‘Killed Young Father at Party’ Just Weeks After Being Freed Over Brutal Attack

A violent psychopath who brutally attacked a fellow university student was left free to kill a young father four months after his sentence, a court heard today.

Colin Welsh, 42, beat his first victim so badly that he was left needing facial reconstruction surgery, the Old Bailey was told.

But despite his history of violence, drug-taking and mental illness, he was simply fined £500 and sent down from St Andrews University before going back to north London.

Welsh was left free to stab cabinet maker Elliot Guy, 27, in the neck, severing his jugular vein, at a party in July 2008.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: School Children to Undergo Annual PE Tests to Measure Their Fitness

Parents could soon be receiving letters from their schools warning them their child has been deemed unfit — in the latest shocking example of Labour’s ‘nanny state’ interference in family life.

Children at secondary schools will face annual fitness tests under the plans laid out today by the Government’s chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson.

But if they fail to impress in the so-called ‘bleep tests’, a letter will be sent to their parents warning them their child was at risk of heart disease, brittle bones and obesity.

The proposal — which is expected to be piloted at a small number of schools before being extended across the country — comes despite the outcry over parents receiving letters informing them their children as young as five are too fat.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Vatican: Here’s a Perfect Secretary of State. But From a Century Ago

His name was Rafael Merry del Val, and he was Pius X’s right hand man. Rarely has an appointment been so successful. The historian Gianpaolo Romanato draws his profile. Which leads to a comparison with the Vatican curia of today

by Sandro Magister

ROME, March 4, 2010 — At the eightieth anniversary of his death, “L’Osservatore Romano” has published a fascinating profile of Cardinal Rafael Merry del Val, secretary of state to Saint Pius X from 1903 to 1914.

It is fascinating for the way it brings to light the greatness of his character, his extraordinary talents, his ability to understand and implement the pope’s guidelines, his holiness of life.

The author of the portrait is Gianpaolo Romanato, a professor of Church history at the University of Padua, a member of the pontifical committee for historical sciences, and one of the leading scholars on the popes of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Is Merry del Val an example of a perfect secretary of state? The comparison arises spontaneously, between a century ago and today.

*

The most famous secretaries of state are usually associated with events and popes of their time: Ercole Consalvi with Napoleon and with the Restoration, Giacomo Antonelli with Pius IX and the condemnation of liberalism, Mariano Rampolla with Leo XIII and his “realist” politics, Merry del Val with the condemnation of modernism, Pietro Gasparri with the concordat with Italy, Eugenio Pacelli with Hitler’s Germany.

Pacelli was the only one to be elected pope, taking the name of Pius XII. And for many years he didn’t even appoint his own secretary of state. Instead, he relied on two capable coworkers: Domenico Tardinni and Giovanni Battista Montini. The first became secretary of state under John XXIII. The second became pope, taking the name Paul VI. And as pope, he changed the structure of the curia, putting the secretariat of state at the top.

Ever since Paul VI, the secretary of state has been the one who has acted as a filter between the curia and the pope. The actions of all the Vatican offices pass through him. And in 1969, pope Montini called to this post a French cardinal who had been formed far away from the curia, Jean Villot…

English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



WYD: ‘Actors for the Pope’ To be Cast by Spanish Church

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 12 — ‘Wanted: Young aspiring actors to play the role of avid believers to promote World Youth Day (WYD)’. Due to a lack of ‘raw materials’ in Zapatero’s secular Spain, the Arch-Bishop of Madrid called a casting session on the World Youth Day webpage for the filming of a promotional video for the event that will see Pope Benedict XVI in Madrid in August of 2011. “Do you want to be an actor? We are looking for characters for a WYD video, and one of them could be you!”, was the message launched on www.jmj2011madrid.com. Youngsters between the ages of 18 and 25 “of all races and all languages” are wanted, with the only requirement being that they live in Madrid or the surrounding area, since they will undergo video trials during casting. The promotional video, with a “United colours of Catholics” style, is looking for “diversity, blonds, brunettes, who are not afraid of the camera”. The search to launch what is defined by bishops as “a gathering of youngsters from all over the world to the Vicar of Christ”, involves ten characters or stereotypes. “A Bohemian-style university student, with a modern and informal jacket and light and stylish eyeglasses”; or “a young Latin boy — Italian, Portuguese, French, or Spanish- with a skater look, wearing a sweatshirt, long shorts, sneakers, and a cap”; or a boy “with a traveller look, with a backpack, jeans, t-shirt, and sneakers”. For girls, they are looking for “a Caucasian, an Asian, one black girl or mulatto with a sporty look”; a young “bold-looking Anglo-Saxon with character” or “one brunette with a page-boy cut and a sleeveless dress or top”. The search for characters includes a “normal looking 25-year-old boy and girl couple”, two “Chinese individuals, with jeans, a v-neck pullover and shirt/blouse for her”. Nothing has been left to chance in terms of looks or clothing. Preference will be given to experienced actors, but aspiring actors are also welcome, so long as they know how to move uninhibitedly in front of the camera. No reference was made to payment, but it has been assumed that the work will be done for the good cause: welcoming the Pope with open arms upon his arrival to Madrid. And if reality has to be readjusted with a bit of fiction for the advertisement, which will be launched nationally and internationally, everything when it comes to evangelisation. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: 22 Serbian Orthodox Monasteries Restored

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE — In Kosovo 22 monasteries, churches and seminaries of the Serbian Orthodox church have been restored out of a total of 35 that were destroyed or seriously damaged during attacks and pillaging by the Albanian population against ethnic Serbs on March 17 2004. So announced the Serbian Culture Minister, Nebojsa Bradic. In a statement quoted by the Tanjug agency, two days before the sixth anniversary of the incidents, the Minister said that the Bishop’s residence in Prizren (in the south of Kosovo) was among the buildings that had been repaired and restored. Bradic took the opportunity to condemn attempts by the authorities in Pristina to claim possession of Serbian artistic and cultural heritage historically present in Kosovo, dubbing them “falsifications”. “The Albanians have sought to use Serbia’s cultural heritage in Kosovo towards a policy creating a new identity, a new history and a new art history. This is all falsification”, he said. In the violent clashes in Kosovo between Albanians and Serbs six years ago, 20 people were killed and over 900 injured. Serbia does not recognise Kosovo’s independence, which was unilaterally proclaimed on February 17 2008, and continues to consider Kosovo as one of its southern provinces. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Prison for Violent Husbands is Against Koran, Mufti

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 15 — The proposal to introduce prison terms for men who beat their wives goes against the Koran and the teachings of the prophet Mohamed, according to the head of Algeria’s Superior Islamic Council. Qaher Sharif fiercely criticised the bill presented to the head of state Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s by the head of the Consultative Council on Human Rights Farouk Qustantiti. “This man’s aim is to violate a law of the Koran and of the Sunnah, and he meddles in subjects that are beyond his competence”, Sharif said in an interview with the Arab-language edition of the daily newspaper El Khabar. “He’s done it before with the death penalty, and now with beatings,” he added, asking “what difference can it make to him what goes on between a man and his wife?” The President of the Islamic Council said that he was stunned by Qustantini’s proposal, because “God has already pointed out precisely the way that a husband must behave towards his wife”. He quoted verses 34 and 35 of the Surah on women, in which men are advised to “admonish women, confine them to their bed and beat them” should they commit “nushooz”, a term signifying both infidelity and a refusal of sexual intercourse. Sharif pointed out that the text is so precise that it indicates the method of punishment to be used against the wife, and that this should be neither “too insistent, nor provoke disfigurement”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Maimonides Synagogue Reopening Ceremony Annulled

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO — Egypt’s official ceremony for the post-restoration reopening of the synagogue named in honour of the Medieval philosopher Maimonides in Cairo — originally scheduled for today — has been called off by Egyptian head of the Supreme Council of Antiquities Zahi Hawass due to behaviour by the Jewish community held to be provocative. According to the press, having an effect on the decision was also the recent announcement by Benyamin Netanyahu to include West Bank holy sites on its list of Israeli National Cultural Heritage Sites. Following a restoration dubbed “miraculous” by the Israeli press, the synagogue was reopened for prayer on March 7 with the participation of a number of religious figures from Israel and the Israeli and US ambassadors. According to Hawass, following the inauguration the Jews had engaged in dancing and the drinking of alcohol. Born in Spain in 1138, the rabbi-philosopher Maimonides (Moshe’ Ben Maimon) died in Cairo in 1204 after having become famous not only within the Jewish world but also those of Christianity and Islam of the time.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Ports Closed Yesterday Due to Weather, Suez Traffic Low

(ANSAmed) — ISMAILIYA (EGYPT), MARCH 15 — Yesterday violent winds and sand storms led to the closing of four Red Sea ports and saw traffic through the Suez Canal reduced to a 20-year low, according to Egyptian authorities. Due to the meteorological conditions, authorities issued an alert and only 26 vessels crossed through the canal: the lowest in twenty years and compared with a daily average in 2009 of 47. The end of the winter and the beginning of spring are often characterised by sand storms in the region caused by the Khamsin wind, which blows from the edge of the desert towards the Eastern Mediterranean.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Interview With Son of Hamas Founder

Last week Mosab Yousef, the eldest son of Hamas founder Sheikh Hassan Yousef, dropped a book more incendiary than any roadside IED, betraying his family, the Palestinian people, and Muslims the world over. Son of Hamas chronicles the decade Yousef spent as a spy for Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security service. In it, Yousef unspools one of the most unlikely tales of our time, narrating the events that led to his disillusionment with Hamas and Islam, his conversion to Christianity, and his kinship with his Israeli handlers, which transformed a boy throwing stones during the first intifada, into a dedicated Shin Bet agent by the start of the second.

Yousef claims to stand with his people, against the Israeli occupation, but with all the damning things he has to say about Islam, he’s bound to be branded an enemy combatant by his former compatriots — and the fact that Son of Hamas is published by the Christian imprint Tyndale, certainly won’t help. GQ spoke with Mosab Yousef to learn why he turned from his family to work with Israel, his thoughts on the true nature of Islam, and how he intends to help bring peace to his homeland.

[Comments from JD: Note GQ’s biased two paragraph intro above. But, Yousef’s answers to the interview questions are well worth reading.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Israeli Envoy: U.S. Ties in ‘Crisis of Historic Proportions’

U.S.-Israeli relations have hit a 35-year low over a contentious east Jerusalem building project that threatens to derail peacemaking efforts with the Palestinians, Israel’s envoy to Washington was quoted as saying Monday.

Ambassador Michael Oren’s remarks clashed with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s assurances that the political turmoil resulting from the settlement announcement, which the Obama administration slammed as “an insult,” was under control.

“Israel’s ties with the United States are in their worst crisis since 1975 … a crisis of historic proportions,” the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper quoted Oren as saying to Israeli diplomats in a phone briefing over the weekend.

Israeli officials said that the U.S. is pressing the Jewish nation to scrap the east Jerusalem building project.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Jerusalem Synagogue Inauguration; Tight Security

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, MARCH 15 — Extraordinary security measures have been brought in for Jerusalem’s Old City, with the imminent inauguration of a recently-restored synagogue subject to large-scale opposition within Palestinian Islamic circles. To prevent incidents of any sort, yesterday Israeli police allowed only Muslims over age 50 into the Temple Mount, and the Israeli army has decided to extend until tomorrow (March 16) the closing of border crossings between Jerusalem and the West Bank. The synagogue in question (“Hurva”, meaning ruins) was founded at the beginning of the eighteenth century and later set fire to by Muslims enraged by the non-payment of debts. In the nineteenth century it underwent restoration, but in 1948 — following the proclamation of the State of Israel — it was destroyed once again, this time by the Jordanian Arab League. Yesterday Bible scrolls were brought into the majestic building (which towers over the Jewish quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City), and the official ceremony will take place today in the presence of important rabbis, ministers and thousands of believers. Premier Benyamin Netanyahu will simply give a recorded message, which in the eyes of the press was decided upon in the attempt not to irritate the United States. However, for the past few days Hamas-linked press sources have been saying that the inauguration of the synagogue is a provocation to Muslims, since it is located very near Temple Mount. Given recent tensions which have arisen in other quarters of East Jerusalem, police are concerned that the Temple’s inauguration could spark large-scale violence. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Palestinian Authority Walks Out of Talks With a Big Smile on Its Face

by Barry Rubin

In 1994, Israel asserted, and the PLO accepted, that construction would continue on existing Jewish settlements. For the next 15 years, negotiations were never stopped by that building.

In January 2009, the Palestinian Authority (PA) stopped negotiations because Hamas attacked Israel from the Gaza Strip and Israel defended itself. Of course, Hamas is also the PA’s enemy and the PA would be delighted if Israel destroyed that group. But for public relations’ purposes, the PA had to pretend inter-Palestinian solidarity.

Then came President Barack Obama who demanded a stop to all construction on settlements in 2009. Israel finally complied but announced that it would keep building in east Jerusalem. The United States accepted that arrangement and even highly praised Israel’s policy as a major concession.

But the PA refused to return to negotiations. Why, because the construction offended it? No, because the PA’s radical forces don’t want to make a peace deal because they believe they can win total victory and destroy Israel. The more moderate forces are too weak to make a deal because of Hamas and their own radicals, though they also have some problems with mutual compromise.

In September 2009, Obama announced that within two months there would be full and final peace negotiations in Washington. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said “yes”: PA leader Mahmoud Abbas said “no.”

No Western media outlet said that the PA refusal to negotiate for-as of today-about 15 months shows that the PA doesn’t want peace. Yet they had no hesitation about saying that Israel doesn’t want peace (or at least maybe doesn’t) because Israel announced the building of apartments on the basis of a policy it has followed for 16 years, without serious complaint for most of that time.

Abbas seized on the opportunity to declare that he wasn’t going to negotiate. Is he indignant? Upset? Does he feel betrayed? No, he’s delighted to have an excuse to do what he wants to do anyway: Not negotiate with Israel!

Just like the famous scene in the film Casablanca when the police inspector, Renault, who regularly gambles at Rick’s Place decided to shut down the nightclub:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]

Middle East


EU: Fuele Urges Ankara to Normalize Relations With Cyprus

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 15 — EU Commissioner for enlargement, Stefan Fuele, on Monday reaffirmed his support to Turkey’s accession talks and bid to join the European Union (EU). Fuele also underlined his support to efforts to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia while speaking at a joint news conference with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Ankara. Fuele said he welcomed Turkey’s policy of zero problem with its neighbours, which was discussed at the meeting. He said he also welcomed historical steps made between Turkey and Armenia to normalise relations. Fuele said they also discussed Cyprus question adding that implementation of the Additional Protocol was important for the EU and urged Turkey to normalize relations with the Greek Cypriot party. The additional protocol to the Ankara Agreement foresees extension of Turkey’s customs union deal to ten countries that joined the European Union (EU) in 2004, including the Greek Cypriot administration. Reaffirming his commitment to see Turkey as a member of the EU, Fuele said his meeting with Davutoglu focused on EU’s commitments and Turkey’s requirements to make steps during the reform process. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy-Lebanon: UNIFIL Contingent Protects Tyrus Site

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 15 — Preserving the archaeological treasures at the historical Port of Tyrus in Southern Lebanon and developing local tourism are the goals of the Italian contingent of the UN mission deployed in the Middle Eastern country, building a new fence around the Roman Hippodrome, the third largest and best preserved in the world, in addition to the creation of a new pathway for the Gymnasium, which also dates back to Roman times. The two projects, financed by Italy with about 37,000 euros, were inaugurated on Saturday in a ceremony with the participation of Sector West Brigadier General Luigi Francavilla of the Friuli Air Assault Brigade, and Abd al-Muhsin al-Husseini, the Mayor of Tyrus, 80km south of Beirut. The Italian contingent secured the archaeological area by building the fence around the Hippodrome. The old fence did not control access to the site in any way, damaging both tourist revenue and security and the preservation of the archaeological remains. A path was built in the Gymnasium, which beforehand was almost entirely eradicated or non-existent in certain points. The new barriers will allow the site to be better protected. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Foreign Aid, USD 304 Mln in Jan-Feb

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 15 — In the first two months of the current year, financial aid to Lebanon from abroad totalled 304 million dollars, according to data released by the Lebanese Finance Ministry. The Italian Institute for Foreign Trade (ICE) office in Beirut reported that the Italian Cooperation had approved a 452,000-euro grant to the Lebanese Finance Ministry to improve the skills of state employees in the management of public funds. The Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED) has instead granted USD 18 million to finance the construction of a dam and an artificial lake in the Falougha zone, while the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Interior Ministry and the Municipality for a 600,000-dollar grant for the upcoming municipal elections, scheduled for May. The Lebanese Parliament has also authorised two loans: the first a 70-million-dollar one from the World Bank for additional financing for the Urban Transport Development Project and the second from the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) to support projects in a number of different sectors including water supplies, healthcare and public education. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Man Treated at Hospital After Having Sex With Animals in Kuwait

The unnamed Asian watchman reportedly explained to his employer that he had been doing “sexual things” to the animals

Kuwait City: An Asian watchman is being treated at a local hospital after he had sexual intercourse with animals on the farm he was guarding.

“I was shocked during my last visit to the farm to see the watchman screaming in pain and I took him to the hospital in Farwaniya. There, doctors diagnosed him with a problem with his organ,” the farm owner was quoted as saying by Kuwaiti daily Al Rai on Saturday.

The unnamed watchman reportedly explained to his employer that he had been doing “sexual things” to the animals and that he may have contracted a dangerous disease. The farm owner said that the expatriate worker cried continiously and saying that he was “extremely tired.”

Readers’ comments on the internet ranged from sympathy for the lonely man to outrage for cruelty to animals. Many asked questions whether the animals were now fit for human consumption.

In 2006, a Sudanese man was forced to take a goat as his “wife”, after he was caught having sex with the animal.

The village council of elders ordered the man to pay a dowry of 15,000 Sudanese dinars ($50) to the goat’s owner who had surprised him with his goat.

The elders said the man should not be taken to the police, but rather pay a dowry for the goat because he used it as his wife.

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



NATO: Top Israeli Gen. In Ankara for Conference on Terrorism

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 15 — Israeli armed forces chief Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi arrived in Turkey today to take part in a NATO conference on terrorism and international cooperation, Anatolia news agency reports quoting Israeli military sources. During his one-day trip, Ashkenazi is expected to hold several meetings with his Turkish counterpart, Gen. Ilker Basbug, and Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul. In January, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak traveled to Turkey in a bid to repair damaged relations between Israel and its leading Muslim ally, securing a commitment to military cooperation but failing to cajole Ankara into curbing its criticism of Israeli policy. Israel’s ultra-nationalist Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman had earlier given Turkey’s ambassador a public dressing down in a meeting called to protest a Turkish television series for showing Israel in bad light. The incident caused a major diplomatic row. Relations between the two governments deteriorated sharply after Israel’s devastating December 2008 assault on the Gaza Strip.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Govt Aims to Attract Investors From Arab Countries

(ANSAmed) — DAMASCUS, MARCH 15 — Creating a company with 20 million dollars in capital, with a 50% stake held by Arab businessmen and 50% held by Arab investors was the proposal made during the 13th Conference of Arab Businessmen and Investors, held recently in Damascus on “Investments in Syria-Originality and Opportunity”. Organised by the Federation of Syrian Chambers of Commerce, the Arab Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture and with the Arab Investment and Export Credit Guarantee Corporation — reports the newsletter of the Italian Embassy in Damascus — the event was attended by the Syrian prime minister and about 1,000 Arab businessmen. During his speech, continued the newsletter, Syrian Prime Minister Haji Otri went over the phases of the liberalisation process for the economy, which the Syrian government has been carrying out for several years, placing an emphasis on the positive results achieved for GDP growth, diversification in productive sectors and the increased number of investment projects. Otri also invited the participants to increase the level of Arab investments into Syria by establishing joint ventures. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Petraeus Briefing: Biden’s Embarrassment is Not the Whole Story

On Jan. 16, two days after a killer earthquake hit Haiti, a team of senior military officers from the U.S. Central Command (responsible for overseeing American security interests in the Middle East), arrived at the Pentagon to brief Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Adm. Michael Mullen on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The team had been dispatched by CENTCOM commander Gen. David Petraeus to underline his growing worries at the lack of progress in resolving the issue. The 33-slide, 45-minute PowerPoint briefing stunned Mullen. The briefers reported that there was a growing perception among Arab leaders that the U.S. was incapable of standing up to Israel, that CENTCOM’s mostly Arab constituency was losing faith in American promises, that Israeli intransigence on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was jeopardizing U.S. standing in the region, and that Mitchell himself was (as a senior Pentagon officer later bluntly described it) “too old, too slow … and too late.”

The January Mullen briefing was unprecedented. No previous CENTCOM commander had ever expressed himself on what is essentially a political issue; which is why the briefers were careful to tell Mullen that their conclusions followed from a December 2009 tour of the region where, on Petraeus’s instructions, they spoke to senior Arab leaders. “Everywhere they went, the message was pretty humbling,” a Pentagon officer familiar with the briefing says. “America was not only viewed as weak, but its military posture in the region was eroding.” But Petraeus wasn’t finished: two days after the Mullen briefing, Petraeus sent a paper to the White House requesting that the West Bank and Gaza (which, with Israel, is a part of the European Command — or EUCOM), be made a part of his area of operations. Petraeus’s reason was straightforward: with U.S. troops deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. military had to be perceived by Arab leaders as engaged in the region’s most troublesome conflict.

[UPDATE: A senior military officer denied Sunday that Petraeus sent a paper to the White House.

“CENTCOM did have a team brief the CJCS on concerns revolving around the Palestinian issue, and CENTCOM did propose a UCP change, but to CJCS, not to the WH,” the officer said via email. “GEN Petraeus was not certain what might have been conveyed to the WH (if anything) from that brief to CJCS.”

(UCP means “unified combatant command,” like CENTCOM; CJCS refers to Mullen; and WH is the White House.)]

The Mullen briefing and Petraeus’s request hit the White House like a bombshell. While Petraeus’s request that CENTCOM be expanded to include the Palestinians was denied (“it was dead on arrival,” a Pentagon officer confirms), the Obama administration decided it would redouble its efforts — pressing Israel once again on the settlements issue, sending Mitchell on a visit to a number of Arab capitals and dispatching Mullen for a carefully arranged meeting with the chief of the Israeli General Staff, Lt. General Gabi Ashkenazi. While the American press speculated that Mullen’s trip focused on Iran, the JCS Chairman actually carried a blunt, and tough, message on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: that Israel had to see its conflict with the Palestinians “in a larger, regional, context” — as having a direct impact on America’s status in the region. Certainly, it was thought, Israel would get the message.

Israel didn’t. When Vice President Joe Biden was embarrassed by an Israeli announcement that the Netanyahu government was building 1,600 new homes in East Jerusalem, the administration reacted. But no one was more outraged than Biden who, according to the Israeli daily Yedioth Ahronoth, engaged in a private, and angry, exchange with the Israeli Prime Minister. Not surprisingly, what Biden told Netanyahu reflected the importance the administration attached to Petraeus’s Mullen briefing: “This is starting to get dangerous for us,” Biden reportedly told Netanyahu. “What you’re doing here undermines the security of our troops who are fighting in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. That endangers us and it endangers regional peace.” Yedioth Ahronoth went on to report: “The vice president told his Israeli hosts that since many people in the Muslim world perceived a connection between Israel’s actions and US policy, any decision about construction that undermines Palestinian rights in East Jerusalem could have an impact on the personal safety of American troops fighting against Islamic terrorism.” The message couldn’t be plainer: Israel’s intransigence could cost American lives.

There are important and powerful lobbies in America: the NRA, the American Medical Association, the lawyers — and the Israeli lobby. But no lobby is as important, or as powerful, as the U.S. military. While commentators and pundits might reflect that Joe Biden’s trip to Israel has forever shifted America’s relationship with its erstwhile ally in the region, the real break came in January, when David Petraeus sent a briefing team to the Pentagon with a stark warning: America’s relationship with Israel is important, but not as important as the lives of America’s soldiers. Maybe Israel gets the message now.

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Share of Foreigners in Istanbul Stock Exchange Drops

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 15 — Share of foreign investors in the Istanbul Stock Exchange increased to 66.07%, as Anatolia news agency reports. Central Registry Institution figures revealed that as of March 12, foreign investors owned 53.65% of the shares transacted at the Istanbul Stock Exchange with the total market value reaching 66.07%. The number of shares owned by foreign investors is 14,930,097,323 with a total value of 84.5 billion Turkish Liras (40.12 billion euro). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Recognise Religious Communities, European Council

(ANSAmed) — STRASBURG, MARCH 15 — Turkey should recognise the legal status of the “non-Muslim” religious community, including Catholics, that is present in the country, and should not keep the orthodox Patriarchate in Istanbul from using the term “ecumenical”. This is the opinion of the Commission of Venice, a group of the European Council that includes eminent constitutionalists. This group has the task to advise member States of necessary reforms regarding the European Convention on human rights. The Commission of Venice recognises that the Erdogan government has introduced some “important” reforms that have “improved the situation of the non-Muslim communities”, these have not been sufficient. Currently it is impossible for the non-Muslim religious communities in Turkey to obtain the legal status. According to the Commission, this is a violation of the second article of the European Convention on human rights, the article on religious freedom and the freedom of forming associations. It could also be a violation of the right to take legal action and to possess goods, since this is not possible without legal status. The statements made by the Commission of Venice also seem to refer to the Muslim community, particularly the non-Sunni community in Turkey. In fact, the text of the document mentions the “non-Muslim” communities in particular, but this label has been removed from the name of the report. Turkey is urged to introduce a law that allows religious communities to get legal status. In the meantime, Ankara is asked to allow these communities to own or acquire goods and to carry out their functions. Regarding the orthodox Patriarchate of Istanbul, the Commission invites the Turkish authorities not to prevent the use of the term “ecumenical”. The Commission underlines that the authorities don’t have to use this title themselves, and don’t have to recognise it formally. Nevertheless Turkey is also asked to reopen the seminary of Halki. The closing of this seminary could be a violation of the right to education. At the same time the Commission asks to eliminate the obligation to be Turkish citizen for the Patriarchate and the metropolitans. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Ahead of Visit, Obama Reconsiders Indonesia Military

WASHINGTON (AFP) — The United States is looking to break a taboo and train an elite Indonesian force linked to past abuses, as President Barack Obama courts the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation with a visit.

With its moderate form of Islam and democratization since the 1990s, Indonesia is increasingly seen in Washington as an ideal partner. Obama spent part of his childhood in Jakarta, giving him a propitious personal connection.

Ahead of Obama’s trip next week, top officers from Kopassus — a military unit that focuses on counter-insurgency and intelligence — visited Washington to discuss a resumption of training, people with knowledge of the talks said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


Is China’s Politburo Spoiling for a Showdown With America?

China has succumbed to hubris. It has mistaken the soft diplomacy of Barack Obama for weakness, mistaken the US credit crisis for decline, and mistaken its own mercantilist bubble for ascendancy. There are echoes of Anglo-German spats before the First World War, when Wilhelmine Berlin so badly misjudged the strategic balance of power and over-played its hand.

Within a month the US Treasury must rule whether China is a “currency manipulator”, triggering sanctions under US law. This has been finessed before, but we are in a new world now with America’s U6 unemployment at 16.8pc.

“It’s going to be really hard for them yet again to fudge on the obvious fact that China is manipulating. Without a credible threat, we’re not going to get anywhere,” said Paul Krugman, this year’s Nobel economist.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Birth Tourism in US on the Rise for Turkish Parents

With more Turkish parents wanting their child to be born in the US, tourism companies are starting to offer ‘birth tourism’ packages to US cities. Many women say giving birth in the US has benefits including cheaper education and fewer visa worries. Some Americans, however, want to restrict the practice, citing fears of illegal migration

If Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 hit “Born in the USA” were to become popular again, the title might now refer to thousands of Turkish children whose parents are increasingly traveling to the United States to give birth.

According to tourism expert Gürkan Boztepe and media sources, 12,000 Turkish children have been born in the U.S. since 2003.The numbers are significant enough to draw the attention of tourism companies and inspire them to pursue “birth tourism.”

“We found a company on the Internet and decided to go to Austin for our child’s birth,” said Selin Burcuoðlu who gave birth to a daughter last year. “It was incredibly professional. They organized everything for me. I had no problem adjusting and I had an excellent birth,” she told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

Burcuoðlu said she and her partner chose to have the birth in the U.S. to make their child’s life more comfortable. “I don’t want her to deal with visa issues — American citizenship has so many advantages.”

Birth tourism

Burcuoðlu is not the only Turkish parent who wants her child to have U.S. citizenship. Many Turkish parents-to-be are now seeking tourism companies to “guarantee” their child’s life.

“We have been involved in medical tourism since 2002,” said Levent Baþ, general manager of Gurib Tourism. “But we were also receiving so many demands about this issue that we decided to sell birth packages,” he told the Daily News.

“We first started our research in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and Orlando and we only contacted Turkish doctors,” Baþ said. “But we are preparing a package that covers everything from the flight and city tours to accommodation for several months and hospital expenses.”

In terms of cost, Baþ said the minimum expense is $25,000, which rises to $40,000 if the destination is New York.

Birth tourism organizations are located throughout Turkey, including one run by Gürkan Boztepe in the Aegean province of Ýzmir. “Before, only celebrities gave birth in the U.S. We are now aiming, however, to make this service accessible to everyone. And surprisingly, our customers are not just from Ýzmir and Istanbul, there are also many people from smaller provinces, such as [southeastern] Gaziantep.”

Many families, however, do not want to talk openly about the process, according to the birth tourism operators. “Many people say they are doing it because they want their kids to get a cheaper education and not deal with visa issues when they grow up,” said Baþ.

“But they don’t want to make it public. Even celebrities who have done this are trying to ignore the issue by saying they had to give birth in the U.S. because their doctors were there,” he said.

Arzu Geiger is an entrepreneur who lives in Gilbert, Arizona, and offers customers the option to stay in her home.

“We got the idea when a friend of ours wished to give birth in the U.S.,” she told the Daily News. “We realized that many women abroad may also wish to give birth in the U.S., but may have many concerns regarding arrangements or safety. Some women may choose to stay alone with us for the first few months, then move to separate living arrangements when family members arrive for the birth.”

While the small-scale companies have started investing in the birth market, bigger firms are also entering the market with alternative packages. The Turkish-owned Marmara Hotel group recently announced a birth tourism package that includes accommodation at their Manhattan branch.

“We hosted 15 families last year,” said Nur Ercan Maðden, head manager of The Marmara Manhattan, adding that the cost was $45,000 each.

Law Amendment

According to the U.S.’s 14th Amendment, the country grants citizenship to anyone born on its soil. At the same time, however, many have demanded the elimination of the “ius soli” law.

“They come to this country and have babies. The children are citizens. The children are eligible to go to school. They receive food stamps and social programs. The American taxpayers are paying for it,” said Republican Congressman Gary Miller last month, who is co-sponsoring a bill that seeks to abolish birthright citizenship for children born in the country to illegal immigrant parents.

According to Emre Özgü, a partner at law firm Barst Mukamal & Kleiner LLP in New York, people in favor of tightening immigration laws have been attempting to end “ius soli” citizenship for years.

“Those trying to restrict immigration argue these babies, who are occasionally called ‘anchor babies,’ serve as a key link in the ‘chain immigration’ process that they would like to see eliminated. However, there is no current pending legislation before Congress that would limit the claim to U.S. citizenship of a child born in the U.S.,” Özgü told the Daily News.

When asked whether birthright citizenship could be considered a loophole in the law, Özgü said he would not classify the “ius soli” citizenship as such because it is explicitly included within the U.S. Constitution.

“While it can be controversial, birth tourism is legal in the U.S.,” said Geiger. “Some of the major concerns expressed with birth tourism are that the mother and baby can access free health and social benefits at the expense of U.S. taxpayers. We do not accept customers in this manner — they are responsible for the payment of their own medical expenses.”

Baþ, however, thinks U.S. authorities are ultimately unconcerned by the practice. “I think the United States is aware of such a law, otherwise they would prevent it. I think it is part of an integration policy. They want people to become American citizens.”

Other examples

Birth tourism to the U.S. is not just popular in Turkey but also in Asian countries such as South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan. According to a Los Angeles Times report, many South Korean parents-to-be have chosen to give birth in the U.S. for many reasons, ranging from a desire to enroll their children in American schools to enabling them to avoid South Korean military service.

The birthright citizenship formerly applied to other countries such as the United Kingdom and Australia but both countries modified their law in the mid-1980s.

India maintained such birthright law until 2004, but ended the right to prevent continued illegal immigration from neighbors Pakistan and Bangladesh.

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Israeli Attempting to Cross Border Arrested

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 15 — Egyptian security forces arrested an Israeli attempting to return to his country while illegally crossing the Egyptian border in the Sinai Peninsula by crossing through barbed wire, said a source from security services. The Israeli, 30-year-old Joachim Feldman, reported the source, was travelling with a Ghanaian national and said that he was a journalist who crossed the border in Taba to follow the paths taken by illegal immigrants to cross the borders. The Israeli was treated for an injury to his hand from the barbed wire. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Human Traffickers Arrested

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 15 — Greek police have dismantled an organisation specialising in human-smuggling in the Xirokrini area. Three people have been arrested, two Greeks and one foreign national, aged between 43 and 55. According to police investigations, the organisation had promised eleven illegal immigrants entry into Greece, on the way to Central Europe, in exchange for a fee of 4,500 dollars. The ongoing investigation hopes to ascertain whether others are part of the group. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel Authorises Egyptian Border Security Barrier

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, MARCH 15 — Yesterday the Israeli government gave the go-ahead for the construction of a security barrier along its border with Egypt in order to stop illegal immigration into the country, especially by Africans. The barrier will be built along two sections, each several kilometres long. The first will be in the south near Eilat, while the second will be further north near Nitzana. Between the two sections, in a mountainous and desert area, the border will be monitored by electronic devices. The project is expected to cost 1.35 million shekels (about 265 million euros).(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Return of Rianceinfestival, With Cinema and Music

(ANSAmed) — RIACE (REGGIO CALABRIA), MARCH 15 — The Riaceinfestival, the festival celebrating migration and local cultures, organised by the town of Riace, will kick off on May 21-23. The event stems from the welcoming and rehousing policies enacted by Riace’s municipal administration over the last few years. The results, together with those of neighbouring towns Caulonia and Stignano, have been very positive, leading to a local system aiding the reception and social integration of refugees. The Festival is to be considered a meeting-place, and features a number of independent video productions about migration, multicultural society, plural society, relationships between rich and poor countries and the protection of local culture and tradition with particular focus on the Mediterranean basin as a prime location for the interweaving and comparison of cultures, languages, religions and both social and legal patterns. As in previous events, this year, the gathering will be split into four main categories, but with a few new additions. ‘Migrants’ is open to stories, meetings and accounts by both migrants and locals with particular focus on the Mediterranean, and also features investigations and reports on what goes on in society, in politics, and in culture, after the onset of migration, a formidable driver of social change. The ‘Short films — make us laugh!’ section is reserved for acting, satire, farse and comedy in general. ‘Local cultures — material culture’ is open to films on research into and protection of cultures, societies, languages and local traditions, including material culture, and their relationship with modernity. Finally, ‘Water, a common good’ is for films made by schools of all types, to reflect on the process of commodification of water, which should be our main common, rather than private asset. The Short Film section is not, unlike last year, open to any topic and the musical video segment has been replaced by the water section aimed exclusively at schools, to encourage the involvement of young people.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Don’t Mess With Texas … Textbooks!

For those who have somehow dodged the news, the 15-member Texas State Board of Education, or SBOE, has been hearing and debating variances of opinion regarding what to include and exclude in the social studies curriculum and subsequent textbook. Not surprising is the full range of progressive issues that liberals want the SBOE to include: from emphasizing equity and tolerance for all minorities to erasing key conservative figures and events from history and whitewashing the Judeo-Christian convictions of our founders.

[…]

I’m proud that Texas (along with only Alaska) opted out of the federal curriculum standard mandates, as the 10th Amendment to the Constitution prescribes for us. Texas refused to participate in order to keep control of what is taught at our public schools. We certainly don’t need the federal government’s help raising or educating our kids. That is what has allowed us to be independent and autonomous over our curriculum.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Only Climate Deceptions Matter in the Post-Fact Society

In his book “True Enough: Learning to live in a Post-Fact Society” Farhad Manjoo claims: “Facts no longer matter. We simply decide how we want to see the world and then go out and find experts and evidence to back our beliefs.” I am not sure this is a modern phenomenon. There are more experts and evidence available but people always seek confirmation of their prejudice. Expectation of a positive response is jarred when the answer is no. Consider what happens when you ask someone to pass the salt and the answer is no. At a conference of elected officials I was asked, “What is the one piece of advice you would give us?” I replied, “Stop hiring the consultants that tell you what you want to hear.” They responded with silence, so I added, “But that is not what you wanted to hear.”

The Post-Fact society is very active with environmental and climate issues. The media, which has generally abandoned the concept of fair and balanced, amplifies it. There’s a constant search for examples to buttress the idea that global warming and climate change are caused by humans. Even after evidence is proven inaccurate, inappropriate or wrong, the idea is pushed and new ‘facts’ found. Central requirements are to blame humans for the change and imply planetary destruction will result.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100314

Financial Crisis
» Greece: Union Leader, Strikes Will Continue
» Premier: China’s Yuan to Remain ‘Basically Stable’
» The Video That Will Put Geithner Behind Bars
» Tide of Protest Engulfs More Russian Cities
 
USA
» California Man Refuses to Take Smart Meter, Locks Up Old Meter
» DOJ: CAIR’s Unindicted Co-Conspirator Status Legit
» Florida on Guard Against Giant Snails
» IRS Visits Sacramento Carwash in Pursuit of 4 Cents
» Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Rules 2nd Amendment Does Not Apply to States
» Mystery Substance Found in Chinese Fluoride Added to Massachusetts Water
» National Coffee Party Day Flops
» The Doctrine of the Catholic Kennedy? Worthless
» Thomas Jefferson Dropped From Texas School Textbooks
» We Simply Can’t Afford Another Entitlement Program
» Wind Farms Could Raise Temperatures
 
Canada
» Muslim Child Brides on Rise
 
Europe and the EU
» An Enemy Within Irish Society?
» Cardinal Biffi Really Doesn’t Like That Book
» Dutch Author Hans Maarten Van Der Brink Lists a Number of Contradictory Reasons Why His Compatriots Might Give Geert Wilders Their Vote in June
» Dwarfgate: 5ft 5in Sarkozy’s Fury as 6ft Cameron and 5ft 11in Osborne ‘Mock His Size’
» Economy: France, Number of Export Companies in Decline
» Hirsi Ali: How to Beat Wilders
» If the Swiss Want Mediocrity Today, They Cannot Expect the Superman Tomorrow
» Ireland: Ahern Proposes a Referendum on Scrapping Blasphemy Law
» Italian ‘Ku Klux Klan’ Man Cited
» Italy: Four Regions Up for Grabs in March Vote
» Italy: Latest Polls Show Four Regions on Knife Edge
» OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu and Foreign Secretary David Miliband
» Pope Helped Priest Accused of Child Abuse
» Portugal: Ikea to Invest 1.1 Bln by 2015
» Reaction to the Inaugural British Tea Party Event
» Spain: Women Reports Lleida Mosque Imam for Polygamy
» Spain: Seven Charged Over Sharia Court Released
» Swiss Muslims Want Islamic Cemeteries in Every Canton
» Switzerland: Sixty People Report Abuses by Priests
» The First Ever Critical Edition of the Koran, Coming to You From Potsdam
» UK: Backlash at the Mosque
» UK: Gordon Brown’s Four-Letter Rant at Baroness Ashton for ‘Letting UK Down’
» UK: Jack Straw to Publish Plans to Abolish House of Lords ‘Very Shortly’
» UK: No Job Unless You’re Polish: Biggest Asda Meat Supplier Excludes English Speakers as ‘All Instructions Are in Polish’
» UK: The Snake Oil Salesmen Who Hijacked My Party: After 25 Years as an MP, Peter Kilfoyle Hits Out at Hypocrisy of New Labour
» US Woman Freed Over ‘Plot to Kill’ Swedish Cartoonist
» Vatican: German Church Leader Apologises for Abuse
 
Balkans
» Robotics: Italo-Bosnian Centre Set Up in Sarajevo
 
Mediterranean Union
» Morocco-Spain: New Barcelona-Tangiers Ferry Link
 
North Africa
» Egypt: 45 Muslim Brotherhood Members Arrested
» Egypt: Calls for Return of Statue of Great Pyramid Architect
» Muslim Teacher Sexually Abuses Christian Children in an Upper Egyptian School
» Tunisia: Sex at Younger Ages, Without Considering Marriage
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» ‘EU May Push Israel Into Peace Talks’
» How Quick They Forget: A Short History of U.S. Policy and Israeli Construction in East Jerusalem
» ‘No-Compromise’ Generation Arises
» Twal: No People Would Accept Such an Occupation
 
Middle East
» Anti Swedish Protests Continue in Turkey
» EU-Turkey: Enlargement Commissioner Fule Due in Ankara
» Tehran: US Planned Cyber War Against Iran, Spies Arrested
» Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Swedish Ambassador Reassures
» Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Diplomatic Crisis With Sweden
» Turkey: Swedish Parliament’s Decision ‘Inequitable’, Erdogan
» Turkey: Ambassador, Italy Not Acknowledging Armenian Genocide
» Turkey-France Trade Relations to be Improved, Minister Says
» Turkey Supports Palestine as Arab World Comatose, Says Druze Leader
 
Caucasus
» Bogus TV Report of Russian Invasion Panics Georgia
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Nearly Half of Recruits for Afghan Police Fail Drugs Test
» ‘It Just Doesn’t Add Up’: Serious Concerns Over Evidence Given by Father of British Boy Kidnapped in Pakistan
» Malaysia Slams Sweden Over Cartoons
» U.S. Defense Contractors Tied to Effort to Track and Kill Militants
 
Far East
» Kyrgyzstan — Uzbekistan: Tensions Rising Between Bishkek and Tashkent, Border Sector Closed
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» French Hostages ‘Freed in Darfur’
 
Immigration
» Italy: Vicenza is Municipality With Most Foreigners
 
Culture Wars
» Phony Christian Outrage: NYT Panics Over Slaying of Sacred Cow
 
General
» Climate Scientists Get Hot Under the Collar
» Exposing the Myth of Moderate Islam

Financial Crisis


Greece: Union Leader, Strikes Will Continue

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 12 — Yanni Panagopoulos, leader of the large Greek union for the private sector, has today stated that, after yesterday’s general strike, protests against the austerity plan approved by Athens “will continue” in order to attain the government’s withdrawal of “unfair and antisocial measures that are contrary to development.” In an interview with Greek TV Skai, Panagopoulos explained that the workers’ situation will continue to worsen both this year and in 2011 and that it is thus necessary to have a constant strategy of combat. “The protests are not over,” he stated. Yesterday over two million people took part in the strike announced by GSEE, by the civil service union ADEDY and the communist PAME union. Violent clashes between anarchists and police took place on the fringes of demonstrations in Athens and Thessaloniki, which saw the participation of tens of thousands of people. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Premier: China’s Yuan to Remain ‘Basically Stable’

BEIJING -China’s premier rejected foreign pressure over its exchange rate controls and said Sunday the Chinese currency will be kept “basically stable.”

Premier Wen Jiabao promised to reform currency controls, but gave no indication when that might happen. Washington and other trading partners are pressing Beijing to ease controls that they say keep the yuan — also called the renminbi — undervalued, giving its exporters an unfair price advantage and swelling its trade surplus.

“First of all, I don’t think the renminbi is undervalued,” Wen said at a news conference. “We oppose all countries engaging in mutual finger-pointing or taking strong measures to force other nations to appreciate their currencies.”

Some American lawmakers and trade groups want Congress to impose punitive tariffs on Chinese goods if Beijing fails to act. Critics say the yuan is undervalued by up to 40 percent against the dollar.

“We will continue to reform the renminbi exchange rate regime and will keep the renminbi basically stable at an appropriate and balanced level,” Wen said…

           — Hat tip: Zenster [Return to headlines]



The Video That Will Put Geithner Behind Bars

If this doesn’t convince you that the Timothy Geithner knew about the securities shenanigans that were going on at Lehman, than I don’t know what will.

Keep in mind, that Geithner ran Lehman through 3 “stress tests” prior to bankruptcy; all of which Lehman failed, and yet, nothing was done. Anton R. Valukas—the examiner who wrote the 2,200 page investigative-report which was released on Thursday— has provided plenty of information detailing Lehman’s “materially misleading” accounting and “actionable balance sheet manipulation.”

In other words, they cooked the books.

[Return to headlines]



Tide of Protest Engulfs More Russian Cities

Russia is being rocked by street demonstrations organized by citizens upset by low pay, unemployment, and corruption, the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported on Wednesday.

Like millions of Russians, Tatyana had been bracing for the annual hike in utility tariffs that comes with the New Year.

But her bill for January exceeded her worst nightmares. It had jumped 25 percent from the previous month, eating up as much as two-thirds of her salary.

“I have great difficulties in paying for my flat,” she said. “Salaries here are low and tariffs for utilities are very high. I grew up in Soviet times, and we didn’t have such problems. I’m really scared for my children.”

Tatyana, a 50-year-old preschool teacher in the central Russian city of Penza, must now spend 5,000 rubles ($168) per month on water, gas, and electricity. This leaves her with just 2,300 rubles ($77) to feed her two teenage children and her husband, an invalid whose health problems prevent him from working.

Panicked, Tatyana decided to take to the street. She joined a rally in Penza organized by the opposition this past weekend to protest worsening living conditions and call for the ouster of local leaders.

“I’m in a hopeless situation,” said Tatyana, who was afraid to give her last name. “I can’t bear it anymore. I need to do something about it and that’s why I went to the protest. I saw that people had already been driven to despair.”

Nervous authorities in Penza did their best to deter residents from attending the rally, offering free entrance to the local zoo, free city excursions, and public lectures on how to cut utility costs.

But to no avail. An estimated 2,000 protesters massed on March 7 in Penza’s city center. The demonstration was peaceful but pointed: local residents are fed up with their sinking living standards, and ready to speak out about it.

Nationwide Rallies

The Penza rally was the latest in a string of street demonstrations that have rocked Russia in recent weeks. In places as varied as Samara, Irkutsk, and Archangelsk, disgruntled residents have been joining forces to protest low pay, mounting unemployment, police abuse, and what increasing numbers of Russians see as a corrupt government on both the local and federal level.

The largest demonstration, held last month in the Baltic city of Kaliningrad, drew as many as 10,000 people.

The demonstration will be repeated on a nationwide scale when Kaliningrad becomes one of at least 15 cities to stage coordinated protests on March 20.

And the protest is not limited to banners and slogans shouted on cold city squares; some prominent Russians, too, are voicing their resentment at the regime built by Vladimir Putin over the past decade.

“The rich are becoming even richer, the poor even poorer. Corruption is total, everyone is stealing,” veteran rock star Yury Shevchuk told his fans at a March 7 concert in Moscow. “The system has built a brutal, cruel, and inhumane government in our country. People are suffering, not only in prisons and camps, but in orphanages and hospitals as well.”

The recent protests are a notable shift from the public passivity of the early and mid-2000s, when the country was enjoying an unprecedented wave of stability and economic prosperity.

Political analyst Dmitry Oreshkin said much of the roiling discontent now is due to the economic crisis, which has hit Russia particularly hard after almost a decade of oil-fueled growth.

“Unemployment is on the rise, prices are soaring, livings standards are worsening,” he said. “Television tells us tales that we are rising from our knees, but this no longer reassures people.”

Nervous Kremlin?

Curiously, authorities are allowing the opposition rallies and police so far have largely refrained from arresting or beating protesters.

Oreshkin said Russia’s political leaders understand that using force to stem such a wave of discontent could turn against them.

“Authorities are rational enough not to follow the Chinese path,” he said. “They would happily break the arms of protesters, but when these protesters number 1,500 or even 10,000, it’s better to find a compromise with them. This signals an evolution of society’s political culture, a very slow evolution that is taking place with the change in generation.”

The Kremlin’s reaction to the season of protests has been muted, but betrays concern.

President Dmitry Medvedev sent his envoy to Kaliningrad following the February rally, and a Kremlin advisor for the region, Oleg Matveychev, resigned under pressure following the protests.

Medvedev also fired the chief of police in Tomsk following a public outcry over the murder of a local journalist by police.

The demonstrations are also notable for uniting the country’s usually fractious political opposition.

Communists and other marginal political parties have been responsible for organizing many of the rallies, and the sight of Russia’s opposition forces standing side by side after years of infighting likely adds to the Kremlin’s uneasiness.

‘Authorities Need Not Worry’

Despite the angry citizens, the protests bear no real threat to the political system, analysts said.

“It has been able to quench the protests,” said sociologist Aleksei Grazhdankin, the deputy head of Russia’s independent Levada polling center. “Besides, there is currently no political force that could lead these rallies and transform them from separate local outbursts into a massive protest. So authorities need not worry.”

In fact, despite growing coverage of the rallies in the Russian and international press, studies by the Levada center has shown that the number of political protests have not increased significantly since the mid-2000s.

Grazhdankin said Medvedev and his mentor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, remain hugely popular despite a slump in polls following the economic crisis. The current wave of protests, he said, is nothing more than a seasonal phenomenon.

“People always display their discontent more actively in spring,” he said. “But if we compare the current situation with data from previous years, there is no real increase.”

There is no doubt that anger is mounting in Russia over enduring hardship and corruption. Many are desperate for change. But even among the thousands of Russians who took to the streets in recent months, far from all believe the protests will lead to genuine improvements.

“Keep the local government or change it? I think someone else will arrive and nothing will change,” said Tatyana in Penza. “I’ve long given up hope that things will get better.”

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

USA


California Man Refuses to Take Smart Meter, Locks Up Old Meter

When Pacific Gas and Electric Co. announced it was installing smart meters, they weren’t exactly giving customers the option of turning down the device. But one Bay Area man demanding his constitutional rights told CBS5 that he doesn’t want a new meter. Period.

“To me it’s unconstitutional, it’s an invasion of my privacy,” said Mark Dieteman.

The smart meter allows PG&E to watch energy usage remotely and lets customers monitor how much electricity they use. However, residents have blamed the devices for a dramatic increase in their bills, prompting calls for an investigation. A Bakersfield man also filed a class-action lawsuit, which claims customers were overcharged and should get a refund.

But Dieteman’s beef isn’t with his bill. It’s with issues of privacy and Big Brother. And to show PG&E he’s serious, he locked up his old meter. So what can PG&E do? An expert interviewed by CBS5 suggests the company can either shut down Dieteman’s service or simply go ahead and install the device anyway, in which case, Dieteman says he’s willing to put up a fight.

[Return to headlines]



DOJ: CAIR’s Unindicted Co-Conspirator Status Legit

There’s another letter circulating on Capitol Hill affirming federal law enforcement’s belief that the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is the product of a Hamas-support network in the United States.

Assistant Attorney General Ronald Weich sent the letter last month to four members of Congress who asked for details last fall on how CAIR was named an unindicted co-conspirator in the terror-finance trial against the Holy Land Foundation and its former officials.

He included trial transcripts and exhibits “which demonstrated a relationship among CAIR, individual CAIR founders, and the Palestine Committee. Evidence was also introduced that demonstrated a relationship between the Palestine Committee and HAMAS, which was designated as a terrorist organization in 1995.”

Read the full DOJ letter here.

[Comments from JD: Link to letter at end of article at the url above]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Florida on Guard Against Giant Snails

They’re not as menacing as Burmese pythons proliferating in the Everglades, but giant African snails are targets of the government too.

The invasive mollusks are considered a major plant pest and a potential public health threat because they can spread diseases, including meningitis. Now federal and state authorities are seeking to prevent the large, slimy, shell- toting snails from reestablishing themselves in Florida.

Once established, agricultural officials said, the mollusks “can create a giant swath of destruction.”

“The idea is that these are prolific breeders,” said Mark Fagan, spokesman for the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. “Our primary concern is the potential harm it can do to agricultural crops, as well as [public] health concerns.”

The Florida department, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are leading the mollusk-prevention effort.

Known as Achatina fulica, the species is one of the world’s largest land snails. They can grow to 8 inches long and 4.5 inches in diameter. It is illegal to import the snails into the United States without a permit.

The snail has not been an issue in Florida for several decades. In 1966, a child smuggled three snails into the Miami area as pets. His grandmother later released them into a garden, and by 1973, the population had grown to more than 18,000, officials said.

Over the next decade, officials spent more than $1 million to eradicate them. That effort is considered the only successful giant African snail eradication on record.

Scientists say the snails consume at least 500 kinds of plants, including citrus crops, Fagan said.

They also can damage buildings by consuming plaster, stucco and other materials they need to grow their shells.

[Return to headlines]



IRS Visits Sacramento Carwash in Pursuit of 4 Cents

It was every businessperson’s nightmare.

Arriving at Harv’s Metro Car Wash in midtown Wednesday afternoon were two dark-suited IRS agents demanding payment of delinquent taxes. “They were deadly serious, very aggressive, very condescending,” says Harv’s owner, Aaron Zeff.

The really odd part of this: The letter that was hand-delivered to Zeff’s on-site manager showed the amount of money owed to the feds was … 4 cents.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Rules 2nd Amendment Does Not Apply to States

The right to bear arms as defined in the Second Amendment does not apply to the states, so Massachusetts can regulate who can have firearms and how those weapons are to be stored, the state’s high court ruled Wednesday.

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court unanimously dismissed two challenges to the state’s gun laws that require citizens to register with police departments before acquiring a firearm, as well as keeping guns stored in a locked container or equipped with a trigger lock.

The court upheld the conviction of Nathaniel DePina, a New Bedford man who is serving a two-year jail sentence for carrying an illegal firearm. His lawyer, Paul Patten of Fall River, challenged the conviction on the grounds that the state’s gun licensing laws were unconstitutional.

Patten said the Supreme Judicial Court missed an opportunity to contribute to the debate surrounding the Second Amendment.

“I think they could have at least given some guidance on the issue,” Patten said. “This leaves all the main questions unanswered.”

Meanwhile, law enforcement officials and gun control advocates praised the ruling.

[Return to headlines]



Mystery Substance Found in Chinese Fluoride Added to Massachusetts Water

Fluoride is added to the water most of us drink because the government believes it’s a safe and inexpensive way to prevent tooth decay.

However, Team 5 Investigates found the Amesbury Water Department pulled fluoride from its system amid concerns about its supply from China.

Department of Public Works Director Rob Desmarais said after he mixes the white powder with water, 40 percent of it will not dissolve.

“I don’t know what it is,” Desmarais said. “It’s not soluble, and it doesn’t appear to be sodium fluoride. So we are not quite sure what it is.”

[Return to headlines]



National Coffee Party Day Flops

Anti-tea movement kicks off with miniscule crowds

Leading up to today’s “National Coffee Party Day” — the countrywide launch of a leftwing movement meant as an answer to the tea parties — a CNN article asked, “Will the Coffee Party rise to the scale of the Tea Party movement? Saturday is the first big test.”

If “scale” is indeed the measure by which the Coffee Party will be graded, however, today’s cup-o’-Joe kickoff has earned a resounding “F.”

Despite a news media buildup over the past few weeks from CNN, MSNBC, New York Times, National Public Radio, Washington Post, Seattle Times and dozens of other outlets, the estimated 350 coffee houses hosting events around the country today welcomed mostly miniscule crowds.

Last year, the fledgling tea party movement scheduled nearly 2,000 gatherings on April 15, Tax Day. Over the summer, tea partiers packed health-care town halls by the hundreds, overflowing venues and leading to lines running around the block. On Sept. 12, the crowd of tea partiers that flooded Washington, D.C., was estimated into the hundreds of thousands, possibly topping 1 million.

By contrast, Alex Pappas of the Daily Caller reports showing up to a Washington, D.C., coffee party at Peregrine Espresso in the Eastern Market area today, “only to find a small gathering of five activists huddled at a small table.”

[…]

They will make an effort to project this as the voice of a new ‘grassroots’ and ‘bipartisan’ political coalition,“ commented Barry Willoughby, one of the leaders of a loose confederation in Florida calling itself the Naples Tea Party, in a Naples News opinion piece. “Does one really think the coffee party will receive a grassroots/bipartisan mantel that has forever eluded the left?”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Doctrine of the Catholic Kennedy? Worthless

In 1960, he theorized the most rigid separation between Church and state, in order to be acceptable as president. Half a century later, Archbishop Chaput is accusing him of causing serious damage. An essay by Professor Diotallevi on the limits and shortcomings of secularism

by Sandro Magister

ROME, March 2, 2010 — Precisely fifty years after the memorable speech, preserved in the anthologies, that John F. Kennedy gave to the Protestant pastors of Houston in order to convince them and the entire nation that as a Catholic he could be a good president (see photo), the archbishop of Denver, Charles J. Chaput, has returned to the scene of the crime, in Houston, for a Baptist conference on the role of Christians in public life.

The “crime” was precisely the one committed by Kennedy with that speech, Chaput maintained in his talk, given yesterday evening at Houston Baptist University and reproduced in its entirety further below.

“Today, half a century later, we’re paying for the damage,” said Chaput, who of all the bishops of the United States is the one most active in the area of relations between the Church and political leadership. He has also written a book on this topic, “Render Unto Caesar,” the central thesis of which is that Caesar must be given his due, but that a Christian serves his nation by living his faith in political life in complete consistency and visibility, without hiding or diluting it.

In Chaput’s view, the rigid separation between Church and state exalted by Kennedy has nothing to do with the origin and history of the United States. It is a concept introduced only in the middle of the twentieth century by a secularist current. Kennedy submitted to this current, opening the way to the privatization of religious belief in the individual conscience and to its definitive collapse, even among Catholics…

English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Thomas Jefferson Dropped From Texas School Textbooks

Widely regarded as one of the most important of all the founding fathers of the United States, Thomas Jefferson received a demotion of sorts Friday thanks to the Texas Board of Education.

The board voted to enact new teaching standards for history and social studies that will alter which material gets included in school textbooks. It decided to drop Jefferson from a world history section devoted to great political thinkers.

According to Texas Freedom Network, a group that opposes many of the changes put in place by the Board of Education, the original curriculum asked students to “explain the impact of Enlightenment ideas from John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, Voltaire, Charles de Montesquieu, Jean Jacques Rousseau and Thomas Jefferson on political revolutions from 1750 to the present.”

[Return to headlines]



We Simply Can’t Afford Another Entitlement Program

Congressional Progressives are arm-twisting, threatening, promising and cajoling each and every member of the Legislative Branch in an effort to advance proposed healthcare insurance reform legislation. They are setting the stage to use the reconciliation process to advance the legislation in the Senate, even though the process was created to address budgetary financial issues, exclusively. And one House member, Louise Slaughter (P-NY), is even concocting procedure that would literally bypass any need for the House to vote on the Senate proposal. The effort that is going into circumventing the will of the American people is wickedly stunning.

But in the end, there is only one question that lawmakers of every political persuasion must ask themselves when it comes time to cast their votes: can we, as a nation, really afford to add another behemoth entitlement program onto the backs of the American taxpayers?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Wind Farms Could Raise Temperatures

Opponents of land-based wind farms have a new ally in the form of MIT. Researchers there say that, far from mitigating global warming, land-based wind turbines actually increase the temperature around them.

[…]

The team found that wind turbines on land reduced wind speed, particularly on the downwind side of the wind farms. This in turn reduced the strength of the turbulent motion and horizontal heat transport processes that move heat away from the Earth’s surface.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Muslim Child Brides on Rise

Federal immigration officials say there’s little they can do to stop “child brides” from being sponsored into Canada by much older husbands who wed them in arranged marriages abroad.

Top immigration officials in Canada and Pakistan say all they can do is reject the sponsorships of husbands trying to bring their child-brides to Canada. The men have to reapply when the bride turns 16. The marriages are permitted under Sharia Law.

Muslim men, who are Canadian citizens or permanent residents return to their homeland to wed a “child bride” in an arranged marriage in which a dowry is given to the girl’s parents. Officials said some of the brides can be 14 years old or younger and are “forced” to marry. The practice occurs in a host of countries including: Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and Lebanon.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


An Enemy Within Irish Society?

Early last Tuesday morning, 60 gardai swooped on three homes in Cork and Waterford in scenes reminiscent of a Hollywood blockbuster. Seven people — four men and three women — were arrested on suspicion of being involved in an Islamic fundamentalist plot to assassinate Lars Vilks, a Swedish cartoonist.

An eyewitness tweeted that a raid on the house in the Coolroe estate in Ballincollig, Cork, was “unreal”. It was “like something from Spooks and the Jason Bourne films” with blacked-out BMWs and Audis being used by the garda’s Special Detective Unit (SDU). They were acting on information provided by the FBI in America where Colleen LaRose, 46 — the supposed mastermind of the alleged plot, has been under arrest since returning from Ireland last October.

While the raids may have resembled something from the Bourne thrillers, LaRose appears to have more in common with the bumbling Sharon Collins, the “lying eyes” Clare woman, who is appealing against her conviction for hiring an assassin through the internet. LaRose, from Pennsylvania, is charged with “recruiting men online to wage violent jihad” in Asia and Europe. Amazingly, she used the alias “Jihad Jane” on YouTube, where her inflammatory comments and videos were soon spotted and reported to the FBI.

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



Cardinal Biffi Really Doesn’t Like That Book

It is the new lectionary for Masses in the Ambrosian rite. The archbishop emeritus of Bologna and scholar of Saint Ambrose again radically criticizes both the book and its authors. As the discontent grows among clergy and faithful

by Sandro Magister

ROME, March 11, 2010 — The argument for and against the new Ambrosian liturgical lectionary is far from being over.

It was begun by Cardinal Giacomo Biffi with an initial barrage of “Critical Observations” on the new lectionary, delivered to Vatican authorities in early January and made public on February 1 by www.chiesa.

It continued with an extensive reply to Biffi from Professor Cesare Alzati, the liturgist who was the book’s main compiler. This reply was also entrusted to www.chiesa and published on February 15.

It extended further on February 23, with the statements to “IncrociNews.it” by the secretary for the congregation of the Ambrosian rite, Monsignor Claudio Magnoli, who in referring to Biffi’s criticisms said in part:

“These are criticisms that have a lot on the surface, but fail to grasp the true reality of the lectionary. Furthermore, some of them are clearly unfounded. Above all, the tone and style in which they are written is mocking and derisory.”

“IncrociNews.it” is the online newspaper of the archdiocese of Milan, whose archbishop, Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi, is also the head of the Ambrosian rite and therefore the ultimate authority over the controversial lectionary.

At this point, it’s Cardinal Biffi’s turn again, with the two texts published further below.

*

The Ambrosian rite is in use in the archdiocese of Milan and in some areas of the surrounding dioceses of Bergamo, Novara, Lodi, and Lugano, the latter of these in Italian Switzerland, for a total of almost 5 million baptized.

It is one of the most noble and ancient rites of the Catholic Church, the father of which — even in terms of music — is identified in the great fourth-century bishop of Milan, Ambrose.

Shortly after Vatican Council II, the Ambrosian rite was in danger of disappearing. But Paul VI, who before being pope had been archbishop of Milan, ordered that it be preserved.

And Cardinal Giacomo Biffi, a Milanese, a scholar of Saint Ambrose, and in those years the auxiliary bishop of Milan, was among those who adapted the liturgical books according to the guidelines of the council.

Biffi was the secretary of the congregation of the Ambrosian rite from 1974 to 1984. Various experts worked with him, including the theologian Inos Biffi — same last name, but no relation — who is still a member of the congregation, but is in strong disagreement with the authors of the new lectionary that came into use in 2008 with the approval of the Vatican authorities.

In the meantime, Giacomo Biffi moved to Bologna, where he was the archbishop from 1984 to 2003. But even from there, he continues to watch over the Ambrosian rite in which he was born and raised.

About the new lectionary, he wrote, “it’s got everything: empty and sometimes misleading archaisms, adventurous ceremonial innovations, unfounded and mistaken theological perspectives, wrongheaded pastoral proposals, and even a few strange linguistic gaffes.”

The “Critical Observations” with which he opened fire are summarized here:…

English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Dutch Author Hans Maarten Van Der Brink Lists a Number of Contradictory Reasons Why His Compatriots Might Give Geert Wilders Their Vote in June

Neue Zürcher Zeitung 12.03.2010

The writer Hans Maarten van den Brink attempts to explain the Geert Wilders phenomenon, the Dutch “demagogue with the bleached and back-combed Mozart hairdo”, whose ongoing battle against “Islamisation” has the Netherlands on tenterhooks: “His standpoints do not follow the usual left/right guidelines. A self-proclaimed admirer of Ariel Sharon and Margaret Thatcher, Wilders is also taking on the world banks, the liberalisation of the job market and the rising retirement age. He wants to close borders, he disputes EU jurisdictions, and believes (like the Social Democrats) that the Netherlands has done enough in Afghanistan. At the same time, he tirelessly beats a drum for universal human rights, particularly for women and homosexuals. He thinks Dutch culture should be protected from foreign influences and that cultural and social subsides should be cut, and more state money handed out to pensioners, animals, the disabled and the police.”

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



Dwarfgate: 5ft 5in Sarkozy’s Fury as 6ft Cameron and 5ft 11in Osborne ‘Mock His Size’

David Cameron is caught up in an extraordinary ‘dwarfgate’ row with French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

The dispute centres on a claim that Mr Cameron made a remark about ‘hidden dwarfs’ while discussing a photograph showing himself with Mr Sarkozy — who is seven inches shorter than the Tory leader.

The French government was reportedly furious about the comment.

And Shadow Chancellor George Osborne allegedly fuelled the Franco-Tory war by describing a box placed beneath a speaker’s lectern as a ‘Sarkozy box’, before bursting into a fit of giggles.

The jibes, made over a period of three days, led to French officials remonstrating with British counterparts, according to BBC2’s Newsnight.

Are claims that Carla Bruni and Nicolas Sarkozy have both had affairs just a Twitter hoax?

The Tories last night dismissed the dwarfgate report as ‘nonsense’ and claimed it was a ‘Labour Party plant’. A senior Conservative source claimed that Gordon Brown was angry that Mr Sarkozy had agreed to meet Mr Cameron — and had even tried to stop the meeting taking place.

The dispute, which took place last September, emerged after Mr Sarkozy visited London on Friday and showered praise on Mr Brown as a ‘great European and very good friend of mine’.

Mr Sarkozy has criticised Mr Cameron’s Eurosceptic stance in recent months. But Conservative officials insisted they got on so well when they met at the French Ambassador’s residence in London on Friday that Mr Sarkozy even offered the Tory leader tips on how to beat Mr Brown in the televised election debates.

The dwarfgate row erupted when Mr Cameron gave a newspaper interview in his Commons office, in which he appeared to mock Mr Sarkozy.

An article described framed photographs on Mr Cameron’s desk, two featuring him with Barack Obama and several with Baroness Thatcher. It continued: ‘…and one with Nicolas Sarkozy that prompts a joke about “hidden dwarfs”.’

It went on to state that Mr Cameron boasted how he liked a photograph of himself with Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Governor of California, ‘because I’m taller than the Terminator’.

It is not clear what was meant by ‘hidden dwarfs’, though the implication is that the phrase was uttered by Mr Cameron and aimed at Mr Sarkozy. The French were not amused.

Mr Sarkozy, who is 5ft 5in, is famously sensitive about his height — or lack of it. Photographs of him with Mr Cameron on Friday show how, at 6ft tall, the Conservative leader towers over the Frenchman.

Mr Sarkozy wears Cuban heels to give him extra inches, while his statuesque wife Carla Bruni wears flat shoes to bring her closer to her husband’s level.

Three days after the ‘hidden dwarfs’ interview, Mr Osborne added insult to injury by publicly taunting Mr Sarkozy at a business conference in Church House, Westminster, organised by the Right-wing magazine The Spectator.

As Mr Osborne, 5ft 11in, approached the lectern to make his speech, he stumbled on a box placed there for a previous speaker. Mr Osborne called it a ‘Sarkozy box’ and burst into giggles.

According to the BBC, French officials lodged a protest with their UK counterparts on the grounds that Mr Cameron and Mr Osborne had ‘failed to show sufficient respect’ for the French head of state.

The protest was echoed in an article by leading French political commentator Marc Roche in the Left-wing Le Monde newspaper, which called Mr Osborne an ‘intellectual lightweight’ and accused him of a ‘lack of courtesy’.

A diplomatic source in Paris said last night that Mr Cameron and Mr Osborne’s comments had caused ‘a fair amount of consternation, to say the least,’ adding: ‘Yes, it was discussed with the French and, yes, they weren’t happy about it.’

It is not the first time Mr Sarkozy and Mr Cameron have clashed. Diplomatic sources say Mr Sarkozy ‘gave a stern lecture’ to Mr Cameron at a meeting in Paris shortly after he became Conservative leader in 2005.

Nick Allan, press secretary at the British Embassy in Paris at the time, said: ‘Cameron was on the receiving end of a tsunami of criticism. It was a 30-minute meeting, 28 of which was a monologue from Sarkozy that made No 10’s “forces of hell” look like a teddy bears’ picnic.’

A spokesman for Mr Sarkozy said: ‘We have no comment to make.’

A romantic reunion with Carla? Er, not exactly…As reunions go, it was far from passionate. Nicolas Sarkozy returned to Paris yesterday to be greeted by his wife Carla Bruni with a pat on the arm, writes James Tapper.

Mr Sarkozy’s visit to Britain last week was blighted by rumours that he and his model wife have both been having affairs.

When he arrived back in Paris, the 55-year-old French president smiled at his wife and touched her lightly on the small of her back. Ms Bruni reciprocated by placing her hand — apparently unencumbered by a wedding ring — on his arm.

Internet rumours claimed Mr Sarkozy was involved with his ecology minister Chantal Jouanno, while Ms Bruni, 43, was said to be romancing musician Benjamin Biolay.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Economy: France, Number of Export Companies in Decline

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 12 — The number of French companies that are exporting has been in constant decline for the last 10 years, despite the number of missions organised in 2009 by UbiFrance, the national agency for the internationalisation of enterprises. UbiFrance Director General Christophe Lecourtier, said that in 2009 the agency carried out 20,000 missions abroad and in 2010 they have planned 21,800. Three new offices have been opened up in Russia by the agency (Moscow, Saint Petersburg, and Ekaterinenburg). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hirsi Ali: How to Beat Wilders

Hirsi Ali does give the established political parties advice on how to beat Wilders, but that advice amounts to forcing all immigrants to assimilate. I’m not sure Wilders would mind.

           — Hat tip: Paul Belien [Return to headlines]



If the Swiss Want Mediocrity Today, They Cannot Expect the Superman Tomorrow

Das Magazin 06.03.2010 (Switzerland)

The Swiss philosopher Ludwig Hasler wonders why the elites are constantly failing. One reason, he believes, is their unpopularity in Switzerland, a country which values mediocrity in its leaders — until crisis strikes, that is. “Basically, we want ordinary people at the helm, but as soon as we hit a storm, we expect the superman. Magistrates who keep an eye on everything, who can smell anything fishy from a mile off, who can cut their way of every Gordian knot, and who resolutely make the superpowers see reason: at the same time they should court the high priest “People”. The mixture is perhaps interesting as a literary creation but you can forget about it in reality.”

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



Ireland: Ahern Proposes a Referendum on Scrapping Blasphemy Law

Sunday Times March 14, 2010

Dermot Ahern, the justice minister, is proposing that a vote to remove the criminal offence of blasphemy be held as part of a planned series of referendums this autumn, writes Stephen O’Brien.

Ahern, who was criticised for increasing the fine for blasphemy to €25,000 last year, said he never regarded the provision in the new Defamation Bill as anything more than a short-term solution.

“There was a lot of nonsense about that blasphemy issue and people making me out to be a complete right-winger at the time,” he said. “There was an incredibly sophisticated campaign [against me], mainly on the internet. I was only doing my duty in relation to it, because clearly it is in the constitution. The attorney general said ‘there is this absolute, mandatory thing… it is an offence, punishable by law.”

A final decision on a blasphemy referendum rests with the cabinet, but if Ahern remains justice minister after this month’s reshuffle, he is likely to propose that it be added to the autumn list. The government is already committed to referendums on children’s rights and establishing a permanent court of civil appeal.

The plebiscites are expected to take place in October, on the same day as the a vote for a new directly elected mayor of Dublin, and three Dail by-elections in Donegal South-West, Dublin South and Waterford.

“I said [last year] that I didn’t want a wasteful standalone referendum on blasphemy in the middle of an economic crisis,” said Ahern. “My preference was to reform [the blasphemy provision] in the short term and to have a referendum in the medium term when it could be bundled with a number of others.”

A defamation bill was already in preparation when Ahern became justice minister in May 2008.

Ahern then said he had three options: to abandon the bill; to hold a single-issue referendum to remove the constitutional reference to blasphemy; or to update the references in the 1961 Defamation Act.

Opting for reform, he said he had removed the seven-year jail sentence from the old legislation.

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



Italian ‘Ku Klux Klan’ Man Cited

White supremacist membership drive ‘a flop’, say police

(ANSA) — Rome, March 12 — A man accused of trying to import the Ku Klux Klan to Italy was cited by police on Friday for inciting racial hate and violence.

The 33-year-old from Modena was responsible for the Italian section of the web site of the United Northern and Southern Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, judicial sources said. Though the man has a clean criminal record, he was already on the police radar for being close to skinhead groups.

“We don’t think his attempt to recruit new members was going very well,” said Rome prosecutor Andrea Rossi.

“We’ve had a look at his computer and taken a number of files for further examination, but it doesn’t look like the website was generating much of a response,” he said.

Rossi estimated that the Italian page, hosted on the Michigan-based hate group’s website www.unskk.com, received fewer than six requests for membership.

“We suspect that a number of those were made by users trying to gather information to give to the police,” he added.

Rossi added that investigators had a difficult time tracking down the website’s creator, who is unemployed and lives with his parents, due to his own attempts to remain anonymous.

He said that while the man was “basically cooperative”, he was evasive when asked about his involvement with the American white supremacist movement.

His webpage ad seeking “good, Christian people ready to join our cause” caught the attention of Italy’s racism watchdog UNAR last fall, who flagged it for the police.

The web page invited prospective members in Italy to send an application and color photo ID in order to receive a provisional one-year membership.

“We’re looking for white patriots willing to defend our race and heritage, and take back what’s been stolen from us,” the website read.

Another section lamented the “sad and inexplicable lack of white pride” among Italians, described as the “fathers of white civilization”. According to coverage by Rome daily La Repubblica, the KKK made its Italian debut in 2005 with groups in Italy and Germany that consolidated into “realms”, local groups at the bottom level of Klan hierarchy.

In 2008, the Italian group obtained recognition from the Northern and Southern Knights, one of the largest white supremacist organizations in the US with chapters in 27 out of 50 American states. Hate crimes are a growing concern in Italy, where a string of attacks and unrest have highlighted growing racial tension.

In early January, the issue came to a head when African field hands rioted in the Calabrian town of Rosarno after they were shot at by local youths.

Some 50 people were injured in clashes with town residents, which lasted for two days and saw immigrants run over in cars and beaten with metal clubs.

The Ku Klux Klan was founded in the southern United States in the years following the Civil War to terrorize freed black slaves and speculators from the victorious north.

The first groups were broken up within a few decades, all but disappearing by the turn of the 20th century to re-emerge in the 1920s, reaching over 4 million members around the US.

Membership in the US has fallen steadily to an estimated 6,000 members in 2008 divided between dozens of groups scattered across the country.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Four Regions Up for Grabs in March Vote

Candidate list mix-up may convince many to stay home

(ANSA) — Rome, March 12 — Four of the 13 regions where elections will be held later this month are still up for grabs while six should be won by the center left and three by the center right, according to a poll published on Friday.

Carried out two weeks before the vote by the ISPO research agency of pollster Renato Mannheimmer, the survey found that the mix-up by Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) center right party in presenting its lists of candidates had convinced 17% of the electorate to change the way the voted in the 2008 political elections with most opting not to go to the polls at all.

However, 74% of those quizzed said the mix-up and the polemics which followed had not influenced their decisions.

According to the poll, undecided voters will play a significant role in the the March 28 and 29 vote. At present 19% of voters said that while they intend to vote they have not decided for whom, while 63% have already decided who to cast their ballots for, 10% are certain they will not vote and 8% are unsure whether they will vote or not.

The four regions where the outcome still appears to be up for grabs are: Liguria, Piedmont, Lazio and Campania.

The six where the center left is expected to win are: Emilia Romagna, Puglia, Tuscany, Marche, Umbria and Basilicata.

The three regions likely to be won by the center right are: Lombardy, Veneto and Calabria.

The ISPO poll was taken March 10 on a cross section of 800 eligible voters.

There will be no polls published in the two weeks before the elections.

A total of 44 million Italians will be casting their ballots in the vote which aside from the 13 regions will also include elections for 11 provincial administrations and mayoral races in 18 provincial capitals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Latest Polls Show Four Regions on Knife Edge

More abstentions possible; 17% to switch vote after list chaos

In about a fortnight’s time, voters in thirteen regions will be heading for the polling stations to elect the new regional councils and their presidents. As all the commentators have pointed out, the vote is highly significant in terms of the balance of power among political groups nationally, as well as at local level. The results will orient policies in key sectors where the regions have competence, such as healthcare. To a large extent, the vote on 28-29 March will verify the current mood of the electorate towards the various parties. It will therefore also be an important indication of the approval enjoyed by Silvio Berlusconi’s executive.

Obviously, no one is in a position to say precisely what the outcome will be, above all because many voters say they are still in two minds. A survey carried out last Wednesday in the thirteen regions involved in elections shows that just under one voter in five (19%) intends to vote but has not yet decided who to vote for. It is also worth noting that in recent years, more and more voters make their minds up in the last few days before the election. At the last European elections, as many as 13% said they decided on the day of the vote and a further 13% made their minds up in the week leading up to the vote. The fortnight still remaining of the election campaign could steer the decisions of the ditherers in one direction or another, and even prompt those who have decided how to vote to change their minds. One factor will be party communication, which is set to intensify in the next few days after a quiet start, or rather after a start focused more on procedural issues than regional problems.

Yet even with all the above caveats, picking a winner for the presidency is relatively straightforward in many regions. For instance, there seems little doubt that Lombardy, Veneto and Calabria will see the Centre-right triumph. Similarly, Centre-left victories are all but guaranteed in Emilia Romagna, Toscana, Umbria, Marche, Puglia and Basilicata. But in several other contests, the situation is much less clear-cut. In Piedmont, Mercedes Bressa has a slight edge on her opponent, Roberto Cota, but the margin is only about one percentage point, which makes it impossible to forecast the result with any certainty. The gap between the contenders is a tad wider in Liguria but still tiny. Polls put the Centre-left’s Claudio Burlando ahead by about two per cent. The outlook in Lazio is even more uncertain. According to the most recent surveys, the Radical Party’s Emma Bonino is ahead of her rival, Renata Polverini but here, too, the advantage is slight.

Ms Polverini’s campaign, which was ahead in the polls until a few weeks ago, was seriously affected by the chaos that accompanied presentation of the election lists. Potentially, the absence of the People of Freedom’s (PDL) symbol is very damaging. Approval for the Centre-right thus far has been more substantial than for the Centre-left, which would have been a big boost for Ms Polverini’s campaign. The absence of a list as important as the PDL’s undermines her advantage. Finally, the Centre-right’s Roberto Caldoro had been looking a winner in Campania but the latest IPSOS poll suggests an inversion of that tendency. The Centre-left’s Vincenzo De Luca is now set to win. Overall at the last regional elections five years ago, the Centre-left managed to secure eleven of the thirteen regions that will be going to the polls. This time round, they might win seven, eight or nine. Needless to say, it’s a result that lends itself to all sorts of interpretations. On the one hand, it could be viewed as progress for the Centre-right since they are likely to wrest a few regions from their opponents’ grasp. Yet on the other, it will be pointed out that Centre-left has, as seems highly likely, held onto the majority of the regions going to the polls.

In reality, any analysis based on the number of regions won, which is the most common approach, fails to tell the whole story. Some regions are much more important, and populous, than others. It follows that they count for much more in terms of votes. A more meaningful figure is the total number of votes obtained overall by each party in the thirteen regions as a whole, although this is not easy to calculate because of the various local groups and “president’s lists”. A global analysis enables us to gauge the actual impact of each of the political forces, revealing whether, and to what extent, the majority parties (especially the PDL) have held onto the popular vote or if, as polls published recently by various bodies suggest, they have fallen back.

In this context, recent events, and in particular the list presentation affair, appear to have influenced voters’ intentions. According to one recent poll, more than 17% of the electorate claim to have changed their voting decision in the aftermath of the list presentation shambles. This does not, of course, mean that all of those interviewed will behave as they said they would but it does offer an indication of the disquiet among the electorate which, as we have noted, has already been picked up by recent surveys of voting intentions. Today, although the figures refer to the country as a whole and not just to the regions that are voting, the PDL is weaker than it was a month ago, having shed about two percentage points. If the findings of the surveys are confirmed on election day (and here we have to remember that there are still fifteen days of the election campaign to go, which could substantially alter the situation), Silvio Berlusconi’s party would lose ground with respect to the last general election but remain ahead of its result in last year’s European poll.

In contrast, the Northern League seems to be holding firm, thanks in part to effective communications. On the other side of the fence, the PD appears to have consolidated, although not in proportion to the fall in the PDL’s vote. Pierluigi Bersani’s group looks to have recovered from the poor result of the European vote but has not recovered its position at the general election. As expected, very few voters have moved directly from one of the two largest parties to the other. Instead, there are complex movements among the various political groups and, especially, to and from abstention. For abstention is the big question mark hanging over the upcoming regional elections. Today, an increasing number of voters feel deluded or repelled by politics in the wake of the events over the past three months, suggesting that the turn-out could be lower. Around 18% of those interviewed said they were moderately or very likely not to vote but the chances are that levels of abstention will be even higher. However, what promises to be a tense climate in the last few days of the election campaign could prompt some voters to turn out, albeit “holding their noses”, which would alter the current balance of power among the parties and, in some regions, affect the election of the president.

Renato Mannheimer

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu and Foreign Secretary David Miliband

Transcript of the Statements to the Media following Bilateral Meeting at the British Foreign Office

David Miliband: I want to recognise the way that the Secretary General during his term of office has been a voice for engagement, a voice for moderation, again a voice for cooperation, and I think it’s a testimony to the work that he’s doing that we, that he has such a full programme in the United Kingdom. He’s meeting a range of Government organisations but also engaging in civil society. And the theme of building inter faith and cross cultural understanding has been at the heart of our talks over the last forty five minutes or so.

I think it’s fair to say that in this country we are proud of many of the ways in which Britain stands up for the rights of all its citizens, whatever their race or their religion. We have some of the strongest laws against religious hatred anywhere in the world. But we know that there is always more work to do to build understanding within our own country and also to take that internationally. And one of the commitments we make is that we know that in order to tackle many of the problems of the modern world, problems of conflict, problems of poverty, problems of climate change, problems of economic instability, we need much greater cooperation between countries like my own and Muslim majority countries around the world.

We have committed first of all to promote greater understanding of the Islamic world, or Islamic worlds, plural, by, as a way of promoting greater respect. We know that there are serious debates about reform inside the Muslim majority countries and we support the promotion of universal values of human rights and free speech and democratic governance.

We also know that there are substantial grievances that many people in the Muslim majority countries feel. Some of them are real and those that are real need to be addressed in a serious way. In our discussions today, ranging from the Middle East to Africa to Europe we’ve talked about how those grievances can be addressed, and I’m very grateful for the open and frank and honest and positive way in which the Secretary General has tried to engage in those debates.

We know that the OIC has a diverse membership and the, the Secretary General has a job to do to balance the different parts of his membership. I think it’s very important that countries like Britain, which have a substantial Muslim population, are able to engage with organisations like the OIC. The OIC made an important contribution to our Afghan Conference in January and I very much look forward to more meetings like we had today to further cooperation in the months ahead.

Thank you very much indeed.

Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu: Thank you. Today we had very fruitful talks and have exchanged views on ways and means to enhance bilateral cooperation between OIC and the United Kingdom of all issues of mutual concern as well as for more cooperation between OIC and EU.

I conveyed to the Foreign Secretary the deep concern of OIC over the recent worrying developments in the Occupied Territories of Palestine particularly East Jerusalem. In our view the recent procedures by Israel related to the settlements would not only jeopardise the chances of the resumption of peace negotiation but also create an atmosphere of confrontation. I would like to take this opportunity to once again call upon the international community to put serious pressure on Israel. I also had the opportunity to brief the Foreign Secretary on the OIC’s efforts has to maintain peace and security and to address the humanitarian needs, especially in OIC member states such as Afghanistan, Sudan, Somalia. The situation in, in, Yemen and Nigeria also came up in our discussion.

I have discussed also OIC’s endeavours in promoting innovation, modernisation and economic development in the Muslim world as well as fighting extremism and terrorism. We emphasised the need to promote understanding and tolerance and the potential in defusing tension and removing mispresentations which have recently affected the relations between the Muslim world and the West. It is my conviction that with its respect of the Muslim world and its experience in cherishing understanding and tolerance, the UK, United Kingdom, can play a crucial role in the better understanding of the positions and concerns of the Muslim world.

We expressed our satisfaction over recently established ties of cooperation between OIC and DfID in the field of international development of relief and humanitarian assistance. I’m happy to be meeting after this meeting with Mr Mike Foster, Minister of International Development.

The Foreign Secretary and I have agreed to continue our mutual relationship, engagement and consultations in all the issues and I have extended an invitation to him now again to visit OIC headquarters.

David Miliband: Thank you very much.

Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu: Thank you.

David Miliband: Thank you.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Pope Helped Priest Accused of Child Abuse

The Pope has become embroiled in Germany’s Catholic child sex abuse scandal after his former diocese confirmed he approved a decision to give church accommodation to a priest accused of forcing an 11-year-old boy to perform oral sex.

The child sex abuse scandal currently rocking Germany has affected 19 of the country’s 27 Catholic dioceses, with new accusations almost daily from former school pupils and choir members.

Pope Benedict XVI, who spent much of his early church career in his home country of Germany, has actively spoken against paedophilia and made promises that accusations would be investigated wherever they arose. After a meeting on Friday with Germany’s top Catholic cleric, Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, he also approved moves to appoint a watchdog to prevent child sex abuse.

A large part of the scandal involves the protection of those accused of abuse, and their continued employment by the church.

Yet it emerged on Saturday that as Archbishop Joseph Ratzinger of Munich and Friesing, the Pope supported an attempt to rehabilitate a priest within his own diocese.

Identified only as H., he had been accused of the sex abuse while in Essen, but moved to Munich for help.

“It was decided in 1980 to give H. accommodation in a rectory so that he could receive therapy. The archbishop [now Pope Benedict XVI] took part in this decision,” a statement from the Munich and Friesing diocese said.

The Süddeutsche Zeitung reported that H. was given spiritual duties to perform and no further wrongdoing was reported between 1980 and 1982, when Ratzinger moved to the Vatican.

But further sex abuse claims were made against the priest in 1985 — allegations so severe he was relieved of his duties and the secular authorities became involved.

A year later he was given an 18-month suspended jail sentence, later extended to five years, and fined 4,000 deutschmarks for sexually abusing minors. He was instructed to undergo therapy.

Yet he remained in the church and worked in a retirement home between 1986 and 1987 before becoming a curate and later a church administrator.

Although no further allegations have been made against him, in 2008 he was relieved of his duties in Garching and five months later was given different responsibilities, and was not allowed to work with young people.

The Süddeutsche Zeitung said he still works in the diocese today.

In a statement from the diocese, former vicar general Gerhard Gruber said, “The repeated employment of H. in priestly spiritual duties was a bad mistake. I assume all responsibility.”

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



Portugal: Ikea to Invest 1.1 Bln by 2015

(ANSAmed) — LISBON, MARCH 12 — By 2015, Ikea plans to double its investments in Portugal, thus bringing them up to 1.1 billion euros. Thanks to this new strategy, writes the Italian Trade Commission (ICE) office in Lisbon, Ikea will create 10,000 jobs directly or in the allied industries. After the sales points in Alfragide, opened in 2004, and in Matosinhos (2007), the group plans to open a third store in Loures by this summer. Ikea, the note continues, will open a further three shopping centres in Matosinhos, Gaia and Algarve, whilst by the end of this year, the three Swedwood factories — the company in the group that produces furniture — will be fully operational (the first is already operating, the second has started production this year and the third will start at the end of 2010). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Reaction to the Inaugural British Tea Party Event

They drank real tea (and imbibed some stronger drink as well). But their concerns mirrored their American cousins’ cause from across the pond.

On February 28, an extraordinary meeting took place in a crowded room in Brighton on the south coast of England. The tea party movement, scoffed at by much of the British establishment, quietly arrived in the UK. With little publicity, and certainly none of it positive except on the blogs, Kenny Irvine arranged a successful event for the Freedom Association in two days time.

So successful was the tea party gathering that the 300-person capacity of the room was reached quickly and people had to be away. This was a British event, so the tea was consumed and not tossed anywhere. There was a cash bar as well for those wishing to have something a bit stronger — another British tradition.

The main speaker for the event, Conservative MEP Daniel Hannan, did some pre-event publicity. Oddly enough, it was through U.S. media outlets like Neil Cavuto’s Fox News show and Hot Tea Radio.

In both of these interviews, Hannan was keen to assure people that no tea would be harmed in any way. American observers found the fact that a tea party event in the UK was being planned both ironic and amusing. However, the problems discussed were as serious as the ones with which American tea party attendees are concerned: high taxes, bloated government, and fiscal irresponsibility.

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



Spain: Women Reports Lleida Mosque Imam for Polygamy

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 12 — A Spanish woman reported the imam of the main mosque in Lleida (Catalonia) to the Guardia Civil for polygamy and abuse. The woman, reports Spanish daily Segre, is named Aicha Lopez and she filed a report against the imam Abdelwahab Houz for marrying her when he was already married to another woman and for having abused and abandoned her during a trip to Morocco. The imam denies both accusations. Based on the report, Aicha Lopez suffered the abuse a month ago in Rabat, where the couple went on vacation. The imam, according to Aicha Lopez, reportedly received a phone call from his previous wife, and when the husband learned that he was discovered, he allegedly became violent, forcing his Spanish wife to get out of their car and return to Spain alone. Afterwards, she reported her husband for polygamy and abuse; accusations that the Guardia Civil of Lleida is currently investigating. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Seven Charged Over Sharia Court Released

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 12 — The seven Moroccans charged with having set up a court of Sharia law in Valls (Catalonia) and of having passed a death sentence on a women accused of adultery, have today been released. The committal judge at Tarragona Court was forced to overturn their imprisonment after the woman who had brought the charges failed to appear in court to identify them for the third time, say court sources, cited by the EP agency. The woman, of Moroccan citizenship, disappeared without trace last November and is thought to have returned to live in Morocco, although the police in that country have not been able to trace her. The charge brought against the seven men, who were facing the prospect of 23 years’ imprisonment for kidnapping, attempted murder and conspiracy to commit a crime, is entirely based on the inquiry conducted by the Catalan police force, the ‘Mossos d’Esquadrà, who had corroborated the ‘probable’ existence of a Sharia court at Valls. The court has, however, left the case open, as well as the accusations against the seven men, who are now free to leave custody. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swiss Muslims Want Islamic Cemeteries in Every Canton

An umbrella group for Swiss Muslims says they should be able to be buried “with dignity” and is therefore calling for Islamic cemeteries in every Swiss canton.

Farhad Afshar, president of the Coordination of Islamic Organisations in Switzerland, told the Sunday newspaper Sonntag he was preparing a legal case concerning freedom of religion.

He said that following the Bernese commune of Köniz’s recent rejection of a separate burial ground for Muslims, a legal ruling was necessary so that “the next time someone says no [to an Islamic cemetery] they are violating freedom of religion”.

Islamic law says Muslims should not be buried with those of a different faith — something already possible in Some Swiss cities, for example Zurich, Bern, Basel and Geneva.

The Muslim community in Switzerland accounts for about 4.5 per cent of the population. Most Muslim immigrants came from the former Yugoslavia and Turkey. The community includes up to 100 nationalities.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Sixty People Report Abuses by Priests

A Swiss abbot says 60 people have reported being victims of abuse by Catholic priests in Switzerland.

Abbot Martin Werlen of the Benedictine Abbey of Einsiedeln told Swiss daily Aargauer Zeitung that the allegations were reported to the Swiss Bishops Conference, which is investigating them.

Werlen did not say in the interview published on Saturday where or when the alleged cases occurred.

Werlen and the bishops conference could not immediately be reached for comment.

His statement was the latest report of abuse by Catholic clergy or church employees in Europe, which has recently seen fresh allegations of sexual and physical abuse in Germany, the Netherlands and Austria.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The First Ever Critical Edition of the Koran, Coming to You From Potsdam

Die Welt 11.03.2010

Lucas Wiegelmann writes an instructive report on the early mashup of Jewish and Christian motifs, ancient Arabic poetry and inspired pieces of original writing that is the Koran. In Potsdam outside Berlin, a team of researchers from the Academy of Sciences is working on a project knows as the “Corpus Coranicum” to produce the first-ever critical edition of the holy book. Wiegelmann talked to a number of the scholars involved, including the prominent Arabist Michael Marx. He serves Mocca, while “next door his assistants and helpers sit in front of their computers typing up ancient manuscripts. The walls are lined with photocopies of ancient codices in the Arabic script. The researchers are analysing around 12,000 photos of the most important Koran manuscripts dating from the 7th to the 12th centuries, copying out the different versions of the verses for comparison before putting them online. A Sisyphean but important task; only when this has been completed can phase two of the project begin, in which the authentic version of the Koran is reconstructed.”

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



UK: Backlash at the Mosque

The influence of Muslim fundamentalists in east London is being challenged, says Andrew Gilligan .

In the two weeks since the Islamic Forum of Europe were exposed by The Sunday Telegraph and Channel 4’s Dispatches as hardline fundamentalists secretly infiltrating the political system, they have been furiously protesting their “proven track record of community cohesion”. Last week, however, the organisation showed its true face.

“We’ve tracked you down,” said the IFE’s community affairs co-ordinator, Azad Ali, in a webcast targeting the Channel 4 reporter “Atif”, who went undercover at the IFE’s headquarters, the East London Mosque, filming the group’s true views — and its boasts that it controlled the local Tower Hamlets council. “Yes, Atif, we’ve got a picture of you and a lot more than you thought we had. We’ve tracked you down to different places. And if people are gonna turn what I’ve just said into a threat, that’s their fault, innit?”

Mr Ali’s words sit strangely with his role as an official advisor to the Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer, and to the police, but perhaps his annoyance is understandable. The undercover reporters filmed him saying: “Democracy, if it means not implementing the sharia, no one’s going to agree with that.”

The reporters found that, far from its protestations of being merely a “social welfare organisation”, the IFE is an organised political movement dedicated to creating an “Islamic social and political order” through “entryism” into mainstream democratic institutions.

Today, though, as the dust settles after this month’s revelations, there are indications that that sort of influence may have peaked. One of the most visible signs of the Islamists’ growing hold over Tower Hamlets council was the highly controversial proposal to erect so-called “hijab gates” — huge arches in the shape of the Muslim veil — at either end of the area’s famous Brick Lane. Local critics, including many Muslims, said it was “Islamic triumphalism” and an attempt to “religiously brand” an area that is home to many different cultures. Last week, the council withdrew the plans.

Last week, too, several local schools, which had been due to send pupils to an event called the “Big Read” at the East London Mosque, announced they were pulling out. The event organisers were forced to send frantic texts appealing for more children. Many local Muslim headteachers have privately told The Sunday Telegraph of their worry about the brand of Islam being preached at the mosque.

And yesterday it looked as if pressure was mounting on the second-most important officer at Tower Hamlets, Lutfur Ali — a man with a controversial employment history and close links to the IFE. Mr Ali, the assistant chief executive, has responsibility for council grants. Under him, increasing sums of council money have been channelled to IFE-controlled organisations.

Tower Hamlets’ chief executive, Kevan Collins, confirmed that a complaint had been received about Mr Ali from another government agency called the National College for Leadership of Schools.

Council sources said the allegation was that Mr Ali had been moonlighting, in council time, with the college. “Any allegations of that nature will be fully investigated,” Mr Collins said. “Every member of staff is under a contractual obligation to work full-time for the council unless explicitly stated otherwise.” A formal investigation into Mr Ali is likely to be launched tomorrow.

Approached yesterday, Mr Ali did not deny the allegation, saying only: “I cannot make a comment on that because I need to check out exactly what the college have said.”

“These are very important signs,” said Badrul Islam, chief executive of a local voluntary organisation, the Ethnic Minority Enterprise Project, and a leading Muslim campaigner against the Islamists. “The IFE have definitely taken a hit and they are into damage limitation. This story has done two things: it has given them notice that what they are doing will not be allowed, and it has made local people realise that the IFE are challengable.”

Mr Islam, who featured in The Sunday Telegraph reports and the Channel 4 film, said the story had created a “huge frenzy” in the community and he had been congratulated by dozens of people for taking part. “But,” he added, “they all said one other thing, ‘Take care of yourself’, or ‘Are you going to be all right?’?”

So far, apart from a couple of anonymous telephone threats, nothing has happened. But the IFE’s opponents in Tower Hamlets know that the battle is far from over.

The hijab gates may have gone, or be on hold, but the increasing march of the hijab itself — and its all-enveloping cousin, the niqab — through the ranks of local women shows the growth of Islamist influence in the area. In Bangladesh, where nearly all the local Muslims originate, it is almost unknown to see covered women. But in supposedly liberal, secular east London, the streets are filled with them. This month, Shiria Khatun, a Tower Hamlets councillor, called in the police after receiving anonymous death threats because of her “Western” dress.

Other disturbing trends have been seen in the East End. Several churches have been attacked, though the area’s churchmen try to play down the religious nature of the incidents. There has been a large rise in attacks on gay people. Jewish history tours of the area have twice been subject to attacks by gangs of local youths. A local Hindu group, the Sanaton Association, had to move its events after they were repeatedly attacked by Muslim youths. And, although there are still many racist attacks on Muslims, the fastest-rising group of victims of race attacks has been whites.

There is nothing to suggest that the IFE and the mosque are behind any of this. But, rather as racial violence in an area tends to rise when the BNP becomes active there, a similar effect is being seen in the East End. At least 18 hate and extremist preachers hosted at the mosque over the past year, including many anti-gay preachers, have probably, for instance, helped encourage the growing climate of intolerance towards homosexuals.

The IFE has taken considerable control over this Bangladeshi area, even though it is the descendant of a party, Jamaat-e-Islami, which opposed and fought against the very creation of Bangladesh. War crimes were allegedly committed by some JI members during the country’s 1971 war of independence. Some of those people fled to London — and played important roles in the foundation of the IFE.

Ansar Ahmed Ullah, another local opponent of the IFE, says that local people are frustrated with the way in which the white political establishment has endorsed and legitimised a mosque whose true nature they do not appear to understand. “We have told them many times about these people,” he says. “But you still get people like Boris Johnson, government ministers and Prince Charles going down there. People see that, and it gives them credibility.”

It is easy to understand why the politicians make a bee-line for the East London Mosque. Many of the area’s other mosques are small, scruffy converted buildings, with peeling paint and a clientele of older men. The East London Mosque is large, shiny and modern, with an air of youth, purpose and a persuasive PR machine. Nor, of course, are the majority at the mosque extremist. But there are, at the very least, inconsistencies between the message tailored for outside consumption and what actually goes on there.

The IFE’s power is about to be subjected to two key tests. In six weeks, there will be local elections, with several IFE councillors up for re-election, and a referendum on having an elected mayor for Tower Hamlets, a post into which the IFE wants to place one of its people. “That will be crucial,” says Badrul Islam. “We think we have the numbers to organise against that.”

But perhaps the organisation’s most serious challenge comes from Bangladesh. Jamaat-e-Islami has never been as powerful there as it is in east London, and Bangladesh’s government is organising to have several JI members indicted for their alleged war crimes during the 1971 liberation struggle. Among them is likely to be a man who plays a leading role in the East London Mosque.

The fundamentalists remain deeply embedded in east London. But in the “Islamic Republic” of Tower Hamlets, the backlash has started.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Gordon Brown’s Four-Letter Rant at Baroness Ashton for ‘Letting UK Down’

Gordon Brown hurled a torrent of abuse at EU Foreign Minister Baroness Ashton in a row over the way she is doing her job, it was disclosed last night.

The Prime Minister swore repeatedly at the Baroness over the telephone, leaving her shaken, according to well-placed sources.

Details of Mr Brown’s latest bullying outburst prompted claims that Baroness Ashton, 53, is losing the confidence of her own Government, as well as Brussels. According to one source, he accused her of ‘letting Britain down’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Jack Straw to Publish Plans to Abolish House of Lords ‘Very Shortly’

Labour’s election manifesto will include plans to replace the House of Lords with an elected second chamber, a minister confirmed today.

Transport Secretary Lord Adonis said Justice Secretary Jack Straw will set out proposals ‘very shortly’.

Mr Straw is understood to have been consulting Cabinet colleagues on the shake-up which would see the Lords become a wholly elected, 300-seat chamber.

Lord Adonis said this morning that Labour’s plans for the Lords had ‘moved on a stage’.

[…]

A proportional representation system would be used to select members, with voting taking place at the same time as General Elections.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: No Job Unless You’re Polish: Biggest Asda Meat Supplier Excludes English Speakers as ‘All Instructions Are in Polish’

British workers have been turned away from jobs in a local factory — for not speaking Polish.

Cooked meat manufacturer Forza AW effectively barred anyone but Poles for applying for jobs on its production line in East Anglia by insisting all staff speak the language fluently.

The company claimed it was necessary as all health and safety training was conducted in Polish.

But Forza — a major supplier of Asda supermarkets — was last night accused of anti-British discrimination because of the adverts, which came after an official report detailed how unscrupulous employers prefer to hire migrants because they are cheap and less inclined to answer back.

Forza’s insistence on Polish speakers may be illegal, as a spokesman for the Government Equalities Office said last night: ‘Under the 1976 Race Relations Act, unless there is a genuine need for a worker to speak a particular language it is against the law to require that they should do so as a condition of employing them.’

‘I couldn’t believe it — are we in England or in Poland?’Forza’s advertisement came as the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s report condemned the ‘mistreatment and exploitation’ of foreign workers, who are often too afraid to raise concerns for fear of being sacked.

The commission said it uncovered ‘widespread evidence’ of physical and verbal abuse and lack of proper health and safety protection, while workers often have little knowledge of their rights.

It is also reported that British workers had spoken of difficulty in registering with employment agencies that supply mainly East European workers.

Shadow Immigration Minister Damian Green said the advert exposed the hollowness of Gordon Brown’s pledge to create ‘British jobs for British workers’.

He added: ‘He must regret ever saying that because it has proved a cruel deception for millions of the unemployed.’

Forza’s advert was sent out via email by East Anglia-based employment agency OSR Recruitment earlier this month.

Headed ‘Immediate factory work available!!!!’ it continued: ‘If you are available or have any friends available, work is starting tomorrow for induction training.

‘Ongoing factory work (meat production) for 4-5 months, shifts are 7am-5pm or 9am-7pm.

‘Transport provided. Applicants must speak Polish. Please call asap!!!!!!’

The advert was signed Katrina Massingham, the company’s ‘industrial team leader’ and it was dispatched to hundreds of potential applicants on the firm’s books.

One job seeker, who contacted The Mail on Sunday after receiving the email, said: ‘I couldn’t believe it when I first read it — are we in England or Poland, for goodness sake?

‘It was weird. I thought it must be a mistake’’If it was a job where you were flying back and forth to Warsaw, I could understand it, but you wouldn’t think language ability would be high on the list of requirements for someone packing sausages all day long.’

A reporter listened in as the 31-year-old man called OSR to ask about the jobs last Tuesday.

The first question he was asked was: ‘Are you Polish?’ When he said no, but could speak the language ‘a little’, he was told: ‘Actually, you have to be fluent because the health and safety training is all done in Polish.’

By Friday, however, after The Mail on Sunday rang again several times and got the same response, the company appeared to have second thoughts about the wisdom of the advert.

An OSR employee gave a different version to a Polish-speaking reporter saying: ‘Actually, you don’t have to be Polish, but it helps.’

When another reporter posed as an English applicant, Ms Massingham told him that all the jobs had been filled but that the language requirement was ‘not too important now’.

She added: ‘For some reason the training was in Polish but we’re trying to get them to change it, because it’s a bit silly, really’.

Earlier, OSR also posted the advert in Polish in several of the Eastern European shops in East Anglia.

In one, the manageress took the ad over the phone, and — when asked to translate it from English — was surprised to hear the line about needing to speak Polish.

‘It was weird, and I assumed it was a mistake,’ she said. ‘After all, we’re in England. So I translated that part as “English not necessary” instead. There have been quite a few people following up the advert since it went up.’

The advert, as she had translated it and posted in her shop, read: ‘Work for Poles. Urgent! Production line work starting March 5, 2010, Full-time (5 days a week). Transport from Norwich city centre and uniforms provided. English not necessary. OSR Agency, Katrina or David.’

Last night, Forza AW claimed the advert was ‘a mistake due to a breakdown in communications and should never have gone out’.

Forza is a leading supplier to supermarkets, and holds a multi-million- pound contract to supply the majority of Asda’s cooked meat range.

Led by £780,000-a-year Max Hilliard, once described as the most powerful man in the British pig industry, it has a £140million turnover and 600 employees. It is normally based in Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire, but about a third of its plant was destroyed in a blaze last month.

As a temporary measure, the company leased factory space and machinery at Bernard Matthews Farms’ huge plant in Great Witchingham, just outside Norwich.

The turkey producer was able to offer spare capacity as its busiest time is some months away.

‘This advert should never have happened’There is no other connection between the two firms. As dawn broke over a rainswept Norwich on Friday, Mail on Sunday reporters watched as ten Eastern Europeans who had been hired after answering the advert gathered outside a John Lewis store waiting for the 6am bus to take them to their long shift.

Stopping three times elsewhere in the city to pick up more workers, the vehicle made its way ten miles north to Great Witchingham.

Once out of the bus, virtually every one of the workers took the chance for a last cigarette before entering the plant for the start of the 7am shift. At the same time, workers in other buses arrived from all over Norfolk and Suffolk, some to work for Bernard Matthews, others for Forza.

Yesterday, Mr Hilliard, claimed the advert’s wording was a mistake and due to a ‘breakdown in communications’ between his firm and OSR Recruitment. He said he was unaware of the ‘Must speak Polish’ clause until The Mail on Sunday alerted him to it.

‘In normal circumstances, this ad would have been vetted and the error removed,’ said the 51-year-old, who is Forza’s chief executive and principal shareholder, owning 60 per cent of the company.

‘But following the chaos of the fire, and the necessity to quickly set up production with 400 workers in another part of the country, the mistake was made but wasn’t spotted.

‘We employ many English workers as well as Poles and Lithuanians, though I can’t give you exact figures, and I assure you categorically that all our training and health and safety briefings are conducted in English, Polish or whatever the employee speaks.

‘I cannot say how this error came about, perhaps a glib comment was made about the difficulty of operating in several different languages, I don’t know, but we would never turn down an English person for a job on the basis that they didn’t speak Polish or any other language.

‘When we moved production down to Norfolk, we contacted the Gangmasters’ Licensing Authority to be put in touch with a reputable agency, and were directed towards OSR Recruitment.

‘I did speak to them in person about our requirements, but I didn’t see the finished advert. It should never have happened and I apologise to anyone who was put off applying for jobs as a result of this email.’

Asked whether the firm would be using OSR for recruitment in the future, he declined to comment.

Forza has become a giant in the processed meat industry in just two years. It specialises in pre-packed and pre-sliced deli-counter style products. Mario Bardwell, a director of OSR Recruitment, refused to discuss the email when approached by The Mail on Sunday. He asked us to put the questions to him in an email — but still did not respond to the written enquiry.

Forza recently announced plans to double its payroll to 1,200 staff, after winning a new contract, and has been considering plans to move to larger premises.

However, the fire at the existing West Yorkshire factory has affected migrant workers there.

‘I’m sure that this happens all the time’Some of the plant’s 600 staff, many of them migrants supplied by local recruitment company Red Rock On Site Services, were sent home. And if they have worked in Britain for less than a year, they are unable to claim benefits.

Helena Danielczuk, who works for Bradford mental health charity Sharing Voices, said she had been approached by more than a dozen Eastern European workers who lost their jobs at Forza.

She said: ‘They have to work for an unbroken 12 months otherwise they are unable to claim Jobseeker’s Allowance. Some of them are destitute.’ The charity has called for financial support for migrant workers left without work because of the fire.

In the late Nineties Mr Hilliard was boss of Malton Foods, then owned by dairy giants Unigate, which bought about a third of the pigs processed for meat in Britain.

He was at the centre of protests from pig farmers when he was awarded the industry’s top prize despite being behind cuts to farmers’ prices three times in a year. National Farmers’ Union members said that it was ‘like giving Saddam Hussein the Nobel Peace Prize’.

The new row will reopen the fierce debate touched off by the recent BBC documentary The Day The Immigrants Left, in which Britons took over migrant workers’ low-paid jobs.

In the film, presented by Evan Davis, some of the featured locals from Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, complained they were routinely turned down for factory work as they were English, an assertion denied by one boss of a potato-packing factory who said: ‘Where British workers are, I don’t know, but they’re not applying for jobs.’

But when two of the participants, jobless Paul North and Terry Garner, did apply for jobs after a successful stint on the shop floor, they were told ‘no suitable vacancies were available’.

Mr Garner said he was ‘not surprised in the least’ to hear that such as discriminatory advert had been issued on behalf of Forza.

He said: ‘I don’t know what the story is with this firm, but I am sure this kind of thing goes on all the time, only the employers are less obvious and just sift through the applications to find the foreign workers.

‘I’ve got nothing against foreigners — they do work hard, but they do it for less money, because they often don’t bring their families and they’ll share accommodation to bring down their overheads.

‘They might pay tax, but at the end of the day, most of the money they’re paid goes back to their own country and not into our economy.’

Mr Garner and Mr North are both currently working as temporary cable layers.

Bosses at Bernard Matthews were said to be upset that the offending advert might — however unfairly — tarnish the firm’s reputation. The company was recently praised by the Equality and Human Rights Commission in its report into migrant workers in the meat and poultry industry.

While the body uncovered widespread abuse of migrant and agency workers, including a lack of proper health and safety protection, Europe’s largest turkey producer was singled out for special praise.

The report stated: ‘One firm that was frequently mentioned as an employer of choice for agency workers was Bernard Matthews.

‘This was because of the respect for, and lack of differentiation between, agency staff and directly employed workers, and the steps taken to promote good relations between different nationalities.’

A Bernard Matthews spokesman said last night: ‘Forza are leasing spare capacity at our plant while they get over the fire at their factory in Yorkshire, but there’s no other link between the two companies.’

The company stepped in less than a week after the blaze, leasing its facilities for Forza for six months.

Meanwhile, an Asda spokesman added: ‘While we recognise that these were extraordinary circumstances for Forza, we’re pleased that they’ve quickly recognised the advert was a mistake.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: The Snake Oil Salesmen Who Hijacked My Party: After 25 Years as an MP, Peter Kilfoyle Hits Out at Hypocrisy of New Labour

Before he retires, the Labour supporter of 46 years fires this broadside at the dire lack of talent and potential in a Cabinet of makeweights.

By the Eighties, Thatcherism was the order of the day in public life. The economic landscape had shifted, and with it the industrial profile of the nation.

Unions were under the cosh and in rapid retreat from their power and numbers of the Seventies. The stresses spread from wider society into the Labour Party, complicating Labour’s internal battles, first between Right and Left and then with Militant.

Along came New Labour, in a last-ditch attempt to win power before the Labour Party splintered after a feared defeat in 1997.

It worked — at least, for while. What it also did, however, was to emasculate Labour ideologically.

New Labour became a brand, devoid of substance but sold successfully to a bedazzled electorate who were tired of the Tory brand and its painful remedies to our national ills.

No one can deny the marketing success that was New Labour. Unfortunately, snake oil salesmen are always found out eventually — and New Labour’s day of reckoning is nigh.

What, therefore, will be at the core of the Labour Party after the Election?

Not a great deal, I fear. One only has to look at the way in which the party has recruited its front line troops to fight in 2010.

[…]

The choice for the Labour Party is between the social democratic urges of New Labour — complete with deregulation, devotion to markets and privatisation — and the democratic socialist model which calls for regulation, appropriate intervention and a thriving public sector.

There can be no compromise between the two.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Woman Freed Over ‘Plot to Kill’ Swedish Cartoonist

Police in the Irish Republic have released a fourth person, an American woman, who was detained over an alleged plot to murder a Swedish cartoonist.

The woman, who has not been officially named, was among seven people arrested. Three were freed without charge on Friday. Three men are still being held.

They were suspected of planning to kill Lars Vilks over a cartoon of Prophet Muhammad’s head on the body of a dog.

It was used in a 2007 Swedish newspaper editorial on freedom of expression.

Those originally detained included nationals from Algeria, Libya, the Palestinian territories, Croatia and the US.

‘Insecure’

The American woman arrested in the Irish Republic has been named by US media as Jamie Paulin-Ramirez.

Christine Mott, from Colorado, identified Mrs Paulin-Ramirez as her daughter, whom she described as a “very insecure, unhappy person that just was looking for something to hang on to”.

Irish police have refused to confirm whether Mrs Paulin-Ramirez is the woman involved, and have declined to release the identities of any of those arrested.

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



Vatican: German Church Leader Apologises for Abuse

Vatican City, 12 March(AKI) — The leader of Germany’s 26-million member Roman Catholic church apologised to victims of sexual abuse by priests after a Friday meeting with Pope Benedict VXI, who encouraged him to deal with the problem.

Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, head of the German Bishops’ Conference, said the German Church was moving to investigate accusations of abuse in Catholic institutions and implementing measures to prevent a repeat of the occurrences.

“The German bishops are dismayed by what has happened and the acts of violence against children,” Zollitsch said after the 45-minute private audience.

“A few weeks ago I asked forgiveness from the victims, something which I must repeat today in Rome.”

German justice minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger has criticised the Vatican for what she called a “wall of silence” over widening sex abuse allegations at 18 of the country’s 27 Roman Catholic dioceses.

Georg Ratzinger, pope’s brother, on Tuesday asked for forgiveness from the victims of an unfolding sex abuse scandal in the Regensburg boys’ choir which he directed for 30 years that has rocked the Catholic church in Germany.

Zollitsch said he had briefed Benedict about the situation in the pope’s native Germany, where more than 100 reports have emerged of abuse at Catholic institutions. He said the Regensburg choir case was not discussed.

“With great shock, keen interest and deep sadness, the Holy Father took note of what I had to say,” Zollitsch told a press conference, adding that he had not specifically discussed the Regensburg choir with the pope.

“I informed the Holy Father of the measures which we are adopting and I am grateful to him for encouraging me to continue with the adoption of these measures in a decisive and courageous manner,” he said. “We want to bring the truth to light.”

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

Balkans


Robotics: Italo-Bosnian Centre Set Up in Sarajevo

(ANSAmed) — SARAJEVO, MARCH 12 — A centre for new robotics technologies has been set up in Sarajevo following an technical and trade agreement between two companies in the sector: Bosnia’s Grizelj and Italy’s Evolut. According to the Italian Trade Commission in Sarajevo, the project will have an overall value of 6 million Bosnian marks (around 3 million euros), of which 80% is to be invested in the Bosnian company and 20% will go to the Italian partner. One million euros have so far been invested. The Centre is situated in the Stup zone and covers a total area of 3,200 square metres. It employs all the workforce of Grizelj and 5 new engineers in addition. The first robotised modules should be ready by the fourth quarter of this year. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Morocco-Spain: New Barcelona-Tangiers Ferry Link

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, MARCH 12 — A new maritime link between Barcelona and Tangiers has opened today thanks to Spanish company Acciona Transmediterranea. The news was reported by the press agency MAP, which quoted Spanish sources. The new line was launched yesterday at Barcelona’s Ferry Terminal by the company’s president Jorge Vega-Penichet, in front of representatives of the regional Catalan government. This is Transmediterranea’s first link from northern Spain, with other departure points towards Tangiers in the south of the country, in particular Algesiras. The ship Albayzin, which will leave twice a week, from Barcelona on Mondays and Fridays, and from Tangiers on Tuesdays and Saturdays, is able to carry 575 passengers, 200 vehicles and 2,230 linear metres of goods. In 2009, the volume of traffic with Morocco was of 848,000 passengers, 226,000 vehicles and 767,000 linear metres of goods. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: 45 Muslim Brotherhood Members Arrested

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 12 — Today Egyptian police arrested 45 members of the Muslim Brotherhood. According to the group’s website, the individuals were arrested in the governorates of Giza, Charkiya, Menufiya and Dakahleya. The website also reports that the arrests were carried out as a precautionary measure before the demonstrations and sit-ins organised by the group after Friday prayer to support the al Aqsa mosque. Commentators underlined that this clampdown by police against the Muslim Brotherhood comes after statements by several members who recently announced their intention to run for the upcoming elections to the People’s Assembly and the Shura Council. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Calls for Return of Statue of Great Pyramid Architect

(ANSAmed) — ALEXANDRIA, MARCH 12 — Nearly 9,000 Egyptian and European youth launched a campaign for the return of the statue of Hemiunu, the architect of the Great Pyramid of Giza, from Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany. In statements to MENA Friday, Bassam el-Shama’a, a member of the Egyptian Historical Studies Association, said Hemiunu is son of Prince Nefermaat and his wife Itet and is believed to be the grandson of Seneferu and Hetepheres I. Impressively, the live-size statue of Hemiunu is 1.55m high. It represents Hemiunu, seated on a block throne, his right hand decisively clenched, his left hand resting on his knee, he added. The national campaign for the restitution of Hemiunu was launched on the internet and attracted around 9,000 supporters from around the world, he added. The list of Hemiunu’s achievements is recorded on his statue, he added. They include member of the elite, high official, vizier, kings seal bearer, attendant of Nekhen, and spokesman of every resident of Pe, priest of Bastet, priest of Shesmetet, priest of the Ram of Mendes, Keeper of the Apis Bull, Keeper of the White Bull, elder of the palace, high priest of Thoth, courtier, Overseer of Royal Scribes, priest of the Panther Goddess, Director of Music of the South and North, Overseer of All Construction Projects of the King. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslim Teacher Sexually Abuses Christian Children in an Upper Egyptian School

by Mary Abdelmassih

A scandal was uncovered this week at an Upper Egyptian elementary girl’s school, where a Muslim teacher has been sexually assaulting Christian Coptic children. Copts are enraged due to the impunity with which the State Security authorities have dealt with these crimes.

The last incident took place on Tuesday 3/3/2010 in the Helwa Girl’s Elementary School, when Arabic teacher Hany Taha, lured 11-years-old Hanan Adel Aziz to the school’s lower ground floor and dragged her into the washroom. She was later rescued by another Muslim teacher when he heard her distressed screams. The village of Helwa lies in the district of Matai, 200 km south of Cairo, in the Minya Governorate.

“Hany Taha has been targeting only the school’s Christian minor girls and has five ‘known rape precedents’ in the same school. However, the guardians of the children were put under pressure to accept a reconciliation using both coercion and threats not to report the incidents, according to activist Mariam Ragy of Katiba Tibia advocacy after interviewing Adel Aziz, the victim’s father. Aziz said that the Muslim teacher lured his daughter from the classroom under the pretext that her aunt who works mornings in the same school is waiting for her. Ragy said that the accused Muslim teacher used to work in a private school before being sacked due to the same pervert behavior. “Also two transfer resolutions from this school were issued against him but were waived due to the “the existence of a family relationship between the headmistress and the brother of the accused, said Ragy. “

“Ironically, only 3 months ago did teacher Taha rape the Coptic minor Magda Bochra Shaker from the same school. Her family was forced into reconciliation with the intervention of the school headmistress,” said activist Medhat Klada of Copts United advocacy.

The education department at the school has investigated the last incident. and posed a few sanctions on the teacher, but no action was taken concerning the criminal side of this case. Attorney Naguib Gabrail who heads the Egyptian Union for Human Rights said that what happened to the Matay girl is sexual abuse of a minor girl, which is a criminal act. “We are about to present an official communication to the Attorney-General Abdel Meguid Mahmoud, to investigate the incident and bring the offender to a speedy trial,” he said.

Adel Aziz told Mariam Ragy that he is being put under pressure to reconcile with the perpetrator. “But I flatly refuse any kind of reconciliation. This is a matter touching on my honor, Taha ought to get the full brunt of the law.”

Copts all over the Minya Governorate, are angered over the double standards used by the Security authorities in handling rape cases of Muslims and Christian girls.

End November 2009, provoked by a rumor of an alleged rape of of Muslim minor by a Coptic man, villagers in Farshout ,carried out collective punishment against the whole Coptic community in the area, burning and looting their homes and property, with Muslims asking for the death penalty to be carried out on the alleged molester Girguis Baroumi. In all these incidents, State Security forces were colluding with the Muslim vigilantes.

Activist Wagih Yacoub poses the question, “Did the Copts go out and collectively punish the Muslims of Matai by burning and looting their property, just for the action of that Muslim teacher, similar to what the Farshout Muslims did to the Coptic community.?” He adds “The constant State Security interference, coercion of Coptic parents into reconciliation and withdrawal of their police report against the Muslim Taha, makes one wonder if they are not there just to protect the abuser? Is the State Security there to protect all citizens or just the Muslims?”

[Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Sex at Younger Ages, Without Considering Marriage

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 12 — Discussions on sexuality among youngsters remain taboo, even in Tunisia, the Arab country that is most open to change, both in educational institutions and in most families. And yet experts agree that data should make officials seriously consider the opportunity of offering sexual education courses in schools. Supporting this idea are the results of a study conducted last year by the National Family and Population Office (ONFP) and the Tunisian Association against sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS (ATLMST/SIDA), which reported that 13.5% of girls and 52.5% of youngsters between the age of 15 and 24 have had sex at least once, and in 60% of the cases, without the use of contraceptives. A factor that has led to a substantial increase in the number of abortions among single women. The official annual number of abortions according to statistics varies between 2,400 and 2,500. However, experts say that these figures in reality are at least three times higher due to illegal abortions. Another sign that supports calls for a targeted sexual education policy comes from official data (still from ONFP), which reports that medical visits due to fears of sexually transmitted diseases account for 65% of all medical visits to centres specialising in reproductive health services and divisions in these offices that are reserved for youngsters. Initial sexual relations, which are taking place at an average age for women of 16.4, and for men at 17.4. The increase in early sexual activity is mainly attributed to the fact that people are getting married in Tunisia at an increasingly later age: 85% of the population between the ages of 15 and 29 is currently unmarried, 5% more than six years ago. The trend is similar for Tunisians between the ages of 30 and 49: 20% of the population is unmarried compared to 16% in 2001. Forecasts do not indicate any reverse in these trends according to the National Youth Office (ONJ). Half of the younger population is against marriage, due to elevated costs of weddings (25.2%), due to the responsibility involved (19.7%) and others due to pure lack of interest. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


‘EU May Push Israel Into Peace Talks’

EU Foreign Policy chief Catherine Ashton: We may use trade ties as leverage.

The European Union might use its trade ties with Israel as leverage to pressure it into renewing peace talks with the Palestinians, Catherine Ashton, the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy at the EU said on Saturday.

Ashton was speaking at an EU foreign minister conference held in Spain. Swedish Foreign Minister, Carl Bildt, said that Israel’s announcement on building in east Jerusalem during United States Vice President Joe Biden’s visit last week was intentional and not coincidental.

Bildt said there were “no guarantees” that Israel was committed to peace.

Ashton is on the verge of a Middle East tour where she will visit Egypt, Israel, Syria and Lebanon.

Earlier Saturday, the London-based newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi reported that US Middle East envoy George Mitchell has promised the Palestinians that Israel will not construct new homes in east Jerusalem during peace negotiations.

According to the paper, Mitchell told Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas over the phone that Washington would provide the PA with guarantees that Israel would halt construction in the east of the city.

On Tuesday it was announced that 1,600 new apartments would be constructed in the east Jerusalem Jewish neighborhood of Ramat Shlomo. The announcement came during the visit of US Vice President Joe Biden and embarrassed Washinton, leading to harsh condemnations from Biden and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and to Palestinians threatening to cancel planned indirect talks with Israel. Israeli government officials, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, have apologized for the timing of the announcement, although not for the building permits themselves.

The Arab report stated that Mitchell’s promise of guarantees was given after the Palestinians refused to accept Netanyahu’s apology as a signal that construction would not move forward.

Clinton sharply admonished Netanyahu over the Interior Ministry’s approval of the new building in east Jerusalem in a phone conversation Friday.

Her call came hours ahead of a condemnation of the housing plan issued by the Quartet of the US, UN, EU and Russia.

“The Quartet has agreed to closely monitor developments in Jerusalem and to keep under consideration additional steps that may be required to address the situation on the ground,” read its statement, which also called for the resumption of peace talks. The Quartet said it would “take full stock” of the situation at its meeting in Moscow on March 19.

In her call to Netanyahu, Clinton labeled the east Jerusalem announcement “a deeply negative signal about Israel’s approach to the bilateral relationship,” one that went against the spirit of Biden’s trip to Israel this past week and “undermined trust and confidence in the peace process and in America’s interests,” according to State Department spokesman PJ Crowley.

He said that Clinton also stressed that “the Israeli government needed to demonstrate not just through words, but through specific actions, that they are committed to this relationship and to the peace process.”

Biden wrapped up a four-day visit to Israel Thursday in which he repeatedly stressed the strength of the alliance and the US commitment to Israel’s security. When news broke Tuesday about the plans for building in Ramat Shlomo, he drafted a response in consultation with US President Barack Obama using the harshest diplomatic language to condemn the move.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



How Quick They Forget: A Short History of U.S. Policy and Israeli Construction in East Jerusalem

by Barry Rubin

For more than four months the U.S. government has been celebrating Israel agreeing to stop construction on settlements in the West Bank while continuing building in east Jerusalem as a great step forward and Israeli concession deserving a reward. Suddenly, all of this is forgotten to say that Israel building in east Jerusalem is some kind of terrible deed which deserves punishment.

Israelis are used to this pattern: give a big concession and a few months later that step is forgotten as Israel is portrayed as intransigent and more concessions are demanded with nothing in return. Here is a short history of this round:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



‘No-Compromise’ Generation Arises

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 11 — A generation has arisen in Israel which feels less unease than previous ones at episodes such as the recent settlement expansion programme in East Jerusalem, greeting with a metaphorical shrug of the shoulders the umpteenth appeal for moderation, coming this time, with feelings of “friendship” by US Vice President, Joe Biden in his address this morning at Tel Aviv University. This is the new “no-compromise” generation revealed by a brand-new survey, which paints a frightening portrait of a generation an Israeli academic has no hesitation in describing as “a combination of religious fundamentalism…and racism”. Figures from the survey reveal deep-seated anti-Arab sentiment, which is sometimes overt and aggressive, among nearly half of a representative sample of Israeli students aged between 15 and 18. They are completely in favour of the settlers’ outlook and they reveal genuine xenophobia towards the “new immigrants” to Israel, whether from the former USSR or the Falasha from the Horn of Africa. The study, which was conducted by the Maagar Mochot Institute, shows that 46% of the students questioned were against the notion that Israelis of Arab origins should be able to enjoy the same rights as Hebrews. This ratio rises to 82% among those who practise their religion, but is as high as 36% among those who label themselves non-religious. Meanwhile, 16% of those interviewed where unashamed at saying that the slogan ‘death to the Arabs’ was a legitimate one. These figures find their mirror-image on the other side of the Barrier. And they make a paradoxical mix with professions of belief in democratic principles. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Twal: No People Would Accept Such an Occupation

(ANSAmed) — VATICAN CITY — “The military occupation of Palestinian territory is hard, arrogant, show fear of others and of oneself, is devoid of freedom and of rights. It feeds violence and pursues humiliation. No people would accept such an occupation”. Speaking in an interview given to the Italian weekly, Vita, the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Msg. Fouad Twal, was giving his opinion of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. According to Twal, the present leaders of Israel and Palestine “are only managing the conflict’. “They are moderate to the point of being weak. This war is the offspring of a military occupation, but nobody has the courage to say whose offspring”. “We have to work for peace and security for all. Either the Holy Land sees peace on all sides or nobody will be able to live in peace”. The main obstacles in Twal’s view are to be found in fundamentalisms: “On one side there is Hamas, and on the other side there is Shas (Israel’s ultra-orthodox party). Neither of these two is helping us to find a solution to the conflict. But if the politics of moderation brings no fruit, people will turn elsewhere, look for new pathways and even try out the wrong ones. Unfortunately the moderates have brought us nothing and people have turned to the extremists. Even among the Catholics. We are all guilty of this”. “The international community has to intervene,” the Patriarch of Jerusalem said, “but Europe, above all, has to act: not just with aid, it has to have the courage of its convictions and dare to speak the truth”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Anti Swedish Protests Continue in Turkey

Diplomatic efforts are underway to mend a rift between Sweden and Turkey, caused by the Swedish parliament’s decision to recognize the mass killing of Armenians and other ethnic groups in 1915 as genocide.

The Swedish ambassador to Turkey, Christer Asp, said protests were still underway on Saturday in some cities, following large demonstrations outside the Swedish consulate in Istanbul on Friday.

He added that his post box was over flowing with hate mail and letters indicating Swedish business interests have been affected by the dispute.

“Some of the letters are formulated in such a way that I could not repeat them in public. They are not threats but they’re not saying anything nice about Sweden, if you know what I mean,” he told the news agency TT.

Swedish foreign minister, Carl Bildt, has condemned the parliament’s vote.

“These kinds of decisions tend to increase tensions rather than reduce them,” he told news agency Reuters.

Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt has also assured his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he did not agree with the paliament’s decision — which was supported by four parliamentarians who are members of his governing centre right coalition.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



EU-Turkey: Enlargement Commissioner Fule Due in Ankara

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 11 — European Commissioner for enlargement Stefan Fule would pay a visit to Turkey on March 14 and 16, Anatolia news agency reports quoting a statement by Turkish Foreign Ministry. The ministry said this would be the first visit of Fule to Turkey since he has taken office on February 1 adding that Fule would be received by Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu as well as State Minister & Chief Negotiator for EU talks Egemen Bagis. Fule would also meet with the chairman and members of Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Commission and EU Adjustment Commission, the statement added. The issues included in the agenda of Turkey-EU relations and developments recorded in negotiation process would be assessed during the visit. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tehran: US Planned Cyber War Against Iran, Spies Arrested

(IsraelNN.com) Iran has accused the United States of trying to conduct a cyber war against the Islamic Republic and has arrested a group of 30 alleged spies.

Officials added the alleged cyber spies “waged psychological war against the Islamic Republic of Iran, organized and encouraged people to take part in illegal gatherings, collected information on nuclear scientists and gave information to spy agencies.”

According to a report published Saturday by the state-run Fars news agency, the charges included creating an intelligence-gathering network, “including identification of the country’s nuclear scientists and staging illegal demonstrations and encouraging the public to take part in them after the presidential elections.”

The government claimed the alleged spies were members from the “exiled People’s Mujahedeen and monarchists” and were funded by the administration of former U.S. President George W. Bush “to launch a cyber war against Iran.” “The Interpol has been informed to take action against some who live in the United States,” the news agency said.

A mass opposition movement has swelled in Iran over the past year in response to the lopsided election results that showed a “landslide victory” for the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad last June. Nearly daily protests spread throughout the country, led by members of 68-year-old former Iranian Prime Minister Mir-Hossein Moussavi’s Green Movement.

Moussavi, who served in office from 1981 through 1989. Hundreds of Green Movement members and other demonstrators were arrested by government forces during and after the protests. Many were injured during the demonstrations, and some were killed. There have also been numerous accounts of people being tortured in prison and “disappearing.”

Iran has sought ways to minimize the media coverage of the violence perpetrated against demonstrators by Basiji government security forces by blaming “foreign agents” who it says have infiltrated the country and have led its youth astray.

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



Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Swedish Ambassador Reassures

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 12 — “The good and friendly relations that exist between Turkey and Sweden are very solid and will remain so forever,” said the Swedish Ambassador to Ankara, Christer Asp, while leaving the Turkish Foreign Ministry today. The diplomat had been summoned there this morning following the diplomatic crisis which arose last night between Ankara and Stockholm, following the approval by the Swedish Parliament of a motion in which the massacres of Armenians are defined as “genocide”, reports private network Ntv. “And these good relations,” added Asp, “become increasingly important at times like these. Yesterday’s decision (by the Swedish Parliament) will have no effect on the Swedish government and Sweden, which will continue to provide its support Turkey’s European Union membership process”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Diplomatic Crisis With Sweden

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 12 — The Swedish Ambassador in Ankara, Christer Asp, has been summoned this morning to the Turkish Foreign Ministry following a diplomatic crisis which yesterday exploded between Ankara and Stockholm after the Swedish Parliament approved a motion in which the Armenian massacres are recognised as “genocide.” The news was reported by private television broadcaster NTV, quoting sources at the Foreign Ministry. Yesterday Ankara decided to call its Ambassador to Sweden to return to Turkey for consultations. Exactly a week after the vote by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US Congress which recognised the massacres of the Armenians at the time of the Ottoman Empire as “genocide”, the same vote of condemnation came from the Swedish Parliament yesterday, provoking an immediate and aggravated reaction from Ankara, which has cancelled the planned visit by Premier Tayyip Erdogan for the intergovernmental summit between the two countries scheduled for March 17. A few minutes after the Anadolu agency released the news of the Swedish MPs’ decision (131 votes in favour and 130 against, decisive were four MPs from the majority who ignored indications from the Government and voted with the left-wing opposition), a statement attributed to Premier Erdogan appeared on the Turkish Cabinet Office website which read: “We strongly condemn this decision which has been reached for political reasons and which does not correspond with the close friendship that links our two countries.” In addition, Ambassador Zergun Koruturk, who took up office in Sweden on November 1 last year, was immediately recalled. Ankara has always denied that the Armenian massacres were premeditated genocide and maintains that between 300,000 and 500,000 Armenians (and not the one and a half million as maintained by Yerevan) were killed in a civil war which also caused the loss of Turkish lives. On Thursday, immediately after the approval of the resolution by the US Congress committee, Ankara recalled its Ambassador, Namik Tan, who took up office on February 25. Now Ankara, as Erdogan has recently said, is waiting to know what the administration in Washington intends to do, letting it be understood that the Turkish diplomat will only return to Washington when Turkey has guarantees that the resolution will not be brought to a vote of the Congress plenary assembly. But now the problem has also arisen with Sweden, despite Foreign Minister Carl Bildt hastening to describe “the politicisation of history” as an error and to say the line of the government, which is in favour of the Turkey’s entrance into the EU, “remains unchanged.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Swedish Parliament’s Decision ‘Inequitable’, Erdogan

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 12 — Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said on Friday that The approval of Armenian resolution in the Swedish parliament was an “inconsiderate and inequitable” decision, Anatolia news agency reports quoting Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan as saying on Friday. Commenting on the approval of the resolution on Armenian allegations regarding 1915 incidents in the Swedish parliament, Erdogan said, “an incident which had occurred 95 years ago and whose reasons, results and victims have not yet emerged into daylight, has been brought in front of Turkey just like a threat in many countries. I consider this as an inconsiderate and inequitable decision.” Erdogan said the decision cast shadow over extremely positive relations between Turkey and Sweden. “Parliaments convene, vote and rule on incidents that occurred 95 years ago. This approach lacks logic and commonsense. I am underlining that such decisions will have a negative impact on our efforts aiming to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia.” Swedish Parliament on Thursday approved a resolution on Armenian allegations regarding 1915 incidents with 131 votes against 130. The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs last Thursday approved the resolution on Armenian allegations. Turkey strongly rejects the genocide allegations and regards the events as civil strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks and Armenians. Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to normalize relations between the two countries. The protocols envisage the two countries to establish diplomatic ties and open the border that has been close since 1993. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Ambassador, Italy Not Acknowledging Armenian Genocide

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 12 — Italy is not joining those countries that acknowledge the massacres of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917 as “genocide”. The announcement comes in a memo circulated today by the Italian Ambassador in Ankara, correcting reports on a Turkish television channel which had placed Italy on the list of countries that officially considered it an act of genocide. The communiqué went on to specify that what the TV station had said “did not correspond to the truth” and it pointed out that Italy’s Parliament, in a resolution passed on November 17 2000, committed the country’s government to “exerting its influence to completely overcoming any friction between peoples and minorities in the area in order to create the conditions for the respecting of the territorial integrity of the two states (Turkey and Armenia), for their peaceful coexistence and the safeguarding of human rights as part of a more rapid integration of Turkey into the European Union”. Turkish TV broadcast this denial immediately, thus closing the affair. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey-France Trade Relations to be Improved, Minister Says

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, FEBRUARY 25 — The economic relations between Turkey and France did not reflect the actual potential, Anatolia news agency reports quoting Turkish State Minister for foreign trade Zafer Caglayan as saying. “Bilateral relations should be further improved,” Caglayan said while speaking at Turkey-France 2nd Term Joint Economic Commission (JEC) meeting in Ankara. Caglayan and French Minister of State for foreign trade Anne-Marie Idrac, who is paying a visit to Ankara, addressed the JEC meeting. Caglayan said there was regression in foreign trade in 2009 because of global crisis, noting, “there is a 22% recession in Turkey’s foreign trade in 2009.” Caglayan said there was not increase in trade with France but at the same time was not affected as much as the general regression. Caglayan said total direct investments amounted to 60-65 billion USD in 2002-2009, and noted that investments of France in Turkey reached 4.4 billion USD. He said there were important French investments in Turkey like Renault and Carrefour. “Some sectors in Turkey and France are complementary. Automotive sector is an example to this. Turkey and France may cooperate in transportation and energy,” Caglayan said, noting that Turkey was a country that may make 120 billion USD investments in the next decade. Caglayan said Turkey has a very big potential in renewable energy, adding that Turkey and France could make cooperation in the third countries. French minister said trade volume between Turkey and France should be upgraded, urging shopping dynamics to be boosted. The guest minister said Turkey and France could work together in Africa, the Balkans and Central Asia. French Minister of State for foreign trade Anne-Marie Idrac said France was one of the most important investors in Turkey but Turkish companies did not undertake much investments in France.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Supports Palestine as Arab World Comatose, Says Druze Leader

‘At the time, the Ottoman Empire was the ‘sick man of Europe,’ and nowadays it’s the Arab world that is the sick man,’ says Druze leader Jumblatt. Photo: Rayya HADDAD

A powerful Druze leader in Lebanon has underlined the increasing influence of Turkey in the Middle East as the Arab world has been undergoing turmoil over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Turkey is playing an important role in its region, Walid Jumblatt, the leader of Lebanon’s Progressive Socialist Party, or PSP, said March 5 in an interview with the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

At his residence in the heart of Beirut, decorated with a mix of Oriental- and Western-style furniture, with Buddha statues alongside his everyday working desk, Jumblatt said that while half of the Arab world has been in a coma, Turkey has been supporting the Arab world’s main cause, which is, he said, the Palestinian cause.

“At one time, some Turks rightly or wrongly have accused Arabs of betraying them during World War I, but now, with the new policy of Turkey and also of Syria, we have to admit that Turkish-Arab resentment is over,” Jumblatt said when asked whether Turkey is distancing itself from the West through the recent rapprochement with its eastern neighbors.

Though he praised U.S. President Barack Obama’s speech in Cairo last year, Jumblatt also said the June 4, 2009, address lacked practical implications, whereas Turkey, with its active involvement as a mediator, is the major determining factor for the Middle East peace talks.

Citing Turkey’s Ottoman roots to define today’s Arab world, the Druze leader said, “At the time, the Ottoman Empire was the ‘sick man of Europe,’ and nowadays it’s the Arab world that is the sick man.”

The Arab League gave the green light to Palestinians on March 3 to enter indirect talks with Israel; the motion, however, was tabled after Israel announced its plan to expand Jewish settlements in east Jerusalem.

Supporting limited negotiations with the Israeli government is giving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a clear-cut victory after all, Jumblatt said. “Netanyahu will now say, ‘I’ve been colonizing the West Bank, I’ve been attacking the holy places like Haram al-Khalil and nobody is there challenging me now,’“ he said.

Praising initiatives

After his visit to Turkey in February, the Druze leader seemed impressed by the democratic initiatives started by the country’s ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP. As a neighboring country to the Arab world, Turkey is now the only successful experiment of democracy in the region, the only one that respects the rules of democracy, he said.

Nevertheless, Jumblatt said he believes that the same levels of democracy and development fail to apply for the rest of the Middle East. Referring to the latest report by the United Nations Development Programme on human development in Arab states for 2009, he reiterated that the Arab world has long suffered due to low literacy rates and fundamentalism, which he said is becoming “more depressing every year than before.”

Apart from diplomatic relations, Turkey’s growing economic ties in the region are also very much appreciated by the Druze leader, who is a successful businessman as well.

Turkey has recently lifted visa requirements for Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, leading to the creation of a visa-free Middle East for the country. The direct involvement of Turkey aimed not only to increase diplomatic relations but also to augment trade capacity amongst the Middle Eastern states.

The visa-free zone should be further developed for the benefit of each actor in the region, Jumblatt said, using the European Union as an example of how more embedded trade relations in the Middle East could work. Disputes in the EU ended with the creation of a common market in Europe, he said.

“When the Germans and French in the ‘50s decided to build new relationships starting with the abolishment of the taxes and barriers on steel at that time… they stopped fighting after having the bloodshed of World War I and World War II,” Jumblatt said.

He added that the Arab world needs to develop economic ties, keeping the European common market in mind, in order to set up healthier and more peaceful relations in the Middle East.

In addition to regional developments, Jumblatt also stressed the growing trade capacity with Cyprus. In order to further strengthen economic development, he added, both Turkish and Greek Cypriots should create an “acceptable environment.”

He expressed his hope that this would not become as complicated as the Palestinian issue.

‘Lebanon must improve ties with Syria’

With his political maneuvering and ability to emerge on the winning side of Lebanon’s civil war and its aftermath, Jumblatt is seen by his critics as the country’s “political weathervane.”

Jumblatt, who heads the country’s Druze community, recently occupied headlines with his controversial decision to leave the pro-Western March 14 Alliance of Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri to ally himself with the opposition, the Hezbollah-led March 8 Alliance.

While Jumblatt’s critics say his alliance with the Hezbollah-led coalition has complicated already tense negotiations over the new Lebanese government, Jumblatt believes the close relations with Damascus on both political and economic issues must be maintained as stated in the 1989 Taif Accord.

The importance of such relations is even evidenced by the government, Jumblatt said, citing al-Hariri’s December meeting with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus.

The two held “constructive” talks, ending five years of animosity between Syria and a broad political alliance led by al-Hariri that stemmed from the assassination of al-Hariri’s father, Rafiq al-Hariri, in a massive Beirut car-bombing in February 2005.

A United Nations inquiry in June said it had evidence that Syrian and Lebanese intelligence services were linked to the killing yet Damascus has consistently denied any involvement.

“After all we have to accept the fact that we are allies. We have only one enemy, which is Israel,” said Jumblatt, who was a vocal supporter of Syria following the civil war but campaigned against Syrian influence in Lebanon after the death of Syrian President Hafez al-Assad.

Jumblatt said there is a visible increase in Israeli aggression directed toward Lebanon in recent times. Ultimately, the Druze leader said the only chance for peace with Israel is if they give the Palestinians the rights they deserve.

“I’m proud that my father [Kamal Jumblatt] defended the Palestinian cause and died for the Palestinian cause.”

The senior Jumblatt was one of Lebanon’s most veteran political figures and was founder of the Progressive Socialist Party of Lebanon, or PSP, which united leftist parties with a secular pan-Arab ideology and supported the Palestinian nationalist movement.

Walid Jumblatt’s father was assassinated in 1977.

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

Caucasus


Bogus TV Report of Russian Invasion Panics Georgia

Panic was sparked in Georgia after a TV station broadcast news that Russian tanks had invaded the capital and the country’s president was dead.

The Imedi network report, which brought back memories of the 2008 war between Russia and Georgia, was false.

But mobile phone networks were overwhelmed with calls and many people rushed onto the streets.

Imedi said the aim had been to show how events might unfold if the president were killed. It later apologised.

The head of the holding company which owns Imedi TV, George Arveladze, said he was sorry for the distress that the TV report had caused.

‘Disgusting’

For a brief moment on Saturday evening many Georgians thought history was repeating itself, the BBC’s Tom Esslemont in Tbilisi says.

It is only 18 months since Russian tanks came within 45km (28 miles) of the Georgian capital, our correspondent adds.

In its news report, pro-government Imedi TV showed archive footage of the war and imagined how opposition figures might seize power after an assassination of the country’s President, Mikheil Saakashvili.

Although the broadcast was introduced as a simulation of possible events, the warning was lost on many Georgians, our correspondent says.

One local news agency reported that emergency services had received an unusually high volume of calls in the ensuing minutes.

And once calm returned, the report was seen by some as a poorly disguised swipe at the Georgian opposition politicians who recently travelled to Moscow to meet Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Mr Arveladze told Reuters that the aim was to show “the real threat” of how events might unfold.

That did not stop dozens of journalists and angry Georgians who gathered outside the Imedi TV studios to protest.

One opposition politician who was there labelled the report “disgusting”.

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

South Asia


Afghanistan: Nearly Half of Recruits for Afghan Police Fail Drugs Test

Britain’s attempts to bring law and order to Afghanistan have been hit by the news that up to 40 per cent of potential recruits to the country’s police force have failed drug tests.

Opium, the raw form of heroin, is by far the most common substance detected, according to British military sources.

The disclosure comes as British troops help try to recruit tens of thousands more officers to the Afghan National Police, in a move that is crucial to allowing our soldiers to withdraw.

But since compulsory drug tests were introduced last year, thousands of applicants have been turned away.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘It Just Doesn’t Add Up’: Serious Concerns Over Evidence Given by Father of British Boy Kidnapped in Pakistan

Police in Pakistan say they still have new questions about the evidence given to them by the father of kidnapped five-year-old Sahil Saeed before he left the country to return to Britain.

Detectives in his family’s home city of Jhelum say they want to speak again to Raja Naqqash Saeed — who flew to Manchester early last Tuesday — over key elements of the testimony he has given them.

A senior police source said investigators are troubled by the claim that the £100,000 ransom demand for Sahil was made in sterling — when previous kidnappers of British citizens have made their demands in Pakistani rupees.

Police, who believe someone ‘very close’ to the family may be involved in the plot, also want to ask Raja more about the second of two calls he says he received from the kidnappers which they believe may have been made from Britain.

‘Some of the things the father has told us just don’t seem to add up and we would like to speak to him about them in more detail,’ the source said. ‘We are not happy that he has left the country in this way.’

A Mail on Sunday investigation has meanwhile discovered that Raja, 28, and Sahil’s 31-year-old mother Akila lived apart for more than a year before his abduction and only reunited in Britain weeks before the kidnapping.

Family members said their relationship had deteriorated to the extent that Akila, who was raised in Britain, informed the Home Office they were estranged, dashing Raja’s hopes of getting a British passport.

Just five days after Sahil’s abduction in Jhelum, Raja stunned relatives in Pakistan by leaving his family’s home after telling his mother he was going to the local police station to check on the investigation.

Instead, he drove to the capital Islamabad where he caught a flight to Manchester early on Tuesday. He is understood to have been met by plain-clothes officers.

Greater Manchester Police have said that Mr Saeed is not being treated as a suspect. They have also stressed that he is co-operating fully with them.

Raja’s uncle Raja Bisharat told us: ‘We weren’t worried when he said he was going to the police station because officers had been questioning him on a regular basis since the kidnap and we thought it was just another appointment.

‘He took his car, drove away and never returned. The next morning, his car was returned to us by the police and he had gone to Britain.’

Raja booked his plane ticket a day after a harrowing one-to-one meeting with Pakistan’s interior minister Rehman Malik, who made it clear to reporters afterwards that he believed someone ‘very close to the family’ was involved in the kidnap.

Raja’s departure from Pakistan was the latest twist in a kidnapping that took place against the background of feuding parents torn apart by cultural differences, money issues and jobless Raja’s failure to get a British passport.

Sahil was about to return home to Britain with his father 10 days ago after a three-week stay at his grandmother’s home in Jhelum when a gang of four gunmen burst into the family compound and, after a six-hour robbery, fled with Sahil.

Raja says he was phoned with a ransom demand for £100,000 after the kidnapping and received a further call on his mobile phone from the kidnappers using a Spanish number two days later telling him to await further instructions.

The drama unfolded after Raja and Akila had been separated for more than a year. Raja returned to Pakistan while Akila stayed in Oldham with their three children. They reunited briefly but fell out within weeks. Raja then took his son to his grandmother’s house in Jhelum in February.

Almost eight years after their May 2002 wedding, Raja still has a Pakistani passport and has indefinite stay status in Britain but not citizenship because of his lengthy trip to Pakistan and Akila’s contact with the Home Office, the relatives said.

Normally, a Pakistani who married a British passport holder can expect to have a British passport within five years.

The Mail on Sunday revealed last week how Raja took Sahil out of school in Oldham and to Pakistan after a bitter row, taking Akila’s passport with him so she could not follow them.

It was only when family elders intervened that he agreed to return to Britain with Sahil.

A close relative, who asked not to be named, said: ‘Raja pretended he had come back to Pakistan with Sahil because his mother was ill but that was just eyewash.

‘He came back as he simply couldn’t get on with his wife. The marriage had collapsed so he came back to Pakistan and only returned to the UK when family members stepped in.

‘Akila had written to the Home Office asking them to stop the naturalisation process and not to issue Raja with a passport because they were estranged.’

Divorcee Akila married Raja, a cousin, after the failure of her first marriage to another Pakistani man also from Jhelum. There were no children from that marriage.

Raja, whose late father and uncle ran a cement business in Jhelum, came from a poorer family than Akila’s.

But her family hoped he would find work in Britain and support Akila and the three children they had together — Sahil and daughters Anisha, four, and Hafsah, 21 months. However, Raja struggled to find work. They split up and Raja returned to Pakistan in 2008, leaving Akila and her three children alone in Oldham, according to family members. ‘When he was back in Pakistan he fell in with a bad crowd — bad Muslims who drink liquor and smoke hash,’ one of them said.

Other members of Raja’s family had been involved in local feuds. Two of his young cousins were killed last year in a feud between rival gangs.

When Sahil disappeared, police initially treated Raja as a potential suspect and officers said they still had concerns over two aspects of his story — the Pakistani kidnappers asking for the ransom money in pounds and the call from kidnappers reportedly made from a Spanish telephone number to Raja two days after the kidnapping.

A police source said they believed the call may in fact have come from Britain, suggesting a link to a criminal gang in the UK.

Deputy Superintendent of Police Raja Tahir Bashir said he would have preferred Raja to stay in Pakistan and would like to speak to him further.

For relatives, the past five days have been profoundly unsettling. ‘We could never imagine Raja would be involved in anything like this,’ one of them said. ‘We can’t understand why he ran away the way he did.’

Last week Raja denied that his family had any involvement in Sahil’s disappearance. He said: ‘That’s totally rubbish, I don’t know who [the kidnappers] are, I don’t know where they come from.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Malaysia Slams Sweden Over Cartoons

The Malaysian foreign minister has asked Sweden to take action against newspapers which reprinted a caricature of the Prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog last week.

“Malaysia strongly denounces the reprinting of the caricature of Prophet Muhammad by three Swedish newspapers on 10 March 2010,” foreign minister Anifah Aman said in an unusually outspoken statement yesterday.

He said his country was concerned that such “despicable acts disregard the

sensitivity of the Muslim world in the name of freedom of expression.”

“Such irresponsible acts are provocative and offensive in nature and hence

it is totally unacceptable,” he added.

“Malaysia wishes to request the Swedish government to take measures against

such publications to prevent the recurrence of such irresponsible acts in the

future.”

The country’s conservative Islamic party, PAS, announced plans to organize a demonstration and submit a formal letter of protest to the Swedish embassy over the re-printing of the caricature.

Sweden’s ambassador to Malaysia told the news agency TT that the demonstration is expected to happen at the end of the week, following Friday prayers.

The Malaysian foreign minister’s comments came at the end of a week which saw the arrest of seven people over an alleged plot to assassinate cartoonist Lars Vilks, who drew the caricature and who has a $100,000 bounty on his head from an Al-Qaeda-linked group. When the news of the plot broke, a number of Swedish newspapers reprinted the caricature, as a gesture of support for the cartoonist’s freedom of expression.

The original controversy started when a Swedish regional daily published Vilks’ satirical cartoon in 2007, prompting protests by local Muslims which later led to international protests. Egypt, Iran and Pakistan have all lodged formal complaints with the Swedish government.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



U.S. Defense Contractors Tied to Effort to Track and Kill Militants

Under the cover of a benign government information-gathering program, a Defense Department official set up a network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help track and kill suspected militants, according to military officials and businessmen in Afghanistan and the United States.

[Return to headlines]

Far East


Kyrgyzstan — Uzbekistan: Tensions Rising Between Bishkek and Tashkent, Border Sector Closed

Border incidents are on the rise with guards firing at each other. Uzbekistan wants to stop Kyrgyzstan from building a dam on the Naryn River, fearing it might reduce the volume of water flowing downstream.

Bishkek (AsiaNews/Agencies) — The rising tensions between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan are causing violent incidents along the countries’ shared border, especially in the Fergana Valley. Adding fuel, on 1 March Uzbekistan unilaterally closed one of the largest border crossings between the two countries.

Uzbek officials said the Kara-Suu-Avtodorozhnyy checkpoint was off-limits to all traffic because of needed repairs. Closure of the border crossing is hurting business on the Kyrgyz side in Kara-Suu, where local traders have become used to supplying Chinese goods to Uzbekistan.

The relationship between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan began deteriorating two years ago when Tashkent jacked up the price for its natural gas, leaving its Kyrgyz neighbour without enough fuel to face the cold winter.

Unlike other countries of the region, Kyrgyzstan lacks both oil and natural gas. However, it has many important rivers, and the government in Bishkek has recently begun the construction of a big hydroelectric plant named Kambarata-1on the Naryn River to generate electric power.

Uzbek leaders have objected to the project, saying it would reduce water flow to Uzbek territory, and negatively impact agriculture, potentially damaging the country’s cotton sector, especially in summer.

Disputes between the two countries have their roots in Soviet times, when Moscow encouraged integration of the various republics at the expense of their self-sufficiency. Back then, Kyrgyzstan could rely on other Soviet republics to meet its energy need.

Experts note that in the last few months incidents between the two countries have increased with border guards of both countries abusing the human rights of the citizens of the other.

On 17 January, in the Jalalabad District for example, Uzbek soldiers held a Kyrgyz frontier guard prisoner for six days after shooting at him.

On 1 March, Kyrgyz border guards detained four Uzbek shepherds, accusing them of crossing the border illegally.

Three days later, Kyrgyz frontier guards shot and killed an Uzbek citizen and wounded another in Batken Province.

Helping to fuel the confrontational mood is the fact that roughly 20 per cent of the 1,375 kilometre border has not been clearly defined.

Many fear that all this might be just the beginning of a wider conflict. Analyst Alexander Knyazev told Eurasianet that Tashkent is prepared to do anything to stop the Kambarata dam project, “including the use of military methods of intervention”.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


French Hostages ‘Freed in Darfur’

Two French hostages seized in the Central African Republic on 22 November have been freed in neighbouring Darfur, the French foreign minister says.

Bernard Kouchner was quoted by news agency AFP as saying the pair, who worked for the Triangle charity, had been released.

They were thought to have been taken by gunmen in the town of Birao, on the CAR border with Chad and Sudan.

A number of aid group staff have been abducted in the region recently.

Mr Kouchner said in a statement that the two had been freed and were heading to the Sudanese capital Khartoum, AFP reported.

They were working for the French aid group Triangle Generation Humanitaire when they were kidnapped.

The region is home to hundreds of thousands of displaced people, including many made homeless by conflicts in Sudan’s western Darfur region.

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

Immigration


Italy: Vicenza is Municipality With Most Foreigners

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, MARCH 12 — With over 20% of the population made up of foreigners, Arzignano, a town in the province of Vicenza famous for its tanning and mechanical industries, has the highest resident immigrant population. According to data from ISMU, referring to January 1 2009, the city with the lowest number of resident foreigners is Taranto, with less than 1% of the population. In order followed Sassari (1%), Bari, Foggia and Salerno (2%), Naples, Catania, Palermo, Cagliari, Giugliano in Campania and Messina (3%). The largest city in the north with the lowest number of resident foreigners on January 1 2009 was Genoa with 7%, while the largest municipality in the South with the greatest number of resident foreigners on the same date was Reggio Calabria with 4%. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Phony Christian Outrage: NYT Panics Over Slaying of Sacred Cow

In Obamanutz: A Cult Leader Takes the White House, I devoted an entire chapter to The Great American Dumb Down by way of explaining the variables that contributed to the installation of Barack Obama into the White House.

Not content to merely throw away billions of your hard-earned tax dollars on substandard schools that refuse to teach the most basic academic skills, the Left has also hijacked your children’s social development. Under the rubric of teaching “diversity” and “social justice”, public schools have become indoctrination centers, dedicated to teaching impressionable young people that America really ought to be ashamed of itself. The term “diversity” is liberal code that has nothing to do with the stated agenda of “multiculturalism,” which is supposed to be the study of different cultures. Diversity, as defined by liberal academics, means pushing extreme left wing values onto innocent schoolchildren with impunity.

Bill Ayers is a leading advocate of social justice teaching. Even young evangelicals—that is, the children of the religious Right—have been deluded into believing in “social justice;” eighteen- to twenty-nine-year-old evangelicals voted for Obama, in spite of his record on abortion. Many of these young people claimed that it was the pursuit of social justice that put them in the Obama camp. “Social justice” is just more aged hippie jargon; it has no real meaning other than to disrupt the current social order. So effective was this inculcation that thirty-two percent of eighteen- to twenty-nine-year-old evangelicals voted for Obama, twice the number who voted for John Kerry in 2004. David Horowitz defines “social justice” as shorthand for opposition to the American traditions of individual justice and free markets. So pervasive is the Ayers social justice model that teachers weave radical ideology into core subjects; for example, using an Iraq body count to teach math.

Students have no frame of reference to see how absurd this is. Schools today emphasize America’s past mistakes and injustices, rather than her achievements.

[…]

David Horowitz told Sean Hannity on the Sean Hannity show March 9, 2009, that the current goal of public education is not to provide students with academic knowledge; it is to organize an anti-capitalist revolt.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Climate Scientists Get Hot Under the Collar

An international group of national science bodies is to review the United Nations climate body in a bid to restore confidence in the beleaguered institution.

The InterAcademy Council (IAC), a Netherlands-based group of 15 national academies of science, will examine the work of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced earlier this week.

The IPCC acknowledged in January that several of its key warnings in a 3,000-page report published in 2007 were exaggerated.

The body’s defenders insist its problem is one of public relations, that its methodologies are fine and that the climate change science is sound.

Andreas Fischlin, head of Zurich University’s terrestrial systems ecology group and coordinating lead author of one of the chapters in the 2007 report, says criticism of the IPCC is “completely out of proportion”.

But he also has little confidence in the review proposed by the IPCC and says the body could have avoided much of the mess had it stuck to its own rules.

“I therefore rather emphasize measures to improve the current assessment procedures, such that the application of the existing IPCC rules is strengthened and more likely to be applied rigorously throughout,” Fischlin told swissinfo.ch by email.

Ban said “there were a very small number of errors” in the report, which cited more than 10,000 scientific papers and was the basis for the Nobel Prize which the IPCC shared the same year with Al Gore, the former US vice-president.

“Let me be clear. The threat posed by climate change is real,” Ban told reporters alongside panel chairman Rajendra Pachauri. “Nothing that has been alleged or revealed in the media recently alters the fundamental scientific consensus on climate change.”

India and China

Notwithstanding Ban’s confidence, the errors, which included an unsubstantiated projection of Himalayan glaciers melting by 2035 and a slip-up in rudimentary Dutch geography, undermined trust in the institution and exposed dissenting voices among global policymakers — and the public — over the soundness of climate science.

“ The press has done a lousy job. “

Andreas Fischlin

India’s environment and forests minister, Jairam Ramesh, recently told the Wall Street journal he was “a climate agnostic” and Xie Zhenhua, China’s top climate negotiator, has said “there are still two different viewpoints in the scientific field” on the subject of man-made global warming.

A survey conducted in the United States released last month found that only 35 per cent of people there believe man-made global warming is real.

The IPCC defends the report and its reputation. “We believe the conclusions of that report are really beyond any reasonable doubt,” said Pachauri, an engineer by training, who has been resisting calls from critics for his resignation despite coming under sustained attack.

Robbert Dijkgraaf, a mathematical physicist and co-chair of the IAC, said the review would be entirely independent of the UN but would be funded by it. The panel will present its report by the end of August.

“We enter this process with no preconceived conclusions,” Dijkgraaf said but noted the while the panel would review the UN’s practices, it “will definitely not go over all the data, the vast amount of data in climate science”.

Following the rules

The IAC panel will be formed in the next few weeks and will try to answer questions about how the IPCC should deal with dissenting opinions within climate science, a field that includes a variety of disciplines.

The goal is to put in place quality control procedures for the next report, scheduled for 2014.

The IPCC has come under blistering criticism even from some of those who believe that it has “admirable objectives” and is worth sustaining.

One such is US climate scientist Roger Pielke Jr., who, in a scathing indictment of the UN body published in Britain’s Guardian newspaper last week, accused it of gross errors, cover-ups and “wrongheaded behaviour”.

Pielke also says the body also engages in policy advocacy, which is specifically outside its mandate.

In fairness, a month earlier, the paper published an opinion piece by a climate campaigner at Greenpeace, who defended the “gold-standard scientific reporting of the IPCC” from “a motley assortment of cranks, ideologues and special interest voices” in the US.

The New Scientist says it was too easy for some numbers “to find their way into public presentations of IPCC reports without sufficiently rigorous assessment”. The journal Nature says the problem is “only superficially about the science”.

Proponents of man-made global warming, who long dominated the debate on climate science, are now “scared shitless” about deniers gaining the upper hand, Nature quotes Stanford University ecologist Paul Ehrlich in a March 11 editorial. It recommends PR training for scientists.

In Zurich, Andreas Fischlin is exasperated with the media, arguing they consistently get the facts wrong. “The press has done a lousy job,” he says in reference to the way publications like Nature and the prestigious Neue Zürcher Zeitung have covered the IPCC’s foibles. “It’s out of touch with reality.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Exposing the Myth of Moderate Islam

I have always maintained that “moderate Muslim” is an oxymoron. We have two kinds of Muslims: Terrorist Muslims and ignorant Muslims. The former are those who know Islam well and live by its dictums. The latter have no clue about their religion and have an idealized image of Islam that has no bases in facts.

Mr. Tarek Fatah’s editorial published in National Post on March 12, 2010 confirms my view. Fatah attended a debate between Dr. Wafa Sultan, the courageous ex-Muslim woman that shook the Arab world when in an Aljazeera televised debate she pointed out that the problem with the Muslim world is Islam, and Dr. Daniel Pipes, a scholar of Islamic history and the director of the Middle East Forum.

In this debate Pipes argued that Islam is not essentially an intolerant religion and that there have been instances when Jews who were persecuted in Christian countries had sought refuge in Muslim lands. Sultan disagreed and reminded her audience that Muhammad had raided several Jewish tribes who lived in Arabia, massacred their unarmed men and allowed his marauding band to rape their women, while always reserving the prettiest for himself.

Upon hearing these comments, Fatah was “traumatized”. “Even a hardened secular Muslim such as myself was deeply hurt by what I heard that evening,” wrote Fatah.

While acknowledging the validity of Sultan’s criticism of Islam, Fatah repined that “instead of using her newfound fame to challenge the established theocracies and corrupt kingdoms of the Middle East, Sultan veered off the deep end and could not resist the temptation of becoming the poster child of Islam haters, joining their ranks with the fervour of a convert.”

Why should Sultan challenge the established theocracies and corrupt kingdoms when these are the rotten fruits of the poisonous tree of Islam? As a medical doctor she is trained to look at the cuase of the disease and not the symptoms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100313

Financial Crisis
» Greece Debt: EU Agrees Bailout Deal
» Greece Bailout Ping-Pong
» Little Left to Laugh About in Impoverished Greece
 
USA
» Illinois Lawmakers Get Eviction Notices
» Islamic ‘Lawfare’ Targets Rifqa Bary’s Friends
» N.J. Terror Suspect Sharif Mobley Tied to Radical Yemeni Cleric Anwar Al-Awlaki
» State Plan Fines Feds $2,000 Over Gun Rules
 
Europe and the EU
» Ireland: Three Released in Cartoonist Inquiry
» Italian Judges: ‘Berlusconi Danger to Democracy’
» Italy: Court Overturns Gag on Political Chat Shows
» Pope OKs German Abuse Moves
» Second U.S. Woman Probed in Cartoonist Plot
» South Asian ‘Slave Brides’ Causing Concern in UK
» UK: Growing Fears Over Muslim Prison ‘Gangs’
 
Balkans
» Serbia-Israel: Cooperation in Agriculture Sector
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Crowd of 3 Thousand Muslims Attack a Coptic Christian Community, 25 Injured
» Muslim Mob Attacks Christians at Church in Egypt, 25 Injured
» Sexual Harassment in Egypt
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» EU: Moratinos: Firm Stance Needed Against Settlements
» Gaza: Israeli Raid After Rocket Launch
» Israel Seals Off West Bank as Precautionary Measure
 
Middle East
» Saudi Arabia: Death Sentence for Lebanese Magician Upheld
» Turkey: Ambassador to Sweden Recalled on Armenia Genocide Vote
» Turkey: A Threat, Yet Again
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Silver Star Winner Reprimanded for Afghan Battle
» Pakistan: Punjab: Christian Maid Burned Alive to Prevent Her From Reporting a Rape
 
Far East
» China: Lawmaker Proposes 15 Years in Prison for Petitioning
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Sacked South African Sex Worker Claims Unfair Dismissal
 
Latin America
» Colombia: Documentary Reveals Truth Behind FARC
 
Immigration
» Malta Shifts Immigrant Rescue Policy as Spat With Italy Grows
» Turkey, Greece Join EU Project to Share Illegal Migration Burden
 
Culture Wars
» Banished! City Forbids Bible Studies in Homes
» New York Times Pays Execs Extra to Hire Minorities and Women Instead of White Guys
» Stupak: Dems Told Me They Want to Fund Abortions Because More Kids Mean Higher Health-Care Costs
» Texas Conservatives Win Curriculum Change
 
General
» The Problems of Neopaganism

Financial Crisis


Greece Debt: EU Agrees Bailout Deal

Exclusive: Germany plays pivotal role in potential eurozone rescue package for Greek debts

The eurozone has agreed a multibillion-euro bailout for Greece as part of a package to shore up the single currency after weeks of crisis, the Guardian has learnt.

Senior sources in Brussels said that Berlin had bowed to the bailout agreement despite huge resistance in Germany and that the finance ministers of the “eurozone” — the 16 member states including Greece who use the euro — are to finalise the rescue package on Monday. The single currency’s rulebook will also be rewritten to enforce greater fiscal discipline among members.

The member states have agreed on “co-ordinated bilateral contributions” in the form of loans or loan guarantees to Greece if Athens finds itself unable to refinance its soaring debt and requests help from the EU, a senior European commission official said.

Other sources said the aid could rise to €25bn (£22.6bn), although it is estimated in European capitals that Greece could need up to €55bn by the end of the year.

Germany, the EU’s traditional paymaster, but the most reluctant to come to the rescue of a fiscal delinquent in the current crisis, has played the pivotal role in organising the rescue package, the sources added.

“There have been quite intensive preparations under the eurogroup. We have the ways and means to do it,” said the senior official, asking not to be named because of the subject’s sensitivity.

“It will be a co-ordinated approach of bilateral contributions [between EU governments] … A bilateral contribution can be a loan or a loan guarantee. The guarantees will facilitate the kind of funds potentially needed in this context.”

The rules governing the operation of the single currency proscribe a bailout for a country on the brink of insolvency. Berlin, in particular, has been worried that any bailout of Greece could be challenged in its constitutional court.

The senior official said the agreement — which will not involve any contribution from the UK taxpayer — had been tailored to respect the bailout ban and avoid a supreme court challenge in Germany.

Alongside the financial relief package for Greece, the European commission is rushing through tougher rules for the eurozone, using powers conferred by the recently enacted Lisbon treaty to try to establish a system of rigorous “budgetary surveillance” of all 16 participating countries. The aim is a new regime of “reinforced economic policy co-ordination” in the EU.

“This is the essential lesson that has to be learned from the Greek case,” Olli Rehn of Finland, the new commissioner for economic and monetary affairs, told the Guardian (and four other European papers).

“The Greek case is a potential turning point for the eurozone,” said Rehn in the interview. “If Greece fails and we fail, this will do serious and maybe permanent damage to the credibility of the European Union. The euro is not only a monetary arrangement, but a core political project of the European Union … In that sense, we are at a crossroads.”

While ready to bail out the Greeks if only on terms of “rigorous conditionality”, European leaders are hoping that the rescue will not be needed, that the draconian package of austerity measures announced by Prime Minister George Papandreou will be enough to calm the markets and stabilise the euro.

EU leaders are to rule next week on whether Papandreou is doing enough to slash the 12.7% budget deficit by four percentage points this year, part of his ambition to cut the deficit by 10 points over three years.

Rehn said he would unveil new proposals next month, enshrining a new single currency regime of “rigorous surveillance of national budgets” and that Eurostat, the EU’s statistical agency, would need to be given formidable new auditing powers over the books of eurozone member states, a demand that may be resisted by EU governments.

“That’s the hard core of our proposal. [The surveillance] should be automatic,” said Rehn. “We have an immediate corrective instrument for the Greek case, plus another framework to prevent new Greek crises.”

Inside the commission, officials are confident that Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, supports the tough new regime being plotted. Schäuble, who uses a wheelchair and is currently in hospital, and will not attend key meetings in Brussels on Monday and Tuesday.

Schäuble enjoys a longstanding reputation as a European integrationist and is said to have played a central role in shaping the Greek bailout plans despite widespread hostility to any such moves in Germany.

Over the past week, he has sparked a major debate by calling for a European Monetary Fund to underpin the currency, and yesterday stoked more controversy by proposing that serial sinners in the eurozone could be expelled from the single currency club.

The EMF concept is for the long-term and a new rule enabling expulsion from the euro club would require the Lisbon treaty to be re-opened, a nightmare for most after labouring over it for almost nine years.

While senior figures in Brussels believe that Chancellor Angela Merkel and Schäuble are intensely serious about establishing an EMF, they also suspect they are using the idea to assuage hostile public opinion in Germany and “prepare a short-term fire brigade operation for Greece”.

[Return to headlines]



Greece Bailout Ping-Pong

Vasia Veremi may be only 28, but as a hairdresser in Athens, she is keenly aware that, under a current law that treats her job as hazardous to her health, she has the right to retire with a full pension at age 50.

“I use a hundred different chemicals every day — dyes, ammonia, you name it,” she said. “You think there’s no risk in that?”

“People should be able to retire at a decent age,” Ms. Veremi added. “We are not made to live 150 years.”

Perhaps not, but it is still difficult to explain to outsiders why the Greek government has identified at least 580 job categories deemed to be hazardous enough to merit retiring early — at age 50 for women and 55 for men.

As a consequence of decades of bargains struck between strong unions and weak governments, Greece has promised early retirement to about 700,000 employees, or 14 percent of its work force, giving it an average retirement age of 61, one of the lowest in Europe.

The law includes dangerous jobs like coal mining and bomb disposal. But it also covers radio and television presenters, who are thought to be at risk from the bacteria on their microphones, and musicians playing wind instruments, who must contend with gastric reflux as they puff and blow.

The situation in the United States is different but also painful. The government will face its own fiscal reckoning, analysts say, as 78 million baby boomers begin drawing on Social Security and Medicare programs to support them in retirement. Without some combination of higher taxes, benefit reductions or an increase in the retirement age, both programs will run short of money to make their promised payments within the next few decades. And many American states are woefully behind on funding their pension obligations for public employees.

In Europe, the conflict has already erupted on the streets, with workers demanding that generous retirement policies be kept while governments press to pare pensions and raise retirement ages because taxpayers cannot bear any additional weight and creditors will no longer finance excessive borrowing.

According to research by Jagadeesh Gokhale, an economist at the Cato Institute in Washington, bringing Greece’s pension obligations onto its balance sheet would show that the government’s debt is in reality equal to 875 percent of its gross domestic product, which is the broadest measure of a nation’s economic output. That would be the highest debt level among the 16 nations that use the euro, and far above Greece’s official debt level of 113 percent.

Other countries have obscured their total obligations as well. In France, where the official debt level is 76 percent of economic output, total debt rises to 549 percent once all of its current pension promises are taken into account. And in Germany, the current debt level of 69 percent would soar to 418 percent.

There is much more in the article including a nice country by country table of current debt obligations and unfunded liabilities. Here is a partial list.

Greece   116%   875%
France   76%   549%
Germany   72%   418%
UK   63%   442%
Poland   50%   1550%
US   84%   500%

           — Hat tip: REP [Return to headlines]



Little Left to Laugh About in Impoverished Greece

Greek national pride is suffering, now that the nation has stooped to international panhandling.

By Marloes de Koning in Athens

Two subjects currently dominate the Greek news. The measures taken against the financial crisis, and a sex tape featuring local TV celebrity and model, Julia Alexandratou. The starlet claims the recording was intended for private use, but a few days ago it became available in newsstands and 200,000 copies were sold.

Comedian Lakis Lazopoulos put two and two together in his popular TV show. He made a clip with the covers of sex tapes marked with financial terms and crisis imagery. “Lost in the gaping budget hole,” one cover read. Prime minister George Papandreou could be seen hanging from chains in German chancellor Angela Merkel’s SM-themed torture chamber. Papandreou is often portrayed nowadays as a vagrant who goes around begging for money from other government leaders.

Blame the government

Little is left of Greek national pride, Lazopoulos lamented. His weekly TV-show, Al Tsantiri Niouz (‘News from the gypsy tent’), draws a bigger audience than Greek football teams’ matches in the pan-European Champions League. After some jokes about sex, he hit a more sombre note, predicting more social unrest to come. His description of how the Greeks are currently feeling was rewarded with roaring applause: “When Europe said ‘stop’, our politicians asked the people: ‘give back the money we stole from you’.”

Support for the Greek government’s far-reaching cutbacks is waning now that the citizens are starting to feel the effects. A month ago, 70 percent of the population still supported prime minister Papandreou’s reform measures, now only half still does. On Thursday, Greeks hit the streets to protest the cutbacks, which are supposed to reduce the budget deficit. Public transport was at a standstill, flights were cancelled and hospitals were only dealing with emergencies. The Greeks are afraid, Lazopoulos said in an interview conducted in his dressing room after the show. They feel they’ve been “taken hostage” by a system that leaves the political parties in control of everything. Those who have a politician to thank for their jobs are not inclined to let him or her fall soon.

Greek resentment is growing. Last week the leader of the country’s biggest trade union was beaten so badly by protestors he ended up in hospital. Many Greeks feel the unions are too close to the socialist government.

No money left

Next Monday, VAT will be raised to 21 percent. The price of a pack of cigarettes has already risen by a full euro in one week, and now stands at 4.20 euros. This month, civil servants will see their pay cheques reduced for the first time. Easter is approaching, but this major holiday in Orthodox Greece will have to be celebrated with bonuses that are 30 percent lower than last year. The Christmas and summer bonus, amounting to an effective thirteenth and fourteenth month in salary for civil servants, will be abandoned. Hotels have already reported that domestic tourism is on the decline. Easter bookings are 60 percent down from last year.

Some hotels will remain closed altogether. “No Easter for us this year,” the comedian Lazopoulos sang to the melody ‘Non, je ne regrette rien’. His pockets, turned inside out, dangled from the sides of his trousers.

Officials have started calling the Greek problem, ‘the Greek case study’. On their visits to Berlin, Paris and Washington last week, the prime minister and finance minister seemed to convince everyone that, while the Greeks have major issues with creative bookkeeping and a towering public debt, the current crisis really demonstrates the lack of a common European economic policy.

Unfair measures

Last weekend, the German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, proposed forming a European equivalent to the International Monetary Fund to help euro countries that are in trouble. While this might help in future crises, for the average Greek citizen, it will make no difference for years to come.

According to Savas Robolis, the head of a labour market research agency operated by Greece’s largest coalition of unions GSEE, Greeks with below average paycheques are taking a double hit. Both the pay cuts and the raised taxes place a disproportionate burden on people who didn’t have much to begin with, he said. “The measures are unfair,” he added.

Because households have less money to spend, consumption will drop, leaving Greece lingering in recession for longer. Robolis predicted it would last until 2015. “Future generations will be burdened with the higher interest rates Greece is now paying on treasury bonds,” he added. The higher tax burden would also lead people to find “new ways of tax evasion” he warned.

Social unrest

Rumour has it that Theodoros Pagalos, the second most powerful man in the governing socialist party, Pasok, has advised the minister of health to hold back on expanding the country’s smoking ban for the time being, because the Greeks “have enough on their hands as it is”.

“It is only a rumour,” grinned Alexandros Karamalikis, the manager of Black Duck, a bar/restaurant/gallery in Athens’ business district, “but it does illustrate the mood well. We have no money, but we do like to go out and have fun, so let us smoke our cigarette in peace.”

In Greece, there is little left to laugh about. When comedian Lazopoulos mentioned the high prices and low pensions, his audience fell silent. “We still laugh,” he later said in his dressing room. “But it sounds hollow. Like the forced laughter at your grandmother’s death bed, used to hide from her the fact she is dying. We do not laugh because we don’t know what’s ailing Greece. We laugh because we do.”

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

USA


Illinois Lawmakers Get Eviction Notices

Budget crunch means state is slow to pay office rents

The state’s money problems are so bad that lawmakers are getting eviction notices and calls from collection agencies about their offices back home.

At least five state senators say they’ve piled up so much unpaid rent, sheepish landlords are asking them when the government plans to make good on its bills.

“He said, ‘Ira, I’m sorry,’“ said Sen. Ira Silverstein, D-Chicago, recalling a visit from his landlord delivering an eviction notice. “And what am I going to do? I can’t argue with the man.”

While none of the lawmakers has actually gotten the boot yet, they are getting a taste of the frustratingly slow pace at which the state pays bills as it careens toward a $13 billion budget hole. It’s a pain that’s magnified exponentially for school districts, drug rehabilitation counselors and businesses awaiting tax refunds.

“It certainly puts us in a position of looking like deadbeats,” said Sen. Mike Jacobs, an East Moline Democrat who got an eviction notice last year from a longtime friend who has rented the same building for years to the senator and his father before him. Payment eventually arrived — nine months late — but Jacobs was prepared to pay if the state had failed to come through.

A notice threatening eviction startled freshman Sen. Dan Duffy, a Lake Barrington Republican. Unsure when the state will cough up the $10,000 it owes his landlord, Duffy is scrambling to see if he can take refuge in a nearby secretary of state driver’s license outlet or a local library should he eventually get evicted.

“When they can’t pay the rent of a Senate office, there’s no way they’re going to be able to pay the hundreds of millions of dollars in bills that they have back due,” Duffy said. “It just shows what a tragic crisis we’re in and how far out of hand this is.”

In the grand scope of what ails state government, the lawmakers all said they recognized late rent for Senate offices is far from the most pressing budget issue.

Each senator receives $83,063 a year as a district office allowance, and the bills end up at the comptroller’s office.

Every day, comptroller workers sift through bills for all of state government and prioritize what must be paid and what has to wait. Each month, $2 billion is set aside. The state must make payments to schools and repay short-term loans. It must pay hospitals, nursing homes and doctors caring for Medicaid patients within 30 days in order to get the best return from the federal government.

Languishing further back in line are the bills to pay rents for lawmaker district offices.

Steve Brown, spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, said he knew of no eviction notices going to House members, but has heard that some legislators “on the brink” have had to dip into their own pockets or campaign funds to pay landlords or keep phone service.

Getting utility bills paid in a timely fashion has been a problem for Sen. John Jones, R-Mount Vernon.

“I’ve heard from collection agencies every month on the power bill and the phone bill,” Jones said. The state once fell seven months behind on his district office’s $900-a-month rent, and he recalled the landlord saying, “I gotta pay my bills, and I need my money.”

Sen. Dan Kotowski, D-Park Ridge, said the state may be as much as one year and $24,000 behind on his office’s lease payments and that he’s had to dip into campaign funds to make phone payments.

“Service was shut down,” Kotowski said. “I wasn’t able to communicate with my constituents, and constituents were not able to communicate with me, and I just decided to use other funds to pay for it.”

Silverstein said his landlord did get a payment after the senator received the eviction notice, at least temporarily defusing the situation.

But Silverstein’s landlord, Demetrios Spyrakos, said Friday he hasn’t received rent payments since October. He’s owed more than $12,000 from the state.

Spyrakos blames Gov. Pat Quinn, who’s tried but failed to get an income tax increase approved. The Jamestown Realty co-owner said he thinks Silverstein is a “good person, but I’ve been asking for the rent. He’s trying, but nobody listens to him or to me.”

Silverstein, whose office is in the West Rogers Park neighborhood, might have to find a new place to work out of soon.

“If I don’t get my money by next month, I have to ask him politely to leave and try to find another tenant,” Spyrakos said. “What else can you do? I can’t wait forever. Who’s going to pay my bills?”

It’s the first time Spyrakos has rented to a politician.

“And I think it’s going to be my last.”

           — Hat tip: REP [Return to headlines]



Islamic ‘Lawfare’ Targets Rifqa Bary’s Friends

Investigation seen as attempt by Muslims to intimidate

The chief of a law firm that has promised to defend a youth pastor reportedly investigated for driving a runaway Muslim-turned-Christian teen to a bus station says the probe is another “lawfare” case in which Islamists are trying to intimidate critics of the religion.

Ohio authorities are investigating youth pastor Brian Williams for his assistance of Rifqa Bary, 17, who claimed she fled her Muslim parents last year because her father threatened to kill her after learning she had become a Christian.

In a column on BigJournalism.com, anti-jihad blogger Pamela Geller called it a “perverse twist of reality” that law enforcement officers are investigating “Christians in Ohio who helped a teenage apostate escape the death threat (in line with sharia law) made by her family.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



N.J. Terror Suspect Sharif Mobley Tied to Radical Yemeni Cleric Anwar Al-Awlaki

A New Jersey nuclear plant laborer arrested in Yemen with 10 other suspected al Qaeda members was in contact with the same radical Yemeni-American cleric tied to Fort Hood shooting suspect Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, federal law enforcement officials told ABC News.

The New Jersey man, Sharif Mobley, was detained by Yemeni security forces earlier this month and taken to a hospital for medical treatment. He allegedly tried to escape from the hospital over the past weekend by grabbing a security guard’s gun and engaging in a gunfight that killed one of the guards.

Mohammed Albasha, a spokesman for the Yemeni embassy in Washington, told ABC News that details of Mobley’s case “will be clearer in a couple of days.”

Asked about Mobley’s apparent connections with the cleric, Anwar al-Awlaki, Albasha said he was not surprised because radicals and extremists in Yemen seek Awlaki out.

“He is a fixture in jihad 101,” Albasha said of Awlaki.

Before fleeing the United States, Awlaki taught at a Virginia mosque visited by 9/11 hijackers Nawaf al-Hazmi and Hani Hanjour.

Since then, Awlaki has become a prominent influence with al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and is believed to be in Yemen.

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



State Plan Fines Feds $2,000 Over Gun Rules

2 years in jail also possible for agent enforcing U.S. regulations on firearm

Wyoming has joined a growing list of states with self-declared exemptions from federal gun regulation of weapons made, bought and used inside state borders — but lawmakers in the Cowboy State have taken the issue one step further, adopting significant penalties for federal agents attempting to enforce Washington’s rules.

According a law signed into effect yesterday by Democratic Gov. Dave Freudenthal, any agent of the U.S. who “enforces or attempts to enforce” federal gun rules on a “personal firearm” in Wyoming faces a felony conviction and a penalty of up to two years in prison and up to $2,000 in fines.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Ireland: Three Released in Cartoonist Inquiry

A man and woman arrested in connection with an international investigation into an alleged plot to murder Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks have been released from custody. The two, who were detained at Dungarvan Garda station, were released yesterday evening without charge. Another woman who had been detained in Tramore was also released yesterday. A file will be prepared for the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Seven people were arrested in Waterford and Cork in relation to the alleged plot earlier this week.

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



Italian Judges: ‘Berlusconi Danger to Democracy’

Italian rule of law is under siege from its own prime minister, judges in the country say.

By Bas Mesters in Rome

Just some recent events in Italy.

Last Wednesday, Italian parliament approved a bill that offers prime minister Silvio Berlusconi immunity from prosecution for corruption, graft and tax evasion for a year and a half.

The four main TV newscasts aired by public broadcaster Rai have all been suspended until the regional elections of March 28 and 29. The government fears of too critical journalism.

Last weekend, the election bylaws were changed, very close to the regional elections. A local wing of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party had failed to register in time for the elections, and the law was changed to ‘repair’ this. A judge however, has refused to recognise the new legislation. This led to Berlusconi accusing the judge of plotting against him.

Democracy in danger

Responding to these and other recent events, Italian judges issued a cry for help on Wednesday. The highest judicial governing body, the Supreme Council of Magistrates, is working on a statement warning “Italian democracy is in danger”. Never before have judges voiced such harsh criticism of the effects Berlusconi’s actions have on Italian justice.

The council wants protect judges from the prime minister’s repeated attacks and hopes to restore respect for the judiciary.

But is the Italian rule of law really in danger? Is democracy under siege?

Formally, Italian checks and balances are still in place. The parliament keeps an eye on the government, the president ensures that any laws passed by parliament are in line with the country’s constitution and the constitutional court can be asked to do the same. A diverse written press offers comment and insight into these processes. In theory, Italy’s rule of law is in excellent order. In theory, Italy is also a functioning democracy. It holds elections where new representatives can be elected.

A reality different from theory

The problem is that all these institutions find themselves under constant pressure. Judges and journalists are constantly under fire from government parties. Parliament and government have been infiltrated by the mafia.

According to Massimo Gianni, an analyst who writes for opposition daily La Repubblica, Berlusconi is playing a game of “smoke and mirrors in which appearances have replaced reality”. “According to Berlusconi, the rule of law is a pointless obstacle. The reign of confusion is preferable,” Gianni said.

Checks and balances like the free press, the judiciary, the president or parliament that become too critical are ridiculed and stripped of their legitimacy. Whoever dares interfere with the leader’s business has a price to pay, Gianni said???.

Berlusconi has compared bothersome magistrates to “a subversive gang of Taliban members” who are “different from the rest of the human race, anthropologically speaking”.

The prime minister has called journalists “communists” and thinks the president of the republic, Giorgio Napolitano, is little more than a pesky obstacle. Members of parliamen are supposed to obey their leader, as far as Berlusconi is concerned.

Above the law?

Over past years, Berlusconi has interfered with justice by altering the statute of limitations, allowing him to avoid prosecution. When he lost his immunity in November, he threatened to cap the duration of trials, which would have allowed tens of thousands of suspects to escape their convictions Thanks to this audacious threat, he was able to escape prosecution this week through less far-reaching means.

Berlusconi has changed Italian media law, generating more income from advertising for his company Mediaset at the expense of the written press and public broadcasting. Whenever the public broadcasters air programmes that Berlusconi finds too critical, he threatens to overturn the TV license tax Rai depends on. He has called on companies to refrain from advertising in La Repubblica, a newspaper which has voiced criticism of him in the past.

Berlusconi has issued decrees whenever parliament threatened to block legislation. He has declared a state of emergency for construction projects that could have easily been completed in a normal fashion.

He also declared a state of emergency when Italy hosted the G8 summit and the swimming world championship. Excavations at Pompeii and the restoration of the Uffizi museum in Florence were given the same treatment, allowing the government to dole out contracts without putting them up for tenders.

Several government officials, politicians and businessmen involved in these ‘emergency projects’ are now suspected of corruption. But judges who are investigating these possible crimes “should be ashamed of themselves,” Berlusconi has said.

The Italian president Napolitano has personally experienced a lot of pressure at the hands of Berlusconi to pass laws that were not always in line with the constitution. Last weekend, the president bowed to pressure and approved the new election bylaws. The fact that a judge later refused to apply them shows just how controversial the new law is.

Little resistance to Berlusconi

With a refined sense of drama, opposition politician and former magistrate Antoni di Pietrio has since called for the impeachment of Napolitano.

The question remains why Italians haven’t rebelled against Berlusconi yet. They haven’t because the divided and bickering opposition has convinced them no viable alternative exists. The model set by Berlusconi, of a father figure surrounded by a clientelist clique is inspiring local copycats throughout the nation. Italians have had to endure corrupt politicians for years. The confusion raised by Berlusconi prevents them from seeing reality clearly. Civil protest exists, internet is abuzz with activism, and there is hope Berlusconi’s administration will soon end. But the prime minister’s power is so great, only his own coalition members will be able to bring it about.

Politicians elsewhere in Europe have shied away from getting involved in the Italian matters. No politician or diplomat would even think to meddle in the internal affairs of a friendly democracy, one of the founding members of the EU. The European People’s Party, the centre-right coalition that dominates European parliament needs Berlusconi’s party to maintain its superior position.

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



Italy: Court Overturns Gag on Political Chat Shows

Rome, 12 March (AKI) — An Italian administrative court Friday overturned a controversial one-month ban on commercial television and radio political chat shows ahead of the country’s regional elections late this month.

The Lazio region’s TAR court on sided with Sky and Telecom Italia Media in their appeal against Italian broadcasting regulator’s gag-rule that was contested by the opposition to prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s conservative government.

The rule applied to three analog channels belonging to billionaire Berlusconi’s Mediaset broadcasting empire, as well as Rubert Murdoch’s Sky cable channel.

“The ruling re-establishes the principle of freedom if expression and safeguards the freemarket, both of which are protected by the Italian constitution,” Sky’s Italian unit said Friday in a statement.

Many of Italy’s most famous TV journalists were up in arms after the state broadcaster RAI in February announced it would suspend all its political talk shows ahead of the March 28-29 regional elections. The broadcasting regulator extended the ban to all private channels.

TV officials insist they are only complying with election law, but media unions say it is a bid to stifle criticism of Berlusconi’s coalition. Many of RAI’s chat shows are accused of political bias against Berlusconi, even though as prime minister he has indirect control of the three national channels.

According to the rules, shows would be permitted to be aired, but only if each one of Italians dozens of political parties were represented.

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



Pope OKs German Abuse Moves

Local Church authorised to tackle child sex scandal

(ANSA) — Vatican City, March 12 — Pope Benedict XVI has approved measures to tackle the child sex abuse scandal sweeping the Roman Catholic Church in Germany, the leader of the country’s bishops said after an audience with the pope Friday.

Msgr Robert Zollitsch told a press conference he had illustrated the moves to the German-born pope.

“He is favourable to our measures but we do not know whether they will be extended to other countries,” Zollitsch said.

That will depend on pending decisions by the Vatican’s watchdog, the Congregation (department) for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Congregation is drawing up a “decalogue,” the archbishop said, adding that the German Church did not need the Holy See’s help in handling the scandal.

He said Benedict had “recognised” the German bishops’ ability to tackle the cases on their own. While stressing that the German Church had “always collaborated with justice,” unless victims asked for the police not to be called in, Zollitsch said it would tighten its procedures “to bring the truth to light without false respect for anyone or anything, even things that happened a long time ago, because victims are entitled to this”.

Investigation norms would also be rethought across the country and more support provided to victims.

The archbishop defended the Church’s existing record in tackling abuse, saying “the procedures adopted by us have given excellent results in the last eight years”.

Some 19 of Germany’s 27 dioceses have now been affected by the scandal, which follows similar cases in Ireland, the Netherlands and Austria.

It has even come close to the pope’s brother, Father Georg Ratzinger, with at least one case reported at the famous Regensburg boys’ choir led by Ratzinger for 30 years.

The local Church said the cases occurred before Ratzinger was appointed choirmaster in 1964. The scandals have raised the issue of priestly celibacy but Benedict said Friday it was “a holy value”.

Celibacy, he told an international theological conference at a Vatican university in Rome, was “an expression of the gift of oneself to God and to others”.

“Our limits and weaknesses should prompt us to guard with profound faith” the priestly life, the pope added, making no direct reference to the German scandal. On Wednesday Vienna Archbishop Christoph Schoenborn called for an “unflinching” examination of the possible roots of the scandals, saying “it also includes the issue of priestly celibacy”.

But Vienna archdiocese spokesman Erich Leitenberger told Catholic news agency SIR Thursday that the cardinal “did not call into question celibacy in any way”.

In Germany, the Archbishop of Regensburg, Gerhard Mueller, described the notion of celibacy being “the cause” of child sex abuse as “nonsense”.

Germany has already launched a scheme, involving the Church, police and families, to prevent child sex abuse while Catholic authorities in the Netherlands on Wednesday opened a sweeping probe into how recent cases could have occurred.

Austria is expected to follow their lead.

Scandals have also swept the Church in Ireland and a number of Irish bishops have resigned.

In the United States, where abuse was first exposed on a major scale in the late 1990s, several dioceses have been bankrupted by settlements.

Benedict has promised a new strategy to make sure child sex abuse never happens again, citing the eradication of this “hateful crime” as one of the Church’s top priorities.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Second U.S. Woman Probed in Cartoonist Plot

‘I knew she was talking to these people online… they brainwashed her’

COLORADO — Authorities in Ireland are investigating whether a second American woman was involved in an international plot to kill a Swedish cartoonist for mocking the Prophet Muhammad, The Wall Street Journal reported.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



South Asian ‘Slave Brides’ Causing Concern in UK

Hundreds of women who came to the UK from South Asia to marry say they have been treated as domestic slaves by their in-laws, the BBC has learned.

More than 500 who applied for residence in 2008-09 after their marriages broke down were deported because they could not prove any abuse had taken place.

Police and charities are concerned the incidents are not reported because of family pressure and fear of reprisals.

The UK Border Agency said measures were in place to try to prevent such abuse.

‘Bloodied nose’

The women complaining of being treated as slaves by their families come from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

One woman in her 20s, says she was imprisoned by her mother-in-law for three years at their house in the north of England. She does not want to be named.

She has now started to come to terms with her ordeal, a year after her mother-in-law was prosecuted, but she says she still lives with the fear inside her.

“One day my mother-in-law beat me up really badly,” she says.

“There was a lot of blood coming out of my mouth and nose — I couldn’t tell anyone, call anyone or go anywhere.

“I used to get up at dawn and clean the whole house, scrub the floors, clean the windows, do the washing, cook. In between I’d have to sew.”

She tried to kill herself twice. Eventually she managed to escape after her mother-in-law left her bedroom door unlocked.

“Staying inside all the time, not being allowed to watch TV or go out… I thought I’d rather be dead than live like this.”

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



UK: Growing Fears Over Muslim Prison ‘Gangs’

The Muslim prison population in England and Wales has sharply increased in recent years. The BBC’s Ushma Mistry hears from former inmates and prison officers who claim gangs of Muslim prisoners are an increasingly powerful force.

“Muslims run it. Muslims run the prisons and there’s nothing the screws can do about it. For a Muslim you’d say it’s good but for a non-Muslim, it’s very, very bad,” a former inmate called Jay says.

It is a claim which is backed by former prison officers and other inmates.

Jay, 24, is a Muslim and has been in and out of prison for most of his life. He openly admits to helping to convert non-Muslim inmates to Islam and has meted out violence against anyone who dares to “disrespect” his religion.

He first went to prison when he was 15 and said there were hardly any Muslims inmates back then.

“At the beginning not many knew about Islam. There weren’t many converts. The mosque was empty, but nowadays jails are run mostly by the Muslims,” he said.

“There are certain brothers that convert purely on the basis that they read Islam and they want to believe in something that does good for them. Then other people because they want to be looked after.

“I’ve been in jail five times and on my last occasion, I’ve seen jails being run by Muslim inmates.

“Muslim prayers on a Friday are very, very busy. In some prisons there’s no space. In one jail I was in, they do the prayers in two sessions because there’s no space.”

Intimidating

Muslims represent 12% (9,795) of the prison population in England and Wales, according to the latest available figures from 2008. This has risen by 50% over five years.

In some high security prisons, the figures are well above average.

In 2008, Muslim prisoners accounted for a third (34%) of prisoners in HMP Whitemoor, in March, Cambridgeshire, and about a quarter (24%) of inmates in HMP Long Lartin, in Evesham, Worcestershire.

Speaking anonymously, a former prison officer, who worked at HMP Long Lartin, told the Donal MacIntyre programme about cases where non-Muslim prisoners were seriously assaulted and intimidated for refusing to abide by unofficial rules imposed by Muslim gangs, about eating pork or listening to Western music.

“Muslim gangs was something I was very concerned about — the situation changed where underworld gangsters who used to keep discipline and order were no longer in charge in the prison,” she said.

“The younger guys, who were being forced to convert, were doing it more for protection from a Muslim gang rather than follow the faith — most of them weren’t interested in the faith.

“I knew one lad quite well who was approached by the radical Muslims, and he changed. He just seemed very frightened all the time.

“He used to be forced to pray at certain times and I know for a fact they would be woken in the middle of the night to pray.

“He even grew a long beard even though he didn’t want to. I asked him why he grew the beard and he said ‘It’s survival miss, survival’“.

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

Balkans


Serbia-Israel: Cooperation in Agriculture Sector

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 12 — Israel has expressed interest in cooperation with Serbia in the agriculture sector, Israeli Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development Shalom Simhon told Serbian Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Water Management Sasa Dragin, reports Tanjug news agency. Dragin and Simhon conferred during a visit of a Serbian delegation to Israel fro March 8 to 10, the Ministry of Agriculture said today. The delegation comprised also Vojvodina Premier Bojan Pajtic and directors of many companies and institutes in the agriculture and foord processing sectors. The talks focused on the implementation of the inter-state agreement on bilateral cooperation in the agriculture sector, the release says. Dragin also conferred with Israeli Minister of Trade, Industry and Employment Benjamin Ben Eliezer on the economic situation in the two countries.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Crowd of 3 Thousand Muslims Attack a Coptic Christian Community, 25 Injured

Faithful were gathered in prayer when attack occurred. There were four priests, one deacon and 400 parishioners in the building, women and children also targeted. Fundamentalists fury, egged on by the imam, unleashed by the rumour that the Christians are building a new church. In reality it is a hospice.

Cairo (AsiaNews / Agencies) — The toll from an attack on the Coptic Christian community that took place yesterday in the north-western province of Mersa Matrouh, Egypt is 25 wounded, including women and children. A crowd of around 3 thousand Muslims attacked the faithful gathered in prayer in a building adjoining the local church. The fundamentalists fury, encouraged by the imam, was sparked by the rumour that the Christians have begun to build a new place of worship.

Around 5 o’clock yesterday afternoon, the Muslims — a group of Bedouins and Salafi fanatics — started throwing stones at a construction site, which they believe in reality will be a new church. Local witnesses reported that security forces present were not sufficient to contain the attack. The police fired tear gas and arrested a dozen people, including Muslims and Christians. Only this morning, reinforcements arrived from Alexandria, thanks to which the Coptic faithful trapped inside the building could return to their homes.

At the moment of the attack the Christian prayer house contained four priests, one deacon and about 400 parishioners. Christians say that the building under construction, in fact, is a nursing home and said they were “terrified” by the latest attack. The local imam Shaikh Khamees intervention during Friday prayers has helped to foment the anger of Muslims. He emphasized the duty to fight against the “enemies” of Islam and stressed that “we do not tolerate the Christian presence in our area.”

Reverend Matta Zakarya confirms that this morning there was a summit between the leaders of the local church, state security forces and even some Muslims. “The Coptic are scared — he stresses — especially women and children who were inside the building and witnessed the assault.”

In Egypt, the Coptic Christian community is about 10% of the population in a country with an overwhelming Muslim majority, which discriminates against the Christian community. It is the victim of violence, caused by a sharp rise of Islamic fundamentalism. Sometimes the basis of many attacks there are disputes over land ownership and disputes for women, but they soon become sectarian clashes.

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



Muslim Mob Attacks Christians at Church in Egypt, 25 Injured

by Mary Abdelmassih

Egypt (AINA) — At 17:00 hours on Friday a Muslim mob attacked a Christian congregation during prayers in the church attached to the services building of the Coptic Church in the Rifeyah area of the Mediterranean seaport of Mersa Matrouh. The mob, estimated to be between 2000-3000 of Bedouins and fanatical Muslim Salafis, hurled stones at the building. Four priests, the deacons and 400 parishioners were trapped inside the building.

Rev. Matta Zakarya told activist Wagih Yacoub of Katiba-Tibeyah, an advocacy group, that after the mob hurled stones at the building, they went inside and assaulted the people, mostly families. Neither the security forces nor the fire brigades were sufficient. Only two fire brigades were available. Witnesses said the number of security forces was not enough to contain the Muslims, and tear gas was used against them.

The attack in casualties among the Copts and security forces, mostly head injuries caused by hurled bricks. The injured were treated at Matrouh Hospital. According to Rev. Matta, twenty-five persons were seriously wounded, including women and children. Eighteen houses, twenty-two shops and sixteen cars were destroyed and burnt down. “Twenty-eight people have no homes and had to seek refuge in the services building,” said Rev. Matta.

Security forces enforcement from Alexandria arrived in the early hours of Saturday, and escorted the 400 Copts held in the services building to their homes.

The pretext used by the Muslims for this attack was the erection, without permission, of a wall surrounding the plot of land acquired by the Church adjacent to the services building. “The violence started after the Muslim evening prayer,” said Rev. Matta Zakaria to Coptic News Bulletin, “when the Mosque’s Imam, Shaikh Khamees, talked of the need to fight the ‘enemies’, and said ‘we don’t want Christians to live among us.’“

The mob moved on to other areas not protected by security, vandalizing and torching Coptic homes, shops, businesses and cars in the streets surrounding the services building. “They were chanting religious and Jihadi slogans, during which they vandalized and burnt houses and shops, amid the cries of the terrorized Copts,” reported Nader Shukry of Freecopts.

Copts whose relatives were held inside the services building, gathered in front of the State Security in Matrouh to protest the attacks on them and the delay in the arrival of the security forces to protect them.

Rev. Matta said that a meeting is to be held in the morning of March 13, between the Church, the State Security and the Muslim elders in the area, “Because the Copts are frightened, especially the women and children who were indoors as the Muslims torched their homes and who are now extremely traumatized. Everyone needs re-assurance that such an attack will never happen again.”

The services building, called Archangel Michael Charity, which serves 300 Coptic families, was demolished (AINA 4-30-2009) by security forces on April 26, 2009, under the pretext of questioning the ownership of land, but the matter was later clarified and a license for the construction of a replacement services building was obtained from the Governor of Matrouh.

[Return to headlines]



Sexual Harassment in Egypt

Confronting a Pressing Social Problem

According to a study, 98 percent of the foreign women and 83 percent of the Egyptian women have at some point been subject to sexual harassment in Egypt. Often the blame is placed squarely on the shoulders of the victims. Mohammed Ali Atassi reports

| Bild:

“Increasingly male chauvinist culture”: victims of sexual harassment in Egypt include women from all social and religious classes, veiled and unveiled |

Sexual harassment of women in Egypt is one of many social problems that politicians and the media have tended to treat as an instance of individual, abnormal behaviour. Because they treat it as an isolated aberration from proper social norms — falling outside the path, principles and traditions of a sanctioned way of life — Egyptian society as a whole does not need to confront it.

It took the courage of a few Egyptian women who exposed their own suffering to reveal the treatment many women routinely experience on the streets of Cairo. Simultaneously, a few civil society organizations, aided by alternative media outlets (blogs foremost among them), launched awareness campaigns aimed at transforming both the understanding and method of dealing with the issue, so that Egyptians would cease to view future incidents as isolated acts of perversion, and instead see them as components of a pressing social problem.

Educational and judicial measures

As such, perceptions of sexual harassment have changed to now frame it as an important issue — one that demands political, educational and judicial measures, though many of these have yet to be implemented.

The problem of sexual harassment in Egypt comes to sharp focus in the case of the young film director Nouha Rushdi Saleh, who won a legal case against a truck driver who harassed her in a Cairo street. The court handed down a three-year jail sentence to the perpetrator — and the case blew the cover off the issue in Egypt, where official silence has reigned for years.

Most tourist guidebooks on Egypt, particularly those published abroad, warn foreign women regarding sexual harassment in the street and offer advice on how they should act and react. This could easily suggest that this phenomenon is on the rise. The aggression is hardly confined to foreign women; its victims include Egyptian women from all social and religious classes, veiled and unveiled.

| Bild:

“God will forgive the sins of veiled women”: In Egypt, various campaigns implied that the spread of sexual harassment is linked to the absence of the veil |

Still, most public authorities and influential social forces ignored the issue until the outbreak of the 2006 riots. During the downtown celebrations of the holiday of Eid al-Fitr, a crowd of hundreds of sexually frenzied young men participated in violent attacks on dozens of women, surrounding them in the streets, groping and even trying to undress them. As police stood by and watched the scene ambivalently, no one, not mothers nor veiled women, were safe from the mob.

Implicit assumptions

Supported by the state media, mainly newspapers, some political figures tried to minimize the impact of the incident by accusing the opposition of exploiting the social and political dimensions of the riot for their own benefit. But if the state authority was ready for a cover-up, the Egyptian blogosphere was ready for a fight. Bloggers published testimonies and played video clips of the scenes in Talat Harb square and the surrounding streets where women were assaulted.

And while Egyptian authorities took action and installed security cameras in the center of the city — the site of the 2006 riot — to alleviate the phenomenon, the effort did nothing to prevent similar attacks from being perpetrated in other parts of the city. Incidents spread and in fact intensified in other areas, including Al Haram Street and Al Mohandesseen district, where many girls were assaulted on Eid al-Fitr. This time, however, police successfully arrested many of the attackers.

Unfortunately, many dominant beliefs still place the blame squarely on the shoulders of the victims of sexual harassment. Society makes an implicit assumption that women dress provocatively, or otherwise behave suspiciously to excite men into violently attacking them — or blame women simply because they are unveiled or don’t conform to conservative Islamic dress codes.

Awareness campaigns

If there was one positive result of the 2006 attacks — which claimed many veiled victims — it opened the door for public debate about the phenomenon of sexual harassment in Egypt. Civil society organizations and women’s groups touched on the fresh social wound, launching a legion of awareness campaigns while the issue was still on citizens’ minds.

| Bild:

God ordered the veil: ‘Either you wear the headscarf as a protecting veil — or you will be devoured by the lecherous looks of men’, the phrase reads literally |

These campaigns sought to educate women about their own rights and warn both men and women about the severity of these practices and the pressing need to face the problem as a society. Presenting it as a social issue that affects everyone, the campaigns linked the phenomenon of sexual harassment to youth unemployment and marginalization, as well as to the fact that a growing number of young people are marrying at an older age. They also cited the upsurge in sexual repression amidst an increasingly male chauvinist culture, in addition to the breakdown of the family and moral codes, as factors.

The magazine Kalimatina (“Our Word”) published the campaign “Respect Yourself,” and the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights presented “Safe Streets for Everyone”. In cooperation with various media outlets, both print and visual, websites and blogs, these campaigns worked to enlighten Egyptian youth on the danger of such practices and demand the development of laws that deter them. Campaigns also prepared police stations and trained officers for handling sexual harassment incidents.

In the wake of this multi-faceted campaign, a sociological study named “Clouds in the Sky of Egypt: Sexual Harassment — From Verbal Advances to Rape” examined the situation. The study took a sample of 2,500 Egyptian women and 2,020 other individuals (equally divided between men and women), as well as a survey of 109 foreign women. The results were shocking: 98 percent of the foreign women and 83 percent of the Egyptian women had been subject to sexual harassment — and nearly two-thirds of the men confessed to committing sexual harassment against women.

Counter-campaigns

On the other hand, conservative political and religious groups attempted to exploit the worsened incidents of sexual harassment to serve their own special interests. In a manner clearly demeaning to women, these factions attacked women’s dignity by pegging the blame for the assaults on the victims. The counter-campaigns even went so far as to collude with those who committed the crimes in an obvious attempt to justify their deeds. Rather than defending the victims or protecting women’s rights, these campaigns took the opposite approach.

Two striking examples of this came in the form of posters that the groups hung in some streets and published on many Islamic blogs and websites. The first contains two juxtaposed images. The picture on the right has a green hue and features a woman wearing a veil plastered with mosque-minaret pictures. At the bottom of the picture is a piece of candy carefully wrapped in green, and under it the statement that God will forgive the sins of veiled women. The image on the left, tinted in bright red, depicts an unveiled woman and a man. The bottom shows a red candy in torn paper, with a religious injunction beneath that warns women of moral failure.

The second poster continues the theme of objectifying women, likening her to a piece of candy ready to be eaten, by portraying her as a lollipop that cannot be protected from flies (which means men in the language of these campaigns), save with the wrapper, which translates to the veil. Under the images of two lollipops, one wrapped and the second naked with flies hovering over it, a religious statement professes that an unveiled woman will not be able to protect herself — for God, the creator, knows what is in her best interest, and thus ordered the veil.

These messages reveal a disturbing mentality and ideology that view women as objects of pleasure and entertainment, who must cater to men’s physical needs and fantasies for religion’s sake. While enjoining women to cover themselves in public to prevent being sexually harassed by strangers, this belief system seems to limit women’s choice when it comes to their own sexuality. These messages imply that the spread of sexual harassment is linked to the absence of the veil, and thus the unveiled woman holds the responsibility for the sexual harassment she encounters.

Interference of justice

The public discussion over sexual harassment could have been confined to the media, the campaigns and the counter campaigns were it not for the courage of the young Egyptian director, Noha Rushdi Saleh. A driver sexually assaulted her while she returned from the airport, even though she was accompanied by a friend.

| Bild:

“A safe road for everyone”: Ever since the 2006 attacks several campaigns sought to educate women about their rights |

The assault took place in one of the streets close to her home in the Al Karba district when the driver began swerving his car towards her, extending his hand from the window and violently pulling her towards him. He touched her breasts until she fell on the ground, then he quickly drove away, looking back mockingly at her through his window.

According to Saleh, this glance back was an important factor in her decision to turn to the court and demand her rights. Yelling and feeling great anger that cannot be expressed in words, she followed the driver and was able, thanks to the heavy traffic, to grab the front of his car, all the while shouting and calling for help. Saleh gave an account of her shock at other pedestrians’ reaction:

“I couldn’t believe that some were willing to help and assist the driver to run away in the car, while others told me, ‘We will let him apologize to you.’ I asked them why I would want an apology. Had he stepped over my feet? With my refusal, they asked, ‘What do you need?’ I told them I would report him to the police station. Another bystander said, ‘I don’t understand why you stand here in the midst of men.’ There were people on their balconies looking down and watching me as if I were in a film. One woman was saying to me, ‘Enough my daughter, forgive him,’ but I refused and maintained my position.”

Noha’s legal background empowered her to insist on her rights, and she succeeded in making a police report and taking the defendant to the criminal court. With the support of her father, she was determined to have the court session be public as a means of shaking the Egyptian populace and judicial system into confronting sexual harassment. Northern Cairo’s criminal court, presided over by Judge Shawqi al-Shalqani, issued a judgment on October 21, 2008, which sentenced the defendant Sharif Jouma Jebril to three years in jail and a payment of 5,001 Egyptian pounds as a penalty.

A nail in the coffin of sexual harassment

Noha faced the news cameras and said that the judgment had restored her self-esteem. The judicial system had done her justice, paving the way for all Egypt’s daughters to pursue the legal road to claim their rights and render the first nail into the coffin of sexual harassment.

However, the judgment did not prevent Noha Rushdi Saleh from being the subject of a vicious campaign that impugned her credibility. Her critics accused her of distorting Egypt’s reputation and of carrying Israeli citizenship, as her grandfather was among the Palestinian refugees who came to Egypt.

But her courage has left a significant mark on Egyptian society, because she insisted on seeing her judicial proceeding to the end, as well as ultimately extracting a judgment in her favour from the Egyptian court. She will be remembered for helping to spearhead the long and difficult battle towards creating a civil society that holds the dignity and rights of women as inseparable from its overall goals and aspirations.

Mohammed Ali Atassi

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

Israel and the Palestinians


EU: Moratinos: Firm Stance Needed Against Settlements

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 12 — Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos stated that the European Union, of which Madrid currently holds the rotating presidency, must be more firm in its opposition to Jewish settlements in the Palestinian Territories. “It is necessary to be very demanding on this point”, said Moratinos yesterday speaking before a Parliamentary commission. Moratinos also said that he had had a telephone conversation with his Israeli counterpart Avigdor Lieberman and that he had expressed the EU’s disapproval of the Israeli government’s go-ahead to the building of 1,600 new homes in East Jerusalem. According to Moratinos, who in the past was EU Envoy to the Middle East, the decision may jeopardise the peace process. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaza: Israeli Raid After Rocket Launch

(ANSAmed) — GAZA, MARCH 12 — During the night, Israeli aeroplanes attacked targets in the south of the Gaza Strip in response to the alleged launch of a rocket against Israeli territory. According to several witnesses, the attack caused the injury of several Palestinians. Israeli military sources have said that a metallurgy workshop in the city of Khan Younes was destroyed, whilst near Rafah, on the border with Egypt, a tunnel used for smuggling was hit. The same sources specified that the decision to carry out the raid was taken after the launch of a rocket that hit an empty barn on a kibbutz in the south of Israel without however causing any deaths or injuries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel Seals Off West Bank as Precautionary Measure

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 12 — The Israeli Defence Ministry has sealed off the West Bank from today until tomorrow evening as a precautionary measure to limit the risk of clashes by Palestinian demonstrators on the fringes of Friday’s Islamic prayers. The news was reported by a military spokesman. The measure, which is not unusual on the part of the Israelis in the presence of situations of tension or on the occasion of religious festivities or demonstrations, is linked in particular to tensions about East Jerusalem (the majority Arab area of the city), which last week saw incidents that then spread to other areas of the West Bank. Yesterday the Israeli authorities ordered a restriction on access today to the Temple Mount of Jerusalem, the permanent tinderbox of passions and the epicentre last week of the start of the scuffles. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Saudi Arabia: Death Sentence for Lebanese Magician Upheld

(ANSAmed) — JEDDAH, MARCH 12 — Judges of the General Court of Medina in Saudi Arabia confirmed a death sentence against Lebanese magician Ali Hussein Subat, accused of witchcraft and on trial for about two years. The forty-seven year old Subat was caught in the act of committing the crime in a Medina hotel room, covered with papers with magical symbols, while he was using herbs and amulets for one of his rituals. On December 8, pointed out Arab News’ website, the Saudi Arabian Court of Appeals rejected the judges’ sentence of first instance from the Medina court. The effects of the sentence were suspended, to give the man — a well-known magician on satellite TV programmes who performed with the name “Scheherazade Magician” — to “show repentance” and to verify the authenticity of the accusations against him. During the two years of the trial, Subat, who was also accused of fraud, admitted to practicing black magic rituals and contributing to the break-up of marriages. According to prosecutors of the general court, Subat allegedly practiced black magic publically on television in front of millions of spectators for years and did not show any remorse. According to the General Court, the death penalty sentence must serve “as a warning and deterrent so that others — foreigners in particular — do not perform sorcery in Saudi Arabia”. Now the case will be heard by the Mecca Court of Appeals. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Ambassador to Sweden Recalled on Armenia Genocide Vote

Stockholm, 12 March(AKI) — Turkey has withdrawn its ambassador to Sweden after the parliament voted to describe as genocide the killing of Armenians in World War I.

The Turkish government condemned the resolution on Wednesday, saying it was “based upon major errors and without foundation”.

The Swedish government opposed the opposition resolution but it passed by one vote after some MPs voted against party lines.

The move comes only a week after Ankara called home its ambassador to the United States because a US congressional committee approved a similar resolution.

European Union member Sweden has been one of the strongest supporters of Ankara’s bid to join the bloc, while the United States is generally considered a strong western ally of the NATO-member Turkey.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (photo) cancelled a visit to Stockholm scheduled next week and issued a statement criticising the vote.

“Our people and our government reject this decision based upon major errors and without foundation,” said the statement.

Many historians and the Armenian people accuse Turkey of committing genocide after Ottoman Turks in 1915 and 1916 killed hundreds of thousands of ethnic Armenians.

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



Turkey: A Threat, Yet Again

By Srdja Trifkovic

Inside the Beltway, the fact that Turkey is no longer a U.S. “ally” in any meaningful sense is still strenuously denied. But as I note on Alternativeright we were reminded of the true score on March 9, when Saudi King Abdullah presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with the Wahhabist kingdom’s most prestigious prize for his “services to Islam..” Erdogan earned the King Faisal Prize for having “rendered outstanding service to Islam by defending the causes of the Islamic nation.”

Services to the Ummah — Turkey under Erdogan’s neo-Islamist AKP has rendered a host of other services to “the Islamic nation.” In August 2008 Ankara welcomed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for a formal state visit, and last year it announced that it would not join any sanctions aimed at preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. In the same spirit the AKP government repeatedly played host to Sudan’s President Omer Hassan al-Bashir — a nasty piece of jihadist work if there ever was one — who stands accused of genocide against non-Muslims. Erdogan has barred Israel from annual military exercises on Turkey’s soil, but his government signed a military pact with Syria last October and has been conducting joint military exercises with the regime of Bashir al-Assad. Turkey’s strident apologia of Hamas is more vehement than anything coming out of Cairo or Amman. (Talking of terrorists, Erdogan has stated, repeatedly, “I do not want to see the word ‘Islam’ or ‘Islamist’ in connection with the word ‘terrorism’!”) imultaneous pressure to conform to Islam at home has gathered pace over the past seven years, and is now relentless. Turkish businessmen will tell you privately that sipping a glass of raki in public may hurt their chances of landing government contracts; but it helps if their wives and daughters wear the hijab.

Ankara’s continuing bid to join the European Union is running parallel with its openly neo-Ottoman policy of re-establishing an autonomous sphere of influence in the Balkans and in the former Soviet Central Asian republics. Turkey’s EU candidacy is still on the agenda, but the character of the issue has evolved since Erdogan’s AKP came to power in 2002.

When the government in Ankara started the process by signing an Association agreement with the EEC (as it was then) in 1963, its goal was to make Turkey more “European.” This had been the objective of subsequent attempts at Euro-integration by other neo-Kemalist governments prior to Erdogan’s election victory eight years ago, notably those of Turgut Ozal and Tansu Ciller in the 1990s. The secularists hoped to present Turkey’s “European vocation” as an attractive domestic alternative to the growing influence of political Islam, and at the same time to use the threat of Islamism as a means of obtaining political and economic concessions and specific timetables from Brussels. Erdogan and his personal friend and political ally Abdullah Gul, Turkey’s president, still want the membership, but their motives are vastly different. Far from seeking to make Turkey more European, they want to make Europe more Turkish — many German cities are well on the way — and more Islamic, thus reversing the setback of 1683 without firing a shot.

The neo-Ottoman strategy was clearly indicated by the appointment of Ahmet Davutoglu as foreign minister almost a year ago. As Erdogan’s long-term foreign policy advisor, he advocated diversifying Turkey’s geopolitical options by creating exclusively Turkish zones of influence in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia, and the Middle East… including links with Khaled al-Mashal of Hamas. On the day of his appointment in May Davutoglu asserted that Turkey’s influence in “its region” will continue to grow: Turkey had an “order-instituting role” in the Middle East, the Balkans and the Caucasus, he declared, quite apart from its links with the West. In his words, Turkish foreign policy has evolved from being “crisis-oriented” to being based on “vision”: “Turkey is no longer a country which only reacts to crises, but notices the crises before their emergence and intervenes in the crises effectively, and gives shape to the order of its surrounding region.” He openly asserted that Turkey had a “responsibility to help stability towards the countries and peoples of the regions which once had links with Turkey” — thus explicitly referring to the Ottoman era, in a manner unimaginable only a decade ago: “Beyond representing the 70 million people of Turkey, we have a historic debt to those lands where there are Turks or which was related to our land in the past. We have to repay this debt in the best way.”

This strategy is based on the assumption that growing Turkish clout in the old Ottoman lands — a region in which the EU has vital energy and political interests — may prompt President Sarkozy and Chancellor Merkel to drop their objections to Turkey’s EU membership. If on the other hand the EU insists on Turkey’s fulfillment of all 35 chapters of the acquis communautaire — which Turkey cannot and does not want to complete — then its huge autonomous sphere of influence in the old Ottoman domain can be developed into a major and potentially hostile counter-bloc to Brussels. Obama approved this strategy when he visited Ankara in April of last year, shortly after that notorious address to the Muslim world in Cairo.

Erdogan is no longer eager to minimize or deny his Islamic roots, but his old assurances to the contrary — long belied by his actions — are still being recycled in Washington, and treated as reality. This reflects the propensity of this ddministration, just like its predecessors, to cherish illusions about the nature and ambitions of our regional “allies,” such as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

The implicit assumption in Washington — that Turkey would remain “secular” and “pro-Western,” come what may — should have been reassessed already after the Army intervened to remove the previous pro-Islamic government in 1997. Since then the Army has been neutered, confirming the top brass old warning that “democratization” would mean Islamization. Dozens of generals and other senior ranks — traditionally the guardians of Ataturk’s legacy — are being called one by one for questioning in a government-instigated political trial. To the dismay of its small Westernized secular elite, Turkey has reasserted its Asian and Muslim character with a vengeance.

Neo-Ottomanism — Washington’s stubborn denial of Turkey’s political, cultural and social reality goes hand in hand with an ongoing Western attempt to rehabilitate the Ottoman Empire, and to present it as almost a precursor of Europe’s contemporary multiethnic, multicultural tolerance, diversity, etc, etc. In reality, four salient features of the Ottoman state were institutionalized discrimination against non-Muslims, total personal insecurity of all its subjects, an unfriendly coexistence of its many races and creeds, and the absence of unifying state ideology…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Silver Star Winner Reprimanded for Afghan Battle

Among Those Reprimanded Is Captain Who Won Silver Star for Repelling the Attack

Three Army officers have received letters of reprimand for failing to prepare adequate defenses for a combat outpost in Wanat, Afghanistan, where a mass Taliban attack in July 2008 resulted in the deaths of nine soldiers and 27 wounded, Defense Department officials confirmed to ABC News.

“These are essentially career-enders,” said a military official of the letters of reprimand.

Two Defense Department officials said the actions are not yet final because the review that led to the letters of reprimand is still ongoing and the three officers have a period of time to respond and request reconsideration of the disciplinary action.

Among the three officers receiving the letters of reprimand is Capt. Matthew Myer, the company commander of the unit attacked at Wanat, who was awarded the Silver Star for his brave actions in repelling the attack. The Silver Star is the military’s third highest award for bravery under fire.

However, the actions of Myer and two of his superior officers prior to the attack are what prompted the disciplinary action, namely not preparing adequate defenses for the newly built outpost that left it vulnerable to attack.

[Comments from JD: Comments to the article are interesting.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Punjab: Christian Maid Burned Alive to Prevent Her From Reporting a Rape

Kiran George had burns on 80% of her body and died after two days of slow agony. The girl was raped by the son of her Muslim master. When she threatened a lawsuit, the young man killed her. In a second incident a Muslim mob burnt a Christian home and copies of the Bible.

Lahore (AsiaNews) — A Christian girl was raped and burnt alive by the son of a Muslim master, for whom she worked as a maid. The girl died in hospital yesterday after two days of agony, for the burns on 80% of her body. The incident occurred in a small town in Punjab and has similar details to the sad story of Shazia Bashir, the 12 year old Christian raped and murdered by a powerful lawyer in Lahore, a crime still for which he is still unpunished.

Kiran George worked for a Muslim family in Sheikhupura, a Punjab town. The girl died yesterday at the Mayo Hospital in Lahore, where she was hospitalized on 9 March in critical condition. To unleash the murderous madness of the son of the employer the threat of a complaint of sexual assault.

Peter Jacob, executive secretary of the Justice and Peace of the Catholic Church of Pakistan (NCJP), told AsiaNews that “the house of a Christian family was set on fire” as revenge because “a young man is accused of killing a Muslim.” The Catholic activist explains that the suspect, Yasir Abid, is “subject to pre-trial detention. The victim is the son of a Muslim landowner in the village of Kirtu Pandora, in the Narang Mandi”.

Mohammad Raza Ahmda raped the Christian girl who, at first, confided only with her friends for fear of losing her jobs. Her family’s conditions of extreme poverty had led the young girl to remain silent. When Kiran George threatened her tormentor of telling her story to the police, the young man blocked her escape and closing the door, he poured gasoline all over her with the help of his sister, setting her on fire.

The Muslim master, instead of bringing the girl to the hospital, called her parents telling them that her clothes caught fire while cleaning the kitchen. Kiran George was subjected to two days of slow agony, however, before dying, she told the whole story to the police who opened an investigation file on the young man.

Also in Punjab a crowd of Muslims robbed and burned the house of a Christian family. The assault happened on 10 March in Narang Mandi, a town in the district of Sheikhupura. The extremist’s anger was triggered by the alleged involvement of a Christian in the killing of the son of a local landowner. The mob also burnt some copies of the Bible.

Christian families denounced the “deliberate burning” of some copies of the Bible kept inside the home. Police started to investigate and evaluate whether to open a file of investigation for the crime of blasphemy. In this case, says Peter Jacob, the judiciary “will not act under section 295-B of the Pakistan Penal Code, which provides for punishment up to life imprisonment for those who desecrate the Koran, but does not provide for the holy books of other religions”.

“We are against the blasphemy laws — concludes activist NCJP — and this applies regardless of the sacred text or who is guilty of the crime.” However, he hopes for “thorough investigations” and the punishment of those who “burned the house of the Christian family.”

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

Far East


China: Lawmaker Proposes 15 Years in Prison for Petitioning

Liu Qingning, deputy director of the Legal Affairs Committee of the Guangxi Regional People’s Congress, wants the National People’s Congress to punish petitioners with stiff sentences. Wen Jiabao instead called for better petition procedures. In the meantime, social unrest grows in the country.

Beijing (AsiaNews) — Chinese citizens who petition the government to complain about abuses by local officials, a right recognised under China’s constitution, could get up to 15 years in jail if Liu Qingning had his way. Mr Liu, who is a member of the National People’s Congress (NPC) and a deputy director of the Legal Affairs Committee of the Guangxi Regional People’s Congress, wants to put away people who “seriously disrupt the normal life and work order of local government leaders”.

If his proposal were accepted, it would turn a long-standing policy on its head. Indeed, China’s central government and President Hu Jintao have repeatedly urged ordinary citizens to blow the whistle on corrupt officials by petitioning higher authorities. A special agency has even been set up to handle such cases to avoid burdening the regular administration.

Even Premier Wen Jiabao in his opening address to the NPC said that the authorities should value petitions as a useful tool to prevent social conflict because it would allow the right authorities to act. “We will improve the handling of public complaints lodged via letters and visits,” Wen said in his report.

In his view, actions allowed under current petition rules, like demanding compensation from local government, should be criminalised if they were repeated and caused “serious consequences”. These actions include chanting slogans, unfurling banners, distributing printed or written material, staging sit-ins, blocking exits of buildings, occupying or overstaying in petition offices, suicide attempts and self-harm. A jail sentence of up to three years would be given to petitioners when they are involved in one such action, rising to seven to 15 years for “particularly serious cases”.

The proposal by Liu Qingning was slammed by internet users, lawyers and petitioners. Many wondered whether he was a representative of the people or of “corrupt officials”. Others suggested that he had the mindset of a feudal lord.

One well-known Chinese blogger, Wu Yonglin, made a counterproposal, suggesting that China’s criminal code be amended to make it a criminal offence when officials fail to do their best in handling complaints and petitions from the public.

In the meantime, social unrest and protests against local government continue across China. The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences released its 2010 Rule of Law Blue Book at the end of February. In it, it said that the number of criminal and civil cases in China increased substantially in the first ten months of 2009, reaching 5.3 million and 9.9 million respectively, with the former rising by over 10 per cent and the latter by about 20 per cent.

It found that the rising crime rate and growing social unrest are directly related to the financial crisis and the vagaries of China’s economy. This year, things could get worse. In fact, the country has not yet completely recovered from the slump in spite of rising industrial output. What is more, it still has major social problems to solve, starting with the millions of unemployed migrant workers who are still out of work.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Sacked South African Sex Worker Claims Unfair Dismissal

A South African sex worker has gone to court, saying she was unfairly sacked by a Cape Town massage parlour.

Known as Kylie, she was dismissed for choosing her clients and spending time with her boyfriend who did not pay for her services, local media report.

The judge said he was not sure how a person engaged in an illegal activity could challenge her dismissal in court.

But Kylie’s lawyer said her case was about unfair dismissal, not whether selling sex should be legalised.

Several previous courts have refused to hear the case, on the basis that sex work is illegal, reports the South African Press Association.

Three judges at the Labour Appeals Court are now considering whether they can intervene.

“When dismissed you are made to stop with something criminal… but then you say: ‘Please protect me from someone who is stopping me from doing something criminal’ — it doesn’t makes sense to me,” said Judge President Raymond Zondo, Sapa reports.

Kylie has spent seven years trying to seek redress after being sacked in 2003.

She is reported to have since left the profession.

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

Latin America


Colombia: Documentary Reveals Truth Behind FARC

Roma, 12 March (AKI) — A powerful new documentary has revealed the violent face of Colombia’s outlawed armed group FARC. Peruvian woman director Judith Velez’s 64-minute film, called ‘Liberenlos ya!’ charts FARC’s evolution from its creation in the 1960s as a Marxist guerrilla group through to its involvement in drug trafficking and kidnappings.

The documentary on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia was made together with Peruvian journalist Pablo O’Brien does not have a narrator and consist of a series of interviews with witnesses and experts.

“I wanted to achieve maxiumum objectivity, without interjections and commentaries from outsiders,” Velez told Adnkronos International (AKI).

The film has a didactic approach and pays “great attention to the topic of human rights” in delivering a two-fold message, Velez said.

“First, revolutionary armed struggle, despite its seductive appeal, especially to the desperately poor, cannot provide a solution to Latin America’s problems.”

“Second, in Europe, there’s too much romanticism surrounding revolutionary groups like the FARC, which has found support in Europe simply owing to a lack of information about the group.”

The film draws on previously unpublished documents and images, such as that of the very youthful Pedro Antonio Marin, FARC’s historic leader later known by his battle names of Manuel Marulanda or Tirofijo (sureshot) who died in 2008.

“To make this documentary, we carried out a real investigation, during which we uncovered sensational things, like the killing in Equador in March, 2008 of FARC leader Rafael Reyes,” she said.

“Apart from the historic and documentary aspect, I wanted to give ample space to FARC’s human aspect, to show the great suffering that can be caused by an ideology which disregards the social impact of its actions to achieve its political aims.”

The film contains excerpts from the pathbreaking radio programme ‘Voices of the Kidnapped’ presented by journalist Herbin Hoyos, who was himself held by FARC guerrillas for 17 days in 1994.

The film captures the anguish and heartbreak of kidnap victims’ families in footage of tearful fathers who appear on the radio programme, urging FARC to allow their children hear their voices over the airwaves.

“It took the case of Ingrid Betancourt’s kidnap to raise awareness outside Latin America of a reality that affects many people in the continent,” said Velez in a reference to Colombia’s highest profile hostage and former politican whom FARC freed in July 2008, after 6 years in captivity.

“Betancourt’s release forced us to completely alter the film,” said Velez.

She decribed how travelling to the border between Ecuador and Colombia made the film’s crew sense the nightmare that the region lives under and how they felt like foreigners at the mercy of armed groups and drugs barons in a place where anything could happen.

“The lost influence and prestige of the FARC today is due to its bloodly drift, which shows that violent political change cannot work”, added Velez, with reference to the years of Sendero Luminoso’s terrorism in her country.

‘Liberenlos ya!’ aims to show how revolutionary movements grow up and inevitably become violent.

“These movements become strong because of the enormous gap between the rich and the poor. The weakest in society are attracted to armed groups when they don’t see any other way out,” said Velez.

“If the gap between rich and poor is not reduced in the future, there is a risk that armed movements will continue to to be formed.”

Velez is already known in Italy for her film ‘Schermi d’Amore’ which won first prize at Italy’s Verona Film festival and her earlier film ‘La Prueba.

However, “Prueba” won 20 thousands euros for its distribution, but the Italian firm went bankrupt and the film was never distributed.

‘Liberenlos ya!’ has not yet won any Italian awards, and Velez was unable to present it at the Bombay film festival because she was ill.

“But I hope to have a more luck in future. We are already entering festivals in Europe or Italy.”

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

Immigration


Malta Shifts Immigrant Rescue Policy as Spat With Italy Grows

Valletta, Malta — Malta will be provide would-be illegal immigrants at sea with the necessary assistance to continue on their journey to Italy from now on, the Maltese government said.

The decision signifies a marked shift in policy towards immigrants as the diplomatic row between Italy and Malta deepens, after Italian authorities turned back boat-loads of migrants to Malta on May 1.

In a strongly worded statement after a cabinet meeting Monday night, the government said the assistance it would give immigrants at sea would vary according to the nature of the case.

The government would continue taking those immigrants who were forced to abandon their boat to the nearest port, or it would assist them to continue on their way safely. Previously, there was no policy to intervene in this way, and several of theimmigrants were taken in to Malta.

The decision was prompted after Rome turned back a Maltese patrol boat with 66 rescued immigrants just 24 miles off Lampedusa last week. The would-be illegal immigrants were picked up from a dinghy by the Maltese, after the Italians said they had no rescue vessels to mount a rescue. But when the Maltese patrol boat arrived just off Italian territorial waters, it was intercepted by two Italian vessels and told not to proceed further. The immigrants were taken to Malta.

The Maltese government’s decision is expected to incense the Italian government which has itself shifted its policy on immigrants in recent weeks. Italy said that rescued immigrants cannot be taken to the islet of Lampedusa from now on because it is not considered a safe port.

Both countries say they cannot cope with the heavy influx of people fleeing Africa and have called on the EU to intervene. (dpa)

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



Turkey, Greece Join EU Project to Share Illegal Migration Burden

As Turkey and Greece blame each for thousands of migrants who illegally cross into Western countries via Turkish territory every year, an EU-funded project is bringing the two neighbors together to tackle the common problem. UK official Richard Bradley says: ‘This project is a good example of how Greece can be involved in fruitful cooperation with Turkey’

While Turkish and Greek relations are in tatters over the issue of illegal immigrants seeking to reach prosperous Western countries via Turkey, a European Union-funded project is bringing the neighbors together to combat the common problem.

“The whole problem of illegal immigration is a shared problem. It is an international problem, not a question of blaming one country,” Richard Bradley, deputy director of EU strategy from the U.K. Border Agency, told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review in an interview.

The U.K., a strong advocate of Turkish membership in the EU, is leading the project aimed at supporting Turkey’s capacity to combat illegal migration and establish removal centers for illegal migrants.

Bradley attended the launch of the project, which also includes the Netherlands and Greece, in Ankara last week.

Tens of thousands of migrants illegally cross into Greece from Turkey every year, with Greece accounting for almost half of the number of illegal aliens recorded in the EU in 2008.

Acting upon pressure from Greece, a 2009 EU summit declaration held Turkey responsible for the problem, which drew ire from the Turkish Foreign Ministry. The ministry said Turkey was not an outsider county, but a negotiating country and that the burden must be shared.

“We encourage Greece and Turkey to cooperate on these matters. This project is a good example of how Greece can be involved in fruitful cooperation with Turkey on this shared problem,” said Bradley, adding that Turkey is located in a strategic position surrounded by eight countries and, as such, is a favored route for migrants trying to reach EU territory.

“It is not a question of blaming Turkey [but rather] a question of supporting Turkey in its efforts to combat this problem, which is not only a problem of the EU but also problem for Turkey itself,” said Bradley, adding that Turkey was not only a transit country but also increasingly a destination country for immigrants, like the U.K.

“Therefore, Turkey can also be a part of the solution because the more effective the efforts made by Turkey to intercept and return illegal immigrants, the less illegal immigrants will choose to travel via Turkey. It has a deterring effect,” he said.

Turkey is involved in 27 projects with the EU, more than half of which concern immigration. The U.K.-led project, which costs roughly 1.2 million euros, will help Turkey access EU expertise to effectively handle the problem. With the project, two new removal centers will be established to house 750 illegal immigrants each in accordance with the EU standards.

The U.K. currently operates 11 removal centers that can hold over 3,000 detainees at any one time. Although some are run by private companies, the centers are subject to rules and operating standards set by the government, including requirements to implement strategies to protect detainees from anti-social behavior, bullying, self-harm and drugs.

Turkey urged to abolish barrier

Meanwhile, another EU-funded project headed by the UK and the Netherlands that was recently launched in Ankara will target asylum-seekers and refugees.

Turkey is under EU pressure to abolish a geographical limitation law that restricts non-European refugees to only applying for a temporary status as asylum-seekers.

“We encourage Turkey to change the law concerning geographical limitation. Of course, I cannot answer the question when it will change but we know that it will be made before Turkey joins the EU because it is part of the conditions of the EU to remove this geographical limitation,” said Bradley.

Under the project, reception centers will be set up for refugees in six cities, including Gaziantep, Erzurum, Van, Istanbul, Ä°zmir and Ankara. It will provide training and advise Turkey on how to process asylum claims in accordance with EU standards.

“The question is whether they [asylum-seekers] are making a well-founded claim or not. Even if Turkey has a geographical limitation, it can still decide whether the claim is well-founded,” said Bradley.

In the U.K. model, asylum-seekers and their dependants are supported by the government. The country welcomes genuine asylum-seekers and operates a fast and fair process. By modernizing its system and improving the speed of decision-making, the U.K. has reduced the number of asylum claims during recent years, Bradley said.

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

Culture Wars


Banished! City Forbids Bible Studies in Homes

‘This letter will serve as a 10-day written notice to quit such use’

The city of Gilbert, Ariz., has ordered a group of seven adults to stop gathering for Bible studies in a private home because such meetings are forbidden by the city’s zoning codes.

The issue was brought to a head when city officials wrote a letter to a pastor and his wife informing them they had 10 days to quit having the meetings in their private home.

The ban, however, prompted a response from the Alliance Defense Fund, which filed an appeal with the city as the first step in its campaign to overturn a provision it describes as illegal.

“The interpretation and enforcement of the town’s code is clearly unconstitutional, “ said Daniel Blomberg, a member of the litigation team for ADF. “It bans 200,000 Gilbert residents from meeting in their private homes for organized religious purposes — an activity encouraged in the Bible, practiced for thousands of years, and protected by the First Amendment.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



New York Times Pays Execs Extra to Hire Minorities and Women Instead of White Guys

Another fun fact from the New York Times’s proxy: Senior executives can get an extra bonus for hiring minorities and women instead of white guys.

Don’t believe it?

Let’s go to the text:

The [Compensation] Committee also retained the discretion to increase or decrease the individual component of the total bonus paid to each executive by up to 10% based on the continuing development of a diverse work force, including the inclusion of diverse candidates in hiring processes and the demonstration of personal commitment to diversity through participation in diversity-related activities, such as mentoring and sponsorship of affinity groups.

And how did NYTCO’s senior management do on this category of potential bonus for this year?

  • Chairman Arthur Sulzberger didn’t get any extra
  • Neither did CEO Janet Robinson
  • But Michael Golden, CEO of NYTCo’s “regional media group” got an extra 5%.

So, what did Michael do for this money, exactly?

(By the way, is this really legal?)

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



Stupak: Dems Told Me They Want to Fund Abortions Because More Kids Mean Higher Health-Care Costs

I don’t quite believe it, although that’s partly because I don’t want to believe it. It’s the abortion equivalent of death panels, essentially. It’s so sinister, and so perfectly matches the most ogrish caricatures of the pro-choice left, that it’s almost too bad to check. It’d be like Ron Paul claiming that pro-war Republicans told him to vote for Iraq because they were dying to get their hands on all that oil. They simply can’t be this cold-blooded.

Well, actually … sure they can. But would they cop to it?

Sitting in an airport, on his way home to Michigan, Rep. Bart Stupak, a pro-life Democrat, is chagrined. “They’re ignoring me,” he says, in a phone interview with National Review Online. “That’s their strategy now. The House Democratic leaders think they have the votes to pass the Senate’s health-care bill without us. At this point, there is no doubt that they’ve been able to peel off one or two of my twelve. And even if they don’t have the votes, it’s been made clear to us that they won’t insert our language on the abortion issue.”…

What are Democratic leaders saying? “If you pass the Stupak amendment, more children will be born, and therefore it will cost us millions more. That’s one of the arguments I’ve been hearing,” Stupak says. “Money is their hang-up. Is this how we now value life in America? If money is the issue — come on, we can find room in the budget. This is life we’re talking about.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Texas Conservatives Win Curriculum Change

AUSTIN, Tex. — After three days of turbulent meetings, the Texas Board of Education on Friday approved a social studies curriculum that will put a conservative stamp on history and economics textbooks, stressing the superiority of American capitalism, questioning the Founding Fathers’ commitment to a purely secular government and presenting Republican political philosophies in a more positive light.

The vote was 10 to 5 along party lines, with all the Republicans on the board voting for it.

The board, whose members are elected, has influence beyond Texas because the state is one of the largest buyers of textbooks. In the digital age, however, that influence has diminished as technological advances have made it possible for publishers to tailor books to individual states.

In recent years, board members have been locked in an ideological battle between a bloc of conservatives who question Darwin’s theory of evolution and believe the Founding Fathers were guided by Christian principles, and a handful of Democrats and moderate Republicans who have fought to preserve the teaching of Darwinism and the separation of church and state.

Since January, Republicans on the board have passed more than 100 amendments to the 120-page curriculum standards affecting history, sociology and economics courses from elementary to high school. The standards were proposed by a panel of teachers.

“We are adding balance,” said Dr. Don McLeroy, the leader of the conservative faction on the board, after the vote. “History has already been skewed. Academia is skewed too far to the left.”

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

General


The Problems of Neopaganism

Alternative Right—being the magazine of “radical traditionalism” that it is—carries with it tendencies that are inherently reactionary and backward-looking. And with good reason! The modern world has been marked primarily by cultural decay, uprootedness, and the elevation of the worst aspects of humanity. The answers to most of man’s problems may indeed be found in the classical reactionary and anti-revolutionary works of the West.

So if we adopt the term “reactionary” without fear, as Evola recommends, we need to have some sort of idea what we are looking back towards. And because many answers are to be found in pre and post Christian Europe, it seems tempting to extend this impulse to pre and post Christian spirituality, represented most prominently by Neopaganism.

Neopaganism is a hard term to define properly, mainly because it has come to include so many different belief systems. Often associated with ethnocentric and neotribal movements, neopagan faiths include Wicca, Germanic and Slavic Paganism, Norse mythological practices, and modern interpretations of Druidism. And even further beyond that, many of Nietzsche’s modern disciples with a passion for German antiquity count themselves in the ranks of the neopagans.

The first and most important problem with Neopaganism is that, to put it simply, it is wrong. Whatever may be said about the dangers of egalitarian and universalist Christianity, that the Church was built as a repository of truth with the distinct purpose of spreading that truth and, through that truth, saving men’s souls, is beyond question. Neopaganism is built around an impulse that runs contrary to the truth… and this impulse is recognized by a vast majority of neopagans. Men that concern themselves with philosophy and ascetics in public find themselves slaughtering goats in the name of Thor in private when they know that the practice is utter nonsense. It is all well and good to desire a connection with your barbaric ancestors; it is quite another thing to bring your silly hobby into the realm of philosophy and politics.

Which brings me to my second point: nearly every aspect of the western world worth saving is a product of Christianity, not Paganism. Even the distinctly non-Christian things are Christian in origin. While Christianity absorbed most of the worthwhile aspects of pagan society and made them its own, Christianity has left its fingerprints on every aspect of the West. A rejection of Christianity in favor of a false pagan faith would be antithetical to the defense of the West. As G.K. Chesterton wrote:

“The French Revolution is of Christian origin. The newspaper is of Christian origin. The anarchists are of Christian origin. Physical science is of Christian origin. The attack on Christianity is of Christian origin. There is one thing, and one thing only, in existence at the present day which can in any sense accurately be said to be of pagan origin, and that is Christianity.”

Neopaganism also presupposes that the West can be saved without the Church. This is impossible, mainly because throughout history the West was the Church. It was Christianity’s hammer, Charles Martel, that beat back the invading Muslims and saved the West, not Thor’s hammer. It was Richard I, not Fenrir, who beat back Saladin and was steps from retaking Jerusalem. It was the Catholic Inquisition, not Idunn, that expelled the Muslims from Sicily and Spain.

Some readers may wonder why it is even necessary to address this small and seemingly-irrelevant strain of pre-modern faith. For one, it is a major undercurrent on the far-right and has yet to have been adequately refuted, either by myself in this piece or by others in an appropriately lengthy format. It also deals with issues of great importance. Spirituality and mysticism edify politics and philosophy. It informs the believer of the many truths unreachable by the faulty logic of the individual. It is an essential element of the human condition.

The impulse that has led many otherwise-intelligent writers to embrace neopagan ritual is also leading many young Catholics to the medieval origins of their faith. The Latin Mass movement, led by righteous anti-Vatican II crusaders, is growing rapidly, and coupled with the growing right-wing ethnic and cultural movements in Europe it could mean an end of the social destruction of Europe.

Requisite reading for any discussion of Germanic paganism and medieval Christianity is James C. Russell’s The Germanization of Early Medieval Christianity. Russell describes how Medieval Christendom adopted many of the admirable traits of the German barbarians and grew to the height of its power in part because of these traits. Christianity’s early troubles, described by Sam Francis as “world-rejecting” are similar to those plaguing modern Christianity: mass-egalitarianism, universalism, and advocacy of the destruction of much of the social and cultural fabric of the West. The traits of medieval Christendom are the traits that will save the West: social hierarchy, loyalty to blood and soil, and the elevation of nobility and heroism.

But imagining the 21st century battle for the West led by neopagans rather than the Church is like imagining the delightful hierarchical authoritarianism of de Maistre as inspired by the Wiccan Moon Goddess instead of the glorification of God’s providence. It is impossible, unthinkable.

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

News Feed 20100312

Financial Crisis
» Is Goldman Sachs a Bubble Ready to Burst?
» Italy Faces a Derivatives Time Bomb
» Lehman Brothers’ Chiefs Concealed Losses With Accounting ‘Gimmick’ Days Before $700billion Collapse
» Obama: Serving Ambitions, Not Citizens
» Stern Backs $100bn IMF Climate Fund Plan
 
USA
» Al Qaeda Suspect Had Worked at Nuke Plants in NJ and Pa
» Bill Requires U.S. Withdrawal From NAFTA
» Expert: Reagan Gets the Shaft in Textbooks
» Fed Agencies Seize Toys, Call Them ‘Machine Guns’
» Obama Czar in ‘Clean Energy’ Corruption?
» Obama Justice Department Shut Down ACORN Probe
» Pentagon Shooter Pot Scandal Grows
» Reforming the Way Public Employees Are Paid
» Ryan: Dems Ramming “Shell” HC Bill Through Committee Monday
» Senate Health Bill Would Up Costs for Millions in Middle Class, Analysis Finds
» The Disemboweling of America
» While Government Treats Citizens as Terrorists, Mexican Military Invades U.S.
 
Canada
» From an Ex-Muslim, True Islamophobia
 
Europe and the EU
» Agnes Heller Demands More Civil Courage of the Hungarians
» Care Does Not Include Sex — Dutch Nurses’ Union
» Dutch FM Verhagen: Wilders Spreads Hatred
» EU Spent at Least €14m Subsidising Convicted Fish Crooks
» Germany: Jesuits Hard Hit by High Number of Abuse Claims
» Hungary in the Throes of Social and Political Crisis
» Italy: Economy on the Rise, Berlusconi Says
» Italy: Berlusconi Accuses Magistrates of Dictating Campaign Tempo
» Italy: Police Seize Parmalat Founder’s Hidden Yacht
» Italy: “Army of Escorts” Used to Fuel Corruption
» Netherlands: Lives Left in Ruin by the ‘Brothers of Love’
» Paedophilia: Irish Bishops: Pope Asks Us to Help Judges
» Poles No Longer Fear Germany
» Pope: We Live in a Cultural Context Hostile to Faith
» Spain: Reliving Memory of Francoist Concentration Camps
» Sweden: Black Cobra Gang Steals Selection of Small Cakes
» UK: Checks to See if Foreign Out-of-Hours Doctors Can Speak English ‘Go Against EU Rules’
» UK: Don’t Raise Your Family in Britain, Say Expats: UK Voted Worst Place in Developed World to Bring Up Children
» Whether or Not the Western Allies Abandoned the Jews
 
Mediterranean Union
» EMPA: Buzek: Assembly is a Political Bridge Across the Med
 
North Africa
» Morocco: France’s New Off-Shoring El Dorado
» TLC: Egypt’s Mobile Penetration Reaches 71 Pct
» Tunisia: Minister: Textiles a Fundamental Sector
» Tunisia: 2010 Textile Exports to +12.7%, Italy Main Buyer
» Why Conservatives in Egypt See Women as Candy: Either Wrapped or Covered in Flies
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Jews Displaced From Arab Lands Finally Recognized
 
Middle East
» Dancing for Their Lives: Undercover Visit to an Iraqi Expat Nightclub in Syria
» How to Make Defeatism Look Good: Let’s Give Up and Cheer the Islamists
» South Korea Eyes Nuclear Push in Turkey
» Surprise! Guess Who’s Biggest Islamic Threat
» Turkey: Baby Mortality Rate Down in Seven Years
 
Russia
» More Than 50 Jehovah’s Witnesses Arrested in Russia for Taking Part in a Public Protest
» Russia Signs India Nuclear Reactor Deal
» There is Only One Way to Govern Ukraine Today
 
South Asia
» “Swede” Killed in Afghanistan
» India: Madhya Pradesh: Hindu Religion Perhaps Compulsory Subject in Schools
» Some U.S. Officials See a Growing Taliban-Al Qaeda Rift
 
Far East
» China — Tibet: The Dalai Lama “Close to the Uyghurs’ Scares Beijing
» China Insists Google Must Obey the Law or Face Consequences
» Corruption is a Cancer to the Countries of South-East Asia
» Vietnam: Thousands of Vietnamese Women and Children Sold as “Sex Slaves”
 
Australia — Pacific
» Australia on Internet Censorship Threat List
» NZ Internet Filter Goes Live — Gov Forgets to Tell Public
 
Immigration
» Court Thwarts Dutch Immigration Policy
» Italy: Immigration Rules Trump Education
» UN Concerned About Italy’s Security Package
 
Culture Wars
» Jail for Dissing ‘Gays’ Pulled After Publicity

Financial Crisis


Is Goldman Sachs a Bubble Ready to Burst?

One of the best lessons I’ve learned over my career as an investment analyst is the myth of excellent management or “great execution” is really just that — a myth.

When I see companies in troubled industries reporting quarter after quarter of great results, while all of their peers are getting killed, I know a fraud is going on. I remember in the early 2000s, WorldCom kept reporting profits when all of the other long-distance carriers were getting killed. I knew it couldn’t last. And it didn’t. WorldCom’s accounting was revealed to be a fraud — the company was counting its network access costs as capital expenses. Once the real numbers came out, the company collapsed in what was the largest bankruptcy in American history at that point.

About three years ago, I saw Goldman Sachs reporting quarter after quarter of unbelievable results when all of the other investment banks were hurting. I spent a lot of time looking at its numbers — which didn’t make any sense. It reminded me of Enron. It kept reporting bigger and bigger profits, but lost more money every year in cash. And its debt balances kept growing.

[…]

In October 2008, I figured out part of the big secret: Goldman had insured all of its subprime exposure via AIG. This allowed it to book huge profits on its subprime investments long before they were actually paid off because the bonds were insured.

[…]

But I completely missed one big part of the story. And once this fact becomes common knowledge, it will probably mean jail time for several leading Goldman executives and the end of the firm. What did I miss? The entire Goldman-AIG relationship was a complete sham. Let me explain.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy Faces a Derivatives Time Bomb

Financial markets are gripped by the role derivatives have played in Greece’s debt crisis, but Italy also has a derivatives time bomb, and hundreds of cities are in the €24-billion blast zone.

Many local governments eager to cut financing costs for years rushed to sign up for complex derivatives contracts, even when the terms were in English. But some cities, facing big losses when interest rates go up, are now trying to pull out of derivatives and suing the international and local banks that arranged the deals.

In a test case, a judge in Milan will decide in coming weeks whether to try 13 people and four banks — UBS, Deutsche Bank, Germany’s Depfa and JPMorgan Chase & Co — on aggravated fraud charges. The case stems from a derivatives swap over a €1.68-billion 30-year bond, the biggest issued by an Italian city.

Milan, Italy’s financial capital, is facing a €100-million loss on the deal, city officials say. Milan is also suing the banks for €239-million in overall liabilities.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Lehman Brothers’ Chiefs Concealed Losses With Accounting ‘Gimmick’ Days Before $700billion Collapse

Lehman Brothers used accounting gimmicks and had been insolvent for weeks before it filed for bankruptcy in September 2008 with more than $700 billion (£461 billion) in assets, an official investigation has found.

Some of Lehman’s management’s decisions can be questioned and the firm’s valuation procedures for its assets may have been wanting — but those responsible were not liable for the firm’s collapse, Anton Valukas found.

However, Lehman could have claims against former chief executive Dick Fuld and chief financial officers Chris O’Meara, Erin Callan and Ian Lowitt for negligence or breach of fiduciary duty, he added.

The revelations came in a 2,200-page report into who could be blamed for the firm’s collapse in 2008, which deepened the global financial crisis.

The examiner said there was also sufficient evidence to support a possible claim that the firm’s auditor, Ernst & Young, had been ‘negligent’ and that Lehman could pursue claims against the firm for ‘professional malpractice’.

[…]

The long-awaited report contains explosive allegations about a gimmick, known as ‘Repo 105,’ that was used for the sole purpose of manipulating Lehman’s books, contributing to the firm’s demise.

The examiner concluded that the gimmick, which dated back to 2001 and was used without telling investors or regulators, gave the appearance that Lehman was reducing its overall leverage levels in 2008 when in reality it was not.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama: Serving Ambitions, Not Citizens

This recession isn’t going to end as long as Obama is in office. The recession is an essential part of the “Progressive” plan to transform the foundation of the country from capitalism to socialism.

The unemployment rate of 9.7 percent represents only about half of the workforce that would be working if jobs were available. Jobs in the private (productive) sector continue to decrease, while government and SEIU (Service Employees International Union) taxpayer paid jobs continue to increase.

With less and less revenue from private sector production and more and more government dependence, you can see where this is headed. You can also see why our government keeps borrowing more money to pay for liabilities that aren’t being covered by tax revenue.

Eventually, the loan interest rate becomes unaffordable, or credit is denied altogether, and the nation’s economy collapses through default. That’s when the socialists take over and begin confiscating 50% or more of your income in taxes as a necessary step toward economic recovery.

[…]

This synthetic president said in his State of the Union address that “we were sent here to serve our citizens, not our ambitions.” Maybe Obama needs to start listening to his own speeches. He has done nothing but serve his own ambitions and special interests since taking office. He must be aware that nationalized healthcare is not popular with the American people, yet he continues to push it. How is that “serving our citizens?” Is he really listening to anyone other than Andy Stern, president of the SEIU?

“If the power of persuasion doesn’t work, then we’ll use the persuasion of power.”—Andy Stern, another Marxist advising Obama and influencing national policy. As the communist USSR president, Nikita Khrushchev, once said: “We will take you over from the inside!” At the time, in the late 1960s, few took him seriously. They should have. The communists now have their man in the White House.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Stern Backs $100bn IMF Climate Fund Plan

London, 11 March: A climate fund proposed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to raise $100 billion a year by 2020 has won support from climate change economics guru Nicholas Stern.

Speaking in Nairobi on Sunday, IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said: “Sustainable growth in developing countries will require large-scale, long-term investments for climate change adaptation and mitigation. The Copenhagen Accord suggests that $100 billion a year is needed by 2020, over and above existing aid commitments. This will be difficult to do with the standard approach — a series of ‘pledging conferences’ for decades to come.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Al Qaeda Suspect Had Worked at Nuke Plants in NJ and Pa

The American arrested in a sweep of al-Qaeda members worked as a laborer at five nuclear plants in South Jersey, Pennsylvania and Maryland, federal officials said today.

Sharif Mobley had a “red badge” clearance, the highest level a laborer can obtain, while working on at the Salem-Hope Creek nuclear plants in Salem County, according to a spokesman from the local union of which he was a member.

Sharif was arrested last week with suspected al-Qaeda members in Yemen and officials said he then killed a guard while trying to escape from a hospital. He is under FBI investigation in Delaware. Law enforcement sources have said the investigation is terror-related.

In addition to PSEG’s Salem-Hope Creek plants on Artificial Island, Mobley worked at the Peach Bottom, Limerick and Three Mile Island I plants in Pennsylvania and at Clavert Cliffs in Maryland, according to an e-mail from Neil Sheehan, a spokesman for the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Sheehan said the commission is investigating what level of access Mobley had at the plants.

He was a contractor with the Local 222 chapter of the New Jersey Laborer’s Union in Camden for projects in Salem County.

“He had full clearance to go where he needed to be,” said chapter Business Manager Curt Jenkins. “You have no way of knowing what somebody’s thinking. He went through the strenuous background checks that everybody else has to go through.”

The NRC’s Sheehan said, “A laborer typically would not have access to any security-related or sensitive information.”

Background checks include criminal history, drug testing, employment verification and psychological assessments. The companies — not the NRC — carry out the background checks and are required to do ongoing behavioral observation.

PSEG spokesman Joe Delmar said Mobley worked as a contract laborer during refueling outages from 2002 to 2008 and satisfied federal security requirements.

Federal authorities told state Homeland Security officials that there was no security breach involving Mobley at the nuclear plants, according to Mike Drewniak, spokesman for Gov. Chris Christie.

Jenkins said Mobley, who worked on scaffolding at the nuclear plants and excavation projects in Camden County, would have been put through a repeated background check each time he worked on a new job. He said those checks are thorough, going as far back as childhood.

“If there’s anything there they’re going to find it,” he said.

Mobley transferred from the Philadelphia Local 322 in 2003 and then suspended his union membership in 2008, telling Jenkins he was going to school. He didn’t say where or what for. Jenkins assumed he was at a university in the region or “in the country at least.”

He said Mobley was polite and hard-working.

“He always was mild-mannered,” Jenkins said. “I never saw him angry or portray any sign that he would get violent.”

Mobley’s brother, Charles Beyah, also is a union member in Atlantic County.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Bill Requires U.S. Withdrawal From NAFTA

‘Proponents have had more than enough time to make this work — it didn’t’

A coalition of 27 lawmakers from across the political spectrum is sponsoring a bill to withdraw the U.S. from the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, in as little as six months.

Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Miss., has introduced HR 4759, “To provide for the withdrawal of the United States from the North American Free Trade Agreement.”

“NAFTA and similar free trade agreements have resulted in a 29 percent decline in U.S. manufacturing employment since 1993,” Taylor’s office said in a statement. “NAFTA discourages investments in U.S. manufacturing facilities and accelerates the erosion of our industrial base.”

Taylor called the loss of manufacturing jobs a matter of national defense He pointed out that the U.S. had a trade surplus of $1.7 billion with Mexico in 1993, prior to its entry into NAFTA — and that number turned into a deficit that peaked at $75 billion in 2007 and dropped to $47 billion by 2009. Additionally, his office said the trade deficit with Canada in 1993 was $11 billion prior to NAFTA, swelling to $78 billion and dropping back to $20 billion with the decline of the economy in 2009.

“I voted against this legislation in 1993 because I knew that this trade agreement would lead to a decline in jobs and our industrial manufacturing base,” Taylor said. “Just look at what happened when the Department of Defense needed to rapidly build Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles.”

Taylor explained that the Department of Defense sought to increase the number of MRAP vehicles in Iraq in 2007 and purchased 17,700. He said because of diminished manufacturing capacity, it took nine different contractors working together to build all those vehicles.

“The decline in our manufacturing base left the contractors without a trained workforce to build these vehicles. This led to delays and choke points in production and overall delivery of the MRAPs,” he said. “This was a logistical nightmare.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Expert: Reagan Gets the Shaft in Textbooks

If you want to know just what your kids are learning from their history books, all you have to do is apply the “Reagan test,” says Professor Larry Schweikart.

As the Texas textbook battle continues to simmer, Schweikart says the first thing he does to determine whether a book is politically slanted is to go to any section discussing President Ronald Reagan. What you’ll find there, he says, will tell you everything you need to know, he says.

Schweikart says the majority of books he’s examined credit former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev with ending the Cold War, and not Reagan. That’s “a joke,” Schweikart says. “I lived through the Reagan years, I remember.”

“The reason why textbooks get to where they are is because this is the world view of (a) the people who write the text books, (b) people who edit the text books, and (c) people who publish them,” the history professor says.

Schweikart says the textbooks’ authors bring an inherently liberal viewpoint to their work.

“They all tend to come from New York, Boston, Washington and Philadelphia,” giving them a “drastically” different viewpoint from the rest of America, he says.

Aside from bias, there are factual errors as well.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Fed Agencies Seize Toys, Call Them ‘Machine Guns’

Claim pot metal frames actually could fire bullets

A gun rights organization has launched a Freedom of Information request following a decision by federal Customs and Border Protection agents to seize a shipment of toy pellet guns and a determination by the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that they could be converted into machine guns so they must be destroyed.

Government agencies have explained that the Airsoft toys, made of a soft pot metal and lacking a firing mechanism, easily could be converted into a true weapon capable of automatic fire.

“Our firearms technology branch classified this as a machine gun,” BATFE Special Agent Kelvin Crenshaw said in a report assembled by Gun Owners of America. “With minimal work it could be converted to a machine gun.”

Gun Owners spokesman Erich Pratt told WND today his organization has launched a FOIA demand for information to find out on what basis the government reached that conclusion.

[…]

An analysis by John Velleco, director of federal affairs for Gun Owners noted that, “To make the transformation, the entirety of the upper receiver would have to be replaced, but the lower receiver would still be unable to endure the intense force of live ammunition because it is made of pot metal (inexpensive alloys) instead of hard steel.

“And all of this work would actually cost more than buying a real — and stable — AR-15 rifle,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Czar in ‘Clean Energy’ Corruption?

Co-authored paper with financial bundler who boasted of gains for his company

President Obama’s “science” czar, John Holdren, was co-author of a 2004 energy policy paper that recommended “cap and trade” legislation, including “clean coal” technology and $2 billion from the federal budget for construction of one or two new nuclear facilities.

WND has learned a co-author of the paper with Holdren is John Rowe, a financial bundler for President Obama’s 2008 campaign who serves as chairman of Exelon, the mega-utility owning 30 percent of all U.S. nuclear plants.

Rowe, who has financial ties to several members of the Obama administration, last month boasted how his company stands to gain financially from the regulation of high-carbon emitting plants — the very recommendations Rowe set forth in his paper with Holdren.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Justice Department Shut Down ACORN Probe

FBI documents ‘reflect systematic voter registration fraud’

A nonpartisan, political watchdog group announced today that it has obtained documents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation detailing federal investigations into the alleged corrupt activities of Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN.

Judicial Watch revealed that the documents it acquired reference serious allegations of corruption and voter registration fraud by ACORN and the Obama administration’s decision to shut down the criminal investigation without filing criminal charges.

[…]

“These documents reflect systematic voter registration fraud by ACORN,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “It is a scandal that there has been no comprehensive criminal investigation and prosecution by the Justice Department into this evident criminal conduct.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pentagon Shooter Pot Scandal Grows

Left-wing California politicians have been talking about legalizing and taxing marijuana to save the state from bankruptcy. But thanks to the state’s most notorious pothead, Pentagon shooter John Patrick Bedell, that vision may now go up in smoke. Bedell’s easy access to “medical marijuana” in California is quickly becoming a scandal that threatens the well-funded movement to increase access to the weed by legalizing it statewide—and perhaps nationwide.

Bedell had a doctor’s approval to get “medical marijuana” in 2006 and was reported by his father to have a “medicinal marijuana card” when he was declared missing in January of this year.

Facing a backlash over reports that Bedell was a psychotic pothead, the illegal-drug lobby is accusing anyone who brings up anything negative about “medical marijuana” of engaging in “reefer madness,” a term once given to chronic marijuana use of the kind that ultimately resulted in Bedell’s downward spiral and death in an exchange of gunfire at the Pentagon.

On top of the Bedell tragedy comes the apparent overdose of actor Corey Haim, who smoked marijuana at the age of 16 before moving on to other drugs, including cocaine, crack, stimulants and Valium.

[…]

However, after California passed Proposition 215 legalizing medical marijuana in 1996, media celebrities such as Bill Maher, dubbed one of the top ten “celebstoners” by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), began to vigorously promote the weed. “The only thing bad about marijuana is it makes you eat cookie dough,” he joked.

But after Bedell’s shooting rampage, which resulted in two guards being shot and wounded, no one is laughing.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Reforming the Way Public Employees Are Paid

Public employee compensation is breaking the bank. Two or three decades ago, it was commonly understood that public employees were underpaid; everyone knew that when they took a government position. The lower pay was balanced by job security, extra days off, and a generous benefit package, so government employers were able to attract qualified applicants in spite of the lower salaries.

Then, state by state, city by city, public employees were allowed to unionize, which — in hindsight — was perhaps the biggest fiscal mistake governments could have made. Predictably, public employee unions (PEUs) began to involve themselves in politic campaigns and amass enormous campaign war chests and eventually began electing the very people with whom they were negotiating their contracts.

If unions attempted this in the private sector, it would be a felony and people would go to prison…but almost no efforts have been undertaken to prevent this form of “bribery” in the public sector and today public employee unions routinely control both sides of the bargaining table.

Under this perverse new system, public sector salaries have grown until they are at par or greater than the salaries of similar job classifications in the private sector. However, these higher salaries are in addition to vastly superior, public sector fringe benefit packages.

Today, public employees in Oregon enjoy the best fringe benefit packages money can buy and, in addition to high salaries and first class fringe benefits, they routinely retire making more money in their pension than when they worked full time. Seriously.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Ryan: Dems Ramming “Shell” HC Bill Through Committee Monday

Rep. Paul Ryan says that Democrats are ready to ram a “shell” health care bill through the Budget Committee, on which he serves as ranking Republican member, to use as a vehicle to impose national health care.

In a phone interview with TAS Thursday afternoon, Ryan said that he expects Democrats to begin the complex process on Monday, under which they would have the Budget Committee approve a phantom bill by midnight, which they will then send over to the Rules Committee. At that point, the Rules Committee will strip out all of the language in the phantom bill, and insert the changes to the Senate bill that Democrats have negotiated.

“They don’t have the votes right now, but they’re creating the vehicle so that they can airdrop in whatever changes they want,” Ryan said.

[…]

He said he expected Democrats to dust off last year’s health care bills from the Education and Labor and Ways and Means Committees, to use as the vehicle for reconciliation changes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Senate Health Bill Would Up Costs for Millions in Middle Class, Analysis Finds

A nonpartisan study is casting new doubt on President Obama’s campaign pledge not to raise taxes on the middle class.

The Senate health care bill crucial to saving President Obama’s signature domestic initiative will hit the wallets of a quarter of all Americans making less than $200,000 per year, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Joint Tax Committee that assessed the way the bill would hit taxpayers directly through new taxes and fees and indirectly through taxes levied on health care providers and passed on to consumers.

The committee also determined that the bill would subsidized insurance premiums for 7 percent of taxpayers — about 13 million people — while some 73 million people would face higher costs from the new fees and taxes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Disemboweling of America

Though Bush 41 and Bush 43 often disagreed, one issue did unite them both with Bill Clinton: protectionism.

Globalists all, they rejected any federal measure to protect America’s industrial base, economic independence or the wages of U.S. workers.

Together they rammed through NAFTA, brought America under the World Trade Organization, abolished tariffs and granted Chinese-made goods unrestricted access to the immense U.S. market.

Charles McMillion of MBG Information Services has compiled, in 44 pages of charts and graphs, the results of two decades of this Bush-Clinton experiment in globalization. His compilation might be titled, “Indices of the Industrial Decline and Fall of the United States.”

From 2000 to 2009, industrial production declined here for the first time since the 1930s. Gross domestic product also fell, and we actually lost jobs.

[…]

China accounts for 83 percent of the U.S. global trade deficit in manufactures and 84 percent of our global trade deficit in electronics and machinery.

Over the last decade, our total trade deficit with China in manufactured goods was $1.75 trillion, which explains why China, its cash reserves approaching $3 trillion, holds the mortgage on America.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



While Government Treats Citizens as Terrorists, Mexican Military Invades U.S.

While the U.S. government and federal authorities busy themselves targeting American citizens as domestic terrorists, it seems they couldn’t care less about the fact that the military of a foreign power is flying around American airspace with wanton abandon.

Residents of Falcon Heights, a south Texas border town, saw a Mexican helicopter hovering over a house shortly after 6pm on Tuesday night. The chopper conducted surveillance for about 15 minutes before flying back to Mexico.

“They had armored individuals in the chopper, open ramp, very military looking, in style and preparation,” said Zapata County Sheriff Sigifredo Gonzalez Jr.

“It’s proof the Mexican military sees no boundaries,” reported local KRGV News’ Stephanie Stone, adding that the incident wasn’t the first of its kind and wouldn’t be the last.

“The markings I understand read ‘La Marina’ which is equivalent to the Mexican Navy,” said Gonzalez.

[Return to headlines]

Canada


From an Ex-Muslim, True Islamophobia

The words stung me like a jolt of electricity: “Muhammad was a child rapist.” As if the slur were not sufficient, the speaker then insinuated my Islamic faith was filth. “I am ‘clean’ of Islam,” she sneered to her Toronto audience. As far as hate speech goes, the shoe was suddenly on the other foot.

For years, radical Islamists have cited freedom of speech to defend their attacks on Christians, Jews, Hindus and liberal non-observant Muslims. A hateful tone is never far from the surface — although great care is taken to couch this cancer in ambiguity and double-speak. Take for instance the Toronto imam caught on videotape praying to Allah for the “defeat of the kufaar,” a thinly disguised reference to Christians and Jews.

As a Muslim, I learned very early in life to walk in my adversaries’ shoes to feel their pain. This is why I have not shied away from calling a spade a spade and outing the segregationist hate mongers within my community, an effort that has paid dividends in the slow decline of overt anti-Semitism and Hinduhatred in the public religious discourse of Western Muslims.

But last week, it was not a Muslim cleric whose speech traumatized me; it was the words of an ex-Muslim…

           — Hat tip: flyboy [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Agnes Heller Demands More Civil Courage of the Hungarians

Magyar Narancs 25.02.2010 (Hungary)

The majority of the Hungarian population cannot identify with the republic which was created 20 years ago. Istvan Bundula talked with philosopher Agnes Heller, who blames in part Hungary’s former status as the “happiest shack” in the Eastern camp. “The paternalistic politics of the Kadar era so spoiled the people that even today they still expect everything from the state and feel no obligation to take responsibility themselves. Hungary lacks a strong civil society which acts independently of party allegiances, it has no independent initiatives — either in field of economics or politics. In his ‘Emilia Galotti’ Gotthold Ephraim Lessing wrote ‘Violence! Who can’t resist violence? […] Seduction is the true violence’“. One of the reasons for the recent surge in the popularity of the far right, Heller says, is the Hungarian propensity for blowing things out of proportion. “There was and is no limit to how wild things can get in Hungary, and the situation is getting more extreme all the time. People have got used to discussing all sorts of issues in public using the language of the extreme right. Neither the Hungarian laws nor Hungarian society tried to put a stop to this — and that is the real problem. Because the state wouldn’t have had to have made laws [against Holocaust denial] if society had not tolerated it. […] When the people hear this sort of talk they look away in fear instead of speaking up. But you fear has not place in a democracy, because the key virtue of democracy is civil courage. Without it, democracy cannot exist, however good the laws.”

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



Care Does Not Include Sex — Dutch Nurses’ Union

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) — A union representing Dutch nurses will launch a national campaign on Friday against demands for sexual services by patients who claim it should be part of their standard care.

The union, NU’91, is calling the campaign “I Draw The Line Here,” with an advert that features a young woman covering her face with crossed hands.

The union said in a statement on Thursday that the campaign follows a complaint it had received in the last week from a 24-year-old woman who said a 42-year-old disabled man asked her to provide sexual services as part of his care at home.

The young woman witnessed some of the man’s other nurses offering him sexual gratification, the union said. When she refused to do the same, he tried to dismiss her on the grounds that she was unfit to provide care.

“This type of action is not part of the job responsibilities of carers and nurses,” NU’91 said.

The case has been reported to police, the union added.

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



Dutch FM Verhagen: Wilders Spreads Hatred

THE HAGUE, 12/03/10 — In an address to foreign journalists, opinion-maker and students, Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen has stated that MP Geert Wilders spreads hatred.

Wilders is currently on trial on charges including hate speech. According to Verhagen it is not up to politicians but to the courts to decide whether freedom of speech has been violated. However, in the same speech, Verhagen himself pronounced a guilty verdict on Wilders.

“Only the courts can determine whether the law has been broken after utterances have been made,” stated Verhagen. But he also said: “By spreading fear and hatred, he is only destroying, not building. And in the process, he is damaging the interests of the Dutch people and the reputation of the Netherlands in the wider world.”

Wilders method is simple, according to the Christian democrat (CDA) minister. “He plays people off against one another — in a highly distasteful fashion, I might add. He is not looking to find common ground, uphold shared values or work toward constructive solutions based on these shared values. (…) If we allow discrimination and hatred to spread, this will only lead to segregation, polarisation, escalation and eventually, confrontation.”

Verhagen was speaking at a conference on public diplomacy. He announced that in a new pilot, the Netherlands “has established three public diplomacy hubs — in Washington, Beijing and Cairo — which are responsible for shaping a regional approach to public diplomacy.”

“Our primary, short-term goal is to respond to incidents and crises: damage control, if you will. Our secondary goal is to put our policies in context, with a view to building support. And our wider goal is to develop a long-term relationship with opinion makers, with a view to promoting a solid and positive image of the Netherlands.”

Media analysis, networking activities and visitors’ programmes as well as exchanges and cultural relations, are all used to this effect. “By applying these various instruments, usually through our embassies, we hope to create a more balanced picture of our country.” Verhagen noted that “politics is not just about whose military or economy wins, but also about whose ‘story’ wins.”

Verhagen began his speech by saying that “in the Netherlands, as elsewhere, diversity has come to be viewed not so much as a source of cultural enrichment, but as a threat. Many Dutch people fear radicalisation, and their fears are fuelled by international terrorist attacks in the name of Islam. This, together with a general feeling of unease caused by globalisation, has resulted in rising tensions between groups of people with different cultures, customs and beliefs.”

“_These tensions are disguised or denied by some and fuelled by others. I believe both responses are wrong. Downplaying tensions does not do justice to people’s legitimate concerns. Fuelling conflict, on the other hand, is equally irresponsible. Look at how Geert Wilders has influenced the public debate in the Netherlands over the past few years. Look at what he’s doing in the run-up to the June 9 elections.”

“We should condemn not religions, but rather people and groups who abuse religion to achieve their ends through violence. Islam is not the problem. (…) I prefer to focus on what we share as people and as nations, and how we can live together peacefully, on the basis of a number of universally shared convictions. Human rights are what bind us together in this world.”

Referring to a survey his ministry commissioned two years ago on the Netherlands’ reputation in fifteen countries, Verhagen said it “was striking that we scored lowest in the three Muslim countries that were part of the survey”. These were Egypt, Turkey and Indonesia.

“In Egypt and Turkey, neither opinion leaders nor the population at large expressed much appreciation for the Netherlands in terms of ‘moral values’ and ‘respect for other religions.’ That is a disappointing result in the sense that it is completely contrary to our self-image. This result goes against the core values we embrace: human rights and tolerance. We will thus have to learn and adapt our strategy. To help us better understand our interlocutors, more qualitative, in-depth research will be carried out in the Arab world.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



EU Spent at Least €14m Subsidising Convicted Fish Crooks

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — The European Union has spent at least €14 million in subsidies to firms convicted of illegal fishing, a new report has revealed.

Some 36 law-breaking vessel owners with 42 convictions between them received €13.5 million between 1994 and 2006 according to an investigation by Fishsubsidy.org, a group of researchers investigating the recipients of the EU’s Common Fisheries Policy.

In a laborious nine-month investigation, the team matched up records of court convictions with lists of who receives EU fishing subsidies. The investigators warn however that this is only the tip of the iceberg, as they only looked at boats in the waters of two major fishing nations, Spain and France. They had attempted to investigate Italian fishing as well but it proved too difficult and time-consuming.

Additionally, data on convictions is very hard to obtain. Unlike data on fisheries subsidies, there is no official data that governments provide on convictions. Instead, the information was culled manually from government websites, newspaper reports and court records.#

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



Germany: Jesuits Hard Hit by High Number of Abuse Claims

The sexual abuse scandal in Jesuit-run German schools is spreading rapidly and is likely to involve more than a hundred former pupils, according to the head of one of the affected colleges.

The impact on the Catholic order, the Society of Jesus, has been devastating, since the Jesuits have always boasted: “Give us the child for seven years and we will give you the man.” Now it seems the order may lose some of its credibility, in Germany at least, as a pillar of Catholic education.

“I can imagine that we will reach a three-figure number,” said Father Klaus Mertes, head of the elite Canisius college in Berlin, talking of the number of possible victims. He did not exclude a compensation package.

Manuela Groll, a lawyer representing many former pupils, said: “More and more victims are coming forward every day.”

The problems are not confined to the Berlin college, with cases of possible abuse being investigated at schools in Bonn, Göttingen, in St Blasien in southwest Germany, Hanover and Hamburg. At the Alosius college in Bonn, alma mater of Thomas de Mazière, the Interior Minister, and Stefan Raab, one of Germany’s top TV entertainers, the director has resigned after a parent accused him of complicity.

The claims date from the late 1950s to well into the 1990s but all, so far, fall under the statute of limitations, meaning that there will be no official criminal prosecution.

Instead, the order has engaged an independent lawyer, Ursula Raue, to look into the allegations. Some abuse victims say that she is too close to the Jesuits.

Most cases reported to the order so far occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Catholic priests speaking off the record say that, as leaders of church youth groups during this period, they were confused by the rapid changes in society. Pupils were caught up in the sexual revolution of that time and wanted to discuss their sexuality with the priests, many of whom were in their twenties. Until then, say the priests, Catholic education had an innocence about it. But the problems run much deeper. Many of the complainants say they were put under pressure to masturbate their priests. The Süddeutsche Zeitung carried an interview with an anonymous 62-year-old who has been active in politics for the past three decades.

He described graphically how, 50 years ago, he would be expected to enter the priest’s room and perform a sex act. The priest left the college two years later, supposedly for health reasons, to a parish in the Tyrolean alps, where he died in 1972.

To judge by the testimony of the victims, this was part of a pattern of covering the tracks of offending priests. Serious sexual and psychological abuse appears to have been tolerated until word leaked out to parents.

The Jesuits have apologised to the victims but the order faces a long period of self-appraisal. Even within the order, the expectation is that the paper trail will show a record of shielding offenders and ignoring signs of child abuse.

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



Hungary in the Throes of Social and Political Crisis

Elet es Irodalom 05.03.2010 (Hungary)

For many years Hungary has been in the throes of social and political crisis, which manifests itself in a widespread mistrust of public institutions, politicians and an all-out rejection of the politics which emerged after the collapse of communism in 1989. As a result, the parliamentary elections in April are expected to result in a landslide victory for the right-wing conservative Fidesz party, which is promising a return to authoritarian order. The philosopher and communication scholar Mihaly Szilagyi-Gal is concerned that the liberation of 1989 could be reversed. And that, he writes, would be an even greater fiasco than the oppression under the dictatorship. “For the first time since the transition, Hungary is on the brink of a situation in which one side of the political camp is essentially becoming autocratic. The problem is not with the side itself but the one-sidedness — perhaps even for the victor. This situation, which so closely resembles the monotheism of the one party state is, this time around, not the result of a — from society’s point of view — external oppression, but of a society behaving badly. This makes the defeat even more hard to bear. […] The badly-behaved society has itself become the oppressive power. There is no such thing as ‘them’ and ‘us’ any more. We are our own worst enemies. It’s all us.”

According to sociologist Peter Kende, the crisis of society which is now coming to a head in a push for law and order, has three factors to blame for its enormity: the crisis of legitimacy of the democratic institutions; the Hungarian reality deficit (the fear of facing reality and real conditions, as described by Elemer Hankiss as the “morbus Hungaricus”); and the existential angst, which many connect with the market economy and others with the poor performance of the current government in protecting the peace: “It is tragic that this country which was so disappointed by the promises made in 1989, is now on the verge of wasting a unique opportunity. Because if not in 1989/90, when else have we Hungarians had a free say in shaping our future ? If we now decide to surrender these achievements even only in part, it is most likely that we will never see an opportunity like it. Certainly not in our lifetimes.”

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



Italy: Economy on the Rise, Berlusconi Says

Premier presents new ‘Bank of the South’

(ANSA) — Rome, March 11 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi on Thursday was upbeat about the economy saying that a recovery, while slow, was in the works.

“After pulling out of a deep crisis, we are beginning to rise. This recovery will not be fast and the numbers won’t be big, but the trend is upwards,” the premier said.

Looking back at the economic downturn, Berlusconi recalled that “the government, when it tried to spread optimism, did not have its eyes closed but knew the importance of the psychological factor. We need to exploit this optimism”.

According to the premier, the fact that carmakers like Fiat did not insist on having last year’s ‘cash-for-clunkers’ initiative extended to 2010 “is a sign that the situation is getting better”.

Berlusconi made his remarks at the presentation of a plan to create a Banca del Sud, bank for the south, to help finance development projects in Italy’s economically depressed south, the so-called Mezzogiorno.

Also on hand was Treasury Minister Giulio Tremonti who said that as soon as the new bank opened a branch he intended to be the first person to open an account there.

Berlusconi added that if this were the case, he would be the second to do so.

The most recent data on the Italian economy indicates that the recovery is struggling to get going with GDP in the last quarter of 2009 falling 0.3% over the previous three-month period, after climbing 0.6% in the third quarter over the second and reversing a negative five-quarter trend.

National statistics bureau Istat on Wednesday again revised its data for the Italian economy in 2009 and said GDP fell by 5.1%.

Istat had initially put the decline in GDP at 4.9% and then on March 1 revised this to 5%.

NEW BANK TO OFFER CREDIT FOR SOUTHERN DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS.

The Banca del Sud will not be a retail bank with branches open to the public but operate as a so-called ‘second level’ bank which will coordinate medium and long-term credit through other banks. The credit will be channeled for projects aimed at creating new businesses, encouraging young and female entrepreneurs, allowing small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to grow and expand abroad, investing in research and development and creating more jobs in the Mezzogiorno. This new network of existing banks, the Treasury explained, will only focus on coordinating credit for specific projects and not deal with other problems which typically affect the Mezzogiorno, like the lack of infrastructures and inefficient public services. However, Berlusconi said at the presentation, the State does intend to turn to the new bank to raise funds for major public works projects. The Banca del Sud will be a private bank although the State will hold a minority stake and make a symbolic financial investment. However, the state will sell its interest in the bank after its initial five-year development period has ended. Aside from making funds available for development projects, the Banca del Sud will also serve as a consulting agency for banks in its network and SMEs and will carry out evaluations of the various projects.

The 15-member organising commission has been tasked with selecting the new bank’s founding members, defining the bank’s governance, setting the minimum capital investment network members must contribute and defining their specific functions and activities. The founding members will include the Italian Postal Service and the 111 banks belonging to the Banche di Credito Cooperativo and Casse Rurali located in the south, for a total of 620 branches. The organising commission will be advised by a panel of representatives from Italy’s national organizations and unions representing industrial employers (Confindustria), artisans (Confartigianato), retailers (Confcommercio), retail services (Confesercenti, farmers (Coldiretti), farm cooperatives (Lega delle Cooperative), farm owners (Confagricolture) and chambers of commerce (Unioncamere), among others.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Accuses Magistrates of Dictating Campaign Tempo

(AGI) — Rome, 11 Mar. — During an election rally to support Renata Polverini, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said “The Left-wing judiciary is dictating the tempo of this electoral campaign. First they invented a non-existent Bribesville and now they have invented this rejection of our lists.” .

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Seize Parmalat Founder’s Hidden Yacht

La Spezia, 11 March (AKI) — Italian tax police on Thursday seized a 16-metre yacht owned by Calisto Tanzi as they continue to recover assets owned by the founder of the dairy giant Parmalat, nearly seven years after the company’s collapse.

Police located the yacht in La Spezia, a port city in the northwestern Liguria region, but did not provide any details about the estimated value of the yacht dubbed one of Tanzi’s “last treasures.”

Police in December found 19 paintings and drawings including works by Picasso, Monet and Van Gogh hidden in houses belonging to friends of the Tanzi family.

At the time, police said the value of the art works could be as much as 100 million euros.

Parmalat collapsed in December 2003 with a 14 billion euro discrepancy in its accounts.

The case was Europe’s biggest bankruptcy and Tanzi was sentenced to 10 years in prison for corporate fraud in 2008.

A Milan court sentenced Tanzi to 10 years in prison for fraud in 2008. He appealed the sentence and is free awaiting trial.

He is also accused of fraudulent bankruptcy in a trial under way in Parma.

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



Italy: “Army of Escorts” Used to Fuel Corruption

Rome, 11 March (AKI) — An Italian investigation of a major corruption scandal linked to last year’s Group of Eight summit has claimed up to 350 prostitutes were offered to senior officials in a bid to win key contracts. Italian newspapers reports said on Thursday that prosecutors and police investigators discovered a vast network of escorts, who were each typically paid from 500 to 700 euros for appointments in Venice, Bologna, Florence and Rome.

The alleged prostitution network — which is said to have included Russians, Ukrainians, Cubans and Venezuelans — emerged from telephone taps recording conversations by former public works officials, Fabio De Santis and Mauro Della Giovanpaola, both of whom have been arrested for corruption.

Four men including Italy’s former civil protection deputy, Angelo Balducci, have been arrested for alleged corruption over construction contracts linked to the G8.

In one telephone conversation published on Thursday a businessman implicated in the unfolding scandal, Guido Ballari, is alleged to have booked a prostitute for De Santis in Rome at a cost of 500 euros.

According to the newspaper reports, when De Santis emerged from his appointment, Ballari telephoned him immediately.

“Do you realise you just made it by the skin of your teeth?” he was recorded to have said. “One minute after you came out, her husband arrived. What a mess that would have been!”

Diego Anemone, a Rome businessman among the four arrested in relation to the G8 corruption scandal is also alleged to have paid 5,000 euros for De Santis and Della Giovampola to stay in Venice during the city’s famous film festival.

According to the Italian daily, La Repubblica, Anemone’s brother, Daniele, booked a hotel and paid 1,500 euros for each escort supplied to the two government officials staying there.

Investigators have told the media that De Santis allegedly had more than 150 “contacts” with escorts during the period of telephone taps.

Florence magistrates are probing alleged kickbacks related to 327 million euros worth of construction contracts for last July’s G8 summit as well as other public works projects.

The G8 was held in the central quake-struck region of Abruzzo after being abruptly moved there from Sardinia last April.

Civil protection chief, Guido Bertolaso, a key ally of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, is also under investigation for alleged sexual impropriety and corruption related to contracts awarded to companies at last year’s Group of Eight summit.

Bertolaso widely respected in Italy for his role after the powerful earthquake killed 300 people in L’Aquila last April has denied any wrongdoing in relation to an ongoing investigation by Florence prosecutors.

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



Netherlands: Lives Left in Ruin by the ‘Brothers of Love’

Every day, more people are coming forward with reports of sexual abuse suffered at Catholic boarding schools in the Netherlands. Eikenburg boarding school is one institution mentioned more often than others.

By Joep Dohmen

Misty-eyed men in their 50s and 60s finally tell the story of their abuse at the hands of priests now in their 70s and 80s. Those priest cry as well as they admit their wrongdoings. After 40 years, the silence surrounding the sexual abuse committed by the priest of the Brothers of Love order, at Eikenburg boarding school in Eindhoven, has been broken.

Last month, NRC Handelsblad and Radio Netherlands Worldwide first broke the story of former students who were abused by Salesian priests at the Don Bosco boarding school in ‘s-Heerenberg. Since then, 350 victims have reported cases of abuse to an office of the Catholic Church in the Netherlands.

Another boarding school

The joint investigation has now revealed a second boarding school where abuse appears to have been both widespread and serious in nature.

Eleven former students of the now defunct Eikenburg Catholic boarding school for boys in Eindhoven have come forward offering independent testimony of the sexual and physical abuse they and others suffered there between 1956 and 1983.

The former students have accused nine priests and one lay brother. Some 50 priests worked at Eikenburg in the period the abuse took place. In its heyday, 350 children lived at the boarding school, mostly the sons of diplomats, industrialists, merchants and employees of electronics manufacturer Philips.

The boarding school opened its doors in 1849 and is “tucked away in the pristine serenity, protected by sturdy oaks and ample forests,” according to a promotional leaflet from the 1950s. In 1996 the boarding school closed its doors because it no longer drew enough students. The last priests to serve the order still live at the school.

A truly religious upbringing

The priests’ stated goal was to “give the pupils a truly religious upbringing, and make them accustomed with an orderly and regular life, diligence and good manners.” Loving one’s neighbour was “the central mission in life” for the Brothers of Love.

Dolf — who asked to be mentioned by his first name only — boarded an airplane destined for the Netherland in the fall of 1956. His parents, who lived abroad, thought he would be in good hands with the order.

When he arrived at the school’s gate, his group leader awaited him amidst a tapestry of brown and yellow autumnal leaves, Dolf recalled. The priest had black hair combed back over his head and wore horn-rimmed black glasses and a toga of the same colour. He was a heavy-set, coarse man.

The “truly religious upbringing” touted by the promotional leaflet consisted mostly of terror and humiliation. “I got so nervous I wet my bed,” Dolf, now 63, recalled. “That would lead to more punishment, and public ridicule.”

If his group leader priest got very angry, he would walk into the dining hall and tug at the edges of the table cloths, leaving the students to clean up the resulting mess. Masses were held at six every morning. A meat jelly served often for dinner was so disgusting, some boys couldn’t keep their food down. Anyone who gagged would be forced to eat his own vomit, and was beaten to boot.

Nowhere to turn to

“After a few weeks, I was woken up in the dormitory in the middle of the night,” Dolf remembered his abuse so long ago. “The priest took me with him and made me kneel down. I was covered with 15 blankets, and sat there sweating for 45 minutes. Then I had to satisfy him. This process was repeated every week for a full year, in every way imaginable. As a child, I didn’t understand what was happening. Later, he also tried to rape me. He was so big and strong. His hands covered my entire face.”

After 18 months, the priest suddenly disappeared, but Dolf was left scarred for life. At school, he became impossible to handle. “Later I was taken in by some very sweet people, and I received psychiatric treatment. Now that I have retired, it is all coming back to me,” Dolf said.

The worst, Dolf recalled, was the combination of loneliness, home sickness and the lack of safety. “My parents were far away. I had nowhere to turn to,” Dolf said. Telling them of his plight by letter was impossible. All mail sent to and from students was checked by the priests.

Feeling hurt and saddened, Dolf sought out the Brothers of Love last year. “My story was belittled. They told me the priest had been a little crazy, but that it hadn’t been that bad,” Dolf said.

Father Van Heugten (74), now abbot of the order, told NRC Handelsblad that he was familiar with Dolf’s story. “The brother was sent to a psychiatric institution,” he said. The order did not investigate the matter any further at the time.

Pilgrimage of sorts

Ton, now 61, is the son of a successful businessman from Nijmegen. In the two years he stayed at the same boarding school, his life was “totally ruined,” he said. He was also abused by a man in a toga. “His hands would crawl under my bed sheets. His penis would be in my mouth,” Ton recalled.

Years later,Ton’s therapist called the man to confront him and he confessed.But he refused any further contact. “I was so happy he confessed,” Ton cried as he spoke about it. His therapist, José Klaassen, said there is no reason to doubt the veracity of his client’s story.

Ton was never able to put the abuse entirely behind him. On an annual pilgrimage of sorts, he still returns to a nook of the boarding school where he would beat the walls in despair as a child.

After the school became a co-ed institution, girls fell victim to it as well. One of them is now 42, married with two children. She still visits a therapist every week. She was abused by a young priest in her room at Eikenburg for three years, from 1980 to 1983. What began with consolation ended in years of regular sex.

There are many more victims like Dolf and Ton. Some willing to go on record, others not. Some still feel guilt or shame over what happened to them. The main thread running through their confessions is the wanton nature of the physical and sexual abuse by priests and laymen alike. In the rare cases the priests’ supervisors did act, perpetrators were only reassigned elsewhere. The abuse was never investigated nor did anyone put a stop it. The abuse continued until at least 1983.

Abbot Van Heugten at first refused to comment on the accusations. “My advisors and my doctor have told me: no publicity”, he said before hanging up. He returned the call a day later, sounding desperate. “We didn’t know one of our board members had a relationship with a 13-year-old girl,” he said, referring to one of the latter cases of abuse. “He was here a second ago confessing to me in tears. This morning, I spoke to another abused former student over the phone four hours. I am at a loss, sir. This is all coming down on me now. I can only hope you will refrain from mentioning priests’ name,” Van Heugten said.

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



Paedophilia: Irish Bishops: Pope Asks Us to Help Judges

(AGI) — Vatican City, 11 March — To avoid ‘disinformation’, Irish bishops have clarified in a press statement that at the meeting held in Rome with the Pope it was made clear that ‘the Letter of 2001 does not absolve the Church authorities from their civil obligations, in particular the obligation to communicate and fully cooperate with civil authorities’.

Ireland’s bishops also expressed ‘appreciation’ for the declaration from director of the Holy See Press Office, Father Federico Lombardi, concerning this ‘very serious issue’ above all with “reference to the victims; the proper starting point is recognition of what has happened and concern for the victims and the consequences of the actions’. .

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



Poles No Longer Fear Germany

Two decades after German reunification raised widespread concern in Poland, the overwhelming majority of Poles no longer fear their western neighbours.

A survey by Polish pollster CBOS that was published by the newspaper Rzeczpospolita showed only 14 percent of Poles still had anxiety associated with Germany. Back in 1990, when Germany first officially recognised its eastern border with Poland, 88 percent of Poles said they feared the Germans.

In contrast, half of all Poles still said they fear Russia, though the number was down from 67 percent five years ago.

Polish psychologist Janusz Czapinski said his countrymen had come to realise modern Germany had nothing in common with Poland’s wartime Nazi occupiers and that Germans now treated their neighbours in a “friendly and peaceful” fashion.

“The majority of EU funds that we use come from our western neighbour,” Czapinski told the paper.

Despite Germany’s troubled history with Poland, ties between the two countries have improved considerably since Warsaw joined both NATO and the European Union.

However, relations with Berlin suffered during the nationalist-conservative government of former Polish premier Jaroslaw Kaczynski from 2005 to 2007. Polish officials also bristled periodically due to a now resolved dispute about a foundation meant to remember the suffering of German civilians expelled from lands now part of Poland immediately after World War II.

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



Pope: We Live in a Cultural Context Hostile to Faith

(AGI) — Vatican City, 11 February. — Pope Benedict XVI commented that, “We live in a cultural context marked by a hedonistic and relativist mentality, which tends to remove God from life, hinder the acquisition of a clear framework of values, the ability to distinguish good from evil and the development of a mature sense of sin.” The Pontiff added that these days “there is a sort of vicious circle between blurring of the experience of God and the loss of a sense of sin.” He believes that this situation “due to various not wholly dissimilar aspects” is like post-revolutionary France, in which lived Saint Jean-Baptiste-Marie Vianney, mentioned in the current Annus Sacerdotalis as a model for modern priests. .

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



Spain: Reliving Memory of Francoist Concentration Camps

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 11 — Spain is reliving the memory of “Franco’s slaves” in the concentration camps, with the transfer of the archives from the State Auditors’ Department to the Ministry of Culture and from there to the Historical Memory Documentary Centre in Salamanca. The news was reported today by El Pais. The archives will arrive tomorrow, 145 cases filled with documents, and can be consulted thanks to the agreement that was signed one year ago by Culture Minister Angeles Gonzalez Sinde, and the President of the State Auditors’ Department, Manuel Nunez. The documents contain the memory of 132 concentration camps and of the 541 battalions of prisoners sentenced to forced labour in military and civilian operations, after their arrest by the Francoist troops in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). El Pais daily has had access to the archives. The documents include the lists of people who have entered and left the prison camps. A copy of these monthly lists was sent to the Auditors’ Department to justify costs for provisions. And in the cases of forced labour, the lists also served as justification for the very low salary that was paid for this labour. The names of all prisoners are accompanied by their status or destination: “placed at the disposal of the civilian governor”; “to the chief of police”; “to hospital”; “deceased” or “released”. Few people knew of the existence of these archives for decades. “They were not hidden, we just didn’t have the space to have people consult them,” the vice director in charge of the archives of the State Auditors’ Department, Soledas Cases, told El Pais. According to historian Javier Rodrigo, a total of 188 camps were operational between 1936 and 1947. “They were camps for imprisonment, classification, reeducation and exploitation. They were sources of humiliation, famine, abuse, punishment, integration and transformation. And, in many cases, physical elimination”. The goal of the Francoist regime, according to Rogrido, was not to kill the opposition but to use a “social scalpel to separate the good from the bad, Spain from anti-Spain”. It is estimated that between 367,000 and 500,000 prisoners of the Civil War and, from 1940, refugees of WWII passed through the concentration camps to supply workers. The last camp to be closed was the camp of Miranda dell’Ebro, in 1947. This camp held World War II refugees from various countries: Germany, France, UK and Poland.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Black Cobra Gang Steals Selection of Small Cakes

Criminals with connections to the Black Cobra network are suspected by police of pilfering 120 boxes of almond tarts, punch rolls, apple crowns and brownies from a delivery truck in southern Sweden on Thursday.

“We have conducted raids at a number of addresses and have confiscated cakes,” police spokesperson Charley Nilsson told local newspaper Helsingborgs Dagblad.

The tasty treats were stolen on Wednesday night from a truck belonging to Godbiten, an Åstorp-based firm specialising in the production of traditional Swedish cakes and buns. While the driver slept in preparation for a trip to Denmark, the sweet-toothed thieves cut open the truck’s protective covering and liberated its irresistible cargo.

But the police were soon hot on their heels and were able to observe as four men began unloading Godbiten cake boxes at a store in Helsingborg at lunch time on Thursday, Helsingborgs Dagblad reports.

The store’s 29-year-old owner was placed under arrest and police were quickly able to round up four further suspects.

One of the suspects was in the process of feeding his child with Godbiten cakes when the police knocked on his door on Friday morning, a source told the newspaper.

Three men have so far been detained on suspicion of theft and handling stolen goods. Several of the suspects are known to the police and some are linked to the Black Cobra criminal gang, which began life in Denmark before spilling over the border into Sweden.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK: Checks to See if Foreign Out-of-Hours Doctors Can Speak English ‘Go Against EU Rules’

Britain is sticking rigidly to EU rules that outlaw checks on foreign doctors’ language skills while France flouts them, it emerged yesterday.

Britain is complying with the regulations even after the death of David Gray, who was killed by a German doctor with poor English skills, the General Medical Council said.

Health minister Mike O’Brien concedes we are ‘stuck’ with the rules for two years.

The GMC, which regulates doctors, also revealed the French get around the ban by not having tests as such, but by inviting prospective foreign GPs in for interview to check their language skills.

The council met Health Secretary Andy Burnham last week to demand an end to the ban on checks — but were told it could mean fines from Brussels.

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



UK: Don’t Raise Your Family in Britain, Say Expats: UK Voted Worst Place in Developed World to Bring Up Children

Britain is the worst country in which to raise children, while Australia is the best, a study has found.

The survey of expatriates living in six different countries found there was a better standard of living Down Under, and a better quality of family life.

[…]

A massive 45 per cent of parents said the quality of their family life had decreased since moving to the UK — just 16 per cent noticed an improvement, according to the survey commissioned by HSBC.

Britain was rated the lowest of the six countries examined. The list, from best to worst, read Australia, Singapore, Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates, the U.S. and the UK.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Whether or Not the Western Allies Abandoned the Jews

Le Nouvel Observateur 04.03.2010 (France)

The cover dossier addresses the controversy between Yannick Haenel and Claude Lanzmann, over whether or not the western allies abandoned the Jews. Such, namely, is the view put forward by Haenel in his book about the Polish resistance fighter Jan Karski (more here), whereas Lanzmann rejects the idea wholeheartedly. Claude Weill and Laurent Lemire collect together all the known facts on the matter in a background article in which they also address the role of the Vichy regime and the Vatican. Their astounding conclusion is that the Allies are beyond reproach but that the Vatican is as guilty as Rolf Hochhut maintained in his play ‘The Deputy’ . The magazine aslo prints excerpts from Karski’s 1943 memoirs which have now been republished in France (see another article on the subject in Figaro) in which he — unsuccessfully — tried to inform Roosevelt about the death camps: “When I left the president, he was still as fresh, rested and smiling as at the start of our discussion. I, on the other hand felt very tired.”

Claude Lanzmann talks in his article about the “Myth of Rescue” and explains that in the pre-war days as well as during the war, Jews were “not the centre of the world” but had taken up residence on the sidelines, if not the margins, of society. “This not only applies to the United States, but to the whole of Europe as well, not to mention Germany. The Jews were not — and are still not — although some of them like to pretend otherwise — the centre of the world. It is from the perspective of this factual truth, that we must judge the behaviour of the Allies during the War and their supposed abandonment of the Jews. Was it possible to save ‘the Jews’ or ‘Jews’? Which ones could have been rescued. When? How?”

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

Mediterranean Union


EMPA: Buzek: Assembly is a Political Bridge Across the Med

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 11 — The Euro-Mediterranean Parliament represents “a political bridge across the Mediterranean, a unique form of cooperation which is now more than ever a reason to push ahead with the peace process and development of the region’s economies”. The Speaker of the European Parliament, Jerzy Buzek, was speaking on the eve of the plenary session of EMPA in Amman which is to run until Sunday. As Speaker of the European Parliament, Buzek is also Deputy Speaker of EMPA and he will be using the visit to have a meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah II, on Sunday afternoon. The Middle East will be one of the main subjects on the agenda for the assembly and the Speaker of the European Parliament repeated its commitment “to reconstructing trust between the two sides. Our main concern is that talks should start as soon as possible and for this to happen what we need is goodwill” from the Israeli as well as the Palestinian side. Buzek went on to stress “the great potential there is for collaboration in the energy sector in the Middle East as a way of overcoming political differences. This cooperation is of key importance for our citizens: we want secure energy supplies at reasonable prices”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Morocco: France’s New Off-Shoring El Dorado

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 11 — With minimum wages at under 1 euro an hour and 44-hour working weeks, ridiculous benefit contributions, a five-year tax break and new cabled office space with security surveillance at just 8 euros a square metre, there is no real need to ask why French companies, from stock-market blue chips to SMEs are joining in the mass Morocco-bound exodus. Despite the campaign being waged by the Paris government against the temptation to off-shore, the former French colony has become a fashionable destination, with a 15% rise in transfers and 35,000 new jobs being generated. Insurers Axa, Bnp-Paribas, Bull, Ubisoft, Bouygues Telecom — to name just a few — have set themselves up directly on location while others are out-sourcing part of their businesses across the Mediterranean. And it seems that even Paris’ hospitals have joined the migration and are considering transferring some of their administrative departments to Casablanca. Not to mention all those companies that have set up their call centres in Morocco. The country has become “a suburb of the French economy”, says Mohamed El Ouahdoudi, the head of the Association of Call Centres and Offshore Information Services in Morocco. He was speaking to the Paris daily, Le Parisien, which has run a three-page reportage on “the kingdom of off-shore France”. Apart from the fact that the cost of living in Morocco “is 40% lower than that in France”, there is also the fact, says the Chair of Morocco’s Association of Customer Relations, Youssef Chraibi, that Moroccan employees speak French and often boast good quality university degrees. Young Moroccans are drawn to working for French companies as they pay better and there is no problem with practicing their religion. Hasna, who works for the company Ecowatt, in a country where the minimum wage is around 180 euros a month, is earning between 400 and 670 euros as well as having sickness insurance, banking facilities, and income tax limited to a 20% band, compared to the 38% imposed on other Moroccan workers. These are unusual perks indeed in the Maghreb country, where, in order to draw in further French investment, the government is footing the bill for new-staff training up to 5,800 euros over three years. In 2010 courses will be run to train 10,000 new engineers, says Quatiqua El-Khalfi, the Chair of Production at Morocco’s Ministry of Trade and Industry. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



TLC: Egypt’s Mobile Penetration Reaches 71 Pct

(ANSAmed) CAIRO, FEB 22 — The number of mobile subscribers in Egypt reached 55.35 million, or 71 percent penetration, by the end of December 2009, according to figures the National Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (NTRA). The penetration rate saw a 34.1 percent increase over the previous year’s 41.29 million subscribers; while growing 4.4 percent from 53.0 million the previous quarter. Mobinil’s total subscriber base reached 25.354 million by December 2009, growing by 2.9 percent over the previous year. Its market share is now equal to 45.8 percent, down from 46.1 percent in September 2009. Vodafone now has a total 23.325 million subscribers, up 5.7 percent from September 2009, equaling a market share of 42.1 percent, up from 41.6 percent. Meanwhile, Etisalat Egypt’s subscribers stood at 6.67 million, an increase of 5.9 percent compared to September. The third mobile operator’s market share is now 12.1 percent, up from 11.8 percent in September. In its daily market report, Beltone Financial said, “The Egyptian mobile market witnessed a slowdown in subscriber growth during the fourth quarter of 2009, particularly due to the fierce competition that emerged in quarter three, inflating subscriber growth during that quarter and, consequently, leading to weaker growth. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Minister: Textiles a Fundamental Sector

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, FEBRUARY 18 — The textiles and clothing sector in Tunisia, in spite of the crisis, remains a fundamental sector for the country’s economy, stated the Minister of Industry and Technology, Afif Chelbi, who spoke in Tunis at the conclusion of a seminar entitled “Textiles and Clothing: Trend and 2010 Domestic and International Prospects”, stressing that the it is the primary manufacturing export sector. It represents 36% of total exports, worth some 3 billion euros, and employs some 40% of workers in the domestic manufacturing. In 2009, Tunisia maintained its place as the fifth largest supplier to Europe’s clothing market (about 4% of the European Union), preceded by China, Turkey, India and Bangladesh. Regarding the performance of exports recorded last year, the minister reminded that, after a visible drop in the first half of the year, the last quarter showed signs of recovery, thus avoiding a two-digit negative balance. The final result was -8.8%. The result is judged as positive, he affirmed, and the result of the strategies implemented in Tunisia to consolidate the sector. (ANSAmed).

2010-02-18 20:10

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: 2010 Textile Exports to +12.7%, Italy Main Buyer

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 11 — Tunisia’s textile exports increased by 12.7% in volume and 16.9% in value since the start of this year. The t-shirt sector recorded the sharpest rise (+10.29% in value, +2.55% in volume). The Italian market, the country’s main buyer, takes in 67% of Tunisian textile exports. Tunisia is the fifth-largest clothing supplier of the European Union, and ranks second in women’s underwear and working clothes, third in jeans, fourth in trousers and fifth in ready-to-wear. Around a thousand foreign companies are active in the Tunisia textile-clothing sector. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Why Conservatives in Egypt See Women as Candy: Either Wrapped or Covered in Flies

Qantara 08.03.2010 (Germany)

A study in Egypt has produced shocking figures on sexual harassment, Mohammed Ali Atassi reports (here in English). “Ninety-eight 98 percent of the foreign women and 83 percent of the Egyptian women had been subject to sexual harassment — and nearly two-thirds of the men confessed to committing sexual harassment against women. On the other hand, conservative political and religious groups attempted to exploit the worsened incidents of sexual harassment to serve their own special interests. In a manner clearly demeaning to women, these factions attacked women’s dignity by pegging the blame for the assaults on the victims.” One of the examples Atassi gives is of a poster portraying a woman “as a candy that cannot be protected from flies (which means men in the language of these campaigns), save with the wrapper, which translates to the veil. Under the images of two candies, one wrapped and the second naked with flies hovering over it, a religious statement professes that an unveiled woman will not be able to protect herself — for God, the creator, knows what is in her best interest, and thus ordered the veil.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Jews Displaced From Arab Lands Finally Recognized

For the first time since they came to Israel, all 10 Jewish communities displaced from Arab countries have agreed on a course of action to address their grievances — and triumphed in the political arena.

The plight of the estimated 856,000 Jews who were forced to leave Arab countries after the establishment of the State of Israel has played a minimal role so far in negotiations for Middle East peace. But on February 22, the Knesset adopted a law under which any Israeli government entering into peace talks must use those talks to advance a compensation claim for those who became Israeli citizens.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Dancing for Their Lives: Undercover Visit to an Iraqi Expat Nightclub in Syria

Um Nour checked her watch. It was close to midnight and my guide to the Iraqi refugee underworld in Damascus wanted to get to the nightclub so she could start making money. I had failed the dress test, attempting to camouflage myself in an alluring outfit and eliciting only a pursed-lips stare, but Um Nour’s transformation was remarkable. I would not have recognized her on the street. On the many daytime occasions we had met during my reporting trips to Damascus in 2008, she dressed in baggy track pants, black hair tied back in a ponytail, her face lined and tired. This time, her long black hair was shiny and brushed with thick bangs that framed her face. She wore a tight-fitting black T-shirt sprinkled with sequins and black stretch pants tightly cinched at the waist. Her lipstick was deep red, her eyeliner heavy and black. She wore two rhinestone rings, her stubby fingers extended by fake red nails curled around an expensive cell phone.

Um Nour escorted me into the club, past men in black dinner jackets at the front door. Syrians owned the club, paid off the Syrian police when necessary, and called them in when there was trouble. Most of the clientele were Iraqis. The room was vast and dark, with spotlights trained on the dance stage. A live band played somewhere in the gloom behind the stage, making conversation almost impossible. There were at least a hundred tables. Most of the customers sat in small groups near the stage, drinking watered arrack and Johnnie Walker, sipping in the low haze of smoke from apple-infused tobacco in bubbling water pipes. Family groups sat farther back: mothers, fathers, and young daughters. Single women in their 20s and 30s had claimed seats in the darkest places, the better to survey the room. Um Nour picked a table near the back entrance, secured our spot, and gestured to the ladies’ restroom. We had gotten past the Syrian owners, but I would have to fit in with the mostly Iraqi clientele.

Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of the Iraqi exiles in Syria had turned to the sex trade for survival. In Damascus, refugees were not permitted to hold jobs. As resources dwindled, many were led into the underground economy. Female-headed households accounted for almost a quarter of the refugees registered with the U.N. refugee agency. Widowed, divorced, or separated from husbands by the war, many women had children or elderly parents to support. Sex was often their only marketable asset.

“I will never dance until I get so drunk,” said a woman in a pink latex jumpsuit with clear-plastic shoulder straps that kept the tight fabric in place. She was bent toward the mirror in the ladies’ room, applying eyeliner, next to a line of Iraqi women in the same pose. It was an utterly familiar female ritual: women gathering in front of a public bathroom mirror. It could have been anywhere, but for the outfits of tight fabrics and silver spandex revealing tactile, soft, full breasts served up for inspection. Clinging fabric over ample round backsides. Long skirts, slit to the thigh, bellies exposed. Gleaming black hair. High-heeled boots. Young faces. Curvaceous bodies. One last look? Enough eyeliner? Another pat of powder? Anxiety also filled the room, because of the deals that would have to be concluded later in the evening. One woman, maybe 20 but probably younger, was dressed as a schoolgirl. As we all prepared for the night ahead, the Iraqi women chatted, traded names and phone numbers. They flipped open cell phones and showed the pictures of their young children. Lingering together in this comfortable female place, homesick, they were preparing to live off their bodies.

Another woman said her name was Abeer. “My husband tried to smuggle the kids to Sweden, but they got caught and are back in Baghdad,” she told me. She had divorced her husband when he set off for Sweden. She had agreed to the separation for the sake of her two children. Now, she lived with her sister, and worried about her kids. She sent her club earnings home for them. But why had she come to Damascus, I asked; what had driven her to come here in the first place? “I was a journalist,” she said. In 2007, she was hired by a television station based in Baghdad. She worked as a correspondent until the day her mother found a letter that had been thrown into the family garden: “Leave in 48 hours or we will kill you.” Syria was the only open border. While I was pondering Abeer’s choices, she clicked her cell phone shut, took one last look at her mirror image, and moved toward to door. “Have a good night,” she said knowingly, one businesswoman to another, as she made her way into the dark nightclub.

I could see why this was Um Nour’s favorite club. The system of cost and rewards favored women who wanted some control over their work. It was a freelance market. We had walked in through the front door for “free,” while the male patrons paid a steep cover charge and even more for the alcohol and snacks delivered to the table. Um Nour explained that women paid the Syrian men at the door at the end of the night — but only if they left with a man.

Iraq has a long historical connection to prostitution. The Whore of Babylon is a character in the Bible’s Book of Revelations, the symbol of all things evil. The world’s oldest profession was first recorded in Mesopotamia in the second millennium B.C. The code of Hammurabi, the ancient world’s first fixed laws for a metropolis, acknowledged prostitution and gave prostitutes some inheritance rights. But Iraq’s modern dictator, Saddam Hussein, had set the stage for the moral decline of his population.

That he did so came as no surprise even to the Iraqis I knew who were most disturbed by the rampant prostitution among the exile community. Many had lived in Baghdad when prostitution was public. At the close of the Iran-Iraq War, prostitutes, protected by the regime, were encouraged to welcome the returning troops — a benevolent “victory present” from Saddam. In the 1990s, another time of hopelessness, prostitution became more widespread. The United Nations sanctions, imposed in 1991 to force Saddam to reveal and destroy Iraq’s suspected weapons of mass destruction, ushered in a decade of deprivation and corruption. Saddam was unmoved by the punishing financial and trade embargo, but ordinary Iraqis were impoverished, humbled by destitution, as the social fabric of the country unraveled. I had heard many stories about these years. Iraqis poured out searing memories that were as clear and important as the current U.S. occupation. “My father always said one Bush starved us, the other Bush drove us from our homes,” as an Iraqi doctor put it. His wealthy father had been ruined by the U.N. embargo, which reduced the family’s daily diet to tomatoes, bread, and onions, with small bits of meat for special occasions. Even the most common illnesses, previously treatable, could be a death sentence as medical supplies dried up. An Iraqi actor told me his bitterest memories came from the sanctions decade as his father moved the large family to cheaper and cheaper accommodations and his sister died prematurely due to inadequate medical care. In those desperate times, Iraqi women had also turned to prostitution to survive.

Another friend who had lived in Baghdad throughout this period observed: “You cannot overestimate the damage those sanctions did to the society. It was a casual thing for an Iraqi brother to help his sister, escorting her to a paying customer because it was improper for her to go alone. University students engaged in prostitution because they needed the cash for food. The administrative staff at the universities would take the role of pimps.” Iraqis keenly recalled not only the social wreckage but also the period in the 1990s when Saddam turned to Islam to shore up his legitimacy and suddenly acquired a new moral censoriousness.

Saddam’s national faith campaign had singled out prostitutes and included a public campaign to halt their activities. Appearing on Iraqi television, Saddam announced that these Iraqi women “were dishonoring their country.” Between 2000 and 2001, he unleashed the Fedayeen Saddam, a militia created by his son, Uday, to send an unmistakable message to a beaten-down population. Women accused of prostitution were rounded up and publicly beheaded in Baghdad and in other cities. The executioners carried out their work with swords. The severed heads of the condemned women were left on the doorsteps of their homes. Honor is a deeply held concept in Iraqi identity and women play a significant role. The horrific beheadings, the public humiliation of entire families, amplified Saddam’s cruelty and turned the punishment into a state-sanctioned desecration of a family’s name. But in the moral landscape of exile — shaped, in part, by Iraq’s sectarian civil war — honor was abandoned in the struggle to survive.

I would have to dance. In the dark at the back of the room the stage seemed like a bright planet, a place so distant I could barely make out the life forms. Um Nour had left me sitting alone. She was wandering around the club, greeting old friends. She had explained to the group of men sitting behind us that I was Ukrainian and therefore didn’t speak Arabic, but that didn’t stop them from sending drinks to the table and trying to engage me in drunken conversation. When one kissed me on the top of my head, I decided that I’d be safer on stage.

I climbed up into the bright lights. Most of the dancers seemed alone in the crowd. An older woman, in a simple red dress more appropriate for a day at the market, had been on the dance floor all night. She appeared to be listening to music from some distant time inside her head; eyes closed, she mouthed the lyrics of traditional laments of loss. With each refrain, her eyes moistened and she took the cigarette she was holding and brought the burning tip close to the exposed skin above her breasts. Over and over she brought the smoldering tobacco near her naked skin, about to inflict pain, but stopping short of contact. When the music ended she left the stage for a refresher of tobacco and alcohol.

Two girls danced together, fingers locked, madly twirling waist-long dark hair in circles to the beat of the music. One of them I recognized from the ladies’ room; no longer wearing her schoolgirl’s outfit, she had changed into a still more revealing costume and had paired herself with another long-haired beauty. Were they a package deal? Did they even know each other? They embraced like old friends but did not make eye contact with each other or with any other dancer on the stage. Beside them were two little girls, no more than 12 years old, in party dresses and lipstick. They copied the faces of the older women on stage — giddy, shiny-faced dancers at 3 o’clock in the morning.

The undeclared rules of the dance floor segregated the dancers. Men danced with men, arms entwined over shoulders, in short lines, flinging out one leg at a time and moving in a circle. Women danced alone or in pairs. Breaking the rules, pairing a man and a woman, would imply a business arrangement, and it was too early in the evening for that. The men mounted the stage to scout, to get a better look at the merchandise on offer.

The entertainment was tailored to an Iraqi audience, the music a medley of emotional, nostalgic old favorites from home. A comedian pumped up the audience by calling out the names of Iraqi cities. Baghdad! Sulaymaniyah! Mosul! The applause built for each constituency. He told jokes about the hard life in Damascus and played to the overwhelming longing for home. Then the band struck up another familiar tune and the next singer started the first few words of a song the audience knew well, a song of praise for Saddam. A blue laser light shot out from the audience and tapped the singer’s face. In mid-lyric, he switched to a tribute to the Iraqi national football team, eliciting widespread applause and calming the crowd of drunken men.

Abeer discovered me on the dance floor. I hadn’t seen her since our conversation in the ladies’ room. She wanted a dance partner and we were now old friends. She grabbed my hand and I was grateful. What choice was there? I was out of place, uncomfortable, a little scared in this crowd. My limited Arabic would not get me out of trouble. I needed a friend and Abeer had offered her hand, a partner for my charade. We danced. We rolled our eyes at the little girls on the stage as they became clumsy and tired and knocked into the other dancers. The red lady with the cigarettes was still with us and we shook our heads and wondered what trauma she was playing out. We moved around the dance floor, took in the details, looked at the faces, and then I saw Nezar Hussein, my translator and friend.

He was dancing, too, arms tangled in a line of men, smiling broadly when I finally noticed him. Unknown to me, he had been at the club all night, sitting across the room, my silent protector. I was relieved to see him. We made a plan to meet at the back entrance and share a cab for the trip home to compare notes on the rest of the dancers.

The man in the black dinner jacket at the front door demanded 500 Syrian liras, equivalent to about $15. He stretched out his hand and looked at me. He wanted his commission. I was leaving with a man, albeit Nezar, and I was now expected to pay up out of my expected proceeds. “But he’s my friend!” I said blurting it out in English, momentarily forgetting Um Nour’s instruction. Nezar and I had walked out together, reclaiming our identities at the front door, but to the Syrian controllers we were still part of the nightclub clientele. The dinner jacket stretched out his hand again and repeated, more forcefully this time, his demand for a cut of the deal. Five hundred, he said. We kept walking toward the cab and he watched us go. “Don’t ever come back here again,” he said glaring. That was easy. I did not ever want to come back again. The undertow of despair was too great.

In the taxi, Nezar and I marveled at the dancer in the red dress, the cigarette lady, who had sat out the intermissions on Nezar’s side of the room. “I saw her beating herself every time the singer started a song about mothers. She beat her breast really hard. When she saw me watching her, she came over to my chair and kissed me on my eyes. And she was crying.” We both shook our heads at the unimaginable calamity. We were tired, emotionally exhausted, and completely sober.

“I saw Um Nour showing pictures on her mobile phone,” said Nezar. He had saved this detail for last. “I mean, I wasn’t far from her when she came to my side of the room. Photos of almost-naked girls,” he said. Um Nour was a madam? She was trafficking young girls when she got up from the table and circulated among the male customers in the club? She was tough, a survivor. I should not have been so surprised. Each time I had asked her about her own daughter Um Nour had proudly answered that both of her children were in school. She was making sure they had a good future. Her children were Iraqis and one day they could go home.

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



How to Make Defeatism Look Good: Let’s Give Up and Cheer the Islamists

by Barry Rubin

I’m not going to bash or rant about a Newsweek article about Turkey by Owen Matthews-shocking and dangerous as it is—but rather talk about what is wrong and inaccurate about it. That article is part of a new wave of defeatism sweeping the West, though it still remains subordinate to the more ostensibly attractive idea that there is no real conflict or at least one easy to fix by Western concessions.

Here’s the title: “The Army Is Beaten: Why the U.S. should hail the Islamists.” Yes, we should thank the Islamists for taking over Turkey. But wait a minute! The ruling AK party says it isn’t Islamist. Indeed, I have been viciously attacked by them in the Turkish media for saying so. Up until now the line—including that from the regime itself—has been that we shouldn’t be afraid of them because they are really just democrats. But now some are willing to face the truth and still sugarcoat it.

Matthews writes:

“The political logic should be simple. The arrest of a shadowy group of generals for allegedly plotting a bloody coup should be a victory for justice. The end of military meddling in politics should be a victory for democracy. And greater democracy should make a country more liberal and more pro-European.”

Each of these sentences makes a false assumption and must be examined a bit.

Sentence one: Arresting military officers is only a victory for justice if they are guilty. Why does the author assume they are guilty? In fact, the claims are ludicrous. That a group of officers created a 5000 page plan for a coup that involved attacking mosques and massive attacks on civilians. It is one of a series of such accusations for which no real evidence has been presented, in which a widely disparate group of people have been arrested as alleged conspirators when their sole connection is that they are critics of the government.

This is ridiculously gullible. It’s like the famous sentence by a newsweekly magazine that even if the Hitler diaries were forgeries (they were) that would tell us a great deal about the history of the time. If in fact the arrests were trumped-up to tame the army so that the current regime can impose a dictatorship in practice it was not a victory for justice but for injustice. Iran, Syria, Hamas, Hizballah, and Islamists in general lie a lot (and a lot more than democratic government) so why should they be taken at their word, especially when any serious examination of evidence shows the truth.

Sentence two: Of course, in general, keeping the army out of politics is a victory for democracy, but that ignores the specific history of Turkey. The army has viewed itself and been accepted there as the guardian of democracy. This history is certainly imperfect but when the country has been sliding into anarchy in the past or fallen into the hand of those who threatened to destroy the republic, the army has stepped in briefly, gotten civilians to reorganize things on a stable basis, and quickly gone back into the barracks.

The Turkish army is not like those of the Third World which hunger for power, destroy democracy, and unleash corrupt and repressive regimes. On the other hand, this article—and many others—show ignorance about the actual shifts in Turkey.

For example, there is no awareness that the regime is seizing control of the media; that the party leader (which means the prime minister for the ruling party) simply picks candidates for parliament as he pleases; that the reforms have strengthened the prime minister’s power and not parliamentary democracy; and that women are being forced out of high positions. Merely weakening the army doesn’t mean more democracy when in almost every other respect there is less.

Sentence three: If indeed-as is the case-the regime is systematically cracking down on the free media and imposing its control over all the institutions. This is not leading to greater but to less democracy. There should be a lot more reporting on what’s happening within the country instead of just repeating the regime’s claims.

Indeed, the author states:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



South Korea Eyes Nuclear Push in Turkey

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 11 — South Korea’s plans to become a global player in the nuclear industry were boosted yesterday by the signing of a co-operation agreement between Korea Electric Power Corporation (Kepco) and Turkey’s Elektrik Uretim (EUAS), the two countries’ state power companies. The deal — as Financial Times reports — gives Kepco five months to conduct feasibility studies and produce a bid to build a 5,600 megawatt plant with four reactors in the Black Sea province of Sinop, Taner Yildiz, energy minister, confirmed in a telephone interview. If its proposal is accepted, an intergovernmental agreement would follow. Young Hak Kim, South Korea’s deputy prime minister, told a conference in Istanbul that construction could then begin in the short term. A Kepco-led consortium, with strong state backing, undercut US, French and Japanese rivals to secure a USD 20.4bn contract to build nuclear power plants in the United Arab Emirates last December. A Turkish deal would mark the start of a broader push into emerging markets, with officials in Seoul forecasting that Korean companies could earn some $400bn from reactor sales by 2030. The agreement also signals Turkey’s determination to succeed in a first foray into nuclear power, after four attempts dating back to the 1960s. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Surprise! Guess Who’s Biggest Islamic Threat

Interview Terror expert’s warning cites this NATO member

Famed PLO terrorist-turned-Christian Walid Shoebat is warning that the United States needs to be watching not Iran, Syria or even Hamas and Hezbollah as closely as it needs to follow the actions of the Islamic leaders of Turkey.

It was just a few months ago when Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin reported Turkey appeared to be seeking the restoration of the old Ottoman Empire.

The report said Turkey’s increasing disinterest in the European Union combined with its efforts to re-establish its influence in Turkic countries of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and its outreaches to Russian, Syria and Iran are cause for concern.

[Comments from JD: see URL for audio interview]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Baby Mortality Rate Down in Seven Years

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 11 — Baby mortality rate in Turkey was down in the last seven years, Anatolia news agency reports quoting Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan as saying adding that the rate was 2.85% in 2007. “This rate dropped to 1.3% today,” Erdogan said during inauguration ceremony of health institutions in Ankara. Erdogan said the rate of vaccination was up to 96% from 78%, and the measles cases were down to 5 from 7,810 between 2002 and 2009. The premier said malaria cases were also down to 39 in 2009. They were 10,224 in 2002. “Measures we have taken have been effective in this decline,” Erdogan said. The premier also said the government had launched free cancer scanning services in 81 provinces, and merged public hospitals under a single roof. “Thus, 35 million members of the Social Security Agency (SSK) can be treated at public hospitals,” he said. Erdogan also said the rate of contentment from health services rose to 62.5% from 39.5%between 2002 and 2009. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


More Than 50 Jehovah’s Witnesses Arrested in Russia for Taking Part in a Public Protest

Some 150,000 volunteers hand out about 12 million leaflets slamming the persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses, guilty of rejecting to military service and unfriendliness towards other religious groups. For their part, the Witnesses say that history is repeating itself with a return to Soviet-style persecution.

Moscow (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Between late February and early March, Russian police arrested at least 50 Jehovah’s Witnesses for handing out leaflets that describe how their religious freedom is curtailed. They are especially critical of the way their communities are being persecuted, labelled extremist and criminal for refusing the military draft.

On 26 February, the group’s national body launched a campaign to raise awareness about the violence Jehovah’s Witnesses encounter in many republics of the Russian Federation. It brought together almost 150,000 volunteers in the streets of Moscow, Rostov, Sverdlovsk, Nizhny Novgorod, Omsk, Krasnodar, and Volgograd. Protesters handed out leaflets in railway as well as subway stations and at bus stops. Titled ‘Is history repeating itself? A question for Russians’, the four-page flyer quoted extensively from President Dmitry Medvedev’s speeches in which the Russian leader condemns political repression based on religion. Distributed to the tune of 12 million copies, the leaflet noted that the post-Soviet rehabilitation of Jehovah’s Witnesses had “turned to dust.”

Fifteen years ago, many veteran Jehovah’s Witnesses received a special “certificate of rehabilitation.” Now the same people, certificates in their pocket, are being charged as “extremists,” forced to go underground.

According to Lev Levinson, director of the Institute for Human Rights, the current persecution is the by-product of a perverse interpretation of anti-extremism laws.

As a religious group, Jehovah’s Witnesses are accused of being a “sect”, of being unfriendly towards other Churches, of rejecting military service, this despite the fact that Russia’s constitution allows for an alternative civilian service.

In their defence, Jehovah’s Witnesses say that they are being forced to organise their campaign because various courts in Russia have banned their publications and outlawed their activities (see “Court in Rostov bans Jehovah’s Witnesses for being religious extremists,” in AsiaNews, 17 September 2009, and “Altai court condemns Jehovah’s Witnesses for “extremism,” in AsiaNews, 5 October 2009)

Before that, they had turned to President Medvedev asking for justice (see “Jehovah’s Witnesses write to Medvedev, tell him they are persecuted like in Soviet times,” in AsiaNews, 13 November 2009), but now must try to move public opinion.

Following the latest incident, Jehovah’s Witnesses were interrogated after their arrest, their leaflets seized. Most of them were eventually released after a few hours.

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



Russia Signs India Nuclear Reactor Deal

Russia has announced it will build 16 nuclear reactors in India as part of defence and energy deals.

The long-anticipated nuclear agreement came as Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited India.

He said nuclear co-operation was one of the most important aspects in the partnership between the two countries which have strong trade ties.

Russia’s state-owned nuclear company earlier said six of the reactors would be built by 2017.

Russia is already building two reactors in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

“The agreement sees construction of up to 16 nuclear reactors in three locations,” Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, accompanying Mr Putin, said.

Russia is competing with French and US firms for contracts to build nuclear power plants in Asia’s third-largest economy which is looking to increase its energy supply to sustain rapid economic growth.

The increased competition began after India’s landmark civilian nuclear deal with the US in 2005 which ended the isolation India had experienced since it tested an atom bomb in 1974.

“This is one of our most important and promising areas of co-operation,” Mr Putin said in New Delhi on Friday.

Coal still accounts for more than 50% of India’s energy use — but a substantial expansion of nuclear power reactors is proposed over the next few decades.

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



There is Only One Way to Govern Ukraine Today

The New York Review of Books 25.03.2010 (USA)

Historian Timothy Snyder is not panicking about Ukraine’s independence under its new Moscow-friendly president, because the ties Viktor Yanukovych maintains with the Ukrainian oligarchs are much too strong and these men like to do things their own way. The key issue for Snyder is if and how Yanukovych tackles corruption: “Because the office of the president is not very strong, and because Yanukovych is a client of industrialists, Ukraine is an unlikely candidate for the solution to corruption chosen by Vladimir Putin in Russia: to break the oligarchs — or some of them — by force and then declare a victory for law. Without reducing corruption, this has made Russia an authoritarian state. Russia, as it happens, is also tied for 146th in the Transparency International index. There is only one way to govern Ukraine today: close tax loopholes, tax oligarchs, give a tax break to the middle classes so that small businesses can emerge from underground, and above all ensure that the enforcement of tax laws is fair.”

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

South Asia


“Swede” Killed in Afghanistan

A Swedish woman from Örebro in eastern Sweden was shot and killed in Kabul in January. The woman was visiting relatives in the Afghan capital, according to a report in Nerikes Allehanda.

The woman died when men unknown to her opened fire as she sat in a car with a relative. Swedish authorities have been informed, but have not been told any more details of the events surrounding the killing.

“The information we have received from our consular office in Kabul is that the person who was was shot was a woman living in Sweden and who was visiting Afghanistan,” said Ellinor Lundmark at the Swedish foreign ministry to the newspaper.

According to the foreign ministry, the woman’s family have not sought the help of the Swedish authorities, who recommend against visiting Afghanistan due to the precarious security situation.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



India: Madhya Pradesh: Hindu Religion Perhaps Compulsory Subject in Schools

The Chief Minister of the State speaks of introducing the Hindu holy book Bhagavad Gita as compulsory text in schools. Bishop of Madhya Pradesh Instead, we must study the values of all religions, to educate for tolerance and pluralism.

New Delhi (AsiaNews) — Shivraj Chouhan, Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh, is “evaluating” whether to make it compulsory to study the Gita, the Hindu religious text, in schools as a text of “moral science”. The opinion of Mons. Cornelius, bishop of the state.

At the time of his election the CM had assured that he would not would introduce this book in school curricula. But this decision is strongly supported by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS, National Volunteers Organization), a very strong Hindu extremist group in the area, whose leader Mohan Bhagwat recently spoke in Bhopal confirming that non-Hindus can not be considered as real Indians.

Bishop Leo Cornelius, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Council of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, told AsiaNews that “the Church is convinced that there are values in every religion and all religions can enrich each one of us. There is nothing wrong with the Chief Minister introducing the Bhagavad Gita into the schools , but he should make the religious book the standard text of religious values. The CM can not impose one particular religion on everyone. I will insist that the texts of other religions, such as the Koran, the Bible, the sacred books of Buddhists, Sikhs, Parsis and others are also introduced. The Moral Science program should include the moral values of all religions. The choice of a single book stops children from understanding the great value of tolerance towards other religions. “

The Bhagavad Gita (Song of the Divine) is a Sanskrit poem considered a sacred text, the most popular and beloved among the devout Hindus.

“In Madhya Pradesh — continues the prelate — it is a challenge to live the Christian faith. Members of the Barathiya Janata Party (BJP, a Hindu fundamentalist party) are for the most part good people, even the most indoctrinated by the ideology of the RSS are kind. But this ideology causes distortions, so it is essential to dialogue with them for a proper understanding. Too often, the BJP and the RSS have a misperception of the Christian faith and have the false belief that we distort their culture. The Catholic Church is engaged in a thorough and serious dialogue with these people, to correct the false vision they have for our faith and to foster peace and social harmony. “

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



Some U.S. Officials See a Growing Taliban-Al Qaeda Rift

Reporting from Washington — A growing number of Taliban militants in the Pakistani border region are refusing to collaborate with Al Qaeda fighters, declining to provide shelter or assist in attacks in Afghanistan even in return for payment, according to U.S. military and counter-terrorism officials.

The officials, citing evidence from interrogation of detainees, communications intercepts and public statements on extremist websites, say that threats to the militants’ long-term survival from Pakistani, Afghan and foreign military action are driving some Afghan Taliban away from Al Qaeda.

As a result, Al Qaeda fighters are in some cases being excluded from villages and other areas near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border where they once received sanctuary.

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

Far East


China — Tibet: The Dalai Lama “Close to the Uyghurs’ Scares Beijing

The Chinese central government and the administration of Tibet strongly attack the speech given yesterday by the Buddhist leader: “It distorts reality and foments separatism within China.”

Beijing (AsiaNews / Agencies) — In Tibet, “there is no serious problem, despite what the Dalai Lama says.” This is the declaration of the new president of the Autonomous Region of China Padma Choling, refuting accusations made yesterday by the Tibetan leader in exile, according to who Beijing “is trying to wipe out Buddhism. “ Yesterday, on the 51st anniversary of the uprising of 1959 and the second anniversary of the 2008 protests that occurred in many parts of China that is home to Tibetan people, there were no reported incidents.

“In Lhasa — said Padma, the so-called “ hawk “ of the Tibetan Administration — you can see monks and nuns everywhere. In Tibet there are about 1,700 religious sites home to 46 thousand monks.”

In his speech the Nobel Peace Laureate accused the Chinese central government of having reduced the monks to a state of “semi-slavery” and expressed his support for the peoples of Eastern Turkestan — the Uyghur, considered a separatist group by Beijing — and for those intellectuals who criticize the regime. This is a clear reference to Liu Xiaobo, the Chinese dissident author of “Charter ‘08” who has been sentenced to 11 years in prison.

The regional president criticized the Dalai Lama for having called the Chinese region of Xinjiang “East Turkistan”, using the term coined by local anti-Chinese nationalists. “He should not foment rebellion in our country”, said the local leader. According to Tibetan exiles, about 200 people died in the 2008 protests while the government says that the victims were “little more than twenty.”

The central government has also attacked the Buddhist leader. According to the Foreign Ministry spokesman in Beijing, Qin Gan, “the Dalai Lama destorts” the real situation in Tibet. Furthermore, according to Qin, his support for the Uyghur “is a demonstration of his desire to harm the national unity of China and his separatism”.

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



China Insists Google Must Obey the Law or Face Consequences

It’s been quiet about the Google-China dispute for a while now, but today, the silence was broken by China’s minister of Industry and Information Technology, Li Yizhong, who stated that Google must either obey Chinese law or “pay the consequences”, leaving no room for a compromise. With more and more western countries building their own internet filters and internet monitoring schemes, it becomes ever harder to make a strong fist against China.

“If you want to do something that disobeys Chinese law and regulations, you are unfriendly, you are irresponsible and you will have to pay the consequences,” said Li Yizhong about Google, “Whether they leave or not is up to them. But if they leave, China’s Internet market is still going to develop.”

[Return to headlines]



Corruption is a Cancer to the Countries of South-East Asia

According to a risk-consulting firm, Indonesia is the most corrupt country in South-East Asia along with Cambodia, Vietnam and the Philippines. The problem is pervasive in all sectors of the economy and society. Accusing adversaries of corruption has become a political tool of choice for many corrupt politicians to hang onto power. Catholic scholar in Manila says that if the common good were the priority, countries like Indonesia and the Philippines would be among the least corrupt countries in the region.

Manila (AsiaNews) — In Indonesia, South-East Asia’s most corrupt country, “Corruption has become a charge [. . .] used by corrupt people to protect themselves and to stifle reform,” said the Political and Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC) in a report released yesterday. The Hong Kong-based consulting firm, which specialises in strategic business information and analysis for companies doing business in the countries in East and Southeast Asia, found that corruption is pervasive in Cambodia, Vietnam and the Philippines.

Using a 1-to-10 scale, it scored the level of corruption among elected officials and public servants. Its informants are some 2,000 expatriate businessmen in 16 countries. Last year, it found that Singapore, Australia and Hong Kong were the least corrupt countries.

“The whole fight against corruption is in danger of being corrupted,” the PERC report said. The whole process could end up being taken over by corrupt politicians.

To illustrate its point, the consulting firm focused on Indonesia’s Bank Century, which was rescued from collapse with US$ 716 million of taxpayers’ money.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and members of his cabinet have come under investigation by parliament for the rescue plan. He came to power in 2004 and was re-elected in 2009 on an anti-corruption and economic reform platform, which gained widespread international support. For PERC, the charges against him by opposition politicians are a clear example of how the old establishment is using corruption to stay in power.

Corruption is one of the region’s main problems. In countries like Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines, it affects not only the public sector and big banks but also local government, resulting in billions of dollars wasted. According to World Bank data, the Filipino state lost US$ 4 billion in 2008 in kickbacks and waste.

“In the Philippines, corruption spread quickly because of the selfishness of big public and private companies, who represent the bulk of production and employment in the country,” said Crispulo Acuna, professor at the Catholic University of Santo Tomas in Manila.

“If the public good was the priority, countries like Indonesia and the Philippines would be the least corrupt in Asia.”

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



Vietnam: Thousands of Vietnamese Women and Children Sold as “Sex Slaves”

From 1998 to 2010 at least 4,500 women and children have crossed the borders of Vietnam to supply the prostitution racket. Some 65% go to China, then Cambodia, Laos, to the Europea, African and America. Internet sites sell children on the net. Is the new form of slavery which characterizes the 21st century.

Ho Chi Minh City (AsiaNews) — Children sold on internet auctions to the highest bidder, through specialized sites that are updatedat least “three or four times day with new arrivals”. Women who end up in prostitution, treated as “sex slaves” by traffickers of neighbouring countries — Cambodia and China — or for the European, American and African markets. In Vietnam the evil trade in human lives continues, with numbers increasing every year.

A government document published recently, shows that from 1998 to early 2010 about 4,500 women and children have crossed the borders of Vietnam, in the hands of unscrupulous smugglers. A phenomenon that began in 1987 when Hanoi opened its borders to a market economy, and exacerbated by numerous cases of corruption involving local authorities or people of “middle class.” The intervention of NGOs and charities operating between Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand has had little effect.

In 2009, joint operations of the Vietnamese and Cambodian government led to the arrest of 31 traffickers, saving the lives of 70 victims preparing to cross the border into Cambodia. A social activist reports that, again last year, 981 women and children were sold in Cambodia or China. At least 781 people involved in the trafficking of human lives.

The highest trade is recorded at the border between China and Vietnam; where of the volume of total traffic is about 65%. Women feed the prostitution market, or are sold as brides to the highest bidder or exploited as labour. Another 10% is recorded along the border between Vietnam and Cambodia: the women are used as prostitutes, or transit in the country before reaching European countries including England, France and Germany. There is also a 6.3% crossing the Vietnamese border in the direction of Laos, passing through the provinces of Nghe An, Ha Tinh, Thanh Hoa and Quang Tri.

In some cases, the victims of extortion are brought to the ports of Tan San Nhat and Noi Bai, heading for Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Macau or to the nations of Europe, Africa and America. Since the authorities in Bangkok began a crackdown on prostitution, especially child prostitution, Vietnam has become the new “hot zone” for sex tourism. And as always the points of reference are the bars, discos, the resort areas of major cities including Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and the provinces of Hai Phong and Da Nag.

P. Martino, a member of an NGO that deals with social issues, explains that the goal “is to help Vietnamese children, sold as ‘sex slaves’ in Cambodia.” Children are sold in their “hundreds” even on the internet, on sites that define them as “new products” and are updated at least “three or four times a day.” The sex market, he concludes, is “a new form of slavery characteristic of the 21st century.”

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

Australia — Pacific


Australia on Internet Censorship Threat List

A TOP media rights watchdog has listed Australia along with Iran and North Korea in a report on countries that pose a threat of internet censorship.

Paris-based Reporters Without Bordersput Australia and South Korea on its list of countries “under surveillance” in its “Internet Enemies” report (rsf.org/ennemis.html).

Australia was listed for its government’s plan to block access to websites featuring material such as rape, drug use, bestiality and child sex abuse. Critics say the plan is a misguided measure that will harm civil liberties.

In South Korea, the RSF report added, “draconian laws are creating too many specific restrictions on web users by challenging their anonymity and promoting self-censorship”.

“These countries are worrying us because they have measures that could have repercussions for freedom of expression on the internet,” RSF secretary general Jean-Francois Julliard said.

Russia and Turkey were also added to the watchlist, which is a category below RSF’s top “Enemies of the internet”, the countries it considers the 12 worst web freedom violators.

These include Saudi Arabia, Burma, China, North Korea, Iran and Vietnam.

“The world’s largest netizen prison is in China, which is far out ahead of other countries with 72 detainees, followed by Vietnam and then by Iran, which have all launched waves of brutal attacks on websites in recent months,” RSF’s report said.

A senior manager of US internet giant Google, David Drummond, said there was an “alarming trend” of government interference in online freedom, not only in countries that are judged to have poor human rights records.

He cited Australia’s plans as an example, saying that there “the wide scope of content prohibited could include socially and politically controversial material”.

The Australian case “is an example of where these benign intentions can result in the spectre of true censorship”, he added.

“Here in Europe, even in France, at this very moment, some are tempted by this slippery path of network filtering.”

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



NZ Internet Filter Goes Live — Gov Forgets to Tell Public

The rise of the secret censor

New Zealand’s internet filtering system went live last month — but the government forgot to mention this to its electorate until its hand was forced by online freedom campaign, Tech Liberty.

Thomas Beagle, a spokesman for the group, said he was “very disappointed that the filter is now running” and that its launch had been conducted in such a “stealthy mode”. He added: “It’s a sad day for the New Zealand internet.”

In an interview with Computerworld this week, he claimed that the filter had gone live on February 1 but the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) delayed announcing this at until it had met with its Independent Reference Group.

The manager of the DIA’s Censorship Compliance Unit, Steve O’Brien, denied that there had been any subterfuge. The system has been undergoing trials for two years and the media have been aware of this throughout.

He said: “The Independent Reference Group has met and the filter system processes were demonstrated as set out in the code of practice, that is that the website filtering system prevents access to known websites containing images of child sexual abuse.”

While the DIA continues to be coy about exactly which ISPs are joining the filter, Tech Liberty understands that Watchdog and MaxNet have already signed-up to deploy the filter system, and that ISPs Telstra Clear, Telecom and Vodafone have said they will do so.

Orcon, Slingshot and Natcom have said that they won’t or, in the case of Orcon, that more data is needed as to how the filter will impact customer service.

[Return to headlines]

Immigration


Court Thwarts Dutch Immigration Policy

The European Court of Justice has upended the minimum income requirement for foreign marriage partners. More aspects of Dutch immigration policy could be at odds with European law.

By Marjolein van de Water

The Moroccan M. Chakroun had lived in the Netherlands for two years when he married in 1972. His new wife remained in Morocco, while he worked as a manufacturing employee until he lost his job in 2005. A year later, Mrs. Chakroun applied for a Dutch residency permit so she could be with her husband. The request was denied: her husband’s unemployment benefits were below the required minimum income of 120 percent of minimum wage.

The Chakrouns appealed their case, finally ending up in the Court of Justice of the European Union, which ruled in the couple’s favour last week. The minimum income requirement for foreign marriage partners, which is higher in the Netherlands than anywhere else in the EU, is at odds with the European right to family reunifications.as laid down in European Council Directive 2003/86/EC.

Exit minimum income requirement

After the European court reprimanded the Netherlands for its policy, justice minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin told parliament this week he would be dropping the 120-percent requirement. His department will also stop distinguishing between people who were already married before they came to the Netherlands and people who want to bring a new partner here.

The minister was left with no other options, said professor Kees Groenendijk, the chairman of the Radboud University’s Centre for Migration Law. “The court’s ruling is unambiguous and sends a clear message to the Dutch government. It has been ignoring European regulations for years.”

Groenendijk thinks other aspects of Dutch policy will also need to be upended because they are at odds with European regulations. The minimum age requirement (21) for foreign marriage partners the Netherlands has introduced for instance, or the language test prospective immigrants are required to take in their country of origin before coming for the Netherlands. “The right to family reunification is fixed in European law. It is legally impossible to deny people that right.”

Minister Hirsch Ballin said he still stood behind an earlier letter he sent to parliament at the end of last year, announcing even stricter measures. He then proposed a ban on recognising marriages between first cousins and introducing a minimum education requirement for immigrants. The government is also looking to raise the bar on the language requirement.

Encouraging assimilation?

Groenendijk said these proposals were also in disagreement with European regulations: “The EU directive does not allow excluding people based on their marriage to a cousin or education,” he said.

Stricter legislation on family migration was introduced by a government comprised of conservative Christian Democrats and right-wing liberals between 2003 and 2006. Dutch government data show the number of successful requests for foreign marriage partners dropped from 23,000 in 2003 to 11,000 in 2007.

The government hopes stricter policies will prevent forced marriage and encourage assimilation and emancipation. Whether Ballin’s proposed measure would have such an effect remains to be seen, however. A study by the justice department’s science bureau could not find any relation between foreign marriage partners and forced marriage. Forced marriage is also common between partners both living in the Netherlands, as is marriage between cousins, according to the study. It also showed that young people who are looking to bring a partner to the Netherlands from abroad often quit school to get a job in order to meet the minimum income requirement. This means a negative impact on societal integration.

A stricter admittance policy will do little to improve emancipation and assimilation, according to Sabine Kraus, who is a policy worker for E-quality, a think tank for emancipation, family and diversity issues. The Dutch government has put an undeserved emphasis on reducing foreign marriage partners as much as possible, she said. “You cannot prevent family reunification, so that shouldn’t be your national focus. If you are looking to improve integration and emancipation, you should offer foreign marriage partners a fitting trajectory. That is a more effective way of preventing immigrants from drawing benefits.”

Kraus feels too little attention is devoted to talents and possibilities of immigrants who have often enjoyed an education back in their native countries. “Women are put in trajectories meant for housewives, even though most of them are highly motivated to work and learn. Cabinet’s goals regarding emancipation and integration would be better served if it appealed to that desire,” she added.

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



Italy: Immigration Rules Trump Education

Impact on kids no reason not to expel illegals, top court

(ANSA) — Rome, March 11 — Foreigners without permission to live in Italy must be expelled from the country, even if they have young children at school from whom they will be separated, the supreme court said on Thursday.

Italy’s highest appeals tribunal, the Court of Cassation, expressly overturned its own previous rulings that indicated the welfare of children was paramount in such cases. Rejecting an appeal by an Albanian national, whose pregnant wife is expecting their third child, the court said the man’s situation was not sufficiently “exceptional” to prevent his expulsion under Italian immigration law. The Albanian father had argued that the enforced separation from his children would be an “emotional trauma” that would hamper their psychological development and their educational performance.

But the court ruled that authorities are only able to overlook illegal residency for a limited period of time and “only when there are serious concerns linked to the psychological and physical development of a minor arising from an emergency situation”. It said that the impact of a separation on a long-term, ongoing process in a child’s life, such as its education, could not be characterized as an “emergency”.

“The fact that children are doing well at school and have formed stable friendships is neither exceptional nor temporary,” the court said. In the judges’ view, any finding suggesting a child’s education amounted to an “exceptional circumstance” would “give foreign families clearance to exploit childhood”. The Albanian man’s family are all legally resident in Italy and his wife is shortly expected to receive Italian citizenship.

The ruling appears to reverse at least two previous decisions by the same court, one of which from January.

In both earlier cases, the judges stressed that a child’s welfare should take precedence over a parent’s immigration status. But in the latest decision, the supreme court described the previous rulings as “reductive” in that “they focused entirely on safeguarding the needs of minors and failed to insert this concern within the wider legislative framework”. The decision drew an angry response from opposition politicians, who suggested it was confusing, contradictory and failed to give sufficient weight to the wellbeing of the children involved. Two deputies with the largest opposition group, the centre-left Democratic Party, said the decision violated “all international conventions”. “It is a serious error making expulsion the priority, as it condemns the children along with the parents,” said Jean Leonard Touadui and Guido Melis in a joint statement. Communist Refoundation leader and former minister Paolo Ferrero described the ruling as “inhumane and aberrant”, adding: “I thought Italy was meant to be the country that defended the family”. Antonio Borghesi, Deputy House Whip for the small Italy of Values party, said the decision was a product of “racist immigration laws” and the “climate of intolerance stirred up by the current government”. The immigration spokesman for the Italian Communists Party, Maurizio Musolino, described the ruling as “another step towards barbarity”, which had left him “aghast”. But Cabinet Undersecretary Carlo Giovanardi, who holds the family portfolio, said he agreed with the ruling, emphasizing that the court reached its decisions on a case-by-case basis. Nevertheless, he added, “it would be a devastating and unacceptable outcome if the instant expulsion caused a drop in the children’s productivity at school”.

Nevertheless, he added, “it would be a devastating and unacceptable outcome if the instant expulsion caused a drop in the children’s productivity at school”.

Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini said the decision was a “fair one”. “The faults of the parents should not fall on the children but there can be no justification for using and exploiting children to circumvent situations of illegality,” she said. Organizations working with children and migrants also weighed into the debate. The United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, said the ruling created “further chaos” in Italy’s immigration laws. “Italian legislation is already contradictory and now the Court of Cassation is also reaching contrasting conclusions,” said UNICEF Italia Director Roberto Salvan, adding that the “impact of the separation from their father on the children in question should not be underestimated”.

The head of the Italian section of the international Terre des Hommes children’s federation, described the ruling as “a glaring step backward for Italy”. “Forcibly separating children, particularly foreign youngsters, from their parents places them in an extremely vulnerable position,” said Raffaele Salinari. But the immigration spokesman for the leading Catholic charity Caritas, Olivero Forti, said although the decision was disappointing, it did not mean the underlying principle had been overturned. “The Court of Cassation looks at each case individually,” he said. “I think in this specific instance it simply concluded that the children’s wellbeing would not be damaged”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UN Concerned About Italy’s Security Package

(AGI) — Rome, 10 Mar. — The UN has once again strongly criticised Italy’s immigration policy. “I’m still concerned about the provisions of the Italian security package which makes illegal immigration an aggravating circumstance” said the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay addressing the Senate Human Rights Commission. Pillay went on to say that: “It is the responsibility of the public authorities to make sure that immigrants are neither attacked nor vilified. Army troops patrolling the streets, continuous calls for emergency measures or the vigilante patrols also known as ‘ronde’, all of that helps create a difficult climate for immigrants and human rights. Politicians and public officials should refrain from discriminatory statements against immigrants that are likely to raise further suspicions. Those responsible for the recent acts of violence against immigrants in southern Italy should be quickly brought to justice”. .

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Jail for Dissing ‘Gays’ Pulled After Publicity

Mass. plan would have allowed year behind bars

A plan in the Massachusetts statehouse to allow jail time for those caught dissing homosexuality has been pulled abruptly after a conservative group publicized the move by lawmakers.

The apparent precedent of criminalizing opinions about homosexuality had been predicted by those who had opposed the nation’s “hate crimes” law before it was adopted as an amendment to a must-pass military bill in Congress and signed into law by President Obama last year.

According to officials at Mass Resistance, which monitors among other things the state legislature, and dispatchers alerts on developing situations, this case arose when lawmakers added onto a bill addressing schools an unrelated provision providing the jail time.

[…]

He said he was glad for the victory, but cautious because he doesn’t believe the plan is going away.

“Nothing happens by mistake,” he told WND. “Something as unlikely as this, which had nothing to do with the rest of the bill, didn’t just slip in accidentally. It is something they clearly want to do. We’re just going to have to watch for it.”

“This is the direction they want to go.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100311

Financial Crisis
» China: Exports and Imports Rise Sharply, Inflation Follows
» Failed Banks May Get Pension-Fund Backing as FDIC Seeks Cash
» Greece Paralysed Once Again by General Strike
» Greece: General Strike and Clashes in Athens
» Italy: Istat: Unemployment to 8.6% in January
» Stimulus or Sedative?
 
USA
» A Frustrating Visit to a Mosque in Washington DC
» Bush’s Union Transparency Rules Retracted Under Obama
» Collapse of the American Empire: Swift, Silent, Certain
» District Sues Parents … to Shut Them Up!
» Every American is a Criminal, Or Soon Will be
» Fox’s Beck, Krauthammer & Kristol: Wrong on Wilders (Much to Talal’s Delight)
» Get Ready for the Know All, See All National ID Card…Plus, Plus
» Hearing Delayed for Obama Judicial Nominee Who Supported Serial Killer
» House Democrats Looking at ‘Slaughter Solution’ To Pass Obamacare Without a Vote on Senate Bill
» Monckton on Climate Hoaxers: “Jail the Lot”
» Muslim Sues NY Police for Job Bias
» Palermo-New York: Miami Op Nets Gambino ‘Capi’, Sicily Old Guard
» Patent Reform is a Patent Giveaway
 
Canada
» Investigation Over Online Hate Speech
 
Europe and the EU
» Baroness Ashton Drops Opposition to Euro-Army Headquarters
» Bluefin EU-Protected, Exception for Italy
» Celibacy ‘A Gift’ Says Vatican
» Europe is Not Failing Its Muslims. But Islam Has Failed Europe
» France: Gov’t Invests 13 Mln Euros in Video Surveillance
» French Bread Spiked With LSD in CIA Experiment
» Germany: Child Abuse Scandal Spreads to Catholic Dorm
» HSBC Admits Details of 24,000 Swiss Bank Accounts Stolen
» Italy: Berlusconi’s Approval Rating Lowest-Ever
» Italy: World’s Largest Bioethanol Plant in Italy
» Italy: Magistrates Allege Balducci Used G8 Money to Buy Soft Furnishings for Son
» Italy: Proton Rays Will Burn Away Tumours
» Italy: Police Seize Dangerous Waste in South
» Italy: Heavy Snow and Rain Causes Havoc
» Netherlands: CDA Stalwart to Lead Catholic Abuse Research
» Netherlands: Leefbaar Rotterdam ‘Collected’ Proxy Votes
» OIC Islamophobia Observatory Spokesman Condemns Reprint of Blasphemous Cartoon by Swedish Newspapers
» Slovenia: Corruption, Agriculture Minister Steps Down
» Spain: False March 11 Victim Living on State Funds for 6 Yrs
» Spain: March 11 Attacks: A Divided Madrid Mourns Victims
» Spain: ECB Criticizes Lack of Measures Against Deficit
» Sweden to Recognize Armenian Genocide
» Swedish Ambassador ‘Concerned’ Over Sudden Roma Influx
» Swedish Security Police Eye Terror T-Shirts
» Swedish Papers Defend Anti-Prophet Cartoon
» Turkey Protests Sweden Armenia ‘Genocide’ Vote
» UK: ‘Tormented to Death’: Man With Learning Difficulties Bullied for Ten Years Collapses After Confronting Yobs in His Garden
» UK: BA Worker ‘Planned to Use Strike to Become a Suicide Bomber’
» UK: Route Unveiled for £30billion Rail Link With 250mph Trains That Will Plough Through Heart of England
» Why’s There Not So Much as a Hair’s Breadth Between the Christian Right and the Secular Left
» Wilders Damages Holland: FM
 
Balkans
» EU: Belgium Repatriates to Serbia and Macedonia
» Kosovo: Media: Premier Under Pressure Over Corrupt Minister
» Serbia: Milosevic’s Death; 4th Anniversary, Flowers on Grave
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU Programme to Spread Civil Defence Culture
 
North Africa
» Morocco: Government, Just Severity Against Proselytism
» Morocco Defends Expulsion of Christian Workers
» Superglue: The Remarkable Unity of the Muslim Brotherhood
» Top Egyptian Cleric Dies of Heart Attack
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Announcing Construction of East Jerusalem Apartments: Stupid, Yes; Proof of Disinterest in Peace, No
» Biden: USA-Israel Relations Cannot be Broken
» East Jerusalem: Press, Israel Planning 50,000 Homes
 
Middle East
» Saudi Arabia: Court Upholds Death Sentence Against Sorcerer
» Syria: Repression Grows as Europe, US Avoid Discussing Rights
» Syria: Gov’t Wants Private Investor for Barada Industries
» To Win We Must Know Our Enemies and Know Ourselves
» Turkey: Ergenekon; Three More Soldiers Imprisoned
 
South Asia
» Death of Chinese Rebel a Good Omen for Pakistan
» Indonesian Islamic Organization Issues a Fatwa Against Smoking
» Pakistan: Five Killed in Attack on Christian Charity
 
Immigration
» Don’t Look Now! Amnesty is Back
» Greece: New Democracy Against Law Amendment
» Italy: Pillay Deplores Criminalisation of Immigration
» Italy: Gypsy Relocation Plan “Violates Human Rights”
» Italy: Children in School No Stop to Deportation
» Obama Pledges Support for Schumer, Graham on Immigration
» Spanish Government Donates Computers to Ghana Immigration Service
 
Culture Wars
» UK: Court: Christian’s Stand on ‘Gay’ Unions ‘Not Important’
 
General
» Amil Imani: Muslims’ Sheep Mentality

Financial Crisis


China: Exports and Imports Rise Sharply, Inflation Follows

Exports are up by 45.7 per cent; imports by 44.7 per cent. Consumer prices jump 2.5 per cent, the highest increase in 16 months. Official sources say public debt by local government could be higher than expected, and reach 6 trillion yuan.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Chinese export jumped 45.7 per cent in February from a year earlier, whilst imports surged 44.7 per cent, the General Administration of Customs said on Wednesday. However, inflation also rose sharply as local governments show a higher than expected debt level.

The faster than expected rise in exports and imports has caught experts by surprise. In fact, no one is ready to venture an explanation, saying only that February figures are unrepresentative since they include Chinese New Year, a time of great celebration and spending. They note that the current surge in exports might be short-lived until China’s main markets (United States and European Union) do not pick up.

In January, exports gained 21.0 per cent, whilst imports increased by 85.5 per cent. China’s trade surplus for February was US$ 7.6 billion, compared with US$ 14.2 billion in January. However, Lu Zhengwei, chief economist at Industrial Bank in Shanghai, urged caution, saying that the base of comparison was much lower early last year, when demand was depressed by the global credit crisis. In fact, adjusting the totals for changes in the number of working days and holidays, exports fell from the previous month for the second month in a row.

Other experts note that trade figures continue to be skewed by the fixed rate of the yuan, held by Beijing at 6.83 to the dollar since July 2008 to help it maintain high volumes of exports.

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said on Saturday that the decision to re-peg the yuan has been a special response to the international crisis and that China would have to shift from that policy stance sooner or later.

This will have to be done to contain inflation. Consumer prices last month rose 2.5 per cent from a year before, whilst the jump in producer prices was over 5 per cent, the biggest in 16 months. Real estate prices also continue their upward spiral.

Figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed housing prices in China’s 70 large and medium-sized cities rose 7.8 percent in December 2009 from a year earlier, up 1.5 percent compared to the previous month.

Relevant figures from the Beijing Municipal Statistics Bureau show that the city’s average annual income in 2008 was 44,715 yuan, whilst urban apartments were selling for an average of 15,581 yuan per square metre.

Jia Kang, director of the Research Institute for Fiscal Science at the Ministry of Finance, said that local governments’ hidden debt might be about 6 trillion yuan (about US$ 950 billion). The estimate “may not be very accurate” but the scale should be close to that, Jia said in Beijing today.

Local officials in fact owe their careers to their areas’ economic achievements—this has often led to the reporting of inaccurate data. Now government-spending data might not be very accurate either.

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



Failed Banks May Get Pension-Fund Backing as FDIC Seeks Cash

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. is trying to encourage public retirement funds that control more than $2 trillion to buy all or part of failed lenders, taking a more direct role in propping up the banking system, said people briefed on the matter.

Direct investments may allow funds such as those in Oregon, New Jersey and California to cut fees for private-equity managers, and the agency to get better prices for distressed assets, the people said. They declined to be identified because talks with regulators are confidential.

[Comments from JD: This proposal would pour your retirement funds into a black hole.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece Paralysed Once Again by General Strike

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — Greece is once again at a standstill today — for the second time in little more than a week — due to a general strike against the government’s austerity plan. Planes, trains, ships and urban transport are halted, and schools, hospitals, offices and banks are closed. For the past few days rubbish collection has been impeded, with an informational black-out as well. The 24-hour strike called jointly by the public sector employees union Adedy, its private-sector counterpart Gsee and the Communist union Pame will be blocking the central areas of major cities with demonstrations and marches in which even police and firemen will be taking part, as well as teachers, students and the anarchic movement. Public buildings continue to be occupied in the capital and other cities. The strike coincides with the end of the mission to Berlin, Paris and Washington by Premier Giorgio Papandreou, who said that thanks to his trip the image of the country abroad had “changed completely”. Yesterday the stock exchange gave its positive assessment of the premier’s international talks with a sharp rise of 2.62%. However, polls show a growing popular opposition to a large part of the measures in the anti-crisis package.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: General Strike and Clashes in Athens

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 11 — Several hundreds of anarchists created chaos in the centre of Athens today. There have been several clashes with the police on the sidelines of the union demonstration to accompany the general strike against the austerity measures. With the country paralysed for the second time in a week of protests of more than two million workers, several hooded young people decided to break away from a procession organised by leftwing parties and anarchist parties, and throw Molotov cocktails and stones at the police. The riot police, in front of the Parliament, used tear gas. The clashes continued while the procession returned. At the university building, the police responded with charges to the throwing of Molotov cocktails and stones by other extremist groups, which shouted anti-government slogans and slogans against the socialist party in charge. They also smashed shop windows and burned trash containers. More incidents took place in the nearby Exarchia district. Some of the protesters have been arrested. No serious injuries have been reported, apart from some bruises. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Istat: Unemployment to 8.6% in January

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 1 — The Italian unemployment rate continues to rise, to 8.6% in January after the 8.5% recorded in December 2009. The news was announced by Italian statistics institute ISTAT, which underlines that the January result is the worst since January 2004, the start of the historic series. Unemployment among young people, ISTAT continued, has reached 26.8%, 0.3% higher than the previous month and 2.6% above the level of January 2009. Male unemployment reached a total of 1 million 147 thousand in January, a 2.1% increase (+23,000) from the previous month and 27.2% (+245,000) from January 2009. The number of jobless women reached 997,000, -1.9% compared with December 2009 (-19,000) and +9.8% compared with January 2009 (+89,000). Male unemployment reached 7.7%, an increase both compared with December (+0.2 percentage points) and January 2009 (+1.7%). Female unemployment rate was recorded at 9.8%, -0.2 percentage points compared with December 2009 but +0.8 points from January 2009. ISTAT added that employment in January was virtually the same as in December, and lost 1.3% compared with January 2009, -307 thousand. Male employment totalled 13 million 677 thousand in January, 0.1% below the previous month (-18 thousand ) and 1.9% below January 2009 (-260 thousand). Female employment was recorded at nine million 228 thousand, +0.1% from December (+8 thousand) and -0.5% (-47 thousand) from January 2009. The number of jobless in the age between 15 and 64 totalled 14 million 871 thousand, +0.2% (+28 thousand) compared with December 2009 and +1.2% (+172 thousand) compared with January 2009. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stimulus or Sedative?

Abraham Lincoln once asked an audience how many legs a dog has, if you called the tail a leg? When the audience said “five,” Lincoln corrected them, saying that the answer was four. “The fact that you call a tail a leg does not make it a leg.”

That same principle applies today. The fact that politicians call something a “stimulus” does not make it a stimulus. The fact that they call something a “jobs bill” does not mean there will be more jobs.

What have been the actual consequences of all the hundreds of billions of dollars that the government has spent? The idea behind the spending is that it will cause investors to invest, lenders to lend and employers to employ.

That was called “pump priming.” To get a pump going, people put a little water into it, so that the pump will start pumping out a lot of water. In other words, government money alone was never supposed to restore the economy by itself. It was supposed to get the private sector spending, lending, investing and employing.

The question is: Is that what has actually happened?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


A Frustrating Visit to a Mosque in Washington DC

Al Ahram Weekly 04.03.2010 (Egypt)

Margo Badran, a feminism and Islam academic, describes a frustrating visit to a mosque in Washington DC. There she witnessed a group of women trying to pray behind the men in the main prayer hall, but their presence so angered the mosque attendant that he called in the police to force the women to leave. “Out in the street I turned to one of the cops, who like the other policeman, was African-American, and said: ‘You know about race and gender in this country. How did you feel about throwing women out? Did you ever think in your job you would be called upon to do such a thing?’ All he said was: ‘That’s why I didn’t arrest you.’ He repeated what the other cop had said: ‘The mosque is a private place and they have the right to eject out if you do not play by their rules.’ This cop did not say as the other one had done menacingly: ‘We are the police and we can throw you out.’ All I could say to my compatriot, the ‘good cop,’ was: ‘The lunch counter was also private.’ What if the young men sitting down there had played by the rules? Whose rules?”

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



Bush’s Union Transparency Rules Retracted Under Obama

The Obama administration promised increased transparency in government but has rolled back rules proposed by the Bush administration that expanded the financial disclosure statements required of labor unions and their leaders.

Since President Obama took office, the Labor Department has rescinded or delayed three sets of rules proposed by the George W. Bush administration that would have required unions and their leaders to more specifically detail their finances, according to a review of records by The Washington Times.

The rules were rolled back while the Obama administration was seeking more stringent regulation of corporate America, including banks, insurance companies, health care providers and publicly traded companies.

The proposed Bush rules would have required labor unions to identify from whom they were buying and selling assets, forced union leaders and employees to file more detailed conflict-of-interest forms, and required unions to reveal the finances of hundreds of so-called labor trusts — largely unregulated entities set up to provide benefits for members.

Former Labor Secretary Elaine L. Chao, one of the architects of the expanded Bush rules, said the Obama administration is “making a mockery of the regulations” and is giving “preferential treatment” to the unions.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Collapse of the American Empire: Swift, Silent, Certain

Commentary: Historians warning of a sudden ‘thief at night,’ an ‘accelerating car crash’

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (MarketWatch) — “One of the disturbing facts of history is that so many civilizations collapse,” warns anthropologist Jared Diamond in “Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed.” Many “civilizations share a sharp curve of decline. Indeed, a society’s demise may begin only a decade or two after it reaches its peak population, wealth and power.”

Now, Harvard’s Niall Ferguson, one of the world’s leading financial historians, echoes Diamond’s warning: “Imperial collapse may come much more suddenly than many historians imagine. A combination of fiscal deficits and military overstretch suggests that the United States may be the next empire on the precipice.” Yes, America is on the edge.

Dismiss his warning at your peril. Everything you learned, everything you believe and everything driving our political leaders is based on a misleading, outdated theory of history. The American Empire is at the edge of a dangerous precipice, at risk of a sudden, rapid collapse.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



District Sues Parents … to Shut Them Up!

Defendants had demanded, gasp!, public records

A school district in Arizona has filed a lawsuit against a handful of taxpayers seeking a court ruling that they have no right to ask for public records, sue the district or even complain to anyone about the educational institution’s activities.

The action brought by officials with the Congress, Ariz., district, against Jean Warren, Jennifer Renee Hoge, Cyndi Regis and Barbara Rejon apparently is a precedent.

Liz Hill, the assistant state ombudsman for public access, told the Goldwater Institute, which is defending the taxpayers, that she is unaware of any other situation in which a government agency went to court to block public access to public records that by law must be available.

[…]

Institute attorney Carrie Ann Sitren asserted school officials are trying to silence people who have been critical of their handling of school policy and tax money.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Every American is a Criminal, Or Soon Will be

“The more laws government passes, the more law breakers government makes.” Ron Ewart

We have repeated the following phrase several times in our articles, since repetition seems to be the only way to get a message across. “YOUR MONEY IS GOVERNMENT’S MAJOR POWER OVER YOU: The first power that government has over you is YOUR perception that YOUR money is their money.

The second power that government has over you is by using the money they take from you by force, against you.

But, the third power that government has over you is that you will religiously obey their laws, no matter how many they pass, or how unconstitutional those laws may be.”

From another article we wrote: “The consequence of too many laws is that huge segments of the public are totally unaware of their existence. And yet, under the law, ignorance of the law is not a defense.”

And speaking of too many laws, don’t you just love going to the airport and being treated like a criminal … or a terrorist? Instead of taking care of the problem as the most powerful nation on Earth, we turn little old ladies into criminals, as they are forced to take their shoes off and are wanded all over their entire bodies. Then there are the poor souls who have the misfortune of having had hip or knee replacements. They are required to almost undress, while some gaping TSA agent scans every inch of their body and clothing and the immediate crowd gathers ‘round to watch the virtual undressing, all the while muttering to themselves, “thank God it wasn’t me.”

[…]

But Smart Grid, when fully implemented, will take away your control of all the machines in your business and in your home. One of the provisions of Smart Grid will be a small electronic circuit board placed in the appliances in your home that can turn the appliance on or off, or adjust it one way or another, to compensate for loads on the power grid. You are sitting there in your living room and suddenly you notice it is getting colder. That is because the smart grid card in your furnace control unit has sensed an increasing load on the grid and has re-adjusted your furnace from a comfortable 72 degrees to a most uncomfortable 60 degrees and you won’t be able to do one damn thing about it … legally that is. Or you are in Arizona and the outside temperature is 110 degrees, but the smart card, hidden in your thermostat, turns off your air conditioner.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Fox’s Beck, Krauthammer & Kristol: Wrong on Wilders (Much to Talal’s Delight)

by Diana West

When Glenn Beck, Charles Krauthammer and Bill Kristol each from their respective Fox News perches branded Dutch political phenom Geert Wilders as beyond the political pale, it was shocking and outrageously so, and for several reasons.

One. I’ve grown used to Fox News and all other media ignoring not just the Wilders story but also the cultural story of the century, altogether — namely, the Islamization of Europe, something Wilders, a great admirer of Ronald Reagan and a committed supporter Israel, is dedicated to halt and reverse. The survival instinct of the Dutch, who, earlier this month gave unprecedented electoral victories to Wilders and his party, is a strong indicator that this civilizational transformation is not irreversible. But covering the Islamization of Europe, as readers of this column know, usually makes for bad news. And worse, at least according to the powers-that-be, even half-way competent reporting on the subject puts Islam in a bad light because it reveals exactly what happens to Western-style liberty when Muslims enter a non-Muslim host country in sufficient numbers to enact and extend sharia (Islamic law) over a heretofore Judeo-Christian-humanist society.

Better safe (politically correct) than sorry (subject to potential boycott or worse), our media prefer, frittering away precious powers afforded by the First Amendment…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Get Ready for the Know All, See All National ID Card…Plus, Plus

Obama and his administration want to know and control everything; namely us. If given the chance, Obama and his crew will morph into place a national ID Card for Workers under the guise of repairing and responding to the Immigration problem.

Now, the push is on to quickly create a biometric card, which would have embedded information, personal information and fingerprints. Who cares about that old fossil…privacy rights. This special and intrusive card would be forced on and used by ALL workers in America. The recent Wall Street Journal article exposed this very thing. It isn’t just Democrats who have lost their minds on this. Senator’s Chuck Schumer (D) and Lindsey Graham (R) are boldly leading this effort and want a bill signed soon. In fact, they are planning to meet with Obama next week to update him on their work. Isn’t this progressive and most special?

Obama, Schumer and Graham say and believe that forcing this card on all workers would stop new illegal aliens from coming here to work because they couldn’t get work without a card. The magical thing is that this president and congress are boldly pushing amnesty for the 20-40 million illegal aliens already living here so they need not worry about this new working card.

[…]

Then there is the control with the Health Care bill

In the Senate and House version still being manipulated into place, they have described the IRS controlling this bill. It would have access to your bank accounts, especially if health payments or bills were late. Did you ever wonder why this Health care horror show would be governed by the dreaded IRS? Wonder no more. They have the biggest and most complicated computer system of tracking there is. Imagine a person fighting cancer, having lost a job and now behind on payments to a coerced Government health plan…now the IRS is breathing down your back and seizing your bank accounts.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hearing Delayed for Obama Judicial Nominee Who Supported Serial Killer

The Senate Judiciary Committee has postponed the hearing for a controversial Court of Appeals nominee after the panel received a letter from a home-state prosecutor blasting him as a judicial loose cannon and Republicans raised concerns about his alleged bias in favor of sex offenders.

U.S. District Court Judge Robert Chatigny gained notoriety in 2005 for his role in trying to fight the execution of convicted serial killer and rapist Michael Ross, also known as The Roadside Strangler, whom Chatigny had described as a victim of his own “sexual sadism.”

His conduct in that case, which included threatening to go after Ross’ attorney’s law license, as well as his ruling in 2001 against sex offender registries created under Megan’s Law, has caused a commotion among Republicans on the judiciary panel.

“I’ve never seen conduct like this,” said a Republican source. “I’m shocked that the White House vetted this guy … and still put him up for a judgeship.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



House Democrats Looking at ‘Slaughter Solution’ To Pass Obamacare Without a Vote on Senate Bill

Would House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her fellow House Democratic leaders try to cram the Senate version of Obamacare through the House without actually having a recorded vote on the bill?

Not only is the answer yes, they would, they have figured out a way to do it, according to National Journal’s Congress Daily:

“House Rules Chairwoman Louise Slaughter is prepping to help usher the healthcare overhaul through the House and potentially avoid a direct vote on the Senate overhaul bill, the chairwoman said Tuesday.

“Slaughter is weighing preparing a rule that would consider the Senate bill passed once the House approves a corrections bill that would make changes to the Senate version.

“Slaughter has not taken the plan to Speaker Pelosi as Democrats await CBO scores on the corrections bill. ‘Once the CBO gives us the score, we’ll spring right on it,’ she said.”

Each bill that comes before the House for a vote on final passage must be given a rule that determines things like whether the minority would be able to offer amendments to it from the floor.

In the Slaughter Solution, the rule would declare that the House “deems” the Senate version of Obamacare to have been passed by the House. House members would still have to vote on whether to accept the rule, but they would then be able to say they only voted for a rule, not for the bill itself.

Would that rationale fly with the public? Is it logical? Of course not. But remember, these folks have persuaded themselves that a majority of the American people really want Obamacare.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Monckton on Climate Hoaxers: “Jail the Lot”

Wednesday evening, I had the honor of attending a presentation given by noted ‘climate change’ skeptic Lord Christopher Monckton, sponsored by the Bull Run Republican Women’s Club in Manassas, Virginia.

As I didn’t think it appropriate to ask a long-winded Chris Matthews-type question, I essentially wanted to know (with all the revelations of deliberate fudging of climate data to “prove” global warming is happening) what the legal ramifications on the players could be, considering how many billions of dollars cities, states, businesses, corporations, as well as whole nations have spent going “green”, not to mention the adverse effects on developing nations?

Lord Monckton’s response was direct and to the point: “Jail the lot!”

[Comments from JD: See url for video.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Muslim Sues NY Police for Job Bias

WASHINGTON — An American Muslim is suing the New York Police Department for barring him from joining the force because of his Arabic origin and Muslim faith, a case rights activists say symbolizes a surge in job discrimination since the 9/11.

“There is a lot of racism and a lot of paranoia about Arabs in the police department,” Mark Taylor, lawyer of Said Hajem, told IslamOnline.net.

Hajem, a 39-year-old naturalized US citizen originally from Morocco, decided to pursue a career with the NYPD after knowing about the need for Arabic speakers on the force.

He passed the entrance exams with high scores and was cleared to join the Police Academy. He even received a congratulatory letter from the Police Commissioner.

But at the interview with Ricardo Ramkissoon, who was in charge of reviewing the application, the officer refused to take any personal references with Middle Eastern names of Hajem’s friends and neighbors.

“The officer responded very negatively to that, claiming that he could be a terrorist and they would say good things about him to get him on the force,” said Taylor.

“He specifically said that he was against officers from other countries to become members of the police department.”

Ramkissoon later said in his review that there are several reasons not to hire Hajem.

“That was really shocking to us… it is just a clear case of bias,” said Taylor, adding that his client decided to take his case to the court.

Lawyers for the city filed a motion asking that Hajem’s claim be dismissed but the District Court in Manhattan turned it down.

“The case is going to trial as the judge found that there are enough evidences for discrimination here to justify a trial,” said Taylor, adding that the lawsuit will proceed next month.

The NYPD had earlier said they just delayed Hajem’s hiring for years, but he is still eligible for hiring indefinitely.

They did not respond to IOL request for comment.

Surge

Civil rights advocates believe Hajem’s case is not so uncommon in post 9/11 America.

“There are too many cases without having something to support it,” Khadija Athman, Civil Rights Manager at the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), told IOL.

She noted many Muslims have faced job discrimination since 9/11 and filed cases with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the government agency responsible for enforcing laws against employment discrimination.

“After September 11, there were so many of these cases the EEOC received that they had to have a separate department to deal with the cases affecting Muslims and people from Middle Eastern origin.”

Fahed Al-Rawaf, a media and legal adviser at the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC), agrees that discrimination at work place against Muslims and Arabs has soared.

“There has been a surge in employment discrimination cases across the country.”

The EEOC estimates confirm that Muslims and Arabs have faced the sharpest increase in workplace discrimination in recent years.

But unfortunately, laments Athman, most people just take it and do not report the discrimination they were subject to or file lawsuit.

“The problem is that with employment, it is not easy to prove you were not approved because of being Muslim or Arab.”

Rawaf believes there is a lack of awareness among the Muslim community, estimated at between six to eight million, of what their rights are.

“There is a need to have more awareness about your rights at the work force and what does constitute discrimination.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Palermo-New York: Miami Op Nets Gambino ‘Capi’, Sicily Old Guard

(ANSA) — Rome, March 20 — Italian police and the FBI on Wednesday arrested 27 suspects — 21 in Palermo and six in the US — in an operation against a powerful Cosa Nostra clan and US affiliates including three Gambino family ‘capi’ in New York.

Agents said the two-year operation showed how the Italian and US branches of the Sicilian Mafia were still working “closely” together.

“But we have cut off those links,” said Italian Police Chief Antonio Manganelli.

He said the op showed the “historic collaboration between Italian police and the FBI is a strong as ever” and devoted Wednesday’s success to slain anti-Mafia heroes like Palermo police chief Boris Giuliano, killed in 1979, and investigating magistrates Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, murdered in 1992.

In New York, the FBI took into custody three suspects, Gambino commanders Gaetano Napoli and his sons Gaetano Jr and Thomas, on suspicion of extortion, loan sharking, money laundering and fraudulent bankruptcy.

Another three were arrested in Miami: alleged go-between Roberto Settineri, his suspected right-hand man Antonio Tricami and another alleged associate, Daniel Dromerhauser.

They are suspected of money laundering and obstructing justice.

A seventh man, Giuseppe Frusteri, was arrested on weapons charges. In Palermo, police arrested 21 members of the city’s Santa Maria di Gesu’ family on suspicion of drug trafficking, attempted homicide, money laundering, extortion and other crimes.

In Palermo, police said the operation showed how Cosa Nostra was turning to “historic’ bosses after recent turmoil following the arrests of several top members stemming from the 2006 capture of 43-year fugitive boss of bosses Bernardo Provenzano.

“They need to get charismatic figures back in business,” said a statement from the special SCO division of the Italian police, which worked with the FBI.

Among the 20 arrested were Santa Maria di Gesu’ old-time chief Gioacchino Corso, his brother Giampaolo; and veteran hitman Giuseppe Lo Bocchiaro, who was recently released after serving time for the 1982 murder of rival gangster Pietro Marchese in Palermo’s Ucciardone prison.

Pietro Pilo, a trusted lieutenant of long-time clan head Cosimo Vernengo, was arrested with a log book showing victims of protection rackets and amounts due. Three handguns were also seized.

In New York, the Gambinos are still closely allied to the Colombo, Bonanno, Genovese and Lucchese families in drugs, gambling, arms and prostitution rackets as well as infiltrating public works, the FBI said.

Italian Interior Ministry Undersecretary Alfredo Mantovano said the operation had scored “an extremely important result” in the State’s fight against the mafia.

In the last two years Italian police have cancelled 17 names from their most-wanted list including the top Palermo bosses.

Their prime target now is Trapani-based boss Matteo Messina Denaro, believed to have become Cosa Nostra’s new No.1.

The Italia government recently unveiled a new anti-mafia plan including a national mafia map and database and an assets seizure agency in Reggio Calabria.

The Calabrian ‘Ndrangheta syndicate is now considered Italy’s most powerful mafia, having outstripped Cosa Nostra thanks to its control of the European cocaine trade.

Italy’s two other main mafias are the Camorra in Naples, a major player in illegal waste disposal and public tenders, and the Sacra Corona Unita in Puglia which is heavily involved in people trafficking

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Patent Reform is a Patent Giveaway

Americans should beware when Members of Congress talk about “reform” and “comprehensive” because those words usually cover a lot of mischief. The latest example of this legerdemain is the so-called Patent Reform now aggressively pushed by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT).

Since we’ve outsourced millions of well-paying American jobs overseas, the one asset we have to maintain our American standard of living is innovation superiority. The United States is the world’s leader in technology innovation, which is due to our private enterprise economic system, our constitutional protections of private property, and most especially our unique system of granting patents to inventors.

Other countries can produce things we invent more cheaply because of the pitiful wages they pay, but they have a dismal record of inventing anything. Lacking expertise in innovation, some foreign countries concentrate on stealing ours.

Communist China is the world’s top producer of illegal copies of music, movies, software, designer apparel, medicines, and other U.S. products. Chinese agents stole or illegally purchased high-tech machines and systems, restricted electronic components, embargoed components for military weapons, and communications systems, in order to copy them.

Now that Communist China has become America’s banker, China is flexing its muscles in a new way that threatens our economy and our jobs. The buzzword is “indigenous innovation.”

China has promulgated new anti-American trade rules that prohibit imports of our products unless they are based on intellectual property that is developed and/or owned in China, and associated trademarks are originally registered in China.

These rules mean that U.S. products cannot be sold in China unless the U.S. companies give China their current patents plus their research and development of new products. This targets our most innovative manufacturing and service industries, including computers, software, and telecommunications.

The Chinese government has issued a catalog of products that are subject to this obnoxious rule, and the list is expected to be expanded soon to other industries. China’s “indigenous innovation” rule will exclude many major U.S. firms from the Chinese market or require them to give China their patents and advanced technology.

Yongshun Cheng, former senior judge and deputy director of the Intellectual Property Division of Beijing High People’s Court, stated bluntly that the proposed U.S. patent bill is bad news for American innovation and good news for foreign infringers. He pointed out that the bill “is friendlier to the infringers than to the patentees in general as it will make the patent less reliable, easier to be challenged, and cheaper to be infringed.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Investigation Over Online Hate Speech

(IsraelNN.com) Authorities in Canada are investigating an anti-Semitic website that accused Jews of being behind several murderous terrorist attacks. The website’s creator, York University student Salman Hossain, has been suspended from school and will face a disciplinary panel.

The Ontario Police’s hate crimes and extremism unit is looking into Hossain’s writings.

Hossain, a dual citizen of Bangladesh and Canada, created a site called “filthyjewishterrorists.com” on which he blamed terrorist attacks in the United States and Canada on “the mass murdering terrorist Jewish community.” He accused Jews of being behind terrorist attacks that were in fact perpetrated by Muslims, and said that the Jews carried out the attacks in order to make Muslims look bad.

He called to murder all Jews in Europe and North America if a terrorist attack were to take place in Canada.

“The university is moving on this issue in a serious fashion,” York University said in a statement. “We want all of our students, all of our community members, to be safe,” the school added.

On his site, which has been taken offline, Hossain bragged about his hatred for Jews, and predicted that “foreign troops” would enter Western countries “and vaporize the Jewish neighborhoods in Major Population Centers using nuclear warheads and cruise missiles.”

“This war on Islam… will end with the complete extermination of the Jewish culture, race, and religion,” he said.

After Canada’s National Post reported on the story, Hossain confirmed that he did in fact support genocide against Jews.

Hossain has been involved in hate crimes in the past. Three years ago, he faced charges after expressing support for terrorist attacks in Canada. Those charges were dismissed after the attorney general determined that Hossain was undergoing rehabilitation.

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

Europe and the EU


Baroness Ashton Drops Opposition to Euro-Army Headquarters

Baroness Ashton has dropped her opposition to a permanent European Union military headquarters that many believe will be the first step towards a Euro-army.

Britain is staunchly opposed to a standing military headquarters in Brussels claiming it would duplicate Nato and be “an unnecessary use of resources”.

But since becoming EU foreign minister last year, Lady Ashton has gone from “being unconvinced” to having an “open mind” over the move. It has been demanded by French and German supporters of a European army.

“People raise the question whether the EU should have its own permanent operations HQ. This is a serious issue that deserves a serious debate,” she said to MEPs on Wednesday.

The Conservatives have accused Lady Ashton of “going native” and succumbing to pressure from France.

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



Bluefin EU-Protected, Exception for Italy

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 10 — Based on an agreement to be formalised tomorrow by the EU Council of Ministers, Europe has decided to ban the international trade of bluefin tuna. The fish will not disappear completely from European tables, though, as it can still be eaten as long as it is locally fished. The agreement reached in Brussels today between representatives of the 27 member states upheld the exceptions requested specifically by Italy. Thanks also to the position taken by the UK and Germany, the EU has agreed to introduce all the financial measures necessary to compensate for the negative impact that the decision will have on the sector and the European fishing industry as a whole. According to the agreement reached, the registration of the bluefin tuna on appendix I of the list of protected species will not occur immediately, but only after the meeting in November 2010 of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT). Europe has also decided to protect coral, but not to forbid its marketing. It has transpired from today’s meeting in Brussels that the agreement, which also includes measures protecting elephants and bears, will include coral in appendix II of the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species. Experts say that coral marketing would not be banned but rather regulated to avoid an exploitation incompatible with its survival. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Celibacy ‘A Gift’ Says Vatican

Clergy ‘minister’ speaks out amid abuse scandals

(ANSA) — Vatican City, March 11 — Priestly celibacy is a gift, the Vatican’s ‘minister’ for the clergy said Thursday after an Austrian archbishop appeared to suggest the Church should look at the issue in light of recent sex abuse scandals.

“Priestly celibacy is a gift from the Holy Spirit which…must be lived with fullness and joy,” said Cardinal Claudio Hummes, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, the head of a sort of ministry which regulates clerical life.

“Christ chooses some people” to be priests and practise celibacy which is part of a “unique and privileged relationship with God,” said Hummes, who in 2006 caused a brief flap when he said celibacy was “not a dogma”.

Another high-ranking cleric, Caritas International chief Oscar Rodriguez Maradiga, said: “I don’t understand how there can be a link” between celibacy and child sex abuse.

Like other clerics, he stressed that children were abused outside the Church but the media appeared to focus more strongly on scandals involving priests.

On Wednesday Vienna Archbishop Christoph Schoenborn called for an “unflinching” examination of the possible roots of the scandals, saying “it also includes the issue of priestly celibacy”.

But Vienna archdiocese spokesman Erich Leitenberger told Catholic news agency Sir Thursday that the cardinal “did not call into question celibacy in any way”.

In Germany, the Archbishop of Regensburg, Gerhard Mueller, described the notion of celibacy being “the cause” of child sex abuse as “nonsense”.

Germany has launched a scheme to root out and prevent Church child sex abuse while the Church in the Netherlands on Wednesday opened a probe into how recent cases could have occurred.

Pope Benedict XVI has yet to speak out on the recent German scandal, which is said to involve dozens of school cases and a couple of ex-choristers at the famous Regensburg boys choir, where the pope’s brother Georg Ratzinger was choirmaster from 1964 to 1994.

Ratzinger this week said he knew nothing of the cases and apologised to the victims.

Scandals have also swept the Irish Church and a number of Irish bishops have resigned.

Benedict said Thursday that priests must live their vocations “in a high way” to give examples for the faithful to follow”.

An association of Italian former priests who have married said Thursday Schoenborn was right in allegedly raising the celibacy issue.

Benedict has promised a new strategy to make child sex abuse never happens again, listing the eradication of this “hateful crime” as one of the Church’s top priorities.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Europe is Not Failing Its Muslims. But Islam Has Failed Europe

by Douglas Murray

Just back from a trip to Cairo and Alexandria. While I was there at the weekend, my recent debate against Tariq Ramadan went out on BBC World. It is now available on YouTube among other places. And as I promised I would post it when it came out, here is the first section (of my and Ramadan’s opening speeches) below. The rest follows on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4M-whjJs10

The motion was “Europe is Failing its Muslims”. I’m happy to say that Flemming Rose and I convincingly won the argument, with the audience voting overwhelmingly (and despite considerable intimidation in the hall on the night) that Europe is not in fact failing its Muslims.

The debate has been edited down for broadcast. My one gripe about this (except for the BBC’s inevitable censorship of my criticisms of the Muslim Council of Britain among other government-paid Muslim-groups — as reported by the Evening Standard here) is that they cut one crucially relevant case study I gave.

One of the two clerics who whipped up hatred against Denmark around the world, in the wake of my colleague Flemming’s commission of depictions of the historical figure Mohammed, arrived in Denmark from Lebanon in the 1990s. He went to Denmark because he has a disabled son. The country which he came from could not look after his child but he knew that Denmark would. And it did. He repaid the society by inciting hatred and violence against it. When such cases can be repeated ad nauseum, it should hardly even have to be pointed out how obscene the motion Flemming and I found ourselves debating really was.

It is grotesque to argue that Europe has failed its Muslims. It has been made repeatedly obvious that it is Islam that has failed Europe, indeed that it is Islam that has failed Muslims. I am delighted that the audience in the hall on the night agreed. And that most of the audience around the world who have emailed me since transmission — currently including people from as far afield as Nigeria, Pakistan and Iraq — appear to agree with that too.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



France: Gov’t Invests 13 Mln Euros in Video Surveillance

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 10 — France is preparing to invest 13 million euros to equip 231 municipalities, 19 schools and 19 residential areas with 3,203 new video surveillance systems, Le Parisien reports. The newspaper’s website specifies that France doubled its funds for video surveillance in 2010 compared with 2009 (17 million euros), and trebled its subsidies from 2008 (11.7 million euros). Increasing the application of video surveillance in France is one of the priorities of the government of Nicolas Sarkozy.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



French Bread Spiked With LSD in CIA Experiment

In 1951, a quiet, picturesque village in southern France was suddenly and mysteriously struck down with mass insanity and hallucinations. At least five people died, dozens were interned in asylums and hundreds afflicted.

For decades it was assumed that the local bread had been unwittingly poisoned with a psychedelic mould. Now, however, an American investigative journalist has uncovered evidence suggesting the CIA peppered local food with the hallucinogenic drug LSD as part of a mind control experiment at the height of the Cold War.

The mystery of Le Pain Maudit (Cursed Bread) still haunts the inhabitants of Pont-Saint-Esprit, in the Gard, southeast France.

On August 16, 1951, the inhabitants were suddenly racked with frightful hallucinations of terrifying beasts and fire.

One man tried to drown himself, screaming that his belly was being eaten by snakes. An 11-year-old tried to strangle his grandmother. Another man shouted: “I am a plane”, before jumping out of a second-floor window, breaking his legs. He then got up and carried on for 50 yards. Another saw his heart escaping through his feet and begged a doctor to put it back. Many were taken to the local asylum in strait jackets.

Time magazine wrote at the time: “Among the stricken, delirium rose: patients thrashed wildly on their beds, screaming that red flowers were blossoming from their bodies, that their heads had turned to molten lead.”

Eventually, it was determined that the best-known local baker had unwittingly contaminated his flour with ergot, a hallucinogenic mould that infects rye grain. Another theory was the bread had been poisoned with organic mercury.

However, H P Albarelli Jr., an investigative journalist, claims the outbreak resulted from a covert experiment directed by the CIA and the US Army’s top-secret Special Operations Division (SOD) at Fort Detrick, Maryland.

The scientists who produced both alternative explanations, he writes, worked for the Swiss-based Sandoz Pharmaceutical Company, which was then secretly supplying both the Army and CIA with LSD.

Mr Albarelli came across CIA documents while investigating the suspicious suicide of Frank Olson, a biochemist working for the SOD who fell from a 13th floor window two years after the Cursed Bread incident. One note transcribes a conversation between a CIA agent and a Sandoz official who mentions the “secret of Pont-Saint-Esprit” and explains that it was not “at all” caused by mould but by diethylamide, the D in LSD.

While compiling his book, A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA’s Secret Cold War Experiments, Mr Albarelli spoke to former colleagues of Mr Olson, two of whom told him that the Pont-Saint-Esprit incident was part of a mind control experiment run by the CIA and US army.

After the Korean War the Americans launched a vast research programme into the mental manipulation of prisoners and enemy troops.

Scientists at Fort Detrick told him that agents had sprayed LSD into the air and also contaminated “local foot products”.

Mr Albarelli said the real “smoking gun” was a White House document sent to members of the Rockefeller Commission formed in 1975 to investigate CIA abuses. It contained the names of a number of French nationals who had been secretly employed by the CIA and made direct reference to the “Pont St. Esprit incident.” In its quest to research LSD as an offensive weapon, Mr Albarelli claims, the US army also drugged over 5,700 unwitting American servicemen between 1953 and 1965.

None of his sources would indicate whether the French secret services were aware of the alleged operation. According to US news reports, French intelligence chiefs have demanded the CIA explain itself following the book’s revelations. French intelligence officially denies this.

Locals in Pont-Saint-Esprit still want to know why they were hit by such apocalyptic scenes. “At the time people brought up the theory of an experiment aimed at controlling a popular revolt,” said Charles Granjoh, 71.

“I almost kicked the bucket,” he told the weekly French magazine Les Inrockuptibles. “I’d like to know why.”

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



Germany: Child Abuse Scandal Spreads to Catholic Dorm

A Roman Catholic dormitory near Frankfurt closed in 1981 on Wednesday became the latest religious institution enmeshed in a child abuse scandal now involving over two-thirds of Germany’s dioceses.

The Diocese of Mainz said it had preliminary indications that two people abused pupils boarding at the Bensheim Konvikt in the 1970s. State prosecutors have been informed, a statement said.

The director of the dormitory, where children attending a nearby secondary school boarded, was also implicated in sexual abuse allegations, it said. He “left the service of the diocese” in 1979 before the convent closed for “economic and educational” reasons.

The scandal erupted in January when an elite Jesuit school in Berlin admitted systematic sexual abuse of pupils by two priests in the 1970s and 1980s, and has now engulfed 19 of Germany’s 27 dioceses.

Also implicated is a boarding school attached to the Domspatzen (“Cathedral Sparrows”), Regensburg cathedral’s 1,000-year-old choir. The choir was run for

29 years by Georg Ratzinger, brother of Pope Benedict XVI.

Most of the priests concerned are not expected to face criminal charges because the alleged crimes took place too long ago, but there have been growing calls for a change in the law and for the Church to pay compensation.

The German scandal is one of several to have rocked the Catholic Church in recent years, notably in Ireland where one priest admitted sexually abusing more than 100 children, and this week in Austria and the Netherlands.

Federico Lombardi, a spokesman for the Vatican, said Tuesday that German, Austrian and Dutch Church leaders had acted “rapidly and decisively,” stressing that sexual abuse went far beyond church walls.

The chairman of the German Bishops Conference, Robert Zollitsch, was to meet the pope on Friday at the Vatican to discuss the cases.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



HSBC Admits Details of 24,000 Swiss Bank Accounts Stolen

Details of 24,000 HSBC customers with Swiss bank accounts have been stolen, the bank admitted today.

The theft potentially exposes large numbers of international clients to prosecution by tax authorities in their home countries.

A former IT employee of Swiss subsidiary HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) SA, identified by French authorities as Herve Falciani, stole the information between late 2006 and early 2007, the bank said.

The accounts, held by individuals worldwide, were all opened before October 2006 and some 9,000 have since been closed.

‘We deeply regret this situation and unreservedly apologize to our clients for this threat to their privacy,’ said Alexandre Zeller, chief executive of the Swiss subsidiary.

The bank said it has contacted the affected customers and doesn’t believe the stolen data has or will allow any unauthorized person to access the affected accounts.

The stolen information only affects accounts in Switzerland with the exception of its former subsidiary HSBC Guyerzeller Bank, it said.

However, the theft could leave some of those account holders exposed to prosecution by tax authorities.

In recent cases of data theft from banks in Switzerland and Liechtenstein, the information was offered to foreign governments seeking to track down nationals who avoided paying their taxes by hiding money in Swiss accounts.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi’s Approval Rating Lowest-Ever

Record lows also for his govt and PdL party

(ANSA) — Rome, March 10 — The approval ratings for Premier Silvio Berlusconi, his government and his People of Freedom (PdL) party all fell to record lows in March, according to a monthly poll from the IPR research group released on Wednesday.

IPR added that Italy’s other parties, both in government and on the opposition, failed to benefit from the PdL’s decline.

The March poll came after the mix-up up by the PdL over presenting its list of candidates for this month’s partial regional elections and the government’s attempts to rectify this. According to the March poll, Berlusconi’s personal approval rating in one month slipped two percentage points to 44%, its lowest level since he took office in the spring of 2008 and far below its peak of 62% in October 2008.

The percentage of Italians who disapprove of Berlusconi’s performance as premier rose by two percentage points to its highest yet, 54%.

The approval rating for Berlusconi’s center-right government also fell by two percentage points, after holding steady for fourth months in a row, sinking to 38%, its lowest yet, while its disapproval rating climbed two points to 58%.

Although its approval rating fell in one month from 46% to 43%, the PdL continued to be the party which enjoyed the greatest confidence among Italians.

The Democratic Party (PD), the biggest opposition group, saw its approval rating hold at 40%, after gaining three points last month following a four-point loss in January.

The opposition IdV, headed by ex-Clean Hands prosecutor Antonio Di Pietro, held at 38% while the centrist UDC opposition party fell two points to 38%.

The approval rating of the PdL’s government ally the Northern League was unchanged again this month at 31%.

Within the government only eight ministers had approval ratings of 50% or above while 15 were below.

Welfare Minister Maurizio Sacconi again this month enjoyed the highest approval rating, 64%, while four ministers were tied in second place with a 59% rating: Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, down a point; Justice Minister Angelino Alfano; Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti and Industry Minister Claudio Scajola, all up a percentage point.

Civil Service Minister Renato Brunetta held at 58%, after falling three points in February, Equal Opportunities Minister Mara Carfagna was unchanged at 55%, and Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa fell two points to 50%. At the bottom of table again this month was Tourism Minister Michela Vittoria Brambilla, who dropped three points to 25%, while Environment Minister Stefania Prestigiacomo and Elio Vito, the minister for relations with parliament, were unchanged at 29%.

Out of 23 ministers, 10 saw their ratings remain the same as last month, six saw them fall and seven rise.

The IPR poll was taken March 8 and 9 on a cross section of 1,000 Italian voters.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: World’s Largest Bioethanol Plant in Italy

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 2 — With reference to second generation ethanol, Italy is about to become the European leader hanks to innovative research and development: the M&G Mossi group and Ghisolfi, thanks to the innovative technology developed by controlled company Chemtex Italia, confirmed for 2010 the construction in Crescentino (Vercelli) of an industrial facility with an annual output of 45,000 tonnes of second generation ethanol, the largest in the world. The second generation bioethanol facility will allow annual CO2 savings equal to 51,000 tonnes, equal to the use of 6,800 vehicles, starting from a biomass not allocated to food use and widely available across the land. On location there are approximately 300,000 tonnes of hay that can be easily located in the area surrounding the facility, and only 4,000 hectares would be needed to raise the marsh reed needed to fully fuel the scheduled production. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Magistrates Allege Balducci Used G8 Money to Buy Soft Furnishings for Son

Perugia magistrate refuses to release members of “the gang” from custody

PERUGIA — Businessmen angling for public works contracts were willing to pay for the wedding banquet of a woman working at the department in charge of major events. Other expenses incurred by middle and high-ranking civil servants were also taken care of. A glaring example is the purchase of fabrics for the home of Angelo Balducci’s son by the “Società Maddalena which built the conference hall for the G8 summit”. The revelations are in the report sent by Perugia public prosecutors Sergio Sottani and Alessia Tavernesi to the investigating magistrate, requesting that Angelo Balducci, Mauro Della Giovampaola and businessman Diego Anemone’s application for release should be turned down. The three are being held on bribery charges, along with Fabio De Santis, who did not apply for release. The prosecutors’ request was upheld and yesterday evening the defence application for release from custody was rejected by the investigating magistrate, Paolo Micheli.

The wedding banquet

The public prosecutors have reconstructed the network of relationships: “What was put in place in the context of managing major events was a complete and utter ‘commercialisation’ of the entire system for the benefit of private interests. This was possible thanks to the complicity of all, or nearly all, of the decision-making centres involved and of bodies with spending power. It is clear that bribery within the department involved the system in its entirety, not just the top echelon. The many tapped conversations enable us to understand that Diego Anemone and other businessmen acceptable to the system had daily contact not just with managers but with the whole of the structure. They catered for the demands of all employees: paying for refreshments for the wedding of one woman, procuring bank finance for the officer in charge of payment orders, delivering mysterious envelopes and sending valuable Christmas gifts for various officers. Favours and gifts were distributed at all levels, effectively guaranteeing the award and subsequent management of contracts in defiance of every principle of impartiality and good conduct of public administration, at immense cost to the public purse”. The public prosecutors’ argument, upheld by the magistrate, highlights “an inexplicable communality of interest between public servants and entrepreneurs, justified by previous encounters or by contact at work. Yet it goes much further, reaching the point of the total subservience of the public bodies to those outside the public administration, commercialising the public function to the exclusive benefit of private interests.”

Balducci’s companies

A document sent to the Carabinieri’s ROS special operations group on 3 March reconstructs the purchase of fabrics by Balducci’s wife in September 2008 to furnish the home of their son Filippo. In a phone call tapped on 30 September, the owner of the Foresi shop told Anemone that the merchandise selected “was particularly expensive” and asked him for authorisation to deliver the goods and for payment. During questioning by the magistrate, Balducci claimed to have repaid the money to Anemone. This version is contested by the public prosecutors, particularly after they had acquired the invoices. The report points out that the “corresponding taxation documents from the Foresti shop were issued to the Società Maddalena, a consortium set up to complete the contract for building the G8 summit conference hall. This demonstrates that managing and invoicing costs for completion of the works were conducted in an entirely ‘private’ fashion, to the sole detriment of public accounts, which indirectly bore the cost of favours distributed by the businessman to the conniving public official who guaranteed the award of the public contract”. The report also deals with Balducci’s relationship with Diego Anemone, who secured many contracts in connection with the G8 summit, the world swimming championships and the centenary celebrations for the unification of Italy. Balducci maintained that the relationship was “utterly irrelevant to the award of contracts and the subsequent management of works undertaken”. The prosecutors point out, however, that the relationship “was not restricted to personal encounters. Documents acquired show that it involved a communality of economic interests with company entanglements that were absolutely inappropriate, let alone illicit”.

Women in Venice

The report devotes a whole chapter to Mauro Della Giovampaola, a delegate at the La Maddalena G8. The investigators note that “initially, he even denied being a public officer” and then claimed he “had no power to spend or manage that would have enabled him to satisfy the demands of this or that private contractor involved in completion of the works”. However, the public prosecutors note that this “contradicts the outcome of his technical activities and Della Giovampaola’s own admission that he could award substantial technical consultancies (one went to magistrate Achille Toro’s son), which looks very much like power to make decisions and undertake related spending”. Della Giovampaola also denied encounters with prostitutes at the Hotel Gritti in Venice in the company of his colleague De Santis, organised by an employee of Diego Anemone. The public prosecutors say: “His affirmations verge on the grotesque, after glancing at the day’s conversations, some of which are eloquently explicit, and occasionally reminiscent of Boccaccio. We can deduce that the sexual act requested by the public officers was certainly offered, whether or not it actually took place”.

Fiorenza Sarzanini

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Proton Rays Will Burn Away Tumours

World’s fourth hadron therapy centre opens at Pavia. Will deal with inoperable cancers

MILAN — An invisible super-ray can penetrate and destroy the DNA of cancer cells. The ray is produced by a complex system of accelerators and transport lines that take it to the patient in the operating theatre, where the beams of subatomic particles attack the five per cent of tumours that are not operable or are resistant to normal radiation therapy. The new treatment is now available in Italy at Pavia, where yesterday ministers Ferruccio Fazio, Giulio Tremonti and Umberto Bossi attended the opening of the first CNAO (national centre for oncological hadron therapy: hadrons are the particles involved, protons and carbon ions). It is the world’s fourth such centre, after Chiba and Hyogo in Japan, and Heidelberg in Germany.

SYNCHROTRON — The hadrons are produced and accelerated in a synchrotron built by Italy’s institute of nuclear physics. Sandro Rossi, technical director of the CNAO foundation, points out: “It’s a particle accelerator with two sources that generate carbon ions and protons. The ions go round inside the synchrotron at an initial velocity of about 30,000 kilometres per second and are then accelerated to the energy level indicated by the doctor on the basis of the depth of the tumour”. The particle beam is then sent on to the treatment room, of which there are three, plus one for research. The central room contains a 150-ton suspended magnet which bends the particle beam through 90 degrees and directs it onto the patient from above. Radiation sessions lasts for two or three minutes and there are typically ten sessions in a treatment cycle. Roberto Orecchia, the CNAO foundation’s scientific director, notes: “This therapy does not replace conventional radiotherapy. It’s simply another string to our bow”. Among the more difficult to tackle cancers that can be treated by hadron therapy are sarcomas, tumours of the central nervous system, head and neck, melanomas of the eye and the tumours known as non-small-cell lung cancers and primitive liver neoplasms. So far, 50,000 patients around the world have been received proton therapy, and more than 6,000 have been treated with carbon ions, with excellent results. One feature of this therapy is its ability to penetrate in depth without damaging healthy tissue. The Pavia centre will now commence an experimental stage that will end in October 2011, after which routine treatment will begin. The centre will be fully operational in 2013, when it will have capacity to treat about 3,000 patients a year.

Adriana Bazzi

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Seize Dangerous Waste in South

Taranto, 16 Feb. (AKI) — Italian police on Tuesday seized over 600 tonnes of untreated dangerous waste materials believed to be destined for China in the southern port city of Taranto. Police made formal complaints against two people in connection with the materials, which they said were falsely labelled and concealed inside 24 containers lacked the necessary export permits.

Italian tax police and customs officials have seized 61 containers destined for export containing 1,400 tonnes of dangerous waste materials in Taranto in the southern region of Puglia in the past 12 months.

In January police arrested 10 people in northern Italy over the illegal trafficking of dangerous waste.

Six suspects were placed under house arrest, while four were jailed, in an operation which was part of a broader anti-mafia investigation, police said.

Police said they were investigating businesses allegedly involved in the illegal management and transport of waste.

A total of 41 people are under investigation including bank managers, according to Italian paramilitary police.

In December, Italian police uncovered 50,000 tonnes of dangerous waste including cancer-causing asbestos in a sprawling 10,000 square metre illegal dump in Torricella in the southern region of Puglia.

Formal complaints were made against 92 people last near over 43 illegal landfills discovered in the province of Taranto.

Shady waste disposal firms were planning to conceal 622,000 tonnes of dangerous waste in the illegal dumps, according to police.

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



Italy: Heavy Snow and Rain Causes Havoc

Rome, 9 March (AKI) — Late winter snow and rain storms in Italy have left hundreds of people stranded on the peninsula’s highways, shut down schools and cut off towns on the island of Sicily. Heavy snowfall in the past day has covered 1,000 kilometres of highways in Italy’s north and centre stopping hundreds of vehicles in the central region of Abruzzo early Wednesday, as drivers waited for snowploughs to clear major roads.

Snowstorms struck elsewhere in southern Europe this week. Barcelona on Monday recorded its heaviest snowfall since 1962 and thousands of travellers were stranded in Italy and on the border with Spain and France.

Bologna’s Guglielmo Marconi airport was closed early Wednesday as 150 emergency workers cleared heavy snow.

In Sicily, the highway connecting the cities of Palermo and Agrigento was closed after being flooded by 40 centimetres of water.

Early Wednesday, heavy rain provoked landslides that cut off the villages of Itala and Scaletta near the city of Messina.

Torrential flooding also closed highways in the southern regions of Calabria and Campania.

Heavy snow and rainfall was expected to continue in Italy until late Thursday.

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



Netherlands: CDA Stalwart to Lead Catholic Abuse Research

Former parliamentary chairman and CDA member Wim Deetman is to chair an independent investigation into reports of sexual abuse at a number of Catholic boarding schools.

The far-ranging investigation was ordered by Catholic bishops on Tuesday following mounting reports of abuse by priests at schools and seminaries in the 1960s and 1970s.

Since the end of February when newspapers reported claims of abuse at a boarding school in ‘s-Heerenberg in the 1960s and 1970s, over 350 people have come forward, the Volkskrant said on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, one former priest at the boarding school told tv show Nova in a telephone interview on Tuesday he had abused a boy. ‘I must offer my deepest apologies,’ the man said.

He did not rule out abusing other boys at the school. ‘I also want to offer the others, if there are more, my apologies for my actions 40, 41 years ago,’ he said.

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



Netherlands: Leefbaar Rotterdam ‘Collected’ Proxy Votes

The public prosecution department in Rotterdam has begun an investigation into the collection of proxy votes by supporters of local populist party Leefbaar Rotterdam following the discovery of an email full of tips for getting other people’s voting forms.

The email was sent to party workers by city councillor Ronald Buijt who told reporters on Wednesday night he had done nothing wrong. ‘It was just a way of approaching our own supporters,’ Buijt was quoted as saying in the AD.

But a spokesman for the local election council said: ‘Voters who cannot cast their ballot themselves have to take the initiative to find someone to vote for them by proxy. The voter must take the initiative, not others, such as political parties.’

Recount

Council officials in Rotterdam are beginning a recount of all 220,000 votes cast in the port city on Thursday following claims of irregularities at polling stations.

According to the initial election result, Labour is just 651 votes ahead of Leefbaar. Both parties would take 14 seats on the city council.

‘This incident [proxy voting] puts all Leefbaar’s complaints about the election in a different light,’ said local Labour leader Peter van Heemst. ‘I have a bad feeling about this and I feel I’ve been fooled because for the past week Leefbaar has been giving the impression it fought a perfectly clean campaign.’

Shocking

‘I think this is shocking,’ Arno Bonte, leader of the left-wing greens GroenLinks’ local campaign. ‘Leefbaar Rotterdam has been around for eight years and should know better.’

The local election in Rotterdam has been dogged by controversy, with some papers now calling for a completely new vote.

According to the NRC, there were more than 100 incidents at the polls, ranging from multiple voting, one polling station being left unmanned for a few minutes and party workers trying to recruit support in the polling stations themselves. One ballot box was even found to be empty at the end of the day, the paper claims.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



OIC Islamophobia Observatory Spokesman Condemns Reprint of Blasphemous Cartoon by Swedish Newspapers

A spokesman of the Organization of the Islamic Conference’s Islamophobia Observatory condemned the reprint of the controversial drawing of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) by Swedish artist Lars Vilks in three Swedish newspapers, namely Dagens Nyheter, Expressen, and Sydsvenska Dagbladet, and electronic media including radio and television broadcasts as reaction to an alleged plot to murder the cartoonist, which was uncovered in Ireland on March 9, 2010.

The spokesman said that the OIC had always spoken against violence including death threats against the originators of the blasphemous cartoons. He said however, that the Swedish media’s explanation of the action taken to reprint the cartoons in the name of freedom of expression was unacceptable, unwise and irresponsible as it has caused hurt and insult to the Muslim citizens of Sweden as well as the 1.5 billion Muslims across the world who had nothing to do with the alleged death threat. The spokesman added that there were other options available for the Swedish media to show their protest instated of resorting to an action that could potentially open a raw wound and incite avoidable unrest.

The OIC spokesman hoped that the Swedish newspapers will show restraint and exercise the right to freedom of expression in a responsible manner.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Slovenia: Corruption, Agriculture Minister Steps Down

(ANSAmed) — LJUBLJANA, MARCH 10 — In Slovenia, Agriculture Minister Milan Pogacnik resigned today after an investigation against him for corruption, abuse of power and political extortion got underway, which also involves other high-ranking politicians as well as several businesspeople. With Pogacnik, another two members of the ultra-nationalist Slovenian National Party (SNS), including its leader Zmago Jelincic, and other politicians and executives have been under investigation since yesterday. The minister explained that he decided to step down “due to pressure from the press and the opposition”, saying that he has nothing to do with the corruption that he has been accused of. His resignation, according to analysts, should in no way compromise the stability of the Slovenian government, but should strengthen it, since the scandal has resulted in the removal of an official that has been heavily criticised in recent weeks. The investigation began a few months ago due to suspicions that in the sale of land for the construction of a terminal at the Port of Koper on the mainland in Sezana, near the Italian border, there was illegal speculating and pressure applied by politicians to change regulatory plans. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: False March 11 Victim Living on State Funds for 6 Yrs

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 11 — The woman never got on the Madrid trains targeted by the March 11, 2004, attacks which cost the lives of 192 and injured over 2,000, but since then she has been living on state aid set aside for the victims of the attacks. El Mundo has told the story of the Ecuadorian immigrant Lorena Candelario today, reporting that the woman had received Spanish citizenship, public housing, tens of thousands of euros and the Real Encomienda, an award for the victims of terrorism. The Audiencia Nacional uncovered the fraud in 2006 and reported Lorena Candelario for the simulation of a crime, but she continued to claim she had the right to state aid. In the attempt to recover the sums provided by the Treasury, the Interior Ministry has tasked the State Public Prosecutor’s Office with bringing legal proceedings against the Ecuadorian woman. A total of 33 awards to victims of terrorist attacks will be contested by the Prosecutor’s Office, though the case of the South American woman has caused the greatest stir. The woman worked for the Asispa firm, which provides home-based assistance to the sick in the Madrid municipality of Barajas, in the northern part of the capital, opposite the Atocha station where the explosions took place. On the afternoon of March 11, Lorena Candelario went to work as usual and then at 6:40 P.M., eleven hours after the attacks, she underwent a medical examination in a Barajas surgery, where she said that she had been on one of the trains struck by the bombs, and that she had pain in her arm and tremours due to shock. The doctors in the surgery did not find any injury, even to her hearing, similar to those suffered by all of the victims of the attack. (ANSAmed).

2010-03-11 13:36

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: March 11 Attacks: A Divided Madrid Mourns Victims

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 11 — Madrid today marks the sixth anniversary of the March 11, 2004 attacks in which 192 people died and over 2,000 people were injured, with a series of memorial ceremonies which have once again marked the division between the local authorities and the 11-M Association. The latter, chaired by Pilar Manjon (whose 21-year-old son was killed on the a train), this morning took part in a ceremony in memory of the victims organised by the UGT and CCOO unions in the square in front of the Atocha station in Madrid. Meanwhile, at the memorial to the victims erected inside the station, Mayor Alberto Ruiz Gallardon and the president of the Madrid Community, Esperanza Aguirre led the official ceremony attended by political representatives. Manjon, in a statement to the media, said that the association she chairs was not invited to the town council’s ceremony, which was instead attended by both the Association for aid to victims of terrorism and the Association of victims of terrorism. In memory of the victims of the bombings, an official statement was read in a plenary session of the Congress and a minute of silence was observed in the presence of Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. In the afternoon, Congress will host another ceremony to be attended by the various associations of the victims of the attacks. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: ECB Criticizes Lack of Measures Against Deficit

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 11 — Spain has not taken the necessary “concrete measures” to reduce its public deficit and reach the goals set by the stability pact for 2013. This criticism is part of the most recent monthly report of the European Central Bank, quoted by press agency EFE. The document warns the Spanish government that the target to reduce the public deficit to below 3% in 2013 “has not been fully backed by concrete measures”. The ECB underlines that Madrid has scheduled a reduction of 1.8 GDP points per year until 2013, more than the EU-recommended 1.5 points, to correct the Spanish deficit which reached 11.4% of GDP in 2009. However, Spain has not taken concrete measures to reach this goal, particularly for the 2011-2013 period. The ECB also criticises Ireland, which has time until 2014 to lower its deficit to the required standards. The country has promised to reach “ambitious targets of structural financial reconstruction”, without specifying any measures so far. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden to Recognize Armenian Genocide

The Swedish parliament voted on Thursday in favour of a motion to recognize the 1915 Armenian genocide.

Though the motion had the backing of members of five of the seven Swedish parliamentary parties, the vote’s outcome was uncertain to the last as the parliamentary Committee on Foreign Affairs had recommended its rejection.

But with several centre-right politicians ignoring the recommendation and choosing to vote with the opposition, the motion was eventually passed by a single vote.

Speaking to The Local prior to the vote, Left Party foreign policy spokesperson Hans Linde expressed his view that the time had come for Sweden to take a stand on the issue.

“Firstly, to hinder any repeat and to learn from history. Secondly, to encourage the development of democracy in Turkey — which includes dealing with their own history. Thirdly, to redress the wrongs committed against the victims and their descendants,” Linde said.

The foreign affairs committee, in its comments on the motion, had argued for an open debate on the issue. It also stated that the persecution of the Armenians and other ethnic groups in 1915 would have constituted genocide according to the definition adopted by the United Nations in its 1948 genocide convention if it “had it been in force at the time.”

But the committee stated that it does not consider it parliament’s role to rule on human rights issues and that this should instead be addressed by “open research, open access to facts, and free debate.”

Sweden’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt agreed with the committee’s position in comments on his blog on Thursday. Under the heading “Don’t politicize history,” Bildt wrote:

“A politicizing of history in this way risks undermining ongoing reconciliation processes, plays into the hands of those opposing normality in Armenia and reform in Turkey… and creating new tension in Swedish society.”

The committee concluded in its comments that the Turkish government has in recent years made some movement on the issue, with conferences arranged on the subject as well as broader media debate.

The Swedish parliament has voted on the issue before, even approving a report in 2000 recognizing the disappearance of as many as 2.5 million Armenians, Chaldeans, Syrians, Assyrians and Pontian Greeks from April 1915 as genocide. But the recognition was later withdrawn “on a technicality”, Hans Linde told The Local.

“The parliament also voted against recognition (by 245 to 37) in 2008. The difference this time is that the Social Democrats have changed their position,” he said.

Carl Bildt claimed in his statement that the Social Democrat parliamentary group was forced to change standpoint on the issue as a result of a party congress vote, arguing that there are “several that feel deep unease over this.”

According to Sweden’s Living History Forum, most researchers are now in agreement that the massacres constituted genocide according to the accepted 1948 UN definition. The exception to this is Turkish researchers. The Turkish government has never recognized the events as a genocide and it is illegal in Turkey to claim that it occurred.

The Living History Forum is a Swedish public authority which works with issues on tolerance, democracy and human rights from both a national and international perspective.

The Local has made attempts to contact the foreign policy spokespersons at the Centre and Liberal (Folkpartiet) parties for a comment.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Swedish Ambassador ‘Concerned’ Over Sudden Roma Influx

Sweden’s ambassador in Belgrade has expressed concern over the number of Serbian citizens seeking asylum in Sweden in the wake of a recent relaxation of visa restrictions.

“There are currently 770 Serbian citizens in Sweden, most of whom are Roma, who are requesting political asylum,” Swedish ambassador in Belgrade Krister Bringeus was quoted as saying in the Danas daily.

“All 770 people came to Sweden in last two months, which is equal to the number of people that came to the country during the whole of last year. We are very concerned over the situation,” Bringeus said.

“None of them will be granted asylum and all will be sent back home in the coming days under an emergency procedure,” he added.

Sweden is the second EU state after Belgium to have raised an alarm over an influx of asylum seekers since the European Union lifted visa restrictions for citizens of Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia in December.

They are now allowed to travel freely into the Schengen zone which covers a majority of EU countries.

According to figures from Belgium, 58 ethnic Albanians sought asylum there in January and the number swelled to 330 in February.

Serbia has said it would take back all those who sought asylum in accordance with agreements on readmission it signed with EU member states.

Interior Minister Ivica Dacic said Serbia would open a probe into the case, as the asylum seekers had been organised. According to local media reports travel agents set up bus tours to EU countries luring locals with stories that they would get political asylum, a job and a house there.

Macedonia and Serbia have agreed to investigate the possibility of prosecuting the organisers of the bus lines, Dacic told the Beta news agency.

The first bus carrying failed Serbian and Macedonian asylum seekers back from Belgium was expected to arrive in the towns of Presevo and Kumanovo respectively later.

The bus is carrying more than 40 people who have all agreed to withdraw their asylum requests and return home voluntarily.

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



Swedish Security Police Eye Terror T-Shirts

Swedish security service Säpo has said it is monitoring Danish clothing firm Fighters + Lovers, which relocated to Sweden last year after six of its members were convicted of supporting terrorism.

Denmark’s Supreme Court found in March 2009 that the company’s T-shirts violated Danish terror legislation as sales would support the PFLP in the Palestinian territories and the FARC in Colombia, both of which are included on the EU’s list of terrorist organisations.

All six convicted members of Fighters + Lovers received conditional prison sentences of between two and six months. In response, the firm decided to move its T-shirt operations to Sweden despite the fact that Sweden is also legally obliged to follow the EU list.

Since August 2009 the firm has been selling its T-shirts from Sweden and states on its homepage that proceeds from the collection are being forwarded to the FARC and the PFLP.

According to news agency TT, Swedish security police (Säpo) are aware of the firm’s presence in Sweden and are monitoring the situation but were unwilling to confirm what measures had been taken.

The firm operates a Swedish, Danish and Spanish web-shop to sell its T-shirts bearing logos with the groups’ names, as well as a Facebook site used to explain its mission in support of groups that it describes as “freedom fighters and political activists.”

The firm argues that terror legislation is out of all proportion.

“Showing solidarity to freedom fighters is not supporting terror,” the group writes, explaining that proceeds from T-shirt sales go to lawyers providing legal aid to Palestinians and Colombians incarcerated by Israeli and Colombian intelligence services.

F&L’s Danish director Michael Schølardt told Danish newspaper Politiken that since the court also fined the firm $165,000 proceeds are currently going to the Danish state and not the FARC nor the PFLP for the time being.

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



Swedish Papers Defend Anti-Prophet Cartoon

“It’s very important for us to take a stand on the issue of freedom of expression,” said Mattsson.

CAIRO — Three leading Swedish newspapers have republished a lampooning cartoon of a person described as Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) under the pretext of showing solidarity with the cartoonist in the face of an alleged murder plot against him.

“It’s very important for us to take a stand on the issue of freedom of expression,” Thomas Mattsson, editor in chief at the Stockholm tabloid Expressen, told Deutsch Welle on Thursday March 11.

In 2007, Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks depicted a person he described as Prophet Muhammad as a dog to illustrate an editorial on self-censorship and freedom of expression.

“This cartoon has been published in several newspapers in Sweden before,” said Mattsson.

“Expressen has never published it, but we did so today given the fact that seven people were arrested yesterday on conspiracy of murder of the artist, Lars Vilks.”

The same was done by the Stockholm-based Dagens Nyheter newspaper and the Malmö daily Sydsvenska Dagbladet.

The three dailies said the move was a show of solidarity with Vilks.

“Vilks doesn’t stand alone in this conflict,” Dagens Nyheter said in an editorial Wednesday.

“A threat against him is, in the long term, also a threat against all Swedes.”

Irish police have arrested four Muslim men and three women on suspicion of plotting to kill the Swedish cartoonist in an operation coordinated with US and European security agencies.

Vilks, who has a 100,000-dollar (74,000-euro) bounty on his head from an Al-Qaeda-linked group, began receiving death threats after his cartoon appeared in Swedish newspaper Nerikes Allehanda on August 18, 2007.

No offence

Mattsson argued that their decision to print the controversial cartoon should not been seen as an offence to Muslims in Sweden, estimated at nearly 400,000.

“We wanted to show this cartoon for our readers, but not in an offensive way,” he told the Deutsch Welle.

“It’s not published on the front page — it’s a two-column drawing, so it’s pretty small — but it’s identifiable and you can look at it and make up your own mind.”

Gunilla Herlitz, the Dagens Nyheter editor-in-chief, echoed the same position.

“I believe that, in this case, the cartoon is a part of the news and therefore we would like to show the readers what this is all about,” he told The Times on Thursday.

“But the cartoon is published in a context and is not the leading picture on the page.”

Any drawings of Prophet Muhammad, let alone lampooning ones, are considered blasphemous under Islam.

The publishing of the cartoon in 2007 triggered protests by Muslims in the town of Oerebro, west of Stockholm, where the Nerikes Allehanda newspaper is based.

The protests echoed the uproar caused in Denmark by the publication in September 2005 of 12 drawings, including one showing a man described as Prophet Muhammad with a turban in the shape of a bomb and another showing him as a knife-wielding nomad flanked by shrouded women.

The crisis prompted Muslims in Denmark and worldwide to champion local campaigns to wash away widely circulated misconceptions about Prophet Muhammad.

IslamOnline.net launched a special website, Reading Islam, as part of a larger effort to acquaint non-Muslims with the Prophet.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Turkey Protests Sweden Armenia ‘Genocide’ Vote

Turkey has withdrawn its ambassador to Sweden after the parliament voted narrowly to describe as genocide the killing of Armenians in World War I.

The Turkish government condemned the resolution, saying it was “based upon major errors and without foundation”.

The Swedish government opposed the opposition resolution but it passed by one vote after some MPs voted against party lines.

It comes days after a US congressional panel passed a similar resolution.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan cancelled a visit to Stockholm scheduled next week and issued a statement criticising the vote.

“Our people and our government reject this decision based upon major errors and without foundation,” said the statement.

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said the vote was a “mistake” but that it did not change the position of his government, which supports Turkey’s entry into the EU.

The Swedish vote comes less than a week after the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee approved a similar resolution — by 23 votes to 22 — despite strong Turkish lobbying not to.

That vote also sparked anger from Turkey and the recall of its ambassador to Washington.

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



UK: ‘Tormented to Death’: Man With Learning Difficulties Bullied for Ten Years Collapses After Confronting Yobs in His Garden

A man with learning difficulties was ‘tormented to death’ after being bullied by yobs for more than a decade, neighbours claimed today.

David Askew, 64, dropped dead after he tackled thugs who broke down his gate and invaded his garden.

Neighbours said Mr Askew had been targeted before he was found dead at his home in Hattersley, Greater Manchester, last night.

One neighbour said he had been ‘tormented to death — like bear baiting’.

Residents criticised police and officials for not supporting Mr Askew and his brother Brian and mother Rose, who was wheelchair-bound.

Officers were called to the address last night after being told yobs were causing an ‘annoyance’.

When they arrived the youths had vanished but officers discovered Mr Askew collapsed in his back garden.

He was pronounced dead at the scene.

As news of his death spread, neighbours told how Mr Askew had been the victim of a campaign of harassment.

Avona Davies, 49, said: ‘This has been going on for about 10 years. We have complained to the police and council and they put cameras in their back garden about three years ago.

‘They tormented David for money and cigarettes. They harassed him every night without fail.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: BA Worker ‘Planned to Use Strike to Become a Suicide Bomber’

A would-be suicide bomber worked for British Airways and volunteered to work during the cabin crew strike, a court heard today.

Bangladesh-born Rajib Karim, 30, faced three charges under counter terrorism legislation when he appeared in court today.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Route Unveiled for £30billion Rail Link With 250mph Trains That Will Plough Through Heart of England

A controversial £30billion high-speed rail link that will whisk travellers at up to 250mph from the capital to the Midlands and the North was announced today by the Government — just weeks before the General Election.

It will cut a swathe through the scenic Chiltern Hills risking blight for some of the most beautiful countryside in Britain thereby igniting protests with thousands of people and landowners whose properties are affected.

The plan is for a ‘Y-shaped’ line which initially connects London with a new station in Birmingham with plans for it later to branch off to the North-West, to Manchester, and North to Leeds.

The Birmingham phase will cost between £15.8billion and £17.4billion and the second part between £14.2billion and £12.6billion.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why’s There Not So Much as a Hair’s Breadth Between the Christian Right and the Secular Left

ResetDoc 05.03.2010 (Italy)

In a short interview the French political scientist Olivier Roy, explains why the Christian right and the secular left are both Islamophobic: “The former tendency stems from the Christian identity. The belief that Europe has Christian roots has nothing to do with religious belief. That is a right-wing conservative position. The Italian Lega Nord does not attend church, but regards the Church as a part of its identity. The latter is the secular left, which is against Islam — not because it is the religion of the immigrant but because it is a religion and the secular left is against any form of religion. Until recently, in the 20th century, debate raged between the secular left and the Christian right but now these are on the same side of the fence.”

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



Wilders Damages Holland: FM

“Freedom of expression is not a license to insult other people at will,” insisted Verhagen.

NOORDWIJK — Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen believes far-rightist, anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders is damaging the country by his divide-and-rule approach to politics and fear-mongering.

“His method is simple: he plays people off against one another, in a highly distasteful fashion,” Verhagen told a conference on public and social diplomacy in the 21st century on Wednesday, March 10.

“He is not looking to find common ground, uphold shared values or work toward constructive solutions based on these shared values,” asserted the top diplomat.

“In fact, his approach is the opposite of constructive: by spreading fear and hatred, he is only destroying, not building.”

Wilders’s far-right Freedom Party (PVV) made strong gains in last week’s local polls coming first in Almere, a city near the capital Amsterdam, and second in The Hague, boosting his chances to win the June parliamentary elections.

The controversial politician is notorious for his attacks against Islam and Muslims.

He released in March 2008 a 15-minute documentary, entitled “Fitna” or sedition in Arabic, accusing the Qur’an of inciting violence.

The documentary drew international condemnation and was blasted by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as “offensively anti-Islamic”.

Wilders had earlier called for banning the Muslim holy book, which he described as “fascist.”

Foreign Minister Verhagen warned that his approach to politics has many serious repercussions, both domestically and internationally.

“In the process, he is damaging the interests of the Dutch people and the reputation of the Netherlands in the wider world.

“If we allow discrimination and hatred to spread, this will only lead to segregation, polarization, escalation and eventually, confrontation.”

Freedom to Offend

Foreign Minister Verhagen refuted the argument used by Wilders to justifying his controversial actions on the grounds of freedom of expressions.

“Being free to give offence does not mean that it is wise to give offence,” he asserted.

“Freedom of expression is not a license to insult other people at will. Everyone has the responsibility to show respect for the rights and reputations of others.”

The government official also defended Islam and the country’s Muslims against repeated attacks by Wilders.

“Islam is not the problem,” he stressed.

“We should condemn not religions, but rather people and groups who abuse religion to achieve their ends through violence.”

Verhagen praised the active participation of the Muslim community over the past centuries.

“There are more than 800,000 people in the Netherlands with roots in the Islamic world, about 5.3% of our population,” he noted.

“The overwhelming majority of them adheres to the values and rules of Dutch society and participates in Dutch society.”

Wilders, currently facing charges of discrimination and inciting hatred against non western immigrants and Muslims, will show a second part of his anti-Islam film, Fitna II, after the June general elections.

The new film, prepared with the help of professional US filmmakers, will allegedly show the effects of Muslim immigration to Europe.

“If we allow discrimination and hatred to spread, this will only lead to segregation, polarization, escalation and eventually, confrontation,” said Foreign Minister Verhagen.

“I have no patience for radical elements that place themselves outside our society. These radical elements should be penalized heavily as they are disrupting our social fabric.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Balkans


EU: Belgium Repatriates to Serbia and Macedonia

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 11 — The first group of Serbian and Macedonian nationals whose requests for political asylum were rejected by Belgian authorities have been repatriated to their home countries. Most are ethnic Albanians who, following the abolition of compulsory visas in December, went to EU countries — Belgium and Switzerland especially — with the aim of obtaining political asylum. As the Belgian ambassador to Serbia, Denise de Hauwere, told Tanjug, there were 44 Albanians from Serbia and 28 from Macedonia who were repatriated on buses. Since the beginning of the year there have been several hundred requests for asylum in Belgium — all of which rejected — by nationals of Balkan countries, a sharp increase over previous years. On Tuesday Belgian Premier Yves Leterme went to Macedonia to stress that it had no intention of granting asylum for economic reasons.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kosovo: Media: Premier Under Pressure Over Corrupt Minister

(ANSAmed) — PRISTINA, MARCH 11 — Important Western countries reportedly asked the Premier of Kosovo, Hashim Thaci, to expel a Minister from the government. The Minister is suspected of illegally earning 10 million euros by abusing his position. As the Kosovar newspaper Koha Ditore reports, a documents has been handed over to Thaci by the secret services of one of the countries of the Quint group (USA, UK, Germany, France, Italy). This document reportedly contains sufficient evidence against this Minister, whose name is not mentioned in the article. According to sources of the newspaper, the suspect has much political influence and is in charge of an important Ministry. To put pressure on the Prime Minister, opposition leader Ramush Haradinaj, former Premier and current President of the Alliance for the future of Kosovo, directly accused Thaci to be at the root of corruption in the country. “In my opinion, corruption starts with Thaci and he is the main cause. His logic of government creates consequences on other levels”, said Haradinaj quoted by the press. The US ambassador to Kosovo, on behalf of the embassies of the other Quint countries, has denied the news that Thaci has been put under pressure to make changes in his government. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Milosevic’s Death; 4th Anniversary, Flowers on Grave

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 11 — On the fourth anniversary of the death of Slobodan Milosevic, a delegation of the Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), founded by Milosevic, has placed a wreath of flowers on his grave in Pozarevac, his birth city, around 80 km south-east of Belgrade. The Socialist Party, currently led by Vice Premier and Interior Minister Ivica Dacic, participates in Serbia’s pro-European government in coalition with the Democratic Party of President Boris Tadic. Dacic was not present at today’s ceremony however. The delegation was led by Infrastructure Minister Milutin Mrkonjic, who in the past weeks was at the centre of a media row on pictures of Milosevic on the walls of his office. Slobodan Milosevic died on March 11 2006 in the prison of the Hague’s International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), where he was tried for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. He was President of Serbia from 1990 to 1997 — during the years of the bloody Balkan wars — and after that President of the small federation formed by Serbia and Montenegro. Milosevic’s wife, Mira — who lives in exile in Moscow together with her son Marko — has spoken harsh words about the Socialist Party. The SPS, she told newspaper Kurir, “is in power today but isn’t doing anything to allow us to visit the grave of Slobodan Milosevic”. Both Milosevic’s wife and son are under investigation in Serbia for criminal offences. If they decide to return to Serbia they would be immediately arrested. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU Programme to Spread Civil Defence Culture

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 9 — Drought, earthquakes, landslides, flooding, storms, large outbreaks of fire, but also industrial or energy disasters. Many are the natural and manmade disasters that place the lasting development of the Mediterranean region at risk. To avoid the devastating effects of these disasters on the people, the natural resources and the infrastructures of affected Countries, the EU is trying to disseminate in the partner Countries of the Mediterranean and the Balkans a culture that is primarily based on prevention. Such is the objective of the Euromed Programme for the prevention, preparation and reply to natural and manmade disasters (PPRD South), financed by the EU with 5 million euros and managed by a consortium led by the Italian Civil Defence and comprising that of Egypt, France and Algeria, and by UNSDR, the UN agency to lower the risk of disasters. “Mutually help each other for greater security and protection” is the slogan of the Programme that aims to strengthen the quality if Civil Defence services in the Euro-Mediterranean area through a transfer of know-how and information from EU Countries to the 14 Partner Countries of the Mediterranean and the Balkans (Egypt, Algeria, Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Montenegro, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, Palestinian Territories). The fundamental instrument to do this is the “System of Geographic Information (GIS) for Civil Defence”, an online system developed by the Italian Civil Defence in Collaboration with the National Council of Research (CNR) that will collect the databanks of all the involved bodies that will allow the creation of interactive maps of areas at risk. GIS will be the focus of a 4-day workshop that opened today in Rome in the offices of the Civil Defence, with experts coming from the 14 Partner Countries. The participants will learn how to create a databank and how to use the most recent management methods and analyse geo-spatial risk information. This will lay the foundations for the creation of PPRD South’s System of Geographic Information (GIS). In this sector the Partner Countries are basically moving their first steps, except for Algeria where the in 1996 the Civil Defence office was outfitted with a System of Geographic Information thanks to a presidential decree. This system allowed the Country to acquire a high degree of professionalism also thanks to fast track access to information concerning the territory, infrastructures and industrial areas that is rarely available in other Mediterranean Countries because of “national security” issues. The same reticence is found in Partner Countries with reference to the procession of interactive risk maps, which in the PPRD South project should flow into a sort of “regional Atlas of risk”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Morocco: Government, Just Severity Against Proselytism

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, MARCH 11 — Morocco is severely opposed to anyone who threatens and mocks religious values. This is what Morocco’s Communication Minister Khalid Naciri has said in reply to criticism over the expulsion over the past few days of some twenty foreigners accused of proselytism. After the expulsions, the Open Doors NGO, which is inspired by evangelical Protestantism, said that Morocco “seems to be backtracking on its willingness to welcome and respect the rights of man”. Naciri, who is also a Government spokesperson, pointed out that “the same severity was used against the fundamentalist Muslims of the Salafia Jihadia group or against the over 100 Koranic schools contrary to dominant Muslim practice”. “The rare cases of expulsion are not linked to the practice of the Christian religion,” he added, “but to acts of proselytism.” In a statement to the MAP press agency, the Catholic Archbishop of Rabat, Vincent Landel, said that “to force anyone to change religion is a condemnable act.” Landel also released a statement, signed jointly by the chairman of the Evangelical Church in Morocco, in which the two men both state that they “have always been able to act within the framework of the freedom of worship attributed to Christian foreigners.” Chief Rabbi Joseph Israel also stated that “Morocco is a tolerant country”, where “all religions, Muslim, Jewish and Christian, are practiced without constraints or limits”. Father Dimitri Orekhov, representative of the Russian Orthodox church in Morocco stated that he is contrary to any form of proselytism, pointing out that “the Moroccan Constitution guarantees freedom of worship and expression.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Morocco Defends Expulsion of Christian Workers

Morocco says it will take a tough line on proselytism — seeking converts from another religion — two days after it expelled 20 Christian workers.

Communications Minister Khalid Naciri warned that the government would be “severe with all those who play with religious values”.

Religious freedom is guaranteed under Moroccan law but proselytism is banned.

Some Christian groups claim the authorities are deliberately trying to restrict their work in the country.

The expelled Christians had run a children’s home called Village of Hope near the town of Ain Leuh in the Middle Atlas mountains.

The home housed 33 children who, it is claimed, would otherwise have been abandoned.

The 20 foreign workers were given just a few days’ notice to cease their activities and leave the country, a statement on the group’s website said.

They were accused of trying to convert the children in their care to Christianity.

The group’s statement says it had always been open about its Christian beliefs with the authorities, and for 10 years had been allowed to take in and foster abandoned children.

A British couple who live near Marrakesh and who know the Village of Hope children’s home told the BBC they were stunned by the news.

The couple, who declined to be named, said the foster parents and the children — some of whom had lived at the home for 10 years — had been left traumatised by the separation.

Children ‘targeted’

Mr Naciri said the expelled foreigners “took advantage of the poverty of some families and targeted their young children, whom they took in hand, in violation of the kafala (adoption) procedures for abandoned or orphaned children”.

He said Morocco had “always been and remains a land of openness and tolerance”.

“All churches have their place on the street in Morocco and Christians practise their religion freely,” the minister said.

“The rare cases of expulsion have nothing to do with the practice of Christianity but with acts of proselytism.”

He said the warning also applied to Muslim groups.

BBC religious affairs correspondent Christopher Landau says under Moroccan law, Jewish and Christian minorities can worship without restriction but are not allowed to encourage citizens from the Muslim majority to abandon their faith of birth.

However, some missionary groups in the country claim authorities are deliberately trying to restrict Christian work, he adds.

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



Superglue: The Remarkable Unity of the Muslim Brotherhood

by Husam Tammam

As the greatest internal crisis the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) has experienced for over half a century took place in full view of the media one obvious question arose. Is the group on the verge of splitting? With each day that passed expectations that the MB would splinter grew. It seemed more a question of when than if.

The crisis, though, blew over without the group coming apart at the seams. After the MB elected a new leadership it retreated into self- contained mode. One of the group’s ideologues was moved, as a result, to speak at length about its invincibility. The MB was inspired by divine factors, not mundane considerations, he insisted.

The MB, at least in Egypt, seems uncannily capable of resisting division. This is particularly true when one compares the MB with other groups. But it does not mean that the group is immune to splits. They have happened in the pat, some minor, others of more significance.

Ahmed El-Sokkari, a co-founder of the group and once its number two, left the Brotherhood after failing to see eye to eye with Hassan El-Banna.

Small groups, too, have been known to break away, the best known being the coterie around Mohamed Rifaat and the Shabab Sayedna Mohamed (Youths for Our Master Mohamed) faction.

The biggest split took place under Hassan El-Hodeibi, the second supreme guide. Several Secret Organisation leaders, including the organisation’s commander Abdel-Rahman El-Sandi, tried to oust El-Hodeibi. They were joined by members alarmed at El-Hodeibi’s dealings with the post-1952 Revolution regime, including Azharites Mohamed El-Ghazali, Sayed Sabeq and Abdel-Moez Abdel-Sattar.

Some who left the MB went over to the 1952 revolutionary regime and ended up in senior positions within the government’s religious organisations (Sayed Sabeq and El-Ghazali), political organistations (Abdel-Aziz Kamel) and security services (Naguib Gowefl). The desertions continued throughout the revolutionary era as the Nasserist regime sought to co-opt many former MB members.

During the clampdown of 1965 the MB suffered a doctrinal, not just an organisational, schism. Many members were influenced by Sayed Qotb’s ideas about hakimiya (government by divine ordinance) and jahiliya (ignorance of the true faith). While in prison MB members debated Qotb’s ideas, subsequently issuing a document, Doah la Qodah (Preachers not Judges), in which they refuted Qotb’s hardline concepts.

In prison the MB held trials of Qotb’s followers as a result of which some recanted. Others left the group and formed what came to be known as the Qotb current. One prominent member was Ahmed Abdel-Maguid Abdel-Sami, who received a death sentence along with Qotb, though it was later commuted. The main ideologue of the Qotb current was Abdel-Maguid El-Shazli, whose Hadd Al-Iman wa Haqiqat Al-Islam (The Boundary of Faith and the Truth about Islam), is considered by many to embody the group’s manifesto.

We should not, however, confuse the above group with the Qotb sympathisers of today, though it is true that most of the latter were linked to the MB in 1965. The most prominent of today’s Qotb sympathisers are the eighth Supreme Guide Mohamed Badei, Mahmoud Ezzat and Sabri Arafah El-Komi.

One cannot speak of organisational schisms in the MB in the 1970s and 80s, or under supreme guide Omar El-Tilmisani. The MB, at the time, was too busy picking up the pieces after the havoc wrought on its structure by the policies of the Nasserist regime. El-Tilmisani oversaw a forceful attempt at restructuring, during which the MB succeeded in recruiting many members among college students.

Even so there were desertions. Farid Abdel-Khaleq resigned from the Guidance Bureau in protest at the dominance of Secret Organisation members within the MB. A few years later Sheikh Abdel-Sattar Fathallah Said walked out from the Guidance Bureau in frustration over the MB’s endorsement of President Hosni Mubarak’s re-election.

The 1990s, a time in which the MB gathered momentum, saw the desertion of over 100 members from Al-Azhar University under the leadership of Mohamed Roshdi (after whom the resulting faction was called). Roshdi was influenced by Qotb, and the MB dismissed his ideas as erroneous. The Roshdi schism took place under the fourth supreme guide, Mohamed Hamed Abul-Nasr.

The beginning of the term of the fifth guide, Mustafa Mashhour, saw a major generational split. A group led by Abul-Ela Madi, Mohamed Abdel-Latif, and Salah Abdel-Karim, the so-called middle generation ( geel al-wasat ) defected, declaring its intention to form a political party that would integrate fully in political life.

The MB experienced further turbulence with the resignation of a majority of members of the Administrative Bureau of South Cairo who took over some MB institutions and declared their independence from the group.

Still, the MB remains relatively cohesive. Certainly it has demonstrated that it is more capable than other parties when it comes to retaining unity in the face of harsh clampdowns. The MB is over 80 years old now. During its existence Egypt has moved from a monarchy to a republic. The country has had two kings and four presidents, some quite determined to destroy the MB.

The reasons for such cohesiveness are numerous. They include the centralised organisation of collective work, the emphasis on cohesion, and the doctrinal and religious commitment to unity. All these factors have boosted the group’s staying power.

The MB has produced a wealth of literature on the merits of collective work and the drawbacks of division. It has drawn on many religious texts, taken from various phases of Islam, to persuade its members that unity is the only way to survive.

The MB constantly exalts the value of loyalty to the group. MB preachers often say that the value of any “brother”, however senior his position in the hierarchy, hinges on his loyalty to the group: If a member thinks of leaving the group, the MB responds with the dismissive remark, “The group throws away its junk”.

The MB doesn’t claim to be the only truly Muslim group, but the frequency with which it harps on the topic creates a sense of obedience, indeed subservience, among its members, associating even the thought of dissent with guilt. As a result, few members think of the MB as a political entity or preaching organisation with which it is fine to disagree. Members swear to obey the supreme guide whatever they may think of his directives.

The organisational cohesiveness of the MB is exceptional. There is a great variety of MB interests and members often disagree, both about the manner of working and the nature of the work itself. Nothing keeps the group together beyond a simple ideal and harsh organisational discipline. Despite the MB’s claim to a universal Islam, doctrinal variety, even contradictions, exist within the group.

The MB doesn’t follow one school of Islamic law. It even refuses to embrace any one branch of Islamic jurisdiction in a forthright manner, although it is mainly a Sunni group. The MB will not produce a clear opinion on controversial matters unless it is forced to do so, as was the case when it denounced violence. The group refrains from taking sides because it wants to pose as the sole representative of a universal Islam. This conduct gives it great flexibility and allows it to maintain organisational cohesion. Within its ranks, the MB allows pluralism of thought, so long as such pluralism does not reach the point of challenging the leadership.

Beneath this broad umbrella of intellectual and doctrinal interpretation the MB can effectively absorb members. It puts its foot down only when someone defies orders or challenges the leaders.

The MB is more than a party and less than a state. The group has created a parallel society with its own network of social relations, political roles and economic interests. It has carved a social arena for itself in which members can live from birth to death without once having to step outside.

The brother is accepted into a group that provides organisational and social connections to the point when he doesn’t have to look elsewhere. He can live and receive education, make friends and get married, find a job and engage in politics. The MB has created its own society, established its own institutions, created its own activities, and managed its religious, economic and social affairs in a manner that allows individuals to interact with society at a distance.

When a brother enters this society he loses the ability — or the will — to break free from the group. To step aside would be like stepping out of your own skin. To depart would be like leaving the only clan to which you belong.

After years of collision with the regime the group has developed a bunker mentality, one that makes it feel that it is hunted down and surrounded by enemies, who also happen to be the enemies of God. As the MB prepares its members for constant confrontation with its enemies it encourages paranoia among them. The resulting siege mentality helps keep everyone together. Internal differences are disregarded for the sake of unity.

In times of expansion, internal debate is seen as a diversion from the cause. In times of contraction, members fear to augment the pain by criticising the group. Internal dissent is invariably associated with feelings of guilt.

The Quranic text in which Moses blames his brother Aaron for letting the people pray to the bull while awaiting his return is often cited. Aaron, it is mentioned, risked the faith of the community to maintain unity. Similarly, the MB buries any organisational lapses or intellectual glitches in order for unity to prevail.

The regime’s tactics have also served to promote MB unity. It has never attempted to engage in dialogue with MB dissidents which in turn discourages dissent. The experience of the so-called middle generation is a case in point. For the last 15 years they have done everything they can to form a political party, but the regime has refused to budge an inch.

The regime clearly believes that dealing with a united MB is better than dealing with splinter groups. A united MB, with a known leader and hierarchy, can be pressured and cajoled. It is much easier to handle one group than a multitude of dissenters. Hardly surprising, then, that MB dissenters prefer to stay within the bosom of the group rather than to face the cold realities without.

* The writer is an expert in Islamist movements.

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



Top Egyptian Cleric Dies of Heart Attack

Riyadh, 10 March (AKI) — Sheikh Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, Egypt’s top Muslim cleric and Sunni Islam’s most senior figure, has died, while on a visit to Saudi Arabia. The 81-year-old died of a heart attack in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Egypt’s official MENA news agency reported on Wednesday.

Tantawi riled radical Islamists for his controversial ban of the face-covering niqab veil, which he said had no basis in Islam.

The news of his death was “an indescribable shock,” his son Amr Tantawi told Egyptian television, adding that Tantawi would be buried in Medina — the burial place of the Prophet Mohammed.

“The family has decided that since God chose for him to die on Saudi land, he will be buried in al-Baqie cemetery in Islam’s second holy city of Medina,” his son added.

Abdullah el-Naggar, advisor to the sheikh, told Egypt’s Nile News television the death was a surprise, saying that before leaving to Saudi Arabia the sheikh had seemed in “excellent shape and health.”

Tantawi had since 1996 headed al-Azhar mosque and al-Azhar University, Sunni Islam’s highest seat of learning and scholarship.

Last year, Tantawi barred female students at the university from wearing the full-face covering niqab veil. His views on the veil prompted Egypt’s Islamist Muslim Brotherhood movement to accuse him of “harming the interests of Islam”.

Tantawi was vocal in his opposition to female circumcision, which is common in Egypt, calling it “un-Islamic”. He also condemned suicide attacks, saying extremists had hijacked Islamic principles for their own ends.

He said French Muslims should obey any law that France might enact banning the veil, upsetting other Muslim scholars.

He wrote a number of books, including a 15-volume, 7,000-page encyclopedia on the interpretation of Quran.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Announcing Construction of East Jerusalem Apartments: Stupid, Yes; Proof of Disinterest in Peace, No

by Barry Rubin

There’s been a lot of nonsense written about an Israeli government announcement that 1600 apartments will be built in east Jerusalem. The timing was stupid, of course, since Vice-President Joe Biden was in town and didn’t like the idea. Moreover, to have such an announcement just when indirect talks were about to start between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (PA) doesn’t make Israel look helpful.

But that’s about it.

Anyone who knows Israel really well understands this to be what is called locally a “fashlan,” that is a stupid mess-up as often happens with the government there. Israel combines the candor of a First World country with the bureaucratic incompetence of a Third World one. The ministry simply didn’t think about what the impact would be nor did it consult with the prime minister’s office. It was sheer narrow-visioned incompetence.

Of course, though, Israel has announced since 1993, when the Oslo Agreement was signed, that it would continue building on existing settlements. And the government made clear all along that construction would continue in east Jerusalem. The action, if not the timing, was neither a provocation, the establishment of a “new settlement,” or proof that Israel didn’t want peace.

After all, everyone seems to have forgotten one simple fact:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Biden: USA-Israel Relations Cannot be Broken

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 11 — Israel and the US maintain relations that are “unique” and this bond “cannot be broken”, whatever challenges may lie ahead, US Vice President Joe Biden has said in his speech to an audience of students in Tel Aviv. Biden also said that he counted Israeli Premier Benyamin Netanyahu, who he referred to using his nickname ‘Bibi’, as being amongst his “closest friends”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



East Jerusalem: Press, Israel Planning 50,000 Homes

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 11 — With the issue of Israeli construction in East Jerusalem the cause for confrontation between Benyamin Netanyahu’s government and US Vice President Joe Biden(currently on a visit to Israel), Israeli daily Haaretz has revealed that in the zone at the centre of the controversy 50,000 new housing units for Israelis are planned, with 20,000 of them already in advanced stages of approval and implementation procedure and another 30,000 only on paper for the time being. Haaretz noted that most of the projects involve predominantly Jewish zones in East Jerusalem, while a much smaller portion involve small Jewish centres within Palestinian areas in East Jerusalem. Concerning the former, Haaretz reported that, in the southern outskirts in the Gilo quarter, 3,000 new housing units were planned with another 1,500 in Har Homà and 3,500 in Ghivat Ha-Matos. In the northern outskirts, 1,500 housing units are planned in Pisgat Zeev, 450 in Nevé Yaakov and 1,200 in Ramot. In the Eastern outskirts, the Armon ha-Natziv quarter is expected to be extended with an additional 450 housing units. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Saudi Arabia: Court Upholds Death Sentence Against Sorcerer

JEDDAH: The General Court in Madinah upheld its verdict against 46-year-old accused Arab sorcerer Ali Hussein Subat (aka Shahrzad), saying he deserved death for publicly practicing black magic, thus spreading corruption on the earth.

The judges said they called for the execution of the man for his continuous practice of black magic and that he had been doing it publicly for several years before millions of viewers of a satellite channel.

In a statement on Wednesday, the court said it was not convinced by the appeal bench’s rejection of its verdict against the sorcerer and its attempt to ask the man to repent.

“All evidence proved that he was practicing black magic,” the court said.

The general court has now passed the case back to the Appeals Court in Makkah. It also seized the man’s cell phone, which he was carrying at the time of arrest.

The court insisted that the magician deserved death in order to make him an example and deterrent for others, especially for foreigners who come to the Kingdom to practice sorcery.

The appeals court rejected the general court’s first verdict on Dec. 8, 2009, saying it was a premature one and that the man should be asked to repent if he had really committed the crime. The appeals court also wanted to make sure that all allegations made against the defendant were genuine.

The magician was arrested at a hotel in Madinah two years ago. Members of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice seized a talisman where he had written the name of a man, his mother and wife.

Shahrzad acknowledged in front of the general court in Madinah that he had presented a black magic program on the Saudi Sports Channel. However, he claimed that he was practicing black magic during the past eight years in order to treat patients. He also admitted that he had called for the assistance of Satan, Jinn and talisman for his purpose.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Syria: Repression Grows as Europe, US Avoid Discussing Rights

Envoy Should Use Visit to Condemn Harassment, Detention of Activists, Journalists

(New York, March 11, 2010) — Catherine Ashton, the EU foreign relations chief, should raise human rights concerns with Syrian officials during her visit next week and seek specific commitments to improve their record, Human Rights Watch said today. So far, the increased Western engagement with Syria has not resulted in any human rights gains because the US and Europe have failed to press the issue, Human Rights Watch said.

In the last three months, as Western officials reached out to Syria, its security services have detained numerous human rights activists, journalists, and students who tried to exercise their rights to free expression and assembly. In February alone, Prime Minister Francois Fillon of France and US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns have visited Damascus.

“As the last few months have demonstrated, talking to Syria without putting its rights record on the table emboldens the government to believe that it can do whatever it wants to its people, without consequence,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “A message to Syria that says ‘We only care about your external affairs’ is a green light for repression.”

On March 2, 2010, Military Intelligence in Aleppo stormed the apartment of Abdel Hafez Abdel Rahman, a board member of the unlicensed Kurdish human rights group MAF (“Right” in Kurdish), and detained him with another MAF board member, Nadera Abdo. Other members of the group said that the detention is tied to Abdel Rahman’s activities for the group MAF. While the security services released Abdo on March 6, Abdel Rahman remains in detention.

Security services have also detained bloggers, journalists, and writers. On December 27, 2009, State Security called in Tal al-Mallohi, 19, a secondary school student, for interrogation, reportedly for articles she wrote and distributed on her blog. A few days later, the security services confiscated her computer and detained her. A Syrian human rights activist told Human Rights Watch that she remains in detention. Human Rights Watch was unable to determine what article the security forces deemed objectionable.

On November 22, State Security detained without explanation Ma`en `Akel, a journalist at the newspaper Thawra. Syrian activists following the case said `Akel apparently was detained for investigating government corruption. Security forces finally released him on February 23 without charging him with a crime. On January 7, security forces detained another journalist, Ali Taha, and a photographer, Ali Ahmad, in the Sayyida Zaynab neighborhood of Damascus. They were released on February 7, without having been charged. Both work for the satellite TV station Rotana, which mainly focuses on social life topics.

On February 10, border police detained Ragheda Sa`id Hasan, who had been a political prisoner in the 1990s for her Communist Action Party membership, as she tried to cross into Lebanon. Three days later, unidentified individuals entered her apartment and confiscated a copy of “The New Prophets,” a manuscript in which she describes her experience as a political detainee, as well as publications issued by various Syrian opposition parties. She remains in detention.

“A government that fails to respect the rights of its citizens can’t be counted on to respect any other international obligation, to anyone,” Whitson said. “Ending the persecution of Syrian citizens should be part and parcel of any plan to rehabilitate this government from its isolation.”

Two detained human rights lawyers, Muhannad al-Hasani, president of the Syrian Human Rights Organization (Swasiah) and Haytham al-Maleh, a 79-year-old prominent human rights lawyer who has been jailed repeatedly, are on trial. On February 18, al-Hasani appeared before a Damascus criminal court for interrogation on charges of “weakening national sentiment” and “spreading false or exaggerated information” in connection with his monitoring of the Supreme State Security Court (SSSC), a special court with almost no procedural guarantees.

Al-Maleh appeared before a military judge on February 22 to face new charges of “insulting the president” and “slandering a governmental body.” According to his family, his health is failing since the `Adra prison authorities stopped allowing families to bring medication to inmates on February 11. Al-Maleh, who has diabetes and an overactive thyroid, has refused the prison pharmacy’s medicine because he believes the medicine is of poor quality.

“While Syrian officials are chatting up Western diplomats in their gilded front parlors, they’re jailing anyone who dares to utter a critical word in their basement prison cells,” Whitson said.

Security forces also have cracked down on political activists, particularly Kurdish leaders. On December 26, Political Security detained four prominent members of the Kurdish party Yekiti: Hassan Saleh, Muhammad Mustapha, Ma`ruf Mulla Ahmad, and Anwar Naso. All four remain in incommunicado detention. In a recent report, Human Rights Watch documented the increased repression of Syria’s Kurds following large-scale Kurdish demonstrations in March 2004. The Syrian authorities also are expanding their travel bans on activists. On February 24, security services prevented Radeef Mustapha, the head of the board of the Kurdish Human Rights Committee, and the coordinator of the Syrian Coalition to Combat the Death Penalty, from traveling to Geneva to attend the fourth annual conference to combat the death penalty. According to a February 2009 study published by the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression, at least 417 political and human rights activists are banned from traveling.

“We are back to the bad old days where you have to watch every word you say,” a Syrian lawyer who wished to remain anonymous told Human Rights Watch over the phone.

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



Syria: Gov’t Wants Private Investor for Barada Industries

(ANSAmed) — DAMASCUS, MARCH 11 — The Syrian government has announced a call for bids of private investors on the management of the General Company for Metallic Industries or Barada, the only State-owned company that makes electrical appliances. The Italian Trade Commission (ICE) announces in a statement that Barada has been a well-known brand in Syria for decades, but that production is now stagnating. According to the Italian Trade Commission (ICE), the reasons behind these problems are competition from private companies on one side, and the use of an obsolete design and inadequate marketing, leading to an increase of stocks, on the other. The General Organisation of Engineering Industries has set April 15 as deadline to present bids. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



To Win We Must Know Our Enemies and Know Ourselves

Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hezbollah, once declared: “We are going to win because they love life and we love death.” Let’s translate this into an Islamic meaning horizon: “We are going to win because infidels love life, something transient, whereas we Muslims love death, something eternal.”

Another rendering: “We Muslims are going to win because unlike westerners we do not fear violent death.” This rendering would disturb the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes. He thought Englishman, like mankind in general, regarded violent death as the greatest evil. Hobbes, the unknown founder of modern psychology, seems to have been ignorant of Islam.

Be this as it may, fear of violent death has permeated liberal-leftists in America and Europe. This fear, no less than their secular humanism, explains why they abhor war and seek peace. Recall the Cold War, when a leftwing American academic coined the phrase “Better Red than Dead.” This servile attitude cannot but encourage Muslims like Nasrallah, who are more cunning than wise. Know this: underlying Islam’s love of death is fear of life!

Islam’s fear of life is rooted in pre-Islamic times, in Arab culture, which was tribal, polytheistic, and shaped by a desert environment where life was “nasty, brutish, and short.” One hardly dared sleep in that uncivilized environment. If your throat wasn’t slit, your camel, on which your survival depended, was stolen by a rival tribe. Here is where Hobbes’ fear of violent death seems to apply. Not so, because Arab culture bred warriors. As in Sparta, manliness or courage was deemed the highest virtue. Fear of violent death would be shameful.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Ergenekon; Three More Soldiers Imprisoned

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 10 — Today a court in Istanbul charged and imprisoned another three members of the Turkish armed forces suspected of having plotted in 2003 to overturn the government of the Islamic-inspired Justice and Development Party ( AKP, of Premier Tayyip Erdogan), making the number of people arrested as part of the investigation for subversion a total of 40, reports press agency Anadolu. Among the soldiers in prison are retired generals, admirals in service and about thirty officers of varying ranks. Among these is also former Army General Cetin Dogan, believed to be the master planner of the alleged scheme (code named ‘Balyoz’, meaning hammer), which was reported in January by pro-government newspaper Taraf. ‘Bayloz’, according to the daily, intended to throw the country into chaos with acts of violence and terrorism, with the final goal of putting pressure on the AKP, which had been in power for just a few months, discrediting it and demonstrating that it was not able to guarantee public safety, and therefore forcing it to leave the government, yielding its position to the military. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Death of Chinese Rebel a Good Omen for Pakistan

by Amir Mir

LAHORE: The recent killing of Abdul Haq al-Turkistani, the chief of Turkistani Islamic Party (TIP), a Chinese Muslim separatist movement, in a US drone attack in North Waziristan area of Pakistan bordering Afghanistan has come at a critical juncture when Islamabad was under rising pressure from Beijing to allow it to set up military bases in Pakistan to counter the Chinese rebels operating from its soil.

A TIP spokesman has already confirmed that the Chinese separatist commander was among the three militants killed in an American drone strike in Tappi village of Miramshah in North Waziristan on February 15 while they were traveling in a vehicle. Abdul Haq al-Turkistani was closely linked to al-Qaeda and happens to be the second successive chief of the Turkisatni Islamic Party to have been killed in the Pakistani tribal areas. Abdul Haq, also known as Maimaitiming Maimaiti, became the TIP chief after the killing of Hassan Mahsum, the group’s previous head, by the Pakistani security forces in South Waziristan on October 2, 2004. His importance can be gauged from the fact that the US Treasury Department had designated him a global terrorist in April 2009, stating that he has already been appointed a member of al-Qaeda’s Majlis-e-Shura or executive council, way back in 2005. Soon afterwards, the United Nations had too designated him a terrorist leader.

According to well-placed diplomatic circles in Islamabad, the growing strength of the Pakistan-based Chinese separatist movement under the command of Haq was a matter of serious concern for Beijing which had even asked Islamabad to allow it military presence either in the NWFP or in the FATA, as is the case with the Americans, so that it could effectively counter the Chinese separatists there. They added that the killing of Abdul Haq has come as a good omen for Pakistan as it would ease off the Chinese pressure to establish military bases in Pakistan. Yet diplomatic circles said the Chinese wish to have military presence in Pakistan should not be painted as an attempt to set up military bases there. They added that China does not have any military bases outside its land unlike the United States and its prime concern was the spread of violence from the Pakistani tribal belt to the trouble-stricken Chinese region of Xinjiang, the main Muslim majority province.

The Turkistani Islamic Party (TIP), which is also called East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), is an Uyghur militant group that advocates the creation of an independent Islamic state of East Turkistan, in the Muslim-dominated Xinjiang region of China. East Turkistan had maintained a measure of independence until the early 1950s, when Mao’s victorious rebel armies turned to the peripheries and began securing Chinese borders, capturing Manchuria, Mongolia, Tibet and East Turkistan. The native Uyghurs resisted the Chinese occupation until 1960s, but failed to win support from neighboring Muslim states due to their fractured tribal nature. Since the mid-1980s, however, an active pan-Islamic movement has been trying to cement the opposing groups together against Chinese occupation of their homeland, pressing for an independent East Turkistan state. Yet Beijing, which views Xingjian as an invaluable asset due to its crucial strategic location near Central Asia and its large oil and gas reserves, is using all possible methods to quell the separatist movement.

Beijing blames the Uyghur separatists for carrying out sporadic bombings and shoot outs in the past, causing an atmosphere of insecurity and fear in China. Abdul Haq appeared in a video only last year, calling for Chinese people to be attacked at home and abroad. “Their men should be killed and captured to seek the release of our brothers who are jailed in Eastern Turkistan,” said Haq who was shown somewhere in the Pakistani tribal areas while carrying an assault rifle. Chinese President Hu Jintao subsequently asked his Pakistani counterpart Asif Zardari during a meeting in Beijing to take stern action against the Chinese militants hiding in Pakistani tribal areas and running terrorist activities in China, adding they might threaten the security of over 5,000 Chinese nationals working on numerous development projects in Pakistan.

In June 2009, Islamabad arrested and extradited ten Chinese militants to Beijing wanted on terrorism charges. But the death of Haq has come as a significant success in the ongoing Chinese campaign against Islamic separatists. He used to run a training camp for his recruits in Tora Bora in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province prior to the US invasion in October 2001. However, he had relocated his camps to Pakistan’s lawless Waziristan region. Haq was considered influential enough in al-Qaeda’s leadership circles that he was dispatched to mediate between rival Taliban groups after the death of Commander Baitullah Mehsud. He was spotted in the Pakistani tribal areas in June 2009, attending an important meeting with Baitullah Mehsud, who was finally killed in an American drone attack in August 2009.

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



Indonesian Islamic Organization Issues a Fatwa Against Smoking

Muhammadiyah, the second largest Muslim organization in the country for followers, declares that smoking is “haram” morally wrong. It leads to unhealthy lifestyles, weakens and pushes frustrated people to suicide. Tobacco industry, a major economic resource at risk.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — The Muhammadiyah has launched a fatwa against smoking, saying that smoking is haram, or “morally wrong”. A tough stance from the moderate Muslim organization, that counts about 40 million members and in Indonesia — the most populous Muslim country in the world — is second only to Nahdlatul Ulama (NU, with 60 million followers). The religious edict, moreover, goes to hit the tobacco industry, one of the most important economic activities in the country in turnover and as a source of employment.

The two organizations maintain, usually, a moderate position in relation to controversial issues such as jihad, Islamic terrorism, morals, code of ethics and clothing. Precisely for this reason Indonesian public opinion is “surprised” by the announcement of the Muhammadiyah. The central committee and executive arms of the Muslim movement has in fact declared “morally illicit” (haram), the vice of smoking.

The ban on cigarettes was written on paper in a “fatwa” identified by the initials 6/SMOTT/III/2010, which also contains the reasons why smoking is wrong. Above all the will to propose models of healthy lifestyles and to help preserve the environment. Together with the health and ecological aspects, the edict is motivated by the desire to strengthen the souls “weakened” by wrong behaviours and lifestyles.

Professor Yunahar Ilyas, a leading member of the Muhammadiyah, confirms that smoking is a “bad habit” that leads people to other worse “situations”, including physical weakness, and pushes the frustrated to suicide.

The position of the second largest Muslim organization in the country strikes at the heart of the tobacco industry, a major economic resources of Indonesia. The magnates of smoking, in fact, are among the main tax contributors. The sector also provides employment to many people, the majority originating from poor areas and agricultural land. Even sporting events and music will suffer a severe blow: cigarettes, in fact, are among the principal sponsors. A collapse of business in the tobacco sector — caused by the fatwa — would limit their resources to invest in entertainment and in sports.

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



Pakistan: Five Killed in Attack on Christian Charity

Peshawar, 10 March (AKI/DAWN) — Militants armed with guns and grenades killed at least five people when they stormed the offices of a US-based Christian charity in Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said. The gunmen attacked the offices of World Vision near Oghi, in the district of Mansehra in the troubled North West Frontier Province, where Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants have carried out multiple attacks.

Police said five people were killed, including two women, and a spokesman for World Vision confirmed that four of its Pakistani staff died in the attack that took place 60 kilometres north of Islamabad. Six others were injured.

World Vision administration officer Mohammad Sajid told the media that he was in the building when “more than 15 armed men” arrived in trucks and entered the offices.

“They gathered all of us in one room. The gunmen, some of whom had their faces covered, also snatched our mobile phones.

“They dragged people one by one and shifted to an adjacent room, and shot and killed them. We could see them firing,” he said.

The Christian charity has been operating in the area since October 2005, when a massive 7.6-magnitude earthquake killed more than 70,000 people and left about 3.5 million homeless in Pakistan’s northwest (photo).

A wave of suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan has killed more than 3,000 people since 2007 but foreign targets are rarely attacked.

Blame has fallen on Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants bitterly opposed to the alliance with the United States.

Four local staff with the British-run aid group Plan International were killed in a similar attack in Mansehra in February 2008, prompting some charities to withdraw their offices from the troubled area.

The Plan office was burned to the ground in the attack by gunmen who opened fire and hurled grenades, and the non-governmental organisation, which had been active in the area for 12 years, halted its operations in Pakistan.

On February 3, a bomb attack in the NWFP district of Lower Dir killed three American soldiers and five other people at the opening of a school just rebuilt with Western funding after a militant attack.

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

Immigration


Don’t Look Now! Amnesty is Back

Shades of Kennedy-McCain, new legislation being prepared

A new battle over illegal immigration is rapidly shaping up in the nation’s capital.

Supporters of comprehensive immigration reform are demanding immediate legislative action from the Obama administration with a planned mass demonstration in Washington scheduled for March 21, billed as “March for America: Change Takes Courage.”

Meanwhile, Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., have been meeting with the White House to reintroduce immigration legislation. The bipartisan effort is reminiscent of twice-failed attempts by Sens. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., and John McCain, R-Ariz., during the administration of President George W. Bush.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: New Democracy Against Law Amendment

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 11 — Antonis Samaras, leader of the main Greek opposition party, New Democracy, has defined the new law on immigration which is being debated in parliament as “dangerous”. The law would provide for the granting of citizenship to second generation immigrants and give them the right to vote in local elections. “My party,” said Samaras, “will abolish the law when it returns to power.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Pillay Deplores Criminalisation of Immigration

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 11 — “I deplore the tendency to criminalise illegal immigration and wonder what led to illegal immigration becoming a criminal offense” in Italy, said United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navathenem Pillay in a hearing before the Foreign Affairs Commission in the Chamber of Deputies, underscoring the importance of setting up a body for the protection of human rights at the national level. Pillay also spoke out against Italy’s policy of sending back migrants at its borders. “Those requesting asylum have to be able to be heard, and the policy of sending them back prevents this. The latter constitutes a violation” of human rights, stressed the UN High Commissioner, who expressed concern over the tendency, “which has intensified over the past year”, to represent migrants “in negative terms”. In asking himself what led to Italy’s “making illegal immigration into a criminal act”, Pillay also spoke on the issue of the Rom ethnic group, which Italy has dealt with almost exclusively in terms of “security”, and has criticised the emergence of cliche’s against them. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Gypsy Relocation Plan “Violates Human Rights”

Rome, 11 March (AKI) — An Italian plan to clear Roma Gypsy camps and relocate more than 6,000 people was a major violation of their human rights, according to Amnesty International. In a new report released in Rome on Thursday, the rights group attacked the controversial plan which provides for the destruction of 100 camps, claiming would leave 1,000 people homeless.

“These measures urgently need to be rethought,” said Ignacio Jovtis, the organisation’s Italian expert, in a statement.

“Roma families across the Italian capital now face losing their possessions, their social contracts, their access to work and to state services.

“There is also a risk that if the plan is implemented it could be used as a blueprint for forced evictions in othyer Italian regions.

“Evictions without prior consultation and the offer of adequate alternative accommodation to all of those affected are a violation of their human rights.”

In a project dubbed the ‘Nomad Plan’ around 6,000 Roma, commonly referred to as Gypsies, are expected to be relocated to 13 new or expanded camps on the outskirts of the Italian capital after over 100 camps are demolished.

Rome mayor Gianni Alemanno has been supervising the demolition of the city’s camps, including Europe’s biggest Gypsy camp, Casalino 900, which was completely levelled by bulldozers last month.

Amnesty said that any forced evictions and relocations would “result in a range of human rights violations” and inhibit the Roma’s access to public schools and employment.

“Many Roma live in shacks and caravans lacking basic hygienic conditions,” Jovtis said. “ The current situation is the result of years of neglect, inadequate policies and discrimination by successive administrations.”

Top European rights watchdog The Council of Europe has previously criticised Italy for the living conditions of Italy’s Roma and Sinti Gypsies and the “xenophobic” climate of discrimination they and other immigrants face.

There are an estimated 160,000 Roma Gypsies in Italy, nearly half of whom were born in Italy and have Italian citizenship.

Others come from European Union countries such as Romania and the countries of the former Yugoslavia.

The Italian government claims it wants to give those who are in Italy legally better access to schools, medical and social services.

According to Amnesty, between 12,000 and 15,000 Roma live in Rome.

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



Italy: Children in School No Stop to Deportation

(AGI) — Rome, 11 Mar. — Allowing non-European Union citizens to remain in spite of having been expelled from the country, cannot take place, if not “in particular situations.” The first Civil Section of the Court of Cassation has emphasized that this does not include having children at school in Italy.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama Pledges Support for Schumer, Graham on Immigration

President Barack Obama vowed to continue partnering with congressional leaders on comprehensive immigration reform.

Obama, after a meeting with Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who are working to craft a comprehensive immigration bill, pledged support for the senators and other leaders to craft an immigration reform bill.

“Today I met with Senators Schumer and Graham and was pleased to learn of their progress in forging a proposal to fix our broken immigration system,” Obama said in a statement following the meeting. “I look forward to reviewing their promising framework, and every American should applaud their efforts to reach across party lines and find commonsense answers to one of our most vexing problems.”

Schumer and Graham have been working to put together a bill to win bipartisan support, upon which some congressional leaders have hoped to move this year.

Obama said that he’s optimistic that a coalition of grassroots groups was “building momentum” for reform, and said he’d partner with Schumer, Graham, and community leaders going forward.

“I told both the Senators and the community leaders that my commitment to comprehensive immigration reform is unwavering, and that I will continue to be their partner in this important effort,” the president said.

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



Spanish Government Donates Computers to Ghana Immigration Service

Accra, March 10, GNA — The Spanish Government on Wednesday presented 26 computers with accessories and anti counterfeiting machines valued at about 58,000 Euros to the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) in Accra to boost its operations.

Mr. Vicente Garcia Sanjuan, Head of Migration Desk, Office of the Director-General, Migration and International Relationship, Ministry of Interior, Spain who presented the items lauded the excellent and effective collaboration between Ghana and Spain in the fight against illegal immigrants and organised crime.

He noted that while legal migrations opened door to a world of opportunities, illegal immigration was dehumanising and helped groups engaged in human trafficking.

Mr. Sanjuan said criminal groups that engaged in organised crime usually left victims especially women and children in sexual exploitation, marginalisation, social exclusion and slavery.

“The migrants sometimes make outrageous commitment, with members of organised crime that tie them or their families for many years,” he added.

Mr. Sanjuan contended that it was the duty of authorities to fight against illegal immigrant and reduce the action of organised crime by ensuring that law enforcement agencies enforced laws on migration.

To address illegal migration, he said Spain was also encouraging West African countries through capacity building as well as provision of logistics under the EU AENEAS programme.

Mr. Sanjuan said apart from mounting surveillance on the sea borders, it was also building security networks for the exchange of information in the fight against illegal immigration.

In fighting against document fraud, he said, Spain had co-financed training courses in Ghana and mentioned the formation of new Centre of Expertise in Migration and Identity Document (CEMID) in the country to check fraud.

Mrs. Rebecca Chantel Guinea Stal, Charge d’Affairs of Spain, said provision of the computers was to provide a very practical way for both countries to learn from each other.

Ms. Elizabeth Adjei, Director of Immigration Service, receiving the items said it had benefited from numerous projects from the Spanish Government towards capacity building.

She mentioned a two-million Euro facility for the installation of a 14 Digital Boarder Surveillance Equipment around Ghana’s 45 boundaries.

Ms. Adjei said the GIS was embarking on reforms and restructuring of its operations especially in human and drug trafficking.

She said GIS had received some cases involving identity fraud and impersonation especially among people who want to travel to Europe and the computers would boost their operations and enhance database.

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

Culture Wars


UK: Court: Christian’s Stand on ‘Gay’ Unions ‘Not Important’

Refuses to hear case of registrar forced to perform same-sex ‘marriage’

The U.K. Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal by a Christian registrar forced by her employers to perform same-sex “marriage” ceremonies, saying the case does not raise issues of “general public importance.”

Lillian Ladele said she is “disappointed” and feels her religious rights have been “trampled by another set of rights,” according to a report by the Christian Institute. She is now considering taking the case to the European Court of Human Rights.

Ladele had been a registrar for 16 years for London’s Islington City Council. But when she refused to perform a homosexual civil union due to her religious beliefs, her employers threatened her with dismissal and purportedly passed confidential employment details about her to a staff LGBT forum.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Amil Imani: Muslims’ Sheep Mentality

Humans are living information machines, receiving input from both external sources as well as the body, processing it in some fashion, and producing output: our thoughts and behavior. From the moment of birth, parents, siblings, and others play pivotal parts in supplying the input and influencing how it is processed.

           — Hat tip: Amil Imani [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100310

Financial Crisis
» Bahrain Finance Minister: Islamic Rules Saved US From Recession
» ‘Generation Zero’ And Its Impact on America
» Spain: With Ireland, OECD State Hardest Hit by Crisis
 
USA
» Public-School Imam: ‘We Could Just Kill You’
» Teen Hauled to Jail for Overdue Library DVD
» Video: Sen. Byrd Single-Handedly Stopped President Clinton From Using Reconciliation
 
Europe and the EU
» ‘British Fritzl’ Made Daughters Pregnant 18 Times After Shocking Failings by Social Services and Police… But No One’s Been Sacked
» EU President Van Rompuy ‘Pities’ Farage for Tirade
» European Parliament: More Freedom for Extended-Stay Visas
» France: Teacher Attacked by Muslim Student After Calling Al-Qaeda a Terrorist Group
» Italy-Israel: Healthcare Ministers Meet in Rome
» Italy: English Invading Italian Vocabulary
» Italy’s Anti-Cancer ‘Supertomato’
» Italy: Banks: Santander Considering Takeover of RBS Branches in UK
» Italy: Airports: Linate, Malpensa and Orio Join Forces for Expo 2015
» Italy: Chief Exorcist Father Gabriele Amorth Says Devil is in the Vatican
» Spain: Catalan Gov’t Harshly Criticised About Response to Weather
» Sweden: Vilks ‘Not Shaking With Fear’ Over Murder Plot
» Sweden: Top Flight Club Bans Foreign Language Use
» Sweden: Police Chief Aims to Save Boys From Life of Crime
» UK Churches Oppose Mosque Plan
» UK: Leeds Gang Jailed for Hot Iron Torture of Teenager
» UK: Primary Schoolchildren in Tears After They Are Told They Will be Removed From Families as Part of Holocaust ‘Game’
» UK: Posting Flyers is Anti-Social Behavior Says Government
» UK: They Can’t Read, Can’t Write and Think the World Owes Them a Living: Tesco Director’s Damning Verdict on Britain’s School-Leavers
» UK: The Speed Camera Trap on the M6 That’s Racing Towards Record £3m Haul in Fines
» US ‘Jihad Jane’ Linked to Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist
» Web Censorship Up Says Google
» Wilders: Fitna 2 Not Ready Before Elections
 
Balkans
» Increase in Asylum Seekers Causes Concern
» Kosovo: Enel in Competition for Coal-Fired Plant
» Montenegro: European Council Denounces Police Mistreatment
» Serbians Interested in Greece and Spain
» Snow and Strong Wind Cut Croatia
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU-Libya: Programme to Start by 2011, But Dialogue Fragile
» EU-Morocco: After Summit Focus on Common Market
» Italy: Civil Protection, Italy ‘Model’ In EU Programme
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Mothers, Wives of ‘Disappeared’ Not Giving Up
» Egypt’s Top Muslim Cleric Dies of Heart Attack
» France: Algiers Officially Protests Over Le Pen Poster
» Morocco: Ten Dead Due to Heavy Rains
» Morocco: Spanish Press, 27 Christians Arrested
» Spain-Morocco: Moratinos, No Progress on Sahara Human Rights
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Biden: Israeli Settlements Undermining Peace Effort
» Cast Lead: MPs Ask for Investigation Within 5 Months
» Going Backward? Understanding and Attempts to Resolve the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
» Joe Biden’s Snub to Netanyahu as He Arrives 90 Minutes Late for Dinner in Middle of Row With Israel Over West Bank Houses
 
Middle East
» French Carrefour to Expand Domestic Chain in Turkey
» Iran: Former President ‘Barred’ From Foreign Travel
» Iran: Isfahan: Protestant Clergyman Tortured for “Converting Muslims”
» Iraq: The Shiite Al-Maliki is Ahead, But the Secular Allawi is Also Going Strong
» Jordan to be a Regional Nuclear Training Centre, Officials
» Saudi Arabia: Man in Police Uniform Arrested for ‘Homosexuality’
» Saudi Awards Turkey’s PM for ‘Service to Islam’
» Syria: EU Supports WFP Food Distribution to 200,000 People
» Turkey: Illiterate Woman, 7-Yr Sentence for Pro-PKK Placard
 
South Asia
» ‘Bali Bomber’ Dulmatin Confirmed Dead in Indonesia Raid
» Myanmar — Bangladesh: Thousands of Rohingya Refugees Facing Starvation in Bangladesh
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Former Sex Slave Tells Story of ‘Trip of No Return’
» Nigeria: Clinton Calls for Justice Over Christian Massacre
 
Immigration
» “Coexistence is More Difficult if We Do Not Respect Their Religion”
» Activists Tell Obama to Protect Illegals
» Euro Court Warns Sweden Over Iran Deportation
» Greece: Parliamentary Debate on Citizenship
» USA: Minority Births May Soon Top White Births

Financial Crisis


Bahrain Finance Minister: Islamic Rules Saved US From Recession

Manama, Bahrain (CNN) — Bahrain’s finance minister said adherence to strict Islamic rules helped his country escape the worst of the global recession.

Finance Minister Sheikh Ahmed bin Mohammed al Khalifa predicts growth of four percent for Bahrain’s economy this year, saying “long-term consistent growth” is the kingdom’s goal.

Sheikh Ahmed said the country “built an economy that is resilient, that is able to withstand shock.”

“We’ve gone through this period very well. I think the diversification of our economy has helped us tremendously,” he told CNN.

Asked how the kingdom avoided some of the riskier assets that ended up crippling other economies, the minister said: “Looking at Islamic finances and industry, because they are barred by their own rules from some of the creative products, they were able to stay away from those industries.”

We built an economy that is resilient, that is able to withstand shock.

—Sheikh Ahmed Bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Bahraini Finance Minister

RELATED TOPICS

Bahrain

Bahrain International Circuit

World Economy

He said the country had a “conservative nature.”

Bahrain, an archipelago of 33 islands off the coast of Saudi Arabia, is a constitutional monarchy with an elected legislative assembly that has been ruled by the al Khalifa family since 1783.

“We’ve never claimed we were immune,” Sheikh Ahmed said, however. “We were exposed like the rest of the world. But by adhering to best practices, we were able to make sure that we minimized the damage to controllable levels.”

For centuries, pearls were Bahrain’s biggest export and its main source of income. In the early 1930s, though, Bahrain became the first Gulf state to find a sizeable deposit of crude oil, a discovery that boosted the country’s economy and accelerated its modernization.

Bahrain is also tapping into tourism and sports — in a similar way to other Gulf countries facing declining oil reserves — to promote itself internationally and attract new streams of revenue.

Bahrain International Circuit is the home of a series of international auto races, including the annual Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix, which kicks off the Formula One season this weekend.

Sheikh Ahmed said he expected 2010 growth to be “slightly better than what we experienced in ‘09.”

“The challenge for us is to start looking at … what’s going to propel our economy for the next couple years,” he said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



‘Generation Zero’ And Its Impact on America

“Generation Zero,” a new documentary produced by Citizens United head David N. Bossie and writer/director Stephen K. Bannon presents a compelling indictment of runaway federal budgets under President Barack Obama.

As such, “Generation Zero” will become an important statement dedicated to expressing the core concerns of the millions of independent voters and middle-class Americans participating in the rapidly emerging tea-party movement.

“Generation Zero” is Bossie and Bannon’s name for the now retiring baby boomers who were born into unprecedented prosperity made possible by the economic sacrifices of their Depression-era grandparents and the valor of their World War II-generation parents.

The documentary attributes the U.S. fiscal meltdown to undisciplined baby boomers coming to maturity and gaining power.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Spain: With Ireland, OECD State Hardest Hit by Crisis

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 10 — Spain and Ireland are the OECD member states that will be hardest hit by the financial crisis in terms of the drop in GDP, which in 2010 will fall to 11.8 and 10.6 points respectively, compared to an average drop of 3.1 points in other developed countries. These results figure in a report published today by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and quoted by the EFE agency. The deterioration of the labour market in both Spain and Ireland has caused “a substantial reduction in the workforce” due to a drop in the arrival of migrants, which will mean a potential drop in GDP of 8.4 points and 9.8 points, against a 1.1-point drop in the mean potential GDP in developed countries. The OECD claims that although the Spanish government has adopted important new measures to stave off the crisis and increase productivity and competitiveness, “no action has been taken” towards wage restraint or regarding collective agreements. The organisation also points out that Spain requires “greater flexibility in the labour market” as well as a reduction in the gap between indeterminate and temporary contracts. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Public-School Imam: ‘We Could Just Kill You’

Witness affidavits say Muslim leader tried to ‘incite violence’ against critics

A former administrative assistant for a publicly funded school in Minnesota — located in the same building as a Muslim mosque and run by a Muslim imam — stated in legal documents that the school director told her, “We could just kill you, yeah tell your husband we’ll do his job for him.”

Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy, or TiZA, in Inver Grove Heights, Minn., which also shares space in a building with the Minnesota chapter of the Muslim American Society, came under state investigation after multiple reports by columnist Katherine Kersten.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Teen Hauled to Jail for Overdue Library DVD

What started as a routine traffic stop ended with a Colorado teen doing hard time. The offense? Not returning a “House of Flying Daggers” DVD to his local library. Come on, Colorado. You’re better than that.

Apparently young Aaron Henson, an impressionable lad all of 19 years old, fell in with the wrong DVD-borrowing crowd sometime last year. Henson packed up the flick for a move, forgot that he had it, and ended up with a warrant for his arrest:

The city said it sent an overdue notice and bill, neither of which were returned.

The city then sent a summons, which was returned.

Then, the city sent a new court date order, it was not returned. And when Aaron failed to appear for the second court date, the city issued a warrant.

Why all the fuss? Because apparently the municipality of Littleton, CO values the DVD of a 2004 release at $31.45, and any “theft” over $30 gets prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. Also of note: Littleton, CO has apparently never heard of Amazon.

[Return to headlines]



Video: Sen. Byrd Single-Handedly Stopped President Clinton From Using Reconciliation

“President Clinton got on the phone and called me also and pressed me to allow his massive health care bill to be insulated by reconciliation’s protection.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


‘British Fritzl’ Made Daughters Pregnant 18 Times After Shocking Failings by Social Services and Police… But No One’s Been Sacked

A father was free to use his daughters as sex slaves for three decades because more than 100 care workers were too scared to stop him, a devastating report revealed yesterday.

The two sisters suffered more than 1,000 rapes, became pregnant 18 times and had seven children by their perverted father.

Yet for ten years they were on the Child Protection Register, supposedly being monitored by social services.

Astonishingly, care workers were aware of repeated allegations of incest but did nothing because they wrongly feared they could be sued for breaching confidentiality.

The 57-year-old father, who was given 25 life sentences at Sheffield Crown Court in November 2008, ran rings around the authorities by controlling his daughters through fear and moving house 67 times.

Yesterday a Serious Case Review spelled out a catalogue of shocking failures by 28 separate agencies and more than 100 care workers.

The ordeal of the sisters and the failure of those supposed to protect them unfolded over 35 years in which:

Authorities received 12 reports of physical abuse by the father and seven specific allegations of incest from family members;

Sixteen child protection ‘case conferences’ were held and the two sisters were questioned about the paternity of their children 23 times;

Proper action by just one of the social workers or other officials including police who knew about the family could have ended the horror;

Nothing was done to intervene in part because social workers had a culture of ‘having a quiet word’ rather than taking action.

But despite the litany of errors nobody was sacked or even disciplined for failing to stop one of the most horrific abuse cases in decades — and all are hidden behind a cloak of anonymity.

The report states ‘action should have been taken’ in 1997 — when the brother of the victims made allegations of incest to police.

The case outlined at Sheffield Crown Court was chillingly similar to that of Austrian Josef Fritzl, who kept his daughter locked in a cellar for 24 years and fathered seven children by her.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



EU President Van Rompuy ‘Pities’ Farage for Tirade

The President of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, has said he pities Nigel Farage, the British MEP who called him a “damp rag” last month.

Mr Van Rompuy said his popularity had soared in Belgium, following the tirade from the Eurosceptic Mr Farage.

“I found it so ridiculous that I was not even really angry… I feel pity for that kind of behaviour and that kind of man, that’s all,” he said.

Mr Van Rompuy said voters appreciated politicians who kept their cool.

Mr Farage, of the UK Independence Party, compared the former Belgian prime minister to a “low-grade bank clerk” and accused him of being a “quiet assassin of European democracy and of European nation states”.

He also referred to Belgium as a “non-country”.

Mr Van Rompuy told the BBC he never got angry.

“When I was in the Belgian parliament as prime minister, if people said nasty things or insulted me I stayed very calm and that was very well received by the public,” he said.

“I can assure you that I am now at the height of my popularity in Flanders, after the incident in the European Parliament… A lot of people feel themselves confident when they are governed by people who don’t get nervous and angry at every incident.”

Earlier Mr Van Rompuy told the Flemish broadcaster VRT that he had reacted “like the British at their best, phlegmatically”.

In his writings, he has quoted the saying “Forgive your enemies, but don’t forget their names,” adding that it is one he has applied in practice.

In the case of Mr Farage’s outburst, he said, the question of forgiveness did not arise, because it had not deeply affected him.

Mr Farage was reprimanded by the European Parliament president for his “insulting” tirade and was fined just under 3,000 euros (£2,700) after refusing to apologise for it.

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



European Parliament: More Freedom for Extended-Stay Visas

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, MARCH 10 — A citizen of a third country in possession of a visa for extended stay, granted by a EU member country, will be authorized to go to the other member states for three months per semester, just like anyone possessing a residency permit. This is what is provided by the rule adopted by the European parliament, which should become effective by April 5. “The fact that a student to whom a visa is granted in order to attend a course in Belgium cannot travel to a specialized library in the Netherlands to obtain information useful for a thesis, or is not authorized to visit Barcelona on the weekend is simply unacceptable,” stated Portuguese European deputy Carlos Coelho (Ppe). With the current communitary law, those holding visas for extended stay in EU countries — such as students on a study trip, scientists, scholars, and family members of some European Union citizens — are not authorized to travel to other member states during their stay, and cannot travel through other states when returning to their country of origin. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Teacher Attacked by Muslim Student After Calling Al-Qaeda a Terrorist Group

Lyon, France — A 15-year-old French schoolboy sprayed a teacher with teargas after she described al-Qaeda as a “terrorist group”, she told reporters on Tuesday as prosecutors began their investigation.

“I had just explained that the attacks on September 11, 2001 were carried out by the terrorist organisation al-Qaeda, as is written in the text book,” said the history teacher, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“He stood up and declared that al-Qaeda is not terrorist and that neither is the Taliban,” she said, adding that the boy had then pulled out a spray can and doused her and a teaching assistant with teargas.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy-Israel: Healthcare Ministers Meet in Rome

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 9 — Healthcare Minister Ferruccio Fazio met today in Rome with his Israeli counterpart Yakov Litzman. The meeting took place at the National Institute for Infective Diseases, Lazzaro Spallanzani, allowing for a visit to the High-Level Isolation Unit, which is a highly advanced centre for the treatment of infectious diseases due to possible events such as bioterrorism events, for example. The issues focused on in the meeting between the two ministers included new opportunities to collaborate in the healthcare field between the two countries which have opened with the Bilateral Plan of Action signed at the Italian-Israeli summit on February 2. Emergencies involving transmissible diseases, the quality of hospital treatments, an increased presence of Italian doctors in Israel, healthcare assistance projects through telemedicine services and the infant healthcare sector were among the topics directly analysed in depth by the two ministers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: English Invading Italian Vocabulary

Use of ‘Ital-English’ said to be up 773% in eight years

(ANSA) — Milan, March 9 — English words are invading the Italian vocabulary and in the past eight years their use has leapt 773%, according to Federlingue, an umbrella group for language services, translators, interpreters and language schools.

Federlingue carried out a study posting a questionnaire on the Web for over 100 business-to-business clients between the ages of 25 and 50 who had used the group’s translation services over a 12-month period.

In 84% of the replies Federlingue said it discovered ample use of ‘Ital-English’, the use of English words and phrases mixed into spoken and written Italian.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy’s Anti-Cancer ‘Supertomato’

Campania creation helps beat disease, expert says

(ANSA) — Rome, March 9 — A ‘supertomato’ created by Italian scientists is the perfect food for helping keep cancer at bay, the head of the World Foundation of Urology said on Tuesday. Launching Prostate Cancer Week in Italy, Mauro Dimitri said the ‘supertomato’ created by the Biomolecular Institute at the Naples National Research Centre offered a unique blend of nutritional qualities.

“This tomato has nutritional characteristics that are ideally suited for preventing disease,” explained Dimitri. “It has a total anti-oxidant activity superior to all other tomato hybrids normally for sale, both fresh and preserved.

“It has a greater content of the cancer-fighting carotene lycopene and vitamin C than is found in purple tomatoes, and the same anti-inflammatory properties as the San Marzano tomato”. According to Dimitri, these qualities not only make it suitable for fending off prostate cancer but also for reducing the risks of a host of other diseases in which oxidative stress and the subsequent creation of free radicals play a role. These include cardiovascular disease, arthritis, Parkinson’s Disease and osteoporosis, as well as cancers of the lung and stomach. The team of scientists that created the tomato has been at pains to stress that it involved no genetically modified organisms but is a simple blend of two existing varieties: the San Marzano, famed for its taste and anti-inflammatory properties, and the Black Tomato, a purple fruit high in anti-oxidants. The real name of the ‘supertomato’, Maxantia, is still awaiting registration but widespread cultivation of the bright red, plum tomato has already got under way in Campania. Speaking at the official unveiling of the ‘supertomato’ a few months back, Naples Agriculture Councillor Francesco Emilio Borrelli said it was a fruit that combined the best of Campania tomatoes. “Our supertomato is a natural blend that has fused two genetic heritages to obtain a new variety with high, health-giving properties,” he said. In recognition of its healthy qualities, Campania regional authorities have also backed a commercial deal with local pizza makers.

The aim is to encourage local pizzaioli to use the Maxantia on their pizzas as a healthier alternative to regular tomatoes. In addition to its innately healthy properties, the supertomato also boasts another key advantage over other fruit and vegetables, in that it loses just 20% of its anti-oxidant properties when cooked.

Discussing the dangers of prostate cancer and the launch of the weeklong campaign, Dimitri warned it was the commonest tumour among men in Italy, with 37,000 new cases each year, causing 9,000 deaths annually.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Banks: Santander Considering Takeover of RBS Branches in UK

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 9 — Spanish banking group Santander is seriously considering buying 320 branch offices in Great Britain being sold by Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). The Spanish group, which already has a well-rooted presence in Great Britain, has prepared a 4-billion pound offer (about 4.4 billion euro), which according to analysts will make a takeover bid by other competitors unlikely, although other companies such as Virgin Money, NAP (National Australian Bank) and BBVA (Bank of Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria) have not ruled out the possibility of relaunching their own takeover bids. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Airports: Linate, Malpensa and Orio Join Forces for Expo 2015

(ANSAmed) — MILAN, MARCH 10 — The companies running Malpensa and Linate (SEA) and Orio Al Serio (SACBO) will join forces for an industrial cooperation between the airports of Milan and Bergamo in view of Expo 2015, but also in the longer term, with all parties looking ahead to “a project that in time could include other airports in a broader territory”. It is with these objectives, a statement says, that a cooperation agreement was signed today between SEA, the owners of both Milanese airports, and SACBO, in which SEA has a 30% stake. As part of the agreement, special labour and steering groups will be set up, with equal input from both companies, creating economies of scale through the joint running of operational procedures in individual airports. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Chief Exorcist Father Gabriele Amorth Says Devil is in the Vatican

Sex abuse scandals in the Roman Catholic Church are proof that that “the Devil is at work inside the Vatican”, according to the Holy See’s chief exorcist.

Father Gabriele Amorth, 85, who has been the Vatican’s chief exorcist for 25 years and says he has dealt with 70,000 cases of demonic possession, said that the consequences of satanic infiltration included power struggles at the Vatican as well as “cardinals who do not believe in Jesus, and bishops who are linked to the Demon”.

He added: “When one speaks of ‘the smoke of Satan’ [a phrase coined by Pope Paul VI in 1972] in the holy rooms, it is all true — including these latest stories of violence and paedophilia.”

He claimed that another example of satanic behaviour was the Vatican “cover-up” over the deaths in 1998 of Alois Estermann, the then commander of the Swiss Guard, his wife and Corporal Cedric Tornay, a Swiss Guard, who were all found shot dead. “They covered up everything immediately,” he said. “Here one sees the rot”.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Spain: Catalan Gov’t Harshly Criticised About Response to Weather

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 10 — The Catalan government has been subjected to harsh criticism after the collapse caused by the unusual amount of snowfall which hit Catalonia on Monday. All newspapers today dedicated articles and editorials to the chaotic situation reigning in the region due to the non-prediction of it and the delays in intervention by the Generalitat government, and more snow has fallen over the past few hours on the La Jonquera border with France, causing the closing of the National Highway 2. At least 66,000 households in the Gerona province spent the night without electricity due to the interruption in supply by Endesa due to damage to facilities from the snowfall. Generalitat government sources have said that the service would be entirely restored by the end of day. In the early morning hours, there were still kilometres-long line-ups on the provincial AP-7 road for access to Barcelona, which has been re-opened for traffic but with serious problems caused as concerns circulation due to the snowfall, according to Highway Police reports. The closing of the National Highway 2, with a connection to France, has led to further line-ups of articulated lorries at the border, where lorries are detoured in the direction of Montmel and Tarraga. On the Catalan road network, 78 stretches of provincial and municipal roads are closed to traffic, 56 of which in the Barcelona province. Generalitat sources have informed that railway transport has been normalised, but the Barcelona-France connection is still suspended, while the Barcelona-Portnou line is operative only to Figueres. Two days after the heavy snowfall, 57 schools in the Girona province are still closed, affecting about 25,000 students. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Vilks ‘Not Shaking With Fear’ Over Murder Plot

Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks said he was undaunted by revelations of a plot on his life after seven people were arrested in Ireland on Tuesday.

“I’m not shaking with fear, exactly,” Lars Vilks told Swedish news agency TT.

“I have prepared in different ways and I have an axe here in case someone should manage to get in through the window,” added Vilks, who since the publication of his drawing of the Muslim prophet Muhammad as a dog three years ago has had a $100,000 bounty on his head from an Al-Qaeda-linked group.

His comments followed news that four men and three women, all Muslims originally from Morocco and Yemen, had been arrested in southern Ireland over an alleged plot to assassinate him.

Vilks said he had received threatening phone calls from Somalia at the beginning of the year and that the Swedish security police, Säpo, had since warned him there was a heightened threat level against him.

“But I didn’t think it was that serious,” he told TT.

Säpo spokesman Mattias Lindholm told AFP that the agency was informed about the international operation leading up to Tuesday’s arrests.

“We have cooperated … Right now we are in continuous touch with the authorities involved, including our Irish counterparts,” he said.

Lindholm refused to comment on the threats against Vilks or on Säpo’s actions to protect him.

Swedish newspaper Nerikes Allehanda published a cartoon on August 18, 2007 depicting the Prophet Mohammed as a dog to illustrate an editorial on self-censorship and freedom of expression and religion.

The cartoon prompted protests by Muslims in the town of Örebro, west of Stockholm, where the newspaper is based. Egypt, Iran and Pakistan made formal complaints and death threats were issued against Vilks.

An Al-Qaeda front organisation offered $150,000 to anyone who slit Vilks’ throat or $100,000 for his murder by other means, while they also offered $50,000 to kill newspaper editor-in-chief Ulf Johansson.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Top Flight Club Bans Foreign Language Use

Swedish top flight football club, Brommapojkarna (BP) have introduced a language policy requiring all players to speak Swedish to each other in order to be eligible for selection.

Online football betting on www.bwin.com

“This is a non-issue,” BP chairperson Ola Danhard told The Local on Wednesday.

As almost all of BP’s players are home grown talent — with 17 of the 23 first team players from its youth set up — Danhard argued that a language policy was little more than a formality.

But Danhard did confirm that the club’s board had voted to establish a policy for the exclusive use of Swedish within the club, both in its changing rooms and on the pitch.

“It is important for the collective that everyone in the team speaks the same language,” he said.

Danhard told The Local that BP has a very successful youth set-up, drawing on talent from the greater Stockholm catchment area. He pointed out that while many of the players are from immigrant families and are multilingual, all can speak Swedish.

“In the changing room if you are going to use a language then it is much nicer if it is a language that everybody understands,” Danhard said.

Danhard told The Local that they have been working with the issue for some ten years and there have been no negative reactions to date.

“Like I said, this is a non-issue. We should all speak Swedish within the club,” Ola Danhard said.

Brommapojkerna are widely recognised to have Sweden’s best youth set up, which is the largest in Europe in terms of the number of active teams of all ages (250). The club’s most famous recent prodigy was Albin Ekdal, who joined Juventus in 2008.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Police Chief Aims to Save Boys From Life of Crime

Stockholm county police chief Carin Götblad has recommended the creation of special municipal task forces to coordinate efforts from police, schools and social services to steer Sweden’s youth away from criminality.

“I suggest that the key actors — social services, schools and the police — are given a legal responsibility to support the parents of young people,” Götblad, who is leading a state inquiry into the matter, wrote in an article in Dagens Nyheter on Wednesday.

The Stockholm police chief has been tasked with developing ways to identify young people in the risk zone and to propose strategies to prevent their recruitment into criminal networks.

There are around 5,000 young people in Sweden who are considered to constitute the recruitment pool for criminal groups, Götblad said. The group is primarily made up of boys living in deprived residential areas in the major cities.

“We have a lot of knowledge about the backgrounds and risk factors around young people who develop a criminal lifestyle. It primarily concerns boys and young men living marginalized in the most deprived areas,” Götblad wrote.

Resources should be focused on these groups, for the sake of the boys, but also “for a safer society,” the police chief urged.

Götblad has also suggested the creation of Projekt Pojke (Project Boy) to address social problems, psychological ill health and stereotyped gender roles among young men and boys.

“These boys are particularly vulnerable. Schools are not formed according to their needs and there is today almost no labour market for young, uneducated men,” she said.

Projekt Pojke would offer work experience and free-time activities and work to change values and attitudes that encourage criminal activity, the police chief said, adding that companies and the business community should be encouraged to become involved.

Karin Götblad proposed that the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention (Brå) should be tasked with, in collaboration with other bodies, produce a manual for developing a systematic method for identifying exposed groups and for leading individuals away from a life of crime.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK Churches Oppose Mosque Plan

CAIRO — Churches and locals in Camberley town, South East England, are opposing a planned mosque, describing its minarets as supremacist statement for Islam.

“I think it fair to say that a mosque with two 100ft minarets and a large elevated dome is making not so much a spiritual, as a powerful cultural, or even political statement,” Rev Mark Chester, chairman of Churches Together coalition, told the Times Wednesday, March 10.

The coalition, which represents Camberley churches, firmly opposes the planned mosque’s design and site.

It threatened that the mosque plan would spark “antagonism between the Muslim community and the wider community in Camberley for years to come.”

The mosque, proposed by the Bengali Welfare Association, would be located near the Royal Military Academy.

The location was the site of a former Victorian school used by local Muslims as a mosque over the past 14 years.

Still, Rev Bob Peck of St Martin’s Church claims the mosque plan is not innocent.

“They seem to have a political agenda and they want to make a big statement,” he told the Times.

“It’s a supremacist statement.”

Britain has a sizable Muslim minority of more than two millions, mostly of Asian backgrounds.

Security Threat

Tim Cross, a retired Major-General, describes the mosque as “a significant security threat.”

He claims the minarets could be used to attack senior members of the royal family and important military figures who visit the Royal Military Academy every year.

“Visitors self-evidently provide significant potential targets being openly on display around the college building and elsewhere,” he told the Times.

The mosque planning application will be decided by Surrey Heath Borough Council at a meeting Wednesday.

But the fierce opposition is already shocking to local Muslims.

Abdul Wasay Chowdhury, a spokesman for the Bengali Welfare Association, dismissed security concerns as ungrounded.

He asserted that access within the minarets would not go beyond the height of a house as they would be filled in with concrete.

The Ministry of Defence, which initially had security concerns about the minaret, has reserved its position after these clarifications.

“Plans were revised so that access to the towers would be restricted to essential maintenance work,” it said in a statement.

The Muslim community leader also dismissed allegations that the mosque was a political statement.

“We do not know anything about politics,” Chowdhury told the Times.

“We are simple people who want to do according to our faith.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK: Leeds Gang Jailed for Hot Iron Torture of Teenager

Four Leeds men who used a hot iron and boiling water to torture a boy over a “drug debt” have been jailed.

The gang demanded a £20,000 ransom after abducting the 16-year-old on 30 April 2009, Leeds Crown Court heard.

Shaheed Rahman, 24, was sentenced to 12 years and nine months and Syed Ahmed, 24, got 12 years, after both admitted conspiracy to kidnap and blackmail.

Shuel Hussain, 28, got 10 years and Abdul Rajaque, 29, five years and three months after admitting blackmail.

A fifth man, 25-year-old Hassan Ahmed, will be sentenced at a later date after also pleading guilty to blackmail.

Det Supt Bill Shackleton, from West Yorkshire Police’s homicide and major inquiry team, said: “This was a deeply traumatic experience for the young man who was taken hostage, and also for those members of his family who were obliged to deal with the demands made by the kidnappers.

“The fact that a 16-year-old young man was needlessly tortured with a hot steam iron and by having red hot water poured onto his skin made this offence all the more despicable.”

The court heard the victim was bundled into a Transit van by a group of men as he walked home from a takeaway restaurant in the Harehills area of Leeds.

Victim handcuffed

He was then taken to an address, in the Belle Isle area of the city, where he was handcuffed and had a pillowcase and a carrier bag placed over his head.

He was then burned on his legs with an iron and scalded with boiling water over a five-hour period.

During this time his brother was repeatedly contacted by the kidnappers who demanded a £20,000 ransom as payment of the “drugs debt”.

The men threatened to cut off the victim’s fingers unless it was paid.

The court heard police went to the house in Belle Isle after a neighbour reported hearing “shouts and screams”.

The victim was treated at Leeds General Infirmary for his injuries and a statement written by his doctor reported that he has suffered depression and anxiety since the incident.

           — Hat tip: G [Return to headlines]



UK: Primary Schoolchildren in Tears After They Are Told They Will be Removed From Families as Part of Holocaust ‘Game’

Pupils became hysterical after a number of them were separated and told they were being sent away or might end up in an orphanage.

The terrifying ordeal was meant to give the students at the Lanarkshire school an insight into the horrors faced by Jewish children during the Second World War, when they were plucked from home and sent to Nazi death camps.

But the ill-conceived exercise, which was sprung without warning on the children at St Hilary’s Primary School in East Kilbride last Thursday morning, went badly wrong with many pupils, aged just 11, reduced to tears.

Deputy head teacher Elizabeth McGlynn was responsible for segregating the pupils and telling them they were to be sent away.

One angry parent, who has lodged an official complaint about the project, told how the ‘barbaric’ role play left children crying their eyes out in class.

In a letter sent to council bosses, the unnamed mother said: ‘Mrs McGlynn told the children they would probably have to be sent away from their families and that their parents had been informed about this and knew all about it.

‘When one child asked if that meant they might have to go to an orphanage, they were told that might be a possibility.

‘At that point many of the children became very distressed.

‘One boy kicked his chair over, one was angry and demanded to speak to someone in charge but most were crying on a scale ranging from mildly to severely.

‘Their ordeal lasted between 12 and 15 minutes before the children were informed that it was all an act but that the role play would continue until lunchtime.’

One girl said her classmates began crying when Mrs McGlynn told them she had a letter from the Scottish Executive saying nine children had to be separated from their classmates.

She told the shocked youngsters those who were born in January, February and March had lower IQs than other children, ‘due to lack of sunlight in their mother’s womb’, and that they had to put yellow hats on and be sent to the library.

The mother added: ‘When I asked why on earth they thought it was appropriate to deliver a role play situation to the children in this way, Mrs Stewart informed me that they didn’t inform the children beforehand.

‘This was because they wanted the children to experience an “accurate emotional response” to this scenario in order for it to be reflected in their story writing.

‘Mrs Stewart then invited me to come up to the school and see the excellent work that had been produced as a result of the exercise.

‘I declined and my position and opinion on the method used to extract emotive story writing from the children was cruel, barbaric, traumatic and totally, totally unethical.

‘My daughter and indeed no child needs to feel the terror, fear, panic, segregation and horror that a child of the Holocaust experienced during one of the worst atrocities in history to be able to empathise with them in order to produce good story writing.’

A South Lanarkshire council spokeswoman, who confirmed that a role play activity took place, said: ‘The council can confirm that a parent handed in a letter to Education Resources on Monday, March 8, 2010, and this will be responded to shortly.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Posting Flyers is Anti-Social Behavior Says Government

We’ll start today’s lead story off with some Irony. A flyer nationally distributed to homes in the UK entitled “Tackling Anti-Social Behavior” lists posting flyers as possible anti-social behavior. The evil act is ranked next to vandalism, graffiti and intimating groups.

If you should see somebody with a green florescent bag putting leaflets in doors, please don’t panic. Stand up to the criminals and call your local police force. If it’s serious (maybe the leaflet might be political?!) Don’t hesitate to dial 999, or if you wish to remain anonymous you can always go to the crime-stoppers website. Maybe Crime Watch will show a photo fit image of the deviant delivery boy on their monthly broadcast.

This fear-mongering and deceptive government flyer has a section entitled “Your Rights”. Well unless you’ve forgotten, your rights state that you have free speech! It is perfectly within the law to post leaflets and flyers in to home letterboxes as long as they don’t have a message on the door stating otherwise. The very fact that the government pushes this nonsense in a flyer, suggests that the government are above the people and only they have the right to distribute ideas, political material and advertising to the public.

[Return to headlines]



UK: They Can’t Read, Can’t Write and Think the World Owes Them a Living: Tesco Director’s Damning Verdict on Britain’s School-Leavers

Growing numbers of British school-leavers have ‘attitude problems’ and believe the world ‘owes them a living’, a Tesco boss warned today.

Youngsters too often turn up late for work and interviews and fail to see the importance of dressing neatly and working with others, said Lucy Neville-Rolfe, director of corporate and legal affairs.

Many also struggle with basic maths and English as exams become easier and schools fail to properly enforce discipline.

In a hard-hitting speech, Mrs Neville-Rolfe, 56, one of the most powerful and well-paid women in British business, blamed failures in our education system.

She said shortcomings among school-leavers were ‘perhaps not a surprise’ because of ‘well-publicised problems in some schools’ including 380,000 suspensions a year, and nearly a quarter of a million persistent truants.

‘If children aren’t learning the importance of discipline at school — or, dare I say it, in the family — how can we expect them magically to have learned it by the time they turn up looking for work?’ she said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Speed Camera Trap on the M6 That’s Racing Towards Record £3m Haul in Fines

For such an innocuous stretch of motorway, it is fast gaining a fearsome reputation.

In little more than five weeks, this three-mile length of road cutting through the scenic borderlands of North-West England has smashed the British record for speed camera victims.

An astonishing 5,569 motorists have been caught breaking the 50mph speed limit by the fixed cameras at roadworks at a junction of the M6 near Carlisle.

With each motorist set to receive a minimum fixed penalty fine of £60, the cameras have already raked in more than £334,000.

And with three weeks of work to go, they are set to bring in fines of more than £500,000 in just two months — the equivalent of £3million a year.

Angry motoring groups say the huge number of victims is proof that speed cameras — which earn more than £100million in fines a year — are being used as a ‘cash cow’ by the Government.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US ‘Jihad Jane’ Linked to Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist

An American woman known as “Jihad Jane” was charged by US authorities on Tuesday with conspiring to kill Swedish Muhammad cartoonist Lars Vilks, government sources told CNN.

The woman, named as Colleen LaRose was arrested in Philadelphia on October 15th 2009, but he involvement was confirmed by US authorities only hours after Irish police arrested seven people accused of plotting to kill the Swedish artist, who courted controversy in 2007 for for drawing cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammad as a dog.

In her indictment released by the US Justice Department on Tuesday it is shown that LaRose faces charges of “conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, conspiracy to kill in a foreign country, making false statements to a government official and attempted identity theft.”

Over the course of at least a year, she is alleged to have used the internet to recruit men in South Asia, Europe and the United States for terror attacks.

She is also accused of recruiting women “who had passports and the ability to travel to and around Europe in support of violent jihad,” and of having stolen a US passport “and transferred or attempted to transfer it in an effort to facilitate an act of international terrorism.”

The indictment alleges LaRose received two messages in March 2009 from an individual in a South Asian country instructing her to kill an unnamed Swedish resident. A US government official confirmed to CNN that the target was Vilks and the charges relate to Tuesday’s arrests in Ireland.

“Kill him… this is what i say to u,” the indictment quotes one message as saying. “Kill (the individual) in a way that the whole Kufar [non-believer] world get frightened,” the second said.

“I will make this my goal till I achieve it or die trying,” LaRose allegedly responded.

An Al-Qaeda-linked group has placed a $100,000 bounty on Lals Vilks’ head in response to a cartoon he drew depicting the Prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog.

The indictment alleges that LaRose — born in 1963 — last March “sent an electronic communication to the Swedish embassy asking for instructions on acquiring permanent residency status in Sweden.”

She is also said to have “traveled to Europe with the intent to live and train with jihadists” in August 2009.

In September 2009, LaRose allegedly sent a message reiterating her commitment to kill, adding “only death will stop me here that i am so close to the target.”

LaRose, also identified by the monikers “Fatima LaRose” and “JihadJane,” faces life in prison if convicted.

A MySpace page under the name “JihadJane” features a biography of a Pennsylvania woman who describes herself as having “reverted to Islam.”

“I live in Pennsylvania, originally from Texas. I have recently (a couple months) reverted to Islam and I can safely say that of all the things I have ever done in my lifetime, bcomming Muslim is what i am the proudest of.”

Elsewhere, the user lists her heros as “Skeikh OBL,” an apparent reference to Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, and “The brothers in… Jihad.”

The indictment and material released by SITE, a US group that monitors extremists, suggest LaRose had an active online presence, despite being repeatedly banned from websites including YouTube and harbouring fears she was under surveillance.

SITE released a message purportedly posted by LaRose on an English-language jihadist forum that directly addressed those she thought were monitoring her.

“We are and have been aware of you and your infiltration in here and in other forums… i hope you enjoy the videos and pictures of your comrades being blown to hell by the brothers well placed IED’s and the brothers sharp shooters blowing off the heads and other limbs of your comrades.”

The case “demonstrates that terrorists are looking for Americans to join them in their cause, and it shatters any lingering thought that we can spot a terrorist based on appearance,” said US Justice Department attorney Michael Levy in a statement.

In communications detailed in the indictment, LaRose is alleged to have said her appearance would allow her to “blend in with many people,” adding it “may be a way to achieve what is in my heart.”

Profile pictures on the “JihadJane” MySpace page include one showing a fair-skinned woman with blue eyes, her hair covered by a headscarf.

David Kris, assistant attorney general at the Justice Department’s National Security Division, hailed the indictment and said the government would remain vigilant.

“Today’s indictment, which alleges that a woman from suburban America agreed to carry out murder overseas and to provide material support to terrorists, underscores the evolving nature of the threat we face,” he said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Web Censorship Up Says Google

Milan ruling ‘dangerous’ says comminications chief

(by Denis Greenan).

(ANSA) — Geneva, March 9 — Web censorship is not confined to repressive regimes, Google’s communications director said Tuesday in the wake of last month’s conviction in Italy of three of its executives for violating privacy laws.

“Internet censorship is getting worse and more sophisticated,” Robert Boorstin told an international conference in Geneva.

“More than 40 countries have resorted to censorship at one time or another and Google has been interrupted in 25 countries,” he told the second annual Summit for Human Rights, Tolerance and Democracy, sponsored by non-governmental organisations like UN Watch and Freedom House.

Boorstin stressed he did not “want to compare repressive regimes like Burma with Western democracies”. But he declared that the February 24 Milan verdict amounted to censorship.

In the sentence, which has been widely decried by advocates of Web freedom, a judge ruled that Google failed to protect the privacy of an autistic teenager who appeared in a 2006 video posted by school bullies.

“The content of the video is absolutely inexcusable and Google removed it as soon as it was alerted to its presence,” Boorstin reiterated.

The ruling, which Google is appealing, constitutes “a danger” to Web freedom because it appears to establish the principle that preventive control is needed, Boorstin told the forum.

Every minute, the Google communications chief pointed out, some 20 hours of videos are uploaded onto YouTube.

The year-long trial in Milan was the first judicial proceeding anywhere against executives of the Internet search engine company.

It was seen as having implications for the way Google operates in Italy and for the wider debate over freedom of speech and legal responsibility for Internet postings.

Prosecutors hailed Judge Oscar Magi’s ruling as “recognising that privacy rights trump business logic” while Google called it “an attack on the fundamental principles of freedom on which the Internet was built”.

Former Google Italy president David Carl Drummond, now senior vice president, was given a six-month suspended jail term along with George De Los Reyes, a retired former Google Italy board member, and Peter Fleitcher, Google Europe’s privacy strategy chief.

The three, for whom prosecutors had asked a year’s term, were found guilty of invasion of privacy but not of defamation.

Arvind Desikan, head of the Google Video for Europe project, was acquitted because he only faced the defamation charge.

The convicted are entitled to two automatic appeals.

The defendants denied negligence, saying they could not have prevented the incident and stressing that the company took prompt action to identify the four bullies, who were expelled from their Turin high school as a result.

After the ruling, the United States ambassador to Italy, David Thorne, said “online abuses must not be an excuse to violate the right to a free internet”.

VERDICT CRITICISED IN ITALY TOO.

Magi’s ruling was widely criticised in Italy too.

Popular Web activist Beppe Grillo said it was tantamount to punishing the owner of a building on which offensive slogans have been painted or prosecuting a phone company when users violate privacy norms.

Instead of being found guilty, the Google execs should have been lauded for exposing bullying, said Grillo, 61, a comic and political activist who came seventh in Forbes’ list of Web personalities in 2009.

Italian politicians of all stripes said the ruling could threaten the development of the Web.

The Italian section of Reporters Without Borders (RWB) voiced the same concern, calling Magi’s ruling “a grave precedent, all the more so because it was taken in a democratic country”.

“If the judges meant to start a debate on Internet privacy they picked the wrong case,” RWB said in a statement.

“This sentence, unfortunately, establishes the de facto need for prior control of the publication of videos”.

“It is a serious blow to freedom of expression”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Wilders: Fitna 2 Not Ready Before Elections

Geert Wilders’ follow-up to his anti-Qur’an film Fitna will not appear before the general election.

The Freedom Party (PVV) leader announced last year that he was planning a second film. He was hoping to release it in the run-up to the next parliamentary elections, but the collapse of the coalition government has brought them forward by a year.

Mr Wilders has been busy making preparations for the film but nothing has actually been produced so far. “Fitna 2 will be spectacular,” he says, “but it certainly won’t be finished before the elections”.

A documentary film about Geert Wilders is due to be released soon in the United States. And he is writing a book, but that won’t appear before the elections either.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Increase in Asylum Seekers Causes Concern

Belgrade/Skopje, 9 March (AKI) — Some members of the European Union are concerned about a sharp increase in the number of political asylum seekers from the Balkans, since visas were abolished last December, local media reported on Tuesday.

Belgian prime minister Yves Leterme flew to Skopje on Monday to discuss the issue with Macedonian leaders, and Serbian prime minister Mirko Cvetkovic was urgently called to Brussels last Friday.

The EU abolished visas for citizens of Serbia, Macedonia and Montenegro in December, and a drastic jump of asylum seekers was reported in the subsequent months by Belgium and Sweden, prompting speculation that visas may be restored.

“It’s by no means serious, but the problem exists and we are urgently working to resolve it,” Milivoje Mihajlovic, Serbian government media spokesman told Adnkronos International (AKI).

Mihajlovic said it was in the interests of all involved that these “malpractices be stopped”.

He said the first contingent of “false asylum seekers” could be repatriated from Belgium as early as Wednesday.

Belgian ambassador to Belgrade Denise de Hauer said that 330 citizens from southern Serbia, mostly ethnic Albanians and Roma, applied for asylum in Belgium, in February compared to 58 in January.

In the first days of March, there were 20 applications daily, which caused great problem for Belgian authorities, she said. “There are no conditions for political asylum, because no one in Serbia is persecuted on ethnic or religious grounds and there is no war in the country,” De Hauer said.

Swedish ambassador Krister Bringeus told Belgrade television that his country had received 580 requests for asylum in 2009 and 300 only in February this year.

Serbian police minister Ivica Dacic denied there was widespread abuse. But warned if there was proof, those responsible would be punished.

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



Kosovo: Enel in Competition for Coal-Fired Plant

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 9 — Only Public Power, made up of Enel and Greek company Sencap, are still in the competition to build a 1,000-megawatt coal-fired power plant in Kosovo. In fact the Czech energy company Cez, along with its American partner AES, has withdrawn from the competition, explaining that delays to the competition and changes to the parameters of the project were the reason for the withdrawal. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Montenegro: European Council Denounces Police Mistreatment

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, MARCH 9 — Whoever is arrested by the police in Montenegro runs the serious risk of being subjected to mistreatment that, sometimes, is so serious that it can be considered torture. This is shown by the Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) by the European Council in a report made public today, regarding the visit conducted in Montenegro at the end of 2008. The report makes clear that the CPT delegation found non-lawful objects such as baseball bats in the interrogation rooms. In addition, the report underlines how some persons interviewed attributed their not being mistreated to the fact that they confessed the crime of which they were committed, immediately. Despite the high number of cases of mistreatment, the CPT shows that the Montenegro authorities are not carrying out any effective inquiries into the reported cases. The Committee furthermore denounced the state of degrade of the cells in the police offices, and has invited the authorities to put an immediate end to this state of things. In their report, the CPT ended by denouncing the state of absolute degradation of the Komanski Most Institute, for persons with so-called “special needs”. In this structure, which houses persons from 3 to 76 years of age (some of whom have been here since 1976, the year the Institute opened), the delegation found dormitories that were foul-smelling andinfested by rats, unusable bathrooms, and patients that were dirty and covered with flies. The CPT, underlining that keeping patients in such a state is equivalent to subjecting them to mistreatment, invited the Montenegro authorities to resolve the situation immediately. The government of Montenegro has already sent the CPT numerous letters in which it claims to have taken the necessary measures to correct the situations denounced by the Committee in its report.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbians Interested in Greece and Spain

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 9 — Serbian tourists interested in spending summer in Greece and Spain, reports VIP Daily News Report. Greece would have the largest demand for summer vacation this year also, and Spain would be on the second place, after the visa abolishment that increased interest in this country. According to the survey of National Association of Tourist Agencies (YUTA), one half of citizens would spend their summer in Greece, while 18% decided to go to Spain, and the third place went to Turkey.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Snow and Strong Wind Cut Croatia

Snow in Lika and Gorski kotar mountainous regions and in the eastern, central and north-western parts of Croatia and strong wind have almost cut southern and northern Croatia off from each other.

Since early this morning (Weds), drivers have been warned not to start journeys without winter equipment or, if possible, to postpone them.

There is very strong wind along the coast.

In central Croatia in the Lika and Gorski kotar areas, up to 40 centimetres of snow have fallen since last night.

Passenger traffic has been difficult on many roads, and some have been closed.

Ferry traffic from the mainland to Pag, Rab, Cresa and Brac Islands has been suspended, and many catamarans are not operating because of strong wind.

Buses on the Zagreb-Split route have been delayed.

In Zagreb alone, 73 traffic accidents occurred today.

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

Mediterranean Union


EU-Libya: Programme to Start by 2011, But Dialogue Fragile

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 9 — The first national program for cooperation between the EU and Libya, in the realm of the European Neighborhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI), is to last three years. The European commission has approved the allontment of 60 million euros in funds, in sight of a collaboration agreement between Brussels and Tripoli, which has not yet been reached. The document approved by the European Commission explains that the EU has “a strong political interest in furnishing assistance, particularly in the areas where common action is required, especially in immigration and energy security”. In fact, however, the political dialogue with Libya “is very new and remains fragile. It is necessary to strengthen our mutual knowledge and reciprocal trust before undertaking an ambitious programme of cooperation”. In the meantime the EU marks the following as “clear and urgent” priorities: improving the quality of education and health services, increasing the sustainability of economic and social development, and shared handling of immigration. Until today, on this last front Libya has still not accepted the EU’s proposal, requesting financial assistance superior to that approved by the national program. Once a political agreement is reached, according to the EU, it will be possible to launch a joint initiative on specific objectives: strengthening the fight against illegal immigration through Libya and the capacity of the forces in charge of controlling the borders; improving the situation of institutions and of the rules for the handling of immigrants and persons who need international protection, and improving the capacity of the Libyan authorities involved in the handling of immigration. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU-Morocco: After Summit Focus on Common Market

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 9 — Full steam ahead towards a common economic space: this is the hotline of the road map drawn up by the EU and Morocco at their first bilateral summit in Granada, after the Lisbon Treaty came into effect. Brussels and Rabat are planning to further strengthen their ties, on the economic and social front, in line with the path of the “advanced statute” of bilateral relations granted in October 2008 and of the European neighbourhood policy. The summit was useful for this, to repeat a common commitment on a formal level, as they await the unblocking of talks over key agreements on commerce. The intention is to increase efforts in the direction of an “in-depth” free trade agreement, which will contribute towards a gradual integration of the markets, intensifying for example negotiations on the liberalisation of services, such as the development of transport and energy networks. The EU and Morocco have also committed to moving forward their negotiations on agricultural produce and fishing “in view of a signature and enforcement as soon as possible”. However it is this latter agreement which continues to encounter obstacles, in particular because of strong opposition from Spanish farmers. King Mohammed VI himself, in a letter read by Prime Minister Abbas El Fassi, noted the delay in launching the liberalisation of trade in this area, after an agreement reached last December. Despite problems with local farmers, it is the Government in Madrid which sees Morocco as a strategic partner and which is confirmed as the main sponsor of a strengthening in relations between the EU member states and Rabat. Spanish Premier José Zapatero made a heartfelt appeal at the meeting between Moroccan and European entrepreneurs which preceded the summit. “It is the Governments’ responsibility to ensure that the political and diplomatic climate encourages the development of closer relations. But it is you, the business community from the two shores of the Mediterranean, who must place a guiding role, by intensifying these relations” said Zapatero. He highlighted the progress made by the Arab country “in parallel with the neighbourhood policy of the European Union, which has made 654 million euros available to the Moroccan Government between 2007 and 2011, in support of the economic reforms undertaken”. The final speech of the summit by Morocco’s Prime Minister, Abbas El Fassi, echoed this appeal, calling for an assumption of responsibility by companies as trailblazers “in finding new paths of cooperation at this crucial time”. Meanwhile, as a background to commercial prospects, there remains a thorny issue between Brussels and Rabat: the issue of human rights, especially in the western Sahara. “We discussed the issue” said the permanent President of the EU, Herman Van Rompuy “which the European Union is following closely. The EU supports the efforts of the United Nations to arrive at a just and sustainable solution which is acceptable to both sides”. Rompuy also confirmed that Brussels “will continue to be active with regard to the humanitarian aspects of the conflict, and in this context would like to see progress in the situation of human rights and its defenders”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Civil Protection, Italy ‘Model’ In EU Programme

(ANSAmed) — ROME — A strategic geographical position and a “model of excellence”: this is what Italy can boast of in the field of civilian protection. The country is committed on the front lines of the European sphere, in strengthening the cooperation and prevention of disasters in Mediterranean and Balkan countries. One may even say that the Euro-Mediterranean cooperation in this sector began with Italy, which launched in 1998, together with Egypt, in the ambit of the Barcelona Process (also known as the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership), the EU ‘Pilot’ program, to improve the institutional cooperation between EU countries and partner countries. Among the promoters of the project is Agostino Miozzo, general director of the Volunteer office for international and institutional relations of the Italian civil protection. “It has been the most responsive program of the Barcelona Process”, Miozzo stated, despite difficult political contention marked by the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, “but we have not given up; we have held out”. And so Italy has continued to play a primary role in the second EU program, ‘Bridge’, lead by France until 2008, and now finds itself at the head of the Euromed Program for prevention, preparation and response to natural and man-made disasters (Pprd South). The program, financed by the EU with five million euros, is run by Italy in tandem with the Civil Protection of Egypt, France and Algeria together with Unsdr, the United Nations agency for the reducing the risk of disasters. “Our priority this time is prevention”, said Miozzo, who today opened a four day workshop in Rome on ‘Geographical Information Systems (GIS) for Civil Protection’ with experts from 14 partner countries (Egypt, Algeria, Bosnia-Herzogovinia, Crotia, Montenegro, Turkey, Israel, Tunisia, Morocco, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and the Palestinian territories). The GIS is modelled after the online system set up and currently used by the Italian Civil Protection, which contains the data bases of all the bodies involved and which permits one to create a map of “at risk” zones. “We, the countries of the Mediterranean, are all confronted with the same problems”, Miozzo explained. “Every week there is some disaster: earthquakes, such as the one yesterday in Turkey, landslides, flooding, without mentioning summer forest fires, a field where cooperation is already working very well”. It is fundamental to prepare those populations that are most exposed, to react in case of a calamity. “It is necessary to create a link between information and territory”, Miozzo insisted, “to transform ultratechnological information into clear and simple messages to the population”. “There is nothing secret about civil protection; we must accept to share our information, because our primary objective,” Miozzo underlined, “is the security of the citizens of the partner countries, but also that of so many Italians who take vacations in the Mediterranean area”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Mothers, Wives of ‘Disappeared’ Not Giving Up

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 8 — The mothers, wives and sisters of the thousands in Algeria who disappeared after being taken away by Islamic-based armed groups or the security forces in the 1990s, in the dark decade of terrorism, refuse to give up. This is why they have gathered today in Algiers in front of the Justice Ministry, on the initiative of the association SOS Disparus, “once more, to lay claim to their right to justice and the truth” about what has happened to their family members. “Women are the first victims of forced disappearances. They are in a situation of severe economic and psychological vulnerability,” reads the statement released by the association gathering together the families of the 8,000 who disappeared, “taken away by security forces”. “To the pain of missing their loved ones is added that of not even being able to go through a period of mourning,” and these women “wait and live in the hope of seeing those they love again.” According to the association of the families of victims of terrorism and the CFDA (Collective of Families of Disappeared Algerians), there are between 10,000 and 15,000 people who have disappeared in Algeria, taken away by Islamic-based armed groups and security forces, while official figures instead put the number at about 8,000. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Top Muslim Cleric Dies of Heart Attack

Egyptian religious leader Sheikh Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi, the grand sheikh of al-Azhar, has died of a heart attack during a visit to Saudi Arabia, Egypt’s official MENA news agency reported on Wednesday.

Tantawi, 81, was in Riyadh to attend the King Faisal awards ceremony, it said. Tantawi’s moderate views has rankled hard-liners.

The news of his death was “an indescribable shock,” his son Amr Tantawi told Egyptian television.

“The family has decided that since God chose for him to die on Saudi land, he will be buried in al-Baqie” cemetery in Islam’s second holy city of Medina, his son added.

Tantawi was apponted as the Grand Imam of al-Azhar since 1996. Al-Azhar, one of the most prominent seats of Sunni Islamic learning in the Muslim world, has schools, universities and other educational institutions across Egypt.

Abdullah el-Naggar, advisor to the sheikh, told Egypt’s Nile News television the death was a surprise, saying that before leaving to Saudi Arabia the sheikh had seemed in “excellent shape and health.”

A member of Tantawi’s office, Ashraf Hassan, told Reuters that Mohammed Wasel, Tantawi’s deputy, was expected to temporarily take over leading the institution until the Egyptian president appointed a new head for the body.

Most recently, Tantawi infuriated conservatives late last year by barring women from wearing the full face veil known as the ‘niqab’ at al-Azhar University. That step was part of the intensifying struggle between the moderate Islam championed by the state and a populace that is turning to a stricter version of the faith.

Al-Azhar receives most of its funding from the state.

When he was appointed, Tantawi was viewed as having relatively liberal views on issues such as women’s rights but had been criticized by some for toeing the government’s line.

In office, he opposed female circumcision as not an Islamic practice.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



France: Algiers Officially Protests Over Le Pen Poster

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 9 — Algeria has “officially” protested against the electoral poster of the French far-right party, Jean Marie Le Pen’s National Front party, in which the Algerian flag is used. Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci has stated as much on the fringes of the ceremony for Women’s Day organised by the President of the Republic. “When the symbols of foreign countries are brought to their knees,” said Medelci, quoted by APS, “the French State must take the necessary steps.” The poster on which the slogan “No to Islam” appears, depicts a woman with a burka and several minarets that cover the French territory covered by the Algerian flag. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Morocco: Ten Dead Due to Heavy Rains

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, MARCH 10 — Heavy rains, strong winds and landslides have killed around ten people in several Moroccan regions. Many people have been injured, others have been made homeless due to floods. The news was announced by press agency MAP, quoting sources in the Interior Ministry. In the central region of the country, seven people drowned when trying to cross a river in full flood. In the village of Kisba, eight people were injured when two clay houses collapsed. A man died when the cave in which he fled, near the city of Taza, collapsed, two others were drowned by the river water. The heavy rains that have hit the country for weeks have caused the collapse of bridges and hundreds of houses. Many hectares of land have been flooded and hundreds of families have been taken to temporary shelters. Two weeks ago the rains caused a minaret in Meknes to cave in. Forty-one people who were in the mosque for the Friday prayer lost their lives in the event. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Morocco: Spanish Press, 27 Christians Arrested

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 10 — The Moroccan authorities arrested 27 Christians and expelled another 26 this weekend, with the EU-Moroccan summit taking place in Granada, El Pais reports today. Most of the people who were expelled are members of the Anglo-Saxon Evangelical Church. One of them is a Franciscan monk (the first Catholic who was expelled in 30 years). An African man arrested on Sunday in the protestant church of Marrakech is a Korean Evangelist. The Village of Hope orphanage in Ain Leuh had to be closed due to the decision taken by the country’s Interior Minister; 16 evangelists involved in the care for the 33 children living in the centre, which opened its doors around ten years ago, have been expelled as well. All expelled clerics are held responsible for trying to “destroy the faith of Muslims”, according to a statement issued by the Moroccan Interior Ministry, quoted by the press. The managers of the orphanage have been accused of “proselytism among minors on the pretext of charity”. “In Marrakech police forces have entered the temple to make arrests, this has never happened before” said pastor Jean-Lpuis Blanc, head of the protestant Church in Morocco. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain-Morocco: Moratinos, No Progress on Sahara Human Rights

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 10 — Spain will continue to hold a “firm” stance with Morocco for it to make progress in terms of human rights in the western Sahara, but also asked for a responsible attitude by the Polisario Front and Algeria, its ally. The statement was made by minister of Foreign Affairs Angel Moratinos, who appeared yesterday in the congress’s foreign commission for an update on the development of the conflict in western Sahara, which was a Spanish colony up to 1975. Moratinos guaranteed that good relations with Rabat will help to find a solution to the conflict. And, though acknowledging that “the position of the Saharawi is not equal to that of Morocco”, he claimed that “the strong and the weak must assume their responsibilities” to reach a solution. The head of Spain’s diplomatic services made a positive assessment of the fact that the UN mission in the area supervises human rights, even though he deemed that a “greater effort” is necessary, especially as regards Saharawi activists who are in jail. Finally, he also stated that he believed that new relations between the EU and Morocco can be the “best lever” for a definitive solution to the Saharawi conflict. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Biden: Israeli Settlements Undermining Peace Effort

(ANSAmed) — RAMALLAH, MARCH 10 — Israeli settlements are undermining Palestinian willingness to enter new peace talks, according to US vice-President Joe Biden. Speaking in Ramallah, Biden again condemned Israel’s decision to build 1,600 new settlements in East Jerusalem. The vice-President, who yesterday publicly criticised Israel’s announcement of new construction plans, was speaking after a meeting with Mahmoud Abbas at the Palestinian National Authority’s headquarters in Ramallah. In his statement, Biden reiterated Washington’s full support for the future creation of a Palestinian state as part of a peace agreement with Israel based around the “two-state solution”. “It is the duty of both parties to build an atmosphere to support negotiations, not complicate them”, warned Biden, reasserting America’s stance that “yesterdays’s decision by the Israeli government to push through the building plans for new homes in East Jerusalem undermines the very trust that is needed right now in order to begin and see through talks that are profitable for both parties”. As far as the future is concerned, Obama’s deputy was clear in reaffirming US efforts towards “a Palestinian state which is governable and which will have territorial continuity”. “It must be clear to all that today there is no alternative to the two-state solution, which must be an integral part of any global peace plan”, Biden added. Mahmoud Abbas warned that talks could go ahead only if Israel complied with “efforts towards a peace process” and ceased “the realisation of activities that might threaten its outcome”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Cast Lead: MPs Ask for Investigation Within 5 Months

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, MARCH 10 — Independent and impartial investigations into operation ‘Cast Lead’, which must meet international standards, to be started within five months was the request made by European Parliament to the Israelis and Palestinians in a resolution approved today in Strasbourg. The Euro-MPs confirmed how respecting international humanitarian law and human rights on both sides represents a precondition for the peace process. According to the Assembly in Strasbourg, the High Representative for Foreign Affairs of the EU and the member states should therefore work to achieve a common position and “publically ask for the application of recommendations contained in the Goldstone Report and for responsibilities to be assumed for all violations of international law, including alleged war crimes”, by calling for the Israelis and Palestinians to conduct independent investigations in compliance with international standards. The EU should also “actively monitor the application of the recommendations included in the Goldstone Report , consulting the EU missions and NGOs working in the field”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Going Backward? Understanding and Attempts to Resolve the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

by Barry Rubin

Last September, President Barack Obama said before a large audience at the UN that within two months there would be intensive, direct, final status talks between Israel and the Palestinians. Sort of a Camp David III. Now, six months later we are back in the pre-1992 era of indirect talks.

Yet reporters still ask, and write, that this might be the prelude to some grand breakthrough and a comprehensive peace deal. When will they ever learn? Never, apparently.

Note that it is important for the two sides to meet but the reason is to deal with far more immediate tasks: coordination on economic and security issues particularly. I guess I’m going to have to go on for decades saying that there won’t be a comprehensive peace agreement for decades.

Before we start, though, one more point that is very important. When I say that the continuation of the conflict is mainly the fault of the Palestinian side, I’m not doing that to score political points. Who cares? The world will go on in precisely the same way whatever people think after reading articles.

You need to understand whose fault it is because it’s impossible to understand what’s going on without comprehending that reality. Nothing makes sense. After all, if Palestinians yearn for their own country and are suffering so horribly, why do they keep rejecting a peace agreement on the basis that they might—at worst—have to give up, say, five percent of the territory they claim?

But to return to the timeline, a simple reminder about one small point regarding Israel-Palestinian issues tell more than 100 op-eds. The Palestinian Authority (PA) will now probably engage in indirect talks with Israel and this will be hailed as a great step forward by Western media and governments, a triumph for the Obama Administration.

In fact, however, this sets the conflict back to around 1992, before direct talks began in Washington for the first time. And the PA must be dragged, kicking and screaming, into doing even that much.

Aren’t they in a hurry to get a state? No.

Here are four misunderstandings that block Western understanding of the issue:

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Joe Biden’s Snub to Netanyahu as He Arrives 90 Minutes Late for Dinner in Middle of Row With Israel Over West Bank Houses

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden snubbed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last night by arriving 90 minutes late to a scheduled dinner.

Mr Biden’s late arrival was in response to Israel announcing 1,600 new homes will be built in disputed east Jerusalem during his visit to the region.

He sharply rebuked the Israeli step — which came just after the Palestinians agreed to a new round of indirect peace talks under U.S. mediation after a 14-month lapse.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


French Carrefour to Expand Domestic Chain in Turkey

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 10 — A joint venture of the French retail major Carrefour and its partner in Turkey Sabanci Holding, eyes to expand retailing industry in the country in 2010, as Anatolia news agency reports today. Carrefoursa is planning to open 100 more supermarkets and two new hypermarkets that would total a 110 million TL (nearly $71.4 million) investment and start 1,000 more jobs, said Haluk Dincer, head of Sabanci Holding’s retailing group. Dincer said Carrefoursa opened last year four hypermarkets and 54 supermarkets, the largest launch ever in its history, despite the fallout from a global recession, serving to some 90 million customers. Carrefoursa has 26 hypermarkets and 160 supermarkets in Turkey and it employs around 7,800 people. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran: Former President ‘Barred’ From Foreign Travel

Tehran, 9 March(AKI) — Former reformist Iranian president Mohammad Khatami has been barred from leaving the country, semi-official Iranian news agency Fars reported Tuesday. According to Fars website, the executive secretary of Tehran’s Vo’az Community Hojjatoleslam Abbas Amirifar announced that an Iranian intelligence official had told community members that Khatami had been barred from leaving the country.

He quoted the intelligence official as saying that Khatami had recently intended to leave the country. But there has been no official announcement.

Khatami, who was Iran’s president from 1997 to 2005, supported opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi in the country’s contested presidential election last year which provoked widespread protests and hundreds of arrests.

One report said a close Khatami ally had denied he was barred from foreign travel.

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



Iran: Isfahan: Protestant Clergyman Tortured for “Converting Muslims”

During a visit in prison, the pastor’s wife saw he had signs of torture. He could be executed. An anti-Protestant crackdown is underway in Isfahan. The regime’s fight against proselytising is coupled with fears that Christian gatherings might host its opponents.

Tehran (AsiaNews/Agencies) — A protestant clergyman, Wilson Issavi, has been jailed for “converting Muslims”. He has been tortured and threatened with execution. According to the Farsi Christian Network, Issavi’s wife, Medline Nazanin, recently visited her husband in prison. She said that he was in poor health and that he bore visible signs of torture.

Rev Issavi (pictured), 65, was arrested on 2 February in Isfahan shortly after he finished a house meeting. He heads the Evangelical Church of Kermanshah in Isfahan, a 50-year-old church body affiliated with The Assemblies of God that caters to the local Assyrian population.

Iranian intelligence officials told his wife that he might be executed for his alleged activities.

During the raid, State Security police detained everyone in the house, later releasing all but Issavi and the owner of the home.

According to Compass Direct News, a sweep against Protestant Christians is taking place across Isfahan. On 28 February, Isfahan residents Hamid Shafiee and his wife Reyhaneh Aghajary, both converts from Islam and house church leaders, were arrested at their home. Their fate and whereabouts are still unknown.

Rev Issawi has run into police before. On 2 January, police sealed his Kermanshah church and ordered him not to reopen it. In response, he continued his activities in house meetings.

Official controls and police bans appear to be motivated by suspicions that Christians are involved in proselytising but also by fear that their meeting might hide activities by opponents of the clerical regime.

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



Iraq: The Shiite Al-Maliki is Ahead, But the Secular Allawi is Also Going Strong

The outgoing premier dominates in Baghdad and the south; Allawi is 70-90% in the north and west. Turnout of 62%. Difficulties in forming a new government.

Baghdad (AsiaNews) — On the second day of counting ballots, the outgoing Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki seems to be the favorite and his supporters are already claiming victory. “We are confident of going to government,” said one of the leaders of the Alliance for the Rule of Law, Khaled al-Asadi. Commenting on the unofficial results that are circulating in different constituencies in the country the parliamentarian, who heads al-Maliki’s party, said he was confident of victory. He adds: “The Constitution provides that the most voted party has the task of forming a government and appointing the new prime minister and that is what we will do. >From the results we collected at a local level it is evident that the party Iyad Allawi (the former premier — see Photo — and leading of Iraqiya, a party thatgroups together Shiite and Sunni) is the second, but by a large margin”.

Pending the official results yesterday the turnout was announced: 62%, higher than the provincial elections in January 2009 (51%), but lower than the general election of December 2005, when the turnout hit 79.63 %.

Unofficial sources report al-Maliki’s camp to be leading in Baghdad and the Shiite majority southern: 9 of 18 provinces in all, while Allawi is said to have received more support in the (mainly Arab) provinces in the north and those of the west, where his party is said to have taken between 70 and 90% of the votes. Results from the three provinces that make up the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan are as of yet unknown, where the duopoly of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Massoud Barzani, president of the region, and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, could be undermined by Goran, the new opposition movement that ran alone.

Maliki’s coalition does not rule out being able to go to the government without having to sign alliances with many other parties. But due to the fragmentation of Iraqi politics it seems rather unlikely that any single party will gain the needed seats (163) to form the executive. Beyond the result, therefore, the most realistic scenario is that of a coalition government.

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



Jordan to be a Regional Nuclear Training Centre, Officials

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, MARCH 9 — Jordanian officials said today they are looking forward to making the kingdom a centre on nuclear training in the Middle East with the opening of a training centre in cooperation with France. Officials from Jordan Nuclear Commission said the centre would attract interest from many countries as it will group various technical and educational programmes related to nuclear engineering and safety. The centre will be built in collaboration with French and other international institutions, according to Chairman Khaled Toukan Jordan Nuclear Commission. The centre will develop curricula and encourage multinational projects to attract students and professionals from across the region, said Jordanian officials. Moreover, Jordan and France are also planning to set up a university in Jordan which would be modelled after the French Ecole Polytechnique or National Polytechnic Institute. The Jordan French Uranium Mining Company, a joint venture between French firm AREVA and Jordan Energy Resources Inc., intends to establish an open-pit uranium mine in the central region. Officials said that French technology has also been short-listed for the Kingdoms first nuclear reactor, expected to be a 1,000-megawatt Generation III reactor. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia: Man in Police Uniform Arrested for ‘Homosexuality’

JEDDAH: Police here confirmed on Tuesday a man was arrested in January for dressing up in a police uniform, engaging in “inappropriate acts” and posting the video online.

Police First Lt. Nawaf Al-Bouq told Arab News that the 27-year-old man had been previously charged “with a homosexual case but was bailed out.”

“This time he is facing three charges: One is for homosexuality; the other for general security; and the third is for impersonating a police officer,” said Al-Bouq.

The video depicts a young Saudi man dressed in a police uniform inside a vehicle flirting with the man holding the camera. He asks the cameraman for his driver’s license and offers “comfort.”

At one point, he waves around what appears to be a real handgun. Later in the approximately two-and-a-half-minute video on YouTube, he lifts up his shirt and rubs his chest. The video quickly spread online and through SMS until police detained both men involved in the act. Attempts have been made to block the video from being viewed in Saudi Arabia.

The case was made public because police wanted to clarify rumors that were spreading about the video.

“We were directed by higher authorities to give a statement to the press in order to clear things up to the public,” said Al-Bouq. “We always make sure that cases like this are not open to the public. I don’t think it’s appropriate or important for the citizens or the country. But after rumors were spread on the Internet we had to set things straight.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Saudi Awards Turkey’s PM for ‘Service to Islam’

Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz presented Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan with one of the country’s most prestigious prizes on Tuesday for his ‘service to Islam’.

Erdogan earned the King Faisal International Prize for having “rendered outstanding service to Islam by defending the causes of the Islamic nation, particularly the Palestinian cause and the just rights of the Palestinian people,” said Abdullah al-Uthaimin of the prize-awarding group.

“At the international level, he was a leading Muslim founder of the call for rapport between civilization and a passionate advocate of constructive dialogue, openness, and principles of international understanding and cooperation.”

Seven academic researchers were also awarded King Faisal Prizes.

Algerian Abdurrahman Elhaj-Saleh and Lebanese Ramzi Baalbaki jointly earned the King Faisal Language and Literature prize for Arabic linguistic and grammatical research.

German Reinhold Ganz and Canadians Jean-Pierre Pelletier and Johanne Martel Pelletier shared the King Faisal Prize for Medicine for work on osteoarthritis.

U.S.-based mathematicians Enrico Bombieri and Terence Chi-Shen Tao split the King Faisal Science prize for their work in theoretical mathematics.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Syria: EU Supports WFP Food Distribution to 200,000 People

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MAR 9 — The United Nations World food programme (Wfp) has started distributing emergency food assistance to almost 200,000 people in the rural northeast of Syria, where the drought of 2009 has severely affected small-scale farmers and herding families. According to the Enpi site (www.enpi-info.eu), thanks to donations from the European commission humanitarian aid department (Echo) as well as other organizations and countries, the Wfp will provide families with a two-month food ration that includes rice, bulgur, oil, wheat flour, chickpeas and salt. In addition, the Wfp will start distributing supplementary feeding rations to children under five, and to pregnant and nursing mothers in Al-Shadadi district of Al-Hasakeh, one of the worst-affected areas with the highest rate of migration and school closures. The Un food agency has so far received 8.2 million dollars out of the required 22 million dollars needed to provide food assistance to up to 300,000 people. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Illiterate Woman, 7-Yr Sentence for Pro-PKK Placard

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 10 — A 49-year-old Turkish woman, mother of six, has been sentenced to seven years in jail by a court in Diyarbakir (in the south-eastern, mostly Kurdish part of the country) for having raised a placard in support of the separatist Kurdish Workers Party (PKK), which is outlawed in Turkey. Reports were in the pro-governmental daily Sabah, which underscored that, as fate would have it, the woman — whose name is Vesile Tadik — did not even know what was written on the placard since she is illiterate. The incident for which the woman was sentenced occurred three months ago, when the woman took part in a non-authorised protest in Siirt against the closing down of the Democratic Society Party (DTP); the main pro-Kurdish party in the country which was dissolved on December 11 on a decision by the Constitutional Court on charges of connivance with the PKK. The woman charged defended herself by saying that “during the protest I walked along with other women. I was given the placard and held it up as the other women with me were doing. But I know neither how to read nor how to write, and I don’t even know what was written on it.” However, her admitting to being illiterate had no effect on the judge’s decision to sentence her to seven years in prison for “propaganda for a terrorist organisation”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


‘Bali Bomber’ Dulmatin Confirmed Dead in Indonesia Raid

DNA tests on the body of a man killed in Jakarta prove beyond doubt he is Dulmatin, the last main suspect of the Bali bombings, Indonesian police say.

Police chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri said bomb-making equipment had been found during the raid in the capital.

Dulmatin was suspected of planning the 2002 attacks which killed 202 people.

News of Dulmatin’s death had been announced earlier by Indonesia’s President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, during talks in Australia.

About half of those killed in Bali were Australian, and officials there have praised Indonesia’s anti-terror operations.

Police had initially not determined whether the man they killed at an internet cafe in the capital on Tuesday was Dulmatin — there have been previous cases where bodies were incorrectly believed to be those of terror suspects.

But Mr Danuri said there was now no doubt.

“From photographic evidence and DNA, we can confirm that the body of the man we shot at the internet cafe matches 100% with Dulmatin’s,” he said.

“He had the capability to detonate bombs from a distance, and we thank God we have succeeded in catching and killing him because he was very dangerous here and to other countries.”

He said bomb-detonators had also been found in the raid and warned Indonesians to remain alert to signs of militant activity.

Most wanted

Dulmatin was alleged to be a leading member of Jemaah Islamiah (JI) — a militant group with links to al-Qaeda — which has a long history of launching attacks in Indonesia and is blamed for the Bali attack.

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



Myanmar — Bangladesh: Thousands of Rohingya Refugees Facing Starvation in Bangladesh

US charity sounds the alarm, claiming Bangladesh is blocking aid and medical treatment for refugees, who are locked up in open-air prisons. Rohingya are a Muslim minority from Myanmar and are persecuted by that country’s military dictatorship. Bangladeshi authorities dismiss accusations, saying, “We are the victims.”

Dhaka (AsiaNews/Agencies) — A US medical charity has warned that thousands of Burmese refugees in Bangladesh are facing starvation. Physicians for Human Rights said that government authorities in Bangladesh are preventing the Rohingya from receiving adequate care. The Rohingya are a Muslim minority who fled Myanmar to escape persecution. The government has dismissed these allegations as it did for similar reports by Doctors without Borders (MSF) last month.

The Rohingya are one of the many ethnic minorities that make up the Union of Myanmar. They live in Rakhine State, in the country’s north-west, and are among the poorest and most persecuted ethnic groups in the world. Myanmar’s military regime has denied them citizenship and refused to let them own land. It does not even allow them to travel or marry without first getting permission from the authorities.

Tens of thousands have fled, especially to predominantly Muslim Bangladesh and Malaysia. Bangladeshi authorities have granted refugee status to 28,000 Rohingya, who live in United Nations refugee camps in Kutupalong. However, government sources put the actual number at 200,000 or even 300,000.

The government in Dhaka is now cracking down to stop further mass exodus as neighbouring Myanmar prepares for elections later this year.

The report by the Physicians for Human Rights says that children will starve if aid is not delivered. It blamed local authorities for “arbitrary arrests, illegal expulsion and forced internment” of refugees.

“The government of Bangladesh is absolutely ignoring it [the refugee problem]. They are sweeping it under the rug,” said Richard Sollom, director of research and investigation for the group.

Dhaka has rejected the charges. Abdul Momen, Bangladesh’s representative in the United Nations said they were “totally false”. Instead, he said, “Government officials just have to make sure that any aid isn’t coming from terrorist groups”.

“We are the victims,” he explained “an impoverished country, and in spite of that, we tried to help them as best we can.”

Last year, press reports focused on the persecution of the Rohingya by Thailand’s military. Despite Bangkok’s denials, many refugees who entered Thai territorial waters were stopped by the Thai Navy and sent back into the open sea without food and water.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Former Sex Slave Tells Story of ‘Trip of No Return’

Rome, 9 March (AKI) — When Isoke Aikpitanyi left Nigeria in search of a new life in 2000, she thought she was going to work as a fruit vendor in a market in London. A well-known lawyer from Lagos had asked her to pay 30 million lire (15 thousand euros) for the trip and a job selling fruit when she arrived.

When she arrived in the British capital, she was immediately locked in an apartment with other young women for a month before being sold to criminals in the northern Italian city of Turin where she was forced to spend the next two years working as a prostitute.

“We were merchandise,” she told a human trafficking conference organised by the Canadian Embassy in Rome on Tuesday.

“I tried to resist for a month. Then a girl with whom I was sharing a room was killed. Her body was found on the outskirts of Turin.”

When Aikpitanyi said goodbye to her family and boarded a plane in Nigeria, she had no idea she would join what the United Nations estimates to be 1.4 million sex slaves.

A recent report released by the UN’s Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking found there were 21,400 victims of human trafficking for the purpose of forced labour, including prostitution, in 2006 alone.

Aikpitanyi may have been luckier than many of other sex slaves who resist prostitution but cannot escape it.

After she refused to continue working as a prostitute, she was severely beaten and stabbed.

After three months in a Turin hospital, Aikpitanyi emerged from a coma and fled with the help of an Italian who would eventually become her boyfriend, she told Adnkronos International (AKI) in an interview.

“They threatened me. Before escaping I was beaten. When I awoke I escaped. I didn’t know who to trust.”

She also complained about the women who worked as “madams” who collaborated to keep women enslaved for prostitution.

“Finding women are collaborators in the violence really hurt. It’s like a nightmare,” she told AKI.

Aikpitanyi said she was driven by an anger against those who “exploit the dreams of those seeking a better life and destroy their dignity. “Today I won’t permit another person to exploit me,” she said.

After her ordeal, Aikpitanyi founded the first and only association for victims and former victims of human trafficking in Italy, the Association of the Girls from Benin City.

Working with Italian journalist Laura Maragnani she published her memoir, “The Girls from Benin City” in 2007.

It is difficult to quantify the success of her advocacy. But she stopped her sister from making the same mistake of boarding a plane for Europe.

““When I was writing my book my sister called to tell me ‘I found my opportunity in Europe’. She cried with me after I told her my story and didn’t come,” Aikpitanyi said.

Aikpitanyi has not returned to Nigeria, partly because she fears it may endanger her family.

Her father initially sought to pursue justice for his child’s slavery, but stopped when he discovered that there were powerful people involved in the lucrative human trafficking business.

“The oppression isn’t only on a woman but on her entire family,” she said. “You don’t know how far the chain of power extends.”

The human trafficking conference was organised by the Canadian Embassy and the Delegate of Quebec in Rome to promote understanding about human trafficking, ways to prevent it and prosecute those responsible.

The event was held to mark International Women’s Day on Monday.

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



Nigeria: Clinton Calls for Justice Over Christian Massacre

Jos, 9 March (AKI) — US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has urged Nigeria to arrest those responsible for the sectarian violence that resulted in the massacre of hundreds of Christians near the city of Jos at the weekend. Clinton’s call came as the Vatican expressed “concern and horror” at the violence that led to the deaths of up to 500 people from Christian villages.

Clinton called for restraint and urged the Nigerian government to “make sure the perpetrators are brought to justice.”

Police spokesman Mohammed Lerama said 93 people had been arrested over the killings.

US-based Human Rights Watch on Monday urged Nigeria’s acting Goodluck Jonathan to ensure the massacre was “thoroughly and promptly investigated and that those responsible are prosecuted.”

The group called for an end the cycle of impunity which it said had led to the killing of thousands of people in surrounding Plateau state over the past decade.

The massacre was widely considered to be revenge for a previous round of killings in January.

In a statement released on Tuesday, the head of the Vatican press office, Father Federico Lombardi described the deaths “not as a religious, but a social confrontation”.

Five hundred people from the Berom ethnic group in largely Christian villages in the central north of the country died, allegedly at the hands of Muslims from the Fulani ethnic group.

Archbishop John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan of Abuja, Nigeria, told Vatican Radio, said sectarian violence was not responsible for the deaths.

“The international media are quickly led to report that it is Christians and Muslims who are killing one another; but this is not true, because the killings are not caused by religion but by social, economic, tribal and cultural issues,” he said.

“The victims are poor people who know nothing about, and have nothing to do with, any of this and are completely innocent.

“For our part in the church, we continue to work to promote good relations between Christians and Muslims, seeking to reach agreement in an attempt to overcome violence and to work together to face the real political and ethnic problems”.

Nigerian troops were reported to be patrolling the villages which were targeted on Sunday in a bid to prevent further violence.

Acting president Goodluck Jonathan dismissed the country’s national security adviser, Sarki Mukhtar in an apparent response to the killings.

Some have questioned how the attack could have taken place when a military curfew has been in place since January, when at least 300 people died in clashes between rival Christian and Muslim groups in Jos. Rights activists said more than 550 had been killed.

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

Immigration


“Coexistence is More Difficult if We Do Not Respect Their Religion”

Olivier Roy talks to Sara Hejazi

The main problems faced nowadays in Europe by young immigrants are traditional racism, based the colour of a person’s skin, and widespread anti-religious sentiments. This is the opinion expressed by Olivier Roy, professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Scieneces Sociales (EHESS) in Paris. His most recent book, “La Sainte Ignorance” (2009), speaks of religious revivalism as the consequence of globalisation and a crisis of cultures…

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Activists Tell Obama to Protect Illegals

Urge legislation, end to deportations

Immigrant rights groups on Monday demanded that President Obama impose a full moratorium on deportations of illegal immigrants, arguing that his policies have been worse for their cause than those of his Republican predecessor.

Saying they’ve been “betrayed” by and lost patience with Mr. Obama, the advocates suggested that the president could regain their support by leading a fight on Capitol Hill for a bill to legalize illegal immigrants. Mr. Obama took the first step toward legalization during a meeting Monday at the White House with two lawmakers working on a bill.

But a bill could take months to pass. In the meantime, the immigrant rights groups say, Mr. Obama must end deportations altogether.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Euro Court Warns Sweden Over Iran Deportation

The European Court of Human Rights has told Sweden that it will breach its humanitarian obligations if it deports an Iranian asylum seeker, saying his claims of past torture appeared to be true.

The man, identified as R.C., filed a request for asylum two years after arriving in Sweden in 2003.

But Swedish authorities doubted his claims of torture and his escape from a packed revolutionary court in Iran, saying such tribunals were not open to the public. They also decided to turn down his asylum request.

A case was then filed at the European rights court in 2007 and declared admissible a year later. The tribunal also ordered Sweden to stay his deportation until further notice.

The judges on Tuesday ruled that the man’s “basic story had been consistent

throughout the proceedings,” and that despite some “uncertain aspects … its

overall credibility had not been undermined.”

The man, who said he took part in an anti-government protest in 2001 after which he was arrested, tortured and detained for almost two years before he managed to escape, risked renewed torture if he was deported, the court ruled.

“The Court also accepted the general conclusions of the medical report that the marks of injuries found on R.C.’s body could have originated from torture,” a statement said.

The judges also noted that “several organisations reporting on the situation in Iran noted an increase in human rights violations in Iran after the 2009 elections, including excessive police force, arbitrary arrests, killings, ill-treatment of detainees and the use of torture to obtain confessions.”

They said the man would likely be “detained and ill-treated” if he was sent back.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Greece: Parliamentary Debate on Citizenship

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 10 — Debate has got underway in the Greek Parliament on the draft law drawn up by the Ministry for the Protection of Citizens concerning the granting of citizenship to second-generation immigrants living legally in Greece. Supporting the draft law is Premier Papandreou’s Socialist Party as well as the left-wing Syriza, while Nea Dimocratia, the main opposition party, and the right-wing Laos are against it. The Greek Communist Party (KKE) has not yet taken a position. The government has reiterated that the draft law concerns only legal immigrants and that citizenship will be granted only if all legal requirements are met. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



USA: Minority Births May Soon Top White Births

Minorities Make Up Nearly Half Children Born In US

WASHINGTON — Minorities make up nearly half the children born in the U.S., part of a historic trend in which minorities are expected to become the U.S. majority over the next 40 years.

In fact, demographers say this year could be the “tipping point” when the number of babies born to minorities outnumbers that of babies born to whites.

The numbers are growing because immigration to the U.S. has boosted the number of Hispanic women in their prime childbearing years. Minorities made up 48 percent of U.S. children born in 2008, the latest census estimates available, compared to 37 percent in 1990.

“Census projections suggest America may become a minority-majority country by the middle of the century. For America’s children, the future is now,” said Kenneth Johnson, a sociology professor at the University of New Hampshire who researched many of the racial trends in a paper being released Wednesday.

Johnson explained there are now more Hispanic women of prime childbearing age who tend to have more children than women of other races. More white women are waiting until they are older to have children, but it is not yet known whether that will have a noticeable effect on the current trend of increasing minority newborns.

Broken down by race, about 52 percent of babies born in 2008 were white. That’s compared to about 25 percent who were Hispanic, 15 percent black and 4 percent Asian. Another 4 percent were identified by their parents as multiracial.

The numbers highlight the nation’s growing racial and age divide, seen in pockets of communities across the U.S., which could heighten tensions in current policy debates from immigration reform and education to health care and Social Security.

There are also strong implications for the 2010 population count, which begins in earnest next week, when more than 120 million U.S. households receive their census forms in the mail. The Census Bureau is running public service announcements this week to improve its tally of young children, particularly minorities, who are most often missed in the once-a-decade head count. The campaign features Nickelodeon’s Dora the Explorer, the English- and Spanish-speaking cartoon character who helps “mommy fill out our census form.”

The population figures are used to distribute federal aid and redraw legislative boundaries with racial and ethnic balance, as required by federal law.

“The adults among themselves sometimes forget the census is about everyone, and kids should be counted,” said Census Bureau director Robert Groves. “If we fail to count a newborn that is born this month, that newborn misses all the benefits of the census for 10 years.”

Whites currently make up two-thirds of the total U.S. population, and recent census estimates suggest the number of minorities may not overtake the number of whites until 2050.

Right now, roughly 1 in 10 of the nation’s 3,142 counties already have minority populations greater than 50 percent. But 1 in 4 communities have more minority children than white children or are nearing that point, according to the study, which Johnson co-published.

That is because Hispanic women on average have three children, while other women on average have two. The numbers are 2.99 children for Hispanics, 1.87 for whites, 2.13 for blacks and 2.04 for Asians in the U.S. And the number of white women of prime childbearing age is on the decline, dropping 19 percent from 1990.

For example:

— In Gwinnett County, Ga., an Atlanta suburb, the population has shifted from 16 percent minority in 1990 to 58 percent minority in 2008. The number of blacks and Hispanics nearly doubled, while the number of white young people stayed roughly the same.

— The population of Dakota County, Neb., increased from 15 percent minority in 1990 to 54 percent in 2008, due largely to an influx of Hispanics who came looking for work in meatpacking and other labor.

— In Lake County, Ind., a suburb of Chicago, the minority population grew from 43 percent in 1990 to 53 percent in 2008 as the number of white children declined, the number of blacks stayed stable and the number of Hispanics increased.

The 2008 census estimates used local records of births and deaths, tax records of people moving within the U.S., and census statistics on immigrants. The figures for “white” refer to those whites who are not of Hispanic ethnicity.

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

News Feed 20100309

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» Germany: Reformers Want Pope to Talk About Alleged Abuse Cases
» Greece: Women’s Clothing Imports Increase by 60%
» Iranian Poet Simin Behbahani Handed ‘Travel Ban’
» Ireland: Thousands of Marriages at Embassies Declared Illegal
» Ireland: Seven Arrests Over Alleged Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist
» Irish Arrests Over ‘Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist’
» Irish Police Foil Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist
» Irish ‘Sharia Law’ Website Gets 270,000 Hits a Month
» Italy: Padua Starts 250,000 M2 Photovoltaic Plant
» Italy: Ports of Venice and La Spezia Greener With Enel
» Italy: Non-EU Exports -0.3% January, +4.7% Annual
» Italy Lashed by Late Winter Storm
» Muslims Outraged at UK Screening of ‘Fitna’ Film
» Netherlands: Catholic Church Abuse Claims Rise to 200
» Netherlands: Church Has 1mln Euro Fund Ready for Sex Abuse Victims
» Netherlands: Labour, CDA, Neck and Neck in New Poll
» Nuclear: GDF Suez Does Not Rule Out Interest in Italy
» Nuclear: Construction First Italian Plant by 2013
» Out of Dutch
» PVV Firm Over Headscarf Ban in Almere
» Spain: CGPJ Guards Against Delegitimisation of Judges
» Spain: Compensation for Women Victims of Franco
» UK: ‘Gangsta’ Rap Star Snoop Dogg Wins His 3-Year Battle to Visit Britain… And We Pick Up £100,000 Bill
» UK: Facebook Attacked for Ignoring 100 Reports of ‘Grooming’ And Refusal to Have Panic Button for Users
» UK: How Violent Crime Has Risen 44% After 13 Years of Labour: But Ministers Insist It’s Down
» UK: Parents ‘Unable to Understand Their Teenage Children’s Homework’
» UK: Pakistani Men Arrested ‘Within Days of Massive Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Britain’
» UK: Police Inspector ‘Left Student to Die in Road After Knocking Him Down and Driving Away’
» UK: Tories Ask: Why BBC3, BBC4?
» UK: We’ll ‘Unleash Hell’ On Tories, Threaten Unions as Public Sector is Gripped by New Militancy
» UK: Young Woman Jumped 100ft to Her Death Just Hours After Father Begged Psychiatric Hospital Not to Release Her
» US Apologises Over Gaddafi Comments
» Wilders to Take Council Seat in the Hague
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: KFOR: 570 US Soldiers Home by May
» Serbia: Switzerland, Eur40 Million to Support EU Integration
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU: EuroHeritage Project on Water Management Techniques
 
North Africa
» Algeria-Egypt: Inland Revenue Rejects Orascom’s Appeal
» Over 1 Mln Italian Arrivals to Egypt in 2009
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Card.Sandri’s Appeal for Christians in Holy Land
» Israel: Jews in Holy Land? What Jews?
» Italy-Israel: Research: 2010 Tender for Joint Projects
 
Middle East
» Artist Defiant Despite Fine for Turkish PM ‘Mockery’
» Barry Rubin: The Saudi Foreign Minister Explains the New Middle East
» Talks Between Greece and Qatar
» Turkey: Two Bear Cubs Rescued From Hunger
» Turkey Not to Send Back Its Ambassador to US, Erdogan
» Water: World Bank Raises Alarm for Yemen
 
Russia
» Russia ‘May Get Italian Armoured Cars’
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Q: What to Do When a Taliban Hand Grenade Falls at Your Feet? A: Throw it Back at Them (And Save the Lives of Two Comrades)
» Afghanistan: Michael Yon: Of Concern
» India Sets Quota for Female MPs: 1/3 of Parliament Must be Women
» Three Indonesia Militants ‘Die in Raids Near Jakarta’
 
Far East
» China’s Ominous War Warning
» China: 200mph ‘New Orient Express’ Could Get Passengers From London to Beijing in Just Two Days
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Britain Sends South Africa 42m Condoms in HIV Fight Before World Cup
» Mauritania: Moderate Islam Party for Fight Against Al Qaeda
» Vatican Concerned Over Events in Nigeria
 
Immigration
» Estonia Urges Cooperation With Russia in Fighting Illegal Immigration
» UK: Asylum Seeker Who Stabbed His Friend to Death on the Loose After Escape From Secure Hospital
 
Culture Wars
» Abortion: Spain; Bishops Start New Campaign, It’s My Life
» Holland Proposes Giving Over-70s the Right to Die if They ‘Consider Their Lives Complete’
» The Race to the Bottom
 
General
» Bill Gates: Use Vaccines to Lower Population
» Klaus Warns of Environmentalism While on Visit to USA
» Stakelbeck: Ex-Terrorist Takes CBN Inside Al Qaeda

Financial Crisis


Italy: Dubai World to Request Pay-Back Postponement From Creditors

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 8 — Dubai World, the state-owned holding which is rescheduling its 26-billion-dollar debt, intends to ask credit banks to postpone its pay-back programme. Bloomberg quoted three bankers as saying that the request would be made this month during the meeting held for the presentation of the plan. According to the sources, the banks could avoid getting less money than what they are owed if they grant more time to Dubai World to pay back loans, while at the same time getting guarantees from the Dubai government. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama Debt: $20,000,000,000,000 by 2020!

Is living in a fascist nanny state run by incompetent Marxists really worth $20 trillion dollars?

As reported, in part, by spectator.org, Barack Obama’s reckless budget plans will cause the US debt to swell to $20,000,000,000,000 by year 2020.

Twenty trillion dollars!

Excerpts from the report:

“The Congressional Budget Office has released its assessment of President Obama’s budget, and the results aren’t pretty. According the analysis, deficits in the next decade will be worse than what the White House has projected, much higher than they would be if we were to follow current law, and even higher than what CBO had forecast last year.

“Between 2011 and 2020, the nation will accumulate $9.8 trillion in deficits as a under the Obama budget, according to the CBO, ending the decade with $20.3 trillion in public debt, which translates into a staggering 90 percent of gross domestic product (compared with the 53 percent Obama “inherited” in 2009).

“By contrast, in its own budget release, the White House Office of Management and Budget had projected debt at 18.6 trillion in 2020 (or about $1.7 trillion less than the CBO).

“Obama’s budget would also add more to the debt when it is viewed relative to the CBO baseline scenario that assumes current law is followed, as demonstrated by the area chart below. The blue area represents the additional debt created by Obama’s budget—while it may not look huge, the difference reaches about $5 trillion relative to the CBO baseline scenario (or added debt of 23 percent of GDP) by 2020.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tulsa’s Sales Tax Collections Have Declined 12 Consecutive Months

TULSA, OK — The report from the Oklahoma Tax Commission regarding sales tax collections for the City of Tulsa shows the collections have now declined 12 consecutive months.

According to the preliminary report, sales tax collections from mid-January to mid-February totaled $14,916,708, an 11.6 percent decline from the same month last year. That decline was consistent with revised general fund budget predictions.

Use taxes, which businesses and others pay on purchases of equipment from out-of-state vendors, were below budget estimates. The total was $997,427, down 31.4 percent from the same period last year and 25 percent below budget estimates.

“This continued decline further confirms our decision to reduce the general fund budget in order to have a balanced budget by the end of the fiscal year,” said Mayor Dewey Bartlett. “We are not yet seeing significant improvement in the local economy. So far, we are unable to determine if we have reached the bottom of this economic cycle. Our sales tax decline began in April, 2009, which was a decline of more than 5 percent from the previous year.

“Finding solutions to our financial situation by reviewing our core businesses is one approach that will steel the City against future economic declines. We continue to look for new ways of doing business. KPMG has arrived in Tulsa (Monday) to begin the planning stages of a strategic business review of City of Tulsa departments. It is still our goal to have the review completed by early summer.”

Since the decline in sales tax revenues began early last year, the current and past City administrations have reduced operating expenses in the general fund by about $27 million.

In the first nine months of the fiscal year, the City has collected $18.34 million less in sales taxes and $2.02 million less in use taxes compared to the previous year.

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



Turkey: More People Fail to Repay Credit Card, Loan Debt

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 9 — A total of 51,716 credit card users in Turkey failed to make their payments in January while 68,227 people failed to repay individual loans to banks, as Today’s Zaman reporta quoting data from the Central Bank of Turkey. According to figures released by the bank, the total number of people with unpaid credit card and individual loan debt climbed to 119,943 in January. Counting every person once, the total number of people in Turkey who have defaulted on personal debt since 2005 grew to 1.93 million in January. The majority of these, some 1.27 million, failed to repay credit card debt while the remaining 667,823 did not pay their individual loan debt. The number of people who failed to repay their credit card and individual loan debt surged in 2008 in particular, jumping from 2007’s 192,266 to 602,648, a 213 percent increase. Similar increases continued during the 2009 global financial crisis as well. With credit card usage skyrocketing in Turkey over the past few years, the amount of unpaid debt has reached worrisome levels, alongside a problematic increase in non-performing loans. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Anti-Israel Activist Attacks Jewish Girl on Campus

(IsraelNN.com) University of California at Berkeley was again the site of a clash involving pro-Israel and anti-Israel activists last Friday when Husam Zakharia, leader of the Students for Justice in Palestine, assaulted Jessica Felber of the pro-Israel Tikvah group with a shopping cart.

The incident occurred during competing events from the SJP-run “Israel Apartheid Week” and “Israel Peace and Diversity Week” organized by Tikvah. Felber was holding a sign that read “Israel Wants Peace” when Zakharia intentionally slammed her from behind with a shopping cart filled with toys donated for the welfare of Arab children in the Hamas-controlled Gaza region.

Felber told Israel National News that she responded to the incident by immediately placing her attacker under citizens’ arrest. Police arrested him later that day and Felber expressed hope that the District Attorney will see the case through and file charges against Zakharia.

Felber said that Friday’s incident was not the first time Zakharia used violence against pro-Israel advocates. According to her, physical intimidation has frequently been employed as a tool by SJP to silence students opposing their anti-Zionist activities on campus. “SJP students have been terrorizing us for three years with intimidation, accusations and threats. This incident is simply the culmination of it all and we are not going to tolerate it anymore.”

SJP’s tactics backfired on at least one occasion when, in November 2008, the group attempted to disrupt a concert organized by the Zionist Freedom Alliance during “Israel Liberation Week” on the UC Berkeley campus. After striking a ZFA activist in the head, Zakharia found himself beaten to the ground. Following the incident, Zakharia and two fellow SJP members, along with two Zionist activists, were cited for battery but no charges were officially filed.

The UC Berkeley Hillel and leaders of the California Bay Area Jewish community condemned the violence at the time but made no moral distinction between SJP and ZFA. This time around, however, Felber said Hillel and many other Jewish organizations have been very supportive and she expressed hope that SJP will no longer be able to intimidate her or other students on campus.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



CNN Lavishes Coffee Party With Favorable Coverage After a Year of Tea Party Demonization

The corporate media is once again lavishing the “Coffee Party” with favorable coverage after having demonized the Tea Party as racist extremists for nearly a year, proof positive that the much vaunted new movement, which is run by an Obama campaign operative, is nothing more than a front for the establishment.

In a new report entitled, Coffee Party, Tea alternative?, CNN’s Lisa Sylvester allows Coffee Party members to talk at length about how they are more “reasonable” than Tea Party members and how the Coffee Party represents a genuine alternative that will “stop shouting and get things done in Washington” without spewing “hateful rhetoric”.

Watch the clip.

The report implies that the movement is a rampaging success across the country despite the fact that the gatherings shown in the clip consist of no more than a dozen people, whereas Tea Party events have been attended by hundreds of thousands of people for nearly a year.

CNN glosses over the fact that Coffee Party founder Annabel Park is an Obama campaign operative, with the tone of the host dismissing it as no big deal, before promoting the Coffee Party’s next national event on March 13th.

Compare the establishment’s favorable coverage of the Coffee Party to their treatment of the Tea Party, which has been demonized as a fringe movement of racist extremists since it first organically grew out of the End the Fed protests almost three years ago.

[Return to headlines]



Democrats, Reconciliation and 1/6th of the U.S. Economy

Heavy-handed tyrannical misuse of institutional procedures for the purpose of driving America off of a cliff

As the nation has shifted against Obama’s effort to seize control of 1/6th of the U.S. economy by passing off “socialized medicine” as some form of private health care reform, leftists have grown increasingly desperate to find a way to move their agenda forward against a rising tide of opposition from the citizenry.

It is a highly partisan initiative with NO hope of any bipartisan support, because only the most hardened Marxists see anything good in the federal confiscation of 1/6th of the U.S. economy, by a government which has a long history of bankrupting every program it has ever run.

Still, Obama and company plan to go forward, using a legislative tool called “reconciliation.” What is Reconciliation?

In short, reconciliation is a tool designed to block the filibuster on matters of the federal budget. It was first introduced in 1974, as a legislative procedure designed to end marathon budget debates by simply removing budget items at the root of the debate, and passing the agreeable portions of the budget by simple majority, thereby blocking a filibuster that would keep congress in perpetual debates until the government would shut down without a budget in place.

In other words, it was a tool for reducing federal spending by ending debate on disagreeable additions to the budget, hence its nick name, the Budget Reconciliation Act.

It is a “balanced budget” tool, which came into law via the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. It was not designed as a tool for Democrats or Republicans to run roughshod over the other, nor as a tool for the federal government to run roughshod over the taxpayers.

[…]

To go forward with an overt Marxist agenda, progressives must do so against the will of most American citizens, who are fed up with such heavy handed tactics from their elected SERVANTS!

But progressives (aka Marxists) can’t back up, because the people who put them and keep them in power are very dangerous folks. The international cabal behind the current American administration is already notably disappointed that their chosen “messiah” has thus far failed to deliver on their international agenda, despite controlling all branches of the federal government.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Fox News: Best Investment Saudi Prince Talal Ever Made

by Diana West

It was pile-on time at Fox News tonight as Glenn Beck, Charles Krauthammer, a gal whose name I missed and Bill Kristol all branded Geert Wilders beyond the pale tonight.

Beck classified Geert as a fascist.

Krauthammer said Geert didn’t know the difference between Islam and Islamism — never mind that according to Krauthammer’s idea of Islamic scholarship, neither did Mohammed.

The gal is the middle said she agreed with Imam Krauthammer and added that if people like this (Geert) are elected to lead Holland it will suffer the consequences.

Kristol called Geert a demagogue.

In other words, a stomach-turning display — or should I say halal?

Fact is, this anti-Geert pundit solidarity will only delight Newscorp stakeholder Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal. That’s because it is Wilders in the Netherlands who stands as the unexpectedly strong spearhead of resistance to the Islamization of Europe and the wider West. As a scion of the most powerful sharia dictatorship in the world, Prince Talal doesn’t like that. How fortunate for him that Fox News doesn’t like it, either.

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Obama’s TSA Pick Has Conflict of Interest?

Serves on board of company focused on federal contracts

President Obama’s pick to head the Transportation Security Administration serves on the board of a corporation that raised millions to do business with companies positioned in growing areas of the federal budget, WND has learned.

The issue could become a hot button of controversy as the Senate considers confirming retired Gen. Robert Harding.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Runaway Prius: Police Come to Driver’s Rescue After Toyota Accelerates Out of Control

Police were forced to rescue a motorist whose Toyota accelerated out of control along a motorway in California, in another blow for the car giant in the wake of its massive safety recall.

Highway police shepherded the driver to safety when he called for help after his Toyota Prius accelerated out of control at speeds of up to 90 miles per hour.

James Sikes, 61, said he couldn’t slow down for more than 30 miles along a motorway in San Diego after his accelerator stuck.

He eventually cruised to safety after a police car pulled alongside and told him to use the emergency and regular brakes and turn off the runaway car’s engine.

‘I pushed the gas pedal to pass a car and it did something kind of funny,’ said Mr Sikes. ‘It jumped and it just stuck there. As it was going, I was trying the brakes. It wasn’t stopping,’ he added.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Muslim Leaders Forbid Aid to Troops

Islamic jurists decree giving soldiers food ‘not permissible’

American Muslims are banned from helping U.S. soldiers deployed in Afghanistan, Iraq and other “Muslim lands,” according to a shocking fatwa, or religious decree, recently issued by American-based Islamic jurists.

One of the most respected Islamic law authorities in America has decreed it is “not permissible” for even Muslims who are citizens of America to send food or other aid to American troops serving in those Muslim countries.

The Assembly of Muslim Jurists of America, or AMJA, ruled it is a “sin” to help the U.S. military in its multi-front war on terror. AMJA delivered the ruling through its online “fatwa bank”:

[…]

Terror expert Paul Sperry, author of “Infiltration” and “Muslim Mafia,” says AMJA is top-heavy with radical Muslim Brotherhood leaders posing as moderates.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Woman Indicted on Terror Charges

A Pennsylvania woman in her late 40s has been charged with terror offences including using the internet to recruit militants for deadly attacks abroad.

Colleen LaRose — also known as Fatima LaRose and “Jihad Jane” — was arrested in Philadelphia in October 2009.

A federal indictment accuses her of agreeing to kill a Swedish citizen and travelling to Europe for this purpose.

However one of the prosecutors told the Associated Press the indictment did not link to any “organised terror groups”.

A Department of Justice statement said Ms LaRose and five others “recruited men on the internet to wage violent jihad in South Asia and Europe, and recruited women on the internet who had passports and the ability to travel to and around Europe in support of violent jihad”.

Ms LaRose, a US citizen born in 1963, is charged with “conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, conspiracy to kill in a foreign country, making false statements to a government official and attempted identity theft.”

Attorney Michael Levy was quoted as saying Ms LaRose’s appearance “was considered to be an asset because it allowed her to blend in.”

He said the case “demonstrates that terrorists are looking for Americans to join them in their cause, and it shatters any lingering thought that we can spot a terrorist based on appearance”.

If Ms LaRose is found guilty, she could face a life term in prison and a fine of $1m.

After she was arrested on 15 October, she made an initial court appearance but did not enter a plea, AP reported.

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

Canada


The Climate Funding Trough: The Canadian Example

Misuse of Funding By Environment Canada

Money to support the singular approach to climate research came from department funding diverted from other uses. Weather stations were closed; Canada has fewer stations now than in 1960. Many were converted to Automatic Weather Observing Stations (AWOS) so unreliable that NavCanada initially rejected them when they took charge of airports. Services were curtailed and data was restricted or only available with payment. The Assiniboine River Management Advisory Board (ARMAB) was told by the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration (PFRA) Environment Canada wanted several thousand dollars for a single DVD of weather data for research to “drought proof” the Prairies. Environment Canada employees sought and competed with private companies for contracts. Canadian National and Canadian Pacific used two EC employees when sued for non-delivery of grain by the Canadian Wheat Board. These and other diversions from primary goals caused complaints that triggered public inquiries.

[…]

Prevention of Further Waste Is Necessary

Could this be avoided? Absolutely! All you need to understand is why and how the process was set up. Maurice Strong told Elaine Dewar he could not achieve his goal of getting rid of the industrialized nations as a politician, but could get all the money he wanted and not be accountable through the UN. He set up the IPCC and used the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) to get access to the weather services in each country. They then diverted funding to the self-proclaimed national emergency of global warming. We must direct funding through agencies already established with filters necessary to eliminate any political bias or influence.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belgium: Al-Qaeda-Linked Suspects Go on Trial

Brussels, 8 March (AKI) — Nine suspected Muslim extremists went on trial in Brussels on Monday, accused of running a jihadist network in Belgium and of having links to Al-Qaeda in Pakistan and Afghanistan — charges which they deny.

The nine suspects are accused of recruiting young European Muslims to train on the largely lawless Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

Two of the suspects, who are currently on the run, will be tried in absentia. All face jail terms of up to 10 years if convicted of membership to a terrorist group.

Belgian authorities arrested the suspects late last year in an operation that broke up the extremist cell they are alleged to have run.

One of the key suspects due to appear in court on Monday was 50-year-old Belgian-Moroccan Malika al-Aroud, who is accused of recruiting young Muslims over the Internet. She has already been convicted of terrorism charges by a Swiss court.

Al-Aroud is the widow of one of the killers of Ahmed Shah Massoud, head of the anti-Taliban Northern Alliance in Afghanistan.

Massoud was assassinated in 2001 just days before the September 11 attacks against the United States.

The would-be jihadists allegedly recruited by al-Aroud were sometimes escorted to the Afghanistan-Pakistan borderlands by her second husband, Moez Garsalloui, according to prosecutors.

Garsalloui is one of the suspects being tried in absentia.

According to the prosecutor, Garsalloui had ties with “important” Al Qaeda figures.

The prosecution evidence includes a farewell video, the kind of last testament left by suicide bombers before they carry out an attack.

The video features another of the suspects on trial, 24-year-old Hicham Beyayo, 24, who denies intending to carry out a terror attack.

At the time of their arrests, police did not find materials that could be used to carry out a terrorist attack in any of the suspects’ possession.

Aroud has dismissed the prosecution case as “empty”.

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



Berlin: Arabs Almost Half of Serial-Offenders

The typical serial offender is male, of Arab origin, and remains a criminal as an adult, this according to an interim report on the status of the implementation of the Berlin serial offenders concept, as reported by the Senator for Justice Gisela von der Aue (SPD) in parliament on Wednesday. The serial offender policy, with which Berlin set up a separate department in the prosecution, ends this month, and the senator decided to renew it April 1st.

A key point is that the same offender always meets the same police officer and prosecutor, all authorities are networked so they can quickly identify disastrous trends and take countermeasures. In addition to the police and prosecution, this includes the youth social-service and juvenile courts.

According to von der Aue, at the beginning of the year, there were 548 serial offenders registered, none of them children. These included 83 were juveniles, 211 adolescents and 254 adults, ten of which were female. The former juveniles have reached adulthood and continued being criminals. They’re expecting a continued low-level increase. 79% of the serial offenders are of immigrant background, 47% are of Arab origin. More than 2300 court cases have been started since the creation of the department, with more than 2,700 court decisions (there were multiple defendants in some cases). According to von der Aue the number of probation failures — cases of re-offending during the probation period — was also high at 60%. In 2007, Berlin applied its concept to the beginner-criminal policy, where the offender would be intercepted before he begins his serial offender career. 172 people were registered in that.

Legal issues spokesperson for the Greens, Dirk Behrendt, complained that the punishment process was taking too long. The senator did not contradict him, and said they would work to speed up the process.

[Return to headlines]



Church ‘Acted Promptly’ On Abuse

Vatican responds to latest German cases

(ANSA) — Vatican City, March 9 — The Catholic Church acted quickly on child sex abuse in Germany and elsewhere, the Vatican said Tuesday.

The Church “dealt with the manifestation of the problem promptly and decisively,” Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said a day after German Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger said a 2001 Vatican directive for cases to be first handled internally had helped set up “a wall of silence” in Catholic schools.

The minister’s insistence on prosecutors being brought in as soon as possible was later toned down by Chancellor Angela Merkel who praised the German Church for taking “very, very important steps in confronting the problem very seriously”.

Two of the cases allegedly involved the famed Regensburg boys’ choir headed from 1964 to 1994 by Pope Benedict XVI’s brother Georg, who reiterated Tuesday he had not been aware of them and apologised to the victims.

Catholic Church sources said at the weekend the cases occurred before Georg Ratzinger took charge.

Father Lombardi stressed Tuesday that the institutions involved in the spate of allegations “showed they wanted transparency”.

“Indeed,” he told Vatican Radio, “in a certain sense they hastened the manifestation of the problem by urging the victims to speak out even when the cases occurred a long time ago”.

“By doing so,it tackled the question on the right foot because the correct departure point is a recognition of what happened, concern for the victims, and the consequences of the acts carried out against them”.

Benedict recently tasked officials with drafting new strategies to prevent abuse and cover-ups such as those recently exposed in Ireland, Germany and the Netherlands.

Father Lombardi said the Vatican will shortly issue “new operational pointers” to “fine-tune prevention strategies”.

Lombardi said the Vatican welcomed Germany’s announcement of round-table meetings involving school, church and other representatives to detect and prevent abuse.

“The Church is naturally ready to take part and commit itself” to such events, he said.

Recalling that paedophilia is not confined to religious institutions, he said the Catholic Church’s “painful experience can be a useful contribution for others”.

In Austria, for example, there were 17 recently attested cases in Church institutions compared to 510 in “other milieux”.

The first German round-table is scheduled for April 23.

Benedict is set to meet the head of the German bishops’ conference later this week.

Last month the pontiff announced an upcoming pastoral letter to the Irish Church in response to two reports on decades of abuse and cover-ups which have led to the resignation of several bishops.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Congressman Charlie Rangel Violates House Ethics Rules

Representative Charles Rangel, the top Democrat responsible for tax laws in the U.S. Congress, was found “guilty” of accepting Caribbean junkets from a private corporation, an act that violates the House of Representatives’ ethics rules.

However, most of the mainstream media organizations are slow to carry the news stories of Rangel’s reign of corruption and even slower to investigate the allegations that seem to point to a career built on crime, corruption and political posturing.

[…]

Others were less kind in their remarks. For instance, a former New York City police detective claims Rangel was a Democrat Party hack in the Big Apple, who “carried the bags for the boys downtown.”

“As a young detective, I had to straighten out Charlie [Rangel] while he was working as a defense attorney and ran errands for some of New York’s more despicable characters,” said former NYPD detective Sid Frances, owner of a Harlem-based security firm.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



European Prosecutor Could Prosecute Britons Without Government’s Permission

The European Union is planning to create a new super-prosecutor who would have powers to bring cases against British citizens without the approval of the Crown Prosecution Service or the Government.

The Spanish EU Presidency, backed by France and Germany, announced that it is going to propose the creation of an EU European Public Prosecutor next month using powers under the Lisbon treaty.

The move is regarded as “extremely worrying” and is seen as a further attempt to transfer powers from London to Brussels.

It would mean that British people could face prosecution through a justice system the UK Government has made no contribution to setting up.

The British Government has consistently opposed the plans but is powerless to stop them going through as they can be passed as long as they have the backing of nine member states under so-called “enhanced co-operation”.

Britain has “opted out” of the system, which means that while the European prosecutor will not be able to bring cases in this country, he will still be able to issue European arrest warrants to force UK citizens to face prosecution in another member state — without asking the permission of the Government or the Director of Public Prosecutions, Keir Starmer.

The news comes after The Daily Telegraph disclosed how the European Union is drawing up plans for its first direct tax with a “green” levy on petrol, coal and natural gas that could cost British consumers up to £3 billion.

The prosecutor’s initial powers will be confined to cross-border financial transactions — specifically to “investigate fraud and speculation against the euro”.

Conde Pumpido, Spain’s Inspector-General of Finances, said: “The single currency needs a specific institution that protects the application of criminal law against fraud and speculation.”

However, there are concerns that once appointed the new European prosecutor will seek to use his powers to prosecute a range of different and non-financial crimes.

The Spanish Presidency’s website raises the prospect of allowing the prosecutor also to “investigate and initiate criminal proceedings against cross-border crimes such as people trafficking, drug trafficking or terrorism”.

Sarah Gaskell, from campaign group Open Europe, said: “This is an extremely worrying move for UK citizens, who could face prosecution by a European Public Prosecutor that the UK Government had no hand in setting up.

“The deeply undemocratic Lisbon Treaty is being used to outsource controls over our justice system to EU institutions, in what is the start of a very worrying trend of judicial creep that could see such a prosecutor’s powers expanded into all manner of areas.

“This just goes to show that the Government’s so-called ‘opt-outs’ from the Lisbon Treaty in justice and home affairs are a totally inadequate safeguard for the UK’s criminal and justice system.

“A future government needs to fundamentally reform Britain’s participation in EU criminal and justice rules and reclaim much greater control over the legal rights of its citizens.”

Mark Francois, the shadow Europe minister, said: “The Lisbon Treaty allows other countries to establish a European prosecutor for themselves if they wish, but we are not obliged to follow suit.

“In fact, it would be absolutely unacceptable for Britain to participate in any such project.

“It would endanger the integrity and accountability of our legal system. A Conservative government would not allow a European Public Prosecutor to have any authority in Britain. Labour and the Lib Dems should now match our position.”

A spokesman for the EU Commission said: “The Commission is looking at its options but no decisions have been made.”

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



France: Total Closes Refinery, Jobs Safe

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 8 — French oil company Total has announced to close its refinery in Dunkirk, in the north of the country, after almost two months of protests. The news was announced by sources in trade unions, and later confirmed by the company. The refinery will be closed, but Total specified that none of the 370 jobs will be lost thanks to the creation of a methane terminal in partnership with EDF, a training centre and a technical reorganisation centre. These new initiatives, according to the company’s calculations, will provide jobs for around 225 employees of the refinery. The rest will be offered jobs in other refineries or other Total installations in France, or will be offered early retirement.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France-Morocco: Sarkozy Allows Moroccan Girl Back

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 8 — The French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who today welcomed 22 representatives of women’s rights groups, has announced that he is ready to allow the return to France of Najlae Lhimer, the Moroccan schoolgirl who was controversially kicked out of the country after visiting a police station to file a complaint against her brother, who had been beating her. At the end of a meeting at the Elyseé Palace, the head of the “Ni Putes Ni Soumises” women’s rights group Sihem Habchi said that the Head of State was “ personally involved” in recalling the girl from Morocco. The girl had been living illegally in France since 2005, escaping an arranged marriage in her country of birth, but suffered constant beatings at the hands of her brother until last January, when she found the courage to report him to authorities, only to be detained and then deported at the end of February. The girl’s expulsion contrasted with the current stance of the French government, which claims to want stricter punishments for violence towards women. The case caused uproar among groups defending women’s rights as well as the socialist opposition. According to Sihem Habchi, Sarkozy’s decision, which comes a week before regional elections predicted to be damaging for the right, “sends out a message to all women, who as of today, can go to the police and make complaints about the violent abuse they are suffering.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Friends of the EU

The European Union is funding some of the most powerful environmental NGOs in Brussels — while in turn, they lobby the EU for more money and influence.

Environmental non-governmental organisations (NGOs) have enormous influence in the European Union. However, some of the most vocal green groups are actually funded directly by the EU to lobby it. The EU funds many NGOs operating in Brussels whose main purpose is to influence EU policy-making and implementation. This report analyses one programme of funding, in which DG Environment (the division of the European Commission responsible for environmental affairs) distributed over €66 million to environmental NGOs between 1998-2009.

Specifically, we examine funds allocated to the Green 10 — a coalition of ten NGOs pushing for an “environmental” agenda in EU policy-making.

* Nine out of the Green 10 receive funds from the Commission. * Eight members receive one-third or more of their income from the Commission, and five of those rely on the Commission for more than half their funding.

Under EU rules, an NGO can receive up to 70% of its income from the EU, and thus is obliged to find only 30% of its income from alternative sources.

From 1998 to 2009, there was a substantial increase in funds given by the Commission to environmental groups: from €2,337,924 (1998) to €8,749,940 (2009) — an average increase of 13% every year.

The EU’s funding of Green 10 members has also increased during this time period.

* Birdlife Europe funding increased by 900% * Friends of the Earth Europe funding increased by 325% * WWF European Policy Office funding increased by 270%.

The majority of Green 10 members now receive considerably more money from the Commission than in previous years. As a result, many have struggled to reduce their dependency on EU funds — in fact, three members depend more on EU funds today than in 2005.

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



Gaming: Greek Intralot to Supply 15,000 Terminals to Sisal

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 9 — Greek group Intralot announced that it has agreed on a contract to supply Italian gaming company Sisal with 15,000 MicroLot terminals equipped with scanner document readers in addition to related consulting and maintenance services. The Italian Trade Commission (ICE) office reports that Sisal, which manages popular games such as Superenalotto, Totip+ and Tris, currently holds a 12.3% share on the Italian market and in 2009 increased its turnover by 43%, reaching 9.4 billion euros. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



George Bush to David Cameron: Don’t Derail Northern Ireland Peace Process

The former US president George Bush has made a direct plea to David Cameron to support the Northern Ireland peace process, amid widespread concern in the US about the Tories’ new electoral pact with the Ulster Unionists.

In his most active intervention since leaving the White House, Bush took the rare step of calling the Conservative leader to ask him to use his influence to press his unionist partners to endorse the final stages of the 15-year search for a settlement.

Bush, who took a close interest in the peace process during his years in the White House, telephoned Cameron last Friday to ask him to plead with the UUP leader, Sir Reg Empey, to endorse the deal in a vote tomorrow in the Northern Ireland assembly.

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



Germany: Catholic Scandal Spreads

Former Regensburg Choirboys Talk of ‘Naked Beatings’

Former choirboys of the Regensburger Domspatzen have told SPIEGEL about sexual and physical abuse at two boarding schools attached to the famous Catholic choir. One former choirboy says it’s “inexplicable” that the Pope’s brother Georg Ratzinger, a former head of the choir, didn’t know about it.

The abuse scandal at the Regensburger Domspatzen choir is bigger than had been thought so far. Therapists in and around Munich treated several former choirboys who were traumatized by sexual and other physical abuse.

One man affected told SPIEGEL about cruel rituals in the Etterzhausen boarding school, a preparatory school for younger pupils from which the choir draws its recruits.

He said that at the end of the 1950s the headmaster of the school, a Catholic priest, had dealt out hard physical punishments. He had often practiced what was called “naked beatings” in his private rooms, where boys aged eight or nine had to undress and were beaten by hand. In some cases, the victim said, penetration took place.

‘Sexual Lust’

The director and composer Franz Wittenbrink, who lived in the Regensburg boarding school of the choir until 1967, said the school had an “elaborate system of sadistic punishments combined with sexual lust.”

He said the headmaster at the time “would choose two or three of us boys in the dormitories in the evenings and take them to his flat.” He said there had been red wine, and that the priest had masturbated with the pupils. “Everyone knew about it,” said Wittenbrink. “I find it inexplicable that the Pope’s brother Georg Ratzinger, who had been cathedral bandmaster since 1964, apparently knew nothing about it.”

One fellow pupil had committed suicide shortly before taking his high-school exams, Wittenbrink said. Despite many indications, the Regensburg Diocese did not make abuse cases public until contacted by SPIEGEL last Thursday. Now the chair has pledged to investigate everything rigorously and to present an interim report at the end of March.

The allegations against former teachers are the latest to come to light in a scandal over sexual abuse at Catholic schools in Germany.

Pope’s Brother Says Knew Nothing

Georg Ratzinger, the brother of Pope Benedict XVI, told an Italian newspaper he was willing to testify in the sex scandal but knows nothing about the alleged abuse of boys in the Regensburg choir.

In an interview published Sunday, Ratzinger was quoted as saying by the Rome daily La Repubblica that there was “discipline and rigor” but no terror during his 30 years as head of the Regensburg choir from 1964 until 1994.

The pope’s brother also said the abuse accusations also reflected “a certain animosity toward the church.”

The Vatican had said on Saturday that two cases of sexual abuse linked to the Regensburg choir did not coincide with the 30-year period it was led by Georg Ratzinger.

‘Great Deal of Anger’

The Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano printed a statement on Saturday by the Bishop of Regensburg, Gerhard Ludwig Müller, saying that one case of abuse by the deputy director of a primary school linked to the choir was detected in 1958.

In addition, the paper called for action to be taken against those responsible. Walter Kasper, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, told the paper that perpetrators need to be brought to court and victims compensated for their suffering.

He said he has followed the ever growing scandal in Germany with “deep disappointment, pain and a great deal of anger.” There is “no justification, no tolerance,” he continued. At issue is a “despicable crime that must be pursued with absolute resolve.”

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



Germany: Reformers Want Pope to Talk About Alleged Abuse Cases

Child molestation scandals at several German Catholic schools have prompted Catholic reformers to call on Pope Benedict XVI to account for his term as bishop in Bavaria between 1977 and 1982.

A spokesman for the “We are the Church” movement, Christian Weisner, said the pope should publicly state exactly what he knew about widespread allegations of abuse by clerics in the Bavarian city of Regensburg during the 1960’s.

“From 1977 to 1981 Joseph Ratzinger was the bishop of Munich and Freising, so he must answer the question about what he knew then and what he did about it,” Weisner told news agency DAPD.

The statement followed revelations that the renowned German boys choir, the “Regenburg Domspatzen,” had received reports of sexual abuse dating back to the 1960s.

Weisner said the church authorities could not ignore the fact that information about these child abuse cases had been known by senior officials in the church leadership. In addition, many cases of sexual violence had been systematically hushed up by the church leadership, he said.

Director and composer Franz Wittenbrink, who attended the choir’s boarding school in the 1960s, told newsmagazine Der Spiegel of a “sophisticated sytem of sadistic punishments wrapped up in sexual desire.” Wittenbrink said the boarding school’s director at the time would “come into the dormitory at night and pick out two, three of us boys to take back to his apartment.”

Pope Benedict’s brother, Professor George Ratzinger, has headed the boys choir since the 1960s. Ratzinger told the Italian newspaper “La Repubblica” that he knew nothing about cases of child abuse.

The Vatican has said that it will back an investigation.

Zero tolerance

German Education Minister Annette Schavan told the mass-circulation newspaper Bild am Sonntag that there should be “zero tolerance” for sexual abuse of children and announced she would meet with education officials in the coming week to discuss concrete measures to prevent abuse in the future.

“Violence and abuse of schoolchildren is the worst breach of trust imaginable. It makes me livid,” Annette Schavan said.

“Wherever there is a suspicion of abuse or violence against children in schools, there must be zero tolerance and a complete explanation. Nothing must be hushed up,” added the minister.

She also told the Passauer Neue Presse that she supported extending the statute of limitations for sexual abuse.

Abuse allegations spread

The scandal in Germany broke in January when an elite Jesuit school in Berlin admitted the systematic sexual abuse of its pupils by two Roman Catholic priests in the 1970s and 1980s.

The Jesuit order has said that so far around 120 people have come forward alleging abuse.

Meanwhile, a report into alleged past abuse at a monastic school in Ettal, near the Swiss border, said that minors “were massively abused over decades, sexually, physically and psychologically” by several monks. And on Sunday new accusations came to light against a nun at an orphanage in Berlin who allegedly molested children throughout the 1950s and 1960s. The nun withdrew from the order in 1986 .

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



Greece: Women’s Clothing Imports Increase by 60%

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 9 — In recent years a substantial increase of 60% has been observed in Greece for women’s clothing imports, according to the results of a market study by consulting firm Icap Group. The increase, according to analysts, coincided with a decrease in local production, which is characterised by many small and medium sized companies, which operate mainly for third parties; others have a developed retail sales network with their own brands or franchised labels. Icap, cited by the Italian Trade Commission (ICE) office in Athens, found that although the size of the market is not significant, there is still space for new players. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iranian Poet Simin Behbahani Handed ‘Travel Ban’

Iran’s leading female poet has told the BBC she has been barred from leaving the country by the government.

Simin Behbahani, 82, said she was about to fly to France when her passport was confiscated at Tehran airport.

The human rights activist has written poems in support of the opposition campaign against disputed elections in June last year.

Last week Iran detained international award winning film director Jafar Panahi and members of his family.

“The moment I was due to get on the plane, a man came and took my passport away from me and said that I was banned from going abroad,” she told the BBC’s Persian service.

They questioned her for hours asking questions and then ordered her to appear before a court, she said.

She was on her way to Paris to present a paper on feminism and read a poem at conference.

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



Ireland: Thousands of Marriages at Embassies Declared Illegal

THOUSANDS of foreign couples who married at their country’s embassies in the Republic over the past three years are being told their marriages are invalid and illegal.

The problem has sparked a diplomatic row between the Government and several EU states, which have asked Spain — current holder of the EU presidency — to mediate on their behalf. The decision by the Government also affects the citizens of non-EU states, whose embassies conduct marriage ceremonies.

Last week the General Register Office wrote to all foreign embassies informing them that marriages performed by diplomatic missions were not recognised as marriages unless they conformed to Irish law. The note said marriages would not be legal unless they were performed by an authorised registrar and took place in a registered building which was open to the public.

The guidance issued to embassies follows passage of the 2004 Civil Registration Act, which updated existing laws on registering marriages. It entered into law on 5th November 2007, which means all marriages in embassies since then are invalid.

Several embassies complained yesterday that the communication last week was the first time they had been told performing marriage ceremonies was illegal. “Yes we do have a problem and we no longer take applications for weddings . . . the problem is no one warned us that it was illegal to marry people at the embassy,” said deputy head of the Lithuanian mission, Natalia Baceviciene.

The Lithuanian embassy has performed about 100 marriage ceremonies since 2007 and the Polish embassy has performed about 500. The Department of Foreign Affairs estimates up to 3,000 couples could be affected.

Diplomats fear that unless the Government changes its position, the couples’ marriages — which have already been recognised in their home countries — will have to be deregistered.Under international rules, ceremonies deemed illegal in the country they are performed cannot be recognised in the home state, said one diplomat. The decision to rule existing marriages illegal is creating problems for many couples, who have been told by the General Registry Office they cannot register their children in the names of both married parents. Many have been advised to register children in the name of a single parent, which could lead to complex custody, taxation and inheritance issues.

One Polish couple who got married in their embassy in mid-2009 said they were now facing problems registering their son’s birth. “Our son Kamil is two weeks old and we can only register his birth as single parents since the Irish Government does not recognize our marriage,” said Adam Goraj. A spokesman for the Department of Foreign Affairs said marriages performed by embassies were not recognised. “We are in contact with the embassy with a view to resolving this issue,” he added.

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



Ireland: Seven Arrests Over Alleged Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist

GARDA HAVE arrested seven people as part of an international investigation into an alleged plot to kill a Swedish artist who produced a series of sketches depicting the Prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog.

The suspects, four men and three women, are being held at Garda stations in counties Waterford and Kilkenny.

They were arrested during a major search operation at 10 addresses in Waterford and Cork yesterday morning.

Detectives in Ireland have been working on the case since late last year with their counterparts in the US and Europe, including Sweden.

Those arrested yesterday are from Algeria, Croatia, Palestine, Libya and the US. They are aged in their mid-20s to late-40s.

The Irish Times understands the suspects were taken into custody on the basis of information supplied to the Garda by the FBI that came to light after surveillance of the suspects’ communications, including e-mails.

The US investigators believe the alleged leader of the group is one of the Algerian men. He has been living in Ireland for the past decade.

[…]

“At no time has anyone in this country ever been under threat,” said one Garda source.

A group of more than 60 garda from Waterford and Cork were involved in yesterday’s searches of residential and business premises. They were backed by members of specialist Dublin-based Garda units including the anti-terrorism Special Detective Unit.

The premises raided were in Waterford city and Tramore and in Ballincollig, Co Cork. Computers, mobile phones, discs and documents were taken away for analysis.

However, no firearms or explosives or any other hazardous material was found. It is not known how far the alleged assassination plot had progressed.

Garda sources who spoke to The Irish Times said none of those arrested has any known links to al-Qaeda or any other militant group.

The suspects are being detained under Section 50 of the Criminal Justice Act at Garda stations in Waterford, Tramore, Dungarvan and Thomastown in Kilkenny. They can be held for up to seven days without charge.

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



Irish Arrests Over ‘Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist’

Seven people have been arrested in the Irish Republic over an alleged plot to kill a Swedish cartoonist for depicting the Prophet Muhammad, police say.

The four men and three women are all Muslim immigrants, according to media reports, though a police statement did not confirm this.

Cartoonist Lars Vilks had depicted the Prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog in the Nerikes Allehanda newspaper.

Islamic militants put a $100,000 (£67,000) bounty on his head.

Mr Vilks was quoted as saying he was unfazed by the arrests, which he said he thought could be linked to two death threats he had received by telephone in January.

‘Slaughter’ bonus

Irish police said the seven suspects were arrested after an investigation into a “conspiracy to murder an individual in another jurisdiction”, a probe that also involved police in the US and other European countries.

The suspects ranged in age from their mid-20s to late-40s.

Ireland’s RTE news network reported that five were detained in Waterford and two others in Cork.

RTE said those in custody were originally refugees from Morocco and Yemen, but had gained asylum and were in the Republic of Ireland legally.

Mr Vilks has been under police protection in Sweden since threats were made against his life.

“I’m not shaking with fear, exactly,” he told Swedish news agency TT after Tuesday’s arrests.

“I have prepared in different ways and I have an axe here in case someone should manage to get in through the window.”

In 2007 a group linked to al-Qaeda in Iraq offered a $100,000 reward for killing Mr Vilks, and a 50% bonus if he was “slaughtered like a lamb” by having his throat cut.

It offered another $50,000 for the murder of Ulf Johansson, editor-in-chief of the regional newspaper, Nerikes Allehanda.

‘Now it’s your turn’

The Vilks controversy arose in 2007, when his entry in an arts project was published by the newspaper.

It pictured a dog with the head of a bearded man in a turban.

Several Muslim countries protested against the picture.

At the time, Swedish officials expressed regret at any hurt caused to Muslims’ feelings, but said the government could not prevent the publication of such drawings because of media freedom rules.

The case came about a year and a half after a series of depictions of Muhammad in Denmark’s Jyllands-Posten paper caused an uproar in early 2006.

Those cartoons sparked protests from Muslims around the world. Dozens of people were killed in riots.

Muslims regard any image of the Prophet Muhammad as blasphemy.

In January, one of the cartoonists whose drawing appeared in Jyllands-Posten, the Dane Kurt Westergaard, was targeted in his own home, allegedly by a Somali radical Muslim with an axe.

Mr Westergaard, who escaped unharmed, had depicted the Prophet Muhammad with a bomb in his turban.

Mr Vilks told The Associated Press news agency that the telephone threats in January had come from “a Swedish-speaking Somali. He reminded me about what had happened to Westergaard and threatened with a follow-up and that ‘now it’s your turn’.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Irish Police Foil Plot to Kill Swedish Cartoonist

Seven Muslims were arrested by Irish police on Tuesday on suspicions of conspiracy to murder a Swedish cartoonist who drew the prophet Muhammad with the body of a dog.

The four men and three women were arrested in the southern Irish towns of Cork and Waterford following an international operation.

A police source confirmed press reports that they were Muslims arrested over an alleged plot to assassinate Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, who has a $100,000 bounty on his head from an Al-Qaeda-linked group.

“The operation… is part of an investigation into a conspiracy to commit a serious offence (namely, conspiracy to murder an individual in another jurisdiction),” said a statement from Ireland’s national police service.

It added that the operation involved law enforcement agencies in the United States and a number of European countries.

The seven range in age from mid 20s to late 40s, police said, while the RTE state broadcaster reported that they were originally from Morocco and Yemen, but were all legally in Ireland.

Swedish newspaper Nerikes Allehanda published a cartoon on August 18, 2007, depicting the Prophet Muhammad as a dog to illustrate an editorial on self-censorship and freedom of expression and religion.

The cartoon prompted protests by Muslims in the town of Örebro, west of Stockholm, where the newspaper is based. Egypt, Iran and Pakistan made formal complaints and death threats were issued against Vilks.

An Al-Qaeda front organisation offered $150,000 to anyone who slit Vilks’ throat or $100,000 for his murder by other means, while they also offered $50,000 to kill newspaper editor-in-chief Ulf Johansson.

The uproar echoed that caused in Denmark by the publication by a newspaper in September 2005 of 12 drawings focused on Islam, including one with the Prophet Muhammad with a hat in the shape of a bomb.

Muslims worldwide, angered both by the association of their religion with terrorism and by the showing of images of Muhammad, which most consider blasphemous in themselves, took to the streets in protest.

In February 2008, Danish police said they had foiled a plot to murder the cartoonist of the bomb drawing, Kurt Westergaard, while another attempt on his life was allegedly made by a Somali man in January 2010.

Vilks has in the past dismissed the threats against him as “scare tactics” and, supported by the Swedish media, has insisted on the importance of publishing such material in defence of Sweden’s freedom of expression.

He even announced in 2007 that he had begun working on a musical based on the drawing called “Dogs”, involving Muhammad, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Al-Qaeda.

He compared it to musicals such as “Cats”.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Irish ‘Sharia Law’ Website Gets 270,000 Hits a Month

An Irish Islamic website which argues for the introduction of Sharia law here and extols the benefits of Islamic rules for women claims to have had nearly 270,000 hits last month alone.

Targeted at what it called Irish “O’Muslims”, the Muslim Public Affairs Council website, www.mpac.ie, also warns readers about the dangers of imitating the Kuffar (non-believers in Islam).

In one article, entitled ‘21st Century Ireland — A man’s world’, the author notes that a woman may not need a man to take care of her but asks “would it not be nice?” to have someone to provide for her.

“Instead of constantly trying to be better-looking than all the other girls in the club… instead of trying to impress a different bloke every weekend, is it not nicer to have that special someone,” it asks. “Someone who will always think you’re the best-looking girl… and that really doesn’t want you wearing as little clothes as possible because it’s not nice for you to be so cold. Is that not better?”

A separate post examining whether introducing Sharia is a patriotic duty suggests that an “O’Muslim” has a “duty as a citizen of Ireland to work for its best interests”.

“And who could doubt that establishing the authority of Allah in the land is in the best interests of Ireland?” it asks.

“To remove injustice and establish fairness, to remove moral degradation, immorality and licentiousness and establish propriety, righteousness and restraint and to establish tawheed (the worship of the Only One worthy of worship) are surely noble Islamic aims.”

The website — which says all content is screened by moderators in advance of being posted online — last week carried references to the fact that “victory is near” because wars are bankrupting America and described the recent crucifixion of a paedophile and murderer in Saudi Arabia as “justice”.

MPAC spokesman Liam Egan, who goes by the Muslim name Mujaahid, said the independent website was not affiliated with the Irish Council of Imams or any other Muslim organisation here and was run by a “volunteer group of indigenous Muslims”.

“From a religious perspective we believe we represent a mainstream Islamic position… considering the specific content and its limited relevancy [a minority group in Ireland] we have witnessed an exponential rise in site hits, last month we had 269, 733,” he told the Sunday Tribune.

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



Italy: Padua Starts 250,000 M2 Photovoltaic Plant

(ANSAmed) — PADUA, FEBRUARY 26 — Its designers named it the largest photovoltaic plant in the world. World record or not, the work that started today will measure more than 250,00 square metres. Work started with the laying down of the first modules on the roofs of the buildings in Padua’s Interporto (freight village) and Magazzini Generali (public warehouse). The plant, once complete, will comprise 67,500 photovoltaic panels, and will have an overall energy capacity equal to 15 Megawatts (peak) that will allow the annual generation of 17 million Kilowatts per hour of energy thanks to the sun. The investment made available by the two logistics companies amounts to 50 million euros. The Padua facility should be larger in size than the largest currently known photovoltaic facility, which is located in Zaragoza (Spain). Work should be completed in 2010. According to calculations made by the designers, the energy produced on the roofs of the Interporto and the Magazzini Generali will be equal to that consumed by 5,000 families in one year, but with the saving of approximately 9,000 tonnes of CO2 per year, equal to the consumption of 3,200 tonnes of oil. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Ports of Venice and La Spezia Greener With Enel

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 1 — The goal of the agreement signed by the ports of La Spezia, Venice and the Enel group is to reduce pollution and to increase energy savings. According to the accord, signed by Enel managing director Fulvio Conti and the managing directors of the ports of La Spezia, Lorenzo Forcieri, and of Venice, Paolo Costa, Enel will equip the two ports with “cold ironing” systems for the supply of electricity to ships in the harbour using a land-based co-generator. The new system, the French website Econostrum.info reports, will reduce polluting emissions and save energy, since the ships will be able to shut down their auxiliary engines while in harbour. Compared with the traditional onboard generators, the ‘cold ironing’ system, already used in some large ports in America and North Europe, “reduce emissions of carbon dioxide by 30% and of nitrogen oxides by more than 95%”, Enel specifies in a statement, adding that the system also has a positive effect on “acoustic pollution”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Non-EU Exports -0.3% January, +4.7% Annual

(ANSAmed) — ROME, FEBRUARY 22 — Italy’s exports to non-EU countries fell slightly by 0.3% on December 2009 and net of seasonal adjustments, while imports went up by 5.4%, says Italian National Statistics Institute ISTAT, based on preliminary estimates. Exports were up by 4.7% on January 2009 though, and imports were down by 3.7%. In the three months from November 2009-January 2010 exports were up by 5.3% and imports by 4.7% compared to the previous quarter. In January 2010 the trade deficit with non-EU countries was 3.19 billion euros, an improvement on the same month of 2009 (-3.98 billion euros). Excluding the energy sector, the trade balance with non-EU countries registered a surplus of 482 million euros, compared with a deficit of 57 million in January 2009. The tendential increase in exports in January 2010 were mainly to Turkey (+50.6%) and China (+38.9%). Exports were down though to Japan (-10.1%), Russia (-10%) and the OPEC countries (-4.8%) and the United States (-1.9%). The tendential fall in imports was mainly to Italy’s biggest commercial partners, with the exception of Turkey (+30.8%) and India (+8%). A “good start”, but we need to pay “attention to sudden reversals in the crisis”, said Deputy Minister for Economic Development with Foreign Trade portfolio, Adolfo Urso, commenting on the ISTAT data. “It seems to be an excellent sign for the start of the year: exports are up by 4%, in line with what we forecast, what’s more the commercial deficit is down further: this could be the year of recovery”, said Urso, which means we need to focus on the emerging nations.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Lashed by Late Winter Storm

Cold spell brings snow to Tuscan cities, floods to Venice

(ANSA) — Rome, March 9 — Thermometers plummeted around Italy on Tuesday as a late winter storm brought sub-zero temperatures to the Alps, snow to Tuscany and high waters in Venice just a few weeks ahead of the first day of Spring.

Residents in Siena awoke to find Piazza del Campo, celebrated site of the annual Palio horse race, under a bed of snow that thickened as flakes continued falling throughout the morning.

The leaning tower of Pisa was also glazed in white on Tuesday morning together with Brunelleschi’s dome in Florence as temperatures there hovered around freezing.

The mercury dropped far below that in the Alps, to lows of -21.4 degrees C (-5.8 F) in the town of Sestriere near Turin and -18 C (-0.4 F) in Tarvisano in the northeastern corner of the Dolomites. The sudden cold is expected to raise tides in the Venetian lagoon on Wednesday flooding the island-city with ‘acque alte’ 105 cm above sea level.

Across the Adriatic Sea, authorities in Trieste issued warnings for possible hurricane force winds blowing off the water at up to 115 km/hour uprooting trees and knocking down road signs.

The sting in winter’s tail is expected to last through Thursday, according to the Civil Protection Department who held a special meeting on Tuesday in anticipation of emergencies.

The agency said downpours forecast in Sicily and Calabria could provoke further mudslides, like the ones that forced thousands of people from their homes in both regions last month.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslims Outraged at UK Screening of ‘Fitna’ Film

The screening of Geert Wilders’ controversial anti-Islam film in the U.K. Sunday outraged Muslims and rights organizations earning the far-right Dutch MP the labels “fascist” and “racist.”

The film, called Fitna, was screened at the House of Lords in response to an invitation Wilders got on March 5 from Lord Malcolm Pearson, leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) and member of the House of Lords, and Baroness Caroline Anne Cox, cross-bench member of the House of Lords.

Wilders’ trip to the U.K. is part of the Stop Islamization Of Europe (SIOE) campaign. SIOE is an organization whose goal is to prevent Islam from becoming a substantial political force in Europe. Wilders’ visit is supported by the far-right English Defense League (EDL).

The film, which declares Islam is incompatible with democracy and calls the Quran a fascist book, was scheduled for screening in the U.K. in 2009. However, Wilders was denied entry to the country. He was accused of inciting hatred and designated a persona non grata. The ban was overturned in October 2009, a moved that Wilders called a “victory for freedom.”

British rights groups slammed the visit and submitted a complaint to the Interior Minister, calling Wilders the Dutch version of the English Defence League (EDL), whose sole goal is to fight the presence of Islam in Europe, and the far-right British National Party (BNP), which restricts its membership to Caucasians only.

Protesters from Unite Against Fascism (UAF) waved signs that read “EDL+BNP= Nazi racist thugs” and chanted “EDL, go to hell, and take your Nazi mates as well.” The police made sure to keep UAF protestors away from ADL supporters who carried signs welcoming Wilders.

Meanwhile, Muslims inside and outside the U.K. continued their campaign against what they perceive as systematic and intentional insults directed against their religion, their holy book, and their prophet.

The campaigns, which are mostly launched on the internet and call for boycotting countries that insult Islam, cite Wilders’ movie, the Danish cartoons, and Theo Van Gough’s movie Submission as just a few, yet flagrant, examples European insults to Islam..

However, online campaigns also indicate that Muslims are losing hope as they no longer trust that serious political action will be taken to stop spread of Islamophobia in Europe.

The ban on Wilders’ film last year was not only praised by Muslims, but also by British officials who view the MP as a fanatic extremist intent on inciting intolerance in Europe.

British MP George Galloway expressed his support for the British government’s decision to ban Wilders from the U.K.

“I believe that this man, Wilders, from Holland is a racist hater of Muslims, hater of Islam, and he shouldn’t be allowed into our country to whip up that hatred,” Galloway said in a T.V. interview.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Catholic Church Abuse Claims Rise to 200

Some 200 people have now registered sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic church officials with the church organisation set up to help victims, the Telegraaf reports on Monday.

Jan Waaijer, spokesman for the Hulp en Recht organisation said he was shocked by the flood of claims since the end of February, when newspapers reported claims of abuse at a boarding school in ‘s-Heerenberg in the 1960s and 1970s.

‘Let it all come out now. A church which is mature and open to self-criticism can deal with this,’ he told the paper.

The organisation has taken on extra staff to deal with the surge, he said.

Bishops

Meanwhile, Ad van Luyn, chairman of the Dutch bishops conference, has called for an independent inquiry into the abuse claims.

‘It is the job of the church to clearly condemn abuse and apologise,’ he told a tv show. ‘In the future, the church must take every measure possible to stop this happening.’

The bishops conference is due to meet to discuss the growing scandal on Tuesday.

Insurance

On Saturday it emerged that the diocese of Utrecht agreed €1m in coverage with Aegon against potential abuse claims back in 2006.

The NRC and Radio Netherlands report that the deal was the result of a long-running dispute between the church and insurance company.

‘The church viewed compensation paid to sexual abuse victims could be deemed a physical injury claim,’ the NRC said. ‘Aegon refused to do this because it did not wish to put a premium on the misuse of minors.’

Compensation

The insurance deal follows a €43,000 payout made to a girl who had been abused by a priest.

The Aegon deal only covers claims made before 2000 and a spokesman for Aegon told the paper no claims had been made.

The church’s current insurer Nationale Nederland does not cover damages claims stemming from sexual abuse, the paper says.

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



Netherlands: Church Has 1mln Euro Fund Ready for Sex Abuse Victims

Aegon insurance company has put aside a million euros to pay for claims by Dutch victims of sexual abuse suffered at the hands of Catholic clerics.

Aegon and the archdiocese of Utrecht, which acted on behalf of the Roman Catholic church in the Netherlands, came to this agreement in 2006, an investigation by NRC Handelsblad and Radio Netherlands Worldwide has shown. If damages exceed a million euros, the Church will have to pay for them itself.

Aegon broke with church after 45 years

The deal ended a long-lasting dispute regarding the coverage offered by the church’s liability insurance policy with Aegon. The Church felt it could claim any damages paid to victims of sexual abuse by priests as bodily damage incurred by them. Aegon refused, saying it did not want to “put a premium on the abuse of minors”.

The conflict was set off when the church tried to claim 43,378 euros in damages paid to a girl who had been sexually abused by a priest. Aegon refused and severed all ties with the church, ending a 45-year relationship. The church then sued its former insurer. According to Aegon, “the legal dispute ended in a compromise agreed upon in 2006”. The church dropped its case and Aegon agreed to pay one million euros in damages.

A spokesperson for the archdiocese refused to comment, saying that “we have agreed with Aegon we would not speak out on this matter and want to uphold that agreement”.

“We both agreed victims should not suffer because of our dispute,” an Aegon spokesperson said. “That is why we have reserved a million euros for this purpose.”

The money is meant to pay for claims emanating from abuse that took place before Aegon terminated the church’s insurance policy in 2000. According to the insurer, no claims have been filed yet. Victims seeking damages should file them with the Catholic church, the spokesperson said.

“Once a judge has determined the claim is justified, or if the church decides to take responsibility, we will pay. The total amount of all claims has been capped at one million euros. Anything over that amount will be paid by the church.”

Sex abuse no longer insured

Recent publications in NRC Handelsblad and other publications concerning the abuse that took place at boarding schools, abbeys and seminary schools have led to dozens of new reports and complaints. Lawyers expect victims will file for damages with the Church. In recent weeks, the Roman Catholic church has received some 200 reports from people who encountered sexual abuse in the past.

The church will have to pay any claims emanating from abuse that took place after 2000 from its own coffers. The church’s new insurance policy with insurance company Nationale Nederlanden does not cover sexual abuse. A Dutch trade organisation of insurers advised its members to adjust their policies accordingly in 2000. Damages emanating from “sexual or sexually charged behaviour of any nature” have since been exempted from coverage.

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



Netherlands: Labour, CDA, Neck and Neck in New Poll

A new poll by Maurice de Hond puts the Labour party (PvdA) and CDA neck and neck on 24 seats, with Geert Wilders anti-Islam PVV still in first place on 27.

The internet panel poll gives Labour a nine-seat boost since it pulled out of the government two weeks ago.

The 24-seat total for the CDA is the lowest ever record for the party by De Hond, and is a two-seat drop on last week’s result.

Support

The position of prime minister and party leader Jan Peter Balkenende has come under pressure in the media since the party’s poor performance in the local elections.

Last week, a number of ministers came out publically to express their support for the prime minister.

At the moment, the CDA has 41 seats in the 150-seat parliament and Labour 31.

De Hond’s is the only polling organisation to put the PVV in top position.

The poll also shows that it will take at least four parties to form a new coalition government after the June 9 general election.

Should Balkenende resign? Take part in our poll

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



Nuclear: GDF Suez Does Not Rule Out Interest in Italy

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 4 — The French Energy group Gdf Suez “does not rule out” the possibility of becoming interested in nuclear power in Italy: this was declared by the CEO Gerard Mastrallet, during the presentation of 2009’s annual results. “We have already shown our willingness to grow our energy presence in the Italian market”, he continued, “perhaps one day nuclear power will be a part of this presence. We have not yet made any decisions, but it is possible. We follow with lively interest the progress of the debate (on returning to nuclear power) in Italy”, he added towards the end of the event, “at the moment we are not on the front line, but we are watching with interest what is being said and done in this regard”. “We produce energy”, he specified, “we are not ‘all-nuclear’ producers or ‘all-renewable’ producers; we seek simply the most convenient and profitable source”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Nuclear: Construction First Italian Plant by 2013

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 8 — “The Italian nuclear programme is going ahead as scheduled. The Italian government is creating the right conditions to allow companies to start construction of the first nuclear plant by 2013”, said Italian Economic Development Minister Claudio Scajola during an international conference on nuclear energy in progress in Paris, in the OECD headquarters. “We want a mix of 25% nuclear energy, 25% renewable energy and 50% energy from fossil fuels”, Scajola added.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Out of Dutch

[Mark Steyn]

These aren’t words one has cause to type terribly often, but I think Charles Krauthammer is being deeply naïve in his observations on Geert Wilders (as, reportedly, was Glenn Beck, to whom I am otherwise well disposed, not least because he liked my Christmas single).

Wilders does not need to be lectured condescendingly about distinctions within Islam, because he lives with them every day. And he has concluded, notwithstanding Dr. Krauthammer’s views on the precise “minority” that identifies as “Islamist,” that Islam itself is the issue — and that, therefore, regardless of the “moderation” of the “overwhelming majority” of Muslims, the more Islam the less Netherlands in any recognizable sense. Are the gangs of gay bashers on the streets of Amsterdam “Islamist” by Krauthammer’s definition? Maybe, maybe not. But, either way, they make the running, and the rest of the community is either indifferent or quiescent.

As for whether Wilders is “extremist,” his views on the cultural compatibility of immigrants were routine and unexceptional until the 1960s, not only in Europe, but also in the U.S. And, even in North America today, they are the stated policy of the Government of Quebec. One can certainly disagree with that, but does that make Quebec also “fascist” (Beck) or even “extreme” (Krauthammer)?

Dr. Krauthammer is also incorrect to suggest there are two issues here. When the state attempts to constrain further Europe’s already too shriveled bounds of public discourse, the only issue is state power. The Continental political class does not want to debate the question of its ever more assertive Muslim populations, and so has decided to criminalize that debate. Geert Wilders lives under 24/7 security because Muslims (including the killer of Theo van Gogh) have pledged to murder him. Yet he’s the one on trial for incitement? The issue is not Wilders or his views, but the Dutch state and their ever more “extreme, radical, and wrong” views on core Western liberties.

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



PVV Firm Over Headscarf Ban in Almere

Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam party PVV is sticking firm by its earlier commitment to make a headscarf ban in public buildings a central element in the negotiations to form a new city council executive in Almere.

Raymond de Roon, who led the PVV’s campaign in Almere, is currently holding talks with other parties about forming a new administration for the polder city.

The PVV emerged as the biggest party after the local elections last week.

Local Labour leader Alphons Muurlink told news agency Nos it was very quickly apparent the two parties cannot work together. ‘De Roon is sticking with the headscarf ban and that completely goes against the PvdA’s position,’ he said.

The left-wing green party GroenLinks has also ruled out an alliance with the PVV.

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



Spain: CGPJ Guards Against Delegitimisation of Judges

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 8 — Spain’s General Council of the Judicial Power, the CGPJ, has requested the “utmost request” for the “role of judges”, guarding against the “undeserved effects of delegitimisation” that could be provoked by political interference in the functioning of justice, which it calls “a fundamental power of the State”. These are the words of CGPJ spokeswoman Gabriela Bravo, who read out an institutional statement at a public event in Valencia, according to the EFE agency. The Council’s stance comes amid controversy surrounding the three cases launched against a judge from the Audiencia Nacional (Spain’s National Court), Baltazar Garzon, looking into three lawsuits filed by far-right organisations and by some of the accused in an investigation into alleged corruption in Spain’s People’s Party, known as the “Gurtel case”. The statement also follows the barrage of criticism levelled at the judge Eloy Velasco by Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez, following allegations of Caracas’ collaboration in links between ETA and FARC. Yesterday the Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero praised the “courage” shown by judge Garzon in the struggle against ETA. “In relation to the information, comments and opinions that have emerged in the last few days regarding certain legal proceedings ongoing at the Tribunal Supremo [Supreme Court] and the Audiencia Nacional,” said the CGPJ statement, “we demand not only the absolute defence of freedom of expression, but also the utmost respect, nationally and internationally, for the independence and jurisdictional function of Spain’s judges and courts.” Magistrates are hoping for a return to a “calm atmosphere”, given that the current situation “is hardly compatible with the actions that lead to an undeserved effect of delegitimisation of the work of the judiciary, which provokes mistrust of a fundamental power of the State.” This explains the request for “utmost institutional respect”, without “attempting to influence ongoing legal proceedings.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Compensation for Women Victims of Franco

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 8 — A one-off compensation of 1,800 euros for all the women who underwent persecution and torture by the Franco dictatorship for political reasons, was announced today, on International Women’s Day, by Councillor for Justice and the Public Administration in the Andalusia Council, Begona Alvarez. In a statement to the media, Alvarez confirmed that the council was preparing a decree, the first in Spain for women in the matter of the historic memory and will be ready within two months. The women will be able to prove they underwent persecution, torture or humiliation “with any proof admitted by law”, as the councillor said, recognising that only a few women would go ahead with a claim for compensation, given the length of time since the dictatorship. The Councillor justified the initiative by saying that so far, out of the 2,742 compensations awarded by the Council to the victims of the Franco regime, on the basis of the law on historic memory, only 5% have been received by women. The decree will be aimed at women who suffered “harassment against their honour, their privacy or their image by the Francoist regime “, after being abused or raped during the dictatorship. It will be a “tribute to the women who fought to defend the values of the II Republic”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Gangsta’ Rap Star Snoop Dogg Wins His 3-Year Battle to Visit Britain… And We Pick Up £100,000 Bill

Rapper Snoop Dogg has humiliated ministers by winning a three-year legal battle to overturn a ban on him entering the U.K.

In an embarrassing defeat for the Home Office, the American hip hop star successfully claimed the ban infringed his human right to freedom of expression.

It means that Snoop — who has a string of criminal convictions and has been tried for murder — could be free to return to Britain as early as Thursday.

The Government’s unsuccessful legal battle — which cost the UK taxpayer in excess of £100,000 — has been criticised as ‘an appalling waste of public money’ by the rapper’s lawyer.

And the fact that an immigration tribunal has ruled in the musician’s favour could impact on Britain’s ability to keep so-called ‘undesirables’ out of the country.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Facebook Attacked for Ignoring 100 Reports of ‘Grooming’ And Refusal to Have Panic Button for Users

  • Facebook ignored 100 reports of suspected grooming
  • Site attacked for lack of child protection measures
  • Ashleigh’s mother says it’s ‘too easy’ to abuse
  • Merseyside Police refers itself to watchdog
  • Rapist posing as teenager had more than 6,000 online friends

Facebook ignored more than 100 reports of possible grooming of young girls, it was revealed today, as the site came under fire for its lack of security measures.

The social networking website insisted safety was its top priority after the appalling case of Ashleigh Hall, 17, who was lured to her death by a serial rapist she met online.

It urged members to take ‘extreme caution’ after the teenager’s murder by Peter Chapman highlighted the astonishing ease with which potential predators can trap victims on the internet.

But it was attacked for a ‘glaring failure’ for refusing to have a panic button on its pages, which would allow children to raise the alarm if they believe they are being targeted by predatory paedophiles.

[…]

Described as ‘calculated and wicked’, Chapman was jailed for a minimum of 35 years for Ashleigh’s kidnap, rape and murder yesterday.

[Comments from JD: Warning: Graphic Content.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: How Violent Crime Has Risen 44% After 13 Years of Labour: But Ministers Insist It’s Down

Violent crime has rocketed by 44 per cent under Labour, official Parliamentary research revealed last night.

The House of Commons Library report is the definitive independent verdict on the 13-year record of the Government.

The Tories say the research backs their claims about ‘broken Britain’.

The figures are a serious and embarrassing blow to the Government — which has repeatedly insisted violent crime was down and accused the Tories of using ‘dodgy’ statistics.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Grayling said: ‘This new analysis confirms that the level of violent crime actually reported to police officers in police stations up and down the country is much higher than it was a decade ago.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Parents ‘Unable to Understand Their Teenage Children’s Homework’

Mums and dads should probably not be the first port of call for teenagers stuck on algebra equations and physics problems.

For parents are routinely flummoxed by their children’s homework, research shows.

In fact, they achieved an average score of only two out of ten in a quiz based on GCSE lessons in science, maths, history and geography.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Pakistani Men Arrested ‘Within Days of Massive Al Qaeda Terror Attack on Britain’

Five men linked to a UK terror plot which would cause ‘mass casualties’ were arrested days before they planned to strike, a court heard today.

A senior British intelligence officer, identified only as ZR, told the Special Immigration Appeals Commission that the group was set to stage an atrocity between April 15 and 20 last year.

He told the hearing that that the alleged plot ringleader Abid Naseer exchanged coded emails with an Al Qaeda operative called Sohaib while planning the attack.

The pair used girls’ names to cover their tracks, the officer said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Inspector ‘Left Student to Die in Road After Knocking Him Down and Driving Away’

An off-duty police chief inspector whose car struck a university student on a dual carriageway failed to stop and claimed he thought he had hit a post, despite having the victim’s blood and skin on his shattered windscreen, a court heard today.

Jamie Jones, from West Midlands Police, allegedly killed Warwick University student Raymond Cheung on the Coventry-bound carriageway of the A45 in the early hours of March 8 last year.

Jones, 38, carried on driving after the fatal impact, leaving the victim’s body in the road to be struck by a second car, Shrewsbury Crown Court heard.

[…]

The court heard that the 20-year-old, originally from Hong Kong, had recently had a ‘falling out’ with a female student at the university and may have walked into the oncoming traffic intentionally.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Tories Ask: Why BBC3, BBC4?

Conservative culture front bencher Jeremy Hunt is asking what’s the point of BBC3 and BBC4? It’s a good time to ask the question. In an interview with the Independent, Hunt queried why £100m was being spent, merely to attract “very, very small” audiences.

This is some way short of calling for the channels to be scrapped, as reported today. In fact, Hunt said exactly the same thing last September. It’s also less than the £172m the BBC overspent on three building projects (one of which is the £1bn — that really is billion — makeover of Broadcasting House), the National Audit Office reported last week.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: We’ll ‘Unleash Hell’ On Tories, Threaten Unions as Public Sector is Gripped by New Militancy

Britain is in the grip of a wave of militancy by millions of public sector workers as unions threaten to ‘unleash hell’ on an incoming Conservative government.

Alarming figures reveal the number of days lost to strike action in the public sector is now 15 times higher than in the private sector, prompting concerns about the growing readiness of union leaders to flex their muscles.

These figures are particularly startling as it is private sector workers that have so far borne the brunt of the recession, taking the vast majority of pay cuts, pay freezes and redundancies.

Yet Labour’s union paymasters, who are bankrolling the party’s election campaign, are preparing further strike plans.

There will be angry clashes tomorrow when tens of thousands of senior public sector workers are expected to be told they will get a pay freeze this year, like many of their private sector counterparts.

[…]

According to one union source, they are building up a £25million war chest to ‘unleash hell’ on a Tory government.

Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, accused the public sector of ‘throwing its toys out of the pram’, while ‘people in the private sector have long accepted the reality that these are tough times.’

He said: ‘Public sector workers are far more likely to go on strike despite enjoying better pay, more generous pensions and far greater job security than workers in the private sector.’

[Comments from JD: Greece 2.0]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Young Woman Jumped 100ft to Her Death Just Hours After Father Begged Psychiatric Hospital Not to Release Her

A medical suffering from mental illness jumped to her death from a tower block just hours after her father begged staff not to release her from a psychiatric ward.

Graham Nye was so concerned for his 22-year-old daughter Victoria’s wellbeing that he warned hospital staff ‘if she goes back to her flat she will throw herself off the balcony’.

Later that night she plunged more than 100ft to her death from the 13th floor balcony of her Southampton tower block.

An independent investigation has now been launched by the NHS trust into the events leading up to the death of Miss Nye, who had been diagnosed with bipolar syndrome.

[…]

Mr Nye said his daughter had been tormented for eight years with mental illness and this was the first time she was willing to get help.

But he claimed she was told by psychiatrists that she ‘could not be helped’ despite medical notes from a family doctor, saying she was in need of urgent care.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Apologises Over Gaddafi Comments

The US State Department has apologised for comments made about Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s call for jihad, or holy war, against Switzerland.

Department spokesman PJ Crowley, who made the dismissive comments, said they did not reflect US policy and were not intended to offend.

Col Gaddafi had criticised a Swiss vote against the building of minarets and urged Muslims to boycott the country.

Mr Crowley described it as “lots of words, not necessarily a lot of sense.”

Libya and Switzerland are embroiled in a long-running diplomatic row.

Clarification

“I regret that my comments have become an obstacle to further progress in our bilateral relationship,” Mr Crowley said.

Last week, Libya’s National Oil Corporation warned US oil firms of possible “repercussions” over Mr Crowley’s reaction.

The Libyan ambassador to the US sought to clarify Col Gaddafi’s remarks saying the Libyan leader meant an economic boycott not “an armed attack”.

“I should have focused solely on our concern about the term jihad, which has since been clarified by the Libyan government,” Mr Crowley added.

“I understand my personal comments were perceived as a personal attack on the president,” he said.

“These comments do not reflect US policy and were not intended to offend. I apologise if they were taken that way.”

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



Wilders to Take Council Seat in the Hague

Geert Wilders is to take a seat on the Hague city council after winning 13,000 preference votes in last week’s local elections.

Earlier Wilders, who is a sitting MP, said he would not take up a seat if he won. His anti-Islam party PVV emerged as the second biggest party in the political capital, with 17% of the vote.

‘I am going to see if I can combine it. I will give it a go for a while,’ Wilders was reported as saying.

The news means two of the eight PVV councillors in the Hague’s new city council will combine their work with being members of parliament.

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

Balkans


Kosovo: KFOR: 570 US Soldiers Home by May

(ANSAmed) — PRISTINA, MARCH 9 — In the next two months, the United States will withdraw 570 soldiers from Kosovo, so that by the end of May there will only be 830 U.S. soldiers among the multi-national KFor force. Captain Dan Murphy said that the number of American troops that will remain in Kosovo will be, at any rate, sufficient to guaranteed continuity to the NATO mission there. At the beginning of this year, as has been announced in past months, NATO substantially reduced the numbers of Kfor, which passed from 14,000 to 10,000. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Switzerland, Eur40 Million to Support EU Integration

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 8 — The Swiss government will support Serbia’s European integration process by financing a cooperation program worth EUR40 million over the next four years, Swiss Cooperation Office in Serbia Director Beatrice Meyer said, reports Tanjug news agency. Presenting the new Cooperation Strategy 2010-2013, Meyer stressed that the program envisages activities in four main areas — economic development, rule of law and democracy, education and energy efficiency and renewable energy. Meyer said that the two countries have cooperated closely for nearly 20 years and reminded that Swiss donations to Serbia since 1991 have reached around EUR200 million. Swiss Ambassador to Serbia Erwin Hofer said that the most important goal of the two countries’ cooperation through these programs is supporting Serbia’s European integration and improving its chances of joining the European Union. Hofer said that the cooperation between the two countries will have two components in the coming period — social and economic — and explained that the social part entails increasing social inclusion and reducing poverty in Serbia, while the economic segment entails helping Serbia to become more competitive in the market. Serbia’s Assistant Finance Minister Gordana Lazarevic stressed Switzerland’s support in international financial institutions (the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, European Bank for Reconstruction and Development) and among the wealthy donor countries, adding that the country plays a major role in the restructuring of Serbia’s existing debt and the granting of new loans. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU: EuroHeritage Project on Water Management Techniques

(ANSAmed) — PALERMO, FEBRUARY 22 — Discovering the memory of water through some conservation techniques considered to be part of an intangible heritage and that allow for the rational management of water resources in the countries of the Mediterranean. This is the objective of ‘REMEE’ (Redecouvrons ensamble les memoires de l’eau), one of the twelve projects financed by the European Union as a part of Euromed Heritage IV, presented today in Palermo during a workshop on the protection of immaterial assets. The project has the aim of rediscovering and passing down to new generations some age-old systems of water conservation, involving Algeria, France, Greece, Morocco, Tunisia e Turkey. “Water”, affirms Algeria’s Metair Kouider, one of the partners in the REMEE project, speaking at a workshop, “is a rare and precious asset which must be used rationally and not only keeping industrial logic in mind. Old generations, for example, used ‘qanat’ or ‘fogara’, a technique used particularly in the desert to avoid water dispersion. During the project we interviewed some elderly Algerians that knew of these techniques and we wrote them down”. Cooperation between Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon in connection with intangible cultural heritage, was one of the objectives of the “Medliher” project. “These four countries”, affirmed France’s Fleur Perrier, the coordinator of Medliher, “were among the first to have signed the UNESCO convention for the protection of intangible heritage. In practice, the project consists in putting these countries in the position of applying the convention”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria-Egypt: Inland Revenue Rejects Orascom’s Appeal

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 9 — The Algerian inland revenue service has rejected the appeal presented by Egyptian company Orascom for outstanding tax payments and fines totalling 43.9 billion dinars, some 600 million dollars, regarding the activity of its branch, Djezzy, over the last three years. The company announced that it will file an appeal. In order to file a new appeal, Orascom must pay 20% of the sum requested. According to the Algerian press, the Egyptian company is said to be looking for a partner to whom they could sell off a part of its shares, in order to bring the case with Algiers to an end. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Over 1 Mln Italian Arrivals to Egypt in 2009

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Over one million Italian tourists visited Egypt in 2009, a figure that is substantially in line with the overall numbers from 2008, despite a decline of 25,000 arrivals overall. A 2.3% decrease that makes Italy the fourth ranked country in terms of international arrivals to Egypt, according to Egyptian Tourism Minister Zoheir Garranah, explaining last year’s data in the tourism industry, which is still an engine for the Egyptian economy. Garranah underlined that these are “significant figures in light of a particularly sensitive year in the tourism industry on a global level, making it a good result, since the crisis could have resulted in significantly worse consequences. Comparing the final balance for Italian tourism numbers for the year 2009 with other foreign destinations for Italians, I ascertained that the decrease in Italian arrivals to Egypt was much more contained”. The minister’s assessment contained reasons to be optimistic, since “with an initial look at the situation regarding Italian arrivals to Egypt this year, it is encouraging that we registered a 31% increase in January, which represents 15,000 more tourists in absolute terms compared to the same month in 2009, a figure that essentially compensates for the loss of 25,000 Italian tourists overall last year, and allows us to look to the future with cautious optimism”. However, in Garranah’s view, 2010 will be a “difficult year overall, but it will also be full of challenges and opportunities”. Garranah also highlighted how Italy was the first country to launch the new seaside establishments on the Egyptian coast of the Mediterranean, and was the first country to discover Sharm and Marsa Alam. Niche products will also be developed, such as golf, desert safaris, ecotourism, diving and the yachting segment. There are also various projects in the development stages aimed at proposing high-quality wellness tourism. As part of the actions to support Italian tourism to Egypt, the Egyptian government will continue to subsidise the airports of Taba, Marsa Alam, Aswan, as well as Luxor and the Mediterranean coast. Collaboration with airline companies will focus on increasing the capacity of flights to Egypt, with the objective of increasing business for both countries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Card.Sandri’s Appeal for Christians in Holy Land

(ANSAmed) — VATICAN CITY, MARCH 8 — The Christians in the Holy Land “deserve the support of the entire Church”, said Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Vatican Congregation for the Oriental Churches. The cardinal invites people to participate in the 2010 Collection for assistance to Christians in the Middle East, particularly in Israel and in the Palestinian Territories. “The Christians of the East” the letter of Cardinal Sandri sent to all priest worldwide reads, “have a responsibility that belongs to the universal Church, in other words the responsibility to preserve the ‘Christian origins’, the places and people who are the sign of them, so that those origins may always be the reference of the Christian mission, the measure of the ecclesial future and its security”. Sandri explains that “The Pope has entrusted to the Congregation for the Eastern Churches the task of keeping alive interest in that blessed Land. In his name I urge everyone to reinforce the solidarity that has been shown so far”. This year’s appeal “is inspired by the pilgrimage ‘in the historical footsteps of Jesus’ which the Holy Father Benedict XVI made last May. On that occasion, “strongly emphasizing the ceaseless problem of emigration, His Holiness recalled that ‘in the Holy Land there is room for everyone’, and he urged the authorities to support the Christian presence but at the same time assured the Christians of this land of the Church’s solidarity”. He then encouraged, Sandri adds, “the baptised to be ‘a bridge of dialogue and constructive cooperation in the building of a culture of peace to replace the present stalemate of fear, aggression and frustration”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel: Jews in Holy Land? What Jews?

The Israeli government announced that it would include the Cave of the Patriarchs (Me’arat HaMachpelah) in Hebron and Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem as part of a comprehensive plan to preserve Israel’s national heritage and religious sites (“Moreshet”). The reaction of the Arab (and all Islamic) world to the decision has once again showed the real essence of the “Arab-Israeli conflict”, which actually is the holy war that Arabs had proclaimed against the Jews.

[…]

It is the genocidal approach that is characteristic of Islam. Power and possession are inherent parts of religious attitude in Islam. This approach extends to all other religions, not only to Judaism. The idea consists in depriving other cultures of their spiritual base to achieve total physical domination over them.

The famous Belgian orientalist Koenraad Elst in his book “Negationism in India: Concealing the Record of Islam” writes:

“In all the lands it conquered, Islam has replaced indigenous places of worship with mosques. In Iran, there are no ancient Zoroastrians or Manichean shrines left. In Central Asia, there are no Buddhist temples left. Similarly, in India (except the far South where Islam penetrated rather late) there are practically no Hindu temples that have survived the Muslim period (over 10,000 destroyed). But there are thousands of mosques built on the foundations of Hindu temples (for example, the Ayodhya temple).”

Nowadays, the same policy is being carried out towards the Jews. The ignorance, hypocrisy, and soullessness of the Western world make the problem easier to overcome.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy-Israel: Research: 2010 Tender for Joint Projects

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 9 — Medicine, biotechnologies, agriculture, renewable sources, environment and telecommunications are a few of the sectors where Italian companies and research institutes on one side, and Israeli companies on the other, will be able to present joint projects, as provided by the cooperation agreement covering the sectors of scientific research and industrial development signed by the two Countries. According to the tender for the gathering of joint research projects for 2010, joint Italy/Israel projects can be finance by Italian and Israeli authorities after winning a competition. Fundamental requisites for project finances include: technical innovation characteristics of the proposed product, process or service. The statement added that the submission of projects by Italian and Israeli participants will have to occur simultaneously (each to its competent authority) no later than May 20 of 2010. For further information see www.esteri.it . (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Artist Defiant Despite Fine for Turkish PM ‘Mockery’

A British artist whose collage was found to have mocked Turkey’s prime minister has been fined by a court in Istanbul.

Michael Dickinson walked smiling from the Kadikoy district court, a free man, but not completely off the hook.

The judge ruled that the British artist had crossed the line with his cartoon, superimposing the head of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan on the body of a dog, and found him guilty of insulting Mr Erdogan’s “dignity and honour”.

The judge sentenced him to 425 days in prison, the first time anyone has been jailed for criticising the prime minister.

But the sentence was immediately commuted to a fine of about £3,000.

When a defiant Mr Dickinson insisted he would not pay, the judge explained that, provided he made no new cartoons of the prime minister over the next five years, the fine would be put aside.

“Of course I’m relieved”, he told the BBC outside the court.

“I didn’t know what to expect. But I still don’t think I should have been guilty, and I’m not saying I’m not going to make any more cartoons of politicians.”

It has been quite a legal saga for the 59-year-old teacher, writer, anti-war activist and founder of the Istanbul branch of the Stuckist art movement.

‘Best in Show’

He was originally charged under the draconian article 125 of the Turkish criminal code in June 2006, after exhibiting a collage titled “Best in Show”.

It showed George W Bush leaning over and tying a bow around the neck of a dog with Mr Erdogan’s head on it, as a critique of Turkey’s alliance with the United States.

The case against Mr Dickinson, originally from County Durham, was dropped, but outside court he displayed a similar cartoon to journalists, in protest he said against the prosecution of his Turkish colleagues.

When that case finally came to court in September 2008 he was acquitted — but the verdict was overthrown on appeal by a state prosecutor.

The prosecutor insisted the crime was so serious that Mr Dickinson must do time in prison.

The judge seems to have found a way out of the potentially embarrassing scenario of a foreign artist being put behind bars for offending the prime minister.

Nevertheless the case will ring alarm bells with human rights groups documenting what they say are multiple attacks on freedom of expression in Turkey.

Some originate with the famously thin-skinned prime minister himself.

Michael Dickinson is not the first cartoonist, for example, to be sued for depicting Mr Erdogan as an animal.

One notable edition of the satirical magazine Penguen in 2005 had him represented as no fewer than nine animals — that case was thrown out by the judge, but Mr Erdogan has won thousands of pounds in damages over the years.

‘I like it here’

But journalists and writers often face far more serious charges.

One article in the criminal code — the infamous “301” on insulting “Turkishness” — has been used to prosecute award-winning novelists Orhan Pamuk and Elif Safak, and Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was murdered by a Turkish nationalist in 2007.

Powerful prosecutors are prepared to go after any journalist deemed to be sympathetic to terrorist groups.

Last month a Kurdish journalist was jailed for 21 years because his paper used a respectful term of address when describing the jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan.

Another Kurdish journalist is facing up to 525 years in prison on similar charges.

Also last month, the editor of a well-known newspaper website was freed after spending 10 months in prison, suspected only because she had met the leader of an extreme left-wing group.

By those standards Michael Dickinson can count himself lucky.

So what are his plans now? He went back to the UK last year, after 24 years in Turkey, but says he did not like his native country much.

“I like it here, I like the food, the people, the weather”, he said.

“But at least in Britain I could make satirical pictures of Gordon Brown and not go to jail.”

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



Barry Rubin: The Saudi Foreign Minister Explains the New Middle East

Here’s today’s evidence that we are now living in Middle East 2.0 instead of the old version.

First, a definition:

Middle East 1.0: Characterized by Arab nationalist domination, competition among the strongerArab states to lead the region and by the weaker ones trying to survive those campaigns. Arab-Israeli conflict is a real enterprise. Roughly 1952-2000 or so. International aspect: Cold War competition between the United States and USSR and, near the end, US as sole superpower.

Middle East 2.0: Characterized by a battle between Arab nationalist regimes and revolutionary Islamists. An Iran-led bloc (Syria, Hamas, Hizballah, Iraqi insurgents) seeking regional hegemony. Israel and most Arab states have parallel interests; Arab states (except for Syria) put low priority on conflict. International aspect: Will the West support the moderates or appease the radicals.

The latest occasion is an interview of Prince Saud al-Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister with Maureen Dowd of the New York Times. Of course, there are the usual rhetorical flourishes about Israel but the passion and focus is clearly on Iran and various Islamist terrorists. (“There is nothing wrong with keeping the terrorists on the run,” says the prince.)

This is the same man who told Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that sanctions would be too slow in stopping Iran from getting nuclear weapons and the United States better do something quick. Here he says he prefers a resolution through the UN but it isn’t clear what that means.

It’s funny that in the West the region is being discussed, written about, and taught as if we were back in the 1970s. There is a particular obsession with the idea that everything is about the Arab-Israeli conflict. But if the Saudis talk like this publicly (you can imagine what they say privately) it’s a sign of how changed everything is in Middle East 2.0’s world.

Read this carefully. The prince says:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Talks Between Greece and Qatar

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 8 — Greece and Qatar are discussing the construction of a liquid natural gas station and a power plant in the industrial district of Astakos, in the western part of Greece. According to a statement issued by the Greek government, State Minister Harris Pampoukis has talked over the phone with Qatar’s Vice Prime Minister and Energy Minister, Abdullah bin Hamad Al Attiyah, to discuss the investment project. According to estimates of the Greek government, the project will cost more than 3 billion euros and will create over 1,500 jobs. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Two Bear Cubs Rescued From Hunger

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 2 — Two 1 month old bear cubs that were dying from hunger were rescued in a mountain area in northern Turkey by the inhabitants of a village that found them unconscious and starving. The report was made by Turkey’s Dogan agency which specified that the discovery of the small plantigrades occurred in the woods surrounding the village of Aksu, close to the city of Arac. Despite searches carried out in the area, the mother of the cubs was not located and it is believed that she was shot down by poachers. According to Ihsan Ozbay, the vet who visited them, the cubs had not eaten in many days. They have been transferred to the bear rehabilitation centre in the city of Bursa where they are swiftly recovering their energy and vitality drinking litres of warm goat’s milk. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Not to Send Back Its Ambassador to US, Erdogan

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 9 — Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said that Turkey would not send back its ambassador to U.S. before seeing clear results, as Anatolia news agency reports from in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he was set to receive the ‘King Faisal International Prize’. On March 4, Turkey temporarily recalled its ambassador in Washington D.C. Namik Tan minutes after a U.S. congressional panel approved a resolution labelling the incidents of 1915 as “genocide”. The resolution on Armenian allegations related to the incidents of 1915 was adopted at the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs in a voting of 23-22. Shortly after the measure passed the committee voting, Turkish government said in a statement that Ambassador Tan had been recalled to Ankara for consultations. Speaking to reporters, Erdogan said that adoption of the resolution concerned Turkey, adding that the U.S. was a strategic ally and partner of Turkey. Erdogan said that the decision was not binding, however, the attitude was important. He said that the attitude of the U.S. in the next period was very important for Turkey, adding that Turkey was waiting for the attitude the U.S. would assume next. Erdogan noted that he did not believe the U.S. would sacrifice its strategic partner for simple political discussions. He said that Turkey would assess the situation in a large scale, and would not send back its ambassador before seeing a clear result. Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to normalize relations between the two countries. The protocols envisage the two countries to establish diplomatic ties and open the border that has been close since 1993. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Water: World Bank Raises Alarm for Yemen

(ANSAmed) — RIYADH, MARCH 8 — The World Bank has sounded the alarm regarding the water situation in Yemen. If the current impractical use of water is not restricted in the Sanaa area, about 80% of which is used for farming, the capital’s water basin could dry up completely within fifteen years, the Bank says. Due to the country’s serious economic problems, Yemeni authorities are unable to invest in expensive desalination facilities. The only alternative, according to a statement released by Italian Trade Commission in Riyadh, could be to build a new dam, which would allow control of water use, and of the unauthorised use of hundreds of illegally-built wells, of which there are at least 500 in the country, concentrated mainly in the area around Sanaa. The authorities in Yemen, however, “have announced that financial support is expected from the World Bank, as well as from Germany and the Netherlands, amounting to a total of 340 million euros invested for towards a water development project, the implementation of which is set to last fifteen years”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russia ‘May Get Italian Armoured Cars’

Lince ‘got positive rating’ says Russian industry source

(ANSA) — Moscow, March 9 — The Russian army may get Italy’s Lince (Lynx) armoured car, an anonymous source told the Interfax news agency Tuesday.

Talks on buying a “large shipment” of the highly rated vehicle are under way, according to the source, said to be “in the Russian military-industrial complex”.

“This model has already been tested in Russia and got a positive rating from Russian military sources,” the source said.

He gave no further details, saying that the price and conditions of sale had to be set.

According to unofficial sources at the Russian defence ministry, Moscow may buy up to 1,000 Lince cars.

But a Russian strategic expert, Ruslan Pukhov, pointed out that, unlike Israeli-built drones or Mistral-class French warships, Russia already produces the Tigr (Tiger) armoured car which is very similar to the Lince.

The Lince has been deployed in Iraq, Afghanistan and other Italian missions abroad and has been credited with saving soldiers’ lives.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Q: What to Do When a Taliban Hand Grenade Falls at Your Feet? A: Throw it Back at Them (And Save the Lives of Two Comrades)

When a Taliban hand grenade landed at the feet of Rifleman James McKie he made a split second decision that saved his life and those of two comrades — by picking it up and throwing it back.

As the soldiers came under fire from three different directions, the device exploded in mid air just yards away from where they were standing, sending shrapnel flying.

Rifleman McKie, of Reconnaissance Platoon, 3rd Battalion The Rifles, suffered injuries to his face and right arm.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Michael Yon: Of Concern

Abysmal, unsafe conditions which some of our most dedicated troops are living in, at a remote base run by the Spanish military in Afghanistan

The email is about the abysmal, unsafe conditions which some of our most dedicated troops are living in, at a remote base run by the Spanish military in Afghanistan. All deletions [xxx] are by me. I have the entire email. The serious and disturbing allegations are found in the second and third paragraphs.

Please note, that the failure to support permanent US troops at this Spanish base constitutes real negligence about their ultimate safety. And that comes on top of a degree of harassment that is shocking among allies.

The message begins:…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



India Sets Quota for Female MPs: 1/3 of Parliament Must be Women

India’s upper house of parliament voted overwhelmingly today for a historic bill that would reserve one-third of legislative seats for women, despite a boycott by socialist lawmakers.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described the 186-1 vote a ‘historic step forward toward emancipation of Indian womanhood.’ The bill now goes to the lower house, where it is likely to pass.

Members greeted the announcement of the voting result by thumping their desks.

The vote came after socialist lawmakers blocked the parliamentary debate on Monday and forced the upper house to adjourn twice today. The protesters later boycotted the voting.

The bill to reserve one-third of legislative seats for women — in national and state parliaments — has faced strong opposition since it was first proposed more than a decade ago, with many political leaders worried that their male-dominated parties would lose seats.

But socialist lawmakers’ objection is that the bill does not go far enough: They would like to see seats reserved for ethnic minorities and people from low castes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Three Indonesia Militants ‘Die in Raids Near Jakarta’

Indonesian security forces say they have killed three suspected militants in two raids near the capital Jakarta.

The raids were said to be linked to an ongoing operation against militants in Aceh province that has brought a number of arrests.

Police said they could neither confirm nor deny the man killed in the first raid was Dulmatin, a top member of the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) group.

He is wanted over the Bali bomb attacks in 2002 that killed 202 people.

‘Big name’

The first raid took place at an internet cafe in Pamulang city, west of the capital, local media reported.

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

Far East


China’s Ominous War Warning

High-ranking officer: ‘We can light a fire in their backyard’

A colonel in the People’s Liberation Army has written in a new book: “If the United States can light a fire in China’s backyard, we can also light a fire in their backyard.”

He forecasts that such a conflict could come in the near future — “at most 10 to 20 years.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China: 200mph ‘New Orient Express’ Could Get Passengers From London to Beijing in Just Two Days

The Asian power wants to build the 200mph rail line through Europe, the Middle East, India and Asia, in return to access to the natural resources of the countries it travels through.

Under the scheme, British passengers would be able to depart from King’s Cross in London and, using the Channel Tunnel, join a service to the Chinese capital.

Rail expert Wang Mengshu, from China’s Academy of Engineering, said: ‘We are aiming for the trains to run at 215mph.’

That means the 5,070-mile trip from London to Beijing — which currently takes a week or more and several changes of service — could be completed in 48 hours.

The new service will not be arriving in Britain just yet, but the Chinese are hopeful it could be here within ten to 15 years.

China already has its own high-speed railway network, and is negotiating to extend this to up to 17 countries.

Mr Wang said most of the countries already at the negotiating table are in south-east and central Asia. The talks involve a trade of resources for technology. Many of the countries are under-developed but mineral rich.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Britain Sends South Africa 42m Condoms in HIV Fight Before World Cup

Britain is to give 42m condoms to South Africa in response to a request for an extra billion as part of an HIV prevention drive before the World Cup, the government will announce today.

The request for British help in stockpiling sufficient condoms for the expected influx of thousands of football supporters in three months’ time was made during President Jacob Zuma’s recent visit to the UK to meet the Queen.

“Obviously there’s a big focus on the World Cup coming up and a huge increase in the number of people coming into South Africa,” said the international development minister, Gareth Thomas, who will announce the £1m funding today at an emergency summit in London on HIV prevention and treatment. “The South Africans have identified themselves the need to get more condoms in place. South Africa specifically asked for British assistance and we are responding to that request.” He pointed out that the fans would inevitably spill over into neighbouring African countries with high HIV rates, which would also need to take precautions.

The South African government estimates that up to half a million visitors could travel to the country, raising fears of a rise in prostitution and sex trafficking from neighbouring countries and eastern Europe, and creating a potential HIV timebomb.

Last week South Africa’s Central Drug Authority warned that 40,000 prostitutes were expected to arrive for the month-long tournament.

South Africa is embroiled in a struggle to combat the world’s biggest HIV caseload and to convince its population of the importance of safe sex.

The South African health minister, Aaron Motsoaledi, expressed concern that the message was being ignored because people believe HIV can now be easily treated.

“President [Jacob] Zuma made two far-reaching statements on World Aids Day,” Motsoaledi said. “He made a strong statement about prevention and a strong statement about treatment regimes, but after World Aids Day South Africans were only talking about the one.

“That’s what is worrying me. I am saying treatment must only come after prevention … We are worried that South Africans seem to be thinking that we have arrived.”

The Department for International Development (DfID) is keen to support the South African government because of the leadership it has shown recently on HIV. On World Aids Day in December last year, the South Africans announced bold plans to improve access to HIV treatment, particularly for pregnant women and young children, as part of a fresh political will to tackle HIV and Aids. Now the attention is turning to preventing new infections.

Some 450m male condoms are distributed in South Africa every year but, with 16 million sexually active men and one of the highest HIV infection rates in the world, there are never enough.

The DfID will today host an emergency meeting in London to try to stop the fight against HIV and Aids from running into the sand. Five years ago, the G8 pledged universal access to treatment and prevention by 2010. About 4 million people in poor countries are now on antiretroviral drugs to keep them alive, but more than 8 million still urgently need them. More than 33 million people live with HIV around the world and a further 2.5 million people became newly infected last year.

The Global Fund to fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, which channels money from donor countries into disease-fighting programmes designed and carried out by developing countries themselves, said that an estimated 4.9 million lives have been saved since it was set up in 2002.

It predicted that, if efforts continue, mother-to-child transmission of HIV in childbirth could be eliminated by 2015, TB could be halved and malaria effectively eliminated from many countries. But its funding is now under threat.

“This report clearly shows the world’s investments are making a difference,” said Michel Sidibé, executive director of UNAids.

“However, Aids is not over in any part of the world and, without a fully funded Global Fund, our shared dream of universal access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support could become our worst nightmare — putting the lives of millions of people currently on treatment in jeopardy and millions of pregnant women … not able to protect their babies from becoming infected.”

HIV nation

An estimated 5.7 million South Africans are living with HIV, about one in every five adults. There are about 1,400 new HIV infections and nearly 1,000 Aids deaths every day. Television adverts ask viewers to “imagine the possibility of an HIV-free generation” by being cautious. But condom use is still far from a social norm.

Critics accuse South Africa’s leadership of undermining the fight with denialism and hypocrisy. Former president Thabo Mbeki’s unwillingness to act has been blamed for the premature deaths of 300,000 people.

President Jacob Zuma, while being tried on charges of raping an HIV-positive family friend in 2006, was ridiculed for testifying he took a shower after sex to lower the risk. He was acquitted of rape. Earlier this year he again did not use a condom when having sex with the daughter of a family friend, who subsequently gave birth to his 20th child.

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



Mauritania: Moderate Islam Party for Fight Against Al Qaeda

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 9 — The president of Tewassoul, Mauritania’s moderate Islam party, today called for a general fight against extremists “to guarantee the security of the people and of Muslim, Christian and Jewish guests, and all those who are amongst us”. Jamil Ould Mansour, whose small opposition party holds 5 of 95 seats, condemned the recent hostage kidnappings in Mauritania carried out by terrorists linked to the al Qaeda Organization in the Islamic Maghreb and invited all the countries in the region to “continuous coordination and orchestration before making any decision concerning the fight against terrorism”. A clear reference to Mali’s decision to set free a Mauritania extremist to gain the liberation of a French hostage. Four fundamentalists arrested in April 2009 in north Mali, which al Qaeda asked to be set free in exchange for French citizen Pierre Camatte, were freed last month. Nouakchott and Algiers recalled their ambassadors in Bamako after the release in sign of protest. Three Spaniards and two Italians kidnapped at the end of November and in mid December are still being held in northern Mali. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Vatican Concerned Over Events in Nigeria

Religion not seen as the cause of Muslim-Christian violence

(ANSA) — Vatican City, March 8 — Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi on Monday expressed the Holy See’s “concern and horror’ over the wave of violence in Nigeria which has left hundreds of Christians dead.

Lombardi added that indications were that the Christians had been attacked not for religious but for social reasons.

Some 500 people are believed to have been killed at the weekend when Muslim herdsmen attacked three mostly Christian towns near the city of Jos.

The attack came two months after similar clashes between Muslim and Christian groups over control of fertile farmland in the state of Plateau.

Speaking Monday on Vatican Radio, the archbishop of Abuja, Msgr John Olorunfemi, said the violence was the result of “a classic feud between farmers and herdsmen, the difference being that the herdsmen are all Muslim and the farmers are Christians”.

“It’s easy for the international press to simply report that Muslim and Christians are killing each other. But this is not the case because the cause is not religious but has to do with social, economic, tribal and cultural issues and differences,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Estonia Urges Cooperation With Russia in Fighting Illegal Immigration

Estonian President Toomas Henrik Ilves called on Monday for closer cooperation with Russia in combating illegal immigration to EU countries.

“I mean cooperation between the police and border protection services of Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland and Sweden, as well as our cooperation with Russia, because it is from there that illegal refugees are attempting to penetrate EU countries,” Ilves said.

He said the greater part of illegal refugees, most of them Afghan nationals, sought to get to Estonia across the Russian-Estonian border.

He stressed, however, that the Estonia border “is well protected.”

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



UK: Asylum Seeker Who Stabbed His Friend to Death on the Loose After Escape From Secure Hospital

A mentally ill killer locked up for slitting the throat of a butcher is on the run after escaping from a secure London hospital.

Fida Mohammed Utmanzi, a 20-year-old Afghan asylum seeker, absconded from the North London Clinic in Edmonton, at 7.23pm yesterday.

He disappeared just eight weeks after he was detained indefinitely under the Mental Health Act on being convicted of manslaughter at the Old Bailey.

Police warned members of the public not to approach Utmanzi but to dial 999 immediately.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Abortion: Spain; Bishops Start New Campaign, It’s My Life

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 9 — A new campaign against abortion, on occasion of the Life Day that will be celebrated on March 25, was presented today by Spain’s Episcopal Conference. “It’s my life! It’s in your hands” is the slogan which lies next to the image of a newborn baby held up by the crossed arms of its mother and father. In a statement disseminated through the SEC’s website, the bishops assure that the campaign’s main objective is to “keep on giving voice to those who will be born to defend their right to life and offer real support to pregnant mothers in hardship”. The new initiative follows the aggressive advertisement campaign sponsored in recent months by the Episcopal conference which opposed the image of a baby to that of an Iberian lynx with the following text: “It’s more protected than an unborn baby”. In this occasion, the bishops plan on distributing, from March 15 to 30, 6 million information pamphlets and to post 30,000 posters in Spanish parishes and dioceses, together with 1,500 large advertisement billboards that will appear in 37 Spanish cities. The bishops point out that the new law on abortion, which was approved in its final version by the Senate on February 24, and against which last Sunday in Madrid some tens of thousands of pro-life association members took to the streets, “aside from being a major step backwards in the legal protection afforded to the life of unborn babies, entails a greater abandonment of pregnant mothers”. The pro-life associations announced an appeal in Strasbourg against the law approved by the Spanish Courts. The law on abortion, which decriminalises the voluntary interruption of pregnancy during week 14 of pregnancy, and up to week 22 in case of major deformation of the foetus or risk for the physical and mental wellbeing of the mother, will come into effect on July 5, after it is signed by king Juan Carlos and published on the State’s Official Bulletin. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Holland Proposes Giving Over-70s the Right to Die if They ‘Consider Their Lives Complete’

Assisted suicide for anyone over 70 who has simply had enough of life is being considered in Holland.

Non-doctors would be trained to administer a lethal potion to elderly people who ‘consider their lives complete’.

The radical move would be a world first and push the boundaries even further in the country that first legalised euthanasia.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Race to the Bottom

…Remember, the goal is homogenous children who all display the behaviors deemed necessary to achieve and maintain the sustainable global environment of the “created future.”

What is this type of curriculum intended to achieve? A critical thinker. What is a critical thinker? In the words of one critical thinking guru, schools don’t want a Naïve Nancy or a Selfish Sam, schools want a Fairminded Fran, someone who thinks right and wrong are situational; what is right today maybe be wrong tomorrow in a different situation; truth is always “in flux” with no absolutes. A Fairminded Fran is a dialectic thinker; someone who truly believes that perception is reality; who runs on feelings rather than cognition.

The dialectic thinker is at the opposite end of the spectrum from a didactic thinker who runs on facts, who believes in absolutes, who believes right and wrong are static, not situational. A dialectic thinker is easily manipulated while a didactic thinker is not; therefore not given to abandoning individual principles for the group principles derived by consensus.

While education reform advocates scoff at the claim that schools are brainwashing children, that is exactly what they are doing. These are the same tactics that Edward Hunter describes in his book, Brainwashing, published in 1958, about the “men who endured and defied the most diabolical red torture” at the hands of Marxists. What is happening in America has a name; it’s called transformational Marxism, the quiet atrophy (as opposed to violent overthrow), via gradualism, to the Marxist state. As already apparent in the growing chaos of America, transformational Marxism is the pipe dream of dialectic thinkers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Bill Gates: Use Vaccines to Lower Population

Billionaire advocates curbing CO2 by reducing earth’s inhabitants

One of the world’s wealthiest men and the founder of Microsoft, Bill Gates, has suggested vaccines as one method of reducing the world’s population.

Gates made his remarks to the invitation-only Technology, Entertainment and Design 2010 Conference in Long Beach, Calif. His February address was titled, “Innovating to Zero!”

He presented a speech on global warming, stating that CO2 emissions must be reduced to zero by 2050. Gates said every person on the planet puts out an average of about five tons of CO2 per year.

[…]

Discussing the “P,” or population portion of the equation, he stated, “Let’s take a look. First we got population. The world today has 6.8 billion people. That’s headed up to about 9 billion. Now if we do a really great job on new vaccines, health care, reproductive health services, we could lower that by perhaps 10 or 15 percent”.

[Comments from JD: see url for video.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Klaus Warns of Environmentalism While on Visit to USA

Palm Beach — Czech President Vaclav Klaus, now on a working visit to the USA, today warned of the threat to freedom and prosperity by environmentalists who are trying to dominate people and stop economic growth under the excuse of the protection of nature and climate.

“Environmentalism and its most extreme version, global warming alarmism, asks for an almost unprecedented expansion of government intrusion and intervention into our lives and of government control over us,” Klaus said in a speech he delivered to the conservative Club for Growth.

“Environmentalism also wants to suppress economic growth, reduce prosperity and hinder human progress,” he added.

“The environmentalists ask for substantial reduction of carbon dioxide emissions. When it happens — with our current technologies — it will substantially increase the costs of energy for everyone because it would imply restrictions on the use of oil and coal, which are no doubt much cheaper than all alternative energy sources,” Klaus said.

“When energy prices go up, the costs of nearly all other goods and services go up as well. All carbon taxes, cap-and-trade schemes and wind and solar power subsidies are steps in the wrong direction, leading to a severe and protracted economic hardship for little or no benefit,” he added.

“There are plenty of arguments suggesting that the real threat for human society is not global warming itself. The real threat comes when politicians start manipulating the climate and all of us,” Klaus said.

“Politicians, their bureaucrats as well as many well-meaning individuals who accept the alarmist view of anthropogenic climate change probably hope that — by doing so — they are displaying intelligence, virtue and altruism. Some of them even believe they are saving the Earth. We should tell them that they are merely passive players in the hands of lobbyists, of producers of green technologies, of agrobusiness firms producing ethanol, of trading firms dealing in carbon emission rights, etc., who hope to make billions at our costs. There is no altruism there. It is a political and business cold-hearted calculation, he added.

Last year, too, Klaus was invited to present his views on global warming to the USA. He attended a conference on climate staged by the Chicago-based conservative organisation Heartland Institute in New York last spring.

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



Stakelbeck: Ex-Terrorist Takes CBN Inside Al Qaeda

I recently sat down for a lengthy interview with a former colleague of Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri.

Ex-terrorist Noman Benotman met with the two Al Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan shortly before 9/11 to discuss strategy.

He shared his insights with me about UBL and al-Zawahiri, based on his personal interactions with them:

—They consider the US a “paper tiger,”

—Bin Laden takes great pleasure in the killing of innocent civilians and how his attacks are portrayed by the Western media.

—Al Zawahiri, not Bin Laden, is the most extreme individual in Al Qaeda.

For more, watch my interview with Benotman at the link above.

[Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100308

Financial Crisis
» Germany and EU Plan ‘European IMF’
» Greece: Tajani: Positive Measures, Italy Not at Risk
» Greece: Fresh Strikes Today
» Greece Hits Bottom
» Obama Eyeing Your Retirement Account
» Portugal: Press, Tax Increase in Anti-Deficit Plan
 
USA
» Conservatives Do it in Public
» Custodian of U.S. Mosques Promotes Slaying Americans
» Eric Massa: Democrats Ousted Me Over Health Care
» Frank Gaffney: “The Gop’s Job #1”
» Michigan Kindergartner Suspended for Making Gun With Hand
» Obama Targets GOP in Last-Ditch Pitch for Health Care Bill
» Obama’s TSA Pick: Hire on ‘Ethnic Diversity’
» Pardon Me, Obama Administration, But Isn’t Your Policy on Fire?
» Was the Pentagon Shooter an Obama-Approved Pothead?
» Why Joe the Plumber Should Not Accept a Compromise McCain Bill
 
Europe and the EU
» Cyprus: EU Launches Bids for Turkish Community’s Schools
» Flemish Pride
» France: Problems in South Due to Heavy Snow
» Italy: ‘Won’t Pay’ Sex Clients Guilty of Rape
» Italy: 53% of Income Concentrated in North
» Italy: 70% Home-Owners and 13% Mortgagees
» Let’s Keep Our Paws Off Knut’s Balls
» Portugal: Civil Servants Strike Over Salary Freeze
» Swedish Armed Forces Cuts Troops and Bases
» The Garbage of Naples: How the Mafia Helped Send Italy’s Trash to Germany
» UK Suspected Hitler Youth Acted as ‘Spyclists’
» UK: Baby Left in Bag Outside Mosque Dies After Police Took 80 Minutes to Spot He Was Still Alive
» UK: Drunken Teenage Yob Shouted ‘Timber’ After Killing Sports Coach With Single Punch
» Vatican Downplays Pope Miracle Report
 
Balkans
» Serbia-Croatia: 100,000 on Facebook Forum Against Hate
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Israeli Press Praises Maimonides Synagogue Restoration
» March 8: EU Competition on Gender Equality for Children
» Spain: Schools and Roads in Catalonia Closed
» Tunisia: One on Five Citizens Own Credit Card
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» UN Inquiry Accused of Anti Israel Bias
 
Middle East
» Audio: Dire Warning: Israel Must Strike Iran Now
» Earthquake: 150,000 to Die in Istanbul, Report Predicts
» Iran Gives Russia Pilots Two Months to Leave: Report
» Iran: Influential Cleric Urges Veil Crackdown
» Turkey Earns USD 825.9 Mln From Hazelnut Exports
» United Arab Emirates to Follow Third Reich Policies Against Jews
 
South Asia
» Pakistan: Car Bomb on Intelligence Headquarters in Lahore , 11 Dead and Over 60 Injured
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Appeals for Calm After Nigerian Sectarian Slaughter
» Nigeria: Troops Deployed to North After Christian Killings
 
Immigration
» 26 Illegal Immigrants Found in Lorry
» Roma Duped Into Seeking Swedish Asylum
 
Culture Wars
» Turkey: “Homosexuality is a Disease”, Says Minister
 
General
» IMF Floats Climate Change Fund Idea
» Political Agendas Continue to Drive Climate Fiasco

Financial Crisis


Germany and EU Plan ‘European IMF’

The European Commission and the EU’s biggest economy, Germany, are planning to create a “European IMF” that could rescue debt-ridden countries like Greece, officials said on Monday.

“The (European) Commission is ready to propose a European instrument like this that would have the support of eurozone members,” the EU’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn told the Financial Times Deutschland.

Rehn emphasised the financial aid would be linked to “strict conditions.”

“We are working closely on this issue with Germany, France and other EU member states,” he added in the interview.

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble have also suggested the creation of a European version of the Washington-based International Monetary Fund.

The IMF gives out emergency loans to countries with troubled finances.

“We’re not planning an institution that would compete with the IMF, but for the internal stability of the eurozone, we need an institution that has the experience and power of the IMF,” Schäuble told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

“We should calmly discuss the consequences of the Greece crisis and should not rule anything out, even the creation of a European Monetary Fund,” he said.

“I will shortly be making proposals on this topic,” added the minister.

Weighed down by a deficit over four times the EU’s limit, Greece has initiated a raft of austerity measures, including sweeping tax hikes and deep cuts in public spending.

The emergency action has sparked protests and nationwide strikes that have affected air and ground transport, as well as schools and hospitals.

On an international level, the crisis has weighed heavily on the value of the common currency, the euro, and on the financial markets.

Napolitano called for the creation of a European monetary fund to help eurozone nations in trouble during a visit to Brussels last week.

“The European Central Bank (and) the European institutions are aware that there’s something missing from our common tool box to tackle unforeseen and serious crises in one of the eurozone nations,” he said.

Socialists in the European Parliament have also called for the creation of such a fund to be managed by the European Investment Bank (EIB).

Under their scheme the EIB, Europe’s lending arm, would borrow from the market at a reasonable interest rate. Countries in crisis could then borrow these funds at a similar rate as others are able to do.

Such a system would protect the eurozone against speculative attacks and create conditions in which a sovereign default by any eurozone member state “is clearly judged impossible by the markets,” the European Socialists said.

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



Greece: Tajani: Positive Measures, Italy Not at Risk

(ANSAmed) — MILAN, MARCH 8 — “The measures taken by the Greek government to deal with the situation are very positive. They appear to be adequate to deal with the problems”, said European Commissioner for Industry Antonio Tajani. He added that “Italy is not at risk, also because it has a good banking and business system”. “Greece will not leave the Eurozone, we have never taken this into consideration: we are making sure that the possible problems for the euro will not spread to other countries”, Tajani added from a meeting on SME in Milan. “Greece must solve its problems giving significant and positive answers to the markets, because confidence in the markets is important” the European Commissioner concluded.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Fresh Strikes Today

(ANSAmed) — ATEHENS, MARCH 8 — Greek customs officers have begun a 48-hour strike today against the government’s austerity package, and the country’s rubbish tips are closed until Thursday, the day of a national strike. Court employees will also be striking for two hours today. Communists, who will be taking part in Thursday’s general strike called by the Gsee and Adedy unions, private and public sector workers, have called strikes today in Athens and other cities for International Women’s Day and against the latest measures in order to “keep the pressure” on the government. Students and teachers are also mobilising, though only in part. Since Friday the State Printing Office has been occupied by Interior Ministry employees, who are trying to prevent the publication of the latest measures in the official gazette, and former employees of the privatised Olympic airlines are continuing their protests in front of the State Treasury. According to polls, most Greeks are against the mass strikes against the latest government measures, even though they believe that the latter are too harsh and unfair, and would like them to be temporary only. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece Hits Bottom

A Clash of Cultures on the Aegean

The Greek government is doing everything it can to prevent national bankruptcy. But the real fight will be waged between those in Greece who are prepared for sacrifice and those who want to cling to the good old days. A report from the front lines.

The 2004 Olympic Games in Athens were easily the high point in the career of Kostaris Antonis, 45. “I had never before experienced such a thing, neither emotionally nor financially,” he says. Antonis is sitting on his rooftop terrace, which looks out onto the Acropolis. His eyes glow in the sun — and with the memory of Greece’s grand success six years ago.

Antonis is the head of a mid-sized landscaping company with some 50 employees, depending on the season and demand. Prior to the Olympics, Antonis was able to beat out a number of other companies for contracts to beautify game venues in both Athens and Piraeus. Even today, he says, he is still “especially proud” of the honor. It also reminds him of a time when the world still seemed intact.

Today, Antonis still specializes in large projects with high visibility. But his pride has slowly given way to financial worries. “I don’t know anymore how I’m going to go forward,” he says.

He adds that clients owe him a total of €4 million ($5.4 million) for work already completed — with most of the projects having been done for municipalities and other public entities. The northern city of Thessaloniki, for example, owes him €780,000, and there is no sign that it will pay him any time soon.

‘Gets Me Down’

The open account stems for work done in 2006 to beautify venues for an international track and field meet. The contractor was the General Secretariat of Sports, a division of the country’s Culture Ministry. But, so far, not a single cent from the job has landed in Antonis’ account. “It bothers me and sometimes really gets me down,” he says.

But it’s not the only deadbeat customer on Antonis’ books. Indeed, unpaid invoices have become the rule rather than the exception for his company, particularly when it comes to public contractors. He is also owed €180,000 for landscaping work done along some of the main roads in central Athens last year. The 2009 fiscal year has long since passed, but Antonis has seen no money from the project. He has repeatedly been told “there were parliamentary elections,” whatever that’s supposed to mean.

If he is lucky, he is able to use the outstanding invoices as collateral to secure bank financing. But being dependent on financial institutions during a crisis is hardly a comfortable place to be. Furthermore, he has to pay the interest himself and then try to get it back from the public creditors. “To be honest, there are moments when I think about just throwing in the towel,” Antonis says. “It can’t go on like this.”

The situation Antonis finds himself in is something being felt across the entire country. Fear is widespread — fear of a national bankruptcy or of losing one’s own livelihood. Nobody quite knows what a Greek insolvency would look like, but everyone assumes that things are going to get worse — or even completely horrible.

Even If It Hurts

Still, many in Greece have found a new cause for hope. Headlines, of course, are made by those who call general strikes and stage demonstrations in downtown Athens. But much of the population is now cautiously optimistic that Greek Prime Minister Georgios Papandreou, the country’s recently elected leader, will be able to lead the country out of crisis with his brutally honest assessment of Greece’s atrocious financial situation. On Friday, Papandreou is in Berlin for talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel. Prior to his visit, he asked in an interview for assistance from the German government — Berlin, he hopes, will help Greece secure better credit rates on the international financial markets.

“The new government is showing a desire to impose order,” Antonis says, full of praise, adding that he is convinced that “the words will be followed by action.”

Even if it hurts. The drastic austerity measures that Papandreou announced on Wednesday — and which were approved by Greece’s parliament on Friday — are even stricter than the ones that were originally envisioned. In all, the package of public-sector salary cuts, tax increases and pension freezes is worth €4.8 billion. “The days, weeks and months to come will not be easy,” Papandreou said. He compared the situation with a “state of war.” Unions responded promptly, threatening new demonstrations, general strikes and the occupation of government offices and agencies.

Indeed, in the coming weeks, how Papandreou interacts with his own countrymen will be one of the decisive questions. In addition to winning back the faith of the financial markets and the European Union, he must also win trust on the Greek street — and increase it.

Part 2: Come What May

For now, surveys indicate that up to two-thirds of Greeks support the austerity measures passed by the Papandreou government. Support for his party, the Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK), is at 48 percent, higher than it has been in decades. Still, the same figure illustrates a split in Greece — between those who realize the time has come for belt-tightening and those who want things to remain as they have been, no matter what the consequences are.

Kostas belongs to the latter group. The 38-year-old tax official, whose job won’t allow him to provide his last name, is vehemently opposed to the austerity measures. “It’s not the civil servants that are the thieves,” he says. “It’s the others.” For this reason, he participated in the recent labor disputes “on principle” as well as in last week’s general strike. And he’ll do it again, too. As he sees it, these are “defensive actions.” “But a strike alone,” he says, “can’t block the state’s way forward.”

Including benefits, Kostas’ after-tax income is €1,900 ($2,600) a month. His wife, likewise a tax official, earns the same. He says that, with the introduction of the reforms, he, his wife and their three-year-old son will have to make do with at least €500 less per month. “That is a huge problem for our household budget,” he says.

Still, they are relatively privileged. They earn more than the average Greek salary of €700-€900 per month and, as civil servants, they can’t be fired or laid off. And, the bloated Greek bureaucracy is a major part of the problem. One out of every four people working in Greece is an employee of the state.

The Art of Survival

As Alternative Foreign Minister Dimitris Droutsas says, the government finds it “only natural that there are also counter-reactions and resentment.” He adds: “We have to convince our population that we will proceed in a way that is as socially just as possible. That those with less won’t be squeezed, and that those with more will be asked to contribute more to the rehabilitation. It’s an issue of credibility.”

In essence, though, it’s not merely a question of tax and pension system reform aimed at getting the country back on track. Rather, it is an offensive against an ingrained culture and mentality. It’s about the art of everyday survival in modern-day Greece.

Such survival has long been dependent on who you know — and how much you are willing to pay in bribes. The system is known as “fakelaki” — a word meaning “little envelope” and which refers to the bribes regularly demanded of Greek citizens to “expedite” service. In reality, of course, no fakelaki often translates to no service. Sums of money stuffed in envelopes are passed across desks to secure appointments, documents and permits. It’s a playful form of corruption that is firmly anchored in everyday Greek life.

Like Gyros and Tzatziki

In a recent survey, 13.5 percent of Greek respondents admitted to paying fakelaki; on average, they said they paid €1,450 ($1,970) a year. In reality, though, the numbers and sums could be much, much higher. In Greece, cronyism and bribery go together like gyros and tzatziki. As television sports reporter Dimitris Malisiovas says, there are two important things in a Greek’s life: “knowing someone in the right position and tipping.”

As one German who does business in Greece says, you “practically can’t get a driver’s license without some fakelaki,” adding that you certainly won’t get one on the first try. The way it regularly works, he says, is that you will have “two testers, each of whom gets €100.” And for an important operation, you’ll often have to fork over up to €4,500, even if the cost itself is already covered by medical insurance.

Officials estimate that, of the 25 million houses and buildings in Greece, 10 percent of them are completely illegal and 80 percent are partially illegal, expanded or renovated without a permit. Bribes, of course, cleared the way. Then there is the practice of collecting the pensions of those who have passed away. The most recent census found that pension checks of between 40,000 and 60,000 deceased people, some of whom have been dead for years, were still being cashed. As one civil servant explains, dead people are responsible for notifying the pensions office of their deaths themselves.

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



Obama Eyeing Your Retirement Account

‘Automatic IRAs’ to grab dollars for funding federal deficits?

The Obama administration is quietly exploring strategies that would require hundreds of billions of dollars in programs such as 401(k)s and Individual Retirement Accounts to be invested in U.S. Treasury bonds, Jerome Corsi’s Red Alert reports.

Corsi reports the administration is doing so under the guise of making workplace retirement savings accounts available to all Americans and ensuring that existing retirement savings accounts pay lifetime income.

He noted the Obama administrations needs to sell $1.5 trillion in new U.S. Treasury debt in 2010 just to keep the government operating under the federal budget deficit projected for this year.

“With the Federal Reserve scheduled to phase out its direct purchases of Treasury debt, the Obama administration is anxious to find another market upon which to unload hundreds of billions of dollars of Treasury bonds carrying yields much lower than would be required to sell the same hundreds of billions of dollars of Treasury bonds in the open market,” Corsi explained.

He said the Obama administration is contemplating implementation of a so-called “automatic IRA,” packaged as a program designed to guarantee all workers have access to a retirement plan through their place of employment, even if the employer does not currently offer a pension or other tax-favored retirement plan.

What the ‘automatic IRA’ ends up being is a government mandate that every employee must have a portion of their compensation direct-deposited into a government-mandated IRA,” Corsi wrote, “perhaps whether the employee wants to participate or not.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Portugal: Press, Tax Increase in Anti-Deficit Plan

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 8 — The Portuguese government is working on a plan to bring down the country’s deficit and might eliminate some tax deductions beginning in 2011, as well as raise taxes on financial returns. Reports were from the daily Diario de Noticias, quoted by Bloomberg, which said that the government might continue to freeze government salaries. Among the measures being looked into by the Portuguese government, which will be presenting the plan to the European Union this month, is reportedly also cuts to the Welfare sector: the daily paper Jornal de Negocios wrote that the government is mulling a reduction in expenditure on unemployment benefits for some forms of compensation provided for those receiving a pension. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Conservatives Do it in Public

Unlike liberals, conservatives don’t have to resort to lying and subterfuge to communicate their ideas

No conservative in American history ever attempted the takeover of one sixth of the national economy by way of stealth or by bullying. No legislation has been crafted by conservatives behind closed doors on Christmas Eve without so much as a nod to the opposition party. Health insurance by conscription is anathema to conservative principles.

The convoluted and unconstitutional mélange of devices brewed by liberals would not only commandeer a huge chunk of the US economy, it would change forever the valued relationship between patient and physician; replacing the doctor’s judgment with that of listless bureaucrats.

Worse still, the health crimes legislation would establish a permanent left wing majority in a country that is by nature, center right. Small comfort that the November elections are a presumable rout for the Democrats who supported this lubricity. The mutations to our way of life wrought by the liberals’ scheme will endure far beyond a single midterm or even presidential election.

[…]

Conservatism, in its purest form is effortless. Nobody ever has to force conservatism on a population.

Liberalism, like its cousins, socialism and communism, is entirely antagonist to basic human nature. It’s pure folly to believe that humans will toil as hard for an amorphous “common good” as they will to provide for themselves and their families.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Custodian of U.S. Mosques Promotes Slaying Americans

NAIT: ‘It is the duty of Islam to fight him until he is killed’

The custodian of most of the major mosques in America acts as a front for the radical Muslim Brotherhood in America, and publishes and distributes Islamic literature that exhorts Muslims to “kill” any Westerners who get in the way of spreading Islam, WND has learned.

“No political system or material power should put hindrances in the way of preaching Islam. If someone does this, then it is the duty of Islam to fight him until either he is killed or until he declares his submission,” asserts an Islamic publication distributed by the North American Islamic Trust.

NAIT holds title to more than 300 mosques in America — including the large Islamic center outside Washington where the Fort Hood terrorist and some of the 9/11 hijackers worshipped.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Eric Massa: Democrats Ousted Me Over Health Care

Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.) says the House ethics committee is investigating him for inappropriate comments he made to a male staffer on New Year’s Eve — and that he’s the victim of a power play by Democratic leaders who want him out of Congress because he’s a “no” vote on health care reform.

“Mine is now the deciding vote on the health care bill,” Massa, who on Friday announced his intention to resign, said during a long monologue on radio station WKPQ. “And this administration and this House leadership have said, quote-unquote, they will stop at nothing to pass this health care bill. And now they’ve gotten rid of me, and it will pass. You connect the dots.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: “The Gop’s Job #1”

One of the most influential conservatives in America this weekend gave a sneak peek at a soon-to-be-published book he has written calling for a “New Republican Party.” (The ground rules of the meeting were off the record; the book will be out soon, though, so stay tuned for much more about it.) The author underscored that for the sort of improved GOP we need, “national security must be Job #1.”

Unfortunately, as noted in this space two weeks ago, it seems that for a some prominent Republican/conservatives, to paraphrase the “Open Borders” crowd, national security is a job Americans don’t want to do anymore.

Consider the scant and mostly euphemistic treatment of the issue in the new Conservative Action Project manifesto dubbed the Mount Vernon Statement, released with much fanfare on February 17. Not particularly objectionable, but a pale comparison to the principled and robust opposition to the totalitarian ideology of the day, Soviet Communism, enunciated fifty years before by William F. Buckley, Jr. and other founders of the modern conservative movement in America.

Then, there was the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in which, apart from several noteworthy addresses, the official agenda was largely bereft of any discussion of the threats to our nation, constitution and society arising from today’s totalitarian ideology — what authoritative Islam calls “Shariah.”

Most immediately, the final selection is underway for the Tea Party-inspired “Contract from America.” The idea is that activists and ordinary citizens are being polled to fashion a list of priorities for their elected officials. The only problem is that not one of the twenty options from which the public is being asked to chose addresses national security, Shariah-inspired jihad, terrorism, homeland security or any other aspect of the common defense. For people who are supposed to be attached to the Constitution— which gives priority to that federal responsibility— this seems to be a most curious oversight.

Or is it?…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Michigan Kindergartner Suspended for Making Gun With Hand

To the little boy’s mother, it was just a 6-year-old boy playing around.

But when Mason Jammer, a kindergarten student at Jefferson Elementary in Ionia, curled his fist into the shape of a gun Wednesday and pointed it at another student, school officials said it was no laughing matter.

They suspended Mason until Friday, saying the behavior made other students uncomfortable, said Erin Jammer, Mason’s mother.

School officials allege Mason had displayed this kind of behavior for several months, despite numerous warnings.

“I do think it’s too harsh for a six-year-old,” said Jammer, who was previously warned that if Mason continued the practice he would be suspended. “He’s six and he just likes to play.”

[Return to headlines]



Obama Targets GOP in Last-Ditch Pitch for Health Care Bill

Obama used his speech Monday to try to rouse supporters into helping him twist arms on Capitol Hill and send the bill over the “finish line” soon.

“Let’s seize reform. It’s within our grasp!” he shouted.

Looking to make this the home stretch of his yearlong reform push, Obama aggressively went after insurance companies and accused them of making “calculated” decisions to raise rates beyond what families can afford.

“The insurance companies continue to ration health care based on who’s sick, who’s healthy,” Obama said. “These insurance companies have made a calculation.”

[…]

As Obama spoke, House Republican Leader John Boehner warned that Americans will face higher taxes, reduced health benefits for the elderly and lost jobs if Obama gets his way.

Calling the proposed legislation “heavy on snake oil” and light on reality, Boehner said in a statement that Obama should take note of states that already want to opt out of his “burdensome health care mandates.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s TSA Pick: Hire on ‘Ethnic Diversity’

Robert Harding says placing minorities at top should be ‘requirement’

President Obama’s pick to head the Transportation Security Administration long has pushed for “ethnic diversity” as a determining factor in hiring new teams for U.S. military and intelligence agencies, WND has learned.

The president announced today his nominee for TSA chief, retired Gen. Robert Harding.

[…]

Harding declared “selection must be made at the senior levels!”

He added, “[There are] many ways to do that, but if legislation is needed maybe it should be part of the discussion here.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pardon Me, Obama Administration, But Isn’t Your Policy on Fire?

by Barry Rubin

The story of the U.S. engagement with Syria and the sanctions issue regarding Iran’s nuclear program are fascinating. Each day there’s some new development showing how the Obama Administration is acting like a deer standing in the middle of a busy highway admiring the pretty automobile headlights.

Or to put it a different way, it is like watching the monster sneak up behind someone. Even though you know he’s not going to turn around, you can’t help but watch in fascinated horror and yelling out: “Look out!” But he pays no attention.

So I’m not just writing about these two issues in isolation but as very appropriate symbols of everything wrong with Western perceptions of the Middle East (and everywhere else) and the debates over foreign policy (and everything else) nowadays.

On Syria, for the most recent episodes of the story see here and here but, briefly, the Syrian government keeps punching the United States in the face as Washington ignores it.

But now, on March 1, a new record is set. The place: State Department daily press conference; the main character, departmental spokesman Philip J. Crowley. A reporter wants to know how the administration views the fact that the moment the U.S. delegation left after urging Syrian President Bashar al-Asad to move away from Iran and stop supporting Hizballah, Syria’s dictator invited in Iran’s dictator along with Hizballah’s leader and Damascus moved closer to Iran and Hizballah. Indeed, Asad said regarding Hizballah, “To support the resistance is a moral, patriotic and legal duty.”

In other words, the exact opposite of what the United States requested. Is the government annoyed, does it want to express some anger or threat?so

Let’s listen:…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Was the Pentagon Shooter an Obama-Approved Pothead?

The left says he was a right-winger; the conservatives say that he was a leftist. What is abundantly clear, from reading his Internet commentaries, is that Pentagon shooter John Patrick Bedell was a psychotic pothead. He hated a government that he believed was standing in the way of his desire to use, grow and glorify marijuana. He virtually worshipped the drug. “I’m a cannabis enthusiast,” he proclaimed.

In terms of ideology, he expressed conservative ideas about limiting the role of government, but opposed the war in Iraq and favored open borders.

But rather than try and make silly ideological points by accusing Bedell of being either left or right, there is an urgent need for the blogosphere—and the major media—to address the question of how he became criminally psychotic and a patsy for conspiracy theories. The answer is marijuana, which alters the ability of the mind to comprehend reality but which is depicted by most of the media as safe and harmless.

This connection—between pot and mental illness—is a matter of the medical record but is conveniently being ignored in the many stories about this young man’s strange journey and tragic end.

The book, “Marijuana and Madness,” cites studies and evidence from around the world, some of it going back 40 years, linking the use of marijuana— supposedly a “soft” drug—to mental illnesses, including schizophrenia and psychosis. One of the latest studies finds that “Marijuana use at a young age significantly increased the risk of psychosis in young adulthood…”

The public laughs at the old propaganda films such as “Reefer Madness,” which depict marijuana smokers as crazed zombies. However, the Pentagon rampage was likely triggered by marijuana-induced psychosis. Bedell was not only a heavy marijuana user and had been busted for possession and growing the drug, but dedicated much of his life to glorifying the substance.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why Joe the Plumber Should Not Accept a Compromise McCain Bill

It is a common political strategy in Washington, when a member’s pet bill is in trouble, to signal an interest in accepting “reasonable” changes. Aware that John McCain’s Dietary Supplement Safety Act will not move without significant change, he now aims to save the awful measure, quell the loud opposition. and invite greater support by suggesting that he would entertain a lot of changes. The bill, however, is a disaster from beginning to end. The harm it is advertised to address (the sale of supplements as steroids) is already illegal. In short, there is no room for compromise on this bad bill. It needs to go to the dust bin.

McCain’s bill has hit a wall of opposition, a wall constructed by significant protests from consumers, physicians, and industry, precisely because it invites FDA to remove supplements from the market and it regulates down to the grandmother who distributes supplements from her basement. The bill is the political equivalent of a loathsome, contagious disease. Those who sign onto it will likely suffer the same rebuke as Senator McCain. Consequently, weeks after its introduction, it still has only one co-sponsor, the original one, the retiring liberal Democratic Senator Byron Dorgan.

While Senator McCain claims the bill is designed to protect consumer interests, his claim is belied not only by the bill’s terms but also by the fact that he introduced it on behalf of lobbyists for the major national baseball leagues, themselves representatives of corporate interests. As Congressman Ron Paul has astutely pointed out, the bill favors the pharmaceutical industry and threatens consumer access to supplements.

Senator McCain’s bill was advertised as a means to stop steroids from being sold as supplements, but instead the bill gives FDA broad new powers to ban all manner of supplements other than those sold as steroids, to require new registration and reporting by all who sell supplements, and to cause simple distributors of supplements to be open to FDA inspections, even civil penalties and fines, for the first time. In short, McCain’s bill greatly expands FDA discretionary power to remove a wide variety of safely consumed dietary supplements from the market and to cause presently law abiding citizens to become law violators for failing to file registration forms and keep records (neither of which are remotely needed to protect the public from supplements sold as steroids).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Cyprus: EU Launches Bids for Turkish Community’s Schools

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MAR 3 — The European Union, through Europeaid, launched the fourth Call for proposals under the Eu ‘Schools’ Initiative for Innovation and Change Grant Scheme, that will provide grants of between 10.000 euros and 50.000 euros to pre-primary, primary and secondary schools in the northern part of Cyprus. Only schools that have not received a grant under any of the three previous Calls for Proposals are eligible to apply. Overall, up to 500.000 euros will be available. The grant scheme, the European Commission affirmed in a note, will offer support to the modernisation of the Turkish Cypriot communitys education sector by funding a range of activities including, amongst others, training courses, study visits, upgrading of materials and equipment. The aim of such activities is to promote the development of modern teaching and learning methods, to raise the capacity of teachers, to improve the overall management of the educational system and to encourage networking between stakeholders. The deadline for submission of proposals is 20 april. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Flemish Pride

In the corner of a garage in Lede, Belgium, there are a dozen boxes stacked to the ceiling. Each box contains hundreds of small yellow flags with the black Flemish lion. This is the flag of the people, not the government. This is the identity of a culture that for centuries others have tried tirelessly to eradicate. When I speak with Ghislain, the owner, about bike racing, I speak of the favorites to win. He speaks of the Belgians. When he asks if I would like a beer, I am served a Westmalle Dubbel, his favorite Flemish beer. There are thousands of garages like this, and owners like Ghislain, many of whom I’ve met. They form the backbone of Flemish life, a culture that, unless you embrace, you risk remaining an outsider…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



France: Problems in South Due to Heavy Snow

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 8 — The south of France was hit by heavy snowfall last night, exceptional at this time of year. The snow has caused blackouts and problems on roads and in air transport. Eight departments in the south of France and in the Principality of Andorra stay on high alert today. The last time so much snow — up to 25cm on sea level and 40cm locally — fell in the area was in 1974. ‘Meteo France’ called the weather ‘remarkable’ considering the time of the year. In the Gard department, where 30cm of snow fell last night, around 250 people were unable to continue on the road and had to be “rescued and moved to temporary shelters”, local authorities report. Heavy vehicles, weighing more than 7.5 tonnes, are not allowed to run. Traffic remains difficult due to the ice that has formed on the roads. Yesterday evening the airport of Nimes, in the Gard, decided to reroute all flights to the airport of Montpellier. School busses are not running either, and the prefecture has asked people to move around as little as possible. According to Meteo France, the situation will improve this afternoon.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘Won’t Pay’ Sex Clients Guilty of Rape

Man who ‘did a runner’ gets four years

(ANSA) — Rome, March 3 — Clients who don’t pay prostitutes are guilty of rape, Italy’s highest court ruled Wednesday.

The Cassation Court, Italy’s highest appeals court whose sentences set legal precedents, upheld a four-year rape conviction against a Ligurian man who ‘did a runner’ from a hotel without paying for his sex bout.

“There is no doubt,” the supreme court justices said, “that the man abused the women and was aware of it”.

It was not consensual sex, the judges said, because the sex act was “only committed in light of the fee due”.

Diego S., 50, compounded his crime by getting the hotel to say he hadn’t been there, the court said.

He was ordered to pay Laura S. 2,000 euros as provisional compensation with further damages to be established by a civil court.

Diego S. was banned for life from any watchdog agencies and for five years from any other public position.

The court did not say what his occupation was.

Prostitution is not illegal in Italy but exploiting it is.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: 53% of Income Concentrated in North

(ANSAmed) — ROME, FEBRUARY 25 — On average about 53% on the income available to Italian families is concentrated in the north, 26% in the south and 21% in the central part of the country. The data came from research carried out by ISTAT examining the 2005-2007 period. In particular, the north-west, the central area and the south show similar average annual growth at about +3.2%, equal to the national average of +3.2%. On the contrary, growth in the north-east was above the national average at +3.4%. Topping the list was Emilia-Romagna with +4%. Regarding the north-west, Liguria and Lombardy show growth rates for income available to families for the 2005-2007 period at respectively +3.4 and +3.3%, while Piedmont and Valle d’Aosta showed rates inferior to the national average with +3% and +2.9% respectively. In the north-east there exist regions with rates above the national average, like Emilia-Romagna with +4% and the province of Trento +3.6% and others in which the increase was below the figure, like Veneto (+3%). In the central regions, Marche and Lazio showed figures above the national average at +3.4% and +3.3% respectively, while Umbria showed the most contained growth of all the regions with +2.5%. For southern Italy, Abruzzo distinguished itself, again for the 2005-2007 period, showing the largest increase in available income at 3.9%, followed by Molise with +3.8%. It is growth that compensates for the below average figure from Campania with +2.7%, Sardinia with +2.8% and Calabria and Sicily, both with 3.3%. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: 70% Home-Owners and 13% Mortgagees

(ANSAmed) — ROME, FEBRUARY 26 — Italy is a country of home-owners: the latest survey made by the country’s statistical agency, Istat (about the situation in 2008) shows that around 7 out of every 10 households (68.5% of the total, or 16.9 million households) are owner-occupiers, while around 2 in 10 (18.9% or around 4.7 million) pay rent. And there are the lucky ones: 3.1 million households (12.6% of the total) live in rent-free accommodation. Owner-occupiers (around 300,000 households re-scheduled their mortgages in 2008), represent 13.4% of the total, with percentages varying between 15.9% in the Centre-North to 8.2% in the South. It is a situation that mostly involves newly-weds: e.g. young couples without children (36.6%). Lastly, the costs: in 2008 housing costs (condominium, heating, gas, water, other services, normal upkeep, electricity, telephone, rent, passive mortgage interest) were one of the main outgoings for households. Average monthly spending stood at 347 euros, or 9% of income for the richer households and 30.5% for the less well-off. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Let’s Keep Our Paws Off Knut’s Balls

Castrate Knut? Overzealous animal rights activists need to keep their paws off Berlin’s beloved polar bear, argues Bernd Matthies from Der Tagesspiegel.

Knut is doing just fine, thank you. Berlin’s leading furry citizen is all grown-up. No longer an adorable celebrity fuzzball, Knut’s become a man — so to speak. He’s even got a live-in girlfriend at his small yet centrally located bear pad in the German capital. The only thing missing for an ursine happily-ever-after to this story is a couple of cute cubs of his own.

That is, if it weren’t for the killjoys at Peta. This week the animal rights group claimed that Knut and his lady Giovanna shared the same grandfather — which could lead to detrimental inbreeding should the two decide to start a family. The solution? Castrate Knut!

Perhaps not. First of all, the demand to snip Berlin’s favourite furry son is coming from an organisation known for its hunger for publicity. Peta would sell its own grandmother to create a few choice headlines — if you known what I mean.

Besides, what kind of signal does it send if Berlin neutered a city institution known around the globe? And let’s not mention the whole panda baby bust at the Berlin Zoo, shall we? If anything, the still extremely broke German capital could use another baby polar bear or two to keep the tourists happy.

So let’s keep our paws off Knut’s balls.

This commentary was published with the kind permission of Berlin newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, where it originally appeared in German. Translation by The Local.

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



Portugal: Civil Servants Strike Over Salary Freeze

(ANSAmed) — LISBON, MARCH 4 — Portuguese civil servants have downed tools in protest against the freezing of their salaries decided by the Socialist Government of Premier José Socrates as part of measures to reduce the public deficit. The strike was called by the country’s three main unions. It is the first since the election in September which Socrates won, although he lost the absolute majority in Parliament which he had held in the previous legislature. Today’s strike, said spokeswoman for the Common Front for the Public Administration, Ana Avoila, “is one of the largest strikes by the civil service”. Portugal’s public deficit is currently 9.3% of GDP. The Government of José Socrates is committed to going below the 3% ceiling by 2013 as imposed by Brussels.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swedish Armed Forces Cuts Troops and Bases

The Swedish Armed Forces (Försvarsmakten) has proposed to scale down the country’s domestic defences, closing at least one air force base, eliminating one troop regiment and halving training resources for home defences.

The reductions will lead to 800 million kronor ($112 million) in savings, which will be invested in the military’s transition to a professional army, according to a report from Sveriges Radio (SR).

In July 2010 Sweden’s compulsory military service scheme will come to an end and be replaced by a voluntary system, which is not expected to require the same training resources.

“We have a certain over capacity and can carry out our activities in fewer locations,” General Lieutentant Jan Salestrand told SR.

“We have not yet started identifying where they should be.”

The government has been criticized for plans to close air force bases and regiments, which opponents say will leave the country vulnerable to an attack. A freeze on any closures was ordered until after the general election in September.

However analysts speculate that the most likely candidates for closure will be the F17 air force base in Ronneby in southern Sweden as well as troop regiments in southern and western regions. Northern Sweden is expected to keep the F21 base in Luleå, which hosted Nato war games last year.

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



The Garbage of Naples: How the Mafia Helped Send Italy’s Trash to Germany

German courts have been dealing with an unusual problem. More than 100,000 tons of Italian trash were shipped to eastern Germany, saving a waste treatment plant from bankruptcy. But what could have been a solution to Naples’ notorious garbage crisis ran afoul of the law.

Plastic bags filled with garbage covered the Piazza del Plebiscito in Naples. In the suburbs, piles of garbage grew like tumors along arterial roads, and at night the air was heavy with the pungent odor of burning dumps. More than 1,100 tons of new waste was being added to the piles every day.

The garbage had to be removed. But how? And where would it go? That was the question that worried Lorenzo Miracle, the manager of an Italian logistics company.

Meanwhile, the streets were spic and span in Großpösna, a town in the eastern German state of Saxony. It is the site of the Cröbern Central Waste Treatment Plant, a monument to German thoroughness that cost at least €100 million ($135 million) to build and includes sewage treatment basins and a decorative pond. It is one of Europe’s most advanced facilities, a garbage dump for the 21st century.

But the Cröbern treatment plant was apparently bigger than it needed to be. Residents of the state were not producing enough garbage to keep the plant running at full capacity. It needed more waste. But who was going to provide it? That was the problem faced by Konrad Doruch, the waste treatment plant’s chief solid-waste procurer.

Each of the two men, Mr. Miracle and Mr. Doruch, had something the other man wanted. They reached an agreement, and beginning in April 2007, freight trains loaded with waste from Naples started running north to Großpösna almost daily.

‘Unprecedented’

It was an arrangement that seemed to benefit both sides. The only problem was that it apparently involved several illegal activities, including the unauthorized handling of hazardous waste, bribery and the establishment of a criminal organization.

Unfortunately for Doruch, the solid-waste procurer in Saxony, the Italian police targeted him in a large-scale investigation dubbed “Operation Ecoballe.” The investigators, hoping to get the better of the Neapolitan Mafia, known as the Camorra, intercepted hundreds of phone calls. Companies tied to the Camorra arrange for the transport and illegal disposal of waste, both in Italy and abroad.

In late November, the Italian investigators expanded their efforts to German soil. Prosecutors and police officers searched the waste processing plant in Großpösna and other waste processing and recycling companies in Saxony and the neighboring state of Saxony-Anhalt. The authorities were looking for anything associated with solid waste coming from Italy, including shipping documents, contracts and invoices. The investigation revolved around 150,000 tons of solid waste that had been transported to Germany in 200 freight trains, which apparently should never have been allowed to cross the Alps.

The Italian-German solid-waste profiteering scandals provide insights into a booming industry. According to investigations by Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), up to two million tons of household waste have already been dumped illegally in German waste dumps and former landfills. “The extent of the solid-waste profiteering activities is quantitatively and qualitatively unprecedented,” and has been completely underestimated by government agencies and politicians, according to an internal BKA study conducted with the goal of putting shady solid-waste deals on the agenda at the next conference of environment ministers in June.

Illegal Household Waste

The case of the Cröbern treatment plant shows that it is not always shady demolition companies and landfill operators who are treating law and order the way they treat waste. Even semi-governmental businesses have been suspected of acting illegally in extreme circumstances.

The circumstances were indeed extreme in April 2006, when local politicians in the eastern city of Leipzig met to discuss the crisis faced by the treatment plant operator, the Western Saxon Waste Disposal and Recycling Company (WEV). The company, a majority of which is owned by the city of Leipzig and the surrounding counties, was “in acute economic difficulties, which could ultimately jeopardize its continued existence,” the agenda of the meeting reads.

The WEV lost €4.5 million in 2005 alone, and it was time for management to come up with a plan. Decision-makers were in demand, men like Konrad Doruch, a Saxon with a pronounced dialect who has made a career for himself in the waste management business. At first, he was in charge of safety and fire protection at the waste treatment plant, and he was later promoted to the job of sales director.

Between 2003 and 2006, Doruch successfully arranged to have more than 200,000 tons of solid waste shipped from Italy. It was premium material for the plant in Großpösna, including slag from an aluminum plant in Novara and insulation material containing asbestos from Verona. State authorities had granted the Cröbern treatment plant special permission to dispose of the hazardous waste.

The WEV, losing money and lacking enough solid waste to keep its plant running efficiently, sent Doruch back to Italy. This time, however, he didn’t procure industrial waste from the north, but household waste from the south, from Naples and the surrounding Campania region, where the Camorra all but controls the waste disposal business.

If what the investigators claim is true, that was when the WEV’s methods became illegal. Household garbage from Campania cannot simply be exported to Germany like olive oil or wine.

Part 2: Afoul of German Treatment Laws

Since 2005, even German domestic household garbage can no longer be dumped into landfills. Instead, it has to be incinerated or subjected to a complicated procedure, which involves sorting and crushing the garbage, and then removing as much bacteria as possible. German authorities only approve garbage imports if the waste has been properly treated first.

Despite these restrictions, the Saxon and Italian solid-waste dealers tried anyway. Beginning in April 2007, freight trains filled with household waste began departing from the Maddaloni-Marcianise depot about 30 kilometers (19 miles) north of Naples, to be unloaded the next day in Großpösna, 1,500 kilometers away.

Minor incidents like the one that happened on April 26, when a special unit of the Carabinieri, Italy’s national police force, ordered foul-smelling containers opened, could not put a stop to the German-Italian garbage connection.

According to the freight documents, the containers were supposed to contain pre-treated waste, or intermediate products in the recycling chain. Instead, the Carabinieri found ordinary household waste from southern Italian kitchens, and seized eight containers. But by the next day, the trains were running again.

Under this system, the contents of 7,500 containers ended up in eastern Germany. It was apparently an extremely lucrative arrangement for the WEV, which is said to have been paid €16 million, or €86 per ton. The politicians from Leipzig and the surrounding areas must have been pleased, now that their prestigious project was finally paying off. Their company, almost bankrupt a year ago, was in the black.

It appears that authorities in Saxony were not particularly interested in the nature of the solid waste being processed in their treatment plants. Investigators believe they can prove that Sales Director Doruch simply lied about the contents of many shipments and promptly shipped the bulk of the waste, a total of 107,000 tons, to treatment facilities run by Andreas Böhme in neighboring Saxony-Anhalt. Böhme, an automotive body specialist by trade, did not have a permit to process solid waste from Italy, but he did own a waste shredder. In Saxony-Anhalt, the solid waste from Naples was apparently re-classified once again, this time as “sorted mineral waste,” which qualified it for disposal.

‘A Fixed Group’ of Criminals

Some of it wound up in a landfill in the town of Freyburg-Zeuchfeld, in Saxony-Anhalt, which was all but shut down in the spring of 2009, after state environmental inspectors had found 300,000 tons of illegally dumped waste at the landfill.

The prosecutors believe they know who is behind the garbage shipments. From the very beginning, says one investigator, “a fixed group of German and Italian criminals” planned to “dispose of the garbage from Campania illegally, because most of it was untreated, in the region of Saxony-Anhalt.”

Böhme denies this. His attorney, Steffen Segler, says that his client treated the solid waste from the WEV “properly.” Konrad Doruch also rejects accusations that he was involved in illegal garbage profiteering. Doruch, like his former boss at WEV, has since left the company.

The new man at the head of the waste treatment plant has hired an auditing firm to conduct an internal investigation, the results of which will be presented to the WEV Supervisory Board in mid-March. It’s still unclear whether, and when, prosecutors in Leipzig and Halle (the state capital of Saxony-Anhalt) will file charges.

Their counterparts in Naples appear to be further along in prosecuting the case. In the fall of 2008, they presented Lorenzo Miracle with an arrest warrant, and two dozen other managers at the treatment plant and officials were temporarily arrested. They all stand accused of being involved in illegal garbage profiteering.

It almost seemed as if these efforts had put an end to the international garbage dealers’ work. But that impression is deceptive. In December, another 100 tons of fresh garbage was discovered in a waste dump in Saxony-Anhalt. It was from Italy.

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

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



UK Suspected Hitler Youth Acted as ‘Spyclists’

The British intelligence agency MI5 suspected members of the Hitler Youth conducted bicycle reconnaissance tours through the countryside in the run-up to World War II, documents released by the UK National Archives revealed on Monday.

“File KV 5/87 deals with the activities of the Hitler Youth in the UK in the years leading up to the Second World War, in particular bicycling tours. The danger of reconnaissance activity was recognised, though initially on the basis of an exaggerated newspaper report about ‘spyclists’,” archive officials said in a statement about the newly declassified documents.

Concerns about the Hitler Youth tours apparently began after the Daily Herald newspaper ran a May 1937 article entitled, “Nazis must be spyclists,” which allegedly translated Nazi cycling association documents encouraging young fascists on holidays abroad to take special note of important landmarks and geological features for use by German authorities.

While MI5 was apparently sceptical about the report’s authenticity, it still gathered reports about Hitler Youth cycling tours through England ahead of the war.

The more than 100 pages of records and intercepted correspondence also detail how the Nazi organisation attempted to create a relationship with the Boy Scouts. The German ambassador reportedly invited prominent Boy Scout leaders, including founder Baden Powell, to dine with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop.

Powell was also allegedly invited to meet Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, though there is no evidence that such a meeting took place.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK: Baby Left in Bag Outside Mosque Dies After Police Took 80 Minutes to Spot He Was Still Alive

A baby abandoned on the steps of a mosque was left outside in the cold for 80 minutes by police officers who thought he was dead.

The boy was eventually spotted breathing as forensic officers investigated the scene where he was left in a carrier bag at the weekend.

He was taken to hospital where he died within the hour.

Witnesses told how the area was cordoned off and a white tent put up around the infant after police arrived at 10.30am on Saturday.

Shouts for an ambulance were heard around midday before the child was taken away in a police car.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Drunken Teenage Yob Shouted ‘Timber’ After Killing Sports Coach With Single Punch

A drunken teenage yob who had previously been let off with a string of warnings over his thuggery killed a university graduate with a single punch.

Adam Rogers, 24, was punched in the head after he stepped in to stop a fight during a night out.

When a friend later asked William Upton, 17, whether he had floored the sports coach with a single blow, he callously replied: ‘Timber!’

Today a judge said he was sick of dealing with cases involving young drunken youths.

Judge Stuart Baker said: ‘Sadly I don’t find the circumstances of this case to be unusual at all. Sitting here day after day after day I have an almost endless succession of cases involving young men who chose to go out, become far too affected by alcohol and then, by little cause or sometimes no cause at all, resort to violence seeming to think that it is alright to do it and thinking they are not going to do any harm.

‘It gets to the stage where members of the public — decent folk — who may want to go into the town centres in the evening, feel intimidated or unable to do so because they don’t know what sort of danger they will be exposed to as a result of young men being drunk and sparking off violence with no reason to do so.’

He said: ‘Because the public rightly expresses real concern about drunken street violence, unprovoked street violence, the only appropriate sentence to indicate to the public that the courts take a serious view of young men drinking and behaving in a violent and drunken way is to impose a custodial sentence.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Vatican Downplays Pope Miracle Report

Theologians to get French nun ‘cure’ assessment after Easter

(ANSA) — Vatican City, March 5 — The Vatican is downplaying a Polish newspaper report claiming a miracle cure attributed to late pope John Paul II in his beatification cause was not in fact miraculous.

Warsaw daily Rzeczpospolita reported Thursday that French nun Sister Marie Simon-Pierre, who testified in 2005 that she had dreamed of the recently deceased pope shortly before recovering from Parkinson’s Disease, in fact suffered from a similar disease which is not terminal.

There was no official response from the Congregation for the Causes of Saints but an authorised Vatican source said the nun’s miracle was still the one being examined in order to clear the way for the beatification.

The examination of the nun’s case is still at an initial stage, he said.

Experts will hand a report to a medical commission which will give its considered opinion to theologians and cardinals after Easter, the source said. “The miracle is ‘sub judice’ and it is absolutely premature, as well as false, to speak of it being disproved or approved,” the source said.

Vatican experts said this would inevitably mean a delay in the beatification, pushing it back from November 2010 to early 2011.

The Vatican has received more than 240 reports of alleged miracles attributed to the intervention of John Paul but intends to stick with the nun’s case, Vatican sources insisted.

John Paul cleared the first hurdle towards sainthood in November when his “heroic virtues” were recognised.

This rekindled speculation that he might become a saint on the fifth aniversary of his death, next month, but the Vatican said it would take longer. One miracle is needed for beatification, the second step to sainthood.

A second one is required for the third and final step, canonisation, when someone becomes a saint.

Candidates for beatification must overcome a complicated and lengthy vetting process.

In the case of pontiffs, the procedure is usually much longer because the Vatican must examine much more material given the mass of responsibility and decisions made by popes.

However, Pope Benedict XVI put John Paul II’s beatification cause on a fast track, waiving a rule requiring a five-year wait before the start of the process.

New reports of miracles attributed to John Paul II’s heavenly intervention are said to arrive in Rome every week.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia-Croatia: 100,000 on Facebook Forum Against Hate

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, FEBRUARY 17 — A Facebook forum already counting over 100,000 Serbs, Croats and others has been set up to demand that an end be put to the hatred and disagreements between Serbs and Croats generated by the fratricidal wars of the 1990s in the Balkans. “I have a dream that one day on the Balkan hills, the children of our Slavic ancestors will sit down side by side around a table as brothers,” reads the group’s presentation, which began on 5 June 2008 on the initiative of Brandon Djordjevic. “We use Facebook to put an end to Serbian-Croatian hatred” was the initial slogan, and by June 26, two thousand had already signed up, with this figure rising to 13,000 by December 31. The slogan was thereafter changed to “Wéll find 50,000 Serbs and Croats who do not hate each other”. The latter target was achieved in only four days: from December 14 to December 18, 2009. The invitation was then changed once more to “Are there 100,000 Serbs and Croats who do not hate each other? Say yes”. From that moment until February 14, the forum of contacts taking part grew to 101,000. “I am a Croatian from Split. I do not hate anyone, except for the politicians of the 1990s. They harmed our interests and got enormously rich doing so,” said one of those who has joined. “If we had been wiser we could have lived as a confederation, an alliance of states like in the US, the United Kingdom, or Australia, and we would already have joined the European Union long ago.” “It is great to hear that in this former Yugoslav area there are at least 100,000 normal people who before all else want to be men, and only afterwards Serbs, Croats or Bosnians,” said one of those who commented on the site. “It is great to know that there are a lot of people out there who feel good not hating anyone. I am sure that there are many more than 100,000, even if we haven’t yet managed to really listen to each other due to the still-raging turbo-patriotic din.” The initiative aiming to reconcile Serbs and Croats, and in the future all the peoples of the former Yugoslavia, is giving rise to both praise and generalised agreement. “It is very encouraging, since most of the 100,000 are young people, future opinion makers and future opinion leaders,” Zharko Korac, a well-known psychology professor at the Belgrade University told ANSA. “They are the future journalists, writers, and directors, and in 10-15 years they will become our managerial class.” “I am also in contact with the group, and some have already come to Pola on holiday, where we had the chance to meet up,” said the Istrian Misel Percan, one of the leading forces behind the initiative. Among the Facebook group’s contacts are also Bosnians, citizens of other former Yugoslav Republics and those of other countries. Among the latter, the Italian Alex Ferronato said that it was only natural that he “supported the Serb-Croat cause, even if I live very far from this reality. I feel that it is utterly absurd that people in this world seem unable to understand that past misunderstandings and mistakes cannot continue to have negative repercussions on our lives.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Israeli Press Praises Maimonides Synagogue Restoration

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV — “An amazing result: an incredibly beautiful work of restoration, to which words just cannot do justice” was how Israeli daily Yediot Aharonot’s Cairo correspondent described the “resurrection” of the synagogue of the medieval philosopher Maimonides, following years of reconstruction work financed by the government. Yesterday members of the tiny local Jewish community celebrated inaugural services with religious figures who had come to the country for the express occasion from Israel. The official reopening of the synagogue, in the Jewish quarter of Cairo’s Old City, will occur in a week’s time. According to the correspondent from the Israeli paper, the restoration of the building “seems miraculous”, seen for many years in an abandoned state and which had even been left roofless. In order to get back the ancient splendour, he added, Egyptian authorities had invested over two million dollars. Born in Spain in 1138, the philosopher-rabbi and doctor Maimonides (Moshe’ Ben Maimon) died in Cairo in 1204, after having won renown not only within the Jewish world but also in the Christian and Muslim ones of the time. Later his synagogue was to take shape within the collective imagination as a place of miracles. According to Yediot Ahronot, Egyptian King Fuad even wanted to spend a night in it to get over ailments from which he was suffering. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



March 8: EU Competition on Gender Equality for Children

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 8 — “Once upon a time there were a girl and a boy; together they wanted to make the world a better place”. For the forth year in a row, the European Commission launches an international drawing competition on gender equality on the International Women’s Day. The competition calls on children all over the world to express their vision of gender equality. The winners will be selected from each region by a jury of European children, and a prize equivalent to the value of ?1.000 Euros will be awarded to each winner. Up until the 14th of May, Egyptian children in the age of 8 to 10 can submit their drawings on the theme of “Once upon a time there were a girl and a boy; together they wanted to make the world a better place..”. Children should submit their drawings to the office of the Delegation of the European Union to Egypt. The winning drawings will be included in a booklet published by the European Commission. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Schools and Roads in Catalonia Closed

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 8 — The snow that fell in Catalonia in the past hours, as low as 200m above sea level, has caused serious discomfort. A total of 71 provincial and State motorways have been closed, as well as hundreds of schools, mainly in the province of Girona. Many flights on Barcelona had to be rerouted to Reus. The general direction of Civil Protection has raised the alarm level in the special snow plan to 1 in around 30 provinces, together with the alarm for rough sea and strong winds, according to sources in the councillor’s office for interior affairs of the Generalitat. Orange alert (“serious risk”) has been raised by the State meteorological agency in Huesca, Barcelona, Girona, Lleida, Tarragona, Castellon, Valencia and the Spanish enclaves in Morocco of Ceuta and Melilla. Minimum temperatures are expected to reach -9 degrees in Catalonia. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: One on Five Citizens Own Credit Card

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 8 — On December 31 2009 a total of 2.082 million credit cards were in circulation in Tunisia, a penetration rate of 20.17% among the population. This figure has increased by 11.4% compared with the previous year. Over the same period, the number of cash dispensers increased from 1,246 to 1,424 (+14.3%). The volume of transactions climbed from 3.1 million dinars (around 1.6 million euros) in 2008 to 3.6 million dinar (around 1.86 million euros) in 2009. Most operations last year regarded cash withdrawals at cash dispensers (82.48%). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


UN Inquiry Accused of Anti Israel Bias

By Ben Evansky

UNITED NATIONS — A controversial United Nations report called the UN Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict and more commonly known as “The Goldstone Report,” is under fire for being biased against Israel. Among its conclusions was an accusation that Israel had committed “war crimes” during its twenty-two day war with Palestinian terrorists that ended in January, 2009. Critics discredit this finding — saying key members of the report were clearly biased in favor of the Palestinians.

The Geneva based UN Human Rights Council created the Goldstone report in April 2009 after a recommendation by Richard Falk, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on “The situation of Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories Occupied since 1967”, to investigate Israel’s Gaza offensive.

Prior to his UN appointment, Falk had written that Israel’s “imposition of collective punishment had a certain resemblance” to what the Nazis had done in World War II, and is known for his controversial views on the 9/11 terror attacks, telling Fox News that Americans “deserve a more adequate response to the unanswered questions…that have been provided by the 9/11 commission.”

Falk says he fully supports the Goldstone Report saying its members are “highly qualified and professionally respected.”

Nile Gardiner disagrees. Gardiner is a UN expert at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, and tells Fox News that the so called experts who helped write the report had already convicted Israel for war crimes before coming on board to investigate it. According to Gardiner “it’s an extreme example of the UN’s anti-Israel propaganda, which comes at a huge expense to taxpayers.”

Just last month, commission member Desmond Travers told the pro-Palestinian website Middle East Monitor that Hamas had only fired “something like two” rockets at Israel prior to the build up to the conflict in December 2008. According to official Israeli figures the number of rockets fired into Israel was 125, in addition to 80 mortars. Travers also called Gaza the “only gulag in the Western hemisphere”, and in that same interview accused Britain’s “Jewish lobby” of wielding undue influence over that country’s foreign policy. Travers did not respond to a request for an interview.

Another member of the team is Christine Chinkin, who in a letter published by the Sunday Times of London during the height of the war joined others in accusing Israel of committing war crimes in Gaza. Several months later Ms. Chinkin was appointed to the Goldstone report. Chinkin did not respond to a request for an interview.

This last weekend Francesca Marotta, a senior member of the UN staff that helped compile the Goldstone Report, was advertised as being the keynote speaker at a pro-Palestinian event in Switzerland. Marotta told Fox news she did not end up attending and wouldn’t answer any further questions.

Calls for her to be disciplined were scoffed at by UN spokesman for the High Commissioner for Human Rights. Rupert Colville told Fox News that none would be taken against her, saying, “Why on earth should there be?” Colville also says staff from his office “attend a huge variety of meetings on issues related to work.”

Hillel Neuer is the executive director of the Swiss based NGO UN Watch and first publicized Marotta’s speaking engagement. He argues that no one in her position should side with partisan political campaigns and says her actions undermine the UN’s authority and neutrality.

As to the four senior members who produced the report, Neuer points to a letter sent by future inquiry members Judge Richard Goldstone, Hina Jilani and the aforementioned Desmond Travers a full month before their appointment that protested Israel’s actions in Gaza. Neuer says, “Goldstone promised impartiality but the mission members had all made up their minds, adopting the Hamas narrative over Israel from the very start.”

As to whether UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon was worried about the UN’s neutrality being question, his spokesman Farhan Haq told Fox News that he had “no comment” about the composition of Goldstone’s team and that the report’s substantive findings “speaks for itself.”

Rupert Colville said the members of the mission “should be thanked and congratulated, not subjected to personalized abuse.” Hillel Neuer fired back telling Fox News, “The inquiry disregarded the basic principles of international fact-finding” through its selection of members.

While Judge Richard Goldstone did not respond to a request for an interview concerning the impartiality of the inquiry members, UN Watch’s Hillel Neuer believes that “the Islamic-dominated Human Rights Council carefully selected mission members whom they knew were sharply critical of Israel.

The UN General Assembly will again take up the Goldstone report in early spring 2010.

           — Hat tip: AA [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Audio: Dire Warning: Israel Must Strike Iran Now

Tehran will have nukes before U.N., Obama do anything, says diplomat

The only action that can stop Iran from building nuclear weapons is an Israeli strike on Tehran’s nuclear facilities, argued John Bolton, the former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. under the Bush administration.

Speaking in a radio interview with WND senior reporter Aaron Klein, who hosts an investigative program on New York’s WABC 770 AM, Bolton warned time is running out for an Israeli attack.

“Right now we know about the facilities. … We know where they are,” he said. “We know exactly what their dimensions are, and I think they are susceptible to an Israeli attack.”

Bolton said an Israeli military option “isn’t there forever. … If Israel is going to use military force, it needs to use it sooner rather than later.”

[Comments from JD: Audio of interview at url above]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Earthquake: 150,000 to Die in Istanbul, Report Predicts

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 3 — Up to 150,000 people will lose their lives and 300,000 buildings will be knocked down in an anticipated earthquake in Istanbul, predicts a report released by the Turkish Chamber of Civil Engineers, or IMO, as daily Hurriyet reports today. The report, which was sent to Parliament on Monday, reveals over half of construction projects approved by engineers of inspection companies are not earthquake proof. The results came after IMO inspected 9% of the 1,031 projects supposedly made earthquake-proof by inspection companies in 2008. The IMO report predicts in the next anticipated Istanbul earthquake 70,000 buildings will undergo severe damage and 200,000 buildings will undergo moderate damage. According to the report, 70,000 to 150,000 people will lose their lives and a further 160,000 to 200,000 will be injured and hospitalized. Moreover, 400,000 families are expected to need shelter in the aftermath of the quake. IMO has warned parliament hospital buildings need to be strengthened in Istanbul as inspections have shown 86% of hospitals in the city are susceptible to collapse. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran Gives Russia Pilots Two Months to Leave: Report

TEHRAN (Reuters) — Iran has given Russian commercial pilots working in the Islamic Republic two months to leave the country as it has no need for them, Transport Minister Hamid Behbahani was quoted as saying on Saturday.

The move is a further sign of strains between Iran and Russia, which has indicated it could back new sanctions against Tehran over its disputed nuclear work. For its part, Iran has voiced frustration over Moscow’s failure to deliver a defense missile system.

Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency said the idea to order the Russian pilots to leave the country gained momentum after a Russian-made aircraft caught fire as it landed in northeastern Iran in January, injuring more than 40 people.

The plane belonged to Iran’s Taban airline but the pilot was Russian, Fars said. It did not say how many Russians currently worked as pilots for Iranian airlines.

“Upon an order from the president (Mahmoud Ahmadinejad), the Road and Transport Ministry has set a two-month deadline, upon the expiry of which all Russian pilots will have to leave the country,” Behbahani said.

“When our country itself possesses plenty of professional and specialist pilots, there is no need to bring in pilots from abroad,” he told Fars.

Iran has suffered a string of crashes in the past few decades, many involving Russian-made aircraft.

In 2009 a Tupolev aircraft flying to Armenia caught fire in mid-air and crashed, killing all 168 people on board.

U.S. sanctions against Iran have prevented it from buying new aircraft or spare parts from the West, forcing it to supplement its aging fleet of Boeing and Airbus planes with aircraft from Russia and other former Soviet states.

Behbahani said about 120 aircraft out of 193 planes in Iran’s commercial fleet were currently active, with the rest grounded for one reason or another.

Russia, which has significant trade ties with Iran, is among six world powers trying to find a diplomatic solution to the long-running dispute over Tehran’s nuclear program.

Moscow has indicated it could support new sanctions against Iran provided they are not too severe. Iran denies Western accusations that its nuclear work is aimed at developing bombs.

Iranian officials have voiced growing frustration at Russia’s failure to supply the advanced S-300 missile defense system, which Israel and the United States do not want Tehran to have. Russia last month said it would not sell weapons if it leads to destabilization in any region.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Iran: Influential Cleric Urges Veil Crackdown

Tehran, 8 March(AKI) — On the occasion of International Women’s Day, influential Iranian cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami said on Monday that women must stop breaking Islam’s rules and wear the veil in the correct manner.

“I ask competent authorities to intensify checks on veils and on the type of clothing worn by women in public with the aim of stopping the moral corruption that is spreading in society, said Khatami, a close associate of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“Women must respect Islamic law and wear the veil in an appropriate way,” Khatami said in an interview with state-funded Iranian Students’ News Agency.

In the lead up to Women’s Day, several pro and con opinions have been voiced regarding the veil, which since the 1979 Islamic Revolution has been an obligatory part of women’s clothing while in public.

On Saturday, Zahra Rahnavard, wife of Iranian ex-prime minister Mir-Hossein Mousavi — a politician in her own right — said parliament must change the law on the veil on the grounds that it violates women’s civil and political rights.

According to rules in place in Iran on Islamic dress codes, a woman who does not completely cover her hair and body in public can be fined or imprisoned. Men also must wear their hair short and T-shirts and all Western-style clothes are banned.

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



Turkey Earns USD 825.9 Mln From Hazelnut Exports

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 3 — Turkey, one of the leading hazelnut producers of the world, has earned USD 825.9 million from hazelnut exports in the past six months, Anatolia news agency reports quoting an exporters association as saying on Wednesday. Turkey shipped more than 133,898 tons of hazelnuts to almost 90 countries, Association of Black Sea Hazelnut Exporters said. One quintal (100 kilograms) of decorticated hazelnuts was traded approximately at USD 630 from September 1, 2009 to February 28, 2010. Some 101,014 tonnes of hazelnuts exports were made to EU countries, it said. Turkey shipped 159,680 tonnes of hazelnuts and earned USD 774.8 million the same period last season. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



United Arab Emirates to Follow Third Reich Policies Against Jews

The authorities of the United Arab Emirates made an unusual decision. Dubai police chief Dahi Khalfan al-Tamim said on March 1 that anyone who looks or sounds like a citizen of Israel will be blocked from entering the country, even if a suspected individual produces a passport of a different state.

“It is easy for us to identify [Israelis], through their face or when they speak any other language. We used to respect them when they would come holding European passports; we regarded them as Europeans and never treated them badly. But from now on, anyone we suspect to have a dual citizenship, they will be treated with great suspicion,” the police chief said.

The decision is directly linked with the assassination of a high-ranking official of Palestine’s Hamas movement in one of Dubai hotels on February 20. UAE officials believe that Mahmud al-Mabhuh, one of the founders of the military wing of Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, was killed by Israel’s Mossad. The secret agents most likely used passports of other countries to commit the crime.

It is not quite clear, though, how Arab officials are going to identify Israelis. They would obviously have no difficulty in identifying Orthodox bearded hasids for their side-locks, hats and glasses. It looks like a joke though: “Wearing a hat and a pair of glasses makes you a Jew.”

Such people would never think of traveling to Emirates. Will Emirates liken itself to the Third Reich and use rulers and protractors to measure the shape of the nose, earlaps and the skull structure? If it does, the UAE will lose all of its friends in the West.

The police of Dubai suspect 26 people in the killing of Mahmud al-Mabhuh. The suspects hold passports of Britain, Ireland, Germany, France and other countries.

Mossad’s participation in the plot to kill the high-ranking official of Hamas is just a theory. Even if we assume that it is true, the passports, which the suspected Israelis produced, may not necessarily be fake. Israel has dual citizenship agreements with dozens of countries, including those mentioned in the criminal case.

It may just so happen that law-abiding Britons or Australians will not be allowed to enter the UAE. Such a state of affairs will quickly develop into an international scandal. There are influential Jewish communities in the two countries, and the members of those communities hold two passports on absolutely legal grounds.

In general, the situation is a comic one. However, the scandal related to the assassination of the Hamas official does not look like a joke at all.

Israeli scientist of politics, Avigdor Eskin, said in an interview with Pravda.Ru that the police chief of Dubai released the above-mentioned statements for propaganda purposes.

“One has to take account of Oriental pride here. Someone attacked your territory and you were not able to prevent the crime. Nevertheless, it is easy to see that it was an attempt to distract people’s attention from the most important question. Why did the law-enforcement bodies of the UAE ignore the presence of an outstanding terrorist on the territory of the country?”

Sergey Demidenko, an expert with the Institute for Strategic Analysis, said that the incident in the Emirates would not affect the dialogue between Arabs and Israelis just because of the fact that there is no such dialogue.

“Israel has formal relations with only two Arab states — Egypt and Jordan. There is nothing new in the current situation. It is just another episode in the long-standing opposition. Israel’s relations with the Arab world can be characterized with indifference and scandals. The number of scandals has been growing recently — one may recollect the liquidation of Hezbollah’s high-ranking officials last year. More scandals are coming soon, I can be sure of that.

“The new Israeli administration with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman at the head conduct a tough political course against Israel’s adversaries. They try to neutralize them where they can,” Demidenko said.

Sergey Balmasov

Vadim Trukhachev

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

South Asia


Pakistan: Car Bomb on Intelligence Headquarters in Lahore , 11 Dead and Over 60 Injured

The attack bears the hallmark of al Qaeda and Pakistani Taliban. In the past the Federal Investigation Agency had already suffered two attacks. The residents had requested moving the headquarters, located in a residential area. In two and a half years Pakistan has recorded 360 attacks and more than 3 thousand victims.

Lahore (AsiaNews / Agencies) — This morning at dawn a car bomb hit the Federal Investigation Agency headquarters in Lahore. Official sources said that the toll is 11 dead, including a woman and a child, and at least 60 wounded. The attack bears the hallmark of al Qaeda militants, backed by Pakistani Taliban who are seeking to overthrow the government through bombings and repeated violent attacks.

Khusro Pervaiz, an official of the provincial government, said that “clearly, the target of the attack was the investigating agency. The attack is a psychological blow for the Pakistani authorities who have recently won a series of successes against Islamist militias. A battle that has the consent of the U.S. government, which has welcomed the capture of leading figures among the Afghan Taliban.

The explosion left a deep crater in the road in front of the headquarters of the Federal Investigation Agency — Pakistani intelligence — and has destroyed the facade of the building. In the past the intelligence agency had already suffered two separate attacks.

A group of citizens has railed against the police that arrived in the meantime on the scene. The government building is located in the suburb of Model Town, Lahore, in an area with a high population density. A woman reports that “several times in the past we asked that it be moved away from our homes, but they have not done anything.”

In 2009, in Lahore there were at least three bloody attacks: March 3 armed commandos killed six police in an ambush on the Sri Lanka cricket team. On 30 March a group targeted the police academy, killing eight people. On May 27 a car bomb exploded near a police barracks, causing at least 23 victims.

In two and a half years, Pakistan has registered some 360 attacks, in which more than 3 thousand people have been killed. Most were suicide attacks perpetrated by the Taliban in Pakistan engaged in an armed conflict against the army in the tribal areas on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Appeals for Calm After Nigerian Sectarian Slaughter

JOS, Nigeria — UN chief Ban Ki-moon appealed Monday for “maximum restraint” amid revulsion at the slaughter of more than 500 Christians in Nigeria, as survivors told how the killers chopped down their victims.

Funerals took place for victims of the three-hour orgy of violence on Sunday in three Christian villages close to the northern city of Jos, blamed on members of the mainly Muslim Fulani ethnic group.

While troops were deployed to the villages to prevent new attacks, security forces detained 95 suspects but faced bitter criticism over how the killers were able to go on the rampage at a time when a curfew was meant to be in force.

Media reported that Muslim residents of the villages in Plateau state had been warned by phone text message, two days prior to the attack, so they could make good their escape before the exit points were sealed off.

Survivors said the attackers were able to separate the Fulanis from members of the rival Berom group by chanting ‘nagge’, the Fulani word for cattle. Those who failed to respond in the same language were hacked to death.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Troops Deployed to North After Christian Killings

Jos, 8 March(AKI) — Nigeria’s government sent in troops to the northern Jos region on Monday after at least 500 people were killed in attacks by machete-wielding gangs on Christian villages early on Sunday. Police said they had arrested scores in connection with the attacks, which are said to have been carried out in revenge for Muslim-Christian clashes near Nigeria’s city of Jos that killed hudreds earlier this year.

“We have been able to make 95 arrests but at the same time over 500 people have been killed in this heinous act,” said Dan Manjang, an adviser to the Christian-dominated Plateau state government, in one report.

Many of the dead were women and children, who were hacked to death by the gangs, who were also armed with machine guns, officials said.

In January, 326 died in clashes in Jos between rival religious and ethnic groups, according to police, although rights activits said more than 550 had been killed.

Another Plateau state official, Gregory Yenlong, in a report urged people to “remain calm and be patient as the government steps up security to protect lives and property in this state”.

Killing between Christians and Muslims, as well as inter-tribal massacres are common in Nigeria. Following its independence from the UK in 1960, ethnic tensions erupted into the three-year Nigerian-Biafran war resulting in the death of more than 1 million civilians either from the fighting or starvation.

A Red Cross spokesman said the security situation was “still in disarray” and that while its teams had been able to help evacuate some people to hospital in Jos, they were still trying to reach all those areas affected.

A dusk-to-dawn curfew has been in place since the four-days long clashes between Christian and Muslim mobs in January.

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

Immigration


26 Illegal Immigrants Found in Lorry

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 8 — A Romanian man has been arrested by the police of Greece for traffic of illegal immigrants. The man was driving a lorry in which 26 immigrants, among whom 12 children, were hidden in cardboard boxes. He was arrested at Promachonas at the Bulgarian border. The police have impounded the lorry, a mobile phone and 710 euros in cash, found on the driver. The man will have to appear in court, and the prosecutor of Serres has decided that no legal steps will be taken against the immigrants.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Roma Duped Into Seeking Swedish Asylum

An estimated 1,000 Roma people, primarily from Serbia, have been lured this year alone into travelling to Sweden in the vain hope of securing residence permits, the Swedish Migration Board has said.

Buses filled with Roma people have been pulling into Gothenburg and Malmö on an almost daily basis.

“Travel agencies run by unscrupulous businessmen are tricking already vulnerable people into coming to Sweden,” said board director-general Dan Eliasson.

The migration board chief is advising Roma people not to make the long trip to Scandinavia as their chances of being granted residency are “extraordinarily small”.

“They probably feel that they are living in difficult social conditions and maybe even that they are discriminated against, but this is not something that gives them the right to protection in Sweden.

“Generally they’ll quickly be informed that they can’t get a residence permit and they’ll have to go home,” said Eliasson, who added that the vast majority came to Sweden from Serbia, though some have also made their way north from Montenegro and Macedonia.

The Roma population in Serbia is considerably poorer than the wider population, and sporadic reports have emerged of violations perpetrated against Roma in Serbia, Kosovo and, recently, in Italy.

“But in order to gain asylum you need to be able to show that you are persecuted and risk violent treatment. It is very difficult to receive asylum from Europe,” said Eliasson.

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

Culture Wars


Turkey: “Homosexuality is a Disease”, Says Minister

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 8 — Turkey’s State Minister responsible for the affairs of women and families, Mrs. Aliye Kavaf, continues to make controversial comments on morals and values that raise reactions. Following her criticisms on the love scenes in Turkish soap operas, the minister said she believes homosexuality is a biological disorder that requires treatment “I believe homosexuality is a biological disorder, a disease,” said Aliye Kavaf in an interview with the daily Hurriyet’s Sunday supplement. “I believe (homosexuality) is something that needs to be treated. Therefore I do not have a positive opinion of gay marriage.” Kavaf said her ministry does not have an agenda for gay marriage and there is no demand for such a thing anyway. “We are not saying that there are no homosexuals in Turkey, these cases do exist” she said. The comments come shortly after Kavaf was criticized last week for saying she is disturbed by love scenes in Turkish soap operas and that she believes they are inappropriate for Turkish family values. “When reporters asked me about kissing scenes in Ashki Memnu (Forbidden Love) soap opera, I said: ‘In Europe and America that type of program is broadcast under control. They are encrypted, people who want to watch them buy them.’ Kavaf said in the Hurriyet interview that she does not approve of broadcasting that is solely focused on ratings. “That scene may not be important for 45- to 50-year-old people in terms of degeneration, but it might have a different effect on children aged 4-10.” Other criticisms against the minister included her seeming tolerance for violence. Kavaf provided fire for the canon in her Hurriyet interview. “I only watch Kurtlar Vadisi (The Valley of Wolves). I do not know if it is wrong or right, but the messages offered in the show attract my attention,” she said. Kurtlar Vadisi is a popular soap opera about mafia and “deep state” affairs in which scenes of murder and torture are common. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


IMF Floats Climate Change Fund Idea

Global financier the International Monetary Fund has switched its attention to the environment with a plan for the world’s governments to pool together to raise money needed to adapt to climate change.

IMF managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the fund was worried about the huge amount of money needed and the effect that will have on the global economy.

He added that the proposal may help efforts to reach a binding agreement on climate change later this year.

Mr Strauss-Kahn proposed that countries adopt a quota system similar to the one it uses to raise its own money, which could bring in money faster than proposals to increase carbon taxes or other fundraising methods.

He only provided a broad outline of the plan, as the organisation will release a paper later this week with full details.

[Return to headlines]



Political Agendas Continue to Drive Climate Fiasco

Exploitation of global warming underscores a fundamental difference between left wing ideology from communism through socialism, and free market capitalism.

The former pursue political agendas regardless of failures and cost. Obama pursues green jobs or cap and trade that have failed elsewhere. The latter, if not too shackled by government, flexes, adapts, innovates, invents and advances the human condition and improves the environment (check pollution levels in communist countries). The left who used global warming as their Trojan Horse continue despite complete exposure of the fraudulent means used to build the horse.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100307

Financial Crisis
» Bankers Urge Regulations to Streamline Work of Islamic Banks
» Brüderle: Germany Won’t Give ‘One Cent’ To Greece
» Organized Crime: The ‘Looting’ Of $11 Trillion From the U.S. Economy
 
USA
» A Detention Bill You Ought to Read More Carefully
» Clash Over ‘Global Warming’ Ratcheted Up Another Degree
» Naked Snow Sculpture Covered Up After Neighbours Complain
» Obama Draws Fire for Appointing SEIU’s Stern to Deficit Panel
» Students Throw Cotton Balls, Are Arrested for Felony Hate Crime
» White House Adviser: ‘Heavier People’ Bad for Economy
 
Europe and the EU
» Abuse Scandal Hits Elite Progressive School
» Germany: Catholic Abuse Scandal Hits Famous Boys’ Choir
» Italy: Top EU Court Attacks Italy Over Naples Garbage
» Italy: Berlusconi ‘Furious’ About Election Bungle
» Italy: Two More Arrests in Public Works Graft Probe
» Minority: ‘Arberia Film Festival’ In Calabria
» Stop Wilders Committee Formed in the Netherlands by Dutch Citizens
» UK Muslim Leader: Islam Not a Religion of Peace
» UK: Bomb Disposal Expert Due to be Sent to Afghanistan is Quizzed After Car Explosion Leaves Pregnant Wife’s Legs Shredded
» UK: Bulger Killer Jon Venables Held Over Child Porn Claims
» UK: It’s Terror Check Chaos as Dozens Miss US Flights
» UK: MoD Probes ‘Inappropriate Term on Soldier’s Uniform
» UK: Peter Oborne: The Plot to Stop the Tories Ever Gaining Power…
» UK: The Horrors of Socialized Medicine Uncovered
» UK: The Social Worker Who Looked After Bulger Killer Until Release Gives a First Extraordinary Account of His ‘Kid Gloves’ Treatment Inside…
» UK: Unwanted Men, We Need You to Curb the Welfare Amazons
» UK: What a Daft Way to Stop Your Spaniel Eating the Milkman
» Vatican: Doubts Raised About ‘Miracle’ Linked to John Paul
 
Balkans
» Serbia: Orthodox Church Shocked by Corruption Claims
» Serbia: Problem With Belgium Will be Settled
 
Mediterranean Union
» Beirut as Shelter for Arabs From Middle Ages, Abi Saab
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Arch-Terrorist Abdullah Barghouti: Netanyahu to Blame for Schalit Deal Collapse.
» ‘Hamas Losing Control Over Strip’
 
Middle East
» Iran Developing Massive Launch Site With Help of N.Korea
» Iran’s Ahmadinejad Calls Sept 11 “Big Fabrication”
» Iran: Brazil Resists US Pressure on Sanctions
» Iran: Italian Envoy Asked to Explain Spy Arrests
» ‘Islamic Nations Will Back Iran Strike’
» Jonathan Spyer: What Does Assad Want?
» March 8: Arab World, Women Better Educated But Not Enough
» ‘They Need to be Liberated From Their God’
» Turkey: PM Attacks US After Armenian ‘Genocide’ Vote
» Turkey: ‘Jewish Lobby Behind U.S. Armenia Genocide Vote’
 
South Asia
» British Father Found Stabbed to Death in Girlfriend’s Home in Malaysia After Splitting From Wife
» India: Muslim Women Can Move Forwards Wearing the Veil
» India: Memo to Saudis: Please Stop Terror
» Malaysia Magazine Sorry for Communion-Spitting Offence
» Pakistan: Islamabad, Jihad on the Internet: Terrorism Charges for Five U.S. Students
» Pakistan: Police Search for Kidnapped Boy
» Pakistan: Sources: U.S.-Born Al-Qaida Spokesman Caught
» Pakistan: Officers Say American-Born Al-Qaida Arrested
» Pakistan: U.S.-Born Al Qaeda Arrest News Incorrect
» Revealed: Bitter Family Split of Boy, 5, Kidnapped by Gunmen in Pakistan
 
Far East
» China ‘Must Reduce Rich-Poor Gap’ — Premier Wen
» Cyberwar Declared as China Hunts for the West’s Intelligence Secrets
» More Than 20:000 North Korean Refugees in South Korea
 
Australia — Pacific
» McDonald’s Rejects Push to Have More Halal-Serving Outlets
» Row Over Barbecue as Primary School Opts to Offer Halal Sausages
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» “Scores Killed” In Nigeria Clashes
» Pirates Hijack Norwegian Tanker Off Madagascar
 
Immigration
» EU: Cooperation With Libya and Turkey Urgent
» Italy: Mixed Marriages Triple in 10 Years
» Italy: Violence Erupts in a Rome Detention Center
» Netherlands: Immigrant Voters Again Important for PvdA in Local Elections
» Netherlands: Income Check on Foreign Brides Ruled Illegal
» Obama to Push Immigration Before Elections
» UK: British Taxpayers to Fork Out Millions More in Benefits for EU Migrants
 
Culture Wars
» Munich Hosts Homosexual Job Fair
» Netherlands: Church Bows to Gays Seeking Communion
» Spaniards Rally Against Abortion
» Teenage Boys Watching Hours of Internet Pornography Every Week Are Treating Their Girlfriends Like Sex Objects
» UK: After Tory Leader Reveals His List of Ethnic Candidates, Cameron’s Rainbow 1st Eleven
» UK: Clergy Could Face the Law Over Same-Sex Ceremonies
» Vote for Marriage? You’re on a Hit List
 
General
» The Guaranteed Failure of Catering to Muslim Perception

Financial Crisis


Bankers Urge Regulations to Streamline Work of Islamic Banks

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, MARCH 2 — Bankers from around the Middle East and north Africa met on Tuesday at the opening of the regions first forum on Islamic banking to discuss challenges facing this industry in light of the world economic crisis. The three day forum also brings together banking experts and central bank officials from around Europe to craft out a common understanding to the nature of Islamic banking investment. Governor of Jordans central bank Umaya Toukan called for integrating Islamic banking into the international banking industry. “I think it is very important that the Islamic banking industry be part of the global banking system. It cannot be isolated, therefore the accounting standards, regulatory structures or requirements, the capital adequacy requirements, all of these issues should be consistent with international standards,” said Touqan. Experts also called for coming up with certain regulations and standards to streamline work of Islamic banks. “The central bank of Jordan attaches great importance to the development of the Islamic Banking industry and we are participating actively in the committees and working groups on the drafting of standards on all aspects of Islamic finance. As the Islamic finance expands, the central bank will have to ensure that these new banks become fully integrated with the rest of the banking system, said Touqan during the opening session. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Brüderle: Germany Won’t Give ‘One Cent’ To Greece

German Economy Minister Rainer Brüderle on Friday said Berlin will “not give one cent” to help Greece out of its debt crisis, as Chancellor Angela Merkel prepared to meet Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou.

“Papandreou said that he didn’t want one cent — in any case the German government will not give one cent,” Brüderle said on the sidelines of a meeting with European Union industry commissioner Antonio Tajani.

The remarks came ahead of talks in Berlin later on Friday between Papandreou and Merkel amid rising tension between the two countries.

Brüderle was referring to comments by Papandreou in Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper published Friday.

“We are not asking for money,” Papandreou said. “We need support from the European Union and our partners to obtain credit on the markets at better conditions. If we do not receive this aid, we will not be able to enact the changes we foresee.”

Greece successfully raised an urgently needed €5.0 billion ($6.8 billion) with a bond issue on Thursday, but had to pay an interest rate significantly above 6.0 percent, or about twice the rate at which Germany can borrow.

Papandreou has made clear that he is looking for some form of expression of “solidarity” which would enable Greece to share some of the credibility attached to other eurozone governments, notably Germany, so that future bonds can be issued at a lower rate.

Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, is widely seen as the most likely candidate to help prevent what would be a disastrous Greek default but there is strong opposition in the country against such a move.

Greek politicians have bristled over insulting headlines in the German press and editorials denouncing the corruption there, although Papandreou himself has acknowledged the problem.

Media reports have suggested that for all the stern words, Germany is drawing up contingency plans behind the scenes including either bilateral aid, joint European action or help from the International Monetary Fund.

Merkel welcomed Greece’s announcement Wednesday of a package of austerity measures as “an important step” towards cutting its budget deficit and restoring trust in Athens and the euro.

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



Organized Crime: The ‘Looting’ Of $11 Trillion From the U.S. Economy

The following is based on a report by Cliff Kincaid for Accuracy in Media.

The New York Times is quoting a spokesman for George Soros as saying that the well-known hedge fund operator is guilty of no wrong-doing in connection with the financial upheaval currently affecting Greece and Europe as a whole.

But Zubi Diamond, author of the powerful new book, Wizards of Wall Street, says the agenda of Soros and other short sellers is clear. Their purpose, he says, is “to loot America and any foreign country which invested in America. Greece was one of them. Iceland was ravaged and annihilated.”

[…]

He warns that any asset class that is traded in the NYSE, CME, or EUREX exchanges is susceptible to manipulation by the members of Managed Funds Association and their strategic partners. “They have primed the market for manipulation,” he says.

In the case of Greece, Diamond says that the country “gathered all her nest eggs and brought it to the wolves’ den at Goldman Sachs,” a member of Managed Funds Association, “but Goldman Sachs then shorted the market while their clients were on the other side of the trade.”

Diamond says there would not have been a Greece debt crisis if all the safeguard regulations had not been removed. He blames Christopher Cox, who served as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), for laying the groundwork for this financial upheaval. “The removal of the uptick rule, and the circuit breakers and the introduction of mark to market accounting is what caused the economic collapse and the stock market crash,” he says. “Greece lost investment capital in the 2008 Wall Street collapse, which gave their country a balance sheet problem on top of the debt they already have. Their deficit ballooned. You know the rest. The EU is accusing Greece of not disclosing all their debt and investment risk exposure.”

Commenting on reports that federal authorities and the SEC will investigate Goldman Sachs for their involvement in the Greece debt crisis, Diamond says that “my prediction is that nothing will happen” because Goldman Sachs is a member of the powerful MFA.

“The Managed Fund Association is the government,” Diamond charges. “They bought the policy makers and regulators, and then took over our government.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


A Detention Bill You Ought to Read More Carefully

Why is the national security community treating the “Enemy Belligerent, Interrogation, Detention, and Prosecution Act of 2010,” introduced by Sens. John McCain and Joseph Lieberman on Thursday as a standard proposal, as a simple response to the administration’s choices in the aftermath of the Christmas Day bombing attempt? A close reading of the bill suggests it would allow the U.S. military to detain U.S. citizens without trial indefinitely in the U.S. based on suspected activity. Read the bill here, and then read the summarized points after the jump.

According to the summary, the bill sets out a comprehensive policy for the detention, interrogation and trial of suspected enemy belligerents who are believed to have engaged in hostilities against the United States by requiring these individuals to be held in military custody, interrogated for their intelligence value and not provided with a Miranda warning.

[There is no distinction between U.S. persons—visa holders or citizens—and non-U.S. persons.]

[Return to headlines]



Clash Over ‘Global Warming’ Ratcheted Up Another Degree

Congressman wants funding stopped; scientists plan retaliation campaign

The clash over “global warming” has been ratcheted up another degree this week, with one member of Congress demanding U.S. taxpayer funding for the research be halted and scientists who have been accused of slipshod and deceptive work planning a campaign of retaliation against their critics.

[…]

The revelations were significant, because the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency signed two findings Dec. 7 that concluded greenhouse gases in the atmosphere “threaten the public health and welfare of current and future generations.” The EPA’s rulings could mean thousands of dollars in additional taxes for individual consumers.

Now, Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Joe Barton, R-Texas, is citing the doubts about the integrity of “climate change” science in a letter asking for an accounting of U.S. taxpayer support for the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the IPCC.

The U.S. since 1994 has given some $50 million to the panel, and contributions under Obama now have doubled.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Naked Snow Sculpture Covered Up After Neighbours Complain

A family in America was told by police to cover up their snow sculpture after neighbours complained that it was offensive.

Elisa Gonzalez and her family spent hours crafting a nude sculpture in the front garden of their home in Rahway, New Jersey.

Motorists stopped to take photos of their version of the celebrated Greek statue Venus de Milo, and several neighbours were complimentary.

But Rahway police sent an officer to their home after they received an anonymous complaint of “a naked snow woman”, and asked the family to cover her up.

When the officer arrived, Mrs Gonzalez said, he was apologetic and appreciative of the snowlady and her assets.

“He said, ‘It’s very good,’“ Mrs Gonzalez recalled.

Despite his appreciation, the officer then asked the family to dress the snowlady.

Mrs Gonzalez said: “She was curvaceous, bodacious and booty-licious. But she had a six-pack!

“I thought she looked more objectified and sexualised after you put the bikini on.”

Mrs Gonzalez’s daughter Maria Conneran, 21, said they had been made to cover up art.

She said: “Our snow lady looked like marble. It looked like a statue.

“Are you going to go to the Met and cover up all the statues?”

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Obama Draws Fire for Appointing SEIU’s Stern to Deficit Panel

President Obama’s decision to appoint his close political ally, union leader Andrew Stern, to the newly created National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform has set off a firestorm of criticism from business and conservative groups who charge he is a political radical who should be investigated for failure to register as a lobbyist.

The prestigious 18-member commission will study and recommend ways to whittle down the $12 trillion debt the federal government has amassed. Stern is one of six panelists Obama has named; the House of Representatives and the Senate will each appoint six others.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Students Throw Cotton Balls, Are Arrested for Felony Hate Crime

Two students at the University of Missouri-Columbia were suspended Wednesday after their arrests in a case of cotton balls thrown across the lawn of the campus black-culture center.

Campus police on Tuesday evening arrested the students, one of whom is from the St. Louis area, on suspicion of a felony hate crime. The two were released on bond, and charges were pending.

The incident happened early Friday at the Gaines/Oldham Black Culture Center, near the middle of campus. Nathan Stephens, the center’s coordinator, said students were offended because of the “symbolic violence” that harkened to days of slavery on cotton plantations.

[Comment: This would be funny if it wasn’t so sad. Amerika is in trouble when people are getting arrested just for being stupid.]

[Return to headlines]



White House Adviser: ‘Heavier People’ Bad for Economy

Rahm Emanuel’s bioethicist brother suggests government intervene in eating habits

The U.S. economy would be in better shape if people weren’t so heavy, according to Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, the older brother of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and a presidential health care adviser in his own right.

“I mean, we’re all focused on health care, diabetes and heart disease,” he said in a recent appearance on the New York Times “Freakonomics Radio” program. “But, there’s all sorts of things like the simple that, you know — heavier people — transportation is more, so there’s more spent on gasoline, more on jet fuel.”

The White House is aggressively pressing for passage of the Democrats’ trillion-dollar health-care reform plan while First Lady Michelle Obama has taken up the issue of childhood obesity.

[Comments from JD: This is already being implemented in the UK where we see social workers harassing parents if their child is deemed “overweight”.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Abuse Scandal Hits Elite Progressive School

Pupils at a progressive private boarding school in Hesse were regularly sexually abused, the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper reported Saturday. The news follows a series of revelations about Catholic schools in Germany.

Catholic abuse scandal hits famous boys’ choir — Society (5 Mar 10)

Minister accuses church of blocking child sex abuse investigation — National (23 Feb 10)

Top Catholic bishop apologises for child abuse scandal — National (22 Feb 10)

The Odenwaldschule school board admitted to the paper that teachers had abused wards at the school for years. School director Margarita Kaufmann told the newspaper, “As far as I am concerned, it is a fact that sexual abuse occurred here at least since 1971.”

According to accounts by former pupils, teachers at the school in Heppenheim woke them by stroking their genitals, forced them to perform oral sex, and were made into “sex slaves” for whole weekends.

Teachers also beat their wards, provided them with drugs and alcohol, and did not intervene when several pupils sexually abused a girl.

Allegations against Rector Gerold Becker, who ran the school from 1971 to 1985, were first made public around ten years ago. But investigations were suspended because of the amount of time that had passed. “It was a failure and a serious mistake, that the school did not investigate further then,” Kaufmann said.

Kaufmann, who has directed the school since 2007, said that she had recently been approached by pupils with concerns, and that she had then spoken to several former pupils. She believes that at least three former teachers were involved. The Frankfurter Rundschau believes that between 50 and 100 former students were victims of abuse.

The Odenwaldschule was established in 1910 with a holistic ethos of raising a child according to its own individual desires, rather than through discipline and drill. The 225 pupils currently attending (200 as boarders) live in so-called ‘families,’ with their class teacher as a kind of ‘family head’ who lives in an adjacent room. A boarder’s place at the school currently costs €2,220 a month.

Prominent alumni include Green party politician Daniel Cohn-Bendit, journalist and TV presenter Amelie Fried, entrepreneur Beate Uhse and the author Klaus Mann.

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



Germany: Catholic Abuse Scandal Hits Famous Boys’ Choir

The child sexual abuse scandal in Germany’s Catholic Church continued to spread on Friday as a spokesperson confirmed abuse at Regensburg’s cathedral school for their famous boys’ choir, the Domspatzen.

Victims of have come forward to report abuse at the institution, and the two men, who both died in 1984, will still be charged with their crimes, the diocese spokesperson said.

One suspect, who was a religion teacher and the institution’s assistant leader, was removed from service in 1958. The other man was reportedly censured in 1971.

“We want to investigate with transparency,” the spokesperson said.

The diocese said it planned to create a commission to study the school’s old files and archives between 1958 and 1973, when the abuse is thought to have occurred.

On Thursday Bavarian police also raided the Ettal monastery, which runs a Catholic boarding school, on suspicion of child pornography. According to daily Münchner Merkur, a monk there has admitted to uploading such material to the internet. The monastery also admitted to at least two cases of sexual abuse.

The scandal was revealed in late January when Berlin’s prestigious Canisius school announced that around 50 former students had claimed they were sexually abused by priests. Since then lawyers for victims have said more than 120 people across the country have come forward with allegations of abuse by up to 12 different priests and teachers at other Catholic institutions. So far 18 of 27 dioceses have been affected.

The country’s top Catholic bishop Robert Zollitsch, who issued a public apology in late February, is schedules to meet with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican in one week to discuss the scandal.

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



Italy: Top EU Court Attacks Italy Over Naples Garbage

Luxembourg, 4 March(AKI) — Europe’s top court has accused Italy of endangering people’s health by failing to effectively manage rubbish disposal in the southern city of Naples and the surrounding area two years ago. The European Union’s Court of Justice said Italy failed to adopt measures recommended by the EU in 2006.

“Italy has not adopted all the necessary waste management measures in the Campania region,” the Luxembourg-based court said in a statement.

In 2008 the European Union started legal action against Italy after rubbish went uncollected for months in Campania turning parts of the southern region into a sprawling garbage heap. The crisis started in late 2007 after landfills were closed.

About 55,000 tonnes of waste lined roads with up to 120,000 tonnes piled in public storage sites awaiting treatment, the court said, citing figures from the Italian government.

“In that way, the waste caused a nuisance through odours and damaged the countryside, thus harming the environment. Moreover, Italy itself admitted that the situation was dangerous for human health, which was exposed to certain risk,” the court said in a statement.

Court of Justice spokeswoman Estella Cigna said the ruling served as a warning which can prompt the European Commission, the EU’s ruling governing body, to put further pressure on Italy.

“There are different kinds of pressure that can be applied,” she told Adnkronos International (AKI) by telephone. “This may include withholding regional funds or fines.”

During the 2008 election campaign, Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi blamed the rubbish crisis on inaction by his political opponents and he held his first cabinet meeting in Naples after being re-elected prime minister.

Berlusconi managed to clear the area of mountains of rubbish but garbage collection problems persist and are often blamed on local opposition to landfills and mafia control of some waste disposal companies and public services.

The Italian government must surmount these obstacles, the Court of Justice said.

“Neither the opposition mounted by the local inhabitants nor the failure to honour contractual obligations, nor yet the presence of criminal activity, constitutes a situation of ‘force majeure’ which could justify both the failure to fulfil obligations under the directive and the failure to have the requisite facilities up and running on time,” the statement said.

Italian authorities have accused the local mafia, or Camorra, of dumping huge amounts of industrial waste in the Campania region’s landfill sites and profiting from its control of the toxic waste industry.

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



Italy: Berlusconi ‘Furious’ About Election Bungle

Rome, 4 March (AKI) — Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi is furious about an election bungle that has stopped candidates from his People of Freedom party (PdL) from standing in crucial regional elections at the end of March. Roberto Formigoni, the current governor of the northern region of Lombardy, was not included on a list of candidates after an official missed the deadline for registration.

A Milan appeals court on Wednesday rejected attempts by Berlusconi’s party to register Formigoni and his list of candidates for the elections to be held on 28-29 March.

At a dinner with senior party colleagues at his official Rome residence Palazzo Grazioli late on Wednesday, Berlusconi reportedly said he was “worried” about the reaction from the party’s political supporters.

But according to the Italian daily, La Repubblica, Berlusconi also expressed concern about continuing differences between him and Gianfranco Fini, key ally and speaker of the lower house of Parliament.

“The government is at risk of imploding in a year,” Berlusconi apparently said.

“I can no longer exist in a party in which everyone goes their own way. The government must be in a position to work. And I want to know immediately who is with me and who is against me.”

According to La Repubblica, Berlusconi told his colleagues he was tired of the internal strife afflicting the government.

“Whoever remains now must accept my leadership of the party,” he reportedly said. “The others can go.”

Berlusconi has spent the past few days at his Rome residence recording several election advertisements in which he invites voters to make a choice between the “right which gets things done and the left of defeatism”.

The party’s election blunder occurred when the PdL missed the deadline for submitting its list of candidates for the key region of Lazio, which includes Rome.

The error may enable the centre-left opposition to win one of Italy’s most crucial regions.

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



Italy: Two More Arrests in Public Works Graft Probe

Rome, 5 March (AKI) — Italian police have arrested two more suspects in an unfolding corruption scandal over public works contracts including those awarded for last year’s Group of Eight summit. Four suspects were previously arrested in the probe into the alleged kickbacks, including Italy’s former civil protection deputy, Angelo Balducci, who was this week at the centre of a Vatican gay sex scandal.

The latest two suspects in the public works corruption probe were named as Italian businessman Francesco Maria De Vito Piscicelli and Roman lawyer Guido Cerruti.

Piscicelli is in prison and Cerruti is under house arrrest, on the orders of magistrates in the central Italian city of Florence.

They are reportedly accused of corruption over construction contracts for the construction of a paramilitary police academy near Florence.

The Florence magistrates are probing alleged kickbacks related to 327 million euros worth of construction contracts for last July’s G8 summit as well as other public works projects.

The G8 was held in the central quake-struck region of Abruzzo after being abruptly moved there from Sardinia last April.

Rome businessman, Diego Anemone, a public works contractor in Tuscany, Fabio De Santis, and government official Mauro Della Giovampaola were also arrested last month in connection with the probe, as well as Balducci.

Balducci (centre left in photo) was arrested last month and has also resigned as head of the Italian government’s public works committee.

Phone taps in the possession of Florence magistrates also reportedly contain conversations between Balducci and a Nigerian singer in an elite Vatican choir, Ghinedu Ehiem, who allegedly ran a gay prostitution network.

The Vatican dismissed Ehiem earlier this week after left-leaning daily newspaper La Repubblica reported on Wednesday that he had procured young men, including trainee priests, for Balducci.

After his arrest , Balducci was removed from his Vatican post in The Gentlemen of His Holiness, the ceremonial ushers of the papal household, Italy’s national news agency ANSA reported on Thursday, citing Vatican sources.

Balducci was also a construction consultant to the Vatican.

His boss, Italy’s embattled civil protection chief Angelo Bertolaso, was one of dozens of people investigated in the sweeping corruption probe.

A well-respected figure, Bertolaso has kept his job, but the investigation has dealt a serious blow to his image as a popular hero who spearheaded rescue efforts during the Abruzzo earthquake.

Bertolaso has denied all wrongdoing, including allegations that he enjoyed “not only massages but sexual services” at the Salaria Sport Village, a health club in Rome, according to phone intercepts.

He has also denied that Anemone organised “megagalactic sex parties” for him.

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi repeatedly rejected Bertolaso’s offers to resign.

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



Minority: ‘Arberia Film Festival’ In Calabria

(ANSAmed) — SAN DEMETRIO CORONE (COSENZA), MARCH 1 — The ‘Arberia Film Festival’, a festival for the Arbresh film culture, will take place in San Demetrio Corone on August 13 and 14 of this year. The goal of the festival is to make people aware of the issues like the protection and valorisation of the Albanian linguistic minority in Italy, their daily life and the discrimination, racism and violence against this group, as well as the inequality and the position of women and children. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stop Wilders Committee Formed in the Netherlands by Dutch Citizens

Anyone who does not agree with the anti-Koran movie Fitna by Dutch right-wing parliamentarian Geert Wilders in the Netherlands can now indicate that by wearing an anti-Wilders T-Shirt reports the Dutch Telegraaf newspaper.

The organizers of this protest campaign are non-Muslims who have no sympathy for any type of extremism in the Dutch society and who feel that the road chosen by Wilders to express his personal feelings about Islam is not correct and will only lead to more violence. The organizers of the protest noted, “We want to provide an outlet for ordinary people who are upset about the Wilders movie. Wilders, because of his public privileged position is able to walk around as “an elephant in a China cabinet” on this issue, while the silent majority in the Netherlands, which does not agree with the airing of his movie, is forced, to stay silent.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK Muslim Leader: Islam Not a Religion of Peace

The Obama administration has released a review of its strategy in the war on terrorism. The report failed to even mention the word “Islam.”

CBN News traveled to London to talk with Anjem Choudary, a leading Muslim radical who says Islamic teachings are what shaped his pro-jihad message.

Although both George W. Bush and Barack Obama have declared that Islam is a religion of peace, Choudary begs to differ.

A Religion of Peace?

“You can’t say that Islam is a religion of peace,” Choudary told CBN News. “Because Islam does not mean peace. Islam means submission. So the Muslim is one who submits. There is a place for violence in Islam. There is a place for jihad in Islam.”

Choudary is the leader of Islam4UK, a group recently banned in Britain under the country’s counter-terrorism laws. He wants Islamic Sharia law to rule the United Kingdom and is working to make that dream a reality.

While Islamic radicals in the United States usually prefer to speak in more moderate tones while in public, masking their true agenda, Choudary has no such inhibitions.

[…]

Choudary says his group is merely following core Islamic teachings and that Islam is much more than a religion.

“This particular belief is more than just a religion,” he declared. “It is not just a spiritual belief. It is, in fact, an ideology which you believe in and you struggle for and you are willing even to die for, because you believe in that: That is your whole life.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Bomb Disposal Expert Due to be Sent to Afghanistan is Quizzed After Car Explosion Leaves Pregnant Wife’s Legs Shredded

The husband of a heavily pregnant woman seriously injured after her car exploded has been held today on suspicion of her attempted murder, sources said.

Nicholas Fabian, 32, was held after wife Victoria, also 32, suffered serious leg injuries in the blast in a communal car park in the village of Vigo, near Meopham, Kent, just after 1pm yesterday.

Police said she was the sole occupant of the car when it exploded. Her baby is believed to have been unharmed by the blast.

According to unconfirmed reports, Mr Fabian is an Army bomb disposal expert who was due to be posted to Afghanistan.

Initial reports said Mrs Fabian’s two sons, aged four and ten, were in the back of the car which exploded. But the two children were in a nearby car and escaped harm from the blast.

Residents described hearing a loud thud, feeling the ground shudder and seeing smoke rising from the communal car park where the woman’s vehicle was parked.

She was pulled from the blazing wreckage of her car by her husband and a neighbour.

Witnesses said she screamed ‘my baby’ as neighbours desperately tried to staunch the bleeding from her wounds with T-shirts and towels.

Her legs were said to have been ‘shredded’ by the blast.

Vincent Redman, 17, said the explosion almost blew his bedroom windows out.

He rushed to the scene where he saw the heavily pregnant woman screaming and covered in blood.

The teenager said that when helped drag the victim from the vehicle he saw a ‘gaping hole’ between the accelerator pedal and clutch of her Mazda 323 and the engine compartment.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Bulger Killer Jon Venables Held Over Child Porn Claims

Jon Venables, one of the killers of James Bulger, was recalled to custody over a claim about child pornography.

Ministers have refused to confirm allegations that he is in prison on suspicion of committing child-porn offences. It has also been claimed that probation officers were concerned that he had been disclosing his real name.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Justice said: “We cannot confirm or deny anything with regard to this.”

The Government is standing firm over its refusal to comment on the reasons behind the decision to recall Venables, 27, to custody for fear of compromising an ongoing investigation into the alleged crime.

[Return to headlines]



UK: It’s Terror Check Chaos as Dozens Miss US Flights

Controversial anti-terrorist restrictions imposed on Britons travelling to the US have led to scores of people missing their flights since they were introduced six weeks ago.

The Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) requires all passengers without a visa to complete an online application form before they leave for America.

The form should be completed three days before travelling — but airlines flying to America, including British Airways and Virgin Atlantic, report that some passengers are still turning up for flights without having filled one in.

A senior BA manager said: ‘Those who “forget” run the risk of not travelling. Staff may be able to help to complete it at the airport, but passengers run the risk of not getting the approval back from the US authorities before the departure.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: MoD Probes ‘Inappropriate Term on Soldier’s Uniform

The MoD has launched an investigation after a photograph of a soldier who had an offensive message written on his kit appeared in its official magazine.

The serviceman’s left kneepad has “Get some Paki” scrawled on it. His picture featured in Soldier magazine alongside a story about new rations for troops.

“An investigation is currently underway to identify the soldier,” said the MoD.

Last year, Prince Harry apologised for using offensive language to describe a Pakistani member of his army platoon.

‘Racist behaviour’

The picture was printed in January’s edition of Soldier, the magazine of the British army published for the UK armed forces by the Ministry of Defence.

Officials airbrushed the online version, but thousands have already been put on sale, with 70,000 sent to serving British troops — many in Afghanistan.

The Ministry of Defence said it was aware of a photograph and an “inappropriate remark” on a soldier’s uniform.

“The Army does not tolerate racist behaviour,” added the spokesman.

“All those who are found to fall short of the Army’s high standards or who are found to have committed an offence under the Armed Forces Act 2006 are dealt with administratively or through the discipline process.”

In January 2009, Prince Harry got in trouble after a video diary was published by a national newspaper in which the prince called one of his then Sandhurst colleagues a “Paki”.

He said he had used the term as a nickname about a friend and without any malice.

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



UK: Peter Oborne: The Plot to Stop the Tories Ever Gaining Power…

The past few weeks have been David Cameron’s worst since the summer of 2007, when Labour had a 20 per cent poll lead and Gordon Brown was on the verge of calling an early general election — which everyone thought he’d have won easily if he hadn’t bottled it.

The Tories’ lead in the polls, in double figures throughout most of last year, has halved since Christmas.

[Return to headlines]



UK: The Horrors of Socialized Medicine Uncovered

While many Americans complain about the cost of health care in the United States — and lawmakers in Washington, DC are seeking control of the medical industry — perhaps all concerned should first learn about the horrors of having access free or inexpensive health care that kills, causes suffering, and offers little in the way of health or care, according to the opponents of ObamaCare.

Syndicated radio talk show host and attorney Mark Levin reported that an investigation of a British health care facility revealed horrible conditions including hundreds of deaths and unsanitary conditions.

Levin, who served as chief of staff at the U.S. Justice Department during the Reagan Administration, stated on the Thursday night edition of his highly rated show that the British Secretary of Health Andy Burnham commissioned a probe of a medical facility. The probe revealed a shockingly high death rate at that hospital.

According to the report — which confirmed the earlier findings of a March 2009 probe — 400 to 1,200 patients died from 2005 to 2008 while at the medical center Mid-Staffordshire NHS.

The probe revealed that aside from the disturbing high rate of deaths in that health care facility, the investigators discovered neglect because the hospital cut corners in a bid to reach government targets. Britain possesses a socialized medical system that includes targeted cost savings at the expense of patients’ well-being.

[…]

“Don’t expect to read any of this report in U.S. newspapers or newsmagazines. At least not until ObamaCare becomes a reality,” said Baker.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Social Worker Who Looked After Bulger Killer Until Release Gives a First Extraordinary Account of His ‘Kid Gloves’ Treatment Inside…

The portrait he paints may surprise: It is of someone who managed to divorce himself from a crime which shocked the world, who emerged from his secure unit aged 18 as a ‘popular, likeable lad’ and, above all, singularly confident — chillingly so.

‘Of course I can’t be sure, no one can, but I can’t see Robert going the same way as Venables,’ he said. ‘He is just too smart, too calculating.’

What he has to say about Thompson’s comfortable existence inside and the way the ‘prison system danced in attendance around him’ will infuriate James’s mother Denise Fergus.

And he said he saw nothing in the way of remorse.

If Thompson ever cried while in detention, no one ever saw him do so. And when the subject of the toddler’s murder was raised by staff or other children, it was always met with the same shrugged response: ‘It was something that happened, and I don’t want to discuss it with you.’

Aged ten, Thompson arrived at the detention centre in the North of England the day after his arrest in February 1993, and remained there until his release in 2001.

The social worker, who would later chaperone the boy on trips to shopping centres and parks, recalled his first day.

‘Not surprisingly, he was monosyllabic and sullen when we were first introduced, like all the children when they first arrive,’ he said.

‘But then it became apparent that he was what we call a typical “care kid” — even though he hadn’t been in care. These children are cocky and streetwise, know the system and know their rights and what they can get away with.

‘He’d say things like, “I want a drink. Get me one now. You’ve got to get me one”.’ From the outset he was treated as a star prisoner — and played up to it.

‘There were frequent visits from Home Office officials who were always fussing over him, checking with him and the staff that he was all right.

[…]

What lay behind this, I think, was that no one wanted to upset him because they were afraid of what the consequences might be. The management wanted him there. A lot of the staff thought the people running the unit used Thompson’s presence to coerce the Home Office into improving facilities.

‘The place doubled in size in the time he was in there. They threw millions at it.’

By the time he reached 14, Thompson was going on regular outings to a nearby shopping centre. ‘Along with a female social worker, I was assigned to him as a chaperone.’

[…]

It was at the age of 16 that the most significant event during his eight years’ detention occurred: He acquired a girlfriend, a pretty redhead the same age who was a habitual thief.

‘They hit it off instantly and did nothing to disguise their attraction for each other,’ said the social worker.

‘Everyone knew they were a couple and newcomers to the unit who took a fancy to her were told to back off “Robert’s girl”. She knew exactly who Robert was, what he had done, but it didn’t put her off.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Unwanted Men, We Need You to Curb the Welfare Amazons

Are men surplus to requirements? The answer, after more than half a century of feminism and the welfare state, depends largely on class. Men from the employable and educated classes are still in strong demand among women. But much lower down the socioeconomic scale, among the least privileged, men have become — or have come to seem — entirely optional.

Already we have what the tabloid newspapers call an epidemic of single motherhood — young women who have chosen to have babies on welfare, without husbands or boyfriends. One in four mothers is single and more than half of these lone mothers have never lived with a man and survive on welfare.

As many of these women become grandmothers, a new pattern has emerged of three generations of mothers without a man in the house — lone granny, lone mum and fatherless children, all expecting the state to stand in for daddy, as of right. These women are not so much welfare queens as matriarchal dynasties of welfare Amazons.

[Return to headlines]



UK: What a Daft Way to Stop Your Spaniel Eating the Milkman

As we know, one man once got on one plane in a pair of exploding hiking boots and as a result everyone else in the entire world is now forced to strip naked at airports and hand over their toiletries to a man in a high-visibility jacket.

In other words, the behaviour of one man has skewed the concept of everyday life for everyone else. And we are seeing this all the time.

Last month a Birmingham couple pleaded guilty to starving their supposedly home-schooled daughter to death. Now, of course, there are calls for parents who choose to educate their children at home to be monitored on an hourly basis by people from the “care” industry, and possibly to have their toiletries confiscated.

Then we have calls to ban sexually provocative pop videos from the television until 9pm and put Loaded magazine on the top shelf. Will this prevent teenage boys from seeing girls’ breasts? Well, whoever thinks it will has plainly never heard of the internet.

We see the same sort of overreaction to paedophilia. Just because one man in your town likes to watch schoolgirls playing netball, you must apply for a licence if you wish to take a friend’s kids to school in the morning. And I now run the risk of having my camera impounded by the police if I take pictures of my children playing on the beach.

Likewise, if I decide to take a picture of St Paul’s Cathedral I will be hurled to the ground by anti-terrorist officers and possibly shot six times in the back of the head — just because one person in Bradford once made a speech about the infidel.

We seem to have lost sight of the fact that throughout history 90% of people have behaved quite normally 90% of the time. Agatha Christie, for instance, was home-schooled and at no point was she forced to eat breadcrumbs from her neighbour’s bird table.

Of course, at the extremes, you have 5% who are goodie-goodies and who become vicars, and 5% who build exploding hiking shoes and starve their children to death.

It’s this oddball 5% that is targeted by the tidal wave of legislation. But making it more difficult to teach your children at home will not stop kids being mistreated.

It just changes the pattern of everyday life for everyone else. This is what drives me mad.

We now think it’s normal behaviour to take off our clothes at an airport. But it isn’t. Nor is it normal to stand outside in the rain to have a cigarette or to do 30mph on a dual carriageway when it’s the middle of the night and everyone else is in bed. It’s stupid.

[Return to headlines]



Vatican: Doubts Raised About ‘Miracle’ Linked to John Paul

Vatican City, 5 March(AKI) — The canonisation of Pope John Paul II may be delayed after reports that a French nun has had a relapse of Parkinson’s disease, which was believed to have been cured due to the pope’s intervention. The Vatican documented Sister Marie Simon-Pierre’s recovery from the illness as evidence of a miracle — a requirement for the late Pope John Paul II’s elevation to sainthood.

The nun’s relapse could now mean that the Vatican will have to find further evidence of a miracle linked to John Paul for his canonisation to advance.

But the Vatican on Thursday rejected the suggestion following a report by Polish newspaper Rzeczpospolita that Simon-Pierre had fallen ill with the same paralysing disease that affected the Polish pope.

“The news is without any foundation,” a Vatican source said on Thursday, according to the Italian daily, La Repubblica.

But the newspaper said that the Vatican medical commission charged with investigating Simon-Pierre’s case has asked a church official involved in the sainthood process to find another miracle.

Simon-Pierre, born in 1961, had reportedly been suffering from the degenerative disease since 2001, but has testified that she was cured in the night of 2 June 2005 after praying to John Paul II, whose final years were also marked by the degenerative disease of the nervous system.

“All I can tell you is that I was sick and now I am cured. It is for the church to say and to recognise whether it is a miracle,” she said during a 2007 news conference in the southern French city of Aix-en-Provence.

John Paul died in April 2005 after more than 26 years as pope.

At his funeral, admirers gathered in St. Peter’s Square chanting “santa subito,” or “saint now” encouraging his successor Benedict XVI to speed up the process towards canonisation.

Benedict has waived the five-year period normally required between the death and beatification of a candidate for sainthood.

There is speculation that John Paul II will be beatified on the fifth anniversary of his death. Beatification is the third of the four steps in the canonisation process and a person who is beatified is given the title “Blessed”.

At least two miracles are required under church rules to make someone a saint.

A further miracle related to John Paul was identified when a nine year-old Polish boy paralysed by kidney cancer was able to walk after praying at the pope’s tomb in 2006.

Stanislaw Dziwisz, John Paul’s former private secretary, who is now the archbishop of Krakow, has said there are many other miracles attributed to the late pontiff.

Some estimates suggest there are more than 200 miracles linked to John Paul.

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

Balkans


Serbia: Orthodox Church Shocked by Corruption Claims

Belgrade, 5 March (AKI) — The Serbian Orthodox Church has been shocked by a corruption scandal which has led to the suspension of Kosovo bishop Artemije. But analysts said on Friday it also revealed political pressure and deep divisions in the church’s leadership.

The Church’s Holy Synod formed a five-man commission in February to check the financial operations of Artemije’s diocese in Kosovo, after claims of fraud and financial mismanagement.

The investigation turned violent when a fight broke out between monks supporting Artemije and those opposing him.

The investigation discovered many alleged irregularities, misappropriation of church funds and humanitarian aid, and Artemije’s secretary Simeon Vilovski fled to Greece.

Serbian police arrested Predrag Suboticki, who operated a church-linked construction firm, which was engaged in the reconstruction of monasteries destroyed in ethnic Albanian unrest in March 2004.

The investigation showed that Vilovski and Suboticki were buying apartments in Belgrade and property in Greece with church funds.

Serbian police minister Ivica Dacic said that at least 350,000 euros were handed out in cash from church funds to pay fictional construction bills.

The Holy Synod convened on 13 February, temporarily suspended Artemije from managing the Rasko-Prizrenska diocese in Kosovo, and appointed an official administrator.

Hundreds of monks and Kosovo Serbs demonstrated in Belgrade, protesting against what they called “political persecution” of bishop Artemije.

He is still a member of the Holy Sabor of Bishops (church parliament) and his fate will be decided at the Sabor convention in May.

But the scandal has seriously tarnished the image of the church, which has been the most trusted institution of some ten million Serbs around the world.

It also exposed a struggle between pro-western reformists and conservative opponents of ecumenism among the church leadership.

Artemije, 75, boycotted a visit by US vice-president Joseph Biden to Kosovo last year, saying he was the main architect of the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia, which pushed Serbian forces out of Kosovo, paving the way for independence.

Reformist bishop Irinej has denied the Holy Synod acted under political pressure in suspending Artemije.

“With an absolutely clear conscience, I can say that there was no political dimension to it,” Irinej told Belgrade TV.

But conservative bishop Filaret told Adnkronos International (AKI) “the great magician”, meaning president Tadic, did intervene.

“He had sent emissaries to each and every one of us, suggesting we should replace Artemije, because he was harmful to his foreign policy,” Filaret said.

He claimed Tadic was looking for an exit strategy to implicitly recognise Kosovo as a precondition for Serbia’s joining the European Union, saying Artemije was a “thorn in Tadic’s eye”.

Asked about corruption charges, Filaret said it was for judicial bodies to decide.

He said many bishops had accumulated wealth and didn’t live up to Christian ethics. “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone,” he said quoting the Bible.

“But why only Artemije, and why at this unfortunate moment?” he asked.

A prominent Belgrade church analyst, Zivica Tucic, said there were “both elements, of corruption and politics” in Artemije’s case.

He pointed out, however, that the Holy Synod didn’t blame Artemije directly for the fraud, but for not controlling his closest associates.

“Artemije has been a problem for some time,” Tucic told AKI.

“His rigidity certainly hasn’t helped the ecumenical image of the church promoted by newly enthroned patriarch Irinej, or Tadic’s efforts to present a new ‘peaceful face’ of Serbia to the world,” Tucic said.

Meanwhile, Artemije has withdrawn from the public eye, saying he would do nothing that may hurt church unity.

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



Serbia: Problem With Belgium Will be Settled

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 5 — The problem of the constant stream of Serb and Macedonian citizens that have arrived in Belgium over the past few months claiming political asylum will be resolved. Speaking to journalists in Brussels following his meeting with the President of the European Commission, José Mauel Barroso, Serbia’s Prime Minister, Mirko Cvetcovic, said: “I have met the Belgian Prime Minister, Yves Leterme and I may say that the problem is going to be settled by common accord” He continued: “It would appear that somebody has organised a scam with a promise of a prize of 500 euros and hotel accommodation for those applying for asylum”. In Cvetcovic’s view, this is not a matter of “a bona fide application for political asylum, but a problem of an economic nature, tied to the underdeveloped conditions in the region between Serbia and Macedonia, where most of these asylum seekers are arriving from”. Among the measures to be implemented by Belgrade, ‘we shall announce that there is no chance of asylum being granted and that rumours have been spread telling untruths. Apart from dealing with the ‘tourist organisation’, the Serb government intends to start a campaign of information for its citizens, especially those in the South of the country. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Beirut as Shelter for Arabs From Middle Ages, Abi Saab

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, MARCH 5 — “Beirut city of paradox”, which bears the “many stigmas of its history” caused by many “overlapping” realities or realities that “ignore each other”, which has survived many challenges, under the pretence of looking at the future”, “archaic and modern, fanatic and tolerant, barbaric and civilized, religious and laic, chaos and harmony, violence and sweetness”. Pierre Abi Saab, a Lebanese journalist of Al Akhbar, spoke today about the cultural life of his city, Beirut, at the forum on identity and internationalization which started today in Naples, the first act of the ‘Mediterranean Cities’ project where speakers present the cultural life of their cities. A city of “contradictions”, he continued, which adapts to catastrophes, “a unique source of spiritual wealth”, but also at the mercy of policies of real estate speculators, since “the Lebanese democracy is nothing more than a sharing out of rights and privileges to its lords”. From a distance “it looks like it has no problems”, also thanks to its prosperous nightlife, to the tourists, the part-time residents, the rising prices per square metre. But the threat of poverty is a real one, according to Ani Saab. The Lebanese are fighting against skyscrapers built with Gulf capital, and Beirut is nothing but “a cabaret of shelters for Arabs who flee the medieval inferno that continues to be in place on those parts”. This “excellently globalised city” has gone through a cultural revival after the civil war. “The children of a mix of desperation” are looking for new forms of culture. But which newspaper could publish an article like this, he was asked? “There are some” the journalist responded, “including mine, but there is still much work to be done, and we have to conquer our freedom”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Arch-Terrorist Abdullah Barghouti: Netanyahu to Blame for Schalit Deal Collapse.

‘If freed, I’ll still fight Israel’

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is putting spokes in the wheels of the prisoner exchange deal, Hamas official Abdullah Barghouti said at the Nazareth District Court Sunday.

Barghouti, who is serving 67 life sentences for murdering 66 Israelis and being an accomplice in the murder of others, is one of the prisoners Israel is refusing to release in an exchange deal that would bring IDF soldier Gilad Schalit back home. Schalit has been in Hamas captivity for almost four years.

Israel brought Barghouti to court to ask to extend the conditions of his solitary confinement.

Upon arrival, he confidently told reporters, “If there is a deal, I would be set free along with Marwan Barghouti and Ahmad Sa’adat.” Marwan Barghouti and Sa’adat are other ‘high-value’ prisoners convicted of multiple counts of murder.

Barghouti also said, “After my release, I will continue to fight for Palestine, so long as the occupation continues.”

Asked whether Schalit was properly treated by his captors in the Gaza Strip, he said, “When we have a state we will also be able to conduct proper trials.”

“The will to fight has nothing to do with Jews themselves, it is only because the Jews conquered our land,” Barghouti continued.

Last week, during a discussion at the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, Netanyahu said one of the conditions Israel insists on regarding the prisoner exchange is that prisoners are not released to places from which they can easily return to terrorist activities.

Netanyahu noted how in two past prisoner exchange deals, some of the Palestinians released were involved in murdering more than one hundred Israelis.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



‘Hamas Losing Control Over Strip’

Ahmed Ja’abri, commander of Hamas’ armed wing, Izaddin al-Kassam, recently sent an urgent letter to Hamas leader in Damascus Khaled Masha’al, warning that the situation in the Gaza Strip was “deteriorating,” and that Hamas has started losing control over the territory, London-based Arab-language newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat reported on Saturday morning.

The letter was reportedly written in light of a series of assassinations and explosions near the offices of senior Izaddin a-Kassam commanders and of Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh. No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran Developing Massive Launch Site With Help of N.Korea

Iran is building a new rocket launch site with North Korean assistance, Israel Radio quoted IHS Jane’s as reporting overnight Friday.

The new launcher, constructed near an existing rocket base in the Semnan province east of Teheran, is visible in satellite imagery, according to the report.

The defense intelligence group said the appearance of the launcher suggests assistance from North Korea, and that it may be intended to launch the Simorgh, a long-range Iranian-made missile unveiled in early February and officially intended to be used as a space-launch vehicle (SLV). SLV’s can be converted to be used as long-range ballistic missiles for military purposes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iran’s Ahmadinejad Calls Sept 11 “Big Fabrication”

Ahmadinejad, who often rails against the West and Israel, made the comment in a meeting with Intelligence Ministry personnel.

It came amid escalating tension in the long-running dispute between Iran and the West over Tehran’s nuclear program, with the United States pushing for new U.N. sanctions against the major oil producer.

Ahmadinejad described the destruction of the twin towers in New York on September 11, 2001 as a “complicated intelligence scenario and act,” IRNA reported.

He added: “The September 11 incident was a big fabrication as a pretext for the campaign against terrorism and a prelude for staging an invasion against Afghanistan.” He did not elaborate.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iran: Brazil Resists US Pressure on Sanctions

Brasilia, 4 March(AKI) — Brazil “will not bend” to pressure from the United States for greater sanctions against Iran, Brazilian foreign minister Celso Amorim said on Wednesday. He made his comments after a meeting with US secretary of state Hillary Clinton in the country’s capital, Brasilia.

“We believe it is necessary to be sure that all possibilities of negotiation have been tried,” Amorim said.

Both Brazil and the US have the same objective to eliminate nuclear weapons, he said.

“We will not simply bow down to an evolving consensus if we do not agree. We have to think by ourselves and with our values and principles,” he said.

The US is seeking support for renewed sanctions against Iran which it believes is enriching uranium to develop nuclear weapons.

Brazil is currently a member of the United Nations Security Council.

“We think with our own mind. We want a world without nuclear arms, certainly without proliferation,” Amorim said at a joint news conference with Clinton.

“It is not about simply bending to an opinion that may not be true.”

During her remarks, Clinton reiterated the case for new sanctions, saying that Iran is not likely to engage in negotiations over its nuclear programme until sanctions were imposed.

Clinton said that sanctions had to be passed first in order to persuade Iran to “negotiate in good faith”.

The measure would bolster existing sanctions and focus on the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, which has extensive business interests in the country.

Any new sanctions are expected to focus on the banking, shipping and insurance sectors of the Iranian economy, broadening the scope of the sanctions in the three previous UN security resolutions.

The US aims to get Russian and Chinese support to negotiate the proposed sanctions draft.

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



Iran: Italian Envoy Asked to Explain Spy Arrests

Tehran, 5 March(AKI) — Italy’s ambassador to Tehran Alberto Brandanini has been summoned by the Iranian foreign ministry to explain the arrest of two Iranians accused of spying and involvement in an international arms smuggling ring.

The Italian foreign ministry on Friday confirmed that Brandanini had been called in after five Italians and two suspected Iranian spies were arrested in northern Italy on 3 March for allegedly trafficking weapons to Iran.

The Rome correspondent of the Iranian state television network IRIB, Hamid Massouminejad, and Ali Damirchilu were among those arrested on Wednesday.

Arrest warrants were issued for two other Iranians still at large who are suspected of involvement in the alleged arms trafficking ring, police said in Milan on Wednesday.

The investigation, dubbed Operation Sniper, was led by Milan prosecutor Armando Spataro, who probed the 2003 kidnapping and “extraordinary rendition “ of Abu Omar, a Muslim cleric accused of abetting terrorism by CIA agents in Milan.

The investigation led to the conviction of two former Italian secret agents and 23 CIA agents in absentia over the kidnapping.

Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said the arrests “indicate that another game is underway which aims at certain propagation [against Iran],” according to state-run English-language Iranian television Press TV.

Mehmanparast told Fars that the Italian envoy was asked by Tehran to explain the arrests of the two Iranians.

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



‘Islamic Nations Will Back Iran Strike’

An Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities would be quietly supported by a wide coalition of Islamic nations, including a number of extremist states, Deputy Minister of the Negev and Galilee Ayoub Kara said Saturday.

Kara, speaking at a Beersheba event, said that though none of them would admit to it publicly, Islamic nations had conveyed messages to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that they would back military action against Iran by Israel and the US.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Jonathan Spyer: What Does Assad Want?

In Damascus last week, the full array of leaders of the so-called ‘resistance bloc’ came together in a series of meetings. Presidents Ahmedinejad of Iran and Assad of Syria were there, alongside a beaming Khaled Meshal of Hamas and Hizballah General-Secretary Hassan Nasrallah. There were some lesser lights too to make up the numbers — including the PFLP-GC’s Ahmed Jibril, a fossil from the old alphabet soup of secular Palestinian groups.

The mood — replicated a few days later in Teheran — was one of jubilant defiance.

The reasons underlying Syria’s membership of the ‘resistance bloc’ remain fiercely debated in western policy discussion. It has long been the view of a powerful element in Washington — strongly echoed by many in the Israeli defense establishment — that Syria constitutes the ‘weakest link’ in the Iranian-led bloc.

Adherents to this view see the Syrian regime as concerned solely with power and its retention. Given, they say, that Syria’s ties to the Iran-led bloc are pragmatic rather than ideological, the policy trick to be performed is finding the right incentive to make Damascus re-calculate the costs and benefits of its position.

Once the appropriate incentive tips the balance, it is assumed, the regime in Damascus will coolly absent itself from the company of frothing ideologues on display in Damascus and Teheran last week, and will take up its position on the rival table — or at least at a point equidistant between them.

The specific incentive required to perform this trick varies depending on who you ask. In Israel, it is generally assumed that the recovery of the Golan Heights is the great prize. In this view, Syrian backing for Hizballah and for Palestinian terror groups is intended to keep up the pressure on Israel, in order to force it to concede the Golan.

In Washington, one may hear a number of other incentives discussed — the removal of the Syria Accountability Act, US aid and investment, and so on.

The logic of all these positions depends on the basic characterization of the Assad regime as ultimately motivated purely by Machiavellian power interests. This characterization remains received wisdom in Israeli and US policy circles to a far greater extent than the evidence for it warrants…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



March 8: Arab World, Women Better Educated But Not Enough

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 4 — Better informed and more involved in the economic affairs of their countries, but still the victims of inequality, and in some cases, completely without protection against violence: this is the snapshot given by a report compiled by the American organisation Freedom House into women’s rights in the diverse countries of the Arab world. In Yemen, Iraq and the Palestinian Occupied Territories Islamic extremism or backwardness — the result of ongoing endemic conflicts — forces women to suffer humiliating and discriminatory treatment, whereas in Kuwait, Algeria and Jordan the progress is more encouraging. The study, which was carried out during the last five years in 17 countries in north Africa and the Middle East, as well as the Palestinian Territories, gives as an example the decision by the Kuwaiti authorities to allow women the vote and to allow them to stand in legislative elections. The case of Algeria is also given as a positive example thanks to modifications to the Civil Code, which is now less discriminatory towards wives and mothers. Jordan is mentioned for its greater involvement of women in the management of economic-financial affairs in the private and public sectors of the Hashemite Kingdom. From Morocco to Iraq, there has been a general and gradual increase in the rate of literacy among the female population, even though in reality access to university education remains the exclusive domain of men. Violence against women, which is mostly carried out within the home, remains the most worrying aspect of the picture painted by Freedom House: in most of the countries analysed, crimes against women are not only tolerated by society — especially in rural areas — the perpetrators often go unpunished by the law. In this case, Jordan provides a negative example, over the light sentences which are regularly handed down to fathers and brothers who kill their daughters or sisters in the name of the defence of the family’s honour.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



‘They Need to be Liberated From Their God’

The ‘Son of Hamas’ author on his conversion to Christianity, spying for Israel, and shaming his family.

‘I absolutely know that in anybody’s eyes I was a traitor,” says Mosab Hassan Yousef. “To my family, to my nation, to my God. I crossed all the red lines in my society. I didn’t leave one that I didn’t cross.”

Now 32, Mosab is the son of Sheikh Hassan Yousef, a founder and leader of the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. Throughout the last decade, from the second Intifada to the current stalemate, he worked alongside his father in the West Bank. During that time the younger Mr. Yousef also secretly embraced Christianity. And as he reveals in his book “Son of Hamas,” out this week, he became one of the top spies for Israel’s internal security arm, the Shin Bet.

The news of this double conversion has sent ripples through the Middle East. One of Mr. Yousef’s handlers at the Shin Bet confirmed his account to the Israeli daily Haaretz. Hamas—already reeling from the assassination of a senior military chief in Dubai in January—calls his claims Zionist propaganda. From the Israeli prison he has occupied since 2005, Sheikh Yousef on Monday issued a statement that he and his family “have completely disowned the man who was our oldest son and who is called Mosab.”

[…]

As the son of a Muslim cleric, he says he had reached the conclusion that terrorism can’t be defeated without a new understanding of Islam. Here he echoes other defectors from Islam such as the former Dutch parliamentarian and writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali.

Do you consider your father a fanatic? “He’s not a fanatic,” says Mr. Yousef. “He’s a very moderate, logical person. What matters is not whether my father is a fanatic or not, he’s doing the will of a fanatic God. It doesn’t matter if he’s a terrorist or a traditional Muslim. At the end of the day a traditional Muslim is doing the will of a fanatic, fundamentalist, terrorist God. I know this is harsh to say. Most governments avoid this subject. They don’t want to admit this is an ideological war.

“The problem is not in Muslims,” he continues. “The problem is with their God. They need to be liberated from their God. He is their biggest enemy. It has been 1,400 years they have been lied to.”

These are all dangerous words. Of the threats issued to his life by Islamists, he says, “That’s not the worst thing that can happen to you. I’m OK with it, I’m not afraid. . . . Palestinians have reason to kill me. Some Israelis may want to kill me. My goal is not to defeat my enemy. It is to win over my enemy.”

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



Turkey: PM Attacks US After Armenian ‘Genocide’ Vote

Ankara, 5 March (AKI) — Turkey has recalled its ambassador to Washington after a US congressional panel resolution which described as genocide the mass killings of Armenians during World War I. Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan immediately condemned the vote and said the resolution would damage the countries’ bilateral relations.

“We condemn this bill that denounces the Turkish nation for a crime that it has not committed,” the prime minister said in a statement.

Ambassador Namik Tan, who had only taken up his post in Washington recently, has been recalled to Ankara for consultations and Turkey is reportedly considering other action.

Turkey, a key American ally and fellow NATO member, had lobbied hard for the US Congress not to vote on the issue.

The Armenian government estimates up to 1.5 million Armenians died during World War I during the disintegration of the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey has consistently rejected allegations of genocide, claiming that both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks died in the bloodshed.

It had mounted a vigorous lobbying campaign against the US resolution.

The resolution was narrowly approved — by 23 votes to 22 — by the US House of Representatives foreign affairs committee.

In 2007, a similar resolution passed the committee stage, but was shelved after pressure from the Bush administration.

Turkey and Armenia signed accords in October last year to establish diplomatic relations and open their shared border.

The move was greeted with protests in Armenia, where many people say Turkey did not fully address the 1915 killing of hundreds of thousands of Armenians.

Armenia wants Turkey to recognise the killings as an act of genocide, but successive Turkish governments have refused to do so.

The agreement called for a joint commission of independent historians to study the genocide issue.

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



Turkey: ‘Jewish Lobby Behind U.S. Armenia Genocide Vote’

Jewish lobbyists contrived a U.S. congressional vote that labeled the World War One-era massacre of Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide, a London-based Arabic-language newspaper claimed on Saturday.

Pro-Israel lobbyists had previously backed Turkey on the issue ? but changed tack in retaliation for Turkish condemnation of Israel’s policies in the Gaza Strip, the Al-Quds Al-Arabi daily said in an editorial, according to Israel Radio reports.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

South Asia


British Father Found Stabbed to Death in Girlfriend’s Home in Malaysia After Splitting From Wife

A British father was found stabbed to death at his girlfriend’s home in Malaysia yesterday — two years after moving to the country with his wife.

Andrew Murchie’s naked, blood-soaked body is said to have been discovered by his girlfriend, who was today being questioned by police over the 46-year-old’s death.

Police found a 6in knife lying beside Mr Murchie, who was stabbed in the neck, at the house in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



India: Muslim Women Can Move Forwards Wearing the Veil

A few days ago, Muslims in Karnataka took to the streets to protest the publication of an article against the Islamic veil by the ‘Kannada Prabha’ newspaper, ostensibly by well know writer Taslima Nasreen. Because of her liberal views on Islam, she has been living in exile for the past 16 years. The unrest left two people dead, and 50 injured; it also caused anger and fear among the State’s Hindu population. Asghar Ali Engineer, a Muslim and head of the Centre for Study of Society and Secularism, tells Indians about the struggle Muslim women are engaged in for their rights. He accuses Indian newspapers of distorting reality, something that is preventing a real reform of Islam.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) — A recent protest by thousands of Muslims in Shimoga and Hassan (Karnataka) has resulted in the death of two people, and the injury of another 50. Scores of cars were damaged and many stores were set on fire. The violence broke out when a local daily, the Kannada Prabha , published an article attributed to dissident Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen in which she says that Muhammad was opposed to veil. In fact, Nasreen has denied ever making such a claim, insisting that she has had no dealings with the newspaper.

In response to violence, the authorities imposed dusk-to-dawn curfew to prevent possible retaliation against local Hindus. However, police said the situation was still tense.

In Mangalore, someone yesterday someone threw a Molotov cocktail against the offices of Kannada Prabha. Two other newspapers also had their offices stoned.

Despite condemnation of the violence by local Islamic organisations, Hindus are very concerned. In India, Muslims number 137 million or 12.1 per cent of the population. In some states, like Karnataka, the local Muslim community tends to be very conservative culturally and is at odds with Hindu nationalism (which governs the State through the Bharatiya Janata Party or BJP). The situation has often led to misunderstandings, causing violence and mutual recriminations.

We reprint here an article by Asghar Ali Engineer, head of the Centre for Study of Society and Secularism, titled ‘Muslim Women and Change’.

“Most people think Muslim women are oppressed, forced to wear the veil and confined to the four walls of their houses. This is mainly because every day they read in newspapers that the Taliban force women to wear the veil and burn down schools for girls. They see women always wrapped in black garments from head to toe. The controversy over the burqa in France has reinforced this image of Muslim women.

This image would be justified if all Muslim women adhered to this strict dress code, which evolved in the Middle Ages, and which some Muslim theologians keep on justifying even today. However, there is a big difference between what is argued on theological grounds and what is grounded in reality. I could be wrong, but I dare say that Muslim women have been defying theological codes for more than a century now. Now a century later, they have gone even further in their public achievements.

Whilst it is true that even today, some Muslim theologians are arguing over whether women are naqisul aql (intellectually inferior) or not, the reality is that many Muslim women have gone further than many Muslim men in a number of fields. In Saudi Arabia, where women are not even permitted to drive cars, a woman has become a licensed pilot and has been flying planes.

Now, we get news from Malaysia that Farah al-Habshi, an engineer by profession, has become deputy weapons and electrical officer on the KD Perak, a Malaysian naval warship. Today she is wearing the white and blue uniform of the Royal Malaysian Navy; interestingly, she is also wearing a hijab to cover her head, though not her face. She feels her hijab in no way comes in the way of performing her duties.

Malaysia is an Islamic country and orthodox ulama exercise a great deal of control over people’s lives. Recently, even the Government of Malaysia has had to back down when the ulama took a stand against Christians using the word Allah in their religious literature or press. In this country, Muslim women also face other problems at the hands of conservative ulama with respect to family laws for example. However, this is in the same country in which a woman was commissioned as a naval officer on combat duty. Even in India, women have not won the right to be on combat duty in the Navy, or fly fighter planes, or serve in combat units. They are not even allowed to be on warships, whereas Ms Farah al-Habshi has recently participated in the MILAN naval exercise along with other women.

Ms Farah is highly articulate and answered all the questions put to her by journalists. Her example is not unique; there are several more. Many Muslim women have excelled even in the field of theology, quite independently of traditional theologians. They have shown courage to challenge orthodox ulama.

One example is Amina Wudud, who teaches Islamic Studies in Washington, United States. She believes that women can lead mixed congregations in prayer. A few years ago, she actually led a Friday prayer and delivered the khutba (sermon) before a group of about 100 people, men and women, something quite unthinkable in the traditional Muslim world. It raised a storm of protests and even Yusuf Qardawi, an otherwise moderate theologian from Qatar, wrote an article, opposing a woman leading a mixed congregational prayer.

After a great struggle, some Kuwaiti women were elected to the Kuwaiti parliament, eventually fighting for the right to sit in the house without having to wear the hijab. They took their case to the Supreme Court of Kuwait and won. Many more examples can be cited of Muslim women daring authorities for their rights.

However, the media, which is interested in sensationalising issues, has refused to highlight the achievements of Muslim women. They continue to portray them as submissive to traditional authorities, meekly accepting their situation. This image of Muslim women has to change; reality, which is much more complex, has to be understood.

This is not to deny that Muslim women face difficult problems in many countries. Their liberation is not a foregone conclusion. However, it is also true that many of them are fighting and refusing to submit meekly. What gives us hope is their continued struggle and defiance of traditional authorities.

It should also be mentioned that many ulama and jurists also have realised that medieval Shari’ah formulations about women cannot be easily enforced anymore. Some of them, like Muhammad Abduh of Egypt, Maulavi Mumtaz Ali Khan of India and Maulana Umar Ahmed Usmani of Pakistan, have expressed serious reservations about traditional theological formulations on women.

The determined struggle by Muslim women will force many more theologians to revise their position and use the Qur’an, not medieval theology, as the basis for the views on women’s issues.

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



India: Memo to Saudis: Please Stop Terror

But request over Pakistani activities ignores Wahhabi work

India has made a quiet appeal to Saudi Arabian leaders for help in getting Pakistan to halt its sponsorship of anti-Indian terrorism — attacks originating from Pakistani territory, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

In a meeting last week, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh made the appeal to the Saudis, whose limits on terrorism sponsorship appear to restrict only activities inside the Saudi kingdom.

[Comments from JD: This spineless appeal only emboldens the Whahhabists.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Malaysia Magazine Sorry for Communion-Spitting Offence

A Malaysian Muslim magazine has apologised after two of its journalists pretended to be Roman Catholics and took Holy Communion in a church.

Al-Islam said it had not intended to insult Christians with an article describing how the journalists received and later spat out communion wafers.

They were allegedly investigating reports that Muslims were illegally converting to Christianity.

Christians complained after charges against the reporters were dropped.

The Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur, Murphy Pakiam, said the two men had desecrated the Church, and the lack of charges appeared to legitimise their behaviour.

“The journalists have displayed utmost disrespect for the Catholic community when they admit receiving and spitting out the Holy Communion,” he told a press conference.

He said the incident “does not augur well on inter-religious harmony and peace” in Malaysia.

It is the latest in a series of incidents raising religious tensions in the Muslim-majority country.

Ignorance?

The monthly Malay-language al-Islam magazine indicated the men spat out the communion wafers because it took a photograph of them partially bitten.

“Al-Islam magazine apologises… because the article had unintentionally hurt the feelings of Christians, especially Catholics,” it said on its website Utusan Karya.

“It is also not the intention of al-Islam to insult the Christian religion nor to desecrate their house of worship.”

The government’s top lawyer, Attorney-General Abdul Gani Patail, said the pair had not understood the significance of the wafer.

“The actions of the two reporters may have hurt the feelings of the people but I was satisfied that they did not intend to offend anyone. It was an act of sheer ignorance,” he said in a statement.

“Therefore in view of the circumstances at that particular time and in the interest of justice, peace and harmony, I decided not to press any charges against them.”

The journalists said they had found no evidence of the illegal conversion of Muslims.

Catholics believe the communion wafer is transformed into the body of Christ during the celebration of Mass.

While non-Catholics can attend Mass, the Church does not allow those who are not baptised to receive the communion wafer.

The BBC’s Jennifer Pak in Malaysia says that non-Muslims feel their right to practise religion freely has come under threat in a country dominated by Muslims.

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



Pakistan: Islamabad, Jihad on the Internet: Terrorism Charges for Five U.S. Students

The young people come from Virginia and are of Pakistani, Yemen, Egyptian and Eritrean origin. They are charged with “conspiracy with terrorist purposes”. If found guilty, they face life imprisonment. On March 10 the Sargodha court will rule on trial. Pakistani experts: The Internet is a quantum leap in the war of the fundamentalists.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — On 10 March next five young Americans appear in court, accused of “conspiracy with terrorist purposes.” The students, all in their twenties, come from Virginia and have been detained in prison in Sargodha, a city 190 km south-east of Islamabad since last December. According to the investigation files opened by the Pakistani police, they contacted militant groups via the Internet, in order to organize an attack.

Hassan Dastagir, the student’s lawyer, tells the Pakistani newspaper The Dawn that at present, a formal charge has not yet been issued of against them. However, the police have filed a detailed document to the court of Sargodha, and they are awaiting the verdict of the judiciary. The report speaks of “conspiracy with criminal purpose,” adds the lawyer, with the intention to move into neighbouring countries “to overthrow the government” in office and “raise money” to finance attacks.

The courts are expected to accept the formal accusation — and order the trial — on 10 March. Previously appearing before the magistrates, the young people said that they would provide medicines and financial aid to Muslim friends who live in Afghanistan. If convicted, Hassan Dastagir, warns they risk a life sentence.

The police believe that the group was headed across the border to join the Taliban guerrillas in the fight against the Kabul government and the coalition forces. They are American citizens, but of different origins, two Pakistanis, one Egyptian, one Yemeni and one Eritrean. The e-mails sent by young people, investigators reveal, show “contacts with Pakistani militants, who were intending to use them to plan attacks in Pakistan.”

The five defendants accuse the Pakistani police and the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of torture. An accusation strongly denied by the authorities in Islamabad, which denies any mistreatment.

Ahmed Rashid, author of “Descent into Chaos” on Pakistani facts and expert on the Taliban, stressed that the story represents “an impressive development” in the strategy of the terrorists, who use modern technology to recruit new followers. Pervez Hoodhbhoy, professor of physics in Pakistan, pointed the finger at religious schools, the madrassas, some of which are “breeding grounds for extremism.” He has received death threats from fundamentalists, but will not be bowed and echoed: “The Internet has provided them with new ties to jihadist groups around the world”.

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



Pakistan: Police Search for Kidnapped Boy

Jhelum, 5 March (AKI) — Pakistani police conducted raids overnight in an urgent bid to find the five-year-old British boy who was kidnapped during a family holiday. Sahil Saeed was abducted from his grandmother’s house in Jehlum city, 100 kilometres south of the capital Islamabad on Thursday after thieves held the family at gunpoint.

Teams of police were working round the clock to find the boy as his father begged for his son’s release.

Robbers kidnapped Sahil Saeed from the home after stealing jewellery and cash. They are demanding a 120,000-dollar ransom.

They broke into the house as Sahil and his Pakistani father were preparing to get a taxi to the airport and fly home to Oldham in northwest England, relatives and officials said.

“God willing, we will recover the boy very soon,” police investigator Raja Tahir Bashir told the media. “We are doing whatever is possible.”

Bashir said several suspects were being questioned by police but he would not give any further details.

Raja Naqqash Saeed appealed for his son’s release, saying he feared he would not be able to communicate with his captors because he only speaks English.

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



Pakistan: Sources: U.S.-Born Al-Qaida Spokesman Caught

Gadahn, 31, reportedly held in Pakistan; $1 million reward on his head

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Adam Yahiye Gadahn, a U.S.-born spokesman for al-Qaida, has been captured in Pakistan, government sources said Sunday.

Gadahn was arrested in recent days, two officers who took part in the operation said. A senior government official also confirmed the arrest. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.

An intelligence source confirmed the report to NBC News, adding that Gadahn was detained in Sohrab Goth, a suburb of Karachi, and was later moved to the capital Islamabad.

The arrest is a major victory in the U.S.-led battle against al-Qaida and will be taken as a sign that Pakistan is cooperating more fully with Washington. It follows the recent detentions of several Afghan Taliban commanders in Karachi.

Gadahn moved to Pakistan in 1998, according to the FBI, and is said to have attended an al-Qaida training camp six years later, serving as a translator and consultant for the group.

A U.S. court charged Gadahn with treason in 2006, making him the first American to face such a charge in more than 50 years. He could face the death penalty if convicted. He was also charged with two counts of providing material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization.

Gadahn, 31, grew up on a goat farm in Riverside County, Calif., and converted to Islam at a mosque in nearby Orange County.

Gadahn has been wanted by the FBI since 2004. There is a $1 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

Gadahn video posted online

The report came as a videotaped recording by Gadahn was placed online.

In it, Gadahn called on Muslims serving in the U.S. armed forces to emulate the Army major charged with killing 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas

In the 25-minute video posted on militant Web sites, Gadahn described Maj. Nidal Hasan as a pioneer who should serve as a role model for other Muslims, especially those serving Western militaries.

“Brother Nidal is the ideal role model for every repentant Muslim in the armies of the unbelievers and apostate regimes,” he said.

Gadahn, also known as Azzam al-Amriki, was dressed in white robes and wearing a white turban as he called for attacks on what he described as “high-value targets.”

“You shouldn’t make the mistake of thinking that military bases are the only high-value targets in America and the West. On the contrary, there are countless other strategic places, institutions and installations which, by striking, the Muslim can do major damage,” he said, an assault rifle leaning up against a wall next to him.

Hasan has been charged in the Nov. 5 shooting that killed 13 people at Fort Hood. The 39-year-old Army psychiatrist remains paralyzed from the chest down after being shot by two civilian members of Fort Hood’s police force.

“Nidal Hasan is a pioneer, a trailblazer and a role model who has opened a door, lit a path and shown the way forward for every Muslim who finds himself among the unbelievers,” Gadahn said.

Media cited as targetable

In the latest video, Gadahn said those planning attacks did not need to use only firearms like Hasan, but could use other weapons. “As the blessed operations of September 11th showed, a little imagination and planning and a limited budget can turn almost anything into a deadly, effective and convenient weapon.”

Gadahn said fighters should target mass transportation systems in the West and also wreak havoc “by killing or capturing people in government, industry and the media.”

He recommended finding ways to shake “consumer confidence and stifle spending” and noted that even unsuccessful attacks, such as the failed attempt to bomb a U.S. airliner on Christmas Day, can bring major cities to a halt.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Officers Say American-Born Al-Qaida Arrested

KARACHI, Pakistan — The American-born spokesman for al-Qaida has been arrested by Pakistani intelligence officers in the southern city of Karachi, two officers and a government official said Sunday, the same day Adam Gadahn appeared in a video calling for Muslim violence.

The arrest of Gadahn is a major victory in the U.S.-led battle against al-Qaida and will be taken as a sign that Pakistan is cooperating more fully with Washington. It follows the recent detentions of several Afghan Taliban commanders in Karachi.

Gadahn — who has often appeared in al-Qaida videos — was arrested in the sprawling southern metropolis in recent days, two officers who took part in the operation said. A senior government official also confirmed the arrest.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.

Gadahn grew up on a goat farm in Riverside County, California, and converted to Islam at a mosque in nearby Orange County.

He moved to Pakistan in 1998, according to the FBI, and is said to have attended an al-Qaida training camp six years later, serving as a translator and consultant for the group. He has been wanted by the FBI since 2004, and there is a $1 million reward for information leading to his arrest or conviction.

The 31-year-old is known by various aliases including Yahya Majadin Adams and Azzam al-Amriki.

He has posted videos and messages calling for the destruction of the West and for strikes against targets in the United States. The most recent was posted Sunday, praising the U.S. Army major charged with killing 13 people in Fort Hood, Texas, as a role model for other Muslims.

A U.S. court charged Gadahn with treason in 2006, making him the first American to face such a charge in more than 50 years. He could face the death penalty if convicted. He was also charged with two counts of providing material support to a designated foreign terrorist organization.

Gadahn has appeared in more than half a dozen al-Qaida videos. The video released Sunday appeared to have been made after the end of the year, but it was unclear exactly when.

Dawud Walid, the executive director of the Michigan chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Southfield, Mich., condemned Gadahn’s call for violence, calling it a “desperate” attempt by Al-Qaida’s spokesman to provoke bloodshed within the U.S.

Walid, a Navy veteran, said Muslims have honorably served in the American military will be unimpressed by al-Qaida’s message aimed at their ranks.

“We thoroughly repudiate and condemn his statement and what we believe are his failed attempts to incite loyal American Muslims in the miltary,” he said.

Imad Hamad, the senior national adviser for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, based in Dearbon, Mich., condemned al-Qaida’s message and said it would have no impact on American Muslims.

“This a worthless rhetoric that is not going to have any effect on people’s and minds and hearts,” he said.

Al-Qaida has used Gadahn as its chief English-speaking spokesman, and he has called for the destruction of the West and for strikes against targets in the United States. In one video, he ceremoniously tore up his American passport. In another, he admitted his grandfather was Jewish, ridiculing him for his beliefs and calling for Palestinians to continue fighting Israel.

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: U.S.-Born Al Qaeda Arrest News Incorrect

Confusion Over Militant’s Identity Sparked Reports of Gadahn Arrest; Some Media Say It is Another U.S.-Born Terrorist

An “important Taliban militant” was arrested today in Pakistan. But that is where the confusion started.

Earlier it was reported by Pakistani media that intelligence agents had arrested Adam Gadahn, the American-born spokesman for al Qaeda, in an operation in the southern city of Karachi.

It was further reported by the Associated Press and Reuters that Gadahn had been arrested, sourcing security officials.

CBS News was told by sources in the Pakistan government that it was Gadahn, even after U.S. officials refused to confirm it was the California native for whom a $1 million reward has been posted.

Now, CBS News’ Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad writes that earlier reports the detained individual was Gadahn proved false. According to a Pakistan security official who spoke with CBS News on condition of anonymity, the arrested individual is in fact “a Taliban militant leader who is known as Abu Yahya.”

The official said evidence compiled from an interrogation of the suspect and information exchanged with U.S. officials verified the man’s identify.

The reassessment only added to the confusion surrounding the arrest of a man earlier described by other unnamed Pakistani security officials as Gadahn.

“In the light of our latest information, I can say, this is not looking like Gadahn. But it is still the arrest of an important Taliban militant,” said the Pakistani security official who spoke to CBS News late Sunday.

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



Revealed: Bitter Family Split of Boy, 5, Kidnapped by Gunmen in Pakistan

The parents of the five-year-old British boy kidnapped in Pakistan were involved in a bitter split shortly before their son was snatched by armed gunmen.

Raja Naqqash Saeed took his son Sahil out of school and flew with him to his family’s home in Pakistan, leaving his wife Akila and their two daughters behind in Oldham.

He took his wife’s passport with him so she could not follow them to Jhelum, said a senior police source in the city south of Islamabad.

Since Wednesday’s kidnapping, Mr Saeed has claimed he took Sahil to Pakistan to pay a surprise visit to the boy’s maternal grandmother, who has been unwell.

In reality, the source said, he left with Sahil after a ‘major falling out’ that threatened their marriage and may have been considering taking his son permanently to Jhelum.

The source said that although Mrs Saeed knew her husband was taking Sahil to Pakistan, it was not until they had left that she realised he had taken her passport too.

It was only when family elders in Jhelum intervened that they patched up their arranged marriage in emotional phone calls.

They had agreed to give their marriage another go when gunmen robbed the family’s compound and kidnapped Sahil as he and his father were about to leave for the airport to fly back to England.

Police initially placed Mr Saeed under surveillance when they discovered he had travelled to Pakistan with his wife’s passport, the source said, before ruling him out as a suspect.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


China ‘Must Reduce Rich-Poor Gap’ — Premier Wen

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has said China must reverse its widening income gap between rich and poor.

He said benefits of a growing economy — expected to expand by 8% this year — should be distributed more fairly.

In a major speech at the start of China’s annual parliamentary session, the premier also said the economy needed restructuring.

He wants Chinese firms to improve their ability to innovate, producing high-tech and high-quality products.

The premier’s comments came in a wide-ranging speech delivered in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, where the largely ceremonial parliamentary session is being held.

In the keynote speech, Mr Wen reviewed the government’s work over the past 12 months and set out its policy goals for the coming year.

Registration reform

The speech touched on many issues, but on a number of occasions the premier spoke about the need to make China a fairer society.

“We will not only make the ‘pie’ of social wealth bigger by developing the economy, but also distribute it well,” Mr Wen told about 3,000 delegates, returning to a theme that he has often spoken about during his premiership.

“[We will] resolutely reverse the widening income gap,” he added later, in a speech that lasted more than two hours.

As part of that project, the premier said China would reform the household registration system that classifies people as either city or rural dwellers.

This controversial system means many migrant workers — farmers who travel to towns and cities to find better-paid work — are unable to get proper services.

“[We will] gradually ensure that they receive the same treatment as urban residents in areas such as pay, children’s education, healthcare, housing and social security,” he said.

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



Cyberwar Declared as China Hunts for the West’s Intelligence Secrets

Urgent warnings have been circulated throughout Nato and the European Union for secret intelligence material to be protected from a recent surge in cyberwar attacks originating in China.

The attacks have also hit government and military institutions in the United States, where analysts said that the West had no effective response and that EU systems were especially vulnerable because most cyber security efforts were left to member states.

Nato diplomatic sources told The Times: “Everyone has been made aware that the Chinese have become very active with cyber attacks and we’re now getting regular warnings from the office for internal security.” The sources said that the number of attacks had increased significantly during the past 12 months, with China among the most active players.

In the US, an official report released on Friday said that the number of attacks on Congress and other government agencies had risen exponentially in the past year to an estimated 1.6 billion every month.

The Chinese cyber-penetration of key offices in both Nato and the EU has led to restrictions in the normal flow of intelligence because there are concerns that secret intelligence reports might be vulnerable.

Sources at the Office for Cyber Security at the Cabinet Office in London, set up last year, said there were two forms of attack: those focusing on disrupting computer systems and others involving “fishing trips” for sensitive information. A special team has been set up at GCHQ, the government communications headquarters in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, to counter the growing cyber-threat affecting intelligence material. The team becomes operational this month.

British and American cyber defences are among the most sophisticated in the world, but “the EU is less competent”, James Lewis, of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said. “The porousness of the European institutions makes them a good target for penetration. They are of interest to the Chinese on issues from arms sales and nuclear non-proliferation to Tibet and energy.”

[Return to headlines]



More Than 20:000 North Korean Refugees in South Korea

by Joseph Yun Li-sun

According to South Korean authorities, North Koreans fleeing Kim Jong-il’s regime is greater every year. The Church is working for the integration of the ‘Saetomin”, the refugees who end up at the bottom of the social ladder.

Seoul (AsiaNews) — North Korean refugees in South Korea “are far from integrating. Their number, which has increased manifold from 947 in 1998 to 16,513 last year, keeps growing. It should reach 20,000 next year,” an official with Hanawon (United Korea), the government-run institution that helps defectors settle in South Korea, told AsiaNews.

According to the organisation, which operates in a highly sensitive area for the whole Korean Peninsula, 58.4 per cent of refugees still consider themselves North Koreans; only 6.3 per cent think of themselves as South Koreans. North Korea’s intense political indoctrination and problems associated with settling in a more modern and freer society like that of South Korea are the main causes.

The Catholic Church has addressed the issue. At the start of this year, it held three a three-day seminar on ‘Saetomin, agents of the Gospel’. Saetomin means ‘refugees, settlers’ in Korean and is the term South Koreans use for those who manage to get out of North Korea and settle in the South. Over time however, the word has become a derogatory term because of the exiles’ low level of integration.

For Prof Ko Kyeong-bin, a Catholic who teaches at the University of Seoul, “the distress of 20,000 Saetomin living here is of great concern. [. . .] they are only the mirror of the 20 million North Koreans who would come to us after the reunification of two Koreas. We have a long way to go before being ready to welcome them in the right way.”

The South Korean government agrees. Through Hanawon, it helps refugees with language, home care, housing, and jobs. However, for some NGOs “that is too little and misdirected.”

“If we want a united peninsula, we must follow a cultural path that recognises that we are brothers divided by a strip of land.”

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

Australia — Pacific


McDonald’s Rejects Push to Have More Halal-Serving Outlets

McDONALD’S has rejected a push to have more halal-serving outlets despite pressure on the fast-food giant.

A Victorian burger fan, Amin Assafiri, launched the Facebook campaign in frustration at having to drive from driving 8km north to the closest halal McDonald.

Mr Assafiri lives to the north of Melbourne, in Fawkner, with the nearest Hala McDonald’s in Roxburgh Park.

His “Make Fawkner McDonald’s halal!” Facebook page has attracted 341 members — not enough to sway the burger chain’s management.

“We can only accommodate the market so much,” McDonald’s spokeswoman Kristy Chong said. “It is a considerable cost to go halal.

“There are already three halal McDonald’s in Melbourne.”

Mr Assafiri said at least 1000 Muslims living in Fawkner made special trips to Victoria’s halal McDonald’s in Roxburgh Park and Brunswick East.

The third Victorian halal McDonald’s will open in a renovated Preston McDonald’s in June.

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



Row Over Barbecue as Primary School Opts to Offer Halal Sausages

A ROW over sausages has a school community sizzling amid competing claims of bigotry and animal cruelty.

What was supposed to be a welcome-back barbecue for students at Coburg West Primary School has turned into a debate over the Islamic halal method of preparing meat.

Members of the school’s Parents and Friends Association believed they were being inclusive when they ordered halal-only sausages for last month’s barbie.

But some parents thought it was political correctness gone mad to offer only halal meat.

Parent Diane Rees said yesterday that she was outraged when told by the PFA that “we have to buy halal because we have some Muslim children in the school”.

“I said to the principal, ‘I think you’re discriminating against the majority of the school and appeasing the minority by only serving halal,’ “ she said. “It’s not fair on my children that they can’t eat at the school.”

Ms Rees said she wasn’t anti-Muslim — her concern was over the way animals were killed under the halal method, which involves a knife cut to the jugular veins and carotid arteries in the neck.

“They take two long minutes to die and I think that’s bloody cruel,” she said.

But Australian Federation of Islamic Councils president Ikebal Patel said research showed that, done properly, halal was a quick and humane slaughter of animals.

“I think they are using the issue of some halal sausages at a barbecue, for God’s sake, to bring out their own xenophobic bigotry,” he said.

“It was very thoughtful of the parents and friends association to try to cater for Muslims. I think they (the critics) need to get real and get a life on this one.”

School principal David Kilmartin, who has been in the job for only a month, said halal-only barbecues were not school policy and the PFA had been told to provide a choice of meat in the future.

“I don’t think it was done with any malice. I’m assuming there would have been requests from Muslim families to have halal meat,” he said.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


“Scores Killed” In Nigeria Clashes

Scores of people were killed on Sunday after pastoralists attacked villagers close to the central Nigerian city of Jos, witnesses said.

More than 100 people were killed in clashes on Sunday between pastoralists and villagers near the central Nigerian city of Jos, witnesses said.

Villagers in Dogo Nahawa, just south of Jos, said Fulani pastoralists from the surrounding hills attacked at about 3 a.m. (0200 GMT), shooting into the air before slashing those who came out of their homes with machetes.

A Reuters witness who visited the village counted around 100 bodies piled in the open air. Pam Dantong, medical director of Plateau State Hospital in Jos, showed reporters 18 corpses that had been brought from the village, some of them charred.

Officials said other bodies had been taken to a second hospital in the state capital.

It was not immediately clear what triggered the violence.

Four days of sectarian clashes in January killed hundreds of people in Jos, the capital of Plateau state, which lies at the crossroads of Nigeria’s Muslim north and predominantly Christian south.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Pirates Hijack Norwegian Tanker Off Madagascar

Pirates have seized a tanker off Madagascar in the Indian Ocean and are sailing it towards the Somali coast, the ship’s Norwegian owners have said.

The UBT Ocean was carrying oil from the United Arab Emirates to Tanzania, Svenn Pedersen, of owners Brovigtank, told Reuters.

Piracy has made the seas off the Horn of Africa among the most dangerous in the world, despite naval patrols.

Attacks usually increase between March and May when the seas are calmer.

Mr Pedersen said the owners had received a call from the captain who said there were pirates on board the ship.

“Very quickly afterwards we lost all contact with the boat,” he told AFP news agency.

The UBT Ocean is registered in the Marshall Islands.

Its seizure comes two days after pirates captured a Saudi tanker and its crew in the Gulf of Aden and sailed it to the Somali town of Garacad.

An international naval force is patrolling the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean but has been unable to stop attacks on shipping from pirates based in Somalia.

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

Immigration


EU: Cooperation With Libya and Turkey Urgent

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, FEBRUARY 26 — Faced with illegal immigration, the European Union stepped up the pace for greater cooperation with Libya and Turkey, according to reports on the conclusions reached by the Justice and Home Affairs Council meeting underway in Brussels. In the final document, with the aim of establishing “short-term effective cooperation”, the 27 member states have urged the European Commission “to urgently look into drawing up an agenda on cooperation between Eu and Libya to include initiatives for maritime collaboration, border management (including the possibility of developing an integrated surveillance system), international protection, effective return and readmission of illegal immigrants, as well as issues relating to individual mobility.” The Council has made an appeal for a rapid conclusion to official talks between the EU and Turkey on readmission agreements, considering it an issue requiring urgency, and urged the European Commission, members states and Turkey to “further develop cooperation on immigration”. Member states then asked the Brussels executive, as part of the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance, to look into the possibility of supplying adequate financial means to improve Ankara’s capacity to tackle illegal immigration, including support for the application of an integrated management system along Turkey’s borders. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Mixed Marriages Triple in 10 Years

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 3 — Mixed marriages in Italy have tripled in the last 10 years, increasing from 3% of the total in 1998 to 10% in 2008, according to a study promoted by the national office for ecumenism and inter-religious dialogue of the Italian Episcopal Conference and headed by Barbara Ghiringhelli of the Ambrosian centre for documentation for religions (CADR). The study was presented today in Ancona at the conference of diocesan heads for ecumenism and dialogue. Conducted on a national scale (94 diocese were involved), the study showed that the 975 interdenominational, inter-religious and mixed marriages registered in 1999, increased to 1,557 in 2008. Inter-denominational marriages increased sharply (between different sects of Christianity), while inter-religious marriages remained more or less the same or slightly decreased. In 1999, interdenominational marriages totalled 553, while in 2008 they increased to 911.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Violence Erupts in a Rome Detention Center

ROME, Italy — The alarm went off at Rome’s detention center for undocumented migrants. Tunisian migrant Badis Barhumi, who had tried to escape, hurried back inside to hide. The chief police officer on duty found Barhumi among other migrants and beat him down with a baton.

“We yelled at him to stop,” said Mustafa, one eyewitness who denounced the violence to a local radio station, “but he kept going.”

The incident soon ignited a revolt. Migrants started grabbing blankets and mattresses and setting them on fire. Another migrant called GlobalPost with an account of the violence: “They are setting bottles on fire and throwing them at the police, like Molotov cocktails,” said Elkattani Abdelatif, a detainee from Morocco. “Police are on the roof, the building is smoking, it looks like guerrilla warfare.”

Rome’s Identification and Expulsion Center (CIE) Ponte Galeria, has confronted discontent before. It is the largest center for identification and repatriation of migrants in Italy. Guarded by soldiers and barbed wire, the concrete building hosts more than 350 men and women in separate compounds.

“This is something that happens every time they sense change and are afraid,” said Amos Dawodu of the Italian Red Cross, the former sanitary director at the facility. “That’s what they do to communicate when they want something.”

On the night of the February riot, the Italian Red Cross, which managed social service and healthcare at the Rome CIE, was handing over control to a new organization.

The Italian Red Cross acknowledged the revolt but said it didn’t witness the beating.

“If that were the case,” said Francesco Rocca, head of the Italian Red Cross, “that would make the Red Cross an accomplice.”

According to a 2010 report by Doctors Without Borders (MSF), identification centers throughout Italy are plagued by scarce hygiene, crowded quarters and inadequate care for chronic illnesses like diabetes, hypertension and HIV. When MSF visited Rome’s CIE in the summer of 2009, migrants had gone without toilet paper, soap or towels for two weeks.

“This is worse than a prison,” said Abdelatif, the detainee. “I’ve seen people breaking their hands or feet or eating batteries and razor blades just to go to the hospital. The other day a Romanian guy drank a bottle of detergent, just to get out.”

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



Netherlands: Immigrant Voters Again Important for PvdA in Local Elections

THE HAGUE, 05/03/10 — Immigrant voters have again provided important support for Labour (PvdA) in the local elections. Moroccans in particular voted for the party en masse, according to research by Amsterdam city council and the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies of the University of Amsterdam.

The PvdA remained the biggest party in Amsterdam by some way, partly due to 74 percent of Moroccans voting for the social democrats. Among Ghanaians, a big group in the Zuidoost district, the figure was even 88 percent. Among Surinamese and Antilleans, the PvdA ‘only’ won 53 percent, De Volkskrant reported yesterday. It gave no figures for Turks.

The PvdA was as always the biggest party in Amsterdam by a long way. But it did drop to 28.9 percent from 39.4 percent. The conservatives (VVD) won some ground (17.1 percent), as did the leftwing Greens (GroenLinks), to 15.2 percent, while the Socialist Party (SP) vote was halved to 7.4 percent. Centre-left D66 climbed to 14.8 percent from 4.1 percent in Amsterdam.

In 2006, the immigrant vote for PvdA was even higher at 80 percent, with only GroenLinks and SP picking up a few crumbs. This time around, D66 was also a competitor. The turnout in Amsterdam among immigrants was similar to four years earlier, ranging from 46 percent among Turks to 26 percent among Surinamese and Antilleans.

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



Netherlands: Income Check on Foreign Brides Ruled Illegal

Dutch immigration rules requiring men or women wishing to bring in a foreign partner must earn at least 120% of the official minimum wage have been ruled illegal by the European court of justice in Luxemburg.

The case had been brought by a Moroccan man who has lived in the Netherlands since 1970 and was refused permission to bring in his wife.

The couple met in 1972 but she only applied to join him in Holland in 2006. Permission was refused because the man is now unemployed and does not meet the income requirements.

The Dutch justice ministry said it is studying the ruling before it will comment.

For a similar case, click here

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



Obama to Push Immigration Before Elections

The Los Angeles Times is reporting that President Barack Obama is planning on pushing the immigration issue before the November elections. He met with his staff and two senators, Chuck Schumer and Lindsey Graham, the Times is reporting, in an attempt to map out a plan for running the legislation before representatives become too busy with the fall election.

Inside sources indicate that amnesty will be included in the deal. A strategy for “a path toward citizenship” for the estimated 10.8 million illegal aliens now in the country is reported to be one of the topics being considered.

“We’re very hopeful we can get a bill done. We have all the pieces in place. We just need a second Republican,” Schumer said in a statement. But he acknowledged that he is having a hard time finding people interested in jumping on board.

[Return to headlines]



UK: British Taxpayers to Fork Out Millions More in Benefits for EU Migrants

Taxpayers face paying millions of pounds in extra benefits to Eastern European immigrants because of changes to EU regulations.

For the past seven years, immigrants from eight countries due to become full members of the EU were banned from claiming benefits in the UK until they had worked here for 12 months.

But from April 2011, immigrants from Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia and the Czech Republic — where income levels are 40 per cent of the European average — will be allowed to claim Jobseekers’ Allowance and other benefits after just three months.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Munich Hosts Homosexual Job Fair

Europe’s first career fair for homosexuals comes to Munich this weekend. Moritz Honert from Der Tagesspiegel spoke with the founder of Milk 2010 about job prospects for gays and lesbians in Germany.

There are less dangerous places for coming out of the closet than Singapore.

Swede Anders Wikberg knew this when he lived in there for a year in 2003. Homosexuals in the country are threatened with a several-year prison sentence, but Wikberg finally had enough.

“I just didn’t want to lie anymore,” he says.

In hindsight, it was good decision. The openness not only strengthened his relationship to friends and family, but also helped his career. Before he’d often been afraid admitting he was gay would lead to trouble.

“Since I no longer have to constantly watch out for what I say, I can concentrate much better,” he says.

Today the 31-year-old lives in Munich. There he no longer fears a prison sentence like in Singapore, but still feels that the professional lives of gays and lesbians aren’t always made easy in Germany.

“Many firms consider themselves open, but it doesn’t appear so to me at all,” he says.

That’s why together with his business partner Stuart B. Cameron, Wikberg brought “Milk 2010” to life — which he says is Europe’s first career fair especially for homosexuals. The event takes place on Friday and Saturday in Munich for the first time.

Wikberg and Cameron borrowed the name from Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California.

“He was an example,” Wikberg says. “Milk was the first US politician that was openly gay and still successful.”

The event is meant to be a networking platform. At the same time there will be speeches on topic such as, “Are we different? — Homosexual executives put to the test,” or “Outing at the workplace — curse or blessing?” Additionally there will be a presentation of an index that promotes firms that champion equal rights for homosexuals.

Eight companies plan to send representatives to Milk 2010, among them Google, SAP, Cisco, Ford, Volkswagen Financial Services and IBM.

“If we want to win the best workers for our company, then we can’t afford to shut anyone out,” says Uta Menges, who ensures employee diversity at IBM Deutschland.

She also points out that colourful mix within the company is extremely desirable, because it helps creativity.

Other companies make similar arguments, though they don’t make a secret of the fact that the commitment has a positive effect on their corporate image.

The job fair organisers also have frequently discussed what kind of image they are projecting. They accept that by putting the differences between gays and heteros into focus, they could torpedo their goal of equal rights.

“We simply believe that the demand for such an event persists,” Wikberg says.

The organisers expect up to 2,000 visitors in the first year. The hope it will become an annual event that could eventually expand to Berlin.

They’re also getting support from Germany’s Lesbian and Gay Federation (LSVD). Spokesperson Renate Rampf says that while the professional situation for homosexuals in Germany has improved, there’s still discrimination.

“When there’s a post to be filled, in Germany it’s still the case that heterosexuals with the same skills are favoured,” she says.

The Milk 2010 event runs March 5-6 in Munich.

This article was published with the kind permission of Berlin newspaper Der Tagesspiegel, where it originally appeared in German. Translation by The Local.

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



Netherlands: Church Bows to Gays Seeking Communion

Homosexuals can now attend communion in all parishes in the diocese of Den Bosch.

News — Snubbed, homosexuals head to mass en masse

This is the outcome of a meeting between the church council of the main Roman Catholic church in the Netherlands, St. John’s Cathedral in Den Bosch, priest Geertjan Van Rossum, Vera Bergkamp of the gay organisation COC and editor-in-chief of the gay peridocial Gaykrant.

“People should decide for themselves whether or not to attend communion whatever their sexuality and should do so with a clean conscience,” said a spokesperson for the diocese.

As a result, the openly gay Prince of the Carnival who was recently refused communion in the provincial town of Reusel should have received it. The church’s refusal to give him communion sparked protests at Roman Catholic church services up and down the Netherlands on Sunday.

During the protest, gay rights demonstrators dressed in pink and wearing wigs of the same colour walked out of the service at St. John’s after priest Geertjan van Rossum said “the correct experience of sexuality is part of the ten commandments”.

Gay organisations COC and the ‘Friends of Gaykrant’ are pleased with the “reconciliatory words” from the church council. Bergkamp said, “The discussion has been initiated. The church council has indicated it wants a long-term contact.”

The church council has called on demonstrators not to protest in church by wearing pink triangles or calling out slogans. The gay organisations have decided not to continue their Sunday mass protests. They hope their supporters will follow suit.

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



Spaniards Rally Against Abortion

Thousands of demonstrators have marched through Spanish cities to protest against a bill that will make it easier for women to seek an abortion.

In Madrid, families with young children carried banners, flags and balloons and chanted “No to abortion! Yes to life!”.

The bill, already passed by parliament, introduces abortion on demand up to 14 weeks into a pregnancy.

At present, a pregnancy can only be terminated in mainly Catholic Spain under specific circumstances.

The new bill is due to come into force in July.

It is the latest in a series of ethical issues which have pitted the Catholic right against the government, which has legalised gay marriage and made divorce easier.

“No woman can be sent to jail for terminating her pregnancy or threatened with that. That’s the difference,” Socialist Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said on Saturday.

Child’s rights

One of those protesting in Madrid on Sunday, Maruchi Barosa, said the demonstration was “in support of humanity”.

According to one of the organisers, Victor Gago, the demonstrators had blocked the capital’s central Sol square.

“We are demanding the right to life. The children are not guilty if their parents want or don’t want them. They should have thought about it before,” said Marta Puig, quoted by the AP news agency.

“It isn’t the mother who has the rights, it is the child,” said another demonstrator.

A similar protest in October drew tens of thousands of people onto the streets.

Spain’s existing law, dating from 1985, allows abortion in cases of rape and when there are signs of foetal abnormality.

Currently, Spanish women can also end a pregnancy if their physical or psychological health is at risk. In practice, the last category has been used to justify the vast majority of abortions — of which there were 112,000 in 2007.

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



Teenage Boys Watching Hours of Internet Pornography Every Week Are Treating Their Girlfriends Like Sex Objects

Psychologist Dr Linda Papadopoulos has just published a government report into the sexualisation of children, and is certain that exposure to porn is having an adverse affect on the lives of today’s teenagers.

‘My research has left me extremely concerned,’ she says. ‘A recent survey showed that 54 per cent of boys found porn “really inspiring” in terms of sexual performance. This worries me, because of the nature of the material they are now watching.

‘This isn’t the type of pornography that was around when we were teenagers. What kids are seeing today is very often violent, and it has no intimacy, no respect, no kindness, no context of sex within a loving relationship.

‘It is very damaging to young people and to their relationships.’

[…]

Dr Michael Flood, a sociologist based at the Australian Research Centre for Sex Health and Society, is at the forefront of international research into how exposure to internet porn is influencing the behaviour of teenagers.

He has just completed a study examining the impact of porn on the young people who watch it.

‘Boys who watch explicit sexual material develop an increasing belief that all of their friends and peers must all be highly sexually active,’ he told me. This, he believes, is desensitising them and putting them under pressure to be doing the same.

‘When boys are repeatedly exposed to what I call nonmainstream-sexual behaviours, they may be more likely to accept and adopt them as well.

‘I am also very concerned that exposure to aggressive or violent pornography may be blurring the lines of consent.’

In other words, he believes boys who watch violent porn are more likely to behave violently.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: After Tory Leader Reveals His List of Ethnic Candidates, Cameron’s Rainbow 1st Eleven

In the latest development in his campaign to show how dramatically the Tories have changed, David Cameron has published the party’s first-ever official list of openly gay MPs.

The Conservatives say they have 20 openly gay candidates standing in the Election. Of those, 11 told party chiefs they were ‘happy’ to be named in the first authorised list of gay Conservative candidates.

It has led some to suggest jokingly that the Tories might change the party’s traditional blue colour to the rainbow flag of the gay movement.

Publication of the list followed a claim by Shadow Minister Nick Herbert that if the Tories win the forthcoming General Election there could be up to 15 openly gay Conservative MPs. That compares to three at present, including Mr Herbert.

The move follows similar increases in the number of Tory women and ethnic minority candidates. It has led to a backlash from some grassroots activists, who claim the changes have been forced on them by Mr Cameron. Others say it has made the Conservative Party look more modern.

In a speech authorised by Mr Cameron, Mr Herbert said the party had ended the domination of ‘male, white, professional, grey-suited and straight’ Tory MPs.

[…]

Mr Herbert said: ‘A successful political party ought to look like the country it seeks to govern. If we were truly representative, we would have 99 women, 16 black or ethnic minority and ten gay MPs.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Clergy Could Face the Law Over Same-Sex Ceremonies

Warning comes after amendment to allow churches to hold events

British lawmakers have tentatively approved a bill to allow churches to host same-sex marriages, prompting warnings that the measure would be one step from forcing clergy to perform the homosexual ceremonies.

Even the head of the nation’s top homosexual activist group, Ben Summeriskill of Stonewell, is concerned about the implications for churches, according to the Christian Institute.

“Right now, faiths shouldn’t be forced to hold civil partnerships, although in 10 or 20 years, that may change,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Vote for Marriage? You’re on a Hit List

Battle looms in Supreme Court over ‘gay’ activist harassment

A battle is set to begin in the U.S. Supreme Court, as backers of traditional marriage hope to fend off a law that would make their names and addresses public and, therefore, make them prime targets for homosexual activists intent on bullying them into silence.

The case calls into question whether voters have protected free speech and anonymity rights in signing petitions and ballot initiatives or whether states must release signatories’ names and addresses as a matter of public record.

With reported cases of bullying, organized boycotts and threats of violence against the signers of traditional marriage initiatives in several states already — and homosexual activists pledging to make lists of signatories public and searchable online — lawyers at the American Center for Law and Justice are concerned that voters may grow fearful of reprisal should they sign a petition seeking to restrict marriage to one man and one woman. That fear, the ACLJ is arguing in a brief filed this week before the Court, is exactly the kind of political and voter intimidation that the Constitution should protect against.

“The right to secret ballot safeguards citizens from the historic evil of voter intimidation,” the ACLJ brief argues. “Similarly, the right to anonymity in signing referendum petitions is no less essential in safeguarding signers from reprisal or intimidation.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


The Guaranteed Failure of Catering to Muslim Perception

“So long as widespread suspicion exists, and it does exist, amongst the Arab population, that the economic depression … is largely due to excessive Jewish immigration, and so long as some grounds exist upon which this suspicion may be plausibly represented to be well founded, there can be little hope of any improvement in the mutual relations of the two races. —” 1930 statement by the British government

What does this statement, following an inquiry into the 1929 Muslim attacks upon Jews in Mandatory Palestine, have to do with a recent disinvitation to speak at Britain’s Cambridge University for Israeli historian Benny Morris?

The statement marks the emergence of the Western phenomenon of making decisions on the basis of what Arabs and Muslims perceive, or are said to perceive, at the expense of the facts or the merits of the case.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100306

Financial Crisis
» German Tabloid Tells Greeks to Get Up Earlier
» Greece: New Strike Paralyses Country
» How Safe is Britain’s Proud Pound?
» Italy Denies Iranian ‘Payback’ Charges
» Italy: Economy: Italy: GDP Drop in 2009 Worst in 38 Years
 
Europe and the EU
» Dutch MP Geert Wilders Claims to be All About Freedom of Expression — But is He About to Engulf Britain in a Holy War?
» Geert Wilders Warns Brits of Muslim Takeover
» Importing Germany’s Imams
» Is Geert Wilders the New William of Orange?
» Islamophobia on Tour: Wilders Comes to Britain
» Spain: First Muslim Party Presented in Granada
» UK: By Calling for the Release of ‘Lady Al-Qaeda’, Lord Ahmed Has Brought the Upper House Into Disrepute
» UK: Fury as Far-Right Leader Faces Demo
» UK: Kenan Malik: I Despise Him, But That’s No Reason to Ban Him
» UK: Neglected by ‘Lazy’ Nurses, Man, 22, Dying of Thirst Rang the Police to Beg for Water
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Fire Destroys Eulex Documents on Crime
» Serbia: EU: Frattini, Too Soon to Say Accession in 2014
 
Mediterranean Union
» Egypt-NATO Partnership Paves Way to Boost Euromed Dialogue
» EU: Neighbourhood Policy Funds, 5.7 Bln From 2011 to 2013
 
North Africa
» Internet: Algeria; 770,000 With ADSL But Ministry Wants More
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Jerusalem Clashes and in West Bank, Dozens Hurt
 
Middle East
» Economy: Turkey CPI Highest in EU Area, Report Says
» Turkey: Judiciary Under Siege, Supreme Court President Says
» Venetian Group to Head Study on Dead Sea
 
South Asia
» Italy: ‘No Impediment for Premier’
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Mauritania: France Cancels 17.4-Million-Euro Debt
 
Immigration
» Australians Don’t Want More People — Poll

Financial Crisis


German Tabloid Tells Greeks to Get Up Earlier

Tabloid Bild newspaper has written an open letter to Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou, telling him he was visiting a country where, unlike his own, people “get up early and work.” Merkel condemned “negative emotions” as “unhelpful.”

“No one here has to pay thousands of euros in bribes to get a hospital bed. We don’t give pensions to generals’ daughters who can’t find a husband … Taxi drivers give receipts and farmers don’t get billions of euros in EU subsidies for non-existent olive trees,” the newspaper thundered in its Friday edition.

Responding to an earlier suggestion by some German MPs, Papandreou said Friday that Greece did not need to sell some of its uninhabited islands to raise cash and plug its gaping budget deficit.

“I think that more creative solutions exist to tackle the deficit than selling Greek islands,” Papandreou told reporters in Berlin after talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Tensions have been growing between the popular press and some politicians of the two countries as Greece seeks to restore trust in its solvency in the global financial markets. Germany, as Europe’s biggest economy, is seen as first in line for any bailout but any such move would be deeply unpopular with voters.

German magazine Focus recently printed a cover image of the famous Venus de Milo statue making an obscene hand gesture. The accompanying article called Greece the “traitor” of the euro for its excessive deficit spending.

Merkel said on Friday that “everything to do with negative emotions is unhelpful. We should find other solutions to our problems.”

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



Greece: New Strike Paralyses Country

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — Greece is once again paralysed today by a new partial general strike and by demonstrations in all the major cities, whilst Parliament is being called to approve the government’s austerity package which will severely reduce wages, freeze pensions and impose new taxes. The communist union PAME has called for a national 24-hour strike for today, whilst the two main confederations, ADEDY (civil servants) and GSEE (private sector), have decided on a suspension from work from midday local time (11am in Italy), but giving their members permission to strike for the full day. And this is what will happen to all urban transport, doctors, professors, and journalists from state media. Air transport will suffer heavy delays due to the air traffic controllers’ four-hour strike, as will rail and ferry links. ADEDY and GSEE are also preparing to declare a general strike next week (likely to be March 11) after protests in recent days by taxi drivers and pensioners, whilst customs officers prepare to follow suit. Yesterday evening thousands of people, lead by activists and communist trade union representatives, demonstrated in Athens, Thessaloniki and in the country’s major cities against the “anti-popular and criminal” measures urged by Premier George Papandreou who will today meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin. During yesterday evening’s demonstration, there were skirmishes with the police in the centre of the capital. Meanwhile, this morning the governor of the Bank of Italy, Mario Draghi, has commented positively — in light of the success of the bond sale — on the measures adopted by the Greek Government to deal with the crisis, defining them as “very serious”. Draghi said that “they are measures that have convinced the markets, as can be seen by the success of the sale (of Greek bonds, Ed.) and they have also convinced the ECB and EU Commission.” Yesterday requests for the Greek ten-year bonds resulted as three times what was offered: 15 billion euros against the 5 billion on offer. As a result the New York Times wrote that “it is a step back from disaster”, commenting on the outcome of the operation. The bonds will pay annual interest of 6.37%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



How Safe is Britain’s Proud Pound?

Speculators Eye Next Prey

By Carsten Volkery in London

First the euro, now the pound. Britain’s currency is coming under massive pressure as speculators bet that the UK’s national debt will soon get out of hand. Like Athens, London has its share of problems — and the Brits don’t have any euro zone partners to back them up.

Schadenfreude may be a German word, but it has never been a foreign concept in Great Britain — particularly in recent months as the British watch the trials and tribulations of the European common currency, the euro. The budgetary and debt problems facing Greece, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Spain have merely reinforced their conviction that staying out of the euro zone was the right decision. Unlike Berlin, London is not under pressure to come to the aid of Athens.

But speculators have not just taken aim at the euro in recent days. The British pound, too, has become a favored target — showing Brits how vulnerable their own currency may actually be. At the beginning of the week, the pound slid to a 10-month low of just $1.4781. Since then, the pound has staged a mini-recovery, moving back above $1.50 on Wednesday. But market pressure on the British currency is not likely to disappear overnight.

Alarm on the Markets

The most immediate trigger for the recent currency swoon came in the form of political surveys which indicated that a Conservative victory in general elections (which will likely be held in early May) may not be a foregone conclusion. Markets were alarmed out of fear that a close election could make it difficult for parliament to pass a strict package of savings measures.

Such political concerns are temporary. Given the British electoral system, a Conservative victory remains likely — nor is it clear that a minority government would be unable to cap spending.

More permanent, however, are the fundamental economic indicators that are becoming the pound’s Achilles heels — debt and budgetary problems that have fuelled the British currency’s downward trend since October 2008.

The problems start with the size of the country’s budget deficit. With a budget deficit of 13 percent of GDP this year — Greece’s is 12.7 percent — Britain is by far the deficit champion of the G-20 states. Britain has so far avoided an Athens-style crisis primarily by virtue of the fact that its economy is much more flexible and competitive than Greece’s. Furthermore, most still believe that the country is capable of shrinking its debt without outside help. Also, unlike Greece, which is facing the need to immediately refinance €20 billion in debt, most British debt won’t come due until 14 years from now.

Losing their Patience

But international financiers are beginning to lose their patience. Since the beginning of the year, the share of foreign investors in British bonds has dropped from 35 percent to 29 percent. Returns on 10-year bonds, one measure of the risk associated with them, have climbed to above 4 percent — almost a percentage point above the German benchmark. The number of short positions on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange betting on a further loss of pound value has spiked upwards recently. The numbers reflect the market’s growing skepticism.

In recent months, the British have proudly pointed out the advantages of having their own currency in the midst of the crisis. Through the devaluation of the pound, exports have been made cheaper and investments in the country more attractive. The domestic economy has profited, too. Growth of around 1 percent is predicted for the first quarter of 2010 — the first since 2008.

It has also enabled the Bank of England to intervene in grand style, holding down interest rates so that money is available cheaply to both the government and consumers. Attractive mortgage interest rates have also helped to revive the real estate market, which has in turn buoyed the general mood of the British.

Whitewashing the Crisis

The downside of these monetary policies, though, is that they conceal the true scope of the crisis. The most recent bonds issued by the British government were fully subscribed because the Bank of England purchased the majority of them. That may enable the government to finance its deficit under favorable conditions, but the move risks jeopardizing the trust of the markets.

Mass consumer debt in Britain is whitewashed in a similar manner. With an average personal debt of 170 percent of annual income, British households are even further indebted than the Americans. And interest rates kept artificially low by the Bank of England are still feeding this bubble. Sooner or later, a rise in interest rates is inevitable — at which point domestic demand could take a nose dive.

If Britain had joined the euro zone when it was established, at least some of these excesses could have been prevented. The fiscal policy guidelines of the common currency would have ensured that. The average annual deficit of the euro-zone countries is currently only 6 percent. Great Britain also could have hid behind the reputation of more solid euro-zone members, just as the Greeks are now doing. As a relatively small country with its own currency, however, Britain is more vulnerable.

Currency Remains Weak

But in Britain, the opinion still prevails that the country is better off staying alone. Hope for a upswing is being nourished by a series of positive economic indicators. On Wednesday, the Markit Service Index, which measures the mood of British service providers, rose to its highest level in two years. It also helped to rally the pound again.

Still, the currency remains weak. And though it is unlikely at this point that the rating agencies will downgrade Britain’s creditworthiness, the possibility cannot be ruled out. In May 2009, Standard and Poor’s cut its view of British bonds from stable to “outlook negative.” If Britain were to actually lose its AAA rating, it could have disastrous consequences for the pound. And there would be no holding the speculators back.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy Denies Iranian ‘Payback’ Charges

Tehran demands release of TV reporter arrested for arms dealing

(ANSA) — Rome, March 5 — Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini on Friday denied Iranian claims that the arrest of two Iranians in an arms trafficking probe was a ‘political manoeuvre’ or any kind of ‘payback’.

“I flatly reject any Iranian insinuation that there was political motivation behind the recent arrests,” he said.

“Italy is a nation founded on the rule of law and is a state in which the judiciary is independent of the executive.

The arrests of Iranian and Italian nationals were carried out in connection with a probe into arms trafficking in violation of international law,” Frattini said in a statement.

“All those who were arrested will obviously see guaranteed their right to defend themselves and to legal counsel throughout the entire trial process. They will also benefit from the full guarantees awarded to anyone held in custody,” he added. The Iranian foreign ministry on Friday summoned Rome’s ambassador to Tehran, Alberto Bradanini, to officially protest the arrests of TV journalist Hamid Masoumi-Nejad, 51, and fellow Iranian national Ali Damirchilu, 55, and demand their immediate release.

The pair were among seven people including five Italians arrested Wednesday on suspicion of breaking an international arms embargo to smuggle weapons into Iran.

Two other Iranians, Hamir Reza and Bakhtiyari Homayoun, escaped arrest and are considered fugitives.

Iranian news agency IRNA on Friday quoted Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehman-Parast who called the arrests “another propaganda initiative against Iran”.

On Thursday Iranian TV claimed the arrest of the journalist was ‘payback’ for his coverage of scandals involving Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

According to the Iranian TV news channel IRINN, Masoumi’s reports “on the Italian economic crisis and cases of corruption and scandals concerning Berlusconi” had annoyed politicians. Masoumi has been accredited to the Rome foreign press association as a correspondent for IRINN for the last 15 years and is a well-known figure in journalism circles.

IRINN also said the arrests were part of “a Zionist-American plan to unfairly accuse the Islamic Republic” and claimed Arab satellite TV stations Al Arabiya and Al Jazeera were allegedly helping it by covering the Milan probe.

EIGHT-MONTH PROBE.

On Wednesday Milan assistant prosecutor Armando Spataro said the seven people arrested sought to export to Iran weapons ‘dual use’ materials and systems, which can be converted from civilian to military use.

He added that the arrests were the result of an eight-month probe which had been carried out using a vast number of wiretaps and intercepting email and SMS communication. Among the Italians arrested was Alessandro Bon, 43, a Veneto native who lives in Monza and who is believed to have orchestrated the illegal trafficking through a Varese-based company, Antares. Also arrested were Bon’s girlfriend Danila Maffei, 40; Bon’s business partner Arnaldo La Scala, 43, who is also a lawyer in Turin; Guglielmo Savi, 56, the head of a telecommunications company, Sirio SrL; and Raffaele Rossi Patriarca, who investigators said travelled to Iran to establish contacts with the Iranian military interested in arms deals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Economy: Italy: GDP Drop in 2009 Worst in 38 Years

(ANSAmed) — Rome, March 1 — Last year’s 5% decline in Italy’s gross domestic product was the greatest drop since Istat began collecting data in 1971, the national statistics bureau said on Monday. In presenting its latest report on the nation’s economy Istat also revised its data for 2007 and 2008, reducing the 1.6% rise in 2007 to 1.5% and expanding the 1% decline in 2008 to 1.3%. Italy’s deficit/GDP ratio rose to 5.3% from 2.7% in 2008 while the public debt rose to 115.8% of GDP, at 1,761.191 billion euros, from 105.5% in 2008. The new Istat report also showed that for the first time since 1991 Italy posted a primary deficit rather than surplus, with state revenue excluding interest on existing debt falling by 0.6% of GDP, compared to a surplus of 2.5% in 2008. State revenue in 2009 amounted to 47.2% of GDP, down 1,9% over the previous year when it rose by 1.1%, while spending rose to 52.5% of GDP from 49.4% in 2008, Istat reported. Tax pressure in Italy climbed 43.2% from 42.9% in 2008, Istat said. Consumer spending in Italy last year shrunk by 1.2%, with a 1.8% drop in household spending, while overall government spending rose by 0.6%. Gross salaries in 2009 fell by 0.6%, with increases of 1.7% in the agricultural sector, 1.2% in construction and 0.9% in the services sector, offset by a 5.7% drop in the industrial sector, Istat reported. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Dutch MP Geert Wilders Claims to be All About Freedom of Expression — But is He About to Engulf Britain in a Holy War?

From the Netherlands drift the first sparks of a firestorm that threatens to engulf Britain and the rest of Europe.

At its centre stands one man, a 44-year-old by the name of Geert Wilders.

He is a Dutch MP who likes sharp suits and has a shock of blond hair.

It’s a look not dissimilar to that of car salesman “Swiss Toni” from classic comedy series The Fast Show — but mention the name of Geert Wilders in Holland and it won’t raise a laugh.

Quite the opposite, in fact.

His actions, the Dutch government is warning, have put countless lives at risk. Plans are being drawn up to evacuate Dutch embassies around the world, riot police are on standby in Amsterdam and ordinary citizens are cancelling foreign holidays as they prepare for trouble.

There are already protests on the streets and by the goverments of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Indonesia.

Wilders, you see, has spoken out against the Muslim faith. He’s attacked the “tsunami of Islamisation” that he says is engulfing traditional Dutch society.

He’s attacked the prophet Mohammed, saying that were he alive today he should be “tarred and feathered” and deported as an extremist.

He’s attacked the culture of political correctness that has seen immigrants given housing and benefits without even having to try to assimilate into Western culture.

And he’s attacked the Koran, a book he likens to Hitler’s Mein Kampf, describing it as the cornerstone of a “fascist ideology” that aims to destroy all who oppose it.

Wilders has also made a 15-minute movie. Called Fitna (Arabic for “strife”), it was broadcast on the internet for the first time on Thursday afternoon, prompting fears of a backlash against Dutch citizens of unprecedented proportions.

Wilders remains unrepentant. Over the past few years the Right-wing MP has received many death threats and knows his life is in danger.

Even so, he says: “If I were to moderate my voice, if I stop saying what I think, then the people who use undemocratic arguments like death threats would have won.

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“So I will never stop, because if I moderate my voice, if I do not tell the truth according to me, then the people who use threats will win. I believe that in a democracy those people should never win.”

Opinions of Wilders are mixed. The Establishment seeks to discredit him as an over-ambitious, Right-wing, pro-Israeli politician who will do anything to gain popularity.

It says his comments are so inflammatory that they have no place in a civilised society.

But others insist he should be free to express his opinions and that those who seek to silence him are the real threat.

Surveys show that many people agree with him. Where others have been cowed into silence, Wilders has given voice to the concerns of the masses (or so the argument goes).

And, as Wilders has noted, those concerns are not unique to the Dutch — but are also boiling close to the surface in Britain.

When a Danish newspaper published caricatures of the prophet Mohammed in 2005, more than 100 people died during ensuing protests across the Muslim world.

So it is hardly surprising that mainstream TV companies haven’t been keen to broadcast Wilders’s video.

The sensitivities surrounding the film mean that even making it available on the web hasn’t proved straightforward.

When an early clip from Fitna was placed on YouTube, the internet moviesharing site, the authorities in Pakistan took the unprecedented step of blocking access to it.

Then, earlier this week, the website on which Wilders had proposed showing the film was closed down by its internet service provider amid concerns over its content.

Undeterred, Wilders vowed that, if necessary, he would personally hand out copies of it on DVD in Amsterdam.

In the end, he didn’t have to, as he posted the footage on LiveLeak.com, a Britishbased video-sharing website.

It is that connection which yesterday dragged the UK into the controversy.

“This heinous measure by a Dutch lawmaker and a British establishment. . . is indicative of the continuation of the evilness and deep vengeance such Western nationals have against Muslims,” Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman said.

The documentary juxtaposes Koran extracts against footage of terrorist atrocities, of Sharia law in action and of jihad.

These include graphic scenes of Americans throwing themselves from the Twin Towers in the 9/11 attacks, beheadings and hangings.

Ten minutes into the film, Wilders turns to the Netherlands.

Statistics showing the growing Muslim population in Holland (nearly one million Muslims make up 5.5 per cent of the population but in the main cities it is around a third and growing) are followed by images of female genital mutilation, a hanging of gay men, and bloodied children.

This is succeeded by the question: “The Netherlands of the future?”

The film concludes with someone leafing through the Koran and a tearing sound. “The sound you heard was a page being torn out of the phone book. It is not up to me, but up to the Muslims to tear the spiteful verses from the Koran,” reads the text on the screen.

“In 1945, Nazism was defeated in Europe. In 1989, Communism was defeated in Europe. Now, the Islamic ideology has to be defeated. Stop Islamisation. Defend our freedom.”

The final image is the Danish cartoon of the prophet Mohammed with a bomb as a turban. The fuse coming from the bomb is lit and as the screen turns black there is the sound of thunder.

Overall, it’s quite a slick production but its content, while stomach-churning and offensive in places, is no more extreme than other packages on the web.

What distinguishes it is that Wilders is prepared to claim authorship and makes no bones about his motivations for making it.

His aim is to illustrate his dislike for the Koran. “The main issue is the fascist book of the Koran,” he says.

“What I want to show. . . is that many verses (in it) are very bad indeed and, even today, are inspiring people to do the worst things not just in the Middle East but in Europe and the United States.”

He adds that it is wrong to see the Koran in the same light as the Bible.

“It is a very vivid book that, unfortunately, is still giving incentives to a lot of people and some countries of the world to do the most terrible terroristic things. Unfortunately, it is not a handful, it is a growing minority who find an inspiration in Islam.”

Wilders, whose Freedom Party (PVV) holds nine seats in the 150-seat Dutch parliament, emphasises it is the ideology that he objects to and not Muslims per se.

But he claims that rising numbers of Muslims are taking an extremist stance and he does not believe that a “moderate” or “European” version of Islam will emerge for many thousands of years.

“We cannot afford to wait,” he says.

Wilders does not think that all cultures have a right to be treated equally, even branding Islamic culture “retarded”.

It is his view that the politically correct approach of Governments in Western Europe towards immigrants has failed.

He wants the Dutch constitution rewritten so that the Koran can be outlawed in Holland, all immigration from Muslim countries halted, Muslim immigrants paid to leave and all Muslim “criminals” stripped of Dutch citizenship and sent “back to where they came from”.

“We tried for many decades in Europe, we tried it the other way, to do it with dialogue and by accepting other cultures and by calling them our equal and by saying everything is all right,” he says.

“Dutch politicians allowed it to happen. They never said: ‘Stop, this is our country, our values, we are the bosses, if you want to come here and stay here that is OK but only if you adhere to our values, to our principles and our laws.’ But certainly that is not happening.

“For all our tolerance, unfortunately we are also tolerant to the intolerant. We should learn to start being intolerant to the people who are intolerant to us. That is the best lesson for the Dutch government to learn.”

And, according to Wilders, it’s not just the Dutch government who needs to learn this — other nations, Britain included, are “going in the wrong direction altogether”.

“There is almost no country more politically correct than the UK,” he has said.

“Look at the terrible things that happened in London after Madrid. You have more reason than most to make this debate transparent and public.

“As long as the political elite does not take the questions, the threats, the problems of large parts of their constituents seriously, I am very negative about the future.”

Not as negative, though, as his many critics who say that the posting of the film is likely to provoke such a strong reaction that people will die.

Dutch soldiers in Afghanistan are certainly a target and plans have been drawn up to evacuate Dutch nationals from Muslim countries worldwide.

Wilders acknowledges that some people will be offended by the film but says he can’t be blamed if people react in a way that is outside the law.

“I can never be responsible for that because I am a democratically elected politician.

“I use only democratic means and I believe in a democracy — if you don’t like the message or the movie or the article, you write your own article or you make your own movie or you go into a debate or a discussion, and if people use violence (instead) then they are responsible for it.”

Others say he is being disingenuous and trying to provoke an extreme reaction. For while he condemns Nazism, he is also displaying its worst traits by wanting to get rid of Muslims.

Hans van den Broek is a former Dutch minister for foreign affairs and a government adviser.

“I am well aware of people’s constitutional right regarding freedom of speech, but Wilders’s pronouncements about wanting the Koran forbidden and his likening of Mohammed to Hitler go too far,” he insists.

Meanwhile, Zainab al-Touraihi, secretary-general of the Contact Body for Muslims, the official Muslim advisory body to the Dutch government, says: “I think he’s addicted to the attention of the media. He’s doing it for political reasons, and I’m sure he’s getting more and more votes — and that’s the scary thing.”

Wilders is well aware of this growing support. Most Dutch people wanted the film to be broadcast, andWilders recently topped a poll as the most effective politician in Holland. Support for his party increases, as does the feeling that he has tapped into a deep well of grievances.

Those who know him say it is hardly surprising given his own experiences. The son of a printing company director, Wilders has a Catholic background and went to a Catholic secondary school.

He was a speech-writer for the liberal VVD party, was elected as city councillor in Utrecht in 1997 and made an MP the next year.

Wilders lived with his wife in Utrecht’s Kanal island area — which, once a respectable neighbourhood, became dogged by crime, blamed on rising immigration and unemployment.

Around this time Wilders was beaten up and had his wallet stolen, reportedly by immigrant youths. He needed hospital treatment.

The attack was said to have left him convinced the Netherlands was unsafe and that immigration and unemployment and crime needed to be tackled.

This was reinforced in 2002, following the murder of outspoken anti-immigration MP Pim Fortuyn by a Leftist activist.

Wilders set up the Freedom Party and attracted widespread publicity calling for a ban on the burqa. Friends say he is obsessed with politics, partly due to the extraordinary life he now has to live.

Surrounded by six bodyguards, paid for by the State, he has received 600 death threats. Sometimes he and his wife have been moved into prison cells for their safety.

“It is something you would not wish on your worst enemy,” he says of this. “I lost my freedom and privacy because of my opposition to Islam.”

And though he does not say it, it is clear he would sacrifice his life, too.

Before the film’s release, a statement on an Arabic website with links to Al Qaeda read: “In the name of Allah, we ask you to bring us the head of this infidel who insults Islam and Muslims and ridicules the Prophet Mohammed.”

For Geert Wilders — and for the stability of society in much of Western Europe — the stakes have again been raised.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Geert Wilders Warns Brits of Muslim Takeover

VIOLENCE erupted outside Parliament after a notorious far-right politician was allowed to enter Britain.

The English Defence League and anti-fascist and Muslim protesters clashed yesterday over the arrival of extremist Dutch MP Geert Wilders.

Police arrested more than 50 demonstrators as tension boiled over.

A thousand of the rival groups’ supporters hurled missiles at each other just hours after Mr Wilders, leader of the Dutch Freedom Party, showed his anti-Islamic film Fitna to the House of Lords.

Mr Wilders’ visit comes just a year after he was banned from Britain for his far-right political views.

The 46-year-old firebrand has seen his popularity rocket in his native Netherlands and is even being touted as a future prime minister.

In a press conference near Parliament yesterday, he branded Islam a “violent and hateful” religion, and Allah “a mass murderer”.

He added: “Islam and democracy are incompatible. The more Islam we have, the more freedom we lose.

“I advocate in my country the complete halt of immigration from Muslim countries and the deportation of those who want to impose Sharia law or have terrorist sympathies.

“I believe the rest of Europe, including Britain, should take a similar stance.

“I will seek to block the building of new mosques and abolish Muslim faith schools if I gain power.

“I do not hate Muslims, only the minority who believe in violence to achieve their hard-line aims.

“The question that Britain must ask itself is, will their capital be London or Londonistan in 20 years?”

The press conference was chaired by cross-party politician Baroness Cox, 72, and UKIP leader Lord Pearson, 67.

Lady Cox said: “I may not agree with what Mr Wilders believes but this is a victory for freedom of speech.”

During the visit the English Defence League and various far-left and Muslim groups were separated by a strong force of police.

The anti-fascist protestors sang “Nazi scum off our streets”, while the EDL responded with the same chant.

March For England leader Dave Smeeton, 54, said: “We are not racists, we just don’t want to see Britain turned into an Islamic state.”

Protester Francis Aincliffe, 26, from Bradford, explained why he was at the rally. He said: “I’m protesting against Sharia law. It’s an ancient medieval belief that has no place in modern Britain.

“I’ve got a four-year-old daughter and I don’t want to see her exposed to all of that.”

In a statement, The Home Office said it was unhappy Mr Wilders had been invited to Britain, adding: “The

Government continues to oppose extremism in all forms.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Importing Germany’s Imams

With Germany lacking schools of Islamic theology, Muslim congregations have long imported religious leaders. As Germany considers steps to create more homegrown imams, countries like Turkey — which sends state-employed imams to Europe to serve large segments of the Turkish diaspora — are filling the gap.

It was impossible to tell that the men who gathered in a German language class one frigid winter morning in Ankara, Turkey were Islamic religious leaders. They wore suits, or plaid button-up shirts, and could have easily passed for office workers or graduate students as they worked over phrases of German in their course book.

“Birgit Deichmann still searches,” one man in a grey suit read aloud. He stroked his black mustache with a look of befuddlement. “What is a Deichmann?” he asked the instructor. Deichmann, she explained, was just a German last name, the name of the person still searching.

His question indicated the degree of culture shock that lay ahead. These men, who hail mostly from the villages and cities of Anatolia, would in the next several months depart for Germany to serve four years as imams, leaders of Muslim congregations in mosques throughout the country. From their classroom at the Goethe Institute in Ankara, where through the windows the students could behold the white and grey minarets of Ankara’s Kocatepe Mosque soaring to such heights that the towers seemed to hang from the clear blue heavens, German society seemed like a distant notion. Most of the imams, in fact, had never visited Germany, much less held a conversation with anyone with a last name like Deichmann.

Bridging the Gap

Germany lacks well-established Islamic theological programs that can educate German-born Islamic scholars, which means that Muslim congregations often have little choice but to import imams and religion teachers from abroad. But German policy-makers are increasingly considering whether religious leaders from Turkey or other nations are the best candidates to lead congregations in Germany, especially following a recommendation in February by the German Council of Science and Humanities, an advisory group to federal and state governments, which called for the prompt creation of two to three new Islamic theology programs within German public universities. The creation of such programs can be considered a progressive notion in a nation where even the construction of a neighborhood mosque with minarets can ignite fears over the increasing prevalence of Islam in Europe.

But for Germany, a country perpetually seeking antidotes to what many of its citizens see as the difficulty of integrating its manifold population of 4 million Muslims, comprised mostly of Germany’s large Turkish minority, the idea of cultivating a distinctly German form of Islam that is rooted in German institutions, or at least mosque leaders with a native knowledge of the German language and the communities they serve, is increasingly seen as wise integration policy.

Within the Turkish Presidency of Religious Affairs, the state agency known as Diyanet that oversees the practice of Islam in Turkey and appoints imams to serve large segments of the Turkish Diaspora abroad, there is agreement that Germany could benefit from educating more home-grown imams in its own theological institutions. “But how can one do that now so long as the institutions in Germany or in Europe are not of the kind that exist in Islamic lands?” Ali Dere, who heads up foreign relations for Diyanet, said in his office in Ankara, where, on the wall, a portrait of Mustafa Atatürk, the founder of the Turkish republic, gazed down upon the room. “As a long-term goal, we wish that Europe somehow develops wholly strong and good institutions of Islamic theology.” But, Dere added as a note of caution, it would take time to develop such programs since there is not exactly an abundant pool of German-speaking, university-trained Islamic theologians who could staff them.

Close Ties to Turkey

Diyanet began sending imams to Germany in the mid-1980s, at a time when more fundamentalist Islamic movements that had been banned in Turkey had become increasingly popular among Turkish Muslims in Germany. In 1984, Diyanet founded The Turkish-Islamic Union of the Office for Religious Affairs in Germany (DITIB), now one of Germany’s largest Islamic organizations, in a move that experts say was at least partly intended to counteract the influence of those movements. Today about 880 of Germany’s estimated 2,500 mosques and Islamic associations affiliate themselves with DITIB, which maintains close ties to Turkey.

This class of 16 religious officials in Ankara — including five women headed abroad as Koran teachers — was near the end of a four-month course required by Diyanet. After school one day, many of the men from the class gathered in the common room of their dormitory, where during the course, they shared cramped rooms with as many as five single beds and barely enough floor space to lay down a prayer carpet. The men said they believed in a very tolerant strain of Islam, and indeed, they sounded almost idyllic when speaking of their faith. “Every Muslim loves everyone,” said Murat Abdullah, a tall 39-year-old who towered above his classmates. “Not only human beings, but all God’s creatures,” added his colleague, Haluk Disci, a 29-year-old with a trimmed black beard.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Is Geert Wilders the New William of Orange?

The Kingdom of England is in a parlous state. Ruled by a rotten Scottish tyranny, the nation groans under the weight of oppressive, unconstitutional laws, the ruling elite is in the pay of its absolutist masters on the continent, and many Englishmen suspect their government is promoting an oppressive and reactionary religion against the will of the people.

The nation’s only hope is a charismatic young Dutchman fighting almost single-handedly against the creation of a united Europe under the rule of an unelected tyrant in Holland’s southern neighbour.

The Dutchman, coming to England’s aid, warns its people:

“It is both certain and evident to all men, that the public peace and happiness of any state or kingdom cannot be preserved, where the Laws, Liberties, and Customs, established by the lawful authority in it, are openly transgressed and annulled; more especially where the alteration of Religion is endeavoured, and that a religion, which is contrary to law, is endeavoured to be introduced; upon which those who are most immediately concerned in it are indispensably bound to endeavour to preserve and maintain the established Laws, Liberties and customs, and, above all, the Religion and Worship of God, that is established among them; and to take such an effectual care, that the inhabitants of the said state or kingdom may neither be deprived of their Religion, nor of their Civil Rights”

Three centuries after William III of Orange, another Dutchman comes to these shores, although at least King Billy never had to defend himself against charges of “Cathophobia”.

Geert Wilders’s Freedom Party is on course to top the polls in the Dutch election in the summer, after tremendous gains in local elections this week — it came first in Almere and second in The Hague, the two only local authorities the party contested, and this despite Wilders being put on trial earlier this year for “insulting Islam”.

Or maybe because of… Despite the media consensus that Wilders is “far-Right” and Islamphobic, and a trouble-maker with a dodgy haircut, the Dutch people obviously saw his trial for what it was — proof of his point that multiculturalism threatens freedom. They decided that, whatever the benefits of “diversity”, the most important thing is diversity of opinion. Freedom to eat two dozen different cuisines in an evening or visit half a dozen religious buildings is small comfort if it is at the expense of freedom of speech.

The Dutch establishment only has itself to blame, for they have made the people’s decision for them — either Wilders will be jailed or he will become Prime Minister.

There is almost nothing they can do to stop him. In central London right now United Against Fascism and the English Defence League are poised to repeat some of the retro-1930s street battles they’ve been having around the country these past few months. But whatever happens, and even if the EDL alienate everyone who is remotely worried about Islamic immigration by looking like a bunch of football hooligans, it won’t taint Geert Wilders.

Because unlike many opponents of mass immigration, he’s not a fascist or a racist — the British establishment would love Wilders to reveal himself to be another Nick Griffin or Jorg Haider, someone with lots of skeletons dressed in SS uniform in his closet, but he’s not. He’s just a normal mainstream conservative who sees, like many others, that the liberal establishment suffers from sort of groupthink madness when it comes to the subject of immigration.

As he said this week: “We’re going to take the Netherlands back from the leftist elite that coddles criminals and supports Islamisation.” Now if only David Cameron had said that last Sunday…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Islamophobia on Tour: Wilders Comes to Britain

A year after his first attempt, the Dutch politician finally brought his message here.

By Chris Green

When the far-right Dutch MP Geert Wilders came to the UK to promote his brand of Islamophobia last year, he made it only as far as Heathrow before being unceremoniously turned away and flown back to his native country.

Yesterday, after a wait of more than a year, he returned to screen his anti-Islamic film in the House of Lords, but unlike his earlier visit, which provoked a storm of debate about the right to free speech, this time few people seemed to notice.

The politician’s flowing locks of swept-back blond hair have led some to nickname him Mozart. So it was unfortunate that Mr Wilders was forced to address the world’s media yesterday in a tiny room with a piano prominently displayed in one corner.

On the wall behind him was a portrait of Peregrine Bertie, the Duke of Ancaster and Kesteven, whose 18th-century wig bore more than a passing resemblance to Mr Wilders’s hairstyle. The Duke’s expression remained calm throughout, a remarkable feat considering the events which unfolded in front of him.

The hot and cramped venue was selected for two reasons: its proximity to the House of Lords, where Mr Wilders had finally succeeded in screening his controversial short film Fitna, and its security. Only one person from each media organisation was permitted, and all bags were searched.

Here, under the watchful eyes of his three earpiece-wearing bodyguards, the 46-year-old leader of the Freedom Party told a tense and sometimes heated press conference that Islam was a “fascist ideology” and that the Prophet Mohamed was “a mass murderer, a barbarian and a paedophile”. He said: “I have nothing against Muslims, but I have a problem with the Islamic ideology, which I believe is a totalitarian ideology to be compared with other totalitarian ideologies like communism or fascism. I believe Islam is a violent and dangerous religion and even a retarded culture. I think we should stop the Islamisation of our society. Islamism and democracy are incompatible. The more Islamism we have, the more freedom we will lose and this is something worth fighting for.”

He added that if his party was elected at the Netherlands’ general elections in June, he would attempt to halt all further immigration of Muslims into European countries, and would deport Dutch citizens with Moroccan or Turkish parentage “as soon as possible”.

Mr Wilders’ film Fitna, an Arabic word meaning “strife”, is an incendiary anti-Islamic piece of propaganda which the Dutch Prime Minister once said served “no purpose other than to offend”. In the 15-minute movie, sections of the Koran are read out alongside footage of the 11 September terrorist attacks. Disturbing images of lynchings and executions are shown, as is the beheading of the British civil engineer Ken Bigley in Iraq in 2004. No facts or figures are quoted other than a graph showing the increase in the number of Muslims living in Europe over the past century. Even to be sitting in front of the cameras in central London marked an important victory for Mr Wilders, who is awaiting trial in his home country for discrimination and fomenting hatred. If convicted, he faces 16 months in prison, but the trial has been suspended until after the Dutch elections, at which his party is tipped to become the second-largest in parliament.

He has been waiting to screen his film in this country for more than a year. In February 2009, he was detained at Heathrow and ordered to return to the Netherlands. The then Home Secretary, Jacqui Smith, used EU laws to prevent his visit, describing Mr Wilders as an “undesirable person” whose presence would “threaten community harmony and therefore public safety”. But his ban was overturned at an asylum and immigration tribunal, allowing Mr Wilders to claim a victory for free speech and misquote George Orwell.

“Even if you don’t subscribe to my views, I’m able to come here and to speak out my mind,” he said. “Like George Orwell once said, the right of freedom is especially to listen to somebody who says something that you do not want to hear.”

He was invited to Britain by Lord Pearson, the leader of the UK Independence Party, and the cross-bencher Baroness Cox, who said they did not subscribe to Mr Wilders’s views but felt it was important he was given the chance to air them. Lord Pearson described Mr Wilders as “a very great man” who lived with the constant threat of assassination.

But the Ukip leader was forced to admit that only six MPs and peers had attended the screening, and that most of the audience had been made up of parliamentary staff. “Don’t forget it’s Friday,” he said. “The important thing about this debate is that it took place.”

On his way to face the media, Mr Wilders drove past protesters against British far-right groups such as the English Defence League (EDL) and the British National Party (BNP). Their placards read: “EDL + BNP = Nazi racist thugs”. Jonathan Dodds, a 26-year-old student, said: “There’s been a huge rise of far-right groups across Europe, which is extremely alarming. That we’re giving a platform to fascists like this is scary.”

But there can be no denying that Mr Wilders is a far more impressive speaker than other far-right party leaders. After 45 minutes of questioning he had not come close to being ruffled. And shortly after Lord Pearson declared: “We’re got to go, we’re going to be late for lunch”, the politician known as Mozart climbed into his bulletproof car with his bodyguards and set off once more for the House of Lords.

It was, if nothing else, a virtuoso performance but one that may well have been avoided had Britain allowed his entry in the first place.

Not welcome: Banned from Britain

*Since 2005 hundreds of people who promote hatred, terrorist violence or serious criminal activity have been banned from entering the UK. In May last year the Government published a list of 16 “least wanted” people.

*Those excluded in recent years include religious extremists, neo-Nazis, animal rights activists, rap artists and lifestyle gurus. But banning people based on their political views is rare.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Spain: First Muslim Party Presented in Granada

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 5 — PRUNE, the Partito Renacimiento y Union de Espana, Spain’s first Muslim party, was presented today on national level. The party was founded in July 2009 and will participate in the 2011 local elections and the 2012 general election. During the presentation in Granada, party founder Mustafà Bakkach, born in Morocco and with the Spanish nationality since 2001, explained in the Arabic language that the new party “that wants to represent minority groups” aims to increase citizen participation in politics, to promote justice, equality and solidarity and to respect “binding legality in the Spanish Constitution”. “People have tried to spread fear, saying that this is a fundamentalist, pro-Moroccan or Islamic party”, said Bakkach, quoted by press agency EP. The founder of PRUNE, who has been delegated by the Spanish Islamic commission for the Moroccan community and who is Vice President of the Foundation of Muslim religious bodies in Spain (FEERI), added that “if there are Christian parties, I don’t see why our problem can’t be based on Islam. We don’t receive funds from any foreign country, though attempts have been made, which we have refused”. The party leader stressed that the “restitution of Al-Andalus or the application of the Sharia”, suggested by the media, is nothing but “stupidity”. The party was presented on the eve of the EU-Moroccan summit tomorrow and Sunday in Granada, with Spain as EU president this half year. PRUNE has opened offices in Madrid and Barcelona, after Granada. The party will now present its programme in Asturias, Valencia, Murcia and Malaga.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: By Calling for the Release of ‘Lady Al-Qaeda’, Lord Ahmed Has Brought the Upper House Into Disrepute

The popular Dutch MP Geert Wilders is in town again today. And once again the Labour peer Lord Ahmed has objected to this Dutch Parliamentarian appearing in the British Parliament.

Lord Ahmed appears to have a very warped idea of what brings the Upper House into disrepute and what does not. What does not bring the House into disrepute is the possible future Prime Minister of an allied country appearing therein.

What certainly does bring the House into disrepute is a peer using the facilities of the House to throw a meeting calling for the immediate release of the convicted al-Qaeda terrorist Aafia Siddiqui, otherwise known as ‘Lady Al-Qaeda’.

Who did this? Why Lord Ahmed of course. As reported by Associated Press Pakistan last month Lord Ahmed said :

He would be writing a letter to the US President Barack Obama carrying signatures of other British MPs calling for Dr.Siddiqui’s repatriation to Pakistan and withdrawal of case [sic].

The Labour Peer further said he would also raise this question in the Parliament to ascertain how the British Government could help in this regard.

APP continues:

According to Lord Nazir, the conviction of Dr.Siddiqui has been received with great dismay in Pakistan which would further fuel anti-American feeling in the south Asian country.

“If US wants to create a good impression of itself in Pakistan, it should release Dr.Siddiqui and send her back to Pakistan,” he asserted.

He said no credible independent evidence was presented at the New York court and in the words of defence lawyers the decision of the jury was based on fear rather than facts.

Lord Ahmed may have his own reasons for disliking courts. But to use the House of Lords in this way strikes me, at any rate, as another reason why Lord Ahmed remains — amid some fairly stiff competition — the most persuasive single argument for reform of the Upper House.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Fury as Far-Right Leader Faces Demo

ANTI-FASCIST protesters were arrested as they staged a demo against far-Right Dutch politician Geert Wilders who arrived in Britain yesterday.

Police faced chants of “shame on you” when they bundled members of the crowd into vans outside the Houses of Parliament.

Controversial Wilders, 46, who wants the Koran and the burkha banned in the Netherlands, was screening his latest film at the House of Lords.

He said the anti-Islam film Fitna and subsequent discussion was attended by around 60 people.

The blond Dutchman last year overturned a Home Office order banning him from entering the country on public safety grounds.

Yesterday’s visit was at the invitation of UK Independence Party peer Lord Rannoch and Baroness Cox, a former Tory peer. A Home Office spokesman said the Government regretted the peers’ decision to bring him back to Britain.

Wilders, leader of the Dutch Freedom Party, is on course to win most Parliamentary seats in the country’s June 9 election.

Yesterday he branded Islam a “violent and retarded” culture.

He claimed that Islam and democracy are “incompatible” and called for an end to immigration to Europe from Muslim countries.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Kenan Malik: I Despise Him, But That’s No Reason to Ban Him

Analysis

I despise Geert Wilders. I loathe his populist anti-immigration rhetoric. I despair of his tirades against Muslims. I find his film obnoxious.

But I also think that he has every right to be as crude and as loathsome as he wants to be. He should be free to be as rude about me and my beliefs — indeed, about anybody’s beliefs — as I am about him and his. That is the essence of robust political debate in a plural society.

When he was banned from Britain last year, the then Home Secretary Jacqui Smith claimed that his “statements about Muslims … would threaten community harmony and therefore public security in the UK”.

Wilders is a threat to public security only insofar as some of his critics may be provoked to respond with violence. But then they, not Wilders, should be held responsible. What of the threat to “community harmony”? Wilder’s ideas have caused controversy because there is a real debate in Western societies about Islam and about the relationship between Muslims and non-Muslims. That is why his party, the PVV, made gains in Dutch elections last week. However deplorable we might find Wilders’ arguments we cannot wish them away. They have to be engaged with, openly and robustly.

Underlying the argument for censoring people like Wilders is the belief that, in a plural society, speech necessarily has to be less free. “If people are to occupy the same political space without conflict”, the sociologist Tariq Modood suggests, “they have mutually to limit the extent to which they subject each others’ fundamental beliefs to criticism.”

No they don’t. It is precisely because we live in a plural society that expression needs to be as free as possible. In a society in which different beliefs are deeply held, clashes are unavoidable. A society in which no offence is given or taken is one that is culturally and politically dead. The right, even of bigots, to “subject each others’ fundamental beliefs to criticism” — and indeed to be abusive about them — is the bedrock of an open, diverse society.

Kenan Malik is senior visiting fellow at the department of political, international and policy studies at the University of Surrey

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Neglected by ‘Lazy’ Nurses, Man, 22, Dying of Thirst Rang the Police to Beg for Water

A man of 22 died in agony of dehydration after three days in a leading teaching hospital.

Kane Gorny was so desperate for a drink that he rang police to beg for their help.

They arrived on the ward only to be told by doctors that everything was under control.

The next day his mother Rita Cronin found him delirious and he died within hours.

She said nurses had failed to give him vital drugs which controlled fluid levels in his body. ‘He was totally dependent on the nurses to help him and they totally betrayed him.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Fire Destroys Eulex Documents on Crime

(ANSAmed) — PRISTINA, MARCH 4 — A fire has destroyed most of the documentation on organised crime kept in the offices of EULEX, the EU mission in Kosovo. As announced by EULEX spokesperson Karin Limdal, flames engulfed EULEX offices on the Film City base of KFOR. The documents destroyed contained data analysis and a large amount of intelligence information on organised crime. However, it was stressed that the fire had not jeopardised EULEX’s possibilities to investigate serious crime in Kosovo. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: EU: Frattini, Too Soon to Say Accession in 2014

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 4 — According to Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini it is too early to say that 2014 is the year in which Serbia will become full EU member. In an interview today with the Belgrade newspaper Vecernje Novosti, Frattini said that all depends on the negotiations with Brussels. “It is premature to discuss 2014 now as possible date for Serbia accession to the European Union”, said the Foreign Minister. Underlining that Italy is a strong supporter of Serbia’s European integration, Frattini said that the accession process requires “a certain amount of time”. Frattini added that Serbia’s candidature may already be on the agenda of the next European Council of Ministers. Now the European Commission has to completely analyse Serbia’s membership application on a technical level. This will have to be done rapidly, the Italian Foreign Minister continued. Referring to Kosovo, Frattini said that Italy intends to respect the decision of the International Court of Justice on the legitimacy of its statement of independency. The Court is expected to read its verdict in the coming months. The Italian government will continue in its balanced approach, according to Frattini, who underlined that Italy appreciates the fact that Belgrade has decided to go to court instead of using political means in the case of Kosovo’s independence. “Of course, we will respect the decision of the International Court of Justice”, Frattini concluded. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Egypt-NATO Partnership Paves Way to Boost Euromed Dialogue

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 4 — Partnering with Egypt, NATO is looking to what is beyond bilateral cooperation; enhancing Euromed dialogue. According to Michael Stopfore, NATO Deputy Assistant Secretary General, Egypt continues to play the same effective role it has been playing for years to boost dialogue between countries in the north and south of the Mediterranean. Cooperation with Cairo has taken an upturn after an agreement was reached with NATO three years ago, Stopfore said. In 2009, the two sides locked a deal to preserve data that the NATO official believes will give anti-terror cooperation a shot in the arm. Stopfore was speaking at a seminar on NATO-Egypt cooperation which opened in Cairo today. Adopting a new strategy that gives priority to its partnerships, NATO has been reaching out to partners to solve common problems. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU: Neighbourhood Policy Funds, 5.7 Bln From 2011 to 2013

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 2 — EU resources to strengthen cooperation policies and promote economic integration with neighbouring countries, in the south like in the east, are increasing: over the next three years funds allocated for this purpose will reach 5.7 billion euros. Today the European Commission announced that the finances will support economic and political reforms and regional and cross-border cooperation with partner Countries in the context of ENPI, the instrument for Europe’s neighbourhood policy and partnership, in addition to sponsoring projects in areas such as climate change, transport, energy and the environment. In 2013 alone the EU’s neighbouring countries will receive more than 2 billion euros, compared to 1.6 billion in 2010. With a new entry: for the first time ever, the countries that will benefit from EU funds will include Libya. EU High representative for foreign policy Catherine Ashton stated that “We want to further commit ourselves to cooperating with our neighbours, proving that the EU remains a solid and reliable partner in hard times such as these”. European Commissioner for enlargement Stefan Fule added that “If we want to make a successful neighbourhood policy, we need to give ourselves the instruments to do so: greater mobility of the people, more trading, more assistance. All of this has a price”. The 5.7 billion euros budget concerns 19 ENPI programmes scheduled for 2011-2013, of which 16 were approved today, for a total amount of 4.2 billion euros. The budget also includes assistance to the occupied Palestinian territories. In particular, 13 new bilateral programmes were approved, mostly with Countries of the Mediterranean area: Algeria, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Egypt, Georgia, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Moldavia, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Ukraine. The news is Libya, which is currently negotiating a deal with the European Commission. To guarantee effective work with Tripoli, for example on the topic of immigration, financial cooperation must also be established, which amounts to 60 million euros over the next three years. Two new programmes are also starting: a regional one to support the partnership with the Countries of the East, and an interregional one, worth 757.7 million euros, to finance cultural exchanges, contacts between local and regional authorities, and to support investments in the transport, energy and environment areas. This latter initiative will include, for example, finances for interconnection infrastructures for the supply of energy. What is instead still under preparation are the programmes which concern the Euro-Mediterranean partnership, Belarus and cross-border cooperation. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Internet: Algeria; 770,000 With ADSL But Ministry Wants More

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 3 — Those with a subscription to the ADSL internet network in Algeria number 770,000, said Postal Services and Communication Technologies Minister Hamid Bensalah today on national radio. Bensalah noted that the figure was still lower than what had been expected, since “Algerie Telecom has technical capacity to offer ADSL access to 1.2 million.” The state-run telephone company “is doing all it can to improve what it has on offer,” he added. According to the minister, by 2013 subscribers will number about 6 million. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Jerusalem Clashes and in West Bank, Dozens Hurt

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, MARCH 5 — Around sixty people are suffering from injuries, bruising and the effects of tear gas, Palestinian sources say, after today’s clashes between Palestinian demonstrators and Israeli forces. The clashes occurred during Islamic Friday prayers in the Old City of Jerusalem and other sites around the West Bank. Meanwhile, Israeli forces in Jerusalem are speaking of at least six police officers having to receive treatment for injuries incurred with a further dozen officers suffering bruises. The clashes in Jerusalem’s Old City took place outside the Temple Mount area, which had already been the scene of an outbreak of violence this morning. Eye-witnesses speak of demonstrators throwing stones in the alleyways, while police replied with tear gas and stun grenades. Medical sources have reported one Palestinian boy being seriously wound by a rubber bullet in Nabi Saleh, a suburb of Ramallah, in the course of today’s protests.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Economy: Turkey CPI Highest in EU Area, Report Says

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — Latest inflation figures for February in Turkey put the country on the top of a list of European Union countries with highest Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rates, said a report released by an Istanbul-based risks research institute quoted by Anatolia news agency. TurkStat said earlier this week consumer prices in Turkey recorded a 1.45% monthly rise in February as the year-on-year increase was 10.13% (2003=100). Year-on-year CPI in January was 8.19%. “Pressure caused by a rise of 21.02% in prices of alcoholic beverages and tobacco products as well as a rise of 8.61% in prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages had adverse effects on February figures, which came above expectations,” said the report by Okan University Financial Risks Research Center. The report said Turkey’s macro-economic outlook seemed negative given recent capacity utilization figures, foreign trade data and jobless rates. The report said the Turkish Central Bank could be expected to wait until figures for the second quarter are announced before making any intervention to policy rates. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Judiciary Under Siege, Supreme Court President Says

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — Turkey’s Supreme Court President Hasan Gerceker said the government was attempting to beseige the judiciary through constitutional amendments. Gerceker, as Anatolia news agency reports, who addressed a conference on judiciary independence and constitutional amendments in Ankara emphasized the importance of the separation of powers in democracies. He said that all branches of the state should respect the powers, rights and responsibilities of the other as arranged under the constitution. Gerceker said that they wanted the administrative survision over the Supreme Board of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) to end. He said the Supreme Court wanted the Justice Minister and his undersecretary to be left out of the HSYK. “However we see know that the executive branch wants to further besiege the judiciary with planned arrangements,” said Gerceker. “Appointment of members to high judiciary bodies by the executive and the judiciary branches is not only against the independence of the judiciary but also not a necessity or a priority. The desired reforms (by the government) will further limit the independence of judiciary and make HSYK inoperable. The election of members to the board by the parliament will politicise HSYK,” said Gerceker. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Venetian Group to Head Study on Dead Sea

(ANSAmed) — VENICE, MARCH 4 — Thetis, an engineering group headquartered at the Arsenal in Venice, will carry out a study with the purpose of helping the environment in the Dead Sea basin between Israel and Jordan, which is suffering from a lack of water. The World Bank Project (20 billion dollars) will bring water from the Gulf of Aqaba/Eilat (Red Sea) to the Dead Sea through a subterranean tunnel that will travel for 180km through the desert. The objective of the work, explained Antonio Paruzzolo, the director of Thetis, is to compensate for the water deficit of the Dead Sea, which is expected to intensify by 2040, and to generate a greater volume of freshwater, obtained through a desalinisation plant. Thetis, which was chosen out of a field of 18 competitors, must now realise one of the five studies necessary to evaluate the feasibility of the project, meaning that they must examine the potential environmental impact of transnational infrastructure on the Gulf of Aqaba/Eilat. The capacity of the tunnel, which will transfer water to the Dead Sea, totals about two million cubic metres per year. The group must assess the impact of the project on the circulation of water and on the reef system. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Italy: ‘No Impediment for Premier’

Cabinet meeting no bar to trial continuing, Milan judges rule

(ANSA) — Milan, March 1 — A Milan trial into alleged tax fraud by Silvio Berlusconi’s Mediaset group went ahead Monday after judges denied the premier had a ‘legitimate impediment’ from attending because of a cabinet meeting.

In their ruling, the judges said the cabinet meeting was called after the schedule of hearings had been agreed with Berlusconi.

Berlusconi’s lawyers and supporters criticised the ruling.

“This is extremely serious,” said lawyer Niccolo’ Ghedini, a member of his People of Freedom (PdL) party.

He argued that the trial would now have to be annulled because, he claimed there was a sentence by the Constitutional Court which quashed a trial in a similar case.

“The Constitutional Court will have to agree that there is a conflict of powers” between the executive and the judiciary, Ghedini argued.

Another of the premier’s lawyers, Pietro Longo, said “the premier will have to raise the issue of conflict of powers”.

PdL Chamber of Deputies whip Fabrizio Cicchitto said: “It is clear that we are faced with a permanent political use of justice” while the party’s Senate whip, Maurizio Gasparri, said the ruling was another alleged instance of “persecution and prejudice” against the premier.

But a small opposition party, the Italian Communists (PdCI), said: “A premier who systematically shrinks from being tried, calling last-minute cabinet meetings only to dodge trials, is a very bad example for citizens”.

“Either the law is the same for everyone or it is not a law, but a privilege,” said PdCI national coordinator Alessandro Pignatiello.

In the trial, one of two involving the premier, Berlusconi and others are accused of evading tax by allegedly inflating film prices.

The Berlusconi government is seeking to enshrine into law the legitimate impediment principle to allow top officials to do their jobs without trial distractions.

It is one of several moves, including a mandatory trial cap, which critics say the premier will use to end his legal woes.

The second trial, for allegedly bribing British tax lawyer David Mills, went ahead Saturday despite a final ruling Thursday that Mills’ reception of the $600,000 was covered by Italy’s 10-year statute of limitations.

Mills, who denied wrongdoing, saw his four-and-a-half year sentence quashed. For Berlusconi, the statute is set to elapse in November because he was removed from proceedings for about a year by an immunity law later struck down by the Constitutional Court.

But the trial, for allegedly paying Mills for reticent testimony in two previous trials, is unlikely to run its course because it is only at the initial stage, legal experts say.

Berlusconi, whose trials stem from business activities before he entered politics in 1994, has consistently denied wrongdoing and claims a leftwing group of prosecutors and magistrates is persecuting him.

On Friday he likened them to the Taliban fundamentalist militants in Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mauritania: France Cancels 17.4-Million-Euro Debt

(ANSAmed) — NOUACKCHOTT, MARCH 4 — France has decided to cancel a 17.4-million-euro debt on the part of Mauritania, to allow the country to invest this money in programmes for local development. The cancellation of the debt was authorised in an agreement signed in Nouackchott by the Mauritanian Minister of the Economy and Development, Sidi Ould Tah, and by the French Ambassador Michel Vandpoorter. The agreement, a note specifies, “falls within the realm of measures for the cancellation of debt, decided by the international community in favour of poor, heavily indebted countries, of which Mauritania is one of the prime beneficiaries”. From the sums thus freed up, 4 million euros will be destined to programmes in the fight against poverty and 6.7 million euros will go to the National Programme for the Development of Education. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australians Don’t Want More People — Poll

THE public has rejected plans to massively boost Australia’s population.

The federal government wants to increase the population from 22 million to 35 million by 2050, largely through immigration.

But a poll has found three-quarters of respondents think Australia does not have the services or infrastructure to cope with more people.

More than 60 per cent wanted immigration slowed.

And a majority of the 1000 people surveyed by Essential Research late last month thought the environment was too fragile to cope with more people, and there was not enough space for them.

The government wants to boost the population because it means more young taxpayers to pay for the high costs of an ageing population.

But the public aren’t buying the economic argument either — just over half of those surveyed thought more people would not help the economy.

The poll also found that just over half the respondents — 51 per cent — approved of the government’s plan to means test the rebate for private health cover. A third of respondents opposed the plan.

The government wants to wind back the rebate for single people earning more than $75,000 and couples earning more than $150,000 a year.

Support for the move, which is in trouble in the Senate, was stronger among Labor voters and those on low and middle incomes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100305

Financial Crisis
» Greece: Communist Union, National Strike Tomorrow
» Greece: German Deputies Suggest Selling Islands
» Italy: With the Crisis Comes a Low-Cost Boom
» Italy: Iran Wants Release of Arms Suspects
» Spain: Industrialists’ About-Turn on ‘Rubbish Contract’
» Turkey Has Second Highest Jobless Rate Behind Spain, Study
» Who’s Behind the Financial Crisis?
 
USA
» Barack Obama and the Date-Rape of America
» Las Vegas Air Force Base Placed on Lockdown
» Obama Administration Plans to Close International Labor Comparisons Office [To Hide Reality of Globalization]
» Obama Calls ‘Entrepreneurship Summit’ With Muslims
» Queens Imam Pleads Guilty in Brooklyn Federal Court
» The Rise and Fall of a Female Captain Bligh
» Turkish Muslim Imam Kicks Off Congress With Prayer
» Veil of Secrecy Covers Toyota Cars’ ‘Black Boxes’
 
Europe and the EU
» Danish Newspaper Politiken ??Apologizes to Muslims Worldwide; Law Firm of Ahmed Zaki Yamani (Lawyers and Legal Consultants) Urges Other Danish Newspapers to Follow Suit
» Diana West: How the West Will be Won
» France: Sarkozy Launches Anti-Deindustrialisation Plan
» France: New Halal Shop for Middle-Class Muslims
» Geert Wilders on Course to be Next Dutch Prime Minister
» Italy to Keep Out GM Potato
» Kercher ‘Violent Sex Crime’
» Netherlands: Immigrant Voters Again Important for PvdA in Local Elections
» Spain: Abengoa: 5 Mln for Combined Cycle Plant
» Srdja Trifkovic: Prison of Nations
» Switzerland to Vote on Appointing Lawyers for Abused Pets
» Tourism: Bit: One Out of Two Tourists Books Via Web
» UK: ‘Torture’ Litigation Costs Begin at $60 Million
» UK: Spy Chips Hidden in 2.5 Million Dustbins: 60pc Rise in Electronic Bugs as Council Snoopers Plan Pay-as-You-Throw Tax
» UK: Taxpayer Will Have to Fund Yet Another £250,000 New Identity for James Bulger Murderer After His Return to Jail
» UK: We Must Not be Afraid of Taking on Islamic Extremists
» Wilders, Not Islam, ‘Is Holland’s Biggest Problem’
 
Balkans
» EU: Turkey and Croatia, No Decentralisation Progress
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Tounsi Murder, Family Contests Official Version
» Algeria: Bill Proposed on Crimes From French Colonial Period
» Algeria: 1.6 Mln Counterfeit Articles Seized in 2009
» Egypt: Lebanese Popstar Homicide, New Trial for Tycoon
» Libya: Arab League Supports Tripoli Against Switzerland
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» E. Jerusalem: Jews Praise Jewish Terrorist
» Jerusalem: Clashes Erupt at Temple Mount
 
Middle East
» A Million Hungry Souls: Brutal Transfer Committed by Syrian Regime Finally Recognized by UN
» Barry Rubin: When It’s Necessary and Desirable to Assassinate Terrorists
» Divorced Before Puberty
» GOP Reps. Want Charges Dropped Against Seals Accused of Abusing Terror Suspect
» Lebanon: Death Penalty for 12 Extremists
» Turkey Pleased With Raid Against PKK in Belgium
» Turkey: Lay Women Rip Veils in the Streets
» Turkey: Massacres of Armenians, We Won’t Cave Into Pressure
» Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Use of Incirlik Air Base at Risk
» Turkey: Armenian Massacres; USA, Ankara Not Mincing Words
» Turkey Warns US Over Armenian ‘Genocide’ Vote
» Turkish Premier Erdogan to Receive “Arab Nobel Prize”
 
Caucasus
» Global Jihad Creeping Into Russia’s Insurgency
 
Culture Wars
» Lawmakers Review ‘Male Mutilation’
» UK: Harriet’s Man Ban in ‘Sexist’ Commons: MPs Vote to Ditch Term ‘Chairman’ For Gender-Neutral ‘Chair’
» UK: Parents’ Anger After Class of Seven-Year-Olds is Shown ‘Graphic Sex Cartoon’ At School
 
General
» Ihsanoglu Calls for a Holistic Approach to Human Rights

Financial Crisis


Greece: Communist Union, National Strike Tomorrow

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 4 — The Greek Communist Party (KKE) and its union Pame have announced a nationwide strike for tomorrow against the 4.8-billion-euro austerity package decided on yesterday by Giorgio Papandreou’s government. A national strike has been called by the confederation of state employees Adedy for March 16, while its private sector counterpart Gsee is getting mobilised for action. On Pame’s strike tomorrow and the numerous demonstrations already organised in many different cities, the communist daily Rizospastis announced a “War on war” in reference to the expression used by Papandreou, who had said that “the country is at war” against the crisis and speculation. The communist daily responded that “war is what was launched by the Pasok government against the population in the name of the middle class”. Taking part in today’s demonstrations in Athens, Thessaloniki and other cities, are several trade unions as well as student and teacher associations who will also be participating in the March 16 national strike called by the state employees union Adedy. Pame unionists have this morning conducted a sit-in at the building containing the Finance Ministry in Athens. The over a hundred protestors announced that they intended to stay until tomorrow, the day of the national strike. Also underway is a protest by former employees laid off by the privatised Olympic Airlines. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: German Deputies Suggest Selling Islands

(ANSAmed) — BERLIN — Two German Deputies have today suggested that the Greek government, struggling to deal with the disastrous consequences of the crisis, sell some of its islands to pay off its debt, according to the German daily Bild. The daily summed up the deputies’ comments with the following words: “We’ll give you the money, you give us Corfu”‘, while the article even went further with “…and sell the Acropolis as well”. “The Greek government must renounce its participation in companies and sell its landed property, such as uninhabited islands,” Frank Schaffler, an expert in economics of the Liberal Democrats party, told the paper. Deputy Marco Wanderwitz from Angela Merkel’s CDU was even more extreme and said that “if the European Union, and therefore Germany, helps out Greece economically, it will need to give something in exchange.” “Some islands, for example, might be a solution,” he added. According to the Tourism Ministry, Greek islands number 3054, of which only 87 are inhabited. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: With the Crisis Comes a Low-Cost Boom

(ANSAmed) — MILAN, FEBRUARY 22 — Italy’s Veneto region is offering packages of one to three days for sports holidays with rafting or biking starting from only 50 to 250 euro. The Liguria region is betting on economic backpacking vacations in the Apennines. Last year, the province of Cagliari registered a 22% increase in arrivals due largely to new low-cost air routes and bed and breakfasts, the number of which has almost quadrupled in four years. Times of crisis see an upswing in the low-cost sector and the packages on offer at the BIT (International tourism trade fair) which has been taking place in recent days reflect this, with reasonable prices and come-and-go offers available throughout regions and towns. Also, as data just presented by Italy’s Unioncamere-Insnart agency confirms, Italians may be tightening their belts but they’re not giving up their holidays. This tendency seems to have been confirmed among the stands of Milan’s Fieramilano, where yesterday the BIT concluded. The stands were invaded by thousands of tourists hoarding brochures and catalogues with their next holiday in mind. Earliest attendance figures available to the organisers already reveal an increase in the number of visitors to the fair compared to last year. However, a low-cost holiday does not necessarily mean that it comes at a lower price. According to the principal research conducted into vacation trends in 2009 (by Swg-Conferescenti, Harris Interactive and Ipsos-EuropAssistance) it is often the duration of the stay and the distance of travel that are reduced, without necessarily leading to a reduction in the price spent on services. A typical example of this is the so-called city break, or the long weekend in a European capital, a favourite among many of the groups represented at the BIT’s stands. In the decade from 1995 to 2005 the total number of nights spent by foreigners in the Old Continent increased by 56.7%, an average of 4.5% annually, and, according to Ipk World Travel Monitor, short to medium duration holidays represent 40% of total nights spent in Europe and 20% of the turnover generated in international tourism. This phenomenon is also interesting countries like Morocco, which for several years has been aiming its strategy towards long weekends in Marrakesh, Fes or other imperial cities, thanks to a boom in good-priced deals proposed by several companies active in the country. And, thanks to the financial crisis, the low-cost philosophy also seems to have expanded into business tourism in 2009: in fact, according to data from Volagratis, while 69% of reservations are in the low-cost sector, business clients account for 30% of this trend. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Iran Wants Release of Arms Suspects

Italian ambassador called in for official protest

(ANSA) — Rome, March 5 — Iran on Friday asked for the immediate release of two suspects arrested in a probe into alleged arms trafficking, calling the Milan investigation “a political manoeuvre”.

Italian ambassador to Tehran Alberto Bradanini was called to the Iranian foreign ministry Friday where officials issued an official protest requested the “immediate” release of Iranian TV journalist Hamid Masoumi-Nejad, 51, and Ali Damirchilu, 55.

The pair were among seven people including five Italians arrested Wednesday on suspicion of breaking an international arms embargo to smuggle weapons into Iran.

Two other Iranians, Hamir Reza and Bakhtiyari Homayoun, escaped arrest and are considered fugitives.

Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Ramin Mehman-Parast called the arrests “another propaganda initiative against Iran,” according to Iranian news agency IRNA.

“We are following the affair seriously and the Italian ambassador was called to provide explanations,” he said.

The Milan prosecutors’ office has issued no response so far.

On Thursday Iranian TV claimed the arrest of the journalist was payback for his coverage of scandals surrounding Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi According to the Iranian TV news channel IRINN, Masoumi’s reports “on the Italian economic crisis and cases of corruption and scandals concerning Berlusconi” had annoyed politicians.

Masoumi has been accredited to the Rome foreign press association as a correspondent for IRINN for the last 15 years and is a well-known figure in journalism circles.

IRINN said Thursday the arrests were part of “a Zionist-American plan to unfairly accuse the Islamic Republic” and claimed Arab satellite TV stations Al Arabiya and Al Jazeera were allegedly helping it by covering the Milan probe. In the probe, Milan prosecutors say the suspects sought to export to Iran weapons ‘dual use’ materials and systems, which can be converted from civilian to military use.

EIGHT-MONTH PROBE.

On Wednesday Milan assistant prosecutor Armando Spataro told the press the investigation had been going on for eight months. He said it had been carried out using a vast number of wiretaps and intercepting email and SMS communication. This would not have been possible, Spataro stressed, under new wiretapping restrictions now before parliament. Spataro added that the investigation saw collaboration between several law enforcement agencies.

Among the Italians arrested was Alessandro Bon, 43, a Veneto native who lives in Monza and who is believed to have orchestrated the illegal trafficking through a Varese-based company, Antares.

Also arrested were Bon’s girlfriend Danila Maffei, 40; Bon’s business partner Arnaldo La Scala, 43, who is also a lawyer in Turin; Guglielmo Savi, 56, the head of a telecommunications company, Sirio SrL; and Raffaele Rossi Patriarca, who investigators said travelled to Iran to establish contacts with the Iranian military interested in arms deals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Industrialists’ About-Turn on ‘Rubbish Contract’

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 3 — A minimum wage contract for young people under 30 with a duration of between 6 months and 1 year, with no redundancy payment or right to unemployment benefits. The proposal put forward by the Industrialists’ Confederation (CEOE) for the reform of the labour market has brought about criticism and arguments from the unions, party and government, which was withdrawn today by the president of the CEOE, Gerardo Diaz Ferran. “It was just an example. It is not and will not be on the negotiating table,” confirmed Diaz Ferran today in statements to Antena 3 TV, on the issue of the proposal put forward yesterday by the director of labour relations of the CEOE, José de la Cavada. According to Ferran, it was only “an example of existing contracts in France,” while Spanish industrialists want to agree with the unions on “a contract for young people which is not ‘rubbish’, but which, on the contrary, can connect them to another more stable contract.” The French model proposed by Cavada is a contract the wage of which does not exceed the minimum inter-professional wage, which in France is 1,350 euros per month and which is 630 euros per month in Spain. The Minister for Infrastructure, José Blanco, said he was opposed to the contract speculated by the industrialists, saying that “what Spain needs is to stabilise and not to make the labour market more precarious.” The socialist spokesman to the Congress of Deputies, José Antonio Alonso, spoke along the same lines. The Minister for the Economy, Elena Salgado, today underlined in statements to the press that the contract proposal for young people without redundancy pay “is not a good start to social dialogue.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Has Second Highest Jobless Rate Behind Spain, Study

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 3 — Increasing unemployment rate has put Turkey to second-worst place in Europe, behind Spain, a study showed today as Anatolia news agency reports. Recently-announced figures showed that Turkey’s jobless rate rose 3 points since 2008 to 14%. Spain was worst hit by 18% unemployment rate. The study, conducted by Istanbul’s Okan University, covers EU countries, Turkey and the United States. The study said Turkey’s unemployment rate was not only an economic problem but also a sociological one. Europe’s average jobless rate is 8.8%, it said, adding that Germany has 7.5% unemployment rate, France and Croatia has 9.5%. The report also said that 43.9% of Turkey’s labor force was unregistered. This rate is estimated as 9% in EU, 7% in Britain and France, and 5% in Spain. Belgium and Greece follow Turkey with 15% unregistered employment in Euro zone, it said. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Who’s Behind the Financial Crisis?

The New York Times is quoting a spokesman for George Soros as saying that the well-known hedge fund operator is guilty of no wrong-doing in connection with the financial upheaval currently affecting Greece and Europe as a whole. But Zubi Diamond, author of the powerful new book, Wizards of Wall Street, says the agenda of Soros and other short sellers is clear. Their purpose, he says, is “to loot America and any foreign country which invested in America. Greece was one of them. Iceland was ravaged and annihilated.”

The term “short selling” in this context refers to investors, speculators and currency manipulators who bet on the decline or collapse of a stock or currency through complex financial instruments handled mostly through secret off-shore accounts. For the hedge fund short sellers to make money, prices have to go down.

Short-sellers, who are appearing at a March 11 event at the libertarian Cato Institute, insist that they “provide liquidity and transparency to our capital markets” and that their operations “expose corporate fraud and mismanagement.”

But Diamond strongly disagrees. He says the Managed Funds Association, the lobbying arm of the hedge fund short sellers, is crafty and deceitful. “When they tell you that short selling contributes liquidity to the market, that is a lie,” he says. “Short selling destroys capital and takes away liquidity from the market. When they tell you that they are taking steps to remove manipulation from the stock market, that is a lie. They are taking steps to introduce manipulation to the stock market, and prime the stock market for manipulation and looting. When they tell you that the uptick rule is outdated, because of decimalization, that is a lie. They lie to deceive, to bring forth a big pay day from short selling, hence the looting of America and America’s wealthiest corporations and their shareholders, sanctioned by their Washington D.C. lap dogs.”

“The most influential members of Managed Funds Association, the hedge fund short sellers, have an anti-capitalism agenda, an anti-industrialized nation agenda, and a far left liberal, Marxist radical agenda,” Diamond says.“Hedge Fund short sellers are not capitalist. They are anti-capitalist and they are not investors; they are anti-investors.” He says they “loot” companies and countries.

[…]

AIM had warned about this potential problem in a January 16, 2008, column, “Soros Bets on U.S. Economic Collapse,” in which we noted hedge fund ties to the Democratic Party and a report that hedge fund managers, including Soros, stood to make billions of dollars from a U.S. housing market collapse.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Barack Obama and the Date-Rape of America

Good Americans from sea to shining sea are grappling right now with how to mentally process what they’re witnessing in Washington, D.C.

The spectacle of a far leftist president literally forcing socialized medicine down the throat of an unwilling center-right America is reminiscent, perhaps more than any other contemporary metaphor, of date rape.

A man determined to have his way with a woman may start off seducing her with lies, flattery and the usual pretense of caring about her. But at a critical moment, when she says, “Stop, I’m not comfortable with this and don’t want to go any further,” he has a choice: Either do the right thing and back off, or abandon all prior pretensions and take her by force.

As president, Barack Obama courted us with sweet talk, but America grew increasingly uncomfortable with his advances and firmly said, “Stop” — in fact, screamed bloody murder for months. Yet Obama remains obsessed with forcing himself on America.

Put aside for the moment the fact that Obama is single-handedly destroying the Democratic Party for years, perhaps decades, by maniacally pursuing Obamacare as though it were Moby Dick and he Captain Ahab, leading all the Pequod’s hapless Democrat crewmen into political destruction.

Rather, let’s focus on how to truly understand what we’re seeing — something virtually unprecedented in the American experience, at least in our lifetimes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Las Vegas Air Force Base Placed on Lockdown

Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas was placed on lockdown Friday with nearby streets closed, according to local reports.

Base spokesman Eugene Hill said the main gate was closed and the base was put on lockdown about 3 p.m., according to the Las Vegas Sun.

It remains unclear what has caused the lockdown.

Metro Police spokesman Bill Cassell said officers are assisting with traffic control in the area.

Nellis is the location of the United States Air Force Warfare Center and is a major training location for both U.S. and foreign military aircrews.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Obama Administration Plans to Close International Labor Comparisons Office [To Hide Reality of Globalization]

Like a scorekeeper for the world, a tiny unit within the Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks globalization’s winners and losers, and the results are not always pretty for the United States. Manufacturing jobs here, for example, have fallen faster since 1979 than in Canada, Germany or Japan. Compensation for those jobs dropped here in 2008 but jumped in South Korea and Australia.

Soon, however, Americans may be spared the demoralization in these numbers: The White House wants to shutter the unit that produces them.

President Obama’s budget would eliminate the International Labor Comparisons office and transfer its 16 economists to expand the bureau’s work tracking inflation and occupational trends. The White House says the cut, estimated to save $2 million, is one of many difficult decisions the president was forced to make to control spending.

[Return to headlines]



Obama Calls ‘Entrepreneurship Summit’ With Muslims

The White House on Friday announced a “summit on entrepreneurship” to build economic ties with the Islamic world, part of President Barack Obama’s outreach to Muslims.

The White House said it has invited participants from more than 40 countries over five continents for the April 26-27 conference in Washington.

“The summit will highlight the role entrepreneurship can play in addressing common challenges while building partnerships that will lead to greater opportunity abroad and at home,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.

Obama first spoke of the entrepreneurship conference in his signature June 4 speech in Cairo to the Islamic world.

In the closely watched address, Obama said the United States was seeking a “new beginning” with the Islamic world to rebuild relations that had sharply deteriorated over the past decade.

Obama promised at the time that he would convene a “presidential summit on entrepreneurship” by the end of 2009.

He said that the meeting would “identify how we can deepen ties between business leaders, foundations and social entrepreneurs in the United States and Muslim communities around the world.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Queens Imam Pleads Guilty in Brooklyn Federal Court

NEW YORK (AP/1010 WINS) — An imam linked to the suspects in an aborted suicide bomb plot against New York City pleaded guilty on Thursday to lying to the FBI — a deal sparing him serious jail time but forcing him to leave the country.

A tearful Ahmad Afzali told a judge in federal court in Brooklyn that he had wanted to help authorities in the investigation of the threat, but lied under grilling by the FBI about his phone conversations with admitted al-Qaida associate Najibullah Zazi.

“In doing so, I failed to live up to my obligation to this country, my community, my family and my religion,” he said. “I am truly sorry.”

Under the plea deal, Afzali faces up to six months behind bars at sentencing on April 8. It also requires the Afghanistan-born defendant to leave the country within 90 days after completing the sentence or face deportation.

Afterward, he told reporters, “I just signed my death sentence.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Rise and Fall of a Female Captain Bligh

Women are so common in the upper ranks of the U.S. military these days that it’s no longer news when they break through another barrier. Unfortunately, the latest benchmark isn’t one to brag about: being booted as captain of a billion-dollar warship for “cruelty and maltreatment” of her 400-member crew. According to the Navy inspector general’s report that triggered her removal — and the accounts of officers who served with her — Captain Holly Graf was the closest thing the U.S. Navy had to a female Captain Bligh.

A Navy admiral stripped Graf of her command of the Japan-based guided missile cruiser U.S.S. Cowpens in January. The just-released IG report concludes that Graf “repeatedly verbally abused her crew and committed assault” and accuses her of using her position as commander of the Cowpens “for personal gain.” But old Navy hands tell TIME that those charges, substantiated in the IG report, came about because of the poisonous atmosphere she created aboard her ship.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkish Muslim Imam Kicks Off Congress With Prayer

Turkish Muslim imam Abdullah Antepli from Duke University delivered the opening prayer for the US House of Representatives on Wednesday, where the Armenian “genocide” bill was put to the vote in the Foreign Relations Committee on Thursday.

The US Congress has opened with prayers since 1789 but it is an honor only three Muslims have been given so far, the last occasion being in 2003. Antepli was invited to give the prayer by Democrat Representative David Price from North Carolina.

Antepli prayed that God guide members of Congress and enable them to serve citizens of the country and all humanity, regardless of gender, ethnicity or religion. “Fill their hearts and minds with passion and determination to improve the quality of the life of their fellow human beings,” he recited.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Veil of Secrecy Covers Toyota Cars’ ‘Black Boxes’

Automaker won’t release information that could help crash investigations

SOUTHLAKE, Texas — Toyota has for years blocked access to data stored in devices similar to airline “black boxes” that could explain crashes blamed on sudden unintended acceleration, according to an Associated Press review of lawsuits nationwide and interviews with auto crash experts.

The AP investigation found that Toyota has been inconsistent — and sometimes even contradictory — in revealing exactly what the devices record and don’t record, including critical data about whether the brake or accelerator pedals were depressed at the time of a crash.

By contrast, most other automakers routinely allow much more open access to information from their event data recorders, commonly known as EDRs.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Danish Newspaper Politiken ??Apologizes to Muslims Worldwide; Law Firm of Ahmed Zaki Yamani (Lawyers and Legal Consultants) Urges Other Danish Newspapers to Follow Suit

In the first success achieved by the legal efforts regarding the Cartoon Drawings of the Prophet Mohammed (peace be upon him), which were published by the Danish Newspapers, Politiken (one of the newspapers that had published the Cartoon Drawing) declared its apology for the offence it had caused against Islam, Muslims, and their Prophet Mohammed (peace be upon him).

On Friday, 26 February 2010, corresponding to the 12th of Rabee’ Al-Awal 1431H, Politiken published its apology and the draft of the settlement which has been reached between the newspaper and the Law Firm of Ahmed Zaki Yamani (Lawyers and Legal Consultants) mandated by Corpc Unison Kinsfolk Home Wolq (the International Organization of Ilaf Al El-Bait) which exist in eight countries, namely Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Lebanon, Qatar, Australia, and Palestine, and has more than (95.000) ninety five thousand members who are the descendants of the Prophet Mohammed (peace be upon him).

Mr. Faisal Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Executive Partner of the Law Firm of Ahmed Zaki Yamani (Lawyers and Legal Consultants) and the Lead Council of the Prophet Case said: “We thank God for our success in reaching a settlement with the Danish Newspaper which has recognized its mistake, apologized, and indicated not to reoffend Muslims and their Prophet (peace be upon him). We wished that all the Danish Newspapers which published the Drawings accepted to enter into a settlement as Politiken did, and published an apology to avoid multiple jurisdictional litigations and costly damages in favor of our clients.

Mr. Faisal Yamani pointed out that on the authorization of Corpc Unison Kinsfolk Home Wolq (the International Organization of Ilaf Al El-Bait) to the Law Firm of Ahmed Zaki Yamani (Lawyers and Legal Consultants) the Law Firm more than once sent letters to the seventeen Danish Newspapers requesting them to apologize in order to avoid multiple jurisdictional litigations against them.

Mr. Yamani stated: “we have succeeded in reaching a settlement with the newspaper, however, we will continue as mandated by our clients (the organizations) as they are the descendants of the Prophet (peace be upon him) and have been harmed as all Muslims around the world by the publication of the Cartoon Drawings.

And he added: “We have asked the Danish Newspapers three demands, namely:

  • To provide an apology for publishing the drawing, on its hard copy publication.
  • To remove the drawing from all the websites and the ones they control.
  • To promise not to republish the drawing again…
           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Diana West: How the West Will be Won

When the Netherlands’ Party for Freedom leader Geert Wilders recently addressed voters in Almere, a Dutch city of 200,000 where his party handily won elections this week, he told them what to expect as his once-tiny, anti-Islamization party started flexing its new political muscle. Aside from lower taxes and other political staples, his plans for this city not far from Amsterdam include a ban on Muslim headscarves.

Wilders’ ban would apply to “headscarves in municipal bodies and all other institutions (that) receive even one penny of subsidy from the municipality.” He continued: “And for all clarity: This (ban) is not meant for crosses or yarmulkes because those are symbols of religions that belong to our own culture and are not — as is the case with headscarves — a sign of an oppressive totalitarian ideology.”

Here, Wilders is distinguishing between the religions of Christianity and Judaism, and the religio-political ideology of Islam, noting not only the near-indigenous nature of the former, but also the encroaching totalitarianism of the latter. This is the crucial cultural argument to make if a cultural Reconquista of Europe from Islamization is to be successful.

Certainly, we have seen glimmers. Last year, Filip Dewinter of the Vlaams Belang party of Belgium led a winning campaign to ban the hijab — what he calls “the propaganda weapon of choice for the establishment of Islamic society in Europe” — in the Flemish schools of his country, making the same vital judgment call that Wilders did.

“(He) who defends the headscarf out of reasons of tolerance and pluralism has little or no understanding of Islam,” Dewinter said. “The hidden agenda behind the veil leads to segregation,” a veritable apartheid-regime, he explained, with which Islam seeks to control and dominate the West. Equating the Muslim head scarf with the Christian cross or the Jewish yamulke is “therefore incorrect,” Dewinter continued, identifying the headscarf as “the flag of a political ideology” in which it is not the individual religious experience that is central, but rather “the realization of a theocratic society based on sharia, or Islamic law.”

Maybe that’s a lot for Americans to take in, but they haven’t lived through the Islamization Decades that their European cousins have…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



France: Sarkozy Launches Anti-Deindustrialisation Plan

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 4 — French President Nicolas Sarkozy presented a series of measures to support industry hit by the crisis, today in Marignane in the south of the country, with the aim of increasing industrial production by 25% by 2015. Sarkozy said he wants to “protect jobs in industry” as the active workforce has plummeted by 15% in the industry in the last 10 years. In 2009 it accelerated, with 200,000 jobs destroyed and a crash of 11.9% in production. The industrial component of France’s GDP fell by 22% in 1999 to 16% in 2008, the same level as Great Britain, while in Germany it was 20%. In order to give a boost to France’s industry, Sarkozy mentioned the ‘large national loan’ of 6.5 billion euros which will be launched during 2010, 5.5 billion of which will go towards financing businesses which innovate and towards investment in transport and space. But the government also plans to propose a new savings product aimed in particular towards funding industry. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: New Halal Shop for Middle-Class Muslims

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 3 — A young businessman of Moroccan descent, Rachid Bakhalq, has opened a 100% halal food shop in Nanterre, in the Paris suburbs, making the most of a market which is growing rapidly in France. But Hal’Shop is not your average bazaar, because Rachid has gone for a “bobo” (bourgeois-bohemian) approach, his aim being to attract middle-class Muslims, whom he calls “Beurgeois” (a composite of “beur”, the term for a French person of North African descent and “bourgeois”). These are Muslims who are westernised in terms of lifestyle, but who cannot eat non-halal foods, explains the young man, who worked for General Motors and Danone before embarking on his latest adventure. His move comes after the fast-food outlet Quick created ripples by opening a branch serving only halal hamburgers. Rachid is offering these “bobo” Muslims a selection of French halal products, such as foie gras and sweets without pork-derived gelatin. No alcohol will be served but there are some products that are not associated with the tenets of Islam, such as spices, North African cured meats and Argan oil, items targeting what Rachid calls “food tourists”. According to a recent study, the halal food industry’s turnover, which has a predicted annual increase of 15%, is an estimated 5.5 billion euros for 2010, of which one billion comes from fast food. Bio products lag far behind with a predicted 2.6 billion euros.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Geert Wilders on Course to be Next Dutch Prime Minister

The far-right politician Geert Wilders is poised to become the next Dutch prime minister after making major gains in regional elections.

Municipal results announced on Thursday put his party in first place in Almere, a region near Amsterdam and second in The Hague, one the country’s largest cities and the seat of the Dutch government.

If repeated in national elections on June 9, the Freedom Party could win 27 out of 150 seats, becoming the largest single party and putting him in line to become prime minister and form a new government.

[…]

“The leftist elite still believes in multiculturalism, coddling criminals, a European superstate and high taxes. But the rest of the Netherlands thinks differently. That silent majority now has a voice.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy to Keep Out GM Potato

Government ‘won’t allow’ EU approved genetically modified crops

(ANSA) — Rome, March 3 — A genetically modified (GM) potato approved by the European Commission this week will never cross the Italian border, Agriculture Minister Luca Zaia vowed Wednesday.

“We will be opting not to allow the sale or cultivation of the so-called Amflora potato in Italy,” he said.

On Tuesday, the EC ended a 12-year moratorium on new GM plants in Europe by giving the go-ahead to the Amflora potato, engineered to produce more of a certain kind of starch, as well as three varieties of pest-resistant corn.

Zaia was one of the first to speak out against the decision and on Wednesday criticised the newly elected European Health Commissioner, John Dalli, for his part in their approval.

“The EC has held firm against GM foods for over 12 years, but now Dalli, after just a week in office, gives them the go-ahead,” Zaia said.

While adding that he didn’t question Dalli’s good faith and scientific acumen, he maintained that Italy would not budge in its opposition.

The widely criticised decision on Tuesday included a clause allowing EU member states to decide for themselves whether or not to permit the crops’ cultivation and sale.

However, the Italian Farming Confederation (CIA) argued that taking advantage of the clause was not enough and that the government should adopt a law explicitly forbidding the cultivation GM foods in Italy and requiring products made with GM materials to bear a label. Following the decision, which met with near-unanimous disapproval from Italian politicians and conservationists, some reports cited the Catholic Church as coming out in favour of it.

The Vatican daily Osservatore Romano on Wednesday was quick to deny those reports, saying they confused the opinions of “a few individual clergymen” with an official position on the part of the Church.

However, the editorial did quote a passage from Pope Benedict XVI’s most recent encyclical, Caritas in Veritate, which suggested GM foods could help stamp out worldwide hunger.

“It’s no coincidence that countries which grow GM foods raised their annual production by 13% compared to 7% in the rest of the world,” said the article, adding that the number of hungry people in the world rose above one billion for the first time in history last year.

But Italian environmentalists insisted that long-term health risks overshadowed the possible benefits of GM foods, and promised fierce opposition should they ever appear in Italy.

The Italian Green Party on Wednesday threatened to occupy any land set aside for GM farming to protect Italian agriculture from contamination.

“We will take over the fields in a non-violent protest to protect our health and our food,” vowed party chairman Angelo Bonelli.

In the hospital after a 33-day hunger strike to protest alleged censorship in the media, Bonelli said his party would also ask Rome police to seize any imported seeds of GM plants as a public health risk.

He went on to criticize the European Food and Safety Authority (EFSA), which gave the corn and potato the all-clear, for allegedly ignoring concerns raised by the European Medicines Agency (EMA).

According to experts, the Amfla starch potato contains small quantities of a protein that neutralizes the effects of two very common antibiotics, generating fears that exposure to them could render people more vulnerable to infection.

The three brands of corn, which have been approved for human consumption in the United States, have raised health concerns in Germany where one of the varieties is banned.

However, the EFSA said that extensive testing failed to demonstrate that the vegetables posed health risks of any kind.

According to a report issued Wednesday by farmers’ union Coldiretti, only six of 27 EU member states allow the cultivation of GM foods.

The study said GM seed sales fell by an average of 12% across those six countries, together with a net reduction of land set aside to grow them.

At present, Spain, the Czech Republic, Romania, Slovakia, Poland and Portugal are the only countries in the EU that produce GM crops.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kercher ‘Violent Sex Crime’

‘Crescendo of violence’ in drug-fuelled attack, judge says

(ANSA) — Perugia, March 4 — The murder of Meredith Kercher in Perugia in November 2007 was a violent sex crime, an Italian judge said Thursday in his detailed ruling on the December guilty verdict for Amanda Knox and her Italian ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito.

The murder, said Judge Giancarlo Massei in a written ruling of more than 400 pages in support of the 25-year and 26-year sentences, was “erotic, violent and sexual” in motive.

A second man sentenced to 16 years in a separate, appeals trial, Ivory Coast native Rudy Guede, tried to have sex with 21-year-old Kercher before she was killed on the night of November 1, the judge said.

Knox, now 22, and Sollecito, now 25, decided to help Guede, now 23, “subject Meredith to sex abuse” but the victim put up “fierce resistance”.

The assailants gripped the Leeds University exchange student so tightly around the throat they left bruises that led investigators to initially think the cause of death might have been suffocation, the judge said.

But this was in fact only a part of a “crescendo of violence” aimed at getting Kercher to give in to the attempted rape, he said.

Traces of Guede’s Y chromosome were taken by a vaginal swab during Kercher’s autopsy, the judge said.

A small wound found on Kercher’s neck was caused by a knife “Sollecito always had with him” and was made after he cut her bra, the verdict said.

The fatal wound was inflicted by Knox with a kitchen knife later found in Sollecito’s apartment, Judge Massei said.

Massei said the assailants were under the influence of drugs on the night of the attack, while Kercher had been drinking.

Prosecutor Giuliano Mignini hailed the ruling as “upholding almost entirely the prosecution case” and “vindicating the work of the police”.

DEFENCE VOWS TO REBUT SENTENCE ‘POINT BY POINT’.

Sollecito’s lawyer Luca Maori said his team intended to “rebut point by point” the verdict.

“It is a sentence which we still have to carefully assess but which we wholly disagree with,” Maori said.

There was no immediate response from Knox’s defence team.

The case will be examined at the Chamber of Deputies on March 18 by US legal experts called by the Italy-US Foundation.

Foundation Chairman Rocco Ghirlanda said “it will not be a counter-trial but will have the sole aim of comparing Italian and US judicial and trial systems and try to understand what a possible verdict might have been if a similar case had been tried in the United States”.

In the 427-page ruling, made public Thursday, Massei and fellow judge Beatrice Cristiani said the case against Knox and Sollecito was “without gaps or inconsistencies”.

Knox, a Seattle university exchange student living with Kercher, was sentenced to 26 years in jail and Sollecito, a Perugia University student from Perugia, to 25. They did not get a life sentence because they were first offenders.

Knox got one year more for defaming a local pub owner she initially blamed for the murder.

Both deny wrongdoing and are appealing.

The verdict, against Knox in particular, caused a strong reaction in the United States where ‘pro-Amanda’ groups who claimed she had been demonised by the press have rallied to support her appeal later this year. One of the United States’ top lawyers, Ted Simon, will flank her Italian defence team.

Simon said in January: “Her conviction was a tragic mistake…but I’m certain that we’ll be able to obtain her release with the new trial,” he said.

The appeal is expected to focus on the DNA evidence which was already hotly contested in the first trial.

After the sentence, the Knox family said she had received a fair trial but the verdict was a “big mistake”.

Under Italian law convicted criminals are entitled to two appeals. Knox and Sollecito’s first appeal is expected to get under way this summer.

Their legal teams are confident of overturning the verdict or getting the jail terms shortened.

The US consulate is providing its customary support for Knox ahead of her appeal.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Immigrant Voters Again Important for PvdA in Local Elections

THE HAGUE, 05/03/10 — Immigrant voters have again provided important support for Labour (PvdA) in the local elections. Moroccans in particular voted for the party en masse, according to research by Amsterdam city council and the Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies of the University of Amsterdam.

The PvdA remained the biggest party in Amsterdam by some way, partly due to 74 percent of Moroccans voting for the social democrats. Among Ghanaians, a big group in the Zuidoost district, the figure was even 88 percent. Among Surinamese and Antilleans, the PvdA ‘only’ won 53 percent, De Volkskrant reported yesterday. It gave no figures for Turks.

The PvdA was as always the biggest party in Amsterdam by a long way. But it did drop to 28.9 percent from 39.4 percent. The conservatives (VVD) won some ground (17.1 percent), as did the leftwing Greens (GroenLinks), to 15.2 percent, while the Socialist Party (SP) vote was halved to 7.4 percent. Centre-left D66 climbed to 14.8 percent from 4.1 percent in Amsterdam.

In 2006, the immigrant vote for PvdA was even higher at 80 percent, with only GroenLinks and SP picking up a few crumbs. This time around, D66 was also a competitor. The turnout in Amsterdam among immigrants was similar to four years earlier, ranging from 46 percent among Turks to 26 percent among Surinamese and Antilleans.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Spain: Abengoa: 5 Mln for Combined Cycle Plant

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 3 — Spanish group Abengoa will invest 5 million euros for the construction of a combined cycle thermoelectric plant in Tabernas, in the zone of Almeria, in Spain. The Econostrum.info website reports that the project, which will in part be financed by the provincial government of Andalusia (with 5 million euros), will see the participation of other companies such as DLR, a branch of Caterpillar Turbomach, GEA and Algerian Neal (New Energy Algeria). Once it is up and running, the new experimental plant — which plans for a solar tower, a 5 MW gas turbine — should allow the optimisation of gas consumption. Again in Tabernas, the Junta of Andalusia has decided to build a research centre for renewable energies. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Srdja Trifkovic: Prison of Nations

Nigel Farage, a British member of the European Parliament, was fined an equivalent of $4,000 on Tuesday for “insulting” the new European Union President Herman van Rompuy (r.) and refusing to apologize. In a memorable performance in Strasbourg ten days eaerlier, the Euroskeptic MEP told the former Beligian prime minister that he had “all the charisma of a damp rag and the appearance of a low-grade bank clerk”:

“We were told that when we had a president, we’d see a giant global political figure, a man who would be the political leader for 500 million people, the man that would represent all of us all of us on the world stage, the man whose job was so important that of course you’re paid more than President Obama. Well, I’m afraid what we got was you… The question I want to ask is: ‘Who are you?’ I’d never heard of you, nobody in Europe had ever heard of you.”

Mr. Farage’s tirade was well worth his ten days’ MEP allowance. It put some spotlight on the inner workings of a monstrous bureaucracy. It gave a welcome boost to the popularity of his UK Independence Party (UKIP), which advocates Britain’s withdrawal from the EU and opposes the Tory-Labour therapeutic-social-democratic duopoly. It provided a rare spark of rhetorical flair in an institution otherwise reminiscent of the Supreme Soviet, circa 1957.

But let us first consider Farage’s passing reference, during his response to Van Rompuy’s inaugural address, to Belgium as a “non-country,” “an artificial construction” which is “breaking up.” The bien-pensants were offended with that part of his statement, too, but they cannot refute the facts.

Belgium was created by treaty, ex nihilo, by the Concert of Europe 180 years ago, mainly on Britain’s insistence as a buffer keeping the Channel ports neutral…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]



Switzerland to Vote on Appointing Lawyers for Abused Pets

Switzerland, where flushing goldfish down the toilet is illegal, is preparing to vote on whether abused animals deserve lawyers.

[Return to headlines]



Tourism: Bit: One Out of Two Tourists Books Via Web

(ANSAmed) — RHO-PERO (MILAN), FEBRUARY 18 — According to Unioncamere-Isnart research presented at Fieramilano on the opening day of the International Tourism Bourse (BIT), there are more than 2.2 million hotel bed places in Italy, about a million more than in France and one third more than Spain’s. Italy appears to be the second destination for those seeking hotel accomodation (about 77 million, behind France’s 99 million), though the first in terms of visiting tourists,which amount to just short of 252 million. Here is a fact about marketing strategies,in which the web is increasingly becoming more evident: nowadays practically one out of two tourists (41%) makes their own booking in Italy’s establishments on-line (on-line bookings were 36% in 2008), whereas package tourists represent little more than 9%, as last year. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Torture’ Litigation Costs Begin at $60 Million

Resolution could take years to reach

LONDON — British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has decided that “at least” $60 million taxpayer cash will be spent to meet the legal costs for damage cases lodged against the government by six former Guantanamo Bay detainees, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

The six are suing MI5 and MI6, claiming the security services were complicit in alleged torture.

Seventy-five of Britain’s top lawyers have been retained by the government to analyze almost a million documents related to the Guantanamo Bay claimants.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Spy Chips Hidden in 2.5 Million Dustbins: 60pc Rise in Electronic Bugs as Council Snoopers Plan Pay-as-You-Throw Tax

The growing threat of a stealth tax on the rubbish we throw away was exposed by startling figures yesterday.

More than 2.5million homes now have wheelie bins fitted with microchips to weigh their contents.

This is an increase of nearly two-thirds in just a year. The bins, which can be electronically identified and weighed, are designed for ‘pay-as-you-throw’ rubbish tax schemes.

Under such schemes — which are likely to be hugely unpopular — families who put out more waste will pay higher taxes to their local council.

Disclosure of the rapid spread of chipped bins followed the announcement this week of the first council to bring in a bin tax. Bristol City is presenting its scheme as a reward for recyclers, with cash payments to homes that leave out less rubbish.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Taxpayer Will Have to Fund Yet Another £250,000 New Identity for James Bulger Murderer After His Return to Jail

One of the killers of James Bulger will have to be given a second new identity costing the taxpayer £250,000, it emerged today.

Officials are resigned to having to provide Jon Venables with another new name, National Insurance number and passport, to protect his anonymity after he was recalled to prison.

It was claimed today fellow inmates are already aware of the 27-year-old killer’s real identity.

It was also alleged that Venables has made several visits to Liverpool — the scene of James’ killing — to enjoy nights out, a pop concert and a football match.

[…]

The tight-knit group that knows the new identity of Jon Venables operates a culture of extreme secrecy.

Even police officers who come in contact with the killer will have no idea they are dealing with a dangerous individual.

Instead, Venables has been told he can simply give any arresting officer his new name — guaranteeing he is treated like any other member of the public.

Normally, when police stop a murderer, a cursory check of the Police National Computer would advise them of the criminal history of who they are dealing with so they can take great care in the way they handle the case.

But in Venables’s case his new name is on the computer and it does not have his full criminal history. The same is true of the DNA and fingerprint databases. A police officer entering Venables’s new name into the computer would not be aware of the full truth.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: We Must Not be Afraid of Taking on Islamic Extremists

Muslims are standing up to fundamentalist organisations such as the Islamic Forum of Europe. We should do the same, writes Andrew Gilligan.

By Andrew Gilligan

The East End has one of the best local papers in Britain, a genuine mirror of its community. But curiously, this week’s issue seems to have missed a story which has been making some serious waves in that very community. One of the local MPs, Labour’s Jim Fitzpatrick, was quoted in The Sunday Telegraph, and on national television, as saying that his party had been infiltrated by a secretive, fundamentalist organisation, the Islamic Forum of Europe — which he compares to the Militant Tendency in the 1980s.

At the same time, the area’s other MP, George Galloway, was quoted — albeit on a secretly recorded tape — as saying that the IFE played a “decisive role” in his election victory, and admitting that he owes them “more than it would be wise… for me to say”. Lutfur Rahman, the council leader in Tower Hamlets, repeatedly refused to deny that the IFE helped him win the leadership. And the reports also pointed out that a great deal of public money has been channelled to IFE-linked projects, causing council officers major concerns.

The IFE, based at the hardline East London mosque, claims to be an “open and tolerant” social welfare institution. In fact, as undercover reporters for Channel 4’s Dispatches found, it is working, in its own words, to change the “very infrastructure of society, its institutions, its culture, its political order and its creed… from ignorance to Islam”. It may not manage that — but it has already won significant political power over a multiracial community through democratic, secular parties whose values are diametrically opposed to its own.

I admit an interest — I made the programme, and wrote The Sunday Telegraph report. But I think I know why others are reluctant to address the issues we raised. That reason is fear. In six months of research, we spoke to dozens of people in the Tower Hamlets Labour Party. Almost everyone who talked to us said exactly the same thing — but no one, save Mr Fitzpatrick, was brave enough to say it on the record.

Graham Taylor, the chairman of the party, has been forced to make a grovelling apology for suggesting that the town hall was a “centre of Islamic fundamentalism” (he says the comment was meant ironically). Rushanara Ali, the Labour candidate in Mr Galloway’s Bethnal Green & Bow constituency, is a secular moderate. But she issued a weaselly statement which can be read, as it was no doubt intended, as an attack on Mr Fitzpatrick, who represents the neighbouring constituency of Poplar and Canning Town.

In the back of every politician’s mind lurks the fear that taking on the IFE will cost them votes. In the back of every journalist’s mind is the knowledge that writing anything even faintly questioning of the East London mosque will incur tedious correspondence with its hair-trigger libel lawyers. In the back of every white person’s mind lurks the fear of the IFE’s favoured charge, “Islamophobia”.

Dispatches’s answer to that charge is that 70 per cent of our interviewees were Muslim. The most important people in the film are the locals of the area — Harmuz Ali, the vice-chairman of the Brick Lane mosque, Badrul Islam, the chief executive of the Ethnic Minority Enterprise Project, and many others. They reject the IFE, knowing better than anyone that it does not represent their community. They dismiss as nonsense the claim that any attack on it is an attack on Islam itself.

Interestingly, too, the IFE’s and the mosque’s response to the reports has so far been rather more muted than their pre-publication threats would suggest. The Muslim community of East London is calling the IFE’s bluff. Given the importance of this issue, it is time for others to find similar courage.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Wilders, Not Islam, ‘Is Holland’s Biggest Problem’

Geert Wilders and his anti-Islam Freedom Party party did well in Dutch municipal elections on Wednesday. Still, despite the attention the populist party attracts, it still has a long way to go if it wants power on the national stage, say German commentators.

General elections in Holland aren’t scheduled until June. But municipal polls on Wednesday may have provided a peek at how the populist, anti-Islam Freedom Party (PVV) of Geert Wilders’ might fare. And for many, the glimpse is cause for some concern.

Election results show that Wilders’ party came out in front in the town of Almere and finished in second place in The Hague, the only two municipalities — of 394 — where his party put up candidates.

“Today Almere and The Hague, tomorrow the whole of the Netherlands,” Wilders said Wednesday night, according to the AP. “We’re going to take the Netherlands back from the leftist elite that coddles criminals and supports Islamization.” Given the weak showing by the Christian Democrats and the Labor party — which shared power in a national coalition until it collapsed last month over the country’s Afghanistan deployment — Wednesday’s vote could signal that the Freedom Party may be a key player in June.

Wilders, 46, is known for his outspoken anti-Islam and anti-immigrant views. He has called for headscarves to be banned in public buildings, compares the Koran with Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” and wants to see “urban commandos” provide “additional safety” on city streets. He is currently facing charges for inciting hatred. On Friday, he is in Britain for a showing of his controversial, anti-Muslim film “Fitna.”

In Friday’s newspapers, German commentators express disappointment at Wilders’ success but add that his party doesn’t have the manpower yet to act on the national stage. At the same time, they also see it as a ominous sign, worrying that the troubles there might soon find their way to Germany:…

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Balkans


EU: Turkey and Croatia, No Decentralisation Progress

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 2 — No progress has been achieved in the decentralisation of power: an opinion project being debated by the Committee of European regions complained about the lack of improvement by two candidate Countries to join the EU (Turkey and Croatia) when it comes to local and regional administrations. The opinion, whose spokesperson is Georgios Papastergiou (Ppe) from Greece, highlights in the case of Turkey its “disappointment for the total lack of progress in the transfer of jurisdiction to local powers”. But the spokesperson also pointed out that Croatia “failed to adopt the decentralisation strategy” and that “there is the absence of coordination between the political and technical levels, as like between the central and local administrations”. The opinion was examined today by the competent commission that was also called to draw up the situation concerning the use of the pre-acceptance instrument which should offer municipalities and regions the means required for an improved integration at all levels. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Tounsi Murder, Family Contests Official Version

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 4 — The family of Ali Tounsi, the Algerian police chief killed a week ago in his Algiers office by one of his collaborators, Colonel Chaib Oultache, have decided to break the reigning silence and speak out against the official version, calling it “biased and premature”. A few days ago Interior Minister Yazid Zerhouni said that the murder had occurred “without witnesses”, underscoring that it had been of a personal nature, simply “a matter between two men”. His family “cannot be indifferent” to “such comments, which attempt to explain the murderer’s motives as ones of a personal nature”, reads the statement released by the press. Tounsi, said his family, “did not have any problem with his killer, nor with anyone else. The deceased was killed in cold blood, in a cowardly and deliberate manner in his office just before a meeting,” and “he died as a patriot, in the service of the State in the struggle against criminality in all its forms.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Bill Proposed on Crimes From French Colonial Period

(ANSAmed)- ALGIERS, MARCH 4 — A draft law to criminalise French colonialism is currently being examined by the Algerian government, which must make a decision within 60 days. After an initial postponement, a reworked bill was presented to Algerian Parliament again on February 25, reported the Algerian press. The draft law demands that Paris apologise and calls for the creation of special war crime tribunals for acts carried out during the colonial period (1830-1962). The proposal was signed by 125 MPs from various parties, including the alliance that supports the president, the National Liberation Front (FLN, formerly the country’s single party), the National Rally for Democracy (RND) and the Movement of Society for Peace (MSP, formerly Hamas). When it first arrived in Parliament on February 12, the bill sparked anger in the French government, reigniting the periodic tensions that exist between the two countries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: 1.6 Mln Counterfeit Articles Seized in 2009

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 4 — In 2009, Algerian customs officers impounded one million 640 thousand counterfeit articles. The general direction of customs offices (DGDN), quoted by APS, reports that this number is rising: in 2008 1.59 million articles were impounded. Cigarettes and cosmetics represent respectively 41.36% and 30.18% of all seized products. Most of them come from China (62.5%), United Arab Emirates (18.75%), France and Niger (6.2% each), Turkey and Thailand (3.2% each). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Lebanese Popstar Homicide, New Trial for Tycoon

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 4 — The Supreme Court of Cairo has accepted the appeal presented by the lawyers of Egyptian businessman, Hisham Talat Mustafa, and by the police official Mohsen el-Sukkariti, both condemned to death for the assassination of the Lebanese singer Suzanne Tamim. The two will thus be retried by another court of law. According to a release given after the sentence, the original verdict “was found to be erroneous in its application of the law”, and the court did not respond to several important pleas by the defense. Last summer, the death sentences by hanging had been confirmed for Mustafa, a member of the National Democratic Party (PND, currently in power) and of the retired official el-Sukkariti, one for have ordered the killing of the singer, 30 years of age, and the other for having carried it out. The woman was killed in 2008 in Dubai. The Court had initially given its verdict in May of 2009, but the death sentence still had to be ratified by the high judge, or mufti. According to the charges, Mustafa, who allegedly had an intimate relation with the singer, paid el-Sukkariti 2 million dollars to kill Suzanne Tamim, who was the found dead on July 28, 2008 in her Dubai apartment, with numerous stab wounds and her throat slit. El-Sukkariti, after having watched the singer’s house, supposedly introduced himself to her as a real-estate agent, and then stabbed her. Mustafa directed one of his multi-billion dollar economic groups and was also a member of the consultative Council (Senate). He had been deprived of immunity and substituted by his brother as the head of the enterprise. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Arab League Supports Tripoli Against Switzerland

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI, MARCH 4 — The Ministers of Arab League Countries decided yesterday in Cairo to fully support Libya in its conflict with Switzerland, which they called “racist”, and to officially ask EU institutions to “refuse the list of people who are not allowed to enter the Schengen countries”. The document arrived after another long day dedicated to the diplomatic row between Libya and Switzerland that started in July 2009, when Hannibal Gaddafi, one of the sons of the Libyan leader, was arrested in Geneva. The countries that signed the document are: Somalia, Sudan, Egypt, Morocco, Mauritania, Algeria, Djibouti, Syria, Yemen, Bahrain, Kuwait, UAE, Jordan, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Tunisia. The decision was taken on the day when Libya launched a “total” commercial and economic embargo on Switzerland. This new move follows the crisis of Schengen visas and the call for Jihad, ‘holy war’, made by Libyan leader Gaddafi against Switzerland because of the question of the referendum on minarets. The announcement of the “total commercial and economic” embargo came at the moment when Libyan Foreign Minister Mousa Kousa spoke of some hope to resolve the diplomatic crisis between the two countries. In the past two months Tripoli has cut its oil supplies to Switzerland, withdrawn Libyan capital from the country’s banks, closed the doors to Swiss Air and to close all Swiss companies active in Libya. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


E. Jerusalem: Jews Praise Jewish Terrorist

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, MARCH 4 — Jewish inhabitants of the Arab district of Sheik Jarrah, in East Jerusalem, have sung the praises of the Jewish terrorist and physician Baruch Goldstein. Goldstein opened fire on praying Muslims in the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron 16 years ago, killing 29 Palestinians before being killed himself. The Sheik Jarrah is the focus of serious tensions between the local Arab population and Jewish settlers who are trying to move into the area. Israeli leftwing pacifists and activists have organised a demonstration in the district for next Saturday, to denounce the violent conduct of these settlers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Jerusalem: Clashes Erupt at Temple Mount

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, MARCH 5 — Clashes erupt today at the Temple Mount in Jerusalem at the end of Friday prayers. According to military radio, groups of Islamic worshippers threw rocks against the Wailing Wall which stands below, where Jewish followers were located. In order to bring an end to the disturbances, the Israeli police entered the Temple Mount where they met with a considerable hail of stones. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


A Million Hungry Souls: Brutal Transfer Committed by Syrian Regime Finally Recognized by UN

Syria can no longer hide the immense transfer it has embarked on in respect to more than one million of its miserable citizens, after a UN report two weeks ago exposed the bitter truth successfully concealed thus far: More than 300,000 Syrian families have been uprooted by authorities from their homes in eastern Syria and abandoned in the country’s major cities without any means of making a living. The reason: An illogical policy of forced agricultural in the east of the country that included forcing residents to grow water-hungry corps such as cotton and wheat; this prompted water wells to dry up completely and led to deep hunger.

This is the greatest transfer operation undertaken in the Middle East in dozens of years and Syria tried as much as possible to hide it, as it cannot admit to such grave economic failure while also admitting that it is no different than hunger and drought stricken African nations. Now everyone also understand how deeply desperate Syria was to get its hands on our Sea of Galilee, in order to dry it up completely by transferring water in pipes to eastern Syria, to the arid and no longer inhabitable areas.

Syria also prefers to bow down to Turkey, so that the latter perhaps hand over more water from the Euphrates. The issue of water involving Syria, Turkey, and Iraq is grave and severe, yet everyone tries to hide it as much as is possible. I already wrote in the past about the Syrian plot to take over the Sea of Galilee in order to resolve its water crisis, and now we got the official proof in the form of the UN report.

Our Golan buffer

What would have happened had Israel handed over the Golan to Syria? Where would the Syrians deliberately and immediately relocate their million uprooted citizens to, in order to take over the area and be kept away from the major cities? The answer is clear — the Golan Heights; there is water there. Bashar Assad dreams of filling the Golan with one million Syrians, and then northern Israel will be in his hands; when he wishes to do so, he will prompt “resistance” and then roll his eyes to the heavens and declare that he doesn’t know who did it.

Given that the ethnic rule in Syria is artificial — that is, the small 7% Alawite minority rules over the other hostile 93% of citizens — a civil war is merely a matter of time. In Iraq, a Sunni minority ruled over a Shiite majority, yet the Middle East is mostly Sunni. Alawites can only be found in Syria. Should this happen, and the Golan will be deliberately inhabited by Syrian citizens, the terrible ethnic war will also immediately boil over to our Galilee. There will be neither stability nor peace; it will only open the door for much worse trouble.

The Syrian regime has made a reputation of forced transfers of its oppressed citizens: It already transferred about one million Syrian citizens to Lebanon in order to take over its economy, and now another one million Syrians were transferred from the east of the country, under terrible conditions of coercion and brutality. This, of course, does not stop the Syrian regime from raising a hue and cry in respect to Israel’s “horrific acts” in Gaza.

Fortunately, we have the Golan in order to isolate us from the civil war that will be raging in Syria, as happened in its neighboring country, Iraq. The Golan also serves as a buffer in the face of the brutal Syrian regime; it is doubtful whether the US president knew what the regime is doing to more than one million of its own miserable citizens when he decided to renew diplomatic ties with Damascus. It is the very same Syria whose regime is still the only suspect in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

After reading this article, no Israeli would again be able to claim: I didn’t know. Should the Golan Heights be handed over to Syria, the plateau will be filled with people incited against us and deliberately used to target northern Israel, in an organized and unorganized manner. In a world of lies, deception, and concealment of the truth, this article is a warning.

           — Hat tip: RH [Return to headlines]



Barry Rubin: When It’s Necessary and Desirable to Assassinate Terrorists

There has been a huge international controversy about the assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, a leading Hamas terrorist, in Dubai on January 19. I have no idea who did it but have some points to make on the subject.

1. Generally speaking, media coverage almost never (in Europe) or only minimally (in the United States) talks about what Mabhouh actually did to merit his end. The New York Times had the following paragraph at the very end of its story:

“Mr. Mabhouh had a role in the 1989 abduction and killing of two Israeli soldiers, and was also involved in smuggling weapons into Gaza, Israel and Hamas have said. Israel officials say the weapons came from Iran.”

It would seem that there would be more discussion of the deeds of such people so they are not portrayed, at least implicitly, as innocent victims. Readers could weigh the assassination against their crimes, which would otherwise go unhindered and unpunished. Mabhouh was probably in Dubai arranging more arms’ shipments from Iran so that Hamas could go to war again, causing deaths on both sides. He was a real war criminal, in contrast to the bogus ones fabricated by the terrorist-sponsoring dictatorships which seem to have so much influence on the “human rights” agenda.

2. As long as Western states do nothing to help bring Hamas or Hizballah terrorists to justice, and since Israel has no way of getting these people before a court, it has no option other than the extra-judicial one. Remember that an Israeli cabinet minister is more likely to face prosecution in the United Kingdom nowadays than a terrorist who has murdered Israeli civilians.

Some European countries—France and Italy have admitted as much regarding past deals—have secret agreements with terrorist groups to allow them to operate freely as long as they don’t do attacks within the country. Other terrorists—like the Palestinians who hijacked the Achille Lauro cruise ship and murdered an American citizen or one of the Libyan masterminds of the Lockerbie plane bombing that killed scores of passengers, mainly Americans—have been released from prison without completing their terms.

This point of international culpability in letting certain terrorists escape or function isn’t brought up, explained, or seriously discussed: What do you do if specific people are attacking you and there’s no other option to stopping them? If the United States could assassinate Usama bin Ladin or other top al-Qaida terrorists whom it could not capture shouldn’t it do so? Of course it should.

3. There is a cliché when talking about counter-terrorism to the effect that getting a specific individual doesn’t matter as there is always someone to replace him. But in terrorism, as in other aspects of life, there are more effective and less effective individuals. Since Israel eliminated Hamas’s master bombmaker-who not only made bombs but trained others—in 1995, less capable people replacing him in that line of work have managed to blow themselves up a lot.

The terrorist Imad Mugniya, who someone killed in Damascus, was a unique individual since he had personally worked with the Palestinians, Hizballah, Syria, and Iran. Given his energy, ability, and connections he was not really replaceable.

Mabhouh was in a similar position, the top Hamas arms’ procurer who enjoyed the trust of the Iranians and who knew how to get lots of rockets and other equipment quickly and consistently.

These are not people who merely carried out a specific attack but those who make possible the staging of dozens of attacks.

Of course, terrorism doesn’t go away-expecting that it will do so is a Western act of wishful thinking-but the point is to reduce the number and effectiveness of attacks, and thus the number of casualties.

There are other advantages to eliminating key terrorist operatives. Often it can spark factional conflicts which make terrorist groups spend more time on internal battles. It also sparks mistrust among terrorist partners. If Mugniya can be assassinated in the neighborhood of Damascus that is the most secure place in all of Syria, can Iran and Hizballah trust Syria? Where did the leak occur? Who is infiltrated by the enemy?

Indeed, though outsiders may understate this reality, there is more than a seed of suspicion planted…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Divorced Before Puberty

By Nicholas D. Kristof

It’s hard to imagine that there have been many younger divorcées — or braver ones — than a pint-size third grader named Nujood Ali.

Nujood is a Yemeni girl, and it’s no coincidence that Yemen abounds both in child brides and in terrorists (and now, thanks to Nujood, children who have been divorced). Societies that repress women tend to be prone to violence.

For Nujood, the nightmare began at age 10 when her family told her that she would be marrying a deliveryman in his 30s. Although Nujood’s mother was unhappy, she did not protest. “In our country it’s the men who give the orders, and the women who follow them,” Nujood writes in a powerful new autobiography just published in the United States this week, “I Am Nujood, Age 10 and Divorced.”

Her new husband forced her to drop out of school (she was in the second grade) because a married woman shouldn’t be a student. At her wedding, Nujood sat in the corner, her face swollen from crying.

Nujood’s father asked the husband not to touch her until a year after she had had her first menstrual period. But as soon as they were married, she writes, her husband forced himself on her.

He soon began to beat her as well, the memoir says, and her new mother-in-law offered no sympathy. “Hit her even harder,” the mother-in-law would tell her son.

Nujood had heard that judges could grant divorces, so one day she sneaked away, jumped into a taxi and asked to go to the courthouse.

“I want to talk to the judge,” the book quotes Nujood as forlornly telling a woman in the courthouse.

“Which judge are you looking for?”

“I just want to speak to a judge, that’s all.”

“But there are lots of judges in this courthouse.”

“Take me to a judge — it doesn’t matter which one!”

When she finally encountered a judge, Nujood declared firmly: “I want a divorce!”

Yemeni journalists turned Nujood into a cause célèbre, and she eventually won her divorce. The publicity inspired others, including an 8-year-old Saudi girl married to a man in his 50s, to seek annulments and divorces.

As a pioneer, Nujood came to the United States and was honored in 2008 as one of Glamour magazine’s “Women of the Year.”

           — Hat tip: Zenster [Return to headlines]



GOP Reps. Want Charges Dropped Against Seals Accused of Abusing Terror Suspect

Two Republican lawmakers are seeking to have charges dropped against three Navy SEALs facing court-martial for accusations of abusing a terror suspect arrested for an ambush killing of U.S. contractors in Iraq.

The SEALs — Special Warfare Operators 2nd Class Matthew McCabe and Jonathan Keefe and Special Warfare Operator 1st Class Julio Huertas — were part of a team that in September 2009 captured Ahmed Hashim Abed, the suspected plotter behind the murder and mutilation of four Blackwater USA contractors in Fallujah in 2004.

The contractors’ bodies were burned and left hanging from a bridge. The image came to symbolize the rise of Al Qaeda in Iraq and the brutality of the enemy Americans face there.

McCabe is accused of punching Abed in the stomach and giving him a bloody lip during the arrest.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Death Penalty for 12 Extremists

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 4 — Twelve extreme Islamist terrorists have been sentenced to death by a military tribunal in Beirut for taking part in clashes against the Lebanese army in the refugee camp Nahr al Bared in 2007. The tribunal sentenced the extremists for “forming an armed group with terrorist aims” and for killing Lebanese soldiers and civilians. The men were all members of Fatah al Islam, a group inspired by al Qaeda, and six of them were Palestinian. From May to September 2007, over 400 people, almost 200 of them Lebanese soldiers, were killed in battles inside and around the Palestinian camp close to the northern port of Tripoli. Three of the terrorists were sentenced in absentia. The suspected leader of the group, Shaker al Abbsi, is still on the run. In recent weeks another dozen members of Fatah al Islam were sentenced to death, something that is hardly ever carried out in Lebanon, however.DAC (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Pleased With Raid Against PKK in Belgium

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said today Turkey was pleased with the operation being waged in Belgium against terrorist organization PKK. At a joint conference with his New Zealander counterpart Murray McCully in Ankara, Davutoglu thanked Belgian authorities for their cooperation. Belgian Police launched a wide-scale operation against terrorist organization in Belgium Thursday morning, raiding 25 locations including the studios of ROJ TV, broadcast organ of the terrorist organization, in Denderleeuw town near Brussels. The Police arrested several members of the organization including former legislator of the dissolved Democratic Party, Remzi Kartal, and his assistant Zubeyr Aydar. “We are very pleased because Belgium fulfilled its responsibility,” said Davutoglu. Belgium’s stance following the suit of Italy and France, is a clear message to those who provide resources to acts of terror,” said Davutoglu. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Lay Women Rip Veils in the Streets

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — In a demonstration that was more unique than rare in Turkey, against the feared Islamization of the country, roughly a hundred lay women, belonging to the main opposition party, demonstrated in the southern city of Mersin, ripping apart dozens of turbans, the traditional Islamic Turkish veil, and trampling the pieces. This was stated by local media, which published several images of the protest, which took place before the so-called ‘House of Ataturk’, situated on the street of the same name, in Mersin. Appearing for the protest were the “die hard” members of the People’s Republican Party (CHP), the political party founded in 1923 by Kemal Ataturk, the father of modern Turkey, with the name of the People’s Party, on the occasion, yesterday, of the anniversary of the abolition of the Califate in Turkey. The initiative, more than being anti-Islamic, was against the CHP, which last year, in an attempt to gain back popular support and votes before the administrative elections of March 29, 2009, had launched a so-called “openness to the turban”, (a piece of clothing that the secular Turkish Constitution forbids being worn in universities and in all other government offices), thus irritating thousands of its own supporters, both men and women, mostly lay. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Massacres of Armenians, We Won’t Cave Into Pressure

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — “We will not cave into pressure and Turkey will never make decisions under pressure from anyone,” said Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu. Speaking about normalising relations with Armenia, the minister said that “this will require common sense from all parties involved. Aside from the last 25 years, we have lived in peace with the Armenians for 10 centuries. Any intervention by other parties will only damage the process of normalising relations between Ankara and Yerevan”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenian Massacres; Use of Incirlik Air Base at Risk

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — In reaction to the approval yesterday evening by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives on a resolution in which the Armenian massacres that took place during the Ottoman empire are defined as “genocide”, Ankara could prohibit the US from using the Incirlik air base (southern Turkey) which is currently used by the US military to supply their troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. The news was reported by daily newspapers Zaman and Hurriyet. The Turkish threat to not allow the US to use Incirlik is not new. The same threat was made in October 2007 after the Foreign Affairs Committee of Congress approved a similar motion to the one approved yesterday evening. Again at that time Ankara recalled their then ambassador, Nabi Sensoy, back to Turkey for consultations. All the Turkish daily newspapers today headline on yesterday evening’s vote in Washington and underline how the US President Barack Obama “did not do enough” to block the resolution. Daily newspaper Vatan, in particular, highlights the “hardly orthodox” methods which it says the Committee head, Democrat Howard Berman, is said to have used to get his more rebellious colleagues to vote. For his part, Murat Mercan, Chairman of the Turkish Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee, who is currently in Washington, has described yesterday’s vote as “a comedy”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenian Massacres; USA, Ankara Not Mincing Words

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — The vote of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the US House of Representatives on a non-binding resolution in which the 1915 and 1917 Armenian massacres that took place during the Ottoman empire are defined as “genocide” was expected in Ankara. So much so that, with unusual speed in Turkey, as soon as it was discovered from the website of the Turkish Cabinet Office that out of the 46 members of the Committee, 23 against 22 voted in favour of the document, a message of condemnation immediately appeared. Premier Tayyip Erdogan expressed concern over the consequences of the vote and underlined that the taking of a stance by the parliamentary body “risks damaging Turkish-American relations, as well as the process of normalisation between Turkey and Armenia.” Shortly after, it was announced that the Turkish Ambassador to the US, Namik Tan, has been immediately recalled to Ankara “for consultation”. Tan arrived in Washington just a few weeks but is already an expert on America. That things were not looking good for Ankara was already clear a few days ago, but events have taken a turn for the worse in the last 48 hours. Turkey was opposed to the approval of the document insomuch as it has always denied that the number of Armenians killed during the massacres total one and a half million (for Ankara there were “only” 300,000) and that they died as a result of a civil war and not due to genocide. Thus yesterday morning Turkey had already raised not only the possibility of withdrawing their Ambassador if the resolution were approved, but also the potential of cancelling contracts worth 45 billion dollars with five large US defence companies. Furthermore, Ankara has circulated — via the Turkish press — a so-called ‘Plan B’ to be implemented if the document is approved. This plan sets out, amongst other things, that Turkey could potentially not ratify the protocols of normalisation of relations signed in October in Zurich with Armenia, considered to be important for the stability of the Caucasus. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Warns US Over Armenian ‘Genocide’ Vote

Foreign Minister Davutoglu cautions Obama administration of negative diplomatic consequences if it doesn’t impede American resolution on World War I-era killing of Armenians. US Secretary of State Clinton says will ‘work very hard to ensure the resolution does not go to the house floor’

Associated Press Published: 03.05.10, 21:47 / Israel News

Turkey warned the Obama administration on Friday of negative diplomatic consequences if it doesn’t impede a US resolution branding the World War I-era killing of Armenians genocide.

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey, a key Muslim ally of the US, would assess what measures it would take, adding that the issue was a matter of “honor” for his country.

Meanwhile, a senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said there was an understanding with the Democratic leadership in Congress that the resolution would not proceed to a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives.

A US congressional committee approved the measure Thursday. The 23-22 vote would send the measure to the full House of Representatives, if the leadership decided to bring it up. Minutes after the vote, Turkey withdrew its ambassador to the US.

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton did not answer a question about the diplomatic fallout Friday.

“The Obama administration strongly opposes the resolution that was passed by only one vote by the House committee and will work very hard to make sure it does not go to the house floor,” Clinton told reporters in Guatemala City, Guatemala.

Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated and those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

President Barack Obama’s administration had been silent about the resolution until shortly before the vote when it said it opposed its passage. Turkey wants stronger action to block the resolution.

“The picture shows that the US administration did not put enough weight behind the issue,” Davutoglu told reporters. “We are seriously disturbed by the result.”

“We expect the US administration to, as of now, display more effective efforts. Otherwise the picture ahead will not be a positive one,” he said. He complained of a lack of “strategic vision” in Washington.

The measure was approved at a time when Washington is expected to press Turkey to back sanctions against Iran to be approved in the UN Security Council, where Turkey currently holds a seat. Turkish cooperation also is important to US operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

‘Domestic political games’

Also at stake are defense contracts. Turkey is an important market for US defense companies, many of which had lobbied against the measure.

“We have had good cooperation with the US administration at all levels,” Davutoglu said. “We would expect our contributions not to be sacrificed to domestic political games.”

Davutoglu said the US ambassador had been called to the Foreign Ministry for talks. The ambassador, James Jeffrey, told reporters the Obama administration was opposed to the measure being voted in the full House.

The foreign minister said Turkey was determined to press ahead with efforts to normalize ties with Armenia, but said Turkey would not be “pressured” into taking any decisions.

He added that the vote had put the ratification of agreements to normalize ties with Armenia at risk.

Last year, Turkey and Armenia agreed to normalize ties by establishing diplomatic relations and reopen their shared border, but the agreements have yet to be approved by their parliaments.

Turkey has been dragging its feet, fearful of upsetting ally Azerbaijan, which balks at any suggestion of the reopening of the border until its own dispute with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh is settled. The region in Azerbaijan has been under Armenian control.

Armenian groups have sought congressional affirmation of the killings as genocide for decades and welcomed Thursday’s vote.

“The problem that America faces is how to recognize the Armenian genocide without damaging its strategic alliance with Ankara. But at some point, we must adopt moral positions,” Mourad Papazian, president of the western European branch of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, told AP Television News in Paris.

He stood in front of a monument overlooking the Seine River to victims of the killings.

“The reaction is unanimous, that is to say that the Armenian residents and the diaspora welcome the decision” by the House foreign affairs committee, he said.

Armenians abroad — estimated at 5.7 million — outnumber the 3.2 million living in Armenia itself, the smallest of the ex-Soviet republics.

In Ankara, dozens of members of a small left-wing party staged a protest near the heavily protected US Embassy, shouting: “Genocide is an American lie!” Police allowed a small group to approach and lay a black wreath at its gates.

The genocide issue is one of many obstacles to Turkey’s membership in the European Union. Turkey has been struggling to block similar genocide bills in parliaments across the globe.

The US congressional vote came at a time when relations with the United States — strained by Turkey’s refusal to allow its territory to be used for the invasion of Iraq — had recently improved. Turkey was the first Muslim country Obama visited after taking office.

           — Hat tip: RH [Return to headlines]



Turkish Premier Erdogan to Receive “Arab Nobel Prize”

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 5 — Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan will travel to Saudi Arabia next week to receive the King Faisal International Prize for Service to Islam, popularly known as the “Arab Nobel Prize,” as Anatolia news agency reports. Erdogan will visit Saudi Arabia on March 8 and 9. Prior to his visit, Erdogan, who spoke to the International Islamic News Agency, said that he considered the prize was awarded not only to him but also to Turkish nation and Turkey. The prize, which is given every year by Saudi Arabia’s King Faisal Foundation, is presented to scientists and people who create positive differences in the world and make contributions to Islam. This year, eight people from seven countries were announced winners of the prize in different categories such as, Service to Islam, Medicine, Arabic Language and Literature, Islamic Studies, and Science. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Global Jihad Creeping Into Russia’s Insurgency

The Islamist insurgency in Russia’s North Caucasus region appears to be mutating from a grassroots separatist movement towards global jihad or holy war, whose goals, propaganda and patronage point abroad.

In February Russia’s most wanted guerrilla, Chechen-born Doku Umarov, vowed on Islamist websites to spread his attacks from the Muslim-dominated North Caucasus into the nation’s heartland, wreaking havoc through jihad.

His pledge follows escalating violence in the form of shootings and suicide bombs targeting authorities over the last year in the mountainous North Caucasus, particularly Chechnya, site of two separatist wars since the mid-1990s, and the provinces flanking it, Ingushetia and Dagestan.

Regional Muslim leaders and rebels revile each other as blasphemous and criminal. But after years of the Soviet Union suppressing religion, both welcome a Muslim revival that has brought elaborate new mosques, government-sponsored hajj trips to Mecca and a bubbling interest in Arabic.

Alexander Cherkasov, who has closely followed the North Caucasus for 15 years for rights group Memorial, said whereas in the past rebels wanted freedom from Russia, a struggle that dates back over 200 years, now they are influenced by jihadism, a global fight against alleged enemies of Islam.

“Part of it is homegrown. Corruption leads many to seek out what they call true Islam, but political Islam, by way of foreign financing and insurgents, is certainly playing a role,” he told Reuters.

Al-Qaeda links?

Al-Qaeda operative and Egyptian militant Makhmoud Mokhammed Shaaban in Dagestan, who the FSB security service said had masterminded several bombings.

A myriad of web sites that have come to characterize the insurgency show videos of “martyrs”, something unheard of in the region five years ago. They feature mostly local men, framed by Caucasus flags, chanting in Arabic ahead of suicide missions.

Over the last year, public statements of support for Doku Umarov and other Caucasus rebel leaders have come from a leading al-Qaeda mentor, Jordanian Sheikh Abu Mohammad al-Maqdisi.

U.S. intelligence officials say Maqdisi is a major jihadi mentor who wields more influence over Islamist ideology than leading militants such as Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri.

In an open letter to Umarov last year, which was posted on unofficial Islamist websites, Maqdisi said “it is my great pleasure to express my alignment with, patronage for, and support to the Mujahideen of the Caucasus.”

Rebel leader Alexander Tikhomirov, an accomplished cleric who renamed himself Said Buryatsky after his native East Siberian Buryatia region, trained for jihad in Egypt for many years, where he learned fluent Arabic, political analysts say.

Buryatsky took responsibility for the deadliest attack in the North Caucasus in four years last August when a suicide bomber killed at least 20 and injured 138 at a police headquarters in Ingushetia.

Christopher Langton of the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London told Reuters that “jihadism” in the North Caucasus is “energized” partly by links to Afghanistan and the Middle East composed of a mixture of smuggling, trade, Islamic non-governmental organizations and charities.

The FSB, successor to the KGB, has long said the insurgency has links to al Qaeda although regional leaders reject that.

“We have identified enormous financial influence from Afghanistan and Pakistan,” said Sergei Goncharov, head of a group of veterans of an elite KGB force.

Isolation tactic

But Kremlin critics say the government blames al-Qaeda to cover up its share of responsibility for the region’s poverty and endemic corruption, which also inspires youths to turn to extremism.

“Moscow wants to conceptualize the North Caucasus, they are interested in isolating it from the rest of Russia,” Glen Howard, President of the Washington-based think tank Jamestown Foundation, told Reuters.

Regional leaders often play down the insurgency as a whole.

Moscow-backed hardline Chechen boss Ramzan Kadyrov says there are fewer than 30 insurgents left in his republic. He has also accused the West of financing the Islamist insurgency, as well as plotting to seize the entire Caucasus region.

Ingushetia’s leader Yunus-Bek Yevkurov maintains that deep poverty alone fuels discontent.

Over the last two years, deaths due to violent incidents have shot up dramatically in the North Caucasus, from just over 40 in January 2008 to 140 in August 2009, according to a study by Washington’s Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

There is now alarm that Islamist extremism could spread to other parts of Russia, home to around 20 million Muslims, more than half of whom live outside the North Caucasus.

Paul Quinn-Judge, from the International Crisis Group, warned that the violence could indeed spread: “The guerrillas are trying to extend the war to Russia proper.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Lawmakers Review ‘Male Mutilation’

Bill before legislature would ban circumcision

Lawmakers in Massachusetts are attacking the practice by Jews and other groups of circumcision with a bill to label the process genital mutilation and outlaw it.

The proposal would make Massachusetts the first U.S. state to take such action.

The bill calls for outlawing circumcision of males of any age except in cases of medical necessity and also outlaws all forms of circumcision or alteration of the genitals in females.

The most controversial part of the bill appears to be the provision to outlaw circumcision in infant boys.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Harriet’s Man Ban in ‘Sexist’ Commons: MPs Vote to Ditch Term ‘Chairman’ For Gender-Neutral ‘Chair’

Parliament has banished the word ‘chairman’ from its proceedings for being too sexist.

MPs voted by 206 to 90 to replace it with the gender neutral ‘chair’ as part of sweeping reforms in the Commons.

The move was endorsed by Commons Leader Harriet Harman, pictured, who has spearheaded a feminist agenda at Westminster.

But Tory MP Nadine Dorries condemned the move as ‘ridiculous’.

She said: ‘What a complete nonsense. MPs should be getting on with the more substantive reforms in the Commons rather than dealing with this politically correct frippery.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Parents’ Anger After Class of Seven-Year-Olds is Shown ‘Graphic Sex Cartoon’ At School

A mother has taken her seven-year-old daughter out of school after she was made to watch a cartoon showing a couple chasing each other around a bed and having sex.

Seven and eight-year-old pupils watched the controversial Channel 4 sex education DVD, Living and Growing, at their village primary school.

A voice-over on the DVD describes the sex as ‘exciting’.

Lisa Bullivant, from Legbourne, Lincolnshire, was so upset by the ‘graphic’ content, she took her daughter out of East Wold Primary School and placed her with another school.

Mrs Bullivant said: ‘The cartoon was very graphic. My daughter was frightened and children have unfortunately been copying what they have seen. Parents should have been given the decision of whether the video should have been shown or not.

‘Seven to nine-year-olds should not possess this knowledge. There is no educational or psychological benefit or need for children of this age to have full knowledge of what sexual intercourse actually entails.’

[Return to headlines]

General


Ihsanoglu Calls for a Holistic Approach to Human Rights

The Secretary General of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, called for adopting a “holistic approach that covers all human rights for all individuals and peoples when carrying out an objective assessment of the lessons learned.” He noted with appreciation the mechanism of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) which forms an efficient tool to promote Human Rights’ values. Ihsanoglu emphasized that the Human Rights Council’s role “should be constructive and remedial and not judgmental or selective.”

He said this in his statement at the High Level Segment of the 13th Session of the Human Rights Council (HRC) held in Geneva on Monday, 1st March 2010. Ihsanoglu called on the HRC to effectively address the plight and permanent suffering of the Palestinian people under the continuous and deliberate aggression by the Israeli military forces and a frequency of flagrant violations of their basic human rights in light of the various United Nations independent mechanisms, including the recent Goldstone Report, which have highlighted grave breaches of international humanitarian and human rights law that underpin contentions of war crimes and crimes against humanity. He demanded the HRC in particular and also other UN bodies to implement the recommendations of the Goldstone Report and ensure action on the Report. Additionally, he reiterated his call for a Conference of High Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention on measures to enforce the Convention in the Occupied Palestinian territories.

Moreover, Ihsanoglu declared that the OIC is keen to encourage efforts for promoting and protecting human rights of the people of Jammu and Kashmir and described the resumption of engagement between Pakistan and India as a positive development.

The Secretary General expressed his concern over the rising trend of Islamophobia whose manifestations have caused serious disturbance of public order and which must not be allowed to threaten regional and global peace and security. On this issue, he said that the “OIC believes in according primacy to multilateralism to dealing with such issues of global concern.” He also called for a constructive engagement in dealing with a range of issues such as discrimination, intolerance and incitement to hatred on religious grounds, limits to freedom of opinion and expression and complementary standards.

Ihsanoglu stated that the task of improving human rights conditions on a global scale should be seen as a shared responsibility that must be borne collectively by all nations represented in the family of the United Nations. However, he emphasized that the OIC believes that tackling contemporary threats to global peace and security posed by conflicts and terrorism solely from the security angle would not lead to a durable and comprehensive solutions. Hence, there is a need for a proper understanding of the root causes, which often lie in political grievances, backwardness, underdevelopment and concerns related to preservation of national, ethnic, cultural and religious identities, he added.

The Secretary General declared that the OIC is on the verge of establishing an Independent Permanent Commission on Human Rights whose “establishment must be viewed as a landmark event and a most positive development in the four-decade long history of the OIC. The Commission is expected to constitute an important pillar of the ongoing process of reform at the OIC with a view to transforming the OIC into a body that would effectively cope with the existing and emerging challenges faced by the Muslim world.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100304

Financial Crisis
» USA — Asia: This Year, US Public Debt Could Reach End Game
» ‘We Give You Cash, You Give US Corfu!’ German MPs Suggest Greece Sell Its Islands (And the Acropolis) To Pay Off Its Debt
 
USA
» 2 Pentagon Police Officers Shot
» Abuse of Power
» Carbon Market Collapse Brings Gore Out of Hiding
» Colleges’ Liberal Indoctrination ‘Infuriating’
» Feds Weigh Expansion of Internet Monitoring
» NAACP Image Award Reaches New Low
» Obama Czar’s Shocking Communist Connections
» Some Republicans Criticize Judge Pick
 
Europe and the EU
» Fiat Auto Spinoff Plan on the Table
» France: 20 Million Euros for Storm-Hit Oyster Farmers
» Germany: Islamist Militants Jailed Over Terror Plot
» Italy: Premier’s Party Cannot Run in Rome Area
» Italy: Airline-Style Day- And Time-Specific Tickets for High-Speed Trains
» Italy: Iranian ‘Spies’ Among 7 Arrested in Arms Trafficking Bust
» Italy: Senate Accepts Di Girolamo’s Resignation
» Italy: Fiat: Group Share in Italy Down to 31% in February
» Italy: Premier Blames Electoral Officials
» Napolitano: Anachronistic Anti-European Forces
» Netherlands: Organ Donation ‘Before Death’ Idea Slammed
» Sweden: Malmö Mayor Blasted for ‘Israeli Lobby’ Comment
» Swedish Weapons Exports on the Rise
» UK: Pupils Aged Five on Hate Register: Teachers Must Log Playground Taunts for Government Database
» UK: Pay-as-You-Throw: Council to Launch Pilot Scheme That Could Pave the Way for National Bin Taxes
 
Mediterranean Union
» EU-Morocco: Farm Products and Seafood, Talks Continue
 
North Africa
» Cinema: Guido Chiesa Film in Tunisia, Sahara Setting Again
» Egypt in Talks With China Over Suez Economic Zone, Minister
» Egypt: Ghali Urges to Set Up Expatriates’ Council
» Egyptian Court Acquits Muslims Who Beheaded a Christian
» Libya and US in War of Words
» Tunisia: Water Reserves Increase
» Tunisia: Pumpkins for Foreign Markets
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Arab League: Yes to Indirect Israeli-Palestinian Talks
» Arabs Manipulate Media, Digital Pogrom
» Israel — Palestine: Jerusalem: Seeds of the Third Intifada Planted in the “ King’s Garden “
» Lieberman Wants Police Chief Investigated
» Worldwide Initiatives Against Israeli ‘Apartheid’
 
Middle East
» Books: Amoz Oz Translated Into Arabic to Help Understanding
» Hamas Leader Killed; Payoneer Network Involves Israel
» Iraq: From Baghdad to Mosul, For Peace and the Rights of Minorities
» Iraq: Militants Arrested Over Christian Attacks
» Reflecting…With the Bishop of Kirkuk, On the Iraqi Ethno-Religious Mosaic
» Saudi Arabia Removes Embargo on Tunisian Meats
» Syrian FM Urges Unified Stand Against Israeli Policy
» Turkey: Armenians; $45 Billion Ultimatum to Washington
» Turkey: Armenians; Ankara May Recall Ambassador
» Turkey: Armenians; Ankara Prepares for “Plan B”
» Turkey: Armenians; US Gov’t Calls for Blocking Resolution
» Turkey: Armenian Massacre; H. Clinton Warns Foreign Commission
» Turkey: Massacre of Armenians; Obama Calls Gul, NTV
» Yemen: Gov’t: 11 Al Qaeda Members Arrested in Sanaa
 
Caucasus
» Kazakhstan — Europe: Kazakh Oil to Reach Trieste
 
South Asia
» ‘He’s Just a Little Boy’: Mother’s Tears as British Son, 5, Is Kidnapped and Held for £100,000 Ransom on Pakistan Holiday
» Pakistan: Punjab: Christian Couple Touches Qur’an With Dirty Hands, Gets 25 Years in Prison
» Pakistan: Kidnapped Sikhs Were Forced to Cut Hair and Convert to Islam
 
Far East
» Chinese Labour Shortage Drives Up Wages

Financial Crisis


USA — Asia: This Year, US Public Debt Could Reach End Game

Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke issues the warning. Asian nations, China and India first, are no longer willing to purchase securities issued by the US Treasury, which this year has about US$ two trillion short-term debt to refinance. Beijing is buying gold instead.

Milan (AsiaNews) — For at least four years, AsiaNews has sounded the alarm bells against the risks due to the huge size reached by speculative finance[1]. In 2008, we said that the attempt to save US banks could push the US debt beyond the point of solvency (see Maurizio d’Orlando, “US debt approaches insolvency . . .,” in AsiaNews 19 December 2008)[2]. Back them it could appear a bit overblown, but now even US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S Bernanke is warning the US Congress about the danger. In a statement before the House Financial Services Committee,[3] he said that the US public debt might no longer be sustainable very soon. Financial jargon aside, the subtitle of an article by The Washington Times—Stage is set in U.S. for a Greek tragedy—says it all. Interviewed for the article, Bernanke says the United States is likely to face a debt crisis like the one in Greece sooner than later, “not something that is 10 years away”.

In 2008, the size of the debt was such that it was quite clear that it was not sustainable. Now we have a timeframe to measure the likelihood of insolvency for the US public debt, and it is this year. The reason for that is described in an article whose title needs no explanation: “The bankruptcy of the United States is now certain”.[4]

The abyss of debt

By the end of 2010, the US Treasury will have to refinance US$ 2 trillion in short-term debt, plus additional deficit spending for this year, estimated to be around US$ 1.5 trillion (US$ 1.6 trillion today two months after the original article was published). Together, the US Treasury will need to borrow US$ 3.5 trillion (US$ 3.6 according to this writer) in just one year.

In 1999, two well-known economists—Alan Greenspan and Pablo Guidotti—published a formula in an academic paper. Kept secret for a long time, it is designed to predict with precision when a country’s public debt will lead it to be insolvent. Called the Greenspan-Guidotti rule, it says that to avoid a default, countries should maintain hard currency reserves equal to at least 100 per cent of their short-term foreign debt maturities.

According to the author, the United States holds 8,133.5 metric tonnes of gold (the world’s largest holder). At November 2009 dollar values, that is about U$ 300 billion.[5] The US strategic petroleum reserve shows a current total position of 725 million barrels. At current dollar prices, that is roughly US$ 58 billion worth of oil. According to the IMF, the US has US$ 136 billion in foreign currency reserves. Altogether, that is some US$ 500 billion in reserves (US$ 455.5 billion according to AsiaNews).

Foreigners hold 44 per cent of US$ two trillion short-term US debt; that is US$ 880 billion. Total domestic savings in the United States are only around US$ 600 billion annually. If the United States needs to sell US$ 3.5 trillion (or US$ 3.6 trillion) in Treasury bills, and all domestic savings combined are put into US Treasury debt, the United States will still fall short by nearly US$ 3 trillion. Where is the rest of the money going to come from?

China’s gold

Not China, nor India or any other Asian countries. Last year, China has in fact proportionately reduced its holdings in US Treasury bills in relation to rest of its reserves.

Recently, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) put up 191.3 tonnes of gold for sale. Some analysts had earlier suggested that China might be interested in buying it. Assets in dollars are estimated to represent over 70 per cent of China’s US$ 2.4 trillion foreign exchange reserves. As of April 2009, China held 1,054 tonnes of gold or 1.2 per cent of its GDP. That falls well below the world average. Indeed, gold represents less than 10 per cent of China’s total reserves.

According to the China Daily[6], a semi-official mouthpiece for the Communist Party of China, China is not likely to buy IMF gold because it might upset the market. However, some Chinese commentators believe that Beijing should increase its gold reserves to 1,800. Sources told AsiaNews that China’s real goal is 4,000 tonnes.

The same is true for other Asian countries. For instance, India, Mauritius and Sri Lanka have bought 212 tonnes sold by the IMF.

As for Japan, it is likely to continue avoiding open confrontation with the United States; but the real intentions of its top financial circles might be inferred from a mysterious and unsolved incident that occurred last summer when two officials from Japan’s central bank were caught at the Italian-Swiss border town of Chiasso carrying US Treasury bills with a nominal value of US$ 134.5 billion.

Since 1945, the US dollar has been the main international reserve currency. In theory, this gave the US Federal Reserve the power to issue debt securities at will, with the value of international trading assets. However, the Greenspan-Guidotti rule restricts this power.

Whenever US insolvency becomes self-evident, no one dare say they did not know. The Greenspan who came up with the aforementioned formula is the same Alan Greenspan who chaired the Federal Reserve for 18 years and allowed speculative. i.e. “structured” finance to expand (based on poorly tested mathematical algorithms).

This is the same Greenspan who in 1977 wrote a prophetic PhD dissertation (which was removed from his university at his request in 1987, when he became Fed chairman) on how financial bubbles develop in real estate and then burst. Not only was Greenspan aware of it, but so were US top financial circles. In other periods of history, this could lead to accusations of “treason”, but today our sense of personal and collective responsibility is more faded and faint than before. Alternatively, perhaps, there is a level of ultimate responsibility that is darker and runs deeper that the guilt of any one individual.[7]

[1]See also Maurizio d’Orlando, “Clashes between US, China and Iran may account for record gold prices,” in AsiaNews, 12 May 2006; ibid, “War scenarios [. . .] and the collapse of the world’s financial system” , in AsiaNews, 7 August 2006; ibid, “Chinese stocks and the risk of economic crisis,” in AsiaNews,22 May 2007; see also other articles by AsiaNews on the subrime crisis, toxic securities, bank rescue, etc.

[2]See, by the same writer, “Subprime lending to trigger world’s worst financial crisis since 1929,” in AsiaNews, 19 September 2007; ibid, “Depth of the abyss of economic, social, political chaos,” in AsiaNews, 30 September 2008; ibid, “Paulson plan: useless and harmful to democracy,” in AsiaNews, 6 October 2008; ibid, “The way out of the crisis is neither Left nor Right,” in AsiaNews, 25/11/2008; ibid, “Economic crisis: US, China and the coming monetary storm,” in AsiaNews, 09/12/2008.

[3]See Patrice Hill, “Bernanke delivers blunt warning on U.S. debt,” in The Washington Times, 25 February 2010.

[4] See Porter Stansberry, “The bankruptcy of the United States is now certain, in The Daily Crux, 24 November 2009.

[5] According to this writer’s calculations, the current estimated value is lower, US$ 261, 49 billion.

[6]See “China unlikely to buy gold from INF: Official,” in China Daily, 25 February 2010.

[7]Curiously, Greenspan began a close association with Ayn Rand, who developed the philosophy of ‘Objectivism’, which influenced a satanic philosophy (as defined by Satanist Anton LaVey in his writings).

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



‘We Give You Cash, You Give US Corfu!’ German MPs Suggest Greece Sell Its Islands (And the Acropolis) To Pay Off Its Debt

‘The Greek state must sell stakes in companies and also assets such as, for example, unpopulated islands,’ said Frank Schaeffler, a member of parliament for the pro-business Free Democrats.

A legisltator in Chancellor Angela Merke;s conservative CDU party, Marco Wanderwitz, said Athens should provide ‘collateral for any money it receives from the European Union to help it out of its debt crisis — in this case, certain Greek islands also come into question.’

‘We give you cash, you give us Corfu!’ said the racy Bild national newspaper in a tone which many suspect was only half in jest.

That the suggestion came from Germans has only added more fuel to the fire raging between the two countries, with thrifty Teutons calling Greeks lazy spendthrifts and the Greeks retaliating by calling them Nazis with no compassion.

Berlin is seen as key to any eventual bailout if the Greek economy continues to crumble, thus threatening the beloved euro project at the heart of German politics since the end of WW2.

Greeks have been angered by what they perceive as a threatening line from a country which occupied their homeland and ravaged it during their stay in the 1940’s.

Greece’s deputy foreign minister, Dimitris Droutsas, was asked about the sale of the islands in an interview with Germany’s ARD TV.

‘I’ve also heard the suggestion we should sell the Acropolis,’ Droutsas said drily.

‘Suggestions like this are not appropriate at this time.’

Greece has around 6,000 islands off its coast, of which only 227 are inhabited, according to the country’s National Tourism Office website.

Flogging them off to developers would alleviate some of the pressures that Greece faces as it enters a new round of draconian austerity measures aimed at reining in a budget deficit more than four times above EU limits and staving off bankruptcy.

The Socialist government increased sales, tobacco and alcohol taxes and cut public sector holiday allowances to save 4.8 billion euros, equal to about two percent of gross domestic product (GDP), pensions in the public and private sector were also frozen and civil servants had their bonuses for holidays scrapped.

Mrs Merkel is set to hold crisis talks with Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou tomorrow to discuss the situation in Greece.

She is under pressure from German Chambers of Trade to get Greece to call off a boycott of German goods that got underway as soon as the mudslinging about national virtues occurred.

German car dealerships, a supermarket chain and even a pet food distributor from the Fatherland are all feeling the fury of the Greek response to German view of their national crisis in reduced sales.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

USA


2 Pentagon Police Officers Shot

WASHINGTON — A gunman coolly drew a weapon from his pocket and opened fire at the teeming subway entrance to the Pentagon complex Thursday evening, wounding two police officers before being shot and critically wounded, officials said.

The two officers suffered grazing wounds that were not life-threatening and were being treated in hospital, said Richard Keevill, chief of Pentagon police.

The suspect, believed to be a U.S. citizen, walked up to a security checkpoint at the Pentagon in an apparent attempt to get inside the massively fortified Defense Department headquarters, at about 6:40 p.m. “He just reached in his pocket, pulled out a gun and started shooting,” Keevill said. “He walked up very cool. He had no real emotion on his face.” The Pentagon officers returned fire with semiautomatic weapons.

Of the suspect, the chief said, “His injury is pretty critical.”

The assault at the very threshold of the Pentagon — the U.S. capital’s ground zero on Sept. 11, 2001 — came four months after a deadly attack on the Army’s Fort Hood, Texas, base allegedly by a U.S. Army psychiatrist with radical Islamic leanings. In the immediate aftermath Thursday, investigators did not think terrorism was involved but were not ruling that out and did not discuss possible motives.

Law enforcement sources identified the suspect as John Patrick Bedell, 36. They also said they were investigating whether a second person was somehow involved. No further information was available.

The subway station is immediately adjacent to the Pentagon building, a five-sided northern Virginia colossus across the Potomac River from Washington. Since a redesign following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the Pentagon, riders can no longer disembark directly into the building. Riders take a long escalator ride to the surface from the underground station, then pass through a security check outside the doors of the building, where further security awaits.

After the attack, all Pentagon entrances were secured, then all were reopened except one from the subway, said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman.

Keevill said the gunman gave no clue to the officers at the checkpoint about what he was going to do.

“There was no distress,” he said. “When he reached into his pocket they assumed he was going to get a pass and he came up with a gun.”

“He wasn’t pretending to be anyone. He was wearing a coat and walked up and just started shooting.”

A Pentagon official working late in the building said people inside first heard of the shooting on television. They were later told the building was locked down and to stay in place.

Then at around 7:30 p.m., they heard an announcement on the public address system that they could leave through Corridor 3 — one widely used to get access to one of the parking lots.

“We really don’t know anything, just that we can leave now through that corridor,” one official said on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak about the incident.

[Return to headlines]



Abuse of Power

‘An undemocratic disservice to our people and to the Senate’s institutional role.’

A string of electoral defeats and the great unpopularity of ObamaCare can’t stop Democrats from their self-appointed rendezvous with liberal destiny— ramming a bill through Congress on a narrow partisan vote. What we are about to witness is an extraordinary abuse of traditional Senate rules to pass a bill merely because they think it’s good for the rest of us, and because they fear their chance to build a European welfare state may never come again. ***

The vehicle is “reconciliation,” a parliamentary process that fast-tracks budget measures and was created in 1974 as a deficit-reduction tool. Limited to 20 hours of debate, reconciliation bills need a mere 50 votes in the Senate, with the Vice President as tie-breaker, thus circumventing the filibuster. Both Democrats and Republicans have frequently used reconciliation on budget bills, so Democrats are now claiming that using it to pass ObamaCare is no big deal.

Yet this shortcut has never been used for anything approaching the enormity of a national health-care entitlement. Democrats are only resorting to it now because their plan is in so much political trouble—within their own party, and even more among the general public—and because they’ve failed to make their case through persuasion.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Carbon Market Collapse Brings Gore Out of Hiding

We should ignore Al Gore’s bizarre Op-Ed in, where else, the New York Times but it needs analysis because it includes all the standard errors that entrap and confuse most people.

It also exposes him as a real hypocrite in his own words. The title “We can’t wish away Climate change” illustrates how little Gore knows or understands. No, we can’t wish it away because it has and will always exist.

[…]

Exploitation of Fear

In case you accept that climate change and global warming are normal, Gore has another fear — national security: “we need to deal with the national security risks of our growing dependence on a global oil market dominated by dwindling reserves in the most unstable region of the world”. But US dependence on foreign sources is a self inflicted wound that began with the military oil reserve set asides made after WWII, and aggravated by anti-nuclear campaigns and unnecessary excessive regulations in the name of environmentalism.

And if that fear doesn’t persuade you he has a third. “In fact, the crisis is still growing because we are continuing to dump 90 million tons of global warming pollution every 24 hours into the atmosphere — as if it were an open sewer. He cleverly doesn’t mention CO2 but the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says it caused all warming since 1950. CO2 is not a pollutant and is essential to life; its designation as such is part of the entire strategy of undermining industrialized nations. This paragraph starts with Gore’s wish that the climate crisis were an illusion. It is an illusion, as anyone who understands the science realizes, an illusion outlined and colored by the corrupt scientists of the CRU/IPCC.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Colleges’ Liberal Indoctrination ‘Infuriating’

Cites study that documents graduates’ shifting perspectives

Talk radio icon Rush Limbaugh says a new study of college students that indicates only a fraction are learning civics lessons but many are adopting liberalism is “infuriating” but not surprising.

Limbaugh cited the American Civic Literacy survey conducted periodically by the Intercollegiate Studies Institute.

Among the results were that 51 percent of the respondents could not name the three branches of government, and 27 percent could not name even one right or freedom guaranteed by the First Amendment.

“This goes on and on and on,” Limbaugh said.

However, the report concluded, colleges are doing an exemplary job indoctrinating students into liberalism.

[Comments from JD: see url for audio.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Feds Weigh Expansion of Internet Monitoring

Homeland Security and the National Security Agency may be taking a closer look at Internet communications in the future.

The Department of Homeland Security’s top cybersecurity official told CNET on Wednesday that the department may eventually extend its Einstein technology, which is designed to detect and prevent electronic attacks, to networks operated by the private sector. The technology was created for federal networks.

Greg Schaffer, assistant secretary for cybersecurity and communications, said in an interview that the department is evaluating whether Einstein “makes sense for expansion to critical infrastructure spaces” over time.

Not much is known about how Einstein works, and the House Intelligence Committee once charged that descriptions were overly “vague” because of “excessive classification.” The White House did confirm this week that the latest version, called Einstein 3, involves attempting to thwart in-progress cyberattacks by sharing information with the National Security Agency.

[Return to headlines]



NAACP Image Award Reaches New Low

Quite frankly, the NAACP is a disgrace. When President Obama spoke at an NAACP event, the audience erupted in wild applause when Obama said that blacks are still suffering from racism in America. Thank you, Mr. Great Unifier. Why was the NAACP audience so excited about maintaining victim status? Why did they want to believe the lie that race-relations in America have not changed much since the 1950s?

Yes, as long as there are humans, there will be some prejudice and discrimination. But racism is not a problem for blacks in America today. America is the greatest land of opportunity on the planet for all who choose to go for it. Why are so many people willing to risk everything to get to our shores, attempting the journey on cardboard rafts held together with crazy glue and duct tape?

Dr. King’s once-great NAACP has become a negative, shameful tool of the left: overseers committed to keeping their fellow blacks dependent and subservient to the Democrat party.

Including once-self-proclaimed Communist Van Jones among the honorees at this year’s NAACP Image Award show last night epitomizes the organization’s descent into liberal Hades. Jones was forced to resign as the Obama administration’s green czar due to his radical, far-left ideas, which include believing the Bush administration blew up the towers on 9/11. Jones has spouted extremely vicious and vulgar comments about political opponents. NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous called Jones “an American treasure.” Is Jones the “image” that the NAACP wishes to present to young black America while treating black U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and black former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice like dirt? Utterly outrageous and shameful.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Czar’s Shocking Communist Connections

Edited publication whose founders allegedly fed secrets to Soviet Union

John Holdren, President Obama’s “science czar,” served on the board of editors of a magazine whose personnel were accused of providing vital nuclear information that helped the Soviet Union build an atom bomb.

The magazine, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, has a long history of employing socialist and communist sympathizers, including during the time of Holdren’s employment in 1984, reports the New Zeal blog.

[…]

At the time Holdren worked on the Bulletin in 1984, communist and socialist sympathizers still occupied the magazine’s masthead.

The New Zeal blog notes the Bulletin’s board of directors in 1984 included: …

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Some Republicans Criticize Judge Pick

With Democrats scrambling to find enough votes to pass health care reform, Republicans are looking for the next legislative deal to attack and have trained their sights on President Barack Obama’s nomination of Democratic Rep. Jim Matheson’s brother for a federal judgeship.

Republicans gleefully circulated a Weekly Standard piece yesterday that asked if Obama was trying to buy Matheson’s vote by nominating his brother, Scott, to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. Both the White House and Matheson’s office swiftly answered the question with a resounding ‘no.’ And both Republican senators from Matheson’s home state of Utah support the nomination.

Still, that didn’t stop Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann from raising the issue on “Larry King Live” last night, calling for an “independent investigation” into the matter.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Fiat Auto Spinoff Plan on the Table

Marchionne says ‘hypothesis’ addressed in April 21 business plan

(ANSA) — Geneva, March 3 — The possibility of Fiat spinning off its automobile division will be addressed when the group presents its new business plan on April 21, CEO Sergio Marchionne said on Wednesday.

Speaking on the sidelines of the Geneva automobile show, Marchionne said “the option of spinning off the auto division is a very complex one. It is part of a framework of hypotheses which we are analysing very carefully. We’ll see on April 21”.

Two years ago, Marchionne told Fiat shareholders that spinning off Fiat Group Automobiles (FGA) — which includes the Fiat, Lancia and Alfa Romeo marques — was a “hypothetical possibility” but that ‘we have not taken any steps in that direction”.

Speculation that a spinoff may be on the horizon mounted after Fiat last year acquired control of US automaker Chrysler and hit a peak when it was in the running to take over General Motors’ European division, which produces Opel in Germany and Vauxhall in Britain.

The spinoff plan, however, was put on hold last July when Fiat appeared to lose out to Canadian-Austrian autoparts-maker Magna International in its bid for Opel.

The GM-Magna deal later ran aground and the US automaker has now decided to hold on to its European division.

Spinning off FGA and merging it with Chrysler, which includes Jeep, and possibly other marques in the future is in line with Marchionne’s view that “in the not-too-distant future our industry will have five or six producers each with a minimum market of five million cars”.

Fiat acquired 20% and management control of Chrysler last year in a non-cash deal in exchange for its cutting-edge green and small car technology.

Aside from trying to revive the American marque, Fiat plans to use its American production facilities, sales and service network to reintroduce Fiat and Alfa Romeo to the lucrative US market.

Marchionne said on Wednesday that a plan to return Alfa romeo to the US would also be illustrated on April 21.

Once Fiat begins producing its own cars in the US it will be able to increase its stake in Chrysler to 35%.

Fiat has an option to take a majority interest in Chrysler once federal bailout loans have been repaid.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: 20 Million Euros for Storm-Hit Oyster Farmers

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 3 — France has earmarked 20 million euros to oyster farmers and an “emergency fund” of 5 million euros to farmers affected by Xynthia, the violent storm that ripped through three regions of western France last weekend. The French Agriculture Minister Bruno Le Maire made the announcement during a visit to one of the affected areas. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Germany: Islamist Militants Jailed Over Terror Plot

Dusseldorf, 4 March (AKI) — A German court on Thursday jailed four Muslim militants — including two converts — for up to 12 years each for a failed plot to attack US targets in Germany. The planned attacks were intended to force Germany to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan.

The terror trial was Germany’s biggest in decades and the court found the four plotters had planned a “mass murder unrivaled in Germany.”

The court in Dusseldorf sentenced the two Germans converts, Fritz Gelowicz and Daniel Schneider, to 12 years each. The avoided the maximum 15 year jail term as they confessed their involvement in the plot.

Turkish national Adem Yilmaz was sentenced to 11 years in prison, while German-Turkish citizen Attila Selek got five years for his role in supporting so-called ‘Sauerland’ terror cell. Sauerland is the area of western Germany where they were arrested.

During the trial, all four confessed their allegiance to the Islamic Jihad Union, a splinter group of the Al-Qaeda-linked Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

According to the US state department, the Islamic Jihad Union was responsible for co-ordinated bombings outside the US and Israeli embassies in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent in July 2004.

The four defendants had planned a “mass murder unrivaled in Germany,” said federal prosecutor Volker Brinkmann in his closing argument.

The ‘Sauerland’ plotters discussed attacking supermarkets on US airbases including Ramstein, Frankfurt airport, German nightclubs and airports to punish Germany for its 4,000 troops in Afghanistan

Defence lawyers however, called it “the largest insufficient attempted terrorist attack.” They had been asking for sentences below 10 years.

The men had trained at camps in Pakistan and procured some 700kg of chemicals to produce 410kg of explosives, prosecutors said.

Gelowicz, Schneider and Yilmaz were detained in September 2007 after preparing 410 kilogrammes of explosives — 100 times the amount used in the 2005 London bombings, prosecutors said.

Selek was detained in Turkey in November 2007 and later extradited to Germany.

The truck and carbomb attacks had been planned for October 2007, during a parliamentary vote to extend German participation in the NATO force in Afghanistan.

German security services uncovered the plot in December 2006 and conducted one of the biggest surveillance operations in post-war German history.

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



Italy: Premier’s Party Cannot Run in Rome Area

Court upholds exclusion in upcoming regional elections

Premier’s party cannot run in Rome area

(ANSA) — Rome, March 3 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party suffered another setback on Wednesday after a Rome appeals court upheld a ruling barring its candidates from running in the Rome province in this month’s regional elections.

The court confirmed a decision by a court on Sunday, excluding the PdL from standing in the Rome area because party officials had missed a noon cutoff to present the candidates list on Saturday. The PdL can still take the case to the regional TAR court and then to the state administrative tribunal.

But a final decision would be needed before March 13 — the cutoff for the publication of electoral lists — to allow the PdL to run in the Rome province.

PdL officials have already said they would run the gamut of appeals. Earlier, another Rome court readmitted the party’s candidate for the presidency of the Lazio region to run with her own civic list, overruling a decision to strike it off because of a minor bureaucratic glitch.

The pro-Renata Polverini list was initially barred from running in the March 28-29 elections because of a missing signature in documents presented to the electoral panel on Saturday.

Polverini — a trade union leader — is up against Radical party candidate Emma Bonino, a former European Union commissioner who is backed by most of the centre-left opposition, including the PD.

Hours later, however, a Milan appeals court confirmed that the List for Lombardy headed by incumbent president Roberto Formigoni should be barred because of bureaucratic irregularities with some 500 signatures.

Formigoni can still appeal the ruling and even if barred from running with his own list, his re-election is not in doubt since he is backed by the Premier’s People of Freedom (PdL) party and the Northern League, which have traditionally strong voter support in the region. Whatever the outcome of further appeals, the flap over the PdL’s exclusion from the key Rome province in the March 28-29 elections in 13 of Italy’s 20 regions has upset supporters, raised the premier’s ire and caused friction within the party.

It also drew the scorn of key ally, outspoken Northern League leader Umberto Bossi, who on Tuesday branded officials responsible for the blunders “amateurs out of their depth”.

In a boost for PdL morale, a leading Italian political scientist, Professor Roberto D’Alimonte of Florence University, said that even if the premier’s party is excluded from the race in the Rome area, Polverini still has a good chance of winning since voters could vote for her civic list or for allied parties.

“If she wins there is no risk of Polverini not reaching a majority in the regional council,” said D’Alimonte, explaining that allied parties would step in for the PdL, at least in the Rome province.

However, other pundits believe that if the PdL is barred from running in the Rome province — the biggest in Lazio, with 2.3 million voters — the centre left manage to keep the region.

Berlusconi said last week that the elections are of strategic importance for his government.

The centre right had been optimistic of snatching Lazio away from the centre left after the region’s ex-president, Piero Marrazzo, was forced to resign in October in a sex and drugs scandal.

Meanwhile, Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa whipped up a storm by warning that the centre right was “ready to do anything” if electoral appeals courts bars its candidates from running because of bureaucratic blunders.

La Russa was quoted by two left-leaning dailies as saying that Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party was optimistic of a positive ruling from the courts overturning a decision on Saturday barring its candidates from running in the Rome province.

“We will never accept a ruling which would prevent hundreds of thousands of our supporters from voting for us at the regional elections. If they bar us from running we are ready to do anything”.

La Russa’s statements are “serious and unsettling”, accused the House Whip for the opposition Italy of Values (IdV) Party Massimo Donadi.

“A defence minister should not use such threatening and subversive language,” added Donadi, stressing that the PdL should “blame itself for its woes”.

Nicola Zingaretti, the president of the Rome Province for the opposition Democratic Party, expressed concern over La Russa’s “sinister remarks”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Airline-Style Day- And Time-Specific Tickets for High-Speed Trains

Trenitalia says running-in period is over and fewer trains run late. Managers accuse Alstom equipment of breaking down

MILAN — First came the running-in period when six out of ten trains arrived within 15 minutes of the scheduled time. Then the Christmas snow brought record delays and cancellations. After that, prolonged bad weather and trains called in for maintenance occasioned further delays and cancelled services.

Following a difficult start, high-speed trains have completed their first two months of operation. Internal Trenitalia reports say that today “the proportion of trains arriving on, or within 15 minutes of, the scheduled time has risen from 60% to 90%”. Plans for fine-tuning the service portfolio in phase two are also set out. One move stands out: ticket prices will vary depending on time and day, just like flight tickets, which means that first and second class will be things of the past. But the reports also reveal tensions between the railway group and the French-owned Alstom company, which supplies some of the traffic management systems and the new ETR 600 trains: “Ninety-two hours of delay were recorded from 13 December to the end of January because of technical problems attributable to Alstom. More than 400 trains were involved”, says Trenitalia, referring to “failures of traffic management equipment” and “on-board systems” On-board systems alone “were responsible for delays to one train in seven”.

Running-in period and new service portfolio

The whole of the Turin-Salerno line was inaugurated on 13 December. Frecciarossa services linking Rome and Milan have increased by 40% and travel time between the two cities has fallen by about 30 minutes. But the promised journey times have often failed to materialise owing to breakdowns, running-in or bad weather. Particularly badly hit has been the Florence-Bologna line, where delays have yet to be completely eliminated. “In response to running-in problems, we have decided to extend until the end of March the promotional price of 48 euros for the Rome-Milan service”, Trenitalia announces. The extension is only one of the new developments on the ticket front. The biggest revolution in the run-up to market liberalisation will come with day- and time-specific pricing replacing the differential between first and second class. As on airlines, the Frecciarossa’s direct competitors on the Rome-Milan route, passengers travelling by rail will pay more at busy times and on high-traffic days, and less when demand is lower. Then there are the on-board services: “These will cater for the needs of the different categories of business and pleasure rail travellers”. One soon-to-be-introduced novelty is internet connectivity. Under an agreement the railway group is about to sign with Telecom Italia, Wi-Fi systems will be installed on Frecciarossa trains. “To improve quality of mobile phone calls and internet browsing”. Other changes will affect timetables. “More trains will be in service on the Turin-Milan and Rome-Naples lines from March, before the new timetable comes into effect”. Two more services will run on each line at peak times in the morning and evening. “On the Rome-Milan route, services will be removed, or times changed, at off-peak periods in mid morning and mid afternoon”.

Technical problems

Trenitalia sources acknowledge the issues that have marked the first two months of high-speed trains, particularly on the Bologna-Florence line. “The route and its junctions have had to handle a huge number of trains (more than 100 services every day) which have highlighted problems that could not be detected during trials”. Then there was the bad weather. “Running trains even in extreme conditions led to a series of technical issues and prolonged maintenance operations”. However, Trenitalia blames Alstom, as well as running-in and bad weather. The internal report says: “Most of the delays are attributable to breakdowns of technology supplied by Alstom. In contrast, systems from other suppliers such as Ansaldo worked smoothly”. The problems relating to “unsatisfactory technology” have been known for some time. As a result, Trenitalia has removed Alstom from its list of approved suppliers. In the dock are management systems, such as the centralised traffic control system in Bologna, and the systems at Bologna and Florence stations. Block circuits on the same line also failed because of lack of communication between on-board and trackside software. Trains would be blocked even when they were the only ones on the tracks. The upshot is: “Since 13 December, there has been a 40% increase in breakdowns related to the ETCS trackside/on-board signalling system supplied by Alstom. These problems impacted on the punctuality of one train in seven, on average”.

Emergencies and measures

The report also refers to “malfunctions of mechanical and electrical components manufactured by Alstom and the speed control system fitted to Frecciarossa and Frecciargento”. These were problems “that did not, however, impact on safety”. The report notes that on 10 January, an ETR 600 lost a two and a half by two metre fibreglass cover in one of the two tunnels on the Bologna-Florence line. On 5 February, another accumulated 100 minutes’ delay, and was then cancelled, when a microswitch worth ten euros failed to function. Trenitalia also complains about the failure of the main switch that controls the supply of electricity to the motors, and about excessive wear to the running surface of the wheels. Regarding market liberalisation and competition from NTV, the report adds: “We are not apprehensive. If anything, this is a stimulus. However, the Italo-French company has ordered new high-speed trains from Alstom. We hope they will be more reliable than ours are, otherwise it will be no contest. Criticism from various sources is amply justified by punctuality that is still unsatisfactory. More than two thirds of the fleet with Alstom equipment has required intervention, which has improved punctuality by about ten points”. Other action has been taken to fine-tune the service portfolio. The report notes: “Trains are not running full. To cut consumption and costs, Frecciarossa trains have been shortened by at least one carriage”. This will also facilitate restyling and the substitution of the current seats with new models in leather.

Alessandra Mangiarotti

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Iranian ‘Spies’ Among 7 Arrested in Arms Trafficking Bust

Milan, 3 March(AKI) — Police in Italy have arrested five Italians and two suspected Iranian spies for allegedly trafficking weapons to Iran. Arrest warrants were issued for two Iranians still at large who are suspected of involvement in the alleged arms trafficking ring, police said on Wednesday in Milan.

The investigation, dubbed Operation Sniper, was led by Milan prosecutor Armando Spataro, who probed the 2003 kidnapping and “extraordinary rendition “ of Abu Omar, a Muslim cleric suspected of abetting terrorism, by CIA agents in Milan. The investigation led to the conviction of two former Italian secret agents and 23 CIA agents in absentia over the kidnapping.

“It is an investigation of considerable importance because it concerns the entire international community,” Spataro said on Wednesday at a Milan press conference.

Operation Sniper began in June 2009 and was aided by police collaboration in Bern, Switzerland, where one of the Italian suspects resided, Spatoro said.

Earlier, a statement by the Italian tax police said they had intercepted optical-precision equipment, scuba-diving jackets and oxygen tanks bound for Iran as well as tracer bullets, incendiary bombs and other “explosive materials”.

Arms exports to Iran are strictly controlled under a United Nations embargo.

Investigators also suspect the arms trafficking ring sold equipment to Iran known as “dual use” because it can be converted for military use, according to Spataro.

Italy is one of Iran’s biggest European Union trading partners, partly because of exploration investments by Rome-based oil company Eni.

Prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has joined calls by other western leaders called for stronger sanctions against Tehran to convince the Middle Eastern country to curb its uranium enrichment program that the West suspects is being used to develop nuclear weapons.

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



Italy: Senate Accepts Di Girolamo’s Resignation

Vote 259 to 16 on rightwinger linked to mafia

(ANSA) — Rome, March 3 — The Senate voted Wednesday to accept the resignation of a centre-right senator named in a money laundering phone scam and linked to a Calabrian mafia boss.

In the secret ballot, the upper house voted 259 to 16, with 12 abstentions, to accept the resignation of right-wing Senator Nicola Di Girolamo.

Di Girolamo, who is facing an arrest warrant, appealed to the senators before the vote, saying “my story is not a criminal one”.

He said he had no links to ‘Ndrangheta, Italy’s most powerful mafia. The centre-left opposition had on Tuesday opposed the motion to weigh the resignation, saying the senator should be expelled instead. “We don’t want such an important issue, a scandal like this, to be wiped out or treated as if it were a mere discussion about Di Girolamo’s resignation,” said Democratic Party whip Anna Finocchiaro.

Di Girolamo resigned on Monday, a few days before the Senate was expected to give the go-ahead for his arrest.

In a letter of resignation addressed to Senate Speaker Renato Schifani, Di Girolamo accused his colleagues of likening him to Lucifer and “cutting me to pieces”.

He also rejected prosecutors’ charges that he had been elected to the Senate as representative for Italians abroad because of vote-rigging organised by Ndrangheta.

“I was elected thanks to 24,500 voters …who were neither mafiosi or criminals,” said the senator with Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, admitting though that “a small part” of those who voted for him could have been swayed by individuals “tainted” by mafia connections.

Di Girolamo said he was certain he would be able to clear himself when questioned by prosecutors.

Schifani urged the Senate last week to consider annulling Di Girolamo’s election because he falsely claimed he lived abroad rather than in Rome and was therefore ineligible to run as a candidate for Italians abroad.

Prosecutors say that in exchange for the vote rigging Di Girolamo helped the mafia launder huge sums.

Last week, the newsweekly L’Espresso published several pictures of an electoral dinner in 2008 where Di Girolamo is shown with ‘Ndrangheta chieftain Franco Pugliese and Rome businessman Gennaro Mokbel, the alleged ringleader of the scam.

Pugliese and Mokbel were arrested Tuesday while Di Girolamo’s arrest needed to be cleared by a Senate panel.

Pugliese, who was sent on ‘internal exile’ to Mantua in the 1990s, is a top member of the Arena family, one of Ndrangheta’s most powerful clans.

He first came to the attention of police in 1997 when 12 billion lire in assets were seized including apartments, land and five cars in Calabria and a shopping centre near Bergamo.

His son Michele was among 34 mobsters arrested last November in an operation that uncovered three murders including the bazooka killing of Mob patriarch Carmine Arena in 2004.

Berlusconi said during the weekend he had never met Di Girolamo, adding that he had been put up as a candidate by House Speaker Gianfranco Fini’s National Alliance party, which merged with the premier’s Forza Italia last year to form the PdL.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fiat: Group Share in Italy Down to 31% in February

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Fiat Group Automobiles market share slipped to 31% from 31.99% a year earlier and 32.02% in January whereas new car registrations climbed 16.82% over February 2008. Within the Fiat group the Fiat marque saw its year-on-year registrations in February rise 15.8%, while those for Alfa Romeo were up 4.58% and Lancia saw a jump of 30.49%. In regard to market share, the Fiat marque’s stood at 24.02%, down from 25.01% a year earlier,and Lancia’s in one year rose from 4.29% to 4.64%, while Alfa Romeo’s share slipped from 2.69% in February 2009 to 2.34% this year. Among the foreign carmaker, Ford was the best selling marque, followed by Volkswagen and Renault. According to the transport ministry, used car sales last month fell 7.33% over February 2009. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Premier Blames Electoral Officials

Too tough with his party’s candidates’ lists, Berlusconi says

(ANSA) — Rome, March 4 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi complained on Thursday that his People of Freedom (PdL) party has been barred from running in regional elections in Lombardy and the Rome province because officials had been overly strict in vetting the paperwork.

“They were too rigorous when checking our lists of candidates,” the premier was quoted as telling his aides.

Courts in Milan and Rome have confirmed election officials’ decision to exclude the PdL from running in Lombardy for technical irregularities and in the Rome area because paperwork was handed in after Saturday’s noon cutoff. The incumbent president of Lombardy, Roberto Formigoni, the PdL and its Northern League ally, which had expected to sweep to victory in their stronghold, will be unable to stand if the decision is not reversed.

A ruling by Lombardy’s regional TAR court on whether to allow Formigoni to run for re-election in the March 28-29 elections is expected over the next few days, his lawyer said on Wednesday.

Luca Giuliante, who filed the appeal with TAR earlier on Wednesday, said it was “technically unfeasible” to expect a ruling today. It will take a few days, he said. A Milan appeals court on Wednesday said Formigoni’s civic list, linked with the PdL and the Northern League parties, should be excluded from the poll because of bureaucratic irregularities involving nearly 100 signatures.

If TAR also decides against, Formigoni can still file another appeal with the state administrative tribunal.

But a final decision will be needed before March 13 — the cutoff for the publication of electoral lists — to allow the PdL to run in the Rome province.

Formigoni said he was confident that the bureaucratic glitches can be overcome because, in the past, similar problems with signatures had been overlooked or approved on the basis of court rulings. Government sources said officials were considering the idea of drawing up an urgent decree which would allow parties to hand in their lists again. This solution would be agreed with the centre-left opposition, which has, in large part, expressed its unease about running without the country’s major party.

The leader of the Italy of Values (IdV) party, Antonio Di Pietro, however, has already ruled out the idea of finding a “legislative solution” to the problem, saying it would amount to “a coup”.

So has Pier Luigi Bersani, leader of the Democratic Party (DP), the biggest in the centre-left opposition.

Bersani said the idea was fuzzy and “didn’t stand on its feet”, stressing that there was still plenty of time to settle the issue through the courts.

“We haven’t popped the champagne or uncorked the wine; we want to run regularly,” he said, stressing that the centre right had created the muddle and could not “hold others responsible for what’s happened”.

Meanwhile, Simplifications Minister Roberto Calderoli said it was important to meet with President Giorgio Napolitano to discuss ways of finding a solution to the problem.

Speaking after a meeting between League leader Umberto Bossi and Berlusconi at the premier’s residence, Calderoli said a number of solutions had been tossed up.

“But at this point, we need to meet with the president and, in view of the unprecedented nature of what’s happened, see what sort of instruments we have available.” Earlier, Napolitano said he was “very concerned” about what could happen if the PdL, the country’s biggest party, and the League, are barred from running in Lombardy.

The president told reporters during a visit to Brussels he was ready to weigh possible options.

Asked if a political solution could be found, he replied “If someone tells me what it is, who is presenting it and what it’s about, I’m ready to examine it,” he said before flying back to Rome.

Government sources said Berlusconi had called an urgent cabinet meeting late Thursday, soon after talks with Napolitano.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Napolitano: Anachronistic Anti-European Forces

(AGI) — Brussels, 4 March — President of Italy, Giorgio Napolitano, commented that the victory of anti-European forces in Holland represents an “anachronistic and very dangerous illusion,” despite it being “an ahistorical and unrealistic tendency.” Talking about Italy, Napolitano continued, “at the moment I don’t see any increase in anti-European views or a desire for Italy to pull back from integration.” .

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



Netherlands: Organ Donation ‘Before Death’ Idea Slammed

A proposal to remove donor organs from patients who are dying before they are actually dead, published today in the Dutch medical journal Medisch Contact, has met with fierce criticism.

Dutch Protestant daily Trouw reports that many doctors and the Dutch Kidney Foundation both find the idea “terrible”.

Clinical ethicist Erwin Kompanje and medical researcher Yorick de Groot of Rotterdam’s Erasmus Medical Centre have proposed removing organs from registered donors before death. They argue this would lead to a greater availability of organs “of optimum quality”. Half of all organs currently harvested are lost because of poor blood supply.

The authors of the proposal admit many doctors will intuitively reject the concept, “It is a very controversial idea, but with an eye on the chronic shortage we thought it should be talked about.”

Quality deterioration

At the moment, doctors wait for a while after terminating treatment (usually by switching off a ventilator) before rushing a donor into an operating theatre. Donor organs deteriorate quickly during this time.

The Dutch doctors’ association (KNMG Royal Dutch Medical Association) thinks it is a terrible idea. They believe a measure like this will damage the trust patients have in the medical profession.

Likewise, the Dutch Kidney Foundation says that even though 200 people die every year because there are no kidneys available, “you have to keep to your promises.” It believes the proposal gives people the wrong idea that the current rules, anchored in law, could change. The foundation says it is already receiving phone calls from worried members of the public.

Sensitive issue

The authors of the proposal are unperturbed. They say they are aware of the sensitivity surrounding the issue, and worded their proposal very carfeully as a result. They say that, at best, the new proposal would be no more than an option which people could consider while they are still healthy.

Dutch newspaper AD writes that more and more kidneys are actually coming from living donors, usually family members, as fewer registered donors are dying in the ‘right circumstances’ for their organs to be used.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Mayor Blasted for ‘Israeli Lobby’ Comment

Representatives for the Jewish Community in Malmö have slammed the city’s mayor, Ilmar Reepalu, for his use of the term “Israeli lobby” in a Danish television interview.

“I encounter a great many people from what one could call the Israeli lobby, who are not interested in what I say and what I think, but who do want to attribute lots of opinions to me,” Reepalu said in an interview with Danish TV2.

Reepalu and the Jewish Community (Judiska församlingen) have been at cross purposes of late after the mayor drew parallels in newspaper interviews between anti-Semitism and Zionism.

He has also denied that there had been any attacks on Jews in the city despite police figures showing that violent incidents against Jews have doubled over the last year.

Reepalu responded to a call from Social Democrat party leader Mona Sahlin last week to engage in a dialogue with Malmö Jews, meeting with representatives last week. His latest comments on the Danish TV2 show Lorry have been met with consternation by the Jewish Community.

In a letter to Reepalu and Mona Sahlin, the Jewish Community representatives have expressed their disappointment with the mayor’s televised comments.

“This is the kind of wording used by anti-Jewish or anti-Semitic forces, who claim that it is the Jews who control the media,” wrote Fred Kahn and Fredrik Sieradzki.

A recent series of articles in local newspaper Skånska Dagbladet detailed how Jews were choosing to leave the city as their situation become increasingly vulnerable in the face of attacks from extreme elements in the Muslim community and far-left political circles.

Reepalu reiterated to Danish TV his view that his quotes had been misrepresented, despite the fact that Skånska Dagbladet has released all its tapes and written correspondence with the mayor in a bid to show that he had not been misquoted.

Kahn and Sieradzki also referred Reepalu to their meeting with the mayor last week as part of the effort to patch up their differences.

“This was exactly the kind of comment we advised you to avoid if you didn’t wish to be misunderstood by people who take this as their cue to direct threats and harassment at Swedes of Jewish extraction.”

Reepalu said last week he was ready to act, via the newly formed Dialogue Forum, to ease tension between the city’s plethora of ethnic groups.

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



Swedish Weapons Exports on the Rise

Sweden sold weapons to the value of 13.5 billion kronor ($1.9 billion) in 2009, up 7 percent on the previous year, according to new figures released by the Swedish Agency for Non-Proliferation and Export Controls (Inspektionen för strategiska produkter — ISP).

“Of the total defence materiel exports, 80 percent went to well established partner countries, both within the EU and to countries like South Africa and the United States,” said agency director-general Andreas Ekman Duse in a statement.

“As in other years, larger deals play their part and have a bearing on the statistics, such as sales of the Combat Vehicle 90 to the Netherlands and the JAS 39 Gripen [fighter jet] to South Africa,” he said.

The export figures encompass products made by companies based in Sweden, regardless of the origins of the owners.

More than half (53 percent) of exports went to other EU countries, along with Norway and Switzerland.

27 percent was accounted for by countries defined by ISP as “established partners”, including the US, Australia, South Africa, Canada, South Korea and Singapore.

The final 20 percent went to twenty different countries, dominated by Pakistan (1.4 billlion kronor) and India (901 million kronor), but also including Malaysia (129 million kronor), Thailand (81 million kronor) and the United Arab Emirates (900,000 kronor).

Green Party spokesman Lars Ångström said he was appalled to see Saudia Arabia on the list of countries buying defence equipment from Sweden.

“Saudi Arabia seriously and systematically violates human rights as defined by the UN, and it is unacceptable that exports have gone there,” he said in a statement.

Ångström was also distressed to see Bahrain, Oman and Malaysia among the recipient nations.

The Netherlands was the biggest buyer of Swedish defence equipment in 2009, paying a total of 2.5 billion kronor. Completing the list of the top five purchasers were South Africa (1.7 billion), Pakistan (1.4 billion), and the United Kingdom, which spent a fraction more than India’s 901 million kronor.

ISP’s role in the process involves approving licences for the export of military equipment. Permission is conditional on a number of factors, with certain barriers put in place if a country finds itself at war. As in the case with the United States however, the agency can continue to authorise sales to warfaring countries if there are overriding defence and security policy reasons deemed to tip the balance in favour of continued trade.

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



UK: Pupils Aged Five on Hate Register: Teachers Must Log Playground Taunts for Government Database

Heads will be forced to list children as young as five on school ‘hate registers’ over everyday playground insults.

Even minor incidents must be recorded as examples of serious bullying and details kept on a database until the pupil leaves secondary school.

Teachers are to be told that even if a primary school child uses homophobic or racist words without knowing their meaning, simply teaching them such words are hurtful and inappropriate is not enough.

Instead the incident has to be recorded and his or her behaviour monitored for future signs of ‘hate’ bullying.

The accusations will also be recorded in databases held by councils and made available to Whitehall and ministers to help them devise future anti-bullying campaigns.

The scale of the effort to stop children using homophobic or racist language was revealed after the parents of a ten-year-old primary school pupil in Somerset, Peter Drury, were told that his name would be put on a register and his behaviour monitored while he remained at school.

The boy was reported after he called a friend ‘gay boy’. His parents fear the record of homophobic bullying will count against him throughout his school career and even into adulthood.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Pay-as-You-Throw: Council to Launch Pilot Scheme That Could Pave the Way for National Bin Taxes

The first pay-as-you-throw rubbish scheme is to be launched this year, raising fears of nationwide bin taxes.

Under the controversial plans, binmen will weigh each household’s weekly rubbish, with the council paying cash ‘rewards’ to the least wasteful homes.

Town hall chiefs say the scheme is designed to encourage green behaviour. And they insist those who continue to fill their dustbins will not be fined.

But critics say the pilot will lead to a system of rubbish incentives and fines in which large families pay more to have their bins emptied and electronic microchip ‘spies’ are placed in every wheelie bin.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU-Morocco: Farm Products and Seafood, Talks Continue

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 4 — Negotiations between EU and Morocco on the liberalisation agreement for agricultural products and seafood continue. An agreement was reached on the issue on December 17 2009. On the eve of next weekend’s summit in Granada, according to European sources “there are still some minor problems” to resolve. In general, there are problems that regard the sectors that will suffer the agreement’s economic and financial consequences. The question is not whether the agreement will be signed, only when. “There are no uncertainties. Both parties are working with the objective to come to a result as soon as possible,” Brussels reports. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Cinema: Guido Chiesa Film in Tunisia, Sahara Setting Again

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 3 — “Let It Be”, which Italian director Guido Chiesa is shooting in Matmata, is the latest film to explore the charm of the Tunisian Sahara. The desert town has been the setting for hugely successful films in the past, most notably George Lucas’ late 1970s classic “Star Wars”, which was set in both Tataouine and Matmata. The latter is a Berber village renowned for its unique Troglodyte architecture, with hillside dwellings dug into the earth. Here tourists can choose to stay in a unusual and spotless hostel built into the rock, dug out of what was used for several scenes in the film. But few people realise that some of the most captivating scenes in the 1976 film “ET” were filmed on the Sahara’s Chott el Djerid, a large salt lake, or that the planet Tattoine that the friendly alien flies over, actually takes its name from nearby Tataouine. Franco Zeffirelli, who was struck by the beauty of the area, shot “Jesus of Nazareth” here in 1977 while Spielberg brought Indiana Jones to Tataouine in “Raiders of the Lost Ark”. Another famous director, Roman Polanski, chose Matmata, Tataouine and Nefta as the setting for “Pirates”. One of the most successful film of the 1990s, winning nine Oscars, was “The English Patient”, which featured breathtaking views of the Tunisian Sahara. Part of the film was shot in the central Tunisian coastal town of Mahdia, which to this day boasts a particularly antiquated charm. The oasis towns of Gafsa, Tozeur and Nafta were used for Roberto Benigni’s 2005 film “The Tiger and the Snow”. But cinematic interest in the Tunisian desert dates back a great deal further. Cinema was a very recent concept when the Lumiere brothers filmed documentaries here. It was not until 1919 that Luitz Morat shot the first feature-length film to be made in Africa, “Les Cinq Gentlemen Maudits”. Towards the end of the 1960s, Yannik Bellon, daughter of the famous photographer Denise Bellon, wrote the short film “Zaa, petit chameau blanc”. Today, it is Guido Chiesa’s turn. An Arab-language film with predominantly Tunisian actors — including Ahmed Hafiene, familiar to Italian audiences — “Let It Be” tells the story of Mary, mother of Christ, in an “anthropological” way. In the words of the director himself, the film aims to evoke the themes of maternity and mother-son relationships “through the story of a girl who lived in Galilee 2000 years ago.” This is the reason for which a large part of the film is shot in the village of Zraoua, highly reminiscent of old Palestine. The role of Mary has been given to an amateur actress, 14-year-old Nadia Lhelifi, who is from Matmata. A bizarre advertisement in Tunisia’s main French-language daily newspaper completes the picture. In the job section, the words “foreign nationals living in Tunisia wanted for roles as extras in Italian film”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt in Talks With China Over Suez Economic Zone, Minister

(ANSAmed) — HONG KONG, MARCH 3 — The Egyptian government is negotiating with Tianjin Economic-Technological Development Area (TEDA), one of China’s most successful investment zones, about replicating the model near the Suez Canal (SEZone) said Egypt’s Investment Minister Mahmoud Mohieldin as reported by MENA. Under Egyptian law, TEDA could take up to a 49 percent stake in the 1.5 billion dollar project, Mohieldin said. SEZone is intended as the first in a series of state-led development zones targeting manufacturing investment. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Ghali Urges to Set Up Expatriates’ Council

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 3 — Head of the National Council for Human Rights, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, called today for the establishment of an expatriates’ council of elected members to strengthen their connection with the homeland. In the foreword he wrote in a book released by the council on duties and human rights of Egyptian expatriates in European Union states, Ghali called for supporting efforts exerted by Egyptian embassies and consulates and counting the number of Egyptians abroad to get to know their specialties especially scientists to increase their contribution in development projects in Egypt. “Practicing citizenship means working together in all fields to compare problems inside and outside”, he said, referring to the Cairo Declaration on citizenship issued in November 2007. Egyptian expatriates should give a good image of Egypt, through their faith and their behavior, he said, adding that many Egyptians abroad are successful and have merged into their new societies.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egyptian Court Acquits Muslims Who Beheaded a Christian

by Mary Abdelmassih

(AINA) — An Egyptian court in the southern city of Assuit acquitted this week four Muslims accused of killing 61-year-old Farouk Attallah on October 19, 2009. In broad daylight and in full view of witnesses, the killers fired 31 bullets to his head before beheading him, in the busy village market place of Attaleen, near Dairout, 313 kilometers south of Cairo. The dead body was then dragged in the street, accompanied by shouts of victory. Free Copts website published a video of the disfigured body (warning, violent graphic content: video).

The judge presiding over the court on February 22, said that he was not satisfied that the testimony of the witnesses established that the imprisoned men were the killers. After the acquittal of Mohamad, Ashraf, Osama and Ahmad Hassouna, there was jubilation in the court room, with shouts of ‘Allah is Great’ and congratulations from all Muslims, including members of the state security forces who were present.

Christians were enraged over the acquittal, since similar cases would result in life imprisonment or execution for a Copt if the victim was a Muslim.

The verdict came as another wake-up call to many Copts, according to Peter Sarwat, the plaintiff’s attorney. “It sends a clear message that Coptic blood is extremely cheap.” he told Mariam Ragy of Katiba Tibia Coptic site. “This acquittal will make permanent the present culture of impunity enjoyed by Muslim aggressors against Copts.”.

Sarwat said the ruling was inadequate, as it acquitted the accused but did not say who the perpetrators are. “If these men did not kill, so who killed? The ruling should have referred the case to the general prosecution to present the perpetrators.”

The Court based its ruling on quasi non existent proof, as well as the absence of “positive evidence” testimony versus the presence of “negative evidence” testimony. “The judge refused to take into consideration the testimonies of the dead man’s daughter who said she only saw one killer and not four, as well as the testimony of the Muslim man who was wounded in the shootings,” said Sarwat. According to media reports, most people who witnessed the shootings in the market place refused to come forward for fear of vengeance from the assailants’ family. There were false witnesses who confirmed that the killers were present at work.

“It is not enough to get a conviction based only on police reports which are full of legal loopholes and weak prosecution investigations,” said Sarwat. Legal observers have always claimed that the police purposely deliver to prosecution reports full of inadequacies and loopholes, thereby getting from the courts acquittals for Muslims.

What prompted the killing of Farouk Attallah was an alleged illicit sexual relationship between his son Romany and a local Muslim girl, Hagger Hassouna. A rumor that intimate photos of Hagger together with her lover Romany were circulating on cell phones in Dairout lead four members of the Hassona family to kill Romany’s father, after failing to locate his son, who had fled.

Besides the killing of Farouk Attallah, the arrest of the Hassouna perpetrators sparked on October 24, 2009, Muslim riots and collective punishment against all Copts in Dairout. Christian-owned shops, pharmacies, and homes were looted and burned (AINA 10-27-2009).

Although several hundreds Muslims participated in those riots, the police only detained 19, and these were acquitted on December 13, 2009 because of the lack of eyewitnesses and conflicting statements between the accused and the victims.

The majority of Copts believe the reason for the acquittal of Muslims is that although Egypt claims to be a secular state, in reality it applies the Sharia law which dictates .that a Muslim who kills a non-Muslim must not be killed, because it is not reasonable to equate a Muslim with a “polytheist” (a Christian).

Commenting on the acquittal, Dr. Naguib Gobraeel, President of the Egyptian Union of Human Rights, said: “What is the solution? The same happened with regards to Al-Kosheh Massacre [21 Copts were slaughtered in 2000 and not one Muslim was indicted], the attack on the Copts in Alexandria were blamed on a mentally unstable person; even the assailant who beheaded Abdo Goerge Younan in Menoufiah is now in a mental hospital [AINA 9-21-2009]. Heavenly Justice is our last resourt.” He stated that he will appeal this week’s verdict.

The victim’s family was greatly shocked and saddened by the acquittal. “In spite of the blood of their slain family head filling the street, the Muslim killers got away literally with murder,” Sarwat said “It just shows how cheap Coptic blood can be.”

Sarwat asserted that he will appeal the ruling. “We cannot remain silent over this verdict as it has very serious implications for all Copts in Egypt.” He added: “It is not safe for Copts now, as any Muslims who wants to get rid of a Copt, would kill him, knowing well that in the end he will be acquitted.”

[Return to headlines]



Libya and US in War of Words

Rocky relations between the US and Libya took a turn for the worse on Wednesday when Tripoli demanded an apology from a US envoy who criticised Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. The Libyan foreign ministry is furious about comments made by Philip Crowley who denounced the Libyan leader’s decision to declare a holy war on Switzerland.

Gaddafi’s outburst against Switzerland was the latest episode in an ongoing row between the two countries, which dates back to the arrest of his son Hannibal in 2008 for allegedly beating up two members of his staff in a Geneva hotel. In a speech to mark the birthday of the prophet Muhammad, he criticised Switzerland’s decision to ban the construction of minarets and on Wednesday the Mohammed Baayou said Libya would impose a ‘total’ economic embargo on the country.

Rambling address

US Assistant Secretary Philip Crowley has been summoned by the Libyan foreign ministry for his caustic comments on the speech. At a briefing in Washington he compared Gaddafi’s latest outburst with his rambling address to the United Nations last year, describing it as “… Lots of words and lots of papers flying over the place, not necessarily a lot of sense.”

Tripoli responded by escalating the war of words, saying trade agreements between the two countries will suffer as a result — it comes shortly after the US completed its first trade mission to the country since an embargo was lifted in 2004.

Strained relations

Dirk Vandewalle, an expert on US-Libya relations at Dartmouth College in the US, says it may have a negative impact on some of the large US oil companies operating in Libya, like Exxon: “It’s particularly unfortunate because Libya is in a relatively strong position and can deal economically, at least, with whoever it pleases at this particular point in time. So I’d frankly not be surprised if we do see some other actions in the future that would escalate this a bit further, and maybe even action against some American companies.”

US relations with Libya have been traditionally been fragile and Dirk Vandewalle says Libya’s threat will strain the situation further. But, he argues, Tripoli can’t afford to completely break off relations again: “Gaddafi needs to be a little bit careful because he cannot afford to antagonise the US too much… It remains a very important player for bringing Libya back into the international fold and really keeping it there.”

No apology

Philip Crowley on Wednesday stopped short of apologising to Libya, insisting his comments had not been a personal attack. “We remain firmly committed to the US-Libyan relationship,” the spokesman said, adding: “We look forward to continuing our dialogue with Libya but we will not hesitate to express our concerns about the statements or actions of any country.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Water Reserves Increase

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 2 — On February 27, dams in Tunisia contained 1.576 billion cubic metres of water, 46 million more than last year. A very positive figure, considering that the estimated drinking and irrigation water needs for the country total 876 million cubic metres, reported Agriculture and Water Resources Minister Abdessalem Mansour. Tunisia will celebrate a national water saving day on March 22, which aims to raise awareness in the public about optimising water use and preserving natural resources. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Pumpkins for Foreign Markets

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 2 — Pumpkin farmers in the Kalaat El Andalous region (Ariana governorate north of Tunis) are looking to foreign markets with interest. Taking into account the fact that 25% of their product, or 12,000 tonnes, is destined for the domestic market, the remaining part could be sold on the Italian, Libyan and Algerian markets. Analysts stress that this type of pumpkin, cultivated in the governorate on a surface of 400 hectares, is particularly valued for its taste and aroma. The pumpkin, whose production cycle lasts about 100 days, has a good nutritional value; 90% of its contents are made up of water, and it is rich in vitamins A and B, proteins, lipids and mineral salts (iron and calcium). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Arab League: Yes to Indirect Israeli-Palestinian Talks

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 3 — The Foreign Ministers of the Arab countries currently meeting in Cairo have said today that they are in favour of indirect negotiations between Israeli and Palestinians. The negotiations should take place within 4 months. The news was announced by Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Ereka and the Egyptian television. According to a source from the Arab League, “in the resolution project, which must be approved by the Ministerial Council of the Arab League, underway today in Cairo, support for the Arab peace initiative is declared and it is accepted that the US envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell, will continue to mediate for the indirect negotiations between Israeli and Palestinians for a specific period,” equal to four months. “The Arab countries,” he continued, “thus want to show the world and the American mediator that they are not rejecting negotiations, despite being convinced of the lack of serious willingness for peace on the part of Netanyahu’s government.” According to the source, the obstacles put in place by the Israeli government are “the continuing colonisation (of the West Bank), the block around the Gaza Strip and the Judaisation of Jerusalem.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Arabs Manipulate Media, Digital Pogrom

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 3 — “Manipulation by the media has become a defacto strategic weapon of the Arabs against the Israeli state” and the accusatory “rhetoric” against Israelis spread with blogs and social networks creates a “digital pogrom”, according to Danny Seaman, the head of the press office of the Israeli government, speaking at a conference which took place today at European Parliament in Brussels entitled “The media and the conflict in the Middle East. Manipulation?”. For the press office of the government in Tel Aviv, the foreign media “has exceeded the limit, switching from criticism to demonisation of the Israeli state, nearing delegitimising the nation itself”. A practice of emphatic headlines without verifying information with Israeli sources does not constitute “an attempt to tell the truth,” said Seaman, “but is a defamation that aims to create prejudice. This sort of journalism does not require an official response from Israel, it requires legal defence”. Blogs and social networks are full of accusatory “rhetoric”, which in the virtual era translates into a “digital pogrom”, where delegitimising the Jews marks the creation of a new virtual ghetto.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel — Palestine: Jerusalem: Seeds of the Third Intifada Planted in the “ King’s Garden “

Nir Barkat, the mayor intends to demolish a group of houses in east Jerusalem to build a public park. The intervention of Prime Minister Netanyahu has frozen the project. For Palestinians, the expropriation is considered “a declaration of war.” AsiaNews sources: political plan to achieve a “Jewish city”.

Jerusalem (AsiaNews) — The intervention of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has — for the moment — frozen Nir Barkat’s project. However, the intention of the Mayor of Jerusalem to demolish 89 Palestinian homes in the neighbourhood of Silwan — in the area east of the city — to build a public park is only postponed. The project is regarded as a “declaration of war” by the Palestinian side. The tension has reached alarming levels: Christian sources tell AsiaNews that “the seeds for a third intifada have been planted.”

The Israeli authorities claim that the houses in the suburb renamed al-Bustan by the Palestinians — near Temple Mount — is illegal and the area has reached alarming levels of degradation. On the other hand, the Palestinians are claiming ownership of land, considered part of their capital. Nir Barkat, the mayor of Jerusalem, aims to achieve the “King’s Garden “ in the land where King David is believed to have composed the psalms. The project involves the demolition of 22 houses and the tenants, explains the mayor, will be “moved to other areas.” 66 other houses will obtain legal recognition and the “residents have the right to remain” in the land that is the object of discord.

The area of Al-Bustan is located in the heart of Silwan, a Palestinian agglomeration that borders on the Old City of Jerusalem. Tel Aviv occupied the area in 1967 and the intention was to turn it into a public park. The buildings, Nir Barkat adds, are “illegal” and the area is “in the throes of decay” because of the lack of infrastructure. Christian sources tell AsiaNews of a “political plan” to transform “Jerusalem into a Jewish city.” The framework is “disastrous” and there is little room for hope for the future: “The plan is clear to everyone — he adds — and the seeds have been planted for a third intifada.” The Muslim community is ready to respond to attacks and “Christians are caught in the middle, between two fires.” He adds that “I have no hopes for a Palestinian state” nor is there room for hope for a political solution, but “we expect the worst.”

The issue was also addressed by the UN and the U.S. government. Richard Miron, spokesman for the UN, said that “the demolition of the houses in East Jerusalem at the same time demolish confidence [in Israel], not only that of the Palestinians but of the entire international community.” Washington has expressed its “appreciation” for Netanyahu’s intervention and issued an invitation to “avoid unilateral actions” that “undermine the trust and the efforts for the resumption of negotiations.”

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



Lieberman Wants Police Chief Investigated

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 3 — Embroiled in a bitter exchange with police, who for years have been investigating his economic activities in Israel and abroad, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has today requested the immediate opening of an investigation into the behaviour of Police Chief Dudi Cohen. Yesterday Lieberman underwent a lengthy interrogation by police investigators, who claim that two years ago he received secret documents related to the inquiry against him from the Israeli ambassador to Byelorussia, Zeev Ben Aryeh. When Lieberman was sworn into office as Foreign Minister a year ago, the ambassador Ben Aryeh thereafter received a rapid promotion. In a Jerusalem press conference, at the entrance to the Supreme Court, Lieberman said that the description of the events supplied yesterday by the police was “distorted and biased” . In his view, it was thought up “to put pressure on magistrates” and induce them to indict him. Lieberman has also asked the Supreme Court to shed light on a press leak by police officers a year ago, in March 2008, which was damaging to him. Today the daily paper Yedioth Ahronot gave wide coverage to a short polemical article by one of its well-known commentators, who demanded that Lieberman “go home”. The daily paper Ha-Yom, which has links to Premier Benyamin Netanyahu, predicted that Lieberman might be indicted “within the next few weeks”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Worldwide Initiatives Against Israeli ‘Apartheid’

The end of military occupation, the removal of the ‘apartheid wall’, the recognition of equality for Arab citizens living in the state of Israel and the right of return for Palestinian refugees: these are some of the issues to be discussed during “Israeli Apartheid Week”, a campaign that begins today with events planned in 50 cities worldwide. This is the sixth edition of the event, which was first marked in 2005, after students at the University of Toronto, in Canada, first launched the idea. The seven days are intended to sensitize and inform people about the situation in Palestine and the Israeli practices and, policies and institutions that enforce segregation within Israel and in the Palestinian Territories through roundtables, films, documentaries and discussions. From Toronto, the campaign spread to other universities with the notion of organizing initiatives in other city venues, beyond universities; in 2008, the event reached considerable media visibility having been promoted in 25 large cities worldwide including Soweto in South Africa, the area made famous by the 1976 insurgency against white apartheid. There will also be related events in Italy, in Bologna and Pisa, organized by the “Provincial Tables for Peace”.

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

Middle East


Books: Amoz Oz Translated Into Arabic to Help Understanding

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV — “A Tale of Love and Darkness”, the bestseller in which Israeli author Amos Oz painfully revisits his childhood in Jerusalem, has just been translated into Arabic, and will soon be available in Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan. The move is more than just a publishing initiative. Oz said today that he was “particularly moved and emotional”. This is because the translation has been requested and financed by a Palestinian who has twice suffered the effects of terrorism, the lawyer Elias Khoury. The Arabic version of the book is dedicated to his son George, who was killed in Jerusalem in 2004 by militants belonging to the al-Aqsa Martyrs’ Brigade, who initially believed they had “eliminated a Zionist”. Once the victim’s nationality became known, it is said that Yasser Arafat phoned Mr.Khoury to offer his condolences. This was not the first time that tragedy had struck the family. In 1975, shortly after saying goodbye to his father Daud in Zion Square in the very centre of Jerusalem, a powerful bomb exploded a short distance away, killing many Israelis. Elias Khoury’s father was one of the bodies later retrieved. To justly commemorate George, a student “with a promising future and a passion for classical music and sport”, the Khoury family asked the author Jamil Ghneim to translate Amos Oz’s book into Arabic. “Literature can favour real understanding”, said Khoury. “Only by getting to know one another will our peoples be able to reconcile”. Khoury added that he had often heard Oz speaking out in favour of peace between Israelis and Palestinians. This book in particular, he says, “is a work of art of the highest order”. Oz pointed out that of the 27 translations of this book to have appeared so far, “the Arabic edition is certainly the most important”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Leader Killed; Payoneer Network Involves Israel

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, MARCH 3 — The investigation related to the prepaid debit cards used by at least 13 of the 27 suspects in the murder case of Hamas leader, Mahmud al Mabhouh, found dead in a Dubai hotel on January 20, reveal a link between the companies that released them and the Israeli security services in a network named ‘Payoneer Connection’. So reports Gulf news online. According to information released by Dubai Police, some of the cards used by the suspects were prepaid Meta Bank MasterCards, which are issued by Payoneer, a US based company that specialises in prepaid debit cards targeted to internet shoppers. The cards function like credit cards but can be used as an alternative in that they are topped up with funds beforehand. The Payoneer connection unveils a network of links to Israel, specifically its intelligence community. Its CEO is Yuval Tal, an Israeli citizen who, according to media reports, described himself as a former Israeli special forces commando in a 2006 Fox News interview. Clips of the interview on video sharing websites have been removed. However, a person who said he met Tal a couple of times but did not want to be named told Gulf News that “there is no question in my mind that Yuval has contacts with [Israel’s spy agency] Mossad”. Payoneer is held by three venture capital firms: Greylock Partners, Carmel Ventures, and Crossbar Capital. Greylock, which has offices in the US, India and Herzliya, Israel, was established by Moshe Mor, a former military intelligence captain in the Israeli army. Carmel Ventures is an Israeli venture capital fund based in Herzliya. Crossbar Partners is run by Charlie Federman, who is also managing director of the BRM Group, a venture capital fund also in Herzliya that was founded by Nir and Eli Barkat, the former of whom is the mayor of occupied Jerusalem. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iraq: From Baghdad to Mosul, For Peace and the Rights of Minorities

Christians and Muslims, Yazidis and Sabeans marched together in the center of Baghdad demanding protection for religious minorities. There were also rallies in Mosul, coinciding with an appeal to defend the “most vulnerable” Iraqis delivered yesterday by none other than pope Benedict XVI. The demonstrations followed difficult weeks, characterized in Mosul by the killing of at least eight Christians and the tensions, throughout Iraq, promoted by next Sunday’s legislative elections. In a note published today, the association Pax Christi writes about “a situation that appears to worsen from day to day”. According to monsignor Shimoun Nona, the Chaldean bishop of Mosul, the latest violence has caused in the city “a veritable humanitarian emergency” pushing “hundreds of Christian families to flee”. On Friday, the Iraqi government had announced the formation of an inquiry commission over the violence episodes that, as happened in 2008, have been targeting Christian minorities in northern Iraq. Yesterday, while the rally organized by the Hammurabi Organization for Human Rights, was taking place, Benedict XVI asked Iraqi leaders to “make every effort to restore security for the population and in particular for the most vulnerable religious minorities”. According to the Pontiff, Iraq “is crossing a delicate political phase” and the international community must “dedicate to give Iraqis a future of reconciliation and justice”.

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



Iraq: Militants Arrested Over Christian Attacks

Baghdad, 3 March (AKI) — Iraqi police have arrested four Islamist militants accused of planning and carrying out attacks on the Christian community in the northern city of Mosul. According to the Arab news agency, Kuna, the four suspects are being interrogated by police but it was not clear whether they were linked to Al-Qaeda or other militants in the region.

Hundreds of Iraqis protested in the cities of Mosul and Baghdad this week against a wave of violence that has left eight Christians dead over the past two weeks.

Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday called on Iraqi authorities to protect the Middle Eastern country’s Christian minority.

The United Nations said more than 680 Christian families have fled the northern city of Mosul during recent attacks.

The weekend protests took place in the town of Hamdaniyah, 35 kilometres east of Mosul, as well as in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad ahead of this week’s highly charged national election.

In 2004, five Christian churches in Baghdad were bombed while Christians have also been targeted for murder.

Chaldeans form the majority — about 550,000 — of Iraq’s estimated 700,000 Christians.

It is not clear if the increase in attacks against Christians is an attempt at voter intimidation by factions involved in a violent territorial and power struggle between Kurds and Arabs in Mosul or another attempt by Al-Qaeda to derail the election.

Christians number around 250,000 to 300,000 in Nineveh province, of which Mosul is capital.

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



Reflecting…With the Bishop of Kirkuk, On the Iraqi Ethno-Religious Mosaic

“Christians are not interested in power games, economic hegemony, but the creation of a state in which the different ethnicities might cohabit in a peaceful manner. Iraq is a mosaic of ethno-religious realities. To destroy this mosaic would be to destroy all of Iraq.”

[Monsignor Louis Sako, Chaldean bishop of Kirkuk, quoted in a note by the ‘Pax Christi’ movement]

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



Saudi Arabia Removes Embargo on Tunisian Meats

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 3 — Saudi Arabia has called off the embargo on Tunisian beef. The decision regards both fresh as well as frozen and conserved meats and all their derivatives. An online Saudi paper reports that the decision was made thanks to the ascertainment that Tunisian products “are not affected by foot-and-mouth disease.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syrian FM Urges Unified Stand Against Israeli Policy

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 3 — Syrian Foreign minister, Walid al-Moallem, called for a unified Arab stand in the face of the current Israeli policy in the occupied Arab lands, Mena reported. Arabs should use all cards in their hands to press the international community to prod Israel into halting its practices, including attempts to Judaize East Jerusalem, attacks against Aqsa Mosque and non-stop settlement activities, he said while addressing the opening of 133rd session of the Arab League Council at the ministerial level. During this session, Moallem has handed over the council’s chairmanship to Somali Minister of National Planning and International Cooperation Abdirahman Abdi Shakur Warsame. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenians; $45 Billion Ultimatum to Washington

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — Ankara threatened to cancel defense contracts totaling $45 billion with American companies if today the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives will pass a critical resolution for the recognition of Armenian genocide claims. Daily Vatan describes the Turkish warning as “economic ultimatum” adding that Vatan reports that the CEOs of five US companies sent a letter to US congressmen to highlight the hazards of the genocide resolution. They stressed that the approval of the resolution would jeopardize exports totaling $10 billion. Vatan says that despite the warnings, the Foreign Affairs Committee was expected to approve the controversial resolution. Vatan gives details about the companies campaigning in support of Turkey. Boeing: THY has ordered 35 passenger planes. In the next 20 years, THY plans to make deals with Boeing worth $21 billion. Raytheon: The company holds talks with Turkish officials for the establishment of missile defense systems to Turkey. The US government has announced that Turkey could buy equipment worth $7.8 billion. Northrop Grumman: Turkey gives $11 billion support to the Joint Strike Fighter project. Lockheed Martin: Turkey has signed $2.9 billion deal for the purchase of 50 F-16 jets. The company also carries out a modernization project in the Turkish Air Forces worth $635 million. United Technologies: Sikorsky is one of the most powerful candidates for meeting the needs of the Turkish army for 109 helicopters. If the company makes a deal with Ankara, the helicopters will be produced in Turkey. Vatan says that despite the warnings, the Foreign Affairs Committee was expected to approve the controversial resolution. Yesterday, as Vatan reported, Turkish President Abdullah Gul phoned US President Barack Obama to reiterate Turkish concerns about the genocide resolution to be discussed today at the Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. According to the daily, Gul asked the US administration to step in and block the resolution. Gul warned that the approval of the resolution would harm the normalization process initiated between Turkey and Armenia and that strategic partnership between Turkey and the US would suffer a heavy blow. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenians; Ankara May Recall Ambassador

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — If a resolution will be passed today in Washington by the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee to classify the killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1917 as “genocide”, Turkey may recall its ambassador to the U.S., according to Turkish private network NTV. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenians; Ankara Prepares for “Plan B”

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — So far US President Barack Obama has undertaken no steps to block a critical resolution for the approval of Armenian genocide claims, and Ankara believes that this is result of the hardships encountered by Obama administration in domestic politics. Hurriyet daily newspaper says that Ankara has outlined a plan for coping with the possible approval of the resolution. The ratification of normalization protocols signed between Turkey and Armenia is important for stability and tranquility in the Caucasus. If the US Congress approves the genocide resolution, Turkey might shelf the normalization protocols. Hrriyet says that the US should not forget that the Turkish parliament had rejected a motion for cooperation with the US in the Iraqi war. The US expects Turkish support in Afghanistan as well as in the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. Turkey might review its positions in these issues. Turkey might slow down its efforts to make a breakthrough in the nuclear tensions with Iran and in the Middle East peace process. The Turkish General Staff still evaluates the radar system planned as part of NATO defense system. The genocide resolution will have impact on these assessments. According to the most recent speculation, 22 of the 46-member committee are expected to vote in favor of the resolution, while 17 are anticipated to vote against. Seven of the committee’s Jewish members remain undecided. The aim of the Turkish committee, which is currently in Washington, is to obtain the support of at least some of the members which remain undecided in order to decrease the gap between votes in favor and votes against the resolution. The U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee is scheduled to meet today at 17:00 Turkish standard time. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenians; US Gov’t Calls for Blocking Resolution

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — A few minutes from the beginning of the debate at the Foreign Commission of the American Congress, over the resolution regarding the genocide of the Armenians during the Ottoman empire, the U.S. administration advised the Commission to block the discussion, reports CNN Turk. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Armenian Massacre; H. Clinton Warns Foreign Commission

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today warned the Chief of the Foreign Commission of the US Congress that any approval of the resolution over the genocide of the Armenians during the Ottoman Empire would put the process of normalisation of relations begun last October between Turkey and Armenia at risk, reports TV channel CNN Turk. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Massacre of Armenians; Obama Calls Gul, NTV

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 4 — US President Barack Obama called his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul today, says private television channel NTV, which adds that the head of the White House suggested that Gul speed up the ratification of protocols for the normalisation of relations between Turkey and Armenia signed in Zurich last October. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yemen: Gov’t: 11 Al Qaeda Members Arrested in Sanaa

(ANSAmed) — SANAA, MARCH 4 — Eleven members of Al Qaeda were arrested in Yemen in an operation conducted by security forces in which the father of one of those arrested lost his life. The announcement was made by the Yemenite Ministry of Defence. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Kazakhstan — Europe: Kazakh Oil to Reach Trieste

The presidents of Kazakhstan and Romania look at how oil from the Caucasus could reach the Black Sea for transhipment to Romania’s sea port of Constanta and then Trieste. Kazakhs want to reduce their dependence on Moscow. Romanians want to become the gateway to Europe.

Astana (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Kazakh oil will reach Europe via a new route, “through the Caucasus, from Kazakhstan across the Caspian to Baku, then to Georgia via Azerbaijan, to the Black Sea and then to Romania.” From there, it would reach Trieste by pipeline, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev said yesterday after talks in Astana with Romanian President Traian Basescu, who travelled home today.

Oil will be shipped through Azerbaijan and Georgia in existing pipelines until the Black Sea. From the Georgian port of Batumi, it would reach the sea port of Constanta in Romania on tankers, and then flow by pipeline until Trieste.

This will enable Astana to reduce its dependency on Russian pipelines, which presently carry almost all of its oil to the West.

“We are interested in this and we agreed with the president (Basescu) to work together and give orders to oil companies involved,” Nazarbayev said.

“Romania understands very well Kazakhstan’s need to open up possibilities for exports to the European Union because it is a huge market,” Basescu said after the meeting.

“Romania,” he added, “is ready to cooperate with Kazakhstan in use of the Romanian infrastructure: these are railways, overland means of communication, Danube, [. . .] and the Black Sea.”

Although the two leaders did not mention dates, analysts note that Kazakhstan in the past looked at the southern Caucasus route, but put it off because of the war between Russia and Georgia in August 2008. Now that relations between the two countries are on the mend, the project can be envisaged again.

For Kazakhstan, this is especially important because it needs new export pipelines to handle an expected surge in oil production after 2012 when the giant Kashagan field comes on stream in the Caspian Sea.

Kazakhstan averaged 1.5m barrels a day of oil last year and expects to double output after Kashagan comes on stream.

KazMunaigas, Kazakhstan’s state oil company bought Rompetrol, the Romanian oil refining and distribution company, in 2008.

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

South Asia


‘He’s Just a Little Boy’: Mother’s Tears as British Son, 5, Is Kidnapped and Held for £100,000 Ransom on Pakistan Holiday

The mother of a five-year-old British boy kidnapped by gun-wielding robbers in Pakistan broke down in tears today as she said her family had ‘no chance’ of meeting a £100,000 ransom.

Sahil Saeed, from Oldham, Greater Manchester, was snatched this morning in the Punjab region after his grandmother’s house was raided by robbers.

His father, Raja Naqqash Saeed, said the kidnappers had put a noon deadline on the ransom for his safe return.

Speaking at the family’s home, his mother Akila said there is ‘no chance’ her family would be able to pay.

She wept as she told Sky News: ‘He’s just a sweet little boy.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Punjab: Christian Couple Touches Qur’an With Dirty Hands, Gets 25 Years in Prison

Munir Masih and Ruqqiya Bibi are convicted on the basis of the blasphemy law. In January, they were released on bail; now they are in two separate prison facilities. Extremist fringe put pressure, and perhaps corrupted police to find the right evidence to justify the conviction.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — A court in Kasur district, Punjab, convicted a Christian couple, Munir Masih and Ruqqiya Bibi, to 25 years in prison. According to the Centre for Legal Aid Assistance and Settlement (CLAAS), judge Ajmal Hussein convicted the couple for touching the Qur’an without washing their hands.

Munir Masih and Ruqqiya Bibi were released on bail last January, but were re-arrested after the judge ruled against them. The husband was locked up in Kasur’s district prison; the wife was sent to the women’s prison in Multan. Both have started serving 25 years behind bars.

CLAAS, an association that fights for the rights of the poor and marginalised, said that the couple was accused of “contaminating” the Qur’an when they touched it “without washing their hands”.

The incident, which dates back to December 2008, unleashed the fury of Muslim extremists who put pressure on police. Unconfirmed reports suggest that extremists paid off police agents to discover “new evidence” to justify the sentence.

At the end of the police investigation, husband and wife were charged with blasphemy.

The blasphemy law is the harshest tool for religious repression available in Pakistan. It was adopted in 1986 by then dictator Zia ul-Haq to protect Islam and its prophet, Muhammad, from attacks and insults.

In fact, it is actually comprised of sections 295-B and 295-C of the Pakistan Penal Code, which respectively punish with life in prison anyone who defiles, damages or desecrates a copy of the Holy Qur’an, and imposes the death penalty on anyone who defiles the name of the Prophet Muhammad.

In the last two months, there were two more convictions against Christians in Pakistan.

On 11 January, a court in Faisalabad sentenced Imran Masih, a 26-year-old Christian man, to life imprisonment for insulting and desecrating the Koran. He was accused of deliberately burning Qur’anic verses and an Arabic book in order “foment interfaith hatred and hurt the feelings of Muslims.”

On 25 February, a court in Karachi sentenced Qamar David, also a Christian, to life imprisonment for hurting the religious feelings of Muslims when he sent blasphemous SMS.

CLAAS announced that it was filing an appeal with the High Court in Lahore to have the 25-year sentence against Munir Masih and Ruqqiya Bibi overturned.

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



Pakistan: Kidnapped Sikhs Were Forced to Cut Hair and Convert to Islam

by Deepak Lal

The story of kidnapped Sikhs in Pakistan has had a new revelation, with the two men revealing in their 42 day captivity they were forced to convert to Islam. Once Sarjeet Singh and Gurbinder Singh were kidnapped they were forced to go against their religious values by shaving off their beards and cutting their hair.

The two men were being reported to have been kidnapped by a group of militants from the Tehrik-e-Taliban, in which Jaspal Singh was beheaded on February 20th after his family failed to pay a ransom of Rs 30 million, which was demanded for all three men.

Pakistani forces recovered the two remaining men in the Orakzai and Khyber regions, which border neighbouring Afghanistan. Sarjeet and Gurendal were successfully rescued, but not un-scathed as Sarjeet suffered three bullet wounds in the furious gun-fire exchanges. We are being led to believe that Sarjeet was mistakenly shot because he had no beard or turban, with the Pakistani military not being able to tell the difference between the Sikh detainees and the barbaric Taliban militants.

Doctors at the Combined Military Hospital successfully removed two bullets from the body of Sarjeet Singh; he had been in a stable condition since. Gurendal had been reunited with his family in Peshawar where another Sikh man, Robin Singh has recently been abducted with a ransom of £140,000 being demanded. A five year old British boy has also been kidnapped with a ransom of £100,000 being ordered. Although Sikhs are a minority in Pakistan they have lived in Khyber for over 200 years.

India’s foreign minister, S M Krishna has come out to condemn the ‘barbaric’ attacks by the Taliban: “I rise to strongly condemn the beheading of Sardar Jaspal Singh in the tribal areas of Pakistan. This barbaric and heinous crime is deplorable in the strongest possible terms. His abductors, reportedly the Taliban, committed the grave crime when his family was not able to pay ransom money to the abductors. We express our sincere condolences to the family of the victim,” said Krishna who is scheduled to visit Golden Temple in Amritsar on Friday. He has also claimed that Pakistan’s president has condemned the attacks also with the government pledging to find those guilty and India will be taking the issuer up with Pakistan.

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

Far East


Chinese Labour Shortage Drives Up Wages

Chinese car and electronic factories are raising wages in response to their first shortage of workers. The development could hurt China’s competitive advantage.

By Oscar Garschagen in Shenzhen

It didn’t take Zhang Qin (22) long to find himself a job after his 18-hour train ride to the southern Chinese city Shenzhen. “I suspected it would be no problem at all. I read on the internet you could just walk into any factory here and get a job,” he said.

As he stepped into a recruiter’s bus, he called his parents to share the good news. He would be putting together plasma display panels for electronics manufacturer Samsung. But if he didn’t like this work, he said, he would try his luck at competitors LG, Panasonic or Galanz the same month. These options are available because all large factories in the Pearl and Yangtze river delta are currently experiencing a sudden and unexpected labour shortage.

Millions of migrant workers stay home

Millions of migrant workers formerly employed on China’s eastern coast, have not returned from their annual trek back to their native lands. Like every year, they travelled home to celebrate the Chinese New Year and Lantern Festival. But instead of returning east, they have found new jobs in China’s central and western provinces.

Since Chinese employment data are notoriously unreliable and always outdated, no reliable numbers are available concerning the labour shortage. “But if businesses like Samsung, Panasonic and even factories in Hong Kong and Taiwan are raising wages by 10 to 30 percent, you know something big is at work,” said economic analyst Andy Xie. “Those pay raises are a better indicator than official statistics.”

Zhang Qin, an educated but inexperienced electrician from a village in Sichuan, will be earning 1,800 yuan (179 euros) a month working for Samsung. His benefits include a place to stay, three meals a day and free internet. He can earn more for overtime worked on the one day a week he gets off.

Raises all around

Quanta Computer in Shenzhen recently raised the wages of all its 40,000 employees by ten percent, and is also considering a new bonus system. Xie, a former analyst for Morgan Stanley, called this move illustrative of recent developments. Quanta, a Taiwanese company, is one of the biggest manufacturers of laptops in the world. It counts Apple, Dell, HP and Acer among its clients.

Factories producing new iPads, iPhones, Volkswagens, Buicks, Jeeps and BMWs have raised pay by 20 percent on average. “A labour shortage hurting all branches of industry, including hospitality, is an entirely new phenomenon in China. The situation is nothing short of alarming,” said Xie, who works as an analyst for the financial weekly Cajing and several Chinese television networks.

The difference with the situation on the labour market a year ago could not be stronger. Close to 20 of the 150 million migrant workers then lost their jobs after the recession struck in the Western world. There was only one job opening available for every four people looking for work.

Tried every incentive

The situation has quickly reversed: today every job-seeker has four opening to choose from. Large signs with thousands of openings lined the windows of Golden Future employment agency in Shenzhen. The office was quiet on the morning after the Lantern Festival. Director Wang Lu said she had sent her employees to bus and train stations to offer jobs to freshly arrived migrant workers. Other agencies had even sent recruiters out into the provinces.

Tommy Lam Chin, the owner of a chain of textile and toy factories, said he had never been in this situation. Sitting in his Shenzhen office, he explained that while foreign orders had been recovering in recent months, he remained 3,000 workers short of the 8,000 people he needed. “This is the first time I am unable to fill all orders, and am forced to postpone delivery dates past the clients’ wishes,” he said.

Lam Chin’s factories produce high quality sporting gear and expensive blazers for the American market. Like the competition, he has tried every incentive to entice his employees to return: higher wages, bonuses, improved working and living conditions, free internet and movies. Some factories have even paid train and air-fare for their workers.

Their own fault?

Factory owners like Lam Chin hope the labour shortage will prove temporary and that new generations of migrant workers will flock to their factories in May and June when high schools close their doors. But they could be mistaken.

A Chinese periodical, the Southern Metropolis Weekly, concluded this would only happen “if businessmen really start improving working conditions”.

The magazine wrote China’s entrepreneurs “largely have themselves to blame for this problem”, lambasting the companies that provide cheap products to European and American consumers. “They never gave people the respect they deserved. Working and living conditions were appalling and wages were low. Anybody who treats his workers this way should not expect any loyalty. Companies have their own lack of vision to thank for this crisis.”

Two other factors are also at play here. The rapid industrialisation and urbanisation of central and western China has created a demand for labour in the native provinces of many migrant workers. Wages here are mostly lower than they are on the east coast, but so is cost of living, and migrants’ families live nearby. Educational policy is also causing the pool of uneducated labourers to dwindle. Children of labour migrants are attending universities and professional colleges in increasing numbers.

Workers grow richer

Macro-economic consequences of the labour shortage in China’s core industrial regions are not hard to predict, Xie said. “Wages are up, so prices will go too. Inflation will also rise more quickly than the three to five percent currently predicted. Factories producing for export will try to pass some of their rising costs on to consumers in the US and Europe. But they should be careful. Competition is cutthroat and the economic recovery weak.” Current developments are good news for many Chinese labourers however. Their purchasing power will improve as a result.

In any case, China will become less attractive a country for businesses requiring cheap labour. The rising wages and technological developments will hurt China’s competitive advantage in this respect. “This process has been underway for quite some time already. It is an inevitable and welcome development,” Xie said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100303

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Israel and the Palestinians
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Financial Crisis


Greece Announced Added Measures. Papandreou Requests EU Plan

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — Euro-zone countries are “prepared to undertake determined and co-ordinated action, if necessary, to safeguard the financial stability of the entire Euro-zone”. This was the reaction of Eurogroup President Jean Claude Juncker, reacting to the announcement of additional measures in Greece. “The ambitious Greek plan to redress the budget imbalance is now firmly on track”, commented Juncker, adding that the announcement from Athens “confirms the Greek government’s commitment to taking all measures needed to reach the programme’s goals and to ensure a 4% reduction of GDP deficit by the end of 2010”. The additional measures “duly include spending cuts and in particular, savings on public sector wages, which are essential for consolidating accounts and re-establishing competitiveness.” The Greek government today announced “additional measures”, geared towards ending the financial crisis, of a value of 4.8 billion euros, which will see wages and pensions hit hard. Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou warned that “now it is Europe’s turn”, suggesting an appeal to the IMF may not be far off. According to the spokesman for the executive, Giorgios Petalotis, the measures, which were keenly requested by Brussels and decided during an extraordinary meeting of the Council of Ministers, include cuts in holiday bonuses (60%) and Christmas bonuses (30%), another reduction of supplementary salaries (now 12% overall), a freeze on pensions (added to the previously announced freeze on public-sector wages) an increase in VAT (from 19% to 21%), a ban on all bonuses for senior officials and managers, and an increase in duty on alcohol, cigarettes, petrol, diesel and luxury goods. During the meeting in which the measures were decided, Papandreou said : “We have done what we had to do. Now it is Europe’s turn.” Then, hinting indirectly but clearly at an appeal to the International Monetary Fund, he added: “If Europe’s response does not meet our expectations, we will no longer be able to finance ourselves on a market with such high interest rates.”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Juncker, Euro States Ready to Intervene

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 3 — Euro-zone countries are “prepared to undertake determined and co-ordinated action, if necessary, to safeguard the financial stability of the entire Euro-zone”. This was the reaction of Eurogroup President Jean Claude Juncker, reacting to the announcement of additional measures in Greece. “The ambitious Greek plan to redress the budget imbalance is now firmly on track”, commented Juncker, adding that the announcement from Athens “confirms the Greek government’s commitment to taking all measures needed to reach the programme’s goals and to ensure a 4% reduction of GDP deficit by the end of 2010”. The additional measures “duly include spending cuts and in particular, savings on public sector wages, which are essential for consolidating accounts and re-establishing competitiveness.” The Greek government today announced “additional measures”, geared towards ending the financial crisis, of a value of 4.8 billion euros, which will see wages and pensions hit hard. Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou warned that “now it is Europe’s turn”, suggesting an appeal to the IMF may not be far off. According to the spokesman for the executive, Giorgios Petalotis, the measures, which were keenly requested by Brussels and decided during an extraordinary meeting of the Council of Ministers, include cuts in holiday bonuses (60%) and Christmas bonuses (30%), another reduction of supplementary salaries (now 12% overall), a freeze on pensions (added to the previously announced freeze on public-sector wages) an increase in VAT (from 19% to 21%), a ban on all bonuses for senior officials and managers, and an increase in duty on alcohol, cigarettes, petrol, diesel and luxury goods. During the meeting in which the measures were decided, Papandreou said : “We have done what we had to do. Now it is Europe’s turn.” Then, hinting indirectly but clearly at an appeal to the International Monetary Fund, he added: “If Europe’s response does not meet our expectations, we will no longer be able to finance ourselves on a market with such high interest rates.”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Mafia Creating ‘Alternative’ Government

Pisanu alarmed over influence on economy, finance and politics

(ANSA) — Rome, March 2 — Organised crime in Italy is going through a “strategic metamorphosis” aimed at reducing its use of intimidation and violence in favor of exercising its influence on the economy, finance and politics, the head of the parliamentary Anti-Mafia Commission warned on Tuesday.

The Mafia’s ultimate objective, Giuseppe Pisanu explained, is to create an alternative to the government through its control of the economy and finance which has been facilitated by its ability to corrupt politics.

Politics, he said, is a “key channel” through which organised crime can launder its vast illegal wealth into the legal economy.

“We know how it accumulates this wealth but we know very little about where it goes and how it is invested,” Pisanu said.

“And there is no doubt that this dirty capital enters the legal economy through the complicity and collaboration of important players in civil society: lawyers, notaries, businessmen, bankers, government officials and politicians on every level,” the Anti-Mafia Commission chairman added.

According to Pisanu, “a sea of dirty money flows every year into our country adulterating the market economy and corrupting anything and anyone it encounters”.

Looking at southern Italy, home to Italy’s leading crime syndicates — Cosa Nostra in Sicily, the Neapolitan Camorra and Calabria’s powerful ‘Ndrangheta — Pisanu observed how “the powerful influence organised crime has on the local economy there is both the cause and effect of the region’s inability to develop” in the past 50 years.

Using the south as its base, he continued, these criminal organizations “have expanded to central and northern Italy and to parts of Europe, constantly growing more powerful”.

In order to counter this situation, Pisanu said the Anti-Mafia Commission needed to open a debate on revamping and modernising Italy’s anti-mafia laws.

“We need to set ourselves three objectives: draw up a report for parliament on how the Mafia exerts its influence on the economy, society and politics; carry out an in-depth study on how organised crime exercises its influence on the economy and finance in Milan; review existing and proposed legislation in order to adapt it more towards preventing organised crime from expanding further”.

While Italy has embarked on the right path in seizing and confiscating the Mafia’s capital and assets, Pisanu observed, “the seven billion euros in assets seized so far may be a considerable sum but is a pittance considering organised crime’s annual turnover of 120-140 billion euros”.

And while Italy may be having success in cracking down on organised crime’s assets, Pisanu added, these groups have responded by “shifting their investments abroad or into the stock market and finance where it is difficult to track them down”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Secretary Geithner’s Got Some Explaining to Do

By David Yerushalmi

While everyone, including Congress, the media, and the public, have focused on AIG’s $100-million bonus payments to key employees, and most recently on AIG’s stealth payments to counterparties like Chase and the French giant Société Générale — the latter made worse by the fact that it was the Federal Reserve (FED) that wanted to keep these payments hidden from public view — the problem with the AIG bailout is much deeper and more fundamental.

Just about everyone has had something to say about this bailout — mostly that it was an ugly but necessary step to stave off a domino effect that would have brought the world’s financial system to its knees. But what we have not yet heard is just how Treasury Secretary Geithner, as then-head of the NY FED, got away with taking ownership of 77.9% of AIG’s equity and voting rights in clear violation of the law.

The question we are left with is: Why? What motivated this illegal grab of AIG’s equity and voting rights? Was it desperation in the face of the largest potential collapse in the history of modern finance? Was it unbridled power combined with supreme hubris? Or was it just criminal? The answer to this query resides in the as-yet-hidden files of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, now subject to a subpoena issued by my office in the federal lawsuit Murray v. Geithner, pending in the Eastern District of Michigan.

In this lawsuit, brought on behalf of Kevin Murray, an Iraq War veteran and taxpayer, my co-counsel, Robert Muise of the Thomas More Law Center, and I have challenged the U.S. government’s takeover of AIG as a violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment because the taxpayer bailout has the effect of promoting and advancing AIG’s Shariah-adherent insurance business — the largest in the world. AIG promotes itself as a global advocate not only of Islam, but also of the Islamic legal doctrine known as Shariah — which is the Islamic legal doctrine and program that calls for a global hegemony referred to as the Caliphate, the murder of apostates, and jihad against infidels. The most austere and important Islamic legal authorities who legitimize Shariah-compliant finance, like AIG’s takaful insurance products, are the same ones issuing fatwas for jihad against the West.

In the course of discovery, resisted by the government at every turn, we have learned that the deal Geithner put together as the NY Fed’s president was illegal on its face.

The Deal

Specifically, the deal Geithner put together in September 2008 was for the NY FED to pour up to $85 billion of debt funding into AIG to solve its liquidity crisis as the Credit Default Swap counterparties, the banks which had insured themselves against the sub-prime mortgage meltdown, demanded payments under their AIG insurance policies. AIG ended up drawing down $60 billion almost overnight.

But Geithner was not content with a straight debt deal where AIG promised to pay back principal and interest and handed over almost all of its assets as collateral. Geithner wanted real ownership and control (77.9%, to be exact) of AIG’s equity and the voting rights to go along with that.

The problem Geithner knew he had to confront, however, was that the FED was not authorized to take ownership in AIG or any other financial institution. The law authorized the FED only to loan money and take collateral. While the FED might end up with ownership after a default and foreclosure on the collateral, the Federal Reserve Act does not authorize the NY Fed to structure the debt deal with an equity piece.

The Criminal Artifice

So what did Geithner do? He took equity, but he used a fictitious “Trust” to accomplish that which he could not do legally. The AIG Credit Facility Trust has three so-called independent, non-governmental trustees owning the 77.9% of the legal interests of AIG, and the Trust agreement assigns the U.S. Treasury the beneficial interests in the 77.9%. The highly-touted “independence” of the trustees is quite obviously critical to save the Trust from the claim that it is merely a ruse for FED ownership and control.

But there is only one problem with this Trust structure: It is invalid and illegal for two important reasons, not the least of which is that its independence is nonexistent.

Specifically, the Trust Agreement includes a hardly-noticed section 1.03, which gives the FED absolute authority over the Trust’s existence and its terms, effectively granting the FED control over the actions of the trustees. By any legal definition, this is not a valid independent trust. This means, at the very least, that the FED is the real owner of the legal interests in 77.9% of AIG’s equity, and this is, as Geithner himself testified before the Senate Banking Committee in April 2008, not legal.

But the Trust’s infirmities do not stop at its lack of independence. The Trust Agreement also assigns the beneficial interests to the U.S. Treasury as the Trust’s beneficiary. This assignment is patently invalid because a trust beneficiary must be a person or entity that can own title to things in its own name. But the U.S. Treasury is — by statute, by case law, and by actual fact — nothing more than a bank account or depository for things owned by the U.S. government. And a bank account cannot own anything.

So how and why did the dozens, if not hundreds, of government and private-sector high-priced lawyers working on this transaction make such an elementary mistake? We don’t know the answer to this question yet, but we do know why they could not name the Treasury Department as the beneficiary: because like with the FED, at the time, it did not yet have legal authority to acquire an ownership interest in any of the failing financial institutions, either. That authority would come later, when Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, which authorizes the use of TARP funds for acquiring equity. But even that legislation instructs the Treasury Department to avoid acquiring voting rights. Geithner’s deal was all about acquiring not just voting rights, but super-majority control. Unfortunately, there was no legal authority at the time to do so.

The brute fact that now standing exposed before us is the use of an invalid Trust structure to conceal the unlawful ownership and control over 77.9% of AIG’s equity and voting rights by the FED. If Geithner knew he was breaking the law, then this just happens to be the definition of criminal money-laundering under Title 18, Section 1956. Secretary Geithner has some explaining to do to AIG’s public shareholders. We suggest that he seek legal advice first — but this time, from lawyers who actually know what they are doing.

[Return to headlines]



Spain: Wine Hit by Crisis, Sales and Export Collapse

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 1 — Spain’s wine sector has not been spared by the crisis, with sales in freefall due to the decrease in both internal consumption and exports. The dramatic fall in prices has led some of the main producers and cooperatives to ask the government for a so-called “crisis distillation”, which will allow wines to be taken off the market and turned in to alcohol for industrial and fuel purposes. The value of wine export was down 13.5% in 2009, a deficit of 1.718 million euros, while its volume fell by 9.7%, the equivalent of 1.509 million litres, compared to the previous year. This trend comes in spite of a general decrease in prices. Worst hit were fizzy wines, with a 30% slump in sales and a 19.8% fall in cost, according to figures published by Spain’s wine market watchdog. Average prices were reduced by 4.2% over the same period, or 1.14 euros per litre. As far as exports were concerned, Italy was the country that most reduced their purchase of Spanish wines, by a figure of 56.7% in 2009 compared to the previous year. The decline in both exports and internal consumption has damaged not only wine cooperatives, who have been forced to undersell their products to continue trading, but also the largest production companies, who market the wines directly, and who have been forced to drop their prices considerably. Agriculture organisations such as UPA, COAG and food and wine cooperatives have reacted to the crisis by asking the Agriculture Minister Elena Espinosa to distil 2.5 million hectolitres at 1.91 euros per hectograde (the equivalent of 100 hectolitres of pure alcohol) to turn the wine into alcohol for industrial use. According to today’s El Pais, the country’s main agricultural organization, Asaja, has distanced itself from the request, due to its estimated cost of 50 million euros. The fall in consumption and export figures is also exacerbated by the presence of surplus stocks. During the last wine-producing season, excess wine, though slightly above average, was not significantly high, yet it added to the existing surplus, in turn contributing to the imbalance between availability and consumption. Wine consumption in Spain was down 10% in 2009, especially in restaurants and bars, but there was little change in domestic consumption of D.O wines, largely on account of falling prices. The situation is difficult to bear for many producers, especially those in the “designation of origin” region of La Rioja, who often find themselves covering production costs that exceed income. Local companies are said to have bought grapes from producers at a price of 0.3 euros per kilo, while harvest and production costs reach at least 0.4 euros per kilo. Adding to the bleak picture, according to agricultural companies and cooperatives, is the change in machinery in line with European market regulation, which has led to the disappearance of the stocking and warehousing policy.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain to Axe Public Utilities Spending

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 1 — A drastic cut in expenses for Spain’s public utilities and State-controlled enterprises, to reduce the deficit of the country’s public administration from the current 11.4% to the 3% claimed in the European Union stability pact. This has been imposed by the vice president of the Spanish State-owned holding company SEPI, Federico Montero, in a letter sent on February 13 of this year to the directors of public utilities. The receivers of the letter were asked to draft a detailed plan on savings in the 2010-2013 period in a record time of 24 hours. The goals specified in the letter, quoted by El Pais today, are related to a 4% cut of staff expense; a 15% cut of operational costs; a 13% cut of investment and a reduction of up to 36% of all expenses for transfers, lunches, communication and the use of company cars. The austerity plan implemented on January 23 by the Spanish government to reduce the public deficit and recover credibility on the financial markets, with a cut of 50 billion euros until 2013, has led to the first cuts in State-controlled enterprises. The letter speaks of a “rationalisation of workdays” and an “efficient use of assets, in order to save 15%”. Investments have to be reduced by 13% in nominal terms in the 2010-2013 period; infrastructures by 10% and those for trips, protocol, diet and outsourcing by 36%. The 4% cut in payment includes a reduction of absenteeism, a turnover stop and regards the 2.6 million employees of public administrations. The SEPI plan also regards 20 State-controlled enterprises, like the Astilleros Espaoles shipyards, the Hunosa group, Mercasa, Navantia and the EFE agency. The government also wants to reduce the number of public utilities and State-controlled enterprises from the current 474. The ministry of Infrastructure is preparing the merger of several railroad and airport companies. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Recession? What Recession? Fake Shopfronts Built to Cover Up High St Stores That Have Been Closed Down

As High Streets are decimated by the recession — fake business facades have been installed to create the illusion that shops are still occupied.

North Tyneside Council is trialling the new window treatment that at first glance gives the impression that units are occupied.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Congressman Eric Massa Accused of Sexually Harassing Male Staffer

Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.) will not seek re-election after only one term in office.

According to several House aides — on both sides of the aisle — the House ethics committee has been informed of allegations that Massa, who is married with two children, sexually harassed a male staffer.

Massa told POLITICO early Wednesday afternoon that no one has brought allegations of misconduct to him.

Asked about the sexual harassment allegations, Massa said: “When someone makes a decision to leave Congress, everybody says everything. I have health issues. I’ll talk about it [later].”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Paterson is Accused of Violating Ethics Laws

The state Commission on Public Integrity charged Gov. David A. Paterson on Wednesday with violating state ethics laws when he secured free tickets to the opening game of the World Series from the Yankees last fall for himself and others. The announcement came as the governor, already mired in scandal, met with his cabinet and insisted he would stay in office.

In addition to violating the state’s ban on gifts to public officials, the commission found that Mr. Paterson falsely testified under oath that he had intended to pay for the tickets for his son and his son’s friend when. The commission determined that Mr. Paterson had never intended to pay for the tickets and only did so after inquiries from the media, after which he submitted a backdated check as payment.

[Return to headlines]



Scathing Report: Tea Partiers Just Like Timothy McVeigh

Claims they believe government has secret plans for martial law

A new attack by the Southern Poverty Law Center charges the tea-party movement is “shot through” with radical ideas and tied with “hate groups,” “furious anti-immigrant vigilante groups” and “so-called ‘Patriot’ groups.”

The SPLC report, “Rage on the Right, The Year in Hate and Extremism,” assails Rep. Michelle Bachmann, R-Minn., for “plugging” anti-government ideas and Gun Owners of America Executive Director Larry Pratt for daring to promote Second Amendment gun rights.

The SPLC’s Mark Potok warns “so-called ‘Patriot’ groups — militias and other organizations that see the federal government as part of a plot to impose ‘one-world government’ on liberty-loving Americans — came roaring back after years out of the limelight.”

The report echoes themes in a U.S. Department of Homeland Security report last year that characterized “right-wing extremists” as opponents of abortion and illegal immigration and supporters of gun rights and third-party political candidates.

[…]

[Larry] Pratt [of Gun Owners of America] told WND the SPLC report was little more than “fundraising, trying to scare a bunch of little old ladies to cough up money.”

“It’s a typical argument that the left resorts to,” he said, “since they really have trouble with the fact that, until Obama was elected, they had been pretty successful at concealing that liberalism really is socialism.”

He said he was honored to be criticized alongside Bachmann.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Unknown DOJ Lawyers Identified

A day after a conservative group released a video condemning the Justice Department for refusing to identify seven lawyers who previously represented or advocated for terror suspects, Fox News has uncovered the identities of the seven lawyers.

The names were confirmed by a Justice Department spokesman, who said “politics has overtaken facts and reality” in a tug-of-war over the lawyers’ identities.

“Department of Justice attorneys work around the clock to keep this country safe, and it is offensive that their patriotism is being questioned,” said Justice Department Spokesman Matt Miller.

The video by the group Keep America Safe, which dubbed the seven lawyers “The Al Qaeda 7,” is the latest salvo in a lengthty political battle.

For several months, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) has led an effort to uncover politically-appointed lawyers within the Justice Department who have advocated for Guantanamo Bay detainees or other terror suspects.

“The administration has made many highly questionable decisions when it comes to national security, “ Grassley said in a recent statement. “[Americans] have a right to know who advises the Attorney General and the President on these critical matters.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Woman Expelled From CEGEP for Refusing to Remove Niqab

An Egyptian-born Montreal woman has been expelled from Quebec’s post-secondary college system for refusing to take off her niqab — a controversial decision she will contest with the Canadian Human Rights Commission.

Last fall, the woman had been attending the CEGEP St. Laurent in Montreal, taking a government-funded French course that seeks to help immigrants adjust to life in Quebec.

But course instructors say they need to be able to look at people while they are speaking to correct their elocution and pronunciation in class, an action that is not possible when a student is wearing a niqab — a veil that covers all but the eyes.

The woman did take off her niqab in some cases — to have a student ID picture taken and in some instances when she was speaking privately with a female teacher — and the school says it worked to accommodate her needs. She once gave an oral presentation with her back turned to her fellow students so other students would not be able to see her.

Paul Bourque, the director-general of the CEGEP St. Laurent, said it reached a point where the woman did not feel comfortable taking off her niqab in the classroom environment where the number of male students outnumbered female students.

The class, Bourque told CTV Montreal, was configured “in a way that it was not easy for her to be hidden from the students.”

In the end, the woman “decided to wear her niqab,” Borque said.

The situation then became more “tense and confrontational,” CTV Montreal’s Cindy Sherwin reported.

Eventually, the woman was sent a letter from Quebec’s immigration department indicating she had to remove her niqab or choose to leave the class. She was also offered the chance to study online.

The woman refused to remove her niqab and was expelled. She has since filed a complaint with the Human Rights Commission.

Fo Niemi, head of the Centre for Research Action on Race Relations, said accommodating cultural differences is “a constant balancing act that requires compromise, common sense and insight.”

“The issue is, in this case, if the school has undertaken all the reasonable efforts to accommodate her, and it seems it has, because it has tried several formulas and it hasn’t worked out,” Niemi told CTV Montreal. “Then obviously the question for the human rights commission to decide is whether it has been reasonable.”

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Blond Bombshell Geert Wilders Returns to Britain, Looking for a Fight

Geert Wilders has attracted support for his warnings of a “tsunami of Islamification”. He also has to face protests and death threats

Boyish, topped with a bouffant mane of bleached blond hair, cheerful and cherubic, Geert Wilders is the unlikely new face of the far Right in Europe. But appearances are deceptive. The leader of the Dutch anti-immigration Freedom Party has emerged as one of the most divisive politicians in Europe, the purveyor of a virulent brand of anti-Islamic rhetoric that calls for a tax on Islamic headscarves and a ban on the Koran, which he likens to Mein Kampf.

Mr Wilders is facing trial in a Dutch court for “inciting hatred”. Last year he was banned from Britain and turned away at Heathrow when he arrived here planning to show his short film, an incendiary anti-Islamic diatribe that the Dutch Prime Minister described as serving “no purpose other than to offend”.

On Friday, after successfully appealing against the Home Office ban, Mr Wilders will return to Britain at the invitation of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) to show his controversial film to an invited audience at the House of Lords. The English Defence League is expected to demonstrate in his support and Muslim groups are all but certain to mount protests.

To his enemies, the 46-year-old Dutchman is an old-fashioned racist demagogue in a new suit; a bottle-blond bigot. To his growing ranks of supporters he is a champion of free speech, a bulwark against what he calls “the Islamic invasion of Holland”. He may be dismissed by some as a crank but he is an increasingly powerful and popular one. On February 20 the Dutch centrist coalition Government collapsed, deeply divided over keeping troops in Afghanistan, paving the way for a general election in June in which the Freedom Party is expected to do extremely well. Polls suggest that the party will triple its tally of seats, becoming at least the second-biggest parliamentary party and quite possibly the overall winner. Mr Wilders is likely to be a key player in any coalition, with a profound impact on the political agenda.

Related Links

Wilders calls Islamic ‘fanatic’ as witness

Far-right MP on trial for attacks on Islam

Anti-Islam MP vows to defy UK ban

Nicknamed “Mozart” on account of a platinum hairdo that looks strikingly like an 18th-century wig, Mr Wilders has played on the dischords in Dutch society with virtuoso skill. As in Britain, many Dutch voters are alarmed by the scale of immigration, battered by the global economic crisis, culturally anxious and increasingly receptive to his grim warnings about a “tsunami of Islamification”.

The political heir to Pim Fortuyn, the Dutch populist politician who called for a halt to Muslim immigration and who was murdered in the 2002 election campaign, Mr Wilders has portrayed himself as the only politician in his country brave enough to stand up to militant Islam, a threat that he has compared to Nazism. “A century ago there were approximately 50 Muslims in the Netherlands. Today there are about one million. Where will it end? We are heading for the end of European civilisation,” he predicts. Promising strict limits on immigration, he has also called for a “head-rag tax” of €1,000 (£922) a year on Muslim women wearing headscarves.

In 2008 he released a 15-minute film entitled Fitna (the Arabic word for “strife”) which provoked outrage across the Muslim world: it opens with an image of the Koran, followed by footage of terrorist attacks and a litany of stonings, beheadings, honour killings, homophobia and child marriages. It ends, predictably, with the Danish cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad that sparked fury in 2006. Al-Qaeda is believed to have ordered the killing of Mr Wilders after the film was released. Ban Ki Moon, the UN Secretary-General, has described the Dutch politician as “offensively anti-Islamic”. His most incendiary remarks are aimed at the Koran, which he calls a fascist book. “The Koran incites to hatred and calls for murder and mayhem,” Mr Wilders told the Dutch Parliament. “It is an absolute necessity that the Koran be banned for the defence and reinforcement of our civilisation and our constitutional state.”

In January a Dutch court ordered the public prosecutor to try Mr Wilders on charges of fomenting hatred and discrimination. Mr Wilders indicated that he would call witnesses in order to prove Koran-inspired violence, including Mohammed Bouyeri, the man convicted of murdering the Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh in 2004.

Although he faces 16 months in prison if convicted, the trial represents a political goldmine for Mr Wilders and helps to explain his recent rise in opinion polls. If he is convicted he will paint himself as martyr to political correctness; if he is acquitted he will claim vindication. The trial has been suspended until after the election.

Inadvertently, Britain also did much to boost his standing in February last year by banning him from entering the country as an “undesirable person”, citing EU laws enabling member states to exclude someone whose presence could threaten public security. Mr Wilders loudly condemned Gordon Brown as “the biggest coward in Europe” and some 84 per cent of Dutch voters objected to the way that Mr Wilders had been ejected by Britain.

The ban was later overturned by an asylum and immigration tribunal. On Friday, at the invitation of the UKIP leader Lord Pearson of Rannoch and Baroness Cox of Queensbury, he will show Fitna to MPs, peers and guests before giving a press conference at Westminster.

“The issue of militant Islam is the greatest issue facing our Judeo-Christian culture,” Lord Pearson said. “I don’t agree that the Koran should be banned but we want it discussed … mild Muslims should stand up and debate their militant co-religionists.”

Mr Wilders has sought to distance himself and his party from the traditional standard-bearers of the extreme Right in Europe, such as Jean-Marie Le Pen of the National Front in France and the late Jörg Haider of the Freedom Party in Austria. He has made no contact with the BNP. “My allies are not Le Pen and Haider,” he says. “I’m very afraid of being linked with the wrong rightist fascist groups.” His prime political role models are said to be Margaret Thatcher and Winston Churchill.

The son of a printer, Mr Wilders was raised Roman Catholic but is now an atheist. He worked in a Dutch social insurance agency before becoming a speechwriter and then MP for the liberal People’s Party, which he left in 2004 to form his own party.

As a prime terrorist target he lives under 24-hour police guard, changing his location nightly. He is seldom seen in public and gives few interviews. Even contact with his wife, a Dutch-Hungarian former diplomat, is limited by security concerns, This way of life, under constant threat, is “a situation I wouldn’t wish on my worst enemy”, he once remarked.

“They are trying to shoot him all the time,” says Lord Pearson, noting that Mr Wilders will be coming to Britain with five state-hired Dutch bodyguards. “He has a really, really tough existence.”

Mr Wilders opposes expansion of the EU, most particularly Turkish membership, and Dutch military deployment in Afghanistan, but the core of his message lies in an appeal to defend traditional Dutch culture against perceived encroachment by Islam. “Islam is the Trojan Horse in Europe,” he told the Dutch Parliament. “Stop all immigration from Muslim countries, ban all building of new mosques, close all Islamic schools, ban burkas and the Koran … Stop Islamification. Enough is enough!”

Some polls suggest that after the June elections Mr Wilders may lead the biggest single parliamentary party, raising the prospect that a former fringe provincial politician with extreme views and peculiar hair could end up leading the country. “At some point it’s going to happen and then it will be a big honour to fulfil the post of prime minister,” he says. If that comes to pass it will mark both the triumph of a new, more subtle brand of right-wing politics in Europe, and the final demise of the stereotyped image of the Netherlands as a nation of bland liberal views and easygoing tolerance.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Crucifixes in School: European Bishops Satisfied

(AGI) — Vatican City, 2 Mar. — The president of the Council of European Episcopal Conferences, card. Peter Erdo, has expressed “satisfaction with the decision made by the five judges of the Grand Chamber of the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights to accept the Italian government’s appeal”. He added that “religious issues should always be addressed at the national level”. (AGI) .

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Fears on Wilders’ UK Visit

FEARS were growing last night that far-right Dutch politician Geert Wilders could spark furious clashes when he arrives in Britain tomorrow.

The Freedom Party leader will screen his anti-Islamic film Fitna in the House of Lords.

Mr Wilders, who wants the Koran and the burkha banned in the Netherlands, was invited by UK Independence Party peer Lord Rannoch and Baroness Cox, a former Tory peer.

The visit coincides with Gordon Brown’s appearance at the Iraq inquiry, prompting concerns from the Metropolitan police.

Muslim groups are expected to protest at Mr Wilders’ arrival, while the English Defence League plans to welcome him. And the Stop the War Coalition is planning a demo as Mr Brown faces the inquiry.

The Met said: “The English Defence League and the Stop the War Coalition are both planning marches.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Four Jailed for Violent Patrick’s Day Attacks

[Note from McR: If you’re thinking of coming to Ireland to celebrate Saint Patrick’s day read this newspaper article FIRST.]

FOUR MEN involved in a series of violent attacks on six people attending a St Patrick’s Day parade, including a US tourist, have been jailed for terms ranging from three to 10 years.

The men, aged between 18 and 22, were sentenced at Clonmel Circuit Court yesterday for their involvement in a series of “unprovoked attacks” on “innocent” members of the public in Tipperary town on March 17th last year.

Two of the men, brothers Ned (22) and Dan Delaney (19), of Carrowclough, Tipperary, were both handed the maximum 10-year sentence for the offence of violent disorder committed on the day.

Sgt John Keane told the court the men were part of a gang who “were drinking all day” and who unleashed “untold fear amongst the decent citizens of Tipperary”.

US tourist James Faul gave evidence last November of how he was attacked from behind by a gang of men while visiting Tipperary with his wife for the St Patrick’s Day parade.

Mr Faul sustained a broken nose and a fracture to the bone around his left eye, requiring insertion of a titanium plate. He has suffered continuous double vision as a result of the attack.

James Griffin (46) was knocked to the ground, punched repeatedly and kicked about 10 times as he left the Kickham House pub with his partner at 5.58pm.

Judge Thomas Teehan said in his 40 years of presiding over criminal cases, this was among the “most sickening” acts of violence inflicted on innocent victims that he had experienced. He added: “Word must go out that courts will not tolerate this behaviour of character in our towns and villages.”

He said that “levels of violence on our streets had increased”, and the “types of violence have worsened to achieve levels of depravity seldom witnessed 30 years ago”.

The court heard Ned Delaney had used a sign from outside an off-licence to strike Frank Spillane (53) across the back of the head, while Francis Butler (60) was struck on the head with an ice cream sign by Dan Delaney.

John Cleary (68) was struck in the face by Ned Delaney as he smoked a cigarette outside a pub, and suffered a fractured jaw.

All four pleaded guilty to one count of violent disorder and to various counts of assault.

Ned Delaney — whom Judge Teehan called a “ringleader” — received 14 years for four counts of assault, to run concurrently with the 10 years for violent disorder. Judge Teehan suspended the final four years.

Dan Delaney received 12 years for four assault charges, also to run concurrently with the 10-year sentence for violent disorder, with the last three years suspended.

John Paul Delaney (18), of Abbey Street, Cahir, was jailed for five years for his involvement in the attacks, while Patrick O’Keeffe (19), St Ailbe’s Drive, Tipperary, was jailed for three years.

Judge Teehan said he took into account the fact the men had pleaded guilty to the charges, but said it was “extremely important that a message goes out that this type of behaviour will not be tolerated in our society”. He refused an application for leave to appeal on grounds of severity of sentencing.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



‘Iran Arms Runners’ Held in Italy

Two Iranians and five Italians have been arrested by Italian police on suspicion of trafficking arms to Iran, anti-terror police say.

Two more Iranian suspects are currently in Iran, Italian officials say.

Italy’s anti-terrorist prosecutor Armando Spataro said the two Iranians arrested in Italy worked for the Iranian government.

He said they were accused of exporting arms and armament systems, and breaking a UN arms embargo on Iran.

“It is an investigation of considerable importance because it concerns the entire international community,” said Mr Spataro of the nine-month operation, codenamed Sniper.

It was conducted along with Swiss police as one of the suspects lived in Bern, he added.

An earlier statement said those sought were suspected members of the Iranian secret service.

Italy is Iran’s biggest trading partner in the European Union.

But it has been among the countries leading calls for tougher sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme.

The West accuses Iran of seeking to build nuclear weapons. Iran denies this, saying its only aim is to generate nuclear energy.

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



Italy’s Crucifix Appeal Admitted to EU Court

Final ruling on classroom cross ban later this year

(ANSA) — Strasbourg, January 26 — Italy’s appeal on a European court ruling against crosses in Italian classrooms has been admitted.

A five-strong panel on the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) said Italy had a case against the November 3 ruling that sparked a storm in the heavily Catholic country and strong criticism from Italy’s centre-right government.

The ECHR’s ‘Grande Chambre’, or 17-strong ruling panel, will examine Italy’s highly detailed dossier in a public hearing later this year.

Appeals are judged admissible when the issue “raises serious problems of interpretation or application”.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini voiced “satisfaction” at Tuesday’s decision, saying Italy’s “numerous and well-motivated” arguments had been accepted.

Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini said “this is a great success for Italy in reaffirming a respect for Christian traditions and the country’s cultural identity”.

The Vatican City’s top judge, Giuseppe Dalla Torre, said “the fact that the appeal has been admitted by the Grande Chambre means that the arguments used against the first ruling were more than well-founded”.

“The November 3 ruling raised a strong, negative echo not only in Italy but also in many other European countries,” said Dalla Torre, president of the Vatican’s State Tribunal.

“The general principle that is asserting itself in Europe, and particularly in the European Union, is that problems relating to religious questions must be left to the democratic and constitutional responsibilities of individual states because they are the result of traditions and often an equilibrium of factors that have seen conflicts within the states,” Dalla Torre told the Sir news agency.

The Italian Bishops Conference (CEI) called the ruling “a step in the right direction”.

“A much wider consensus than might have been imagined” had been created on the issue, said CEI spokesman Msgr Domenico Pompili.

In other reactions, the head of Italy’s Schengen Committee, Margherita Boniver, said “it is a very important sign”.

Boniver, a member of Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, said “it shows the need to jealously defend the symbols of a religious and cultural heritage that has belonged to Europeans for centuries”.

The deputy chair of the foreign affairs committee, centre-left Democratic Party (PD) member Enrico Farinone, also welcomed the decision.

“This is a positive ruling that takes into account the sensibility of a considerable number of Europeans”.

“We can’t look to the future of this continent by denying our past,” said the PD MP.

Several MPs from across the political spectrum said the ECHR had shown “common sense”. When the appeal was filed on January 29, Frattini said Italy was determined “to defend a very deep sentiment of the Italian people, a fundamental principle which affects the identity of our country”.

He said it was even more important to safeguard Italy’s “Christian identity” after Italy and other Catholic countries failed to have a reference to Europe’s Christian roots included in the European Union’s Constitution.

“We lost that battle, for the moment, but now we must defend that identity”.

Italy had garnered support from “many European countries” for its appeal, he said.

On the same day, Frattini addressed the parliamentary assembly of the 47-member Council of Europe, which the ECHR represents.

He reiterated to the assembly the Italian government’s view that Europe needs to do more to uphold its Christian heritage.

Frattini noted that the Lisbon Treaty protected religious minorities like Muslims but did not cite Europe’s “Christian roots”.

This, he said, was a form of “reverse racism” in which Europe was “mute on religious feelings”.

The Grande Chambre now has a statutory six months to decide what action the Italian government should take to avoid future suits.

The Strasbourg court, which is not an EU body, ruled on November 3 in favour of a petition filed nine years ago by a Finnish-born mother of two who argued crosses in classrooms infringed on pupils’ religious freedom.

The Berlusconi government has been strongly backed in its appeal by the Italian Catholic Church.

The head of the Italian Bishops Conference (CEI), Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, hailed the appeal when it was launched, saying “that sentence goes against European history and religious sentiment”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Blunders Embarrass Premier’s Party

Glitches may bar candidates from running in Lazio and Lombardy

(ANSA) — Rome, March 2 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s party faced further embarrassment Tuesday over new bureaucratic blunders which could bar more candidates from running in key regional elections later this month. After Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party was excluded from the ballot in Rome province for missing Saturday’s noon cutoff to register candidates, a Rome court on Tuesday also barred a personal list headed by the party’s candidate for the Lazio region presidency, Renata Polverini.

The Rome electoral court excluded the pro-Polverini list over “a procedural glitch”, sources close to the candidate said.

Apparently, electoral officials failed to notice that a signature was missing when the list was presented, said the sources, who stressed that they expected the situation to be remedied soon.

Polverini — a trade union leader — is running against Radical party candidate Emma Bonino, a former European Union commissioner who is backed by most of the centre-left opposition, including the Democratic Party. Members of Bonino’s own list claimed that Polverini was now ineligible to stand.

“If her list has been barred, then Polverini can no longer run for Lazio elections,” said lawyer Luca Petrucci, a Bonino supporter. “The electoral law states that a candidate for president must head the list, so if her list is barred she can no longer stand”. But Polverini said she was optimistic that the appeals court would reverse the weekend decision, and allow “democracy to overcome bureacracy”.

Whatever the outcome, the flap over the PdL’s exclusion from the key Rome province in the March 28-29 elections in 13 of Italy’s 20 regions has upset supporters and caused friction within the party.

It also drew the ire of key ally, outspoken Northern League leader Umberto Bossi, who on Tuesday branded officials responsible for the blunders “amateurs out of their depth”.

On Monday, the PdL accused the opposition Radical party of preventing it from registering its electoral list.

A first appeal against the decision to bar the PdL was rejected by a court on Sunday but the party on Monday turned to an appeals court, which is expected to rule on the issue within 48 hours.

If that appeal is also turned down, the PdL could still take the case to the regional TAR court and then to the state administrative tribunal.

However, a final decision would have to come before March 13, when the electoral lists must be published. The PDL claims that two members of the pro-Bonino Radical party fomented a row at the electoral office in a successful bid to prevent its representatives from handing in the documentation on time.

PdL House Whip Fabrizio Cicchitto said there was proof that the PdL men were at the electoral office at 11.25. He warned that electoral officials had set a dangerous precedent with their decision.

“Not allowing all the parties to present their lists …means that democracy is at risk”.

Bonino said on Monday that the PdL’s attempt to pass off the two Radical Party representatives as thugs was “an unacceptable lie”. Berlusconi, who is reportedly fuming with local party officials, said last week that the elections are of strategic importance for his government.

Introducing the four women the PdL has chosen as candidates for regional presidents, Berlusconi said voters would be asked “ to choose between can-do politics and the opposition’s talk”. The premier said he would personally come out to campaign with the centre-right candidates.

“I’ll make it clear (to voters) that they have to choose sides: it’s either the left or us”. The centre right had been optimistic of snatching Lazio away from the centre left after the region’s ex-president, Piero Marrazzo, was forced to resign in October in a sex and drugs scandal.

But if the PdL will be barred from running in the Rome province — the biggest in Lazio, with 2.3 million voters — the centre left may well hold on to the region. Meanwhile, Roberto Formigoni, the incumbent president of the Lombardy region, is facing his own problems with electoral officials who on Monday said his personal electoral list contained bureaucratic irregularities with some 500 signatures.

If that decision is upheld, Formigoni, who is backed by the PdL and the Northern League, will be unable to run with his personal slate, the opposition said.

Formigoni has also lodged an appeal, telling reporters on Tuesday that “the situation is clear: I’m running and I’ll win”.

Italy’s leading dailies ran almost identical headlines on Tuesday, stressing that “chaos” reigned in the PdL in Lombardy and Lazio.

An editorial in Il Giornale, the conservative daily owned by Berlusconi’s brother Silvio, scathingly pointed the finger at PdL officials in Rome, saying that since they “were incapable of presenting the list on time they should be placed under strict observation until undergoing an obligatory medical”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: EU Nod to GM Crops Angers Italians

Genetically modified corn and potatoes clear EC hurdle

(ANSA) — Rome, March 2 — Four genetically modified (GM) crops received the green light from the European Union on Tuesday sparking a chorus of outrage from Italian politicians and environmentalists.

“Not only don’t we agree with this decision, but we’re not going to let it get in the way of our policy on GM foods,” said Agriculture Minister Luca Zaia.

Reiterating that Italy’s strict enforcement of a ban on GM foods was a “question of national sovereignty,” Zaia said the Italian government would band together with other EU members like France, Greece and Hungary to demand the decision be reversed.

The European Commission’s (EC) okay to the Amflora starch potato and three kinds of pest-resistant corn ended an unofficial 12-year moratorium on new GM foods in the EU.

While the Amflora potato is intended for industrial use only, the corn varieties have received the greenlight for human consumption as well.

A statement by EC Health Commissioner John Dalli stressed that the decision followed a “detailed examination” of the products, which determined they presented no significant health risks.

But the agricultural minister’s stance found common cause across party lines with the largest opposition group, the Democratic Party (PD), urging the government to keep GM foods out of Italy.

“The future of Italian agriculture is in high-quality, organic foods, not in genetically modified imitations,” said the PD’s pointman on the environment, Ermete Realacci.

Also speaking out on the decision, Italian environmental lobby Legambiente called it “absurd”.

“Letting these products go to market will put our health at risk and undermine our economy,” said spokesman Francesco Ferrante.

“Italy doesn’t want and doesn’t need genetically tampered foods,” he said.

But National Research Council biotechnologist Roberto Defez said the EC’s decision was long overdue and it was time Europe cashed in on the transgenic revolution.

“Last year, 10% of all farmland on Earth was cultivated using genetically modified crops and it’s ridiculous for the EU to opt out of such an important new market,” he said.

He added that GM products were rigorously tested before being approved and that the EU could help make the process even safer by taking a greater part in it.

The Amflora potato, created by German chemical titan BASF, was modified to create more of a certain kind of starch useful in the paper and plastics industry.

While it has not been approved for human consumption, it has been cleared as feed for animals fuelling worries that potentially overlooked long-term health risks could be passed on to consumers.

In particular, some experts have expressed concerns that a modified protein in the potato neutralizes the effects of a common antibiotic.

However, the European Food and Safety Authority (ESFA) argued that Amflora potatoes contained tiny amounts of the protein too small to interfere with antibiotics and pose no risk for the people who take them.

The three strains of transgenic corn cleared Tuesday have all been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, despite health concerns that have led to a ban in Germany But the ESFA maintains that extensive testing has failed to show any connection between the corn and health complications of any kind.

The issue of GM crops is particularly explosive in Italy.

As the second-largest producer of organic crops in Europe and the fourth largest in the world, there is widespread fear of the potential damage resulting from accidental GM contamination.

According to a recent survey by farmers’ union Coldiretti, seven in ten Italians believe that GM foods are less healthy than traditional ones.

Coldiretti added that the negative perception of GM foods could hurt Italian food exports by as much as 60% were the government to approve them for use.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Milan Blast Suspect Charged With Terrorism

Milan, 2 March (AKI) — Italian magistrates on Tuesday issued new terrorism charges against a Libyan immigrant suspected of setting off a bomb outside a military barracks in the northern Italian city of Milan last October. Mohammed Game will now be charged with an act of terrorism using an explosive device.

Game was arrested after the blast on 12 October last year and charged with attempting to carry out a massacre and carrying and making explosive devices.

Both he and an Italian soldier were injured in the blast, and Game has been in custody ever since.

Thirty-five-year-old Game (photo) was reported to have exploded a home-made bomb hidden inside a toolbox at the entrance of Milan’s Santa Barbara barracks.

He allegedly entered the courtyard of the barracks on foot, where he was confronted by a military guard.

Game is then accused of detonating the rudimentary explosives, which were reportedly made of solid nitrate.

An Italian soldier was slightly injured and Game lost a hand and his eyesight in the attack.

The toolbox where he allegedly hid the bomb was said to have contained two more kilogrammes of explosives, and according to reports, it only partially detonated.

Had the entire load detonated, there would definitely have been deaths, investigators said.

Two more North African suspects were arrested in mid-October in connection with the bombing after police questioned Game’s family.

The Egyptian suspect, named as Abdel Hady Abdelaziz Mahmoud Kol, allegedly helped Game reach the barracks.

The Libyan suspect, named as Mohamaed Imbaeya Israfel, allegedly helped Game to obtain explosives.

Game attended Milan’s Viale Jenner Mosque and had lived in Italy for many years. He has an Italian partner and three children.

He complied a ‘dossier’ containing information on Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and other government ministers, the Italian investigative weekly L’Espresso reported last November.

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



Italy: “At 17, I Didn’t Want an Abortion — Now My Daughter and I Are Homeless”

“I’m being evicted from squatted accommodation. The mayor should help”

She’s young, with a school-leaving certificate, a string of temporary jobs, an internship at 400 euros a month and a dream — a home of her own. Despite her distinctly unusual name, Cintamani Puddu, the Rome woman who wrote the letter published here, has a CV that looks very like those of many other Italian 21-year-olds. What makes it different is her daughter Sita, born when she was only 17, and her courageous determination to provide stability and a future for their “happy little family”. Ms Cintamani and her daughter live in a squatted home from which they are about to be evicted. Her own family cannot, or do not want to, help her and little Sita could be taken into care, even though she is “a serene child” with a “desperate mother” who just needs some help to face the future with serenity herself. Let’s hope that the people who can help her do not stand to one side. This is the letter that Cintamani Puddu wrote to the mayor of Rome, Gianni Alemanno, with a copy to the Corriere della Sera.

LETTER — I’m not against it, but I knew that I had the strength within me to go on and I already loved this little girl. I knew that I could do it so I took my courageous decision. My 17th birthday came and went as I wore my bump proudly, fighting against all the people who didn’t agree with my decision. Naturally, I was still at secondary school at the time. My daughter was born in November of my fourth year at the Federico Caffè technical school. My mother has never given me any help with my daughter but she did let me stay at home with her until I finished school. Luckily, the school did everything they could. At the time, absence from school didn’t mean you failed the year so I spent the fourth year studying at home and going into school when I could find someone to babysit for a few hours. That was when I caught up with the written and oral tests my classmates did during the week. I studied at home on my own with a baby. I didn’t get top marks that year but I did get through without any achievement deficits to make up. The fifth year was more straightforward because my daughter went to day nursery and I was able to go to lessons. In the mornings, I would take my daughter to the nursery, go to my classes and then back home. I’d look after my little brother and daughter and study at night. I managed to get my leaving certificate without any retakes, and with very good marks. It was hard, and as always I am proud of myself, but after leaving school, I also had to leave home.

The situation had become unbearable and I had to get out. For a year, I lived with a friend and her partner. She had a little girl my daughter’s age and there were five of us in two rooms. My daughter and I had a “bedroom” made by dividing up the living room with a bookcase. There was only enough space for my loft bed and my daughter’s cot underneath. As you can imagine, I had to leave that place, too. I found myself without anywhere to live and in that situation, I was “lucky” enough to squat a council house. At the moment, I’m squatting a place owned by ATER, the public housing institute. My address is Via Donna Olimpia 30, block I, staircase A, number 4. Obviously, I have received notice of eviction. As an unmarried mother with a dependent child and short-term contract work, I apparently do not qualify for public housing. Last year, I earned 7,900 euros. I don’t know if you realise how hard it is to pay rent for an ordinary family with two pay packets, especially with the wages they give us ordinary folk. I work from dawn to dusk, and in the evenings, and at weekends as well when I can, but despite everything, there’s no way I can afford a “normal” rent.

They preach procreation in this country. I’m always seeing programmes about “how few children are born” or how “people aren’t having kids any more” or how “youngsters are staying at home with their parents for too long” but it makes me ill even to think about it. Because I have never, ever, seen a programme that told the truth about why it happens. Maintaining a child in Italy has become very, very difficult. I can’t even afford to go to the doctor’s if I’m sick because it would mean missing a day’s work and I might lost my job. That’s why I ended up in hospital a year ago with bronchial pneumonia. Social services said they could only help my daughter and not me because there wasn’t enough money to put me in accommodation if I had nowhere to stay. I could lose my daughter. Would the state be to blame? Or the economy? Or money? It wouldn’t just mean ruining a mother. It would be ruining a child. I don’t take drugs, I’m not addicted to anything and I haven’t got psychological issues. My daughter is a serene child and I’m a good mother. If I thought I wasn’t doing enough, I’d bow my head and admit it. But I’m worn out when I get home at night. I give it everything I’ve got every day. All the time. I’m a desperate mother with a wonderful daughter. I’ve made a happy little family. I’m a brave woman who needs help. I don’t want to lose my little girl yet the way things look I’m not going to make it on my own. I’ve no one else to turn to apart from the state.

Cintamani Puddu

English translation by Giles Watson www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘Arms Trafficking Ring With Iran Busted’

Probe not possible with proposed wiretap limits, police say

(ANSA) — Milan, March 3 — Police on Wednesday broke up an organization allegedly seeking to violate an international arms embargo against Iran, in an operation which investigators said would not have been possible if proposed limits on wiretapping currently before parliament were in effect. The investigation led to the the arrest of seven people and warrants issued against two others for allegedly seeking to export to Iran not only weapons but also ‘dual use’ materials and systems, those which can be converted from civilian to military use. Police said those arrested included five Italians and two Iranians, who are believed to belong to Iranian intelligence, while the two at large were Iranian.

In Tehran, an Iranian foreign ministry official told ANSA that “for the moment Iran has nothing to say” about the arrests.

Milan assistant prosecutor Armando Spataro told the press that “this eight-month investigation was carried out using a vast number of wiretaps and intercepting email and SMS communication. This would not have been possible based the conditions set in the bill which has been passed by the House and is currently under discussion in the Senate”.

“Under the proposed rules we would not have been able to gather sufficient evidence to justify the extension of the wiretaps,” the assistant prosecutor explained. Spataro added that the investigation saw collaboration between several law enforcement agencies.

The suspected Iranian agents were named as Nejad Hamid Masoumi, 51, a journalist accredited to the Rome foreign press association as a correspondent for Iranian TV; and Ali Damirchiloo, 55, who was arrested in Turin.

The Iranians who escaped arrest were named as Hamir Reza and Bakhtiyari Homayoun.

Among the Italians arrested was Alessandro Bon, 43, a Vittorio Veneto native who lives in Monza and who is believed to have orchestrated the illegal trafficking through a Varese-based company, Antares.

Also arrested were Bon’s girlfriend Danila Maffei, 40; Bon’s business partner Arnaldo La Scala, 43, who is also a lawyer in Turin; Guglielmo Savi, 56, the head of a telecommunications company, Sirio SrL; and Raffaele Rossi Patriarca, who investigators said travelled to Iran to establish contacts with the Iranian military interested in arms deals.

The government of Premier Silvio Berlusconi used a confidence vote last June to push through the House a bill to curb the use of wiretaps.

The government argued the measure is necessary to defend the privacy of citizens whose private conversations with suspects targeted by probes have, in recent years, often ended up in the press.

Another argument for the reform — a 2008 campaign promise by Berlusconi — is that large amounts of funds are wasted on inconsequential wire taps, at a time when the government is trying to curb spending.

The measure would restrict the use of wiretaps to investigate serious crimes: mafia, terrorism, corruption of public officials and accepting kickbacks, human trafficking, child pornography, loan sharking and economic and fiscal crimes like insider trading.

In general, wiretaps would not be allowed to investigate crimes which carry sentences of less than five years. Other changes in the bill included requiring wiretaps be authorised by a panel of magistrates, compared to only one at present, imposing a 60-day limit on wiretaps and curbing the amount of funds which can be used to carry them out.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslims’ Fury at ‘Holy City’ Boozer

A MUSLIM leader has blasted a pub for using the name of holy city Medina — branding it an insult to his religion.

The boozer in Dundee changed its name from Bar Rio to Medina Bar and Grill after a renovation.

But this has sparked outrage — as Saudi Arabian city Medina is the second-holiest site in Islam behind Mecca.

Medina is also a term used for a market or trading centre in north African cities.

But Mohammed Bashir Chohan, chairman of the Dundee Islamic Society, last night said: “People are upset about it because Medina is a holy city. It does hurt when somebody misuses the name, especially if they are going to sell liquor.”

The issue has been raised with local MP Jim McGovern.

His spokesman said he was working with councillors including Labour’s Mohammed Asif to “try to bring the parties together to reach a solution”.

Yesterday a spokesman for Medina said there was no offence intended — but added they were unlikely to change the bar’s new name.

He said: “The bar has a Moroccan theme and, as far as we were told, medina is the hustle-bustle of an old quarter of a north African city. There was no intended link to the second-holiest city of Islam.”

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Poland’s Top Reporter Accused of Lying and Spying in New Biography

Ryszard Kapuscinski, the late Polish journalist, has been accused of collaborating with Poland’s communist government and of making factual errors.

A court injunction and a heated public debate have heralded the upcoming release of “Kapuscinski Non-fiction”, Artur Domoslawski’s new biography about Poland’s most renowned foreign correspondent.

Kapuscinski , who died in 2007 at the age of 74, covered wars, coups and bloody revolutions in Africa and Latin America as a correspondent for Poland’s PAP state news agency from 1959 to 1981. His subsequent books were translated into 30 languages.

But the new biography claims many details in Kapuscinski’s books were the stuff of invention.

Mr Domoslavski writes that Kapuscinski, famed for books including “The Soccer War”, never met Che Guevara and many other famous figures he claimed to have befriended as he sent dispatches from his travels around the developing world.

The book has been the focus of a legal injunction by Kapuscinski’s widow, earned the ire of a government minister and the enmity of an Archbishop in the powerful Roman Catholic Church for daring to trifle with the reputation of an author who is lionised in Poland.

Kapuscinski won international recognition for his reports on Africa’s emergence from colonialism and his coverage of its subsequent descent into turmoil and war.

He wrote a number of books that have been widely hailed around the world such as “The Emperor”, which focused on the downfall of Ethiopia’s Haile Selassie; “Shah of Shahs” describing the overthrow of the Iran’s Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and “Imperium” on the break-up of the Soviet Union.

Mr Domoslawski’s book delves into Kapuscinski’s personal relationships, accuses him of collaborating with Poland’s communist government and of making factual errors.

Wladyslaw Bartoszewski, a government minister and a survivor of the Auschwitz Nazi death camp, condemned Mr Domoslawski, saying his book had violated journalistic ethics by applying a tabloid approach to Kapuscinski’s private life.

“There are also publishing houses to present a ranking of brothels (…), but I don’t think I’d like to publish my book in such a place,” Mr Bartoszewski said referring to Kapuscinski’s alleged affairs described in the book, to be released on Wednesday.

Those comments were echoed by many other commentators as well as several top members of Poland’s Roman Catholic church, including Archbishop Jozef Zycinski.

But others said Kapuscinski deserved a biography which looked into the more controversial parts of his life.

Kapuscinski’s widow Alicja Kapuscinska, unsuccessfully sought a court order to block the publication, saying it was damaging to her reputation and Kapuscinski’s memory.

A publishing house, which was originally to release the book, also pulled out.

Though much respected in Poland, Kapuscinski has already been accused of spying for the communists on his travels to the world’s trouble spots at a time when it was nearly impossible to leave Poland without signing a cooperation declaration.

In an interview for Reuters in 2007 Alicja Kapuscinska said her husband was not a spy, but that contracts with the regime were the “price he had to pay” for travelling the world under communism, which was toppled in Poland in 1989.

Kapuscinski is the latest in a long line of public figures whose reputations have been tarnished by allegations of collaboration with Poland’s communist regime, an indication of the country’s continuing struggle to come to terms with a communist past that is now more than two decades old.

Kapuscinski was born into poverty in the town of Pinsk, now in Belarus, in 1932. He used to say he felt at home in Africa as “food was scarce there too and everyone was also barefoot”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Papal Visit Divides Catalonia, Gov’t Perplexed by Date

(ANSAmed) — MADRID — A divided Catalonia will greet Benedict XVI on November 7 after his visit to Galicia for the 2010 St.James Holy Year. On the one hand there is enthusiasm among the church hierarchy, which underlined “the dimension and global repercussion” of the pope’s visit to Spain in the fall, while on the other hand perplexity has been expressed by the three political parties in control in Catalonia, as the visit will take place during the same period as the Catalonian parliamentary election. While confirming Pope Benedict XVI’s first visit to Barcelona, his second to Spain after going to Valencia in 2005 for World Family Day, Archbishop Lluis Martinez Sistach announced that the first Eucharist presided over by the pope in the Sagrada Familia will be accompanied by a choir of over 1,200 singers. But at the same time it will be “a simple ceremony”, taking the economic crisis into account. “The visit cannot be expensive because the Holy See has an austere style,” said the bishop, while speaking to the press. The consecration of the church comes at the culmination of work to build the roof of the modernist structure designed by architect Antoni Gaudi’, a symbol of Barcelona. The first stone was laid in 1882, and construction has proceeded over the last decades thanks to donations from worshipers and tourists from throughout the world. Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the monument is the most visited site in the region, counting about 3 million tourists in 2007. However, the Sagrada Familia has not been spared by the crisis to the tourism sector, with the number of visitors in decline by about 300,000 last year according to Jiordi Bonet, the head architect at the site for the last 25 years. Pope Ratzinger’s visit will also serve to relaunch the monument, “for its artistic significance, the most important church built in the world,” emphasised the archbishop of Barcelona. Sistach pointed out that the pope visited the city when he was a cardinal and hoped that his next stay would serve to “strengthen the faith of the Catalonian people and evangelisation” and to provide strength for the cause to canonise Antonio Gaudi’. The archbishop ruled out the possibility that the proximity to the Catalonian parliamentary elections could jeopardise the pope’s visit, because, he observed, “the collaboration of the government will involve other aspects”, regarding logistics and security. However, perplexity on the visit coinciding with the election was expressed by the PSC, ERC, and ICV-EU. According to the socialist spokesperson in Catalonian Parliament, Joan Ferran, the two events “have no reason to interfere”. “It would be strange,” he observed, “if they took place on the same day. Also according to Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya spokesperson Anna Simo’ it would be out of place if the pope, “who is not a head of state” were to modify the electoral agenda. The ICV-EU party, through its parliamentary spokesperson Dolors Camats, hoped that Benedict XVI’s visit would not interfere with the electoral campaign. Finally, the spokesperson for the People’s Party in Catalonian Parliament, Dolors Montserrat, while praising the announcement of the pope’s visit, admitted that she was surprised about the date, since the last election was held on November 1 four years ago in Catalonia and that Generalitat President Jose’ Montilla has reiterated on more than one occasion that he does not intend hold early elections. On the sidelines of the political controversy, many bloggers for Catalonian dailies pointed out that the last visit by a pope to Barcelona by Pope John Paul II in 1982 was not just any regular event, with throngs of people at Barcelona’s Camp Nou stadium. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Job Agency Accepts ‘Muslim Handshake’ Fine

Sweden’s National Public Employment Agency (Arbetsförmedlingen) has decided not to appeal its fine for discriminating against a Muslim man who had his benefits withdrawn after refusing to shake the hand of Jeanette Löding, the female CEO of a firm with which he was seeking employment.

Job agency fined for religious discrimination (8 Feb 10)

“We have worked hard so that women and men can be seen as equals in the workplace. If feels like we have slipped back a few steps here,” Jeanette Löding, CEO of Melament AB told The Local on Wednesday regarding the court’s decision.

The agency explained that it had decided to accept the Stockholm District Court decision to award the 28-year-old Muslim man 60,000 kronor in compensation as it felt that there was insufficient evidence to prove that discrimination had not taken place.

The agency said that if it appealed the ruling it may appear that there was a requirement to greet people in a certain way in order to participate in labour market training schemes.

Jeanette Löding agreed that there should be scope within Swedish business for people to greet each other in several ways, but added that it was not acceptable to simply ignore somebody.

“It has to be clear that there is a greeting. And that was not the case here,” she said, arguing that the incident had left her feeling “outside” and discriminated against.

The case dates back to May 2006 when the man was seeking work experience at Löding’s firm Melament in Älmhult in Småland in southern Sweden. As a result of the man’s refusal to shake the CEO’s outstretched hand, citing religious faith, his right to benefits was revoked.

The court ruling has since generated a great deal of attention and controversy in the Swedish media.

Dagens Nyheter columnist Lena Andersson was among those scathing of the ruling describing DO’s case and the court ruling as “rewarding the apartheid of agency-approved discrimination.”

The lawyer representing the Discrimination Ombudsman (DO) which took up the man’s case, Katri Linna, argued at the time however that the ruling was important to underline that “everyone can take part in the labour market,” adding that, “people must be able to greet each other differently depending on their religion.”

The Discrimination Ombudsman has since been reported to the Parliamentary Ombudsman (Justitieombudsmannen, JO) for contributing to the discrimination of women, a move welcomed by Jeanette Löding.

“I think it is positive. But we shall have to wait and see what comes of it,” she said to The Local.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Anger Mounts as Straw Refuses to Reveal Why Bulger Killer Jon Venables is Back Behind Bars

The Government was facing mounting anger today at the secrecy surrounding the sensational return of one of James Bulger’s killers to prison.

Government officials have thrown a blanket of secrecy around Jon Venables, refusing to say whether he has committed a new crime or to which jail he has been sent.

The Ministry of Justice have refused to tell even James’ distraught mother the reason for the recall, believed to have happened last week.

Both Justice Secretary Jack Straw and Home Secretary Alan Johnson defended the move to keep all details quiet today.

But the detective who headed the Bulger murder investigation led calls for the truth to be revealed, insisting it would help allay people’s fears.

[…]

Venables and his accomplice Robert Thompson were only ten when they abducted James, two, from a Liverpool shopping centre in February 1993 and murdered him in a crime which shocked the world.

But, despite the horror at their crimes, they were released from custody only eight years later without spending a single day in an adult prison, and handed new identities protected by draconian rules.

As a result, fellow prisoners will today be unaware of the horrific crime committed by their new cellmate.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: BA Man Arrested in ‘Terror Plot’ Raid

A BRITISH Airways worker has been arrested during a probe into terrorist fund-raising, it emerged yesterday.

The British man, 30 — thought to be from an Asian background — was held at BA’s Newcastle-upon-Tyne call centre.

A plot to raise cash for an attack, possibly on a jet, is thought to have been uncovered.

Cops swooped on Thursday after a tip-off, it is believed.

The suspect was driven to a central London police station, where he continues to be held.

He has been questioned for six days after City of Westminster JPs granted an extension to his custody on Saturday.

Police can seek a further extension later this week if required.

Earlier today police arrested three further men in connection with the investigation during 5am swoops at addresses in Slough, Berks.

The first arrest followed a combined operation by the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command and the North East Counter Terrorism Unit.

The investigation is focusing on the suspect’s key contacts and recent movements.

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A BA spokesman said: “An employee was arrested at our Newcastle office last week.

“We take matters relating to security extremely seriously and as a responsible company always fully co-operate with the police.”

It is believed there was no immediate threat of an attack on a plane or a UK target.

The employee was among 800 staff dealing with passenger bookings in one of the airline’s two big British-based call centres.

Staff have access to thousands of flight details and are familiar with basic security procedures.

The UK terrorist threat level is currently at “severe”, one below the top rating “critical”.

The level was raised after former British University student Umar Abdulmutallab’s failed bid to blow up a jet over Detroit, US, on Christmas Day.

Speaking about today’s further arrests, a Metropolitan police spokeswoman said: “At 5am this morning three men were arrested in Slough for the alleged offence of terrorist fund raising.”

She said the men were aged 31, 32 and 43 and were believed to have been taken to Paddington Green police station in central London as their homes were being searched.

She added: “They were arrested a separate residential premises by officers from the South East Counter Terrorism unit as part of a joint operation with the MPS Counter Terrorism Unit.”

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



UK: Chip Shop Owner Jailed After Being Caught With Photos of Him Counting Thousands of Pounds in Drug Money

A chip shop owner was today jailed for 12 years after being caught with pictures of himself counting thousands of pounds of drug money taken on his mobile phone.

Eric Kocabey, 34, was arrested after customs officers at Manchester Airport intercepted an electric fire which had £600,000 of heroin hidden in the back.

Liverpool Crown Court heard the 11kg of drugs were swapped for decoy packages and surveillance officers watched as the fire was delivered to Kocabey’s home in Birkenhead, last October.

Anne Whyte, prosecuting, said that after the Turkish former asylum seeker, who was given British citizenship in 2008, came home from work clutching a tool box, police raided the address and found him dismantling the fire to get at the drugs.

The father-of-one was arrested and several mobile phones were also seized.

On Kocabey’s iPhone were pictures taken in August, before he was under suspicion, of himself with bundles of cash and photos of brown packages similar to those found in the fire.

At his chip shop, White’s Fish Bar in Wallasey, police found a 40-plant cannabis factory in a bedroom.

Kocabey told police he had been pressured into taking delivery of the fire and into letting three men use the flat above his chip shop because he owed money to members of the Turkish community.

Miss Whyte told the court Kocabey was ‘the face of the conspiracy’ and was ‘clearly trusted’.

‘To think that international drug dealers would send a consignment to a man they barely knew was “absurd”,’ she added.

The mobile phone photographs, Miss Whyte said, showed this was not the first time he had been involved with drugs.

David Maudsley, defending, said that prior to falling into debt, Kocabey was ‘a hard working man trying to make a decent living’.

He said his ‘ashamed’ client had been stupid and weak and ‘could have and should have said no’.

Recorder David Turner QC said: ‘The photos were very stupid things to do but people who commit this type of offence are sometimes very arrogant.’

He sentenced Kocabey to 12 years for conspiring to supply Class A drugs and five years, to run at the same time, for being involved in the production of cannabis.

The judge said: ‘You have repaid the hospitality of this country by becoming involved very substantially in the drugs trade.

‘You have made your way, thanks to the generosity of this country, to become the owner of a fish and chip shop.

‘Fortunately, the police and customs through good work managed to intercept a consignment of Class A drugs being imported and which was to be delivered to you.

‘You were not a foot soldier. You were a senior officer in this.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Fundamentalist-Infiltrated Council Steps Back From the Cliff Edge — Just

By Andrew Gilligan

At the eleventh hour, Tower Hamlets has drawn back from an act of stupidity stunning even by its own standards. The council’s initial response to our revelations that it has been infiltrated by Islamic fundamentalists — revelations which the council leader refuses to deny — has been not to investigate the matter, but to attack one of the people who helped expose it.

In the ongoing takeover process of the council by the Islamic Forum of Europe (IFE), one of the key moments was the appointment of Lutfur Ali, a man with close links to the IFE, to the second most important job at the Town Hall — despite his palpable unfitness for the £125,000 post.

Apart from his IFE links, there wasn’t that much else going for Mr Ali. The council-appointed headhunters who considered applicants described him as “rather limited,” “superficial,” and “one-dimensional” and said he might “struggle with the intellectual challenges [of] a highly strategic role.” And the headhunters didn’t even know that Mr Ali had submitted a misleading CV, which gave false dates for a previous employment and omitted the fact that he had been forced to resign from that job for breaching the local authority code of conduct.

Mr Ali is responsible for council grants. Since his appointment, a lot more council money has started going to organisations closely linked to — you guessed — the IFE. These organisations include a very generously-funded youth training project, Brick Lane Youth Development Association, or Blyda. Part of the purpose of this project, according to critics, is to take vulnerable young people off the streets and imbue them with the values of the IFE.

Blyda’s chair and three of its four trustees are also trustees of the IFE, or its youth wing, the YMO. The man in charge of Blyda’s project working with local gang members, Muhammad Rabbani, is the same person who trains young IFE recruits in the need for an “Islamic social, economic and political order” in Britain.

Has the council sacked or suspended Lutfur Ali? Not at all, but they have been trying to suspend the man who exposed him — the opposition leader, Peter Golds, who brought out the contents of the headhunters’ report in our programme. Mr Golds was accused of “breaching confidentiality” by quoting from the document. Actually, he was quoting not from the report but from a letter he wrote about it to the council’s standards committee.

The idea that someone can be thrown off a council for reading out one of his own letters has proved, in the end, a notch too far even for Tower Hamlets. It would also have been the mother of all media disasters. So this afternoon the idea has been dropped.

But it is symptomatic of the utter panic and denial now reigning at the council that they could even have thought of such a thing.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Four Men Including Two British Airways Employees Arrested in ‘Terror Plot’ Raids

Three men were arrested in dawn raids this morning, taking to four the number being held over allegations of terrorism fundraising.

It follows the arrest on Thursday of a 30-year-old British Airways employee in Newcastle. A second BA staff member was among the group arrested this morning.

The three men, aged 31, 32 and 43, were seized by police at 5am today in Slough.

The men are now being questioned about a plot to fund a terrorist attack.

Police refused to clarify what positions the two BA employees had within the airline. Sources said the latest arrests were ‘significant’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Jacob Zuma Brands the British ‘Old Fashioned Imperialists’… Just Hours Before Meeting the Queen

As a practising polygamist who has fathered more than 20 children, both in an out of wedlock, his inaugural state visit has already raised eyebrows.

Today President Jacob Zuma of South Africa added fuel to the fire by branding the British as ‘old fashioned imperialists’ just hours before he was due to by official greeted by the Queen.

Mr Zuma has apparently been angered by his host country’s ‘obsession’ with his colourful private life which includes five wives, a lovechild with the daughter of one of his political allies and a criminal trial for the rape of a young HIV positive woman.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Women Who Refused to Take ‘Naked’ Full-Body Scan Are Barred From Manchester to Pakistan Flight

The pair — who security officials insist were selected at random — opted to miss their flight to Pakistan and forfeit tickets worth £400 each rather than be screened.

One of the women refused to go through the full-body scanner at Manchester Airport on religious grounds while her companion also declined for ‘medical reasons’.

The women were travelling together to Islamabad when they were selected to pass through the controversial security screen after checking-in at Terminal Two at the airport.

An estimated 15,000 people have already passed through the scanners, with the pair the first passengers to refuse a scan.

Both told airport staff they were not willing to be scanned. They were warned they would not be allowed to board the Pakistan International Airlines flight if they refused.

The pair decided they would rather forfeit their £400 tickets and left the airport with their luggage.

The £80,000 scanners were introduced at Heathrow and Manchester airports on February 5.

The X-ray machines allow security staff to see a ‘naked’ image of passengers to show up hidden weapons and explosives, but it has attracted criticism for also showing clear outlines of passengers’ genitals.

Manchester Airport confirmed the passengers had refused to be scanned but said it had received no complaint from the women.

However, civil liberties campaigners say the incident could form the basis of a legal test case to challenge the use of the Rapiscan device in airports.

Alex Deane, director of campaign group Big Brother Watch, said the organisation would represent the women if they wished to challenge the decision in court.

Blog: Are full body scanners really something to blush about?

He said: ‘People shouldn’t have to sacrifice their health, their faith, their dignity, or their privacy in order to fly.

‘People with health and religious concerns shouldn’t be forced to go through these scanners if they have good reason not to. Foolishly, the government has ignored both issues and ignored privacy concerns to boot — they are in the wrong on this.’

There is one Rapiscan scanner in use in a trial at Manchester Airport’s terminal two, which has seen 15,000 people pass through it.

A further two devices — one each for terminals one and three — have been delivered and are set to be operational within the next month.

The scanners have been criticised by the human rights group Liberty and the government’s own Equality and Human Rights Commission.

Only selected passengers are scanned. Security staff say they are chosen at random and not according to race, religion or ethnicity.

Councillor Afzal Khan, who was Manchester’s first Asian lord mayor, said the vast majority of Muslims believed that any privacy concerns should be outweighed by ensuring they are safe when flying.

He said: ‘Hundreds of Muslim passengers have gone through without a problem. While I appreciate people’s concerns for privacy, these steps are necessary for our safety and security.’

A Manchester Airport spokesman said: ‘Two female passengers who were booked to fly out of Terminal Two refused to be scanned for medical and religious reasons.

‘In accordance with the government directive on scanners, they were not permitted to fly.

‘Body scanning is a big change for customers and we are aware that privacy concerns are on our customers’s minds, which is why we have put strict procedures in place to reassure them that their privacy will be protected.’

Last month, Transport Secretary Lord Adonis stressed that an interim code of practice on the use of body scanners stipulated that passengers would not be selected ‘on the basis of personal characteristics’.

Two weeks ago, a week after the scanners were introduced at Manchester and Heathrow airports, Islamic scholars in the U.S. said Muslim travellers should not pass through the scanners because they violate religious rules on nudity.

The Fiqh Council of North America issued a fatwa, or religious ruling, warning Muslims not to go through the scanners.

‘It is a violation of clear Islamic teachings that men or women be seen naked by other men and women,’ read the order.

‘Islam highly emphasises haya (modesty) and considers it part of faith. The Quran has commanded the believers, both men and women, to cover their private parts.’

In the U.S., there are now 40 scanners in 19 airports and could be as many as 450 by the end of the year.

The powerful council of ten scholars that issued the fatwa is affiliated with the Islamic Society of North America.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Man Beaten to Death in Own Home ‘Was Regularly Targeted by Gangs’

A man who was beaten to death in his home was regularly targeted by gangs of youths, police said today.

Andrew Smart, 47, a former self-employed software engineer, was found dead at 6.30pm on February 28 at his home in North Shields, North Tyneside.

Detectives revealed Mr Smart was an alcoholic who would be targeted by teenagers who came into his home to cause trouble.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Number of Child Criminals ‘Has Jumped by 13% Under Labour’

Almost 160 children are convicted of crime every day, official figures show.

The young offenders even include ten-year-olds who have attacked police officers. A total of 57,635 under-16s were found guilty in court in 2008.

Shadow home secretary Chris Grayling, who unearthed the figures, said they showed Gordon Brown was wrong to dismiss the charge that Britain was ‘broken’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Women Refuse to Go Through Airport Body Scanners

Two women were stopped from boarding a plane at Manchester Airport after refusing to undergo a full body scan.

The passengers were due to fly to Islamabad on 19 February when they were selected at random to go through the new scanning machine.

One, who is believed to be a Muslim, refused on religious reasons and the other cited health grounds.

They are thought to be the first people to refuse to use the scanners since they became compulsory in February.

The machines were introduced as a trial at the airport in October 2009.

The women were warned they were legally required to go through the scanner, after being chosen at random, or they would not be allowed to fly, an airport spokesman said.

‘Strict procedures’

It is not clear whether the women were travelling together.

Security staff use the X-ray machine to check for any concealed weapons or explosives but they have been criticised as an invasion of privacy.

A Manchester Airport spokesman said: “Two female passengers who were booked to fly out of Terminal 2 refused to be scanned for medical and religious reasons.

“In accordance with the government directive on scanners, they were not permitted to fly.

“Body scanning is a big change for customers who are selected under the new rules and we are aware that privacy concerns are on our customers’ minds, which is why we have put strict procedures to reassure them that their privacy will be protected.”

The women forfeited their flight and left the airport.

In US airports where scanners are installed passengers have the option of a undergoing a body search.

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]



Wilders’ Best Witness

Whether one agrees or disagrees with Wilders’ and Usmani’s interpretation of Islam is beside the point. The real question is: How can Wilders be prosecuted for agreeing with the interpretation of a world-renowned Islamic thinker and scholar — a scholar who has never been accused of hate speech or insulting Islam?

As the trial of Geert Wilders for insulting Islam moves forward in the Netherlands, the one witness that could clear him of these charges will not be called.

Muhammad Taqi Usmani is a highly respected and well-known expert on Islamic law who served for 20 years as a Sharia judge on Pakistan’s Supreme Court. He is quite possibly the world’s most influential Islamist thinker and writer outside of the Middle East. Usmani is a frequent visitor to Britain, where his monographIslam and Modernism caused a great deal of controversy.

Why is Usmani so important for the purposes of Wilders’ trial? Simply put, Usmani’s interpretation of Islamic doctrine as it concerns non-believers is the same as Wilders’. Indeed, the critical lesson to be gleaned from Usmani’s work bolsters the very argument that Wilders is on trial for making — namely, that the doctrine of jihad, as expounded in Islamic texts, inherently poses a threat to Western civilization. In fact, Osama Bin Laden made the exact same point in a lengthy essay entitled “Moderate Islam is a Prostration to the West” (reproduced in Raymond Ibrahinm’s The al Qaeda Reader).

I don’t know if Wilders is familiar with Islam and Modernism. However, the reader of this work will be struck by the similarities between it and Fitna, the short film that has played a significant role in landing Wilders in court. The critical difference between the two is that no one — especially no Muslim thinker, writer or the Organization of Islamic Countries — has ever accused Usmani of hate speech or of insulting Islam. And yet, consistency of treatment would mandate that if Wilders must go to trial, so should Usmani. At the very least, Usmani should be publicly condemned and ridiculed by prominent Muslim thinkers in Muslim countries.

Consider the nature of his work. Islam and Modernism is broadside attack against modernist Muslim thinking and Western civilization. Usmani is critical of modern practices such as charging interest, women and men working together, birth control, and science that it is not used to further religious thinking. Even America’s moon landing in 1969 is described as an “international crime.”

However, it is his chapter on offensive jihad, which he calls aggressive jihad, that is most significant for purposes of Wilders’ trial.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Winston Churchill, WWII Leader’s Grandson, Dies

Winston Spencer Churchill, a former member of Parliament and grandson of Britain’s wartime leader, died Tuesday, an associate said. He was 69.

Churchill had been suffering from cancer and died at his London home, said Cmdr. John Muxworthy, president of the United Kingdom National Defense Association.

Churchill was a member of the House of Commons from 1970 to 1997. Earlier he had been a foreign correspondent for The Times of London, The Daily Telegraph and other papers.

He was a founder of the Defense Association, which campaigned for greater support for Britain’s armed forces.

“A true patriot, WSC followed in the steps of his grandfather, Sir Winston, who, in the 1930s campaigned ceaselessly for this country to rearm in the face of the ever-growing threat from Nazi Germany,” Muxworthy said. “Eighty years on, our Winston has been fighting the same battle.”…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Albania: Integrate Rom and Egyptians, Council of Europe

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, MARCH 2 — An emphatic call for Albania to introduce further measures or strengthen those already required by law to assure better living conditions for Rom and Egyptian communities was made by the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) of the Council of Europe in its fourth report on the country, which was made public today. Despite the fact that ECRI recognises that the Albanian government introduced a certain number of measures aimed at improving access to homes, work and schools for members of these communities, at the same time the group stressed that what has been accomplished to this point cannot be viewed as sufficient. In particular, the Commission believes that access to education for Rom children is “highly unsatisfactory”. According to ECRI, illiteracy in a large part of minors in Rom and Egyptian communities is one of the factors that explains how these children are more frequently victims of human trafficking, a phenomenon regarding which ECRI expressed “strong worries”. Among its recommendations, ECRI, in addition to calling for the government to do more for the two communities, also asked the authorities to pass laws as soon as possible that punish active and passive discrimination both on a civil and administrative level. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Croatia: Prices 25% Below EU Average

(ANSAmed) — ZAGREB, MARCH 1 — Prices in Croatia are 25% lower than the European average, according to the Croatian statistics institute. The institute specifies that the average Croatian household spends around 11,500 euros per year, against the around 30,000 spent by German or Austrian families. In detail, Croatian households spend 35.6% of their income on food and cigarettes, against a European average of 19.4%, while spending the same as the European average on telecommunication. Croatians spend around 900 euros per year on clothing and footwear (half the European average), and 30-50% less than the rest of the EU on energy. The Croatian GDP, the Italian Trade Commission (ICE) office in Belgrade adds, is 42% of the European average. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Attack Against Police Barracks in Kabyle

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 2 — This morning an armed Islamic group attacked a criminal investigation police barracks in Tigzirt in the Kabyle region in Algeria. The attack, wrote El Watan online, was repelled by the officers, but at least two men were injured. Immediately afterwards, a roundup was carried out by the army in the region. The armed group affiliated with al Qaeda for the Islamic Maghreb is reportedly currently surrounded by security forces in the Hagga forest about 100km east of Algiers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Crops to be Insured Against Droughts

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 2 — Starting next year, Algerian farmers will be able to insure their crops against drought, said Amara Latrous, the president of Algerian insurance union UAR, while speaking on national Algerian radio. Latrous emphasised how this is “the first product of this type in Algeria”. According to Latrous, drought will be able to be classified as a natural disaster and will therefore become insurable. The funds for the new insurance, initially to be reserved for grain farmers, will be allocated by the national agricultural fund and by the central insurance company of the Finance Ministry. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Football: Algeria, Friendly With Serbia Sold Out

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 3 — The Algeria-Serbia friendly football match to be played this evening at the ‘July 5 stadium’ in Algiers has sold out. The 56,000 tickets available for the World Cup 2010 warm-up sold out in a matter of just a few hours. Fans say that most tickets have ended up in the hands of ticket touts who sell them on at exorbitant prices. Coach Rabah Saadane will take advantage of the match to field a different formation to the one used in the Africa Cup of Nations. There are serious absences — Gaouaoui, Meghni and Saifi — whilst players taking to the field for the first time will be French-born Mehdi Lacen of Racing Santander and Chadli Amri from Germany. This evening’s match will be “a good preparation test”, said the coach, in particular for the match against Slovenia in South Africa, who are in the same group as Algeria, together with England and USA. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Morocco’s Solidarity for Its Swiss Dispute

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, MARCH 2 — After Algeria and Tunisia, Marocco, too, has espressed its “total and fraternal” solidarity with Libya after the Swiss government’s decision to ban Libyan citezens from their territory. The Kingdom of Morocco — the minister of Foreign Affairs affirmed in a note released by Map news agency — expresses its total and fraternal solidarity with the Grand Libyan Jamahirija and requests that the situation between the states be overcome in a climate of mutual respect. The crisis between Switzerland and Lybia began with the arrest last year in Geneva of Libyan leader Momar Gheddafi’s son, Hannibal, after a denunciation by two of his domestic servants, who accused him of mistreatment. In the past days, Algeria and Tunisia both have also expressed their solidarity to Tripoli. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Morocco: Bad Weather Damages, But Promising Crops

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, FEBRUARY 23 — The heavy rain which hit all of Morocco in recent weeks which also resulted in the falling down of the Meknes minaret (41 casualties) caused much damage but, according to the Ministry of Agriculture, will guarantee a good crop. Heavy rain was registered in all regions including the southern desert ones, causing the death of a dozen people who were swept away by the water. Roads and bridges were damaged and thousands of hectares of crops were flooded when two rivers overflowed. In the same area numerous families were cleared out and taken to shelters, while the government made available 200 million dirhams (18 million euros) to those farmers and families who were damaged. On the Atlas mountains thousands of people were left stranded by the snow and authorities handed out medicines and foodstuffs. A Ministry of Agriculture leader stated that “Despite the damage this rain is very important for the Country: it will lead to a good agricultural crop even if it is expected to be lower than last year’s”. It should be a great year for citrus fruits as well: 1.4 million tonnes with a 10% increase compared to last year. According to the State secretariat for water, the rain completely filled up the country’s dams, a total of 15 billion cubic metres. In 2009 a +26% record crop balanced the losses in other sectors caused by the international crisis by more than 5%. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Barry Rubin: Americans Love Israel Even More Than You Think

International relations isn’t a popularity contest. But public opinion polls can be useful in countering myths and examining the impact of policymaker, elite, and media campaigns on the masses.

Which brings us to Gallup’s latest poll measuring how Americans feel about different countries. The more one examines the results, the more amazing they are. Americans two favorites are, not surprisingly, fellow English-speakers Canada and the United Kingdom. Then come-Americans are very forgiving-two former enemies, Germany and Japan.

And next on the list is Israel. Even the basic numbers-67 favorable, 25 percent unfavorable-are impressive. But that’s only the beginning. Around 10 percent of Americans don’t like anybody, and only one-fourth of those 25 percent nay-sayers on Israel, that is 6 percent, are really hostile.

In other words, the percentage of Americans who hate Israel is only 6 percent and the number who single out Israel for partly unfavorable views among other popular countries adds about 10 percent more.

And since 10 percent of Americans say they like Iran (85 percent don’t), having only a bit more than that number really disliking Israel isn’t very impressive.

After 20 years or so of intensive media criticism, hostility on campuses, double standards, and controversy that’s nothing short of remarkable.

This conclusion is intensified further by considering the equivalent results for the Palestinian Authority (PA)…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



EU Funds for Palestinian Salaries, Humanitarian Aid

(ANSAmed) — ROMA, 2 MAR — Today, the European Union (EU) made its third contribution this year to the Palestinian Authority’s payment of its civil servants salaries and pensions, both in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank. The contribution of NIS 116.8 million (22.85 million) was delivered through the EU’s PEGASE[1] mechanism and benefited 80,608 civil servants and pensioners. The Government of Finland contributed 2 million to this payment. A significant proportion of this payment came from a European Union commitment of 158.5 million to the Palestinian Authority announced earlier this year while the Government of Finland contributed 2 million. PEGASE channels EU assistance to help build a Palestinian State, in accordance with the priorities and needs identified by the Palestinian Authority in its three year reform and development programme (PRDP). The European Commission has allocated €58 million in humanitarian aid to support operations in favour of the most vulnerable people affected by the ongoing crisis in the occupied Palestinian territory (Opt) and to Palestinian refugees in Lebanon. The funds are channelled through the Commission’s Humanitarian Aid department (ECHO), under the responsibility of Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva. “Humanitarian aid is crucial in saving lives and alleviating suffering until longer term solutions are found. It goes to those most in need, irrespective of their nationality, religion, political affiliation or ethnic origin”, Georgieva said. The Commission-funded humanitarian projects are implemented by non-governmental relief organisations, specialised UN agencies and the Red Cross/Red Crescent movement. The European Commission continues to be one of the largest humanitarian donors for the Palestinian population in the Middle East. Since 2000, the Commission’s total humanitarian response to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has reached more than €500 million. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaza: Police Chief’s Car Damaged by Explosion

(ANSAmed) — GAZA, MARCH 2 — A powerful blast between Sunday night and Monday morning destroyed a car belonging to a Hamas police official in Gaza, but did not take any victims, reports Palestinian civil right NGO PCHR-Gaza. According to early information on the ground, the automobile that exploded belonged to 44-year-old Talal Banat, the commander of police operations in the Gaza Strip. The vehicle was parked next to his home in al-Nasser Street, in a Gaza neighbourhood. PCHR-Gaza pointed out that similar explosions have occurred recently in the Gaza Strip, where according to the organisation, “a proliferation of weapons and chaos in the security system” is taking place, which the authorities should take greater action to counteract. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Leader Disowns Son Who Worked With Shin Bet

(ANSAmed) — RAMALLAH, MARCH 2 — A Hamas political leader in the West Bank, Sheikh Hassan Yussef, issued an open letter announcing that he has disowned his first-born son Musab (34-years-old) after it was revealed last week in Israeli daily Haaretz that he worked with Shin Bet, the Israeli internal security agency, for about ten years to prevent innocent people from being killed. Musab, added the newspaper, was given the code name ‘the Green Prince’ by Israeli agents and was one of the best sources of information inside of Hamas. In a handwritten letter sent from a prison in Negev where he is locked up, Sheikh Yussef stated with deep bitterness that his son, who has converted to Christianity and moved to the US, has irreparably broken away from Islam and has “collaborated with the enemy”. Neither him, nor his wife or other children consider Musab to be part of their family. When learning of the news in Haaretz on Musab’s secret activities in the initial phases of the Palestinian intifada, various Hamas spokespersons had said that this probably had to do with “psychological warfare” conjured up by Israeli to “demoralise” the Palestinians. Sheikh Yussef’s public letter, published by the Palestinian press, seems to indicate that an internal investigation confirmed the reliability of the statements made by the Israeli daily. Musab Yussef, according to Haaretz, has recorded his undertakings in a book (‘Son of Hamas’), which will soon be published in the United States. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel is No More Rogue Than America

By Andrew Roberts

Is state-sanctioned assassination justifiable, or does it somehow de-legitimise the state that undertakes it? Two articles in this newspaper last week, by Henry Siegman and David Gardner, have been violently critical of Israel in the wake of the assassination of the Hamas arms smuggler Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai on 19 January.

Mr Siegman wrote of how “Israel’s colonial ambitions” and “checkpoints, barbed wire and separation walls” were “turning Israel from a democracy into an apartheid state”, thereby creating a “looming global threat to the country’s legitimacy”. Two days later Mr Gardner wrote of how Israel’s “militarist extroversion” over the Dubai murder demonstrated an “Israeli preference for instantly satisfying executive solutions to complex political and geopolitical problems” which would “widen the international battle-space for tit-for-tat attacks” and “encourage the perception that [Israel] is a rogue state”.

Both commentators are completely wrong. All that the Dubai operation will do is remind the world that the security services of states at war — and Israel’s struggle with Hamas, Fatah and Hizbollah certainly constitutes that — occasionally employ targeted assassination as one of the weapons in their armoury, and that this in no way weakens their legitimacy. As for the “separation walls” and checkpoints that one sees in Israel, the 99 per cent drop in the number of suicide bombings since their erection justifies the policy. There is simply no parallel between apartheid South Africa — where the white minority wielded power over the black majority — and the occupied territories, taken by Israel only after it was invaded by its neighbours. To make such a link is not only inaccurate, but offensive. If Arab Israelis were deprived of civil and franchise rights, that would justify such hyperbole, but of course they have the same rights as every Jewish Israeli.

Far from having any colonial ambitions, Israel wants nothing more than to live peaceably within defensible borders. But equally it demands nothing less.

Furthermore, rather than some kind of knee-jerk “preference for instantly satisfying executive solutions”, the decision to kill Mahmoud al-Mabhouh — assuming it was sanctioned, planned and carried out by Mossad alone, which is anything but clear at this stage — would have been minutely examined from every political and operational angle. Yet sometimes complex political and geopolitical problems do require the cutting of the Gordian knot, and this was one such.

When Britain was at war, Winston Churchill sanctioned the assassination by its Special Operations Executive of the SS General Reinhard Heydrich, the capture (and killing if necessary) of General Heinrich Kreipe on Crete; ditto Erwin Rommel. Just as with some Mossad operations, such as the disaster in Amman in 1997 when agents were captured after failing to kill Khaled Meshal of Hamas, not all Churchill’s hits were successful. But the British state was not de-legitimised in any way as a result…

           — Hat tip: Judith Apter Klinghoffer [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Israel-Syria: Apples Exported From Golan to Damascus

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, MARCH 2 — A momentary easing of the tense relations between Israel and Syria took place today at the Quneitra border crossing when 10,000 tonnes of apples from the Golan Heights, occupied by Israel, began to be exported towards Damascus. Transport operations are taking place under the supervision of the International Red Cross with the cooperation of the United Nations and will probably last for several weeks. The overall value of the exports is estimated at several million dollars. This is the fifth consecutive year that the Quneitra border crossing has been opened to allow apples to be exported to Syria, which according to an Israeli military spokesperson, were produced in Golan by Druze Syrian and Israeli farmers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Mideast War in ‘Very’ Near Future?

Dramatic escalation in cooperation between Israel’s foes

Egypt is concerned Israel could be in a conflict in the very near future with Syria or the Iranian-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon, a senior Egyptian security official told WND.

The security official said in any future war with Syria or Hezbollah, both actors have been preparing to storm the Israeli border with guerillas and commandos, an act unseen here since the 1973 Yom Kippur War, the last conflict in which Syria was openly involved.

In previous conflicts with Hezbollah, the terrorist group fired rockets into Israel.

In addition, the security official said Syria has separately been contemplating launching low-grade attacks against Jewish communities in the Golan Heights to pressure Israel into negotiations aimed at relinquishing the strategic territory.

The official said his country is concerned about a coming conflict but did not mention a specific timeframe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Ergenekon Case; 5 More ‘High-Ranking’ Indictments

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MAR 2 — Another 16 people, including five leading figures in the armed forces and magistracy, were indicted in the past hours in Turkey, as part of the investigation into Ergenekon, an elusive national organisation accused of trying to overthrow the government of the pro-Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP) of Premier Tayyip Erdogan, local media report. Among the names of people that have been indicted by the public prosecutor’s office of the city of Erzurum are General Saldiray Berk, commander (in service) of the third army based in the eastern province of Erzincan; former public prosecutor in Erzincan, Ilhan Cihanr, arrested last month by his counterpart in Erzurum because of suspicions that he is a member of Ergenekon; Colonel Ali Tapan, commander of the police of the city of Erzincan; Colonel Recep Gencoglu, commander of the police of Eskisehir; and Demir Sinasi, director of secret services in Erzincan. After the indictments, all documents will be sent to the public prosecutor’s office in Istanbul, which has been following the Ergenekon case for two years. If found guilty, the suspects could be sentenced to 7-15 years in prison for subversion. General Berk is the first of the Turkish army’s highest officials to be officially indicted in the Ergenekon case. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Runaway Wives Sentenced to Public Flogging by Warlord

In some Afghan provinces, warlords still reign supreme. Under their authority, the treatment of women is bleakly reminiscent of Taliban rule; as this video of a woman being whipped in public goes to show.

Please be aware, you may find these images upsetting.

The footage, posted online by Afghani women’s rights organisation RAWA, based in Pakistan, was originally aired by the Afghan TV channel “Tolo TV” on Feb. 18 (the logo of the channel is seen at the bottom of the screen).

When contacted by FRANCE 24, the Afghan channel told us that the scene had taken place in December 2009 in the Dolina district (Ghor province, central), and that the footage was filmed by one of its sources there.

According to Ghor governor Abdul Hai Khatibi, the two women flogged that day — only one is seen on the video — had been forced to marry against their will. Beaten by their husbands, they ran away from their respective homes disguised in men’s clothing. After a month on the run they were caught by police in Chasht (Herat province, west), arrested, and sent back to their husbands.

Both women were sentenced to 45 lashes in public. In a statement made on Pajhowk Afghan News, the deputy chief of police of Dolina district, Jahan Shah, explained that the case had been handed over to the local warlord, Fazl Ahad. He decided to have the women punished for running away, but also demanded that the husbands, whom he deemed guilty as well, divorce their wives.

Contributors

Nasim Fekrat

“Most Afghans would be outraged to see a public flogging like this”

Nasim Fekrat is an Afghani blogger who posted the video on his blog.

This type of thing isn’t unheard of. Obviously you don’t see it in Kabul, where the United Nations, NGO workers, and government agents are present, but in rural areas, warlords are still in charge of the judiciary.

They usually employ a bunch of soldiers, which you can see in this video behind the women. Similar things happen among Taliban circles in places like Kandahar. But unlike here, the information doesn’t get out because people are scared of what might happen to them if they speak out, and journalists aren’t allowed in.

Most Afghans would be outraged to see a public flogging like this. We’re also aware, however, that the situation for women has changed enormously in the past few years. Under the Taliban, these women would have been killed. Today, people can have their opinion about such issues and pass on the message. We’ve got a long way to go but things have already changed a lot.”

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Ex-Gitmo Prisoner Now Taliban Commander

A man who was freed from Guantanamo after he claimed he only wanted to go home and help his family is now a senior commander running Taliban resistance to the U.S.-led offensive in southern Afghanistan, two senior Afghan intelligence officials say.

Abdul Qayyum is also seen as a leading candidate to be the next No. 2 in the Afghan Taliban hierarchy, said the officials, interviewed last week by The Associated Press.

The story of Abdul Qayyum could add to the complications U.S. President Barack Obama is facing in fulfilling his pledge to close the prison at Guantanamo.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



India Newspaper Offices Attacked

Two newspaper offices have been attacked in India’s Karnataka state in unrest over an article allegedly written by the writer Taslima Nasreen.

Two Muslim protesters were killed in clashes with police after the article, which challenges the Muslim practice of veil wearing, appeared in local papers.

An unidentified group vandalised the office of the Kannada Prabha newspaper, which carried the article, police said.

Ms Nasreen has denied writing the article for the newspaper.

She said an article she had written had been translated into the Kannada language and “doctored” to malign her.

Ms Nasreen fled her native Bangladesh in 1994 after receiving death threats relating to a book she had written.

Muslims said her work was offensive to them. She left India in 2008 after further protests and went to live in Sweden.

The appearance of the article in the Kannada Prabha newspaper, whose offices were attacked by a mob on Tuesday night, triggered protests in the Shimoga and Hassan areas.

Police said a group of 10 masked men attempted to set the newspaper’s office in Mangalore on fire after dousing the premises with petrol, but firemen extinguished it in time.

The police said the same group attacked another newspaper office in the area.

“The miscreants have been arrested. We have some clues about who was behind the attacks,” senior police official Gopal Hosur said.

Separately, in Shimoga, incidents of stone throwing and arson were reported despite a continuing curfew in areas affected by the violence.

Police said two protesters were killed after they opened fire on Monday. About 50 people have been injured in the violence.

Police say Hindu groups joined the unrest in Shimoga and Hasan after Muslims took to the streets. About 50 arrests have been made in connection with the violence.

Several shops and vehicles have been set on fire in retaliatory attacks by Muslims and Hindus.

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



UK: Caste Prejudice ‘May Exist’ In British Workplaces

Discrimination on the grounds of caste — or historic social standing in Hindu and Sikh communities — may be happening in the UK, a government peer has said.

Ministers have previously said they did not think people from lower castes were treated unfairly in the workplace.

But Baroness Thornton said evidence may exist. She has ordered more research.

She was speaking as peers accepted an amendment to the Equalities Bill, paving the way for such discrimination to be made illegal if necessary.

Hindu campaigners have long argued that members of the lower caste — referred to as Dalits or “untouchables” — suffer unfair treatment at the hands of higher caste members, even in second generation UK Asian communities.

Baroness Thornton told peers the National Institute of Economic and Social Research was due to present its research in July or August.

“We have looked for evidence of caste discrimination and we now think that evidence may exist, which is why we have now commissioned the research,” she said.

“The proportionate thing is to take the power to deal with that discrimination if and when that evidence is produced.”

Lord Avebury, for the Liberal Democrats, who moved the amendment, said he believed the research would “conclusively prove that caste discrimination does occur in the fields covered by the bill”.

If it becomes law, the bill will require organisations of all sizes and types to promote equality and avoid discrimination in the workplace.

It will clarify existing discrimination legislation concerning sex, race, disability, sexual orientation, religion or belief and age, and ministers hope increased transparency will help tackle the pay gap between men and women.

Keith Porteous Wood, executive director of the National Secular Society, said the decision to commission research represented “a historic moment”.

“The blight of caste discrimination, under which millions in India are regarded as ‘untouchable’, has spread to this country virtually unnoticed.”

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

Far East


Japan — United States: Toyota Chief vs. The US, Two Cultures Face Off

The testimony of the president of Toyota before a congressional committee highlights the differences in corporate cultures. In Japan, the head of a corporation is expected to ensure harmony among employees and boost morale rather than be an economic expert.

Tokyo (AsiaNews) — The hard grilling of Toyota president Akio Toyoda, 53, by a US House congressional committee (pictured) on 24 February shows how different the corporate cultures of Japan and the United States are. Yoshi Inaba, chairman and CEO of Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., and Ray LaHood, US Transport secretary, also appeared before the committee to answer questions about the safety of Toyota cars, recently raised by a series of accidents caused by flaws affecting breaks, gas pedals and electronic fuel pumps. In recent weeks, Toyota was forced to recall 8.5 million cars because of these and other problems. In a committee room, crowded with reporters, photographers and people from around the world, congressmen asked about how much the company’s top management knew about these problems, whether they concealed them or failed to inform Toyota customers of what was at risk.

Since 1998, Toyota has been the world’s biggest automaker, employing hundreds of thousands of people in Japan and around the world. In article in Washington Post, Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour said, “When I announced three years ago that Toyota would open a U.S. vehicle assembly plant in Blue Springs, Miss., I said Toyota was the world’s premier automobile manufacturer. I still believe that.” In the same piece, the governor noted that the Japanese company had operations in ten American states, with some 200,000 employees. However, because of serious problems with some cars and resulting deadly accidents, the company was forced to recall millions of cars and the government had to act.

Two tragic examples

Two women told the members of the congressional committee their stories. One spoke to the committee; the other stood silent, letting the facts speak for themselves.

Rhonda Smith, 65, a social worker from Tennessee, said that in 2006 she was driving her car, a Toyota Lexus, when it suddenly surged. She slammed on the emergency brake and put the car in reverse, but it continued to speed down the freeway. “I prayed for God to help me.”, she said, trying to hold back tears.

After travelling six miles (ten kilometres), Smith said, the car began to slow, by itself, and by the time it reached 33 mph (53 kph), she was able to pull over and turn the engine off.

“Shame on you Toyota for being so greedy,” she told at Toyoda and Inaba, looking straight at them. “Shame on you NHTSA for not doing your job!” she added, looking at Secretary Ray Lahood.

After her narrow escape, she informed both Toyota and the NHTSA (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration) of her mishap, to no avail.

A grandmother from San Francisco, Ms Fe Lastrella, was also present, but she did not speak. That was unnecessary. Everyone had heard from media about the horrible accident of 28 August 2009 that wiped out her family. On that day, 45-year-old Mark Saylor, a California public servant, was driving a rented Toyota Lexus. He was on holiday and taking his wife Cleofe, their 13-year-old daughter Mahala, and 38-year-old brother-in-law Christ Lastrella, on a trip. High speed (160 km) was blamed for their deadly accident. “Hold on! Pray!” Mr Saylor was heard saying before the recording of the 911 call from Chris’ mobile phone ended. The car went off the road and into the bank of a dry riverbed. The floor mat had trapped the gas pedal. No one survived.

Speaking to reporters, Ms Lastrella said, “I’m here to speak for my four children and for the safety of the consumers through the world.” I “don’t want another family to suffer like we are suffering.”

Akio Toyoda, the unlucky “prince”

Toyota’s president was able to appease the members on the congressional committee by showing contrition and exhibiting a cooperative attitude. He repeatedly apologises for the large recall and extended his condolences to Saylor family. “I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a tragedy never happens again,” he said.

Even the harshest critics were mollified by the president’s explanations and during his testimony they avoided any aggressive behaviour since Toyota admitted its guilt and acknowledged that it sped up production at the expense of safety. Toyoda pledged his company would go back to its old philosophy, which is to give absolute priority to consumer needs and safety.

Akio Toyoda’s appointment on 23 June last year was received with enthusiasm by the Toyota family. As the grandson of the company’s founder, he was greeted like a “prince”. At a time when the company was still expanding, a spirit of harmony prevailed within. However, just six months later, the carmaker had to face its greatest crisis in 70 years of existence.

No one relished the idea of appearing before the US Congress. At the beginning, it was thought that Inaba could do the job. However, a request by the chairman of the congressional committee convinced the head of Toyota to appear “voluntarily”.

On his arrival in Washington on 20 February, he refused all interviews to concentrate on his testimony before Congress, trying to understand how US culture worked. He won . . . for the time being.

A culture of harmony

Ms Smith’s traumatic experience explains her emotional outburst but does not justify her harsh moral judgement. Cultural differences rather an ethics matter more in this issue. A Western corporate leader operates according to different cultural principles compared to his Japanese counterpart.

In Japan, harmony is the highest value. Company executives are rarely management professionals but act like cheerleaders for the rank-and-file. “In a Japanese company, the top man isn’t the one calling the shots. He is looked up to as a symbol, a bit like the emperor,” says Toyoaki Nishida, professor of business at Chubu University. Even though the company president wields no power, it would be wrong to consider him powerless. Like the emperor, who is seen as the father of the nation, top executives are psychologically perceived as the head of the company-as-family.

Parissa Haghirian, associate professor of International Management at Sophia (Catholic) University in Tokyo, said that Japanese companies are group-oriented, and generally don’t look to one person to steer the whole, unlike the West, where executives are hired for ideas and leadership. Japanese top executives are team leaders who harmonise everyone’s views to avoid conflict and create consensus.

In Japanese, this is called ‘nemawashi’, which translates as ‘laying the groundwork around the roots’ (behind the scenes) before planting the tree. Neglecting nemawashi is considered a foolish and sure way to walk into failure.

Although it is bureaucratic and time-consuming, but once a decision is made, everyone is on the same page, and action proceeds quickly without infighting.

This culture enabled Toyota to expand and reach its levels of efficiency. When Kiichiro Toyoda, Akio’s grandfather, set up the Toyota Motor Company in 1950, he called it Toyota (slight alteration of the family name) not to honour his family, but rather as a way to see its customers as part of the family with the right to be treated as such.

At a press conference, Toyoda said he was ready to go back to the principles of the “Toyota Way”, and to pay more attention to customer needs than sales figures.

The irony is that in an international economy, loyalty to Japanese culture calls for dialogue with other cultures, that of the West for instance, more specifically that of the United States. The two cultures are not opposed to one another, but are instead complementary.

Symbolically, Japan’s culture stood alongside Mr Toyoda as he spoke in the congressional hearing. His testimony appears to have been a success. Indeed, at the end he said that his company would operate in the United States in accordance with American cultural values.

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



Moscow Alarmed by Chinese Maneuvers

Military exercises suspected of targeting Russian Far East

Moscow, which conspicuously left out any mention of China’s growing influence and power in its newly adopted military doctrine, is revealing the depth of its alarm, however, through its trade and business decisions, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

The new doctrine takes aim at the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which Moscow identifies as a threat due to its eastward expansion ambitions. But a glance at the trade balance sheets between Moscow and Beijing and other business decisions reveals an equal concern is developing there.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Residents Stunned as Hundreds of Fish Fall Out of the Sky Over Remote Australian Desert Town

Residents of a small outback Australian town have been left speechless after fish began falling from the sky.

Hundreds of spangled perch bombarded the 650 residents of Lajamanu, shocking local Christine Balmer, who was walking home when the strange ‘weather’ started.

She said: ‘These fish fell in their hundreds and hundreds all over the place. The locals were running around everywhere picking them up.

‘The fish were all alive when they hit the ground so they would have been alive when they were up there flying around the sky.

‘When I told my family, who live in another part of Australia, about the fish falling from the sky, they thought I’d lost the plot.

‘But no, I haven’t lost my marbles. All I can say is that I’m thankful that it didn’t rain crocodiles!’

Meterologists say the incident was probably caused by a tornado. It is common for tornados to suck up water and fish from rivers and drop them hundreds of miles away.

Mark Kersemakers from the Australian Bureau of Meterology said: ‘Once they get up into the weather system, they are pretty much frozen and, after some time, they are released.’

Lajamanu is located half-way between Darwin and Alice Springs, on the edge of the Tanami Desert.

This is not the first time residents of the small town have experienced fish falling out of the sky.

Resident Les Dillon, 48, said: ‘In the early 1980s I was at the Alice Springs Tavern Hotel and, when I walked out the door, I saw all these little fish, fallen out of the sky.

‘Yes, I had a couple of beers, so none of my friends believed me. I have rung heaps of people to let them know I wasn’t drunk back then. It had really happened!’

           — Hat tip: Wally Ballou [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Somali Pirates Seize Empty Saudi Oil Tanker and Crew

Somali pirates have captured a small Saudi tanker and its crew, the EU naval force in the Gulf of Aden says.

The tanker, travelling from Japan to Jeddah, was empty when pirates hijacked the vessel and took its crew captive.

The MT Nisir Al Saudi was outside the shipping lanes patrolled by naval warships, it was reported.

Somali pirate attacks usually increase in the months between March and May because calmer seas allow the pirates to operate more freely.

The captain of the ship is Greek but the nationalities of the rest of the crew are not known.

In November 2008 Somali pirates hijacked the Sirius Star, a Saudi supertanker loaded with two million barrels of oil.

They released it after two months in return for a ransom, believed to have been $3m (£1.95m), which was parachuted on to the deck of the ship by helicopter.

The latest ship to be captured was taken to the Somali town of Garacad, a known pirate stronghold, said Cmdr John Harbour of the EU Naval Force in the area.

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



South Africa: Life for ‘Ghetto’ Rapists

Grahamstown — Two of the three men who raped a pregnant woman due to their “ghetto life” received life sentences in the Eastern Cape High Court on Monday.

Kevin Campbell, 24, and Elvis Nelson, 25, were both sentenced to life imprisonment for the rape, and another five years for the robbery of a 37-year-old woman on February 15, 2009, Captain Mali Govender said.

A third man, Clayton Donovan Arends, 18, was sentenced to 16 years imprisonment for rape and another five years for robbery.

All the sentences would run concurrently.

Apologised

“The youngest of the trio apologised for what they had done to her, attributing their actions to the ‘ghetto life’ they led. He also mentioned to her that this was the only way that they could have gotten a ‘white bitch’.”

The woman was walking with a man in Port Alfred near the local SPCA when they were attacked by the three, one of whom was armed with a panga. The trio demanded drugs and money from the man.

“He was threatened by Elvis [Nelson] that he will be killed and that his arms will be cut off. Clayton Arends then first hit him with the blunt edge of the panga and after realising his mistake he hit him with the sharp edge,” said Govender.

The woman ran away and hid in the bush. Her male companion hit Arends in the face before escaping.

“In an attempt to get the suspects away from the female victim, he called out to them that he had a cellphone and R600 cash with him.”

Despite this the three found the woman and took turns raping her.

‘Lucky’ her life was spared

“She begged and pleaded for them to stop, but this was in vain. She was strangled on several occasions to stop her from making a noise and [drawing] attention. She also told them that she was pregnant and this also fell on deaf ears.”

The two older men left after they heard barking dogs and believed the police had arrived.

Arends told the woman he would lead her out of the bush. As soon as they reached a clearing, the woman ran away. She flagged down a passing police vehicle.

The three were identified and arrested soon after. They were convicted of the rape and robbery on December 11 last year.

In an interview before the sentencing, Campbell said he expected a life term. Nelson believed, because he had maintained his innocence, that he would be given a lighter sentence.

“They also mentioned that the victim was very ‘lucky’ as her life had been spared.”

According to Govender, the 37-year-old woman told her: “I am glad that they all got high sentences. I am so relieved. What they got is what they deserve.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Greece Moots Citizenship for 2nd Generation

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 3 — The Greek parliament has approved a bill allowing second generation immigrants access to Greek citizenship and the right to vote in local and regional elections. The governing party and the radical left-wing coalition SYRIZA voted in favour of the bill. Nea Dimocratia, the main opposition party and the right-wing LAOS voted against the bill, while the Communist party KKE has refused to vote until the bill is discussed clause by clause. Adonis Georgiadis, Assistant Secretary of LAOS, pointed out that his party has already collected 400,000 signatures in favour of a referendum on citizenship for immigrants.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



No Action Against Exodus for Now, Brussels

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 1 — “We are monitoring the situation, but at the moment we have no comment to make and no specific plans are in place”. So said Michele Cercone, spokesman for the European Commissioner for Home Affairs, Cecilia Malmstrom, in answer to a question today about possible action from Brussels regarding the exodus of ethnic Albanian citizens of Macedonia, Serbia and Kosovo to EU countries, Belgium in particular. “We are aware of the concerns of the Belgian authorities,” explained the spokesman, “and we know that they have planned a trip to the Balkans. Naturally, we are awaiting information, which will give us a clearer idea of what is happening”. According to the local press, the Foreigners’ Office and the general commission for refugees in the Belgian capital have recorded a massive influx of citizens from Macedonia, Serbia and Kosovo over the last few weeks. Most worrying is the systematic aspect of this migratory pattern, which suggests that there is serious organisation behind it. Last Monday, 234 asylum seekers were in the Foreigners’ Office in Brussels. Some 89 were from Macedonia, 57 from Serbia and 14 from Kosovo. The Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme is due to meet his Serbian counterpart Mirko Cvetcovic next Friday, while a visit to Macedonia, Kosovo and Croatian will take place on March 8. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



People Traffickers Offering Illegal Immigrants Discount ‘Package Deals’ To Smuggle Them Into UK

Hundreds of illegal migrants were regularly dispatched to Britain from France as part of a discounted ‘bulk service’ provided by people smugglers, it emerged today.

The £7000-a-head scam saw foreigners transported to Channel ports like Calais and Cherbourg, where they were encouraged to jump aboard lorries heading for England on masse.

The vast numbers of migrants playing cat-and-mouse with the police caused widespread confusion, meaning hundreds could get to the UK, where they claimed asylum or disappeared into the black economy.

Others paid up to £14,000 for a ‘bespoke service’ which involved traveling with false papers inside a camper van driven by one of the smugglers. In this case swift entry to Britain was all but guaranteed.

Details of the ease with which the smugglers regularly evaded British customs and security checks emerged on the first day of a Paris trial which saw 28 smugglers from the so-called ‘Baghdad Ring’ go on trial at the city’s Criminal Correctional Court.

All of the defendants, who are aged from 22 to 49 and from countries like Pakistan and Afghanistan, face up to 10 years in prison for criminal conspiracy and working as an organised gang ‘to facilitate illegal entry and residency in France’.

Those transported came from northern Iraq, central Asia, the Indian sub continent, and China.

Their long journeys towards the UK often saw them travel through European countries like Italy and Greece where ‘technically’ they should have been returned if arrested.

Instead investigating judges Corinne Goetzmann and Patrick Gachon revealed how the men were able ‘to saturate’ port towns like Calais with migrants, mainly because none were ever held in custody by the police.

‘Depending on their final destination — the United Kingdom or Ireland for one of the branches of the enterprise, and Scandanavian countries for the other, they were transported by road, by train and by boat to the country of their choice’ said Judge Gachon.

He said Calais and Cherbourg were particularly popular with the smugglers because of their close proximity to the south coast of England, with at least 1000 migrants paying for the ‘bulk service’ in between 2007 and mid 2008 alone.

If migrants were initially caught trying to leap aboard lorries specially selected by the smugglers, French police simply let them free so that they could try again later.

‘The two services were distinct,’ said another French judicial source involved in the case.

‘The bulk service was the cheapest, while the more costly one involved migrants being driven over by a paid associate of the gang. This service was pretty much guaranteed.’

Last June police from 10 European countries arrested 105 people as part of the operation to dismantle the Baghdad Ring, making it the biggest joint operation against illegal immigration staged by the European Union.

France’s immigration minister Eric Besson has pledged to make ports like Calais ‘watertight’ to illegal migrants, although there are currently some 1500 people sleeping rough in the area as they try to get to Britain.

The Paris trial is set to run until March 26, with similar ones being held in Belgium, Germany and Holland. The case continues.

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



UK: Most Dishonest Man in Britain: Church Leader Charged £4,000 a Time to Smuggle Immigrants Into Country

To all appearances, the Reverend Anthony Quarco was a respectable pillar of the community.

As well as running a church, he worked as a frontline airport immigration officer and volunteered as a Metropolitan Police special constable.

But yesterday, the father of two was unmasked as ‘the most dishonest man in Britain’ and jailed for nine years for smuggling hordes of illegal migrants into the country in exchange for nearly £150,000.

Croydon Crown Court heard that former asylum seeker Quarco used the cover of the church to write letters supporting immigration bids, charging £4,000 a time to claim applicants were church fundraisers or choir members.

Meanwhile, he used his job at Luton Airport to issue fake passports, and even smuggled a man into the country under his own name.

Quarco’s extraordinary story can be told for the first time after a jury found him guilty yesterday of 14 immigration offences.

These included misconduct in public office, money laundering of £143,955, facilitating the breach of immigration law by a non-EU national and possession of false ID documents with intent.

Jonathan Polnay, prosecuting, said: ‘If I was to describe this case in a sentence I would say it is about the activities of a man who has shown by what he has done that he could quite possibly be the most dishonest man in Britain.

‘This image of the hardworking public servant, the religious man, who selflessly serves and protects this country, is nothing more than a front.’

Quarco, then known as Mashudo Brisco Ndou, claimed asylum in Britain in 1995 after arriving from Ethiopia with a Liberian ID card.

By the time he was made a UK citizen in 2005, he had changed his name to Anthony Davis Quarco, and founded ‘The Gift of God Zion Training Church’ in Brixton.

Mr Polnay said: ‘Whilst there was undoubtedly some worship going on, the main purpose for Mr Quarco was to line his pockets with the proceeds of illegal immigration.’

In March 2006 Quarco began work at Luton Airport and by 2008 he was part of the Immigration Service’s Criminal Investigation Team.

His scam was uncovered on March 6, 2009, when police raided his two properties, in Croydon and South Norwood.

Along with £5,000 in cash and some 14 false passports, they found a Ghanaian passport under the name of Anthony Mawuli Quarco, bearing Quarco’s own passport office stamp.

When police tracked this ‘Quarco’ down, he told them his real name was John Peprah and he had paid Quarco £4,000 to enter the UK.

Sentencing, Judge John Anderson said: ‘These offences struck at the heart of the immigration system of this country. This was deliberate and calculated defiance of the immigration laws of this country of which you were well aware.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Attack on ‘Biology-Based’ Restrooms Sparks Backlash

Pro-family activists target repeal of state’s Human Rights statute

AUGUSTA, Maine — The issue over whether schools in Maine will be required to allow “transgender” students to pick which restroom — boys or girls — they feel like using is prompting another look at the state law on which the restroom dispute rests: the Maine Human Rights statute of 2005.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Praying in Park Called ‘Disorderly Conduct’

Conviction ‘ridiculous,’ says attorney. ‘This never should have happened’

A New York man is appealing a “disorderly conduct” conviction for praying in a public park.

Julian Raven, defended by the Alliance Defense Fund, was arrested while praying in an Elmira public park during a 2007 “gay pride” event.

“It’s ridiculous to consider the act of peacefully exercising one’s faith in a public park to be ‘disorderly conduct,’“ said ADF Senior Legal Counsel Joel Oster. “The county court was correct in dismissing three of the convictions. They never should have happened. We are hopeful that the New York Court of Appeals will dismiss the fourth.”

[…]

ADF argues that under the First and Fourteenth amendments to the U.S. Constitution, “peaceful speakers may not be arrested simply because others in the forum may react to their message in a hostile manner.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


A Machine That Prints Organs is Coming to Market

THE great hope of transplant surgeons is that they will, one day, be able to order replacement body parts on demand. At the moment, a patient may wait months, sometimes years, for an organ from a suitable donor. During that time his condition may worsen. He may even die. The ability to make organs as they are needed would not only relieve suffering but also save lives. And that possibility may be closer with the arrival of the first commercial 3D bio-printer for manufacturing human tissue and organs.

The new machine, which costs around $200,000, has been developed by Organovo, a company in San Diego that specialises in regenerative medicine, and Invetech, an engineering and automation firm in Melbourne, Australia. One of Organovo’s founders, Gabor Forgacs of the University of Missouri, developed the prototype on which the new 3D bio-printer is based. The first production models will soon be delivered to research groups which, like Dr Forgacs’s, are studying ways to produce tissue and organs for repair and replacement. At present much of this work is done by hand or by adapting existing instruments and devices.

To start with, only simple tissues, such as skin, muscle and short stretches of blood vessels, will be made, says Keith Murphy, Organovo’s chief executive, and these will be for research purposes. Mr Murphy says, however, that the company expects that within five years, once clinical trials are complete, the printers will produce blood vessels for use as grafts in bypass surgery. With more research it should be possible to produce bigger, more complex body parts. Because the machines have the ability to make branched tubes, the technology could, for example, be used to create the networks of blood vessels needed to sustain larger printed organs, like kidneys, livers and hearts.

Printing history

Organovo’s 3D bio-printer works in a similar way to some rapid-prototyping machines used in industry to make parts and mechanically functioning models. These work like inkjet printers, but with a third dimension. Such printers deposit droplets of polymer which fuse together to form a structure. With each pass of the printing heads, the base on which the object is being made moves down a notch. In this way, little by little, the object takes shape. Voids in the structure and complex shapes are supported by printing a “scaffold” of water-soluble material. Once the object is complete, the scaffold is washed away.

Researchers have found that something similar can be done with biological materials. When small clusters of cells are placed next to each other they flow together, fuse and organise themselves. Various techniques are being explored to condition the cells to mature into functioning body parts—for example, “exercising” incipient muscles using small machines.

Though printing organs is new, growing them from scratch on scaffolds has already been done successfully. In 2006 Anthony Atala and his colleagues at the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine in North Carolina made new bladders for seven patients. These are still working.

Dr Atala’s process starts by taking a tiny sample of tissue from the patient’s own bladder (so that the organ that is grown from it will not be rejected by his immune system). From this he extracts precursor cells that can go on to form the muscle on the outside of the bladder and the specialised cells within it. When more of these cells have been cultured in the laboratory, they are painted onto a biodegradable bladder-shaped scaffold which is warmed to body temperature. The cells then mature and multiply. Six to eight weeks later, the bladder is ready to be put into the patient.

The advantage of using a bioprinter is that it eliminates the need for a scaffold, so Dr Atala, too, is experimenting with inkjet technology. The Organovo machine uses stem cells extracted from adult bone marrow and fat as the precursors. These cells can be coaxed into differentiating into many other types of cells by the application of appropriate growth factors. The cells are formed into droplets 100-500 microns in diameter and containing 10,000-30,000 cells each. The droplets retain their shape well and pass easily through the inkjet printing process.

A second printing head is used to deposit scaffolding—a sugar-based hydrogel. This does not interfere with the cells or stick to them. Once the printing is complete, the structure is left for a day or two, to allow the droplets to fuse together. For tubular structures, such as blood vessels, the hydrogel is printed in the centre and around the outside of the ring of each cross-section before the cells are added. When the part has matured, the hydrogel is peeled away from the outside and pulled from the centre like a piece of string.

The bio-printers are also capable of using other types of cells and support materials. They could be employed, Mr Murphy suggests, to place liver cells on a pre-built, liver-shaped scaffold or to form layers of lining and connective tissue that would grow into a tooth. The printer fits inside a standard laboratory biosafety cabinet, for sterile operation. Invetech has developed a laser-based calibration system to ensure that both print heads deposit their materials accurately, and a computer-graphics system allows cross-sections of body parts to be designed.

Some researchers think machines like this may one day be capable of printing tissues and organs directly into the body. Indeed, Dr Atala is working on one that would scan the contours of the part of a body where a skin graft was needed and then print skin onto it. As for bigger body parts, Dr Forgacs thinks they may take many different forms, at least initially. A man-made biological substitute for a kidney, for instance, need not look like a real one or contain all its features in order to clean waste products from the bloodstream. Those waiting for transplants are unlikely to worry too much about what replacement body parts look like, so long as they work and make them better.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Amil Imani: Liberal Pacifism vs Islamic Extremism

The Gospel writers have noted that Jesus called his disciples to a way of life in which any act of violence can be overcome by love. We must not return evil for evil, Jesus taught, but must return good for evil; we must not hate those who wrong us but must love our enemies and pray for those who hate us. The Qurâ€(tm)an never says this. Instead it explicitly declares that Allah does not love those who do not believe in him…

           — Hat tip: Amil Imani [Return to headlines]



How FBI, Police Busted Massive Botnet

12m zombie machines run by 3 admins

More details have emerged about a cybercrime investigation that led to the takedown of a botnet containing 12m zombie PCs and the arrest of three alleged kingpins who built and ran it.

As previously reported, the Mariposa botnet was principally geared towards stealing online login credentials for banks, email services and the like from compromised Windows PCs. The malware infected an estimated 12.7 million computers in more than 190 countries.

The botnet was shut down on 23 December 2009 following months of collaboration between security firms Panda Security and Defence Intelligence in co-operation with the FBI and Spain’s Guardia Civil.

[Return to headlines]



Smart Grid: The Implementation of Technocracy?

Sustainable consumption? Reconfiguring businesses, infrastructure and institutions? What do these words mean?

According to the United Nations Governing Council of the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP), “our dominant economic model may thus be termed a ‘brown economy.” UNEP’s clearly stated goal is to overturn the “brown economy” and replace it with a “green economy”:

“A green economy implies the decoupling of resource use and environmental impacts from economic growth… These investments, both public and private, provide the mechanism for the reconfiguration of businesses, infrastructure and institutions, and for the adoption of sustainable consumption and production processes.” [p. 2]

Sustainable consumption? Reconfiguring businesses, infrastructure and institutions? What do these words mean? They do not mean merely reshuffling the existing order, but rather replacing it with a completely new economic system, one that has never before been seen or used in the history of the world.

This paper will demonstrate that the current crisis of capitalism is being used to implement a radical new economic system that will completely supplant it. This is not some new idea created in the bowels of the United Nations: It is a revitalized implementation of Technocracy that was thoroughly repudiated by the American public in 1933, in the middle of the Great Depression.

[…]

In 1932, such technology did not exist. Time was on the Technocrat’s side, however, because this technology does exist today, and it is being rapidly implemented to do exactly what Scott and Hubbert specified: Namely, to exhaustively monitor, measure and control every ampere of energy delivered to consumers and businesses on a system-wide basis.

It’s called: Smart Grid.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20100302

Financial Crisis
» Economists Warn Another Financial Crisis on the Way
» Plans for European Economic Government Gain Steam
» Spain: Against Crisis, Goverment Has Recourse to Building
» Spain: Crisis Leads to Increased Mistrust
 
USA
» Ayloush and Lafferty: Rude, Unpopular Speech Worth Defending
» College Credit for 9th-Grade Ethnic Studies
» Hutchison Concedes in Texas Governor Primary
» Pelosi Laid Groundwork for Obama’s Transformation of America
» Postal Service’s Emerging Model: Never on Saturday
» Running Against Bush, Running From Themselves
» Stealing the Next Election
 
Canada
» Rights & Democracy Dissidents Fired
 
Europe and the EU
» €3000 Fine for Insulting Belgium
» Diana West: Hijab Clarity, Western Salvation
» Five European States Back Burka Ban
» Italy: Premier’s Party Faces Woes in Lazio
» Italy: Senator Linked to Mafia Resigns
» Italy: Court Rejects Berlusconi’s Request for Trial Delay
» Italy: A Mix of Racism, ‘Ndrangheta and Fear
» Italy: Manager Mum Forced to Quit Job After Giving Birth
» Italy: Inflation Dips to 1.2% in February
» Lebanese Wedding in Germany Turns Into Brawl
» MEP Nigel Farage Fined Over ‘Insulting’ Tirade
» Netherlands: Highly-Educated Turks, Moroccans to Vote for Center-Left Parties
» Paul Belien: Europe Cracks Down on Bloggers, Not Terrorists
» PKK Recruitment, Arrests in Italy and France
» Poll — Second Poll Puts Wilders Party Top in Dutch Elections
» Racist Site Wants Finnish Leadership Dead
» Spain: Suicide is First Cause of Unnatural Death
» Stakelbeck Interviews UK Radical Anjem Choudary
» UK: Islamic Scholar Tahir Ul-Qadri to Issue Terrorism Fatwa
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Karadzic Accuses Muslims of Killing Their Own People
» Former Bosnian President Arrested at Heathrow Over Alleged War Crimes
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Supreme Court Annuls Gas Supply Ban to Israel
» Egypt Blogger Military Trial Criticised
» Hamas Leader Killed, Jordanians and Egyptians Accused
» Tunisia-ANP: Tunis, Relations Solid and Privileged
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Tourism: Cyprus and Palestinian Authority Will Cooperate
 
Middle East
» Barry Rubin: Will Obama Have an Iraq Crisis?
» France-Saudi Arabia: King Abdullah Guest of Honour July 14
» Hamas Leader Killed; Dubai Police Wants Netanyahu
» Iraqi Christians Demonstrate, Fast Against Killings and the Nineveh “Ghetto”
» Region’s First Catholic University in Jordan
 
South Asia
» Inquest Hears Vehicle in Afghan Blast ‘Not Adequate’
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Absalon Sinks Pirate ‘Mother Ship’
» Mali: Kidnappings, Countries Tense, All Eyes on Mauritania
 
Latin America
» Argentina: Baby Girl Survives After Being Shot in the Chest in Parents’ ‘Global Warming Suicide Pact’
» Chilean Quake May Have Shortened Earth Days
» UK Rejects Hillary Clinton’s Help in Falklands Dispute
 
Immigration
» EU Alarmed by Influx of Western Balkan Immigrants
» Media Reports EU Exodus After Visa Ban
 
Culture Wars
» Czar: Education to Make Students ‘Revolutionaries’
» UK: Don’t Let Politicians Bully You, Lord Carey Warns Christians
 
General
» New Psychiatric Disorders Flag Normal Human Behaviors as “Diseases”

Financial Crisis


Economists Warn Another Financial Crisis on the Way

Nonpartisan Group Led by Nobel Winner Calls for Stronger Financial Reforms

Even as many Americans still struggle to recover from the country’s worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, another crisis — one that will be even worse than the current one — is looming, according to a new report from a group of leading economists, financiers, and former federal regulators.

In the report, the panel, that includes Rob Johnson of the United Nations Commission of Experts on Finance and bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren, warns that financial regulatory reform measures proposed by the Obama administration and Congress must be beefed up to prevent banks from continuing to engage in high risk investing that precipitated the near collapse of the U.S. economy in 2008.

The report warns that the country is now immersed in a “doomsday cycle” wherein banks use borrowed money to take massive risks in an attempt to pay big dividends to shareholders and big bonuses to management — and when the risks go wrong, the banks receive taxpayer bailouts from the government.

“Risk-taking at banks,” the report cautions, “will soon be larger than ever.”

Without more stringent reforms, “another crisis — a bigger crisis that weakens both our financial sector and our larger economy — is more than predictable, it is inevitable,” Johnson says in the report, commissioned by the nonpartisan Roosevelt Institute.

The institute’s chief economist, Nobel Prize-winner Joseph Stiglitz, calls the report “an important point of departure for a debate on where we are on the road to regulatory reform.”

The report blasts some of Washington’s key players. Johnson writes, “Our government leaders have shown little capacity to fix the flaws in our market system.” Two other panelists, Simon Johnson, a professor at MIT, and Peter Boone of the Centre for Economic Performance, voiced similar criticisms.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner “oversaw policy as the bubble was inflating,” write Johnson and Boone, and “these same men are now designing our ‘rescue.’“

The study says that “In 2008-09, we came remarkably close to another Great Depression. Next time we may not be so ‘lucky.’ The threat of the doomsday cycle remains strong and growing,” they say. “What will happen when the next shock hits? We may be nearing the stage where the answer will be — just as it was in the Great Depression — a calamitous global collapse.”

[Return to headlines]



Plans for European Economic Government Gain Steam

With Greek finances dragging down the euro, calls for coordinated fiscal policy within the common currency zone have become more frequent. Now, Germany and France have presented a paper outlining what such a regime might look like. Increased monitoring is at the top of the priority list.

Up until just a few months ago, it wasn’t easy to find people on the Continent who were seriously skeptical about the euro. The European common currency had performed well during the financial crisis and had steadily strengthened against the dollar. Indeed, the only concern was that the dollar would become too weak, thus making euro zone exports unaffordable.

With Greek finances a shambles, however, the weaknesses of the common currency regime have been exposed for all to see this winter. First among them: there is no policy tool to mandate fiscal responsibility in the 16 countries that use the euro — a significant Achilles’ heel for the currency’s stability.

With Greece dragging the euro down, however, the concept of an economic government for the euro zone is gaining momentum. Indeed, the German and French Finance Ministries have developed a draft plan that would significantly strengthen financial policy cooperation in the EU.

The plan, which has been seen by SPIEGEL, calls for increased monitoring of individual member states’ competitiveness so that action can be taken early on should problems emerge. States which have pegged their currencies to the euro — like Denmark or the Baltic countries — will likewise be monitored.

‘Candid and Serious’

The plan also calls for the European Commission to ensure that the euro group spends more time addressing the finances of its member states. In particular, the paper demands that euro group finance ministers “take more time for candid and serious discussions on the goal of a functioning currency union.” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble and French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde have sent their plan to Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs the euro group. The idea is to be discussed at the next meeting of euro zone finance ministers in mid-March.

In a Monday interview with the German business daily Handelsblatt, Juncker voiced support for the idea of greater economic oversight of euro zone members. “We need a European economic government in the sense of strengthened coordination of economic policy within the euro zone,” he said. “The Greece case makes it clear.”

Juncker said that the euro group will examine divergences in the competitiveness of euro zone countries in March. Recommendations for reform will then be transmitted to each country with the expectation that national governments will formulate proposals to eliminate those divergences. The euro zone, Juncker said, will closely monitor the process.

Many have pointed to a lack of common financial policy among countries belonging to the European common currency as a significant weakness for the euro. Indeed, Greece’s current problems, which include a budget deficit of 12.7 percent of gross domestic product and €300 billion in sovereign debt, have led to a significant weakening of the euro against the dollar. Furthermore, after years of at times painful social reforms in countries like Germany, the willingness in Europe to come to Greece’s aid is tepid at best.

Assert Control

An early idea for a common European economic policy, voiced by European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso in early February, called for forcing countries to institute structural reforms under pain of financial sanctions. Greece currently finds itself in a comparable position, with the EU closely monitoring Greek reforms and demanding deep spending cuts. Greece aims to cut its budget deficit by four percentage points this year with the eventual goal of dropping below the euro zone ceiling of 3 percent by 2012.

In a syndicated column, former German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer also threw his support behind a European economic government. “The euro, which turned out to be the critical tool for defending European interests in this crisis, will now be subjected to an endurance test directed at the soft political heart of its construction,” Fischer wrote. He urges that the French and German governments establish a financial oversight body with the teeth to assert control over the finances of member states.

“What is necessary now,” he writes, “is statesman-like leadership — and even more so stateswoman-like leadership. Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are facing the defining challenge of their respective terms in office.”

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



Spain: Against Crisis, Goverment Has Recourse to Building

(ANSAmed) — MADRID — The Spanish government is having recourse once again to construction in order to come out of the crisis, and to create 350,000 new jobs in the next two years. This is one of the measures that the Socialists will negotiate with the other parties in order to arrive, in the course of two months, at the establishment of an agreement against the crisis. The priorities: the creation of jobs before a rising unemployment that, by February, had surpassed 4,130 million persons, double the European average, and new incentives to stimulate the economy. Among these, discharges from debt and the reduction of the VAT to 8% and of personal income tax to 10% for the renovations. The objective is to recover in two years 350,000 of the more than one million job places lost in the building sector since the start of the crisis. All the major Spanish dailies are highlighting these proposals, formulated in the anti-crisis commission, by the vice-premier Elena Salgado. The papers, however, use the news to show how they do not follow the direction of the change of the productive model promoted by the executive branch, led by Jose’ Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. Among other measures, a new plan to extend credit to small and middle-sized businesses, up to 200,000 euros, directly through the Official Credit Institute (ICO); a “public bank” to give a breath of fresh air to the companies asphyxiated by a lack of credit. In addition, there will be a cut of 4% of the personal expenses for City Halls and Regions; the payment of suppliers within 60 days, reduced to 30 for Public administration, and an energy model stretching until 2020, in which the sources of eolic and solar energy have greater weight. “We wanted to end construction speculation, but not construction in general, because building is a very important sector” for the Spanish economy, explained Salgado, in justifying the new wager by the executive branch, regarding housing. With regard to the construction of 800,000 new dwellings per year in the golden period of housing speculation, and up until 2007, the government estimates that 200,000 new homes per year is the quota that will grant the sector survival and will contribute to the growth of the GNP. Today there are 500,000 new accommodations that find no market demand. For the Popular opposition party, the measures proposed by the executive branch are “deluding”, as the spokeswoman for the Chamber of deputies, Soraya Saenz de Santamaria, underlined today. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Crisis Leads to Increased Mistrust

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 2 — The crisis and the high unemployment level, with over 4.130 million people without work, are causing the Spanish people’s diffidence and rejection of immigrants to rise. This was unveiled in the report ‘The evolution of racism and xenophobia in Spain’, produced by the Observatory of the Ministry for Work and Immigration. Despite the fact that fewer immigrants are currently arriving in Spain, due to the economic crisis and greater controls at the borders, the acceptance of foreigners depends ever more upon the need for work and their capacity to integrate. Thirty-seven percent of the 2,800 individuals interviewed in the survey, completed annually by the Observatory, are resistant to immigration: 33% tolerate it, while 30% gave no definite answer. Forty-two percent of responders consider the laws to be “too tolerant” that currently regulate the entrance and stay of immigrants into the country. This is in respect to a small 5% that considers them instead to be “too hard”. On the other hand, 39% of those questioned consider it to be “very acceptable” for “the immigrants who are legally residing in the country, but who have committed crimes, to be expelled from the country”; while for 29% it is “fairly acceptable”, a percentage that has increased 18 points with regard to response to the same question in 2005. Regarding the rights to be recognised to immigrants, those concerning the immigrants’ right to vote receive less favour from Spaniards; followed by those to be re-united with their families, which dropped from 86% agreement in 2007 to 80% in 2009. In answer to the question: for what group of immigrants do you experience most compassion, one out of every three persons interviewed declined to answer, and one out of four answered, “none”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Ayloush and Lafferty: Rude, Unpopular Speech Worth Defending

Eleven students heckled Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren at different intervals at a UC Irvine event recently and set off a debate on what constitutes free speech and when it should be protected.

The right to freely express oneself, particularly against government policies, is a cherished freedom protected by our Constitution. That’s why we were not surprised when people protested at health care town halls, when a congressman interrupted the president’s address to Congress, or when audience members disrupted a speech by former White House lawyer John Yoo at UCI in 2005.

While some may argue that the students’ tactics against Oren were loud and rude, our opinions on the politeness of such conduct are irrelevant. The students merely voiced their passionate discontent on a grave political and moral matter they deemed worthy of their activism.

Israel has undertaken a massive public-relations campaign to salvage its negative image over its violations of international humanitarian and human-rights law, and Oren — as the Israeli government’s representative — must have anticipated vocal audience opposition, the same way supporters of Apartheid-era South African government speaking at U.S. campuses did in the 1980s.

Though their protest was delivered in a loud and shocking manner intended to express the gravity of Israel’s immoral policies and actions, the students were nonviolent, nonthreatening and peacefully left the public gathering as soon as they spoke.

Some try to characterize this incident as a case of Oren’s right to free speech. News reports and videos of the event clearly show that his talk was not wholly disrupted. The interrupting remarks amounted to no more than 10 seconds by each student, barely two minutes total, versus Oren’s allotted time of about an hour. Oren left the stage for some time, but then returned and, despite shout-outs from supporters and opponents, was able to continue his speech.

Public speakers, including ourselves, know that speaking on highly charged topics invites opposing viewpoints. Our own public appearances over the past 15-plus years have been interrupted by jeers, heckling and protests. And, although we don’t enjoy being subjected to that, we know that the freedom exercised by some who rudely interrupt us is the same that protects our right to publicly and freely speak our minds on important political matters.

We are troubled to see that, for exercising their right to free speech, the 11 students at UCI were cited by campus police and faced the threat of disciplinary action, including possible expulsion, not only by the university, but also potential criminal charges by the Orange County District Attorney’s Office.

It is incomprehensible that an institution of higher learning that claims to engage in and promote the free exchange of ideas now seeks to punish its students for peacefully expressing political views, however unpopular, at a student-organized event.

Over the years, there have been countless instances of protest activities during campus speeches, including at UCI, with no comparable disciplinary action taken that we know of. By disproportionately and selectively punishing one set of protesters and not others, including the counterprotesters at the same event, who cursed, threatened and even assaulted students, the university has chosen to censure a particular set of political views — the legitimate criticism of Israel.

Freedom of speech is a two-way street, and it must not be restricted to what is popular, respectful, or appropriate speech, though such guidelines might be preferred by us and others. Oren has the right to speak, even if it is to justify Israel’s occupation and brutal policies. Similarly, the students have the right to dissent, even discourteously.

Both sides exercised that right.

We urge the university to drop all charges and disciplinary actions against the 11 students and redouble efforts to reach out to all students, including Muslim and Jewish students. Not doing so will cause a chilling effect on First Amendment rights on college campuses and our society at large, and leave many students feeling excluded and unwelcome.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



College Credit for 9th-Grade Ethnic Studies

San Francisco high school students, just months out of middle school, can start earning San Francisco State college credit this fall through a ninth-grade ethnic studies course.

Currently, five ethnic studies courses are offered at three high schools, but they offer only high school credits. The school board voted to expand the ethnic studies program last week, increasing the number of courses to at least 10 sections at five high schools.

To help with the added costs associated with expanding the program, San Francisco State offered to help train district teachers and assist with developing curriculum.

At a school board meeting last week, the head of the university’s Ethnic Studies program also promised that students would earn up to six college course credits for the high school freshman course — a rare opportunity for a 14-year-old.

The courses will become part of the California State University’s Step to College program, which has offered college credit for high school students across the state since 1985. Most of those courses require students to be juniors or seniors.

The program is designed for students who might not otherwise be considering college as an option, said Jacob Perea, dean of the School of Education, who runs the Step to College program at San Francisco State.

“We’re not really looking for the 4.4 (grade point average) students,” he said. “We’re looking for the 2.1 or 2.2 students.”

Students cannot fail the class. They either receive a “pass” grade or are withdrawn from the course if it appears they cannot pass, Perea said.

“All we do is give them an opportunity,” he said. “I do believe that (the ethnic studies) course is a course set up so the kids will come out of there with the kind of information that a freshman here taking an ethnic studies course will have.”

The content of the courses offered in the Step to College program are reviewed by CSU faculty to ensure that they’re equal to any offered at the university. The instructors teaching the courses are vetted and given university adjunct status while the course is in progress, Perea said.

But can ninth-graders really produce college-level work?

Perea acknowledged that asking them to write at a 12th- or 13th-grade level could be difficult, but added: “I doubt that we’ve ever had a student come through the program who shouldn’t have.”

The ethnic studies course “encourages students to explore specific aspects of identity on personal, interpersonal and institutional levels and provides students with interdisciplinary reading, writing and analytical skills,” district officials said in a news release about the expanded pilot program.

“I don’t ever learn about the accomplishments and contributions of the people who look like me and the members of my family,” said Balboa High School freshman Monet Cathrina-Rescat Wilson during public comment at Tuesday’s school board meeting. “How can I know who I can be if I don’t know who I am? Ethnic studies provides me with the foundation to learn who I am.”

           — Hat tip: Takuan Seiyo [Return to headlines]



Hutchison Concedes in Texas Governor Primary

Driftwood, Texas (CNN) — Texas Gov. Rick Perry won his state’s Republican gubernatorial primary outright on Tuesday, avoiding a potentially costly runoff election against Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison.

With returns showing the governor on pace for a resounding victory, Hutchison called Perry to concede the race shortly shortly after 9 p.m. Addressing supporters in Dallas, she asked Republicans to unite behind Perry.

“Now we must unite,” she said. “We must win Texas for Republicans.”

Perry’s win ended a yearlong intra-party fight that was billed from the start as a clash of Texas political titans but ended with a whimper as Hutchison struggled to fight a tide of anti-Washington sentiment among conservatives.

Perry, the longest serving governor in Texas history, is seeking a third full term in Austin. His opponent in the general election will be Democrat Bill White, the former Houston mayor who dispatched six opponents in the Democratic primary.

[Return to headlines]



Pelosi Laid Groundwork for Obama’s Transformation of America

Rational people may ponder how Pelosi can urge Democrats to vote for ObamaCare even if it means the end of their careers.

Like Pelosi, many of her Dem cohorts including Senators Barbara Boxer, Harry Reid, Diane Feinstein among others, are long past their due date. In ending their careers for ObamaCare they have nothing to lose. How many of them will live out the rest of their lives in fabulous wealth? Are Dems being paid off with funds stolen from the American till during the destructive Obama administration?

[…]

Not long after Barack Obama was Barry Soetero in red diapers, Pelosi as Useful Idiot Numero Uno was already setting the stage for America’s transformation to a Socialist State.

Pelosi’s hogging of today’s stage as ObamaCare shill covers a past freedom lovers should never forget. For it was Pelosi who carefully shepherded Agenda 21 through Congress, ultimately calling on and getting President Bill Clinton’s help after laying the initial groundwork.

Back on March 29, 1993 Pelosi introduced a joint resolution (H.J. RES166) to renew the call for the United States to “assume a strong leadership role in implementing Agenda 21 and other Summit agreements”, eventually gathering 67 co-sponsors for her bill. Thirty of those sponsors are still in Congress; co-sponsors Ted Kennedy and John Murtha no longer here.

Agenda 21 architects were were former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Canadian UN Poster Boy Maurice Strong, among others. In layman’s terms Agenda 21 is a global sustainability document which, among many other things, helped set the stage for converting military installations around the world into globalist activity centers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Postal Service’s Emerging Model: Never on Saturday

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Postal Service is increasing the pressure for dropping Saturday home delivery as it seeks to fend off massive financial losses.

Postmaster General John Potter is also expected to raise the possibility of higher rates Tuesday in a speech to postal-related businesses and officials.

The agency was $297 million in the red in period from October through December, usually its best season because of holiday mailings.

The Postal Service has previously proposed eliminating delivery six days a week, but got a cold reception in Congress. The renewed effort comes with a series of consultant reports supporting that idea, as well as other changes.

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



Running Against Bush, Running From Themselves

With his ratings plummeting and his administration coming undone, the Great Savior of the Democrats in the White House is more focused on finding ways to blame Bush and congressional Republicans for the current mess, than anything else. And that is predictable enough because the progressive left has built its identity around opposition more than anything else.

Even when in power, the left draws a picture of itself as perpetually embattled. That is the case in a democracy and even in a tyranny, such as the USSR or Cuba, which remained focused on fighting increasingly imaginary enemies. It is no surprise then that Obama can’t put down the left’s well-worn security blanket, because it is too much a part of his movement’s ideological identity.

The left’s identity is built on uprooting tradition, in the same way that the identity of the right is built on preserving it. The left’s love for “reform” and “revolution” are just different ways of expressing their desire to dramatically overthrow and overturn society and nations. Their core identity is tied into their belief that they are the revolutionary vanguard of the class struggle against the established powers. And when they are in power, they cling even harder to that identity, fighting new “established powers” to wage war against.

[…]

The left has never had a great deal of use for Democracy. Like Islam, the left views popular elections as a useful tool for implementing their own rise to power, at which point popular elections are no longer relevant, because the popular will has already been asserted with their own victory. Which naturally makes them very sore losers, blaming election victories on either their own lack of radicalism or the “powerful interests” who are always standing in their way with their “vast right wing conspiracies”.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Stealing the Next Election

“STEALING THE NEXT ELECTION” surveys the various stratagems the far left is currently developing to consolidate power in the U.S. long-term. The list includes:

Universal voter registration: Now being secretly prepared by at least two prominent members of Congress, this is essentially a scheme to legalize voter fraud by shifting responsibility for registering to vote from the citizen to the government, meaning people are automatically registered to vote, based on DMV records, income-tax returns, welfare rolls, unemployment lists and other government databases.

Illegal immigrant registration: Since government databases contain names of non-citizens, not to mention mentally incompetent individuals and felons — factors that would ordinarily disqualify a person from voting in most states — universal registration would open the floodgates to fraud. And since many people own property in more than one location and pay taxes to numerous government entities, they would be afforded the opportunity to vote in multiple locations.

Amnesty: Disguised once again by euphemisms like “comprehensive immigration reform,” amnesty will create millions of new Democrat voters. As Obama adviser and SEIU executive vice president Eliseo Medina said recently regarding amnesty: “Can you imagine 8 million new voters who care about our issues and will be voting? We will be creating a governing coalition for the long term, not just for an election cycle.”

Convicted felons voting: The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals late last year cleared the way for inmates to vote from prison. The court overturned a Washington state law prohibiting felons from voting until they are released and off parole, arguing state restrictions unfairly penalized minorities since they have a higher incarceration rate. Polls show felons overwhelmingly prefer Democrats.

Planting operatives in America’s statehouses: A subversive, Soros-backed group called the Secretary of State Project is gearing up to steal the 2012 election for Obama and congressional Democrats by installing left-wing Democrats as secretaries of state across the nation, from which posts they can help tilt the electoral playing field.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Rights & Democracy Dissidents Fired

Opposition to government’s choice for president grows

Three senior managers at the federal government’s human rights agency who were suspended for publicly declaring their lack of confidence in three Conservative appointees to their organization’s board of directors earlier this year have been fired.

The news was confirmed by lawyer Julius Grey, who is representing the three, on Tuesday.

Rights & Democracy, created under Brian Mulroney’s Conservative government to encourage democracy and monitor human rights around the world, has been in turmoil since the Harper government appointed new board members last year.

The new members challenged grants being made to three human rights organizations known to be critical of Israel’s human rights record.

Federal opposition politicians and the family of former president Rémy Beauregard, who died in January, are calling for an independent inquiry into the organization.

Since Beauregard’s death, almost every staff member of Rights & Democracy has signed a letter stating non-confidence in the interim president and two board members.

The organization’s director of communications, Charles Vallerand, director of resources and administration Marie-France Cloutier, and director of policy, planning and programs Razmik Panossian were suspended without pay in January after they submitted a letter to the media expressing their concerns.

Grey said the three plan to contest their dismissals.

“I don’t want to go into the details,” said Grey. “But it is my opinion, having read the notice, that it is completely illegal,” he said.

The interim president of the organization, Pierre Gauthier, declined to comment on the situation. A spokesman called the issue “a private matter.”

Nomination of president contested

Meanwhile, opposition to the federal government’s choice to replace Beauregard as president of Rights & Democracy continues to grow.

A leading Muslim group is adding its voice to those opposing the federal government’s choice to lead the Montreal-based human rights organization Rights & Democracy.

Groups are taking issue with the views of Gérard Latulippe, who has been nominated to serve as president of Rights & Democracy, contained in a document provided to a Quebec government commission studying the question of accommodations for religious and cultural minority groups. Latulippe’s document “promotes a false fear of Islam,” said Ihsaan Gardee, executive director of Canada’s Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Those views are inappropriate in a publicly-funded organization such as Rights & Democracy, said Gardee.

“They are not really reflective of the values that are enshrined in our Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” he said.

Immigrants from Muslim communities don’t integrate as easily as Americans or Haitians, Latulippe told the Bouchard-Taylor Commission in the 38-page document, adding that Quebec’s immigration policies are leading to an “unnecessary risk of fostering terrorism from within.”

The document, submitted in 2007, also mentions accommodations made for the Hassidic community and the Sikh community.

Latulippe’s nomination as president of the organization last month by Foreign Affairs Minsiter Lawrence Cannon has been criticized by all of the opposition parties who accuse the Conservative government of politicizing an internationally recognized human rights organization.

Those concerns were reiterated by NDP MP Paul Dewar on Tuesday.

“If Mr. Cannon wants to rehabilitate Rights & Democracy, he’ll listen to the opposition parties when they say ‘sorry, but Mr. Latulippe’s not the guy to be president,’“ Dewar said.

Latulippe was the resident director of the National Democratic Institute in Haiti. He served with Cannon as a Liberal in the Quebec legislature and lost his bid for a federal seat in 2000 while representing the now defunct Canadian Alliance.

Cannon declined to comment on the situation. He is expected to make a final decision on Latulippe’s future shortly, his office said Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


€3000 Fine for Insulting Belgium

UKIP MEP Leader Nigel Farage was informed this afternoon by Jerzy Buzek, president of the European Parliament, that he had decided to fine him €3000 for his comments relating to Mr van Rompuy and Belgium. The fine represents 10 days pay, and is the maximum allowable under the rules of the European Parliament. Mr Buzek imposed it after Mr Farage declined earlier today to apologise for his comments.

Mr Farage said: “Free speech is an expensive business in the European Parliament.”

“I tried to talk to the president of the Parliament about freedom of speech, especially in Parliament from elected members, but he has asked me to apologise. He wants me to apologise to Herman Van Rompuy, He wants me to apologise to the European Parliament and he wants me to apologise to the people of Belgium. […]

“I will apologise to bank clerks the world over. If I caused them offence I am very sorry. But if I am not allowed to stand up and say that I think it is wrong that this man has got a job which pays him a salary bigger than Obama’s and that is because the Lisbon Treaty went through without us having a referendum… then what sort of democracy is there in this EU?”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Diana West: Hijab Clarity, Western Salvation

Tomorrow, in municipal elections in Almere, the Netherlands, Geert Wilders’ PVV party — Partij voor de Vrejheid, or Party for Freedom — is poised to emerge the big winner as polls show PVV winning as much as 30 percent of the vote.

A few days ago, Geert Wilders spoke in Almere, an excellent speech full of insights into the Dutch political scene in the wake of its government having fallen. Toward the end of the speech, Wilders describes how his burgeoning political power to reverse the Islamization process may manifest itself…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Five European States Back Burka Ban

More than half of voters in four other major European states back a push by France’s Nicolas Sarkozy to ban women from wearing the burka, according to an opinion poll for the Financial Times.

As Mr Sarkozy presses ahead with plans to ban the wearing of the burka in public places, the FT’s latest Harris poll shows the move is not just strongly supported in France, but wins enthusiastic backing in the UK, Italy, Spain and Germany.

The poll shows some 70 per cent of respondents in France said they supported plans to forbid the wearing of the garment which covers the female body from head to toe. There was similar sentiment in Spain and Italy, where 65 per cent and 63 per cent respectively favoured a ban

The strength of feeling in the UK and Germany may seem particularly surprising. Britain has a strong liberal tradition that respects an individual’s right to full expression of religious views. But here, some 57 per cent of people still favoured a ban. In Germany, which is also reluctant to clamp down in minority rights, some 50 per cent favoured a ban.

“This poll shows that the number of people in France opposed to the burka is going up and that is the product of debate on burka and national identity,” said Professor Patrick Weil, an expert on national identity at the University of Paris-Sorbonne. “But the figure is clearly going up in other countries in Europe like the UK as well, and that reflects the growing concern that there is about this issue in some parts of Europe.”

In the US, concerns about the issue are far less strong than in Europe. Just 33 per cent of Americans surveyed by Harris supported a ban, a far lower figure than the 44 per cent who said they supported it.

In Europe, while opposition to the burka was strong, few respondents said they were prepared to support the ban as part of a wider drive towards secularism in their country.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Italy: Premier’s Party Faces Woes in Lazio

PdL misses registration deadline for candidates

(ANSA) — Rome, March 1 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, excluded from the ballot in Rome province in regional elections this month, on Monday accused the opposition Radical party of preventing it from registering its electoral list.

As it now stands, the PdL’s list will not appear on the ballot for the March 28-29 election in the Rome area because the electoral office said the centre right party had failed to hand in its list of candidates by the noon cutoff on Saturday.

The party’s appeal against the decision was rejected by a court on Sunday but the PdL on Monday turned to an appeals court, which is expected to rule on the issue within 48 hours.

If that appeal is turned down, the PdL could still take the case to the regional TAR court and then to the state administrative tribunal.

However, a final decision would have to come before March 13, when the electoral lists must be published. Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno called on President Giorgio Napolitano, who has expressed concern over the matter, to find a solution but a statement released by his office said it was up to the courts to decide. The PDL claimed that two members of the Radical party had fomented a row at the electoral office in a successful bid to prevent its representatives from handing in the documentation on time.

Grazia Volo, the lawyer who presented the appeal for the PdL, told reporters that party representatives were at the office “well before noon” but that electoral officials had “committed irregularities” by accepting the Radicals’ word they were late because they were standing “physically outside the office”. Volo accused electoral officials of unfairness, saying they had “favoured one party against another”.

PdL House Whip Fabrizio Cicchitto said there was proof that the PdL men were at the electoral office at 11.25. He warned that electoral officials had set a dangerous precedent with their decision.

“Not allowing all the parties to present their lists …means that democracy is at risk”.

Renata Polverini, a union leader who is the PdL candidate for president in the Lazio region — which includes the key Rome province — said she planned to leave the legal matter to party officials while continuing her campaign.

She is running against Radical party candidate Emma Bonino, a former European Union commissioner who is backed by most of the centre-left opposition, including the Democratic Party. Bonino said that the PdL’s attempt to pass off the two Radical Party representatives off as thugs was “an unacceptable lie”. “Frankly, (their version) is laughable and humiliating,” she added. Alemanno told reporters that if the country’s biggest political party was not allowed to run in the Rome area it would be “catastrophic”. Berlusconi, who is reportedly fuming with local party officials, said last week that the elections — in 13 of the country’s 20 regions — are of strategic importance for his government.

Introducing the four women the PdL has chosen as candidates for regional presidents, Berlusconi said voters would be asked “ to choose between can-do politics and the opposition’s talk”. The premier said he would personally come out to campaign with the centre-right candidates.

“I’ll make it clear (to voters) that they have to choose sides: it’s either the left or us”. The centre right had been optimistic of snatching Lazio away from the centre left after the region’s ex-president, Piero Marrazzo, was forced to resign in October in a sex and drugs scandal.

But if the PdL will be unable to run in the Rome province — the biggest in Lazio — the centre left may well keep the region. Meanwhile, Roberto Formigoni, the encumbent president of the Lombardy region, also ran into trouble with electoral officials who on Monday said his personal electoral list contained bureaucratic irregularities with some 500 signatures.

If the decision is upheld, Formigoni, who is backed by the PdL and the Northern League, will be unable to run with his personal slate, the opposition said. However, Semplifications Minister Roberto Calderoli, a Northern League heavyweight, told reporters he expected the problem would be resolved soon.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Senator Linked to Mafia Resigns

Di Girolamo denies involvement in vote rigging, laundering scam

(ANSA) — Rome, March 1 — A centre-right senator named in a money laundering phone scam and linked to a Calabrian mafia boss handed in his resignation on Monday, a few days before the Senate was expected to give the go-ahead for his arrest.

In a letter of resignation addressed to Senate Speaker Renato Schifano, Nicola Di Girolamo accused his colleagues of likening him to Lucifer and “cutting me to pieces”.

Di Girolamo rejected prosecutors’ charges that he had been elected to the Senate as representative for Italians abroad because of vote-rigging organised by the Calabrian Ndrangheta mafia.

“I was elected thanks to 24,500 voters …who were neither mafiosi or criminals,” said the senator with Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, admitting though that “a small part” of those who voted for him could have been swayed by individuals “tainted” by mafia connections.

Di Girolamo said he was certain he would be able to clear himself when questioned by prosecutors, adding that he would place his trust in God.

The senator said “heaps of mud” had been dumped on him by the media who “painted me like a monster who had usurped his electoral mandate”, saying he was instead a “decent person unable to defend myself against the arrogance of liars and ill wishers”. Schifani urged the Senate last week to consider annulling Di Girolamo’s election because he also falsely claimed he lived abroad rather than in Rome and was eligible to run as a candidate for Italians abroad. Prosecutors say that in exchange for the vote rigging Di Girolamo helped the mafia launder huge sums.

The parties’ caucuses are expected to meet soon to decide on a date for voting by secret ballot to accept his resignation. On Thursday, the newsweekly L’Espresso published several pictures of an electoral dinner in 2008 where Di Girolamo is shown with ‘Ndrangheta chieftain Franco Pugliese and Rome businessman Gennaro Mokbel, the alleged ringleader of the scam.

Pugliese and Mokbel were arrested Tuesday while Di Girolamo’s arrest needed to be cleared by a Senate panel.

House Speaker Gianfranco Fini last week urged Senators to vote for Di Girolamo’s arrest while Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he was “shocked” by the evidence against him.

The opposition Democratic Party meanwhile called for a review of electoral procedures for MPs abroad.

Pugliese, who was sent on ‘internal exile’ to Mantua in the 1990s, is a top member of the Arena family, one of Ndrangheta’s most powerful clans.

He first came to the attention of police in 1997 when 12 billion lire in assets were seized including apartments, land and five cars in Calabria and a shopping centre near Bergamo.

His son Michele was among 34 mobsters arrested last November in an operation that uncovered three murders including the bazooka killing of Mob patriarch Carmine Arena in 2004.

Berlusconi said during the weekend he had never met Di Girolamo, adding that he had been put up as a candidate by Fini’s National Alliance party, which merged with the premier’s Forza Italia last year to form the PdL.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Court Rejects Berlusconi’s Request for Trial Delay

Milan, 1 March (AKI) — A Milan court on Monday rejected a request by Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi to excuse himself from a trial over tax fraud and false accounting. It was the first time the court ruled the 73-year-old billionare could not use his official commitments to avoid the trial, after an Italian cabinet meeting was scheduled on Monday.

Berlusconi argued he could not appear because of a cabinet meeting.

Berlusconi had tried to avoid the trial because of a what his government referrs to as a “legitimate impediment” , a legal term referring to prior commitments as prime minister that prevent him from attending court.

He has been facing ongoing legal action in two court cases and criticised judges on Friday, saying they were acting like a “band of Talibans”.

The prime minister’s lawyers failed to show that the cabinet meeting could not be delayed, the court said on Monday.

“It is a decision that is outside every system, a decision that goes against the advice, against the decisions of the High Court, against any kind of logic because a cabinet meeting is not avoidable day to day,” said Niccolo Ghedini, Berlusconi lawyer.

The trial centres on the acquisition of television rights by the broadcaster Mediaset, which is owned and controlled by the Berlusconi family.

Prosecutors have alleged that Mediaset paid an inflated price of 470 million euros to buy the rights from two offshore companies controlled by Berlusconi.

In a separate case involving the prime minister, a Milan court on Saturday adjourned the trial of Silvio Berlusconi accused of corrupting his former tax lawyer until 26 March.

Berlusconi, who did not attend the hearing, is on trial for allegedly paying 600,000 dollars to British tax lawyer David Mills in exchange for giving false testimony during two trials in the mid-1990s.

Mills’ parallel trial for the same crime was thrown out by Italy’s appeals court on Thursday because the 10-year statute of limitations had expired, even though the judges ruled he was guilty.

Berlusconi’s lawyers on Saturday asked the court to suspend the trial until details on the Mills ruling were published, but judges refused the request.

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



Italy: A Mix of Racism, ‘Ndrangheta and Fear

Gian Antonio Stella talks to Federica Zoja

During a meeting held with students protesters from the Berchet High School in Milan, ResetDoc interviewed the Corriere della Sera leader-writer and correspondent Gian Antonio Stella, fresh from the success of his recent book Negri, froci, giudei & co. L’eterna lotta contro l’altro, a history of racism in Italy. This subject is currently headline news after recent events in Rosarno, a municipality in the Province of Reggio Calabria, that was the setting for clashes between central-African immigrants and members of the local community.

Why has Rosarno been given so much visibility by the media? Is it true that some politicians exploited those events?

Three different things happened in Rosarno. Firstly, fraud against Europe and the National Social Security Institute (INPS). The mafia clans had friends and relatives who, on paper, worked as labourers for fake agricultural cooperatives. Then they instead used black immigrants to do the work. This aspect was instantly seized on and exploited by anti-southerners in the North. Then, in Rosarno there was also exploitation by organised crime, which at a certain point decided to get rid of these people. The ‘Ndrangheta discovered that it was not worthwhile and it would be better to take European money and not pick the tangerines. There is not much difference between picking the fruit and paying ‘those people’ or leaving it on the trees and taking the benefits. They chose to get rid of the immigrants. Thirdly, there was also real racism that was triggered when those poor workers reacted. This was not the first time they had been shot at and they reacted, which resulted in a disaster because people were frightened and the media made the mistake of spreading fear. Finally, the fact that they threw the immigrants out of the town, rather than the ‘Ndrangheta ,was negative. There is food for thought in that. They shot at the immigrants and no one else.

All the inhabitants of Rosarno were portrayed as racists, while only a few days later people began to blame the ‘Ndrangheta.

A few days after these events in Rosarno, a listener called in on the programme Prima Pagina (broadcast on Radio3 and hosted by Stella) to emphasise another aspect, saying that the ‘Ndrangheta had added fuel to the flames. This is obvious and blatant. I am not saying that Calabria is racist, but there are racists feelings spreading and they exploded in Rosarno. This is a war between poor people as already seen in Ponticelli (Naples’ eastern suburbs).

Could one say that the north and the south are experiencing a parallel process regarding a perception of instability and danger coming from outside?

Sophocles said “For those who are afraid, everything rustles.” I believe that our country is afraid, confusedly experiencing a powerful disquiet. It is afraid of everything, the economic crisis, losing jobs, not receiving a pension, afraid of TB and the lice immigrants are said to have brought back to Italy and that had been eliminated. This ‘everything’ also includes fear of others, of those who take the jobs Italians no longer like, however, some listeners calling in on radio shows say “if this is way things are going, then our women can work as carers.” This is not true. No Italian woman is prepared to work six and a half days a week and be on duty at night too.

From a European perspective, in terms of intolerance of foreigners, is Italy now dealing with issues other countries have already experienced? Take France for example, where migration is better established because of the country’s colonial history. After seeing the French banlieues in flames, is it now our turn?

France has undoubtedly had great problems, considering that Le Pen (Jean-Marie Le Pen, president of the Front National extreme right party) reached the second ballot in the 2002 presidential elections. One can observe, however, that when a serious right-wing party takes up certain issues without racist overtones, it is possible to put into perspective phenomena such as Le Pen, whose dynamic phase is over. The French Gaullist right has never been racist. The only place where two ministers can call black people ‘bingo bongos’ is Italy.

Using the alibi of ‘provocation’, the borders of political language are constantly moved. Will alarm bells ever go off? And in the meantime the divide between the north and the south increases and anti-southernism is on the rise again…

Perhaps alarm bells will ring when Berlusconi realises what is happening. I believe he has very serious responsibilities. I do not think he is racist, but for tactical reasons he has legitimised the language used by the Northern League in a manner that is not allowed in any other European country. Take Dutch leader Geert Wilders, who is considered a racist in Holland. Well, his speeches would be considered moderate here. “I do not wish to throw anyone out. Holland already has many immigrants and one need to say ‘enough’. We have been too tolerant with those preaching intolerance.” That is what he says. The same applies to Pim Fortuyn (leader of the Leefbaar Nederland, Liveable Holland Party, murdered in 2002 by an extremist left-wing activist) who used to say that Holland’s great open policies had been exploited by ‘others’.

One must also emphasise that the Dutch have experienced very violent events, such as the murders of Fortuyn and Van Gogh. Such events are luckily still unheard of in Italy.

Nothing even comes close to the Northern League’s leader in the European Parliament, Mario Borghezio. Verbal vulgarity and violence are not a characteristic that is exclusive to the Northern League. However, in other countries no ruling party uses the language they use. In Denmark, for example, Pia Kjaersgaard (leader and co-founder of the Danish People’s Party) would not dream of saying the things that Bossi or Calderoli say, although she is tough in defending Danish values, firm on immigration and extremely tough on religion. But she is not racist like our politicians. The only other case of a political party close to the centre of power, which uses language close to that used by the Northern League, is that of Slovakian nationalists who want to throw Hungarians out of Slovakia. But they are not in power; they support the government externally. The Right in Europe is tough in defending its values, hostile to Turkey’s membership and uncontrolled immigration, but they do not use the verbal violence of the Northern League. In racism, form equal substance. Saying “we cannot welcome everyone” is very different from saying “enough niggers” or “enough yellow faces.” And, like it or not, Berlusconi has great responsibility for allowing such language. Let us be clear, the entire language of politics has been barbarised. There are furious clashes in other parliaments too, but “shut up you hideous whore” or “you are a flaccid faggot” as happened the day the Prodi government fell, are things heard only in Italy.

And yet it seems that the Northern League is also gaining votes in the South, as the ‘only political force defending Italian values.’

I do not believe that is entirely true…

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Manager Mum Forced to Quit Job After Giving Birth

Executive’s shock allegation. Equal opportunities minister Carfagna calls for law to be enforced

MILAN — “Hello Stefania. My name’s Piera. I read about you in the Corriere della Sera. I’ve been there, too. I wasn’t an executive, just a plain office worker, but when I came back from maternity leave, I got so much hassle that I had to quit. Don’t give up, for the sake of our children. So they’ll always know what’s right and what’s wrong”.

The story of Milan resident Stefania Boleso, the mum and manager who was forced to resign after returning from maternity leave, has struck a chord. After yesterday’s article, hundreds of messages of sympathy for Ms Boleso have flooded in. It was the most-read story of the day with 115,000 hits and just under 400 comments. Two words are key: courage, because Ms Boleso actually named the company that forced her to resign, the Austrian multinational Red Bull; and justice, because so many emails describe similar situations. The emails reveal a desire for a different world in which women are not forced to choose between work and family. Ms Boleso is surprised: “I would never have expected so much solidarity. OK, some people have pointed out that this could prevent me from finding another job but for once I didn’t want to think purely in terms of expediency. I wanted to tell it like it is”. Today, Stefania Boleso is speaking from her home in Milan. I can hear her one-year-old daughter Alexandra yelling in the background.

“When I became pregnant, I never thought I’d be here, jobless, just a few months later. At 39, I thought I could allow myself a child. I’d always given 100% at work, setting up the marketing department I’m in charge of from scratch, with 28 people under me and an 18,000,000 euro annual budget to manage”. Ms Boleso had re-organised her life for her new dual role as mum and manager. “For my peace of mind, I took on a full-time babysitter and on 30 September, I went back to work. Actually, I’d never really left. Even during my nine months’ maternity, I was still keeping in touch and going in to attend important meetings. Anyway that day, the phone rang first thing. ‘Ms Bolesa, the general manager would like to see you in his office’. He didn’t beat around the bush. He said I was no longer needed and offered me severance pay”. But it was too much for her pride. Ms Boleso opted to tough it out and turned down the money. In response, the company moved her from her old duties and gave her a desk in a huge room on the ground floor, five floors below the other offices. “I stood it for a few weeks and then came the first panic attack. The doctor in casualty told me quite bluntly that the situation would only get worse. I was heading for a breakdown. If I’d been on my own, I’d have hung on but I’ve got a family. I felt I couldn’t put my daughter and husband through all that so I gave in. On 18 December, I resigned and took the severance pay”.

But now, the manager’s story has set the wheels of politics in motion. “The serious incident of the woman executive who was fired after a period of maternity leave reflects how far we are from being able to call ourselves a truly modern nation”, said an indignant minister for equal opportunities, Mara Carfagna. “It saddens me to have to invoke the law to correct an injustice that should not exist in our day and age”, Ms Carfagna continued: “We should have realised long ago that a child is not just a joy for the person who brings it into the world. It is also an investment and a service for the country, if we want to reduce this to a purely economic issue. That said, the laws that safeguard motherhood are already in place and should not be left to gather dust. They have to be enforced in their entirety as instruments of social justice”.

Rita Querzè

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Inflation Dips to 1.2% in February

(ANSAmed) — ROME, MARCH 2 — Italy’s year-on-year inflation rate appears to have dipped slightly last month, falling to 1.2% from 1.3% the previous month, national statistics bureau Istat said in its preliminary inflation forecast for the month. The variation in the cost of living index from January to February was +0.1%, Istat added on Tuesday. The European Union Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) — developed to facilitate inflation comparisons between member states — was unchanged from January to February and climbed by 1.1% over February 2009, Istat said. Istat will issue its definitive inflation report in trwo weeks’. Inflation also slowed in the 16-nation euro zone with the year-on-year rate last month at 0.9% from 1.0% in January. Istat said the slowdown in inflation last month was the result of “stability in short-term prices for goods and services”. The biggest year-on-year price increases last month were recorded for transport (+3.5%) and for alcoholic beverages and tobacco products (+3.3%), while home utility prices fell by 1.4%, Istat said. From January to February the most significant price increases were for communications (+0.7%) and the sector for recreation, entertainment and culture (+0.4%). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanese Wedding in Germany Turns Into Brawl

A Lebanese wedding in Germany ended with the arrival of dozens of ambulances and even more police officers when the celebration took a turn for the worse and a fight grew into a full-blown rumble, according to press reports Tuesday.

The wedding, held Saturday in a spacious celebration hall in the city of Peine, in the northwestern German state of Lower Saxony, had 800 guests from all around Germany, the London-based newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported.

The fight is rumored to have started with the cliché scenario of two men fighting over a girl. However, no official reason has been given for what triggered an outbreak so big that allegedly 200 guests resorted to using knives.

What is known is that both the bride’s and the groom’s families took part in the tussle.

The police, who have so far listened to the testimony of 165 guests, said six guests and one policeman were injured. Four of the injured sustained cuts as a result of the knife fights. One guest was shot in the leg while another guest as well as the policeman were hit in the head with a bottle.

Unable to put an end to the out-of-control brawl, the local police force in Peine had to call for reinforcement from neighboring cities, Salzgitter and Braunschweig.

It took a total of 30 ambulances and police cars and five rescuing teams to restrain the enraged guests and put a stop to the fighting. Guests were later driven to their home towns in police cars for fear further fights would erupt in the streets.

The wedding hall’s manager, Ali Ehsan Yildrim, said he organizes an average of 30 parties per year and had never faced any trouble before. Yildrim is waiting for the families to pay compensation for damaging the hall.

Germany has lately witnessed several weddings turn violent, many of which involved ethnic minorities.

A Kurdish wedding held in the city of Essen, in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, turned into a fight involving knives and bottles and resulting in three guests being injured. Vogelheim, also in North Rhine-Westphalia, witnessed a similar incident when four people were injured in a 600-guest Turkish wedding.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



MEP Nigel Farage Fined Over ‘Insulting’ Tirade

Eurosceptic MEP Nigel Farage has been fined just under 3,000 euros (£2,700) after refusing to apologise for a tirade in the European Parliament.

He was reprimanded for “insulting” behaviour after telling President of the European Council Herman van Rompuy he had “the charisma of a damp rag”.

The authorities said he would lose an allowance paid to MEPs for 10 days but would not be suspended.

Mr Farage said his was a legitimate “voice of opposition” to EU policies.

‘Not acceptable’

He said he would continue to criticise the powers wielded by Mr Van Rompuy and other senior officials who had not been elected.

Mr Farage, leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP) group in the parliament, drew jeers last Wednesday when he said Mr Van Rompuy had the appearance of a “low-grade bank clerk” and described Belgium as “pretty much a non-country”.

The president of the European Parliament, Jerzy Buzek, said such language was “not acceptable”.

During a meeting with Mr Farage to discuss his comments, Mr Buzek said he had asked him to apologise for the personal criticism of Mr Van Rompuy which he said was “offensive”.

“I defend absolutely Mr Farage’s right to disagree about the policy or institutions of the European Union,” he said.

“But… his behaviour towards Mr Van Rompuy was inappropriate, unparliamentary and insulting to the dignity of the House… I cannot accept this sort of behaviour in the European Parliament.”

Given Mr Farage’s refusal to apologise, Mr Buzek said he would be docked his right to a daily allowance paid to all MEPs for 10 days.

Mr Farage said the amount he would lose would be about 3,000 euros (£2,722).

The European Parliament had the power to suspend Mr Farage but decided against the move.

Unrepentant

Speaking after the meeting, Mr Farage was unrepentant: “The only people I’m going to apologise to are bank clerks the world over — if I’ve offended them then I’m very sorry indeed,” he said.

He said he did not think he had been insulting or used “unparliamentary language” and his comments had sparked a debate on Mr Van Rompuy’s role as president of the European Council — a role created under the EU’s controversial Lisbon Treaty and opposed by Eurosceptics.

Mr Farage’s party, UKIP, campaigns for a withdrawal of Britain from the European Union. It has 13 representatives in the parliament.

During his attack on Mr Van Rompuy last week — during the former Belgian PM’s maiden appearance in the role — Mr Farage said “nobody in Europe had ever heard” of him.

He told the BBC he would continue to draw attention to the fact that Mr Van Rompuy and other EU officials had the power to “fundamentally change” the lives of UK citizens even though they had not been elected.

Mr Van Rompuy, 62, was chosen unanimously by the governments of the EU’s 27 member states to take on the role of the first permanent European Council president.

Mr Van Rompuy said he held Mr Farage’s comments “in contempt”, without elaborating.

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



Netherlands: Highly-Educated Turks, Moroccans to Vote for Center-Left Parties

Highly-educated Moroccan and Turkish youth will vote for D66 in the local Dutch elections, followed by PvdA (Labor) and GroenLinks (Greens). Most youth think Alexander Pechtold (D66) is the most appealing politician, followed by Femke Halsema (GroenLinks).

Local parties don’t attract them. “Barely 3% of the youth plan to vote for such a party,” says a researcher from the Labyrinth agency in Utrecht. Labyrinth surveyed the opinion of about 200 Moroccan and Turkish youth. The great majority of them will never consider voting for PVV (Party for Freedom) and TON (Proud of the Netherlands). The SGP and ChristenUnie (both Christian parties) can also count on little support…

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Paul Belien: Europe Cracks Down on Bloggers, Not Terrorists

There is terrorism and there is Islamophobia. Of these two the latter is apparently the more serious misdemeanor. Europe is introducing draconian measures to monitor the internet for so-called “racism,” but at the same time the European Parliament has decided to deny America access to servers with international banking data that relate to terrorist organizations.

Last January, the French Inter-ministerial Committee on Racism and Anti-Semitism met to discuss measures to ban from the Internet those websites deemed by public moralists to be “racist.” The French government is acting in accordance with resolutions of the European Parliament that urge the member states of the European Union to “combat racism and xenophobia.” The French authorities are currently working on “a plan of action at the national and international levels, mobilizing public authorities, Internet operators and special-interest groups” to combat “the expression of racist commentary on the Internet.”

A report presented to the French government on 21 January recommends “an increased action from the Central Office for the Fight against Crime in the Information Technology and Communications Sectors (French acronym OCLCTIC), an organism that collects data on illicit content online. It also recommends an improved system of information among public authorities; and a systematization of the sharing of information between the various parties.”

The report acknowledges that information via the Internet is often international, with some French bloggers being hosted in foreign countries, such as the United States. The report notes that “the international dimensions of the Internet and the different laws and cultures on the question of racism are used by some to escape their responsibilities.” Hence, it proposes that the French and American public authorities work out a plan to combat Internet racism. This plan must also “allow for the participation of national and international NGOs involved in the fight against racism on the Internet.” In the fight against “racism,” civil-liberties and privacy concerns are only of secondary importance.

One of these NGOs is the Movement Against Racism and for Friendship among Peoples (French acronym MRAP), that monitors “racism” in France. Last January, the MRAP presented a 154-page report [pdf], listing more than 2,000 URLs (including 1,000 blogs) deemed to be “racist”, “racialist”, “ethno-differentialist”, “extreme-right”, “anti-Semitic,” “Islamophobic,” “homophobic,” “ultra-Zionist,” etc. The website of the American scholar Daniel Pipes is listed on page 129 as a “neoconservative” site which “develops Islamophobic themes.”

While Europe hopes that America will assist it in its crack-down on “racist” websites and blogs, it is less keen to assist America in its battle against terrorism…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



PKK Recruitment, Arrests in Italy and France

(ANSAmed) — VENICE, FEBRUARY 26 — A suspected association for international terrorism was dismantled by Venice’s General Investigation and Special Branch (DIGOS), which carried out 11 warrants for preventive custody in jail. The measures, carried out in Veneto and other regions, concern 10 Turks and one Italian resident of the Treviso province. The same number of arrests was also carried out in France. According to what emerged from the investigation, the suspected organisation was set up to recruit, indoctrinate and train young people of the Turkish ethnic group to send to fight in the ranks of PKK, the party of Kurd workers which the EU included in terrorist lists. Training camps were allegedly identified both in Italy and in France. The investigation (which was carried out simultaneously in the two Countries with the assistance of German, Belgian and Dutch antiterrorism structures) allowed to ascertain the operation in Italy of a recruitment structure entrusted with finding human and logistic resources in Europe that would be employed by PKK. Recruitment focused on young Kurd men and women. According to a recent report in Parliament by the secret services, the group of PKK militants present in Italy has a position of “absolute relevance” amongst those active in Europe. The secret agents discovered a renewal of the top management in Italy given by the need to “increase propaganda and proselytism activities and to give a new impulse to the collection of funds abroad”. The decided increase of “contribution quotas destined to support the ‘cause’ requested of fellow countrymen, including through extortion”, can also be traced back to the difficulties which the movement is encountering in its Country of origin.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Poll — Second Poll Puts Wilders Party Top in Dutch Elections

March 2 (Reuters) — A second poll has put the anti-immigrant Freedom Party (PVV) of Geert Wilders into a clear lead ahead of Dutch national elections on June 9.

The Feb. 24 TNS NIPO poll, released on Tuesday, put Wilders’ PVV on 32 seats, his best showing to date of any poll since the government collapsed Feb. 20. The Feb. 28 Maurice de Hond poll also put the PVV into first, albeit by a much narrower margin.

The TNS NIPO poll also reflected the worst showing yet for the Christian Democrats (CDA) of Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, with less than half the seats they won in 2006. The CDA or its predecessors have been in almost all of the country’s post-war governments.

Voters will head to the polls for local council elections on March 3 that are likely to give the first indication of the electorate’s response to the fall of the national government over the Dutch mission in Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Racist Site Wants Finnish Leadership Dead

The National Bureau of Investigation is examining an online hate site that calls for the murder of leading Finnish politicians as well as immigrants. The Finnish-language site is registered to a long-time American neo-Nazi.

The anonymous author behind the site’s writing is suspected of illegal threats and the incitement of hatred against an ethnic group.

The site calls for the hanging or shooting of much of the Finnish political leadership, including President Tarja Halonen and Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen. The site also featured a hit list of 50 Finns, named for their role in promoting multiculturalism.

The site is registered to an American named Gary Lauck, a neo-Nazi who became known in 1980s and 90s for smuggling neo-Nazi literature into Europe. Lauck, who served time in a German prison in the late 1990s, later moved his propaganda online.

Göran Wennqvist from the National Bureau of Investigation says it’s been difficult to trace the site’s administrator. Finnish police officials have cooperated with US authorities in the case.

“The concept of freedom of speech is broader in the United States than in Finland. But to my knowledge, these types of direct threats are against the law there too,” says Finnish state prosecutor Mika Illman.

Finnish police are increasingly investigating websites that support intolerance. Last week threats of violence were made against Minister of Migration and European Affairs Astrid Thors on Facebook.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Spain: Suicide is First Cause of Unnatural Death

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 2 — The number of deaths resulting from road accidents in Spain dropped by 20.7% in 2008, so it is no longer the prime cause of unnatural death among the population, since they rank second to suicides. According to figures published today by the National statistics institute, road accidents provoked the death of 3,021 people in 2008, with a drop of more than 20% compared to the previous year, while deaths by suicide amounted to 3,421, a number similar to that recorded in 2007. In terms of gender, suicide was mostly carried out by men, with only 22.6% involving women. In total, in 2008 Spain recorded 386,324 deaths, 963 more than in 2006, equal to an average of 847 deaths for every 100,000 inhabitants. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck Interviews UK Radical Anjem Choudary

During my recent trip to London I interviewed the Muslim radical many call “Great Britain’s Most Hated Man.”

Anjem Choudary openly supports violent jihad and declares his desire to see Britain become an Islamic state ruled by sharia law.

Several former members of Choudary’s group have been arrested on terrorism charges.

And as you’ll see from my new report, Choudary does not mince words about his goals. You can watch it at the link above.

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UK: Islamic Scholar Tahir Ul-Qadri to Issue Terrorism Fatwa

Hearts and minds: Communities divided over how to tackle extremists

An influential Muslim scholar is to issue in London a global ruling against terrorism and suicide bombing.

Dr Tahir ul-Qadri, from Pakistan, says his 600-page judgement, known as a fatwa, completely dismantles al-Qaeda’s violent ideology.

The scholar describes al-Qaeda as an “old evil with a new name” which has not been sufficiently challenged.

The scholar’s movement is growing in the UK and has attracted the interest of policymakers and security chiefs.

In his religious ruling, Dr Qadri says that Islam forbids the massacre of innocent citizens and suicide bombings.

Although many scholars have made similar rulings in the past, Dr Qadri’s followers argue that the massive document being launched in London goes much further.

Extremist groups based in Britain recruit the youth by brainwashing them that they will be rewarded in the next life

Shahid Mursaleen

They say it sets out point-by-point theological arguments against the rhetoric used by al-Qaeda inspired recruiters.

The fatwa also challenges the religious motivations of would-be suicide bombers who are inspired by promises of an afterlife.

The populist scholar developed his document last year as a response to the increase in bombings across Pakistan by militants.

The basic text has been extended to 600 pages to cover global issues, in an attempt to get its theological arguments taken up by Muslims in western nations. It will be promoted in the UK by Dr Qadri’s organisation, Minhaj ul-Quran International.

Shahid Mursaleen, spokesman for Minhaj-ul-Quran in the UK, said the fatwa was hard-hitting.

“This fatwa injects doubt into the minds of potential suicide bombers,” he said.

“Extremist groups based in Britain recruit the youth by brainwashing them that they will ‘with certainty’ be rewarded in the next life.

“Dr Qadri’s fatwa has removed this key intellectual factor from their minds.”

Religious rulings

The document is not the first to condemn terrorism and suicide bombing to be launched in the UK.

Scholars from across the UK came together in the wake of the 7 July London attacks to denounce the bombers and urge communities to root out extremists.

But some scholarly rulings in the Middle East have argued that the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians is an exceptional situation where “martyrdom” attacks can be justified.

Although Dr Qadri has a large following in Pakistan, Minhaj ul-Quran International remained largely unknown in the UK until relatively recently.

It now has 10 mosques in the British cities with significant Muslim communities and says it is targeting younger generations it believes have been let down by traditional leaders.

The organisation is attracting the attention of policymakers and security chiefs who are continuing to look for allies in the fight against extremists.

The Department for Communities, which runs most of the government’s “Preventing Violent Extremism” strategy, has tried building bridges with a variety of liberal-minded groups, but often found that they have limited actual influence at the grassroots.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Karadzic Accuses Muslims of Killing Their Own People

The Hague, 1 March (AKI) — Wartime Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic accused Muslim leaders of killing their own people in order to blame Serbs during the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia. In testimony before the United Nations war crimes tribunal (ICTY) on Monday, he singled out the incident at the Markale market in Sarajevo in 1994, when 70 people were allegedly killed by a Serb grenade.

Karadzic told the tribunal it was a stage-managed “trick” for which Bosnian Serb forces were blamed and later bombed by NATO.

He also showed the court pictures of an empty marketplace, claiming it was the scene shortly before, as he put it, hundreds appeared and the attack was reported.

He said Muslim authorities had brought killed Muslim soldiers to the market to simulate a massacre.

“Killing their own people was part of the ideology of Muslim authorities,” Karadzic said.

“The prosecution has accepted war tricks created by Bosnian Muslims and accused the Serbs for crimes they didn’t commit,” Karadzic said.

Earlier Karadzic told the tribunal that militant Muslim leaders were responsible for the 1992-1995 war in Bosnia, saying that local Serbs were forced to act in self-defence.

“I will defend that nation of ours and their cause that is just and holy,” Karadzic told the tribunal.

“I stand here before you not to defend the mere mortal that I am, but to defend the greatness of a small nation in Bosnia-Hercegovina, which for 500 years has had to suffer and has demonstrated a great deal of modesty and perseverance to survive in freedom,” he said.

Karadzic, 64, is charged with 11 crimes, including two counts of genocide and war crimes.

Prosecutors allege Karadzic played a key role in the massacre of over 7,000 Muslims in the eastern town of Srebrenica in July 1995.

Karadzic appeared in court for the first time since 2 November when the trial was interrupted when he boycotted the proceedings, demanding more time to prepare his defence.

The prosecutor Alan Tieger said in his introductory statement in November that Karadzic was a part of a “joint criminal enterprise”, aimed at removing Muslims and Croats from a part of Bosnia.

“Karadzic was the architect of a policy on which these crimes were founded and commander-in-chief of the forces which committed them,” Tieger said.

Karadzic was arrested in Belgrade in 2008 after nearly 13 years as a fugitive.

During his time in power, he was president of the Bosnian Serb Republic and commander of its army during the Bosnian conflict in which more than 100,000 people died.

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



Former Bosnian President Arrested at Heathrow Over Alleged War Crimes

A former president of Bosnia accused of war crimes was arrested at Heathrow airport yesterday (mon) as he tried to leave the country.

Ejup Ganic, 63, was picked up by officers from the Metropolitan Police following a request from the Serbian government.

His arrest came on the day former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic took the stand to deny his role during the 1992-95 Bosnian conflict at his war crimes trial in The Hague.

Muslim academic Ganic — who had been visiting Britain for a few days — is alleged to have played a key role in the 1992 attack on a Yugoslav army convoy that killed more than 40 people.

Scotland Yard said Dr Ganic was arrested over alleged conspiracy to murder wounded soldiers in breach of the Geneva Convention.

Following his arrest, he was taken to a magistrates court in central London where he was remanded in custody for a month, pending further extradition proceedings.

However last night there were already fears that, as in the case of ex-Chilean leader General Pinochet who was arrested in Britain in the late 1990s, the Serbian authorities could face a prolonged battle to get Ganic extradited.

Dr Ganic served as both vice-president and president of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina after it broke from the former Yugoslavia.

His arrest, at around 2pm, was made under a provisional extradition warrant.

The Serbian government accuses him of conspiracy over the attack, which took place in Sarajevo at the beginning of the conflict.

Dr Ganic is one of 19 Bosnians accused of being involved in an attack on soldiers from the Yugoslav People’s Army in central Sarajevo in May 1992.

The soldiers were injured and said to be retreating at the time — up to 40 were killed. The attack took place at the start of the 1992-95 war, which erupted when Bosnia declared independence from the former Yugoslavia.

Ganic, the highest-ranking ex-Bosnian official named in the warrant, has dismissed the allegations as “ridiculous.”

Dr Ganic served as both vice-president and president of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina after it broke from the former Yugoslavia.

He is currently manager of the private School of Science and Technology in Sarajevo.

The war between Bosnia’s Croats, Muslims and Serbs claimed some 100,000 lives and left the country split between the semi-autonomous Muslim-Croat Federation and the Serbs’ Republika Srpska.

Following his arrest yesterday, Dr Ganic appeared at the City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court. He was remanded in custody until March 29.

The Serbian authorities are now expected to file papers to support their extradition request ahead of a hearing date being fixed.

In a statement, the Foreign Office confirmed the arrest, but added: ‘As the case is now before the courts, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time.’

A senior government official said that Mr Ganic ‘turned up towards the end of last week’ in the UK.

It is understood that he was not on a British watch list and that the Serbian authorities tipped off the British police about his presence in the UK. ‘Serbia put in an extradition request today,’ the official said.

The source said: ‘He does not have diplomatic immunity. He is not a head of state. He’s not on any diplomatic mission from Bosnia. The British legal system will allow him to mount a robust defence.’

Privately, senior government figures were preparing for a major legal battle.

Lawyers for former Chilean dictator General Pinochet mounted a robust defence, at huge expense to the British taxpayer, after his arrest here in October 1998.

A Spanish judge demanded that he be extradited to face trial for the killing of Spaniards after the coup that brought him to power in Chile in 1973.

But after a more than a year fighting extradition from Britain, Pinochet was allowed to fly home to his homeland for medical reasons.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Supreme Court Annuls Gas Supply Ban to Israel

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 1 — The Egyptian Supreme Administrative Court has annulled the decision of an ordinary court in which the government was ordered to interrupt gas sales to Israel. According to press agency MENA, the court has specified in its verdict — read on Saturday — that the authorities have to specify the price of the exported gas as well as the quantities sold to Israel. In November 2008, anti-Israeli activists turned to the ordinary court to ask for the interruption by the government of gas supplies to Israel, following Israel’s military operation Cast Lead in Gaza. The government appealed against the first verdict and decided to ignore the original ban waiting for the result of the appeal. The decision of the Supreme Administrative Court comes a few weeks after the start of a new agreement signed by Egypt and Israel, in which the volume of Egyptian gas sold to Israel is increased. When explaining the verdict, against which no appeal is possible, the Court stated that the ordinary court has no authority to rule on issues “connected to the country’s sovereignty”. The Egyptian private company East Mediterranean Gas (Emg) started supplying gas to the Israeli State-controlled company Israel Electric Corp in 2005, based on an agreement on the supply of 1.7 billion cubic metres of gas in 20 years. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt Blogger Military Trial Criticised

Egypt has been strongly criticised by Human Rights Watch for trying a blogger, Ahmed Mustafa, before a military court.

The 20-year-old is accused of publishing false information in a blog a year ago, alleging a case of nepotism at Egypt’s premier military academy.

Egypt’s emergency law, in place since 1981, allows indefinite detention and trials of civilians in military courts.

Egyptian officials have denied that the power is much used.

The only evidence presented at his trial this week is the post on his blog.

The trial has been adjourned to 7 March to give defence lawyers more time to review the evidence.

‘Mockery’

There has been no investigation into Mr Mustafa’s allegation of corruption, namely his claim that a teacher’s son was pushed out of the academy, to make way for the son of a more influential individual who could make financial contributions, Christian Fraser, the BBC correspondent in Cairo says.

Under two international human rights accords, both ratified by Egypt, the government is required to protect freedom of expression.

Yet Human Rights Watch draws attention to a growing list of bloggers who remain in detention.

Kareem Amer was sentenced to four years in prison in 2006, for writing about sectarian tensions in Alexandria and criticising President Mubarak.

Another blogger, Hany Nazeer, was detained in October 2008 under the country’s emergency law that was designed to fight terrorism for expressing forthright views on Christianity and Islam.

Last year after a visit to Egypt, the United Nation’s Special Rapporteur on human rights reiterated that the trial of civilian suspects in military courts raised concerns about the independent administration of justice.

“The Egyptian government says one thing in Geneva and then immediately makes a mockery of the Human Rights Council’s review process,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

“No civilian should be tried before a military court, and no government that claims to respect human rights should be prosecuting someone solely for writing about corruption,” he added.

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



Hamas Leader Killed, Jordanians and Egyptians Accused

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 2 — Even the security forces of Egypt and Jordan could be involved in the killing in Dubai of a high Palestinian leader of Hamas, for whose death several parties have accused Israeli intelligence. Cited today by the Palestinian daily al Quds al Arabi, edited in London, Mahmud Nasser, a member of the political office for he radical Palestinian movement, affirmed that he possessed “dangerous information” regarding the role of agents of Arab countries “hostile to Hamas”, in the killing of Mahmud al Mabhuh on January 19, in a hotel of the United Arab Emirates. Nasser implicitly indicated as belonging to the Egyptian or Jordanian security forces those “agents who were keeping track on Mabhuh’s movements before his martyrdom”. The Dubai police has to date indicated 27 persons, mostly holding European passports, as members of the team that assassinated the high Hamas leader. Al Quds al Arabi refers that the Emirate magistrates have affirmed that “all the suspects currently are located in Israel”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia-ANP: Tunis, Relations Solid and Privileged

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 2 — The relations between Tunisia and the Palestinian authorities are “solid and priviledged”: this is what has affirmed, in a declaration, an authorized source of the Tunisian Foreign Ministry. “Contrary to erroneous information published recently by certain Arab and foreign papers”, the source states, “Tunisian-Palestinian relations are solid and preferential, and do not cease to evolve thanks to the constant will of the president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and of his brother president Mahmoud Abbas, president of the Palestinian Authority”. “The Tunisian-Palestinian relations”, continues the declaration, “continue to be strengthened, with the the absolute support of Tunisia in the fight of our fellow Palestinian people for the recovery of their legitimate rights and the edification of their independent state on their land. The unshakeable support of Tunisia for the just cause of the Palestinians takes its strength from the principles of president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who has made it a personal cause. The privileged character of the relations of fraternity and of Tunisian-Palestinian cooperation is clear and evident, and is made concrete, in a daily fashion, by the multiple visits and exchanges of delegations on all levels, just as with the strict and permanent concerted efforts between the two parties”. The declarations conclude by reaffirming the will to strengthen ever more the links between the two peoples. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Tourism: Cyprus and Palestinian Authority Will Cooperate

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, MARCH 1 — A Memorandum of Cooperation in the sector of tourism between Cyprus and the Palestinian Authority was signed on Friday after official talks in Nicosia between Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism Antonis Paschalides and Palestinian Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, Mrs.Kholoud Daibes. Speaking after the talks, Paschalides said that through the Memorandum Cyprus will be providing support to the Palestinians in tourism issues, and would be including the Palestinian Authority in exhibitions. The two Ministers exchanged views on issues concerning the promotion and support of tourism in the Palestinian territories. Paschalides noted that in 2011 Cyprus would be offering various scholarships in tourism related courses. Daibes referred to the strong ties between the two peoples, adding that Cyprus and the Palestinian territories are unique tourist destinations, especially concerning religious tourism. She added that Friday’s talks also included the exchange of expertise, investments, cooperation between businesspeople of the private sector, and mutual support on all levels. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Barry Rubin: Will Obama Have an Iraq Crisis?

If — and I repeat, if — this story is true it is going to be a very big development that may, as they like to see in the television promos, change the Obama administration forever. According to Thomas Ricks, the former Washington Post military correspondent, General Raymond Odierno, the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, is asking for an additional combat brigade to be put into Kirkuk and to stay beyond Obama’s August 2010 withdrawal deadline for all combat forces.

Reportedly, Odierno is worried about Kurdish-Arab-Turkoman conflict in the city, which would be a reason why an Iraqi brigade of Arab soldiers might further inflame the situation. Such a request makes the administration very uncomfortable. We saw how it took three months to make a decision over military strategy in Afghanistan which resulted in a highly politicized strategy designed to please all.

Ricks concludes: “I expect that Obama actually is going to have to break his promises on Iraq and keep a fairly large force in Iraq,” He knows better than I do about such things but I wonder if that’s true. I’d expect that for political reasons-and especially just before the critical congressional elections in November-Obama’s team will go for political profit rather than strategic safety.

By the way, this story clears up a mysterious detail that hints the U.S. military is thinking along these lines…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



France-Saudi Arabia: King Abdullah Guest of Honour July 14

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, MARCH 1 — King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia is to be the guest of honour at the July 14 celebrations in Paris, according to Le Figaro in its Confidentiels column. King Abdullah will inaugurate the Streets of Arabia, Archaeology and History in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia exhibition during the celebrations, at the Louvre museum in partnership with Total and Saudi company Rubaiyat. The last official visit to France by the Saudi sovereign was in summer 2007, when he went to Paris to pay his respects to President Nicolas Sarkozy three months after his election. Last year the guest of honour at the French national celebration was India, and 400 Indian soldiers marched along the Champs-Elysees for the first time, and it was the first time they had marched outside their own borders too. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Leader Killed; Dubai Police Wants Netanyahu

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, MARCH 2 — The chief of Dubai’s police submitted to the prosecutor of the Emirate a request for an arrest warrant against Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu and the chief of Mossad (the Israeli secret service) in the context of the investigation into the murder of Hamas exponent Mahmud al-Mabhouh. General Dhahi Khalfan asserted that he is certain that the leader was murdered by Mossad. The chief of Dubai’s police stated that “I am absolutely certain that Mossad is behind this crime, I presented the general prosecutor with a request to arrest Netanyahu and the chief of Mossad”. The general added that he is perfectly aware that the head of the Israeli government “will never be arrested”, however one must “persecute both the instigator of a crime and the person who carried it out”. Deemed to be a key element in weapon trafficking between Iran and the radical Islamic Palestinian movement, al-Mabhouh was found dead in his hotel room in Dubai on January 19. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iraqi Christians Demonstrate, Fast Against Killings and the Nineveh “Ghetto”

People gather, pray and fast across Iraq against “targeted killings.” The archbishop of Mosul asks for security and an investigation into those who are responsible for the slaughter. For the archbishop of Kirkuk, the Muslim community must react and take concrete actions. The auxiliary bishop of Baghdad warns that Christians risk a holocaust at a fundamental moment.

Baghdad (AsiaNews) — Christians took to the streets in Mosul and Baghdad and a prayer vigil was held in Kirkuk to protest the spate of killings of their co-religionists. As a single voice, they called for action against “targeted killings” and expressed their opposition to a plan to set up a Christian “ghetto” in the Nineveh Plains. Christian lay and religious leaders as well as countless members of the community came together to sound the alarm against the slaughter of Iraqi Christians and the flight of hundreds of them from Mosul, victims of an Arab-Kurdish conflict that could leave the country without its Christian population.

Following an appeal by Pope Benedict XVI in yesterday’s Angelus (a source of consolation and faith for Christian leaders), AsiaNews spoke to Mgr Emil Shimoun Nona, Chaldean archbishop of Mosul, Mgr Louis Sako, archbishop of Kirkuk, and Mgr Shlemon Warduni, auxiliary bishop of Baghdad, at a fateful moment for the future of Iraqi Christians.

Mgr Emil Shimoun Nona of Mosul confirmed that hundreds of families have left Mosul in the last few days, about 600 in a community of some 4,000 people, according to a United Nations report. “The situation is calmer now, and the exodus has slowed down,” the prelate said, but “we estimate that about 400 families have escaped.”

Yet, the situation continues to be one of great concern. For this reason, thousands of Christians took to the streets to protest against the violence. The community responded in a “positive” way, he said, adding that “the initiative went well.”

Christians have received messages of solidarity and affection, but the security issue remains. “We are asking the central government and local authorities for two things: more security for the community and proper investigations to find out who ordered these killings and who carried them out,” Mgr Nona said. “This would send a strong signal to Christians, a show that that they are not alone and left to their own destiny.”

Today in Kirkuk, Christians held a day of fasting. At 5 pm, they will take part in a prayer vigil, but only for Christians, to avoid being “used politically” before the 7 March election.

“The government condemned the attacks,” said Mgr Louis Sako of Kirkuk. “Muslim leaders did the same, insisting that the violence is ‘unIslamic’; however, we have become accustomed to such statements and want instead concrete actions”.

Indeed, the prelate did not mince his words. “It is shameful that in a city like Mosul, with a million people, no one has spoken out against the slaughter of Christians.”

All said, he is not without hope for the future. In this view, he said, “It is important” that all Christians be “against the Nineveh Plains plan”, even though leaders and parties have shown signs of weakness and internal divisions. “We must be united because it [the plan] is a trap.”

For the prelate, fasting, holding a joint prayer vigil, putting up flags and posters around the city are all part of this effort to stop the slaughter. They area also a sign of support for national unity, the only way to bring peace and security to the country.

“Today’s initiative is for Christians only,” Mgr Sako said, “to avoid the politicisation of the event. Until now, Muslims have been silent concerning the slaughter, but now they should ‘react’ and take concrete actions.”

For the archbishop, a power struggle is underway in the country, and “we do not want to get involved. Instead, we are fighting for peace in Iraq”.

In the capital, dozens of people demonstrated yesterday against “targeted killings”; they too called on the central government to provide security.

For Mgr Shlemon Warduni, anti-Christian attacks “are organised”. Christians are the victims of the “politicisation of the conflict” between Arabs and Kurds. “We run the risk of a holocaust,” he said. “The support and solidarity of ordinary people, even Muslims, is not enough,” he explained, if political leaders and the government do not take concrete steps.

For the auxiliary bishop of Baghdad, the Nineveh Plains plan is a non-starter. “We shall not stop . . . live or dead; this is fundamental moment.”

Tribal chiefs and ordinary people expressed their “encouragement and solidarity,” the prelate said. For them, “Iraq without Christians is worth nothing.”

For Mgr Warduni, the government, political leaders, and the media must respond to “our alarm warning”.

Meanwhile, Patriarch Emmanuel Delly is in Mosul to bring comfort to the families of the victims and to meet local authorities.

Lastly, through AsiaNews the auxiliary bishop of Baghdad thanked Benedict XVI for the appeal he made yesterday during the Angelus on behalf of Baghdad Christians. “It is encouraging to feel him so close. He is a source of comfort for all the faithful, and his words are a source of consolation and faith in the future.” (DS)

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



Region’s First Catholic University in Jordan

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, MARCH 1 — It was the idea of Pope John Paul II, his successor Benedict XVI has followed up on it and now the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem is carrying the project out rapidly: the first Catholic university of the Middle East. It is being built in Madaba, near Amman, the Jordanian capital. Many buildings and infrastructures have already been completed, despite the fact that Pope Ratzinger laid the foundation stone as late as May 9 2009. The structure will host around 8,000 students from all regions once ready. It is meant to become a meeting point of the regions not just for Christians, but for all people of good will. The international seminar organised by the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the MCL and the Italian European popular foundation in collaboration with the Academy for Economy and International Relations of the Catholic University of Milan, dedicated to the topic ‘Which form of dialogue to build a common future in the Middle East?’, started with a visit to the university’s construction site. Middle East experts, Christians and Muslims and representatives of NGOs that are active in the region participate in the seminar. “The dialogue can take on several forms, but concrete support, through cooperation and solidarity projects, remains most important. This cooperation should show mutual respect and trust”, said Carlo Costalli, chairman of MCL, when opening the event together with the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Archbishop Fouad Twal. Europe should do much more to encourage an ‘institutional dialogue’, and a dialogue ‘on all levels’ must be the task of organisations of the civil society, Costalli added. The Catholic University of Jordan is also a “seed of peace”, as professor Vittorio Emanuele Parsi of the Catholic University of Milan underlined. “A place of culture and education, but also of young people with different backgrounds living together. This can boost policies to organise the future instead of thinking about how to deal with the past”, Parsi added. There are several aspects to the Middle east, he continued: “from the Middle East of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to the Arab world, a spiritual rather than a rational place, more virtual than real, and the ‘greedy’ Middle East of oil, gas and energy”. According to professor Alberto Redaelli, another expert in international conflicts of the Catholic University of Milan, the problem of Christians and Muslims living together needs a cultural process in which the keystone is moved from States to people. Therefore “the presence and active participation of associations and NGOs is essential, as well as the already strong commitment of local Christians, to make it clear that the main need for security is not for ‘politics’ of countries, but of people, of human beings, who want to feel respected, taken care of and loved”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Inquest Hears Vehicle in Afghan Blast ‘Not Adequate’

The sole survivor of a 2008 blast in Afghanistan has told an inquest he believed the vehicle he was travelling in was “not adequate for the job”.

The special forces soldier broke down while giving evidence at the inquest of four UK soldiers who were killed, at Wiltshire Coroner’s Court.

They were Cpl Sarah Bryant and three SAS reservists — Cpl Sean Reeve, L/Cpl Richard Larkin and Pte Paul Stout.

Cpl Bryant is the only British female soldier to have died in Afghanistan.

The four were in a Snatch Land Rover, a light vehicle in which at least 37 UK soldiers have died in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Known as Soldier E, the witness said he was told during pre-deployment training he would be travelling in Snatch Land Rovers.

“There was a lot of worry that these weren’t the right vehicle, in our opinion, for the job in hand,” he said.

“Having used the Snatch in our pre-deployment training, our concerns were heightened, especially when off-road. The mobility and flexibility of the vehicle came into question.”

He added: “It could go off-road, but as a platform to maintain operations, I believe it was not adequate for the job.”

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Absalon Sinks Pirate ‘Mother Ship’

Danish forces boarded and sank a pirate control ship as part of Nato operations off the coast of Somalia

The Absalon, a Danish attack support ship, sank a pirate control ship off the coast of Somalia on Sunday, according to a Nato press release.

The Absalon is the current flag ship of the Nato fleet operating in the pirate-stricken Gulf of Aden off the east African coast and has been involved in numerous pirate run-ins.

The latest saw a pirate mother skiff intercepted by a boarding team from the Absalon before it was scuttled. It had been spotted earlier in the day after leaving a Somali camp outfitted with pirate equipment and supplies.

‘This was a very well executed operation,’ said Admiral Christian Rune. ‘Disrupting the pirates’ capability just off their main pirate camps sends a strong signal to the pirates that Nato and the international community do not tolerate their actions. Disposing of their vessels before they can head to sea hits the pirates before they can present a threat to merchant shipping.’

Nato has stepped up its efforts in the area as the monsoon season comes to an end and the traditionally lucrative spring season attracts more pirates to the seas.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Mali: Kidnappings, Countries Tense, All Eyes on Mauritania

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, MARCH 2 — The tension between various countries of the region continues to increase, in particular in Algeria, Mali and Mauritania, all entangled in the kidnapping of Western hostages on the part of al Qaeda for the Islamic Maghreb, the northwest area of Africa. The organization still has in its hands the Italian Sergio Cicala, with his wife and three Spanish co-workers. After concessions made by Bamako (the capital of Mali), which for the release of the Frenchman Pierre Camatte, has released from prison four members of their organization, now all eyes are on Mauritania. The latest requests by the North African arm of Al Qaeda are directed to Nouachkott, the capital city of Mauritania. This segment of al Qaeda asks for the release of some of its prisoners in return for the freeing of the Italian couple. These are requests that, according to the Algerian press, will hardly be granted, given the rigid anti-terrorist policy of Mauritania and its harsh condemnations of the Malian concessions. Both Nouachkott and Algiers have pulled out their ambassador from Bamako, in reaction to the treaties for the French hostage. Mauritania “will not grant al Qaeda’s requests”, write L’Expression and Le Soir: “how could it then look Algiers in the eyes?”. Algiers “is waiting attentively to see how Nuoakchott responds to al Qaeda’s requests, in particular those for the liberation of the two Italian hostages”, underlined El Khabar, an Algerian daily. Meanwhile, relations between Mali and Algeria become ever more tense. According to the Malian press, Algiers allegedly has withdrawn from the negotiations between the rebels of the North of Mali and the central government, thus breaking, at least for the moment, the “Algiers Agreement”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Argentina: Baby Girl Survives After Being Shot in the Chest in Parents’ ‘Global Warming Suicide Pact’

A seven-month-old baby girl survived three days alone with a bullet in her chest beside the bodies of her parents and toddler brother.

Argentines Francisco Lotero, 56, and Miriam Coletti, 23, shot their children before killing themselves after making an apparent suicide pact over fears about global warming.

Their son Francisco, two, died instantly after being hit in the back.

But their unnamed daughter cheated death after the bullet from her dad’s handgun missed her vital organs.

Paramedics rushed her to hospital covered in blood when police alerted by worried neighbours discovered the massacre three days later.

The youngster is recovering in hospital in the town of Goya in the northern Argentine province of Corrientes, where doctors say she is out of danger.

Her parents said they feared the effects of global warming in a suicide note discovered by police.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Chilean Quake May Have Shortened Earth Days

The Feb. 27 magnitude 8.8 earthquake in Chile may have shortened the length of each Earth day.

JPL research scientist Richard Gross computed how Earth’s rotation should have changed as a result of the Feb. 27 quake. Using a complex model, he and fellow scientists came up with a preliminary calculation that the quake should have shortened the length of an Earth day by about 1.26 microseconds (a microsecond is one millionth of a second).

Perhaps more impressive is how much the quake shifted Earth’s axis. Gross calculates the quake should have moved Earth’s figure axis (the axis about which Earth’s mass is balanced) by 2.7 milliarcseconds (about 8 centimeters, or 3 inches). Earth’s figure axis is not the same as its north-south axis; they are offset by about 10 meters (about 33 feet).

By comparison, Gross said the same model estimated the 2004 magnitude 9.1 Sumatran earthquake should have shortened the length of day by 6.8 microseconds and shifted Earth’s axis by 2.32 milliarcseconds (about 7 centimeters, or 2.76 inches).

Gross said that even though the Chilean earthquake is much smaller than the Sumatran quake, it is predicted to have changed the position of the figure axis by a bit more for two reasons. First, unlike the 2004 Sumatran earthquake, which was located near the equator, the 2010 Chilean earthquake was located in Earth’s mid-latitudes, which makes it more effective in shifting Earth’s figure axis. Second, the fault responsible for the 2010 Chiliean earthquake dips into Earth at a slightly steeper angle than does the fault responsible for the 2004 Sumatran earthquake. This makes the Chile fault more effective in moving Earth’s mass vertically and hence more effective in shifting Earth’s figure axis.

Gross said the Chile predictions will likely change as data on the quake are further refined.

           — Hat tip: Gryffilion [Return to headlines]



UK Rejects Hillary Clinton’s Help in Falklands Dispute

Downing Street has rejected an offer from the US to help the UK and Argentina resolve their latest dispute over the Falkland Islands.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made the offer after renewed tensions were triggered by a UK decision to drill for oil near the islands.

A spokesman for Gordon Brown said he welcomed her comments but did not think her direct involvement was necessary.

Argentina claims sovereignty over the Falklands, which it calls the Malvinas.

It has been angered by the UK’s decision to begin drilling for oil under a seabed off the islands.

Mrs Clinton said the row should be resolved between the two, but “if we can be of any help in facilitating such an effort, we stand ready to do so”.

‘Drilling is legitimate’

However Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s spokesman responded to the offer by saying: “We don’t think that’s necessary.

“We welcome the support of the secretary of state in terms of ensuring that we continue to keep diplomatic channels open but there is no need for that (direct involvement).”

He stressed that “self-determination of Islanders is the key issue” and emphasised that Britain and Argentina have a strong ongoing working relationship.

However the spokesman also said the UK believed the oil drilling was “both the right thing to do and is entirely legitimate”.

Foreign Secretary David Miliband emphasised the point, saying the drilling companies are “wholly within their rights” under international law.

Mr Miliband told MPs at Commons question time: “The government has made it clear it has no doubt about the UK’s sovereignty of the Falkland Islands.

“There can be no negotiations on the sovereignty of the Falkland Islands unless and until such time as the Falkland Islanders so wish it and they have made clear they have no such wish.

“The companies are acting wholly within their rights and wholly within the legality of international law,” he added.

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

Immigration


EU Alarmed by Influx of Western Balkan Immigrants

The European Commission has demanded that the authorities in Macedonia, Serbia, and Montenegro take measures to stem the influx of immigrants to Belgium.

This has happened after Belgium requested help from the EC over the fact that since visa-free travel to the EU was introduced on January 1, 2010, the montly number of Macedonians asking for asylum in the country increased twofold.

An increased influx of immigrants from Serbia, Montenegro, and Kosovo has also been registered in Belgium.

The Belgian authorities became alarmed when they noticed that in January and February they had a lot more asylum seekers from Macedonia than from Afghanistan.

All applications for asylum are to be rejected, and the Belgian authorities have vowed to extradite all illegal immigrants that do not leave within the required period.

Michel Cercone, EC Spokesperson for Justice, Freedom, and Security, has pointed out, as cited by the BNR, that the authorities of each country are responsible for explaining to their citizens the terms of visa-free travel in the EU.

The Bulgarian National Radio’s correspondent in Skopje reports that every day buses packed with families, mostly from Macedonia’s Albanian and Roma minorities, set off for Belgium, Germany, and Switzerland. They are aided by “tourist operators” dealing with “one-way excursions”, which according to media reports, are backed by local Roma chiefs such Member of Macedonian Parliament Admi Bayram.

Belgium’s Prime Minister is going to visit Macedonia next week in an attempt to resolve the emerging scandal.

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



Media Reports EU Exodus After Visa Ban

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, MARCH 1 — Since the abolition of obligatory visas for Serbian, Macedonian and Montenegrin nationals bound for EU countries on December 19 last year, thousands of citizens of these Balkan states, mainly of Albanian ethnicity, have been arriving in EU member states to seek asylum, according to the Serbian media. Belgium has been particularly affected by this and the Prime Minister Yves Leterme has stated his plans to travel to the Balkans to look for a solution to the problem. In Serbia, Riza Halimi, the leader of the Democratic Action Party (a group representing Albanians living in the south of the country) told Beta news agency that nobody knows for sure exactly how many Albanians from the southern Serbian regions of Presevo and Bujanovac have requested asylum in the EU since the withdrawal of visas, however the number is thought to be between five and ten thousand. Halimi said that since January, two travel agencies in Presevo and Bujanovac, both of which have the necessary transport licences, have been providing constant bus links towards EU countries. The buses are often full of Albanians who go on to stay with family and friends already in these countries. “The situation is dramatic. The phenomenon of people leaving for EU countries — especially Belgium and Sweden — is taking on enormous proportions, especially among young people”, the agency Beta quoted Riza Halimi as saying. “There is nothing unusual about this, considering the high levels of unemployment in Presevo and Bujanovac, where more than 70% of people are out of work. So people emigrate in search of a better life”, he added. Beta also reported that the President of the Bujanovac municipality, Jonuz Musliu, has appeared on the Albanian-language television channel Spektar in the last few days, inviting young Albanians in the region to stay put and not to leave for EU countries.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Czar: Education to Make Students ‘Revolutionaries’

New Princeton lecturer Van Jones slammed non-activist students as ‘worthless people’

Van Jones, President Obama’s former “green jobs” czar and a newly appointed Princeton lecturer, has a history of sparking protests against universities and previously slammed non-activist students as “worthless people” obtaining “worthless degrees,” WND has learned.

Jones also implied a university education must help students become “revolutionaries.”

Jones resigned in September from his post as adviser to the White House Council on Environmental Quality after it was exposed he founded a communist revolutionary organization and signed a statement that accused the Bush administration of possible involvement in the 9/11 attacks. Jones also called for “resistance” against the U.S. Jones previously stated his advocacy for green jobs was part of a broader movement to destroy the U.S. capitalist system.

Princeton last week announced Jones has been appointed a visiting fellow in the Center for African American Studies and the Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy at the university’s Wilson School.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Don’t Let Politicians Bully You, Lord Carey Warns Christians

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey today accused politicians of trying to bully Christianity out of public life.

He complained of a ‘strident and bullying campaign’ to marginalise Christianity in the name of political correctness.

Lord Carey said: ‘We have reached the point where politicians are mocked for merely expressing their faith.

‘I cannot imagine any politician expressing concern that Britain should remain a Christian country. That reticence is a scandal and a disgrace to our history.’

The powerful intervention from the retired Archbishop, who stepped down from Lambeth Palace in 2002, comes in the wake of strongly-expressed criticism of state attempts to sideline Christianity from other senior prelates.

Last month Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu said that Christianity was being pushed out of public life in a ‘ferocious and insidious’ manner.

[…]

He told a meeting in the House of Lords: ‘Christianity, which has given so much to our country, is now being sidelined as never before as though it is a stranger to our nation.’

Lord Carey told Christians to stand up for their faith and to be more assertive when their heritage is attacked.

‘If we behave like doormats, don’t be surprised if we are treated as though we are,’ he said. ‘It is time to return to the public square.’

Lord Carey echoed Dr Sentamu’s concerns that the rights of Christian schools to teach the basis of their faith is being stripped away.

‘This bullying campaign seeks to ban faith schools, despite evidence that faith schools perform better than many others.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


New Psychiatric Disorders Flag Normal Human Behaviors as “Diseases”

(NaturalNews) The Disease Mongering Engine, which I invented a couple of years ago and posted on NaturalNews, was initially created as a joke to demonstrate the ridiculousness of the fictitious diseases that are constantly created by the psychiatric industry. This hilarious online disease generator (http://www.naturalnews.com/disease-…) allows you to instantly create your own fictitious diseases and disorders such as:

• Repetitive Dysmorphic Nose Picking Disorder With Itching (RDNPDWI) • Oppositional Disorganized Speaking Disorder With Indigestion (ODSDWI) • Chronic Bipolar Anticipation Dysfunction With Smelly Feet (CBADWSF)

…. and so on.

Here’s the bizarre part: All of a sudden, the new psychiatric diagnostic manual (DSM-V) appears to have adopted as medical fact many of the disorders that were created by the Disease Mongering Engine!

This new manual, for example, now says that spending a lot of time thinking about sex is a disorder. (That immediately paints every teenage boy as “diseased.”)

Another new disease is “Oppositional Defiant Disorder” (ODD), which includes anyone who disagrees with authority. All those who are skeptical about the safety of vaccines, for example, are about to be diagnosed with ODD.

Now, people who are antisocial aren’t merely antisocial. They’re suffering from “Antisocial Personality Disorder” and require pharmacological treatment. So the prick neighbor isn’t merely a prick anymore; he’s a “sufferer” of a “disorder” who needs “treatment.”

[Return to headlines]