News Feed 20120412

Financial Crisis
» Bernanke’s Warning: We Stand on the Precipice of Economic Destruction
» British Official Trade Deficit Increases in February
» Developing Nations Invest Less Abroad, UNCTAD Says
» EU Calls for Eurozone Unity Amid Spain Strains
» EU: German Pay Deals Add to Euro Divergence
» Gallup CEO: High Unemployment Will Make Romney President
» Greece: Banks Facing Specter of Nationalization
» Greek State Gets New Powers to Force Payment of Debts
» IMF, EU to Conduct New Assessment Mission in Romania
» Mass Unemployment in the Balkans — A Need to Act
» Uncertainty About Spain Worries Euro Zone
 
USA
» 24 Outrageous Facts About Taxes in the United States That Will Blow Your Mind
» A New Crop of Digital Science Books Will Change the Way Students Learn
» A Storm-Chaser Who’s Looked Straight Into a Tornado’s Heart
» Better or Worse?
» Birmingham News Drops the Ball on Black-on-White Crime
» Cave Bacteria Finding Suggests Ancient Origins of Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs
» ‘Flying Yogics’ Explains Hopping Mad OWS
» Former Astronauts & Employees to NASA: Stay Away From Global Warming
» Governments Everywhere Having Deep Money Problems
» Mike Tyson: Kill George Zimmerman
» Obama’s “Fairness” Equals Socialism
» The ‘Doomsday Shelter’ Being Built Below Kansas Prairie Where Millionaires Will be Able to Sit Out the Apocalypse in Style
» Unfortunately Named the Affordable Health Care Choices Act of 2009
» US Prosecution of Fundamentalist Muslim Seen as Setback for Free Speech
» Washington Post Suggests Bilderberg Group to Pick Romney’s Running Mate
 
Canada
» Local Muslims Honour Pioneers, Supporters
 
Europe and the EU
» Belfast Embraces ‘Unsinkable’ Titanic Heritage
» Bolkestein Criticises Dutch Journalism as Sentimental
» Council of Europe Ditches Italian Party Funding System
» Council of Europe to Demand More Pressure on Swiss Tax Cheats
» France’s Muslim Allergy: Sarkozy Can Say Goodbye to the Muslim Vote
» France: Hollande Vows to ‘Dominate Finance’
» Free Koran Distributions Have Germany Concerned
» German Piraten Leapfrog the Green Party and Rank Third
» Germany Monitors Koran Distribution by Salafists
» German Politicians Attack Salafist Koran Giveaway
» Iceland’s Volcanoes May Power UK
» Italy: Puglia Governor Under Investigation for Abuse of Office
» Italy: Tearful Bossi Apologises to Northern League for Children
» Italy: Supreme Court Sentences Non-Italian Father for Child Abuse
» Italy: Contracted Works Never Performed in Salerno: 4 Arrested
» Italy: Berlusconi Defense in Ruby Case Paid Minetti Lawyers
» Sweden: Seven Convicted in Brutal Gang Rape Case
» Sweden: Several Injured in Malmö Gang Brawl
» The Mafia and the European Championships: Price Gouging Adds to List of Ukraine’s Troubles
» UK: First-Class Dishonours
» UK: London University Considers Stopping Sale of ‘Immoral’ Alcohol on Campus Because it Offends Their Muslim Students
» UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam
» UK: Popular Vicar Converts to Catholicism… And Takes Half His Flock With Him to Church 500 Yards Away
» UK: Police Anti-Terror Hotline Hacked and Conversations Leaked Online
» UK: TV Row Mosque Opens School
» UK: The Rise of UKIP is a Nightmare for David Cameron
» UK: U-Turn on Mosque Free Parking Plans
 
Balkans
» Croatia: Police Ban International Ultra Rightists’ Gathering
» Kosovo’s Demographic Time-Bomb
 
North Africa
» Egypt: 2 Dead in Clashes Over Toll Raise
» The Devil We Don’t Know, Part 1
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israeli Minister Offers to Meet Grass on ‘Neutral’ Territory
» Palestinians Snub Israel Talks Offer
» Palestine in UNESCO — Ending the State of Confusion
 
Middle East
» Qatar: Ad for Qatari Domestic Help Triggers Protests
» Syria: Lebanese Soldiers Defect, Join Rebels
» Syria’s Minorities Unite Against Assad
» Turkey: China Lands 1 Bln USD Wind Power Deal
» UAE: Peace Convention Begins Today
» UAE: Iranian President’s Visit to Island Raises Tension
 
Russia
» Leading Muslim Public Figure Killed in Moscow
» Punks Against Putin Face Prison Sentence
» Russians Want Dialogue Between Kremlin and Protestors
 
South Asia
» Drug-Resistant Malaria Spreads Across Thailand
» India: the Baby Killed Because it Was a Girl
» India: Hang Baby’s Dad, Say City’s Muslim Leaders
» India: Muslim Militants Attack Christians, Several Injured
» Indian Court Sentences Gujarat Rioters to Life
» Indonesia: British PM Warns of Islamic Extremism on Asian Trip
» Indonesia: Muslims ‘Must Embrace Democracy’ Says David Cameron
» Modi’s Clearance in the Gujarat Riots Case Angers Indian Muslims
» Pakistan: Court Shows Displeasure Over Police Official
» Policy: Bold Strategies for Indian Science
 
Far East
» China’s Stem-Cell Rules Go Unheeded
» New Sony Chief Reboots Business Strategy, Cuts Jobs and Costs
» North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket: Reports
» North Korean Rocket Launch Fails
» Philippines Withdraws Warship From China Standoff
» South China Sea: Common Stance Against Beijing’s Imperialism
» The Mysterious Fall of China’s Bo Xilai
 
Australia — Pacific
» UK: Afghan Refugee Who Said Raping Woman Was Part of ‘Cultural Differences’ Is Jailed for 14 Years
 
Immigration
» UK: Despair is Sometimes the Only Possible Response
» UK: PM Retreats on Kicking Out Foreign Criminals Including Burglars and Violent Thieves
» UK: The Sheikh, The Minister and the Shambles
 
General
» Distant Galaxies Confirm Accelerating Growth of Universe, Dark Energy

Financial Crisis


Bernanke’s Warning: We Stand on the Precipice of Economic Destruction

This week, Federal Reserve boss Ben Bernanke again warned that out of control borrowing and spending will eventually destroy the country.

Said Ben to the the Budget Committee:

[…]

But here is something Bernanke didn’t mention — a large chunk of that debt is owed to the Federal Reserve. In February, the corporate media fessed up to this undeniable fact. From CNBC:

[…]

The bankers that own the Federal Reserve love debt and that’s why they continually expand the money supply.

“Without the Fed’s relentless expansion of the money supply during both the Greenspan and Bernanke eras, the U.S. Treasury never would have been able to issue the staggering sums of debt that now threaten our economic well being,” Ron Paul told the House Committee on Financial Services Subcommittee on Domestic Monetary Policy last year. “This Treasury debt is the very lifeblood of deficit spending, permitting one Congress after another to spend far more than the Treasury collects in taxes. It is precisely this unholy alliance between the enabling Fed and a spendthrift Congress that I hope our witnesses will address today.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



British Official Trade Deficit Increases in February

(LONDON) — Britain’s trade-in-goods deficit widened in February by more than expected, as exports to countries outside the European Union fell, official figures showed on Thursday.

The deficit grew to GBP 8.8 billion (10.7 billion euros, $14.0 billion), the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement. That compared with a revised shortfall of GBP 7.9 billion in January.

Market expectations had been for a smaller February deficit of GBP 7.6 billion, according to economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires.

Exports of goods to non-EU countries fell 8.8 percent to GBP 11.7 billion, while British imports rose 1.0 percent to GBP 16.7 billion, leading to a trade deficit with countries outside the European single market of GBP 5.0 billion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Developing Nations Invest Less Abroad, UNCTAD Says

Direct investments abroad have increased globally, a new study by the United Nations’ trade and development body bears out. But developing and emerging nations have not contributed to the rise.

Foreign direct investments (FDI) rose by 16 percent globally last year, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development announced on Thursday. The Geneva-based body said financial outflows in 2011 amounted to $1.66 trillion ($1.26 trillion euros), up from $1.43 trillion in the previous year.

But the picture was far from homogeneous, UNCTAD warned in its report. While the value of money flowing from highly industrialized nations jumped by a quarter, developing and emerging countries scaled back their foreign financing by 7.0 percent.

Rich nations invested $1.235 trillion abroad in 2011, up from $985 billion in 2010. The corresponding figure for developing nations last year was $357 billion, down from $383 billion in the previous year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Calls for Eurozone Unity Amid Spain Strains

(BRUSSELS) — The European Commission urged eurozone leaders to work together on Thursday after Spain came under criticism from other governments over strains in its public finances.

“We want the 17 euro area member states to move forward together to preserve their common good, the euro,” Olivier Bailly, spokesman for the European Union’s executive arm, told a news briefing.

“A problem with the macro-economic stability and financial stability of one of the 17 eurozone states affects the other 16,” he added. “What we want today is collective solutions and consensual actions to be put in place.”

With its borrowing costs surging to worrisome levels, Spain’s Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy urged EU peers on Wednesday to be “prudent” when making comments about its economic woes.

In recent days both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have made references to public finances in Spain, in a context of market concerns about the country’s finances.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU: German Pay Deals Add to Euro Divergence

Brussels, 4 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Wage moderation in Germany may be coming to an end at precisely the wrong time for European Central Bank President Mario Draghi.

As nations from Greece to Spain battle recessions and record unemployment, workers in Germany are winning some of the biggest pay increases in two decades, with public service staff set to gain 6.3 percent more by the end of next year. That’s widening the gaps between Europe’s largest economy and its euro- area peers, making the ECB’s one-size-fits-all monetary policy less effective.

“While the German wage deals are good news for workers, Draghi is unlikely to be popping the champagne corks,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING Group in Brussels. “ECB policy is inappropriate for each individual country in the euro area; it’s too loose for Germany and too restrictive for the periphery. It could end up making the divergences even bigger.”

Draghi is facing the possibility of price pressures building in Germany just as they wane in nations that have been pushed into austerity drives by the sovereign debt crisis. Only months after the ECB cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low and pumped more than 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of cheap cash into Europe’s banking system to stem the crisis, Draghi warned of “upside risks” to inflation and started talking about how to withdraw the emergency measures.

German Reforms

ECB officials meeting in Frankfurt today will keep their key rate at 1 percent, according to all 57 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The decision is due at 1:45 p.m. and Draghi holds a press conference 45 minutes later.

Labor-market reforms last decade increased Germany’s competitiveness, transforming the economy from the so-called “sick man of Europe” into the region’s locomotive. German nominal gross wages rose an average 2 percent a year between 2000 and 2009, according to Eurostat, less than half the 4.7 percent annual average gain in Spain.

Now, with unemployment at a two-decade low and exports to countries outside the euro area partially shielding the economy from the debt crisis, German workers are asking for a bigger slice of the pie.

IG Metall, Europe’s biggest labor union with about 3.6 million workers, is demanding 6.5 percent more pay.

‘Turning Point’

Germany’s 2 million public service workers are set for a 6.3 percent raise over two years under an agreement reached with the government, the Ver.di union said on March 31. That would be the biggest increase negotiated by the union since 1992.

“The agreement will likely mark a turning point in wage developments in Germany after years of wage restraint,” said Klaus Baader, an economist at Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong. “Given the robustness of Germany’s economy and the continued decline in unemployment, the fact that wage growth is rising is not surprising. If anything, it is surprising it has taken so long.”

Germany’s economy expanded 3.7 percent in 2010 and 3 percent in 2011 before the debt crisis applied a brake. The European Commission projects growth of 0.6 percent this year. That compares with its forecast for a 0.3 percent contraction in the euro-area economy as output declines in Italy, Spain, Belgium, Greece, Cyprus, the Netherlands, Portugal and Slovenia.

Rebalancing Process?

Some economists say rising German wages are part of a rebalancing that has to take place within the 17-nation euro zone. Germany, which has long relied on exports for growth, needs to spur household spending, while peripheral nations have to cut wages to improve competitiveness and export performance.

Greece has slashed its minimum wage by 22 percent as part of efforts to make the economy competitive again.

Still, “the ECB is in a dilemma,” said Holger Sandte, chief economist at WestLB Mellon Asset Management in Dusseldorf. “It’s not an optimal currency area. The economy is terrible in some parts and okay in others, and prices are diverging.”

House prices in Spain plunged 11.2 percent last year; in Germany they rose 5.5 percent, the most since the country’s post-reunification property boom in the early 1990s.

Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann is among the ECB policy makers to have begun talking of an eventual exit from the central bank’s emergency lending measures, saying they entail significant risks.

Draghi, in an interview with Germany’s mass tabloid Bild newspaper, said he shares Weidmann’s concerns and “all members of the Governing Council have taken to heart Germany’s stability culture.”

‘Nowhere Close’

“Exit talks are in large part targeted at Germans and other inflation hawks concerned about rising inflation and the emergence of asset-price bubbles,” said Marco Valli, chief euro-area economist at UniCredit Global Research in Milan. “They want to show they have the tools available to tackle inflation, but they’re nowhere close to a starting the exit.”

While Draghi will probably affirm his view that the euro- area economy has stabilized, contracting manufacturing output suggests the recovery remains fragile.

At the same time, euro-area inflation, driven by higher oil prices and tax increases, will breach the ECB’s 2 percent limit for a second straight year in 2012.

The ECB predicts it will slow to 1.6 percent next year. Still, the days of counting on Germany to exert downward pressure on the rate may be coming to an end, said Juergen Michels, chief euro-area economist at Citigroup in London.

Weak domestic demand and austerity measures will probably result in deflation in periphery countries, giving the ECB room to increase stimulus, he said, yet in Germany price pressures are likely to remain elevated.

“As a consequence, we expect that in contrast to the period since introducing the euro, German inflation rates will be above the euro-area average over the medium term,” Michels said.

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



Gallup CEO: High Unemployment Will Make Romney President

Jim Clifton, GEO of Gallup, the leading poll company in America, told Russia Today unemployment will sink Obama’s re-election bid.

“According to the Gallup poll, if we vote tonight, Romney will beat him… They are not voting for Romney — they just vote against the president,” Clifton said.

Forget Afghanistan, Pakistan and a new war in Africa — Americans are more concerned about losing their jobs. “If something really big happens… that will only make a little bit of a difference. Americans don’t want to hear about foreign policy. They should, but they don’t,” Clifton said.

Clifton admitted unemployment is around 20 percent, far higher than the 8 percent the government and the establishment media keep insisting it is. Others put the number at 22.5%, a number closing in on the last Great Depression’s unemployment figure of 25%.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Greece: Banks Facing Specter of Nationalization

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Even the large Greek banks are facing the specter of nationalization in view of the enormous support for recapitalization they will need from the Financial Stability Facility (FSF), sources said on Thursday. On Friday, as Reporter.Gr writes, the Greek lenders will have to submit to the Bank of Greece their plans for boosting their capital adequacy following the huge write-downs they have had to take as a result of the Greek bond haircut. The country’s international creditors are pressing for the terms of recapitalization to be defined urgently. The banks, whose combined market capitalization has dwindled to less than 3 billion euros, have already divested a large part of their real estate assets but results have been mediocre because of the slump. The banks are asking that shareholders be given incentive to repurchase as many shares as possible after three years, so that they will return to private Greek hands.

However, the central bank is said to be unhappy by the business plans the lenders have presented so far.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek State Gets New Powers to Force Payment of Debts

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 10 — Greek State is aiming at securing the outstanding debts of taxpayers and corporations by confiscating salaries, pensions, real estate, deposits and securities. According to the manual issued by the Finance Ministry, as reported by daily Kathimerini, confiscations can be made provided their amount exceeds 1,000 euros per month after compulsory charges are deducted, while the remainder cannot be under 1,000 euros. Confiscation will also apply to benefits paid by the state and to properties held by third parties (such as banks). The measure does not concern people with debts up to 300 euros, or those with debts from traffic fines and to local authorities. Also exempt are taxpayers who have already arranged for the settlement of their debt through installments or those who benefit from legal clauses in their favor.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF, EU to Conduct New Assessment Mission in Romania

(BUCHAREST) — The International Monetary Fund and the European Union will review economic reforms in Romania during a new audit, from April 24 to May 7, the IMF said on Thursday.

“A mission from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), headed by Jeffrey Franks, will visit Bucharest from April 24 to May 7, 2012, to conduct the fifth review of Romania’s Stand-By Arrangement”, the IMF office in Bucharest said in a press release.

The head of the mission Jeffrey Franks will be accompanied by his successor Erik de Vrijer, the IMF said.

At the end of their previous review, in February, EU and IMF representatives trimmed Romania’s 2012 growth forecast to 1.5-2.0 percent, owing to international economic turbulence.

Franks had called on authorities to continue prudent fiscal policies. “With the upcoming elections and the economic growth slowdown, it is essential to maintain the course of reforms.”, Franks stressed.

In March 2011, the IMF and the EU had agreed to provide Romania with a fresh credit line of five billion euros ($6.8 billion dollars) to be drawn only in case of emergency.

Two years earlier, Romania had obtained a 20-billion-euro rescue package from the IMF, the EU and the World Bank which helped it emerge from recession.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mass Unemployment in the Balkans — A Need to Act

Leskovac, once known as the Serbian Manchester, is home to a textile industry that began in the 19th century, flourished under Communism, and has survived — albeit barely — until today. The town, which lies in the south of Serbia, boasts a textile school (set up in 1947), an association of textile engineers and its very own textile magazine. The boom years are a distant memory, however.

Leskovac’s Socialist-era companies are bankrupt, their production halls empty and their machines have been dismantled and sold as scrap. At the heart of the town’s plight, and that of so many other regions in the Western Balkans, is the impact of dramatic de-industrialisation.

Contemporary Serbia is a society whose population is both aging (with an average age of 41, it is one of the oldest in the world) and shrinking. So is its industry. After stagnating during the economic recovery of the 2000s, the employment rate (the percentage of people of working age actually working) has sharply fallen since 2008. Today it is about 45 per cent, more than 20 percent worse than the EU average.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Uncertainty About Spain Worries Euro Zone

The markets appeared to have forgotten about the euro crisis for a few weeks, but now uncertainty is returning, with yields rising again on Spanish and Italian government bonds. The effects of the ECB’s massive cash injection are wearing off, and Spain’s banks have already reportedly run out of the cheap cash they got from the central bank.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


24 Outrageous Facts About Taxes in the United States That Will Blow Your Mind

The U.S. tax code is a complete and utter abomination and it needs to be thrown out entirely. Nobody in their right mind would ever read the whole thing — it is over 3 million words long. Each year, Americans spend billions of hours and hundreds of billions of dollars trying to comply with federal tax requirements. Sadly, it is the honest, hard working Americans in the middle class that always get hit the hardest.

The tax code is absolutely riddled with loopholes that big corporations and the ultra-wealthy use to minimize their tax burdens as much as possible. Many poor people do not pay any income taxes at all. The dishonest are rewarded for cheating on their taxes (if they can get away with it) and the ultra-wealthy have moved trillions of dollars to offshore tax havens where they can avoid U.S. taxation altogether. Our system is incredibly unfair to the millions of hard working people in the middle class and upper middle class that drag themselves out of bed and go to work each day and try to do the right thing. In addition, the current U.S. tax system is incredibly inefficient, it diverts a tremendous amount of resources away from more valuable economic activities, and it has chased thousands of businesses and trillions of dollars out of the United States. The U.S. tax code is such a complete and utter mess at this point that it can never be “fixed”. The only rational thing to do is to abolish it completely, and any politician that tells you otherwise is lying to you.

The following are 24 outrageous facts about taxes in the United States that will blow your mind…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



A New Crop of Digital Science Books Will Change the Way Students Learn

Next-generation science e-books may help keep young people engaged

Science can advance quickly, rendering existing textbooks obsolete. Now new digital textbooks are emerging intended to better engage students and keep them up-to-date on the latest research. These e-books will cost (and weigh) less than the average printed tome. In January, Apple announced its iBooks 2 textbook platform for the iPad, and publishers, including McGraw-Hill, Pearson, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, have signed on to create content for it.

In February, Nature Publishing Group, of which Scientific American is a part, came out with Principles of Biology, an interactive, multimedia “book” intended for university-level introductory biology classes that is accessible online using tablet computers, laptops, desktops and smartphones. Principles of Biology integrates text with videos, simulations, interactive exercises, illustrations and tests and also includes classic and current papers from Nature and related journals. Future titles in the life and physical sciences are in the works.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



A Storm-Chaser Who’s Looked Straight Into a Tornado’s Heart

The tornadoes that recently swept through the Dallas Forth Worth area were a reminder of their destructive power. While the most sensible response might be to go as far away as possible from such things, atmospheric scientist Joshua Wurman runs right at them.

What makes tornadoes so unpredictable?

We know the fundamentals of how supercell thunderstorms-the ones that produce tornadoes-form. We know that there need to be certain conditions of temperature, relative humidity, and wind speeds at different altitudes. What we don’t really understand very well is why only 25 percent of the supercells make tornadoes and when in their life cycle they do it: Why did that particular supercell make a tornado now, not 15

minutes ago, or 15 minutes from now? The reason we drive 15,000 miles a year to catch 10 tornadoes is because we don’t know which supercells are going to make them or when.

Why is it so difficult to collect data on a tornado?

It’s a pretty foggy, blurry view-we’re looking through a distorted window with cracks in it. We do fairly well at seeing the winds throughout the storm. Radar is great at doing that. We should probably get a B+. Where we get an F, maybe an F+, is in measuring the temperatures and relative humidities, what we call the thermodynamics,

inside the storms. We know that something is causing the winds to move up and down in the supercell, and we believe that the temperatures and relative humidity are critical to that process.

Yet we have almost no direct way of obtaining those numbers. We tried with unmanned aerial vehicles but didn’t get many measurements.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Better or Worse?

All politics are the politics of the future. The one cause that we all champion, regardless of our political orientation, is the cause of the future. All that we fight for is the ability to shape the future.

[…]

The left tends to view the past negatively and future shock positively. It wants change to disrupt the old order of things in order to make way for a new order. It hews to a progressive understanding of history in which we have been getting better with the advance of time, the march of progress mimics evolution as a means of lifting humanity out of the muck and raising it up on ivory towers of reason through a ceaseless process of change.

The right often views the past positively, it sees change as a destroyer that undermines civilization’s accomplishments and threatens to usher in anarchy. It fights to conserve that which is threatened by the entropic winds of change. The conservative worldview is progressive in its own way, but it is the progress of the established order. It sees progress emerging from the accretion of civilization, rather than from the disruption of revolution.

[…]

The left destroys its future by breaking with the past in search of the future. Like a fish out of the water or a tree with no roots, it perishes and becomes a meal for passing predators. It conceives of futures that have no link with the past and ruthlessly strives to implement them over piles of corpses. It fails to understand that the past is neither good or bad, but a mix of the two that has been tested and refined by struggle and conflict. The future will have both good and bad in it as well, but the more it breaks with the past, the more it will be untested and unrefined.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Birmingham News Drops the Ball on Black-on-White Crime

A couple of days ago I reported on the stabbing of white truck driver Nick Stokes by members of a black motorcycle gang called the Outcasts of Alabama. It’s not merely a scary story but also an unusual one, mostly because of the behavior of law enforcement. The Adamsville, AL police department not only failed to question or detain any of the gangsters, but, outrageously, also told Stokes that they “don’t mess” with the Outcasts.

What isn’t at all unusual about the story is the mainstream media’s reluctance to cover a case of black-on-white crime. In particular, I cited the Birmingham News (BN), whose crime-beat reporter, Carol Robinson, had brusquely dismissed the incident as not newsworthy. She now has finally treated it — no doubt as a result of pressure — but in a manner so incomplete that it reflects a grudging attitude. More on that in a moment.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cave Bacteria Finding Suggests Ancient Origins of Antibiotic-Resistant Superbugs

Our pill-popping culture and over-zealous livestock farmers typically take the blame for the widespread resistance of many harmful strains of bacteria to entire classes of antibiotics. And the Food and Drug Administration took a bold move today with a new voluntary plan to help curtail the over-use of antibiotics in agriculture.

But the capacity to fend off antibiotics might actually be lodged deep in bacteria’s evolutionary history. A new study has uncovered dozens of species of bacteria in a 4 million-year-old cave that harbor resistance to both natural and synthetic antibiotics.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Flying Yogics’ Explains Hopping Mad OWS

Some folk are mystified by a video showing Occupy Wall Street (OWS) activists prepping for May Day Protest events by hopping their way “bunny style” to the call of their leaders for a kumbia group hug.

“Yes, those people are hopping to the circle where they execute the group hug. (And nowhere is the strange hopping explained).” (The Blaze, April 11, 2011).

OWS activists hopping to their group hug triggered by a leader shouting “Love is the answer” are not making like the Easter bunny. They are in their own minds (believe it or not) getting ready for the next battle against capitalism by practicing—”flying yogics”.

It should be no surprise to Glenn Beck, who was the first to report on the inauguration of Yoga at the first OWS protest, that The OWS hop seen on the video clip is a form of yogic flying.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Former Astronauts & Employees to NASA: Stay Away From Global Warming

A group of former NASA employees, including astronauts, has called on the agency to stop making “unproven and unsubstantiated remarks” regarding global climate change — specifically that human activities are driving global warming. “We believe the claims by NASA and (Goddard Institute for Space Studies), that man-made carbon dioxide is having a catastrophic impact on global climate change are not substantiated,” write the 49 signatories in a letter to NASA administrator Charles Bolden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Governments Everywhere Having Deep Money Problems

It was 13 months ago we disclosed that the administration passed a stimulus bill known as the $17.5 billion “Hiring Incentives Act” to restore employment. It required that foreign banks not only withhold 30% of all outgoing capital flows, and disclosure of the full details of transactions of non-exempt holders to the Internal Revenue Service. They want the structure of how money ended up at that bank. In addition banks, particularly in Switzerland are required to close the account. That is equivalent to capital controls, so in future it will be easy to put currency controls of all funds entering or leaving the US.

Now we have a new gem on our hands, Senate Bill 1813, which was presented by California Senator Barbara Boxer. The bill has been passed in the Senate 74-23 under the “Moving ahead for progress legislation in the 21st Century Act.”

Section 4034 of the legislation states that any individual who owes more than $50,000 to the IRS will have their passport confiscated, revoked, or put on special terms and they will be denied exit or entry, out or into the US. The bill is loosely written, so as usual the interpretation is left up to bureaucrats in Washington. Hopefully this inclusion will be struck down in the House. Inasmuch almost all our Congress is bought and paid for — you will have to lobby very hard to eliminate it from the bill. This is not about tax evasion; it is about people control and their assets. E-mail, fax, write and call all House members to stop another nail being put in our coffin.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Mike Tyson: Kill George Zimmerman

Former boxer Mike Tyson has weighed in on George Zimmerman. He says it’s a shame he has not been murdered.

In an interview with Yahoo News, the former heavyweight champ said:

[…]

Tyson admits he wasn’t there, so he is not certain what happened — including the possibility Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin in self-defense — but says Zimmerman needs to be shot anyway.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s “Fairness” Equals Socialism

On the tenth of April, 2012, at the Florida Atlantic University, President Obama stated: “This is not some socialist dream … “ I would beg to disagree. That is exactly what it is. And it is HIS dream, not mine, and it is not a dream the majority of Americans share.

It doesn’t take a college degree in politics and/or government to know socialism when you see it, especially for my generation. We grew up fighting it. I mean, we literally took up arms against socialism.

Today in America, socialism has a death grip on the Oval Office of the President of the United States. Far from fighting socialism, as a President of a free country ought to do, Obama has embraced it and is now proselytizing for socialism. He sounds more like a missionary sent from the old Soviet Union to bring America the gospel of socialism than he does the president of a capitalist, democratic country. Sad to say, Obama resembles Hugo Chavez more every day.

President Obama, who has been calling for tax increases on the wealthy in America to “spread the wealth around,” is vehemently denying that his tax increases on the rich are an attempt to “redistribute wealth.”

Let me state this as clearly and concisely as I can: The President of the United States is telling us a lie. And it is a malicious lie, because he KNOWS he is lying!

Redistribution of a nation’s wealth IS socialism, period.

[…]

However, we make a mistake by thinking that Obama is talking to us. He is not. He is talking to his base, the voters who put him in office in 2008. Governor Chris Christie, of New Jersey, nailed it just a few day ago. Paraphrasing, he said, we have become a people sitting on the couch waiting for the government check to arrive. And THAT is Obama’s base.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The ‘Doomsday Shelter’ Being Built Below Kansas Prairie Where Millionaires Will be Able to Sit Out the Apocalypse in Style

When you buy a house, you end up feeling like you will be paying it off until the world ends. Well, how about one of these luxurious condos, which come with all the mod-cons, as well as a pool, a movie theater and a library — oh, and a guarantee that it will survive Doomsday if and when that fateful day comes. For these luxury flats, deep below the Kansas prairie in the shaft of an abandoned missile silo, are meant to withstand everything from economic collapse and solar flares to terrorist attacks and pandemics.

Naturally, there will be no one around to phone if the guarantee fails — but at that point, the insurance will probably be the least of your worries. So far, four buyers have thrown down a total of about $7million (£4.4m) for havens to flee to when disaster happens or the end is nigh. And developer Larry Hall has options to retro-fit three more Cold War-era silos when this one fills up. Hall said: ‘They worry about events ranging from solar flares, to economic collapse, to pandemics to terrorism to food shortages.’

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unfortunately Named the Affordable Health Care Choices Act of 2009

According to The Hill, “the Obama administration is quietly diverting roughly $500 million to the IRS to help implement the president’s healthcare law. The money is only part of the IRS’s total implementation spending and it is being provided outside the normal appropriations process. The tax agency is responsible for several key provisions of the new law, including the unpopular individual mandate.” (The Hill, April 9, 2012)

[…]

Socialized medical care in Western Europe’s nations fares slightly better. Doctors are still paid a government capped salary, there is rationing of care, long waiting lists for procedures, and gross negligence in hospitals. When patients have sniffles, everyone is treated, no problem. That is when free medical care works best. When more expensive procedures and long-term care become an issue, rationing ensues, depending on the patient’s age.

Dr. March was not aware that Muslims are exempt from the requirements of The Affordable Health Care Choice Act but will be full beneficiaries of free health care paid by the rest of us, a blatant form of dhimmitude.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Prosecution of Fundamentalist Muslim Seen as Setback for Free Speech

Prosecutors call Tarek Mehanna a dangerous radical, but he says he’s being punished for not turning into an FBI informant

On Thursday in a Boston court, a 29-year-old Muslim student faces being sentenced to life behind bars in a case that civil liberties groups raises profound questions for freedom of speech in America. Tarek Mehanna, a bearded Islamist with fundamentalist beliefs, was convicted last year for conspiring to provide support to terrorists by downloading jihadi videos from the internet and translating Islamist documents that he found online.

Prosecutors portrayed Mehanna as a dedicated radical who tried, and failed, to get terrorist training in Yemen in 2004 and then devoted himself to promoting and spreading the violent views of radical Islam in America. Defence lawyers had insisted that Mehanna’s trip to Yemen was to find a religious school and that his radicalism has been greatly overstated. They say he was a family man, angry at American foreign policy, who considered himself an outspoken Islamic intellectual and saw the west’s treatment of Muslims as wrong.

However, regardless of which version of Mehanna’s beliefs was the truth, civil liberties groups say the Mehanna case is a huge setback to America’s freedom of speech and that he was essentially prosecuted for “thought crimes” that should be constitutionally protected by the First Amendment. “It is thought crime. We should be very concerned about this,” said Steve Downs, a New York state lawyer who works with various groups examining legal cases brought against Muslims in the decade since September 11.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) tried to file a brief in support of Mehanna during his prosecution but was refused the opportunity by the presiding judge. The ACLU had argued that Mehanna had consumed information freely available on the web and that his freedom of speech was of paramount importance, even if the material was offensive, anti-American or pro-violence. “This is a big case. Weakening the First Amendment is a slippery slope. Certain federal judges seem to ignore it at will,” said Nancy Murray, a director at the Massachusetts branch of the ACLU.

Some observers believe that radical Muslims get different treatment to other extremist groups. Mehanna was convicted of supporting terrorism despite there being no proven active link between him and any terrorist or terrorist organisation, and his activities appeared to consist of spreading easily available material he found on the internet. There is no evidence he actively plotted to take any terrorist action in the US, but he now faces a possible life sentence in jail.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Washington Post Suggests Bilderberg Group to Pick Romney’s Running Mate

A story in today’s Washington Post written by veteran columnist Al Kamen suggests that the Bilderberg Group may have a decisive role to play in picking Mitt Romney’s running mate, continuing a recent trend in which the secretive cabal has had a direct influence on the U.S. presidential election.

[…]

As we have exhaustively documented, despite the fact that the establishment media, many titans of which are Bilderberg members, routinely plays down the weight of the group’s influence on world affairs, in a 2010 radio interview former NATO Secretary-General and Bilderberg member Willy Claes admitted [url] that Bilderberg attendees are mandated to implement decisions that are formulated during the annual conference of power brokers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Local Muslims Honour Pioneers, Supporters

Pioneers of the local Muslim community will be honoured tonight at a dinner organized by the Windsor Islamic Council. Dr. Osman Tarabain, president of the Windsor Islamic Council, said the recognition is long overdue. “We want to honour pioneers in the community like Dr. Gordon Jasey and Dr. Ismail Peer,” said Tarabain. “Both are past presidents of the Windsor Islamic Association and helped in getting the first mosque built in Windsor.” The first mosque was located in downtown Windsor, Tarabain said. He said it was built in the 1950s by Jasey and members of the Lebanese community. As the community grew, Jasey was responsible in 1964 for the development of another mosque at the corner of Dominion and Northwood. “It was later expanded to its current structure in 1972 by Dr. Jasey and Dr. Peer,” Tarabain said.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belfast Embraces ‘Unsinkable’ Titanic Heritage

A century after the Titanic sank, the Northern Irish city of Belfast, where the liner was built, is finally coming to terms with the disaster and attempting to capitalize on the ship’s unique pulling power.

In May, 1911, 50,000 people gathered on Belfast’s docks to watch as the Titanic was floated from the slipway. Some 3,000 men had worked for nearly three years to build the largest vessel the world had ever seen.

“There was a huge amount of pride. It was seen then as a symbol of ambition, a symbol of confidence, of Belfast as being an industrial might,” said Tim Husbands, chief executive of Titanic Belfast, a new visitor attraction built just 100 yards from where the ship was originally launched.

Less than a year later, the ship was lying at the bottom of the ocean. Four days into its maiden voyage from Southampton, England to New York City, the Titanic hit an iceberg and sank in the early hours of April 15, 1912. Of the 2,200 passengers on board, 1,500 drowned in the icy waters of the North Atlantic.

“I think it took many decades for the city (of Belfast) to come to terms with that sense of association of grief, that sense of loss, that sense of embarrassment,” Husbands said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bolkestein Criticises Dutch Journalism as Sentimental

THE HAGUE, 11/04/12 — Dutch journalism is leftwing. Journalists embrace everything that is week and fail to see in capitalism the only workable system, says former conservative (VVD) leader Frits Bolkestein in an opinion article in De Volkskrant.

“Why do the overwhelming majority of journalists vote left?” asked Bolkestein rhetorically. He gave the answer himself: “We are a moralising people and journalists are a reflection of this.” But “moralising means exercising power via the back door. Where freedom reigns, this is impossible.”

The VVD misses out on a good deal of the sympathy of journalists because it, unlike Labour (PvdA) and the Christian democrats (CDA), does not moralise. Except for in economically difficult times like the present, because the VVD is then respected by journalists because impractical idealism then as to give way to real solutions.

“In the big countries around us, the situation is different. There one does find rightwing quality newspapers: the Daily Telegraph in England, the Figaro in France, Die Welt in Germany,” Bolkestein went on.

According to the former VVD leader, who is held in high regard inside and outside his party, CDA and PvdA follow the ethics of intentions. “If the intention is only good, the operation is also good.” The VVD in fact follows the ethics of the consequences. “If these are good, the operation itself is also good.”

The VVD approach is more businesslike and admits less emotions, declares Bolkestein. He considers this necessary because the Netherlands is a small country with a high population and communication density where everyone at every moment talks about the same thing. “Then sentimentality is dominant. We have become a feminine country.”

Capitalism is not popular among journalists, but their opposition to the market is nonsensical, because the alternative is that prices are fixed by bureaucrats. “And what that leads to, we know since the fall of the Wall.”

It is true that capitalism from time to time produces a crisis, like the present one, but this is largely caused by governments, says Bolkestein. “It is certainly true that some — particularly the bankers — have misbehaved. But the government has offered them the room for this. The rules must now be tightened up so that this room is restricted.”

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



Council of Europe Ditches Italian Party Funding System

(AGI) Strasbourg — A Council of Europe reports rejected the Italian party funding system. The document drafted by the Greco Commission, the CoE’s anti-corruption monitoring organization, pinpoints “important” shortfalls, “inefficient” controls and “ineffective” sanctions. The control system is identified as the true “weak point” of the Italian legislation on this matter.

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



Council of Europe to Demand More Pressure on Swiss Tax Cheats

Already involved in tax-disputes with Germany, the US and the EU, Switzerland is also coming under pressure from the Council of Europe. A resolution to be voted on 27 April by its Parliamentary Assembly calls on the Swiss to “exert more pressure” on “tax havens” and bank secrecy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France’s Muslim Allergy: Sarkozy Can Say Goodbye to the Muslim Vote

by Eman El-Shenawi

“France is the worst place in Europe to be a Muslim, because the government is so against us. And if Nicolas Sarkozy is re-elected, it can only get worse.”

Ahead of an upcoming presidential election in France, policymakers are riding a wave of Islam-dominated issues that have unwittingly taken center stage in the country’s public domain. Concerns over Islamic fundamentalism reached a peak in recent weeks when French police launched the latest of a series of raids on suspected Islamic militants, detaining 10 people across the country in predawn arrests. This also came hand-in-hand with news that imams (clerics) were being deported, moderate Muslim preachers were being denied access to the country, and mosques were increasingly being monitored by French authorities. The measures come under the pretext that French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is battling for re-election ahead of the first round of votes on April 22, is brazenly intent on clamping down on dangerous radicals threatening France.

In the spotlight was last month’s Toulouse episode, an al-Qaeda-inspired gunman, Mohammed Merah, who murdered seven people in a nine-day terrorist rampage through the French city. “France will not tolerate ideological indoctrination on its soil,” Sarkozy said in March, as he vowed to jail anyone who viewed jihadist videos online or visited international training camps. But some described Merah’s shooting rampage as “an unexpected gift for Sarkozy” which he “exploited” to increase his chances in the upcoming elections, says Dr. Marwan Kabalan, International Relations and Diplomacy expert at the University of Kalamoon in Syria. And yes indeed, Sarkozy won several percentage points following the range of measures against the Muslim community in France, having previously lagged behind in opinion polls prior to the Toulouse incident, Kabalan adds.

Sarkozy’s opponents have pointed out that amplifying the fear of Islamic fundamentalism has been a very convenient way of appearing as a strong, active president. But in reality, many will argue that French premier practically made his name within the government for drilling the topic of Islamist extremism to the public. Sarkozy became interior minister by taking on the angry young men in the mainly Muslim suburbs of Paris during the 2005 riots, Harriet Alexander of the Telegraph notes, planting his own, individual seed of anti-Islam sentiment into the government. Last September, the president took to banning Muslims from praying in the streets, after photos of Friday prayers spilling out onto the pavements were deemed by far-Right candidate Marine Le Pen as evidence of a supposed Muslim takeover. And in congruent timing, this week marks the first anniversary of a French law banning the wearing of full-face veils in public; a decision by Sarkozy made under the ruse of upholding secular values.

In par with this reasoning, a promise by the president was made early on this year to introduce a law in France to ensure the labeling of all meat killed in accordance with halal Islamic traditions. “It’s frightening at the moment,” Mounia Bassnaoui, a Muslim woman born in France told The Telegraph. “France is the worst place in Europe to be a Muslim, because the government is so against us. And if Nicolas Sarkozy is re-elected, it can only get worse.” Bassnaoui is one of France’s estimated six million Muslims, making the country home to the largest Muslim population in Europe.

Alexander notes that the three elements of immigration, security and Islamic fundamentalism have frequently spoken of in the same breath by Sarkozy, implying a chain of interlinked threats stemming from the Muslim community. “French politicians across the spectrum link Islam and immigration, and the French people end up believing this,” Professor Olivier Roy, a French authority on the link between Islam and politics and an adviser to the French foreign ministry told the newspaper. “But it’s not the case; the wave of North African immigration has slowed to a trickle, and most immigrants now come from China or Eastern Europe,” Roy explained.

Still, for many who support Sarkozy’s efforts to rid the country of the danger from Merah-like figures lingering in the psyche of the average French citizen, the president will continue to be seen as a protector. Last month, before the Toulouse shootings, Sarkozy voiced his intent on keeping moderate voters from defecting to the far-right; encouraging his UMP party to hold a public debate to discuss the compatibility between Islam and France’s secular values. But weeks before the debate has begun, dissent within the UMP over the wisdom of the idea hurt Sarkozy’s credibility, hinting that his leadership of the party is less than ironclad. “If this debate were to be focused only on Islam, if it were to lead to a stigmatization of Muslims, then I would oppose it,” Prime Minister Francois Fillon had said on RTL radio.

Indeed, Muslim groups boycotted the event, accusing the UMP of targeting their faith. “This debate has only one purpose and that is to keep the UMP in the media in the year before the election,” Hassan Ben M’Barek of “Banlieues Respect” group, told Reuters last week. “Clearly, this will feed into Islamophobia,” he added. Despite Islam being France’s second largest religion after Roman Catholicism with some 5-6 million followers, according to government figures, the spotlight on the Muslim community in the country is intensifying and for many Muslims, it is bordering on offensive. “French policymakers must try to acquire better understanding of Islam, religion and culture, in order to win, rather than alienate, their Muslim citizens,” wrote Dr. Kabalan. “More important, perhaps, they must respect the beliefs of the local Muslim community, which is French first and foremost. They may need to check through the constitution of the French Republic, which — among many things — guarantees all citizens the right to choose their religion and practice their faith,” he added.

Whether Sarkozy will win a second term on the back of his anti-Islam drive is tough to tell. Despite his many supporters who have pushed his popularity skywards in the aftermath of the Toulouse shootings, the French premier should be concerned over his electoral losses at the hands of a bulky population of Muslim voters that may be encouraged to vote this year more so than ever.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Hollande Vows to ‘Dominate Finance’

French Socialist presidential candidate Francois Hollande vowed on Thursday to “dominate finance”, following warnings from the right that a left-wing victory would trigger attacks on the euro.

Hollande is on course to unseat right-wing incumbent President Nicolas Sarkozy in the poll to choose the powerful leader of the eurozone’s second economy, which will be conducted over two rounds on April 22nd and May 6th.

With eurozone bond markets on edge over renewed fears that Spain and Italy will struggle to cope with their sovereign debt, Sarkozy has warned that France would be next in the firing line in the event of a Socialist victory.

But Hollande hit back hard, accusing Sarkozy of racking up debt and of allowing France to be bullied by the world of finance into sacrificing growth for austerity, without reaping any benefits for the real economy.

He said he would fight “speculation” and work with France’s EU partners to better regulate markets, rather that surrendering to them, as he alleged Sarkozy has done since his election in 2007.

“What I want is for us to show, France but also Europe, that we have a shared capacity to dominate finance,” Hollande said, on public television.

“I’ve said very clearly what would be my path towards the repair of our public finances. I’ve said that we need more growth, because it is needed, and so I need fear no crisis,” he declared.

“And if the markets are worried — I don’t know if they are, I know that for now they are unfortunately mobilised as regards Italy and Spain — I will tell them here and now that I will leave them no space to act,” he said.

And he dismissed fears his election would trigger a speculative attack on the euro, noting that he has been the opinion poll frontrunner for months and so the markets have had time to get used to the idea of him as president.

“It’s the outgoing president who brought the country to the situation it is in. Public debt has grown by 600 billion euros, we’ve lost our Triple-A credit rating and we have a trade deficit of 70 billion euros,” he said.

“And now he comes to tell us: ‘Watch out, it could be even worse if someone else was in charge’? Well, no it couldn’t.”

Countries borrow money on international bond markets to finance their budget deficits and to rollover their debt. If they lose the confidence of investors, the interest rate to borrow can rise to unsustainable levels, forcing a government in trouble to seek rescue help elsewhere.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Free Koran Distributions Have Germany Concerned

Salafist Muslims have been handing out free Korans across Germany in recent weeks. But the group’s radicalism has many politicians concerned — as does a recent video posted on YouTube that allegedly threatened journalists who wrote critical reports on the religious offensive.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Piraten Leapfrog the Green Party and Rank Third

(AGI) Berlin — The Piraten continue their political ascent, leapfrogging the Green Party, becoming Germany’s third-largest party. A survey conducted by the Forsa Institute for the RTL broadcasting network reveals that the Internet party climbs to 13% in a single go, leapfrogging the Green party, which drops 2 points to 11%. Also the Liberal party is recovering ground and, for the first time in almost a year, regains the 5% threshold enabling it to return to the Bundestag in case of new elections. The Social-Democratic party loses 1 percentage point to 24% along with Linke that slips to 8% (-1%), while Angela Merkel’s CDU/CSU grows one point to 36%. The survey also reveals that with an estimated 5%, the Piraten would also make it into the two regional Parliaments of Schleswig-Holstein and North Rhine-Westfalia, where elections are scheduled for the 6th and 13th of May respectively. After the success recorded in Berlin and in the Saar region, the party that only counted 70 members up to 6 months ago when it still didn’t have a political agenda could conquer a representation in all four regional Parliaments. The large drop in votes for the Green Party is unanimously attributed to the fact that Angela Merkel, having decided to abandon nuclear power, robbed the environmentalist party of its best asset in 20 years of activity.

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



Germany Monitors Koran Distribution by Salafists

A branch of the German security service is monitoring a campaign by Salafist Muslims to give away 25 million Korans to see if it violates constitutional rules on religious freedom.

Ibrahim Abou Nagie, a Cologne-based preacher, says he wants to save non-Muslims from hell. The interior ministry in North Rhine-Westphalia said the campaign was a form of aggressive proselytising. So far, about 300,000 copies have been given away. Salafists are very conservative Muslims who try to emulate the earliest followers of the Prophet Muhammad.

‘Disturbing the peace’

The Office for the Protection of the Constitution in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, which keeps extremist and violent groups under surveillance, has been monitoring Mr Abou Nagie’s organisation. Parties from across the political spectrum united to criticise the Koran giveaway. “Wherever possible, this aggressive action must be stopped,” said Guenter Krings of the governing centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), in an interview with the Rheinische Post newspaper. He admitted that handing out religious material was not in itself objectionable, but said the Salafist radicals were disturbing the religious peace with their behaviour. The centre-left Social Democrats and the Green Party have also expressed their concern.

Salafists have been handing out the German-language copies of Islam’s holy books in the pedestrianised zones of cities, including Cologne. “What is presented as the simple distribution of the Koran is in truth the subtle spreading of the Salafist ideology,” said a spokesman for the state interior ministry of North Rhine-Westphalia. Additional copies are also being distributed in Austria and Switzerland. Last summer, the president of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Heinz Fromm, said: “Not all Salafists are terrorists. But almost all the terrorists we know about had contacts with Salafists or are Salafists themselves.” The project has been funded by Muslims buying a copy of the Koran which then funds the production of a second one to be given away. Wealthy donors based in Bahrain have also made contributions.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



German Politicians Attack Salafist Koran Giveaway

A conservative Islamist group plans to hand out tens of millions of copies of the Koran in Germany this weekend. Leading political figures have criticized the move. Regional politicians on Wednesday slammed a reported plan by an Islamist group to give away up to 25 million free copies of the Koran translated into German in the country’s most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia. Although the act is not illegal, they said such actions were incompatible with German values.

“This aggressive project has got to be stopped if possible,” said Guenter Krings, deputy parliamentary leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party, the Christian Democrats (CDU). “I have nothing in principle against spreading religious scriptures,” he told the Rheinische Post newspaper. But he added, “The radical group of Salafists are disturbing the religious peace in our country.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iceland’s Volcanoes May Power UK

The energy minister is to visit Iceland in May to discuss connecting the UK to its abundant geothermal energy

The volcanoes of Iceland could soon be pumping low-carbon electricity into the UK under government-backed plans for thousands of miles of high-voltage cables across the ocean floor.

The energy minister, Charles Hendry, is to visit Iceland in May to discuss connecting the UK to its abundant geothermal energy. “We are in active discussions with the Icelandic government and they are very keen,” Hendry told the Guardian. To reach Iceland, which sits over a mid-ocean split in the earth’s crust, the cable would have to be 1,000 to 1,500km long and by far the longest in the world.

Hendry has already met the head of Iceland’s national grid about the plan. The web of sea-floor cables — called interconnectors — planned for the next decade would link the UK to a Europe-wide supergrid, which is backed by the prime minister. The supergrid would combine the wind and wave power of northern Europe with solar projects such as Desertec in southern Europe and north Africa to deliver reliable, clean energy to meet climate change targets and reduce dependence on fossil fuel imports.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Puglia Governor Under Investigation for Abuse of Office

Accusations stem from ‘resentment’ Vendola says

(ANSA) — Bari, April 11 — A key figure in the Italian left-wing opposition, Puglia Governor Nichi Vendola, announced Wednesday that he is under investigation for alleged abuse of office in the appointment of a local chief of surgeons. Vendola said at an emergency press conference that he was “not at all worried” by allegations that he unlawfully appointed Paolo Sardelli chief surgeon at Bari’s San Paolo hospital. Cited in the same probe was Lea Cosentino, the former head of the health board in Bari whom Vendola fired in 2010 after she was placed under house arrest during a graft investigation. Vendola said the current probe is based solely on testimony against him from Cosentino.

“She is accusing me due to her strong resentment,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Tearful Bossi Apologises to Northern League for Children

Former leader says fraud probe is plot against party

(ANSA) — Rome, April 11 — Umberto Bossi has apologised to the Northern League on behalf of his children after resigning as its leader last week when his family was linked to probes into fraudulent use of party money.

Bossi fought back tears as he apologised “in the name of those who bear my name” at a grass-roots party meeting in Bergamo late on Tuesday.

Prosecutors investigating alleged fraud by the populist party’s former treasurer Francesco Belsito suspect party money was misspent on Bossi’s children.

Bossi’s son Renzo resigned his position as councillor in the Lombardy regional assembly on Monday, in a bid to stem some of the disillusionment the scandal has caused among League supporters.

The firebrand former leader, whose speech has been impaired since he suffered a stroke in 2004, also suggested the probes were a “plot” against the party, although a number of people in the crowd jeered when he said this.

Bossi also called on the party to be united in this difficult period.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Supreme Court Sentences Non-Italian Father for Child Abuse

Judge refuses defense’s ethnic-religious argument

(ANSA) — Rome, March 30 — The Italian Supreme Court on Friday upheld a sentence for abuse and aggravated assault by a Moroccan father against his 12-year-old daughter.

Defense lawyers maintained that the father, who allegedly beat his daughter with a broom handle for “corrective” purposes after she could not properly recite the Koran, did so because of “cultural” reasons and should be given a lighter sentence accordingly.

The judge dismissed the defense’s argument, calling the treatment “violent and unjustifiable” whether from Italian nationals or foreigners.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Contracted Works Never Performed in Salerno: 4 Arrested

(AGI) Naples — Institutions in the Salerno area fully paid for contracted works that were never actually performed. Some regard non-existent roads, like the one, the mayor of Pollica, Angelo Vassallo had reported before he was killed in an ambush in September 2010. The Financial Police arrested an officer of the Provincial government, a contractor and two employees of a bank, one of whom is the treasurer of the paying the institution. Goods and money, motorcycles and cars worth over six million were seized in apartments in Salerno and the surrounding areas. All four are accused of criminal conspiracy, embezzlement and falsification of public documents, and the two bank employees also of money laundering.

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



Italy: Berlusconi Defense in Ruby Case Paid Minetti Lawyers

(AGI) Milan — Silvio Berlusconi allegedly paid Nicole Minetti’s lawyers 100,000 euro on June 22nd 2011 after hearings for the Ruby case had started. The news was revealed by reports sent from the Bank of Italy to prosecutors in Milan. The following day, June 23rd 2011, Lombardy’s Regional Councillor, charged with encouraging and supporting the prostitution of minors, also transferred a number of sums to her lawyers, 37440 to Daria Pesce, 24,960 to Piermaria Corso and a further 24,960 to the Gagliani Right legal offices. In a statement Bankitalia emphasizes the “possibility of payments made by third parties (Silvio Berlusconi) to Nicole Minetti’s defense team.” And this is not all. during the period between April 15t 2011 and October 14th of the same year, the former premier sent Minetti 145,000 euro.

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



Sweden: Seven Convicted in Brutal Gang Rape Case

Seven of the eight men charged with the aggravated rape of a woman at a housing facility for asylum seekers in Småland, southeastern Sweden, last year were convicted and sentenced to prison on Wednesday in the Eksjö District Court.

“I was hoping I’d pass out, that it would be over and that someone would enter the room,” said the woman, according to daily Aftonbladet.

The woman, a 29-year-old mother of two, had been having a good time at a party, which was held in early December 2011 in a flat inhabited by asylum seekers and part of a Migration Board (Migrationsverket) housing complex.

However, quite out of the blue, the seven men forced the woman into a bedroom, tore off her clothes, held down on a bed and proceeded to take turns raping her.

“I didn’t understand anything. I thought at first that they were joking. Everyone had been so nice before, and then suddenly it happened,” said the woman, according to Aftonbladet.

The men restrained her by holding her hips, arms and shoulders against the bed, and covered her mouth to prevent her from screaming.

She tried to get free by kicking her legs, thrashing with her body, and banging her head against the wall, but to no avail.

According to the woman, none of the perpetrators tried to stop the others from raping her once they had got started.

“They were clapping their hands and laughing and not one said no at any time,” she said during interrogation, according to the paper.

When the 25-year-old man who had initially brought the woman to the party returned to the flat after a few hours, the woman hoped he would save her, but instead he joined in with the others.

It wasn’t until some of the men had left and others fallen asleep that the woman managed to alert the police herself, after crouching behind a rubbish bin.

All seven men denied the allegations but the court found the body of evidence against them to be convincing. Two of the men admitted having had sex with the woman but claimed that it was consensual.

However, the court found the woman’s version of events to be credible and where she was unable to provide details there was other evidence to support her story.

The forensic investigation unearthed DNA traces both on the woman’s body and in the room where the rape took place.

One of the eight charged men were acquitted of the charges but the remaining seven received long prison sentences.

Four of the men were sentenced to six years in prison, two to six years and six months and another, below 21 years of age when the crime was committed, to 4 years and six months.

Prosecutors labelled the incident as a planned attack. All seven were therefore convicted of aggravated rape as they carried out the attack together.

Six of the convicted men are Afghan citizens and will be deported from Sweden and not allowed back for at least fifteen years after they have served their sentence.

The 29-year-old woman will also receive 300,000 kronor ($44,226) in compensation.

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



Sweden: Several Injured in Malmö Gang Brawl

Several people with connections to Malmö’s underworld were hospitalized late Wednesday night after knife-wielding thugs kicked off a fight in the city. “All the injured are part of an underworld faction,” said Anders Kristersson of the Malmö police to local paper Sydsvenskan.

According to the paper, a woman was brought in to the emergency room after being hit over the head with a blunt object, following an argument with some gang members. The woman is previously known to the police in connection to narcotics crimes and fraud. She reportedly had a grievance against some street gang members from the city and enlisted the help of a male acquaintance to rough them up with a knife.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Mafia and the European Championships: Price Gouging Adds to List of Ukraine’s Troubles

Troubles continue to plague Ukraine ahead of this summer’s European Football Championships, which the country will co-host. Criminal gangs have stormed hotels, some hotel operators have tripled prices and others have cancelled contracts with the tour operators that will bring sports enthusiasts to the country. The greed threatens to keep fans away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: First-Class Dishonours

by Geoffrey Alderman

A great many people have had their say on the decision of the officers of Leeds University JSoc to withdraw from Brooke Goldstein the invitation previously extended to her to address the society. In all the hullabaloo that has surrounded this incident, some basic facts seem to have been lost sight of. The first is that, in its treatment of Ms Goldstein, Leeds JSoc acted with incredible rudeness. Had the society’s officers considered her suitability as a speaker and come to a decision that she should not be invited, one might have acquiesced in it. One might have questioned the reasoning that lay behind even the politest of refusals but one could, I think, have accepted it on the basis that it is for the society’s elected officers to decide whom they invite. But this isn’t what happened. What happened was that they decided to invite Ms Goldstein. And then, two days before she was due to speak, and after the event had been advertised, the invitation was withdrawn.

The withdrawal of the invitation was not merely discourteous and impolite. It was deliberately discourteous and knowingly impolite. More than that, it amounted to a gross interference with Ms Goldstein’s freedom of expression. I say this because the grounds upon which the invitation was withdrawn related — or so we are told — to matters that must have been well known to or, easily ascertainable by, the Leeds JSoc officers at the time at which the invitation was originally despatched. These grounds are summarised in a Leeds JSoc press release as having to do with Ms Goldstein’s “links with anti-Muslim propagandists”. I don’t propose here to investigate these links, for the simple reason that they are completely irrelevant. Upon Islam, as upon any other subject, Ms Goldstein is entitled to her views and to express such views publicly. They may or may not be “controversial” — or even (to quote Leeds JSoc) “too controversial”. So what? I am sure that Ms Goldstein, an accomplished lawyer, did not need to be reminded that whatever she was minded to say — had she been permitted to say it — had to be within the law of the land.

Mercifully, in this country (as in the USA), it is still within the law of the land to express in public views that may be considered contentious and even divisive. And if one cannot express controversial, contentious and/or divisive views within the portals of a university, where precisely may one express them? It is here that we reach the nub of the matter, which is that, by their actions, those in charge of the affairs of Leeds JSoc have demonstrated that they have not the slightest notion of what a university is for and what principles underpin its functioning.

So let me tell them. A university exists for the pursuit of truth — no matter how unpleasant, offensive or unpalatable. And, in order that it may pursue the truth, a university exists to protect and facilitate the questioning of received wisdom and the expression of opinions with which others may profoundly disagree. These principles are core to the idea and purpose of a university. They are not negotiable. I am told that some members of Leeds JSoc are congratulating themselves on the fact that no less than 14 members, vice-presidents and trustees of the Jewish Leadership Council appended their signatures to a pitiable letter (published in the JC two weeks ago) expressing confidence in the society and thanking its officers “for simply trying to do the best they can”.

Apart from the fact that, by signing this letter, these 14 grandees have demonstrated their utter unwillingness — or, inability — to comprehend the above underlying issues of principle, I must point out that no less than (by my reckoning) 18 trustees, members and vice-presidents of the so-called Jewish Leadership Council did not sign the letter. Out of this sorry affair, that is the only grain of comfort I can offer. As for Leeds JSoc, the very least its members can do — apart, that is, from offering Ms Goldstein an unequivocal public apology — is to dispense with the services of the current office-holders and replace them with persons who have at least a modicum of understanding of the purpose of a university education.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: London University Considers Stopping Sale of ‘Immoral’ Alcohol on Campus Because it Offends Their Muslim Students

A university is considering ending the sale of alcohol on campus due to concerns from Muslim students.

London Metropolitan University could take action because a ‘high percentage’ of its students thought drinking was ‘immoral’, according to its vice chancellor.

Professor Malcolm Gillies raised the prospect of an alcohol-free campus after gauging the changing values from the influx of new students.

He said it would be unwise to ‘cling’ to a ‘nostalgic’ view where the vast majority wanted alcohol to be available and instead take account of diverging views.

He told MailOnline: ‘I was raising the issue of changing values in student populations and the question of how a responsible university responds.

‘London Metropolitan University is a highly diverse university ethnically and in religious terms. ‘

‘Our students come from all over the world and they come with changing balance of values.

Welcome to the Halal Inn: Britain’s first alcohol-free Islamic pub

‘So the issue of how we cater for those values while still remaining true to being a British university is one of the constant issues any responsible university would be considering.

‘We do have a high percentage of Muslim students — we estimate it may be around 20 per cent for our university.

‘And therefore as most Muslims do look on drink as something which isn’t an acceptable part of everyday life, seeing how do we provide an environment that can respect that, while also respecting values of people such as me who do drink, and who believe drink in moderation is acceptable part — in fact sometimes a good part — of a social community.’

Professor Gillies first raised the subject during a speech to the Association of University Administrators’ annual conference in Manchester on 3 April.

London Metropolitan University was founded in 2002 and has around 30,000 students from 190 countries.

He added: ‘Here’s the problem for London. The majority of our students in London primary schools now have a home language other than English — in other words they come from a very diverse ethnic base.

‘As we go through the next 10 or 20 years in London, we are going to find these cultural values and their differences become more and more important in society.’

Professor Gillies said he would work with the student body to move towards having areas on campus where ‘one serves alcohol and others don’t’, but could foresee a time when the university was an alcohol-free zone.

He added: ‘That’s what education’s actually about, modeling diverse behaviours so we create liberal students in a liberal intellectual environment.’

He questioned whether the university should subsidise student bars, although it was not an issue he felt ‘too strongly’ about, adding: ‘This is about how best you use limited resources to cater to the broadest range of students’.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Mehdi Hasan: A Beacon for Islam

The idiotic Mehdi Hasan has just written a lengthy piece in The Guardian demanding that all Londoners vote for Ken Livingstone in the forthcoming mayoral election. After dismissing Livingstone’s tax avoidance in a few words (yeah, he probably shudda paid more tax), Hasan posits that people have to vote for Ken because if they’re not doing so they’re effectively voting for Boris. He dredges up once more Boris’s remarks about African ‘picaninnies’ with ‘water-melon smiles’, as if this contravention was in some way enough, by itself, to stop anyone voting for the current mayor.

Well, yet again, for the record, let me be absolutely clear about what Boris meant when he made those references: he was being rather bitterly ironic. His comments were directed to two UN workers as he was being driven around Africa witnessing their supposed good works, and the chillingly orchestrated support they were being given at every village. It was a clever, and funny comment, on what he later described as the UN’s ‘neo-colonialism’. It was a sharp comment, in other words, from the left. How do I know this? Because I was sitting with him, in the UN van, when he said it. As is so often the case, a liberal thug has twisted and distorted the very meaning of what Johnson had to say.

But then, reading what Hasan has had to say in the past, you can perhaps understand his contempt for the rest of us kufr scum:

‘The kaffar, the disbelievers, the atheists who remain deaf and stubborn to the teachings of Islam, the rational message of the Quran; they are described in the Quran as, quote, “a people of no intelligence”, Allah describes them as; not of no morality, not as people of no belief -people of “no intelligence” — because they’re incapable of the intellectual effort it requires to shake off those blind prejudices, to shake off those easy assumptions about this world, about the existence of God. In this respect, the Quran describes the atheists as “cattle”, as cattle of those who grow the crops and do not stop and wonder about this world.’

Thanks for that, Mehdi. Ties in nicely with Ken’s wish to make London a beacon for Islam, doesn’t it? Maybe Mehdi himself could be that very beacon.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Popular Vicar Converts to Catholicism… And Takes Half His Flock With Him to Church 500 Yards Away

A vicar led half his congregation in converting to Catholicism after complaining that the Church of England is telling believers in traditional values to ‘sod off’.

Father Donald Minchew was followed by 70 of his flock when he left the Anglican church where he has led services for nearly two decades to join a Catholic church less than 500 yards up the road.

He said the extraordinary leap of faith made him feel like the ‘Prodigal Son’ returning to a church with established beliefs after years of enduring the ‘pick and choose’ attitude of the CofE where congregations are fed on a diet of ‘pap and banality’.

The 63-year-old quit St Michael’s and All Angels parish church in Croydon, south London, to move to neighbouring St Mary’s Church because he opposed many decisions by the General Synod, including the ordination of women priests and bishops.

When he first told his congregation at St Michael’s of his plan during a service there was ‘surprise and astonishment’, he said.

‘They faced a stark choice — to follow me or stay where they were with what was left.

‘I never bullied or pressured anyone to join me. I let them make their own choices.

‘In the end about 70 of the congregation of 120 came with me.

‘They are very brave because they have answered the call of God and done it at great cost, often causing rifts and divisions with family and old friends.

‘The Anglican bishop and Archdeacon of Croydon were extremely understanding and supportive.

‘But from within St Michael’s there were a few false rumours put around to try to keep members of the congregation, including the ludicrous claim that the Catholic church would be ordaining women within a decade.

‘It was a little uncomfortable but I have no regrets.

‘When I was ordained in the Church of England in 1976 there were some things that would never be challenged.

‘But now it just seems that everything has come up for grabs.

‘Those of us who believed in traditional values and opposed the ordination of women and other innovations, who were once an honoured and valued part of the Cof E, are now just being told to ‘sod off’. That’s the bottom line.

‘They all talk of being inclusive and being a broad church when what they really mean is bugger off if you don’t believe in what we believe.

‘Making the move has been like coming home. I feel like the Prodigal Son returning.

‘It is a return to a faith that has fixed values that are not going to change at the next meeting of the General Synod.

‘The Church of England has become like a buffet where you pick and choose which commandments and doctrines you want to follow.

‘We are being fed this pap diet of common worship and banality upon banality rather than the Book of Common Prayer.’

Father Minchew and his followers were received into the full communion at St Mary’s Church last week. Former Anglican bishop Monsignor John Broadhurst received and confirmed the group, who will now form the Croydon Ordinariate.

Father Minchew said 2,000 people attended the mass at St Mary’s on Easter Sunday — more than ten times the congregation he got at his previous church on an Easter Sunday.

He said: ‘In the Catholic Church they take their faith seriously compared to the take it or leave it attitude of the Church of England, where there’s a sense of ‘I don’t fancy it this Sunday.’

The father of four, who is a widower, spent a year deciding on whether to make the move which had serious financial implications for him and his family.

He sacrificed his £11,500-a-year pension — which he was due to start drawing in 18 months — and will have to leave his vicarage home because of his decision.

Parishioner Barry Barnes was one of those who left after 30 years in the congregation at St Michael and All Angels.

He said: ‘We saw where the church was going and decided we could no longer stay in the Church of England.

‘My wife and I decided the Church of England was no longer where we wanted to be and we joined the Ordinariate for a number of reasons.

‘Their attitude towards homosexuality and in light of the possible ordination of women as bishops, neither of us can accept that.’

A spokesman for the Diocese of Southwark, said while they regretted losing Father Minchew and some members of his congregation, ‘we wish them well for their future Christian journey’.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Anti-Terror Hotline Hacked and Conversations Leaked Online

An investigation is under way after hackers targeted Scotland Yard’s anti-terror hotline and leaked conversations between officials on the internet.

An organisation called Teampoison claimed to have carried out the cyber-attack, claiming it was in response to the detention of innocent people on terrorism charges.

The group, which recently claimed responsibility for defacing a Nato website, launched a “phone-bombing” exercise against the anti-terror hotline, making non-stop phone calls for 24 hours.

The activity led to phone-lines at the service being jammed and genuine callers being unable to get through and report potential terror threats.

Hackers then appear to have illegally intercepted an internal call between officials reporting the incident.

The recordings were later posted online in what will be regarded as a major embarrassment of the security services.

In the first recording a voice, which is believed to be generated by a software programme and has an American accent, can be heard speaking to an official at the anti-terror hotline.

The caller claims to be called Robert West and tells the official: “I got some terrorism for you here.”

After explaining that the call was from the group known as Teampoison, he tells the official: “Our philosophy is pretty simple, it’s knowledge is power.”

The call lasts several minutes before an official tells the caller that they are terminating the conversation and passing the details to the FBI.

In the recording between officials, one person can be heard telling another that the hotline received more than 700 phone calls from the group.

He is heard to say: “We have been subjected to a barrage of calls from a group called Teampoison. We have had about 700 calls over the last couple of nights. One of the conversations I had last night was leaked on Youtube.

“Everyone else calling was effectively shut out and could not through at all.”

A statement from the Metropolitan Police Service said: “We are aware of an issue whereby telephone conversations relating to the anti-terror hotline were recorded. Officers are currently looking into the matter and appropriate action will be taken.”

It is the second time in a matter of months that hackers have gained access to private telephone conversations involving Scotland Yard personnel…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: TV Row Mosque Opens School

A MOSQUE where clerics were secretly filmed preaching hate is opening a fee-paying school for pupils from all faiths. Students will be expected to memorise the Koran and wear traditional Pakistani dress. Arabic will be the “key language” taught at the £3,500-a-year Green Lane Masjid Independent Boys’ School. Its annual intake will be 20 students aged 11-16. But they will follow the GSCE curriculum in subjects such as science and geography. Green Lane Masjid in Small Heath, Birmingham, sparked controversy in 2008 when a Channel 4 documentary showed Islamic scholars peddling hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims. Mosque spokesman Ifaan Raza said: “We will be treating the students as young adults and expose them to a variety of opinions and it is up to them to make up their own minds as to what is right or wrong in the eyes of Islam.” Mr Raza said the school did not operate a Muslim-only policy.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Rise of UKIP is a Nightmare for David Cameron

by Iain Martin

How much damage can Ukip do to the Tories? Some Conservative über-modernisers seem to have concluded that the answer is: “not very much”. Given their record, which involved adherence to a strategy which resulted in a failure to beat Gordon Brown outright, I am tempted to conclude that Conservatives should now be very worried indeed. Professor Tim Bale has said that Tories concerned about Ukip are worrying about a “daft distraction” and should aim only for the centre ground. He says the real threat to Conservative prospects will come from Labour. Well, yes, of course the next election will principally be a fight between the two largest parties. But that is only part of the story: elections have sub-plots that can turn out to have a significant impact.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: U-Turn on Mosque Free Parking Plans

PLANS to give a mosque free car parking spaces in Blackpool have been shelved. And the handling of the situation has been blasted as “chaotic” after Blackpool Council withdrew the offer. There was uproar when it emerged the Noor-a-Madina Mosque, on Waterloo Road — which has been refused planning permission by Blackpool Council — had been conditionally offered eight free car parking passes for the Blackpool South car park. But it has now been revealed senior officers and councillors were unaware of the deal — and the mosque has been stripped of the offer. Deputy leader of the opposition, Coun Tony Williams, now wants a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding the offer, and said: “This is totally chaotic — who is running the council? It is a total shambles and a disgrace.” The council has stressed the passes would only have been issued if a planning appeal by the mosque was successful and said the decision was made because other places of worship had been granted similar arrangements in the past.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia: Police Ban International Ultra Rightists’ Gathering

Zagreb, 12 April (AKI) — Croatian police on Thursday banned an international gathering of “ultra-right” political parties, planned for Friday and Saturday in Zagreb, saying it was a threat to public order and could provoke violence.

The gathering was organized by ultra-right Croatian Pure Rights Party (HCSP), but triggered protests by human rights and anti-fascist organizations and center-left government officials.

“We won’t allow the gathering of those who call for violation of constitutional order and snatching a part of Croatian territory,” said prime minister Zoran Milanovic. “Such people can come to Croatia as tourists, but not as political opponents,” he added.

HCSP has invited many European right wing political parties for a conference in Zagreb and an outdoor protest against verdicts by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

The tribunal sentenced a year ago two Croatian generals, Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac to 24 and 18 years in jail respectively, for crimes against Serb civilians during military operation “Storm” in August 1995.

Though the list of foreign attendants wasn’t made public, Milanovic said they were united in “international solidarity” by hatred against minorities, Jews and Roma. “I can only say that it won’t be allowed on the Croatian territory,” Milanovic concluded.

HCSP president Josip Miljak told media he would respect the ban, but vowed to sue the “bolshevik” government to the European court for human rights in Strasbourg. The ban was “final defeat of democracy in Croatia”, he said.

The government “still hasn’t banned the arrival of tourists to Zagreb”, Miljak said, vowing his followers and guests would “gather as tourists and make a stroll through Zagreb”.

Croatia will become a member of the European Union next year, but Brussels has warned Zagreb it must improve its human rights record and is carefully scrutinizing its moves.

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



Kosovo’s Demographic Time-Bomb

The Irish Times Dublin

The continent’s youngest state has the highest unemployment rate. With no chances to travel and few opportunities at home, is Kosovo’s burgeoning youth generation ripe for revolt.

Mary Fitzgerald

At all hours of the day, Pristina’s artists, writers and dreamers gather in the snug confines of Dit e Nat, a book-filled cafe whose name means Day and Night in Albanian. Among them is Astrit Ismaili, a 20-year-old conceptual artist recently returned from a six-month residency in New York. “I was lucky. I got an award to go to the US,” he says. “Most people in Kosovo never get the chance to leave, because of the difficulties getting visas. It’s sad that the talent and ambitions of youth here are much bigger than our reality allows.”

Ismaili’s work explores themes of identity and sexuality through the prism of a society still coming to terms with the aftermath of the war that helped birth Kosovo as an independent state. It can be provocative — one project involved Ismaili posing almost nude against the Pristina skyline — and he knows he is pushing boundaries in what remains a largely conservative place. “If you don’t have the opportunity to experience things outside Kosovo, it can be suffocating here.”

Suffocating is also a word used by an unemployed graduate who gives his name as Dren. Nursing a macchiato at a crowded cafe with a view of the iconic bright-yellow Newborn monument — unveiled when Kosovo unilaterally declared independence in 2008 — Dren gestures around him. “Pristina is full of cafes like this . . . packed with young people like me with nothing else to do but drink coffee all day,” he says bitterly. “We have no work, no prospects and no way out. This is no country for young people.”

Kosovo is, however, a country of young people. Its two million inhabitants make up the youngest population in Europe: every second person is under 25. More than half of the ministers in Kosovo’s government are under 40. The country’s president, a former police commander named Atifete Jahjaga, was just 36 when she was elected last year. And, as officials like to stress when discussing the challenges faced by Kosovo, the state, which celebrated its fourth birthday in February, is the second-youngest in the world after South Sudan.

“You cannot find a single case in history where, within three or four years of independence, the major issues of development in a country were addressed,” says Kosovo’s deputy prime minister, Edita Tahiri. “I would say to our young people, give us time.”

But some charge that the government, which paid Saatchi Saatchi about €5 million to come up with a glossy international advertising campaign trumpeting Kosovo’s “Young Europeans”, is not taking the youth bulge seriously enough. Two years ago, the Kosovo Stability Initiative, a Pristina-based think tank, published, in partnership with Unicef, a report that estimated youth unemployment at 73 per cent.

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

North Africa


Egypt: 2 Dead in Clashes Over Toll Raise

On Libyan border, demonstrators against army

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, APRIL 11 — Two people died and four were injured in clashes between inhabitants of a town on the border between Egypt and Libya and army forces. The clashes broke out last night in Salloum after the decision to increase the toll heavy vehicles have to pay to cross the border. According to al Ahram online, the toll was raised from 450 to 600 Egyptian pounds, around 75 euros. One of the two victims, the online newspaper writes, is a 14-year-old boy. His relatives have not given their permission for a burial and have asked for an investigation. The violence started when armed forces started shooting in the air to disperse demonstrators who were blocking the crossing.

According to some Egyptian media, the protesters have set fire to the military intelligence headquarters and have invited people to take initiatives of non-cooperation starting today.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Devil We Don’t Know, Part 1

The “Arab Spring.” The mainstream media clung to this phrase last year in their giddy haste to promote what they saw as a flowering of freedom-loving, democratic uprisings across the Arab world, for which they were eager to credit President Obama’s famed Cairo speech as partial inspiration. Instead, it unfolded with freedom-hating Islamic fundamentalists seizing political dominance, and the Arab Spring came to look more a Muslim Winter. What went wrong? Bestselling writer and speaker Nonie Darwish is author of the compelling autobiography Now They Call Me Infidel, about growing up in Egypt and her break from Islam, and Cruel and Usual Punishment, an exposé of the stark reality of sharia. Her new book, The Devil We Don’t Know: The Dark Side of Revolutions in the Middle East, explains what really lies behind the Arab Spring movement, and it exposes Islam as the belief system that will inevitably doom those revolutions. This is the first of a two-part interview. Part two will appear tomorrow on FrontPage Magazine.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israeli Minister Offers to Meet Grass on ‘Neutral’ Territory

Günter Grass has compared Israel’s travel ban on him to the methods of East Germany’s Stasi secret police. But Israeli Interior Minister Eli Yishai isn’t budging, saying the decision to declare the German author persona non grata was “better late than never.” He also offered to meet Grass in a “neutral” state.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Palestinians Snub Israel Talks Offer

An offer by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resume direct peace talks without preconditions has been rejected by the Palestinians, who insist Israel must halt settlement construction first.

Israel’s latest offer for direct peace talks has been spurned by the Palestinians, who insist Jerusalem first stop building settlements and release prisoners, according to Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat.

A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas also said on Thursday that Abbas is ready for talks only if Israel halts settlement construction and accepts its 1967 boundaries as the basis for negotiations. Otherwise, Nabil Abu Rdeneh said, any negotiations will “waste time.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Palestine in UNESCO — Ending the State of Confusion

Palestine’s continuing membership of UNESCO has become far more tenuous and now faces increased scrutiny following a decision by the Office Of The Prosecutor (OTP) of the International Criminal Court (ICC) that Palestine is not a State.

Only States can be admitted as members of UNESCO under Clause II Paragraph 2 of UNESCO’s Constitution.

The OTP decision now casts grave doubt on Palestine legally continuing to remain a member of UNESCO.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Qatar: Ad for Qatari Domestic Help Triggers Protests

Insult for emirate’s inhabitants, job too demeaning

(ANSAmed)- DOHA, APRIL 12 — Asking for a citizen of Qatar as domestic help is considered to be an offence and an insult to tradition and the social status women have in the country. This becomes evident from the news reported today by newspapers in Doha about an employment agency that has been heavily criticised for publishing an advertisement for a domestic help, a Qatari citizen. Many citizens have shown their outrage about this initiative, and a candidate for the local elections, Fatima Al Kuwari, has even asked to open an inquiry. Professors, commentators and many other members of civil society have voiced their opinion on the issue in the emirate. “This advertisement is an insult to the dignity of citizens and their social status,” journalist Faisal Al Marzooqi wrote in newspaper Al Arab. “This ad goes against Qatar’s values and traditions. I am certain that no woman in Qatar will respond to this announcement and if someone should do so, we should investigate why and give her all the financial support she needs,” said Abdul Azeez Al Mulla, professor in Qatar.

The citizens of Qatar have no economic problems: they are the wealthiest in the world with a per-head GDP of more than 102,000 USD in 2011. Work seems to be no problem either because of the country’s unemployment rate of just 0.6% in 2011. The government has launched a programme in an attempt to increase the number of Qatari citizens that are hired in the country. Only 20% of Qatar’s population has the country’s passport. The employment agency has offered an apology, admitting that it has made a “mistake”. The agency explained that they were looking for a woman with a residence permit for Qatar, not a Qatari citizen. Still, the press points out, many people are asking for the withdrawal of the agency’s licence.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Lebanese Soldiers Defect, Join Rebels

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, APRIL 11 — Two soldiers from the Lebanese Army have defected and joined the rebels of the Free Syrian Army (FSA). The unprecedented news appeared this morning in the Beirut daily As-Safir, which quoted “well informed” sources close to the two soldiers.

The incident occurred on the Lebanese border of Wadi Khaled, where some of the inhabitants have long held both Syrian and Lebanese citizenship. In the Wadi Khaled border posts, some Lebanese soldiers are deployed that actually live over the border.

Two of the latter, according to the Beirut daily, defected on April 1 while on leave and “did not come back” to their divisions. The Lebanese Army has interrogated the family members of the two soldiers and, a few days later, the commanding officer received a text message on his cell phone: “Our greetings from the Syrian city of Qseir”. Qseir is a town of 40,000 inhabitants in the Homs region bordering Wadi Khaled. “I and my fellow soldier have joined the Free Army and we are fighting against the Syrian regime,” was the second part of the message, according to the newspaper.

As-Safir noted that the Lebanese authorities immediately informed their Syrian counterparts of the defection.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria’s Minorities Unite Against Assad

Syria’s minority groups, until now artificially divided, have united against the Assad regime. If wisely managed, this provisional union could lead to a lasting alliance.

Syria is a diverse country. Located on the border between the Arab and Turkish cultures, the country has seen many different population groups settle there over the millennia.

Most have been followers of Islam, a diverse religion that unites them, but at the same time, also divides them. About three-quarters of Syrians are Sunni Muslims, while about one tenth, including the ruling Assad family, belong to the Shiite Alawites. And then there are the religions linked to Islam, which include Druze, Ismailism, Alevi and Twelver Shiitism, which together make up about 7 percent.

Along with the Muslims, there are also the Christians. They, too, are a mixed group: Greek, Roman Catholic and Syrian Orthodox branches, Maronites, Melkites, Armenian Apostolics and members of the Chaldean Catholic Church. They make up about 15 percent of the roughly 21 million Syrians.

Aside from religious differences, there are also the ethnic minorities: Kurds, Turkmen, Circassians and Armenians, among others. In addition, the last few decades have seen roughly 600,000 Palestinian and Iraqi refugees enter the country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: China Lands 1 Bln USD Wind Power Deal

(ANSAmed) — ISTANBUL, APRIL 12 — By 2023, Turkey is aiming to get 30% of its energy from renewable sources and, in addition to lowering its environmental impact, wants to reduce its dependence on other nations for energy. And so — as Green Chip Stocks website reports — Istanbul’s Agaoglu Group, a construction, tourism, and energy company, is working with China’s Sinovel Wind Group Co. to build a 600-megawatt wind farm. The farm will be worth 1 billion USD and Sinovel will supply, among other things, the turbines and generators. Terms of the deal have not yet been released. Chinese companies like Sinovel are expanding abroad for business, as competition within China is stiff. Just last year Sinovel signed an agreement with Public Power Corp., a Greek company. And as for Turkey, Agaoglu chairman Ali Agaoglu believes that the nation must move forward in clean energy investments at a faster pace in order to reach the 2023 goal of 30%. At the end of last year, Turkey had a total of 1,799 megawatts in wind energy. Agaoglu wants 1,000 megawatts of power in the next three years, and in March the company was dealing with eight investors for a total of 147 megawatts of wind. Agaoglu has licenses for 700 megawatts of wind power that it hopes to set into motion soon.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Peace Convention Begins Today

DUBAI — The second edition of the Dubai International Peace Convention begins today with the objective of sharing ideas and solutions that help cultivate a peaceful world in which the concepts of equality and moderation urged by the Islamic religion are respected. This event, being held under the patronage of His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, envisions that it will enhance religious understanding within an environment characterised by mutual respect. This humanitarian drive will be fuelled by tolerance and benefit all world’s religions, not just Islam.

The convention will host a group of internationally-respected figures who have upheld the Islamic faith through their participation in various lectures, inter-faith dialogues and activities. They are all united under one goal: to encourage pure thought that is not tainted by any fallacies, mistrust or misconceptions of any kind. This is, therefore, an opportunity to spread liberal thoughts and proposals. Among the internationally known names at this conference are Sheikh Abdul Rahman Sudais, Grand Imam of the Grand Mosque; and Sheikh Mashary, guest of honour at the convention. They will lead worshipers in prayer tomorrow. The convention will conclude on April 14.

The other speakers include Dr Zakir Naik, one of the most prominent scholars of Islam and Comparative Religion. He will be joined by great orators like Sheikh Yusuf Estes, Sheikh Abdur Raheem Green, Sheikh Tawfiq Chowdhury, Sheikh Mohammad Sharif, Sheikh Abdul Bari Yahya, Sheikh Hussein Yee, and acclaimed lawyer Mayan Kutty Mather, as well as other leading humanitarians and thinkers.

[…]

[JP note: A bizarre phantasmagoria of the mad, the bad and the ugly. The convention will undoubtedly conclude that only a Pax Islamica can save the world from itself.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UAE: Iranian President’s Visit to Island Raises Tension

‘Flagrant violation of sovereignty, shows Tehran’s falsity’

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has spoken out harshly against the surprise visit by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad yesterday to the Abu Musa island, raising the level of the already tense relations between the Islamic republic of Iran and its Arab neighbours amid the tug-of-war between Tehran and the international community over Iran’s disputed nuclear ambitions. “This was a flagrant violation of UAE sovereignty and its territories,” said UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah Bin Zayed in a statement released by the press agency WAM, calling it an act “of provocation”. Along with two other small islands (Greater and Lesser Tunb) Abu Musa is part of a tiny, rocky archipelago measuring just over 24 square kilometres but rich in energy resources and strategically located at the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 40% of the world’s oil transits.

Beyond the UAE-Iran dispute, Ahmadinejad’s visit (the first ever by an Iranian head of state to the archipelago) has much larger significance considering Tehran’s repeated threats to seal the Strait of Hormuz in response to harsher international sanctions due to its programme for nuclear energy for non-military uses, which the international community instead believes has military ends.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Leading Muslim Public Figure Killed in Moscow

A leading Muslim public figure has been killed in Moscow, RIA Novosti reported citing a police source. Metin Mekhtiev, 33, the former head of international department of the Islamic Cultural Center of Russia, was found dead early on Tuesday, April 10 near downtown Moscow’s Belorussky train terminal, the source said. “He had stab wounds on the neck and face,” he added. According to preliminary data, Mekhtiev — an Azerbaijani national — was killed as he was was waiting for the arrival of his wife and two-month-old son. Mekhtiev was also active in social work with students and youths from the Caucasus region, the Aze.az website said. The head of Moscow’s Islamic Cultural Centre, Abdul-Wahid Niyazov, slammed the murder as “brutal, barbaric and medieval.” He also said a gang of five young people, including a young woman, had attacked Mekhtiev. Police have given no details on a possible motive, but bloggers have speculated on a link to far-right nationalists. Russia has seen a dramatic rise in nationalist sentiments since the break-up of the Soviet Union. Racial violence led to the deaths of 21 people of “non-Slavic appearance” in 2011, a decline from 42 in 2010, according to the Sova organization, which monitors race-hate attacks in Russia.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Punks Against Putin Face Prison Sentence

Human rights activists are calling for the release of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot. The three feminists are facing up to seven years in prison following a performance against Putin in a Moscow cathedral.

In Russia, Vladimir Putin is not to be messed with. Especially not when a protest against the prime minister and future president happens to take place in one of the country’s most important Russian Orthodox cathedrals.

It’s a lesson that Maria Alyokhina, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Yekaterina Samusevich have recently had to learn.

The three members of the feminist punk band Pussy Riot have been in prison since the beginning of March. They face the possibility of up to seven years jail time — all because of a punk performance against Putin at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow on February 21, 2012. They were later accused of trying to denounce the close ties between Russian politics and the Orthodox Church.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Russians Want Dialogue Between Kremlin and Protestors

Protests in Russia over recent elections have impressed the international community. But will they also have a lasting effect on Russian society? That was just one question a DW-Trend poll has sought to answer.

A vast majority of Russian citizens, or 89 percent, is familiar with the national protests against election fraud and in favor of greater democracy, a DW study for April has found. The Ukrainian polling firm IFAK, which DW hired to carry out the inquiry, had surveyed a representative sample of 1,000 people between the ages of 18 and 65 from all over Russia.

As to the protest movement itself, it’s being supported by a large segment of the population and not only by a small minority, as the Kremlin had claimed. According to the poll, 32 percent of Russians support the protests, while 44 percent do not. As such, there is no clear majority opinion. About a quarter of the population remains undecided on the issue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Drug-Resistant Malaria Spreads Across Thailand

MALARIA parasites in west Thailand are becoming resistant to artemisinins — the world’s most effective antimalarial drugs. The march of increasingly drug-resistant malaria across the country has sparked fears that it could reach Africa, where 90 per cent of all malaria deaths occur.

Increasing resistance to artemisinins was first identified in Cambodia in 2006, and is now common along its border with eastern Thailand.

Nicholas White of Mahidol University in Bangkok, Thailand, and colleagues looked for signs of resistance in 3200 patients from clinics on Thailand’s western border. They did so by measuring how long it takes for the number of malaria parasites in a person’s blood to halve. With artemisinin treatment, this should take around 2 hours. In Cambodia, it now takes around 5.5 hours.

On Thailand’s western border, this figure rose from 2.6 hours in 2001 to 3.7 hours in 2010. The percentage of infections that clear very slowly — 6.2 hours or more — soared from 0.6 per cent of all patients in 2001 to 20 per cent in 2010. “If it carries on, we will lose the use of these drugs,” says White.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India: the Baby Killed Because it Was a Girl

Three-month-old Afreen gives up fight for life after being ‘brutalised by her own father’ for not being born a boy

For about a week, she tried hard to hold on and fight hard. But allegedly brutalised by her father for being born a girl, she stood little chance.

Baby Neha Afreen died after a cardiac arrest in a government hospital in Bangalore on Wednesday morning.

The three-month-old baby was admitted to the Vani Vilas Hospital on Thursday night, April 5, with a severe head injury, dislocated neck and bite and burn marks on her body.

Her father Umar Farooq, a car painter, is accused of inflicting the injuries on her because he wanted a male child.

Though Afreen had showed signs of recovery on Tuesday, her condition deteriorated by evening because of repeated convulsions.

‘She was in semi-comatose state since Tuesday evening. We had put her on life support system. Unfortunately, she could not make it,’ said Dr Some Gowda, medical superintendent of the hospital.

The hospital authorities were awaiting a team of doctors from the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences for assistance because the baby had suffered internal head injuries.

But Afreen could no longer fight. She had hurried respiration of 30-40 per minute against the normal 20-25 and also pathycardia, or increased heart rate.

She breathed her last at 11.10 am shortly after a cardiac arrest.

The baby’s mother, 19-year-old Reshma Banu, was inconsolable when the doctors broke the news to her. Afreen was her only child and she had been in a state of shock since Thursday.

Reshma claims that her 37-year-old drunkard husband used to beat her up since Afreen was born.

Last Thursday, he came home drunk in the evening and abused her again for giving birth to a girl.

When Reshma went off to sleep, Farooq is accused of stuffing clothes into Afreen’s mouth to muffle her cries and hitting her with a blunt object.

Reshma, who woke up in the middle of the night, saw the baby suffering convulsions.

She informed her husband, who appeared uninterested. When the baby vomited blood, Farooq fled.

With the help of her neighbours, Reshma hospitalised Afreen. It’s alleged Farooq had assaulted the child twice in the past but Reshma did not complain because she wanted to save the marriage.

Once, he had bitten the baby. On another occasion, Reshma found cigarette burn marks on her forehead and back.

Reshma was initially afraid of approaching the police. The hospital authorities informed the Child Welfare Committee, which prevailed upon her to lodge a complaint against her husband.

Farooq, who went absconding after the alleged assault of his own daughter, was arrested on Sunday and is now in judicial custody till April 21. He will now face murder charges.

The Karnataka state commission for protection of child rights demanded that Afreen’s death be treated as a murder case because the attack on the baby was intentional.

The state human rights commission has sent a notice to Bangalore city police commissioner B. G. Jyothi Prakash Mirji to personally oversee the case and report in two weeks.

National Commission for Protection of Child Rights chairperson Shantha Sinha demanded speedy action against the father.

Killing of the female foetus and the girl child is rampant in India where even the educated and the rich are known to prefer male child.

According to the 2011 Census report, the sex ratio in India stands at 914 females per 1,000 males.

A Unicef report said sex selective abortion by unethical medical professionals has grown into a Rs 1,000-crore industry.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



India: Hang Baby’s Dad, Say City’s Muslim Leaders

Jumma Masjid Imam wishes the man could be stoned so that ‘he knows the pain of burning a young child with a cigarette’

‘I wish we could stone him to death,” said Imam Abdul Khader Shah of Jumma Masjid, Bangalore’s oldest mosque, of the man who brutally killed his three-month-old daughter for not being a boy. When news of Baby Afreen’s death broke out on Wednesday, so great was the anger in the city that even the Imam could not stop his emotional reaction when speaking to Bangalore Mirror. Mincing no words about Umar Farooq, the religious leader said, “He is what we call a zaalim, the most cruel of them all, to kill an innocent child. According to Sharia Law, death by stoning (sansar) is permitted only for adulterers. But I wish we were allowed to stone him to death. He should know the pain of burning a young child with a cigarette when a stone hits him. As the Sharia Law stands, he can be whipped. And this should be carried out so that nobody dares to hurt a child again. Children are God’s gift and we have to accept them irrespective of gender. This man not only killed a child, but also ruined the lives of two women. How long can we stay silent and watch women being treated this way,” the Imam asked.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Muslim Militants Attack Christians, Several Injured

CALCUTTA, INDIA (BosNewsLife) — Christians in India’s eastern West Bengal state were recovering of their injuries Thursday, April 12, after Muslim militants broke up a prayer meeting and beat up believers, including women, local police and Christians said. The March 30 attack in the village of Nutangram in Murshidabad district involved “about 100 Muslim radicals” led by Muslim leader Mohammed Aanu Shaike, local Christians explained.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indian Court Sentences Gujarat Rioters to Life

A court in India has sentenced 18 people to life imprisonment for the murder of Muslims in religious riots in Gujarat state 10 years ago. Five others were given seven years and another 23 were acquitted earlier. The group were found guilty of burning 23 Muslims to death in a house where they had taken shelter from rioting mobs in the village of Ode.

More than 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, died when riots erupted after a train fire killed 60 Hindu pilgrims in 2002. It was one of India’s worst outbreaks of religious violence in recent years. Muslims were blamed for starting the train fire, and Hindu mobs eager for revenge went on the rampage through Muslim neighbourhoods in towns and villages across Gujarat in three days of violence following the incident. A lawyer for the convicted said they would appeal in a higher court.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: British PM Warns of Islamic Extremism on Asian Trip

The Prime Minister has called for democracy and Islam to work hand in hand against extremism, during a landmark speech in Indonesia. David Cameron said the world’s largest Muslim country is proof that the religion is compatible with democracy. But he warned that Islamic extremists must not be allowed to pervert fledgling democracies and persecute minorities. Delivering the speech, Mr Cameron insisted the shift away from authoritarianism made by the world’s most populous Muslim state was an example to those caught up in the Arab Spring. But he also highlighted the dangers facing new democracies such as Egypt, where Islamic political parties have significant support. “Let me be absolutely clear: I am not talking about Islam. Islam is a religion observed peacefully and devoutly by over a billion people,” he told students at Al Azhar university in Jakarta. “And let me also be clear: extremism is not only found among Muslims. But there is a problem across the globe with Islamist extremism which is a political ideology supported by a minority. And this total rejection of debate and democratic consent means they believe that democracy and Islam are incompatible.” Mr Cameron explained that Britain has suffered from extremism and terror, and that Indonesia has become a model country in fighting the problem.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Muslims ‘Must Embrace Democracy’ Says David Cameron

Muslims must embrace democracy and respect the rights of Christians around the world, David Cameron will say.

Speaking in Indonesia, the world’s largest Islamic country, the Prime Minister will urge young Muslims to abandon “the dead-end choice of dictatorship and extremism” by forcing their countries to hold elections. He will claim it would be “the greatest defeat that Al Qaeda could ever suffer,” if more rebel and follow the lead of the young Muslims who sparked the Arab Spring. Mr Cameron will express his concern for the rights of millions of Christians, especially in Egypt, where the Coptic minority say they are facing increasing persecution. In a strong rebuke to Egypt’s powerful Muslim Brotherhood party, Mr Cameron will demand it does not “deny the rights of religious minorities who do not share their specific religious views”. Egypt’s Coptic community, which accounts for 10 per cent of the country’s 80 million population, has been subjected to a continuous campaign of sectarian attacks since the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak last February. Thirteen were killed last May and another 10 two months before in attacks by suspected Islamists.

Addressing students at Al Azhar University, Mr Cameron will use Indonesia as an example of how Islam and democracy can go hand in hand. The country became a democracy in 1998 after years of a military dictatorship. It has successfully fought extremism since a bomb in Bali killed more than 200 in 2002. While praising Indonesia’s efforts to modernise, he will argue that there are still four big “opponents who threaten our shared interests” — authoritarian leaders, corrupt elites, extremists and tribalists. He will say democracy has the ability to defeat these “dangerous foes”, such as the murderous authoritarian regime in Syria, even though they will “do everything in their power to defeat us”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Modi’s Clearance in the Gujarat Riots Case Angers Indian Muslims

A special panel of the Indian Supreme Court probing the deadly 2002 Gujarat riots says there is no evidence that Gujarat’s Chief Minister Narendra Modi had a role in the massacre.

Zakia Jafri, wife of the slain Indian minister Ehsaan Jafri, who was killed in the western Indian state of Gujarat over a decade ago, said she was shocked when the Metropolitan Magistrate M.S. Bhatt read out the findings of the Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) report on the Gujarat bloodbath. The report gave Gujarat’s Chief Minister Narendra Modi a clean chit, saying there was no evidence to implicate Modi and 61 others accused of playing a role in the riots.

On 27 February, 2002, a Muslim mob allegedly set fire to the Sabarmati Express train. The train had been carrying Hindu pilgrims returning from Ayodhya, where 10 years before Hindu nationalists had destroyed the centuries-old Babri Mosque. Then the whole state went up in flames as Hindu extremists allegedly took their revenge on Muslims, killing some 1,000 people, mainly Muslims, in retaliatory attacks. The killing only died down several days later when the army was called in.

Right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) leader Narendra Modi, who was also chief minister of Gujarat at the time, was accused of ordering the police not to intervene.

“I am heartbroken, but I am not going to give up. I will fight for justice as long as I am alive. In the court of the Lord, justice can be delayed but cannot be denied,” Zakia told DW.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Court Shows Displeasure Over Police Official

Islamabad, 12 April (AKI/Dawn) — While hearing a case related to the law and order situation in Balochistan, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry showed his displeasure over the absence of senior police official in the Supreme Court.

A three-member bench headed by the chief justice was hearing the case here on Thursday.

Chaudhry had summoned Inspector General (IG) Balochistan and relevant Superintendent Police (SP) in the court earlier today on an immediate notice.

“If the police officials failed to comply with the court’s order, they will be sent to jail,” he had warned.

He censured the law enforcement agencies for their incompetency in maintaining peace in the province and remarked that the courts are being kept uninformed about the factual details.

“Balochistan is on fire but the officials are mere spectators to it,” Chaudhry remarked.

While talking about the issue of ministers involved in kidnapping for ransom, the chief justice said if Balochistan Home Minister is falsely accusing some ministers for kidnapping cases then the home minister should be arrested.

Seven people have been killed since we came from Quetta,” he observed.

In another relevant development, three people who had been recovered from Kuchlak area were presented before the court.

They narrated their ordeal before the bench and said: “We were abducted from Quetta at night; we were blindfolded and then kept at some unknown location for about 40 days.”

The court issued release orders for the three recovered people and directed the police to safely escort them to their homes.

The court also ordered the police to inform the court before arresting them in future.

The court later summoned Inspector General (IG) Balochistan and relevant Superintendent Police (SP) and a Station House Officer tomorrow.

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



Policy: Bold Strategies for Indian Science

For a nation of its talent and education, India deserves higher scientific standing. It needs clear and honest leadership, not more money, says Gautam R. Desiraju.

When an Indian prime minister publicly admits that India has fallen behind China, it is news. Manmohan Singh’s statement last January at the Indian Science Congress in Bhubaneswar that this is so with respect to scientific research, and that “India’s relative position in the world of science has been declining”, has rung alarm bells. Singh was not springing anything new on Indian scientists; many of us will admit that things are not well. Recognizing the problem is the first step towards reversing this slide.

At present, India has a trickle-down strategy, in which elite institutions are supported in the hope that good science there will energize the masses, and a bottom-up approach, in which the general public is targeted with schemes to popularize science.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China’s Stem-Cell Rules Go Unheeded

Health ministry’s attempt at regulation has had little effect.

Three months after the Chinese health ministry ramped up its efforts to enforce a ban on the clinical use of unapproved stem-cell treatments, a Nature investigation reveals that businesses around the country are still charging patients thousands of dollars for these unproven therapies.

The clinics operate openly, with websites promoting the treatments for serious disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, diabetes and autism, and attract thousands of medical tourists from overseas. They advertise case studies of individual patients who they say have benefited from the treatments, and some have clinics in major hospital complexes, giving them an air of mainstream acceptance. Stem-cell experts contacted by Nature insist that such therapies are not ready for the clinic and say that some may even endanger patients’ health. But the Chinese government is struggling to enforce its ban.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New Sony Chief Reboots Business Strategy, Cuts Jobs and Costs

Change has become the buzzword at the Japanese electronics giant, after its new CEO Kazuo Hirai announced a major restructuring drive aimed at staunching massive losses. Layoffs are part of Sony’s survival strategy. Japan’s electronics maker Sony would cut about 10,000 jobs and shed lossmaking businesses to regain profitability, Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai announced Thursday.

After taking over as Sony CEO from Howard Stringer this month, Hirai said he was prepared to take “painful steps,” aimed at cutting fixed costs in the company’s ailing TV business by 60 percent over the business year starting in March 2013. In addition, operating costs are to be reduced by 30 percent under the restructuring program, costing Sony about $926 million (712 million euros) in the current fiscal year, he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Launches Long-Range Rocket: Reports

North Korea has launched its controversial rocket carrying a weather satellite, South Korea’s Defence Ministry and US officials said.

A spokesman for the Defence Ministry in Seoul told reporters at a briefing that the launch at taken place from North Korea’s Sohae Satellite Launching Station at 7.39am local time and that South Korea and the United States were checking whether it had been a success.

The launch has drawn international criticism and threats to shoot the rocket down as well as sabotaged a food aid deal with the United States.

The Unha-3 rocket took off from a new launch site on the west coast of North Korea, near the Chinese border, and if successful will enhance Pyongyang’s ability to build an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead, critics say.

The three-stage rocket’s flight path will take it over the sea between the Korean peninsula and China, where the first stage is due to splash down. A second stage is due to land in waters off the Philippines.

The launch had been timed to coincide with the 100th birthday celebrations of the isolated and impoverished state’s founder, Kim Il-sung, and came after a food aid deal with the United States had hinted at an easing of tensions on the world’s most militarised border.

North Korea’s government has said the action was part of celebrations and was not a long-range missile test. South Korean President Lee Myung Bak called an emergency Cabinet meeting in response

[Return to headlines]



North Korean Rocket Launch Fails

A North Korean rocket broke apart shortly after being launched from its base today, according to U.S., Japanese and South Korean officials.

Japan’s defense ministry said the rocket flew for just over a minute.

A South Korean defense ministry spokesman said, “The missile separated into several pieces and fell.”

The ministry said the rocket traveled about 70 miles into the air, then split into four pieces and fell. Major parts fell into the North Korean side of the sea and debris fell into the Gunsan Sea off the southwest coast of South Korea.

There were no immediate reports of debris falling onto land.

U.S. officials told The Times that the rocket did not travel as far as a long-range missile tested by North Korea in 2009. The Kwangmyongsong-2 rocket launched in 2009 was said to have traveled about 2,000 miles.

[Return to headlines]



Philippines Withdraws Warship From China Standoff

The Philippines has pulled back its biggest warship from a tense standoff with Chinese vessels. The two countries are trying to avoid an escalation in the conflict over disputed territory in the South China Sea.

Manila withdrew the warship and instead deployed a coast guard vessel to the area, said Philippines Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario on Thursday, adding that China had sent a ship from Beijing’s fisheries bureau.

“We’re watching developments and at the same time we’re pursuing the diplomatic track,” Del Rosario said. “We’re moving forward but it’s still a work in progress.”

Diplomats were apparently trying to negotiate a pragmatic solution to the standoff that would allow both sides to save face.

The conflict began on Sunday when a Philippine Navy plane spotted eight Chinese fishing boots anchored in a lagoon at the Scarborough Shoal, which lies off the coast of the northwestern tip of the Philippine province.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



South China Sea: Common Stance Against Beijing’s Imperialism

Hanoi backs Manila, hoping for a multilateral approach in settling disputes with China. The Chinese Navy has been holding Vietnamese fishermen as hostages for weeks demanding ransom money for their release. Off the coast of the Filipino island of Luzon, the Filipino Navy is confronting Chinese vessels.

Hanoi (AsiaNews) — Hanoi backs Manila, hoping for a multilateral approach to settling conflicts with Beijing in the South China Sea, an area that is at the centre of fierce dispute over resources. This is one of the outcomes of a recent summit in Cambodia by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Mr. Benigno Aquino, president of the Philippines, suggested that the ten-nation association “maintain a common stance” vis-à-vis China, which favours instead bilateral deals with the various stakeholders. Meanwhile Filipino and Chinese warships remain engaged in a naval confrontation off the island of Luzon, a situation that can only increase tensions in the area.

Vietnam accuses the Chinese of holding 21 Vietnamese fishermen it captured inside Vietnamese territorial waters, demanding a US$ 11,000 ransom for each. Vietnam’s appeal for their release has been ignored.

L?c, a fisherman from Lý Son Island, said that people are very angry with the “cruel Chinese”. He insists that the Paracel Islands belong to Viet Nam.

Lê th? H?u, 31, said her husband Nguy?n L?i, 34, was arrested by China’s Navy. “I am worried for the fishermen,” she added, “because they are often beaten by Chinese naval forces.”

The confrontation over resources in the sea now involves India. In the past week, Beijing warned New Delhi that “India should not explore and exploit [resources] in the South East Asia.”

The statement follows a series of agreements signed by the Indian and Vietnamese governments, which grants Indian oil companies exploration rights in Vietnamese territorial waters. In response, New Delhi informed Beijing that the affected area is under Vietnam’s exclusive jurisdiction.

Meanwhile, a high-profile confrontation between Filipino and Chinese warships continue, involving the Filipino Navy’s flagship vessel.

On Sunday, the ship caught eight Chinese fishing boats in Filipino territorial waters, about 120 nautical miles off the coast of Luzon Island. Two Chinese maritime surveillance ships sailed to the disputed area on Tuesday and blocked efforts by the Filipino ship to arrest the fishermen.

On Wednesday, the Chinese embassy in Manila released a statement afternoon insisting the area belonged to China, and ordering the Filipino warship to leave immediately.

The Philippines says it has sovereign rights over areas of the sea within its 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone, and that its position is supported by international law.

Among Asia-Pacific nations, China has the most extensive territorial claims in the South China Sea.

Regional hegemony would be strategically important for Beijing because it would allow it to control the region’s trade and natural resources, such as oil and natural gas.

Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan have challenged China’s expansionist aims, backed by the United States.

In the past few months, a number of incidents have occurred involving warships and fishing vessels from different nations.

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



The Mysterious Fall of China’s Bo Xilai

A political scandal has rocked China: Bo Xilai, former party secretary in Chongqing, has lost his position in the Politburo. Before a change of power this fall, the Communist Party is trying to show a united front.

On Tuesday at precisely 11 p.m. Beijing time, a statement from China’s official news agency Xinhua confirmed the rumors that had been circulating online for days: Bo Xilai, who until mid-February had been Communist Party secretary of Chongqing, China’s largest city, had lost his seat in the Politburo and the Central Committee of China’s Communist Party. Bo had been the charismatic hope of the so-called New Left, the son of a famous revolutionary veteran and figurehead of the upper caste of “princelings,”

With the news, Bo’s meteoric political rise came to an abrupt end. His wife, Gu Kailai, is under investigation for the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood, who was found dead last November in a Chongqing hotel room. According to Xinhua, the two had a business disagreement. The official diagnosis of Heywood’s death was alcohol poisoning, but the body was quickly cremated without an autopsy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


UK: Afghan Refugee Who Said Raping Woman Was Part of ‘Cultural Differences’ Is Jailed for 14 Years

An Afghan man who fled from the Taliban to begin a new life in Australia will spend the next 14 years behind bars after a judge rejected his claim that cultural differences had led to him raping a woman.

Esmatullah Sharifi, 30, was told by Judge Mark Dean in Melbourne that his background as a traumatised Muslim refugee was no excuse for the rape of a drunken and vulnerable teenager.

The judge noted that a psychologist had told the Victoria County Court in Melbourne that Sharifi, who arrived in Australia in 2001, had an ‘unclear concept of what constitutes consent in sexual relationships’.

Rejecting that argument, the judge said Sharifi’s background and flight from the Taliban was not an excuse for violence, telling the Afghan: ‘You well knew the victim was not consenting to the act of sexual penetration you performed.’

It was not the first time that Sharifi had appeared in court on a rape charge — in 2009 he was jailed for a minimum of seven years for the abduction and sexual assault of a woman on Christmas Eve, 2008 — five days after he had raped the teenager.

Already serving seven years imprisonment for that offence, he was now charged with raping the 18-year-old who he had found alone, intoxicated and sitting on the pavement near a nightclub after she had had a disagreement with her friends.

Sharifi, the judge said, had driven from his home that night in December looking for a victim.

He sat down beside the teenager, began talking to her and offered to drive her to a hotel where her friends had moved on to.

But when he drove off in a different direction, the young woman became concerned and texted her friends — until Sharifi took her phone and drove to a dark street.

The teenager cried and asked if he planned to kill her. He replied by putting his hand around her neck and forcing her to remove her clothes before raping her.

‘Your offending is of the utmost seriousness,’ said Judge Dean.

‘You preyed upon a young vulnerable stranger who was alone and intoxicated at night. Your brutal conduct must be denounced by this court.’

Sharifi, who pleaded guilty to rape, will serve a sentence that includes his jailing for the second sexual attack. It was DNA from that second offence that led to him being charged with the earlier rape of the teenager.

With a maximum sentence of 14 years set, he will have to serve a minimum of 11 years and will be eligible for parole in seven years and eight months.

He is likely to be deported back to Afghanistan when he has served his sentence.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Despair is Sometimes the Only Possible Response

There are times when the only appropriate response to events is despair. Yes, this week the European Court of Human Rights approved the extradition to the US of five terrorist suspects. But it’s mystifying how anyone can take cheer. The idea that as a free country we should have such decisions placed in the hands of foreign judges who make their rulings on the basis of a fundamentally flawed convention is so patently unsatisfactory that I cannot, I’m afraid, bring myself to react with anything other than anger to the whole farce.

This is the same court, of course, which has also ruled that Abu Qatada cannot be deported to Jordan. So when it comes to praise for the ECHR’s judgment over Abu Hamza and his colleagues, I say “thanks but no thanks”.

Indeed, any smidgeon of relief brought on by this week’s ECHR ruling is dwarfed by the immigration court victory of Raed Salah. Or, to be more precise, by the reasoning of the judge responsible for Salah’s win, Mr Justice Ockelton, and the outpouring of bile that followed the decision. Central to Sheikh Salah’s case has been his outright denial that his words in a 2007 sermon about children’s blood being used to bake “holy bread” was a reference to the blood libel. The judge found that Salah’s claims were “wholly unpersuasive”. As the judgment put it “We do not find this comment could be taken to be anything other than a reference to the blood libel against Jews.” And yet in the judge’s reasoning, this mattered not a jot. Salah is a welcome visitor to the country.

Decadent doesn’t even come close to describing a state of affairs in which an Islamic preacher can make reference to the blood libel but the judiciary tells him that such remarks are irrelevant to his fitness to be granted entry. According to the judgment, such views are “not at the heart of the appellant’s message” and “it is not easy to see that any reasonable observer would associate the appellant with them in any general sense”. Clearly in Mr Justice Ockelton’s mind it’s unreasonable to associate a man who preaches a sermon based on the blood libel with, er, the blood libel. Go figure.

In the end, Salah himself is an irrelevance. Rabble rousers like him are ten a penny. The importance of his case is symbolic, because it is of a piece with so much else. When the hate preacher Yusuf al-Qaradawi was invited to City Hall by Ken Livingstone, what was his party’s response? To reselect him as its mayoral candidate. When anti-Israel campaigners went on the rampage, destroying the property of a company they claimed has ties to Israel, what was the response of the criminal justice system? Judge Bathurst-Norman did not merely acquit but praised the men. And when Michael Gove earmarked extra funds to protect Jewish children from violent racist attacks, how did a supposedly progressive newspaper — the Guardian — react? By attacking, on entirely fabricated sleaze charges, the role of the Community Security Trust, the organisation responsible for protecting Jews.

As if in an unbroken thread, the CST is under fire again, this time on the back of the Salah appeal judgment, with Mr Justice Ockelton saying that the Home Secretary was misled.

His words have given free rein to a barrage of conspiracists, who are not merely implying but trumpeting the idea that CST — in other words, the Jews — pushed a deceitful agenda to get a perfectly upstanding citizen removed from the UK because he dared to criticise Israel. Yet it wasn’t the CST that pushed the Home Office into anything. It was the Home Office that asked CST for information about Salah. And it was CST who provided the Home Office with the original copy of the disputed 2002 poem in Arabic and English translation. As CST says: “Nobody else provided this information either to the government or to the immigration tribunal, despite the fact that we obtained it all from public sources.” But this is Jews we are talking about, so the default reaction of so many is to push the idea of a conspiracy, whatever the facts.

Despair is, initially at least, an impotent reaction. It doesn’t offer a plan of action. It doesn’t change anything. But until we react appropriately to what is going on around us, we don’t have a chance of changing anything. And I challenge anyone not to despair about the events of this week.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: PM Retreats on Kicking Out Foreign Criminals Including Burglars and Violent Thieves

David Cameron has abandoned a pledge to deport thousands of foreign criminals, including burglars, violent thugs and thieves.

The Tory leader had promised in Opposition to change immigration rules so prisoners from outside the EU were automatically sent home — even those serving short jail terms.

Currently around 7,000 foreign offenders a year escape deportation because they have been handed a sentence of less than 12 months.

But the Government has admitted it is only tightening the rules so that drug dealers serving less than a year are automatically deported.

It means other offenders, including violent thugs and benefit fraudsters, will still not be kicked out. The revelation comes after MPs criticised the UK Border Agency — responsible for processing foreign criminals and illegal immigrants — for not doing enough to kick out ex-prisoners.

Its report showed just 40 per cent of foreign criminals released from prison in a border scandal six years ago have been sent home.

In 2006, 1,013 foreign nationals were let out without being considered for deportation. By November last year, just 397 had been deported and more than 50 had still not been found.

Mr Cameron’s pledge came four years ago after a leaked internal prisons memo showed immigration officials had ‘no interest’ in deporting short sentence prisoners.

In response, a Tory policy document, called Prisons With A Purpose, published in 2007, said: ‘We will accelerate the deportation of foreign national prisoners before the end of their sentences and extend automatic deportation to non-EU prisoners serving less than a year.’

The Lib Dems have also pledged in the past to toughen up the rules.

It is estimated extending deportation to ‘all eligible foreign nationals’ would mean an extra 7,000 would face proceedings every year. In 2010, 5,342 foreign criminals were sent home, compared with 5,530 in 2009.

In a Parliamentary written answer, the Home Office said the 12 months or less policy remains in force.

Immigration Minister Damian Green added that an exception is made if a judge recommends an offender for deportation, or if the criminal has a string of convictions within the past five years.

In addition, drug offenders face automatic deportation for any crime other than possession, even for short sentences.

Tory MP Priti Patel, who asked the question, said: ‘The Government should make every effort to ensure all foreign criminals are deported. They are a huge drain on the criminal justice system.’

Ministers recently toughened rules on sending home European Economic Area nationals.

They are deported if they have served a custodial sentence of 12 months or more for drugs, violence or sex crimes and of two years for all other offences.

Home Secretary Theresa May has expressed her determination to stop foreign criminals using human rights laws to remain in the country.

In 2010 nearly 400 won appeals against deportation using Article 8, the right to a private and family life.

In the past decade, the number of foreign nationals in prison in England and Wales has nearly doubled to 10,866 in last December.

A UK Border Agency spokesman said: ‘Those who come to the UK must abide by our laws. We will always seek to deport any foreign criminal sentenced to more than 12 months as quickly as possible.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: The Sheikh, The Minister and the Shambles

by Marcus Dysch

From start to finish Raed Salah’s deportation has been an utter shambles. The latest ruling — this time from the Upper Immigration Tribunal — arguably only deepens the sense that the authorities have lost control of the case. For Mr Ockelton and his colleagues to have ruled that the blood libel was invoked and admitted that Jews would be offended by Sheikh Salah’s comments, but ultimately found in his favour, only adds to the confusion. What is certain is that this result is truly embarrassing for Theresa May, the Home Office and the UK Border Agency. Once upon a time a minister defeated in this way, and after so many catastrophic errors, would have honourably offered the Prime Minister their resignation.

This result is bound to have implications for the government’s Prevent counter-extremism strategy. At the very least, the next time the Home Secretary is asked to bar a similarly controversial figure she is sure to think back to Sheikh Salah. As the legal wrangling and mud-slinging erupted around him, Sheikh Salah quietly sat it out, waiting for his day in court. YouTube videos show him preparing dinner in the garden of the north west London home at which he was effectively under house arrest, seemingly oblivious to the shockwaves his arrival in Britain had caused. His supporters will see the evidence put before the tribunal as proof of their belief that the government is engaged in a seedy conspiracy, and will use it as further fodder for their misplaced attacks on CST. In reality, Sheikh Salah’s distorted victory is simply the inevitable result of a compilation of cock-ups.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Distant Galaxies Confirm Accelerating Growth of Universe, Dark Energy

The pesky reality that the universe’s expansion is accelerating — an observation that prompted astronomers to invoke an unknown entity called dark energy to explain it — has been further confirmed by new measurements.

Scientists have used cosmic magnifying glasses called gravitational lenses to observe super-bright distant galaxies, giving a measure of how quickly the universe is blowing up like a giant balloon. They found, in agreement with previous measurements, that the universe’s expansion is indeed speeding up over time.

The first measurement of this phenomenon, based on exploding stars called supernovae, was made in the 1990s.

“The accelerated cosmic expansion is one of the central problems in modern cosmology,” Masamune Oguri, of the University of Tokyo’s Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe, said in a statement. “In 2011 the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to the discovery of the accelerated expansion of the universe using observations of distant supernovae. A caution is that this method using supernovae is built on several assumptions, and therefore independent checks of the result are important in order to draw any robust conclusion.”

Scientists still don’t have much of an idea why the universe is not only expanding doing so ever-faster. The gravity of all the mass in the universe would be expected to pull everything back inward, so scientists call whatever force is counteracting gravity “dark energy.”

“Our new result using gravitational lensing not only provides additional strong evidence for the accelerated cosmic expansion, but also is useful for accurate measurements of the expansion speed, which is essential for investigating the nature of dark energy,” Oguri said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120411

Financial Crisis
» 10 Wealthy Italians Have as Much as 3 Mln Poor Ones
» Deal on Taxation of Greek Money in Switzerland Soon
» ECB Says Can Tackle Symptoms But Not Cure Crisis
» Emerging Asia Maintains Boom Despite Western Woes
» Euro-Armageddon is Still Coming, And It’s the Result of Europe’s Insane, One-Size-Fits-None Economic Policy
» European Nations Must be ‘Prudent’ In Comments on Spain: PM
» European Markets Dump Italian and Spanish Assets
» Italy: Nerves Calm Slightly on Italian Bonds
» Italy: Monti’s Mission Hanging on a Thread
» Markets Wary Despite Extra Round of Spanish Cuts
» MEP Cries Foul on Greek Pay-Out to Political Parties
» Nokia Sinks on Profit Warning
» Portuguese Banks Borrow Record Amount From ECB
» Spain: Catalan Municipality Votes Yes on Cannabis Fields
» Spain Can Cope Without Bailout: EU
» UK: IMF Warns of £750bn Pensions Time Bomb
 
USA
» 19 Things That the Talking Heads on Television Are Being Strangely Silent About
» Apple Sued Over Ebook Pricing
» Apple Rolls Past $600-Billion Mark in Tuesday Trading
» Astonishing Video of California Man So Distracted by Sending a Text He Walks Into a Bear
» Attack of the Killer Fungi: Rising Threat Worries Scientists
» Bad Amendments of the 20th Century
» Can Pro-American Right Unite to Defeat Anti-American Left?
» Cops Can Request a Copy of Your Complete Facebook Activity
» NAFTA Partners Take Steps to Boost Trilateral Relationship
» Obama Receives Brazil’s Ex-Terrorist President
» Obama-Romney Race Gets Underway
» Obama Looks to Make Romney the Villain
» Obama Administration Proposes New Effort to Curb Antibiotic Use on US Farms
» Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us
» Trayvon Martin: Disinformation, Fake Reporting Fuelling the Illusion of an ‘American Race War’
» Wounded Romney Set to Take on Obama
» You Can Keep the Change, Part 1
» Zimmerman’s Fla Arrest Follows Puzzling Disappearance; Experts Say He Should Stop Talking
 
Canada
» Royal Canadian Mint to Create Digital Currency
 
Europe and the EU
» Austria: Klimt Up Close
» Bossi Hands in His “Irrevocable” Resignation to the Federal Council; The Party to be Run by a Triumvirate
» Brussels Transport Strike Extended After Fatal Attack
» Bucharest Still Angry About Schengen Refusal
» Central Europe: Fortunately: We Still Have Strudel
» Cinema Confronts the Fear of Islam
» Denmark: “We Need a Real Press!”
» Dutch School Kids Copy US Gang Culture
» France: 300 Women Fined Under Full-Face Veil Ban
» France: Arab Nudes Defy Taboos in Paris Show
» France: Disneyland Paris Turns 20, With Mixed Results
» German Car Makers Race to New Records in March
» Germany: ‘A Koran in Every Home’ Project Makes Waves
» Italy: Lega: Bossi to Maroni, Clean-Up Already Underway
» Italy: Bossi Considers Running Again
» Italy: Probe Into Northern League Finances Opened in Genoa
» Italy: No-TAV Protesters Occupy the Turin-Bardonecchia Highway
» McDonald’s Looks to Lure French With ‘McBaguette’
» Netherlands: Rijksmuseum Distances Itself From Its Islam Cartoon
» Netherlands: Thousands of Volunteers Prop Up Police Forces
» Northern League to Stay Until Padania is Free, Bossi Says
» Norway: Breivik’s Strategy: Secure a Jail Term
» Real Estate: Huge Slump in Property Sales in Cyprus
» Swedes Face Toilet Paper Shortage in Wake of Strike Threat
» Swiss Magazine Under Fire for ‘Racist’ Roma Cover
» Switzerland: Magazine Sued for Racial Incitement
» UK: David Cameron ‘Must Retreat’ On Charities, Senior Tory MPs Warn
» UK: How Dare a Foreign Court Tell us What to Do?
» UK: The Honey Trap: How the Demise of Britain’s Bees Could Cost US £1.8billion a Year
» UK: The Brave Agent Who Exposed Hamza Only to be Betrayed by MI5
» UK: Woman Burglar With 207 Convictions is Finally Jailed… But She Laughs at Two-Year Sentence and Shouts: ‘Cushty’
 
North Africa
» Libya: Inquiry Threatens European Oil Firms
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Stakelbeck: Israel a Safe Haven for Christians Amid Muslim Persecution
» Territories: Netanyahu Studying Outpost Legalisation
 
Middle East
» Iran Cuts Oil Exports to Germany
» Siemens Allegedly Sold Surveillance Gear to Syria
» Syria: Damascus Accuses Turkey of Arming and Sending Rebels
 
Russia
» Russian MPs’ Walkout Mars Putin Unity Call
» Ukraine: Tymoshenko Calls Murder Allegations ‘Absurd’
 
Caucasus
» Russia Kills Nine Rebels in North Caucasus: Report
 
South Asia
» Airbus Gets Multi-Billion-Dollar Order From Indonesia
» India Says EU Tax a ‘Deal Breaker’ For Climate Talks
» Suu Kyi Meets With Myanmar President
 
Far East
» 42,000-Year-Old Baby Mammoth on Show in Hong Kong
» North Korea Gives Current and Former Leaders New Titles
» Philippines, China Look for Diplomatic Solution to Naval Standoff
 
Australia — Pacific
» Serial Rapist’s Afghan Ethnicity No Excuse, Says Judge
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» 159 Rhinos Poached in S. Africa This Year: Minister
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Immigration
» Anger as Swiss Visa Rules Are Relaxed
» Belgium Must Shut Down Anti-Immigrant Website: NGOs
» Finland: Higher Threshold for Some Family Reunification
» Germany: Fear of Honor Killings: Immigrants Flee Families to Find Themselves
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» Agenda 21, The End of Western Civilization, Part 4
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» Ehrlich, Hansen, Lovelock: We Must Build “An Entirely New Kind of Global Society”

Financial Crisis


10 Wealthy Italians Have as Much as 3 Mln Poor Ones

The young ever poorer, wealth only accumulated; Bank of Italy

(ANSAmed) — ROME — In Italy the ten richest individuals have as much wealth as the 3 million poorest ones, according to a survey carried out by the Italian central bank analysing wealth and wealth disparities in Italy. The amount of assets and wealth held by the ten richest individuals in Italy is worth about 50 billion euros, according to the latest rankings drawn up by Forbes last month.

The following are Italy’s “Uncle Scrooges”: 1) Michele Ferrero: the owner of the group involved in the production of sweets boasts assets of 14.2 billion euros and is the richest person in the country, 23rd in the world. 2) Leonardo Del Vecchio: the founder of the eyewear giant Luxottica is in 74th place worldwide, with a fortune totalling 8.6 billion euros. 3) Giorgio Armani: the designer has brought the world of fashion into the rankings of the wealthiest in Italy. Armani holds assets worth 5.4 billion. 4) Miuccia Prada: also of the fashion world, Forbes considers her the 79th most powerful woman in the world. Founder Mario’s granddaughter has assets worth 5.1 billion euros. 5) Paolo and Gianfelice Rocca: the Rocca brothers inherited 10% of Techint Financial, which controls Tenaris, active in energy engineering. They are worth 6 billion and 4.5 billion euros. 6) Silvio Berlusconi: the former prime minister and founder of Mediaset and Fininvest is “only” sixth, with 4.4 billion in assets. 7) Patrizio Bertelli: Miuccia Prada’s husband and managing director of the group, he has 2.77 billion euros in assets. 8) Stefano Pessina: former nuclear engineer and owner of Alliance Unichem, merged with the British pharmaceuticals giant Boots in 2006. He holds assets worth 1.95 billion. 9) Benetton: the Venetian family and owner of the clothing brand of the same name is present in its entirety: Carlo, Gilberto, Giuliana and Luciano boast assets worth 1.5 billion each. 10) Mario Moretti Polegato: the top-ranked member of Geox, despite the decline in share prices, is among the wealthiest Italians, with 1.35 billion in assets.

In Italy the young are ever poorer and wealth in general consists ever more of assets accumulated in the past and ever less from income. Over the past few years wealth distribution has been inverted between age groups: today — unlike in the past — the elderly are richer than the young, who find themselves unable to accumulate. The data from the survey show a generational conflict in terms of income but also concludes that the level of disparity is on a similar level to that seen in other European countries, though in Italy the ten wealthiest individuals have wealth more or less the equivalent to 3 million of the poorest Italians. In 2010 the overall wealth of households was at about 8.638 trillion euros, over 7.5 times the value of 1965 measured at 2010 prices, with an annual growth of 4.6%, but with a reduction compared with 2009 values with 8.767 trillion.

As concerns per capita, wealth has gone from 21.875 euros in 1965 to 142.481 in 2010, substantial growth which stopped abruptly after 2007, when the value reached almost 150,000 euros per person. The loss in three years was almost 5%. Between 1965 and 2010, the ratio between wealth and GDP almost doubled (from 2.7 to 5.6), according to the survey, underscoring that over this 50-year period wealth had grown more than production; wealth coming from the past is ever more sizeable than that which it is possible to earn through daily labours. A significant data shows the change in wealth between age categories: while in 1987 young households (under age 34) were at average levels (on the basis of 100, the level was 82.5), beginning in 2000 these households saw their condition grow much worse (61.7 in 2008), while the opposite happened for the elderly (from 65.5 to 100.2). Also changing was the distribution between social classes: between 1987 and 2008 net household wealth of the working class went from 61.9% to 44%, and all other categories declined though maintaining a fairly high level, except for pensioners who saw an increase from 61.6 to 97.8, although the figure was flat in 2008. As concerns territorial distribution, there was a clear worsening for conditions in the South (from 80.2 to 69.6) and an improvement for all the other geographical areas.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Deal on Taxation of Greek Money in Switzerland Soon

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Greece’s government said an agreement with Switzerland on the taxation of Greek deposits may be signed before the coming elections, in about a month’s time, as Reporter.Gr wrote. Finance Minister Philippos Sachinidis said on TV talks would begin in coming days, while the ministry was conducting cross-checks to identify transfers of money that was not taxed in Greece. He expressed reservations regarding the size of Greek deposits abroad. Sachinidis said there was no current consideration to fully compensate the private smallholders of Greek bonds after the haircut (PSI). “There are many legal problems… PSI is still developing. We must protect the country against legal complications,” he said. Regarding the competitiveness of the Greek economy, Sachinidis said it was a chronic problem of the country and that, “driving salaries as low as Bulgaria’s will not solve the problem”. Finally, he expressed the view that, “if all goes well, we anticipate the country will return to growth in 2013”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



ECB Says Can Tackle Symptoms But Not Cure Crisis

As fresh concerns over Spain and Italy rattled the markets Wednesday, the European Central Bank insisted it can only treat the symptoms of the eurozone debt crisis, but not cure it.

“The ECB has addressed the immediate symptoms but monetary policy cannot cure the underlying causes,” said ECB executive board member Benoit Coeure.

After three months of relative calm, the sovereign debt crisis returned with a vengeance this week, with stock markets plunging and borrowing costs for Spain and Italy jumping as doubts grow over their ability to control their finances.

In Italy, borrowing costs — which have been on the decline in recent months — doubled in a closely-watched auction of short-term debt Wednesday while Spanish 10-year bonds were flirting with rates around 6.0 percent, a level many consider unsustainable for the long term.

Talking to a conference in Paris, ECB board member Coeure insisted that the rise in Spanish bond yields did not reflect Spain’s economic fundamentals.

And seeing that the political will was there in Madrid, he saw no reason why the situation in Spain would not normalise, he argued.

Both Germany and France similarly felt that market fears over Spain’s finances was “excessive,” insisting that Madrid was pursuing the proper reforms.

The ECB’s Coeure said that taking the eurozone as a whole, “the situation in the financial markets has reached a turning point but recent market developments have highlighted that it remains fragile.”

Given the signs of fresh tension, there have been calls for the ECB to come to the rescue.

The central bank has acted as firefighter from the very beginning of the crisis, taking a series of what it calls “non-standard” measures to prevent a collapse of the single currency.

On top of conventional monetary policy moves such as cutting interest rates to historic lows, it has also bought up the bonds of debt-stricken countries.

And most recently, it pumped more than 1.0 trillion euros into the banking system via two so-called long-term refinancing operations (LTROs) in a bid to avert a dangerous credit squeeze.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Emerging Asia Maintains Boom Despite Western Woes

The emerging economies of Asia are seen shifting toward more sustainable growth based on domestic demand instead of exports, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has said. But rising inequalities urgently need to be fixed.

Despite a slowdown in economic expansion, Asia’s emerging economies would continue to grow by a robust 6.9 percent this year, supported by rising domestic consumption, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a regional report published Wednesday.

The bank surveyed 45 newly industrializing countries except Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore South Korea and Taiwan, saying that growth in these emerging economies will “cool somewhat” before “edging higher” to 7.3 percent in 2013.

Continued uncertainties in the eurozone and a further decline in global trade would pose the biggest threats to the growth outlook, ADB Chief Economist Changyong Rhee said in a statement.

“At the same time, Asian economies are gradually diversifying into new markets, private consumption is trending up and the region has limited direct financial exposure to the eurozone, which should help sustain its momentum,” he added.

Growth in China — the world’s second largest economy — is seen slowing by the bank to 8.5 percent this year and 8.7 percent in 2013 compared with 9.2 percent in 2011.

The region’s other emerging giant, India, is expected to grow by 7.5 percent in 2012, while southeast Asia’s economies are forecast to expand 5.2 percent — up from 4.6 percent in 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro-Armageddon is Still Coming, And It’s the Result of Europe’s Insane, One-Size-Fits-None Economic Policy

By Daniel Knowles

Austerity is not helping — it is pushing Spain ever further into recession, as any undergraduate economist could have predicted.

And the thing is, this is entirely the result of Europe’s insane, one-size-fits-none economic policy. Before the start of the economic crisis in 2007, Spain had a government budget surplus of 2.2 per cent of GDP — so the problem is not Spanish government overspending. Rather the country was importing vast amounts of capital — just as every country in southern Europe was. For Germany to run its absurd 5 per cent of GDP export surplus, someone else had to run an import deficit, and so Spain stepped up, just as Ireland did, and Greece did, and Italy did.

All that money inflated southern European wages and prices until they popped. The problem with the eurozone is fundamentally one of competitiveness. In short, Germany has too much of it; its wages are too low and its current account surplus is consequently too big. Since all things are relative, the result is that Spanish, Italian, Greek and Irish wages are all too high. Within the euro, either German wages must go up, or Spanish ones down. The Germans won’t budge, and so the Spanish must beat down wages with unemployment instead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Nations Must be ‘Prudent’ In Comments on Spain: PM

(MADRID) — European Union countries must be “prudent” when making comments about Spain’s economic problems, Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said Wednesday, following criticism from France and Italy.

“We all have our problems and we are working to find a solution to ours and also to help the eurozone. We expect that other countries should do the same, that they be prudent in their statements,” he said.

Rajoy did not specify exactly who he was referring to in his comments to lawmakers from his conservative Popular Party, saying only that he was talking about “statements made in the European Union on the part of certain leaders”.

In recent days both French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti have made critical comments about Spain’s handling of its debt crisis.

Late last month Monti said the European Union was worried about “contagion” from Spain’s debt crisis. He later apologised.

Last week Sarkozy warned French voters Thursday they should re-elect him as president to pursue his cost-cutting plans or face the kind of debt crises that have gripped Spain and Greece.

Spain’s bulging deficit, fragile banks as well as a slide into recession at a time of soaring unemployment, have sparked fresh concern on the markets about the sustainability of its rising sovereign debt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Markets Dump Italian and Spanish Assets

Following a couple of relatively calm months, fears of a double-dip recession grew Tuesday when investors dumped Italian and Spanish bonds over renewed fears about the impact of austerity measures. Italian stocks fell almost 5%, to their lowest since November, and Spanish stocks closed at their lowest since March 2009.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Nerves Calm Slightly on Italian Bonds

Spread back below 400 ahead of key auction

(ANSA) — Rome, April 11 — Sovereign-debt fears calmed slightly on Wednesday as the spread between Italian and German 10-year bonds dropped to 375.3 points after breaking the 400 mark a day earlier. The yield, another key gauge of market confidence, went down to 5.53% at the close of trading as investors eyed a key three-year bond auction Thursday where Italy plans to offer up to five billion euros in State paper. The Milan bourse earned 1.6% and closed at 14,689 points after big banking losses pulled it down 4.98% Tuesday, the worst in Europe.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti’s Mission Hanging on a Thread

La Stampa, 11 April 2012

“Markets slump, spread skyrockets”: La Stampa resumes Tuesday’s financial scare which saw stocks plunge all across Europe. Italy was at the crest of the panic wave, with Milan losing almost 5 per cent and the spread between its bonds and Germany’s benchmark bund crossing the 400 point threshold, with Italian 10-year bonds selling at 5.66% against the latter’s 1.65%.

PM Mario Monti attempted to dispel fears and blamed Spain’s enduring economic troubles and weak international growth. According to the Turin daily, he has also privately lashed out at the Italian entrepreneurs’ association, which has shaken the government by criticising its labour reform for being too watered down and compliant to trade union demands. Writing in La Stampa, Bill Emmot, former editor in chief of The Economist, says –

It would be wrong to pay too much attention to daily or weekly market movements, as they have more to do with animal psychology. […] But behind them lies a substantial truth: neither Europe nor Italy’s sovereign debt problems have been solved. If recession in Italy or Spain is slightly worst than expected, they will fall short of their deficit reduction targets. That will call into question the issue of political will. […] Monti’s reforms have been huge compared to those of previous governments, but not are not adequate to the task he faces. He started a modest liberalisation program, gave a mild stimulus to the forces of competitivity, and launched a labour reform that will not make history. No bond buyer could get the feeling that Italy’s growth perspectives have been radically transformed.

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



Markets Wary Despite Extra Round of Spanish Cuts

BRUSSELS — The EU has welcomed Spain’s plan to cut another €10 billion off its yearly budget, but the measure failed to stop speculation the country could be next in line for a bail-out.

Olivier Bailly, a European Commission spokesman, on Tuesday (10 April) said Brussels “welcomes” the move because it “confirms both the Spanish government’s determination to implement the necessary reforms, and furthermore the Spanish government’s commitment to respect the 5.3 percent (of GDP) deficit (limit agreed) for 2012.”

He approved the move despite the fact the new cuts are mainly to hit education and healthcare.

The €10 billion savings are to come on top of €27 billion of cuts promised on 30 March. But Spain’s financial credibility has taken a battering in recent months, with the new centre-right government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy forced to admit the country’s economic situation is worse than previously thought.

Markets on Tuesday pushed the costs of 10-year Spanish bonds to almost 6 percent, prompting press to ask whether Madrid will need a Greek-type bail-out.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



MEP Cries Foul on Greek Pay-Out to Political Parties

BRUSSELS — The leader of the Liberal group in the EU parliament, Belgian MEP Guy Verhofstadt, has asked the European Commission to justify letting Greece dish out €29 million to its top political parties.

The Greek parliament on Monday (9 April) narrrowly passed the measure by 155 votes out of 300.

The money is to go to the five parties which made the parliamentary threshhold in the last elections in 2009: the centre-left Pasok, the centre-right New Democracy, the far-right Laos and the far-left Syriza and KKE factions.

Pasok interior minister Tassos Yiannitsis said the funds will be used for campaigning in upcoming elections in May and for unpaid wages and other debts, such as to the state social security fund, the IKA.

The move caused controversy in Greece, which is currently slashing public sector wages and jobs in line with EU-demanded austerity measures.

Inside Pasok itself, MP Anna Delara said: “Given the unprecedented economic crisis the country is experiencing, the parties should be asking for their funding to be reduced drastically.” Another senior Pasok MP, deputy defence minister Yiannis Ragousis, abstained from the vote and tendered his resignation.

The leader of New Democracy, Antonis Samaras, did not turn up for the vote. Laos and Syriza voted against the measure, while KKE MPs voted only that they were “present” at the decision-making process.

The smaller parties which do not qualify for the cash — including Verhofstadt’s Liberal group ally, the Democratic Alliance — also complained.

For his part, Verhofstadt in an open letter on Tuesday asked EU commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and economic affairs commissioner Olli Rehn whether EU institutions — which monitor how Greece spends its money under the terms of the Greek bail-outs — agreed the move.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nokia Sinks on Profit Warning

Nokia Corp. Wednesday warned that intense competition, particularly in India, the Middle East, Africa and China would hit its first quarter performance, sending its shares plunging. Chief Executive Stephen Elop said the profit warning shows that the business is still in transition.

“Within our Smart Devices business unit, we have established early momentum with [the Lumia brand of mobile phones using Windows software] and we are increasing our investments in Lumia to achieve market success,” he said.

Mr. Elop announced last year that the company would ditch its own smartphone software Symbian and join forces with Microsoft Corp. to build a new family of phones using Microsoft’s Windows operating system. The strategy overhaul aims to recover ground Nokia has lost to rivals like Apple Inc. with its iPhone and phones based on Google Inc.’s Android software.

Nokia shares were down 18% in recent trade.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portuguese Banks Borrow Record Amount From ECB

Banks in bailed-out Portugal borrowed a record amount from the European Central Bank in March, against a backdrop of rising debt in a sharply slowing economy, official data showed on Monday.

The banks’ ECB borrowings jumped to 56.3 billion euros ($73 billion) last month from 47.5 billion euros at end-February, the Bank of Portugal said.

The previous record of 49.1 billion euros came in August 2010 as the eurozone debt crisis worsened after the EU and International Monetary Fund had to rescue Greece in May that year.

The ECB began providing easy funding for the eurozone banks as the crisis deepened following that bailout and it has continued to offer money on generous terms so as to ease their liquidity problems.

Other figures meanwhile from the Bank of Portugal showed that corporate bad debt hit 8.28 billion euros in February while sour loans to households totalled 4.87 billion euros.

After Ireland in late 2010, Portugal itself needed an EU-IMF bailout in May 2011, adopting a series of tough austerity measures in return for the aid.

The measures have hit activity badly, however, and last month the Bank of Portugal said the economy would now shrink 3.4 percent this year, worse than its previous estimate for a contraction of 3.1 percent.

The economy shrank 1.6 percent last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Catalan Municipality Votes Yes on Cannabis Fields

Referendum on measures to tackle the current economic crisis

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, APRIL 11 — The people of the small rural Catalan village of Rasquera which counts 900 souls, have pronounced themselves as a majority in a referendum in favour of a cannabis cultivation project within a plan of measures to tackle the current economic crisis. The “Yes” as reported by El Pais online, has won with 56% of the votes. The left wing council which governs Rasquera, a town which survives mainly through work in the fields and the production of olive oil, has a public debt of 1.3 million euro and intends to accept the offer from the ABCDA (Barcelona Association for Cannabis and Personal usage) a club whose therapeutic and entertainment purposes counts five thousand members who organise the individual consumption of cannabis allowed by the Spanish government in a collective way. The ABCDA has proposed to pay the municipality thirty-six thousand euro for the permission to cultivate cannabis for non commercial purposes and inject 550,000 euro a year for the rental and management of the land.

The project should create 50 new jobs in the town. The initiative is being examined by the Catalan prosecutor’s office, as law number 368 of the Spanish penal code prohibits cultivation, elaboration and the trafficking of drugs. This particular case would be instead dealing with cultivation for personal usage.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain Can Cope Without Bailout: EU

(BRUSSELS) — Spain does not need a bailout or outside financial help to recapitalise its banks, the European Commission said Wednesday despite surging borrowing costs fuelling fears Madrid may need help.

Spain has unveiled a tough austerity budget to fight off eurozone debt contagion, but the rate demanded by investors to lend to Madrid surged to the worrisome 6.0 percent level on Wednesday before retreating to 5.9 percent.

When asked if the commission still stands by its assessment that Spain does not need a bailout to recapitalise struggling banks, spokesman Olivier Bailly told a news briefing: “Yes we do.”

The European Union’s executive arm again applauded the Spanish government’s efforts to reduce its public deficit and debt, including a “very substantial” reform of the labour market.

The measures are “very demanding and difficult” but necessary, Bailly said, adding that Brussels is waiting for the budgets of Spain’s autonomous regions by the end of April to fully assess the country’s efforts.

Spain has vowed to cut its public deficit — the shortfall between revenue and spending — to 5.3 percent of GDP in 2012 and 3.0 percent in 2013 after allowing it to run over target to 8.5 percent last year.

After Greece, Ireland and Portugal received bailouts, analysts have warned that Spain could be next in line as it battles to overcome the crisis amid a recession and the eurozone’s highest unemployment rate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: IMF Warns of £750bn Pensions Time Bomb

Britain’s ageing population is threatening a pensions time bomb that could cost as much as £750billion, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

The IMF said yesterday that even a slightly faster than expected increase in life expectancy could impose a huge new financial burden on Western economies such as Britain. “The time to act is now,” it said. Governments and the financial sector have consistently underestimated how quickly average lifespans will rise, IMF researchers found. They believe it has been routinely understated by about three years, which could render public finances unsustainable, they warned.

For Britain, the IMF calculated that on the “not unreasonable” assumption that the entire cost would fall on taxpayers, the country’s public debt would rise from 76 per cent of gross domestic product to as much as 135 per cent. In today’s money, that additional cost would be about £750?billion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


19 Things That the Talking Heads on Television Are Being Strangely Silent About

If the talking heads on television don’t tell us about something that happens, does it make that event any less real? Of course the answer to that question is quite obvious, but unfortunately way too many Americans allow their realities to be defined by what they hear from the mainstream media.

Way too many people use phrases such as “if that was true I would have heard about it on television” to deflect conversations that are starting to become uncomfortable. Critical thinking is a skill that is in short supply in America today, and most Americans seem content to let their televisions do their thinking for them. Sadly, the pretty people on television do not spend a lot of time talking about the things that are truly important. Instead, they love to talk about the latest celebrity scandal and they love to divide people into groups and get them fighting with one another. In this day and age, it is absolutely critical that we all learn to think for ourselves. The talking heads on television are concerned with keeping their bosses happy and with keeping the ratings up. Most of them are not really concerned about what happens to you. They just want you to keep watching them so that they can continue to earn their inflated salaries.

Unfortunately, most Americans seem perfectly content with the “infotainment” that they are getting from the major news networks, so major changes to the mainstream media are not likely to happen any time soon.

For those wanting something different, you will have to seek out alternative sources of news (such as this website) that are willing to discuss the truly earth shattering events that are continually taking place all over the globe.

So what are some of the things that the mainstream media has been ignoring?

The following are 19 things that the talking heads on television have been strangely silent about…

#1 Strange Things Happening On The Sun

A lot of really weird things have been happening on the sun lately. For example, recently there was a tornado on the sun that was five times larger than the earth. The following is how this solar tornado was described by a recent Wired article [url].

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Apple Sued Over Ebook Pricing

Apple colluded over ebook pricing with publishers including HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin, Simon & Schuster and Hachette, a US lawsuit alleges.

The United States government sued Apple and the publishers in a New York district court, claiming the publishers colluded to fix ebook prices, rather than allowing retailers to set them. Simon & Schuster, Hachette and HarperCollins settled their suits today, two people familiar with the matter said, but Apple and Macmillan have refused to engage in negotiations and deny they colluded to raise prices for ebooks. The two firms will argue that pricing agreements between Apple and publishers enhanced competition in the ebook industry, which was dominated by Amazon.com.

The US Justice Department is probing how Apple changed the way publishers charged for ebooks on the iPad, Bloomberg reported. The Justice Department said it would announce an “unspecified” antitrust settlement today. Penguin Group is also reported to be preparing to fight the US Justice Department in court if necessary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Apple Rolls Past $600-Billion Mark in Tuesday Trading

US consumer electronics giant Apple is now worth over $600 billion. Already the world’s most valuable company, it reached a new all-time high in early trade on Tuesday, and an end to the rise is not in sight.

Apple continued its success story on Tuesday by crashing through the $600-billion (459 billion-euro) barrier for the first time in its history.

Company shares hit $644 a piece in early trading, up 1.2 percent from Monday’s close. Apple stocks have thus risen by a staggering 59 percent since the start of the year. Analysts have interpreted the continued rally as a sign that stocks have been undervalued relative to the company’s even more enormous profits.

The most recent increase in share value has been fueled by reports of another successful quarter and announcements that Apple will start putting its $97.6-billion cash hoard to use this summer by paying a dividend and buying back a considerable amount of shares.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Astonishing Video of California Man So Distracted by Sending a Text He Walks Into a Bear

Texting while walking down the street can be dangerous — traffic, lamp posts and even pot holes can lead to accidents.

But for one California man the danger was even bigger.

TV helicopter crews in California managed to capture an oblivious phone user walking into the path of a 500lb black bear.

The homeowner calmly walks towards the giant animal, engrossed in his mobile.

However, just feet before he reaches it, he notices the huge bear — and turns and runs in the nick of time.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Attack of the Killer Fungi: Rising Threat Worries Scientists

An unprecedented number of diseases caused by fungi have been causing some of the most severe die-offs and extinctions ever witnessed in wild species and jeopardizing crops to boot, scientists now report.

Fungi are wiping out amphibians on several continents, decimating bats in eastern North America, contributing to the disappearance of bees dubbed colony collapse disorder, and killing corals and sea turtles.

They are even threatening humans, if indirectly, by attacking crops. Fungi and fungilike organisms called oomycetes can cause significant losses to rice, wheat, maize, potatoes and soybeans, according to the researchers who write that the problems “vary regionally but pose a current and growing threat to food security.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bad Amendments of the 20th Century

At the dawn of the 20th Century, the U.S. Constitution had been unchanged for more than 40 years since the amendments of 1865-1870 that prohibited slavery. But then the country panicked. Fearful of the shift from an agrarian to industrialized society and the movement of people from the country to the city, the United States 100 years ago experienced a crisis of confidence that led to something called progressivism. Progressivism was the belief that the government could and should mandate something called the public good as opposed to traditional values of limited government and individual responsibility.

One of the ways that this manifested itself was the creation of the Federal Reserve System in which the federal government would retain some quasi-ownership of the nation’s banks, and would retain the right to intervene into economic affairs as a matter of public policy, but really political influence. All these things began under Republican Theodore Roosevelt and Democrat President Woodrow Wilson, the first progressive president who ushered in Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter and finally Barack Hussein Obama, and the long national nightmare of progressive (socialistic) politics.

Let the history lesson begin:

Amendment 16 — Income Taxes, Feb. 2, 1913.

This gave Congress the authority to collect taxes on income. There are several historians who question whether this amendment was actually legally adopted. But that’s another story.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Can Pro-American Right Unite to Defeat Anti-American Left?

Almost sixty-percent of GOP primary voters voted for someone other than Mitt Romney, making Romney the likely nominee, but with the support of only about forty-percent of primary voters. That’s the bad new…

The good news is that many of those primary voters were democrats, independents, communists and libertarians who crossed party lines to disrupt the GOP nomination process — not Republicans or Conservatives. Due to the stupidity of the Republican Party and their suicidal open primary process in which anyone, and I do mean anyone, democrat, liberal, progressive communist, illegal alien… ANYONE can vote in the GOP primary.

[…]

Leftist anti-American communist thugs know that this is war. Whites may not be at war with blacks, but many blacks sure are at war with whites. Christians and Jews may not be at war with Radical Islam and atheists, but atheists and Radical Islam sure is at war with both Christians and Jews. The ninety-percent of Americans who don’t belong to labor unions may not be at war with labor unions, but the labor unions certainly are at war with all free-market Americans, especially taxpayers. Don’t forget that the unions now control the voting booths.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cops Can Request a Copy of Your Complete Facebook Activity

If police officers were to file a subpoena for your Facebook information, they would receive a printout of the data from the social network. This printout would be so detailed, complete and creepy that you should strive to be a good law-abiding citizen, just to prevent it from ever existing.

We have just learned about the true nature of Facebook’s responses to subpoenas thanks to documents uncovered by the Boston Phoenix, an alternative weekly.

While researching a story about a man dubbed the “Craigslist Killer,” reporters at the Phoenix had access to “a huge trove of case files released by the Boston Police Department.” And in the process of sifting through all of those documents, they discovered the Boston Police’s subpoena of the suspect’s Facebook information— as well as the data provided by the social network.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



NAFTA Partners Take Steps to Boost Trilateral Relationship

While bilateral initiatives have dominated North American issues over the last couple of years, the trilateral relationship has suffered. With a series of high-level meetings, the U.S., Canada and Mexico are taking steps to boost the NAFTA partnership. First, the defense ministers met to discuss shared continental security threats.

This was followed by a leaders summit which pledged to deepen trade, regulatory, energy and security cooperation. The recent meetings have caused some to once again take notice of the incremental efforts to merge all three countries into a North American Union.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Receives Brazil’s Ex-Terrorist President

Would Obama receive Bin Laden in the White House if the terrorist had been elected President of Saudi Arabia?

Of course not. But this week, he is hosting this week a terrorist who is just as anti-American as Bin laden was, the head of a government that employs former terrorists who committed crimes against American citizens. Her name is Dilma Rousseff, President of Brazil.

Dilma was part of a terrorist communist organization known as VAR-Palmares, whose goal was the establishment of a Marxist dictatorship in Brazil, funded and controlled by Fidel Castro.

Dilma confessed to keeping machine guns and plastic bombs under her bed for use by her buddies. Among other crimes, her organization robbed banks, exploded bombs on the street and killed people in cold blood. Most of the terrorists are now employed as ministers, heads of large state companies or influential politicians.

They also killed foreigners such as Major Edward Ernest Tito Otto Maximilian Von Westernhagen and a 19-year-old British sailor named David Cuthberg, besides dozens of Brazilians.

But their most heinous crime was perhaps the murder of American Captain Charles Rodney Chandler. Hero of the Vietnam War, he came to Brazil to study Sociology and Politics at the Alvares Penteado Foundation, Sao Paulo.

[Return to headlines]



Obama-Romney Race Gets Underway

With Rick Santorum’s departure from the Republican primaries, Mitt Romney is the main challenger to U.S. President Barack Obama. Now it’s Romney’s turn to play his trump card.

It is hard to imagine any situation by the end of August other than Mitt Romney becoming the Republican nominee for the U.S. presidency. For weeks, the former governor of Massachusetts has gained delegates’ votes in the primaries, along with the support of Republican Party leaders. Rivals Rick Santorum, the former Senator of Pennsylvania, Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Ron Paul, the Texas Congressman, have lagged far behind.

More than any other, the arch-conservative Santorum dealt Romney one setback after another during the campaign. Santorum forced the moderate Romney to adopt increasingly conservative views in order to compete for Santorum’s supporters. The campaign took on an especially negative tone and was full of personal attacks. None of this worked to Romney’s advantage as he tried to win over centrist voters but lost plenty of sympathy points.

In a direct comparison between Romney and U.S. President Barack Obama, Obama currently comes ahead in almost every respect. A majority of respondents to the latest opinion poll by the Washington Post and ABC News said Obama comes off as more likable and arouses more enthusiasm. The majority also said Obama is more consistent on his views, cares more about women’s rights, is a safer bet in the international arena, supports the middle class and understands the financial problems of average people.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Looks to Make Romney the Villain

“And this election will probably have the biggest contrast that we’ve seen maybe since the Johnson-Goldwater election — maybe before that.”

— President Obama talking to donors at a fundraiser in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.

President Obama will continue today in his opening salvo against presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney, attacking tax policies that allow investors, including the very rich, like Romney, to pay a 15 percent tax rate on income from their portfolios.

Obama has been holding up billionaire Nebraska investor and big Democratic donor Warren Buffett as the role model for the super-rich, as Buffett advocates the idea of raising the tax rate for top earners.

From a policy prospective, this is part of an overall Obama effort to promote “fairness” by increasing taxes on top incomes. Aside from increasing taxes on investment revenue, Obama seeks to reduce deductions for charitable donations by high earners and, most centrally, to raise income taxes for individuals earning more than $200,000 and families taking more than $250,000.

The millionaires tax would only raise a bit more than $1 billion a year, but Obama hopes that if he can win re-election campaigning for that, he will have won a mandate for a tax proposal aimed at increasing the burden on the top quartile of earners.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Administration Proposes New Effort to Curb Antibiotic Use on US Farms

The National Pork Producers Council questioned the guidance’s rationale and said it would disproportionately hurt small and rural farmers who don’t have easy access to veterinarians to oversee their use of antibiotics.

“The guidance could eliminate antibiotic uses that are extremely important to the health of animals,” council President R.C. Hunt said in a statement. “FDA did not provide compelling evidence nor did it state that antibiotics use in livestock production is unsafe.”

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]



Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us

Privacy is eroding fast as technology offers government increasing ways to track and spy on citizens. The Washington Post reported there are 3,984 federal, state and local organizations working on domestic counterterrorism. Most collect information on people in the US. (Source)

Here are thirteen examples of how some of the biggest government agencies and programs track people.

One. The National Security Agency (NSA) collects hundreds of millions of emails, texts and phone calls every day and has the ability to collect and sift through billions more. WIRED just reported NSA is building an immense new data center which will intercept, analyze and store even more electronic communications from satellites and cables across the nation and the world. Though NSA is not supposed to focus on US citizens, it does. (Source)

Two. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) National Security Branch Analysis Center (NSAC) has more than 1.5 billion government and private sector records about US citizens collected from commercial databases, government information, and criminal probes. (Source)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Trayvon Martin: Disinformation, Fake Reporting Fuelling the Illusion of an ‘American Race War’

In the wake of the Trayvon Martin shooting and the ensuing media circus, a new beast has reared its ugly head — this time in the form of media disinformation and race-baiting reports threatening to propel America in the direction of a new race war.

On Saturday April 7th, journalist Michael Miller’s Miami New Times blog clumsily ran with a report entitled,”Armed Neo-Nazis Now Patrolling Sanford, Say They Are “Prepared” for Post-Trayvon Martin”.

The Miami New Times report claims that National Socialist Movement’s mascot, Jeff Schoep, dubbed “The Hollywood Nazi” because of his adherence to TV stereotypes, is leading armed Neo-Nazi patrols of Sanford, Florida to protect white residents from black violence. But there’s only one problem — it isn’t actually happening. Infowars.com contacted the Sanford Police Department on Sunday, looking for confirmation on the Miami News Times story, but according to the department’s office of public information, “We can confirm there have been no reports of any Neo-Nazi, or armed Neo-Nazi patrols in Sanford.”

The Miami New Times have since updated their article to retract their earlier reports of armed Neo-Nazi patrols in Sanford.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Wounded Romney Set to Take on Obama

Rick Santorum has withdrawn from the Republican primary race, putting an end to a race that left many observers scratching their heads. It was a bruising battle for presumed nominee Mitt Romney, leaving him weakened as President Barack Obama goes on the attack.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



You Can Keep the Change, Part 1

Ultimately, what background training was used by President Obama to deceive the masses who love their freedoms and rights to elect a man to the Office of the President of the United States, whose obvious goal is to deny them their freedoms and rights? Simply speaking, the easiest way to describe President Obama’s background is to research the man who has become the driving force in his life. Of course, this man is not the man that most people would expect. It is not the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, even though he has definitely influenced President Obama. The man who has influenced President Obama more than anyone else was Saul Alinsky, a Marxist community organizer.

[…]

Now, since it is obvious that President Obama was influenced by Saul Alinsky, it is very important to know more about the man who influenced President Obama, in order for all Americans to get into the psyche of the President who may ultimately destroy America from within. Of course, the best method to learn about Saul Alinsky is to discuss parts of his 1971 book entitled Rules for Radicals. In fact, the opening page dedication should present the crux and truth of the matter. It reads, “Lest we forget at least an over-the-shoulder acknowledgment to the very first radical: from all our legends, mythology, and history… the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively that he at least won his own kingdom — Lucifer.” (1) Therefore, as written in John 8:32, “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” As a result, based just on the dedication, the rest of Rules for Radicals must proclaim an ideology that would be harmful if applied to a nation’s political structure. Sadly, this Marxist book has become America’s new political guide. Prayerfully, the next political guide will not be the Communist Manifesto.

Why did Mr. Alinsky write Rules for Radicals? According to the Prologue, it was written for the following reason:

[…]

Of course, most American do not want capitalism to be replaced by socialism and or communism. But, once the process of power has gained control of a community or a government, it might just be too late. As Mr. Alinsky stated in Rules for Radicals,

“From the moment the organizer enters a community he lives, dreams… only one thing and that is to build the mass power base of what he calls the army. Until he has developed that mass power base, he confronts no major issues… Until he has those means and power instruments, his ‘tactics’ are very different from power tactics. Therefore, every move revolves around one central point: how many recruits will this bring into the organization, whether by means of local organizations, churches, service groups, labor unions, corner gangs, or as individuals.” (1)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Zimmerman’s Fla Arrest Follows Puzzling Disappearance; Experts Say He Should Stop Talking

PMAP SANFORD, Fla. — The neighborhood watch volunteer who shot Trayvon Martin to death had been out of touch and, his ex-lawyer says, “a little bit over the edge” before his arrest on a second-degree murder charge.

As George Zimmerman turned himself in Wednesday in the Feb. 26 shooting of the unarmed black teen, experts offered this advice: Stop talking.

“My advice to the client would be, ‘Save it for the trial. It can’t help you.’“ said Roy Kahn, a Miami defense attorney.

The 28-year-old Sanford man was in custody in Florida after a puzzling disappearance that had his lawyers expressing concern for his health and announcing they couldn’t represent him anymore. Zimmerman had called special prosecutor Angela Corey, his former lawyers said, had an off-the-record chat with a Fox News Channel host and put up a website asking supporters for money.

“It would not be in a client’s best interest to give any statement before it’s his time to testify at trial,” Kahn said. “For him to give a statement, since he already has given an interview to the police, any additional statement at the State Attorney’s Office would just create the possibility of him creating conflict with his previous statements.”

Zimmerman’s new attorney, Mark O’Mara, said after his client’s arrest Wednesday that Zimmerman “is very concerned about the charges, but he is OK.”

“I’m not concerned about his mental well-being,” O’Mara said.

Former lawyers Craig Sonner and Hal Uhrig on Tuesday portrayed Zimmerman as erratic, said he hadn’t returned their calls and texts and was buckling under the pressure that has built in the month since the shooting.

Jack Schafer, a professor at Western Illinois University and a former FBI behavioral analyst, said Zimmerman’s behavior shouldn’t cause undue concern. After all, Schafer said, he wasn’t charged with any crime and was free to go wherever he wanted after he spoke to authorities after the shooting.

“If I were him, I’d go somewhere in hiding,” said Schafer. “His life is at risk, not by jurisprudence, but by angry people who are rushing to judgment.”

Leslie Garfield, a Pace University law professor in New York, said Zimmerman’s behavior over the last 48 hours should not affect his prosecution.

“Whatever else goes on behind the scenes before charges aren’t really a factor,” she said. “All that should matter is what his intentions were at the time of the shooting.”…

[Return to headlines]

Canada


Royal Canadian Mint to Create Digital Currency

The Royal Canadian Mint wants to get rid of pocket change — and it’s enlisting hacker-types for help.

Less than a week after the government announced the penny’s impending death, the Mint quietly unveiled its digital currency called MintChip.

Still in the research and development phase, MintChip will ultimately let people pay each other directly using smartphones, USB sticks, computers, tablets and clouds. The digital currency will be anonymous and good for small transactions — just like cash, the Mint says.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austria: Klimt Up Close

Paintings by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt are among the most expensive in the world, up there with Picasso and co. During the 150th anniversary of his birth, admirers get a close-up view of his famous Beethoven Frieze.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bossi Hands in His “Irrevocable” Resignation to the Federal Council; The Party to be Run by a Triumvirate

“I’m resigning for the good of the movement and the activists; my priority is the good of the Northern League, but they’re sorely mistaken if they think I intend to disappear.

MILAN — Exactly 20 years on from the 1992 elections, the Northern League’s first real political victory, Umberto Bossi has resigned. The investigations into the Northern League treasurer, Francesco Belsito, being carried out by the public prosecutor’s offices of Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria, caused the party leader to stand down, and he resigned as party secretary during the federal council meeting on Thursday. His “irrevocable” decision was accepted by the federal council, who will replace the secretary with three prince regents, entrusted with the interim running of the movement.

THE TRIUMVIRATE — There will in fact be a triumvirate at the head of the party, composed of the coordinator of the national branch offices, Roberto Calderoli; the former interior minister, Roberto Maroni (who is meeting Bossi in via Bellerio in Milan on Friday for a private talk); and the MP from Veneto, Emanuela Dal Lago. “I’m resigning for the good of the movement and the activists. My priority is the good of the Northern League, and continuing the battle”. These are the words with which Umberto Bossi left his post as party leader. The council nevertheless rewarded him for his service, appointing him party chairman in place of Angelo Alessandri. This appointment will allow him to continue to take part in the meetings of the federal council. Bossi commented that “If you make a mistake, you have to pay for it, regardless of who you are”. Later, in an interview with the editor of LaPadania Stefania Piazzo, Bossi pointed out that “Nobody asked me to resign. I decided to myself, because I was in the way, but the fact that I resigned doesn’t mean I’m disappearing from the scene. They are sorely mistaken. I’m staying in the Northern League, whether as a grassroots activist or secretary, I will always be ready to fight for the cause”. He continued: “As from tomorrow, they can call me an activist, or not even that; just a supporter”. As far as regards the investigations, Bossi’s views are clear: “this is clearly a manoeuvre to attack me and the Northern League”. And as far as regards the conflict with Maroni, he clarified: “It’s not true that Maroni’s a traitor”…

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



Brussels Transport Strike Extended After Fatal Attack

Brussels public transport workers decided Tuesday to extend their strike by at least two more days, keeping buses, trams and metros idle for almost a week after a colleague was fatally beaten. The work stoppage, which was on its fourth day, will continue until at least Thursday, the same day as the funeral for a supervisor who died after being punched in the face following an accident between a bus and a car.

The government announced Monday plans to deploy 400 extra police officers in Brussels and recruit 50 agents for the public transport system following Saturday’s assault, but it will take months to materialise. But unions demanded quicker action to stem what they see as an alarming number of attacks on public transport workers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bucharest Still Angry About Schengen Refusal

The new Dutch ambassador to Romania has been waiting for months to present his credentials to President Traian Basescu but so far, the Romanian leader has not found time to receive the Dutch diplomat.

Because he has been unable to present his credentials, Matthijs van Bonzel is not officially allowed to call himself ambassador. The situation is so unusual that the Dutch Labour party has asked Deputy Foreign Minister Ben Knapen for an explanation. The chair of the Romanian-Dutch Chamber of Commerce in Bucharest has also raised the issue with Dutch politicians.

Diplomats speculate that the cold shoulder from Bucharest is due to the Dutch refusal to allow Romania to join the Schengen Area, a treaty zone comprising the territories of 26 European countries that have abolished internal border controls. The Hague claims that Bucharest isn’t ready to join the area but the Romanian government claims that they have fulfilled all the criteria laid down in the treaty. Bucharest says the Dutch minority cabinet has been hijacked by its parliamentary backer, the right-wing Freedom Party.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Central Europe: Fortunately: We Still Have Strudel

Ekonom Prague

In the wake of the fall of communism, in 1991, Prague, Warsaw, Budapest and Bratislava formed the ‘ Visegrád’ Group. Inspired by a 14th Century alliance of the same countries aimed at fostering trade with Western Europe, the modern Visegrád Group’s objective is to foster integration into Western Europe and to give the group political heft. But some twenty years later, each country appears to be following a different piper.

Tomáš Krejcí

Thinking about what might, today, unite the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary, only one idea came to mind: with only a few variations, a few layers of flavoured puff pastry dough wrapped around apples, cinnamon and raisins. That’s the secret of grandmothers in Prague, Bratislava, Warsaw and Pest.

Only a few people are today capable of finding on the map the exact location [Visegrád, in Hungary] where, in 1335, the kings of Poland, Bohemia and Hungary met. Twenty-one years ago, the Visegrád Group [Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia] was inaugurated in great pomp. The member states shared a past, a pro-western European outlook and the aspiration to a sense of security guaranteed by joining NATO.

Czech children no longer understand Slovak

Although the four countries have, since then, joined the West’s structures, it seems, over time, always more difficult to find their common denominator. Many supranational firms make no difference between the West and the East of Europe. It can happen that Prague will have to submit to London or that Istanbul takes control of Budapest. The banks have settled their regional headquarters in Vienna.

Poland claims, by right, to be equal to France in terms of size and importance. Back home [in the Czech Republic], we are looking to the other side of the English Channel. As for the [Slovak] dream of a new Switzerland, it is fading because, among other reasons, in the deep forests of the Alps you do not risk running into a Gorilla [a recent major Slovak political scandal].

The Hungarian economy’s current difficulties do not favour optimism about the prospects for financial markets in the neighbouring countries.

Central Europe’s identity is becoming more and more diluted in the well-known melting pot of global culture. Those who are nostalgic for the days when German was the region’s lingua franca are forced to note that today, in the ski resorts, Austrians, Hungarians and Slovakians order “two small beers” [in English in the original].

Today, Czech children no longer understand Slovak; the language is no longer being used in the Czech media. And you [Czech readers], when exactly was the last time you went to see the latest Polish or Hungarian film to come out?

One of the aims of the meeting of the three kings at Visegrád, in 1335, was to create an anti-Habsburg coalition. The actual Euro-American Visegrád Group has no common foe. If it came to discretely disappear, no one would notice. We can only hope that strudel, at least, will stand the test of time.

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



Cinema Confronts the Fear of Islam

The Toulouse killings have reignited the debate on integration of Muslims in Europe. The issue is also being tackled by contemporary film-makers.

“In recent years, in France, the climate has deteriorated badly. Religions — and in particular Islam — are stigmatised and exploited for the sake of winning votes”, Adi, who was born in France into an Algerian immigrant family, told swissinfo.ch.

“At one time people used to ask me what nationality I was. Today they just want to know if I am Muslim.” Used as a bugbear by some political parties and media, transformed from a private matter into a public problem, the Muslim religion has become for many immigrants a place they can find their identity.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: “We Need a Real Press!”

CT-Interview with Lars Hedegaard on Mohammed cartoons, Denmark as a role model and one Million Euros

As a small country, Denmark is not very influential within the European Union. But ever since then there appeared the Mohammed cartoons, the country became the focus of international attention. Citizen Times Editor in Chief Felix Strüning spoke with the Dane Lars Hedegaard, president of the International Free Press Society, on developments in his country, the chances of a peaceful solution to the problem of Islam and what he would do with one million Euros.

Citizen Times: Mr. Hedegaard, six years ago, the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Postenpublished the famous twelve Mohammed cartoons. Kurt Westergaard, one of the artists, still needs police protection. So, how is the mood in the Danish population right now?

Lars Hedegaard: There are some indications that parts of the public are getting tired and would dearly like to return to a state of “normality”. In early March the leading PC-paperPolitiken even claimed that the debate over Islam and immigration is over — which is exactly what the paper would like to happen.

However, we will probably never get back to the cosy and warm welfare state we knew just a few decades ago. And it has little or nothing to do with what Danes do or say. As one of the world’s leading Islam scholars Bernard Lewis pointed out back in 2006, the fact that Islamic states and fanatics all over the world would raise hell over a few drawings indicates that they already consider Denmark to be a part of the dar al-Islam, i.e. that part of the world where sharia law reigns.

They consider us to be a conquered country and those of us who refuse to accept this new state of affairs are considered as rebels against the theocratic order they want to impose. For the time being, people may be tired of discussing Islam and the demographic changes that are taking place in our country. But this debate is bound to return with a vengeance as more and more people realise what is happening to our country.

Citizen Times: In October 2011, the Danish Government changed after ten years of successful politics under Rasmussen. Do you already feel differences under the current leftwing and socialist government?

Lars Hedegaard: Yes, certain changes are obvious. Before the election the winning left-wing parties claimed that they would not deviate from the immigration policies introduced by the former centre-right government. They broke that promise — as they have broken practically every promise they made.

So now we are back to practically unfettered immigration. At the same time the Socialist government has made it more lucrative for immigrants to be on welfare rather than working.

Citizen Times: You are the president of International Free Press Society (IFPS) and connected to politicians like Geert Wilders, activists like Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff and Organizations like the U.S. based MEF of Daniel Pipes. What is your key role and how does the IFPS function?

Lars Hedegaard: The IFPS is actually a small group of people acting in an advisory capacity for those seeking our advice. We also keep in touch with like-minded people all over the Western world, i.e. people who will stand up for freedom and especially freedom of expression. My main job is to be President of the Danish Free Press Society, which has existed for more than eight years. It is a membership-based organisation with an elected Board of Directors and our sole purpose is the defence of free speech. Other than that our members are free to voice any opinion they hold — as long as they do not advocate violence or anything totalitarian. We welcome people of all religions and political persuasions.

Citizen Times: More generally, how can we improve the situation with Muslim migration in Europe?

Lars Hedegaard: The basic task is to make people understand what Islam is all about. That it is not a religion in our traditional sense of the word. It is more akin to a political ideology that is totally alien and antagonistic to the tenets of Western civilisation. Until we understand this basic fact, we will have no idea how to help Muslim immigrants to integrate and eventually assimilate to the nations that have let them in.

Citizen Times: Was the latest Danish immigration policy an example for the European Union?

Lars Hedegaard: No. The immigration policies of the former government were widely believed to have been very restrictive. That was not the case. Long-term they hardly made a dent in the rapid demographic transformation of our society, which is leading to the creation of immigrant enclaves more or less outside mainstream Danish society…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Dutch School Kids Copy US Gang Culture

Primary schoolchildren in a suburb of the southern Dutch city of Den Bosch are imitating the violent practices of the North and Central American gang MS-13, parents have been warned. School heads and social workers described in a letter to parents how schoolchildren were copying MS-13’s initiation ritual, in which a group of children beat up a would-be gang member for 13 seconds, or force them to steal something.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: 300 Women Fined Under Full-Face Veil Ban

One year after France introduced a law banning women from wearing full-face veils in public, officials report that around 300 have been fined. The ban on wearing the niqab in any public place was introduced on April 11th 2011.

It is illegal for any woman to wear the veil except when they are at home, worshipping in a religious place or travelling as a passenger in a private car.

Wearing the veil can lead to a fine of €150 ($200) and forced attendance at a citizenship class.

Interior ministry officials reported that “in one year there have been 354 police checks and 299 fines issued,” reported Le Parisien newspaper.

At the time of the law being passed, officials estimated that around 2,000 women were wearing the full-face veil.

In January, interior minister Claude Guéant told parliament that “the number of women wearing the veil has fallen by half” since the law was introduced.

The law remains controversial, with several groups continuing to oppose it.

Rachid Nekkaz of the group “Touche pas à ma Constitution” (Don’t Touch my Constitution) claims that 367 women have been fined and questioned in police stations for “between one and a half and three hours.”

Two-thirds of the women questioned are divorced or single, according to Nekkaz. He believes this proves the women are not wearing the veil “by force of a husband.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Arab Nudes Defy Taboos in Paris Show

The naked body in Arab art is the theme of a new Paris exhibit meant to broaden views of Arab culture, spotlighting the many artists willing to break taboos and depict nudity in all its forms.

“The Body Uncovered” at Paris’ Arab World Institute aims to “challenge the stereotypes usually associated with the Arab world that reduce it to the single image of religious fanaticism,” said the institute’s chairman Renaud Muselier.

“It is intended instead to echo the reality of an Arab art scene that despite the conservative climate, exists, dares to overcome taboos and manages to find a place in the global contemporary art scene,” he explains in the show catalogue.

Until July 15 the institute bordering the River Seine will display 200 works by 70 modern and contemporary Arab artists, many of them women, which address eroticism, the sensuality of dance, violence, the exploitation of women and homosexuality through sculpture, collage, painting, photography and video.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Disneyland Paris Turns 20, With Mixed Results

Disneyland Paris fetes its 20th anniversary Thursday, but while Mickey Mouse now draws nearly twice as many visitors as the Louvre’s Mona Lisa, his fantasy park is not yet out of the financial woods.

French theme parks in general have done well amid Europe’s debt crisis, offering a fairly low-cost escape for families, and Disney reported a record 15.7 million visitors in its fiscal year that ended on September 30 2011.

That compared with 8.4 million visitors to the Louvre art museum, and 6.6 million to Paris’ iconic Eiffel Tower.

“It’s magic, we’re in France, but it feels like we’re in another country altogether,” a Belgian tourist named Christelle told AFP.

Britons Jojo and Jake added: “We’re students so we work very hard most of the time so it’s really nice to come away and do something really childish but really fun.”

But Disney, which bet heavily on a site east of Paris prone to damp, chilly winters, posted a net loss of 55.6 million euros ($72.8 billion) despite a modest increase in sales to 1.3 billion euros.

The sprawling park, served by high-speed trains and home to 57 attractions, boasts Big Thunder Mountain and Space Mountain Mission 2, but also lies beneath a debt mountain that amounted to 1.87 billion euros last year.

Disney says it will pay off that debt by 2024.

It also highlights employment opportunities for minorities that have had trouble even getting job interviews elsewhere in France.

Mourad Adli, a 40-year-old Algerian is cited as an example, starting as a pop-corn vendor when the park opened and now the head of its 60 restaurants.

A French intellectual slammed Disneyland Paris as a “Cultural Chernobyl” 20 years ago, a tag that has not stopped it from drawing more than 250 million visitors in the meantime, making it Europe’s leading tourist destination.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Car Makers Race to New Records in March

Driven by a seemingly insatiable global demand for German cars, luxury auto maker BMW has seen the best quarter in company history, while its mainstream rival VW has sold more cars than ever in a single month.

Germany’s top-of-the-range auto maker BMW sold 425,528 cars worldwide in the first quarter of 2012 — a rise of 11.2 percent compared with a year earlier, the company said Wednesday.

Powered by growth in key markets Germany, the United States and China, the period marked the best quarter in the company’s history.

Sales of 185,728 vehicles in March had also been the highest ever recorded for a single month, the Munich-based firm said, breaking the previous sales record of 165.855 cars set in June 2011.

Sales in China surged 36.8 percent compared with the first quarter of 2011, in addition to a rise of 16.6 percent in the United States and 2.0 percent for Germany.

The company said it hoped to grow stronger than the overall market in 2012, targeting more record sales of its BMW, Rolls-Royce and Mini brand cars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: ‘A Koran in Every Home’ Project Makes Waves

A project by Salafist Muslims to give away 25 million German-language Korans across the country — by post and in town centres, has been slammed by a conservative politician calling it a disturbance of the religious peace.

“Wherever possible, this aggressive action must be stopped,” Günter Krings, a top member of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union parliamentary party, told Die Welt daily newspaper on Wednesday.

“Although there is in principle nothing against the distribution of religious texts,” he said, Die Welt reported he added that the radical Salafists were disturbing the religious peace with their aggressive methods.

The newspaper said that German intelligence services rated the campaign’s initiator Ibrahim Abou Nagie as a dangerous Salafist preacher.

His aim is to give away 25 million free German-language copies of the Koran to non-Muslims — his campaign is called “Read! In the name of your Lord who created you.” Additional copies are also being distributed in Austria and Switzerland.

The Cologne-based preacher says the aim is to try to save people from eternal hell.

The project is being funded by Muslims who buy one Koran, which then funds the production of a second one to be given away and also by donations from wealthy people in Bahrain.

Die Welt said the first copies have already been given out — and that Abu Nagie claims to have given away more than 300,000 German-language Korans across the country already. People are also invited to order a free copy to be delivered by post.

The Easter weekend was the spark for a new phase, the paper said, with what it termed a “frontal offensive against the non- and other-believers”. Others might describe it as setting up stands in 35 town centres across the country and handing out free copies of the Koran.

The paper does admit that the version of the Koran is a moderate one — a translation by Mohammed Ibn Ahmad Rassoul with comments from the German convert Frank von Bubenheim and has been rated by intelligence agencies as not problematic.

Yet the Berlin state office for the protection of the constitution said, “Salafistism is strongly radicalising and is promoted by its followers as supposedly the only true Islam.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega: Bossi to Maroni, Clean-Up Already Underway

(AGI) Rome — Umberto Bossi said, “The clean-up is already underway and we already have the person to do it.” The former number one of the Lega Nord was speaking in reply to comments made by Roberto Maroni yesterday. The ‘Senatur’ made his reply to the Lega’s newspaper ‘Padania’, which opened with the headline: ‘Against the attack that aims to divide. Bossi: everyone united. The clean-up is already underway and we already have the person to do it’. The former interior minister spoke yesterday both in an interview with ‘Padania’ and on his Facebook page, to demand a clean-up within the party, after the legal earthquake that shook the Lega Nord and led to the resignation of Bossi

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



Italy: Bossi Considers Running Again

Resigned League leader denounces ‘plot’

(ANSA) — Rome, April 6 — Umberto Bossi said Friday he has not ruled out running again after stepping down as the leader of the scandal-hit Northern League.

“We haven’t decided yet,” he said. “I’ll tell you later”. The firebrand politician resigned Thursday after he and his family were linked to probes into alleged fraud by the former treasurer of the party, Francesco Belsito.

Bossi repeated Friday that he believes the investigation is part of a plot against his party, a highly vocal opponent of Premier Mario Monti’s administration.

“This all seems organized to me. We’re enemies of Rome, an overbearing thief of Italy, a state that will never succeed at democracy,” he said. Bossi said that the new party treasurer, Stefano Stefani, “must look into the whole dark affair, even if it leads to people with ties to the mafia”.

A police warrant to search the League’s offices in Milan on Tuesday said prosecutors suspected party money was misspent on the former minister’s children.

The search was authorised after prosecutors in Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria launched probes into the activities of Belsito, who resigned as party treasurer on Tuesday.

On the same day, the League’s administrative secretary Nadia Dagrada told prosecutors that the party had received money under the table, which police said they had suspected from wiretapped conversations. This week’s developments come after a senior League member, Davide Boni, the Lombardy regional assembly president, was put under investigation for alleged corruption and bribery last month.

Bossi has denied any wrongdoing.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Probe Into Northern League Finances Opened in Genoa

Investigators examine Ligurian regional secretary’s bank account

(ANSA) — Genoa, April 10 — Prosecutors in Genoa opened an investigation on Tuesday into alleged fraud by the populist party the Northern League, already being probed in Milan, Naples and Reggio Calabria.

Investigators are looking into deposits into the account of the Northern League’s regional secretary for Liguria, Francesco Bruzzone, by former treasurer Francesco Belsito amounting to 40,000 euros.

Party leader Umberto Bossi resigned last Thursday after he and his family were linked to alleged fraud by Belsito.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: No-TAV Protesters Occupy the Turin-Bardonecchia Highway

(AGI) Turin — The A32 Turin-Bardonecchia highway is closed in both directions of traffic. Approximately 150 students of the ‘Kollettivo Giovani’ of the No-Tav Movement marched out of Bussoleno and walked up onto the highway at the Chianocco exit.

At the moment, the highway is is closed in both directions of traffic. In the meantime, more protesters are flowing in from Giaglione while in the Maddalena construction site land-owners are convened in a meeting to discuss the details of the temporary occupation of their land.

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



McDonald’s Looks to Lure French With ‘McBaguette’

The French branch of US fast food giant McDonald’s said Tuesday it was to introduce a “McBaguette” sandwich in a bid to cater to local tastes.

Often derided in food-mad France for its mass-production approach, the chain has worked to adapt with sandwiches featuring local ingredients such as goat’s cheese and pepper sauce, alongside its traditional burgers and chips.

The McBaguette will be launched as a test product on April 18 for six weeks in the chain’s 1,230 French restaurants, Nawfal Trabelsi, McDonald’s France’s vice president for marketing, told journalists.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Rijksmuseum Distances Itself From Its Islam Cartoon

AMSTERDAM, 12/04/12 — The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam is distancing itself “from the significance” of a cartoon from 1683 which it is currently exhibiting. A furore arose in Turkish media.

The print shows the Ottoman sultan lying sick in bed after losing a pitched battle by Vienna. A remarkable detail is that the royal commode is beside the bed with the Koran next to it as toilet paper. Such prints were popular in Europe after the Ottoman defeat in the siege of Vienna.

Wim Pijbes, director of the Rijksmuseum, has meanwhile placed an explanatory text beside the print. This says that such a print is part of the full picture

that the museum wants to give of 400 years of Turkish — Dutch relations, but that “this does not mean that the Rijksmuseum endorses the meaning of the print.” Pijbels says the text was necessary to prevent escalation.

The print is part of the exhibition ‘Ottomania: The Turkish world through Western eyes’. “After reports in the Turkish media came to our ears, we did make contact with the Turkish ambassador. He pointed out the ‘sensitivities’ that are linked with such a print, but he did not ask us to remove the print.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Thousands of Volunteers Prop Up Police Forces

Fourteen of the 25 Dutch police forces use members of the public as volunteers to carry out police tasks, RTL news reports.

Thousands of ordinary people volunteer for police tasks and some wear police uniforms and take part in surveillance or minor detective work, RTL says.

The projects are aimed at ‘improving safety’ and private individuals will play an even greater role when the new national police force is established, sources told the broadcaster.

Patrols

In the Haaglanden police region, for example, the local force wants to have 550 volunteers on its books by the end of the year. They will take over 120,000 hours-worth of tasks from the regular force, including patrols and minor detective work.

Without volunteers ‘we would be able to do substantially less,’ acting police chief Paul van Musscher told RTL news.

In Limburg, volunteers have walkie talkies they can use to alert the police if they spot vandals or burglars and ‘suspicious types’.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Northern League to Stay Until Padania is Free, Bossi Says

(AGI) Bergamo — Former Northern League leader Umberto Bossi claims once again the “only opposition party” was set up.

Speaking at the rally in Bergamo, he said “we will stay on until Padania, northern Italy, is set free. We are ready to battle free our rights and our land. What matters tonight is to take an oath of loyalty, the party leaders must work to prevent any further division in future. Maroni is not a traitor, Maroni is not Macbeth”, Bossi said. “We must stop being divided, being against each other. The Northern League is united. There is no magic circle. We must get going again and buck the archenemy, namely Roman centralism”.

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



Norway: Breivik’s Strategy: Secure a Jail Term

How to defend a mass-murderer whose guilt is not in question? Anders Behring Breivik’s defence will take the unusual approach of trying to prove he is criminally responsible and should be sent to prison.

The 33-year-old right-wing extremist who killed 77 people in twin attacks last July has said he does not want his lawyers to try to get him a light

sentence, but rather wants them to focus on arguing that he is of sound mind.

Their strategy received a boost this week when a second psychiatric examination concluded Tuesday that Breivik was not psychotic at the time of the massacre, contrary to the findings in an initial probe late last year.

“Breivik is very clear on this point: he believes his message would be delegitimized, as he says, if he is declared criminally insane,” one of his

lawyers, Vibeke Hein Baera, told AFP.

The confessed killer had told the first two psychiatric experts who examined him that the carnage had been “just a formality” aimed at drawing

attention to his “manifesto” — a more than 1,500-page Islamophobic rant published shortly before the attacks.

By concluding that he suffered from “paranoid schizophrenia” the two experts not only sparked a heated debate in Norway but also dealt a blow to the killer’s ambition to spread his ideas as a serious ideology and not the rantings of a crazy person.

In a letter to Norwegian media last week, Breivik acknowledged that the first expert conclusion was “the ultimate humiliation,” and insisted that

being sent to a psychiatric hospital instead of prison would be “a fate worse than death.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Real Estate: Huge Slump in Property Sales in Cyprus

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, APRIL 10 — The Cyprus Property News reports a dramatic fall in overseas demand for property in Cyprus, with just five properties sold in the south-east Famagusta region to overseas buyers last month. The figures show that home sales are enduring their worst slump in years.

According to the report, as Famagusta Gazette writes, during the first three months of 2012, overseas sales have fallen more than a quarter compared with the corresponding period last year. Of the 563 contracts of sale deposited at Land Registries across Cyprus last month, 129 (23%) were in favour of overseas buyers.

The report adds that although both Larnaca and Paphos saw a small increase in sales last month, these were more that offset by falling sales in Famagusta, Nicosia and Limassol. Domestic demand for property remains subdued with overall sales falling again in March, with just 434 contracts of sale deposited last month compared with the 465 deposited in March last year. The first three months have seen a 14% rise in sales compared with the same period last year, due to an almost doubling of sales in January. But there are signs that the decline in sales is getting smaller and sales may be about to reach their worst point. Beleaguered property investors in Cyprus, many of them British continue to demand their title deeds, which in most cases have not been issued.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swedes Face Toilet Paper Shortage in Wake of Strike Threat

The threat of a toilet paper shortage looming large over Sweden on Wednesday after a labour union warned it would block deliveries from several Swedish toilet paper factories in a show of solidarity with another union group negotiating for higher pay.

“We’re going to block goods from leaving factories in Lilla Edet, Marestad, Pauliström, and Nyboholm,” Matts Jutterström of the Pappers labour union told the labour trade publication Dagens Arbete.

The action, which is set to go in effect on April 23rd, could wipe out toilet paper and paper towel supplies in stores across Sweden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss Magazine Under Fire for ‘Racist’ Roma Cover

A Swiss magazine has sparked a storm of criticism with a cover story warning against criminal gangs that features a photograph of a Roma child holding a gun. Now a German organization representing Roma and Sinti has filed a criminal complaint against the publication.

It’s a striking image, but is it racist? The conservative Swiss magazine Weltwoche has unleashed a storm of criticism after publishing a photograph on the front page of its current issue of a Roma child pointing a pistol at the camera above the headline: “The Roma Are Coming: Robberies in Switzerland.” The article deals with what is allegedly a growing problem of crime committed by Roma gangs in the country. “They come, steal and leave,” reads the article, which was published last Thursday.

The cover has sparked widespread outrage, which has now reached Germany too. The Central Council of German Sinti and Roma announced on Tuesday that they had filed a criminal complaint for racial incitement and libel against the magazine with the public prosecutor in Heidelberg. The council also announced it was taking steps to stop the issue being sold in Germany.

The weekly’s cover encourages the racist stereotyping of a minority, said the council’s leader Romani Rose in a statement, adding that it places Sinti and Roma under general suspicion. He said it was similar to propaganda from the Nazi era, as it created the impression that criminality was caused by an individual’s ethnic origin. The Nazis persecuted and murdered around 500,000 Sinti and Roma during the Holocaust.

The Central Council has also complained to Switzerland’s Federal Commission against Racism (EKR). EKR President Martine Brunschwig Graf announced earlier this week that the commission would investigate the Weltwoche article.

In a video message published on its website on Monday, Weltwoche defended itself against the criticism. Deputy editor in chief Philipp Gut, who is one of the co-authors of the article, said that although the article had triggered a storm of indignation, it had also met with approval. He said that growing “crime tourism” in Switzerland, largely perpetrated by Roma gangs from Eastern Europe, was a reality, calling it a “current and serious problem.” The photograph of the child symbolized “the fact that Roma gangs misuse their children for criminal purposes,” Gut also told the Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung.

Several criminal complaints have already been filed against Weltwoche in Switzerland, Austria and Germany. One of the people who has filed a complaint, Austrian journalist Klaus Kamolz, told the Swiss news agency SDA that he wanted to send a “symbolic signal” against the “blanket condemnation of Roma as criminals.” Peter Studer, a former president of the Swiss Press Council, said it was an “outrageous picture” with “racist overtones.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Magazine Sued for Racial Incitement

Die Weltwoche, a Zurich-based news weekly, has triggered outrage among some people in Switzerland, Germany and Austria with its latest cover and lead article.

The cover of the magazine, which has ties to the rightwing Swiss People’s Party, shows a Roma child who looks about four years old pointing a gun at the camera (see link). The headline says: “The Roma are coming: Plundering in Switzerland”.

One of those lodging a legal complaint is an Austrian journalist who says he wants to send a “symbolic signal” against what he sees as Weltwoche’s “sweeping generalisation and tarring of Roma as criminals”.

A woman in Basel has also lodged a complaint, accusing Weltwoche of breaching Swiss anti-racism laws.

Peter Studer, president of the Swiss Press Council between 2001 and 2007, said it was an “outrageous picture with racist tones”.

The deputy editor of Weltwoche, who co-wrote the lead article, said he couldn’t understand what all the fuss was about, adding that the real scandal was that none of the people complaining had spoken out against the abuse of Roma children by gangs for criminal purposes.

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



UK: David Cameron ‘Must Retreat’ On Charities, Senior Tory MPs Warn

David Cameron must back down over plans to cap tax breaks on donations to charity or risk undermining Britain’s culture of philanthropy, senior Tory MPs have warned.

The Prime Minister promised to listen “very sympathetically” to charities concerned that philanthropic giving will decline after the Government criticised wealthy individuals who benefit from tax relief on donations.

Mr Cameron, speaking on a visit to Indonesia, said he wanted to “get the balance right” between encouraging charities and cracking down on tax avoiders, and indicated that there could be differing tax treatment for charities registered in Britain and abroad.

Higher rate taxpayers giving to a charity can reclaim more than half of the tax. From April, the maximum amount that can be reclaimed will be £50,000 per year or a quarter of the individual’s income.

Conor Burns, ministerial aide to the Northern Ireland Secretary, Owen Paterson, urged him go further and make a “quick review and retreat”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: How Dare a Foreign Court Tell us What to Do?

Abu Hamza can now be taken to the United States.

Thank you for giving us permission, our worshipful unelected masters in Strasbourg on the European Human Rights Court!

We Britons are so happy! When can we come to the pleasant air of France and polish your shoes?

Or have we gone mad?

Britain — the country that not so long ago had the greatest Empire that the world has ever seen, or is ever likely to see — now has to wait for the permission of a foreign court to extradite evil villains that threaten its own people.

Why?

For God’s sake, Why can’t our Government see how embarrassing this is for our people and our extraordinary history?

Have we now conceded that we are a third rate banana republic donkey state that can’t breathe, move or wink without an international body telling us so?

This is a court that has some judges that do not even have proper legal training, who are from former Soviet countries that have poor law schools, and from states that are not entirely free from the corruption of the judicial office.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Honey Trap: How the Demise of Britain’s Bees Could Cost US £1.8billion a Year

Losing bees would cost Britain £1.8bn to foot the costs of hand-pollinating plants, a study has found.

Researchers at the University of Reading say the decline in their numbers would be disastrous for crops and drive up food prices.

Simon Potts, professor of biodiversity, and his team tested teams hand-pollinating all Britain’s major crops.

They worked out how many hours it would take them to cover all the crops in Britain and what they would be paid for their time at the minimum wage.

Using humans with paintbrushes to pollinate crops including apples, pears, strawberries, oildseed rape, field beans, courgettes, peaches and plums would cost £1.8bn — the equivalent of 60,000 teachers or nurses.

The shocking figure comes just a week after two studies last week found pesticides are stopping bees finding their way home.

Numbers of honeybees in managed hives have fallen by half since the 1980s and wild honeybees are nearly extinct. Bumblebees are in slower decline but some species have already been wiped out.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: The Brave Agent Who Exposed Hamza Only to be Betrayed by MI5

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

At the Fourth Feathers Youth Club, a run-down building near London’s Baker Street, the Islamic cleric Abu Qatada banged his stick on the wooden floor as he preached a hate-filled speech against the British people.

Sixty Muslim men and boys at the Friday lunchtime prayers listened to the inflammatory sermon of Bin Laden’s right-hand man in Britain, before praying in deep devotion to Allah.

But kneeling among them that day in April 2000 was an undercover spy, Reda Hassaine, working for the British Government. He had been monitoring Abu Qatada’s evil activities for six years — and his cover was about to be blown.

Hassaine had reported to Scotland Yard’s Special Branch and the homeland secret service, MI5, that Abu Qatada and his sidekick, the hook-handed cleric Abu Hamza, were inciting terror attacks in London.

He had seen both men collect thousands of pounds from their congregations to pay to send young British Muslims abroad to train as suicide bombers and then return here.

He had warned his secret service minders that the clerics wanted nothing short of a takeover of the West and its Christian way of life, using any kind of atrocity necessary.

But the Daily Mail can reveal that the secret agent’s vital information was ignored because of a little-known deal described as a ‘covenant of security’ forged between the security agencies and radical Islamists in the UK.

The unwritten, if cynical, pact allowed radical clerics to orchestrate and encourage Islamist attacks abroad. Their brainwashing of young home-grown Muslims here was tolerated by the secret services in the hope there would be no attacks on targets in Britain.

[…]

Minutes after observing prayers in the Fourth Feathers Club that day in 2000, Hassaine was beaten up by Qatada’s henchmen. Hassaine recalled: ‘A sidekick of Qatada had learned I was a spy and pointed me out after the sermon that day. At that point, Qatada began to recite a special prayer of jihad, to encourage the killing of anyone who threatens Islam. I immediately sensed I was in trouble.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Woman Burglar With 207 Convictions is Finally Jailed… But She Laughs at Two-Year Sentence and Shouts: ‘Cushty’

A woman thief who preyed on the elderly was finally locked up yesterday — after amassing 207 convictions.

Despite her extraordinary criminal record, Caroline Pattinson, 34, had been spared prison on countless occasions.

But after targeting a 72-year-old grandmother in her home the heroin addict was at last sentenced to two-and-a-half years in jail.

Pattinson, however, laughed it off. As she was led away from the dock she turned to the court and shouted: ‘Cushty, easily done.’

The serial offender, who has at least one child in care, began offending when she was just 14.

But in another illustration of soft justice, the one-woman crimewave was repeatedly handed community orders and suspended sentences, instead of time behind bars. It is believed she has only ever served time in prison while on remand.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Libya: Inquiry Threatens European Oil Firms

Corriere della Sera, The Wall Street Journal Europe

Libya’s National Transitional Council has launched an inquiry into oil contracts signed with foreign companies during the last years of the Gaddafi era, Corriere della Sera reports. The investigation focuses on alleged corruption of Libyan officials from 2008 and 2011, and involves, among others, two of Europe’s largest energy firms, Italy’s ENI and France’s Total.

The inquiry comes in the week after the US Securities and Exchange Commission opened a similar procedure. If convicted, companies could face massive fines and see their current and future contracts with the new government declared null and void. According to the Wall Street Journal, the investigation “casts a cloud on the companies’ ambitions to expand their foothold in the country with the largest oil reserves in Africa”.

ENI, in particular, was the biggest operator in Libya under the rule of Muammar Gaddafi and quickly recovered its lead after the regime change, with a current output share of about 14 per cent. The company was planning to invest over $30 billion (€22.9 billion) to double that figure over the next decade.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Stakelbeck: Israel a Safe Haven for Christians Amid Muslim Persecution

While Christians are being persecuted throughout the Muslim Middle East, they are finding safe haven in Israel. It’s a story the mainstream media won’t discuss.

Click the link above to watch my latest report.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



Territories: Netanyahu Studying Outpost Legalisation

In three villages of Bruchin, Rachelim and Sansana

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, APRIL 4 — The Israeli Prime Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu, has ordered the government’s legal consultant, Yehuda Weinstein, to examine once more the status of three Israeli military outposts in the West Bank, with the aim of finally legalising the positions. Reports suggest that the three areas in question are Bruchin (in the north of the West Bank, set up in 2000 and populated by 10 families), Rachelim (north of the West Bank, set up in 1991 and populated by 50 families) and Sansana (southern West Bank, created in 2000, where 50 families live). The areas were created amid efforts from settlers, who in subsequent years received delayed and partial recognition from the Construction and Defence Ministries and are now awaiting definitive legalisation.

Netanyahu has also asked Weinstein to check if it is possible to avoid the demolition, ruled by the Supreme Court — of four buildings constructed illegally in the Beit El settlement close to Ramallah. Last month, the government tried in vain to reach a deal to avoid the demolition, again in spite of a Supreme Court ruling, of the most populous settler outpost in the West Bank, that of Migron (created in 1999, close to Ramallah). But the appeal presented by the government was rejected by judges and Migron now has to be definitively cleared by June.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran Cuts Oil Exports to Germany

Iran has stopped oil imports to Germany and reduced its consumption of EU products as the European Union moves towards a total embargo on Iranian oil, Iranian media reported on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Siemens Allegedly Sold Surveillance Gear to Syria

German engineering giant Siemens and a spinoff company allegedly sold surveillance technology to the Syrian regime, according to a German television report. The government could be using the equipment to crack down on opposition supporters, human rights activists warn.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Damascus Accuses Turkey of Arming and Sending Rebels

(ANSAmed) — MOSCOW, APRIL 10 — In Moscow today, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Al-Mouallem has accused Turkey of training and arming rebel forces as well as sending militants into Syria. “Turkey backs in all possible ways the actions of illegal Syrian groups, by supplying them with arms, by allowing for the creation of training camps and by fostering their illegal penetration into Syrian territory,” said Walid Al-Mouallem, underlining that this goes against the Annan paln.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russian MPs’ Walkout Mars Putin Unity Call

Russian opposition deputies walked out of parliament in an unprecedented protest on Wednesday, overshadowing a speech by Vladimir Putin urging his compatriots to unite after a tense election contest.

After winning the March presidential election despite an outburst of protests against his rule, Putin outlined in a keynote address his vision for Russia’s future as a top five global economy with a growing population.

But in a sign his upcoming six year Kremlin mandate may not be as unchallenged as his past 12 years in charge, an entire opposition faction walked out of the session in protest at one of Putin’s comments.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ukraine: Tymoshenko Calls Murder Allegations ‘Absurd’

KIEV — Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, serving a seven-year jail sentence on abuse-of-office charges, on Monday dismissed new allegations against her of involvement in the murder of a lawmaker almost 16 years ago. She said they were “absurd” and clearly politically driven.

Ukrainian prosecutors are investigating her possible involvement in the 1996 killing of Yevhen Shcherban, a powerful businessman and politician who died in a hail of bullets as he emerged from a plane in Donetsk. The attackers, disguised as airport mechanics, also killed his wife and several bystanders.

His killing followed several other murders in Donetsk, including a football stadium bombing that killed the owner of the Shakhtar Donetsk club and led to a realignment of political and business alliances in the key steel- and coal-producing region.

Both Tymoshenko and her rival, President Viktor Yanukovych, were already big players in the turbulent region, which seethed with intrigue and where fortunes were made and lost in murky dealings.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Russia Kills Nine Rebels in North Caucasus: Report

Russian security forces have killed nine suspected Islamist rebels in two separate operations in its troubled Northern Caucasus region, the Interfax news agency said on Tuesday.

Five militants were killed during a raid by security forces overnight on the apartment where they were held up in the town of Mineralnye Vody, a security source told the agency.

In the second incident around the village of Achikulak, security forces opened fire on a car which had fired on them during a document check. Four militants were killed in the exchange of fire.

There were no reports of casualties among the security forces.

Both clashes took place in the Stavropol region which is officially part of the Russian Northern Caucasus but lies just to the north of the troubled mainly Muslim Russian republics that are regularly the scene of Islamist unrest.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Airbus Gets Multi-Billion-Dollar Order From Indonesia

European aircraft manufacturer Airbus will build 11 more long-haul passenger jets for Indonesia. The deal, worth almost two billion euros ($2.5 billion), will help the company overcome its current shortage of orders.

Indonesia’s flag carrier Garuda will purchase 11 A330 jets for long-distance travel from Europe’s leading plane producer, Airbus. The deal seems more than welcome for the multinational company, which has only secured firm orders for 90 planes in the first quarter of 2012, compared with more than 400 for US rival Boeing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India Says EU Tax a ‘Deal Breaker’ For Climate Talks

(NEW DELHI) — India’s environment minister said Wednesday that a European Union scheme to tax airlines for carbon emissions was “a deal breaker” ahead of global climate change talks, a warning rejected by the EU.

“I shall stick my neck out and say, for the environment ministry, yes the unilateral measure by the EU… is a deal breaker for the talks,” Jayanthi Natarajan said in New Delhi.

“I strongly believe that as far as climate change discussions are concerned, this is unacceptable,” said the environment minister, who is India’s negotiating leader at global climate change talks.

Natarajan, speaking at a function organised by the Energy Resources Institute, said she had written a letter to EU Commissioner for Climate Change Connie Hedegaard demanding a reversal of the carbon tax on airlines.

Her statements were the toughest by India so far on the EU plan.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, dismissed the minister’s warning and stressed that the system in place since January 1 seeks to encourage others to do the same in their countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Suu Kyi Meets With Myanmar President

Myanmar opposition leader and former political prisoner Aung Sang Suu Kyi has met with President Thein Sein to discuss ways of democratizing the country. The meeting precedes Suu Kyi’s historic entry into parliament. Myanmar’s opposition leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, met with President Thein Sein on Wednesday for the first time since being elected to parliament earlier this month.

The pair met at Thein Sein’s official residence in the capital, Naypyidaw. Following the meeting, Suu Kyi told the AFP news agency that she was “satisfied,” but declined to reveal any details of the discussion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


42,000-Year-Old Baby Mammoth on Show in Hong Kong

The world’s best-preserved mammoth, buried about 42,000 years ago, will go on display in Hong Kong this week, the organiser of its first exhibition in Asia said Wednesday.

Discovered in the permafrost of Russia’s Yamal Peninsula in 2007 by a reindeer herder, the female baby mammoth named Lyuba remained almost fully intact with organs and eyelashes preserved.

Only her toenails, part of her tail, right ear and fur were missing.

Traces of her mother’s milk were even found in Lyuba’s stomach, said the IFC mall, the city’s posh harbourfront shopping centre, which will showcase the animal for a month from Thursday.

Lyuba, which means “love” in Russian, has previously toured North America.

Scientists have said they believe the ice-age mammal was only a few months old when she probably drowned in a mudslide, which “pickled” her in near-perfect condition.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Gives Current and Former Leaders New Titles

North Korea has officially given a new post to its leader, Kim Jong-un, further elevating his position. His late father was also honored with a posthumous title.

North Korea has appointed its new leader, Kim Jong-un, as first secretary of the ruling Workers’ Party — a title that appears to be a new top party post.

At the same time, it declared his father, the late leader Kim Jong-il, to be the party’s “eternal” general secretary.

The announcements were made at a special party conference in Pyongyang, one of two political gatherings this week that are expected to formally install the young Kim as the country’s supreme leader.

Kim Jong-un, who is thought to be 28, took over power from his father in December last year after the latter’s death on December 17. He has already been officially appointed supreme commander of the Korean People’s Army.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Philippines, China Look for Diplomatic Solution to Naval Standoff

The Philippines has said that Beijing and Manila will find a diplomatic solution to a naval standoff in the South China Sea. The two countries are at odds over possession of a small shoal and other landmasses in the sea.

Manila said its largest warship was in a tense standoff with two Chinese surveillance vessels on Wednesday. The incident took place at the disputed Scarborough Shoal, a rock formation in the South China Sea.

Philippine Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario summoned the Chinese ambassador in Manila, Ma Keqing, early on Wednesday, telling her the Navy would enforce Philippine laws.

“The ambassador of China took the view that they have full sovereignty over the Scarborough Shoal,” said Del Rosario. Despite the impasse, he said, “We resolved to seek a diplomatic solution to the issue.”

The Philippine Foreign Ministry said that on Sunday, a navy plane spotted eight Chinese fishing vessels anchored in a lagoon at the shoal, which lies off the coast of the northwestern Philippine province of Zambales.

The Philippine military then sent its largest warship, the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, to the area.

The dispute is only the most recent in a region where maritime boundaries often appear to be blurred. Last year, the Philippines accused China of allowing vessels to intrude into other contested stretches of sea. They include the Spratly Islands, which — as well as being claimed by China — are also subject to claims by Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam. The islands are thought to be rich in oil and gas.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Serial Rapist’s Afghan Ethnicity No Excuse, Says Judge

A JUDGE has today rejected an Afghan refugee’s claim that he raped an intoxicated and vulnerable teenager because of cultural differences.

Esmatullah Sharifi, 30, was appearing in the County Court for the second time in less than three years on a charge of rape and Judge Mark Dean said his background as a traumatised Muslim refugee was no excuse.

The judge said a psychologist told the court Sharifi, who came to Australia in 2001 on a temporary protection visa, had “an unclear concept of what constitutes consent in sexual relationships” in Australia

But the judge said Sharifi’s background and flight from the Taliban in Afghanistan could not excuse an extreme act of violence.

“You well knew the victim was not consenting to the act of sexual penetration you performed,” Judge Dean said.

Sentencing Sharifi for the rape of the 18-year-old woman, Judge Dean said that he had driven from his home in Tullamarine to Frankston looking for a victim.

The woman was alone, intoxicated and sitting on the footpath near the 21st Century nightclub after she had a disagreement with her friends.

Sharifi sat down beside her, started talking to her and offered to drive her to a hotel in Mornington where here friends had gone.

Judge Dean said Sharifi drove in a different direction and the victim became concerned and texted her friends but he took her phone and found a dark street where he stopped.

As she cried and asked if he planned to kill her Sharifi put his hand around her neck and forced her to remove her clothes before raping her.

“Your offending is of the utmost seriousness,” Judge Dean said in his County Court sentence.

“You preyed upon a young vulnerable stranger who was alone and intoxicated at night. Your brutal conduct must be denounced by this court.”

Sharifi pleaded guilty to one count of rape committed on December 19, 2008…

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]



South Africa, Australia to Share SKA?

A decision on the site of the Square Kilometre Array has been delayed to allow a scientific working group to explore ways of maximising investments already made by rival bidders South Africa and Australia-New Zealand — raising the possibility that the hosting of the world’s biggest radio telescope could be shared.

South Africa, allied with eight other African countries, is competing against Australia (allied with New Zealand) to host the €1.5-billion Square Kilometre Array (SKA), an instrument 50-100 times more sensitive and 10 000 times faster than any radio imaging telescope yet built.

The international SKA organisation members met in Amsterdam, the Netherlands on Tuesday to discuss a report and recommendation by an advisory committee on which site was thought to be technically superior, along with commentary made by the SKA board of directors at a meeting in Manchester, England last month.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


159 Rhinos Poached in S. Africa This Year: Minister

Almost 160 rhinos were poached in South Africa in the first three months of this year as trade in the animals’ horns drives up the illegal killings, a minister said Wednesday. “The toll of rhinos poached in South Africa for 2012 has reached the alarming figure of 159, in the midst of the increased anti-poaching effort,” said Water and Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa.

“The Kruger National Park continues to bear the brunt of these losses, with the rhinos poached in the park having reached a staggering total of 95,” said Molewa at a media event at the iconic reserve. “This is no longer an environmental management problem only, but it has become a matter in which we have involved all law-enforcement agencies.”

The animals’ distinctive horns are hacked off to be smuggled to the lucrative Asian black market, where the fingernail-like substance is falsely believed to have powerful healing properties. Last year, a record 448 were poached.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fighting Rages on Sudanese Border

Sudan and South Sudan are engaged in border clashes in an important oil-production area. Observers fear a relapse into all-out war. Sudan says fierce fighting is continuing for a second day on its border with South Sudan as the two neighbors wrangle over a disputed oil field.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



S. African Newspaper Launches Tabloid Aimed at Blacks

South Africa’s historic The Star newspaper launched an edition targeting blacks on Monday, hoping to cash in on the country’s growing middle class. Star Africa is the latest offering of the 125-year-old Star, part of the Irish Independent newspaper group. It is “an intelligent approach to tabloid journalism”, editor Makhudu Sefara said. “Our approach is one that says Africa is not about the texture of your hair, it’s about your approach and relation to the content,” Sefara told AFP.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Anger as Swiss Visa Rules Are Relaxed

Switzerland has suddenly relaxed visa requirements for workers from 33 countries, including many Balkan nations, in a move that has angered anti-immigrant opposition politicians. The liberalization of the visa regime by the Federal Department for Justice and Police (FDJP) would affect 33 non-EU countries whose citizens want to work or participate in training in Switzerland for a maximum of three months, newspaper Tages Anzieger reported.

“The FDJP plans obviously represent a serious change in practice. It is unthinkable that they are secretly trying to wave them through,” National Councillor for the Swiss People’s Party, Hans Fehr, told the newspaper. Although visas for entry under such circumstances would no longer be required, work permits would.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium Must Shut Down Anti-Immigrant Website: NGOs

A network of European anti-racism groups urged the Belgian government on Wednesday to shut down a far-right website inciting people to denounce crimes committed by illegal immigrants.

The European Network Against Racism (ENAR) charged that the website set up by the Vlaams Belang (Flemish Interest) party “recalls Gestapo practices” and represents a call for hatred and violence.

“We call on the Belgian government to disable this website and to strongly condemn actions inciting to hatred directed at specific groups,” said ENAR chairman Chibo Onyeji.

“This is crucial to ensure that Europe remains — also for our children and grandchildren — an inclusive place for all, where everyone can participate on an equal basis,” he said.

The website allows people to file anonymous tip-offs of alleged social security fraud, work on the black market and more serious crimes.

“This website is thoughtless, but more dangerously, it deliberately targets groups on the basis of their national or ethnic origin. Anybody could be targeted because he/she is black or looks North African,” ENAR said in a statement.

Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter said Tuesday that the website was necessary because of the presence of “tens of thousands of illegal immigrants” in Belgian cities and the problems that they cause.

A similar website caused a furore when it was set up by the far-right Freedom Party (PVV) in the neighbouring Netherlands, but Prime Minister Mark Rutte, whose coalition government has PVV backing, refused to condemn it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Finland: Higher Threshold for Some Family Reunification

Regulations governing the reunification of some families may be tightened up. A report by the Interior Ministry says it is possible that in future, people resident on the grounds of humanitarian protection may have to prove sufficient income to support their families before being joined by spouses and children.

[Return to headlines]



Germany: Fear of Honor Killings: Immigrants Flee Families to Find Themselves

Hundreds of young female immigrants are hiding from their families in Germany after fleeing oppression, physical violence and even death threats. Charities and social workers help the women get new identities and build independent lives for themselves, but the risk of revenge from honor-obsessed relatives remains.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Parliament Approves Reception Centres

Clashes in Amigdalesa where the centre will be built

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS — With 117 votes in favour and 37 against, the Greek Parliament has approved the draft law proposed by the Citizens Protection Ministry on the creation of 30 reception centres for irregular immigrants in Greece, and the conditions on the basis of which the clandestine migrants will be kept. “Social peace,” said Citizens Protection Minister Michalis Chrisochoidis in speaking at the assembly, “is in danger.” Voting against the law were deputies from the Greek Communist Party (KKE) as well as those from Syriza (left), Laos (fare right), the Democratic Left and Greek Independents (right).

While discussion was underway on the draft law in Parliament, minor incidents occurred between police and the inhabitants of Amigdalesa, the area in which the first centre for immigrants will be built.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Pay Foreign Convicts to Quit Switzerland’

Foreign-born offenders in Geneva will in future be offered 4,000 francs ($4,634) to leave the country, as part of a plan to reduce the burden on Switzerland’s prisons.

Frustrated by seeing the same North African offenders going through the courts time and again, Geneva has responded by launching a new plan which offers offenders a chance to return to their home countries rather than languish in a Swiss prison.

The move is also aimed at reducing the significant prison bill, which amounts to approximately 450 francs ($491) a day per inmate, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reported. Instead of serving a prison sentence, small crime offenders will be able to choose to return instead to their homelands.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Only 40% of Border Scandal Foreign Criminals Have Been Deported in the Last Six Years

Barely 40 per cent of the foreign criminals released from prison in a border scandal six years ago have been deported, a report reveals today.

In 2006, the Labour government was rocked by revelations that more than 1,000 foreign nationals had been let out without being considered for deportation.

By November last year, fewer than 400 had been removed from the country or deported, and more than 50 have still not been found. Hundreds more remain here despite their cases having been concluded.

[…]

In many cases, criminals use human rights laws to challenge their removal, or officials struggle to secure passports from their home countries, which do not want to take them back.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Agenda 21, The End of Western Civilization, Part 4

[Comment: Part 4 of an excellent series on Agenda 21.]

ICLEI, Unelected Councils and other NGO vehicles promoting Agenda 21/Sustainable Development and the New World Order.

America, as well as the rest of the entire world, is being deluged with schemes to do away with individual freedom, property rights and the Constitution. I do not exaggerate about the extent of the evils that are trying to control every aspect of our lives and to eliminate many of us. Lately I keep hearing (and often thinking myself) that it is too late to stop this train wreck; the global elite have taken us so far down the road toward global government that to return to a republican form of government here in the U.S. might be impossible. The elite have been doing this through ICLEI, Visioning plans and other unelected councils controlled by NGOs (non-governmental organizations) connected to the United Nations.

There are so many various schemes and layers of schemes to relieve us of our freedoms that it would take volumes to try to describe all of them and new ones are being invented almost daily.

This article will attempt to explain ICLEI and how unelected councils have invaded our towns, cities, counties, states and our lives — and how they are destroying each of those entities as they become entrenched.

ICLEI

ICLEI is the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, now known as Local Governments for Sustainability. As we expose what each of these NGOs is doing to attack us, they change their names in the hope of sneaking in under the radar of communities and towns that haven’t been exposed to them yet. It only works for a little while, then they need to change their names again and again as the rocks are lifted and sunlight shines on these evil entities.

ICLEI, a non-profit, private foundation, is based in Bonn, Germany and their nefarious ploy ostensibly is to assist local entities, usually cities and towns, to reduce their carbon footprints. As their website puts it:

ICLEI supports local governments in finding and implementing local solutions to global challenges by (in their words):

  • helping local governments to establishing plans of action to meet their locally defined, concrete, measurable targets
  • working toward meeting these targets through the implementation of projects and by offering tools that help local governments to reach their goals
  • evaluating local and cumulative progress toward sustainable development and making the commitments and actions of local governments known on a global level
  • working in partnership with regional, national and international organizations and institutions to ensure an international framework that supports local action

What that means is that when an entity joins ICLEI they agree to set certain targets (defined by ICLEI and measured by tools sold to them by ICLEI).

ICLEI was one of the groups instrumental in creating Agenda 21. Their whole scheme is to get communities to regulate everything that affects the environment which, of course, is everything including our exhalations.

ICLEI is now operating in more than 600 cities in all 50 states. They are shooting for 1,000 member cities in the US alone in the next three years.

ICLEI’s vice chair, Harvey Rubin, made the telling statement, “Individual rights will have to take a backseat to the collective.” If what I described above doesn’t convince you that this NGO at least is trying to take away our rights and freedoms, his statement should bring it home.

[…]

Comprehensive Development Plans, promoted by one or more NGO in city after city across the nation, are enforcing schemes to “cut their carbon footprint” by controlling energy use. One of the most popular tools now to control energy use is the energy audit and building review. They establish quotas for electrical use, and for heating and cooling pumps, and water use. The use of Smart Meters is meant not only to control our use but to track what we do in our homes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



California Declares War on Family Homes to ‘Save the Planet’

The state of California has declared war on detached family homes, with laws passed to mitigate car use and carbon dioxide emissions now leading to policies that mandate up to 30 homes be built on a single acre of land, fulfilling the goal of climate change alarmists to pack people into densely populated prison cities.

“Metropolitan area governments are adopting plans that would require most new housing to be built at 20 or more to the acre, which is at least five times the traditional quarter acre per house. State and regional planners also seek to radically restructure urban areas, forcing much of the new hyperdensity development into narrowly confined corridors,” reports the Wall Street Journal.

In some areas of Los Angeles County and five other Southern California counties, 30 housing units per acre are being mandated, all under the auspices of laws passed in the name of cutting car use and limiting CO2 emissions, including the 2006 Global Warming Solutions Act and the 2008 Sustainable Communities and Climate Protection Act.

The rules on restricted development are driving up house prices and driving down standards of living. Even if you believe the justification of lowering greenhouse gases, the regulations won’t even achieve that, with greater traffic congestion merely confined to overpopulated cities as additional houses continue to use cars.

Transportation consultant Wendell Cox told the WSJ that the whole process represented an effort to make the construction of detached houses “illegal”.

This is all part of the United Nations’ Agenda 21 project which demands that member nations adopt “sustainable development” policies that are little more than a disguise for the reintroduction of neo-feudalism and only serve to reduce living standards and quality of life.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Mosque in Gay-Hate Row Opens a New Fee-Paying School Where Pupils Will Memorise the Koran and Speak Arabic

A mosque where clerics were filmed allegedly preaching hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims is opening a fee-paying school.

Pupils will be expected to memorise the Koran and wear traditional Pakistani uniforms when it opens in Birmingham this September, with fees of £3,500 a year.

Arabic will be the ‘key language’ taught to the annual intake of 20 students, aged 11 to 16, at Green Lane Masjid Independent Boys School.

Pupils will also follow the national GCSE curriculum in traditional subjects such as the sciences and geography.

Its refurbished £1.5million two-storey building is next to the main mosque in Small Heath.

In 2008 a Channel 4 TV documentary, titled Undercover Mosque, showed secret footage of Islamic scholars at Green Lane Masjid allegedly peddling hate against homosexuals and non-Muslims.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Tenfold Increase in Illegitimate Babies in Century Since Titanic, ONS Says

Ten times more babies are born out of wedlock today than 100 years ago as middle-class couples decide to co-habit rather than marry, while the divorce rate is 170 times higher than it was a century ago, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has said.

The ONS released the statistics to show how much society has changed in the centenary since the sinking of the Titanic. Its figures showed that just under 38,000 illegitimate babies were born in England and Wales in 1911, the year before the Titanic set sail. This is out of a total of 881,138 babies born that year.

By 2010 the number of children in England and Wales born outside marriage had reached 338,790, an almost ten-fold increase, the ONS said. This amounts to just under half of the 723,165 babies born that year.

Meanwhile the number of divorces rose from 702 to 119,589 between 1911 and 2010. Some experts said that the figures provide a “fascinating insight” into how life in this country has changed. Others said that they demonstrate the gradual moral decline of society.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Ehrlich, Hansen, Lovelock: We Must Build “An Entirely New Kind of Global Society”

The United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) has recently published a collection of “key messages” written by the usual suspects, including eugenicist Paul Ehrlich, climate dictator James Lovelock and NASA’s own terror-endorsing James Hansen.

In the statement titled “Environment and Development Challenges: The Imperative to Act”meant to inspire the UN and its upcoming 2012 Earth Summit, the fiends call for a global implementation of population policies. To effectively implement these policies the authors propose rights being infringed upon in order to address what they call “the population issue”:

“The population issue should be urgently addressed by education and empowerment of women, including in the work-force and in rights, ownership and inheritance; health care of children and the elderly; and making modern contraception accessible to all.”, they write.

We of course know perfectly well what they mean by “health care of children and the elderly”. We have recently seen the terrible results of health care for children in the eugenicists’ model-state of China.

[…]

This is just one out of many dehumanizing proposals from the mind of Paul Ehrlich. Also remember this when you read his proposals for a global society necessary to “address population issues” (also out of Ecoscience):

“… Perhaps those agencies, combined with UNEP and the United Nations population agencies, might eventually be developed into a Planetary Regime— sort of an international superagency for population, resources, and environment. Such a comprehensive Planetary Regime could control the development, administration, conservation, and distribution of all natural resources, renewable or nonrenewable, at least insofar as international implications exist.”

Here is your global society in a nutshell.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120410

Financial Crisis
» EU: Italy and Spain Compete for Investors
» Far-Flung Demand Bolsters German Exports
» Italy: ‘17,000 Northern Businesses Went Bust Since 2009’
» JPMorgan Trader Iksil Fuels Prop-Trading Debate With Bets
 
USA
» Alaska Expedition to Study Northern Lights From the Inside
» Hate Preacher Abu Hamza Facing Up to 50 Years Behind Bars in the U.S. After Losing Extradition Appeal
» Home Buyers Find Safety in Disused US Missile Sites
» NASA Jumbo Jet Arrives to Ferry Shuttle Discovery to Smithsonian
» Obama Administration Corruption in Solyndra Deal Confirmed
» Portrait of a Failed “Messiah”
» Santorum Suspends His Campaign, 2 Advisers Say
» State Department Barred Inspection
» Statism Needs Division
» Who Cares About John Derbyshire?
 
Europe and the EU
» European Zoos Welcome Panda Breeding Discovery
» Flemish Far Right Party Launches Racist Website
» France: 13 Salafis Before Judge for Indictment
» France 2012: Sarkozy Attacks in Paris, Freeze EU Check
» Italy: Journalist and Writer Miriam Mafai Dies
» Italy: Bossi’s Son Renzo Resigns as Lombardy Councillor
» Italy: Northern League Must Have Clean Up, ‘Look in All Drawers’
» Italy: Lega: Formigoni Welcomes Resignation of Renzo Bossi
» Italy: Berlusconi Plan to Give Away TV Frequencies Scrapped — Report
» Italy: Bossi Junior Steps Down, Rosy Mauro Urged to Follow Suit
» Italy: Bossi Jr Driver: ‘I Handed Over Lega Money for His Expenses’
» Italy: Public Prosecutor Acquires Video of Payment to Renzo Bossi
» Netherlands: Handshake Muslim Loses Court Case
» Norway Killer Breivik is Sane: Psychiatric Report
» Norway: Oslo Braces for ‘World’s Deadliest Shooter’ Trial
» Norway’s Mass Killer Breivik ‘Declared Sane’
» Norway: Breivik ‘Regrets Not Going Further’: Lawyer
» Norway: Breivik Trial: Facts and Figures
» Norway Gunman Anders Behring Breivik ‘Pleased’ Probe Finds Him Sane
» Norwegian Killer Deemed Sane After All
» Sweden: Obama’s Anti-Semitism Expert to Meet Reepalu
» There’s More to Nuclear Fusion Than ITER
» UK: Abu Hamza US Extradition Backed by European Court
» UK: Blackpool Council Grants Free Parking for Muslims, But Everyone Else Has to Pay
» UK: Hate Preachers Return to Quaker Venue
 
North Africa
» Court Suspends Egypt’s Constitutional Assembly
» Jihadists Say French Paper ‘Liberation’ Is Enemy of Islam
 
Middle East
» 100 Vigilantes to ‘Cleanse Kubbar Island of Women’ — Girls Warned Against Going There
» Iraq Progresses Toward a Future Built on Oil Wealth
» Kofi Annan Will Seek Tehran’s Support for Syria Peace Plan
» Syria Accuses Turkey of Arming Rebels
» Turkey-Greece: Simit (Or Koulouri) Pretzel in Dispute
 
South Asia
» Asian Terrorism Poses an Increasing Threat to Global Security
» India: Red Academics Carry On
 
Far East
» China: Nike and Zara Accused of “Environmental Pollution”
» Pyongyang Puts Washington to the Test
» Report: Sony to Cut 10,000 Jobs Worldwide Through March 2013
» Sony Expects Record Annual Loss
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 100 Boko Harams Took Control of Gao in Northern Mali
 
Immigration
» Greece: “Absolutely Nothing” Done, Says Minister
» Italy, Libya Sign Anti-Migrant Pact
» UK: Key Events in Battle to Extradite Abu Hamza
» UK: Palestinian Ambassador Thanks Memo for Sheikh Raed Support
» UK: Theresa May Humiliated by Judge Over Attempted Deportation of Palestinian Activist
» UK: The ECHR is Right About Abu Hamza, But Britain Still Needs to Leave
» UK: What Today’s Abu Hamza Ruling Means
 
Culture Wars
» France: Imam Blesses Union Between Two Gay Muslims

Financial Crisis


EU: Italy and Spain Compete for Investors

Rome, 10 April (AKI/Bloomberg) — Competition between Italy and Spain for international investors’ funds will heat up this quarter as domestic buying stoked by the European Central Bank fades.

Italian and Spanish bonds slumped last week after demand dropped at a Spanish bond sale and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said his country is in “extreme difficulty.” The decline reversed a first-quarter rally sparked by more than 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of ECB loans to the region’s banks via its longer-term refinancing operation. Spain’s 10-year yield spread to German bunds widened to the most in four months, while Italy’s reached a six-week high.

“Spain and Italy are coming back down to earth after an incredible first quarter,” said Luca Jellinek, head of European interest-rate strategy at Credit Agricole SA in London. “The LTRO bought some time, but not a massive amount of time. Now the second quarter will be harder than the first unless policy moves convince foreign investors to come back in.”

Italian 10-year bonds fell for a fourth week, with the yield advancing 40 basis points to 5.51 percent. The yield difference over bunds widened to 378 basis points, compared with an average of 381 basis points in the first quarter. Spain’s 10- year yield spread to Germany reached 410 basis points last week after averaging 333 basis points in the first three months.

Recycled Cash

Yields dropped in the first three months of the year, suggesting Europe’s lenders were recycling ECB cash into regional bonds. Investors made 13 percent, including reinvested interest, on Italy’s bonds in the period between the ECB announcing the loans on Dec. 8 and the end of the first quarter. Spanish debt returned 6 percent.

“The two LTROs are a window of opportunity for governments to undertake fiscal consolidation and structural reforms,” ECB President Mario Draghi said in Frankfurt on April 4. “National policy makers need to fully meet their responsibility.”

Credit Agricole calculates that the ECB’s support, including loans to banks and direct purchases, prompted purchases of more than 250 billion euros of Spanish and Italian government securities between the third quarter of 2011 and the first quarter of this year. That’s more than the 216 billion euros of debt sold by the two nations during the same period.

Spain sold 2.59 billion euros of bonds on April 4, just above the minimum amount it planned for the auction and below the 3.5 billion-euro maximum target. The sale followed auctions on March 27 where both Spain and Italy failed to raise their maximum target amount.

Fading Effect

“The positive effect from the LTRO is fading and so the market is focusing on what the political developments will be,” said Werner Fey, a fund manager at Frankfurt Trust Investment GmbH, which oversees 6.5 billion euros of fixed-income assets. “The Spanish auction was not very well received and there’s a risk that forthcoming auctions could be difficult for other peripheral countries.”

Spain has to repay 44.3 billion euros of bonds in the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, while Italy has 87.8 billion euros to refinance.

Spain has already met 44 percent of its total financing needs for this year, according to UBS AG estimates. Italy has sold 28 percent of its requirement while France has issued 32 percent and Germany 25 percent, the calculations show. Most of the Spanish and Italian bonds were bought by local investors, the data shows.

Charity at Home

“Foreign investors have been reducing their holdings, there’s been a significant shift toward relying on domestic investors,” said Gianluca Ziglio, an interest-rate strategist at UBS in London. “This trend is likely to stay in place and that leaves the burden on the domestic investors, which aren’t being supported by the ECB’s liquidity anymore.”

Natixis Asset Management is buying Italian debt while remaining neutral on Spain, because Prime Minister Mario Monti’s government has removed much of the political risk surrounding his nation’s securities, while Spain’s situation remains clouded, according to Axel Botte, a Paris-based strategist at the $694 billion fund manager.

Monti, who replaced Silvio Berlusconi in November as Italian bond yields jumped to euro-era records, is implementing spending cuts and tax increases to eliminate the budget deficit next year and trim the nation’s 1.9 trillion-euro debt.

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



Far-Flung Demand Bolsters German Exports

Exports by Europe’s biggest economy picked up unexpectedly in February, with a second consecutive monthly rise. Rising import figures also provide a glimmer of hope for depressed eurozone members. German exports rose by 1.6 percent month-on-month in February, hitting a total of 91.3 billion euros ($119 billion), according to data released by the Federal Statistics Office (Destatis) on Tuesday.

The second consecutive monthly rise in goods and services exported by Germany has driven the overall 2012 figure to 177.3 billion euros so far, 14.7 million euros more than in the first two months of 2011. Germany’s traditionally export-heavy economy is also being helped by strong domestic demand, resulting in rising import figures too.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘17,000 Northern Businesses Went Bust Since 2009’

North-west hardest hit

(ANSA) — Milan, April 9 — Some 17,000 businesses have gone bust in the north of Italy since the global financial crunch in 2009, the think tank Cerved said Monday.

The northwestern regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and Liguria were harder hit than the north-east, Cerved said.

Of the nationwide total of bankruptcies up to last year, Cerved said, a quarter came in the south of Italy and 22% in the centre.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



JPMorgan Trader Iksil Fuels Prop-Trading Debate With Bets

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) trader Bruno Iksil’s outsized bets in credit derivatives are drawing attention to a little-known division that invests the company’s reserves and fueling a debate over whether banks are taking excessive risks with federally insured and subsidized money.

Iksil’s influence in the market has spurred some counterparts to dub him Voldemort, after the Harry Potter villain. He works in London in the bank’s chief investment office, which has assembled traders from across Wall Street to its staff of 400 who help oversee $350 billion in investments. While the firm describes the unit’s main task as hedging risks and investing excess cash, four hedge-fund managers and dealers say the trades are big enough to move indexes and resemble proprietary bets, or wagers made with the bank’s own money.

The trades, first reported by Bloomberg News April 5, stirred debate among U.S. policy makers over the Easter-holiday weekend as they wrangle over this year’s implementation of the so-called Volcker rule, the portion of the Dodd-Frank Act that sets limits on risk-taking by banks with government backing. The law passed after the collapse of the subprime mortgage market triggered the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Alaska Expedition to Study Northern Lights From the Inside

A team of scientists is lofting weather balloons high into Alaska’s northern lights displays, getting a unique inside look at this dazzling atmospheric phenomenon.

The two-week expedition is called Project Aether: Aurora, and it’s slated to run through April 13. The goal is threefold: Learn more about the northern lights (also known as the aurora borealis), test out equipment and help get kids more interested in science, technology, engineering and math — the so-called STEM subjects.

“We think that the excitement of the whole expedition, and the drama involved in completing this cutting-edge science, helps play into the motivation to go into the STEM fields,” said project principal investigator Ben Longmier, a physicist at the University of Houston and chief research scientist at the Ad Astra Rocket Company.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hate Preacher Abu Hamza Facing Up to 50 Years Behind Bars in the U.S. After Losing Extradition Appeal

Hook-handed hate preacher Abu Hamza and four other Muslim fanatics will be sent to the U.S. to face trial after they today lost their appeals against extradition.

Judges in Strasbourg dramatically ruled this morning that Hamza must be extradited to the U.S. where he could face the rest of his life behind bars.

Four other fanatics also lost their appeals against extradition. The ruling stated that the five men would not be subject to ‘ill-treatment’ in the U.S.

The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg rejected the men’s claims that their human rights would be breached by leaving the UK.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Home Buyers Find Safety in Disused US Missile Sites

The anxious and wealthy buy luxury shelters in preparation of doomsday

Tucked deep beneath the Kansas prairie, luxury condos are being built into the shaft of an abandoned missile silo to service anxious — and wealthy — people preparing for doomsday.

So far, four buyers have splashed out a total of about €5 million for havens to flee to when disaster happens or the end is nigh.

And developer Larry Hall has options to retro-fit three more Cold War-era silos when this one fills up.

“They worry about events ranging from solar flares, to economic collapse, to pandemics to terrorism to food shortages,” Mr Hall said on a tour of the site.

These “doomsday preppers”, as they are called, want a safe place and he will be there with them because Mr Hall, 55, bought one of the condos for himself.

He says his fear is that sun flares could wipe out the power grid and cause chaos.

He and his wife and son live in Denver and will use their condo mostly as a vacation home, he says, but if the grid goes, they will be ready.

Mr Hall isn’t the first person to buy an abandoned nuclear missile silo and transform at least part of it into a shelter.

Built to withstand an atomic blast, even the most paranoid can find comfort inside concrete walls that are almost three metres thick and stretch 53 metres underground.

Instead of setting up shop in the old living quarters provided for missile operators, he is building condos right up the missile shaft.

Seven of the 14 underground floors will be condo space selling for €1.5 million a floor or €0.76 million a half floor.

Three-and-a-half units have been sold, two contracts are pending and only two more full units are available, Mr Hall said.

For now, metal stairs stretch down to connect each floor but an elevator will later replace them.

The units are within a steel and concrete core inside the original thick concrete, which makes them better able to withstand earthquakes.

He is also installing an indoor farm to grow enough fish and vegetables to feed 70 people for as long as they need to stay inside and also stockpiling enough dry goods to feed them for five years.

The top floor and an outside building above it will be for elaborate security.

Other floors will be for a pool, a movie theatre and a library, and when in lockdown mode there will be floors for a medical centre and a school.

Complex life support systems provide energy supplies from sources of conventional power, as well as windmill power and generators. Giant underground water tanks will hold water pre-filtered through carbon and sand.

And, of course, an elaborate security system and staff will keep marauding hordes out. The condo elevator will only operate if a person’s fingerprint matches its system, Mr Hall said.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



NASA Jumbo Jet Arrives to Ferry Shuttle Discovery to Smithsonian

Space shuttle Discovery’s chartered ride to retirement has arrived. The modified-Boeing 747, known as the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft (SCA), touched down at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center here Tuesday (April 10). The jumbo jetliner came in from Dryden Flight Research Center in California to ferry Discovery to the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C., where the iconic spacecraft is set to go on public display.

The SCA will not be returning to Florida after dropping off Discovery. Instead, another shuttle, the prototype Enterprise, will be loaded atop of the 747 at Dulles Airport for its own flight to New York the following week. While Enterprise never flew in space, it was the first to fly on a Shuttle Carrier Aircraft for a series of approach and landing tests in the 1970s.

Since 2003, Enterprise has been on public display at the Udvar-Hazy Center. It is being moved to the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, a converted aircraft carrier that is berthed in Manhattan, to make room for Discovery.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Administration Corruption in Solyndra Deal Confirmed

The report, “Consultation on Solyndra Loan Guarantee Was Rushed,” reveals that Department of Energy cut out the Treasury Department officials from issues regarding Solyndra, ignoring the agency’s advice and limiting its opportunity to review the high-priced, high-risk financing of what critics call “an Obama green pipe dream.”

Treasury Department officials previously testified last October before the Energy Committee regarding the agency’s role in the Solyndra debacle and the fact that DOE kept Treasury out of the loop at key points in the decision-making process, according to Congressman Upton.

“The Treasury report echoes what our investigation has shown over and over; Solyndra was a bad bet from the beginning that was rushed out the door while every red flag was ignored. Treasury’s report confirms the agency had been effectively cut out of the loan guarantee process despite federal laws and regulations that require their consultation,” Upton said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Portrait of a Failed “Messiah”

What we have come to learn is that he is a liar. He lies even when he does not have to and he lies all the time.

“His primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it.”

If you think this is a psychological profile of Barack Obama, you would be wrong. It is a quote from a profile of Adolph Hitler, prepared for the Office of Strategic Services—the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency—by Walter C. Langer and three others during World War II.

The fact that it rather closely resembles aspects of Obama’s personality we have come to know would be cause for alarm if we were living in the 1930s at the time of Hitler’s rise to power in Germany, but this is a very different time and the U.S. Constitution is still a powerful instrument.

Unlike the 1930s, the Internet has provided everyone with the ability to access information that, as often as not, conflicts with that the mainstream media would have us believe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Santorum Suspends His Campaign, 2 Advisers Say

Rick Santorum is suspending his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination on Tuesday, according to two people with knowledge of his plans. Mr. Santorum is due to make the announcement at a stop in his home state of Pennsylvania after a weekend in which he tended to his three-year-old daughter, Bella, who had been hospitalized with pneumonia.

The decision abruptly ends his quest for the Republican presidential nomination after weeks in which he has struggled to compete with Mitt Romney’s well-financed, highly-organized campaign apparatus.

[Return to headlines]



State Department Barred Inspection

(IPT) — The State Department broke with normal procedures last week when it ordered the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) not to conduct a secondary inspection on members of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) on their way to visit government officials and think tanks in the United States.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Statism Needs Division

Statism, American liberalism, communism, socialism, fascism, or any other authoritarian ism you can think of, is not popular on its face, so it must force its way into our lives, even using deception to make the people desire it. Crisis fuels the desire by the people for the government to “gain control” of everything. But in order for the ruling elite to be able to ride in on their prized stallion to save the day, their must be division, so that the liberal statist can claim they are hear to resolve that division. . .

But what if the division is not severe enough for the statists to use it? What if, as individuals who are personally responsible and self-reliant, we are doing just fine without the intrusion of government in our lives?

Liberals need division, so if division is not present, they must create it.

Obamacare’s time in the Supreme Court, Trayvon Martin, and a whole bunch of other things going on, are the liberal left’s attempt to create division among Americans. That is how Obama won the Presidency in 2008 — by promising to unite our poor, divided nation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Who Cares About John Derbyshire?

After two days of outrage over John Derbyshire’s outrageously racist rant, National Review announced that it was “parting ways” with the writer. Rich Lowry wrote in a post this weekend that the piece was “nasty and indefensible” (interestingly, he didn’t call it racist) and that Derbyshire wouldn’t be writing for the publication anymore. That’s all well and good-but does it really matter?

It’s easy (and correct) to criticize Derbyshire-his article was explicitly, unabashedly racist and hateful. Frankly, it was a gift to conservative writers. Because now they get to shake their heads in disappointment and condemnation, patting themselves on the back as non-racist by comparison. By holding Derbyshire up as a real bad guy, conservatives are hoping that people will ignore their own racism-not just the content of their media but their ideological principles and the policies they support.

Some people would like to believe that racism is just the explicit, said-out-loud discrimination and hatred that is easily identifiable. It’s not-it’s also pushing xenophobic policies and supporting systemic inequality. After all, what’s more impactful-a singular racist like Derbyshire or Arizona’s immigration law? A column or voter suppression? Getting rid of one racist from one publication doesn’t change the fact that the conservative agenda is one that disproportionately punishes and discriminates against people of color. So, I’m sorry, folks-you don’t get to support structural inequality and then give yourself a pat on the back for not being overtly racist.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


European Zoos Welcome Panda Breeding Discovery

The beloved black-and-white bears are notoriously hard to breed. European zoos are taking note of a new study that sheds light on the endangered mammal’s reproductive “clock.” It turns out male pandas have a cycle too.

It’s mating season for giant pandas — and right about now, males are at their peak for making cubs, a new study has found.

Scientists at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Washington, D.C., have discovered that male pandas seem specially adapted to ramp up their sperm production in advance of female panda ovulation.

Panda captive breeding programs face the ongoing challenge that female pandas ovulate just once a year.

The new findings, published last week in the Biology of Reproduction journal, may improve the chances of preserving genetic diversity in an already small population that is under ever more pressure in the wild.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Flemish Far Right Party Launches Racist Website

(AGI) Brussels — Flemish far right party Vlaams Belang launched a racist website inviting the population to denounce irregular immigrants in Belgium. It is not a new idea: over the past few months, Dutch Geert Wilders’s Pvv party had launched a similar site in the Netherlands, triggering fierce polemics in Europe.

Vlaams Beland leader Filip Dewinter explained that the denounces will be forwarded to police, because, “the presence of tens of thousand of irregular immigrants in the large Belgian cities worsens phenomena like under the table jobs, criminality and abuse of social services”. The anti-immigrants movement has 12 deputies and 5 senators in the Belgian Parliament.

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



France: 13 Salafis Before Judge for Indictment

Planned kidnapping of Jewish judge among charges

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 3 — Thirteen of the seventeen Salafis taken into custody by French police on Friday have gone before the investigating magistrate today who will be charging them with belonging to an illegal association linked to terrorism.

Among the charges against those detained, including the head of the Salafi group Forsane Alizza, is the “planned kidnapping” of a Lyon magistrate of Jewish origins, Albert Levy, said Paris prosecutor Francois Molins. The dissolution of Forsane Alizza (“the Knights of Pride”) was ordered by Interior Minister Claude Gueant, who accused the organisation of training its supporters for armed struggle, of being against Republican principles and of wanting to bring “the kingdom of Islam” to France.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France 2012: Sarkozy Attacks in Paris, Freeze EU Check

Hollande? “Rash of spending”.Programme and letter to French

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 6 — Nicolas Sarkozy is on the counter-attack. The French President, a candidate to his own succession at the forthcoming elections in April and May, has made his move following yesterday’s major rally by François Hollande, rigourously accusing his Socialist rival for the presidency of wanting to introduce a “rash of new spending” and has announced a plan that will see France balance its budget by 2016. Just as François Mitterand did before him, Sarkozy will also use a letter to explain his strategy, with six million copies sent to French households.

Speaking at a press conference in Paris, Sarkozy said that, if re-elected, the plan would see a freeze on the increase of Paris’ contribution to the European Union, allowing the country to obtain 3 billion euros over the entire period of the EU budget (2014-2020). “I can announce to you that France will ask for its contribution to the European budget to be frozen, which will mean savings of 600 million euros per year,” said Sarkozy, who, 17 days ahead of the first round of voting on April 22, today presented in detail his election programme, as well as a 34-page “Letter to the French people”, based on that sent by the former Socialist President, François Mitterand. Six million copies of the letter will be printed and sent to households across the country.

France’s contribution to the EU’s budget currently stands at 19 billion euros, putting the country in second position behind Germany. The President has already told his European partners that efforts to reduce France’s debt will cost 115 billion euros: 75 billion in cuts plus 40 billion in new revenue. Sarkozy also used the news conference in Paris to rail against Hollande, the overwhelming favourite in the polls, saying that his rival’s promises could drag France into a situation similar to that face by Spain or Greece.

Hollande’s plan, he warned, is a “rash of new spending, no-one knows how it will be covered”. “The situation faced by our Spanish friends, after what has happened to our Greek friends, brings us back down to earth,” Sarkozy said, insisting on the negative effect that the former Socialist government in Madrid had on Spain’s financial situation. “After 4 years of crisis, we must reduce deficit, we cannot say that it is time to party,” he added. The outgoing President also claimed that Hollande’s idea of bringing the pensionable age down to 60 “is the very denial of the existence of a crisis. This alone means 5 billion more in spending for nothing”. Sarkozy also pointed the finger at his rival’s tax proposals, which he said represent “a massacre” for families and the middle-class.

The Socialist candidate’s plan to renegotiate the EU fiscal compact agreement, Sarkozy continued “is simply utopian, because [talks] have just finished and there is no government in Europe that wants [such an outcome]”. Europe, he added, was “on the edge of the precipice” and emerging from the situation “has been very difficult”.

Sarkozy has brought the campaign back to an economic battleground after significant focus in recent days on the issues of security and immigration, after the trauma of the massacres in Toulouse and Montauban committed by the Islamic terrorist Mohamed Merah. The polls suggest that Sarkozy will be comfortably defeated by Hollande in the second round of voting on May 6. The first round, however, sees him in the lead. The far-left Front de Gauche party candidate, Jean-Luc Melenchon, also continues to gain ground.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Journalist and Writer Miriam Mafai Dies

Leftwing intellectual was 86

(ANSA) — Rome, April 9 — Distinguished former Communist journalist, writer and liberal intellectual Miriam Mafai died Monday aged 86.

The Florence-born Mafai was a former WWII Resistance fighter who suffered under Benito Mussolini’s racial laws because her mother was a Jew. She later became an official in the Italian Communist Party (PCI), the biggest Communist group in Western Europe and a major player in postwar Italian society.

She worked for PCI organ l’Unita’ and another leftwing newspaper, Paese Sera, before helping found La Repubblica, Italy’s leading progressive daily, in the mid-1970s.

She was looked up to by generations of leftwing women as a proto-feminist and gained a wide audience among both sexes as a waspish, libertarian critic of conservative policies.

From 1983 to 1986 she was head of the Italian journalists’ union FNSI and became an MP for the more moderate heirs to the PCI, most recently as a member of the national executive of the Democratic Party (PD), Italy’s main centre-left party.

Among her best-known works are Black Bread, Women and Daily Life in the Second World War (Mondadori); Goodbye Botteghe Oscure, Once Were Communists (Mondadori); and Forgetting Berlinguer, the Italian Left and the Communist Tradition (Donzelli).

PD leader Pier Luigi Bersani said Mafai was “one of the protagonists of our time”.

“Miriam Mafai lived many roles, always with intelligence, passion and curiosity,” he said. Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno, a political opponent, said Mafai’s death was “a painful loss for the whole city of Rome and all its citizens, regardless of their political leanings”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bossi’s Son Renzo Resigns as Lombardy Councillor

Northern League hit by fraud scandal

(ANSA) — Rome, April 9 — Umberto Bossi’s son Renzo resigned his position as councillor in the Lombardy regional assembly on Monday, four days after a big financial scandal caused Bossi elder to quit as the leader of the Norther League.

Prosecutors investigating alleged fraud by the populist party’s former treasurer Francesco Belsito suspect party money was misspent on members of the Bossi family.

“I’ve stepped aside in this moment of difficulty, without anyone asking me to,” Renzo Bossi told Mediaset television.

“I’m giving an example. I have peace of mind and I have faith in the judiciary, even though I’m not under investigation”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Northern League Must Have Clean Up, ‘Look in All Drawers’

Maroni says auditors to examine party assets

(see related story) (ANSA) — Rome, April 5 — The Northern League must purge itself of any corruption that may exist within it, former minister Roberto Maroni said on Thursday, when Umberto Bossi resigned as party leader after being linked to a fraud probe.

“Now we must work hard to have a clean up, looking at all the accounts and opening all the drawers,” said Maroni, who is one of three senior League figures who have temporarily been put in charge of the party.

The former interior minister added that an external auditing company had been put in charge of checking the party’s assets.

Verona Mayor Flavio Tosi, another League bigwig, said Bossi had shown he “really loves the movement” by taking the painful decision to quit.

However, some politicians from other parties forecast more trouble ahead for the populist League, which campaigns for greater autonomy for the wealthier north of Italy.

“The judicial affair that has forced Umberto Bossi to resign is the tip of the iceberg of the crisis of the League,” said Marina Sereni of the centre-left Democratic Party.

“A party that 20 years ago responded to the demand for change after the crisis of the old political establishment is now the symbol of a period that is coming to an end”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Lega: Formigoni Welcomes Resignation of Renzo Bossi

(AGI) Milan — The president of Lombardy region, Roberto Formigoni, welcomed Renzo Bossi’s resignation from the regional council. Writing on Twitter he said: ‘I have read the announcement of the resignation of Renzo Bossi from Lombardy Regional Council. It’s for the best’.

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



Italy: Berlusconi Plan to Give Away TV Frequencies Scrapped — Report

Rome, 10 April (AKI) — Italy has decided to scrap plans to give away digital television frequencies and will hold an auction that can raise up to 1.2 billion euros for the cash-strapped government.

“I don’t think diving away valuable state property is a good thing,” industry minister Corrado Passera told the la Repubblica daily.

Italy has raised taxes, implemented pension reform and passed other painful measures in an effort to cut the world’s fourth-biggest debt load and put its financial house in order.

The unelected government that came to power in November after Silvio Berlusconi’s rule came to an end amid a debt crisis had given themselves until 19 April to decide if it would eliminate the decision to give away six digital frequencies.

Berlusconi’s media empire was set to benefit from the move to allow qualified broadcasters to snap up valuable frequencies for free in what has been dubbed a “beauty contest.”

Berlusconi is the owner of the country’s largest private broadcaster, prompting accusations of conflict of interest for his government’s decision to not sell the frequencies. The plan was also criticized for favouring incumbent broadcasters.

An auction of fourth-generation mobile telephone frequencies last year raised almost 4 billion euros for the Italian treasury.

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



Italy: Bossi Junior Steps Down, Rosy Mauro Urged to Follow Suit

(AGI) Rome — Umberto Bossi’s son Renzo has also taken a step back. The Lega has now invoked the Italian saying “there are never two without three”, and Roberto Calderoli has called on Rosy Mauro to make up the numbers by stepping down as Deputy Chairman of the Senate. It’s been a tough Easter for the Lega, which is going through what Roberto Calderoli called a ‘tsunami,’ which began with a leaked interview with Alessandro Marmello, Renzo Bossi’s driver and bodyguard. Marmello has apparently told Oggi magazine that he had withdrawn cash from “Lega funds” to pay Bossi Junior’s personal expenses. Just over an hour later came Renzo’s decision. “In this fraught period, I have decided of my own volition to take a step back and resign as regional councillor,” he announced. “I am not under investigation” he was at pains to point out, “it was a difficult decision, made to safeguard the movement and to respond to all the questions that will come out over the next few days.” The Lega leader was pleased with Renzo Bossi’s decision. “He was right to stand down,” said Bossi. But the former secretary also indirectly denied that this hand had been forced by the storm over the movement. “I had been fed up with working for the Region for two or three months,” was all he said. The “Senatur” gave a laconic reply on the subject of Rosy Mauro’s possible departure: “We’ll see” was all he said.

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



Italy: Bossi Jr Driver: ‘I Handed Over Lega Money for His Expenses’

(AGI) Milan — Renzo Bossi’s driver said he gave party money to Renzo Bossi for his personal expenses. Alessandro Marmello, driver and bodyguard of Renzo Bossi, told the magazine Oggi (on the newsstands tomorrow): ‘I can’t carry on. I don’t want to continue to pass money to the son of Umberto Bossi in this way.

It is cash that I withdraw from the coffers of the Lega in my name under my responsibility. He collects it without blinking an eye, putting it in his pocket as it were the most natural thing in the world. That’s enough now. I am an honest person. I don’t want to play this game anymore’.

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



Italy: Public Prosecutor Acquires Video of Payment to Renzo Bossi

(AGI) Milan — Milano prosecutors are in possession of the video that appeared on the ‘Oggi.it’ web site showing Renzo Bossi receiving money from his driver, Alessandro Marnello, which Marnello said proves he took money from the Northern League.

RCS investigators obtained the video.

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



Netherlands: Handshake Muslim Loses Court Case

Rotterdam council was right not to offer lawyer Mohammed Enait the job of client manager after he refused to shake hands with women, a court in The Hague said on Tuesday afternoon.

Enait had applied for the job at the social services department but said he would not shake hands with women on religious grounds. However, he would greet them in another respectful fashion, he said.

When he was refused the job, Enait brought a civil case against Rotterdam council, saying the rejection was religious discrimination.

The court found the refusal to shake women’s hands ‘unacceptable’ and that Enait is ignoring the equality between men and women, reports news website nu.nl. In addition, it would damage the relationship between the council and its clients.

In 2009, Enait was in the news for refusing to stand up in court when judges entered the room on the grounds that in Islam all men are equal.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Norway Killer Breivik is Sane: Psychiatric Report

Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway last July, was not psychotic at the time of the twin attacks and can thus be held criminally responsible, a new psychiatric probe concluded on Tuesday.

“The experts’ main conclusion is that the accused, Anders Behring Breivik, is not considered to have been psychotic at the time of the actions on July 22nd, 2011,” the Oslo district court said in a statement which reopens the debate on whether the self-confessed killer can be sent to prison. “That means that he is considered criminally responsible at the time of the crime.”

The new evaluation counters the findings of an initial probe that found Breivik was suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia,” which meant he would most likely be sentenced to psychiatric care instead of prison.

On July 22nd, Breivik first set off a car bomb outside government buildings in Oslo, killing eight people, before travelling to the small island of Utøya north-west of the capital where he spent more than an hour methodically shooting and killing another 69 people, mostly teenagers.

The victims had been attending a summer camp hosted by the ruling Labour Party’s youth organisation.

The conclusions of the second psychiatric evaluation, which was ordered by an Oslo court amid an outcry over the initial exam findings, were published just six days before Breivik’s trial is set to start.

In the end however, it will be up to the Oslo court judges to determine his mental state when they publish their verdict around mid-July, thus deciding whether he will be locked up in a closed psychiatric ward or sent to prison.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Oslo Braces for ‘World’s Deadliest Shooter’ Trial

Anders Behring Breivik will go on trial in Norway next Monday charged with committing “acts of terror” when he slaughtered 77 people in twin attacks in July that shook the tranquil country to its core.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway’s Mass Killer Breivik ‘Declared Sane’

A second psychiatric evaluation of mass killer Anders Behring Breivik has found him sane enough to face trial and a jail term.

The findings contradict a previous evaluation, published in November, that found him legally insane.

Breivik is due to stand trial on 16 April over a shooting spree last July, in which he admits killing 77 people.

The question of his sanity decides whether he will be sent to a psychiatric ward or jail.

The second evaluation was approved by a court in January following widespread criticism of last year’s assessment that diagnosed him as a paranoid schizophrenic who could not be held criminally responsible for his actions.

Many critics questioned whether such a well-planned attack could have been carried out by someone suffering from a mental illness.

Breivik himself last week blasted the first psychiatric assessment as “lies”, saying 80% of it was wrong.

In a letter to Norwegian tabloid Verdans Gang, he said being sent to a psychiatric ward would be a “fate worse than death”.

“To send a political activist to an asylum is more sadistic and more evil than killing him!” he wrote.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik ‘Regrets Not Going Further’: Lawyer

Right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik, whose trial for the killing of 77 people in Norway begins on Monday, plans to tell the court he regrets “not going further”, his lawyer said on Tuesday.

“This will be extremely difficult, an enormous challenge to listen to his explanations,” Geir Lippestad told reporters. “He will not only defend (his actions) but will also lament, I think, not going further.”

The 33-year-old right-wing extremist also said he was “pleased” with the results of a new psychiatric probe that found him sane and criminally responsible, contrary to a first official exam that concluded late last year that he was suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia” and therefore criminally insane.

“His first reaction was that he was pleased with the conclusion” of the new expert report, Lippestad told reporters after discussing the new findings with his client. “He also said he was not surprised, that he had been expecting this conclusion,” the lawyer added.

Breivik, who has said being sent to a psychiatric ward would be “worse than death”, wants to be declared sane, according to his lawyers, so as not to damage the political message presented in his 1,500-page manifesto published online shortly before the twin July attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik Trial: Facts and Figures

The trial of Anders Behring Breivik opens next Monday and will last about 10 weeks, involving hundreds of people.

Here are some facts about the trial:

The actors

  • The judges: Breivik’s fate will be decided by a panel of five judges, comprising two professional judges and three lay judges whose votes will all weigh equally. The chief judge is one of the professionals, Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen
  • The defence: Breivik will be defended by Geir Lippestad and three assistants
  • The prosecution: two state prosecutors, Inga Bejer Engh and Svein Holden
  • The victims: more than 770 survivors and families of the victims, represented by 162 lawyers
  • The witnesses: close to 150 people are expected to testify

The verdict is expected in mid-July, though no specific date has been set yet. A majority vote by three of the five judges is needed, and will focus on the question of whether Breivik was criminally sane, which will determine whether he is sentenced to prison or a closed psychiatric ward.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway Gunman Anders Behring Breivik ‘Pleased’ Probe Finds Him Sane

Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in Norway last July, said through his lawyer Tuesday he was “pleased” that a new psychiatric probe found him to be sane and not psychotic. “His first reaction was that he was pleased with the conclusion” of the new expert report, Geir Lippestad told reporters after discussing the new findings with his client, who had been found to be suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia” in an earlier probe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Killer Deemed Sane After All

Norwegian mass murderer Anders Breivik is not criminally insane, according to a new psychiatric assessment, which contradicts an earlier examination. It comes six days before Breivik is to go on trial on terror charges.

Anders Behring Breivik, who confessed to murdering 77 people in a bomb and shooting rampage in Norway last July, is not criminally insane after all, an Oslo court said on Tuesday. A new psychiatric assessment says he was not psychotic before, during and after the attacks, nor is he a paranoid schizophrenic.

“Our conclusion is that he is not psychotic at the time of the actions of terrorism and he is not psychotic now,” Terje Toerrissen, one of the two psychiatrists involved in the examination, told the Associated Press news agency. The experts also said that there was “a high risk of repeated violent actions.”

The findings contradict an earlier examination and pave the way for prosecutors to seek a prison sentence instead of compulsory commitment to psychiatric care. Breivik is set to go on trial on terror charges on April 17 for last year’s massacre.

The court will take both psychiatric assessments into account during the trial, which is scheduled to last 10 weeks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Obama’s Anti-Semitism Expert to Meet Reepalu

Malmö mayor Ilmar Reepalu, still in the doghouse for recent comments about the city’s Jewish community, will meet with President Barack Obama’s anti-Semitism representative, who is due to visit Malmö in two weeks. “This is not something she has decided hastily. She has wanted to visit for a long time,” said Julia Janiec, chief of staff at the Malmö mayor’s office to local paper Sydsvenskan.

According to the paper, US president Barack Obama persuaded Rosenthal to take on the role as his representative in the fight against anti-Semitism in November.

Rosenthal, whose father was a survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, has already provoked the Israeli government on a number of occasions by pointing out the difference between anti-Semitism and justified criticism against the state of Israel.

Spokesperson for the US embassy in Stockholm, Chris Dunnett, told the paper that Rosenthal has been following events in Malmö for some time and wants to make sure that there are no politicians in the area that encourage anti-Semitism, discrimination, and racism.

While in Sweden, Rosenthal will also meet with representatives from organizations such as Malmö mot diskriminering (‘Malmö against discrimination’) and ECCAR — the European Coalition of Cities against Racism, to which Malmö belongs.

Björn Lagerbäck, who works with an initiative by the city to combat racism and intolerance, told Sydsvenskan that the Americans want to stay informed about what Malmö is doing to combat the problems in the area.

“Anti-Semitism has existed since the beginning of time. There is every reason to look at what is going on today. We are all responsible,” Lagerbäck told the paper.

Malmö mayor Reepalu has been likened by some observers to British ex-mayor Ken Livingstone for his habit to put his foot in his mouth.

His recent statements in right-leaning magazine NEO that the Jewish community in Malmö had been infiltrated by the Sweden Democrats ruffled a lot of feathers in Sweden and abroad.

Reepalu has recanted his comments completely and is making every effort to reconcile with the local Jewish community.

Israeli ambassador to Sweden, Benny Dagan, has noted his efforts but recently said that he is hoping to see more hands-on approach to sorting out the troubles in the area, according to Sydsvenskan.

           — Hat tip: Freedom Fighter [Return to headlines]



There’s More to Nuclear Fusion Than ITER

CONSTRUCTION is finally under way in southern France of ITER, the experimental fusion reactor that scientists hope will produce more energy than it consumes. It is a huge undertaking, needing the backing of the European Union and six powerful nations to get even this far.

But care needs to be taken that ITER does not overshadow other experiments. The US Department of Energy last month cited increased support for ITER as the reason it plans to axe funding for several smaller fusion projects.

In these penny-pinching times, tough choices need to be made. But ITER will not address a host of practical and operational questions that must be answered before fusion power can become a reality. It is a first step, not a last best hope. If that is forgotten, the distant dream of fusion power may remain just that.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Abu Hamza US Extradition Backed by European Court

The European Court of Human Rights has backed the extradition of Abu Hamza and four other terror suspects from the UK to the US.

The Strasbourg court held there would be no violation of human rights for those facing life and solitary confinement in a “supermax” prison.

Judges said they would consider further the case of another suspect because of mental health issues.

Prime Minister David Cameron said he was “very pleased” with the news.

“It’s quite right that we have a proper legal process, although sometimes you can be frustrated by how long things take,” he added.

The court’s decision is one of its most important since 9/11 because it approves of human rights in US maximum security prisons, making it easier for the UK to send suspects to its closest ally.

There could still hypothetically be an appeal against the court’s ruling in its final Grand Chamber — but in practice, very few cases are re-examined in that final forum.

The men have three months to try to persuade the Grand Chamber to reopen the entire case and examine it. If the men fail to launch an appeal, they will be extradited to the United States.

The family of one of the men, Babar Ahmad, who has been held for a record of nearly eight years without trial, said he would fight on against extradition.

Last week, he appealed in a BBC interview to be charged and tried in the UK because his alleged crimes were committed here.

Home Secretary Theresa May said: “I welcome the decision of the European Court of Human Rights to allow the extradition of Abu Hamza and other terror suspects.

“In five of the six cases, the Court found that extradition would not breach their human rights and in the remaining case, it asked for further information before taking a final decision.

“I will work to ensure that the suspects are handed over to the US authorities as quickly as possible.”

The European Court said there would be no breach of human rights if the men were to be held in solitary confinement at ADX Florence, a Federal Supermax jail in Colorado, used for people convicted of terrorism offences.

Abu Hamza is unlikely to be held at that jail because of his disabilities. The court also held that the life sentences each man faces would not breach human rights.

But in one case, Haroon Aswat, judges said they could not yet give the go-ahead to extradition because they needed to see more submissions on his schizophrenia and how that would be treated were he sent to the US.

The court said that the range of activities and services at ADX Florence were better than many European prisons.

It said: “Having fully considered all the evidence from both parties, including specifically prepared statements by officials at ADX Florence as well as letters provided by the US Department of Justice, the court held that conditions at ADX would not amount to ill-treatment.

“As concerned ADX’s restrictive conditions and lack of human contact, the court found that, if the applicants were convicted as charged, the US authorities would be justified in considering them a significant security risk and in imposing strict limitations on their ability to communicate with the outside world.

“The court finds that there are adequate opportunities for interaction between inmates. While inmates are in their cells talking to other inmates is possible, admittedly only through the ventilation system.

“Save for cases involving the death penalty, it has even more rarely found that there would be a violation of Article 3 (that no-one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment) if an applicant were to be removed to a state which had a long history of respect of democracy, human rights and the rule of law.”

Abu Hamza is charged with offences relating to hostage taking in Yemen and an alleged plot to set-up a terrorism training camp in the United States. Haroon Aswat is also accused in connection to the training camp.

Babar Ahmad and Talha Ahsan are accused of supporting terrorism through a website operated in London.

The final two men allegedly played a part in organising the 1998 US Embassy bombings in East Africa.

           — Hat tip: ICLA [Return to headlines]



UK: Blackpool Council Grants Free Parking for Muslims, But Everyone Else Has to Pay

WHEN BLACKPOOL FC were promoted to the Premier League in 2010 they staged an extremely busy event on the Promenade to celebrate, with the team riding through on an open top bus before taking to the stage to belt out that this was the “best trip they had ever been on”. I went to this event and parked on Blackpool South car park, paying a fairly ridiculous minimum charge of £3.50 for the trouble. But hey, it was a one-off (or maybe not if Ian Holloway can stop the team conceding cheap goals). I just checked and the minimum charge has gone up to £5.00 for this car park, and this is only enough to buy you 3 hours of time before the parking stasi come along and make your trip a whole lot more expensive. In tourist spots in Cornwall, £5.00 gets you the whole day making Blackpool very, very expensive. Expensive unless you are a Muslim that worships at the controversial Noor A Madina mosque on Waterloo Road, operated by Labour Party drone Tasurraf Shah.

This Sunni Islam mosque has been desperately trying to expand its capacity over the last year and boasts on its Wikipedia page that, ‘there are two 200-person capacity buildings at the mosque; three remain under development.’ Assuming the other three buildings are of equal size (they are all similarly sized shops), this works out at a current capacity of 400 and a prospective capacity of 1,000 Muslims. Unfortunately their expansion plans were quashed on the basis of insufficient car parking. On the 13th of February, 2012, Pam Goodwin from Blackpool Council confirmed that 8 parking permits, with no restriction on the vehicle used, had been issued to the Noor A Madina mosque permitting an hour’s free parking on Blackpool South car park every Friday. It seems like a token gesture, because this in no way covers the mosque’s capacity of 400 people. However, since the minimum charge at this car park is £5.00 per vehicle, this works out at a subsidy of £40 per week, or a colossal £2,080 per annum from Blackpool Council.

You might remember that Council Leader Simon Blackburn was asked, through a petition of over 2,300 signatures, to stop the council putting up the rent for the 1st Bispham Scout and Guides group from £10 to £1,400. In rejecting this request, he said;

The implication of granting the Scouts the discretionary payment they seek, while affordable in itself, would be to open the floodgates to a whole host of other equally venerable institutions, and that is a burden I am not prepared to ask tax payers to fund.

A fair point, I suppose, if a little disappointing. The council, however, are not operating in a consistent, fair manner on this. It appears that if the subject matter is a mosque, operated by a crony of the controlling Labour councillors, leading a minority group that could potentially cultivate Labour voters, the council are happy to throw away their stance of protecting taxpayers money and bung over £2,000 per year in benefits in kind to the cause. Simon Blackburn is a hypocrite. The Fairness Commission should be all over this because, as Tasurraf Shah highlights in her appeal against the rejection of planning permission, there are three other churches within sight of the mosque and, like the Noor A Madina, they do not have on-site parking for their congregations. As such, the council should in fact be supplying these churches with appropriate parking passes to maintain fairness. Similarly, other business owners in the area that I have spoken to have applied for parking permits and been rejected by the council, but it seems that handouts are only available if you pray to Allah rather than keep the town’s economy going.

Update

10/4/12, 16.00

I’ve just been informed that following these revelations about free parking passes (which portfolio holder Fred Jackson is said to have been unaware of) and some sniffing around from the Gazette, the council have performed a massive U-turn on this issue and withdrawn all of the passes from the Noor A Madina mosque. Council officers have no authority to whimsically hand out free council services to those they favour. This is yet another insight into a laissez-faire, tail-wags-dog culture in which the officers rule until they are found out. Sound familiar? Of course, if KPMG had done a report about it, it would probably have been kept secret. That said, expect to see this in Wednesday’s Gasjet. Give yourselves a pat on the back, folks!

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Hate Preachers Return to Quaker Venue

Readers of Harry’s Place will be familiar with the strange phenomenon of the hospitality extended by The Quakers — a small religious sect which eschews violence in all its forms — to a variety of hate preachers and theocratic Islamist political movements, all of which explicitly sanction the most horrific violence, backed by religious injunction, against women, gays, Jews and religious dissenters. We have previously discussed the strange politics which renders The Quakers oblivious to the calls to combat, not promote, the politics of hatred. They won’t be moved. So I don’t propose to rehearse those arguments here. The Quakers are beyond reason. For a while, it looked as if hate preachers might possibly have been asked to take their custom elsewhere. No such luck. June sees the return of some of the worst inciters of religious violence in the United Kingdom to Friends House.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Court Suspends Egypt’s Constitutional Assembly

An Egyptian court has suspended the formation of the Islamist-dominated assembly that was poised to draft the country’s new constitution. It is unlikely that the Muslim Brotherhood will welcome the news.

An Egyptian court on Tuesday blocked the creation of a constitutional assembly appointed last month to draft the country’s new constitution. The move was made pending a ruling on its legality, following fierce complaints from liberal and Christian groups that the Islamist- dominated panel did not reflect the diversity of Egyptian society.

Judge Ali Fekri said the court “rejected the argument that the court is not specialized and decided to halt the decision.”

This case, presented by lawyers and activists, represented one of numerous lawsuits that had called for the assembly to be scrapped. Its creation last month sparked outcry over the lack of representation for youth groups, women and Christian Copts. Christian religious bodies also earlier withdrew from the commission.

“This means the assembly’s activities are frozen; it is suspended until further notice, until the judicial panel convenes,” said lawyer Khaled Abo Bakr.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party has maintained that the assembly is representative of Egypt’s society.

The current constitution was suspended in February last year by the army. The military came to power after the country’s former president, Hosni Mubarak, was forced out of office by a wave of popular protests.

The new constitution could be key to determining which state institutions will rule Egypt and the extent and nature of individual freedoms and the terms of presidential power.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Jihadists Say French Paper ‘Liberation’ Is Enemy of Islam

(AGI) Paris — The Jihadists against French daily ‘Liberation’.

The renowned left-wing newspaper risks the same fate of the journal ‘Charlie Hebdo’, whose head office was set ablaze last year with molotov cocktails. According to another daily, ‘Le Figaro’, the fact that Liberation welcomed their colleagues, left without offices, unleashed the wrath of Forsane Alizza, the “Knights of Pride”, a pro-Jihad group which was joined by Mohammed Merah (the Franco-Algerian ‘killer of Toulouse’), which launched a crusade against the “enemies of Islam”.

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

Middle East


100 Vigilantes to ‘Cleanse Kubbar Island of Women’ — Girls Warned Against Going There

KUWAIT: Islamist activist Mubarak Al- Bthali said he will personally “cleanse Kubbar Island from sin,” and warned girls against going there. “Any girl found on Kubbar Island should only blame herself,” he said in a clear challenge to state laws and in the absence of any government reaction.

Al-Bthali said through his twitter account on Sunday that he will launch a campaign to cleanse the Island from sin. Al-Bthali said he previously made a visit to Kubbar Island, along with a ruling family member, and did not find any wrong doing.

He said he will repeat the visit, with ‘some youths in their boats’, and expressed hope that 100 vigilantes will join him. He said he will use cameras to film Island visitors and use loud speakers to hold prayers there.

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]



Iraq Progresses Toward a Future Built on Oil Wealth

When the US toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, few people imagined that it would take another decade before the Iraqi oil industry was rebuilt. Now, progress is finally being made, and the country’s massive reserves could bring untold wealth. But before that happens, Baghdad needs to improve security and get corruption under control.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kofi Annan Will Seek Tehran’s Support for Syria Peace Plan

(AGI)Tehran- Kofi Annan will fly to Tehran on Wednesday to seek support for the peace plan from Iran, one of Syria’s major allies. Salvaging the crumbling peace plan will be a difficult mission for the U.N. and Arab League envoy as the bond between Damascus and Tehran is stronger than ever. On Sunday last the commander of the Guardians of the Revolution’s ground troops, General Mohamad Pakpur, praised the Syrian government’s grand resistance against the U.S., Israel and their allies. ..

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



Syria Accuses Turkey of Arming Rebels

(AGI) Moscow- Syria accused Turkey of arming Syrian rebels, undermining the peace plan proposed by UN-Arab Leage envoy Kofi Annan. “Turkey supports illegal Syrian militant groups, supplies them with weapons and lets them illegally cross into Syria,” Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem stated during a joint press conference in Moscow for his meeting with Russian counterpart Serghei Lavrov. “How can we [fulfill the plan] if there are still illegal arms deliveries and moving of militants from Turkey?” asked Minister Muallem. . .

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



Turkey-Greece: Simit (Or Koulouri) Pretzel in Dispute

Istanbul wants patent to snatch it from the Greeks

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, APRIL 6 — Even a pretzel can bear witness to the deep roots linking Turkey and Greece, united under the Byzantine and Ottoman empires to then become rivals over the Aegean Sea, and now forced to engage in dialogue due to the current economic crisis. The pretzel in question is the sesame-seed-covered in ‘simit’, which — known under a variety of names such as the Greek ‘koulouri’ — is also widely consumed in Serbia, Bulgaria and other parts of the Balkans and Middle East, such as Lebanon.

Its spread went hand in hand with the conquests of Levantine empires and renders its culinary and national connotation uncertain. Now, in order to snatch it away from an attempt at appropriation by the Greeks, Istanbul’s vendors association has requested an international patent on the pretzel. This was reported by the Turkish daily Hurriyet, which underscored that the move has given rise to resentment in Greece, where another newspaper (Eleftheros Typos) spoke of a new stage in the debate over the origins of foods, as seen in the tooth-achingly sweet dessert baklava. However, this time it has also brought back up an age-old, territorial-nationalistic issue: that of the two small islands of Kardak (Imia) from the mid-1990s. In warning that they are taking action alongside the Turkish Culture Ministry, the chairman of Istanbul simit vendors association, Zeli Sami Ozdemir, said that “Greeks want to appropriate the simit, and we have decided to take possession of it” before they get to it.

However, the simit/koulouri has shared roots which are tricky to follow back to their source, as it has been eaten for centuries and enjoys an almost mythical character. The Greek newspaper quoted by Hurriyet noted that in the Roman province Epirus mothers hoped their sons would become simit vendors in the metropolis looking out over the Bosporus. The pretzel was widely known before Christ, and became popular in Constantinople (now Istanbul) and Thessaloniki (now part of Greece) in Byzantine times. As well-known, however, the Ottoman Empire which cemented this tradition also meant Turkish domination over Greece and painful deportations from both sides: first during the Balkan wars and then with the foundation of modern Turkey by Kemal Ataturk. The division of Cyprus and territorial disputes over other Aegean islands have often brought the two countries to the verge of war, averted solely by mutual membership in NATO. Due to conditioning and fostered by incendiary speculation, concerns have been sparked over the recent military exercises in the Mediterranean and hydrocarbons exploration in disputed waters over the past few months. But greater in number are the official statements and the initiatives indicating that the two countries are growing closer, especially due to the economy, with Greece’s in the depths of a serious crisis and Turkey’s prospering at a confirmed growth rate of 8.5% last year, the second strongest in the world after China’s and despite a 5.3% slowdown over the last quarter. In line with the conciliatory statements made by the two countries’ prime ministers in autumn, last month Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said that trade with Turkey would save Greece’s future.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Asian Terrorism Poses an Increasing Threat to Global Security

The US’ most-wanted list of terrorists in Asia seems to be expanding. Its most recent inclusion is Pakistani Islamist leader Hafiz Saeed — an addition that highlights the threat of Asian terrorism.

Recently, the US government put a bounty of 10 million US dollars (7.6 million euros) on the head of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Pakistan’s infamous Islamist leader and founder of the banned terrorist organization Lashkar-e-Taiba. Saeed is accused of masterminding terrorist attacks carried out by Pakistan-based gunmen in India’s financial capital Mumbai in 2008. The US government also holds him responsible for bombings in Kabul in 2010 and an attack on Indian parliament in New Delhi in 2001.

The head money on Saeed is quite high. Only three militants, including Taliban’s leader Mullah Omar, have that high a bounty. Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri has a 25-million-dollar reward on his head.

Both Omar and al-Zawahiri are believed to be hiding in Pakistan — a nuclear power which many security and counter-terrorism experts consider an instable Islamic country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India: Red Academics Carry On

While people’s attention necessarily remains focused on the 2012 election and the domestic issues that animate it, leftist academics are moving at break neck speed in their efforts to poison young minds the world over against the United States. I had a chance to see and confront that head on during a recent trip to India when I was invited to address a seminar at Gautam Buddha University (GBU). The title, “The Marginalized and Excluded in Society,” suggested the same leftist tinge that most academic exercises have, but I had reason to hope that this one would be different.

By inviting me, the university signaled that the seminar would not shrink from identifying victims of Islamic hegemony, as I have done that time and again at universities and elsewhere in India, and the organizers knew it. And my topic, the ethnic cleansing of Bangladesh’s Hindus, took no prisoners in calling out Muslims as the perpetrators.

The seminar began with a grand plenary session and announced Professor Gopal Guru of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) as the keynote speaker. His introduction was glowing. Evidently in India, as in the US, the academic left showers its own with self-congratulatory awards and honors in order to dismiss anyone who might dare take a contrary position as lacking credentials. Seated in the front as an honored guest from a foreign country, I nevertheless determined to listen politely. It was not long, however, before his hard-left bias put that to the test. Much of his speech was a rambling attack on capitalism as the source of all marginalization and big government as its solution. He coupled this with an unremarkable treatise about margins and centers so arcane and divorced from reality that it was the sort of thing that could keep audience members in their seats only in academia. Still, I sat quietly in deference to my hosts—until he started in on the United States.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


China: Nike and Zara Accused of “Environmental Pollution”

(AGI) Rome — What do Nike, Wal-Mart, H&M, Levi’s, Adidas, Burberry and Zara have in common in China? Nothing about fashion, profits or even fame. These international brands hold a negative record in terms of pollution on the other side of the Great Wall of China. This is what comes out of a report called “Cleaning fashion up — Pollution in the textile supply chain” which has been drawn up by a number of environmental organizations, including Friends of Nature (FON), the Institute of Pubblic and Environmental Affairs (IPE) and Nanjing Greenstone. The report focused on 48 suppliers of major brands.

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



Pyongyang Puts Washington to the Test

As North Korea gears up for its planned rocket launch, Seoul, Tokyo and the West continue to lambast Pyongyang, with experts saying the plans are aimed at putting Washington to the test.

The countdown has begun for a North Korean rocket launch, expected for later this week. Officials in Seoul, Tokyo, Beijing and Washington have all expressed concern over the North’s plans, saying it would violate UN resolutions that ban Pyongyang from testing long-range missile technology.

“North Korea’s launch of a missile would be highly provocative, it would pose a threat to regional security,” State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland told reporters Monday.

Washington’s call for a halt to the launch has been repeated by allies South Korea and Japan. Both East Asian states say they will shoot down the rocket if it strays too close to their territory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Report: Sony to Cut 10,000 Jobs Worldwide Through March 2013

TOKYO (AP) — Sony Corp. will cut about 10,000 jobs worldwide over the next year as it tries to return to profit, Japanese news reports said Monday.

The Nikkei business daily and other media said Sony’s decision to slash 6 percent of its work force comes as it struggles with weak TV sales and swelling losses.

Sony spokeswoman Yoko Yasukouchi wouldn’t confirm the reports.

New CEO Kazuo Hirai is holding a press conference Thursday.

Sony has announced restructuring plans by selling its chemical unit. Sony is also merging its LCD panel operation with Toshiba and Hitachi. Yasukouchi said those changes could affect up to 5,000 employees who are subject to transfers.

Sony earlier this year reported a 159 billion yen ($2.1 billion) loss for the October-December quarter and more than doubled its projected loss for the full fiscal year through March 2013.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sony Expects Record Annual Loss

Japanese consumer electronics producer Sony has said it will book a much greater net loss for the past fiscal year than estimated in February. The period under revision ending on March 31 was marred by tax write-downs.

Japanese electronics company Sony announced on Tuesday that its net losses for the past financial year could reach 520 billion yen ($6.4 billion, 4.9 billion euros), more than doubling its previous projected loss, made public in February. The company has recorded a net loss for the past four consecutive years.

Sony said that the more negative outlook was mainly due to massive write-downs of deferred tax assets in the US, totaling 300 billion yen.

“Due to the recording of this additional tax expense, net loss attributable to Sony’s stockholders is expected to be significantly greater than the February forecast,” the company announced at a press conference in Tokyo.

But even before the write-down, Sony had been well on course to end the current fiscal year with a net loss of around 220 billion yen. Management cited slumping television sales and output disruptions from last year’s flooding in Thailand.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


100 Boko Harams Took Control of Gao in Northern Mali

(AGI) Bamako — At least 100 Nigerian Islamic Boko Haram guerillas crossed the frontier with Mali and took control of the town of Gao, in the north of the Country, according to Abu Sidibe, local deputy-governor. The news was confirmed also by the Bamako security forces. Seven people were killed today, including a girl of seven, in a new wave of attacks launched by the Nigerian Boko Haram Islamic group. In the north-eastern town of Dikwa, the terrorists killed a policeman, a civilian and a local politician during the night, as made known by the Nigerian army. The command attacked a police station, a bank, a hotel but was forced back by the soldiers, as lieutenant-colonel Sagir Musa, the Joint Task Force of the Borno State spokesperson announced. Three of the guerillas were killed, the others, though injured, managed to run away.

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

Immigration


Greece: “Absolutely Nothing” Done, Says Minister

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 6 — Greek Citizen Protection Minister Michalis Chrysochoidis has admitted the government has done “absolutely nothing” to contain the surge of undocumented migrants living in Athens. “We have done absolutely nothing — I want to be very clear,” Chrysochoidis told Mega television, referring to the immigration problem and a surge in HIV/Aids cases. “Not only has absolutely nothing been done, but in Omonia Square, out of the 100 drug users there, 35 are HIV positive.

For God’s sake, is there anyone who believes we can continue this way?” The minister defended his decision to impose draconian public health inspections and set up 30 migrant detention centres, mostly out of disused army facilities.

Residents, meanwhile, in the eastern Attican suburb of Menidi continued protests for a third straight day on Thursday against plans to create a detention centre in their area.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy, Libya Sign Anti-Migrant Pact

Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri visits Tripoli

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI — Italy and Libya on Tuesday signed an agreement to stop illegal immigrants leaving from the North African country. Under the accord, signed in Tripoli by Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri, Italy will also train Libyan police forces. Illegal immigration from Libya has started again after last year’s Libyan war and there are fears that large-scale landings on the southern Italian island of Lampedusa will once more become a frequent occurrence as the weather improves. Before the war, a controversial so-called ‘push-back’ policy virtually halted migrant sailings from Libya.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Key Events in Battle to Extradite Abu Hamza

Radical Muslim cleric Abu Hamza has lost his fight over extradition to the United States. Here is a timeline of key events in his case:

  • Hamza, who was born Mustafa Kamel Mustafa in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1958, came to the UK to study in the early 1980s.
  • He met and married an English woman, Valerie Fleming, and received British citizenship, but the couple divorced years later.
  • He suffered injuries to his hands and eye in Afghanistan, where he travelled to fight a “jihad” against Soviet occupation.
  • On his return to the UK, Hamza started preaching radical anti-Western sermons at the Finsbury Park Mosque, in north London.
  • Following the attacks on September 11 2001, Hamza’s comments in support of Osama Bin Laden sparked outrage.
  • In April 2002, he was formally suspended by the Charity Commission from his position at the mosque, over his inflammatory speeches.
  • On September 11 2002, Hamza spoke at a controversial conference at the mosque titled A Towering Day in History.
  • In January 2003, armed police arrested seven people at the mosque in a dawn raid. A stun gun, replica firearms and CS gas canisters were among the items seized.
  • In February 2003, Hamza again caused outrage when he described the Colombia space shuttle, which contained Christians, Hindus and a Jewish person, as a “trinity of evil” and said its destruction was a punishment from Allah.
  • In April 2003, then-home secretary David Blunkett announced new laws allowing British citizenship to be removed from immigrants who “seriously prejudice” the UK’s interests. Legal moves began to get Hamza deported to Yemen.
  • Two weeks later, his lawyers announced he would appeal against the move.
  • In May 2004, Hamza was arrested on a US extradition warrant. The US want him on charges of conspiring to take Western hostages in Yemen, funding terrorism, and organising a terrorist training camp in Oregon between 1998 and 2000.
  • In October 2004, he was charged with 15 offences under the Terrorism Act, including incitement to murder and possession of a terrorism document, temporarily staying the US extradition process.
  • On February 7 2006, Hamza was jailed for seven years after being found guilty on 11 of 15 charges.
  • In July that year, he was given the go-ahead to challenge the convictions for incitement to murder and race hate offences.
  • In November 2006, the Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal against the conviction.
  • In May 2007, a preliminary extradition hearing took place in London.
  • This was followed, in July 2007, by a hearing where Hamza spoke by video link to fight the extradition.
  • In November 2007, a judge at London’s City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court ruled that Hamza had lost his legal arguments against his long-running extradition battle. Senior District Judge Timothy Workman sent the matter to the Home Secretary to make a final decision.
  • On February 7 2008, then-home secretary Jacqui Smith signed an extradition order, meaning Hamza would be handed over to US authorities within 28 days if he did not appeal.
  • But Hamza appealed, delaying moves to extradite him. He later lost his bid to avoid extradition on June 20 2008, when two High Court judges ruled that the decision was “unassailable”.
  • On July 23 2008, he was also refused permission to appeal to the House of Lords when senior judge Sir Igor Judge refused to certify that his case raised a point of law of such public importance to go before the highest court in the land.
  • On August 4 2008, the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ruled that Hamza should not be extradited until judges could examine his case. The Home Office said it would abide by the court’s request.
  • On January 18 2010, Hamza launched another legal fight to hang on to his British passport.
  • On February 9 2010, legal aid bosses seized Hamza’s house in Greenford, west London, to pay off his legal bills, despite the radical preacher claiming it did not belong to him. Officials hoped to raise £280,000 from the sale.
  • On November 5 2010, Hamza won his appeal against the Government’s attempts to strip him of his British passport. The move would have rendered him “stateless” as he had already been stripped of his Egyptian citizenship, the Special Immigration Appeals Commission (Siac) ruled.
  • On April 10 2012, Europe’s human rights judges ruled that Hamza, along with four other terror suspects, would not be subject to “ill-treatment” in America and their extradition was lawful.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Palestinian Ambassador Thanks Memo for Sheikh Raed Support

Following the success of Sheikh Raed Salah’s appeal against a deportation order, the Palestinian Ambassador to London, Professor Manuel Hassassian, has offered his thanks to those who have supported Sheikh Raed and helped to highlight the injustice of the government’s legal action. In particular, Prof. Hassassian thanked Middle East Monitor (MEMO), ITN Solicitors and other organisations who have done what he called “a tremendous job” in the 10-month battle to clear Sheikh Raed’s name against false accusations. Ambassador Hassassian declared the Upper Immigration Tribunal’s ruling to be “a victory for Palestine”, and said that the British justice system had acted in a fair and just way. “This has not only restored dignity and credibility to a man who has campaigned for the Palestinian cause, but has also symbolised victory for the Palestinians in their struggle for freedom, liberty and human rights,” he added. MEMO would also like to thank the Palestinian Embassy and Professor Hassassian in particular for his support for Sheikh Raed throughout his legal battle.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Theresa May Humiliated by Judge Over Attempted Deportation of Palestinian Activist

A judge has strongly criticised Theresa May’s attempt to deport a Palestinian activist over fears that he would stir up race-hate violence, ruling that she was wrong about the danger he posed and that her decision was “entirely unnecessary”.

The Home Secretary was “misled” about a supposedly anti-Semitic poem written by Sheikh Raed Salah, took “irrelevant” matters into consideration and tried to ban him from Britain on the basis of a “few sentences” in an old sermon, it was said. The judgment is a third humiliation for the Home Secretary in the case of the leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, who was able to walk into this country despite being banned and who later won damages for being detained without being told why. It also raises further doubts over the Government’s ability to deport those it considers dangerous extremists, coming just weeks before two notorious terror suspects, Abu Hamza and Abu Qatada, could be set free.

Sarah Colborne, director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, said: “By arresting, imprisoning and attempting to deport Sheikh Raed Salah on what the judge has determined as a ‘misapprehension of the facts,’ the British Government have acted in a shameful way.” Mr Salah, 53, is an Israeli citizen and a prominent activist for an independent Palestine who has previously been jailed for spitting at a policeman and for funding banned charities. He has been accused in the House of Commons of having a “history of virulent anti-Semitism”.

[JP note: Re Abu Hamza ruling, one step back, two steps forward on the road to the Islamic conquest of Europe.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The ECHR is Right About Abu Hamza, But Britain Still Needs to Leave

by Ed West

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that six terror suspects can be extradited. The famous hook-handed Abu Hamza, along with Babar Ahmad, Haroon Rashid Aswat, Seyla Talha Ahsan, Adel Abdul Bary and Khaled al-Fawwaz, will soon be off our hands for good. Over £4 million of taxpayers’ money has been spent keeping the men in British jails, paying for legal costs and keeping their families on benefits. All are wanted on terror charges in the US, but have been able to spend years fighting extradition because some argue that supermax prison would amount to inhuman and degrading treatment under Article 3 of the Human Rights code. Well, I’m sure we’ll all be horrified at the thought that men responsible for hundreds of innocent deaths, who have leached this country dry and filled Guardian column inches and Radio 4 minutes with sanctimonious drivel, might be treated inhumanely. None of this should have been allowed to happen in the first place. We should give asylum to our friends, not our enemies, and there are deep and fundamental problems with that system. But it also raises questions about the role of the European Court. And John Bolton, George Bush’s ambassador to the UN, said that Britain should renounce the jurisdiction of the court. He said:

It’s a question of what do British people want to do? Do you want to be an independent nation, or do you want to be a county in Europe? This is just another example of Britain’s mistake in allowing European institutions to develop to the extent they have. It is yet another infringement on British sovereignty that undercuts its ability to co-operate with the United States. It also calls into question the ability of Europe as a whole to be an effective partner in the war against terrorism.

The problem with the ECHR is not that just it is incredibly ineffective, with more than 100,000 pending cases, nor that by its very nature its prone to increasing its jurisdiction, nor that its understanding of “rights” are totally removed from those of the rest of humanity; but that by its very nature a supra-national judiciary inevitably leads to an supra-national government. Even if it was manned by the wisest men in Christendom, I would still not wish Britain to be a part of it.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: What Today’s Abu Hamza Ruling Means

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that five terror suspects, including notorious Islamist cleric Abu Hamza, can be deported to the United States — a decision welcomed by both David Cameron and Theresa May. Last year, Hamza and three of the other men appealed to the ECtHR against extradition to the US on a whole host of grounds — including that they might face the death penalty and that their trials would be prejudiced. The Court found almost of all their grounds inadmissible, but allowed the appeal to proceed on two grounds: that they would be held in the ADX Florence ‘super-max’ prison and would face extremely long sentences — both of which they claimed would contravene Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which states that ‘No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.’

In its judgement today, the Court found that the conditions at the super-max prison would not be so bad as to constitute torture or degrading treatment, and that — as Isabel McArdle at the excellent UK Human Rights Blog puts it — ‘given the seriousness of the criminal allegations against the applicants in question, and the fact that aggravating and mitigating circumstances would be taken into account by the sentencing judge, the sentences would not be grossly disproportionate’. This means that the five men will likely soon be deported. They do have three months to launch an appeal, but — as Joshua Rozenberg points out — the fact that the judges reached a unanimous decision without feeling the need for an oral hearing makes the chance that a request for appeal will be accepted slim. And the wider implications of the ruling? McArdle calls it ‘a very important victory for the UK government, coming at a time of increased public unease about deportation and extradition law’. Perhaps it will also go some way towards correcting the caricature many have propagated in this country of the European Court of Human Rights as a court that always sides with terrorists against our government.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


France: Imam Blesses Union Between Two Gay Muslims

‘Religious wedding in Sevran following sharia rules’

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 10 — An imam has blessed the union of a same-sex Muslim couple in France. Several media, including France 24 and Al Arabiya, report that Ludovic Zahed Mohamed and his partner Qiyam al-Din Qiyam were not allowed to get legally married in France, but that they still received the blessing of the imam in the mosque of Sevran in February. Ludovic Zahed Mohamed, a Frenchman of Algerian origin, and his South African partner Qiyam al-Din reportedly got married in line with the sharia (Islamic law) in the presence of Jamal, an imam from the Mauritius islands. Jamal has blessed the union, following exactly the same rites that are performed at the marriage of heterosexual couples. Christian and Jewish prayers were said as well during the ceremony, in honour of the couple’s Jewish and Catholic friends. They also had a civil wedding ceremony in South Africa, where same-sex weddings are allowed while France does not recognise this type of union. Ludovic Mohamed Zahed, a practising Muslim, has recently published a book, ‘Le Coran et la chair’ (‘The Koran and the Flesh’), an attempt to reconcile Islam and homosexuality.

“Today I am convinced that if the Prophet Muhammad were still alive, he would celebrate gay weddings,” writes Mohamed in his book that was published in France on March 29. The man, born in 1977, has also founded an association for the defence of homosexual Muslims in France (HM2F).

The socialist candidate for the presidential elections that will be held in April and May, Francois Hollande, leading in the polls, has made marriage and adoption for same-sex couples part of his programme.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120409

Financial Crisis
» Italy: Child Labour Re-Emerges in Naples
 
USA
» Facebook Buys Instagram for $1 Billion
» Manufactured Anarchy Will Not Cow Nations
» Obama Uses Taxpayer Cash to Back ACORN Name Changes Used to Dodge the Law
» Yes, Barack Obama is a Marxist
 
Europe and the EU
» Britain Remains a Slave to Euro Judges
» British Man ‘Fathered 600 Children’ At Own Fertility Clinic
» France: Marine Le Pen Favourite Among the Very Young
» Hungary: Anti-Semitic Blood Libel in Parliament
» I Was Forced to Marry at Five — While Living in UK: Horrific Story of the British Child Bride
» Ireland: Corruption at Heart of Celtic Tiger
» Italy: Bossi Used Northern League Election Grants for Travel and Home Improvements
» Palestinian Activist Ordered Not to Come to Britain Wins Appeal Against Government’s Attempt to Deport Him
» Separatists Marching Under the EU Banner
» UK: Abu Hamza Could be Deported Despite Human Rights Ruling
» UK: Nothing is Sacred to Metal Thieves
» UK: World’s Biggest Wind Farm ‘To Blight the South Coast’ If 200 Near 700ft Turbines Are Erected Just Off Stunning Shore
 
Balkans
» Obama Shuns Kosovo Leader Thaci
 
North Africa
» Egypt Military Warns Against Interference in Its Businesses
» Egypt-Israel Pipeline Sabotaged Again
» Former Egyptian Intelligence Chief: “Not Supported by Army”
» Mario Monti: Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty to be Left Alone
» One Hundred Broken Mirrors
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» ‘Universal’ Cancer Vaccine Developed
 
Middle East
» Da Vinci Was a Muslim, Iranian Author Claims
» Iran Rejects Rollback on Nuclear ‘Rights’ But Sees Room to Bargain at Talks
» Jerusalem Prelate Warns on Plight of Christians
» Malta-Based Iranian Company and Ship Help Syria Defy Sanctions
» Western Powers to Demand Closure of Iran’s Best-Protected Uranium Facility
 
South Asia
» Frank Gaffney: Political Compromise of Our Security
» Indonesia: Prosecutors of Atheist ‘Have Proved Nothing’
 
Far East
» Why We Should All be Very Concerned About Fukushima
 
Australia — Pacific
» Ban the Burqa Protest Offends Sydneysiders
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Cancer Victim Robert Mugabe is ‘Fighting for His Life’ In Singapore Hospital
» Explosion in Somali City of Baidoa Kills at Least 12
 
Immigration
» Most Greeks Support Crackdown on Illegals, Poll

Financial Crisis


Italy: Child Labour Re-Emerges in Naples

Mario Spada/prospekt — Le Monde

In one of Europe’s poorest cities, thousands of children are leaving school to help their families make ends meet. Part of a trend that has been accentuated by the crisis, they find work in the black economy or they are recruited for sinister purposes by the mafia. (Extracts.)

Cécile Allegra

7 a.m. in San Lorenzo in the heart of Naples: the kid is struggling to carry a heavy crate of canned goods through a humid labyrinth of city streets. Dressed in his faded overalls, hoodie and and busted trainers, little Gennaro has already begun his day at work.

No one is surprised to see him slaving away at such an early hour. In September 2011, Gennaro found work in a grocery shop. On the job six days a week and 10 hours a day, he stocks shelves, unloads orders and delivers shopping to customers in the neighbourhood.

Gennaro dreamed of becoming a computer programmer, now he is a shop assistant — the most common profession for Neopolitan child workers. He is paid in cash, earning less than a euro an hour. In a good week he can expect to take home 50 euros. Gennaro has just turned fourteen.

Gennaro’s mother, Paola Rescigno, never thought there would come a day when she would deprive her son of school. For 20 years, she and her husband lived in a 35-square-metre flat that gave onto an interior courtyard in the San Lorenzo neighbourhood, the most densely populated area in the city centre.

Then the father died, carried off by a sudden and virulent cancer, and Paola Rescigno was forced to live from hand to mouth. She organised a micro-company offering cleaning services, which nets her and some of the other unemployed women in her neighbourhood 45 euro cents an hour, or 35 euros a week — significantly less than the wage brought home by her son.

At age 10, the children work ten hours a day

She is the one who wakes Gennaro at dawn every morning so that he will arrive on time at the grocery. His younger sister is only six, and difficult choices had to be made: “I don’t have the means to buy books for both of them. It was either one or the other.” On the kitchen table, there is an “8-day loaf”: 3 kilogrammes of bland long-lasting rye bread, a throwback to the post-WWII Italian famine, which costs only five euros.

In Naples, thousands of children like Gennaro have been forced to work. In 2011, a local government report sounded the alarm on the surrounding Campania region, where more than 54,000 children left the education system between 2005 and 2009 — 38% of them were less than 13 years old.

Shop assistants, waiters, occasional delivery boys, apprentice hairdressers, shop floor hands in the back country tanneries and big brand leather workshops, gofers for market stall holders: they are plainly visible, clearly working, and hardly anyone seems to mind. “Of course, we were the poorest region in Italy. But we haven’t seen a situation like this since the end of the Second World War,” says Naples deputy mayor Sergio d’Angelo. “At age 10, these kids are already working 12 hours a day, which is a clear breach of their right to development.” The parents, who have put themselves in an illegal position, have to contend with the possibility that social services may place their children in foster homes.

The Italian economic crisis has played a major role in all of this. Since 2008, a succession of financial reforms have introduced drastic cuts. In June 2010, the Campania region put an end to its minimum welfare scheme, plunging more than 130,000 families into poverty.

At the time, the average income in the region was 633 euros per inhabitant: today, half of the region’s residents believe they are worse off. “The younger generation has been obliged to suffer the entire weight of the worst economic crisis in the post-war period,” says Sergio d’Angelo.

“A state that abandons its children”

In Naples, the vast majority of children from poor families are faced with a choice between struggling to stay in school or dropping out to work in the black economy. Then there is a third option, which is to join the ranks of the Camorra, the Neopolitan mafia. Specialist educator Giovanni Savino, age 33, has devoted his life to preventing young people from opting for this most brutal choice. His home turf is one of Naples worst neighbourhoods: Barra, a decayed highrise area of the city which is now an openair drugs supermarket under the control of the Camorra clans.

Every week, Giovanni Savino visits Rodino secondary school, located at the centre of one of the suburb’s housing projects, where drug trafficking is a major business and one in every two children is out of school for more than 100 days per year.

By law, absences of more than 60 days should automatically lead to expulsion. For Savino, each case is a race against the clock. Every week, the school’s head teacher, Annunziata Martire, gives him a list of absentees, for whom he must find a solution within ten days before their files are referred to social services.

More often than not, he encourages his charges to sit state exams as external candidates to ensure that they are not taken away from their families and placed in foster homes.

Local government officials are afraid to enter the area’s tower blocks, and there are very few educators like Giovanni Savino who are able to enter Barra.

At the head of an association called Il Tappeto di Iqbal, “Iqbal’s carpet”, named after a Pakistani child-slave who led a revolt and was subsequently murdered, Giovanni Savino has angry words for the mafia, a failing education system, and a state “which abandons its children.” In Italy, there is no automatic access to benefits. Support for the young people and their families is distributed by 150 associations, which are wholly dependent on local government financing.

Since the onset of the crisis, funding for such initiatives has been cut by 87 %: and the 20,000 educators in the Campania region, who have not been paid for two years, have to rely on their own resources to do their work. If no alternative funding is found, Il Tappeto di Iqbal will soon be forced to close down…

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

USA


Facebook Buys Instagram for $1 Billion

Facebook has acquired Instagram, the popular photo-sharing application, for about $1 billion in cash and stock, the company said Monday. In a Facebook post, the company’s chief, Mark Zuckerberg, said he planned to build Instagram independently from the social network, allowing users to post on other social networks, follow users not on Facebook and opt out of sharing on Facebook.

[Return to headlines]



Manufactured Anarchy Will Not Cow Nations

And so it begins.

The day after Easter, April 9, 2012 was chosen as the one to unleash chaos and confusion on the unsuspecting masses.

It’s the day after Easter and the New Black Panthers (NBP) and Occupy Wall Street (OWS) are kicking off the Revolution.

“Shock Video: “Suited, booted and armed. Unbelievable audio from the NBP on Bloody, Anti-capitalist, ‘Race War’ against White Devils. We’re talking about some blood, is the cover story on The Blaze this morning.

Beginning the ‘training’ of some 100,000 activists with mostly George Soros money, the same day message from OWS is “This Spring We Rise!”

It’s more plan than coincidence that both parties are heading toward anarchy on the same day.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Uses Taxpayer Cash to Back ACORN Name Changes Used to Dodge the Law

The Obama administration has showered its allies at ACORN Housing with $729,849 so far this year despite powerful, newly unveiled evidence of corruption and massive accounting irregularities at the longtime affiliate of ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now).

Watchdog group Cause of Action recently pressured NeighborWorks America, a taxpayer-funded federal nonprofit that funneled more than $26.5 million in federal foreclosure-avoidance money to ACORN Housing, to disclose an internal audit furnished to then-Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd, Connecticut Democrat, late last year.

[…]

ACORN itself is a nonprofit version of Enron, the infamous failed energy company that imploded under the pressure of hopelessly confusing, misleading and illegal accounting practices. The ACORN network has developed a tangled, deliberately complex mess of interlocking directorates and affiliated tax-exempt groups that routinely swap seven-figure checks and that has long cried out for a probe under federal racketeering laws.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Yes, Barack Obama is a Marxist

It’s been four years and the mainstream media still refuses to address the fact that Barack Obama is a Marxist. In fact using that word gets you branded as a crazy (guilty but not on this issue) and someone who uses divisive “tone.

Some who brand Obama Marxist use as their evidence his policies such as the takeover of the domestic auto business, Obamacare, “redistribution of income” etc. Others examine his associations, from Frank Marshall Davis and Bill Ayers to people he hired such as Van Jones and Rev. Jim Wallis. While valid, the examples above are purely circumstantial.

I use a simpler and more direct method of proving my case. When the President was running for the Illinois State Senate, not only did he run with the endorsement of a local socialist organization, but also he signed a contract with one of them, The New Party. The party was a Marxist Political coalition. This was not guilt by association thing. Senator Obama sought out their nomination. He was successful in obtaining that endorsement which required that he sign a contract with the group.

Most New Party members hailed from the Democratic Socialists of America and the “Community Organizing” group ACORN. The party’s Chicago chapter also included a large contingent from the Committees of Correspondence, a Marxist coalition of former Maoists, Trotskyists, and Communist Party USA members.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Britain Remains a Slave to Euro Judges

Yesterday, Theresa May promised to instruct the British courts to stop letting foreign criminals claim they have a human right to a ‘family life’ in the UK.

The Mail welcomes any attempt —however belated — to crack down on the egregious abuse of Labour’s insidious Human Rights Act.

But, sadly, the Home Secretary’s plan does not tackle the core of the problem: Britain’s slavish adherence to the edicts of the unelected European Court of Human Rights.

Whatever new rules she passes here, foreign rapists and killers will still be able to march to Strasbourg — at taxpayers’ expense — to claim they have been wronged.

And, inevitably, Europe’s cardboard judges will continue to grant them victories which appal the public — just as they did when ruling hate preacher Abu Qatada must remain in the UK.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



British Man ‘Fathered 600 Children’ At Own Fertility Clinic

A British man may have fathered 600 children by repeatedly using his own sperm in a fertility clinic he ran, it has emerged.

Bertold Wiesner and his wife Mary Barton founded a fertility clinic in London in the 1940s and helped women conceive 1,500 babies.

It was thought that the clinic used a small number of highly intelligent friends as sperm donors but it has now emerged that around 600 of the babies were conceived using sperm from Mr Wiesner himself.

Two men conceived at the clinic, Barry Stevens a film-maker from Canada and David Gollancz, a barrister in London, have researched the centre and DNA tests suggest Mr Wiesner, an Austrian biologist, provided two thirds of the donated sperm.

Such a practice is outlawed now but at the time it was not known that Mr Wiesner was providing the majority of the samples.

The same sperm donor should not be used to create so many children because of the risk that two of the offpsring will unwittingly meet and start a family of their own, which could cause serious genetic problems in their children.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Marine Le Pen Favourite Among the Very Young

(AGI) Paris — Marine Le Pen and Francois Hollande top the polls among new voters in France for the presidential elections. The latest CSA poll published in Le Monde gives the leader of the Fronte National 26 percent among voters in the 18 to 24 year category. The daughter of former paratrooper Jean Marie Le Pen just beats Hollande on 25%. The same poll puts Nicolas Sarkozy on 17% and the ultra leftist Jean-Luc Melenchon on 16% amongst the very young.

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



Hungary: Anti-Semitic Blood Libel in Parliament

A centrist analyst wonders what reasons a radical right-wing representative may have had when he addressed the House to request the commemoration of a young girl who disappeared from her village in 1882, and who, according to the old anti-Semitic narrative, was murdered by local Jews.

Why did Zsolt Baráth, a Jobbik MP bring up the 19th century blood libel case in Parliament? How does this anti-Semitic topic fit into Jobbik’s political message? Why did he consider it prudent?, political analyst Ferenc Kumin asks in his blog.

On Wednesday, the Jobbik MP asked Parliament to commemorate Eszter Solymosi, a peasant girl, who died in 1882. The trial of the alleged Jewish murderers became a typical blood libel case. Although the court cleared them of all the accusations, the case is brought up from time to time by anti-Semitic groups in Hungary. In his speech Baráth claimed that the the court acted under the pressure of “circles who still have the economy of Hungary and the whole world in their hands.” His anti-Semitic speech was condemned by all parliamentary parties except his own, and several deputies also demanded Baráth’s resignation. Even Krisztina Morvai, one of the three Jobbik MEPs said she would not have used such rhetoric.

Kumin admits he was surprised by Baráth’s speech, since Jobbik has been trying to portray itself as a sensible political force. He admits however that in this case he cannot find any political rationality behind the scandalous event. It is not known whether speeches by Jobbik MPs have to be approved by the leadership of their parliamentary group in advance. They should be. But since MEP Krisztina Morvai distanced herself from “that language” on the following day, the issue may not have been discussed beforehand. On the other hand, the text of the speech has still not been removed from the Jobbik party homepage.

Kumin concludes that the incident can be considered as a test of how far a Jobbik MP can go in his or her public speeches. And if Ms Morvai had to dissociate herself from the speaker, then Baráth obviously went too far.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



I Was Forced to Marry at Five — While Living in UK: Horrific Story of the British Child Bride

A successful businesswoman has told of her agony after being forced into an abusive marriage at the age of five — despite living in Britain.

Samina Shah, who is now in her 40s and too frightened to reveal her real name, spoke out after revelations that Britain’s Forced Marriage Unit had handled the case of another five-year-old girl last year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Corruption at Heart of Celtic Tiger

The Irish Times, 23 March 2012

“Corruption and abuse of power ‘endemic’ in politics,” headlines the Irish Times, one day after the publication of the report of the Mahon Tribunal, the longest running public inquiry in the history of the state.

Launched in 1997 to investigate corrupt payments to politicians mainly over planning permissions and land re-zoning issues, the tribunal accused former Taoiseach Bertie Ahern of untruthfulness. It found former European commissioner Pádraig Flynn behaved corruptly, and said another former taoiseach, Albert Reynolds, had abused his power.

The tribunal states that Ahern did not tell the truth over payments worth more than IR£275,000 [€349,177] which passed through bank accounts connected to him. Ahern has always claimed that the cash was not taken for planning favours granted to property developers but “personal loans” from friends to help during a difficult period in his life when he was going through a separation.

The 3,200 page report also found former EU commissioner Padraig Flynn guilty of taking bribes during his time as Irish environment minister from 1987-1993. Flynn had accepted a IR£50,000 [€63,486] “donation” from a property developer who wished to purchase a farm in the west of Ireland. It also condemned the involvement of senior government figures such as ex-Taoiseach Albert Reynolds “in seeking financial contributions from businessmen who were in turn lobbying government to support various commercial projects.”…

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



Italy: Bossi Used Northern League Election Grants for Travel and Home Improvements

Resignation of party treasurer Belsito, now under investigation for embezzlement, fraud and money laundering

Bossi Used Northern League Election Grants for Travel and Home Improvements

MILAN — The treasurer of the Northern League, Francesco Belsito, now under investigation for fraud, embezzlement and money laundering, has resigned from his position in the party. The news came from sources close to the party at the end of a dreadful day for the Northern League…

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



Palestinian Activist Ordered Not to Come to Britain Wins Appeal Against Government’s Attempt to Deport Him

A Palestinian activist, who was allowed to enter Britain despite being banned on the grounds he might incite racial hatred, has won an appeal to stay.

Sheikh Raed Salah, 53, leader of the Islamic Movement in Israel, arrived at Heathrow Airport on June 25. An investigation revealed Border officials had missed six chances to stop him entering the country.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Separatists Marching Under the EU Banner

Uwazam Rze Warsaw

Scotland, like Catalonia or the self-proclaimed Padania in Italy, is now talking openly of its independence. For these regions the European ideal is a political argument, even if a place in the European Union would not necessarily be a good thing for them.

Marek Magierowski

Gerard Piqué owes his celebrity status to several things. Firstly, he’s an excellent footballer, a pillar of FC Barcelona and the Spanish national team. Secondly, he’s engaged to the Colombian star Shakira. Thirdly, Piqué is also a fierce Catalan nationalist, if not a chauvinistic, a foul-mouth and more.

During the famous “Clasico” match between FC Barcelona and Real Madrid last spring, Piqué turned to his rivals while the players from both teams were leaving their dressing rooms and preparing to run out onto the field. “Hey, Spaniards,” he called, “with our eight-point lead we’ve already tied up the championship! All we have to do now is take the King’s Cup. Your King’s cup.”

Sporting events provide perfect setting

Piqué was just saying aloud what many players and supporters of Barça are thinking. Everyone wanted Barcelona to win its victories in the name of the Catalans, wanted the Catalan team to be able to play for the World Cup and wanted Piqué, Puyol, Busquets, Xavi and Fabregas to bring the trophy home not for Spain or for King Juan Carlos but for Catalonia. For now that’s not possible, since FIFA has refused to let the team enter international competitions.

The sport has always been an important element of national identity for Catalan nationalists. Especially under the Franco dictatorship, when Real Madrid was the favourite club of the regime, the goals scored against the “royalists” had the sweet taste of revenge for the years of humiliation and cultural discrimination.

It’s the same with the Scots, who are calling more and more openly for a sovereign state [an independence referendum is planned for 2014] and who take football very seriously. They give their all to support their team, and cheer equally hard for everyone else who plays against England.

Sporting events provide the perfect setting for separatist demonstrations. The chanting, the waving flags, the highlighting of “national unity” are the fixed decor of stadiums in Catalonia, the Basque Country, Scotland and in Corsica. But this is only the backdrop to an acute political struggle over power and money. The street was, until recently, the favourite battleground for that war: in various corners of Europe separatists left bombs in department stores, killed policemen and staged hunger strikes. Often enough, fearing chaos and disintegration of the state, politicians — whether Spanish, British or French — responded with blind brutality…

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



UK: Abu Hamza Could be Deported Despite Human Rights Ruling

Ministers are determined to kick Abu Hamza out of the country even if his extradition to the US is blocked by European judges on human rights grounds tomorrow.

The Home Office is looking into whether or not the terrorist “recruiting sergeant” could be deported to his native Egypt, despite him winning a battle to keep his British passport.

Senior politicians are also urging the Government to go ahead and send the radical Muslim preacher to America to face trial regardless of the European Court of Human Rights verdict.

If he and five other alleged extremists win their claim that facing life imprisonment in a “supermax” jail would breach their human rights, they could be freed from prison almost immediately. Hamza has already served six years for sermons urging the murder of non-Muslims.

Such a decision would also seriously damage relations with the American authorities, which have been trying to put him on trial for allegedly trying to set up a training camp in Oregon as well as supporting jihadis in Yemen and Afghanistan.

Within weeks Abu Qatada, described as “Osama Bin Laden’s right-hand man in Europe”, could also be released from effective house arrest if the Strasbourg court decides he cannot be deported to Jordan, where he faces a trial that may rely on evidence obtained under torture.

It would mean two men considered by the Government to be dangerous Islamist recruiters being back on the streets of London in time for the Olympics, considered to be a prime target for terrorists as well as occupying police in the country’s biggest peacetime operation.

Douglas Murray, of the Henry Jackson Society think-tank, said: “Abu Hamza was probably the most successful person that has been in this country for recruiting extremists. He’s not the sort of person you’d want on the streets.”

Hamza, now 53, was an Egyptian engineer who acquired British citizenship after marrying an English woman, and lost an eye and both hands while clearing mines in Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Nothing is Sacred to Metal Thieves

Theft is up in Britain as commodity prices soar. Crooks are willing to haul away rails, war memorials, even church roofs.

Naomi Wormell is a vicar, not a vigilante. But these days, she finds it hard to choose Christian charity over some swift — and terrible — retribution. The centuries-old church she leads in this quiet English village has fallen victim to a plague sweeping across Britain. Like hungry locusts, metal thieves have repeatedly attacked St. Mary’s Church, swooping down on its roof in the dead of night and stripping away large sections of its Victorian-era lead cladding.

The soaring thefts track a surge in worldwide metal prices. Demand for metals such as copper and lead has boomed as rapidly developing countries including China and India race to build skyscrapers, factories, homes and gadgets for a rising middle class.

Thieves in Britain are ripping up railway and telephone cables, prying off manhole covers and carting away aluminum access ramps for the disabled. Children shiver in schools where heating pipes have been stolen. In a development Prime Minister David Cameron denounced as “absolutely sickening,” memorials to fallen soldiers are being pilfered at the rate of one to two a week.

Last year, grave robbers dug up six tombs in a Welsh cemetery, apparently in search of lead coffin linings. In the English coastal town of Blackpool, despairing officials were forced to pull public artworks from display after thieves lifted three of four lead-based figures from a park and part of a statue from the seaside promenade.

The nationwide epidemic prompted Scotland Yard to announce in December that it was forming a unit devoted to tackling metal theft. But apparently someone forgot to notify the poachers, who, that same day, helped themselves to a large outdoor bronze sculpture by noted artist Barbara Hepworth, valued at $800,000, in South London.

The British are not alone in their growing losses to enterprising metal thieves. Other European countries are struggling with the same problem, including Germany, whose rail system has also taken a big hit. But the extent of the thievery and the wide variety of targets in Britain have been especially notable.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: World’s Biggest Wind Farm ‘To Blight the South Coast’ If 200 Near 700ft Turbines Are Erected Just Off Stunning Shore

The world’s biggest wind farm is being planned for the South Coast of England.

The 200 turbines would earn Dutch company Eneco billions of pounds in Government subsidies. Critics say they will ruin coastal views, while yachtsmen warn they could cause crashes.

The Royal Yacht Squadron, the prestigious sailing club whose patron is the Queen, has written to 200 sailing clubs on the Isle of Wight and along the South Coast to call for action against the development, named Navitus Bay.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Obama Shuns Kosovo Leader Thaci

Washington, 6 April (AKI) — Kosovo prime minister Hashim Thaci ended a three-day visit to Washington on Friday, winning support for Kosovo’s independence and membership in the European Union, but was shunned by president Barrack Obama.

Thaci met with Secretary of state Hilary Clinton on Wednesday and vice-president Joseph Biden on Thursday. He had announced a meeting with president Obama on Friday, but the meeting wasn’t realized and there was no explanation.

At a joint press conference with Thaci, Clinton hailed a recent EU decision to work on a feasibility study for Kosovo’s membership. “It is a step forward towards Kosovo’s membership in the European Union, which confirms that Kosovo and EU statesmen are determined to strengthen relations,” Clinton said.

Belgrade opposes Kosovo independence, but Clinton pledged continued support to Pristina and called on Kosovo and Serbian leaders to remain “dedicated to dialogue” and to implement recently reached agreements.

Under the auspices of the EU, Belgrade and Pristina recently agreed on joint border control, representation of Kosovo in regional meetings, recognition of university diplomas and exchange of birth and land registers.

Kosovo media reported the meeting with Biden was held behind closed doors and there were no statements. But Thaci’s office said in a statement Biden congratulated him on the “courage for making very important decisions in the interest of Kosovo”.

“Biden gave guarantees that the US will remain maximally engaged in Kosovo and will demand implementation of all agreements reached,” the statement said.

Kosovo independence, declared by majority Albanians in 2008, has been recognized by more than eighty countries, including the United States and 22 out of 27 EU members.

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

North Africa


Egypt Military Warns Against Interference in Its Businesses

Egypt’s ruling military has warned against any interference in its murky economic empire amid a burgeoning power struggle with Islamists who control parliament, state media reported on Wednesday.

The warning comes as the military prepares to hand power to a civilian leader when presidential elections end in June, and as the dominant Islamist Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) pressures the generals to sack the government.

Major General Mahmud Nasr, a member of the ruling council, warned that the military “will not allow any interference from anyone in the armed forces’ economic projects,” the official MENA news agency reported.

[Return to headlines]



Egypt-Israel Pipeline Sabotaged Again

(AGI) Cairo — An explosion damaged the Egyptian gas pipeline that supplies Israel and Jordan. This is the 14th sabotage since the beginning of the revolt that toppled Hosni Mubarak .

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



Former Egyptian Intelligence Chief: “Not Supported by Army”

(AGI) Cairo — Omar Suleiman, ex 007 Chief and Egyptian presidential candidate, assured not having the support of the Army. Hosni Mubarak’s former secret service chief accused Islamists of having threatened to kill him. 74-year old Omar Suleiman announced his candidacy on Friday and, to confirm his continued influence, he succeeded collecting 72,000 signatures in a single day, more than twice as many as the required 30,000.

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



Mario Monti: Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty to be Left Alone

(AGI) Cairo- According to Mario Monti the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt should be “left alone and respected”. During his first visit to Cairo the Italian Prime Minister asked his Egyptian counterpart Kamal Ganzouri for assurances that the agreement signed by President Sadat in 1979 remains “a pillar for a peaceful and stable Middle east”. Mr Monti expressed “a strong belief” in that regard and told the Egyptian Prime Minister that this was “borne out in the close talks” in Lebanon, Israel and the Palestinian Territories. Italy’s Prime Minister said Mr Ganzouri “reassured” him regarding parliamentary initiatives which did not appear to be “in line with the Treaty”. . .

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



One Hundred Broken Mirrors

Thirty-nine years after the last major war between Israel and Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood will unveil a constitution based on the Al-Azhar document, a lovely piece of work which emphasizes the importance of democracy and freedom—and the subservience of both to Islamic law. Western observers still working up their enthusiasm for the Arab Spring are noting the former and not the latter.

Virtually everyone has ignored one the final clauses of the Al-Azhar document and its commitment to the “Palestinian” cause. For the Muslim Brotherhood, the Palestinian cause is Hamas, which is to say themselves. A commitment to Hamas is a commitment to an arm of the Brotherhood. A war against Israel is inevitable, but not until the Brotherhood sucks as much aid out of the Great Satan as it can, under the pretense of serving as a moderating influence on Hamas.

[…]

Americans have already gotten a taste of what that system looks like. A corrupt elite overseeing a broken economy being goosed for the benefit of the few. A lapdog media that is forever searching out enemies, bleating denunciations, exposing new threats and conspiracies, to distract everyone from the disaster up top. The Obama era is only a small taste of how people in Russia or Egypt live. In the wake of the Cold War, rather than them becoming more like us, we are becoming more like them.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


‘Universal’ Cancer Vaccine Developed

A vaccine that can train cancer patients’ own bodies to seek out and destroy tumour cells has been developed by scientists.

The therapy, which targets a molecule found in 90 per cent of all cancers, could provide a universal injection that allows patients’ immune systems to fight off common cancers including breast and prostate cancer.

Preliminary results from early clinical trials have shown the vaccine can trigger an immune response in patients and reduce levels of disease.

The scientists behind the vaccine now hope to conduct larger trials in patients to prove it can be effective against a range of different cancers.

They believe it could be used to combat small tumours if they are detected early enough or to help prevent the return and spread of disease in patients who have undergone other forms of treatment such as surgery.

Cancer cells usually evade patient’s immune systems because they are not recognised as being a threat. While the immune system usually attacks foreign cells such as bacteria, tumours are formed of the patient’s own cells that have malfunctioned.

Scientists have, however, found that a molecule called MUC1, which is found in high amounts on the surface of cancer cells, can be used to help the immune system detect tumours.

The new vaccine, developed by drug company Vaxil Biotheraputics along with researchers at Tel Aviv University, uses a small section of the molecule to prime the immune system so that it can identify and destroy cancer cells.

A statement from Vaxil Biotheraputics said: “ImMucin generated a robust and specific immune response in all patients which was observed after only 2-4 doses of the vaccine out of a maximum of 12 doses.

“In some of the patients, preliminary signs of clinical efficacy were observed.”

The results are still to be formally published but if further trials prove to be successful the vaccine could be available within six years.

As a therapeutic vaccine it is designed to be given to patients who are already suffering from cancer to help their bodies fight off the disease rather than to prevent disease in the first place.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Da Vinci Was a Muslim, Iranian Author Claims

Author of ‘Leonardo Da Vinci’s Drawings’ says in this book he has proved that Da Vinci had been converted to Islam: “The book presents a comprehensive biography of Da Vinci and here for the first time I have proved that the artist had been converted to Islam based on authentic documents.”

IBNA: Morteza Khalaj Amirhosseini’s book “Leonardo Da Vinci’s Drawings” contains best drawings as well as a detailed biography of this eminent artist. Based on valid sources, the book proves that Da Vinci had been converted into Persian.

Amirhosseini added: “I have prepared the book in order to address the needs of art students as there was no comprehensive book of Da Vinci’s works available in Iran. We should know an artist by his works, but unfortunately Da Vinci is just an icon in Iran with mythological fame.”

Amirhosseini went on to say that the book presents a complete biography of Da Vinci in which he has proved based on first-hand sources that the Renaissance artist had become a Muslim. However, the west prefers to keep silent on the subject, he added.

He added: “A French writer in the 19th century has evaluated the issue of Da Vinci’s conversion to Islam in a treatise, but the west has banned the publication of this treatise.”

‘Leonardo Da Vinci’s Drawings’ is compiled by Morteza Khalaj Amirhosseini and published by Ketab-e Aban in 172 pages.

‘The Wings of Simorgh’, ‘On Oil Painting’, ‘On Watercolor Painting’, ‘Mysteries of Miniature’, ‘The Life of Rafael’, ‘The Life of Rembrandt’, ‘The Life of Rubens’, and ‘The Magic of Drawing’.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Iran Rejects Rollback on Nuclear ‘Rights’ But Sees Room to Bargain at Talks

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — When talks between Iran and world powers collapsed last year, Tehran quickly blamed the West for trying to trample its “nuclear rights.” The Iranian line appears little changed — signalling that critical negotiations could begin this week where the impasse left off.

But Iranian officials also display a hint of confidence going into Friday’s talks. They believe Tehran may have beaten back the toughest Western demands for a complete halt to uranium enrichment — the key issue of the standoff — and some bargaining room could open for new proposals.

“They have not gained anything through confrontation with Iran,” said Alaeddin Boroujerdi, head of the Iranian parliament’s influential committee on national security and foreign policy.

His message Saturday reflected the challenges of finding a new tone for dialogue with much on the line, including Israel’s threats of possible military action, allegations of covert attacks that have killed Iranian scientists and targeted Israeli officials, and Western sanctions that have taken aim at Iran’s key oil exports and helped drive inflation past 21 per cent.

Iranian envoys in Istanbul will face a cross-section of its foes and allies: the five permanent Security Council members plus Germany. The manoeuvring has already begun, with various policy probes, trial balloons and a flap over the venue that was only resolved Sunday with Iran agreeing to return to Turkey for negotiations.

Yet neither side seems willing — in public declarations, at least — to budge too far from the positions that undercut the last round of talks 14 months ago.

Iran insists it will never surrender the ability to enrich uranium, which allows Tehran to make its own nuclear fuel and is a cornerstone of what the Islamist Republic’s leaders call patriotic efforts toward technological self-sufficiency.

“The nuclear industry is like a locomotive that can push ahead other industries such as the space industry that takes up tens of other industries with itself,” Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Sunday, according to the official IRNA news agency. “This is the same clear path we must continue.”

The U.S. and Western allies may demand that Iran agree to close and dismantle a new enrichment lab built into a mountainside bunker south of Tehran and transfer stockpiles of its most high-grade uranium out of Iran, The New York Times first reported, citing U.S. and European diplomats.

No issue looms larger than uranium enrichment, which Iran is permitted to do under a U.N. treaty overseeing nuclear advances. The U.S. and others fear the labs could be used to make weapons-grade material. Iran says it nuclear program is only for energy and medical research.

“Without some new ideas or proposals on the table, it’s hard to imagine the talks finding some kind of breakthrough,” said Shadi Hamid, director of research at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar.

But there have been some tiny cracks in the wall of distrust between Washington and Tehran that could at least offer some toeholds in the talks.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave a rare nod of approval last month toward President Barack Obama’s assertion that there is still room for diplomacy. Washington now says they want to hear further details about Khamenei’s pledge that Iran would never seek nuclear arms.

“Diplomacy has not reached a deadlock,” said Iranian lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh, a conservative member of parliament’s foreign policy and national security committee.

However, he echoed the common stance among Iranian officials that Western demands to halt uranium enrichment are a dead end…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Jerusalem Prelate Warns on Plight of Christians

The Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Fuad Twal, warned yesterday in his Easter homily of the plight of Christians in the region, saying that the world was now “less concerned” about the minority.

“I wish all of you a beautiful and holy feast of the Resurrection, in the knowledge that the events unfolding in the Middle East threaten our region, our people and our Christians, that add a sombreness to this Easter joy,” he said.

Patriarch Twal, the most senior Roman Catholic in the Middle East, evoked the “fear” of Christians in the region in the traditional address, delivered at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City.

Many, he said, “live in fear: fear due to the unrest in our region; fear of an uncertain, even dark future.”

“Politicians and the international community are a little less concerned about our freedom and our fate. Personal interests overwhelm the goodwill of those trying to seek and advance peace and justice,” he added.

Christian communities in the Middle East have come under increasing threat in recent years, and the Arab Spring, which has ushered in more Islamist leadership, has raised new uncertainties for the embattled minority. Patriarch Twal, 71, nonetheless saluted “an enthusiastic youth” which he said had “shaken from his feet the dust of a dark, miserable and totalitarian history.”

“This is a new generation in search of a new life of justice, freedom and dignity; seeking resurrection and reform for its people. The only means of bringing about these changes are strength of will and confidence in a better future,” he said.

“We help them through our prayers, our encouragement, our advice to be guided by reason while being faithful to their motherland.”

Catholic and Protestant Christians celebrated Easter yesterday, marking the most important date in their religious calendar.

Orthodox Christians, who are more populous in the region, celebrate Easter next Sunday, a day after the spectacular “Holy Fire” ceremony in the Holy Sepulchre church.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Malta-Based Iranian Company and Ship Help Syria Defy Sanctions

At least one company within the significant web of shell companies set up in Malta by the Iranian government to hide its illicit shipping activities and circumvent international sanctions, as well as a Malta-flagged ship it owns, is helping the Syrian regime defy Western sanctions by shipping Syrian oil worth US$80 million to a state-run company in China.

In a special report, the Reuters news agency quotes a source in the shipping industry, who said he had been approached by Syrian state oil company Sytrol, as stating that Syria planned to sell oil directly to the Chinese but had trouble finding a vessel. The Iranians, however, had stepped in to lend a helping hand through one of its Malta-based companies, which sent one of its ships to collect and deliver the cargo.

The Chinese buyer was named as the Zhuhai Zhenrong Corp, a Chinese state-run company sanctioned by the US government back in January. A spokesperson for the company, however, denied knowledge of the shipment.

The US State Department said in January that Zhuhai Zhenrong was the largest supplier of refined petroleum products to Iran, on which the West has imposed sanctions over suspicions that it is seeking to develop nuclear weapons.

Iran is one of Syria’s closest allies and has pledged to support the Assad regime and even went so far recently as to have praised Syria’s handling of the year-long uprising in which at least 9,000 people have been killed so far. China has also protected the Syrian regime from the imposition of sanctions, having controversially vetoed two resolutions at the United Nations against the bloodshed. China is not bound by Western sanctions against Syria, its oil sector or its state oil firm Sytrol.

But the European Union had sanctioned Sytrol in September of last year and the fact that a Maltese-registered company and ship is carrying out the shipment is very dubious indeed.

The Maltese-flagged tanker, MT Tour, is owned by shipping firm ISIM Tour Limited, which is also registered in Malta and has been identified by the US Department of Treasury as a front company set up by Iran to evade sanctions.

The ship is reported to have reached the Syrian port of Tartus last weekend where it took on 120,000 tonnes of light crude oil, according to the industry source and ship tracking data. Like the Chinese, Reuters reports that Syrian and Iranian authorities did not comment on the shipment.

The vessel was last spotted near Port Said in Egypt, where it was due arrive on Wednesday and, while its final destination was not available, the industry source speaking to Reuters said the vessel was likely to head to China or Singapore.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Western Powers to Demand Closure of Iran’s Best-Protected Uranium Facility

Major Western powers are to set two demands, including the closure of Iran’s best-protected uranium facility, when negotiations over the country’s nuclear programme resume this week.

The United States and its European allies will also tell Iran that it must stop refining uranium to a concentration of 20 per cent — a level considered a short step away from weapons grade — and move existing stocks of fuel already enriched to such levels abroad.

The demands signal a Western acceptance of the most important conditions that Israel says must be fulfilled if it is to be persuaded to drop its threat of unilateral military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

President Barack Obama has warned Iran that the talks, which begin on Friday, represent its “last chance” for a diplomatic resolution to the crisis.

Iranian media said the talks, which collapsed more than a year ago, would be held in Istanbul, apparently dropping a push by Tehran to stage the talks in a new venue.

In a significant softening of its position, the Iranian government dropped its opposition to the negotiations being held in Istanbul. Officials in Tehran had previously called for the talks to be held in Iraq or even conflict-ravaged Syria in a tactic seen as a time-wasting ruse.

According to Western diplomats quoted by the New York Times, Iran will be told it must seal and ultimately dismantle its Fordow uranium enrichment plant, buried deep inside a mountain near the holy city of Qom, as a sign of its sincerity.

Iran has begun enriching uranium to 20 per cent at Fordow and is moving much of its nuclear fuel to the plant in a step that has caused deep concern in Israel, whose US-provided “bunker-busting” bombs would probably not be able to destroy the facility.

Iran has already enriched 240 lb of uranium to 20 per cent according to UN inspectors, a little less than the material needed to supply one nuclear bomb if it is refined further. Iran says it plans to triple its stocks of the higher-grade fuel, saying it needs them to supply a research reactor in Tehran that produces medical isotopes.

The Israeli government has demanded a halt to all Iranian enrichment, including to lower levels of 3.5 per cent, but has agreed to allow its Western allies to adopt a “staggered approach” by concentrating first on Tehran’s higher-grade fuel.

“We told our American friends, as well as the Europeans, that we would have expected the threshold for successful negotiations to be clear, namely that [they] will demand clearly that no more enrichment to 20 per cent,” Ehud Barak, Israel’s defence minister, told CNN.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Frank Gaffney: Political Compromise of Our Security

A troubling pattern of putting U.S. and allied security interests second to the Obama administration’s political priorities is now well-established. If allowed to continue, it will not only make the world more dangerous. It is going to get people killed — probably in large numbers and some of them may be Americans.

A prime example of the phenomenon was the disclosure of minute details of the 2011 raid by SEAL Team 6 within hours of its successful liquidation of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan. The revelation of special operations tradecraft horrified those in and out of the U.S. military who appreciate that safeguarding the secrecy of such techniques is essential toensuring their future utility, and the safety of those who employ them…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Prosecutors of Atheist ‘Have Proved Nothing’

Jakarta, 6 April (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesian prosecutors have fouled up the indictment of Alexander Aan, the civil servant in Padang, West Sumatra accused of professing his atheism on Facebook, his lawyers say.

Alexander should have been charged under a joint regulation of the Religious Affairs Ministry, the Attorney General’s Office and the Home Ministry, Ronny Saputra, an attorney from the Padang office of the Legal Aid Foundation (LBH), said.

Ronny said sections of the indictment alleging that Alexander had called on others to “embrace atheism” were unclear.

“The prosecutors have yet to describe when or where my client had done such acts,” he said.

Alexander only posted images and text from the “Minang Atheist” Facebook group on his own account, Ronny said, including such as comics titled “The Prophet Muhammad has been attracted to his own daughter-in-law” and “The Prophet Muhammad had been sleeping with his wife’s maid”.

“The article was first circulated in a forum called “Faith Freedom Indonesia 2008” and has been accessible until now. Meanwhile, the same comic was aired by Metro TV on January 20th in 2010,” Ronny said.

Alexander was merely one of the 2,602 members of the “Minang Atheist”, which he said was founded by 70-year-old Jusfiq Hadjar, a resident of Leiden, the Netherlands, according to the attorney.

“The defendant has never met or directly spoken with Jusfiq,” Ronny said, adding that Alexander had made a public apology for his mistake.

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

Far East


Why We Should All be Very Concerned About Fukushima

Very little attention is being paid to TEPCO’s Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan. The devastating earthquake that hit Japan in March of 2011 is long out of people’s minds. Tragically, what the Japanese government should have done right after the earthquake was what the Russian government did after Chernobyl in 1986: [url]

There’s no saving Fukushima; containment is a complete failure. When, not if, the next big earthquake hits Japan and Reactor 4 collapses, it will be a catastrophe beyond words. Japan is the earthquake capital of the world.

If you think I’m blowing smoke, this from someone who has been following Fukushima daily since the earthquake:

Fukushima is built on landfill. The whole thing is a geological joke. There is nothing that is going to be done. TEPCO closes the place and no one even works there on the weekends! Reactor 2 is completely untouchable…NO ONE can go near it. However, THE WORST is the spent fuel pool at Reactor 4 , which could literally end life as we know it when — WHEN — it falls to the ground. Listen, there is is 460 TONS of enriched nuclear fuel in that pool …enriched to nearly weapons grade. It takes only 10 pounds to make a thermonuclear bomb. Do the math and prepare to be sick…because that is how many nuclear weapons worth of plutonium, et al, will fission and spew it death into the air for YEARS. Sorry, but it’s all true.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Ban the Burqa Protest Offends Sydneysiders

A group of protesters wearing burqas gathered in various places in Sydney today to argue for Australia to ban the face veil. They say the wearing of the Islamic headwear donned by women, should be outlawed because they pose a security risk. Security and police were called when the burqa-clad non-Muslims incited anger outside state Parliament House.

Members of the public were extremely offended by the male protesters wearing the burqa. Zubeda Raihman from the Muslim Women’s National Network says, “I think it is pretty offensive because we live in this democratic country and we are given the freedom of choice.” The group ventured to the Downing Centre Local Court, a city pub, a bank, and the NSW Parliament House.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Cancer Victim Robert Mugabe is ‘Fighting for His Life’ In Singapore Hospital

Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe is said to be fighting for his life in a Singapore hospital.

According to the Zimbabwe Mail a senior official of the 88-year-old’s ZANU-PF party, said the President was undergoing intensive treatment in Singapore and that some members of his family had joined him after boarding a chartered private jet on Saturday.

The alarm was raised yesterday when the government postponed a cabinet meeting set for today.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Explosion in Somali City of Baidoa Kills at Least 12

(AGI) Mogadishu- At least 12 people were killed as a bomb went off in the Somali city of Baidoa. Al-Shebaab Islamists have claimed responsibility for the explosion, whose target consisted of Somali and Ethiopian troops which took over the city from al-Qaeda associated Islamic fundamentalists in February.

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

Immigration


Most Greeks Support Crackdown on Illegals, Poll

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 9 — Nearly 62% of Greek citizens support the government’s recent crackdown on illegal immigration, says an opinion poll carried out in the country, as the local newspaper Kathimerini reports. 83.4% of respondents say illegal immigration is a huge problem, while 48.3% believe the main priority of an immigration policy should be gradual expulsion of all immigrants from the country. The Greek government plans to set up 30 centers for illegal immigrants. Those who do not get asylum will be deported.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120408

Financial Crisis
» Europe May be Heading Back Into Debt Storm
» Global Great Depression and Population Reduction by 2030: MIT and the Club of Rome Prophecy
» The Real Face of Bernanke and the Federal Reserve
 
USA
» Do the Media Want a Race War?
» DOJ Attempts to Install Monitor in Sheriff Joe’s Office
» Longtime Correspondent Mike Wallace Dead at 93, CBS News Reports
» Obama’s Make-Believe Life
» Why Obama’s Political Mentor Deserted Him
» Why the President Should be Fired
 
Europe and the EU
» Burglar Swoops on Swiss Funeral-Goers’ Homes
» Copenhagen Really is Wonderful, For So Many Reasons
» EU Plays Down Financial Impact of Carbon Tax on Airlines
» Germany: Some Chocolate Leaves a Bitter Aftertaste
» Germany: Owl Wings Provide Example for Airplanes
» Hate Crimes in Europe
» Swine Flu Vaccines Cause 17-Fold Increase in Narcolepsy, Horrified Scientists Discover
» UK: University Boat Race 2012: Towpath Guerrilla Trenton Oldfield Sticks His Oar in
 
Balkans
» Macedonia to Block Roma From EU
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israel Declares German Writer Grass “Persona Non Grata”
 
South Asia
» Afghans: US Paid $50,000 Per Shooting Spree Death
» Pakistani President Visits India on Rare Trip
 
Far East
» China ‘Concerned’ Over North Korea Rocket Launch
» North Korea Says Interception of Its Satellite is ‘An Act of War’
» North Korea: Construction Boom Aims to Impress Populace
» North Korea Threatens ‘Merciless Punishment’ As it Readies Rocket Launch
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigerian Car Bombs Kill Many in Kaduna
 
Latin America
» ‘War on Drugs’ Has Failed, Say Latin American Leaders
» Washington’s Neglected Southern Neighbors
 
Immigration
» Stereotyping of Roma Continues in Germany
 
General
» Pope Benedict XVI Gives Easter Sunday Message

Financial Crisis


Europe May be Heading Back Into Debt Storm

(PARIS) — A flood of easy money courtesy of the European Central Bank made for a calm start to 2012 but a poor Spanish bond sale last week signals it may only have been a lull before the debt storm breaks, analysts warn.

The ECB injected roughly one trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) into eurozone banks at auctions in December and February, helping to ease concerns banks would face a funding crunch.

Some of this cash ended up in the sovereign bond markets, helping reduce the rates countries need to pay to raise funds after a year of high tension over whether Italy and Spain — the eurozone’s third- and fourth-largest economies — might also need to be bailed out after Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

“The first quarter was exceptional for eurozone state borrowing,” said Jean-Francois Robin at France’s Natixis bank.

The first three months of the year are important as countries often try to meet a huge chunk of their annual borrowing needs at the outset and they made the most of the early calm.

“Paris and Berlin borrowed at historically very favourable rates and Madrid got a long way towards covering its financing needs this year,” noted Robin.

Spain covered 43 percent of its annual medium- and long-term financing needs in the first quarter, taking advantage of rates of around 4.0 percent compared to near 7.0 percent at the height of the crisis late last year.

But in the first week of April the calm on European debt markets abruptly ended.

Spain barely raised the amount it sought in a bond auction on Wednesday and had to pay investors sharply higher rates just after announcing a tough 2012 budget that aims to make a whopping 27 billion euros in savings.

Madrid’s warning that its public debt will jump by 10 percentage points this year to nearly 80 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) clearly rattled investors who also faced the prospect of an economy slipping deeper into recession.

While ECB liquidity measures helped shield Madrid from immediate danger, economist Raj Badiani at IHS Global Insight warned the risks are expected to intensify next year as Spain is battered by recession and high unemployment and bad real estate assets drag down banks.

This would make it difficult for Spain to achieve its target of reducing its public deficit to the EU ceiling of 3.0 percent of GDP by austerity measures alone, he said, and raised the possibility it would need some sort of help from its European partners.

“This could entail the ECB providing more protection than its current policy of making limited Spanish bond purchases in the secondary market,” he said.

However, ECB chief Mario Draghi made it clear on Wednesday that such a move was not on the cards, although the central banker would not rule out further action to support the region’s banks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Global Great Depression and Population Reduction by 2030: MIT and the Club of Rome Prophecy

A U.N policy paper recently outlined the building blocks for a world government that would enforce a “heavy-handed” approach toward humanity’s impact on the environment, as this new epoch of The Anthropocene Age has begun to negatively alter the planet in irrevocable ways.

A rather infamous book, from a rather infamous group called The Club of Rome, is making a reappearance as humanity hurtles toward demise if its stewardship is not turned over to technocrats. Limits to Growth (1972) is nothing short of a blueprint for population reduction and neo-feudalism; or, as Yale economist Henry Wallich stated at the time of its release, its implementation means “consigning billions to poverty.”

It appears that this plan has been green-lighted by the elite, as recent MIT research validates the conclusions drawn by Limits to Growth at this crucial time when we see the world economy imploding, and a jack-booted green police ready to hit the streets. According to MIT, we are headed toward a guaranteed planet-wide economic collapse and “precipitous population decline” if we do not heed the words of The Club of Rome.

Austerity riots and suicides are filling the streets throughout Europe, as draconian measures are being taken to curb runaway debt. This debt has provably been created by the Ponzi scheme of international banksters who have employed a loan-shark framework that is only paying dividends to those in position to buy up deliberately collapsed assets for pennies on the dollar.

The global elite continue to ignore that the problems which have been generated across the globe have very little to do with true resource shortages, unsustainable economies, or overpopulation; but rather the centralized control, mismanagement, and outright theft by corporate entities using globalization as a means of reducing sovereignty and self-determination.

[Return to headlines]



The Real Face of Bernanke and the Federal Reserve

Here is how the establishment media portrays the bankster minion Ben “Helicopter” Bernanke: [picture]

They expect us to believe he is a “hero” who saved the global economy when the exact opposite is the case. Bernanke and the Federal Reserve rigged an already rigged system of fiat paper money manipulated by the bankers. The monetary policies of the Fed created the economic environment that led to the slow motion Greatest Depression now underway.

Check out this primer [url] on how the fixed monetary game is really played.

Here’s a true representation of the Federal Reserve. It will never be published by The Atlantic or any other establishment publication: [picture]

During president Andrew Jackson’s effort to free the country from the grip of the bankers, newspapers routinely published political cartoons similar the one above. See one here [url].

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Do the Media Want a Race War?

It’s no surprise that Al Sharpton and his fellow rabble-rouser, Jesse Jackson, are doing everything they can to stir passions to the boiling point regarding the death of Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida. That’s been their modus operandi for more than 20 years. Does anybody remember Tawana Brawley, the fake rape victim Sharpton used as his first stepping-stone to national fame (or should I say infamy)?

But I can’t remember a time when the media were so eager to give nationwide publicity to every vicious lie and racist accusation. Forget about trying to get calmer heads to prevail or any of that nonsense about not rushing to judgment. The media want someone’s head on a platter (or at least George Zimmerman’s body in jail). And they want it now.

If they have to doctor the facts a bit to get it, so what? They’re willing to use some incredibly dishonest means to see that “justice” is done.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



DOJ Attempts to Install Monitor in Sheriff Joe’s Office

The Department of Justice in Washington has accused Sheriff Joe Arapio’s Office of engaging in what they describe as ‘racial profiling and mistreatment of illegals aliens and hispanics’ and alleged ‘human rights violations’ in its patrols and jails.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Longtime Correspondent Mike Wallace Dead at 93, CBS News Reports

Mike Wallace, a pioneer of American broadcasting who confronted leaders and liars for the newsmagazine “60 Minutes” for four decades, has died, CBS News said. He was 93.

His death was announced on CBS by the anchor of its Sunday morning program, Charles Osgood. The network did not immediately specify when or where he died. Mr. Wallace had been ill for several years.

As one of the original correspondents and hosts of “60 Minutes,” which was started in 1968, Mr. Wallace helped to establish the television newsmagazine format. “60 Minutes” is now the most popular such program on American television.

An earlier version of this news alert incorrectly stated that Mr. Wallace was 94.

[Return to headlines]



Obama’s Make-Believe Life

I have this theory about Barack Obama. I think he’s led a kind of make-believe life in which money was provided and doors were opened because at some point early on somebody or some group took a look at this tall, good looking, half-white, half-black, young man with an exotic African/Muslim name and concluded he could be guided toward a life in politics where his facile speaking skills could even put him in the White House.

In a very real way, he has been a young man in a very big hurry. Who else do you know has written two memoirs before the age of 45? “Dreams of My Father” was published in 1995 when he was only 34 years old. The “Audacity of Hope” followed in 2006. If, indeed, he did write them himself. There are some who think that his mentor and friend, Bill Ayers, a man who calls himself a “communist with a small ‘c’“ was the real author.

His political skills consisted of rarely voting on anything that might be deemed controversial. He went from a legislator in the Illinois legislature to the Senator from that state because he had the good fortune of having Mayor Daley’s formidable political machine at his disposal.

He was in the U.S. Senate so briefly that his bid for the presidency was either an act of astonishing self-confidence or part of some greater game plan that had been determined before he first stepped foot in the Capital. How, many must wonder, was he selected to be a 2004 keynote speaker at the Democrat convention that nominated John Kerry when virtually no one had ever even heard of him before?

[Return to headlines]



Why Obama’s Political Mentor Deserted Him

Alice Palmer, the avowed communist who helped launch Barack Obama’s career, continues to haunt Obama even today.

In 2008, Palmer showed up at the Democratic National Convention in Denver as a Hillary Clinton supporter, still resentful toward Obama for knocking her and three other candidates off the ballot for an Illinois state Senate seat some 13 years earlier by challenging voter signatures.

“The Democratic primary, what I witnessed, was one of the most appalling, disgusting things I’ve ever seen in my entire life,” Hollywood-based digital photographer Michele Thomas told WND in a joint interview with Hollywood film producer Bettina Viviano.

Thomas began as a volunteer for the 2008 Clinton campaign then launched a petition drive when she learned the Democratic National Committee was not going to allow delegates to cast their votes for Clinton at the convention.

“I just felt like the entire process was being eviscerated and rules were being changed all along to ensure that no matter what, Barack Obama was the nominee,” Thomas said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why the President Should be Fired

Decide now to fire the President in November, and start now preparing to win your precinct, district, county, state, and nation.

There are far more reasons to fire President Barack Hussein Obama than can be addressed in a single column. Here are just a few reasons that should be considered.

President Obama believes that the U.S. Constitution is flawed, and despite his oath to protect and defend it, he has consistently ignored it.

[…]

President Obama believes in the “One World” vision under the authority of the United Nations. From his first trips to foreign countries, he has bowed to foreign leaders and apologized for America’s accomplishments. He has accepted the U.N.’s theory that the earth is dying because of population growth and abuse of resources. His entire energy policy is based on complying with the U.N.’s theory that climate change is caused by carbon emissions from fossil fuel.

More than 31,000 scientists say publicly that there is no human-caused global warming, nor is it likely in the future. The U.N. theory is based on computer models that fail to reflect reality. Models predicted a two-degree rise in temperature since the industrial revolution. Reality is a temperature rise of less than one degree, which cannot be attributed to carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Obama has embraced the U.N.’s Agenda 21 program for achieving “sustainable development” by government control of land use, and of about every other facet of human experience. When Congress refuses to enact his policies, he finds another way to prevail. Through Executive Orders, he has created special councils that engage virtually every federal agency in the implementation of the recommendations contained in Agenda 21.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Burglar Swoops on Swiss Funeral-Goers’ Homes

A 50-year-old man from Neuchatel has been arrested for a spate of burglaries committed while the victims attended the funerals of loved ones.

“He stole from me while I was crying for my husband,” 66-year-old Gilberte Guillaume told online newspaper Le Matin. She had been attending a late-night vigil at the time of the break-in.

“I cannot even find the words to express how indecent it is.”

Guillaume is one of 22 victims who were all burgled while attending funeral services. The offender is thought to have studied the death announcements printed in the press the day before each crime to identify the towns and names of his future victims.

The burglar has been particularly active in the cantons of Jura, Neuchatel, Fribourg, Bern and Vaud, stealing mainly money and jewellery before his arrest at the end of March. The police first tried to catch the man using surveillance, but were finally able to track him using evidence from his last burglary.

The man, known to the police for having committed similar crimes in the past, said that bad financial circumstances had driven him to burgle.

Although the man acted alone, it is clear to police from the pattern of burglaries that he was not responsible for all of those committed in the canton of Vaud while funerals were taking place.

“We continue to monitor the homes of friends and family during funeral ceremonies,” the cantonal police spokeswoman Donatella Del Vecchio told Le Matin. “But we cannot be everywhere.”

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Copenhagen Really is Wonderful, For So Many Reasons

Denmark has just come top in the UN’s survey of global happiness — far ahead of 18th-placed Britain. One former Londoner who moved to the Danish capital three years ago can see why

It feels incredibly safe. I run in the dark with my iPod in full view and, like most Danish mothers, I would leave Liv sleeping in a pram outside a cafe. Yet occasionally I miss the edginess of Shoreditch high street late on a Friday night.

It’s very white too — markedly so for us former inhabitants of Finsbury Park — and with this comes a lack of the cultural diversity and understanding that is such an important component in making London the great city it is. The Danes are gradually opening up their borders, but there’s an unspoken fear among many that this perfect society, which functions so efficiently because of universal high taxes, might shatter under the strain of an influx of immigrants.

In many ways the city feels like London might have 60 years ago and for us, at this point in our lives, it truly is a case of wonderful, wonderful Copenhagen. Whether it can retain its spot at the top of the World Happiness Report will be fascinating to see.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Plays Down Financial Impact of Carbon Tax on Airlines

(PARIS) — The EU’s climate commissioner played down the impact of the controversial carbon tax being imposed by the bloc on airlines, saying Friday it would cost less than a cup of coffee per passenger.

With the tax, sharply criticised by China and the United States, “a flight from Beijing to Frankfurt for example will cost around an extra two euros per passenger,” Climate Commissioner Connie Hedegaard told the French daily Les Echos.

“In other words, an amount less than that of a cup of coffee at the airport,” she added.

With the dispute intensifying over the tax, Hedegaard said it was important to keep a sense of proportion.

Last month plane maker Airbus, plus half a dozen airlines including British Airways, Lufthansa, and Air France wrote a letter to the British, French, German and Spanish governments warning the tax could cost them billions of dollars in lost orders and business and lead to the loss of the thousands of jobs.

A subsequent letter by French Prime Minister Francois Fillon to European Commission head Jose Manuel Barosso made similar points, noting that China had already suspended an important Airbus order.

“We, as Europeans, of course cannot let ourselves be swayed by such threats,” Hedegaard told Les Echos, stressing that China’s payments due under the levy this year would be only 1.9 million euros.

“That is very, very little to be bandying around such threats for,” she added.

Hedegaard said Europe “was as determined as anyone to achieve an ambitious and coordinated approach at the international level” to combat global warming emissions.

“But such an accord will not be possible if certain countries who have opposed the measure up to now do not seriously change their position,” she said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Some Chocolate Leaves a Bitter Aftertaste

Germans love chocolate. But the labor and living conditions of cocoa planters are bad, and child labor is common. The German initiative “Forum Sustainable Cocoa” wants to change that.

Statistics say every German eats eleven kilos of chocolate per year, making Germany one of the most important markets for cocoa. Five to six million farmers in Latin America, South East Asia, and especially Africa produce 90 percent of world production of cocoa.

As much as 70 percent of the cocoa traded across the world is produced in western Africa, with Ivory Coast, Ghana, Nigeria, Cameroon and Togo being the major exporters.

But according to a 2009 survey conducted commissioned by the US Tulane University, in Ivory Coast and Ghana alone, more than 250,000 children work on cocoa plantations under conditions that violate both domestic laws and international rules set by the International Labor Organization (ILO).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Owl Wings Provide Example for Airplanes

Engineers are trying to learn how owls fly through the night without making a sound. Their wings could serve as models for quieter planes, turbines, or air-conditioning systems.

Bionics is the technical term for a field of research where scientists try to emulate nature. Owls are among the animals that have much to teach mankind. It is fascinating, say the scientists from the RWTH Aachen University, how the birds of prey fly without making any sound when they’re hunting.

“Owls hunt at night, when visual information is very limited,” explains biologist Thomas Bachmann. “That’s why owls have specialized in detecting their prey with their ears. And that can only work when they fly quietly.”

When analyzing the aerodynamics of an owl’s flight, Bachmann noticed that barn owls weigh almost as much as pigeons, but their wings are considerably larger and more cupped. “This enables the bird to maximize uplift in fairly low speed,” Bachmann says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hate Crimes in Europe

Studies suggest that 85% of hate crimes in Europe with an anti-religious background are directed against Christians. It is high time for the public debate to respond to this reality! We also notice professional restrictions for Christians: a restrictive application of freedom of conscience leads to professions such as magistrates, doctors, nurses and midwives as well as pharmacists slowly closing for Christians. Teachers and parents get into trouble when they disagree with state-defined sexual ethics. Our research shows that only with a more accommodating approach to religion and specifically to Christianity, Europe will live up to its foundational value of freedom.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Swine Flu Vaccines Cause 17-Fold Increase in Narcolepsy, Horrified Scientists Discover

(NaturalNews) The long-term health damage caused by the great H1N1 swine flu scam “pandemic” of 2009 — and particularly the mass vaccination campaign that accompanied it — is already becoming apparent in the form of an autoimmune disorder. A new review published in the journal Public Library of Science ONE confirms that Pandemrix, a swine flu vaccine produced by drug giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), is responsible for causing an up to 1700 percent increase in narcolepsy among children and teenagers under 17 years of age.

Based on their findings, a cohort of scientists has determined that narcolepsy rates increased significantly following mass vaccination campaigns with Pandemrix. Compiled data has revealed that between 2002 and 2009, the narcolepsy rate among children under age 17 was 0.31 per 100,000. But in 2010, that number jumped to 5.3 per 100,000, which represents a 17-fold increase.

Similarly, research compiled by Markku Partinen of the Helsinki Sleep Clinic and Hanna Nohynek of the National Institute for Health and Welfare in Finland, both of which were also involved in the new research, has determined a link between Pandemrix and narcolepsy. Children not vaccinated with Pandemrix were found to have a 1300 percent less risk of developing narcolepsy compared to children who were vaccinated with Pandemrix.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: University Boat Race 2012: Towpath Guerrilla Trenton Oldfield Sticks His Oar in

An Australian activist with an anti-elitism manifesto has been named as the man who disrupted the University boat race between Oxford and Cambridge by swimming in the River Thames.

First, Sir Matthew Pinsent, the former Olympic rower, thought he saw debris in the water. Then, he and hundreds watching on the banks of the river thought it must be a dog, swimming towards the Oxford and Cambridge boats as they sped past Chiswick on a choppy Thames.

But when he realised that it was a bearded man in a wetsuit who was heading straight for Oxford’s vessel, he desperately signalled to stop the Boat Race, eight minutes after it had begun.

Staring from the water at Sir Matthew, the assistant umpire, was Trenton Oldfield, an Australian activist who had swum in to publicise his bizarre manifesto. As the two crews stopped, the oars inches from Mr Oldfield’s head, officials dragged him out of the water and on to another launch.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Macedonia to Block Roma From EU

Macedonia plans to punish Roma who seek to apply for asylum in the EU. Behind this curb on freedom of travel are warnings from Brussels threatening Skopje’s EU aspirations.

Since December 2009, citizens of Serbia and Macedonia no longer need a visa to travel to the European Union. Many Roma from those countries see this as a chance for a better life in the West. The flow of Roma immigrants to the EU has been steadily on the rise and while many of them apply for asylum once in the EU, none has actually been recognized as a political refugee.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel Declares German Writer Grass “Persona Non Grata”

Israel has barred famous German author Gunter Grass from entering the country, after Grass wrote a poem in which it is depicted as endangering global peace. Grass says he is a friend to Israel despite his comments.

In a statement, Interior Minister Eli Yeshai was cited as saying: “Gunter’s poem is an attempt to fan the flames of hate against the state of Israel and the Israeli people.” Yishai said on Sunday: “If Günter wants to continue disseminating his distorted and mendacious works I advise him to do it from Iran where he will find a supportive audience.”

In the verses published last week, titled “What Must Be Said,” Grass said Israel must not be allowed to launch military strikes against Iran over fears that Tehran is building nuclear weapons.

Israe lhas threatened to take military action against Iran to halt what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described as a threat akin to the Holocaust. Iran claims its nuclear program is solely for civilian purposes. It has, however, called for Israel’s destruction and questioned the Nazi genocide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghans: US Paid $50,000 Per Shooting Spree Death

The United States has paid $50,000 in compensation for each Afghan killed and $11,000 for each person wounded in the shooting spree allegedly committed by a U.S. soldier in southern Afghanistan, an Afghan official and a community elder said Sunday.

The families of the dead, who received the money Saturday at the governor’s office, were told that the money came from U.S. President Barack Obama, said Kandahar provincial council member Agha Lalai. He and community elder Jan Agha confirmed the payout amounts.

[Return to headlines]



Pakistani President Visits India on Rare Trip

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari is in India on an informal one-day goodwill trip. The two nuclear-armed rivals have long been at loggerheads over a number of sensitive issues. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari arrived in India on Sunday on what is the first trip by a Pakistani head of state since 2005.

Zardari’s trip has been described as “private.” He is to lunch with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh before visiting a Muslim shrine 350 kilometers (220 miles) from New Delhi. Zardari and Singh were expected to hold private talks before the lunch. Diplomatic sources said no statements were likely to be made after the meeting.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China ‘Concerned’ Over North Korea Rocket Launch

The foreign ministers of China, Japan and South Korea have all met to discuss a planned rocket launch by North Korea, which some suspect may be a disguised ballistic missile test.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi hosted talks with his Japanese and South Korean counterparts on Sunday, expressing concern over escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula as the North prepares for a rocket launch.

Beijing’s official news agency Xinhua reported that Yang told both ministers separately on Saturday that China was “concerned and worried about the latest development on the Korean peninsula.”

“It is in the common interest of all sides to maintain peace and stability on the Korean peninsula and realize long-term peace and stability in northeast Asia,” Yang said. “China hopes all parties involved will keep calm and exert restraint.”

North Korea has announced plans to launch a rocket sometime between April 12 and 16 in honor of what would have been the 100th birthday of its late founding leader, Kim Il-Sung, on April 15. Pyongyang said the rocket will put a satellite into orbit to research crops and natural resources.

The move angered the United States and its regional allies Japan and South Korea, who regard it as a thinly-veiled ballistic missile test in violation of UN Security Council resolutions.

Both Japan and South Korea have warned that they may shoot down parts of the North Korean rocket if they threaten their territory. Japan reportedly deployed missile batteries in Tokyo and sent out three destroyers carrying sea-based interceptor missiles into the East China sea.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Says Interception of Its Satellite is ‘An Act of War’

SEOUL-North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has ratcheted up his regime’s militaristic rhetoric as Pyongyang threatened to retaliate against any country that intercepts a North Korean rocket booster or collects the rocket debris.

This developed as The Associated Press (AP) reported that North Korea may have moved the first stage of a rocket to a launch stand, indicating it is on schedule for a controversial mid-April launch, according to a new analysis of satellite images.

The rocket isn’t visible at the Tongchang-ri site, but an analysis provided to the AP by the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies says evidence suggests the first stage may be in the launch stand’s closed gantry, a support frame, ahead of the launch planned for April 12 to 16.

The North has vowed to launch a rocket to put an earth observation satellite into orbit, a move widely seen as a pretext to disguise a banned test of its ballistic-missile technology.

The Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea in Pyongyang warned that interception of the satellite would be “an act of war” and would cause a tremendous catastrophe.

Whoever “intercepts the satellite or collects its debris will meet immediate, resolute and merciless punishment” from the North, the committee said in an English-language statement carried by its Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) late Thursday.

The warning came days after South Korea said it was exploring measures to intercept the rocket booster in case it veers off its trajectory. Japan has also ordered its troops to shoot down the rocket if there is concern it or parts of it could land on Japan.

South Korea expects the rocket’s first-stage booster to land in international waters, some 170 kilometers south of its southwestern city of Gunsan, before the rocket’s second-stage booster falls east of the Philippines.

The North has said it chose a safe flight path to ensure carrier rocket debris jettisoned during the flight will not impact on neighboring countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea: Construction Boom Aims to Impress Populace

North Korea has long been known for its military-first policy, which in effect translated into a military-only policy with little room left for investment anywhere else. But now, without abandoning its focus on what it calls defense, it also appears to be trying to revive a dying economy and rebuild on the home front.

The stated aim of the reconstruction sweeping Pyongyang is to put North Korea on the path of being a “strong and prosperous nation” in time for the 100th anniversary of the birth of founder Kim Il Sung on April 15. But the campaign also serves another political purpose: It sets up Kim Jong Un as the new leader of a great people, just as a construction frenzy heralded his father’s ascension before him.

“This is to show their own people they are not poor and underdeveloped,” said Hazel Smith, a professor of humanitarianism and security at Britain’s Cranfield University who lived in North Korea for a few years. “Construction is the cheapest thing you can do and show visible results if you’re an economy that hasn’t got much money.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Threatens ‘Merciless Punishment’ As it Readies Rocket Launch

Japan and South Korea have put their armed forces on standby in response to North Korea’s plans, prepared to shoot down the missile if it passes over their territory.

North Korea was this weekend believed to be at the first stage of launching the rocket, expected between April 12 and 16, claiming that it is part of the centenary celebrations for the birth of the state’s founder Kim Il Sung.

However, the United States, Japan and South Korea believe that in reality it will be a ballistic missile test in violation of UN resolutions.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigerian Car Bombs Kill Many in Kaduna

Two car bombs have exploded in the northern Nigerian city of Kaduna, killing at least 16 people, officials say.

Several others were seriously injured in the attack and have been taken to hospital.

The death toll could be higher, with one official, Abubakar Zakari Adamu, telling the AP news agency 38 had died.

A bomb later exploded in the central city of Jos, injuring several people.

The blasts in Kaduna, which caused extensive damage, happened near restaurants, a hotel and two churches.

Religious conflict

The area has been the scene of a religious conflict in recent years that has claimed hundreds of lives.

There had been warnings of attacks in the region over Easter.

Many of the dead are thought to be motorcycle taxi drivers and beggars.

Witnesses say debris was thrown dozens of metres from the centre of the blast.

Kaduna can be found on the dividing line between Nigeria’s largely Christian south and Muslim north.

‘Horrific act’

No one has yet admitted carrying out the bombing, but the BBC’s correspondent in Nigeria, Mark Lobel, says the radical Islamist group Boko Haram recently said it would carry out attacks in the area over the Easter holiday.

Local Christian groups have speculated that the bombers were targeting a nearby church, but that heavy security meant they detonated their explosives in a nearby area instead.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Latin America


‘War on Drugs’ Has Failed, Say Latin American Leaders

Watershed summit will admit that prohibition has failed, and call for more nuanced and liberalised tactics

A historic meeting of Latin America’s leaders, to be attended by Barack Obama, will hear serving heads of state admit that the war on drugs has been a failure and that alternatives to prohibition must now be found.

The Summit of the Americas, to be held in Cartagena, Colombia is being seen by foreign policy experts as a watershed moment in the redrafting of global drugs policy in favour of a more nuanced and liberalised approach.

Otto Pérez Molina, the president of Guatemala, who as former head of his country’s military intelligence service experienced the power of drug cartels at close hand, is pushing his fellow Latin American leaders to use the summit to endorse a new regional security plan that would see an end to prohibition. In the Observer, Pérez Molina writes: “The prohibition paradigm that inspires mainstream global drug policy today is based on a false premise: that global drug markets can be eradicated.”

Pérez Molina concedes that moving beyond prohibition is problematic. “To suggest liberalisation — allowing consumption, production and trafficking of drugs without any restriction whatsoever — would be, in my opinion, profoundly irresponsible. Even more, it is an absurd proposition. If we accept regulations for alcoholic drinks and tobacco consumption and production, why should we allow drugs to be consumed and produced without any restrictions?”

He insists, however, that prohibition has failed and an alternative system must be found. “Our proposal as the Guatemalan government is to abandon any ideological consideration regarding drug policy (whether prohibition or liberalisation) and to foster a global intergovernmental dialogue based on a realistic approach to drug regulation. Drug consumption, production and trafficking should be subject to global regulations, which means that drug consumption and production should be legalised, but within certain limits and conditions.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Washington’s Neglected Southern Neighbors

It seems to be US President Obama’s ‘Latin America Month’: He hosts the presidents of Mexico and Brazil and will later be off to a regional summit in Colombia. But Latin America is still far from a priority for the US.

If you’re browsing US papers for articles on Latin America, you’ll have to look very closely to find some. On the day after the North America summit at the White house, President Obama met with his Mexican counterpart Felipe Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper — but the New York Times printed a picture of the three of them only on page 17.

The headline was “President confident health law will stand.” As usual, the US journalists’ main interest was Obama’s domestic policy: the health reform is currently in limbo, pending a decision by the US Supreme Court. Only towards the end of the three leaders’ press conference, the questions focused on the relations of the US with Mexico and Canada.

In fact, there are plenty of issues to discuss — the stream of illegal immigrants and the drug and weapons trafficking from south to north being the most pressing. At least those topics do regularly make it into US papers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Stereotyping of Roma Continues in Germany

Foreign, free, travelling and lazy — the people who are dismissed as “gypsies” have been stereotyped for centuries. Hundreds of thousands of them were killed by the Nazi regime, and segregation continued after 1945.

‘Romani village to move to Berlin’ ran one headline in Berlin daily BZ on April 2, and the Berliner Morgenpost followed up with ‘Romani children too much to handle for Berlin teachers’ the next day. Those were just two recent headlines in German newspapers.

Such articles go on to describe aggressive begging, welfare payments allegedly obtained under false pretences and mountains of garbage. This kind of reporting has strengthened the distorted picture of a minority group that has been disparaged in Europe for centuries.

According to polls conducted by conflict researcher Wilhelm Heitmeyer, some 44 percent of the German population believe that Sinti and Roma have a tendency to criminal conduct. Four out of 10 say it is a problem for them to have Sinti and Roma nearby. And yet, say Heitmeyer and other researchers, the respondents are not likely to know any members of the minority they dislike so much.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Pope Benedict XVI Gives Easter Sunday Message

The pope has called for peace in Syria and across the Middle East in his traditional speech on Easter Sunday. The message coincided with a car bombing at a church in Nigeria that left several dead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120407

Financial Crisis
» “Not in Labor Force” At New All Time High
» Portugal on Track But Problems Elsewhere a Threat: IMF
 
USA
» Democrats Responsible for Black Culture of Anger
» Florida Pastor at Dearborn Protest: ‘Islam Has One Goal — That is World Domination’
» Fox News Hires Supporter of Jeremiah Wright and Derrick Bell
» Hundreds Pack Public Hearing on Proposed Mosque in Norwalk
» Muslim Brotherhood’s $1.5 Billion Holy Week Windfall
» NBC Fires Producer in Flap Over Manipulated 911 Call in Trayvon Martin Case
» Photos: U.S. Army Domestic Quick Reaction Force Riot Control Training
» Subsidized and Expensive Solar Energy Bites the Dust Again
» Task Force Searches for North Tulsa ‘Random Shooter’
 
Europe and the EU
» Brussels Public Transport Halted After Fatal Staff Attack
» France: Conference for Muslims Underway Amid French Security
» France: Toulouse Killer Was No Lone Wolf
» Malmö: Hatred of Jews in a Swedish City
» The ‘Islamic Art’ Hoax
» Turkey Will Not be Deterred From EU Bid: Minister
» UK to Propose Laws Allowing the Monitoring of E-Mail and Visited Websites
» UK: “The Number One Driver of Not Voting Conservative is Not Being White”
» UK: And After We’ve Left the EU …
» UK: Disgrace of PC in Drunken Race Rant: Scotland Yard’s Racism Crisis Deepens as Vile Abuse of Asian Shop Manager is Revealed
» UK: It’s Time to End the Tory War on Multiculturalism (Reprise)
» UK: Ken Livingstone, George Galloway and Britian’s Drift to the Politics of Race
» UK: Leicestershire Councillor Facing Probe Over Message Criticising Muslims
» UK: MPs: We Speak Up for Israel — and Get Death Threats
» UK: Playing the Faith Card is a Risky Game
» UK: Sentenced to Death for Being Old: The NHS Denies Life-Saving Treatment to the Elderly, As One Man’s Chilling Story Reveals
» UK: Tory Cabinet Ministers Ordered to Attend Eid and Diwali Festivals to Appeal to Asian Voters
 
North Africa
» Tunisia: Should the World Trust Islamists?
 
South Asia
» Airborne Prayers Problem Solved for Tech-Savvy Muslims
» Avalanche Buries 130 Pakistani Soldiers in Kashmir on ‘World’s Highest Battlefield’ Near Indian Border
 
Far East
» Fukushima Reactor 4: Life on Planet Earth in the Balance
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» British Embassy Staff Withdrawn From Mali as Islamic Insurgents Declare Independence
» Nigeria: Sharia: Amputee Seeks N20,000 to Revive Chicken Trade
» Triumphant Tuareg Rebels Fall Out Over Al-Qaeda’s Jihad in Mali
 
Culture Wars
» A Society That Persecutes Christ is Heading for Terrible Trouble
» Melinda Gates: Worrying About Population Control “Has Led to Much Suffering and Death”
» UK: Baa Baa Little Sheep: How Private School Abandoned Nursery Rhyme’s Lyrics for Easter Show Sparking Political Correctness Accusations
 
General
» How Muslims View Easter
» In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland — Review
» Interview: Tom Holland on the Origins of Islam

Financial Crisis


“Not in Labor Force” At New All Time High

March NFP big miss at just 120K. Unemployment rate declines from 8.3% to 8.2%. Futures slide, for at least a few minutes before the NEW QE TM rumor starts spreading. The household survey actually posted a decline in March from 142,065 to 142,034. Considering Birth Death added 90K to the NSA number, the actual number was almost unchanged. And as always, as we predicted when Goldman hiked its NFP forecast yesterday from 175K to 200K saying “if Goldman’s recent predictive track record is any indication, tomorrow’s NFP will be a disaster”, Goldie once again skewers everyone. Finally, Joe LaVorgna’s +250,000 forecast was just 100% off… as usual.

The unemployment rate drops to 8.2% for one simple reason: the number of people not in the labor force is back to all time highs: 87,897,000.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Portugal on Track But Problems Elsewhere a Threat: IMF

Bailed-out Portugal is on track to meet its debt-rescue targets but faces “formidable challenges,” the International Monetary Fund said Thursday, warning that the EU might have to stand by promises of more support. The country faces a tough task to get into strong enough shape to borrow the funds it needs by returning to the bond market next year, the IMF said.

“Programme implementation remains solid but formidable challenges remain,” an IMF staff paper released a day after the fund, the lender of last resort, approved a 5.17-billion-euro ($6.79 billion) installment of rescue funds.

IMF officials in Washington said after a regular joint review that Portugal was making “good progress” on its economic programme under a 78-billion-euro EU-IMF rescue agreed last November.

The IMF staff review Thursday echoed that finding but also highlighted the difficulties and risks ahead, in particular an aggravation of the debt crisis in other eurozone countries which could knock Portugal off track.

It said Portugal was generally implementing its programme as planned and fiscal and trade deficits were narrowing. “However, the recession will likely deepen in the short term and unemployment, already higher than envisaged under the programme, is likely to rise further in the coming months,” it warned. The economy is now set to shrink by 3.25 percent this year.

The IMF staff report said the government would have to work hard to ensure it cuts spending and raises tax revenue while undertaking reforms to boost growth in order to restore its access to private debt markets. But it warned that even if Lisbon did so, problems elsewhere could hurt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Democrats Responsible for Black Culture of Anger

Black twenty-year-old male Danielle Simpson with two black associates were interrupted by 84 year old Geraldine Davidson while in the process of burglarizing her home. They duct taped her mouth, bound her hands and legs and threw the white former school teacher and church organist into the trunk of her own car. Ms Davidson was severely brutalized before the trio eventually tied a rope attached to a cinder block around her legs and threw her, still alive, into the river.

Brutal crimes are not unique.

But, here is what makes this case remarkable. For seven hours, Simpson rode around in Ms Davidson’s car stopping for fast food and opening the truck to show off his victim to his black friends. Due to fingerprints left on the car, detectives estimate that around ten people viewed Ms Davidson in the trunk.

Incredibly, not one person called the police or lobbied to set the poor elderly woman free. What could possibly harden these black youths to such an extent?

Perhaps one of the detective investigating the case nailed it when he described the black criminals and their friends as part of a “culture of anger.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Florida Pastor at Dearborn Protest: ‘Islam Has One Goal — That is World Domination’

Speaking today in front of the biggest mosque in Michigan, the Florida pastor known for burning the Quran blasted Islam and called upon Americans to take back their country.

“Islam has one goal — that is world domination,” said Terry Jones, wearing sunglasses, jeans and a faded black-leather jacket. “It’s time to stand up.”

Holding signs in English and Arabic that read “I Will Not Submit,” about 20 supporters cheered as Jones and his assistant spoke outside the Islamic Center of America, a Dearborn mosque that sits off Ford Road. Framed by the mosque’s minarets, Jones said he’s concerned that the growth of the Muslim population in metro Detroit and the U.S. will lead to the oppression of non-Muslims.

“Muslims, no matter they go around the world … they push their agenda on the society,” said Jones. “We must take back America.”

The mosque was placed on lockdown Saturday afternoon, with about 30 police cars from Detroit, Dearborn, Wayne County and Michigan surrounding the complex, which also includes several churches. Traffic in and out was prevented, disappointing some worshippers who were not aware of Jones’ rally and couldn’t access the mosque. During the anti-Muslim rally, an electronic billboard with the Islamic Center read: “Happy Easter.”

About 500 feet from Jones was a group of counter-protesters, some of whom were with an activist organization, By Any Means Necessary (BAMN). Police prevented them from approaching the grassy area in front of the mosque where Jones spoke. Muslim leaders had urged people not to attend the counter-protest. Unlike Jones’ last two visits to Dearborn, this one was uneventful with no arrests and no street clashes.

Jones said during his talk that he’s also concerned about the free speech rights of Americans. Over the past year, Jones has battled the City of Dearborn for the right to speak in front of the mosque. Last year, a Dearborn judge threw him briefly in jail and ordered him to stay away from the mosque for three years. That decision was later overturned by a Detroit judge.

Last month, the city asked Jones to sign a legal agreement before protesting. Jones then filed a lawsuit, prompting a Detroit federal judge to rule Thursday in his favor. Jones was represented for free in his battles with the city by the Ann Arbor-based Thomas More Law Center, a conservative Christian group established by Domino’s Pizza founder Tom Monaghan.

During the talk, some supporters of Jones made derogatory remarks and jokes about Muslims. When Jones criticized Rev. Al Sharpton and Rev. Jesse Jackson during his speech, one supporter blurted out: “Throw ‘em in the pit with the Muslims.”

After the rally, supporters of Jones posed for photos in front of the mosque.

A crew from Real Catholic TV, a media outlet based in Ferndale that’s owned by a member of Opus Dei, was at the rally. Its host, Michael Voris, said he supports Jones’ right to free speech and some of his views. Jones, who was a pastor in Germany, said Europe is increasingly under the sway of Islamic law.

“There are whole sections of London ruled by sharia law,” Voris said. “I think there’s the potential to happen in the U.S. what has happened — and is happening — in Europe.”

Tim Voss, 64, of Wayne, said he came Saturday to support Jones because “sharia law is the most dangerous thing. We can’t have it in this country.”

Down the road, counter-protester Laura Dennis, 38, of Detroit, held up a sign that read: “God Loves Us All.”

Speaking about Jones, Dennis said: “This guy’s just a hate monger, no different from the Klan or a Nazi.”

[Return to headlines]



Fox News Hires Supporter of Jeremiah Wright and Derrick Bell

Fox News is once again moving to the left, hoping to avoid left-wing attacks on its news operations and commentators. But the move risks alienating conservative viewers. The current controversy involves new Fox News contributor Santita Jackson, who lists the notorious Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Jr., as being among her personal “activities and interests” on her Facebook page.

Wright, who was Obama’s pastor for 20 years and baptized Obama’s children, became a major controversial figure during the 2008 presidential campaign when it became known that he blamed the 9/11 terrorist attacks on American foreign policy and claimed the U.S. manufactured the AIDS virus to kill black people.

The link on the Santita Jackson page, which promotes matters of personal interest to Ms. Jackson and other things she likes to do, directs people to Wright’s official home page.

But her taste for racial and divisive politics has taken on added significance in view of a blog post from 2010, in which Jackson praised New York University law professor Derrick Bell, who has recently become known as “Obama’s Beloved Law Professor” at Breitbart.com because of videos showing the President embracing him. J. Christian Adams, a former Justice Department lawyer, wrote, “Both Obama and Bell demanded that Harvard hire professors on the basis of race. Obama and other students rallied to Bell’s side after Bell quit teaching in an attempt to force Harvard to implement race-based hiring policies.”

He added, “The Obama-Bell connection is the latest in a pattern of Barack Obama’s associations with individuals who promoted a racially divisive America.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hundreds Pack Public Hearing on Proposed Mosque in Norwalk

NORWALK — Several hundred people packed Norwalk Concert Hall on Wednesday for a public hearing on Al Madany Islamic Center of Norwalk’s proposed mosque for 127 Fillow St.

Many wore buttons reading ‘Keep 127 Fillow Street Residential.’ Others wore t-shirts reading ‘All Faiths Can Co-Exist Peacefully Support the Mosque in Norwalk.’ Joseph Santo, Norwalk Zoning Commission chairman, told all those present at the beginning of the hearing that the commission would not vote on the plan Wednesday night — and would continue the public hearing if it went to 11 p.m. “We will not be voting tonight. If we don’t finish (the hearing) tonight … we’re going to close the hearing around that time … and continue it next Wednesday, April 11,” Santo said. “The application will probably be sent back to committee. We’ll discuss it in committee and then put together a resolution (regarding the application).” Santo said the Zoning Commission has 65 days from the beginning of the public hearing Wednesday night to approve or reject the proposed plan.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood’s $1.5 Billion Holy Week Windfall

On the same day that Hagmann and Hagmann Report radio host and senior Canada Free Press (CFP) columnist Doug Hagmann confirmed that the Muslim Brotherhood was having their friendly little tete-a-tete with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Brotherhood left with a booty of USD 1.5 billion in foreign aid.

“Washington, April 5, Kuwait News Agency (KUNA)—The White House defended the decision to release USD 1.5 billion in foreign aid to Egypt, on Thursday, following meetings between U.S. officials and lawmakers and representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood in Washington.”

In his Wednesday CFP report, Hagmann, who described the “Origins of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) as having been founded in Egypt on 30 April, 2011 by the Muslim Brotherhood, “which is the ideological forefather of al Qaeda and Hamas, supporter of Sharia Law, and an advocate of terrorism against Israel and the West”, named names:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



NBC Fires Producer in Flap Over Manipulated 911 Call in Trayvon Martin Case

NBC News has fired the producer it deemed most responsible for the airing of a selectively edited 911 call placed by George Zimmerman the night he killed Trayvon Martin.

Sources at NBC who asked not to be identified confirmed a New York Times story saying that a Miami-based producer was fired Thursday, though the sources refused to identify the former employee.

The offending segment aired on NBC’s Today show March 27 but went widely unnoticed until it was highlighted by conservative outlets such as the Media Research Center and Breitbart.com.

[Return to headlines]



Photos: U.S. Army Domestic Quick Reaction Force Riot Control Training

The following photos are from March and February of this year and were taken at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington. The first four photos from March depict riot control training for a “domestic quick reaction force” that would aid in civil disturbances. The second set of photos from February depict the 67th Military Police Company that typically mans the area’s Regional Correctional Facility attempting to quell riots among “restless prison inmates” that have created a disturbance. The photos are similar to a collection from May 2010 that depict several National Guard units from different parts of the U.S. quelling protesters in mock communities holding signs that say “Food Now”. A description of one of the events was posted to Facebook by the U.S. Army’s 5th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment:

The Soldiers in a closed formation bang their batons in cadence against their shields as an angry mob approaches.

“When I initially picked up my shield, the thought of the movie 300 was the first thing that came to mind,” said Spc. Kyle Wilhelmi.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Subsidized and Expensive Solar Energy Bites the Dust Again

Solar Trust of America, filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware courts—the ninth solar energy company to bite the dust—adding to the previous list of BrightSource, Beacon Power, Ener1, Evergreen Solar, Fiskar, Solyndra, Sunpower, and Spectrawatt.

Solar Trust of America, which listed assets between $1 to $10 million and liabilities between $10 and $50 million, was unable to meet the Department of Energy loan guarantee deadline. The $2.1 billion loan guarantee was “the largest amount ever offered to a solar project.” (The Washington Examiner)

[…]

Spiegel Online reported that even Q-Cells, the biggest solar cell manufacturer in Germany and the world, has filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday, April 3, 2012, with a record loss of $1.1 billion in 2011. In Bitterfeld-Wolfen, 2,200 workers have lost their jobs. Q-Cell’s share price was 9 cents.

Q-Cell blamed competition from China, management issues, and solar energy subsidies. When the government subsidies dried up, Q-Cell was not able to compete in a real market as their product was expensive to make. Production prices have fallen in China by 30 to 40 percent, much faster than other companies could scale down their costs, especially when relying on government subsidies.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Task Force Searches for North Tulsa ‘Random Shooter’

TULSA, Oklahoma — Tulsa Chief of Police Chuck Jordan and other city leaders spoke at a news conference Saturday afternoon to discuss the fatal shootings that took place in Tulsa overnight Friday.

Standing at a podium at the police station, Jordan said to the shooter, who is still at-large, “We’re coming for you.”

Jordan said the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Marshals Office and Federal Bureau of Investigation as well as the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office will combine to form “Operation Random Shooter.”

Thirty investigators will be a part of the task force dedicated solely to tracking down the shooter, Jordan said.

He stressed the task force needs help from the community, because tracking down a “lone wolf suspect” who acted alone can be a challenge.

“But we are up to that challenge,” he said.

“We are all of one mindset, to find this person, arrest them and put them behind bars, and anyone that’s associated with them,” Mayor Dewey Bartlett said at the briefing.

Police call the string of mysterious shootings unprecedented and are urging caution. The random attacks left three people dead and two injured, all within a 5-mile radius. The victims range in age from 31 to 54.

There’s little information known about the suspect. Chief Jordan said one of the surviving victims was able to tell them that a white man in an older model white truck approached him then shot him.

All of the victims are black, and since the only suspect description is a white man, many are left wondering if this is a hate crime.

Related Story: Tulsa Police Identify Victims In ‘Unprecedented’ Shooting Spree

“It’s a very logical theory, but there’s no evidence at the time to support it,” Jordan said.

“There’s been no racial slurs. We haven’t arrested anybody yet. It’s just not time for us to say that. Right now, I’m more worried about three of my citizens being murdered.”

Jordan said there are substantial commonalities in the shootings, which led police to believe they are related. He cited the time frame, the geographic area and other ballistic evidence, which lead to one person.

The gun appears to be a small caliber, Jordan said, but the OSBI will conduct further testing next week.

“We’ll do whatever it takes to bring the shooter to justice,” Jordan said.

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

Europe and the EU


Brussels Public Transport Halted After Fatal Staff Attack

The public transport authority in Brussels halted all buses, trams and metro trains in the Belgian capital Saturday after a controller was “beaten to death” following a traffic accident.

Spokeswoman Francoise Ledune said the controller, aged 56, was taken to hospital, where he later died.

Ledune said the controller was attacked after he was called to the scene of an accident between a bus and a private car early Saturday.

She said he was hit on the head by a friend of the car driver.

Brussels prosecutor Bruno Bulthe, deploring the “gratuitous violence”, said later the suspected assailant had been arrested.

Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo called in a statement for a swift trial and “the severest punishment” for whoever was responsible.

“Violence has no place in our society, one of whose fundamental principles is mutual respect,” he said.

Interior Minister Joelle Milquet said he would propose measures to improve security on public transport at a cabinet meeting later this month.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



France: Conference for Muslims Underway Amid French Security

Hundreds of Muslims began a four day Islamic congress in Paris on Friday, as fears grew of a religious backlash following the Toulouse killings. More than 200 organisations from all over France are taking part in the four-day event which comes just weeks after Al Qaeda-inspired gunman Mohamed Merah shot dead seven people.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France: Toulouse Killer Was No Lone Wolf

by Jason Burke

As ever, as the dust settles, the facts become clearer. In the case of Mohamed Merah, the killer of three Jewish children, a rabbi and three soldiers in France earlier this month, the questions have become sharper too. Though local authorities have been praised for their handling of the bloody dénoument of Merah’s short-lived terrorist career, many doubts remain. How many other Merahs might there be? Is this a French problem or a Europe-wide threat? What can security agencies do to make communities safer? The first point to make is that France has no particular vulnerability to extremist violence, despite the often noisy debate in the country over issues such as overt displays of religious faith in public institutions and the large Muslim population. Indeed, not only has France avoided any significant mass-casualty attacks of the types seen in Spain and Britain in 2004 and 2005 respectively, but it has produced proportionately fewer of the militant volunteers than other European countries in the late 1990s and the decade following the 9/11 attacks.

That there is now a structurally high level of antisemitism, which often translates into violence, is undeniable. That conservative strands of Islam have made significant inroads in recent years is also without doubt. Yet France’s numerous and varied Muslim communities have not shown the levels of radicalisation seen elsewhere. When they look at the Continent, British secret services are currently most concerned about Germany. But this is cold comfort. Mohammed Merah, juvenile delinquent and mechanic, was, after all, from Toulouse. That he existed at all indicates how ubiquitous the threat is, particularly to Jews, from Lisbon to Tallinn.

Another apparently worrying element is that Merah was not a true “lone wolf”, an independent operator with no connections to anyone else. Though the extent of any training or radicalisation while in Pakistan or Afghanistan is unclear — and may simply be his own fantasy — it is clear that Merah was plugged into extremist networks in and around his home town. Terrorism is, at least in terms of its mechanics if not morals, a social activity like any other, and there has been no case yet of a militant being entirely divorced from some kind of group dynamic which has at the very least encouraged him to think he were doing something that someone would regard as praiseworthy. Merah’s brother has reportedly told the police that he was “proud” of his sibling’s actions. The reactions of the various other low-level activists with whom Merah was in contact are unknown but can easily be guessed.

But the “networked” nature of modern militancy holds out the best chance for stopping such attacks. A genuine “lone wolf” would be almost impossible to detect.

The French security services have done a decent job over the past 15 years of keeping the Jewish community safe. They will now be examining how Merah was allowed to amass a potent arsenal, escape detection and kill. In the UK in recent years, their counterparts have been able to identify many potential attackers through working closely with local police and local communities. This approach, long sniffed-at in France, where a more coercive model has been favoured, has been of critical importance in tracing out the crucial small networks. Coupled with enhanced powers and more resources, the threat has been mitigated, if not eradicated, in the UK. The British have learned much from the French over recent years. Now the cross-channel flow of expertise should be reversed.

Jason Burke is the author of ‘Al Qaeda: the true story of radical Islam’ and, most recently, ‘The 9/11 Wars’

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Malmö: Hatred of Jews in a Swedish City

By Paulina Neuding

Rabbi Shneur Kesselman is used to running. When I asked him about the most serious anti-Semitic attack he has been victim of in his Swedish home town of Malmö, he recalled an incident when a car began backing into him and his wife as they were crossing the street.

How close was he when he stopped? I asked.

“I don’t know, we ran,” he said.

Another incident: The rabbi was walking to morning service at Malmö’s Orthodox synagogue, when a car stopped and the driver asked him aggressively to come closer. It was early Saturday morning and the streets around them were empty. When Kesselman started to walk away, the car turned and began to pursue him.

Again Rabbi Kesselman found himself running through the streets of Malmö. “I have never been so frightened,” he told me.

Anti-Semitic hate crimes are on the rise in Sweden, and as in France and Great Britain, the violence and harassment is increasingly a consequence of immigration from the Muslim world. And just as in other parts of Western Europe, there is no reciprocity between the two groups: the war in Gaza caused a sharp rise in anti- Semitic hate crime, while there were no reports of Jewish attacks on Muslims.

In the capital of Stockholm, such imported anti-Semitism has not yet provoked any dramatic changes in Jewish life — mainly because of the segregated nature of the city. Immigrants dominate housing projects in the suburbs, while most Jewish activity is downtown. Stockholm’s only kosher store, its main synagogue and the Jewish cultural center are located in Stockholm’s business quarters.

In Malmö it is different. In 2004 the most common name for baby boys in the city was Mohammed, and among 15-year-olds, ethnic Swedes are now in minority.

Unlike in Stockholm, these demographic changes are immediately reflected in city life, and for Malmö’s 1,500 Jews, life has changed considerably. It is telling that the city’s Jews don’t use slogans or carry signs during their recurring demonstrations against anti-Semitism; they simply wear kippahs and Stars of David. It has become a manifestation in itself to walk through town as a Jew.

According to the Malmö police, hate crimes in the city range from anti-Semitic remarks (a crime according to Swedish penal law) to violent assault. In late 2008, a peaceful Jewish demonstration was run off the main square by an aggressive mob of immigrants of Arab origin…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



The ‘Islamic Art’ Hoax

Talking about Islamic art is rather like talking about the art of the Khanates. The Imperial Kingdom of Genghis Khan was the largest contiguous empire on earth. But just because different lands and cultures were conquered by Genghis Khan doesn’t mean that there is a significance to grouping their art. The sphere of power of the Muslim Empire stretched from the borders of China and the Indian subcontinent across Central Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Sicily, and the Iberian Peninsula, and on to the Pyrenees. There needs to be a further rationale for calling art collections from lands conquered or subdued by the forces of Islam “Islamic Art.”

Then why all the impetus, which started in earnest some almost a decade ago, for all the “Islamic Art” openings at prestigious museums, from the Metropolitan Museum of Art to the Victoria and Albert Museum in England? The creation of departments of Islamic art at prestigious universities and museums? The support of prestigious foundations like Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art? It is political correctness.

The idea is that the kinder, gentler artistic side of Islam needs to be promoted to disabuse the hopelessly bigoted perception, held by various troglodyte crypto-neo-cons, that Islam is an aggressive, imperialist, expansionist, and repressive “religion.” But even at the start of the “Islamic Art” movement there were, as we shall see, art critics who doubted that Islam provided the inspiration or the continuity for collections of art from lands under Muslim control. The push to credit Islam for so-called “Islamic Art” is beginning to look as feeble as the Obama administration’s mandate to the National Aeronautic and Space Administration to showcase the Arab contributions to space exploration.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkey Will Not be Deterred From EU Bid: Minister

Turkey’s minister for European affairs insisted Thursday that Europeans would not deter his country from its decades-long bid to join the EU despite the obstacles on its path. “No country faces as many impediments, as many challenges and difficulties as my country” in its bid for EU membership, Egemen Bagis said in Bucharest, citing, among others, visa requirements and a slow negotiation process.

“Those politicians around Europe who think that by making these difficulties they can make Turkey go away are dead wrong,” Bagis said at a conference on Turkey and the EU in the Romanian capital. “We are here. Every country that has ever started its negotiations, at the end finished its negotiations, so will Turkey, we will not be the first exception,” he said in English.

Turks are “known to be very patient”, he said, recalling that Ankara first applied to join the European bloc in 1959 and had to wait until 2005 to begin formal accession negotiations.

The talks have stalled over problems relating to EU member Cyprus, whose northern third was invaded and occupied by Turkey in 1974 and countries such as Austria, France and Germany are reluctant to grant full membership.

Romania’s minister of European affairs Leonard Orban said he hoped this attitude would change. “It is absolutely evident from a strategic and security point of view that Turkey’s full accession to the EU represents a fundamental interest to us,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK to Propose Laws Allowing the Monitoring of E-Mail and Visited Websites

We’ve seen in the past months a variety of laws aiming to monitor and censor the internet. The UK (aka Oceania to George Orwell readers) is taking a step further by proposing laws allowing the monitoring of emails, phone calls, text messages and even visited websites in real time. These laws are not a long-term project; they are to be brought in “as soon as parliamentary time allows”. As usual, these big-brotherish laws are justified with noble causes such as “fighting terrorists” but the reality is that the right to privacy of the entire population is being revoked. Furthermore, the definition of “terrorist” has been so distorted in recent years that it will probably end up meaning “someone with an opinion about something” in the near future.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: “The Number One Driver of Not Voting Conservative is Not Being White”

by Tim Montgomerie

The title of this blog was an observation reportedly made by Andrew Cooper — the PM’s polling and strategy adviser — at a recent meeting of Tory MPs. A major survey by the TNS-BMRB polling organisation for the Runnymede Trust (PDF) found that just 16% of Britain’s ethnic minority population were Conservative voters at the last election. That compared to 37% among white Britons. Members of the Indian community were most likely to back the Tories (at about 25%). The least likely were black Britons. Under one-in-ten Caribbean and African Britons are Tory voters. The Lib Dems didn’t do much better than the Conservatives and worse among Indian voters. Labour is the dominant political party among Black and Minority Ethnic communities — winning 68% of all of its votes.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: And After We’ve Left the EU …

by Daniel Hannan

I think I’ve decided what to do when I put myself out of a job as an MEP. The next big task, once we’re safely out of the EU, will be to repair the Anglosphere: the community of free English-speaking democracies. I have written a piece about it in that superb newspaper The Australian. I’ve recently visited a number of Anglosphere countries to plug the message: Ireland, the US, Australia, Canada. The past two centuries have been dominated by the English-speaking peoples and, though we’ve made our share of mistakes, we can also be proud of the way we have spread our values: personal liberty, parliamentary supremacy, the rule of law, free trade, property rights. It’s because of these things that Bermuda isn’t Haiti, that South Africa isn’t the Democratic Republic of Congo, that Hong Kong isn’t China. We surely shouldn’t be ending it all with an indifferent shrug. Rage, rage against the dying of the light!

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Disgrace of PC in Drunken Race Rant: Scotland Yard’s Racism Crisis Deepens as Vile Abuse of Asian Shop Manager is Revealed

The racism crisis engulfing Scotland Yard took a dramatic turn last night as an officer was exposed for abusing an Asian takeaway manager.

In an appalling drunken outburst, PC Philip Juhasz, 31, told the Pakistani to ‘go back to your f****** country’. The disgraced officer faces the sack for gross misconduct after being convicted of a racially aggravated public order offence.

But the case raises serious questions about the determination of police to stamp out all traces of racism among their ranks.

Senior black officers in the Metropolitan police said warnings about growing prejudice have been falling on deaf ears for almost a decade.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: It’s Time to End the Tory War on Multiculturalism (Reprise)

by Paul Goodman

Gavin Barwell wrote on this site last year that Lord Tebbit’s cricket test should be torn up:

“I would love our Prime Minister, who has done so much to transform perceptions of the Conservative Party for the better, to give a speech doing to Norman Tebbit’s cricket test what he did to the Margaret Thatcher’s “There’s no such thing as society” quote. Yes, it is important to have loyalty to this country but your roots are important too.”

I have put it a different way: it’s time to end the Tory war on multiculturalism:

“First, because the word…means so many things to so many people, as now to be almost meaningless. Second, because it isn’t helping the Party win votes…Third, because the M-word has become a dissipation of energies better focused “like a laser beam” on the struggle against extremism and the ideology that underpins it.”

And set out some key facts separately:

“Migrants and their descendants are on the whole less likely to vote Conservative than the rest of the population. In 2010, the Tories…won only 16 per cent of the ethnic minority vote. The proportion of such voters was under one in ten in 2001. By 2050 ethnic minorities will make up a fifth of the population.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ken Livingstone, George Galloway and Britian’s Drift to the Politics of Race

by Damian Thompson

I’m loving this Ken Livingstone tax malarkey. The panic in his campaign team is funny enough, but for true comedy you have to read the tweets of his admirers. There’s a high-profile Leftie blogger called Sunny Hundal, normally puritanical on questions of tax, who is performing spectacular contortions on Twitter to defend his hero’s fiscal ingenuity. Do take a look.

Anyway, I was wondering whether there was anything Ken could do to swing the mayoral election his way if it were held tomorrow. And I could only come up with one idea: go cap in hand to Lutfur Rahman to make sure he gets out the Tower Hamlets vote.

Rahman was elected mayor of that borough in 2010 and is a mighty voice in the local Bangladeshi Muslim community. He’s an independent, having been ditched by Labour, which accused him of supporting Islamic extremists. George Galloway’s Respect Party backed him, though. And so did Ken Livingstone. Were Rahman to return the favour and deliver a bloc vote for Labour, that might just enable the old boy to fulfil his promise to turn London into a “beacon of Islam”. And, talking of beacons of Islam, I don’t see George Galloway being dislodged at the next election. He beat Labour in Bradford West by 10,000 votes. Never before has a by-election been won on the back of a manifesto attuned to radical Islamic sensibilities. But let’s not get too hung up on “Islamification”. It’s an illustration rather than the cause of changes in electoral demography — changes that have wrong-footed both Labour and the Tories.

Telegraph blogger Ed West, a specialist in the politics of immigration, reckons we should look at the way the American electorate has realigned itself. There’s no major Islamic presence in the US — but parts of the country have been profoundly changed by immigration. The increasingly solid Democrat vote in urban America isn’t produced by hopey-changey cosmopolitans: as New York Times columnist Ross Douthat points out, at its core lie Hispanics who have been bought off with “very explicit and specific promises of special legal treatment (in hiring, government contracting, college admissions, immigration policy, etc) based on their ethno-racial background”. The problem for the Democrats is that white males have abandoned the party — not because they’re racist, but because they feel excluded from what Douthat calls the “race-based spoils system” operated by the progressive elite.

Does that sound familiar? Ken Livingstone was the first British politician to set up such a system. Thirty years on, nearly all ethnic minorities in London back Labour. That’s a mixed blessing for the party, though. Labour now faces the same dilemma as the Democrats: the more it subsidises its emerging ethnic vote, the more it drives traditional supporters towards the opposition. Multicultural special pleading persuaded working-class voters to back Boris in 2008. You might think that’s good news for the Tories. David Cameron doesn’t. He hates the (very real) prospect of the Conservatives becoming the “white” party. Everything he says sounds as if it’s designed to alienate the working classes. Instead, he sucks up to progressive opinion-formers who will never vote Conservative. Nor will the ethnic groups he patronises. So he’s stuffed, too. I can’t feel sympathy for either party. Neither had the courage or the common sense to oppose mass immigration. As a result, Britain will soon — for the first time — suffer the fate of countless foreign countries and have to build its policies around religious and ethnic enclaves.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Leicestershire Councillor Facing Probe Over Message Criticising Muslims

A Leicestershire county councillor is being investigated after distributing a leaflet which criticised Muslims. Earlier this year, Graham Partner — who quit the BNP to sit as an independent — sent out a New Year message to voters in his Coalville division. It featured part of an article from a national newspaper which said victimhood “comes easily” to followers of Islam. The article added: “Every terrorist atrocity, every blood- soaked massacre is justified by reference to imagined grievances. But the greatest persecutors of other faiths are Muslim, themselves. The response from the Western church leaders is deafening silence, afraid to accept that their ideological paradise of multi-cultural, multi-faith, left-wing society is nothing more than a fantasy.”

Two county councillors and two parish councillors lodged a complaint, and the county council’s standards board is now investigating. Conservative Peter Lewis, said: “The leaflet certainly cocked a snook at the county’s equality and human rights policies, and as it was issued in his role as a county councillor, it reflected badly, in my view, on the council.

“It certainly seemed to me designed not to build bridges or foster tolerance but to stir up and fire division and hatred around the same period as the EDL march (which took place in Leicester in February). Mr Partner has resigned from the BNP but has clearly retained its combative posture.” Coun Partner said the complaints were politically motivated, and insisted the leaflet was well-received by people living in his ward. He also said the message was not penned by him, but copied from and attributed to Daily Express columnist Leo McKinstry.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: MPs: We Speak Up for Israel — and Get Death Threats

MPs who have spoken in support of Israel have been forced to limit the information they make available to constituents and take other security precautions after being sent death threats or abusive messages by post, by phone or online, a JC investigation has revealed. Two years after Labour’s Stephen Timms was stabbed by a radicalised student, security remains a key concern, especially for MPs who are vocal about controversial topics such as Israel — and suffer threats as a consequence. Two weeks ago Conservative MP John Howell was forced to seek police protection after becoming the target of a campaign by pro-Palestinians. Louise Ellman, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, has been dealing with death threats for a decade. The problem has worsened in recent years and she now receives emails as well as letters.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Playing the Faith Card is a Risky Game

This is something I’ve never said before, but I so agree with George Galloway. His stunning by-election victory last week was the Bradford Spring.

And that’s what worries me and I know for sure it concerns people on all sides of the political divide.

A Labour MP confided in me this week that she was concerned at the possibility of ‘white v brown’ or ‘white v black’ election tensions becoming the norm in Britain.

With Mr Galloway’s victory — made more astonishing by his words of praise for Saddam Hussein and Syria’s President Assad, who must have killed hundreds of thousands of Muslims between them — another problem is looming.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Sentenced to Death for Being Old: The NHS Denies Life-Saving Treatment to the Elderly, As One Man’s Chilling Story Reveals

When Kenneth Warden was diagnosed with terminal bladder cancer, his hospital consultant sent him home to die, ruling that at 78 he was too old to treat.

Even the palliative surgery or chemotherapy that could have eased his distressing symptoms were declared off-limits because of his age.

His distraught daughter Michele Halligan accepted the sad prognosis but was determined her father would spend his last months in comfort. So she paid for him to seen privately by a second doctor to discover what could be done to ease his symptoms.

Thanks to her tenacity, Kenneth got the drugs and surgery he needed — and as a result his cancer was actually cured. Four years on, he is a sprightly 82-year-old who works out at the gym, drives a sports car and competes in a rowing team.

‘You could call his recovery amazing,’ says Michele, 51. ‘It is certainly a gift. But the fact is that he was written off because of his age. He was left to suffer so much, and so unnecessarily.’

Sadly, Kenneth’s story is symptomatic of a dreadful truth. According to shocking new research by Macmillan Cancer Support, every year many thousands of older people are routinely denied life-saving NHS treatments because their doctors write them off as too old to treat.

It is often left to close family members to fight for their rights. But although it is now British law that patients must never be discriminated against on the basis of age, such battles often prove futile.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Tory Cabinet Ministers Ordered to Attend Eid and Diwali Festivals to Appeal to Asian Voters

Tory Cabinet ministers have been ordered to attend Diwali and Eid festivals with Hindu and Muslim voters after being warned they can’t win the next election without increasing the number of Asian voters they attract. George Galloway’s victory in the Bradford West by-election has convinced Conservative high command that they need to do more to reach ethnic minority voters. Ministers and MPs are being quietly told that they need to ‘show their faces’ regularly at ethnic minority and religious festivals over the next three years, rather than simply turning up at election time. The Tories are set to copy a strategy, pioneered by the Conservative Party in Canada, where ministers are expected to report which ethnic minority events they have attended each month. David Cameron’s polling guru Andrew Cooper has identified more than 30 urban seats, with big black and ethnic minority populations, that need to be won to secure a Tory majority in 2015. Mr Cooper has told ministers that polling data shows that while ethnic minority voters most closely associated themselves with Conservative values like the importance of family and law order, they still vote Labour by a majority of 70 to 30.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia: Should the World Trust Islamists?

by David Rohde

Newly powerful groups in Egypt and Tunisia cannot afford to become Hamas-like international pariahs, but they should be watched closely.

TUNIS — Like it or not, this is the year of the Islamist. Fourteen months after popular uprisings toppled dictators in Tunisia and Egypt, Islamist political parties — religiously conservative groups that oppose the use of violence — have swept interim elections, started rewriting constitutions and become the odds-on favorites to win general elections. Western hopes that more liberal parties would fare well have been dashed. Secular Arab groups are divided, perceived as elitist or enjoy tepid popular support.

But instead of the political process moving forward, a toxic political dynamic is emerging. Aggressive tactics by hardline Muslims generally known as Salafists are sowing division. Moderate Islamists are moving cautiously, speaking vaguely and trying to hold their diverse political parties together. And some Arab liberals are painting dark conspiracy theories.

Ahmed Ounaies, a pro-Western Tunisian politician who briefly served as foreign minister in the country’s post-revolutionary government, said that he no long trusted Rachid Ghannouchi, the leader of Tunisia’s moderate Islamist party. Echoing other secular Tunisians, he said some purportedly moderate Muslim leaders are, in fact, aligned with hardliners.

“We believe that Mr. Ghannouchi is a Salafist,” Ouanies said in an interview. “He is a real supporter of those groups.”

Months after gaining power, moderate Islamists find themselves walking a political tightrope. They are trying to show their supporters that they are different from the corrupt, pro-Western regimes they replaced. They are trying to persuade Western investors and tourists to trust them, return and help revive flagging economies. And they are trying to counter hardline Salafists who threaten to steal some of their conservative support.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Airborne Prayers Problem Solved for Tech-Savvy Muslims

SINGAPORE — As a frequent flier and devout Muslim, businessman Abdalhamid Evans always comes up against the same challenge in the air: when to say his prayers. Muslims are required to pray five times a day at certain hours, but this schedule becomes complicated when crossing various time zones at thousands of metres above sea level. “I usually don’t pray when I am in a plane,” said Evans, the London-based founder of a website that provides information on the global halal, or Islam-compliant, industry. But lately I have been thinking that it is probably better to do them in the air than make them up on arrival,” he told AFP. The problem may be solved for travellers such as Evans thanks to an innovation called the Air Travel Prayer Time Calculator, developed by Singapore-based Crescentrating, a firm that gives halal ratings to hotels and other travel-related establishments. Launched earlier this month, the online tool takes data such as prayer times in the country of origin, the destination city and in countries on the flight path and uses an algorithm to plot exact prayer hours during a flight.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Avalanche Buries 130 Pakistani Soldiers in Kashmir on ‘World’s Highest Battlefield’ Near Indian Border

A race against time is under way to save to save 130 Pakistani soldiers buried today in an avalanche on the ‘world’s highest battlefield’.

The incident happened early this morning on the Siachen Glacier, a Himalayan region close to India where thousands of Pakistani and Indian troops are based.

A security official said snow engulfed a battalion headquarters in the Gayari district.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


Fukushima Reactor 4: Life on Planet Earth in the Balance

Diplomat Akio Matsumura is warning that the disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan may ultimately turn into an event capable of extinguishing all life on Earth.

Matsumura posted a startling entry on his blog following a statement made by Japan’s former ambassador to Switzerland, Mitsuhei Murata, on the situation at Fukushima.

[…]

He then said the 11,138 spent fuel assemblies stored at the Fukushima plant contain “134 million curies is Cesium-137 — roughly 85 times the amount of Cs-137 released at the Chernobyl accident as estimated by the U.S. National Council on Radiation Protection.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


British Embassy Staff Withdrawn From Mali as Islamic Insurgents Declare Independence

Staff were today being withdrawn from the British Embassy in troubled Mali in the wake of the military coup, as insurgent Islamic fundamentalists declared it an independent nation.

The Foreign Office said the temporary measure would limit the UK’s ability to help Britons who chose to remain in the Saharan state against official advice.

As British nationals fled the desert nation, Tuareg rebels, who seized control of the country’s north in the chaotic aftermath of the coup, today declared independence for what they called the Azawad nation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Sharia: Amputee Seeks N20,000 to Revive Chicken Trade

Gusau-The second and last person so far to be amputated for stealing under the Islamic legal system in Zamfara State, Mallam Lawali Isa, has said he needs N20,000 to start his chicken-selling business. Isa, who was amputated 11 years ago, on May 3, 2001, at Gumi General Hospital, Zamfara State, during the adminstration of Senator Sani Yerima, was spoted at a local market in Gumi where he spoke to Vanguard. He admitted that although he stole three sets of bicycles from a shop in the state, his amputation was political. He said: “At that time, the then governor, Alhaji Sani Yerima, introduced Sharia, and all of us agreed to its implementation. They preached that whoever stole would have his hand amputated. Unfortunately for me, I became a victim having stolen sets of brand new bicycles. I was arrested and arraigned at the Sharia Court after investigation. But, at the Gusau Prison, where I was kept in custody before the amputation, human rights groups were always visiting and fighting that I should not be amputated. ‘They told me they will stand by me and that I should resist the amputation. I was equally under pressure from the then Zamfara State Commissioner for Religious Affairs, Alhaji Ibrahim Wakala, now the state Deputy Governor and Malam Aliyu Sani Jangebe, the then head of the anti-corruption commission. They all preached to me when they visited, after the human rights group had left and told me I should accept the will of Allah if I know that I am a true Muslim. They quoted some verses from the Holy Koran and tried to convince me on why I had to be amputated and concluded by saying, however, I was free to follow whoever I liked if I would not listen to them. By that time, I had never set my eyes on the person called Governor Yerima. Yes, I broke into somebody’s shop and took some bicycles. It was nine units of bicycles packed three sets of three packets. I had successfully sold two sets; it was in the process of selling the last set that I was apprehended”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Triumphant Tuareg Rebels Fall Out Over Al-Qaeda’s Jihad in Mali

The rebels, armed with weapons stolen from Muammar Gaddafi’s formidable arsenal, took over an area of the Sahara as big as France in an astonishing 72 hours, taking advantage of the chaotic aftermath of an army coup.

Few of the people they promised to free waited to find out what freedom would be like. Instead, an estimated 250,000 people left their homes, terrified families fleeing with their children and possessions. Many told tales of looting and rape by rebels who now control a vast area in the heart of Africa.

Foreign governments were left scrambling to find out exactly who the rebels were, amid fears that a base for al-Qaeda will now be set up in the Sahara similar to ones in lawless parts of Pakistan and Somalia.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


A Society That Persecutes Christ is Heading for Terrible Trouble

by Charles Moore

Politicians in the West — and atheists — ignore at their peril the benefits and power of organised religion.

This week before Easter, I chanced upon the following two quotations. The first says: “Not for 2,000 years has it been possible for society to exclude or eliminate Christ from its social or political life without a terrible social or political consequence.” The second says: “Religion taught by a prophet or by a preacher of the truth is the only foundation on which to build a great and powerful empire.” The first is by Margaret Thatcher, opening her foreword to a book called Christianity and Conservatism, which appeared in 1990. The second appears in Tom Holland’s outstanding new book In the Shadow of the Sword (Little, Brown), which traces the rise of Islam from the ruins of the Roman and Persian empires. It comes from Ibn Khaldun, the great Muslim historian and political counsellor of the 14th century.

The grocer’s daughter from Grantham and the sage from Tunis seem, despite their differences of faith and time, to be saying something comparable. I found myself asking a simple question about both statements: are they, factually, right? Note that neither is insisting — though they probably believe that it is — that what the religious leader preaches is necessarily true. Note, too, that neither is saying that a religion, let alone a religious organisation such as a church, should hold political power. But what they are saying is something like the message of the parable of the house built on rock and the house built on sand. They have seen a good bit of how the world works: they recommend building on rock.

Both remarks would probably not be made by secular public figures in the West today. Mrs Thatcher’s words were written only 22 years ago, when she was still prime minister, but her successors — though all four of them have been highly favourable to Christianity — would shy away from the toughness of her claim. They prefer to confine themselves to saying nice things about Jesus (He had “incomparable compassion, generosity, grace, humility and love”, said David Cameron this week), rather than to suggest that anything bad might happen if His teaching is ignored. As for old Mr Khaldun, well, we’re not supposed to be in favour of great and powerful empires anyway, so let’s not go there.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Melinda Gates: Worrying About Population Control “Has Led to Much Suffering and Death”

In a twisted exercise in deceiving semantics Co-chair and trustee of the Melinda and Bill Gates Foundation Melinda Gates attempted to counter the growing criticism in regards to the Foundation’s efforts in the Third World. During a speech she gave at the TEDx Change in Berlin yesterday, the wife of Microsoft founder and “philanthropist” Bill Gates characterised all criticism of the Foundation’s adventures in the third world as dangerous, especially the charge that the foundation is actively but covertly involved in population control. Gates described the charge as so dangerous in fact, that the criticism”has led to much suffering and death.”

[…]

Speaking of “code” at a 2006 gathering of top globalists devoted to the “family planning agenda” under the umbrella-name “Demographic Dynamics and Socio-Economic Development”, professor of Medical Demography at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, John Cleland, admitted to the fact that they should cease using coded language when communicating to the general public. The gathering was attended by the usual suspects. Representatives were present of the United Nations Population Fund, the International Planned Parenthood Foundation, the European Commission, the World Bank and, last but not least, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

“No more shrouding our statements in code.”, the professor said. “Because code just confuses people.”, the professor said (page 33 in the document).

Cleland went on to say: “It does this cause no service at all to continue to shroud family planning in the obfuscating phrase “sexual and reproductive health”. People don’t really know what it means. If we mean family planning or contraception, we must say it. If we are worried about population growth, we must say it. We must use proper, straightforward language. I am fed up with the political correctness that daren’t say the name population stabilization, hardly dares to mention family planning or contraception out of fear that somebody is going to get offended. It is pathetic!”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Baa Baa Little Sheep: How Private School Abandoned Nursery Rhyme’s Lyrics for Easter Show Sparking Political Correctness Accusations

Quite what the little boy who lives down the lane would make of it is open to conjecture.

But parents at one school made their feelings plain when they heard their children reciting ‘Baa Baa Little Sheep’.

They accused the £2,700-a-term Park Hill primary school of changing the words from ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep’ for the sake of political correctness.

[…]

Andrea Craig, a councillor whose son sang in the show, tweeted: ‘At my son’s Easter concert I saw a song called Baa Baa Little Sheep which I assumed was new. Not so — not allowed black. Really?’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


How Muslims View Easter

by Rollo Romig

Jesus didn’t die on the cross. He was born of a virgin, but he isn’t the son of God. He did not redeem the sins of humankind. He healed the sick, gave sight to the blind, and raised the dead. He spoke complete sentences even as an infant in the cradle, announcing to his mother, Mary, that God had granted him the scripture and made him a prophet. Jesus is neither almighty nor eternal. Jesus is the Messiah. Jesus is a Muslim. This is the Jesus of the Koran. Ninety-three of its verses refer to him-more than any other prophet save Muhammad-and the Koranic account of Jesus’ life harmonizes with the Gospels in more particulars than even many Muslims realize. My wife is a Muslim with years of madrassa education behind her, but when I mentioned Jesus’ virgin birth to her she was skeptical. “Does the Koran really say that?” she asked. I started to look it up, but five seconds later she waved me off. “Don’t bother,” she said, “I found it on Wikipedia.” And so it was written.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland — Review

by Anthony Sattin

The life of Muhammad and the rise of Islam are boldly re-examined in this brilliantly provocative history

In 706AD the caliph al-Walid decided to commission a building as a centrepiece for his new capital, Damascus. Only 74 years had passed since the death of the prophet Muhammad; the Arabs’ new empire was still in the making, and there was no such thing as imperial Islamic architecture. The caliph found inspiration for his mosque in both Christian and pagan temple architecture. And while he built it on the site of one of the greatest of all Roman temples, demolishing the Christian church that stood inside the precincts, he incorporated many of the Roman stones, as well as the tomb of John the Baptist. For decoration, he brought Byzantine craftsmen over to piece together the vast gold mosaics.

The idea of borrowing is untroubling in architecture — we expect to see continuity and evolution in buildings. But the idea that religions evolve out of one another is more disturbing. Christians have choked on the notion that many of their rituals were borrowed from pagan rites. And heaven help the historian who dares to suggest that Islam might be a product of earlier religions and not, as the faithful insist, a revelation direct from God. Tom Holland has done exactly this in his brilliantly provocative new book — and we must hope that heaven is smiling on him now.

[…]

The Qur’an anticipated the day of Holland’s coming (or someone very like him). Sura 25 instructs Muslims to counter the claim that “these are fables of the ancients which he has got someone to write down for him” with the insistence that it was “revealed by Him Who knows every secret”. For believers, these words are proof enough of the veracity of the Qur’an. Some have gone further and used them as justification for intellectual, legal and physical attacks on people who claim otherwise. The lives of some people who have dared to question the historicity of the prophet Muhammad and the Qur’an have been ruined, even ended. We must hope that Holland is spared their wrath and that his excellent book will be lauded, as it should be, for doing what the best sort of books can do — examining holy cows.

Anthony Sattin’s A Winter on the Nile and Lifting the Veil are both out in paperback

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Interview: Tom Holland on the Origins of Islam

by Daisy Dunn

In the fifth century BC Herodotus of Halicarnassus set out a history of hostilities between the Greeks and the Persians. For all his quirky non-sequiturs (Ethiopians’ skin is black, so must be their semen…) he fulfilled his not-so-modest objective to immortalize the deeds of Greeks and non-Greeks alike, in particular, the reason they warred against one another. Tom Holland (who is, incidentally, in the process of translating Herodotus’ Histories) evokes more than a little of this spirit in his new book, In the Shadow of the Sword, an intrepid history of the evolution of the Arab Empire.

From Rubicon to Persian Fire and Millennium Holland has hurtled through ancient history like a runaway horse on a hippodrome. The new book, which has taken five years to complete, was apparently just the next, inevitable hurdle, ‘There was an obvious gap, having written about the Persian Empire and about the transformation from the Roman world to the Medieval world in Europe, to look at what had happened in the East — the collapse of the Persian Empire there, the truncation of the Roman Empire, and to treat the coming of Islam as the falling of the Roman Empire in the East, I thought, would be an interesting take.’ He suggests in his book that Islam’s evolution and final construction as an orthodoxy was part of a long process; that, far from springing up in isolation, it developed out of a melting pot of cultures — the kind of pot that subsequently shattered into a pile of glue-repellent shards, ‘It’s become very fashionable to speak about Abrahamic faiths, and historically it’s tended to be Muslims who’ve been keen on that idea because it gets them into the Judeo-Christian private members’ club, but I think that if you try to look at where Islam might have come from as part of an evolutionary process, and you set aside the notion that it somehow evolved spontaneously in the middle of the desert, it’s actually clear that it’s very much part of the Judeo-Christian tradition, and that all these religions are really products of the same cultural milieu.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120406

Financial Crisis
» Austerity Tax Could ‘Kill Off’ French Bookstores
» Euro Drops Below 1.20 Swiss Franc Floor
» French Trade Gap Widens
» U.S. Added Only 120,000 Jobs in March, Report Shows
 
USA
» Burger King’s New Menu
» Dismissal Recommended for Marine Who Criticized Obama on Facebook
» Government Surveillance Crackdown on Internet Goes Into Overdrive
» Judge Upset by Obama’s Comments on Health Care Law
» Maryland Puts Gift Card Bounty on ‘Fish From Hell’
» North American Union Plan to Disarm the People of the United States
» Obama Should Know Better on Supreme Court’s Role
» Obama Gives Coal Miners the Shaft
» Old Man Attacked by Youths: “This is for Trayvon”
» Poll Shows Big Racial Divide in Opinion on Trayvon Martin Case
» Proposed Satellite Would Beam Solar Power to Earth
» School Children Forced to Participate in Kony 2012 Activism
» Secret Plan Underway to Revive Internet Censorship Bill SOPA
» The NSA is Building the Country’s Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say)
» Trayvon Martin Killing: UN Human Rights Chief Calls for Investigation
» Two Airmen Ejected Before Navy Jet Crashed in Virginia Beach
» Two Navy Pilots Eject From Jet and Send Fighter Careening Into Apartments, Destroying Buildings
» Van Jones Group Plans America’s “Arab Spring” Revolt
» You Tube Now Banning Videos Critical of Global Warming Alarmism
» Your Cell Phone Makes You a Prisoner of a Digital World Where Virtually Anyone Can Hack You
 
Europe and the EU
» Austria: Designer of Iconic Porsche 911 Dies
» Britain’s Royal Air Force Considering Purchase of Israeli Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
» France: Eiffel Tower Lift Falls Down During Test
» French Fear New Serial Killer After Murders
» ‘I Played Warcraft With Norway Killer’: Survivor
» Romania’s Hospital Scandal: Babies Left to Die as Doctors Refuse to Work Without Bribes
» Sweden: Social Democrats Sprint Into Poll Lead
» UK: School Standards at Risk From Attempts to ‘Cure Social Ills’
 
Balkans
» Bosnia Marks 20 Years Since Start of War
 
North Africa
» Jihad and ‘Martyrdom’ In the Voting Booth?
» Tunisia: Muslims Threaten Church, Cover Its Cross With Garbage Bags
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» A View on Günter Grass: Why We Need an Open Debate on Israel
» Caroline Glick: The Eternal Liberation Movement
» Israel’s U.S. Envoy: Award to Helen Thomas Shows Palestinians Aren’t Ready for Peace
» Israel Wary of Changes in the Arab World
 
Middle East
» Iraq: Camp Ashraf Massacre: ‘Hypocrisy Runs Deep’
» Record Number of Refugees Flee Syria for Turkey
» The Price of Oil: Saudi Agenda: Our Gullibility
 
South Asia
» India: The “Massive Con” Causing a Suicide Every 30 Minutes
 
Culture Wars
» Video: Abortion Conditioning: The UN’s Sick Social Engineering Agenda
 
General
» Interview With Director James Cameron: ‘The ‘Titanic’ Shows That the Unthinkable Can Happen’
» Microsoft’s Kinect Spy System

Financial Crisis


Austerity Tax Could ‘Kill Off’ French Bookstores

France’s small bookstores have survived the rise of big chains, Amazon and digital books, but many fear a sales tax rise, part of the debt-saddled government’s austerity plans, could push them out of business. Until now the thousands of independent booksellers that dot France’s town centres offered the best of both worlds — a quaint setting, one-on-one tips and advice, and guaranteed prices as low as at a chain store.

Since 1981, the French state has set the price of books, largely to support independent bookstores which are seen as vital assets to local communities. But President Nicolas Sarkozy’s right-wing government, fighting to get public finances under control, has hiked the sales tax on books from 5.5 percent to seven percent, under measures that took effect on April 1st.

With the French presidential campaign in full swing ahead of the April 22nd first round, the question has turned political with Sarkozy’s Socialist rival Francois Hollande vowing to repeal the rise.

Booksellers see the tax hike, part of measures aimed at saving a total of €72 billion ($95 billion), as a stab in the back. The government has “loaded the bullet designed to kill off independent booksellers,” charged Vincent Monade, a former bookseller and head of the Paris region’s Observatory for Books and Writing (MOTif).

Unlike the United States for instance, where bookselling has become the preserve of big business, France has one of the densest networks of small bookstores in the world.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro Drops Below 1.20 Swiss Franc Floor

The euro on Thursday dipped briefly below the 1.20 Swiss franc floor imposed by Switzerland’s central bank to curb the soaring local currency. The euro fell to 1.1997 francs at around 11.45am before shortly recovering to trade back above the threshold again at 1.2019 francs. A spokesman for the Swiss National Bank declined to comment to AFP whether the bank had intervened.

Since imposing the limit last year, the central bank has consistently said it would defend the level with the “utmost determination,” and pledged to buy unlimited amounts of euros to keep the 1.20 francs minimum.

Investors unsettled by the eurozone debt crisis and uncertain US economic prospects have flocked to a perceived safe haven in Switzerland, driving up the value of the franc to the detriment of Swiss exporters.

The Swiss currency gained 11 percent against the euro and 15 percent against the dollar between January and September 5, 2011, when the SNB intervened decisively on foreign exchange markets to stem its rise.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Trade Gap Widens

An increase in energy imports due to a cold snap in February sent France’s trade deficit jumping by nearly 15 percent in February to hit €6.4 billion ($8.4 billion), customs data showed on Friday. “In February, the increase in imports is in part due to energy purchases connected to the cold snap, which caused the deficit to widen to €6.398 billions from €5.593 billion in January,” said the French customs service in a statement.

In addition to the cold weather, three oil refineries were shut for maintenance, also causing a spurt in imports, the customs service noted. Imports rose to €43.6 billion in February and exports to €37.2 billion. Exports were helped by good sales of manufactured items, as well as agricultural commodities and military equipment, noted the customs service. Major deliveries of satellites and a rebound in vehicle exports also helped the monthly figures.

The 12-month trade deficit came in at €70.051 billion. France posted a record trade deficit in 2011 of €70.104 billion. France has a big structural trade deficit which is a central concern to policymakers, and contrasts with a big surplus by the leading eurozone economy, Germany.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



U.S. Added Only 120,000 Jobs in March, Report Shows

The United States economy added a relatively weak 120,000 jobs in March, and the unemployment rate dipped to 8.2 percent from 8.3 percent, the Labor Department said on Friday.

Many economists had expected March to be the fourth consecutive month of solid employment growth, with the addition of more than 200,000 jobs. In the week leading up to the government report, statistics suggested that hiring was picking up pace.

[Return to headlines]

USA


Burger King’s New Menu

Burger King is trying to revive its ailing empire with a rival’s recipe for success. After years of lackluster sales of its Whoppers and fries, the struggling fast-food giant on Monday launched 10 food items in its biggest menu expansion since the chain was started in 1954.

But there are unmistakable similarities between Burger King’s new lineup and the offerings its much-bigger rival McDonald’s has rolled out in recent years. The Golden Arches already rolled out specialty salads in 2003, snack wraps in 2006, premium coffee drinks in 2009, and fruit smoothies in 2010.

Burger King doesn’t deny that its new chicken strips, caramel frappe coffees, Caesar salads and strawberry-banana smoothies sound pretty close to those on McDonald’s popular menu. But executives say the company came up with them through its research.

“Consumers wanted more choices,” said Steve Wiborg, president of Burger King’s North America operations. “Not just healthy choices, but choices they could get at the competition.”

The menu additions are part of Burger King’s plan to abandon its nearly single-minded courtship of young men, who were once the lifeblood of the industry but were hard hit by the economic downturn. Competitors went after new customers with breakfast items and healthier fare, but Burger King let its menu get stale. As a result, Burger King for the first time was edged out by Wendy’s last year as the nation’s No. 2 burger chain. McDonald’s solidified its hold on No. 1.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dismissal Recommended for Marine Who Criticized Obama on Facebook

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — A military board has recommended dismissal for a Marine sergeant who criticized President Barack Obama on his Facebook page, including allegedly putting the president’s face on a “Jackass” movie poster.

The Marine Corps administrative board said after a daylong hearing late Thursday at Camp Pendleton that Sgt. Gary Stein has committed misconduct and should be dismissed.

The board also recommended that Stein be given an other-then-honorable discharge. That would mean Stein would lose his benefits and would not be allowed on any military base.

… Stein’s lawyers argued that the 9-year Marine, whose service was to end in four months, was expressing his personal views and exercising his First Amendment rights.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Government Surveillance Crackdown on Internet Goes Into Overdrive

In a New York Times editorial, former government cybersecurity czar Richard A. Clarke has called for the creation of customs checks on all data leaving and entering US cyberspace.

Clarke makes the call in relation to Chinese hackers stealing information and intellectual property from US firms.

“If given the proper authorization, the United States government could stop files in the process of being stolen from getting to the Chinese hackers.” Clarke writes.

“If government agencies were authorized to create a major program to grab stolen data leaving the country, they could drastically reduce today’s wholesale theft of American corporate secrets.”

While Clarke may well be coming at this subject well intentioned, the fact that government has a long history of attempting to crackdown on internet freedom and control the web will mean his words are a cause of concern for many.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Judge Upset by Obama’s Comments on Health Care Law

A federal appeals court judge on Tuesday seemed to take offense to comments President Barack Obama made earlier this week in which he warned that if the Supreme Court overturned his signature health care overhaul it would amount to overreach by an “unelected” court.

The Supreme Court is set to issue a ruling later this year on whether to strike down some or all of the historic health care law.

During oral arguments in Houston in a separate challenge to another aspect of the federal health care law, U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Jerry Smith said Obama’s comments troubled a number of people who have read them as a challenge to the authority of federal courts.

“I’m referring to statements by the president in the past few days to the effect, I’m sure you’ve heard about them, that it is somehow inappropriate for what he termed unelected judges to strike acts of Congress that have enjoyed, he was referring of course to Obamacare, to what he termed a broad consensus and majorities in both houses of Congress,” Smith told Dana Kaersvang, an attorney with the Justice Department in Washington, D.C.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Maryland Puts Gift Card Bounty on ‘Fish From Hell’

Wildlife officials in Maryland have put a bounty on the snakehead, the so-called “fish from hell” that can migrate on land and devastates the eco-systems of lakes, ponds and streams.

The state will give out $200 gift cards for Bass Pro Shops as well as other prizes for catching and killing the fish, which is native to Africa and Asia but is believed to have made its way to America through Asian seafood merchants.

“We do not want snakeheads in our waters,” said Maryland Department of Natural Resources Inland Fisheries Director Don Cosden. “This initiative is a way to remind anglers that it is important to catch and remove this invasive species of fish.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North American Union Plan to Disarm the People of the United States

The international insurgent President Barack Obama hosted Mexican President Felipe Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper for talks on transnational trade and security Monday. This is a blatant display of an international socialist cabal, intent on further destroying the sovereignty of our republic and our individual states.

Mexican President Calderon proudly stated that his socialist government had confiscated 140,000 firearms in Mexico and then tried to imply that every one of them was bought in a gun store in the United States. He blamed the rash of violence in Mexico on the sunsetting of our unconstitutional assault weapons ban, suggesting new gun restrictions and confiscations in the United States as a necessity for Mexico’s security.

There was of course no mention of the fact that our southern border is being deliberately left wide open. And of course no mention of the fact that US Attorney General Eric Holder, acting as representative for the insurgent Obama and in correlation with the Mexican government, has been running guns to Mexico and drugs back into the United States for years now.

This communist parley was immediately followed by the announcement that the FBI had arrived in Florida to begin investigating the death of Trayvon Martin. It looks like what this whole thing is building into is an attempt at gun confiscation in the United States.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Should Know Better on Supreme Court’s Role

Stephen B. Presser is the Raoul Berger professor of legal history at Northwestern University School of Law and a professor of business law at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. He signed two of the amicus briefs submitted to the Supreme Court challenging the health care law.

In what must be the most extraordinary statement of his presidency, Barack Obama on Monday blasted the possibility that the United States Supreme Court might overturn the Affordable Care Act. Obama said the court would take an “unprecedented, extraordinary step” if it overturns the law, because it was passed by “a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress.”

Setting aside the point that the ACA did not pass with an overwhelming majority, but by a party-line vote in the Senate and seven votes in the House, and without the support of a single member of the Republican Party, the most astonishing thing about Obama’s diatribe was the fundamental misunderstanding of our constitutional tradition it revealed.

Since 1788, in the famous defense of the Constitution set forth by Alexander Hamilton in the Federalist Papers, it has been understood that it is the task of the Supreme Court to rein in majoritarian legislatures when they go beyond what the Constitution permits.

This is not, as Obama implies, judicial activism, or political activity on the part of the justices. This is simply, as Hamilton explained, fidelity to the Constitution itself, fidelity to the highest expression of “We the People of the United States,” the body whose representatives ratified that Constitution.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama Gives Coal Miners the Shaft

The notion that President Obama is trying to fire up his “base,” as he prepares for a re-election campaign, raises the question of what constitutes his base. It is becoming increasingly clear that the “workers” he is supposedly concerned about are going to be dismissed or ignored so that wealthy environmental groups can be accommodated.

Consider the words of Cecil Roberts, president of the powerful United Mine Workers, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO, after EPA administrator Lisa P. Jackson made a ruling against coal plants. “The Navy SEALs shot Osama Bin Laden in Pakistan and Lisa Jackson shot us in Washington,” Roberts said. Those who missed the news about Jackson shutting down coal plants through executive branch rules and regulations may have been unprepared for the Roberts assault. It was a big story for the media but framed in a way that played down the significance of what is taking place.

“For New Generation of Power Plants, a New Emission Rule From the E.P.A.” was the misleading headline over the story in The New York Times. Much more is at stake than just a “new emission rule” that is somehow supposed to affect global warming.

West Virginia Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, a member of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, put it another way, saying the EPA “is fully engaging in a war on coal…” Manchin went on, “this ill-advised proposal to prevent new coal-fueled generation will move this country away from using all our domestic resources, and I will fight it every step of the way.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Old Man Attacked by Youths: “This is for Trayvon”

An old man was assaulted by a gang in retaliation for the killing of Trayvon Martin:

While Mr. Watts was down the boys kicked him, over and over, shouting, “[Get] that white [man]. This is for Trayvon … Trayvon lives, white [man]. Kill that white [man],” according to a police report.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Poll Shows Big Racial Divide in Opinion on Trayvon Martin Case

Americans are sharply divided by race in their opinion of the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Florida by a Hispanic neighborhood watchman. A Gallup/USA Today poll finds that most black Americans (73 percent) think Trayvon Martin’s shooter, George Zimmerman, would have been arrested if Martin had been white. Only 33 percent of non-Hispanic white people said the same thing.

The racial divide on Zimmerman’s guilt was also big: 51 percent of black people said Zimmerman is “definitely guilty” based on the information available, compared to only 10 percent of whites. About 20 percent of both whites and blacks said Zimmerman was “probably guilty.”

Zimmerman told police that he was following Martin because he looked “suspicious” when the unarmed 17-year-old then attacked him. Zimmerman said he shot Martin in self-defense. He hasn’t been charged. Martin’s family says Zimmerman followed and then attacked and shot Martin in an act of vigilante policing.

An earlier Pew Research Center poll found that only 16 percent of black people said there had been too much media coverage of the shooting, compared to 43 percent of white people. The Gallup poll of more than 3,000 adults has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Proposed Satellite Would Beam Solar Power to Earth

An energy-hungry Earth is in need of transformational and sustainable energy solutions, experts say.

For decades, researchers have been appraising the use of power-beaming solar-power satellites. But the projected cost, complexity and energy economics of the notion seemingly short-circuited the idea.

Now, a unique new approach has entered the scene, dubbed SPS-ALPHA, short for Solar Power Satellite via Arbitrarily Large PHased Array. Leader of the concept is John Mankins of Artemis Innovation Management Solutions of Santa Maria, Calif.

Mankins provided a detailed overview of the power-beaming concept here during the 2012 NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts meeting March 27-29.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



School Children Forced to Participate in Kony 2012 Activism

An Infowars.com reader from Colorado writes to tell us the Cherry Creek Public School district in western Arapahoe County is forcing students to watch Kony 2012. According to the father of a student attending school in the district, students were instructed to write “a letter to Senator Mark Udall in support of Invisible Children’s effort to capture Joseph Kony.”

“This is incredibly disturbing that this assignment’s goal was to force students into some level of political activism in support of a potentially violent conflict (war). Schools are not to be utilized for any activist purposes or those viewpoints forced upon the students outside of the will of the parents,” the father writes.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Secret Plan Underway to Revive Internet Censorship Bill SOPA

Motion Picture Association of America CEO and former Senator Chris Dodd has revealed perhaps more than he intended to in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter with regards to the much maligned Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).

Despite the fact that the legislation was indefinitely shelved in January, Dodd said he was “confident” that there are conversations going on between Hollywood and Silicon Valley to help revive SOPA.

“Between now and sometime next year [after the presidential election], the two industries need to come to an understanding,” Dodd told the magazine.

When asked whether there are negotiations going on now, Dodd replied: “I’m confident that’s the case, but I’m not going to go into more detail because obviously if I do, it becomes counterproductive.”

Clearly Dodd does not want a repeat of the widespread publicity and large scale protests that aided the defeat of the legislation at the beginning of the year.

[…]

SOPA, and the Protecting IP Act (PIPA), the Senate version of the bill, caused a huge backlash when it became clear that they constituted part of a long running agenda to completely re-structure and centralize the internet under government control.

Had the bills become law, they would have provided the U.S. government, through the office of the Attorney General, the power to pursue court orders against any website believed to be engaging in or ‘facilitating’ extremely broadly defined ‘copyright infringement’.

The terminology in the legislation was so encompassing that entire web sites faced the threat of being effectively seized and shut down for merely displaying one ‘offending’ hyperlink.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The NSA is Building the Country’s Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say)

The spring air in the small, sand-dusted town has a soft haze to it, and clumps of green-gray sagebrush rustle in the breeze. Bluffdale sits in a bowl-shaped valley in the shadow of Utah’s Wasatch Range to the east and the Oquirrh Mountains to the west. It’s the heart of Mormon country, where religious pioneers first arrived more than 160 years ago. They came to escape the rest of the world, to understand the mysterious words sent down from their god as revealed on buried golden plates, and to practice what has become known as “the principle,” marriage to multiple wives.

Today Bluffdale is home to one of the nation’s largest sects of polygamists, the Apostolic United Brethren, with upwards of 9,000 members. The brethren’s complex includes a chapel, a school, a sports field, and an archive. Membership has doubled since 1978-and the number of plural marriages has tripled-so the sect has recently been looking for ways to purchase more land and expand throughout the town.

But new pioneers have quietly begun moving into the area, secretive outsiders who say little and keep to themselves. Like the pious polygamists, they are focused on deciphering cryptic messages that only they have the power to understand. Just off Beef Hollow Road, less than a mile from brethren headquarters, thousands of hard-hatted construction workers in sweat-soaked T-shirts are laying the groundwork for the newcomers’ own temple and archive, a massive complex so large that it necessitated expanding the town’s boundaries. Once built, it will be more than five times the size of the US Capitol.

Rather than Bibles, prophets, and worshippers, this temple will be filled with servers, computer intelligence experts, and armed guards. And instead of listening for words flowing down from heaven, these newcomers will be secretly capturing, storing, and analyzing vast quantities of words and images hurtling through the world’s telecommunications networks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Trayvon Martin Killing: UN Human Rights Chief Calls for Investigation

UN Human Rights chief Navi Pillay has called for an “immediate investigation” into the circumstances surrounding the death of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed black teen who was shot dead by a volunteer neighbourhood watchman in Florida.

Ms Pillay made the comments about the controversial case at a press conference in Barbados, as she wrapped up a three-day visit to the Caribbean island nation. “As High Commissioner for Human Rights, I call for an immediate investigation,” she said. “Justice must be done for the victim. It’s not just this individual case. It calls into question the delivery of justice in all situations like this.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Two Airmen Ejected Before Navy Jet Crashed in Virginia Beach

VIRGINIA BEACH— Fire crews are now searching an apartment complex near Naval Air Station Oceana that was struck Friday by a Navy jet, according to emergency officials.

Four people including two pilots have been transported to the hospital, according to Marc Davis, a Virginia Beach spokesman. Their conditions are not known. The two airman were safely ejected before their plane crashed into the Mayfair Mews apartment complex on Birdneck Road.

A Navy spokesman has confirmed to the media that the plane that crashed was an F/A-18 Hornet — a two-seat jet belonging to VFA (Strike Fighter Squadron) 106.

Davis said 63 people have been displaced from the apartment complex and they are working to set up a shelter.

View Larger Map

Interstate 264 is closed to all eastbound traffic at First Colonial, and the exit ramp from I-264 onto Laskin Road has been closed. Wayne Shank, executive director of the Norfolk International Airport, said no flights or departures are being affected.

Sean Pepe, of Norfolk, and Kenny Carver, of Hampton were driving on Interstate 264 when they saw the jet seem to be “floating” in the air before it went down behind some trees.

“It was odd, but we didn’t think anything of it,” Pepe said. “We thought it was doing maneuvers. We were watching the plane but didn’t see the impact. We saw it go down and there was a ‘boom.’ Then there was black smoke everywhere.”

Kelli McQuaid, who lives near the site, was in her house and heard a crash that shook her home. The aircraft crashed into Mayfair Mews, a one-story apartment complex with several buildings of indivudaual units. It appeared to destroy two buildings, one immediately and the other was destroyed by fire.

McQuaid said it happened about 12:02. She was doing routine stuff in her house when it shook. Other jets were in the air, she said, and they continued to circle above the crash site.

[Return to headlines]



Two Navy Pilots Eject From Jet and Send Fighter Careening Into Apartments, Destroying Buildings

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A fighter jet that malfunctioned just after takeoff hurtled into a Virginia Beach apartment complex on Friday in a spectacular crash that sent flames and black smoke billowing from the rubble.

The two pilots managed to eject just before impact, suffering minor injuries along with five others on the ground. Several residents described hearing a loud explosion and looking out their windows to see the red and orange blaze. In the confusion that followed, two men helped one of the bloodied pilots from the two-seat F18 Hornet move to safety.

“Oh, my God, I heard three really loud explosions, then the black smoke went up high in the sky,” said 71-year-old Felissa Ezell, who lives in a townhouse near the crash site.

By evening, emergency crews were searching through the charred remains of the complex, where some 40 apartment units were damaged or destroyed. No fatalities had been reported.

Seven people, including the pilots from nearby Naval Air Station Oceana, were taken to a hospital. All except one of the pilots were released by late afternoon.

Virginia Beach Fire Department Capt. Tim Riley said three residents remained unaccounted for late Friday.

“We don’t know if we have working cell numbers, if they’ve traveled,” Riley said. “We don’t know if people are staying with other people.”

He said crews had done an exhaustive search of about 95 percent of the apartment complex and would continue searching throughout the night.

“We consider ourselves very fortunate,” he said.

The plane had dumped loads of fuel before crashing, though it wasn’t clear if that was because of a malfunction or an intentional maneuver by the pilots, said Capt. Mark Weisgerber with U.S. Fleet Forces Command. He said investigators will try to determine what happened. The jet went down less than 10 miles from Oceana.

Bruce Nedelka, the Virginia Beach EMS division chief, said witnesses saw fuel being dumped from the jet before it went down, and that fuel was found on buildings and vehicles in the area.

The plane not having as much fuel on board “mitigated what could have been an absolute massive, massive fireball and fire,” Nedelka said. “With all of that jet fuel dumped, it was much less than what it could have been.”

The crash happened in the Hampton Roads area, which has a large concentration of military bases, including Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval base in the world. Naval Air Station Oceana, where the F/A-18D that crashed was assigned, is located in Virginia Beach. Both the pilots were from Virginia Beach, Weisgerber said.

The pilots included a student and an instructor. Weisgerber said he did not know how many times the student pilot had been in the air, but that the instructor was “extremely experienced.”

Dozens of police cars, fire trucks and other emergency vehicles filled the densely populated neighborhood where the plane crashed. Yellow fire hoses snaked through side streets as fire crews poured water on the charred rooftops of brick apartment houses. By late afternoon, the fire had been put out.

[Return to headlines]



Van Jones Group Plans America’s “Arab Spring” Revolt

An Egypt-styled “Arab Spring,” which has put radicals in charge of the government, will be launched in the United States this spring with a war on “corporate power, Wall Street greed and the political corruption of the 1 percent,” according to the group headed by former Obama green aide Van Jones.

“They’re really not going to like the 99 percent Spring,” said Rebuild the Dream in an organizing email Friday.

Comparing the collection of protests last year that are symbolized by the 99 percent campaign and Occupy movement, to those of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., the group said that “we were all inspired by the protesters of the Arab Spring who stood up to totalitarian governments, and inspired the Occupy movement here in America.”

The plan for now is to hold protest training sessions around the nation next week. Over 900 are scheduled so far.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



You Tube Now Banning Videos Critical of Global Warming Alarmism

The video, which can be viewed above via Blip.tv, contains a clip from Infowars Nightly News in which Alex Jones gives Professor Norgaard the coveted ‘Skeksy Award’, which is reserved for only the most ardent promoters of tyranny and authoritarianism.

After Rush Limbaugh also directed scorn at Norgaard’s work, the University of Oregon had to back down and claim the inclusion of the word “treated” in the press release describing Norgaard’s paper was a mistake. Norgaard is now being framed at the victim of the whole piece, despite the fact that her dangerously authoritarian tendencies are shared by a raft of other prominent global warming alarmists.

Indeed, videos made by global warming alarmist groups showing children being blown up and having their guts splatted everywhere for not reducing their carbon footprint are apparently fine by You Tube, but suggesting Norgaard isn’t the most attractive woman on the planet is tantamount to hate speech.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Your Cell Phone Makes You a Prisoner of a Digital World Where Virtually Anyone Can Hack You

If you own a cell phone, you might as well kiss your privacy goodbye. Cell phone companies know more about us than most of us would ever dare to imagine. Your cell phone company is tracking everywhere that you go and it is making a record of everything that you do with your phone.

Much worse, there is a good chance that your cell phone company has been selling this information to anyone that is willing to pay the price — including local law enforcement. In addition, it is an open secret that the federal government monitors and records all cell phone calls. The “private conversation” that you are having with a friend today will be kept in federal government databanks for many years to come. The truth is that by using a cell phone, you willingly make yourself a prisoner of a digital world where every move that you make and every conversation that you have is permanently recorded. But it is not just cell phone companies and government agencies that you have to worry about. As you will see at the end of this article, it is incredibly easy for any would-be stalker to hack you and track your every movement using your cell phone.

[…]

Christians in Iran have learned that they must take the batteries entirely out of their cell phones before they gather for home church meetings. If they don’t take the batteries out of their cell phones, there is a good chance that the secret police will show up and drag them off to prison.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austria: Designer of Iconic Porsche 911 Dies

The designer of Porsche’s classic 911 sportscar, Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, died Thursday at the age of 76 in the Austrian city of Salzburg, the German company said. The grandson of the luxury automaker’s founder, F.A. Porsche, as he was known, dreamed up in 1963 the sleek lines and alluring curves of the 911 that have sent car fans’ hearts a-flutter for half a century.

“As creator of the Porsche 911, he established a design culture in our company that still leaves its mark on our sports cars,” the head of Porsche’s supervisory board, Matthias Mueller, said in a statement. The 911 model is now in its seventh generation. “A design of the century for which Porsche is envied around the world,” the mass-market Bild newspaper said of the 911 in an obituary for Porsche. “True fans of the brand only permit slight changes to the design to this day.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Britain’s Royal Air Force Considering Purchase of Israeli Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

U.K. looking at the Eitan system, also known as the Heron TP — the largest and most sophisticated drone Israel makes.

Get Haaretz on iPhone Get Haaretz on Android LONDON — Britain’s Royal Air Force has been considering the purchase of unmanned aerial vehicles from Israel.

The Eitan, also known as the Heron TP, is the largest and most sophisticated drone Israel makes. It is assembled by Israel Aerospace Industries and began operational service in the Israel Air Force two years ago, in a new squadron at the Tel Nof airbase.

The Eitan’s wingspan is as wide as a Boeing 737 airliner and it can stay in the air for up to forty hours, carrying out long-range missions at 40 thousand feet, hundreds of kilometers away from base, broadcasting back real-time footage of wide areas. According to foreign sources, the Eitan also carries out missions over Iran.

Israeli and British security sources have confirmed in recent days that the Royal Air Force has been considering buying a number of Eitan systems, since the Mantis, a joint British-French unmanned strategic project, has been delayed and will not be operational before 2020.

No official request has yet been made by the British Ministry of Defense and for now, the RAF is only making initial examinations and is also considering American UAVs and continuing its manned surveillance flights while waiting for the Mantis.

A purchase of an Israeli military system will surely cause protests by pro-Palestinian organizations. Today, Israel buys very little military products from Britain due to export limits placed in the past by the British foreign ministry.

If the RAF selects the Eitan, it will be the second Israeli UAV bought by the British, following the Hermes 450, which is developed in Israel by Elbit and is built in Britain in a joint venture with the Thales Company as part of a NIS 4.7 billion contract.

That deal also drew anti-Israel protest and the British demanded that Elbit cease test-flights over the Golan Heights and move them to within the Green Line. The Hermes 450 is to carry out tactical surveillance missions over Afghanistan.

An official at Israel Aerospace Industries said that, “Following the decision of the French ministry of defense to purchase the Eitan, we certainly expect other European armies to buy it.”

A British Ministry of Defense spokesperson said that, “In order to provide our troops with the best equipment available, we continually look at how we can exploit a range of emerging and developing technologies to support our Armed Forces.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



France: Eiffel Tower Lift Falls Down During Test

A lift at the Eiffel Tower in Paris has fallen down its shaft as it was undergoing maintenance tests. Management says the incident is ‘serious’ and is investigating its cause.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Fear New Serial Killer After Murders

Police in France are investigating whether another serial killer is on the loose, after four people were killed in similar circumstances south of Paris.

The latest victim was a 48-year-old mother, named by French media as Nadjia Lahsene, who was shot dead outside her home in Grigny, a suburb in the southern outskirts of the capital.

She was killed by a gunman who fled on a motorbike — recalling the method used by Islamist extremist Mohammed Merah.

Merah was killed by offices in southern France last month after committing seven murders.

But police believe there may be a link between the murder of Ms Lahsene and several other homicides in the area over the past five months.

“That is a concern, but in any case, as in every criminal inquiry, we are putting every effort into finding out who is behind this,” France’s interior minister Claude Gueant said.

Authorities have added however that nothing yet suggests any political or religious motives are behind the shootings.

On Thursday, Ms Lahsene, a woman of Algerian origin, was killed in the foyer of the apartment block where she lived with her 18-year-old son.

“Everyone is in shock,” said one of her neighbours, who asked not to be named. “She didn’t feel threatened. She’s a normal person, simple, no history.”…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



‘I Played Warcraft With Norway Killer’: Survivor

A 17-year-old Norwegian boy who hid from Anders Behring Breivik during his island killing spree last summer has revealed that he once played World of Warcraft with the confessed mass killer. “It was a sickening feeling when I realized I had played for two or three hours with the man who tried to kill me,” Fred Ove Løtuft told local newspaper Bergens Tidende.

Løtuft took shelter behind the branches of a large tree for an hour and a half as Breivik gunned down 69 mostly young people at a summer camp for members of the Labour Party’s youth wing on the island of Utøya on July 22nd last year. As Breivik launched an attack on the island’s café, Løtuft said he instinctively began to hunt for a secure hiding place. “I’ve played a lot of shooting games where you have to get away and hide,” he said.

Passing himself off as a Finn, Breivik led a clan in World of Warcraft called the Knights Templar, Løtuft said. In his manifesto, Breivik claimed he belonged to an “anti-Jihad” terrorist organization of the same name.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Romania’s Hospital Scandal: Babies Left to Die as Doctors Refuse to Work Without Bribes

A quarter of a century after the West learned about Ceausescu’s orphanages, children are again the victims, this time of endemic corruption

Dr Catalin Cirstoveanu runs a cardio unit with state-of-the-art equipment at a Bucharest children’s hospital. But not a single child has been treated in the year and a half since it opened. The reason? Medical staff he needs to bring in to run the machinery would have expected bribes.

So Dr Cirstoveanu has launched a lonely crusade to save babies who come to him for care. He flies them to Western Europe on budget flights so they can be treated by doctors who don’t demand kickbacks. That’s what he did last week for 13-day-old Catalin, who needed heart surgery. Dr Cirstoveanu packed a small bag, slipped emergency breathing equipment into the baby carrier and caught a cheap flight to Italy, where doctors were waiting to perform the surgery.

The operation was successful. Two days later, though, a three-week-old baby that Dr Cirstoveanu whisked away to the same clinic in Italy — with tubes piercing her tiny frame — died before she was able to have lymph gland surgery. “I was very worried it wouldn’t work,” he said. “But in Romania, she would have died anyway.”

The soft-spoken doctor is fighting an exhausting and largely solitary battle against a culture of corruption that is so embedded in Romania that surgeons demand bribes to save infants’ lives, and it’s even necessary to slip cash to a nurse to get your sheets changed. It’s one of the reasons why the country’s infant mortality rate is more than double the European Union average, with one in 100 children not reaching their first birthday. “To be honest, it’s so deeply rooted into our system that it’s really difficult to eliminate,” the health minister Ladislau Ritli said.

Patients in Romania — a member of the European Union — routinely discuss the “stock market” rate for bribes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Social Democrats Sprint Into Poll Lead

Spearheaded by an increasingly popular new leader, the Social Democrats have come out on top of a party preference survey for the first time since the 2010 general election. Asked which party they would vote for were an election to be held today, 34.1 percent plumped for the Social Democrats in Demoskop’s April poll.

The result put Stefan Löfven’s party ahead of the Moderates, with Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt’s party dropping back three percentage points to 29.9 percent. “This shows that we’ve managed to get our policy message out there in recent months,” party secretary Carin Jämtin told newspaper Expressen.

Stefan’s Löfven’s rising support has already made him the most popular Social Democratic leader since former Prime Minister Göran Persson hit his popularity peak in the early 2000s, according to the results of a separate poll.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: School Standards at Risk From Attempts to ‘Cure Social Ills’

Education standards are being put at risk by repeated attempts to force schools to cure the country’s biggest social problems, a minister warned today.

Nick Gibb, the Schools Minister, said the “first answer” to almost any challenge facing society — such as obesity, teenage pregnancy and knife crime — was to give schools a new duty to tackle the issue.

He said he was regularly presented with proposals “from one well-meaning group or another” to add “something socially desirable” to the curriculum.

But Mr Gibb warned that the move risked cutting the amount of time available for teaching traditional subjects — the “best way out of poverty” for young people.

The comments come just a week after a major report into last year’s riots in England suggested that schools should be required to “develop and publish their policies on building character”.

It suggested that primary and secondary schools should undertake regular assessments of pupils’ character, in a move likely to cover issues such as self-confidence, honesty and sense of right and wrong.

But addressing the Association of Teachers and Lecturers annual conference in Manchester, Mr Gibb said: “Today it seems that the first answer of many to almost any problem in society is to give a duty to schools to tackle it — be it obesity, teenage pregnancy, or knife crime.

“It feels like every other week I am presented with proposals from one well-meaning group or another to add something socially desirable to the curriculum.

“I see my role as resisting those pressures so that schools can concentrate on educating young people and teachers can focus on teaching.”

The last Government was repeatedly criticised for introducing a series of new duties for English state schools.

This included compulsory lessons in citizenship, a new onus on schools to promote community cohesion, nutritional standards for food and an overhaul of the curriculum covering personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE) lessons.

Speaking after his conference address, Mr Gibb told how he had been recently asked to place chess on the National Curriculum and introduce lessons on Pilates, the body conditioning routine that helps build flexibility and muscle strength.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia Marks 20 Years Since Start of War

Bosnia is commemorating 20 years since the start of its 1992-1995 war. While the fighting is over, the ethnically divided country is not exactly at peace.

Bosnia and Herzegovina on Friday marked the 20th anniversary of the start of the civil war that claimed 100,000 lives and left the country still divided along ethnic and religious lines.

On Sarajevo’s main street, exactly 11,541 red chairs were lines up in rows representing the men, women and children killed in the 44-month assault on the city. It became the longest siege of a city in modern history, with some 330 shells hitting every day.

“This city needs to stop for a moment and pay tribute to its killed citizens,” said Haris Pasovic, organizer of the exhibition titled the “Sarajevo Red Line.” Concerts, performances and other exhibitions were also planned to mark the occasion.

Bosnia had declared independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, supported by a referendum in February and March the following year. The vote was boycotted by a majority of Bosnian Serbs, who largely wanted to stay part of the Serb-dominated Yugoslavia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Jihad and ‘Martyrdom’ In the Voting Booth?

by Raymond Ibrahim

Over and over, evidence emerges from Islamic nations that democracy and voting are instrumental means to an intrinsic end: the establishment of a decidedly undemocratic but draconian form of law-Islamic law, or Sharia.

Earlier, for instance, there was Dr. Talat Zahran, an Egyptian cleric who proclaimed that it is “obligatory to cheat at elections-a beautiful thing.” His logic was simple: voting is a tool, an instrument, the only value of which is to empower Sharia.

Now an Egyptian cleric has thoroughly Islamized the concept of voting.

Context: the presidential campaign of Abu Ismail-the Salafi candidate who openly declared that there is no freedom in Islam, the candidate most likely to try to implement the totality of Sharia if elected-has been compromised due to recent allegations that his mother was an American citizen.

In response, Hazim Shuman, a cleric that appears on satellite, just issued a fatwa saying, “Voting for Abu Ismail is jihad in the path of Allah (jihad fi sabil Allah), and paradise awaits whoever is martyred during Abu Ismail’s political campaign.”

Anyone familiar with Islam’s language knows that jihad fi sabil Allah is synonymous with violence or, from a non-Muslim perspective, terror. For example, the standard Islamic legal text, Umdat al-Salik (“Reliance of the Traveler”) translates fi sabil Allah as “those fighting for Allah”; next to the index entry for fi sabil Allah it simply says “see jihad.”

Incidentally, “jihad in the path of Allah” is what conquered most of what is now called the “Muslim world.”

The logic of this fatwa is as follows: one of the primary purposes of violent jihad is to establish Islamic law; because Abu Ismail is the most likely candidate to institutionalize Sharia if elected, supporting him any which way-including, apparently, through violence and death-is a form of jihad with the highest paradisiacal rewards for those who die trying.

In short, democracy, voting-even the individual candidates, including Abu Ismail-are all means to one end: the establishment of Islamic law.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Muslims Threaten Church, Cover Its Cross With Garbage Bags

by Raymond Ibrahim

According to Al Quds, last Tuesday it was revealed that the Christian Orthodox Church in Tunis, one of very few churches in the country of Tunisia, is being “abused” and receiving “threatening messages” from “Salafis.” Church members are described as “living in a state of terror,” so much so that the Russian ambassador in Tunis specifically requested the nation’s Ministry of Interior to “protect the church.”

The abuse has gotten to the point where “Salafis covered the cross of the church with garbage bags, telling the church members that they do not wish to see the vision of the Cross anywhere in the Islamic state of Tunisia.”

Among all the Arabic-speaking nations, Tunisia has long been described as one of the most “secular” and “liberal”; it was also the first nation where the much ballyhooed “Arab Spring” began. Now its very few churches are not tolerated, and their crucifixes abhorred. If this is “tolerant” Tunisia, what should one expect from the more “radical” nations? More evidence of the true nature of the “Arab Spring.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


A View on Günter Grass: Why We Need an Open Debate on Israel

A Commentary by Jakob Augstein

Is Israel a threat to world peace? German writer Günter Grass has been blasted as an anti-Semite this week for making just such a claim in a new poem. But while the verse may not win any awards, Grass has kicked off an important — and long overdue — debate. And, he’s right.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: The Eternal Liberation Movement

Hamas terror boss Fathi Hamad is a notable figure. Hamad is both the director of Hamas’s al-Aksa television station and the terror group’s “minister” of the interior and national security. His double portfolio is a clear expression of the much ignored fact that for terrorists, propaganda is inseparable from violence.

Hamad’s key posts make him a man worth listening to. His statements necessarily indicate Hamas’s general direction.

On March 23, Hamad was interviewed by Egypt’s Al Hekma television station. The interview was translated by MEMRI.

Hamad made two central points. First, he claimed that the Palestinian war against Israel is the keystone of the global jihad. Second, he said the Palestinians are not a distinct people, but transplanted Egyptians and Saudis.

In his words, “At al-Aksa and on the land of Palestine, all the conspiracies, throughout history, have been shattered — the conspiracies of the Crusaders, and the conspiracies of the Tatars. At al- Aksa and on the land of Palestine, the Battle of Hattin was waged. The [West] does not want this noble history to repeat itself, because the Jews and their allies would be annihilated — the Zionists, the Americans and the imperialists.

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Israel’s U.S. Envoy: Award to Helen Thomas Shows Palestinians Aren’t Ready for Peace

Long-time reporter, criticized for her 2010 anti-Israel comments, honored by the PLO’s U.S. mission for her defense of the ‘Palestinian position every step of the way.’

Get Haaretz on iPhone Get Haaretz on Android A decision by the Palestinian mission to the United States to honor journalist Helen Thomas proves the Palestinians inability to meet the “basic requisites of peace,” Israel’s ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren said on Tuesday.

Oren, responding to a Sunday ceremony in which Thomas was marked for her support of the “Palestinian position, said he “was appalled by the award ceremony given by the PLO delegation in Washington to Helen Thomas, who has been completely shunned by all decent Americans after making anti-Semitic remarks, along with teaching Palestinian children to hate the Jewish State and to glorify suicide bombers.”

“This atrocious act is an indication of the Palestinian Authority’s failure to meet the basic requisites of peace,” he added.

Thomas, a senior White House reporter, drew fire in 2010 when, when asked of her opinion on Israel, she said: “Tell them that they need to get out of Palestine, and return home to Germany, Poland, and America.”

As a result of her remark, an onslaught of public criticism forced Thomas to apologize and retire. Shortly after her retirement, however, Thomas claimed she said “eactly what she thought.” Following those comments, the Society of Professional Journalists decided to discontinue the yearly lifetime achievement award bearing Thomas’ name.

On Sunday, however, the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization General Mission to the U.S., Maen Areikat, led a Washington ceremony honoring Thomas, recognizing what he said was her “long career in the field of journalism, during which she defended the Palestinian position every step of the way.”

The event was also attended by PLO Executive Committee member Hanan Ashrawi, who presented the prize to Thomas, and indicated that the honor came directly from Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

According to the Washington PLO office’s statement, Ashrawi “presented Thomas with the appreciation and blessing of the president and the Palestinian people, for all of her actions supporting Palestine in the West.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Israel Wary of Changes in the Arab World

For decades, Israel had been hoping for change in the Arab world. Yet now that the region is in upheaval, its not just Israeli citizens who are concerned. The government has shown a preference for walling itself in rather than exploring new opportunities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iraq: Camp Ashraf Massacre: ‘Hypocrisy Runs Deep’

About a year ago, members of the Iraqi army killed 34 members of the People’s Mujahedin of Iran at Camp Ashraf. The story drew little coverage but serves as a symbol of countless mistakes from both the Bush and Obama administrations in Iraq.

That’s the opinion of retired U.S. Army Col. Wesley Martin, who was commander of Camp Ashraf at the time of the massacre. Martin explains why he’s outraged that the Iranian group was considered a terrorist group by our own government at the time and still is today.

“The hypocrisy runs deep. Iraq is going to pull further away from the U.S. The only reason they’re holding on to us now is because of the financial help going over there,” Martin told WND.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Record Number of Refugees Flee Syria for Turkey

Violence in Syria has increased just days before an April 10 deadline for the start of a cease-fire between government troops and rebels, as the number of Syrians seeking refuge in Turkey hits a new high. A record number of refugees have fled the violence in Syria into Turkey as a deadline for a cease-fire promised by the government quickly approaches.

Turkish officials said more than 2,800 Syrians arrived on Thursday and Friday — more than double the previously highest number entering on a single day. That puts the total number of Syrian refugees in Turkey at nearly 24,000.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Price of Oil: Saudi Agenda: Our Gullibility

by Raymond J. Learsy

One is compelled to pull out that old chestnut, “There he goes again.” The face of Saudi oil, and de facto senior voice of the OPEC cartel, Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi entertained us to one of his seminal dissertations, expounding on Saudi Arabia’s concerns for the well being of all mankind.

Stating the case clearly, that Saudi Arabia “… remains the world’s largest producer and the country with the largest proven reserves, so it has a responsibility to do what it can to mitigate prices.” No argument here.

Yet that bit of wisdom is prefaced by the oldest of canards, “Needless to say Saudi Arabia does not control the price: it sells its crude according to international prices.” A truly bizarre declaration coming from the leading protagonist of the cartel, OPEC, whose primary function is to limit the supply of oil to world markets to control, and within the limits of the world’s tolerance, to maximize the price of crude oil in the market place. Clearly their efforts have been so successful that the limits of tolerance have now been reached and letting off a little steam has become part of the ritual.

The ritual is encapsulated in the mantra repeated in Mr. Ali Naimi’s pronouncement: “The bottom line is that Saudi Arabia would like to see a lower price . It would like to see a fair and reasonable price, that will not hurt the economic recovery, especially in emerging and developing countries…”. A statement that automatically elicits our well inculcated and programmed hosannas whenever such mumblings come out of Riyadh.

The trouble is we have heard this babble before and now again. In December of 2008, with oil prices teetering below $40 a barrel and gasoline prices accordingly restrained, our now benevolent Saudi Oil Minister Al Naimi would pontificate, after King Abdullah himself had ventured that $75/bbl was a fair and reasonable price, enlightening us, “You must understand that the purpose of the $75 price is for a much more noble cause. You need every producer to produce, and marginal producers cannot produce at $40 a barrel.” This coming from a producer whose “all inclusive” production costs veer toward “$1.50/bbl” or possibly less according to a pronouncement made by none other than Mr. Ali Naimi at the Houston Oil Forum in November 1999.

Well, several months after the December 2008 statement giving us the parameters of oil price ‘nobility’ the price touched and quickly breached Mr. Al Naimi’s $75/bbl. As it went shooting on to $100/bbl and well beyond with barely a word of discomfiture coming from OPEC’s or the Saudi Oil Ministry’s headquarters.

As the price veered to $100 and higher the International Energy Agency had the presumption to criticize OPEC for holding back production only to be roundly reprimanded by OPEC’s the Secretary General El-Badri blaming high prices on speculation and “technical means”, whatever that means.

Speaking of speculation — or worse, manipulation — and given the lack of transparency in the trading of oil futures in the world’s commodity markets, it would be interesting to hear from Mr. Ali Naimi whether the Saudi Oil Ministry, Aramco, the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund or whatever Saudi or OPEC designees are currently holding oil futures contracts and to what purpose. Certainly not to lower the price of oil?

Anyway, thank you Mr. Ali Naimi. Your sincerity and good deeds are appreciated.

           — Hat tip: Gort [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India: The “Massive Con” Causing a Suicide Every 30 Minutes

The introduction of genetically engineered seeds, and the coercion of Indian farmers to use them, has led to the largest wave of recorded suicides in human history.

Indian farmers have been robbed of their livelihoods, causing them to take their own lives in despair.

Over the past 16 years, it is estimated that more than a quarter of a million Indian farmers have committed suicide.

Who is responsible for this tragedy?

The most obvious culprits are global corporations like Monsanto, Cargill and Syngenta and the genetically engineered seed they have forced upon farmers worldwide.

None are hit harder than those in India, where socioeconomic and environmental factors have magnified the impact, making it almost impossible for these farmers to survive.

In fact, genetically engineered seeds are so fundamental to the problem that it’s been termed “GM Genocide.”ii

The rate of Indian farmer suicides has greatly increased since the introduction of Bt cotton in 2002iii.

This is not a pleasant subject to read about, but it is a necessary one… one that can help you understand why it’s so important to continue fighting seed monopolies with ever-increased resolve.

I experienced the Indian farmers’ plight firsthand while spending two weeks in India, where I saw for myself the devastating effects of GM seed upon the lives and livelihoods of these rural farmers.

Genetically Engineered Seeds Spell Global Disaster

There are four primary factors directly related to the use of genetically engineered seed that contribute heavily to this grim situation:

1.   Compared to traditional seed, genetically engineered seeds are very expensive and have to be repurchased every planting season.
2.   Genetically engineered crops require much more water to grow, have much higher requirements for fertilizer and pesticide, in spite of Monsanto’s claims to the contrary and, in spite of their cost to farmers, provide NO increased yield.

While companies like Monsanto have plenty of blood on their hands, additional social, economic and environmental factors make matters worse for these small rural farms:

[…]

But this genetically engineered cotton actually required far MORE water and far MORE pesticides than hybrid or traditional cotton!

These seeds were heavily marketed in India, using film stars and even religious deities to lure farmers in. And they came with a steep price tag— they are four to 10 times more expensive than hybrid seeds. Prior to hybrids, farmers were able to harvest their own seeds from each crop, to be planted next season. However, many genetically engineered seeds contain “terminator technology,” meaning they have been genetically modified so that the resulting crops don’t produce viable seeds of their own. Therefore, new seeds must be purchased every year from big seed companies, at the same punitive prices.

Bt cotton requires more pesticide sprayings than indigenous cotton—MANY times more. Bt cotton has created new resistant pestsviii, and to control these, farmers must use 13 times more pesticidesix than they were using prior to its introduction. Rates of infestation by aphids, thrips, jassids, and other pests have risen since Bt cotton’s introductionx.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Video: Abortion Conditioning: The UN’s Sick Social Engineering Agenda

The UN is producing training videos and holding seminars to teach children as young as ten about the virtues of abortion.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Interview With Director James Cameron: ‘The ‘Titanic’ Shows That the Unthinkable Can Happen’

SPIEGEL: But there have been plenty of catastrophes throughout history with far more casualties.

Cameron: It’s not about numbers. It’s about the hubris of the shipowners, for example; it’s about society at that time. It was a very optimistic time: Technology was advancing; people built aircrafts; they enjoyed electric light; everything looked like there would be a great future. And the Titanic stood for that. And then, suddenly, the unthinkable happened, as if all of this went down with the Titanic. This was a huge blow. And, today, there are unthinkable topics as well, such as a nuclear war. And the Titanic shows that the unthinkable can happen.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Microsoft’s Kinect Spy System

Microsoft X-Box Kinect games device has a video camera and a microphone that records speech. Microsoft has stated that users “should not expect any level of privacy concerning your use of the live communication features,” and the company “may access or disclose information about you, including the content of your communications.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120405

Financial Crisis
» Italy: Household Savings Drop to 17-Year Low
» Pensioner Suicide Shocks Greece
» Rajoy Says Spain in ‘Extreme Difficulty’ As Bond Demand Drops
» Spain: Madrid’s Mayor Chips Away at Debt and Tradition
» Turkey: PM Erdogan Unveils Economic Stimulus Package
» World’s Largest Solar Plant, With Second Largest Ever Department of Energy Loan Guarantee, Files for Bankruptcy
 
USA
» Confirmed: Muslim Brotherhood Group Meets With U.S. Chamber of Commerce
» Exposing the Obama-Soetoro Deception
» Hutaree Militiamen Cleared in Court
» Lies and Doublespeak of American Planning Association
» Murder of Iraqi-American Woman May Not Have Been a Hate Crime
» Muslim Brotherhood Officials Aim to Promote Moderate Image in Washington Visit
» Storm Chaser Catches Terrifying Dallas Tornadoes
» The Democratic Party and Jewish Anti-Semitism
» When is Global Warming Enough?
 
Europe and the EU
» British Government Moves to Tackle Islamophobia
» Greece: Pensioner’s Death Sparks Clashes in Athens
» Greece: Almost a Fifth of Fuel Adulterated, Survey
» Mother Earth and the Fatherland: Germany’s Far-Right Turns to Environmentalism
» Nobel Laureate Under Fire: Grass Says Campaign Against Him ‘Injurious’
» Norway: Romanian Gang Targeting Elderly Women: Police
» Norway: Breivik: Mental Ward a Fate ‘Worse Than Death’
» Norway: Man Beaten and Shoved Into Car Boot in Oslo
 
Balkans
» Kosovars Hurl Stones at Serbian Delegation
 
North Africa
» From a Prison Cell to the Egyptian Presidency
» Presidential Candidate Cheered as He Registers for Election
» Two Tunisians Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Posting Caricatures of the Prophet Muhammed Online
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israel Has Few Options for Rocket Fire From Egypt
» Rocket Fired From Egypt Hits Israeli City of Eilat
 
Middle East
» Germany: Günter Grass Specializes in ‘Self-Righteousness’
» Gulf: Efforts for Artistic Freedom, Islamists on the Attack
» Qatar: 41 Bln Dollar Contract for Underground Lines Ready
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan Sees Rise in ‘Dancing Boys’ Exploitation
» NATO Withdrawal From Afghanistan Continues to Raise Doubts
 
Far East
» Japan: Fukushima Daiichi Site: Cesium-137 is 85 Times Greater Than at Chernobyl Accident
» Turkey’s Erdogan Makes Landmark Visit to China
 
Immigration
» Book: Civilization: The Six Ways the West Beat the Rest, By Niall Ferguson
» Massive Illegal Alien Election Fraud Detected in Florida
» Sarkozy: EU Needs to Protect Itself
 
Culture Wars
» What’s Missing From This Easter Message?
 
General
» Life on Jupiter Moon Europa May Hide in Depths to Survive
» Scientists Closing in on Black Hole at Center of Our Galaxy

Financial Crisis


Italy: Household Savings Drop to 17-Year Low

National Statistics agency Istat says

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Household saving in Italy has dropped to its lowest level since 1995, national statistics agency Istat said Thursday. In 2011 families set aside 12% of household income, down 0.7% on the year. Domestic buying power dropped in the same period by 0.5%.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pensioner Suicide Shocks Greece

BRUSSELS — A pensioner committed suicide in the centre of Athens Wednesday (4 April) giving a public face to the hardship endured by many Greeks as the country slashes spending to satisfy international creditors.

The man, a 77-year-old pharmacist, shot himself in Syntagma Square with some reports saying that he had shouted that he did not want to leave debts to his children.

It later emerged that he had left a suicide note.

“I can’t find another way to react apart from putting a dignified end to things before I start looking through garbage in order to survive and before I become a burden for my child,” said the note according to Greek paper Ekathimerini.

His exact financial situation remains unclear but reports say he was seriously ill and was struggling to pay for medicine. His suicide prompted a spontaneous gathering of around 2000 people in Syntagma Square later on Wednesday.

Peaceful at first, demonstrations turned during violent during the evening, as activists threw rocks and petrol bombs at police, who responded with tear gas and flash grenades.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rajoy Says Spain in ‘Extreme Difficulty’ As Bond Demand Drops

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said Spain’s situation is one of “extreme difficulty” and signaled that his budget cuts are less painful than a bailout would be, as demand for the nation’s debt slumped at an auction. “Spain is facing an economic situation of extreme difficulty, I repeat, of extreme difficulty, and anyone who doesn’t understand that is fooling themselves,” Rajoy told a meeting of his People’s Party today in the southern coastal city of Malaga.

Rajoy raised the threat of an international bailout for the second time this week as he sought to defend the deepest austerity moves in at least three decades. While “no one likes” the budget presented last week, he said “the alternative is infinitely worse.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Madrid’s Mayor Chips Away at Debt and Tradition

Spain is frantically trying to reduce its debts. While conservative Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy is doing so at the national level, Ana Botella is slashing away at spending in Madrid, Spain’s most heavily indebted city. In the process, the mayor is blazing her own path.

When Ana Botella looks up from the files in her office on the fifth floor of Madrid’s city hall, she sees the crown of a fertility goddess. The marble statue of Cibeles standing in a chariot being pulled by lions is the centerpiece of a busy plaza in the Spanish capital. On good days, the players and fans of Real Madrid, the city’s league-leading soccer club, celebrate their victories in the square in front of the Cibeles Fountain.

Last Thursday wasn’t one of those days. Instead of jubilant soccer fans, there were tens of thousands of protestors waving red flags in front of the fountain just below the balcony of Botella’s office. They were protesting against the fact that over 5 million of their fellow citizens are unemployed and against the austerity measures imposed by the conservative federal government, which are plunging many families into poverty.

That morning, inside city hall, Botella and the city council had decided to free up about €1 million ($1.3 million) in funds so that rents could be reduced for the city’s poorest residents living in subsidized housing.

Indeed, these are hard times on Cibeles Square. Madrid’s mayor still has to pay over €1 billion for 16,712 outstanding bills from 2011 as well as try to get the finances of Spain’s most heavily indebted city under control. And she needs to do so as quickly as possible.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: PM Erdogan Unveils Economic Stimulus Package

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, APRIL 5 — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Thursday announced a fresh set of measures to encourage new investments in the country which he said was aimed at reducing dependency on imported intermediate goods and country’s current deficit as well as at contributing to the structural reformation of the country industrial sector and balancing regional differences. Erdogan, as Anatolia news agency reports, said the package would include stimulus programs on general, regional, large-scale and strategic bases, adding that the package also included measures to encourage investments that involved high and medium-high technology use. Erdogan said the package divided Turkey into in six regions where each region will receive varying amounts of incentives in line with their level of development to cancel out regional socio-economic differences.

Erdogan said the program placed special importance on strategic investments in defense, aviation and aerospace industries as well as in biochemical industry, which he said would receive a standard stimuli program designed for the fifth least developed region in the country. The Turkish premier said the package was also aimed at drawing foreign investors. Erdogan said the new stimulus package would be effective as on January 1, 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



World’s Largest Solar Plant, With Second Largest Ever Department of Energy Loan Guarantee, Files for Bankruptcy

Solyndra was just the appetizer. Earlier today, in what will come as a surprise only to members of the administration, the company which proudly held the rights to the world’s largest solar power project, the hilariously named Solar Trust of America (“STA”), filed for bankruptcy. And while one could say that the company’s epic collapse is more a function of alternative energy politics in Germany, where its 70% parent Solar Millennium AG filed for bankruptcy last December, what is relevant is that last April STA was the proud recipient of a $2.1 billion conditional loan from the Department of Energy, incidentally the second largest loan ever handed out by the DOE’s Stephen Chu.

[…]

And while we do not know just how much the government will have to pay out of pocket, we do know that STA had at least $50 million in debt at filing.

What we do know for sure is that at least the firm’s financial advisors made money on the deal. From the company’s Investors page:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Confirmed: Muslim Brotherhood Group Meets With U.S. Chamber of Commerce

Reports of a meeting between representatives of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and members of the Freedom and Justice Party of Egypt, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, were confirmed today. According to information provided by Bobby Maldonado, Manager of Media Relations for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the U.S.-Egypt Business Council hosted members of the Freedom and Justice Party of Egypt including Dr. Abdul Mawgoud Dardery, FJP’s Member of Parliament serving on their Foreign Relations Committee. The meeting was held at the Chamber offices in Washington, DC.

Origins of the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP)

The Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) was founded in Egypt on 30 April 2011 by the Muslim Brotherhood, which is the ideological forefather of al Qaeda and Hamas, supporter of Sharia law, and an advocate of terrorism against Israel and the West.

The Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) was created by the Muslim Brotherhood following the “Arab Spring” uprisings that toppled Hosni Mubarak. According to a February 2012 report in USA Today, “[t]he newly politically empowered Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamic organization that supports religious law and opposes Western influence, has supported a crackdown on those who disagree with them, including the very activists who helped bring about the free elections that the Brotherhood dominated.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Exposing the Obama-Soetoro Deception

Most people following this issue are aware of the irregularities surrounding Obama’s selective service registration. Yet few appear to be aware that detectives from the Arizona investigative team have been methodically securing affidavits documenting alleged criminal activity by the Obama campaign during the 2008 Democratic Party primary.

“Something” happened during the latter portion of the campaign that involved Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Hussein Obama. Recall that Obama and Clinton ditched the press and their respective staff members to meet in secret during the late night hours of Thursday, June 5, 2008, at the home of Senator Dianne Feinstein. The meeting lasted about an hour, and what was discussed was never publicly disclosed.

The expansion of the official investigation is being deliberately ignored by the mainstream media, including outlets often identified with the conservative agenda. Evidence suggests that this deliberate media “blackout” is being orchestrated and ordered at the highest levels of the American government.

[…]

If the issue of Obama’s legal identity seems trivial and a fringe issue in the scheme of things, consider the path this country has taken over the last three-and-a-half years. Even more frightening, consider the path not yet taken. A window into that path was opened by a “hot” microphone that captured Obama’s utterances to Russian President Dmitri Medvedev on March 26, 2012. The world heard Obama say that he would have more flexibility in his second term to adjust our missile defense program to the better liking of the Russians.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hutaree Militiamen Cleared in Court

Much to the chagrin of the Southern Poverty Law Center, a federal judge has cleared the members of a Michigan militia who were accused by federal law enforcement agents of conspiracy to commit sedition. Since you didn’t hear much about this ruling from the national press corps, here is one online version of the report:

“Seven members of a Michigan militia have been cleared of plotting to overthrow the U.S. government as a judge dismissed the most serious charges against them.

“In a shock defeat for federal authorities, District Judge Victoria Roberts said the group’s expressed hatred of law enforcement did not amount to a conspiracy.

“The FBI secretly planted an informant and an agent inside the Hutaree militia in 2008 to collect hours of anti-government audio and video that became the cornerstone of the case.

“Senior officials had insisted they had captured homegrown rural extremists poised for war.

“But the judge said: ‘The court is aware that protected speech and mere words can be sufficient to show a conspiracy. In this case, however, they do not rise to that level.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Lies and Doublespeak of American Planning Association

So, the exact words “Sustainable Development” come from UN documents and its exact policies are imposed at the local level — yet, we are told by its proponents, none of these development plans have anything to do with UN policy. It’s an amazing tap dance.

[…]

So, since they can’t beat us with strong arms, the Sustainablists are rushing to change the entire playing field, changing tactics, re-educating their storm troopers to employ non- confrontational new-speak, and rewriting the dictionary to “avoid polarizing jargon.” In an attempt to neutralize their opposition they seek to lull us all into believing the policies they continue to enforce aren’t Agenda 21/Sustainable Development. There is no hidden agenda, they now promise. It’s just local planning by local officials, so they claim with a straight face.

Hiding their agenda in “new speak”

The worst of the worst of the Sustainablists is the American Planning Association (APA). So panicked is this American Trojan Horse over growing opposition to its policies that APA has organized a “Boot Camp” to teach its operatives how to counter our opposition. Recently APA released a memo entitled “Glossary for the Public.” It is quite telling on how an organization that is supposed to be one of the most respected planning groups in the nation, operating in nearly every city, will teach its people to lie at all costs in order to maintain their power and influence in our communities.

[…]

In every one of those canned descriptions of the “planning process” you will find the tenets of Agenda 21. The use of the word we is the standard “Delphi technique” of the consensus process they are trying to hide. The reference to the future for the children is right out of the UN Agenda 21 definition: “Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” Of course, as we have learned, that to accomplish such an innocent-sounding goal, means locked away lands and resources. Agenda 21.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Murder of Iraqi-American Woman May Not Have Been a Hate Crime

Search warrants in the case of Iraqi-American woman who was beaten to death last month suggests that there may be more to the story than just a case of anti-Muslim violence. According to court records obtained by the San Diego Union Tribune, the victim, Shaima Alawadi, was looking to divorce her husband and move to another state, while her 17-year-old daughter, Fatima, was also distraught about being forced to marry her cousin. Fatima Alawadi also reportedly received a cryptic text message shortly after the attack saying, “The detective will find out tell them (can’t) talk.”

Investigators also learned of another incident that adds to the portrait of a family in trouble. Fatima was picked up by police last November after they responded to a report of two people having sex in a car and found the daughter in a car with a 21-year-old man. Her mother came to pick her up, but while driving home, Fatima threw herself out of the moving car at 35 m.p.h., breaking her arm. She reportedly told hospital staff that she was upset about the arranged marriage.

Finally, police have determined that the key piece of evidence — a threatening note found next to the body telling the family to go back where they came from — was a photocopy and not the handwritten original. (The family did say they previously found a similar note outside their home, but did not save it.)

While none of these details directly contradict the original theory that the killer was an outsider targeting the family because of bias against Muslims, they do suggest a wider range of other motives and the possibility that the note may have been a attempt to distract police from the real killer. Local police and the FBI have not commented on the ongoing investigation or these latest revelations, but have said that there are no suspects at the moment. They also wouldn’t change the fact that there is real anti-Muslim hatred in this country and particularly in El Cajon where the crime occurred. But this is yet another reminder that as with many crimes, particularly those that play out in the public eye, it may difficult to ever piece together what really happened — and the truth is rarely what it first appears to be.

           — Hat tip: Qualis Rex [Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood Officials Aim to Promote Moderate Image in Washington Visit

Members of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood began a week-long charm offensive in Washington on Tuesday, meeting with White House officials, policy experts and others to counter persistent fears about the group’s emergence as the country’s most powerful political force. The revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak has rapidly transformed the Brotherhood from an opposition group that had been formally banned into a political juggernaut controlling nearly half the seats in Egypt’s newly elected parliament.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Storm Chaser Catches Terrifying Dallas Tornadoes

An estimated 10 to 18 tornadoes plowed through the Dallas metropolitan area yesterday afternoon (April 3), tossing semi-trailers high in the air, destroying homes and pelting the region with hail the size of golf balls.

The storms sent thousands of people scurrying for cover. But Brandon Sullivan was hurrying in the opposite direction — straight toward the Dallas twisters. He’d been watching radar and weather reports all morning, and drove all the way from his home in Oklahoma City in search of the telltale rotating clouds.

His chase was rewarded. Just outside Forney, Texas, a town about 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of Dallas, Sullivan stopped his car along a tiny dirt road as a furious tornado churned in a field just about 200 yards (180 meters) away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Democratic Party and Jewish Anti-Semitism

There’s a thin line between Anti-Semitism and Anti-Zionism. That’s true of Muslims and the left, but it’s also true specifically of the Jewish left, whose hatred for Israel manifests itself in a general contempt for Jewish religion, culture and tradition.

[…]

Jewish Anti-Semitism is a very real phenomenon, but it’s not self-hatred, no more so than Bill Ayers’ desire to destroy America is self-hatred. The essence of the left is the rejection of the past in a perpetual war for a better future. The very nature of Jewish identity is built on a continuity of tradition and the nature of the left is to fly its progressive colors by showing contempt for tradition. There can be no balance between the two because to choose the one is to reject the other.

The more the Democratic Party moves in tune with the left, the more it mirrors the bigotry of European leftist parties toward Jews and Israel.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



When is Global Warming Enough?

It depends who you ask. Professor Kari Norgaard from Oregon University thinks, “If you don’t believe in climate change you must be sick.” If you are a skeptic of global warming, you are a racist. Overcoming this challenge, she continued in a paper presented at the Planet under Pressure Conference in London, March 24-29, 2012, is similar to overcoming “racism or slavery in the south.”

Yale University Professor Karen Seto, who also attended the conference, told MSNBC: “We certainly don’t want them [humans] strolling about the entire countryside. We want them to save land for nature by living closely [together.] In her view, humans are foreign to nature, we pollute it, we corrupt it, and eventually destroy it.

The scientists attending the Planet under Pressure conference in London “put out a statement calling for humans to be packed into denser cities so that the rest of the planet can be surrendered to Mother Nature.” (UK Daily Mail)

“Cultural resistance to accepting humans as being responsible for climate change must be recognized and treated as an aberrant sociological behavior.” (UK Daily Mail)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


British Government Moves to Tackle Islamophobia

LONDON: 12 months after Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, the Conservative Party chairman argued that Islamophobia has “passed the dinner-table test” and had become socially acceptable in Britain, the UK Government has established a cross-government working group to tackle anti-Muslim hatred.

The News/Jang has learnt exclusively that the group is modeled on the hugely influential cross-government working group on anti-Semitism, set up by the previous Labour government for the Jewish community.

The Group is chaired by the Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG) and will have representatives from across government including the Cabinet Office, the Department for Education, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Home Office and the Ministry of Justice. This scribe understands that the group will include leading UK academics, Dr Chris Allen from Birmingham University and Dr Matthew Goodwin from Nottingham University.

Imam Qari Asim from Leeds Makkah Masjid, Akeela Ahmed from Muslim Youth Helpline and Fiyaz Mughal of Faith Matters has also been chosen as key members of the group.

In January 2011 Baroness Warsi, the UK’s first Muslim Cabinet Minister, used a speech at Leicester University to raise the alarm over the way in which prejudice against Muslims is now seen by many as normal. Warsi was criticized by many in the press for raising this issue in a forceful manner but the concerns she raised about the prejudice against Muslims on the basis of their faith became a talking point for many days and she won over the backing of many influential political and social figures, including Daily Telegraph’s Peter Oborne who has co-authored with James Jones a pamphlet called Muslims Under Siege, and produced and presented a Channel Four Film on Islamophobia. Baroness Warsi previously raised the issue of Islamophobia with Pope Benedict XVI during his visit to Britain in 2010, where she urged him to help “create a better understanding between Europe and its Muslim citizens”.

Islamic communities and other vulnerable groups have become targets of increased hostility since 11 September. Pakistanis in Britain have become the biggest victim of this bias and the areas where they live have been under attack from the racists and Islamophobes. Britain’s far in particular has switched from attacks on its traditional targets — blacks and Jews — to Muslims instead. They have organized large rallies against Muslims and have developed networks across Europe.

In February this year, Faith Matters, a non-profit group, developed and launched a system called MAMA (Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks). The new service will produce statistical data on the nature of Islamophobia in Britain. Victims will be able to classify their experiences as one of six types: extreme violence, assault, damage of property, threats, abusive behavior, and propagation of anti-Muslim literature. Details will also emerge of where in the country Islamophobia is most prominent so authorities can concentrate their campaigns most effectively.

Fiyaz Mughal, founder director of Faith Matters, told The News/Jang: “The group which is meeting on Islamophobia and anti-Muslim attacks is looking at developing a work programme around further possible research that can be done in these areas. For far too long Muslim communities have said that they have been subject to these social issues and therefore the government wants to address these concerns. This is to be warmly welcome and this Government is making strides to counter hate crime in general and this is extremely positive.”

           — Hat tip: Frontinus [Return to headlines]



Greece: Pensioner’s Death Sparks Clashes in Athens

Violent protests have erupted in Athens following the public suicide of a 77-year-old retired man. A note he left behind accused the Greek government of impoverishing him with its debt crisis austerity measures, a message that resonated with demonstrators. Many are blaming the state for his death.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Almost a Fifth of Fuel Adulterated, Survey

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 5 — Almost a fifth of fuel on the Greek market is adulterated, according to checks carried out by a state body and reported by daily Kathimerini. The General Chemical State Laboratory, which operates under the auspices of the Finance Ministry, conducted almost 1,900 checks on fuel samples in 2010. According to a report published on Thursday, 17% of these samples were found to contain adulterated fuel. The most common way of tampering fuel was to mix heating oil, which is currently taxed less, with diesel. The state scientists found that a third of diesel samples had been adulterated. The Finance Ministry announced plans on Tuesday to raise the tax on heating fuel, mostly in an attempt to combat this practice and tax evasion. However, the move will raise heating fuel prices substantially as the ministry aims to tax diesel and heating oil equally. Currently the going rate for heating oil averages at 1.046 euros per liter, according to the Development Ministry’s price observatory, while the equivalent rate for diesel stands at 1.591 euros/l. Last October a liter of heating oil cost 90 cents, while a year ago it was around 65 cents.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mother Earth and the Fatherland: Germany’s Far-Right Turns to Environmentalism

Environmentalists are often associated with the political left. But now neo-Nazis have discovered nature’s charms too. In addition to selling organic vegetables and publishing a magazine on the environment, Germany’s far-right NPD party has co-opted green campaign issues. Party members use it as a dubious means to make the NPD more socially acceptable.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nobel Laureate Under Fire: Grass Says Campaign Against Him ‘Injurious’

German Nobel laureate Günter Grass has taken to the airwaves to address the raging controversy surrounding his new poem, which is sharply critical of Israel. Yet the debate continues to broaden, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu joining the fray on Thursday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Romanian Gang Targeting Elderly Women: Police

A gang of Romanian women is targeting elderly women across Norway in a series of often brutal jewellery robberies, with 20 such crimes reported in Oslo alone over the last two week, police have said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik: Mental Ward a Fate ‘Worse Than Death’

Anders Behring Breivik, who is set to go on trial on April 16th for killing 77 people in Norway last July, said in a letter published on Wednesday that being sentenced to psychiatric care would be the worst fate imaginable.

“To send a political activist to an asylum is more sadistic and more evil than killing him! It is a fate worse than death,” the 33-year-old right-wing extremist wrote in a 38-page letter, of which the Verdens Gang (VG) daily published a few extracts.

The letter aims to discredit, point-by-point, a report by two psychiatric experts, Synne Sørheim and Torgeir Husby, who concluded late last year that Behring Breivik was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and was therefore criminally insane.

If the Oslo court judges reach the same conclusion at the end of his 10-week trial, the confessed killer will be sentenced to a locked psychiatric ward, possibly for life, rather than prison.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Man Beaten and Shoved Into Car Boot in Oslo

A number of witnesses have reported seeing a man being beaten up and bundled into the boot of a car in Oslo’s Grønland district on Thursday morning. Police said three men shoved the victim into the luggage compartment of a black Mercedes before driving away from the scene shortly after 7am, broadcaster NRK reports.

“We have good contact with the owner of the car, and our preliminary assessment is that this an internal dispute in a criminal environment,” Oslo police investigator Finn Belle told news agency NTB. He added that the owner of the vehicle is known to the police, though they have not yet found the victim of the abduction.

Police have spoken to several witnesses, one of whom reported shouting at the men to stop before they quickly closed the boot of the car and drove away. “I heard hysterical screams from the man who was kidnapped. I saw that they beat him and forced him into the boot,” one witness told NRK.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovars Hurl Stones at Serbian Delegation

Stones were thrown at a Serbian delegation in Pristina on Wednesday as it headed to a meeting with Kosovo officials. “Two cars of the delegation were slightly damaged, while there were no injuries,” police spokesman Baki Kelani said in a statement. Belgrade, however, said one person was slightly injured.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


From a Prison Cell to the Egyptian Presidency

Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood decided to field its own candidate in presidential elections in May. Khairat el-Shater is considered pragmatic, influential and media-savvy. But which direction will he steer Egypt if he wins? Candidates from the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Freedom and Justice Party, won the largest share of seats in Egypt’s parliamentary elections in December. But the party’s program still remains vague, and the Muslim Brotherhood has not indicated which ideological direction it aims to steer the country in and what consequences it could have for Egypt’s political, social and culture future. Recent plans by the Muslim Brotherhood’s to field one of its own candidates in the country’s presidential election in May have come as a surprise to many as it reverses an earlier pledge by the group to stay out of the presidential race.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Presidential Candidate Cheered as He Registers for Election

The man chosen by Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood to run for president in next month’s election has officially registered as a candidate. He has pledged to introduce sharia law to the country if elected. Khairat el-Shater, a leading figure in Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, formally registered himself as a candidate in the presidential election on Thursday amid cheers from supporters. “The people want Shater for president,” the group of about 2,000 supporters chanted. Shater, 61, a millionaire businessman and leading strategist in the Brotherhood, is now a seen as a leading contender for the presidency.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Two Tunisians Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Posting Caricatures of the Prophet Muhammed Online

The Court of First Instance of Mahdia sentenced two men to seven years of prison for charges relating to their posting of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammed on Facebook. The decision is subject to appeal.

According to an extract of the decision, which was posted online, Jabeur Mejri and Ghazi Beji were sentenced to five years in prison for “troubling the public” order and “transgressing morality” by posting the images of the Prophet and an additional two for “bringing harm to others” across “networks of public communications.” The two men were each levied a fine of 1,200 dinars as well.

Beji has fled to Europe to avoid facing charges while Mejri is currently in jail in Mahdia and studying his appeal with his legal representation.

Bochra Belhaj Hmida, lawyer, activist, and ex-president of the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women, is currently involved in an effort to rally civil society against the decision. She stated that she found the decision shocking, particularly, “when one considers the fact that those in Tunisia who committed terrorist acts are free and those two men are being prosecuted for publishing such insignificant things.”

According to Belhaj Hmida, the case was brought by a lawyer in Mahdia, who complained directly to the public prosecutor in the district.

Belhaj Hmida stated that she had informed Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki of the decision and that he requested her to prepare a dossier in which all the facts of the case are contained.

“He was very interested [in the case],” she said.

The Tunisian Secretary-General of the International Federation of Human Rights (IFHR), Khadira Cherif, also expressed outrage at the judgment.

“It’s scandalous that they’ve arrested these men. We are against [the decision],” stated Cherif.

She went on to say that the IFHR would soon make a formal announcement of their position on the affair.

While the public prosecutor of Mahdia was not available for comment, a clerk at the Court of First Instance in Mahdia, Nourredine Waja, gave his personal decision on the validity of the decision.

“Freedom of expression shouldn’t go that far. It’s a more serious affair than freedom of expression. It’s an attack on our religion,” said Waja.

Waja stated that all religions should be protected from such attacks and that the same standard would be upheld for images mocking holy symbols of Christians or Jews.

A spokesperson at the Ministry of Justice was unaware of the case when contacted by Tunisia Live, and no other representative of the ministry was available for comment at the time.

           — Hat tip: RR [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel Has Few Options for Rocket Fire From Egypt

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel’s prime minister on Thursday warned that Egypt’s Sinai desert is becoming a “terror zone” and vowed to strike at militants there after a rocket fired from the area hit a southern Israeli resort town.

The tough talk, however, was tempered by Israel’s desire not to disturb the already fraught relationship with Egypt. Israeli officials acknowledged their options are limited as the new government in Egypt — one of Israel’s few allies in the Arab world — tries to secure its sovereignty over the mountainous Sinai Peninsula.

Thursdays’ rocket attack, the first on Eilat in nearly two years, raised new Israeli concerns about militant activity in Sinai, particularly since the fall of Hosni Mubarak’s regime last year. Israeli security officials have repeatedly warned of a power vacuum in Egypt and say that Islamic militants, including al-Qaida, have stepped up their activity in Sinai and are now active on Israel’s doorstep.

“We are seeing now with Eilat that the Sinai Peninsula is turning into a terror zone,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “We will strike at those who attack us. There can be no immunity for terrorism; it must be fought and we are doing so.”

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak threatened to “strike those responsible for firing (the Grad rocket) at Eilat.”

No injuries were reported in the overnight strike against Eilat, a normally tranquil Red Sea vacation spot that is set to welcome thousands of visitors this weekend for the Passover holiday.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, and Egypt denied the attack was launched from its territory. “The chief of security of southern Sinai has already denied that the rocket was fired from the Sinai territory,” Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Amr told reporters in Cairo.

But Israel military officials, citing intelligence, said all signs were that the rocket had been fired from Egypt. It would be the third such time since 2010 that militants in Egypt have fired rockets toward Israel.

Israel has warned of growing lawlessness in Sinai following the uprising last year that overthrew Mubarak’s regime…

[Return to headlines]



Rocket Fired From Egypt Hits Israeli City of Eilat

A Grad rocket has landed in the southern Israeli city of Eilat, but has caused no damage or injuries, Israeli security officials said.

District police chief Ron Gertner told Israeli radio the rocket had been fired from Egypt’s Sinai peninsula.

He said it struck a construction site close to a residential area shortly after midnight (21:00 GMT).

The blast took place as thousands congregated in the resort town for the Jewish holiday of Passover.

Rocket attacks from Egyptian soil are uncommon. Attacks on Eilat and the nearby Jordanian town of Aqaba in 2010 killed one person and injured another four.

Sinai unrest

Eilat Mayor Meir Yitzhak-Halevy told the Jerusalem Post that the city would function as normal despite the attack.

A wave of unrest has hit the restive Sinai peninsula recently.

Israel says militants have become active in the region since former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in February 2011…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Germany: Günter Grass Specializes in ‘Self-Righteousness’

In his poem about Israel and Iran published on Wednesday, German Nobel laureate Günter Grass expressed the fear that he would be labelled anti-Semitic for his anti-Israeli stance. Some commentators in Germany on Thursday say that the fear was more than justified.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gulf: Efforts for Artistic Freedom, Islamists on the Attack

Storm at Bahrain Culture Festival, Kuwait show closed

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, APRIL 5 — With the curtain coming down in the United Arab Emirates on a month of art characterised by great turn-out and participation, bitter controversy has exploded in neighbouring Bahrain, where the Culture Festival is currently being held, hot on the heels of another storm over artistic expression, this time in Kuwait.

Tension between intellectuals and conservatives in Bahrain exploded in the country’s Parliament on Tuesday with a severe attack by the Culture Minister, Sheikha Mai bin Mohammad al-Khalifa, on Islamist deputies, who in turned demanded the minister’s resignation.

Sheikha Mai and the spring culture festival , the oil-rich island’s most significant cultural event, of which she is a patron, had earlier been the target of criticism from Islamists for failing to cancel the event out of solidarity with victims in Syria, and later for incident during the festival itself.

The mosque located across the road from the building where the cultural events were being held, including a concert by Andrea Bocelli, is said to have been asked not to issue the call to prayer and not to use loud speakers so as not to disrupt the festival. In response, it was claimed that “youngsters were sent” to throw rocks and cause a nuisance at the event.

The Sheikha, a leading figure of some standing in the Gulf’s artistic and cultural landscape is well-known and liked for her efforts to promote culture in Bahrain and that of Arab countries in the region abroad. She is also no stranger to controversy. In 2007, before she became a minister, she clashed explosively with some of the country’s most conservative groups for staging a show by a Lebanese dance group, which was slammed as “obscene and depraved” on account of the sexual allusions in the choreography.

Amid the current rift between culture and tradition, however, intellectuals, writers and non-Islamist deputies have rushed to support the minister.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Qatar: 41 Bln Dollar Contract for Underground Lines Ready

(ANSAmed) — DOHA, APRIL 4 — The tenders for the contract regarding the first stage of the Doha underground project will be presented within a few weeks, Qatar Railways announced. The 41 billion dollar project includes a length of 85 km of underground line, divided in four different lines: red, green, blue and orange. More than 20,000 workers will be hired to carry out the project, one of the crucial infrastructures for the 2022 World Championship Football. In 2009 Deutsche Bahn and Qatari Diar Real Estate Investment Co. signed an agreement on the design of the underground. The first stage includes the construction of 45 underground stations. The small state of Qatar is a gas giant and is investing in infrastructure. The emirate is in fact spending 11 billion USD on the new international airport of Doha, 5.5 billion on a new port in Doha, which will be the deepest in the world, and another 20 billion on its road infrastructure.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan Sees Rise in ‘Dancing Boys’ Exploitation

The 9-year-old boy with pale skin and big, piercing eyes captivated Mirzahan at first sight. “He is more handsome than anyone in the village,” the 22-year-old farmer said, explaining why he is grooming the boy as a sexual partner and companion. There was another important factor that made Waheed easy to take on as a bacha bazi, or a boy for pleasure: “He doesn’t have a father, so there is no one to stop this.” A growing number of Afghan children are being coerced into a life of sexual abuse.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



NATO Withdrawal From Afghanistan Continues to Raise Doubts

NATO troops are due to hand over responsibility for preventing the Taliban’s advance in Afghanistan to local police and soldiers after 2014. Observers fear the country could descend into civil war

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Japan: Fukushima Daiichi Site: Cesium-137 is 85 Times Greater Than at Chernobyl Accident

Japan’s former Ambassador to Switzerland, Mr. Mitsuhei Murata, was invited to speak at the Public Hearing of the Budgetary Committee of the House of Councilors on March 22, 2012, on the Fukushima nuclear power plants accident. Before the Committee, Ambassador Murata strongly stated that if the crippled building of reactor unit 4—with 1,535 fuel rods in the spent fuel pool 100 feet (30 meters) above the ground—collapses, not only will it cause a shutdown of all six reactors but will also affect the common spent fuel pool containing 6,375 fuel rods, located some 50 meters from reactor 4. In both cases the radioactive rods are not protected by a containment vessel; dangerously, they are open to the air. This would certainly cause a global catastrophe like we have never before experienced. He stressed that the responsibility of Japan to the rest of the world is immeasurable. Such a catastrophe would affect us all for centuries. Ambassador Murata informed us that the total numbers of the spent fuel rods at the Fukushima Daiichi site excluding the rods in the pressure vessel is 11,421

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey’s Erdogan Makes Landmark Visit to China

Turkey seeks to develop ties with China. On the first visit of a Turkish prime minister in 27 years, Recep Tayyip Erdogan will also try to convince Chinese leaders to pressure Syria to put an end to violence. Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is set to make a landmark visit to China on Sunday. His first stop is expected to be Xinjiang province in western China, which is dominated by the Uighur people. China’s crackdown on this predominantly Muslim minority during the riots in 2009 damaged bilateral relations between China and Turkey. Three years after the crisis, Erdogan’s visit is seen as a sign of stronger dialogue and growing confidence between the two countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Book: Civilization: The Six Ways the West Beat the Rest, By Niall Ferguson

Reviewer: Dr Ricardo Duchesne

Niall Ferguson is known in leftist circles as a ‘right winger,’ even a ‘super-conservative’. He has always resisted this characterization: ‘I’m just a doctrinaire liberal at heart. Quite why I keep getting called rightwing is only mysterious to me’. True; he is not a conservative. He is a liberal right winger, a neoconservative. Wikipedia’s entry on neoconservatism correctly includes him as one of its proponents. The Western world has moved so far left that a committed believer in the spread of individual rights, free markets, enlightenment values around the world, including feminism and gay rights is now seen as a conservative.

Ferguson handles immigration in the mannerism one is expected to in polite liberal society — lest one faces illiberal reprisals. He eulogizes over the fact that with mass migration ‘a single American civilization is finally emerging’ (p. 139) — a mixed-race species. Why ‘finally emerging’? Because both left and right liberals believe that the mass influx from Africa, Latin America and Asia represents the fulfillment of Western egalitarianism. The emergence of a ‘homogenized humanity’ (p. 198) fabricated through the ‘democratic’ blending of races, religions and cultures is the end of history. Ferguson thus notes that the number of mixed-race couples in the United Sates ‘quadrupled between 1990 and 2000’, and that ‘whites will probably be a minority of the US population’ (pp. 138—9).

These ideas have little in common with the same Burke that Ferguson otherwise defends against the singular and abstract citizen of the French Revolution. Calling for the merging of races, the dissolution of the age-old European ethnic character of the West, and the imposition of universal citizenry across the Islamic world, is a revolutionary idea drastically at odds with Burke’s emphasis on the particular customs and folkways of different cultures, and the ‘ancient liberties’ of Englishmen.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Massive Illegal Alien Election Fraud Detected in Florida

Many of you will remember that I told America on Fox News on Election Day 2010 that the Democrats planned to use illegal alien voters to save themselves from the Tea Party revolution. We believe we saw that with illegal alien voters saving Harry Reid in Nevada.

Now we have more evidence and we need you to take swift action to make this count.

Florida now joins the states of Georgia and Colorado where we have solid evidence of massive illegal alien voter registration and stolen American votes in elections.

Take the following important steps.

Step 1: Watch, rate, and comment on this copy of the video. Each time you watch it and comment you will help the video make it other people…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy: EU Needs to Protect Itself

Or walls will be built, warns French president

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, APRIL 5 — “A society without frontiers is a society with no respect. A country without borders is a country without an identity. A continent without frontiers is a continent which will have to raise walls to protect itself. Help me to construct a strong France”. These are some of the words contained in the letter which the French President Nicolas Sarkozy, running for re-election to the Élysée Palace on April 22 and May 6, will send out to the French people.

Contained in the missive which is being handed out at the press conference attended by Sarkozy in Paris, the current President points out that “in democracy there’s nothing better than the love for our country” The letter, which will be printed in six million copies and delivered throughout the whole of France is made up of thirty-four pages divided into small chapters. Among the priorities set out by Sarkozy is the need to “live in security in an open world”, but also taking a zero-tolerance stance against the “ideologies of hate”. The latter being a clear reference to the recent tragedy in Toulouse and Montauban carried out by the young Islamic terrorist Mohammed Merah. With regards to Europe instead, Sarkozy adds, “it’s an open continent but at the same time it cannot become a colander”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


What’s Missing From This Easter Message?

The Episcopal Church has sent me a copy of the annual Easter Message from Presiding Bishop Katherine Jefferts Schori. It’s 383 words long, in eight paragraphs.

Not once in this message has the Presiding Bishop seen fit to mention the name of Jesus Christ.

[…]

I’m going to quote Paragraph 6 in its entirety, verbatim—otherwise you might accuse me of having made it up as a satire. Here it is.

“As we began Lent, I asked you to think about the Millenium Development Goals and our work in Lent as a re-focusing of our lives. I’m delighted to be able to tell you that the UN report this last year has shown some significant accomplishment in a couple of those goals, particularly in terms of lowering the rate of the worst poverty, and in achieving better access to drinking water and better access to primary education. We actually might reach those goals by 2015. That leaves a number of other goals as well as what moves beyond the goals to full access for all people to abundant life.”

Does this tell us why the bishop doesn’t mention Jesus? Who needs Jesus Christ? We’ve got the UN and its Millenium Development Goals!

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Life on Jupiter Moon Europa May Hide in Depths to Survive

Considered one of the best potential sources for extraterrestrial life in the solar system, Jupiter’s moon Europa may host life in the ocean deep beneath the moon’s icy crust.

Some organisms could even travel to Europa’s surface through cracks and instabilities in the crust, some researchers speculate. But radiation from Jupiter’s magnetosphere constantly bombards the moon and could annihilate life at shallow depths, making it difficult to detect with an orbiter or lander.

So scientists are seeking to determine experimentally just how deep organic life on Europa needs to hide in order to avoid being destroyed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Scientists Closing in on Black Hole at Center of Our Galaxy

Though scientists have suspected for a while that a giant black hole lurks at the center of our galaxy, they still can’t say for sure it’s the explanation for the strange behavior observed there. Now researchers are closer than ever to being able to image this region and probe the physics at work — potentially shedding light on the great conflict between the theories of general relativity and quantum mechanics.

At the heart of the Milky Way, astronomers see some wacky things. For example, about a dozen stars seem to be orbiting some invisible object. One star has been found to make a 16-year orbit around the unseen thing, moving at the hard-to-imagine speed of about 3,000 miles (5,000 kilometers) a second. By comparison, the sun moves through space at a comparatively glacial 137 miles (220 kilometers) a second.

Based on the laws of motion, these dozen stars’ orbits should be caused by the gravitational pull of some massive object in the center of the galaxy. Yet telescopes observe nothing there.

“The really important thing is that all the orbits have a common focus,” astrophysicist Mark Reidof the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics said during the recently concluded April 2012 meeting of the American Physical Society.”There’s one point on the sky, and there’s nothing you can see on images at this position.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120404

Financial Crisis
» ‘This is a Dignified End Before I Have to Start Scrounging Food From the Trash’: Desperate Man, 77, Shoots Himself Dead Outside Greek Parliament During Rush Hour
 
USA
» County Moves to Dismiss Lawsuit Over Public Notice in Mosque Case
» Muslim Brotherhood Officials Aim to Promote Moderate Image in Washington Visit
» Muslim Voters Could Swing Election, Report Finds
» Obama’s Timidity Risks the World’s Security
» Respect the Hoodie and the Headscarf
» Stakelbeck on Terror Show: The Battle for Our Minds
» Students Angry Over Pricey Courses Pepper-Sprayed
» UCLA Honors Sharia Apologist Khaled Abou El Fadl
 
Europe and the EU
» British ‘Extremists Caught Carrying Al Qaeda Manual 44 Ways to Support Jihad Were Fundraising for Somali Terrorists’
» France Arrests 10 Suspected Islamists in Fresh Raids
» French Police Swoop on More Suspected Islamists
» Germany: Hitler: A Short Biography [Book Review]
» Germany: We’re Good Europeans Yet They All Hate Us
» Norway Killer — ‘Insane’ Diagnosis “Worse Than Death”
» UK: ‘Child Sex Victims Were Prostitutes With Enough Business Acumen to Win the Apprentice’, Man at Centre of Sex Gang Trial Tells Court
» UK: British Muslims Transcending Differences
» UK: Blackburn Woman Jailed for Posing as PC on Facebook
» UK: Croydon Mosque Unveils Extension Plans for London Road Site
» UK: Conservatives Will Not Win Election Without More Focus on Minority Voters, Says Baroness Warsi
» UK: George’s Tongue-Lashing: Third Wife (And Mother of His New Baby) Says They’re Still Wed, Then His Mother-in-Law Warns He’ll Only Marry Someone Else Next Year
» UK: Leaders Who Lead to Surrender
» UK: No One Saw it Coming
» UK: Why the Odds Are Against a Tory Majority
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» We Salute Sheikh Yousuf Al-Qaradawi
 
Middle East
» In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland: Review
» Iran: Grand Ayatollah Nour: “Islamic Rules Are Based on Fairness”
 
South Asia
» India: Mamata Doles Out Sops to Muslims
» India: Muslims Hail HC Ruling
» Malaysia: Don’t Cross Religious Boundary: Raja Nazrin
» Muslims in Kazakhstan Indignant at Vodka Makers Inclusion of “Allah” On Liquor Bottles
 
Far East
» Can China Makes Its Cuisine — and Finance — Friendly to Muslims?
 
Australia — Pacific
» Police Say Bendigo Mother Raped 14 Times
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Ghana: NDC Advised to Show Respect to Muslims and the Islamic Religion
» Somalia Theatre Bombing Kills Top Sports Officials

Financial Crisis


‘This is a Dignified End Before I Have to Start Scrounging Food From the Trash’: Desperate Man, 77, Shoots Himself Dead Outside Greek Parliament During Rush Hour

A cash-strapped Greek pensioner shot and killed himself outside parliament in Athens today after saying he refused to scrounge for food in the rubbish.

The public suicide by the 77-year-old retired pharmacist quickly triggered an outpouring of sympathy in a country where one in five is jobless and a sense of national humiliation has accompanied successive rounds of salary and pension cuts.

After becoming desperate at his financial plight, the Greek pensioner is said to have put a handgun to his head in the busy central Athens square before declaring, ‘So I won’t leave debts for my children’, and pulling the trigger.

Just hours after the death, an impromptu shrine with candles, flowers and hand-written notes protesting the crisis sprung up in the central Syntagma square where the suicide occurred. Dozens of bystanders gathered to pay their respects.

One note nailed to a tree said ‘Enough is enough’, while another asked ‘Who will be the next victim?’.

The ‘Indignant’ protesters, who have turned out in the thousands against austerity measures imposed by foreign lenders in exchange for bailout loans, said they planned a march later on Wednesday.

‘This is a human tragedy,’ government spokesman Pantelis Kapsis said as politicians in parliament decried the death.

Acts of suicide have been instrumental in the past in provoking popular protest. A Tunisian vegetable seller triggered the start of the so-called ‘Arab Spring’ by setting himself on fire in December 2010.

‘When dignified people like him are brought to this state, somebody must answer for it.’

Witnesses said the man put a gun to his head and pulled the trigger after yelling out: ‘I have debts, I can’t stand this anymore.’

Another passerby told Greek television the man said ‘I don’t want to leave my debts to my children.’

A suicide note found in his coat pocket blamed politicians and financial troubles for driving him to take his life, police said.

The government had ‘annihilated any hope for my survival and I could not get any justice. I cannot find any other form of struggle except a dignified end before I have to start scrounging for food from the trash”,’ the note said.

The president of the pharmacists’ union in the broader Attica region, Costas Lourantos, said he recalled meeting the man several years ago and was struck by his dignified manner.

‘When dignified people like him are brought to this state, somebody must answer for it,’ said Lourantos.

‘There is a moral instigator to this crime — which is the government that has brought people to such despair.’

Shortly after news of the man’s death, Lourantos says he received an anonymous call from a pharmacist saying she would be next to follow suit.

‘I am now frantically looking to find out who it was so we can stop her,’ Lourantos said.

The busy square, through which thousands pass by during the morning commute hours when the suicide occurred, was cordoned off while the body was taken away.

Greece is stumbling through its worst post-World War Two economic crisis as austerity measures demanded by foreign lenders in exchange for financial aid push the country into its fifth year of recession.

Suicide rates in Greece have dramatically increased in the past three years as the country struggles to cope with economic hardship.

According to the Greek Ministry of Citizen Protection, suicides increased by 22.5 per cent to 622 in 2010.

The government last year said suicides had increased 40 percent over the previous two years as the worsening crisis drives ordinary Greeks to despair.

With financial hardship fast becoming an unavoidable facet of life for many, some Greeks said the pharmacist’s public suicide would not be the last.

‘This is the point to which they’ve brought us. Do they really expect a pensioner to live on 300 euros?’ asked 54-year old Maria Parashou, who rushed to the square to pay her respects after reading about the suicide.

‘They’ve cut our salaries, they’ve humiliated us. I have one daughter who is unemployed and my husband has lost half of his income, but I won’t allow myself to lose hope.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

USA


County Moves to Dismiss Lawsuit Over Public Notice in Mosque Case

Mosque case set for April 25-26

MURFREESBORO — The plaintiffs accusing the Rutherford County government of failing to provide sufficient public notice before approving a mosque will first have to defend a motion to dismiss their case. The county attorney’s office recently filed a motion asking Chancellor Robert Corlew III to make a summary judgment to end the case rather than to proceed with an open meeting trial scheduled for April 25 and 26. Corlew will hear arguments about whether to proceed with the trial during a hearing scheduled at 1 p.m. April 19. The county contends that it provided sufficient public meeting notice through legal advertising and government web posting before the county Regional Planning Commission approved plans on May 24, 2010, for the Islamic Center of Murfreesboro to build a bigger place of worship of 52,960 of square feet.

“This court, in its order denying the temporary injunction, has already ruled that Islam is a religion,” the county’s most recent motion states. “Pursuant to the First Amendment of the United States Constitution, Article I & 3 of the Tennessee Constitution, and the Tennessee Religious Freedom Act, Rutherford County could not provide greater notice to the public based on the Islamic faith, or alleged affiliations, of applicant than is typically provided to any other applicant, religious and unreligious alike. Hence, since the typical notice provided by Rutherford County is, as a matter of law, sufficient, notice in this case was sufficient.”

In a case dating back to September 2010, Corlew so far has ruled the plaintiffs cannot stop the ICM from building a bigger place of worship, and that the congregation has property rights to build a new mosque on Veals Road off Bradyville Pike southeast of Murfreesboro city limits. Corlew, though, has questioned the county’s advertisement in The Murfreesboro Post was sufficient. Plaintiffs’ attorney Joe Brandon of Murfreesboro contends that the county’s motion to dismiss the case has no merit. “We are filing a response in the next couple of days to the county’s motion for summary judgment,” Brandon said during a Tuesday phone interview. “We will be able to show in our response fraud and deceit upon the court. We in no capacity believe the court will grant the county’s motion. The chancellor has already told these plaintiffs that they are entitled to their day in court and we expect our day in court.”

The ICM continues to build its new home to replace a small one on the back side of an office at 862 Middle Tennessee Blvd.

Phase I is supposed to be about 12,000 square feet, and the builder reported last fall he expected it to be done by this summer.

– Scott Broden, 615-278-5158

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood Officials Aim to Promote Moderate Image in Washington Visit

Members of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood began a week-long charm offensive in Washington on Tuesday, meeting with White House officials, policy experts and others to counter persistent fears about the group’s emergence as the country’s most powerful political force. The revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak has rapidly transformed the Brotherhood from an opposition group that had been formally banned into a political juggernaut controlling nearly half the seats in Egypt’s newly elected parliament. With its rise, however, have come concerns from Egypt’s secularists as well as U.S. officials that the Islamist group could remake the country, threatening the rights of women and religious minorities. Such fears were only exacerbated by the Brotherhood’s recent decision to field a candidate in upcoming presidential elections, despite previous pledges that it would not do so.

In meeting with U.S. officials, Brotherhood representatives were expected to depict the organization as a moderate and socially conscious movement pursuing power in the interest of Egyptians at large. “We represent a moderate, centrist Muslim viewpoint. The priorities for us are mainly economic, political — preserving the revolution ideals of social justice, education, security for the people,” Sondos Asem, a member of the delegation, said Tuesday in an interview with reporters and editors of The Washington Post.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Voters Could Swing Election, Report Finds

(CNN) — The number of Muslims in the United States is tiny — less than one in 100 Americans — but their votes could sway the results of the presidential election in November, a new study says. That’s because they are concentrated in a number of key swing states, says Farid Senzai, the author of the report. Take Florida, for example, the state that famously swung the 2000 presidential election for George W. Bush over Al Gore. Bush won by 537 votes — while a get-out-the-vote phone bank contacted 23,000 Muslims in one day during elections in 2008 and 2010, the report says. Nauman Abbasi — the head of Emerge USA, which ran the phone bank — says efforts like his will increase Muslim voter turnout. There are about 1.2 million registered Muslim voters in the United States, according to the study, “Engaging American Muslims.” More religious Muslims and those more involved in their mosques are more likely to vote, it found. The biggest Muslim populations are in New York and California, which are unlikely to be battleground states in November. But the next largest numbers of Muslim voters are found in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Virginia, all of which could be key battlegrounds between President Barack Obama and his Republican opponent.

Florida and Ohio, two states that have been decided by razor-thin margins in recent years, also have enough Muslim voters to make a difference to the final result, the report says.

Of course, many other, larger constituencies, from Hispanics to women to the unemployed to political independents, could also claim to be the key ingredient in a winning coalition.

And Muslim voters have much the same concerns as the population at large, with domestic issues and the economy dominating, the study says. Most Muslims voted for Bush in 2000, Democratic Sen. John Kerry in 2004 and Obama in 2008. They are more likely than the population as a whole to approve of Obama’s performance now, the study found. The report comes from the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, a Washington think tank focusing on Muslim issues. It is based largely on earlier data from sources including Gallup, Zogby International and the Pew Research Center.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Timidity Risks the World’s Security

by John Bolton

Barack Obama’s Stakhanovite efforts to transform America’s economy and society into something akin to European-style social democracy are undergoing considerable analysis and debate, especially as the 2012 campaign steams towards November. Most presidential re-election contests are referenda on the incumbent, and this year will be no exception, despite Obama’s obvious strategy to focus on almost anything but his actual record. His “spread the wealth around” slogan, industrial policy that showers favourites with subsidies and loan guarantees, turning major car manufacturers over to union ownership, and taxing the rich as if they were miscreants, all resemble the paradigm of most current or aspiring European Union members.

But Obama’s driving ideology, whether he wins or loses on November 6, has already had enormous implications for the US role in the world and the very structure of the international order. By reducing not only the visibility of America’s global presence, but also its military capabilities, and by shifting the federal budget even further from national security to social welfare programmes, Obama has also sought to transform the United States into Europe. Of course, the obvious question is what happens once Washington’s protective shield is diminished to the point of feebleness. It was one thing for European and other industrial democracies to be free riders under the sheltering US nuclear umbrella, its strong naval forces, and its essentially global force projection capabilities. But when the only superpower doffs its cape and Lycra uniform, packs them up in the telephone booth, and becomes just another mild-mannered suit, who will then shield those free riders, not to mention a much weakened United States itself?

Obama sees American strength as provocative. He believes its nuclear arsenal is excessive, and hence worthy of reduction, without fearing in any way that shredding the nuclear deterrent might actually have profoundly deleterious consequences not only on US national security, but on security and stability in the world as a whole. He sees his presidency causing “the tide of war” to recede in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, just as his tenure will mark “the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow”. Dramatic reductions in military budgets, and the consequent devastating reductions in force levels, capabilities and weapons systems, apparently do not trouble him even slightly.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Respect the Hoodie and the Headscarf

by Hesham Hassaballa

In the Name of the Compassionate and Infinitely Merciful Precious Beloved

It is quite easy to get overwhelmed by your personal predicaments and problems, whether on an individual or communal basis. As a Muslim community, there are almost daily reports of attacks on mosques, a proliferation of anti-Islam seminars and speakers, and most recently, the horrible news about the beating death of an Iraqi-Muslim woman in her own home. It is quite easy to think that no other minority group has got it this bad. Then I heard about the brutal killing of Trayvon Martin by a neighborhood watch captain. Even though Shaima Al Awadi’s death occurred after Martin’s, in the aftermath of the Martin murder, I came to realize the extent to which young black males across our country are being advised on how to conduct themselves to avoid being killed. It truly took me aback.

The easy response would be to say, “But for the grace of God, there go I,” and move on and not think about it. Yes, indeed, that would be easy to do. But, it wouldn’t be the right thing to do. The correct response to these murders is to say: “I am Trayvon Martin;” “I am Shaima Al Awadi.” The correct response would be to say: “Trayvon Martin is my son,” and “Shaima Al Awadi is my sister.” Indeed, the response to Trayvon’s killing has been nationwide outrage, condemnation, and protest. Sadly, the response to Mrs. Alawadi’s equally tragic murder has been deafening silence. These are not just personal tragedies of individual families and communities in opposite ends of our country. Both murders should be in the forefront of our nation’s collective mind, for both may very well be the result of hatred and division.

Yes, the racism and hatred against African-Americans has predated that of American Muslims by centuries. In fact, many of those African Americans to whom such hatred and racism were directed were themselves Muslim. Yes, those American Muslims who are immigrants or children of immigrants, like me, are very much indebted to scores of African-Americans who stood up and shed their blood on the streets of this country to fight for their civil rights. That is why I say, “I am Trayvon Martin.” And, given that my late daughter would have turned 16 this year, I say, “Trayvon Martin is my son,” as well. But, America needs to also see that Shaima Al Awadi is her sister; Shaima Al Awadi is her daughter; Shaima Al Awadi is her mother. If hatred is ultimately the cause of her death, it is no less tragic, no less outrageous, and no less horrific. There is too much at stake for us to continue to allow such hatred to gnaw at our fabric as a nation and a people. There is too much at stake for us to let this sort of hatred to continue unabated.

Already, people across the nation are wearing “hoodies,” the same type of hooded sweatshirt that young Trayvon wore the night he was killed. I wish that people would also wear a headscarf as well: It is also a head covering, and it also may have contributed to the death of Shaima Al Awadi. In both cases, the investigations are ongoing. In both cases, evidence is there that indicates an underlying racial, ethnic, or even religious hatred that motivated the crimes. And if it is confirmed that hatred was the motive in both cases, then the entire nation should be offended. Just as we should all be saying, “I am Trayvon Martin and Shaima Al Awadi,” we must start to say and begin to work for: “No more Trayvon Martins and no more Shaima Al Awadis.” The future of our harmony as a people is at stake.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck on Terror Show: The Battle for Our Minds

On this week’s episode of the Stakelbeck on Terror show, author Michael Widlanski joins us to discuss his new book, Battle For Our Minds: Western Elites and the Terror Threat.

Widlanski says our government decision makers, the mainstream media and even our intelligence community are misleading the American people about the nature of the Islamic jihadist threat.

He descibes how they’re doing it, why they’re doing it and why it is so dangerous for America’s national security.

Click the link above to watch.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



Students Angry Over Pricey Courses Pepper-Sprayed

“Police at a California college pepper-sprayed as many as 30 demonstrators after students angry over a plan to offer high-priced courses tried to push their way into a trustees meeting, authorities said.

“Let us in, let us in,” protesters shouted on video posted online Tuesday. “No cuts, no fees, education should be free.”

Santa Monica College students were angry because only a handful were allowed into the meeting and, when their request to move the meeting to a larger venue was denied, they began to enter the room, said David Steinman, an environmental advocate.”

[Note from Egghead: Note that the students are using the Obama re-election talking point that higher education should be free — most especially for minorities and illegals!]

           — Hat tip: Egghead [Return to headlines]



UCLA Honors Sharia Apologist Khaled Abou El Fadl

by Cinnamon Stillwell and Judith Greblya

Academic self-congratulation reached new heights at the University of California, Los Angeles on March 21, 2012, with “An Event Honoring Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl.” Abou El Fadl-Omar and Azmeralda Alfi Distinguished Professor in Islamic Law and chair of the Islamic Studies Interdepartmental Program at UCLA-was feted by the UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies, the UCLA School of Law Journal of Near Eastern and Islamic Law, the UCLA School of Law Muslim Law Students Association, and the UCLA School of Law Critical Race Studies Program. Eighty students, professors, and community members gathered to commemorate “the world’s leading authority on Islamic law and Islam, and the prominent scholar in the field of human rights,” according to the event description. In reality, Fadl is an apologist for radical Islam who routinely denies valid concerns over the human rights abuses inherent to Sharia (Islamic) law while charging its critics with “Islamophobia.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


British ‘Extremists Caught Carrying Al Qaeda Manual 44 Ways to Support Jihad Were Fundraising for Somali Terrorists’

Two mean appeared at Westminster Magistrates court yesterday on charges relating to trying to fund terror groups in Somalia.

Cops swooped on the London home of father-of-three Mohammed Shabir Ali, 24, and his twin brother, Mohammed Shafiq Ali, where they discovered a copy of ‘44 Ways to Support Jihad’ by the radical cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

The pair stand accused of raising cash in the UK to send to their brother Mohammed Shamim who it is believed travelled to Somalia in 2008 to carry out martyrdom atrocities.

Neither brother indicated pleas to the charges of possessing an article for use in terrorism and intending to assist another to commit acts of terrorism between August 20th, 2008, and June 21st last year.

The identical twins, both with shaven heads and small goatee beards, appeared at separate hearings at Westminster Magistrates court.

They were arrested last June when police seized the materials from their home in Stepney, but both were released without charge.

Counter terrorism cops, who had been examining the material, swooped at their home two days ago and arrested them.

Prosecutor Louise Gray said that they believed Ali and his brother had been discussing sending cash to their brother in Somalia that they raised through a ‘Dawah’ religious stall.

During Shabir Ali’s hearing she said that in 2008 Mohammed Shamim travelled with Tufaul Ahmed and Mohammad Jahangit to the Emirates, Nairobi and then Dubai where it is feared they travelled on to Somalia. Their return tickets have never been used.’

Ms Gray said: ‘It is believed he has gone to Somalia and is participating with insurgents out there.’

Unemployed Shabir Ali, who has three children — aged four, two and 18 months and lives with his wife and his mother, spoke only to confirm his name and address. He was supported at court by his wife and other family members, one of whom saluted him as he walked in.

Shafik Ali, who spoke only to confirm his name, address and date of birth, and was supported at court by his pregnant wife and her friend, along with two other supporters.

Mr Mian, who represents both men, argued that, when deciding on bail, the Judge should “stand back from the hysteria surrounding the phrase ‘terrorism’.

He said Shafik’s 19-year-old wife is two and a half months pregnant and need of his support as she has none from her own family.

He also said his clients were not accused of committing any further offences after they were released without charge followin the arrests in June.

But District Judge Caroline Tubbs remanded the pair in custody to appear at the Old Bailey on 20 April.

A Scotland Yard spokesman confirmed a 21 year old woman, and a 30 year old man remain in custody in relation to the offences and have not yet been charged.

           — Hat tip: MS [Return to headlines]



France Arrests 10 Suspected Islamists in Fresh Raids

Paris (CNN) — Ten suspected Islamists were arrested in fresh raids across France on Wednesday morning as the country widens a clampdown on suspected extremists in the wake of a deadly shooting spree last month, the interior ministry said.

Meanwhile, 13 alleged radicals arrested Friday were placed under formal investigation for “criminal conspiracy in connection with a terrorist enterprise,” and possession and transportation of weapons, officials said.

The formal warning is a point in the French legal system that comes after an arrest and before formal charges are filed.

Nine of the 13 have been jailed, including Forsane Alizza leader Mohamed Achamlane.

The other four were released Tuesday but remain “under judicial control,” according to Achamlane’s lawyer Philippe Missamou.

On Tuesday, a French prosecutor said the detained radical Muslims were preparing for holy war.

Forsane Alizza and Achamlane were “calling for the establishment of an Islamic caliphate in France and calling for the implementation of Sharia law and inciting Muslims in France to unite for the preparation of a civil war,” Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said.

The group was reportedly linked to Mohammed Merah, who was accused of killing seven people in the south of France in March before police killed him after a 32-hour siege of his apartment in the southwestern city of Toulouse.

Molins said the investigation into Forsane Alizza began in October 2011, and the arrests were not connected to Merah’s rampage.

Achamlane “united around him a number of individuals who for several months had undergone physical training and received religious indoctrination in order to commit violent acts on French territory,” Molins told reporters Tuesday.

The radical leader was “known for his anti-Semitic stance and condemned for publicly violating French penal code,” the prosecutor said.

Members of his group held “discussions during a meeting held in Lyon in September 2011 about a plan to kidnap a judge based in Lyon,” he said.

But a lawyer for Achamlane rejected the accusations against his client, saying the arrests were related to France’s upcoming presidential election.

“These are statements that are not supported by any material facts. This affair is purely electioneering and politically motivated, that is all,” Philippe Missamou said on CNN affiliate BFM-TV.

Another of his lawyers, Benoit Poquet, released a statement denying any kidnapping plot.

Presidential contender Francois Hollande was asked by French radio station RTL Wednesday if he felt the rash of arrests was linked to the upcoming elections but declined to be drawn on the matter.

The Socialist candidate expressed some surprise, however, that the arrests were being carried out now, after the terror attack by Merah.

“I’m not questioning at all what is being done,” Hollande told RTL. “I’m simply saying that we should, or could, perhaps have done more sooner.”

The interior ministry announced Monday it had deported two Muslims and plans to expel three more.

A statement by Interior Minister Claude Gueant said the moves were part of “an acceleration of the deportation procedures of foreign Islamic radicals.”

An Islamic militant from Algeria who was involved in 1994 attacks in Marrakech, Morocco, was sent to his home country Monday, the statement said. In addition, a Malian imam was returned to his home country for sermons that promoted anti-Semitism and rejection of the West, it said.

Deportation proceedings also have started or are planned against three others: an imam of Saudi nationality, a militant Islamist from Tunisia and an imam from Turkey, the statement said.

Weapons ‘easily’ available in France It cited provisions in the law governing aliens and political asylum, saying the statutes “allow this type of decision with regards to the ‘urgent need for state security or public safety’ or ‘conduct likely to harm the fundamental interests of the state.’“

According to the statement, other expulsions will occur soon.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is running for re-election, said the raids were intended to “deny the entry of certain people to France” who did not share the country’s values.

“It’s not just linked to Toulouse. It’s all over the country. It’s in connection with a form of radical Islam, and it’s in agreement with the law,” he said.

Sarkozy suggested then that more raids would follow, saying, “There will be other operations that will continue and that will allow us to expel from our national territory a certain number of people who have no reason to be here.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



French Police Swoop on More Suspected Islamists

PARIS (Reuters) — Police arrested 10 suspected Islamist militants in dawn raids across France on Wednesday after a shooting spree by an al Qaeda-inspired gunman prompted President Nicolas Sarkozy to order a security clampdown, just ahead of an April 22 election.

The DCRI domestic intelligence service, supported by elite police commandos, carried out arrests in the southern cities of Marseille and Valence, two smaller towns in the southwest, and in the northeastern town of Roubaix, a police source said.

Interior Minister Claude Gueant pledged there would be no respite in France’s pursuit of militants.

“The pressure on radical Islam and the threats it represents will not stop,” he said.

The raids, which followed Friday’s arrest of 19 suspects, came 13 days after police snipers shot dead 23-year-old gunman Mohamed Merah, who had killed three Jewish school children, a rabbi and three soldiers in a spate of attacks around Toulouse.

“Those arrested have a similar profile to Mohamed Merah,” a local police source said. “They are isolated individuals who are self-radicalized.”

He said the suspects were tracked on Islamist forums expressing extreme views and were preparing to travel to areas including Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Sahel belt of West Africa to wage jihad (holy war). Some of those arrested had already visited these areas, the source said.

Sarkozy, who faces an uphill task to win re-election in an April-May two-round vote, has vowed to root out any form of militancy following Merah’s killing spree.

Television channels showed images of the early morning raids, with police taking suspects away handcuffed and with their faces covered. Officials also confiscated bags.

Some French media had been tipped off about the raids and police did not cordon off the areas ensuring mass coverage.

Sarkozy Rising

The Toulouse killings lifted domestic security up the political agenda 2-1/2 weeks before the April 22 first-round vote and may have improved Sarkozy’s odds against Socialist Francois Hollande, who he trails in polls for the May 6 runoff.

Sarkozy, a former hardline interior minister, has been accused by some opponents of capitalizing on the Islamist threat for electoral purposes even though only 20 percent of voters consider it their main concern, surveys show.

Centrist election candidate Francois Bayrou accused the government of using the situation for its own political ends.

“It’s fine that the state fulfills its responsibility by controlling and banning gatherings or suspected groups,” he told i-Tele television. “But I find it surprising that it takes place in front of journalists who have been asked to come.”

Speaking on RTL radio, Hollande declined to be drawn on whether he thought the raids were politically driven.

“If there are suspicions and risks, then they must be acted upon,” Hollande said. “But why do it after a terrorist act? I am not questioning what is being done, but maybe we could have done more before,” he said.

Thirteen of the 19 people arrested last Friday are alleged to have links to radical French Islamist group Forsane Alizza (Knights of Pride). They are being investigated on suspicion of terrorism, the Paris public prosecutor said on Tuesday.

Wednesday’s raids were not directly linked to either those arrests or the Merah attacks, the source said.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Germany: Hitler: A Short Biography [Book Review]

by Richard J Evans

It’s hard to think why a publishing house that once had a respected history list agreed to produce this travesty of a biography.

Hitler: a Short Biography

A N Wilson

Harper Press, 224pp, £7.99

Following the success of his Booker Prize-longlisted novel Winnie and Wolf, a fictional account of the relationship between Hitler and the British-born wife of Siegfried Wagner, the composer’s son, A N Wilson has decided to publish a short biography of the German dictator. As writers of historical fiction do, he read a handful of English-language biographies and histories for his novel (he doesn’t appear to understand German) but he has added little or no further reading for this biography. What might do as background research for a novel won’t do as preparation for a serious work of history. Nor does he seem to have thought very hard or taken much care over what little reading he has done.

[…]

It’s hard to think why a publishing house that once had a respected history list agreed to produce this travesty of a biography. Perhaps the combination of a well-known author and a marketable subject was too tempting for cynical executives to resist. Novelists (notably Mann) and literary scholars (such as J P Stern) have sometimes managed to use a novel angle of approach to say something new and provocative about Hitler, the Nazis and the German people. However, there is no evidence of that here, neither in the stale, unoriginal material, nor in the banal and cliché-ridden historical judgements, nor in the lame, tired narrative style; just evidence of the repellent arrogance of a man who thinks that because he’s a celebrated novelist, he can write a book about Hitler that people should read, even though he’s put very little work into writing it and even less thought.

Richard J Evans is the author of “The Third Reich at War” (Penguin, £12.99)

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany: We’re Good Europeans Yet They All Hate Us

by Christopher Caldwell

Once again, Europe has a country at its centre that is too big for its neighbours. Merely by keeping on its best behaviour, Germany has managed to reawaken the historic “German problem”. It has succeeded its way into a crisis. Ever since Greece’s finances became a matter of public concern just over two years ago, Germany has been regaining its status as the leading power in Europe. It subjected itself almost a decade ago to a painful reform of its welfare state and a freeze in real wages that has made it as competitive an exporter as any country in the world, including China.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway Killer — ‘Insane’ Diagnosis “Worse Than Death”

OSLO (Reuters) — A far-right militant who killed 77 people in Norway last year will use his trial to challenge a diagnosis that he is criminally insane, something that would be “worse than death”, excerpts of a letter he wrote showed on Wednesday.

The trial of Anders Behring Breivik, who gunned down 69 at a Labour Party youth camp after detonating a car bomb in central Oslo that killed eight, starts in Oslo on April 16.

In November two court-appointed psychiatrists deemed the 33-year-old was psychotic and paranoid schizophrenic at the time of the attacks, which would normally mean he could not be sentenced to prison.

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Global Emerging Markets: A Promising FutureRequest FREE CopyIn a 38-page letter he wrote in jail and sent to various Norwegian media — of which extracts were published in the daily VG on Wednesday — Breivik said that being deemed criminally insane was unbearable to him.

“I must admit this is the worst thing that could have happened to me as it is the ultimate humiliation,” he wrote.

“To send a political activist to a mental hospital is more sadistic and evil than to kill him! It is a fate worse than death.”

Breivik has said he committed the attacks on July 22 last year to protect Norway from multiculturalism. They were the worst outbreak of violence there since the end of World War Two.

“I knew of course what was right and what was wrong, but I acted instinctively,” Breivik wrote in the letter.

He criticised the two psychiatrists, Torgeir Husby and Synne Soerheim, as unable to be objective.

“Husby said on several occasions that what I had done was bestial and I got the impression from him that he saw me as a wild animal that had to be locked in and drugged at whatever cost.”

“Has an event that has traumatised a nation also traumatised Husby and Soerheim to such an extent that they must be regarded as having a conflict of interest? Can two court-appointed psychiatrists that are so emotionally affected by July 22 mean that they are not able to be objective?”

After a public outcry following the publication of the first psychiatric report, the judges in the case have asked for another evaluation of Breivik’s mental health by different experts. That is due to be published on Tuesday.

Breivik will stand trial, in a case expected to last ten weeks, regardless of the psychiatrists’ assessments.

If his judges rule at the end of the trial that he is psychotic he is likely to be placed in a high-security psychiatric unit. If not, he would face up to 21 years in prison but could be held longer if deemed too dangerous to be released.

Breivik’s lawyer has said he would call defence witnesses to show his client was not criminally insane but held views shared by others.

Among those witnesses are Mullah Krekar, the Kurdish founder of Islamist group Ansar al-Islam, who was recently jailed in Norway for making death threats, and “Fjordman”, a Norwegian right-wing blogger whom Oslo police say was a major intellectual influence on Breivik’s.

Fjordman, whose real name is Peder Jensen, has denied having any links with Breivik.

           — Hat tip: The EDL [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Child Sex Victims Were Prostitutes With Enough Business Acumen to Win the Apprentice’, Man at Centre of Sex Gang Trial Tells Court

A man at the centre of a child sexual exploitation trial today accused some of his alleged victims of being ‘prostitutes’ with enough business acumen to ‘win The Apprentice’.

Eleven men are on trial at Liverpool Crown Court charged with conspiring to engage children in sexual activity.

Today the first of the defendants took to the witness box to deny the charges, which he dismissed as ‘lies’ and ‘rubbish’.

He also accused one girl of being a racist who believed ‘whites were a superior race’.

The 59-year-old man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, admitted having a prolonged sexual relationship with one girl who is alleged to have conspired with the men to exploit other young girls.

But he said he believed she was 18 and was a prostitute.

When asked about the alleged victims in the case the man said: ‘They were clever girls. They had a business empire which extended to Leeds, Nelson, Bradford.

‘If they went on to Sugar’s programme they would probably win The Apprentice. They did very well.’

The defendant, who is balding and was wearing jeans and a sweatshirt, shocked the court when asked a question about how one of the victims could describe his naked body.

He quickly stood up and took off his light blue sweat shirt to reveal his naked torso.

He said: ‘She would have seen this,’ referring to his hairy body and back, which he claims she did not tell the police about.

The man then threw a clump of chest hair on the floor and said: ‘I only have to walk past someone to leave hairs on them.’

He told the court that one girl in particular used to cause problems and ‘corrupted’ the other girls who would hang around in a large group.

‘She never used to hide the fact that white was superior to any other race.

‘The other girls were much much better…she sort of infected them, corrupted them as well.’

The man described the girl as a ‘bone in a kebab’ and added: ‘I can smell a pig and I can smell abuse when it’s being thrown at me.’

He also said of the alleged victim: ‘Anybody who wanted to try to have sex with (her), they would have sex with her.

‘I have never had sex with her. There’s a price on her.

‘Anybody who pays has sex with her.’

The court heard that the man was separated from his wife in 2000 and had grown-up children.

He told the court he had ‘needs’, which is why he had a relationship with one of the girls connected to the case.

When asked if he had been involved in a conspiracy he responded: ‘It’s all white lies.’

He then accused the police of arresting the wrong people and added: ‘Shame on the police.’

He accused them of letting an ‘illegal immigrant get away’, adding: ‘For all I know he could have been al Qaeda’.

Eleven men are on trial charged with conspiracy to engage in sexual activity with children under the age of 16. The prosecution say they plied girls as young as 13 with drink and drugs so they could “pass them around” and use them for sex.

Five girls from broken homes are said to have been ‘shared’ by Kabeer Hassan, Abdul Aziz, Abdul Rauf, Mohammed Sajid, Adil Khan, Abdul Qayyum, Mohammed Amin, Qamar Shahzad, Liaquat Shah, Hamid Safi and a 59-year-old man who cannot be named for legal reasons.

All deny the charges and are all from the Rochdale and Oldham areas of Greater Manchester.

The trial continues.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: British Muslims Transcending Differences

LONDON: Can love really bring people together, crossing boundaries and breaking down barriers? It sounds like the stuff of fairy tales and movies, but recently in a little corner of London that’s exactly what happened. In a trendy Indian restaurant that used to be a pub, people of different faiths and backgrounds got together for a meal to celebrate that crazy little thing called love. The event was organized by the Islamic Society of Britain in partnership with the Christian Muslim Forum to launch the start of the 19th Islam Awareness Week, which ran from March 12-18, 2012. Every year for the past 19 years, Islam Awareness Week has been an opportunity for people across Great Britain to meet, eat, listen and understand each other better. Organizers of the week pick a theme that is of common interest to people of all faiths, such as looking after our neighbors, celebrating the best of Britain or remembering our common heritage. This year the theme was all about love. At the launch event in London, Jewish, Christian and Muslim speakers explained the centrality of love in their religious teachings. In the Jewish tradition, the world stands on three things: Torah (law), (worship) and Gemilut chasadim (acts of loving kindness). Jesus taught his followers to love God and your neighbour as yourself. In Islam, love is at the heart of the religion, it is the basis of one’s relationship with God and the bedrock of relationships with other human beings and all God has created.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Blackburn Woman Jailed for Posing as PC on Facebook

JAILED Sahrish Idris set up a fake Facebook page A WOMAN took on the identity of a police officer she knew to send abusive and racist e-mails on Facebook.

Sahrish Idris, of Blackburn, targeted PC Zoe Brown by using a Facebook account set up in her name.

She also posted messages from another police officer, PC Michelle Moffat, during her campaign of harassment.

One message allegedly sent by the officer referred to Idris as a “P*** bitch” and threatened to arrest her.

Blackburn Magistrates Court heard that PC Moffat could have been sacked if it had been believed she was the real author of the message.

Idris, of Cedar Street, was known to the two officers individually as they had been involved in incidents when she had run away from home as a teenager.

The 20-year-old was jailed for 12 weeks after she pleaded guilty to harassing PC Brown and harassing PC Michelle Moffat by sending a Facebook friend request from a false account, sending messages from the same account, sending an abusive e-mail and making a false allegation about her to her supervisor.

She was also ordered to serve a further eight weeks for being in breach of a suspended prison sentence and made the subject of a three year restraining order stopping her from having contact with either officer.

Catherine Allan, prosecuting, said there had been a number of messages on the bogus account which was eventually closed by Facebook.

One of the messages included the racist slur allegedly made by PC Moffat.

“PC Moffat did not send that message,” said Miss Allan.

“The two officers bumped into each other one day and PC Moffat mentioned the Facebook account. It soon became apparent PC Brown did not have an account.

“As a result of the defendant’s action PC Moffat was worried about her job and PC Brown was concerned because she felt Idris had accessed her private life.”

Angela Rossi, defending, said Idris mistakenly believed she had been sent a racist message by one of the officers.

“She accepts she responded inappropriately and while she didn’t set up the Facebook account she was involved,” said Miss Rossi.

“She is now aware of the implications there could have been for the officers involved.”

Sentencing Idris District Judge Peter Ward said the messages purporting to come from one or other of the officers were totally bogus.

“The nature of the messages was such that if they had been believed the officers would have been at risk of losing their jobs,” he said.

           — Hat tip: The EDL [Return to headlines]



UK: Croydon Mosque Unveils Extension Plans for London Road Site

CROYDON Mosque and Islamic Centre has unveiled expansion plans for a “green” four-storey extension, to be used as a women and children’s centre. The plan for the centre’s site in Dunheved Road includes an 18-metre minaret to in front of the mosque in London Road. The steel structure that already standson the site will be pulled down, due to changes in the building’s design. While the main purpose of the extension is to provide a new prayer area for women, the ground floor will offer a wheelchair accessible wudu washing area for men.

The new building will also increase the mosque’s capacity from about 3,700 to 4,000, reflecting the growth of Croydon’s Muslim community since the centre was built in the 1980s.

Members of the mosque have donated around £500,000 to fund the project.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Conservatives Will Not Win Election Without More Focus on Minority Voters, Says Baroness Warsi

The Conservatives will not win the next election unless they appeal more to black and Asian voters, Baroness Warsi, the party’s co-chairman, has warned.

The peer’s intervention comes after George Galloway swept to victory as the new MP in Bradford West by courting Muslim voters, overturning four decades of Labour control over the seat. According the New Statesman, Baroness Warsi told a meeting of MPs: “[U]nless and until campaigning with BME [black and minority-ethnic] communities is institutionalised and embedded in every aspect of what we do as a political party, we cannot win an overall majority in 2015.” Baroness Warsi, the party’s most senior Muslim, has also recently expressed worries that religious voters are being alienated by a tide of “militant secularisation”. She warned that religion is being “sidelined, marginalised and downgraded in the public sphere”.

The Conservative Party has been facing calls to replace Baroness Warsi and her co-chairman Lord Feldman with a senior MP, following the “cash-for-access” scandal involving the party’s fundraising operations. Baroness Warsi had no involvement in the incident, in which Peter Cruddas, the party’s co-treasurer, was filmed boasting that big donors could have dinner in Downing Street and influence policy. However, senior Conservatives are understood to want a firmer, more experienced pair of hands at the top of the party than the current co-chairmen, who are relatively new peers.

[JP note: Why vote Tory when you can have the real McCoy in Labour?]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: George’s Tongue-Lashing: Third Wife (And Mother of His New Baby) Says They’re Still Wed, Then His Mother-in-Law Warns He’ll Only Marry Someone Else Next Year

George Galloway’s fourth marriage was off to a rocky start yesterday — after his third wife declared he was still wed to her.

In a bitter verbal assault, Rima Husseini, who gave birth to their second son only four months ago, hit out at the 57-year-old politician’s ‘morals’.

The Lebanese researcher said: ‘We are still married under Islamic law. There is a misconception you can have up to four wives in Islam — but it’s just not true in the 21st century.

‘It may have been the case hundreds of years ago as a way of looking after women in the villages who had lost their husbands, but it doesn’t exist now.

‘It’s just a stupid, man-made thing in some Arab countries. It’s not true. Under Islamic law we remain married.’

The Respect MP’s third wife, speaking outside the West London home she shares with their two young children, added: ‘Under English law, he hasn’t done anything illegal. But morally, it’s a different story.

I have been asking for a divorce, but he has been refusing me one for months. To this day he refuses to grant me a divorce.

‘He came this morning to pick up his son and we spoke.’

Mr Galloway also received ‘both barrels’ from Miss Husseini’s mother.

She said her daughter was ‘better off’ without the newly-elected MP for Bradford West, after it was revealed he had married for a fourth time.

The politician showed no remorse yesterday as he winked and boasted about being ‘up all night’ with his latest bride — 27 year-old Dutch-Indonesian Putri Gayatri Pertiwi.

The Mail revealed yesterday how Mr Galloway flew to Amsterdam hours after winning the Bradford West by-election and then married Miss Pertiwi in a Dutch hotel on Saturday.

Few details of the service have been revealed.

Yesterday he posed for pictures outside his £1.4million home in Streatham, South London, alongside his research consultant fourth wife, who is 30 years his junior.

However, just four months ago Miss Husseini, 41, who also worked as his researcher, gave birth to their second son Faris.

The couple had married in a Muslim ceremony in 2007 and have an older son called Zein, aged four.

Yesterday Miss Husseini’s Lebanese family branded the MP a womaniser and claimed his latest union might not last very long.

Her mother Maha said: ‘Next year he will have another wife.’

Referring to all the publicity about his marriages, she added that at least they would know about his past.

Speaking about how her daughter might feel, she said: ‘Ask yourself if you would be angry. Maybe she is better off like that.’

She went on: ‘Rima is only bothered about the children. Of course he sees the children I think. I don’t ask her a lot.’

In the past, father of three Mr Galloway, a Roman Catholic, has claimed that he speaks to his children and grandchildren ‘every day’.

Yesterday morning Mr Galloway mischievously claimed he had been ‘up all night’ — but picking candidates for Bradford city council elections. ‘I was heavily involved, and was up until 2.45am precisely,’ he explained.

He then winked and added: ‘By the Grace of God I am — to coin a phrase — indefatigable.’

Mr Galloway caused outrage in 1994, three years after the Gulf War, when he met Saddam Hussein and was filmed telling the dictator that he praised his ‘strength, courage and indefatigability.’

Yesterday, Mr Galloway — nicknamed Gorgeous George — was less than forthcoming when asked to discuss the attributes of his fourth wife.

He told reporters: ‘Why would I want to discuss my personal life?’ before adding that he would ‘stand here all day and talk politics’.

Miss Pertiwi — a Muslim anthropologist and child rights specialist — studied cultural anthropology at the University of Utrecht before taking a Master’s degree at Amsterdam University.

On one of her blogs she revealed that her parents emigrated to the Netherlands at a young age from Indonesia and had three children.

Between 1979 and 1999 Mr Galloway was married to his former teenage sweetheart, Elaine Fyffe. The couple separated in 1987 but did not divorce for 12 years.

The politician took Dr Amineh Abu-Zayyad, a Palestinian scientist, as a second wife in a Muslim ceremony in 1994.

A year after his divorce from Miss Fyffe in 1999, he married Dr Abu-Zayyad in a civil ceremony in Lambeth.

In 2009 Dr Abu-Zayyad obtained an uncontested divorce citing unreasonable behaviour.

Mr Galloway then married his third wife Rima in a Muslim ceremony in 2007.

           — Hat tip: CJ [Return to headlines]



UK: Leaders Who Lead to Surrender

by Melanie Phillips

Readers of the Jerusalem Post have doubtless been bemused by a rumbling controversy over whether or not the Anglo-Jewish leadership comprises what Isi Leibler derided as “trembling Israelites”. Leibler suggested that both the Board of Deputies and the Jewish Leadership Council were in denial over the UK’s dramatic upsurge in anti-Israel feeling. In particular, they understated the threat of Muslim antisemitism and jihadism, and continuously issued statements warning of the dangers of Islamophobia which paled beside the violence and threats levelled against Jews. Leibler was accused of misrepresenting the situation. What happened to Brooke Goldstein, however, suggests he is nearer to the truth. Leeds JSoc invited Goldstein, a US lawyer who fights Islamic extremism and defends Israel, to deliver a talk at about the stifling of free speech on the Middle East. The JSoc then abruptly cancelled her talk — on the grounds that it would jeopardise community relations and endanger the welfare of Leeds students.

Why was Goldstein considered a menace? Apparently because she is a supporter of the Dutch politician Geert Wilders, had linked to an article about him on a website called Gates of Vienna, and a member of her staff had blogged about a film entitled The Third Jihad. Such reasoning shows how deeply political correctness has warped the judgment of these students. Wilders has been demonised because he stands resolutely against the Islamist aim of conquering the west — and because he thinks the Koran incites hatred and violence against Jews and “infidels”. Does Leeds JSoc not think this incitement endangers Jewish students? Gates of Vienna is an anti-Islamist site that has provided a platform for some ultra-nationalists. Goldstein says her organisation merely linked to one article. This tars her as a dangerous extremist? As for The Third Jihad, I know this is an important film — narrated by a Muslim — which charts the nature and extent of Islamist aggression and the inroads this has been allowed to make in the west. Yet this film has been smeared by the usual combination of Islamists and their western apologists.

I have a particular interest in this smear because I, too, am interviewed in this film. I, too, could thus be pilloried as an “anti-Muslim extremist” — and I’m afraid to say there are members of the UK Jewish community who already do that. This derives from the confusion among much of the leadership, which seems to believe that to identify the threat from Islamic religious extremism is “Islamophobic”. Indeed, a number of communal worthies wrote to the JC attacking it for “criticising and embarrassing” Leeds JSoc instead of “supporting” and “thanking” it. Thanking it for what? For its “resolve” in repudiating the principle of free speech on campus? For “improving Jewish student life” by smearing those who fight Islamic religious fascism, thus effectively whitewashing the virulent Jew-hatred pouring out of the Muslim world? For “acting in the best interests of their members” by turning on a lawyer who would help them defend themselves against anti-Jewish attacks? The fact that this morally bankrupt act by Leeds JSoc has been supported by UJS and so many in Jewish leadership suggests that these leaders don’t understand who are the true friends of the Jews. “Trembling Israelites” isn’t the half of it. These Anglos are not so much “trembling” as leading the surrender to the enemies of the Jews — and thus indirectly encouraging them to redouble their attacks. British Jews should indeed be trembling at being thus abandoned by those who speak in their name.

Melanie Phillips is a Daily Mail columnist

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: No One Saw it Coming

by Salma Yaqoob

What does Galloway’s victory tell us about British politics?

Anybody wanting to follow the Bradford West result unfold was forced to rely on Twitter as journalists and politicians alike were caught unawares by the political earthquake about to take place. But Respect supporters on the ground had been predicting for the last fortnight that a shock was in the air. And for one simple reason; people are disillusioned with austerity and war, they are disillusioned with being taken for granted, and when presented with positive coherent political alternatives, they respond with enthusiasm.

Bradford is mired in unemployment and stagnation. Its voters don’t think they are “in it together” with the Tories and their millionaire donors. Quite the opposite. Respect’s solution on the doorstep was to argue that we need investment not cuts in order to re-energise our economy and create the growth to deliver jobs. This is not some loony-left pipe dream; it is the experience of the American economy where old fashioned Keynesian intervention is driving down unemployment while discredited Thatcherite neo-liberalism drives it up here. When the voters of Bradford West heard that argument put confidently and coherently, albeit with an eloquence that only George Galloway can summon, they responded warmly to it. Surely that is the real lesson for Ed Milliband to draw from this result.

The other lesson is that huge numbers of people are disillusioned with British politicans sending our troops to occupy other people’s countries. When George said that the two soldiers killed by their Afghan comrade had “died in vain”, he spoke for many people in Bradford and beyond whose views on the war are rarely if ever reflected by mainstream politicians.

Finally, the Respect vote is a call for change to the ossified political structure in Bradford. People are tired of being taken for granted. The Guardianwas the only paper to pick up on the specific way that frustration expresses itself within the Muslim community where the Labour party have for generations relied on and reinforced the corrupting influence of “Braderi” — clan networks — that so disfigures South Asian politics. The fact that Respect won in every ward in the constituency, and won by a massive 10,000 majority, testifies that that disillusionment goes way beyond the Muslim community. In the predominately white, middle-class ward of Clayton approximately 900 votes were cast for Respect compared to 40 for Labour. The resounding mandate also testifies to the unifying message of Respect which addressed the roots of disillusionment and challenges the scourges of neglect and scapegoating.

For me, the most exciting and inspiring aspect of the election was the sight of hundreds of young people and women throwing themselves into the political process. They were galvanised by a man who stands by his principles and tells it straight. A wave became a tsunami, very quickly overwhelming anything that has gone before. People poured out into the streets to exclaim support: an unusual sight in politics where canvassers usually try to cajole some interest. Very large numbers of voters in Bradford West clearly like George Galloway’s distinctive message and style. They are not alone.

Salma Yaqoob is the leader of the Respect Party

[Reader comment by RSS (not verified) on Wednesday, 4 April 2012 at 06:57.]

George Galloway talked a great deal about Iraq, Palestine and Kashmir: forced marriage and the disappearance of many a young Bradford girl never got a mention. Galloway insulted Labour’s candidate saying he wasn’t a true Muslim and implied he drank beer; most in Bradford do!! I would just like to ask George what as Iraq, Palestine and Kashmir have to with youth unemployment in Bradford? Many are either delusional or stark raving mad if they honestly think George Galloway would be elected outside his usual confines. I will agree: most are crying out for an alternative to Labour and the Tories, but most aren’t crying out for Galloway and the Religious lunatic fringe which this political opportunist represents. Respect is a Jihadist front. The awful truth is most outside Bradford just associate Bradford West for been the locality many of the 7/7 bombers spent an awful lot of time.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Why the Odds Are Against a Tory Majority

by Mehdi Hasan

Despite losing at the last election, Labour continues to have the bigger pool of potential voters.

Whisper it quietly, but the Tories won’t win the next election. I say this not because of George Osborne’s slashing of taxes on his rich chums — a move described by David Cameron’s former speechwriter as “a basic blunder that sends a missile into six years of Tory modernisation” — nor because of the fallout from the “cash-for-Cameron” debacle. I say it because, despite what the Tory-supporting press might have us believe, this isn’t a Conservative country. Listen to the verdict of Tim Montgomerie, the plain-speaking editor of the ConservativeHome website. “Four numbers should haunt every Tory: 31 per cent, 32 per cent, 32 per cent and 36 per cent — the percentages of the vote that the party won at the last four elections,” he wrote on 20 March, noting how there “may be a Conservative prime minister but the Tory brand remains weak”. It has been 20 years since the Tories last won a Commons majority and, despite losing at the last election, Labour continues to have the bigger pool of potential voters. A recent YouGov poll found that only 30 per cent of the public says it would “never” vote Labour compared to 42 per cent for the Conservatives. The Tory brand isn’t just “weak”, it’s toxic.

[…]

Amusingly, someone who has greater confidence in Miliband’s electoral prospects than most shadow cabinet ministers is Michael Ashcroft, the Tories’ former deputy chairman. “Expanding the Conservative voting coalition to the point where it will elect a majority Conservative government is a strategic challenge for Mr Cameron,” Ashcroft observed last May, adding: “First, he must hold together those who voted in 2010 . . . Just as important, he must attract new voters in substantial numbers.” But where will these voters come from? The three key groups that Cameron failed to charm in 2010 — public-sector workers, Scots and ethnic minorities — will, after five painful years of austerity, have even fewer reasons to vote Conservative in 2015. I’m told the PM is desperate to hire a new adviser on “BME” issues; the Tory chair, Sayeeda Warsi, can’t win over black and minority-ethnic voters on her own.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


We Salute Sheikh Yousuf Al-Qaradawi

Sheikh Yousuf al-Qaradawi is undoubtedly one of the most knowledgeable living Muslim religious scholars in the world today. He is the author of dozens of books on all aspects of Sharia and Islamic thinking and philosophy. At 85, he continues to enrich the world with his brilliance, sagacity and thoughtfulness. His televised weekly show “Asharia wal-Haia” is a real gem and food for thought for both the educated and commoners as well as for Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Dr. Qaradawi, who has long been imprisoned, persecuted and harassed by tyrannical Arab regimes, including the regimes of Gamal Abdul Nasser, Anwar al-Sadat and especially Husni Mubarak, played a vital and pivotal role in inspiring the Arab Spring. He continues to issue inspiring calls to Muslim people struggling for freedom, dignity and democracy in various parts of the world.

In recent weeks, the Sheikh has been under fire from several quarters, including, the French government, some Shiite and pro-Iranian circles, a United Arab Emirates security chief and the Wakf minister of the Palestinian autonomous authority. The Sheikh, like all of us mortals, is not infallible. He doesn’t claim to be infallible or perfect. However, there is no iota of doubt that he stands on a higher moral ground, especially when compared to his critics, whose main credentials range from ignorance to mendacity. Let us begin with the recent tirade launched against the Sheikh by the Palestinian Authority’s minister of Wakf and Islamic affairs who called the Sheikh during a Friday sermon “divisive and sowing discord.”

The verbal abuse against al-Qaradawi came after the eminent scholar issued a fatwa or edict ruling that it is not permissible for non-Palestinian Muslims to visit occupied Jerusalem lest such visits contribute to normalizing relations between Israel and the Muslim world.

Qaradawi argued that “why should we have Muslims from all over the world visit Jerusalem when Palestinian Muslims living in the vicinity of al-Aqsa mosque in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip are barred from accessing the holy city by the Israeli occupation authorities. The Sheikh argued that “we should not break the psychological barriers between Muslims and the Zionist entity. They are our enemies and we shouldn’t normalize relations with them.” The Sheikh’s words are axiomatically veracious because, in the final analysis, recurrent visits by Muslims to a Jerusalem that is thoroughly fettered by the Israeli occupation and raped by it would have a definitive normalizing effect. The visit might, at least subconsciously, convince some visiting Muslims, especially from faraway Muslim countries, that the situation is not that intolerable and that a certain modus vivendi with Israel could be preferable to an all-out Muslim effort to liberate the city from the Zionist-Jewish stranglehold.

Jerusalem and Palestine will not be helped, let alone liberated, by a few thousand disoriented Muslim tourists who would spend a few hours in the holy city watching the first Qibla of Islam being raped, molested and moaning of pain. Besides, these so-called tourists would soon return to Tel Aviv to slowly experience life in the only true democracy in the Middle East, not knowing that every town, village or Kibbutz they encounter while traveling through “Israel” was established on the ruins of an Arab town, village or hamlet. I am not opposed to communication between individuals and nations. But Israel is not a normal nation. It has never been a normal nation. The truth of the matter is that Israel is a crime against humanity. It was founded on the basis of ethnic cleansing, mass murder and lies. It massacred our people, destroyed our homes and villages, and then expelled millions to the four winds. Muslims must never ever normalize relations with an entity as such. We must not commit fornication with our Muslim honor and dignity by kissing the hands of our tormentors and grave-diggers.

Yes, Palestine is occupied by Zionist Jews who have amassed an overwhelming power and have at their beck and call power nations, such as the United States. But so what? Where is the Roman Empire, where is the British Empire? Where is Napoleon Bonaparte? Where is the Soviet Union? Where is Adolph Hitler? I have no doubt that Israel is an artificial entity that won’t be able to withstand the test of history. It is an entity that is bereft of justice, morality and humanity. It is a brat, as ugly as the objective historical circumstances that gave birth to it. It will have to go; it will go.

As to the unrelenting campaign of vilification, insinuation and smear by some pro-Iranian circles against Sheikh Qaradawi for siding with the victims of oppression, tyranny and sectarianism in countries such as Syria, there is no doubt that the Iranian attitude is indefensible, morally scandalous and decidedly un-Islamic to say the least. What is Qaradawi, who consistently supported a constructive Sunni-Shiite dialogue based on mutual respect and Islamic authenticity, supposed to do when he, like hundreds of millions of Muslims and non-Muslims around the world, watch thousands of children and civilians being mercilessly killed by a Nazi-like regime in order to keep his sect in power? Is he supposed to pretend that the massacres are happening on a different planet? Is he supposed to consign his honesty and rectitude to indefinite dormancy or hibernation?

Qaradawi, like many Sunni Muslims, supported Iran during confrontations with the West. He is not making a favor to Iran for doing so; he is only doing his religious Muslim duty.

But Iran and her mainly sectarian allies and supporters are going too far. Because a Yazid who is nominally Shiite is no lesser evil than a Sunni Yazid. A genocide doesn’t become benign when it is perpetrated by Shiites. More to the point, some Shiite circles are effectively justifying the abominable sectarian genocide in Syria by invoking the Palestinian struggle. Well, since when the just Palestinian cause justified murderous repression of Arab people by their regimes? We Palestinians refuse to see our cause being manipulated this way. We reject repression and mass murder in Palestine’s name.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


In the Shadow of the Sword by Tom Holland: Review

by Michael Scott

Tom Holland’s ‘In the Shadow of the Sword’ is an ambitious attempt to unearth the roots of Islam

Readers may be familiar with the fundamental changes that took place in the Roman world as it converted from paganism to Christianity in the fourth century, and as its emperors sought to govern, through the turbulent times of the fifth to seventh centuries, as Christian rulers. This is the stuff of late antiquity as it would be recognised in any classics or history university department. It is, as Tom Holland points out in the opening pages of his latest book, a period of fundamental importance for the shape of our world, as it is the era in which religious monotheism, rather than political kingdom, comes to dominate history.

In that context, Holland focuses on the birth of Islam through the prophet Mohammed in Mecca and Medina (modern-day Saudi Arabia) during the course of the seventh century, as it is told to us by one of Mohammed’s biographers, Ibn Hisham, in the ninth century. The faith of Islam, as Holland points out, is centred on the study and strict observation of both the divine revelations to Mohammed (the Koran), and how Mohammed acted during his lifetime (the Hadith and the Sunna). Yet, echoing what many (mostly non-Muslim) scholars have queried before, Holland points to the historical problem of the evidence: before 800AD, almost 200 years after Mohammed’s death in 632AD, the only “traces we possess” for the development of Islam “are either the barest shreds of shreds, or else the delusory shimmering of mirages”. The task Holland sets himself is to ask what can be done about that gap. His answer is to approach it from the opposite direction: to approach the origins of Islam from its recent past, from the world of fifth to seventh century late antiquity. “Is it possible,” he asks, “that Islam, far from originating outside the mainstream of ancient civilisation, was in truth a religion in the grand tradition of Judaism and Christianity — one bred of the very marrow of late antiquity?”

Holland examines late antiquity not as an age of decline and fall, but of energy and inventiveness, setting the Arab world and Mohammed’s life in the context of the changing geographies, cultures and priorities of the empires of Rome around the Mediterranean, the Sassanians to the East, and the religious and cultural melting-pot of the “Holy Land”, which connected them. Holland identifies key events, places, ideas and decisions within the Persian and Roman systems which may have impacted upon the Arab world, and, in turn, on the birthplace of Islam in Mecca and Medina. In so doing, Holland argues for the forging of Islam in the political and military instability and opportunity of a world convulsed by a changing balance of power. The process, he continues, ensured that, by the ninth century, “a version of Islam’s beginnings that gave no scope for anyone to rule as a Deputy of God”, and in turn no room “for acknowledging the momentous role in the forging of Islam by countless others”, had gained acceptance, the continued presence of which, inevitably, makes Holland’s thesis difficult reading for an Islamic audience.

Focusing on the wider context to unpick key moments in history is a classic Holland approach, echoing, for example, his study of the fifth century BC Persian invasion of Greece in Persian Fire (2005), which explored the context and prior history of the Persian and Greek worlds. Such an approach is now in vogue, because it demands that the historian break the often stifling disciplinary boundaries that have traditionally governed the study of worlds which knew no such boundaries. This is a handsome volume, tackling an important question from a novel perspective, backed by useful notes and written in an accessible and fluid style. But, as I am sure Holland would accept, in part because of the charged nature of the material and issues on which it dwells, and in part because of the vast developments and arenas it attempts to encompass, it is also bound to encounter the full spectrum of critical reaction.

In the Shadow of the Sword: The Battle for Global Empire and the End of the Ancient World

Tom Holland

Little, Brown, £25, 526pp

[Reader comment by bigdaniel on 3 April 2012 at 10:34 am.]

Well it certainly sounds like a rather more robust and honest approach compared to the rather saccharine and partial approaches we are usually offered by popular Western writers on the topic of the origins of Islam. Of course, if The Koran is supposed to be the unchanging Word of Allah as conveyed to Mohammed, then it would be impossible for many Muslims to take on board an approach which suggests rather more prolonged and diverse origins for Islam.?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Iran: Grand Ayatollah Nour: “Islamic Rules Are Based on Fairness”

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — “Islamic rules and instructions are based on fairness and justice,” said the Iranian Grand Ayatollah Hussein Nouri Hamedani. In visit with Head of the Islamic Azad Univerity, Farhad Daneshjou, the grand Ayatollah clarified the role and place of education in the religion of Islam. “Islam eschews Muslims to be ignorant and underscores the role of science in the society,” said the senior cleric. Qom seminary instructor underlined, “It is incumbent upon each of us to diagnose the needs of society and make all-out effort for obviating them.” Ayatollah Nouri Hamedani touted efforts made during these years by authorities of the university stating that Azad University trained deserved people and citizen for the society. “At this time lessons taught at universities are based on secularism, but the officials responsible in this realm should take the cognizance of Islamic teachings and Islamized lessons and units covered at universities and other educational milieu,” said the grand Ayatollah. The Islamic scholar underlined that the hows and whats of the educational programmed should be adapted with Islamic school and believes.

[JP note: gibberish.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India: Mamata Doles Out Sops to Muslims

KOLKATA — Raising the pitch for next year’s panchayat elections in West Bengal, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday announced pro-minority sops including a monthly honorarium for mosque imams. “The government wants to give a monthly honorarium of Rs2,500 to imams of the state which will be paid through the state Wakf Board. “For the purpose a special task force comprising government officials and imams from the city and districts will be constituted which will make the necessary recommendations for the implementation of the scheme,” Banerjee said here during a meet with the religious leaders. Banerjee also said “homeless, landless imams” will now be given the benefits under her pet project “Nijo Bhumi Nijo Griha (Own Land, Own House)”. “There are more than 30,000 imams in Bengal and a large percentage of them do not have a house or land. If they want and if their religious laws permit, then they can avail the benefits under the Nijo Bhumi Nijo Griha’ scheme and get 3 cottahs of land to build house. The government will also provide for the construction expenditure,” she added. She reiterated her government stand of providing reservation to the Muslims.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: Muslims Hail HC Ruling

HYDERABAD: Muslims across the city welcomed the high court judgment in favour of the state Wakf Board in the Manikonda land case on Tuesday. Jubilation was not limited to the Haj House which houses the Wakf Board. Activists involved in the protection of wakf land described the judgment as a ‘landmark decision’, one which proved that the judiciary is ‘secular, powerful and independent’. The Wakf Board is anticipating moves of the opposition and will take a decision based on reactions to the judgment.

One of the petitioners of the case, Mahboob Alam Khan said that the HC judgment could well mark the end of the politicians’ influence on the Wakf Board. “The decision is historic and has set a precedent. The bench reinforced the decision that a wakf property will always remain a wakf property and that its nature cannot be altered. We have taken steps to file a caveat in case the opposition decides to approach the Supreme Court,” he said. Khan traces the mismanagement of wakf lands to the tenure of Chandrababu Naidu and says that irregularities gained momentum during Y S Rajasekhara Reddy’s reign as chief minister. Many honest officers were frequently transferred according to the whims and fancies of the politicians. The Hazrath Hussain Shah Wali wakf land was deemed a gazetted property by the government itself, he added.

Zaheeruddin Ali Khan, managing editor, The Siasat daily observed, “This is just the beginning of the recovery of wakf properties. The judgment has given us the drive to fight more legal battles to win back our land. The judiciary has discharged its duty well and has given Muslims the hope that the law is with them.” Khan added that he is prepared to fight the case if it is taken to the Supreme Court. A watchdog committee comprising lawyers, bureaucrats and activists has been formed to monitor and fight legal battles against landsharks, he said. “The brokering of lands by means of dubious deals will soon come to an end,” he hoped.

Rajya Sabha MP Aziz Pasha noted that Hazrat Hussain Shah Wali Dargah property had become a symbol of mishandling of wakf land across the country. “Indeed, the judgment has made us happy but there are many more battles to win. The select committee of Parliament has made recommendations for managing wakf land better. Most importantly, it has suggested that if any board member is found to have grabbed wakf land, he should be promptly dismissed from the board. Also a deterrent punishment of two years should be awarded to such member,” he said. Further, Indira Gandhi in 1975 had ordered the government to return wakf land but this has been put in cold storage. He noted that instead of having a board, a commissionerate having judicial powers should be set up. “This way, wakf land like endowments land can be taken back from encroachers,” he added.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Malaysia: Don’t Cross Religious Boundary: Raja Nazrin

IPOH, April 3 (Bernama) — The Regent of Perak, Raja Dr Nazrin Shah has reminded the people not to cross the religion boundary as it can spark the country’s worst tragedy. “Don’t lit religious fire as it can burn you up and destroy the state,” he said when opening the State Assembly session at Bangunan Perak Darul Ridzuan here today. He said of late, non-Muslims have crossed religion boundary by challenging Islamic matters via statements that made fun of Islamic laws and the faith of Muslims. “Advice to Muslims on their faith and sharia law by Islamic scholars is being questioned and debated openly by non-Muslims. “This has crossed the religion border. The etiquette of respecting and non-interfering in the affairs of other religions must be adhered.”

Islam’s position is contained in the Federal Constitution and should not not be taken literally but interpreted in a holistic manner and linked with other relevant provisions to ensure that the real purpose of these provisions is not manipulated to deny the rights of Muslims. Raja Nazrin said, “Islam is a protected religion with special and absolute status in the constitution. The provisions and privileges enshrined in the constitution don’t make Muslims proud and arrogant towards those of other religions. “Muslim leaders don’t justify this by being extreme, discriminatory, insulting and offensive of other religions or destroy the houses of worship of non-Muslims.” The Regent of Perak said the majority of Muslims in this country were educated to understand the meaning of religion and the sanctity of God. “Because of this, Muslims avoid making comments, open criticism and don’t interfere in the practices and rituals of other religions,” he added.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslims in Kazakhstan Indignant at Vodka Makers Inclusion of “Allah” On Liquor Bottles

ALMATY, Kazakhstan — Muslims in the Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan are up in arms at a vodka producer for including the word “Allah” on its liquor bottles. Privately owned Channel 31 cited Bekzat Boranbaiuly, head imam at a mosque in the city of Semey, as saying the vodka maker should seek forgiveness for the blasphemous use of the sentence “The Power of Allah Suffices for All.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Can China Makes Its Cuisine — and Finance — Friendly to Muslims?

China’s legendary cuisine has been a secret weapon to winning many an investment. But when a major ingredient of the culinary experience is pork, hospitality can only go so far when it comes to entertaining Muslim businessmen from countries like Indonesia and the Gulf’s emirates. How the Chinese have been able to adjust can be seen in Hong Kong, the international trade port that many of these business people go through on their way to mainland China. Take a look at the Islamic Centre Canteen, just a few floors above the Wan Chai mosque. Wrapped up in the savory, little dumplings the canteen serves is the quintessential Hong Kong culinary experience, sans the pork. That kind of accommodation for Islamic dietary rules is growing, along with business prospects from the Muslim world.

In 2010, there were only 14 certified halal restaurants and markets in Hong Kong, advertised by visitor centers. In the past year alone, however, the number has almost tripled. Muslim community leaders have intimated that the Hong Kong government has collaborated with Islamic clergy to lure prospective Muslim guests with dining options. The Hong Kong Tourism Board reports that in recent years, the number of Middle Eastern visitors to the region has grown by as much as 20% annually.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Police Say Bendigo Mother Raped 14 Times

POLICE allege a Bendigo mother of two was subjected to repeated sexual assault at the hands of six youths who dragged her into a laundry and took turns raping her, a court has heard.

Mohammed Elnour, 19, Akoak Manon, 19, and Mohammed Zaoli, 22, all appeared in the Bendigo Magistrates Court yesterday charged with a long list of sex offences stemming from the alleged gang rape in January last year.

All three men are contesting the charges and the first day of a committal hearing began yesterday.

The court heard Manon and Zaoli both faced 17 charges, including 14 counts of rape and single counts of indecent assault, unlawful assault and false imprisonment.

Elnour also faces these 17 charges as well as charges of using a carriage service to harass and harassing a witness. Police allege Elnour contacted the complainant five days after the alleged rape.

In court yesterday, footage taken on the night of the alleged attack — retrieved from Zaoliâ€(tm)s phone — was shown to Magistrate Richard Wright.

The sound was muffled, the recorded voices were mostly unintelligible, but at times a womanâ€(tm)s voice could be heard saying “no” and “stop”.

Prosecuting Alex Albert said the footage showed part of the incident in the complainantâ€(tm)s home, including Zaoli “grabbing” at her, the incident from which the charges of indecent assault and unlawful assault arose.

Informant Detective Senior Constable Chris Reed tendered photographs of the defendants taken by police at the complainantâ€(tm)s house shortly after the incident allegedly took place.

Senior Detective Reed said six men, three under 18, were arrested soon after.

Running through the charges yesterday, Mr Albert explained that each count of rape related to one of the six youths assaulting the complainant while the other five “acted in concert or aided and abetted” the attack.

He detailed 14 separate charges of digital and penile rape committed by the men.

Mr Albert said that at times the youths pinned the complainant against the wall while another raped her.

After the first two incidents, Mr Albert said the woman checked on her two children, asleep in the house, before coming back to the kitchen and being attacked again.

He said the charge of false imprisonment came when the complainant was dragged from the kitchen.

“Zaoli dragged her from the kitchen into the laundry and she was not allowed to leave,” Mr Albert said.

“All the men were involved in that.”

The court was told the woman was allegedly raped a further 10 times in the laundry.

Family of the complainant became emotional as the charges were read out, trying to hold back tears as they sat in the gallery.

In front of them the three defendants remained impassive.

After all the charges were read out, the complainant gave evidence to a closed court via video link.

The committal continues in the Bendigo Magistrates Court today.

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ghana: NDC Advised to Show Respect to Muslims and the Islamic Religion

The Nasara group of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) in the Upper East Region on Monday condemned recent castigations and attacks on Islam and Muslims by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the media. At a press conference addressed by Alhaji Abubakari Mohammed, Regional Nasara Co-ordinator in Bolgatanga, the group also condemned Mutala Ibrahim, NDC Parliamentary Candidate for Nanton in the Northern region for questioning the choice of Dr Mahamudu Bawumia and his commitment to Islam. Alhaji Mohammed said Mr Mutala Ibrahims’s statement was shameful, careless and an affront to Northerners and the Islamic religion, asking him what authority he had as a Muslim to judge his colleague and called on him to withdraw and apologise to Dr Mahamudu Bawumia and the Muslim Community. He said every political administration in the country gave recognition to all religious groupings including Muslims but the NDC had failed because they never believed in the abilities and capabilities of Muslims and therefore the NDC dropped Alhaji Mohammed Mumuni, a Muslim who was chosen as running mate to then candidate John Atta Mills in 2004.

Alhaji Mohammed said it was time for the NDC to live with the reality that the NPP had chosen Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, a northerner and a Muslim for that matter to be a running mate to Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo -Addo, Flagbearer of the NPP. “We have been keeping our cool hoping that the NDC would come to the reality that Muslims and for that matter Islam deserved respect and dignity just like any other religion” he said. He said Fiifi Kwetey’s report revealed by Wiki leaks indicated that no Muslim will ever become a president of Ghana and Mr Sam Pee Yarley on Radio Gold also made statements to the effect that Nima, a predominantly Muslim community was near the Jubilee House built by the NPP government and so President Mills would not move into it, this according Alhaji Mohammed, went to confirm the disrespect the NDC had for Muslims.

On behalf of the Nasara group, Alhaji Mohammed thanked the NPP for maintaining the tradition of north-south and Christian-Muslim balance since the time of Alhaji Aliu Mahama as Vice President during the NPP regime. The Group also thanked Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for the confidence reposed in Dr Bawumia and for the honour done the Muslim community, and prayed for a peaceful electioneering year.**

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Somalia Theatre Bombing Kills Top Sports Officials

The head of Somalia’s Olympic committee and its football chief are among eight people killed in a bomb attack on a high-profile event in Mogadishu.

Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali survived the blast unhurt after it struck the newly re-opened national theatre in the capital, Mogadishu.

Militants from the al-Shabab group say they carried out the bombing.

African Union peacekeepers said the “despicable” attack would not deter peace efforts in Somalia.

The President of the Somali Olympic Committee, Aden Yabarow Wiish, and the Somali Football Federation chief, Said Mohamed Nur, were both killed. They were among a group of dignitaries who had gathered to mark the first anniversary of the launch of Somalia’s national television station.

Sepp Blatter, president of football’s governing body Fifa, said he was shocked at the deaths of the sport officials.

“I knew both men personally and can only say good things about their endless efforts to promote sport and football in their country,” he said in a statement. “They will be sorely missed.”

Three Somali television journalists were also wounded in the blast, sources told the BBC Somali Service.

The theatre had closed in the early 1990s as Somalia descended into civil war and was only reopened last month, amid a new period of relative optimism.

‘Unimaginable’ scene

Police and hospital sources told BBC News in Mogadishu that eight people had been killed.

Also speaking to the BBC, the prime minister said a woman suicide attacker had carried out the attack.

The prime minister was addressing the crowd of about 300 high-profile guests gathered to celebrate a year since the government-owned TV station took to the air — meant to be yet another milestone in Somalia’s slow return to peace.

But scenes of chaos ensued when a blast ripped through seats. The rescue effort was haphazard and some wounded journalists say they were left to organise their own lifts to hospital.

Police say initial investigations point to a female suicide bomber as being behind the explosion, but the Islamist group al-Shabab said it had planted a device at the theatre ahead of the event, which was announced on television on Tuesday night.

All guests were thoroughly frisked as they entered the theatre, so suspicions are growing that it may have been an inside job. It has also prompted people to question why officials would publicise the event when the government is unable to guarantee security — even for its own prime minister.

Condemning al-Shabab, he said it was in the group’s nature to “kill innocent people” and described the attacks as “the last breaths of a dying horse”.

Abdullahi Yussuf Abdurahiman, 22, survived the explosion. He told BBC News: “I saw mutilated bodies, shoes on the ground, bloody mobile phones and chairs cut in half by the force of the blast.

“A lot of people were being carried out and there were dead people on the floor. It was unimaginable. Then everyone was running away.”

Soldiers started shooting after the blast, witnesses said.

In a statement al-Shabab said it was behind the bombing but referred to a planted device rather than a suicide bomber.

“The Mujahideen successfully planted the explosives before the gathering,” it said on Twitter.

Al-Shabab spokesman Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab told Reuters news agency: “We were behind the theatre blast. We targeted the infidel ministers and legislators, and they were the casualties of today.”

The explosion comes as the UN-backed government seeks to show it has re-established control of the city since al-Shabab was forced out in August.

However, al-Shabab has continued to attack the capital with bombs and mortars.

Last week, African Union (AU) troops said they had seized control of territory on the outskirts of Mogadishu which, they said, had allowed the Islamist fighters to launch their frequent attacks on the city.

Appeal for information

Brigadier General Audace Nduwumunsi, deputy commander of the AU mission said the peacekeepers stood firmly with the Somali government.

“Yet again the terrorists’ methods show that they are enemies of peace and are foreign to Somali culture,” he said.

“By their attack they are trying to derail the hopes and dreams of the Somali people but they will fail.”

He encouraged people in Mogadishu to come forward with any information about possible further attacks.

[Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120403

Financial Crisis
» Bankruptcies Have German Solar on the Ropes
» EU-IMF Experts Praise Portugal, Warn of Risks From Recession
» Fed Buying 61 Percent of US Debt
» Labour: Jobs in Middle East Booming, +47% in Saudi Arabia
» Spain: Government, Public Debt to Approach 80% GDP in 2012
» Spanish Unemployment Hits Record High in March
» Swiss Take Fall as US and UK ‘Havens’ Thrive: Report
 
USA
» Glenn Beck to Publish Blockbuster on Obama’s Communist Mentor
» It’s Not Road Rage, It’s Terrorism
» Obama Imposes Martial Law
» Scrubbing Space Exploration Saved $3 Billion a Year, A Mere Rounding Error
» Sharpton Lands in Jail in Vieques
» Terry Jones Files Federal Suit Against Dearborn Over Free Speech Issues
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Torture Instrument Sale Suspended After Protests
» France Expels Five Islamist Radicals
» France: The Liberal Jewish Eunuch
» French Islamist Suspects ‘Meant to Kidnap Jewish Judge’
» Greece: After Robberies, Museum Guards Get Police Training
» Norway: Islamists and Far Right on Breivik Witness List
» Norway: Krekar, ‘Fjordman’ Called to Testify
» Stolen Tax CD Case: Germany Outraged Over Swiss Arrest Warrants
» Sweden: Teens’ Savage Attack ‘May Have Been Filmed’
» UK: Terrified Pedestrians Scatter as Deranged Driver Tries to ‘Bowl Them Over Like Skittles’ Following a ‘Respect Row’
 
Mediterranean Union
» Research and Innovation, Towards New Partnership
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Books: Kibbutz Experiment Infantile and Cruel, Amos Oz
» Hebron, Army’s Ultimatum to Settlers, Netanyahu Steps in
» Obama’s Got Israel’s Back: That’s Where the Knife Goes
» See Why Israel Doesn’t Trust Obama?
 
Middle East
» Non-Muslims Not Allowed to Buy Property on Turkish Island
 
Russia
» Two Blazes in Moscow, 17 Killed
 
South Asia
» German Military Fears for Afghanistan’s Future
» Mumbai Attack: US Announces $10 Mn Bounty on Lashkar-E-Taiba Founder Hafiz Saeed
» The Logistical Nightmare of Leaving Afghanistan
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Power Elite and the Muslim Brotherhood, Part 11
 
Immigration
» Greece Eyes Illegal-Immigrant Detention Measure
» Tragedy South of Lampedusa, 10 Dead at Sea

Financial Crisis


Bankruptcies Have German Solar on the Ropes

The German solar industry is at a turning point. The bankruptcy of Q-Cells this week shows that the days of German solar cell production are numbered. Asian competitors took the lead years ago, and German government subsidies were part of the problem.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU-IMF Experts Praise Portugal, Warn of Risks From Recession

(LISBON) — Portugal is meeting debt-rescue targets and could be strong enough to borrow on financial markets next year but is in a deeper recession than thought, EU and IMF auditors said on Tuesday.

The economy is now set to shrink by 3.25 percent this year, they said, pointing to a worse recession than expected so far with contraction forecast to be 3.0 percent.

There is a resurgence of concern on financial markets that Portugal is near a danger zone of possibly needing a second round of rescue help from the EU and IMF, and that Spain is also at risk of needing help.

But the creditors commended the Portuguese government for having cut the budget deficit to 4.2 percent of GDP, sharper than a 5.9 percent target.

Portugal still faces risks, the experts from the European Union, The European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, warned.

Portugal last year became the third eurozone country after Greece and Ireland to be bailed out, receiving an EU-IMF package worth up to 78 billion euros in return for a commitment to reform its economy and impose austerity measures.

Since the beginning of the year and particularly in the last month, tensions over the eurozone debt crisis have eased, largely because of progress by the eurozone in increasing emergency funding if further bailouts are needed.

“Overall, the programme is on track. But important risks and challenges remain,” the European Commission said in a report based on the latest assessments of Portugal by the troika, conducted in late February.

The report said: “Noticeable progress has been made in the area of structural reforms. The far-reaching and ambitious reform agenda is on track in the areas of labour market, health care, housing, judiciary and the insolvency and regulatory framework including competition. Also, privatisations so far have been highly successful.”

The auditors said that economic conditions in Portugal had worsened markedly towards the end of last year and that there was concern about a weakening of the external trade balance.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fed Buying 61 Percent of US Debt

The Federal Reserve is propping up the entire U.S. economy by buying 61 percent of the government debt issued by the Treasury Department, a trend that cannot last, Lawrence Goodman, a former Treasury official and current president of the Center for Financial Stability, writes in a Wall Street Journal opinion article published Wednesday.

“Last year the Fed purchased a stunning 61 percent of the total net Treasury issuance, up from negligible amounts prior to the 2008 financial crisis,” Goodman writes.

Goodman also warns that U.S. economy and markets are “at risk for a sharp correction” if conditions aren’t “normalized.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Labour: Jobs in Middle East Booming, +47% in Saudi Arabia

Education and healthcare most dynamic sectors, report

(ANSAmed) — DOHA — Amid a global economic crisis, many Middle Eastern countries stand out for their dynamism, at least as concerns work: over the past year jobs in the region increased by 14% according to the figures provided by the Monster Employment Index on the basis of February 2012. With the Arab Spring many Arab countries decided to invest in job creation in order to ensure social peace. The top place goes to Saudi Arabia, with a 37% increase, followed by Egypt with +31%. Also doing well was Kuwait, where jobs increased by 12%. The opposite was seen in Oman (-18%), in the United Arab Emirates (-13%), Qatar (-12%) and Bahrain (-6%). The most dynamic sectors, according to the report, are education, with a 47% increase in jobs, healthcare (+33%), the financial and banking sector (+28%) and media and communications (+26%). Paradoxically, job opportunities are in decline in the oil sector, which saw a 21% drop in the Middle East despite the oil and gas giants being concentrated in the region. The hotel sector also saw a drop in jobs (-6%).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Government, Public Debt to Approach 80% GDP in 2012

It currently stands at 68,5%

(ANSAmed) — MADRID — The Spanish government expects public debt to rise by about 10% over the course of this year, reaching almost 80% of GDP, compared to the current figure of 68.5%, according to Spain’s Finance Minister. The Wall Street Journal’s interview with Luis de Guindos, which is published tomorrow, has been quoted by the EFE agency. The increase in public sector debt is partly due to the need to finance deficit, the minister says, and the result of government support through syndicated loan guarantees to local governments, who own around 35 billion euros. De Guindos made it clear that the increase in public debt will not require a significant increase in the classification of sovereign debt, a figure that is binding thanks to loans from a number of government schemes. Spain has started out on a difficult road to economic reform, but measures should restore the country to growth in 2013, according to the Minister. The government predicts that anti-deficit measures will lead the economy to a decrease of 1.7% this year, a forecast that De Guindos calls “cautious and conservative”, but will bring about “lightly positive growth” for next year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spanish Unemployment Hits Record High in March

Spain’s number of jobless people has risen for the eighth consecutive month with companies across the nation laying off staff. Madrid’s 2012 austerity budget may further worsen the situation in the short-term.

The number of job seekers in Spain jumped to an all-time high in March, the National Statistics Institute announced on Tuesday. Unemployment rose for the eighth straight month to reach 4.75 million people.

That meant a 0.82-percent increase from February of this year and a 9.63-percent rise year-on-year.

“We continue to face an unsatisfactory situation of an increase in the number of jobless people,” Secretary of State for Employment, Engracia Hidalgo, said in an official release.

He added it is important to create confidence and flexibility for companies. In February, the Spanish government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy passed a new labor reform which made it easier and cheaper for firms to hire and fire people as well as cut wages unilaterally.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss Take Fall as US and UK ‘Havens’ Thrive: Report

Despite the recurrent finger-pointing aimed at Switzerland for providing a haven to tax dodgers, the Tax Justice Network has found that the US and the UK hold over 50 percent of the global offshore market.

Switzerland has been the big loser in the war on tax havens, the newspaper Tribune de Genève reports.

According to the Tax Justice Network, a British organisation made up of accountants, lawyers, academics and others, for all the criticism and worldwide attention, Switzerland is only responsible for about 6 percent of the offshore trade.

“When you read the statement which followed the G20 in April 2009, we find that the emphasis is made on banking secrecy, a Swiss concept, while trusts, a typically Anglo-Saxon legal tool, are forgotten,” Nicholas Shaxson, writer and researcher for the Tax Justice Network, said.

Shaxson is a British author best known for his investigative books, Poisoned Wells (2007) and Treasure Islands (2011), the latter of which is an investigation into the harmful effects of tax avoidance.

Having completed his research, Shaxson now believes that the US and the UK are the biggest tax havens in the world.

According to his survey, the US is responsible for approximately 21 percent of offshore business, while the UK is responsible for about 20 percent. A further 10 percent derives from trade carried out through Britain’s dependent territories, such as the Cayman Islands, and crown dependencies Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Glenn Beck to Publish Blockbuster on Obama’s Communist Mentor

Seizing on the scandal involving President Obama’s “open mic” obsequious conversation with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Glenn Beck has announced that Paul Kengor’s explosive new book on Frank Marshall Davis will be published this summer through Beck’s Mercury Ink outlet. Davis was a pro-Moscow communist who helped raise and mentor Obama.

Davis, Beck says, is the key to understanding Obama’s pro-Russian foreign policy.

The new Kengor book carries the title, THE COMMUNIST Frank Marshall Davis: The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s Mentor. Mercury Ink, which is publishing the book, is the publishing imprint of Mercury Radio Arts, Inc., a multimedia production company owned by Beck.

In the embarrassing “open mic” incident, Obama told Medvedev that he needed some “space” from the Russians before meeting any more of their demands, and that he would have more “flexibility” after being re-elected. Medvedev promised to transmit the information to “Vladimir,” meaning Vladimir Putin, the former KGB officer who is going to assume the Russian presidency for the second time on May 7. Putin has described the fall of the Soviet Union as “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



It’s Not Road Rage, It’s Terrorism

And thus matters rested until a few days ago, when Baz’s confession in 2007 finally became public via a New York Post article. In it, Baz acknowledged the impact of the Goldstein atrocity on him, admitted having specifically targeted Jews, and confessed to following a van of Hasidic boys for two miles from the Manhattan Eye and Ear Infirmary to the bridge. Asked if he would have shot at a van full of black or Latino people, he replied, “No, I only shot them because they were Jewish.”

This belated confession points to a recurring problem of politicians, law enforcement, and the press with Islamist terrorism: their unwillingness to stare it in the face and ascribe murder to it.

Most recently, this avoidance reared its ugly head in the case of Mohammed Merah in Toulouse, France, where the establishment’s immediate impulse was to assume the murderer of three soldiers and four Jews was a non-Muslim. As my colleague Adam Turner notes in the Daily Caller, “the elite Western public officials’ and media’s speculation about the true killer, prior to the discovery of his identity, heavily focused (also here and here and here) on the belief that he was a white European neo-Nazi.” Only when Merah himself boasted of his crime to the police and even sent videos of his actions to Al Jazeera did the other theories finally vaporize.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Imposes Martial Law

On March 16, President Obama without public notice unilaterally assumed dictatorial power over the entire country, issuing an Executive Order (“Executive Order—National Defense Resources Preparedness”) that would permit him in times of peace or war, in his sole discretion, to control all of the nation’s industry and resources for “purposes of national defense.”

Under Article I, Section 9, Clause 2, Congress has the exclusive power to suspend the writ of habeas corpus (the right of one to be released by a court from military or police custody) in “cases of rebellion or invasion” when “the public safety may require it.” Although not synonymous with martial law, which the Constitution never mentions by name, it is nevertheless clear that the Founding Fathers did not intend the President either to declare a state of war or to act independent of Congress to suspend the writ. Moreover, there is no executive power to impose blanket regulations over the economy independent of Congress, even in times of war. In this Executive Order, President Obama assumes that extraordinary power beyond the limits of the Constitution. Indeed, so sweeping are the areas of control, that there is no substantive difference between the powers he has assumed and those of a dictator.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Scrubbing Space Exploration Saved $3 Billion a Year, A Mere Rounding Error

After 30 years of liftoffs, 7,000 NASA workers found themselves unemployed and unemployable. America lost its Shuttle program and its ability to fly into space unless it buys a seat on a Russian rocket. We saved $3 billion a year, a mere rounding error in our out-of-control trillion-dollar spending, but we lost our national pride.

“President Obama canceled NASA’s plan to replace the space shuttle in favor of a more modest program, and then Congress slashed the funding for that.” (Scott Pelley)

According to Chris Millner, this is not the first time Brevard County experienced unemployment on such large scale. It happened in 1972 after the last mission to the moon. NASA had the shuttle designed for years, ready to replace the lunar mission. Similarly, President Bush had approved a program called Constellation to follow the Shuttle.

[…]

Mike Carpenter was shocked when President Obama cancelled Constellation in 2010 and turned over development of a new spaceship program to private entrepreneurs. “Well, we were lied to when Obama came through, gave us a lot of hope and supposedly a lot of change. Well, I’ve got change in my pocket, but the hope is gone.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sharpton Lands in Jail in Vieques

The Civil-rights Leader Got The Stiffest Sentence Among The Anti-navy Protesters.

The Rev. Al Sharpton and three Puerto Rican politicians from New York City received stiff jail sentences Wednesday for breaking onto the U.S. Navy’s grounds in Vieques during protests over bombing exercises there.

Cuffed in the courtroom and led to jail, Sharpton was sentenced to 90 days on a misdemeanor charge of trespassing, a stiffer sentence than most of the other 12 on trial received. In determining jail time, U.S. District Judge Jose Fuste considered Sharpton’s previous conviction stemming from a 1993 protest at the Brooklyn Bridge.

New York State Assemblyman Jose Rivera, New York City Councilman Adolfo Carrion and Roberto Ramirez, president of the Bronx Democratic Party, were sent to jail for 40 days and fined $500 each. They all arrived in Puerto Rico from New York early Wednesday morning after being told Tuesday afternoon that they had to be in Fuste’s courtroom in a matter of hours.

Angry and surprised lawyers for the New York men said they would appeal the convictions and sentences immediately. Local lawyers represented Sharpton, Ramirez, Carrion and Rivera after the judge refused to delay the trial…

[Return to headlines]



Terry Jones Files Federal Suit Against Dearborn Over Free Speech Issues

Detroit— Controversial Florida Pastor Terry Jones sued the city of Dearborn and police chief Monday in federal court, alleging they violated his constitutional rights.

The lawsuit stems from alleged restrictions placed on Jones, who wants to demonstrate and distribute literature Saturday in front of the Islamic Center of America on Ford Road.

A Jones colleague applied for a special events permit, which includes a document releasing the city from any liability, costs or claims resulting from the event.

“Plaintiffs should not be forced to sign a one-sided, unconscionable contract subject only to the unbridled discretion of the city’s legal department in order to exercise their constitutional rights,” Jones lawyer Erin Mersino wrote in the lawsuit. “The city’s free speech restriction imposes an unconstitutional burden on plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.”

Jones wants a judge to declare the city is violating his constitutional rights and block the city from restricting his free speech rights, according to the lawsuit. Jones also wants unspecified damages.

The lawsuit was filed by Jones, Christian minister Wayne Sapp of Florida and the group Stand Up America Now, which was established to educate people about the threat of sharia law.

The group does not have insurance to cover the city’s “hold harmless” agreement and can’t afford to obtain coverage, according to the lawsuit.

Jones says he is coming to Dearborn on Saturday to protest “the rise of shariah” and what he calls “special Muslim privileges.”

Last year, authorities blocked Jones from protesting outside the mosque on Good Friday, but a Wayne County Circuit Court judge later ruled a lower court had erred by requiring Jones to take out a “peace bond” before holding his demonstration.

           — Hat tip: RE [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Torture Instrument Sale Suspended After Protests

A planned sale of torture instruments in Paris which belonged to one of France’s last executioners has been cancelled, for now at least.

The macabre collection of over 350 items was built up by Fernand Meyssonnier, one of France’s last executioners.

He worked between 1947 and 1961 and executed more than 200 people. Meyssonnier, who died in 2008, was particularly known for the executions he carried out in Algeria.

The collection, planned to take place on Tuesday, was put up for sale by his only daughter and was to be handled by the Cornette de Saint Cyr auction house.

On Tuesday morning the sale was still listed on the auction house’s website as “Penalties and Punishments of Yesteryear”.

Gruesome items up for sale included thumb screws, a hand-crusher and a guillotine.

Other torture instruments included a “pear of anguish”, also known as a “choke pear” as the pear-shaped instrument was inserted into the victim’s mouth and then slowly expanded during questioning.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Expels Five Islamist Radicals

France has expelled two Islamic radicals and plans to deport three more as part of its crackdown following last month’s attacks by an Islamist who shot dead seven people, interior minister Claude Guéant announced on Monday.

An Algerian radical and a Malian imam were sent back to their home countries on Monday, the interior ministry said in a statement.

A Saudi imam would not be let back into the country, a Turkish imam and a Tunisian radical would also shortly be expelled, and others would follow, the statement added.

At an election rally in the eastern city of Nancy on Monday, President Nicolas Sarkozy said he was sending a very clear message.

“All those who make remarks contrary to the values of the Republic will be instantly put outside the territory of the French Republic, there will no exception, there will be no leniency,” he said.

French police arrested 19 people in a crackdown on suspected Islamist networks in dawn raids on Friday as Sarkozy made the battle against extremism a keynote of his re-election campaign.

Of those, 16 were still in custody on Monday, sources close to the investigation said.

Some of the arrests were made in the southwest city of Toulouse, where gunman Mohamed Merah was shot dead by police last month after a 32-hour siege at a flat there.

Of the two deported on Monday, Algerian activist Ali Belhadad had served 18 months in France for his part in a 1994 attack on a Marrakesh hotel in which gunmen killed two people and wounded two others, said the ministry.

Belhadad, who had in recent weeks re-established links with the radical Islamist movement, had been deported to Algeria, the ministry said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: The Liberal Jewish Eunuch

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

The verdict is in on the Tolouse killings of Jewish children and the villain is that old standby, “Failure to Integrate”. What it comes down to is that Mohammed Merah did not kill Jewish children because he hated Jews, because he had breathed in the foul poisonous vapors of a creed which believes Jews to be subhuman devils whose destruction must come to pass before the golden age of Islam finally arrives. Mohammed Merah killed Jews because he was unhappy and it was France that made him unhappy.

Murder across religious and ethnic boundaries in Europe is inevitably a crime against multiculturalism. If someone kills a Muslim, it’s an assault on multiculturalism. If a Muslim kills someone, it’s also an assault on multiculturalism. Whoever ends up in the morgue, the incident becomes a clarion call for recommitting ourselves to more multiculturalism.

It’s unsurprising then that the real villains of the Tolouse killings are Sarkozy for banning burqas, Marine LePen for being critical of Islam and anyone who employs words or images which make Muslims feel unwelcome in France. Alienate a Muslim from French society and before you know it he’s shooting up some children in order to express his grievances about integration. Fail to make him happy and the blood of his victims is on your hands.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



French Islamist Suspects ‘Meant to Kidnap Jewish Judge’

Suspected Islamist militants arrested in France were plotting to kidnap a Jewish judge, sources close to the investigation told French media.

Of the 19 people arrested across the country on Friday, 16 remain in custody and the first court hearings are due to be held shortly.

France expelled two foreign-born radical Islamists on Monday.

An Islamist gunman, Mohamed Merah, killed seven people in south-western France last month before being shot.

A lawyer for his Algerian father says she has evidence his son pleaded his innocence in talks with police besieging his flat in Toulouse.

A French police source suggested the allegation did not square with the facts of the siege.

Police protection

Sources close to the investigation told French media that some of the suspects seized in Friday’s dawn raids had been planning to kidnap Jewish magistrate Albert Levy in the eastern city of Lyon.

Mr Levy and his family are now under police protection.

The head of France’s Central Directorate for Domestic Intelligence (DCRI), Bernard Squarcini, said earlier that the suspects were French nationals involved in “collective war-like training, linked to a violent, religious indoctrination”.

Some belonged to a banned extremist group, Forsane Alizza, and had been involved in paintball gun games, he added.

Police also seized a number of weapons including four Kalashnikov rifles, eight other rifles and “seven or eight” handguns, along with tear gas canisters and a taser, Mr Squarcini said.

French anti-terrorism legislation allows for suspects to be held for four days, and some of the suspects may be charged on Tuesday.

Right to appeal

On Monday, the French interior ministry announced two men had been expelled on grounds of state security and public safety, and had returned to their countries of origin.

One of these, Malian imam Almany Baradji, had reportedly preached anti-Semitism and advocated the full face veil for women — which is illegal in France.

The other, Algerian national Ali Belhadad, had already served a prison sentence for his role in a 1994 attack in Morocco, and had renewed his “ties with the radical Islamist movement in recent weeks”.

Both men may appeal against their expulsion, the French interior ministry told the BBC News website on Tuesday.

They had not been allowed to make appeals earlier because their expulsion was an “urgent procedure”.

Two imams from Saudi Arabia and Turkey and a suspected Tunisian militant are similarly expected to be expelled, with more expulsions to follow, officials said…

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Greece: After Robberies, Museum Guards Get Police Training

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, APRIL 3 — More than 2,000 museum employees across Greece have begun week-long security seminars by police, in the wake of two embarrassing robberies as daily Athens News reports. Police said training sites has been set up in 23 cities and towns, with the seminars starting on Monday.

Last month, gunmen snatched dozens of ancient artefacts and a 3,200-year-old gold ring from a museum at Ancient Olympia. The heist came weeks after paintings by Picasso and Mondrian were stolen from the Athens’ National Gallery. “We have many priceless works on display on our museums,” Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos said. “I think the events at Olympia have concerned everyone, and the fact that human lives were put at danger is something we must strive to avoid at all costs.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Islamists and Far Right on Breivik Witness List

The lawyer for Norwegian confessed killer Anders Behring Breivik said on Monday he would call right-wing extremists and Islamists, including a radical jailed mullah, as witnesses in support of his client at this month’s trial.

Defence attorney Geir Lippestad said the idea of calling extremists like Mullah Krekar, who founded the radical Iraqi Kurdish Islamist group Ansar al-Islam and has been sentenced to five years in prison for making death threats, was important to show that his client was not criminally insane.

An expert evaluation determined late last year that Behring Breivik was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, but the 33-year-old far-right extremist who has confessed to killing 77 people in twin attacks last July insists he is sane.

“We have to determine if the experts who evaluated Breivik mistakenly blew off his ideas and opinions, especially about an ongoing war (between Islam and the West), as paranoid hallucinations and a psychosis,” Lippestad told reporters.

“The question is to know if there are in fact groups, even small ones, in Norway who agree (with his premise). That could be important when it comes to the question of legal responsibility,” he added.

The far-right Norwegian blogger “Fjordman,” one of Behring Breivik’s mentors, will also be called to the witness stand, Lippestad said, stressing though that the defence does not intend to enable a free-flow of “political propaganda,” as his client appears to wish.

“Calling witnesses from extremist milieus is important because we think that the psychiatric experts perhaps do not have the necessary knowledge” to distinguish ideological extremism from a psychiatric disorder, he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Krekar, ‘Fjordman’ Called to Testify

Defense attorneys for confessed terrorist Anders Behring Breivik have confirmed that former guerrilla leader Mullah Krekar and anti-Muslim blogger Peder Jensen, better known as “Fjordman,” are among the roughly 35 persons they’re calling to testify during Breivik’s trial. The goal is to prove that Breivik, like Krekar and Jensen, is driven by political ideology, not insanity, and therefore can be held responsible for his attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Stolen Tax CD Case: Germany Outraged Over Swiss Arrest Warrants

Many German politicians and tax collectors are furious about Switzerland’s decision to issue arrest warrants against three German officials who bought a stolen CD with tax data. The move has gone down well in Switzerland, where politicians have praised the country’s assertiveness. But it is unclear how the Swiss authorities will proceed — the main witness is dead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Teens’ Savage Attack ‘May Have Been Filmed’

Video footage may be available of the brutal beating in Gothenburg where a gang of teenage boys are suspected of having beaten a 61-year-old into a coma as bystanders looked on.

On Sunday, four of the seven teens believed to have viciously attacked a 61-year-old man two weeks ago in Gothenburg were ordered held on remand, while the victim is still fighting for his life in hospital.

The boys, who are aged between 15 and 16, were ordered held on suspicion of aggravated assault in the beating of 61-year-old Carl-Eric Cedvander, who was left unconscious in a fountain in a town square.

Another three younger boys who were involved have been taken into custody by social services due to their age, but remain suspected of having a role in the attack.

On Tuesday, the Aftonbladet newspaper reported that video surveillance cameras may have captured the event, with the tapes having been collected by police in hopes they will provide them with a better understanding what happened in the beating, which has has left Cedvander hovering between life and death in a coma ever since.

The attack, which occurred in Kortedala Torg on March 18th, has left other residents embittered and calling for action, and police are concerned that talks of a demonstration against violence may boil over into an anti-immigrant protest.

“We see that racist websites blame foreigners in general after what happened. It makes me angry, and we need to monitor developments carefully,” said the police’s Bertil Claesson to Aftonbladet.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Terrified Pedestrians Scatter as Deranged Driver Tries to ‘Bowl Them Over Like Skittles’ Following a ‘Respect Row’

A crazed driver turned his car into a 50mph motorised battering ram as he tried to mow down a crowd of terrified pedestrians on a night out in Manchester.

These dramatic CCTV images show the moment the deranged driver screeched to a halt, did a U-turn and careered down the wrong side of a city centre street directly towards a group of revellers.

The frightened men and women scatter in terror as angry motorist Dominic Ali, 23, revs up his girlfriend’s Ford Focus and deliberately tries to bowl them over ‘like skittles’.

The businessman said he committed the act of extreme road rage because the group of people had been mocking him as he drew up at a junction.

Footage taken from a camera high above the street shows Ali exchange words with the pedestrians before screeching away, only to turn around a few yards down the street and drive directly at the pedestrians.

The images show an oncoming taxi pass by as Ali made the potentially deadly manoeuvre. The pedestrians are only saved by a lamppost as they dart for cover.

Ali then slammed his car into reverse and sped off backwards into the night as his victims furiously punched the bodywork of the blue vehicle.

Amazingly no one was hurt in the 4am incident which occurred on October 14 last year after the group left a bar in Manchester city centre.

Ali drove the battered car home but later handed himself in after he saw footage of the attack on BBC TV’s Six O’Clock News.

He later claimed a passer-by had tried to punch him through the driver’s side window whilst he was picking up a friend from a ‘gentleman’s club’ and he took revenge on the ‘spur of the moment.’

At Manchester Crown Court Ali, who runs a sports company, was jailed for eight months after he admitted dangerous driving.

His mother sobbed in the public gallery as her son was also disqualified from driving for two years and ordered to pay £366 compensation to Manchester City Council for the damaged lamppost.

Earlier Tim Greenald prosecuting, said the incident occurred after Ali borrowed his girlfriend’s car and drove it into the city centre where he got caught up in the fracas.

He said: ‘There was between three and four passengers in the car as well as the defendant driving.’

According to Mr Greenald the front end of the car was damaged, the lights were damaged, and there was damage to the front suspension and nearside tyres.

‘He stated that he was picking up a female friend from a gentleman’s club and had driven up and saw fighting,’ added Mr Greenald.

‘A male tried to hit him and kicked the car and he claimed to have driven off because he was pursued by males.

‘He said he had to go back to pick up his friend and he was trying to turn right when he lost control due to the nature of the power steering.

‘We say it was intentional and he had driven off.

‘There are clearly words being said but if he had been punched and his car was kicked it’s nothing that the court can see.

‘When he made that right turn there were pedestrians on the road so that endangered their health and safety.’

In mitigation defence counsel Miss Carolyn Smith said: ‘He accepts his driving was deliberate and is struggling to accept the enormity of his actions. When confronted by the CCTV in his police interview he was horrified.

‘He did act on the spur of the moment following a conversation with those people. He was driving with a friend and was driving to pick another friend up from work.

‘He did make off from the group and it was his decision to turn round and frighten them. His actions are inexplicable and he has shown sincere remorse.’

But Judge Martin Steiger QC told Ali: ‘This behaviour is as bad as what can be imagined. You deliberately drove into people on the pavement.

‘You displayed shocking behaviour and the public were put at risk.’

Police said the incident was an act of ‘outrageous recklessness.’

Det Con Dave Berry, of Greater Manchester Police said: ‘Anyone who views this footage will be in disbelief that no-one was seriously injured or even worse, killed.’

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Research and Innovation, Towards New Partnership

EU Commissioner, arab spring called for a new vision

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, APRIL 02 — Research and innovation are key elements of the European Union’s cooperation with Mediterranean countries, European Commissioner for Research, Innovation and Science Maire Geoghegan-Quinn has told the Euro-Mediterranean Conference that brings together more than 300 participants from over 30 countries to define a medium- to long-term agenda for Euro-Mediterranean cooperation, in Barcelona.

Facing common challenges such as climate change, water and energy, “it makes perfect sense — said the the EU Commissioner — to tackle these issues jointly, and to bring our scientists together so they can find the answers we need”. “But there is also — Gheoghegan-Quinn added — a strong economic rationale to work together: investing in and cooperating on research and innovation promotes growth and jobs, and improves people’s lives across both regions”. Commissioner Geoghegan-Quinn said a lot had been achieved since the European Neighbourhood Policy but the events of the Arab Spring “called for a new vision for Cooperation in Research and Innovation between the EU and the Mediterranean countries, which would contribute to sustainable and inclusive growth in the region, and create the conditions for developing a new cooperation partnership”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Books: Kibbutz Experiment Infantile and Cruel, Amos Oz

Stories collection comes out, homage to maladjusted pioneers

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, APRIL 3 — In drawing up the collectivistic project of the kibbutzim, “our founding fathers tried to change human nature in a single swoop, but the attempt was infantile and cruel”: these are the feelings running through the eight short stories in Amos Oz’s latest book. Its title, ‘Ben Haverim’, is willfully ambiguous, and could be translated as either “Among Friends” or “Among Comrades”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hebron, Army’s Ultimatum to Settlers, Netanyahu Steps in

They occupied central building

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV — Tensions are running high today in the West Bank city of Hebron, with the deadline imposed by the Israeli army on a group of settlers, who have been asked to leave a building they occupied a few days ago, about to expire.

The settlers claim that they acquired the building legally (through a Palestinian intermediary), but the Defence Minister, Ehud Barak, has said that, for reasons of public order, the decision to allow new Israeli inhabitants into areas populated by Palestinian lies with the military authorities.

Meanwhile, in an attempt to avoid outbreaks of violence, the Prime Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu, has asked Barak to allow settlers the chance to prove their claims in front of a court, a process that the press says could take several days.

Hebron’s Palestinian mayor, Khaled Osseili, told military radio that settlers took possession of the building, which is located close to the sanctuary known as the Cave of the Patriarchs, by forging documents. The mayor also complained that he was unable to visit the contested building because he was refused access by both settlers and the Israeli army.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Got Israel’s Back: That’s Where the Knife Goes

Is the Obama administration using either leaks or black propaganda to sabotage Israel’s defence against the threat of genocide?- Melanie Phillips, Daily Mail Online

Evidently, reporters at the Daily Mail are not so caught up in the Trayvon ruckus that they’re ignoring the Obama administration’s most recent and most brazen efforts at sabotaging Israel’s efforts to keep itself on the planet.

John Bolton, also seemingly immune from Trayvonmania, told Fox News that an article in Foreign Policy quoted government sources claiming that Israel had been granted access to airfields in Azerbaijan, a former Soviet puppet state.

But, the best part was the element of surprise. Iran has, up till now, expected Israel to strike from the south. Now, thanks to the Obama administration, which is hell bent on preventing Israel from committing acts of self defense, Iran can move to protect itself.

Bolton made it clear that this was an “orchestrated leak”, not some CIA agent gone rogue. Phillips points out that the Foreign Policy piece was written by Mark Perry, a former unofficial Yasser Arafat adviser and well established Israel basher.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



See Why Israel Doesn’t Trust Obama?

Not only has our beloved “Dear Leader,” Obama, managed to “PO” Israel even more, he has now “PO’ed” the Baku government of Azerbaijan. By leaking news, recently, that Israel and Azerbaijan have reached an agreement for Israeli aircraft to have landing rights at Azeri airbases, Obama has infuriated Israel’s Netanyahu government even more and may have compromised Azerbaijan’s relations with Iran (shaky as they may be), as well.

In case you missed it when looking at a map, Azerbaijan is the small country snuggled tightly against the northern border of Iran. There are roughly sixteen million Azeris (The people of Azerbaijan).

Now here’s the thing: Azerbaijan’s government and the Israeli government have become, er, friends. The only people who are having a problem with this is the Obama Administration in America — and the Ahmadinejad Administration in Iran. Suddenly, it would seem, the US and Iran are BOTH going after Israel.

We have told you for months and even years that the Netanyahu government in Israel does not trust the Obama administration in the US and that is why the Israelis refuse to give Obama a heads-up on an attack on Iran. They are convinced (as am I) that the Obama Administration would immediately pick up the phone and call Iran and tell Ahmadinejad “the Israelis are coming.”

Far-fetched, you say? Believe what you want, but the truth is—Obama’s people have already tipped off Iran that there is a pact of some sort between the Baku government in Azerbaijan and the Netanyahu government in Israel possibly for landing rights for Israeli combat aircraft on Azerbaijan soil.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Non-Muslims Not Allowed to Buy Property on Turkish Island

Turkey’s Greek Orthodox citizens living on the island of Gökçeada (Imbros) in the north Aegean cannot buy property on the island, the Taraf daily claimed on Sunday.

The issue emerged when lawyer Erhan Gökçe complained in court about officials who put up difficulties before non-Muslims on the island who want to obtain property. He first petitioned Gökçeada’s Land Registry and Cadastre Department, demanding to know why Muslims can easily buy property on Gökçeada while members of the Greek Orthodox community cannot. The Land Registry office has admitted to preventing non-Muslims from buying property, citing a National Security Council (MGK) decision, but refused to give further details. The office said details constituted state secrets and giving out the information might harm national security, foreign relations and national defense. Gökçe took the issue to an administrative court in Bursa earlier this year. The court ruled that Gökçe has the right to be informed by the bureau about the dubious property sale procedures on the island. However, the Gökçeada Land Registry and Cadastre Department appealed the ruling at the Council of State. The office argued in its appeal that both Gökçeada and Bozcaada are located in a strategic area in terms of national security.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Two Blazes in Moscow, 17 Killed

Moscow officials say a fire has been extinguished in a skyscraper under construction that’s set to become Europe’s tallest high-rise. On Moscow’s southern outskirts a blaze in a hostel has killed 17 migrant workers.

Helicopters dumped water to put out the blaze between the 65th and 67th floors of Moscow’s Federation Tower. Firefighters trudged up stairs because elevators are not yet in service on the construction site. Fourteen people were evacuated without injury, according to Russian news agencies.

The fiery night-time spectacle, watched by Moscow residents, reportedly began when a construction spotlight lamp set fire to plastic sheeting. The twin towers are being erected west of the Kremlin.

A second blaze on Moscow’s southern outskirts killed 17 migrant workers who were using a shed as a hostel fitted out with bunk beds, next to a market, according to a spokesman for Moscow’s fire department.

Unconfirmed reports suggested that the workers might have been from Tajikistan, a country in economic tatters which has a tenth of its population — especially its younger people — living abroad.

The news agency Interfax quoted investigators as saying an electric space heater left on in the improvised hostel overnight to ward off frigid spring weather may have been the cause of the blaze.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


German Military Fears for Afghanistan’s Future

German soldiers are preparing to withdraw from an unstable Afghanistan, a massive operation that defense officials are in the process of organizing. But military leaders worry that they’ll be leaving Afghans at the mercy of the Taliban — and warn that the country could fall apart.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mumbai Attack: US Announces $10 Mn Bounty on Lashkar-E-Taiba Founder Hafiz Saeed

The US has announced a bounty of $10 million on outlawed Pakistan-based Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, the mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks.

This was stated by US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman while addressing a gathering at the American Centre in New Delhi.

She was replying to a question on what the US was doing to bring to justice those involved in terror attacks against India.

Saeed, the founder of terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba, is on India’s most wanted list. After the 26/11 attacks that left 166 people dead, India has asked Pakistan to hand him over.

The US also offered up to $2 million for the deputy leader of Lashkar-e-Taiba, Hafiz Abdul Rahman Makki.

Sherman, who is on a four-day visit to the country, met Indian officials including Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai during which a host of key issues pertaining to Indo-US ties were discussed.

They also discussed the agenda for the Indo-US strategic dialogue to be held in Washington DC in mid-June.

Sherman is leaving for Patna today, the first visit by such a high-ranking US official to Bihar.

From India, Sherman would travel to Nepal, where she will meet with Prime Minister Baburam Bhattarai, other Nepalese officials and South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation Secretary-General Ahmed Saleem.

[Return to headlines]



The Logistical Nightmare of Leaving Afghanistan

NATO forces are due to leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014, but the withdrawal poses a massive logistical challenge. The US and its allies are dependent on air hubs in Russia and authoritarian Central Asian republics to transport its troops and equipment home — and getting those countries to play along is not always easy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Power Elite and the Muslim Brotherhood, Part 11

The imposition of Sharia nationwide is also the goal of Boko Haram in Nigeria. Boko Haram (which means “Western education is sinful”) is modeled after the Taliban, and in a January 27 interview with The Guardian, senior member Abu Qaqa said they were spiritual followers of al-Qaeda and had met senior members of their network while visiting Saudi Arabia. Qaqa also revealed that Boko Haram “have our sights set on [bringing Sharia to] the whole world, not just Nigeria.”

Boko Haram first became active around 2003 in its spiritual home of Maiduguri in northern Nigeria where the Islamic Hausa are the majority. The group killed over 500 people in 2011 and at least 262 in the first few weeks of 2012, with its leader Imam Abubakar Shekau acknowledging the January 20 attacks in Kano (Nigeria’s second largest city in an oil-rich nation of 160 million) that killed at least 185 people.

The AP on January 25 in “Niger official: Nigeria sect linked to al-Qaeda” reported that Niger foreign minister Mohamed Bazoum said members of Boko Haram have had training and received explosives from al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb. This would be at camps in Mali in the summer of 2011, and remember that al-Qaeda came from the MB. Bazoum also said “there is no doubt the two organizations [Boko Haram and al-Qaeda] are connected and they have the same objective of destabilizing our region [Sahel].”

Reuters (Al Arabiya News, January 26) indicated that a UN report released January 26 revealed the “Libyan civil war might have given militant groups [Boko Haram and al-Qaeda] access to large weapons caches…including rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns and anti-aircraft visors,… explosives [Semtex], and light anti-aircraft artillery mounted on vehicles…More advanced weapons such as surface-to-air missiles and man-portable defense systems, known as MANPADS, may also have reached groups in the region.”

And what else did the U.S. and NATO-supported civil war in Libya bring? Look at the result of the new Libyan “democracy,” which President Obama helped bring about. You can see Libyan rebels on a YouTube video posted March 2 and titled “Springtime in Libya” desecrating Christian and Jewish graves. On the same website, there is also a link to another video showing these “freedom loving” rebels torturing blacks in Libya.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Greece Eyes Illegal-Immigrant Detention Measure

The Greek government has put forth a proposal that would enable authorities to hold illegal immigrants indefinitely if they posed ‘a public health risk.’

A proposal from the Greek government announced late Monday night would make it legal for illegal immigrants to be held indefinitely if they are considered a public health risk. The human rights organization Amnesty International harshly criticized the proposal, saying it was “deeply alarming.”

“The Greek authorities must withdraw such measures immediately,” said Amnesty’s Jezerca Tigani, saying they would “only exacerbate the stigmatization of migrants and asylum-seekers in the country.”

Under the proposal, which comes days after another Greek plan that would convert 30 old military bases to immigrant detention centers with a capacity for a thousand people each, illegal immigrants could also be held for compulsory testing and treatment for HIV/AIDS and other diseases.

Parliament is scheduled to vote on the measure next week.

The draft legislation says that those immigrants who qualify for detention do so because they have contracted an infectious disease, or because they belong to groups vulnerable to such diseases, like intravenous drug users, persons involved in prostitution or people who reside in conditions that do not meet the elementary standards of hygiene.”

Greece is the European Union’s busiest hub for illegal immigrants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tragedy South of Lampedusa, 10 Dead at Sea

Say rescued migrants

(ANSAmed) — LAMPEDUSA (AGRIGENTO) — Ten migrants, six Somalians and 4 Eritreans, are said to have died at sea during a crossing between Libya and Italy. The deaths have been reported by 48 refugees rescued yesterday some 60 miles south of Lampedusa by the Italian Navy’s Orione boat and by a motorboat belonging to the Coastal Guard.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120402

Financial Crisis
» Bundestag’s Rights Could Threaten Euro Rescue
» EU Hoping for IMF Boost After Firewall Increase
» Eurozone Unemployment Hits Record as Debt Crisis Bites
» Eurozone Unemployment Spikes to Record as Austerity Bites
» IMF Chief Welcomes Eurozone Firewall Increase
» Investors Expect Another Bond Swap in Greece
» Irish Citizens Boycott Austerity Tax
» Irish PM Kicks Off Treaty Referendum Campaign
» Opposition Party Warning: EU Fiscal Pact May Breach German Constitution
» Return to Dutch Guilder Costly, Says Report
» Sarkozy Set to Announce €115bn in Cuts
» Spain Unveils €27bn in Budget Cuts
 
USA
» Frank Gaffney: The Truth or Taqiyya?
» Gunned Down in Their Classroom: Horror as Seven Are Shot Dead After Nursing Student Opens Fire During Lesson at California Religious School
» Islamic Week Kicks Off Monday in Student Center
 
Europe and the EU
» EU Accession a Priority for Ukraine: Yanukovych
» Exhibition Documents Architectural Evolution of Mosques
» France Expels Five Islamist Radicals
» German Opposition Condemns Swiss Tax Arrest Warrant
» Italy: “Mosques Springing Up Like Mushrooms”
» Jailed Mullah to be Norway Gunman Witness
» Kiev-Berlin Negotiations: Ukraine May Release Tymoshenko for Care in Germany
» Lawyer: Norwegian Who Killed 77 to Call Islamist, Anti-Muslim Extremists to Testify
» Mullah Krekar on Witness List for Norway Gunman
» Robert Spencer Interviews Nicolai Sennels: “Muslims Are Taught to be Aggressive, Insecure, Irresponsible and Intolerant”
» Sweden: Malmö Mayor’s Remarks ‘Wrong’: Party Head
» Sweden: Man Held for Setting His Wife on Fire
» ‘Switzerland Has a Lot of Explaining to Do’
» Switzerland: ‘We Need Border Checks to Combat Crime’
» Toulouse Father: ‘My Son Was Liquidated’
» UK: A Lethal Game-Changer for British Politics?
» UK: Emma Thompson Backs Israel Boycott for Shakespeare Festival
» UK: George Galloway and Ken Livingstone Show That the Left Has Given in to Sectarianism
» UK: George Galloway’s Victory is the Last Thing Britain Needs
» UK: Scenes From a London Hatefest
» UK: The Tories Must Return to True Blue Values to Survive
» UK: The 100-Year War Against Football Fans’ Freedom of Speech
» UK: What Else Tory MPs Say About David Cameron and His Leadership
» Ukraine Allows Ex-Premier to Leave Prison for Medical Care
» US Holocaust Legislation: German National Railway Fears Flood of Lawsuits
» ‘We Need to Invest in a European Identity’
 
Middle East
» Forget Cornish Pasties. Forget Jerry Cans. It’s More Likely Than Not That Israel Will Strike Iran
» German-Turkish Trade Relations Are Gaining Momentum
» Iraq: Man Whose WMD Lies Led to 100,000 Deaths Confesses All
» Syria: Jihadists Declare Holy War Against Assad Regime
» UAE: Death Gets Cheaper in the UAE
 
South Asia
» Suu Kyi’s Party Wins Decisive Victory in Myanmar by-Election
» Wives, Daughters of Osama Bin Laden Jailed in Pakistan
 
Far East
» Hong Kong Protesters Reject Beijing-Friendly Leader
» North Korea’s Leader Was No Whizz at Swiss School
 
Australia — Pacific
» 9,000 Burial Plots for Muslims and Jews
» Burqa-Clad Men Prompt Anger in Sydney
» The Terrorist Australia Doesn’t Want
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Kenya Church Blast Leaves One Dead
» Mali: Neighbours Set to Close All Borders
» Mali: Islamists Push for Sharia Law in Northern Mali
» Mali: Ancient Islam Site Attacked by Tuaregs
» Nigeria: Christian Blood on Obama’s Hands
 
Immigration
» Greece to Complete Anti-Migrant Wall ‘Very Shortly’
» Obama to Relax Rules for Illegal Immigrants to Become Citizens
 
General
» In the Shadow of the Sword, By Tom Holland [Book Review]

Financial Crisis


Bundestag’s Rights Could Threaten Euro Rescue

The German parliament has secured far-reaching rights to decide on the actions of the euro rescue fund. But several German politicians are warning that the Bundestag’s determination to have its say could threaten efforts to save the euro, by hindering the fund’s ability to act quickly.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Hoping for IMF Boost After Firewall Increase

COPENHAGEN — EU ministers are hopeful their decision to raise the combined ceiling of two eurozone bail-out funds to €700 billion will be enough to secure an increase in contributions from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). A two-day meeting of EU finance ministers in Copenhagen ended on Saturday (31 March) with renewed appeals to foreign countries to step up their contributions to the IMF war chest.

“It’s important to ensure the IMF has sufficient resources to play its systemic role in the global economy,” Danish economy minister Margrethe Vestager told a press conference after the meeting. She said the decision by eurozone ministers “is very important in this respect. What we are hoping for is an agreement in Washington” later this month when the IMF board is to decide on an increase in its own lending capacity.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurozone Unemployment Hits Record as Debt Crisis Bites

(BRUSSELS) — Eurozone unemployment jumped to an all-time high in February, hitting southern nations the hardest as the social toll from the debt crisis grips the 17-nation bloc, official figures showed Monday.

The jobless rate rose for the 10th consecutive month and at 10.8 percent set a 15-year record for the single currency area, according to the Eurostat data agency.

Eurozone leaders have vowed to pursue growth and jobs strategies to fend off a looming recession but they insist that unpopular budget cuts and structural reforms must continue in order to restore market confidence after two years of crisis.

In another sign that recession is gripping the region, a key survey showed that manufacturing activity dropped to a three-month low in March, with the “malaise” spreading to top economies Germany and France.

“It looks odds-on that Eurozone GDP contracted again in the first quarter of 2012 after a drop of 0.3 percent quarter-on-quarter in the fourth quarter of 2011, thereby moving into recession,” said Howard Archer, chief European economist at IHS Global Insight.

“The prospects for the second quarter of 2012 currently hardly look rosy,” he said, adding that unemployment also appears “odds-on” to top 11 percent in 2012.

Eurostat estimated that more than 17.1 million men and women were out of work in February, 162,000 more than a month earlier and 1.48 million more than a year ago.

The seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate also rose to a record in the wider, 27-nation European Union, hitting 10.2 percent in February compared to 10.1 percent the previous month.

An estimated 24.55 million people were unemployed in the EU, an increase of 1.87 million from February 2011.

“Soaring unemployment is clearly adding to the pressure on household incomes from aggressive fiscal tightening in the region’s periphery,” said Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital Economics research firm.

“But even in Germany, survey measures of hiring point to a downturn to come and with inflation remaining stubbornly high throughout the eurozone, there is very little hope of a consumer recovery,” McKeown said.

The unemployment rate rose in 18 EU states and fell in eight compared to a year ago. It remained stable in Romania.

Spain remained the worst affected, with the highest rate at 23.6 percent, followed by bailed-out Greece at 21 percent, Portugal at 15 percent and Ireland at 14.7 percent. Italy hit a record 9.3 percent.

Highlighting the North-South divide, the states with the lowest rates were Austria on 4.2 percent, the Netherlands 4.9 percent, Luxembourg 5.2 percent and Germany 5.7 percent.

Unemployment is highest among young people, with data showing one in five persons under 25 looking for work in the eurozone, mainly in southern nations. One in two young Spaniards or Greeks are unemployed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurozone Unemployment Spikes to Record as Austerity Bites

Unemployment in the 17-nation currency area has reached its highest level since the introduction of the euro in 1999, as debt-wracked governments cut spending. With it grows the likelihood of recession in the EU. Unemployment in the eurozone rose to 10.8 percent in February, the highest level in 15 years, the EU’s statistics office Eurostat announced Monday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



IMF Chief Welcomes Eurozone Firewall Increase

International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Lagarde has welcomed the increase of eurozone’s firewall to €700 billion, saying it “will support the IMF’s efforts to increase its available resources for the benefit of all our members.” The IMF had insisted for months on the need to boost the eurozone bail-out funds.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Investors Expect Another Bond Swap in Greece

Following the first economic haircut, Greece is expecting improvements in its debt situation. However, some investors remain skeptical.

In early March, after months of talks, Greek authorities negotiated a debt swap with private investors. One of the participants in the discussion was Hans Humes, president of Greylock Capital Management, an investment firm that specializes in emerging markets and distressed assets. He described the mood as similar to “a family falling-out at the dinner table,” although “a bit more formal.”

A lot was at stake for Humes, as 10 percent of Greylock’s investments had been poured into Greek bonds. This is yet another in a series of debt restructuring programs that the firm has contributed to in the last 20 years — it also provided its assistance in Mexico, Argentina, Ecuador, Yugoslavia, Russia and the Philippines.

The problems in those countries were similar to those currently affecting Greece.

“When a country can no longer carry its debts and when it can’t find a way to get hold of new money, then the investors have no choice but to look for a solution,” said Humes, pointing out that, from an investor’s perspective, breaking negotiations with Greece and demanding a full payback of the debt would be “completely irrational.”

“The alternative is the collapse of their economy, and then they won’t be able to pay us any money for 20 years.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Irish Citizens Boycott Austerity Tax

BRUSSELS — Almost half of Irish people have refused to pay a household tax imposed as part of promised savings measures, while government pressure to secure the levy risks further angering an austerity-weary public.

By a Saturday (31 March) midnight deadline, around 805,000 of the country’s 1.6 million registered households had paid the tax, which has been subject to a high-profile boycott campaign.

The Irish government agreed to introduce it in 2012 as part of a deal with the EU and the International Monetary Fund — from which it secured an €85 billion loan in 2010. But it has been unpopular from the very beginning for its across-the-board nature: the same levy is applied both to rich and poor households.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Irish PM Kicks Off Treaty Referendum Campaign

Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny on Sunday started the government’s campaign in favour of the fiscal discipline treaty ahead of the 31 May referendum. “We have a brilliant opportunity to say to the world that Ireland believes in the future of the euro,” said Kenny.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Opposition Party Warning: EU Fiscal Pact May Breach German Constitution

Germany’s opposition Left Party says the fiscal pact agreed by 25 of the EU’s 27 members may breach the constitution because — the party argues — it can never be rescinded. Legal experts are divided. But Germany’s top court may be called on to settle the issue, and to rule on Europe’s future yet again.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Return to Dutch Guilder Costly, Says Report

Leaving the euro and re-introducing the guilder in the Netherlands would cost €4,500 per year per citizen, according to research carried out for the pro-EU D66 party. Early last month, the country’s far-right PVV party had presented results of a similar study, indicating that such a move would be beneficial.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy Set to Announce €115bn in Cuts

French President Sarkozy is set to announce €115bn in cuts when he unveils his electoral programme at the end of the week, Le Figaro reports. To get a balanced budget in 2016, Sarkozy, a candidate in the 22 April elections, plans €75bn in spending cuts and raising €40bn through taxes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Unveils €27bn in Budget Cuts

The Spanish government will cut €27 billion from the 2012 budget as part of EU-required efforts to bring the deficit down to 5.3% of GDP, despite record unemployment and the economy shrinking by one percent. Deputy prime minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said the nation is in an “extreme situation.”

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           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Frank Gaffney: The Truth or Taqiyya?

One of the most important challenges we face as a free people is understanding the true nature of — and threat posed by — a totalitarian, supremacist Islamic doctrine its adherents call shariah. So, it would seem to be good news that a $3 million public education campaign is being launched nationwide to “clarify” what shariah is.

The question is: Will this campaign be truthful and helpful, or will it amount to an exercise in what is not only permissible under shariah, but obligatory: lying for the faith, or taqiyya in Arabic?

Unfortunately, since the sponsor of this initiative is one of the most virulent Muslim Brotherhood fronts in the United States, the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA), the shariah tour will assuredly be all taqiyya, all the time. As we are seeing in Egypt at the moment, the Brotherhood is fully prepared to lie about its repressive agenda until it is too late for its opponents to resist…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Gunned Down in Their Classroom: Horror as Seven Are Shot Dead After Nursing Student Opens Fire During Lesson at California Religious School

Police surrounded a Christian university in search of a gunman who reportedly opened fire on Monday morning and killed seven people.

The suspect was caught in the parking lot of a shopping centre mall miles away from the Korean Christian school in Oakland, California.

The shooter, named by police as 43-year-old One L. Goh, apparently stood up in the middle of a nursing class at Oikos University, ordered classmates to line up against the wall and opened fire.

A bystander saw a woman ran out of the building saying that her right arm had been shot.

The victim said that the shooter — a former student — was in her nursing class when he stood up in the middle of class and shot another student point blank in the chest before spraying the room with bullets.

The bystander, Angie Johnson, stayed with the woman until she received medical attention.

‘She said he looked crazy all the time but they never knew how far he would go,’ Ms Johnson said the victim told her.

Police spokesman Cynthia Perkins said seven people were dead. She did not release any other details about the victims.

Five people were believed to have been killed at the scene, while two of the five wounded later died at hospital.

One student, 19-year-old Dawinder Kaur, told her brother she was in her nursing class when a former student who had been absent from the class for months told them all to line up against the wall.

After he revealed he had a gun the students started to run away, and Ms Kaur said she was shot in the arm when she tried to help her friend.

‘She told me that a guy went crazy and she got shot,’ her brother Paul Singh told the Oakland Tribune.

‘She was running, she was crying, she was bleeding. It was wrong.’

The suspect was detained at a Safeway supermarket about three miles from the university, about an hour after the shooting.

A security guard at the supermarket approached the man because he was acting suspiciously, KGO-TV reported. The man told the guard that he needed to talk to police because he shot people, and the guard called authorities.

Lisa Resler said she was buying fruit at Safeway with her 4-year-old daughter when she saw the man she later learned was the suspect walk toward the store exit.

‘He was just in the store looking like somebody who was going to pick a deli sandwich up or something,’ she said.

When she left the store, she said, she saw him standing on the sidewalk next to two police cars. She said she saw an officer kick his legs apart and pat him down for weapons but said they didn’t appear to find anything.

The officers then placed him in handcuffs.

‘He didn’t look like he had a sign of relief on him. He didn’t look like he had much of any emotion on his face,’ she said. ‘From what I could see he was completely cooperative with police. He wasn’t saying a word.’

Television news footage showed officers surrounding the building in search of the suspect, described as a Korean man in his 40s with a heavy build and wearing khaki clothing.

At 12.13pm local time, the Oakland police department Tweeted that the suspect was in custody.

‘Possible suspect in custody. No imminent public safety threat appears to exist in immediate area,’ the tweet said.

The footage also showed wounded people being carried out of the building, and more gurneys were being brought in.

Four people were taken by ambulance to the emergency room while others were treated on the scene.

Founder and head of school Pastor Jong Kim said that the shooter had been a nursing student at Oikos but no longer is.

Mr Kim would not say if the man had been expelled or dropped out of the nursing programme.

He guessed that there were about 30 or so gunshots and said that he stayed in his office during the shooting.

Myung Soon Ma, the school’s secretary, said she could not provide any details about what happened at the small private school, which serves the Korean community with courses from theology to Asian medicine.

‘I feel really sad, so I cannot talk right now,’ she said, speaking from her home.

Deborah Lee, who was in an English language class, said she heard five to six gunshots at first. ‘The teacher said, “Run”, and we run,’ she said.

‘I was OK, because I know God protects me. I’m not afraid of him.’

The deadliest school shooting in U.S. history was the Virginia Tech massacre on April 16, 2007. Mentally ill student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 people before shooting himself in a campus rampage.

Another notorious killing was that at Columbine High School on April 20, 1999, when 10 students as young as 15 as well as two members of staff were shot by Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold at the Denver school.

More recently, graduate student Steven Kazmierczak killed five at Northern Illinois University, his alma mater, on February 14, 2008, then turned the gun on himself.

The 2006 shooting at the Amish West Nickel Mines School attracted national attention after relatives of the five young girls killed by Charles Roberts publicly forgave the killer and sent condolences to his family.

An earlier example of a deadly campus massacre came in 1966, when student and former Marine Charles Whitman killed 16 at the University of Texas at Austin, mostly by shooting from a 28th-floor balcony.

Another bystander saw a woman running away from the scene.

‘One of the people who was inside the building, she was saying there is a crazy guy inside,’ witness Brian Snow told KGO-TV.

‘She did say someone got shot in the chest right next to her before she got taken off in an ambulance.’

One man heard the shootings and saw one of the victims running from the scene.

‘I just heard more gunshots. A lady came out running and she had blood on her arm, but I didn’t know how bad the wound was,’ said Brian Snow, who was at a credit union near the school the at the time of the shooting.

‘She was just trying to make sure everyone was safe and took off her jacket and she had a big old hole in her arm,’ he told KGO Radio.

According to its website, Oikos University offers studies in theology, music, nursing and Asian medicine with the hopes of educating ‘emerging Christian leaders’.

The school’s website says it ‘was established specifically to serve the community of Northern California in general and San Francisco and Oakland areas in particular’.

California political figures expressed their condolences at the horrific events.

Governor Jerry Brown said: ‘The tragic loss of life at Oikos University today is shocking and sad.

‘Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims, their families and friends and the entire community affected by this senseless act of violence.’

U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer added: ‘I am praying for a full and speedy recovery for all those injured in today’s shooting.’

And Jean Quan, Mayor of Oakland, called the killing a ‘terrible tragedy’, but praised police for their response to the incident.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Islamic Week Kicks Off Monday in Student Center

Marshall University’s Interfaith will have Islamic week Monday through Thursday in the Memorial Student Center. Shaheed Elhamdani, sophomore chemistry and political science major from Huntington, said Islamic week is there to help students understand the religion with elections coming up. “Especially with the growing political atmosphere right now and the way things are, people are uncertain about what it is,” Elhamdani said. “They don’t understand the concept behind it and what we believe. Islamic Week is our way of reaching out.” Ammar Haffar, senior biomedical sciences major from Scott Depot, W.Va., and president of Interfaith, said a table will be set up where people can receive information about Islam from 11 a.m. through 2 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday in the student center. Haffar said there will be a lecture “Unveiling Sharia” where Interfaith will discuss Sharia law and politics from 6 p.m. through 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Shawkey Dining Room at the student center. He said Sharia is Islamic law that came from the Quran and teachings of the Prophet Muhammed. “Sharia law has been a hot topic that was heavily discussed at the beginning of the election season, especially by the Republican candidates, and there has been a bill circulating around at least half the states on banning it,” Haffar said. “The purpose behind this is to explain what Sharia is and discuss its role in current political discourse.”

Haffar said there will be an “Islam Question and Answer Session” where people can ask questions to Islamic students about the religion from 6 p.m. through 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the BE-5 Multi-Purpose Room in the basement of the student center.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


EU Accession a Priority for Ukraine: Yanukovych

(WARSAW) — Accession to the European Union remains a priority for Ukraine, the country’s President Viktor Yanukovych said Monday, three days after initialing an association agreement with the 27-member bloc.

“Ukraine’s integration into the European political, economic and judicial space, in other words its accession to the EU, is our priority,” Yanukovych said in an interview published by the Polish daily DGP.

He said his country was “ready to proceed without delay to the phase of signing and ratifying the agreement” but regretted that the text did not comprise “a clear perspective of accession.”

Yanukovych said the EU should also ease visa requirements for Ukrainians, given the “progress in the introduction of reforms and European standards” in his country.

“The establishment of a free trade zone should be accompanied by aid for a modernisation of the Ukrainian economy,” he added.

Friday, the EU initialed an association agreement with Ukraine after months of tensions over the jailing of ex-prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

The agreement, which includes an ambitious trade component, is part of EU efforts to keep the former Soviet state from straying too far into Russia’s sphere of influence.

But the actual signing of the pact is unlikely to happen for months, or before Ukraine’s legislative elections in October, as the EU remains concerned over Tymoshenko’s fate and the state of democracy in the country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Exhibition Documents Architectural Evolution of Mosques

Islamic places of worship often cause controversy: Take the construction of Cologne’s grand mosque or the ban on minarets in Switzerland. A new exhibition in Germany covers the architectural evolution of mosques.

Mustafa Pinarci from the Turkish-Islamic Diyanet Culture Association proudly presents the interior of a mosque during construction to a small group of visitors in Esslingen. The group has many questions: Who finances the building of the mosque? Why is there a separate floor for women to pray on?

The mosque guide shows the visitors a list of sponsors and explains that the construction work is also financed through voluntary contributions. The members of the group — particularly the women — react with astonishment when the guide explains that Muslim women prefer not to pray in the presence of men. “Women could be disturbed by looks from men as they pray in various positions,” said Pinarci.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Expels Five Islamist Radicals

France has expelled two Islamic radicals and is planning to deport three more as part of a crackdown announced after a gunman killed seven people, officials said on Monday.

An Algerian radical and a Malian imam were sent back to their home countries on Monday, while a Saudi imam, a Turkish imam and a Tunisian radical were also subject to expulsion orders, the interior ministry said in a statement. The statement said that the imams had made anti-Semitic statements in their sermons, called for Muslims to reject Western values, and said women should wear the full-face veil. It said the Saudi imam was currently out of France but would be refused entry should he try to return. French police arrested 19 people in a crackdown on suspected Islamist networks in dawn raids on Friday as President Nicolas Sarkozy made the battle against extremism a keynote of his re-election campaign.

Some of the arrests were made in Toulouse, where extremist gunman Mohamed Merah was shot dead by police last month after a series of cold-blooded shootings that left seven dead, including three Jewish children. Merah, branded a “monster” by French leaders after his killing spree, died in a hail of police bullets after a 32-hour siege on his Toulouse flat.

France last week banned four Muslim preachers from entering the country for a conference of the Union of Islamic Organisations in France (UOIF), citing their “calls for hatred and violence”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



German Opposition Condemns Swiss Tax Arrest Warrant

German opposition politicians have blasted plans by the Swiss federal prosecutor to file charges against German tax officials for obtaining lists of accounts belonging to possible tax-evaders.

Members of the Social Democrats (SPD) voiced outrage at the Swiss arrest warrant for three civil servants alleged to have bought the data belonging to the bank Credit Suisse.

The Swiss federal prosecutor’s office said on Saturday it had sought legal assistance from German authorities in an investigation into the theft of the information.

“When dictators and mass murderers have been forced out of their homelands, they have often put their stolen assets in Switzerland,” Joachim Poss, deputy SPD parliamentary leader told the German daily newspaper Die Welt. Poss added that Switzerland should “criminalize” those people instead.

The SPD parliamentary whip Thomas Opperman told the mass-circulation daily Bild that the inspectors — who had been trying to root out the accounts of potential tax evaders — should receive a government honor rather than be arrested. “They have upheld the rule of law by fighting money laundering and tax evasion,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: “Mosques Springing Up Like Mushrooms”

by Soeren Kern

Donors are using alternative channels to ensure that their donations escape the control of the regular financial system.

More than 250 mosques across Italy have reached an agreement to create a new umbrella organization, the Italian Islamic Confederation (CII). The CII will be controlled by Morocco, and will compete with an existing Muslim umbrella organization, the Union of Islamic Communities and Organizations in Italy (UCOII). The UCOII, which is estimated to control 60% of the mosques in Italy, is closely tied to the Muslim Brotherhood. Since its founding in 1990, the UCOII has used its virtual monopoly over the mosques in Italy to spread its Islamist ideology over the 1.5 million Muslims in the country. The UCOII has also worked to become the main interlocutor between the Muslim community and the Italian state. But the Italian government has ruled out reaching an agreement with the UCOII because of its links to the Muslim Brotherhood. “There can be no accords with those like the UCOII, who de facto deny the existence of the state of Israel and hold ambiguous positions on terrorism at the national and local level,” according to Andrea Ronchi, Italy’s former Minister for Community Policy.

After it came to light that the majority of the mosques in Italy are controlled by the Muslim Brotherhood, Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni called for a moratorium on the building of new mosques until a new national law could be written to regulate the phenomenon. According to Manes Bernardini, a politician with the Northern League in Bologna, “Mosques are springing up like mushrooms, and mayors can do nothing about it because there is no national law to regulate the proliferation of these structures.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Jailed Mullah to be Norway Gunman Witness

The lawyer for Norwegian confessed killer Anders Behring Breivik says he will call right-wing extremists and Islamists, including a radical jailed mullah, as witnesses in support of his client at this month’s trial.

Defence lawyer Geir Lippestad said the idea of calling extremists such as Mullah Krekar, who founded the radical Iraqi Kurdish Islamist group Ansar al-Islam and has been sentenced to five years in prison for making death threats, was important to show that his client was not criminally insane.

An expert evaluation determined late last year that Behring Breivik was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, but the 33-year-old far-right extremist who has confessed to killing 77 people in twin attacks last July insists he is sane.

The far-right Norwegian blogger “Fjordman”, one of Behring Breivik’s mentors, will also be called to the witness stand, Lippestad said, stressing though that the defence does not intend to enable a free-flow of “political propaganda”, as his client appears to wish. “Calling witnesses from extremists milieus is important because we think that the psychiatric experts perhaps do not have the necessary knowledge” to distinguish ideological extremism from a psychiatric disorder, he said.

The defence will place a special emphasis on calling medical and psychiatric witnesses who are likely to testify that Behring Breivik is of sound mind, Lippestad said. The psychiatric experts’ conclusion last year, which if confirmed would entail that the confessed killer is locked up in a psychiatric institution instead of prison, caused outcry in Norway and an Oslo court ordered a second evaluation by two new experts, who will present their findings on April 10.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kiev-Berlin Negotiations: Ukraine May Release Tymoshenko for Care in Germany

Ukraine may be prepared to release Yulia Tymoshenko, the imprisoned former prime minister, for urgently needed medical care in Berlin. The country’s current president, Viktor Yanukovych, is interested in defusing international pressure, but some in his party are refusing to back down.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Lawyer: Norwegian Who Killed 77 to Call Islamist, Anti-Muslim Extremists to Testify

OSLO, Norway — A lawyer for the Norwegian who confessed to killing 77 people says the defense will call both a Muslim cleric and an anti-Islamic blogger to the stand to refute claims that his client is insane. Geir Lippestad, who represents Anders Behring Breivik, wants their testimony to show there are others who share Breivik’s world view.

Lippestad told public broadcaster NRK on Monday “we wish to call witnesses from both right-wing extremist and Islamist environments.” Lippestad said witnesses would include Mullah Krekar, a radical Iraqi cleric jailed in Norway for making death threats, and a prominent anti-Islamic blogger known as Fjordman. Breivik denies criminal guilt for the July 22 attacks, saying they were part of an anti-Muslim revolution. His trial starts April 16.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mullah Krekar on Witness List for Norway Gunman

An Islamic extremist implicated in the murder of an Australian cameraman in Iraq could be called to give evidence in the trial of Norwegian gunman Anders Behring Breivik.

Breivik’s lawyer says he will call a number of right-wing extremists and Islamists, including the jailed radical Mullah Krekar, as witnesses in support of his client at this month’s trial.

Defence attorney Geir Lippestad says the idea of calling extremists like Krekar, who founded the radical Iraqi Kurdish Islamist group Ansar al-Islam and has been sentenced to five years in prison for making death threats, is important to show that his client is not criminally insane.

An expert evaluation determined late last year that Breivik was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, but the 33-year-old far-right extremist who has confessed to killing 77 people in twin attacks last July insists he is sane.

“We have to determine if the experts who evaluated Breivik mistakenly blew off his ideas and opinions, especially about an ongoing war (between Islam and the West), as paranoid hallucinations and a psychosis,” Mr Lippestad said.

“The question is to know if there are in fact groups, even small ones, in Norway who agree (with his premise). That could be important when it comes to the question of legal responsibility.”

Breivik, who has claimed to be on a crusade against multiculturalism and the “Muslim invasion” of Europe, wants to be declared of sane mind, according to his lawyers, so as not to damage the political message presented in his 1,500-page manifesto published online shortly before the July 22 attacks.

During the trial, which will begin on April 16, the defence attorneys will therefore, upon their client’s request, try to prove that he is sane even though their success would entail that he be locked away in prison instead of a psychiatric institution.

On Monday, Mr Lippestad refused to reveal the “30 to 40” names on the list of witnesses the defence plans to call, but he confirmed that Mullah Krekar was on it…

           — Hat tip: Frontinus [Return to headlines]



Robert Spencer Interviews Nicolai Sennels: “Muslims Are Taught to be Aggressive, Insecure, Irresponsible and Intolerant”

Nicolai Sennels regularly contributes to Jihad Watch, with articles on psychology and translations of Scandinavian and German news. To help you get to know Sennels better, we decided to do an interview.

Nicolai Sennels (born 1976) is a Danish psychologist. His first appearances in the Danish media concerned his unorthodox therapy methods that he developed as the only psychologist at Sønderbro, the youth prison (see here, here, here, here and here). He taught the young prisoners about mindfulness meditation and developed a special program on anger management. Sennels also developed a psychotherapeutic method that focused on teaching criminals with a low understanding of emotions and empathy how to take responsibility for their own behavior. In 2008, the prisoners of Sønderbro voted the facility as the best prison in Denmark. The leader of Social Services in the Copenhagen municipality concluded that this was due to the work of Nicolai Sennels (Amagerbladet, November 3, 2008).

At a conference on immigrant crime in 2008, arranged by the Copenhagen municipality, Sennels said that one should not use the term “criminal immigrants,” but “criminal Muslims,” since the majority of criminal immigrants have Muslim backgrounds. Seven out of ten inmates in the Danish youth prisons have immigrant backgrounds, and almost all of them are Muslims. Sennels was threatened that if he were to discuss his experiences, he would risk losing his job. This story developed into a national debate on the freedom of speech and became a widely discussed topic in the Danish media (please see here and here), and the Minister of Integration joined the discussion.

Sennels decided to publish a book on his experiences, Among Criminal Muslims. A Psychologist’s Experiences from the Copenhagen Municipality, which was well received in both the official Psychologists Union’s magazine and the newspapers. He found himself a new appointment at the Danish Ministry of Defense, and now once again he works as a psychologist for children and teenagers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Mayor’s Remarks ‘Wrong’: Party Head

Social Democrat head Stefan Löfven called recent “anti-Semitic” comments by Malmö mayor Ilmar Reepalu “wrong” following what Jewish leaders called a “constructive” meeting to discuss the issue on Monday.

“The comments were wrong, but I still have total confidence in him,” Löfven told the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper.

Sweden’s Jewish leaders called the meeting “constructive”, but emphasized they still lack confidence in Malmö mayor Ilmar Reepalu following his recent “anti-Semitic” remarks.

“It was a very constructive meeting,” Lena Posner Körösi, chair of the Jewish Community in Stockholm (Judiska församlingen i Stockholm) told the TT news agency following the talks, which were called in the wake of comments labeled as “anti-Semitic” by Sweden’s Jewish leaders.

Following the meeting, which was held on Monday at Social Democrat headquarters in Stockholm, Löfven and Posner Körösi emerged together and addressed reporters.

“We’ve now had a meeting between the Social Democrat party leadership and the Official Council of Swedish Jewish Communities (Judiska centralrådet i Sverige — JC) and discussed the situation in Malmö and respect for the rights of different minorities,” said Löfven, according to the TT news agency.

“We’ve made it very clear that we are committed to our values and the ideology of people’s equal value and religious freedom. I understand and respect the Jewish community’s concern when they view these comments as an insult to these rights.”

While Löfven expressed his continued confidence in Reepalu, he admitted that the Malmö mayor’s comments were regrettable.

“I want to improve dialogue with the Jewish community in Malmö for which Ilmar Reepalu has a great deal of responsibility,” he said.

“I have confidence in him, but it’s clear that the statements he’s made haven’t been good and I’ve been very clear that it’s unfortunately that they were viewed as anything other than what the party stands for.”

At the centre of the controversy were comments by Reepalu suggesting there were “strong ties” between the Jewish community in Malmö and the Sweden Democrats, a political party with a clear anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim line which has its roots in Sweden’s neo-Nazi movement.

According to Reepalu, “Sweden Democrats have infiltrated the Jewish community in order to push their hate of Muslims”.

He later admitted he had “no basis” for the claims, but the comments had already sparked an angry reaction from the Jewish community, prompting a letter to Löfven from the Official Council of Swedish Jewish Communities (Judiska centralrådet i Sverige — JC) demanding action.

While Posner Körösi was pleased with the meeting, she said the onus is now on Reepalu to show he can live up to the Social Democratic values emphasized by Löfven during the meeting.

“Now it remains for Ilmar Reepalu to prove it by his words and actions. Today I don’t have any confidence in him,” she said.

Reepalu on Monday said he planned to contact the Jewish community in Malmö to try to figure out how his comments became misconstrued.

He admitted he doesn’t always express himself that well, but remained emphatic in rejecting claims that he was anit-Semitic.

“Anti-Semitism is the worst form or racism that humanity has ever experienced,” Reepalu told TT.

He said he’s never held the views ascribed to him regarding alleged alliance between the Jewish community in Malmö and the far-right Sweden Democrats.

“My criticism when it comes to the meeting in the Jewish community was directed against the Sweden Democrats and their way of assigning Muslims with collective guilt, not against the Jewish community.”

           — Hat tip: Freedom Fighter [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Man Held for Setting His Wife on Fire

A man in Malmö in southern Sweden is suspected of having set his wife on fire following a domestic dispute stemming from her request for a divorce.

The 38-year-old woman received serious burns in the incident, but her injuries are reportedly not life threatening.

“She has injuries from her midsection and upward and on the entire front of her body…both her her torso and arms. But her face is in pretty good shape,” police spokesperson Peter Martin told the local Skånska Dagbladet newspaper.

According to Martin, investigators believe the woman was drenched in a flammable liquid which was then ignited by her 53-year-old husband.

“The woman wanted a divorce but the man didn’t. He was said to be very controlling,” police spokesperson Anders Lindell told the Expressen newspaper.

The couple’s two children were also present in the apartment at the time, but were unharmed in the incident and have since been taken in by neighbours.

Police received a call shortly after noon on Sunday about a disturbance in a flat in the city’s Rosengård district.

A short time later, emergency services received a call about a fire at the same address.

When fire crews arrived they were met by a woman who had fled out of the apartment. Her clothes had been burned and she was taken by ambulance to Skåne University Hospital in Malmö.

“We heard there was a fire in the building, but when we got there we only found a little smoke in the apartment. A woman whose clothes had been burned ran out of the flat,” emergency services commander Mats Steer told Expressen.

The 53-year-old husband who was still in the apartment was overpowered by police and apprehended on suspicions of attempted murder with an alternative charge of aggravated assault.

The man was placed in arrest later in the evening and interrogated about the incident and denies committing any crime.

Another man was also taken to the police station for questioning, but only as a witness.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



‘Switzerland Has a Lot of Explaining to Do’

Swiss arrest warrants issued over the weekend for German tax inspectors have sparked heated debate in Berlin over the ongoing tax evasion conflict with Bern. German commentators on Monday discuss how renewed tensions could endanger a preventative deal between the two nations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: ‘We Need Border Checks to Combat Crime’

A top Swiss security official has called for the country to reintroduce border checks in a bid to combat a spike in burglaries committed by organized foreign crime gangs.

Jacqueline de Quattro, head of canton Vaud’s security department, believes emergency measures are required after cantons bordering France experienced a 30-percent rise in burglaries last year, newspaper 20 Minutes reported.

A prominent member of the liberal Free Democratic Party, de Quattro said the spiralling crime figures gave Switzerland a legitimate reason to unilaterally sidestep the Schengen agreement and check the identities of people entering the country.

“We need the tools to send out a deterrent signal to criminals,” de Quattro said. “If we do nothing, we risk cross-border crime spreading to the north.” Schengen has opened up Switzerland’s borders, allowing a much freer flow of traffic in and out of the country.

De Quattro’s comments come after the publication last week of official crime statistics showing what has been referred to as an “explosion” of cross-border crime, particularly in cantons Vaud and Geneva.

Switzerland is attractive to criminals not only because of its wealth, but also because the punishments for certain crimes are less severe than in France, news website Swissinfo.ch reported.

The number of car thefts rose by as much as 45 percent in some areas, and overall crime committed by foreigners increased 10 percent on the previous year’s figures. The police are dealing with three main groups of foreign offenders, Francois Schmutz, head of the Geneva police, told Swissinfo.

The first are gangs from Romania and the Balkans; the second, Roma groups who live between Milan and Paris and are thought to be responsible for a whole spate of burglaries; and finally, North Africans living illegally in Geneva. “We need an exception rule which would allow us to conduct systematic border controls,” Swiss People’s Party National Councillor, Heinz Brand, told 20 Minutes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Toulouse Father: ‘My Son Was Liquidated’

The lawyer for the father of the man police shot dead in Toulouse claims to have video proof that Mohamed Merah was needlessly killed. In an interview with Le Parisien newspaper, Zahia Mokhtari said she had seen the videos and they proved the police did not want to capture Merah alive. “What I saw on these videos is proof that Mohamed Merah was manipulated,” she said. “I will be presenting this proof to the French judicial authorities.”

Merah was shot by the elite RAID unit of the French police on March 22nd after he was cornered in a Toulouse apartment block. Merah was the chief suspect in the murder of three school children and a teacher at a Jewish school in the town, as well as the deaths of three French soldiers.

“They didn’t want him alive,” said the lawyer. “What I’ve seen shows there was a deception and we need to show the truth.” In the two videos, Merah is alleged to tell police “I’m innocent, why do you want to kill me, I’ve done nothing wrong.”

Mokhtari said she will be in Paris this week to join forces with a French lawyer to launch legal action. She said the videos were given to her by people “at the heart of events” who wanted to “get the truth out.”

The RAID unit has insisted that it gave Merah every chance to come out alive. “If an assault was launched, it was by Merah,” said the chief of the unit, Amaury de Hauteclocque. 23-year-old Merah was killed after a 32 hour siege in the apartment block where he was tracked down after the seven killings which took place over three days on March 11th, 15th and 19th.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Lethal Game-Changer for British Politics?

by Melanie Phillips

The general response to George Galloway’s sensational victory in the Bradford West by-election has missed the point by a mile. Comment has concentrated on the undoubtedly stunning defeat for Labour, and has ascribed Galloway’s victory to widespread disaffection with mainstream political parties. This is certainly part of the story — strikingly, a significant section of the Tory vote appears to have gone to Galloway — but it is not the key factor behind this torrid triumph of a discredited demagogue. For this rested principally on something that commentators are too blinkered or politically correct to mention. Galloway won because young Bradford Muslims turned out for him in droves. They did not vote for him because he was promising them better public services. They did not vote for him, indeed, on account of any British domestic issues. They did so because he tailored his message to appeal to their religious passions and prejudices about conflicts abroad. Specifically, he campaigned against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and for the Palestinians, declaring that his victory would help satisfy voters’ ‘duty’ to care about such grievances.

Most commentators have dismissed this victory as a shocking one-off with no further significance than an upset by an entertaining maverick. Not so. For with Galloway’s election, religious extremism has become for the first time a potential game-changer in British politics. The point being so resolutely ignored is that Galloway ran on an Islamist religious ticket. It wasn’t simply that he was pandering to Islamist foreign policy obsessions. He made explicit references to Islam throughout his campaign. ‘All praise to Allah!’ he saluted his victory through a loud-hailer — having previously told a public meeting that if people didn’t vote for him, Allah would want to know why. Indeed, declaring in one address that ‘God knows who is a Muslim’, he implied that he was even more of a true adherent of that faith than Labour’s Muslim candidate who, he suggested without a shred of evidence, drank alcohol whereas he himself had never touched the stuff. Pinch yourself — a British politician using the inflammatory rhetoric and professions of Islamic piety more commonly heard in Iran or Saudi Arabia. Just as such religious hucksterism inflames millions of followers in the Islamic world, so certain unscrupulous British politicians have now realised they too can tap into the same well of irrational hatred to deliver them electoral victory.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Emma Thompson Backs Israel Boycott for Shakespeare Festival

British Oscar-winning actress Emma Thompson has added her name to a list of high-profile figures in the arts world calling on the Globe Theatre to cancel its invitation to an Israeli company to next month’s Cultural Olympiad event. Israel’s national theatre company, Habima, was invited to stage one of 37 Shakespeare plays in foreign languages as part of the Globe to Globe festival. Habima will perform The Merchant of Venice, while during the six-week festival the Ramallah-based Ashtar Theatre will put on an Arabic version of Richard II.

The invitation to the Israeli company had already raised concerns of disruption in the manner of the anti-Israel protests during the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra’s Proms performance last year. In January activists from Boycott From Within, formed by Israelis who back the boycott movement, urged Globe directors to stop the performance. The Globe said “active exclusion was a profoundly problematic stance to take”.

Now 37 people have signed a letter calling for Israel to be removed from the roster, including the prominent Jewish anti-Israel activists Miriam Margolyes, David Aukin, Jonathan Miller and Mike Leigh. Also on the list is the star of the play Jerusalem, Mark Rylance. Writing that Habima should be boycotted because it had performed in Israeli settlements, the signatories said: “By inviting Habima, Shakespeare’s Globe is undermining the conscientious Israeli actors and playwrights who have refused to break international law.”

The signatories said they had no problem with the Globe including a Hebrew — language performance. “But by inviting Habima, the Globe is associating itself with policies of exclusion practised by the Israeli state and endorsed by its national theatre company,” they said. “We ask the Globe to withdraw the invitation so that the festival is not complicit with human rights violations and the illegal colonisation of occupied land.” The writers added that “Inclusiveness” is a core value of arts policy in Britain, and we support it.”

Earlier this year the Globe said Habima was “the most well-known and respected Hebrew-language theatre company in the world” and so “a natural choice to any programmer wishing to host a dramatic production in Hebrew”. “They are committed, publicly, to providing an ongoing arena for sensible dialogue between Jews and Arabs, Israelis and Palestinians.” The letter provoked a response from Professor Geoffrey Alderman, who said: “The activities of the Habima theatre company in connection with the Israeli communities that live in these areas is therefore entirely legitimate.” Speaking to the JC last year, Rut Tonn of the Habima Theatre said it was a blessing that Israelis and Palestinians could take part. “We are always looking for collaborations which will help with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: George Galloway and Ken Livingstone Show That the Left Has Given in to Sectarianism

by Graeme Archer

[…]

The modern successful Left-wing politician seeks election through a machinery that should give nightmares to anyone who’s ever pondered the importance of “one nation”. A vicious, divisive sectarianism is… I was going to say “waiting in the wings”, but after Galloway’s victory, that would seem out of date. Those to whom Galloway’s theologically imbued demagoguery gives succour, it should now be clear, are completely immune to metropolitan sneering at his feline antics on Big Brother. The mainstream needs more than to laugh at such people, or deploy colour-coded candidates in a patronising nod towards “authenticity”. Conservatives must show that they are on the side of shopkeepers and their customers, rather than the oligarchs of big business. Fish suppers, if you like; not kitchen ones. Because Galloway isn’t unique. In London, Livingstone imitates George’s unapologetic appeal to sectarianism, in a campaign that must, by now, have cured all but the most delusional Labour supporter of residual eye-scales. “Jews are rich, so they won’t vote for me” is a morally repugnant tone to attach to a mayoral election, but would you be willing to bet that it will fail? The politics of liberal tolerance are being tested against the arithmetic of electoral calculus; arithmetic is winning. It always will, in the absence of a solid Tory counter-appeal to the majority.

So Osborne’s miscalculations and Downing Street’s impression of a Carry On film matter. We can’t trust the Left to fight modern sectarianism: it is their last hope of winning a majority. The Conservatives need rapidly to rediscover why those of us who aren’t toffs support them through thick and thin; it’s got nothing to do with the colour of a cabinet minister’s skin, or with whom he or she sleeps. It’s got everything to do with One Nation — in its proper sense, not as a code for anti-Thatcherite hand-wringing. Cut the taxes of the people who fear for their jobs, Chancellor, because a Tory Chancellor who increases the taxes on people who work is an aristocratic Emperor, quickly seen to be wearing no clothes. The politician in London who benefits from the recent Tory own-goals isn’t called Boris Johnson: and the fight — Boris’s fight — against communal sectarianism is too important to lose.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: George Galloway’s Victory is the Last Thing Britain Needs

by Abhijit Pandya

Galloway’s victory is a vindication for, above all people, Enoch Powell. Powell warned of the dangers that mass immigration would have. Ted Heath failed to listen, what we have is Galloway- a product of classic third world, unassimilated, rabble-rousing, engineering of election results. Galloway’s victory shows that we now have our ghettos. We have segregation. We have a divided land with the consequences of not assimilating failed third-world backward cultures within us. These are growing and multiplying generation after generation. Respect has a future, and provided the Islamic population continues to grow at its present rate, and is not fully assimilated, it is an Islamist one. Be warned.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Scenes From a London Hatefest

Have a look at the scene at last Friday’s “Global march to Jerusalem” demonstration in London. “From the river to the sea” calls for Israel’s annihilation. A Hezbollah flag (it wasn’t the only one). The Neturei Karta freak show. “Zionism, terrorism”. This is what deranged Israel hated looks like.

[…]

It seems Labour can’t even be bothered to answer criticism of such behaviour anymore.

I have written three times to Ed Miliband and other party leaders in a personal capacity. In July, I expressed my concern about my MP’s jaunt to Beirut [i.e. Corbyn], for Viva Palestina’s Summer University, alongside Palestinian hijacker Leila Khaled, and Azzam Tamimi, who has spoken of his desire to become a suicide bomber. No response. I emailed expressing my alarm at Ken’s backing for Rahman. No response. And having been invited to a fundraising night for Ken at the “Shadow Lounge”, I wrote that he should spend less time there and more time working out how large his cheque to HMRC should be. No response.

And who is the man to Corbyn’s right in the photograph above? Labour MP Andy Slaughter. The man Labour thinks should be this country’s Justice Minister.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Tories Must Return to True Blue Values to Survive

by Leo McKinstry

THE Tories seem to be in meltdown. As ministers lurch from one crisis to another, the Prime Minister is mired in a deepening scandal over party funding. On too many fronts, the Conservative-led Government appears to be incompetent, sleazy, out of touch and divisive, precisely the cocktail of negative characteristics that brought down John Major’s administration in 1997. David Cameron can take no comfort from last week’s by- election result in Bradford West, where maverick Left- winger George Galloway achieved a sensational land- slide victory in one of Labour’s northern heartlands. The out- come was a humiliation for Labour leader ed Miliband, plunging his vapid leadership into yet more turmoil. But the Tories did just as badly with their share of the vote dropping by 22.78 per cent, fractionally more than Labour’s decline.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The 100-Year War Against Football Fans’ Freedom of Speech

by Brendan O’Neill

Last week, Nick Hawkins, the man in charge of prosecuting football fans for the Crown Prosecution Service, gave a lecture titled “Crossing the line: when sport becomes a crime”. It might have been better titled “Blurring the line”, since, like all of today’s intolerant snobbish football-watchers, Hawkins collapsed the age-old, Enlightened distinction between words and actions and argued that football fans’ chanting — mere speech — is potentially a criminal offence. According to Hawkins, fans “cross the line”, and potentially commit a crime, when they indulge in “inappropriate crowd behaviour [and] chanting”. “I would strongly urge clubs to stop their fans singing some of their more choice chants”, he said, before proposing that the FA have the power to deduct points from football clubs, thus causing them to plummet in their league tables, if they fail to police and correct their fans’ speech. He also suggested making clubs “play games behind closed doors” — that is, with no fans at all in attendance — if they don’t get shot of lewd chanting.

Clearly, Hawkins is not satisfied with the reams of public-order legislation which already limit what fans can shout, or with the fact that many clubs now employ stewards who wear headcams to capture fans saying untoward things. No, he wants even stiffer penalties to be imposed on fans whose speech doesn’t measure up to what you might hear around an Islington dinner table. In no other area of public life would such stringent proposals to restrict speech be tolerated. Imagine if ushers at the opera wore headcams to film audience members who jeered at a particularly poor aria. Or if a public official suggested that certain novels — really racy ones — should only be made available to certain people, “behind closed doors”. There would be outrage. Liberty and PEN would go mad. But football fans? They don’t matter. Any assault on their freedom of speech is okay. They have become the lab rats for new forms of censoriousness.

It isn’t hard to work out why things uttered in football stadiums are treated as fundamentally different to all other forms of speech, so much so that special laws are needed to curb and potentially punish them. It’s because football fans, those largely working-class blokes, are viewed as more volatile and suggestible than other sections of society, as something closer to attack dogs than rational human beings. Indeed, a writer for the Evening Standard recently likened fans to “Pavlov’s foaming dogs” — that is, they hear a hateful chant and they act on it. Where middle-class theatregoers can be trusted to watch a foul or violent play and not try to re-enact it afterwards, and where erudite literature-consumers can be trusted to work out that an edgy novel about mass murder is just fiction and not an invitation to kill, apparently football fans must be prevented from hearing offensive chanting because they lack the mental skills needed to distinguish between vile words and real, everyday life. A person’s attitude towards free speech often reveals a great deal about his attitude towards Other People — and the clamour to restrict what can be chanted in football stadiums shows that many in officialdom and the commentariat view fans almost as animalistic, as incapable of hearing weird words without taking them to heart and going mental.

Some of the warriors against football fans’ uncouthness claim that the really offensive chanting we hear today is a relatively new phenomenon and is ruining the Beautiful Game. And all they want to do is make football a pleasant sport once more. So the Guardian’s resident railer against working-class shouting says “extremist” chants are a “late-1960s bolt-on to football”. It is unlikely, says the Guardian, that the fans of the 1950s, “in their caps and overcoats” (back when the working classes were decent!), would have chanted really obnoxious stuff. Perhaps. And yet even back then, when fans were the salt of the earth (ugh), there were campaigns to clean up their speech. There always have been.

As pointed out in an interesting collection of essays called The Roots of Football Hooliganism, “Complaints about the language used at football matches regularly surfaced in the British press in the 1890s and early 1900s”. Usually the focus was on swearing. Indeed, just as today’s FA, in an attempt to appease the middle-class loathers of lewd chanting, promises to try to stamp out offensive speech, so in 1901 the FA said it was “determined… to stop the use of foul language on the part of spectators at football matches”. Newspapers frequently published scandalised news reports about the “verbal misconduct” of working-class football fans, with one complaining that “bad language prevents a decent-minded man enjoying the game and prevents a lady attending”. So, in fact, even when fans merely swore rather than sang properly offensive songs, even when they wore “caps and overcoats” rather than sporting naked, tattooed bellies, still there was a war on their vulgar speech in the name of protecting the sensitives of “decent-minded men”. And so it is today. The socially aware commentators and campaigners who present their efforts to stamp out offensive chanting merely as an attempt to “clean up footie” are in fact the latest footsoldiers in a 100-year war on working-class fans’ colourful language. To use a bit of terrace lingo, if you don’t like what is said at football matches, then **** off somewhere else.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: What Else Tory MPs Say About David Cameron and His Leadership

by Benedict Brogan

James Kirkup and Holly Watt have set the proverbial heather alight with their splash today on the four recommendations being put to David Cameron by members of the ‘22 Executive for sorting out the current difficulties of the Coalition’s Tory end. When I last looked it had clocked up more than 1300 comments. I’ve had a succession of telephone calls from MPs wanting to bash my ear about what’s wrong — or what’s not wrong. Downing Street is stressing Mr Cameron’s willingness to listen to his colleagues about anything that concerns them. He will pay particular attention to demands for a broader set of voices on the ministerial benches — code for a reshuffle — and it might be worth putting a small wager on a ministerial overhaul at the end of the session in May, though my money remains on the autumn or not at all this year. The business about the party chairman — or chairmen — has been noted too. A reorganisation of No10 is less likely I reckon, but only because Dave likes it as it is, ie in his image. As for the Chancellor, he would argue with good reason that the closeness of their relationship is one of the big pluses of the Government, and he has no reason to risk it.

For the sake of completeness, here’s a flavour of what other MPs are telling me.

  • The 1922 Committee is no longer representative of the parliamentary party, because members of the new intake in particular seldom attend. The executive in turn attracts criticism from loyalists because, they say, it is packed with mavericks and eccentrics.
  • A considerable majority of Conservative MPs — some say the vast majority — see no reason to question either Mr Cameron’s leadership or his policies.
  • If anything, Downing Street communicates too much, crowding the inboxes of MPs with briefing and notes to guide what they tell their constituents.
  • There is no money: the economic fundamentals have not changed, the Government has no room to manoeuvre.
  • The Coalition is doing God’s work — or words to that effect — on welfare, education and deficit reduction.
  • If this is a crisis, it is one of temporary hysteria encouraged by a small number of malcontents that in no way reflects the reality, namely that Mr Cameron’s authority is not in doubt.

Of course, that’s the situation within the parliamentary party, a strange tempermental beast at the best of times. Trouble is, it’s the voters who matter, and the overnight polls show how confidence in Mr Cameron’s leadership has plummeted following last week’s fiasco. And even those MPs who support Mr Cameron voice frustration at the way George Osborne got the presentation of the granny tax so wrong last week. As Iain Martin pointed out today, MPs have spotted that Mr Cameron is already on the downward glidepath to the end of his leadership, and that very quickly the election that will decide it will be upon us.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Ukraine Allows Ex-Premier to Leave Prison for Medical Care

Ukraine’s prosecutor general has given jailed opposition politician Yulia Tymoshenko permission to get outside medical care for a back condition. Germany is in talks with Ukraine for her to get that care in Berlin.

Prosecutor General Viktor Pshonka said on Monday that Tymoshenko could get care from “a specialized medical facility” outside the Kharkiv penitentiary where she is being held, because she could not get adequate treatment there.

The former premier and rival to President Viktor Yanukovych was sentenced in October 2011 to seven years in prison for abusing her power as prime minister during negotiations with Russia over a natural gas supply contract. Tymoshenko said the trial was an attempt to silence the opposition.

It was expected the 51-year-old would be treated at a Ukrainian hospital, however, the German government confirmed it is in talks to have Tymoshenko brought to Berlin.

“We … hope that the talks with the government of Ukraine make medical treatment (in Germany) possible,” said Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert in Berlin on Monday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Holocaust Legislation: German National Railway Fears Flood of Lawsuits

Germany’s national railway, Deutsche Bahn, has hired a law firm and PR agency in the United States to prepare for legislation being considered by Congress that would allow Holocaust survivors to sue European railway companies for damages in American courts. Deutsche Bahn fears victims could sue for millions if the legislation passes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘We Need to Invest in a European Identity’

BRUSSELS — The European Parliament is trying to cultivate a “European identity,” with top officials saying that it is the only way to ensure a lasting union between member states. “National systems have very much invested in constructing their own identity,” Klaus Welle, the secretary general of the European Parliament told an audience at the Centre for European Policy Studies, a think-tank, on Thursday (29 March).

“If we want to build a lasting union of solidarity we also need to invest in European identity. We need to understand history as European history and not just as compilation of national histories.” Referring to his native Germany, Welle noted that people speak of the country as if it has existed forever. But the modern German state was created in 1871. Before that there was the German Confederation, which also included Prussia and Austria.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Forget Cornish Pasties. Forget Jerry Cans. It’s More Likely Than Not That Israel Will Strike Iran

by Bruce Anderson

Volatile is a word often used by political commentators and indeed political scientists. Latinate and polysyllabic, it sounds thoughtful, academic. The plain English translation was supplied by Harold Wilson: “A week is a long time in politics”. Weeks have rarely come more volatile than the past few days. Let us start with Mr Galloway. He invoked God so often that one is forced to an inescapable conclusion. The House of Commons now has its first Hizbollah MP (the word means party of God). So will the Almighty acquire more adherents? That will depend on the political demography of other Northern cities. There may be more Bradford Wests ripe for exploitation. On one point, however, Ed Miliband can feel safe. It is extremely unlikely that the catsuit man will realise his fantasy of spreading his message to the white working class. There is not much appeal in a programme of no alcohol, sweets for Saddam Hussein and an extreme reluctance to condemn Islamic terrorism.

But we should not draw comfort from that. The only way of mitigating racial tensions in this country is integration on the basis of mutual respect. The Bradford result does nothing to assist that. So Tories tempted to gloat over Labour’s defeat should think again — and get ready to act. If they but knew it, a lot of the Muslims who voted for the wrong sort of respect last Thursday have much in common with the Tory party. They believe in family values and hard work. There should be no problem in persuading them of the need for an economic recovery based on sound public finances. Although there are difficulties over Iraq and Afghanistan, Tories should take those issues head on, not forgetting to mention Kosovo. The removal of Saddam and the Taleban not only offered the prospect of democracy. It also sowed the seeds of the Arab Spring. Why should other Muslims not enjoy the freedom to vote, as in Bradford?I am not saying that this would be an easy case to make, but there is nothing to be gained by apologising. We should treat Muslims with proper respect by arguing vehemently when we disagree. Labour have always been good at patronising coloured immigrants and assuming that it can count on their votes. When there are declarations of independence, Labour politicians do not know how to respond. Their demoralisation should be the Tories’ opportunity. The party’s core message should be: “We know that you have minds of your own”.

[…]

That leads to a final point, which is even more important than Cornish pasties. Over the last week, I have spoken to three people who both realistic and well-informed on matters pertaining to the Muddle East. In the past, they have proved reliable. They all think it more likely than not that the Israelis will take military action against Iran before the US elections.

So if you have stashed away the odd jerry-can, it might still prove useful…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



German-Turkish Trade Relations Are Gaining Momentum

In the past 10 years, Turkey has become an important trade partner for Germany. Export figures have balloned by around 400 percent in the the past decade. But new statistics suggest it’s far from a one-way street.

Turkey has successfully defended its place among the 20 most important trade partners for Germany despite ongoing political tensions over Ankara’s bid to join the European Union.

Over the past 10 years, German exports to Turkey have risen almost four times, the Wiesbaden-based National Statistics Office (Destatis) said on Monday. German imports from Turkey doubled between 2001 and 2011.

In 2011 alone, German exports to Turkey amounted to 20.1 billion euros ($26.8 billion), with imports totaling 11.7 billion euros over the same period. The German trade surplus therefore reached 8.4 billion euros.

Turkey last year took 15th place among the recipients of German exports, which totaled 1,060 billion euros worldwide.

Vehicles and auto parts made up the bulk of German to Turkey exports last year and reached a volume of 5.1 billion euros, followed by engineering tools and machinery as well as chemical products.

Turkey for its part was able to export textiles worth 3.2 billion euros to Germany, followed by specialized machine tools.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iraq: Man Whose WMD Lies Led to 100,000 Deaths Confesses All

Defector tells how US officials ‘sexed up’ his fictions to make the case for 2003 invasion

A man whose lies helped to make the case for invading Iraq — starting a nine-year war costing more than 100,000 lives and hundreds of billions of pounds — will come clean in his first British television interview tomorrow.

“Curveball”, the Iraqi defector who fabricated claims about Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction, smiles as he confirms how he made the whole thing up. It was a confidence trick that changed the course of history, with Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi’s lies used to justify the Iraq war.

He tries to defend his actions: “My main purpose was to topple the tyrant in Iraq because the longer this dictator remains in power, the more the Iraqi people will suffer from this regime’s oppression.”

The chemical engineer claimed to have overseen the building of a mobile biological laboratory when he sought political asylum in Germany in 1999. His lies were presented as “facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence” by Colin Powell, US Secretary of State, when making the case for war at the UN Security Council in February 2003.

But Mr Janabi, speaking in a two-part series, Modern Spies, starting tomorrow on BBC2, says none of it was true. When it is put to him “we went to war in Iraq on a lie. And that lie was your lie”, he simply replies: “Yes.”

US officials “sexed up” Mr Janabi’s drawings of mobile biological weapons labs to make them more presentable, admits Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, General Powell’s former chief of staff. “I brought the White House team in to do the graphics,” he says, adding how “intelligence was being worked to fit around the policy”.

As for his former boss: “I don’t see any way on this earth that Secretary Powell doesn’t feel almost a rage about Curveball and the way he was used in regards to that intelligence.”…

[Return to headlines]



Syria: Jihadists Declare Holy War Against Assad Regime

Abu Rami hails from Lebanon, but his heart is in Syria these days. The 40-year-old is one of hundreds of Arabs who are fighting against the Assad regime at the side of Syrian insurgents. Many of these volunteer fighters are veterans of the Iraq war, who have now brought their holy war to Syria.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Death Gets Cheaper in the UAE

New crematorium cuts costs, but shipping expat bodies home remains expensive.

The government of Abu Dhabi has altered regulations that appear to encourage the use of a new emirate-funded crematorium over burial or repatriation of non-Muslim expatriates.

The cost of funerals has been steadily increasing in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), with coffin prices nearly doubling this year alone. The families and friends of many expatriate workers who die in the UAE are also finding that the cost of shipping the bodies back to their home country is expensive because of the paperwork involved. But now steps have been taken that authorities say would ease the misery of mourners by reducing the red tape and permits required and funding the cremation of dead bodies in a modern crematorium built in Al Ain in Abu Dhabi. “They have spent a great deal of money on this facility and it is a state-of-the-art building,” Don Fox, the chief executive of the Al-Foah Funeral Services in Abu Dhabi, told The Media Line. “No expense has been spared and it gives an aura of serenity and peacefulness to all of the people who have been here.” The facility was built on the orders of Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and furnaces were lit up for the first time in mid January. Orders were also given to eliminate a police clearance certificate for natural deaths and other permits that can reportedly save up to 1,000 dirhams ($272).

The UAE, a Gulf confederation of seven mini-states, has an enormous number of foreign residents. Of the 8.3 million people living in the UAE in 2012, 7.31 million of them (88.5%) are expats, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Foreigner workers began arriving in the Gulf nearly half a century ago when the discovery of oil kicked off a massive infrastructure construction drive. Europeans and Asians, as well as citizens from other Arab countries, have helped turn Abu Dhabi and Dubai from sleepy villages into international trade and financial centers and tourism destinations. Gulf nations are heavily reliant on expatriates to do everything from pouring concrete to running locally-based multinational corporations. But earlier this year, Forbes magazine reported the UAE, was an “expat unfriendly” country. Until the crematorium was built, expats who passed away would either be boxed up in an expensive coffin to be shipped back to their native lands for burial or interred locally. The local options for non-Muslims were old, run down and poorly tended cemeteries. “This prompted the government to do something and they provided this marvelous facility,” Fox said, adding that the facility included a multi-faith church that seats 400 people and was easily accessible from all of the UAE. Flowers and other special requests, such as live transmission of funeral services or recorded on DVD, have also become available.

In Dubai, only caskets sold by the Al-Shindagha Trading Company are approved for transporting the deceased abroad. But that company nearly doubled the price of the coffins from 1,200 dirhams to 2,300. The National, a local daily, reported that the Dubai Health Authority is now trying to bring down the price because poor people struggle to ship the bodies of their loved ones home. “The cost of transporting a body to a country like India comes to more than 5,000 dirhams with the new rates. It would be good news if the prices are brought down,” C.P. Matthew, the founder of Valley of Love voluntary organization, was quoted as saying. Fox of Al-Foah Funeral Services confirmed that the price of caskets had doubled. He said that according to international standards of the Institute of Cemetery and Crematorium Management (ICCM), a coffin is even required for cremation. He said some of the coffins they used were custom made, but many were shipped in bulk from abroad. “Most of them are from China, which seems to be conducting a very thriving business,” Fox said. Fox said the cost of cremation is considerably less than getting buried back at home. Some 2,500 human remains are estimated to be repatriated from Abu Dhabi and Al Ain annually. “To have somebody cremated here would be approximately a third of the cost of being repatriated back to their country,” he said. “The reason it’s cheaper so much is because the actual cremation in Al Ain is free. This is paid for by the UAE government.”

In a further move to ease the burial process the health authorities and police agreed that a “no objection certificate” would be required for any natural deaths, but only if buried locally or cremated. “One had to have a letter from the police department to release the body for burial or repatriation. Now for burial or cremation in the UAE that is not required if the person dies a natural death,” Fox said. “This eases things up considerably here and makes the procedure a lot faster.” Despite the moves that will likely channel more business to the crematorium, public awareness among expats in the UAE is still low. Opened since mid-January, Fox expects business to pick up once their website becomes active. Ninety-nine percent of the public in the UAE are not aware that this facility is available yet,” Fox said, adding that visits by the ambassadors of the U.S., European countries and word of mouth would also help business. “When that website comes up there is going to be quite a publicity campaign for the benefit of all the populace.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Suu Kyi’s Party Wins Decisive Victory in Myanmar by-Election

After her release from years of house arrest just 17 months ago, democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi has secured a seat in Myanmar’s parliament. Her NLD party won all of the seats that it contested.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Wives, Daughters of Osama Bin Laden Jailed in Pakistan

A Pakistani court has convicted five close relatives of deceased al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden for illegally staying in the country. They were sentenced to 45 days in prison, fined, and will subsequently be deported.

Osama Bin Laden’s three widows and two of his daughters were convicted of illegally entering and staying in Pakistan on Monday. They received sentences of 45 days in prison — with 31 of those already served during their trial — fined 10,000 rupees ($110, 75 euros), and will face deportation to their home countries when released.

Despite being formally arrested on March 3 ahead of their trial, the five women had been in detention since last May when the al Qaeda leader was killed by US commandos at a compound in the town of Abbottabad.

The women’s lawyer, Amir Khalil, said that the fines had been paid on the spot and that the family’s younger children would travel with them when they left Paksitan. Khalil also said that his clients did not plan to appeal the ruling.

Two of the wives are Saudi Arabian, one hails from Yemen. Khalil said authorities in Yemen had already approved the defendants’ return, though he was still negotiating with Saudi Arabia, which stripped Bin Laden of his citizenship in 1994.

Once out of Pakistan, the women might reveal more information about how Bin Laden was able to evade capture and detection for years in Pakistan. No evidence has been found suggesting that Pakistani authorities knew where Bin Laden was, but doubts remain given that he lived so close to some sensitive military sites.

Washington hunted Bin Laden for almost a decade after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Hong Kong Protesters Reject Beijing-Friendly Leader

Hong Kong’s leader-in-waiting, Leung Chun-ying, faces broad questions of legitimacy because of his close ties to Beijing. Thousands of protesters have now called for his resignation and for universal suffrage.

Thousands of people protested in the streets of Hong Kong on Sunday against last week’s selection of the semi-autonomous city’s new leader, a property consultant with close ties to the mainland government in Beijing.

Organizers said about 15,000 people took part in the demonstration, which was the first against the new leader since his selection, while police put the figure at around 5,300. Protesters chanted slogans like “One person, one vote” and “Leung step down.”

Leung Chun-ying, a 57-year-old millionaire, won 689 votes in the 1,200-seat committee that chooses Hong Kong’s chief executive. The committee is full of loyalists to the Communist government in Beijing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea’s Leader Was No Whizz at Swiss School

North Korea’s young leader Kim Jong-Un, who was schooled in Switzerland, obtained poor grades in school and was often absent, according to a Swiss newspaper report. Kim, who is 29, was absent for 75 days in his first year at the International School of Bern, according to Le Matin Dimanche, while in his second year, he missed 105 days of classes.

The boy, who was registered under the pseudonym Un Pak, was sometimes in school only in the afternoons, said the newspaper, quoting an unnamed former classmate. Not surprisingly then, Kim failed natural sciences with 3.5 out of 6, and obtained a just minimum passing score of 4 for mathematics, culture and society and German.

Even in English, where he was placed in an advanced class before being downgraded to an average one, he obtained the minimum pass grade. Only in music and technical studies did he obtain 5.

This was despite the fact that Kim, who was born January 8th, 1983, was in a class of children mostly born in 1985 due to his poor level of German — the main language used in the Swiss capital Bern. Kim took over the reins of the hermetic country after his father Kim Jong-Il’s death on December 17th, 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


9,000 Burial Plots for Muslims and Jews

Thousands more burial plots will be made available in Sydney, after it looked like the Muslim community would run out of space for their dead in just six months. The NSW government on Monday announced the allotment of 6000 additional burial plots for Muslims and 3000 for the Jewish community at Rookwood Necropolis in Sydney to address the space shortages. Approximately 350 Muslim burials occur each year at Rookwood, and community leader Ahmad Kamaledine said there were only enough spaces to accommodate burials for the next six months. “For us as a Muslim community … the news is overwhelming. In six months’ (time) we had nowhere to go,” he told reporters at NSW Parliament House. Mr Kamaledine said he’d been working to secure burial plots for the past 12 years. The Muslim community will receive half of the land at Lot 10 in the NSW government-owned Rookwood Necropolis, accommodating 6000 people in double-depth plots. The other half of Lot 10 will be used for 3000 single Jewish burial plots which will be protected in perpetuity, under Jewish requirements.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Burqa-Clad Men Prompt Anger in Sydney

Ugly scenes erupted between a group of burqa-clad protesters and a Muslim man outside NSW State Parliament in Sydney today.

A group of men dressed in the veiled female garb as a publicity stunt to try and get the outfit banned.

Members of the group Faceless ventured into a Sydney CBD courthouse, pub and bank without drawing much reaction, but faced a stronger backlash later outside parliament.

“It’s got no place in Australia — it’s a front to a civilised country like Australia,” Faceless member Nicholas Folkes said of the burqa.

Nine News filmed a man outraged by the protesters, shouting in their faces and pulling off their veils.

“That’s what I think of you,” the man said after spitting on the ground.

The argument became more heated when a man connected to Faceless referred to the prophet Mohammed as “a rat”.

No one will be charged over the stunt.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



The Terrorist Australia Doesn’t Want

The Australian Federal Police did not pursue the extradition of an Islamic extremist over the murder of an Australian cameraman in Iraq, the ABC can reveal. A diplomatic cable dated 2009 and leaked to WikiLeaks suggests there were “no obstacles” to such an extradition request being approved. Paul Moran, a freelance cameraman, was killed in a suicide attack while on assignment for the ABC in 2003. Iraqi terrorist group Ansar al Islam claimed responsibility for the attack. The group’s founder, Najmuddin Faraj Ahmad, also known as Mullah Krekar, openly taunted the Australian Government to come and get him. But no-one did. In 2007 the ABC’s Foreign Correspondent broadcast Norwegian Jihad: An investigation of Mullah Krekar. An AFP spokesman has told Foreign Correspondent that officials considered launching a probe into the case. “The evaluation of evidence was considered against a possible offence under section 115 of the Criminal Code 1995 (Harming Australians),” he said. “In this case, there was insufficient information available to justify an investigation and as a result the AFP determined not to investigate the matter.” But there is no indication of how the AFP reached this conclusion.

Australia’s most experienced international war crimes prosecutor, Graham Blewitt, has slammed the decision as “a lot of crock, a fob-off”. Mr Blewitt was deputy chief prosecutor at the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal from 1994 to 2004 and also headed the Australian Nazi War Crimes Unit in the early 1990s. He says the AFP “has a policy of not touching anything to do with terrorism or war crimes with a 10-foot pole”. They don’t want to do it. Too expensive,” he said. “Their argument that it’s difficult to pursue witnesses and evidence overseas is a load of ****.” Mr Blewitt has accused the Federal Government of lacking the political will to pursue suspects as “there are no votes in war crimes, they walk away from it”.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Kenya Church Blast Leaves One Dead

At least one person has been killed and some 18 injured in bomb attacks in and near to the Kenyan city of Mombasa. The blasts are the latest in a string of attacks since the country sent troops into neighboring Somalia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mali: Neighbours Set to Close All Borders

All borders into landlocked Mali could be closed and its central bank starved of cash as the country’s neighbours attempted to force the controlling junta to restore democracy after the coup.

West Africa’s leaders met on Monday night to plot strategies on how to strong-arm Mali’s new governors into standing down and bringing back the ousted president. Chief among the options is to close borders and cut off capital to the national bank in Bamako. That would leave the country’s 15 million citizens, many of them facing the threat of famine as drought continues, struggling to find food, fuel and cash to buy medicines or keep businesses running. As the crisis in the West African country intensified on Monday, France and Belgium followed Britain’s lead in ordering its citizens to leave as soon as possible. Islamist militants fighting alongside Tuareg forces in the north planted their black flag in the centre of the ancient city of Timbuktu after it fell to the advancing rebels on Sunday night.

France, Mali’s former colonial ruler, ruled out sending troops to help resolve the crisis. But Alain Juppe, the foreign minister in Paris, said on Monday that he would “relay” the needs of Mali’s neighbours to the United Nations Security Council. Rebels in Mali’s Sahara regions have taken the opportunity of the confusion following last month’s coup to seize control of almost all territory in the north. There are fears that the rebels, initially mostly Tuaregs demanding self-determination, are now being overtaken by Islamist factions aiming to forge a new rule according to a strict interpretation of Islam. Captain Amadou Sanogo, the coup leader, took power because he said that the government of Amadou Toure, the deposed president, was doing little to beat back the rebels. But since the March 21 coup, the rebels have taken more and more territory. Their spokesman said yesterday that they did not intend to advance on Bamako, the capital, but would cement their control over newly-captured areas. They would prove hard to dislodge and would demand representation in the national parliament once the crisis passed, one diplomat in Bamako said.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Mali: Islamists Push for Sharia Law in Northern Mali

by Bate Felix

BAMAKO, April 2 (Reuters) — Islamists moved to impose sharia law in northern Mali after helping Tuareg separatists seize key towns, ransacking bars and banning Western-style clothes and music, residents said on Monday. A lightning 72-hour advance by rebels over the weekend, which exploited the chaotic aftermath of a military coup in the distant capital, is the latest threat to stability in West Africa, whose leaders met for crisis talks in Senegal. Coup leaders agreed on Sunday to prepare to hand power back to civilians after neighbouring states threatened to shut the land-locked country’s borders. Residents in the ancient trading post of Timbuktu said local Ansar Dine Islamists, who alongside Tuareg separatists seized the town on Sunday, had declared they were in control of the former Saharan tourist draw and would impose Islamic law. A Reuters reporter in the northern city of Gao, seized by rebels on Saturday, said Islamists there were ransacking bars and hotels serving alcohol. In Kidal, the third main town of the region, one resident told Reuters music had been barred from radio stations and Western-style clothes had been banned.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Mali: Ancient Islam Site Attacked by Tuaregs

AGADEZ, NIGER Booms from rocket launchers and automatic gunfire crackled around Mali’s fabled town of Timbuktu over the weekend. Known as an ancient seat of Islamic learning, for its 700-year-old mud mosque and, more recently, as host of the musical Festival in the Desert that attracted the Irish group U2’s lead singer Paul Hewson (Bono) in January, many are shocked at the attacks. On Sunday, nomadic Tuaregs who descended from the people who first created Timbuktu in the 11th century and seized it from invaders in 1434, attacked the city in their fight to create a homeland for the Sahara’s blue-turbanned nomads. Their assault deepens a political crisis sparked March 21 when mutinous soldiers seized power in the capital. The Tuaregs have rebelled before, but never have they succeeded in taking Timbuktu or the major northern centres of Kidal and Gao, which fell Friday and Saturday as demoralized government troops retreated.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Christian Blood on Obama’s Hands

Drops in a tidal wave of death that is sweeping toward us: We must not forget Boko Haram, the murdered Christians of Africa, the murdered Jews of Tolouse or the murdered Hindus of Karachi.

On Christmas Day of last year, Muslim terrorists set off bombs in churches across Nigeria. It was one of the worst attacks by Boko Haram, which is determined to continue its reign of terror until the country is ruled by Muslim law. Christian pastors have been beheaded by Boko Haram and a spokesman for the group has openly stated that their interim goal is “to eradicate Christians from certain parts of the country.”

The Boko Haram death toll has surpassed a thousand in only a few years. It has killed 250 people this year alone. It draws inspiration from the Taliban, has links to Al-Qaeda, and has carried out numerous sophisticated attacks, including multiple car bombings.

That leaves one question. Why hasn’t Boko Haram been designated a terrorist organization? it has killed more people than some of the organizations on the list and it is dedicated to ethnic cleansing, something that we decided was unacceptable when it came to Muslims. Shouldn’t it then be equally unacceptable when it is being done by Muslims to Christians?

Apparently not. Johnnie Carson, Obama’s Chicago-born man in Africa, and the Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs at subcommittee hearings chaired by Senator Coons, dismissed the idea of designating Boko Haram a terrorist organization and claimed falsely, that despite Boko Haram’s repeated statements about its goals and its very name, that this conflict was not driven by religion, but by social inequities.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Greece to Complete Anti-Migrant Wall ‘Very Shortly’

BRUSSELS — Greece has said it will quickly finish construction of a controversial wall designed to keep out migrants, claiming that the thousands of people coming into the country each year threaten “social peace.” “The construction will begin very shortly and will also be completely very shortly,” the country’s citizen protection minister Micalis Chrisochoidis said during a visit to Brussels on Monday (2 April).

The three-metre-high barrier is to block a 12.5km-long strip of land between Turkey and Greece. The rest of the border between the two countries is formed by the Evros river. Athens says almost 130,000 immigrants entered Greece via the land crossing last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Obama to Relax Rules for Illegal Immigrants to Become Citizens

On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security will post for public comment an administrative change intended to reduce the time illegal immigrants would have to spend away from their families while applying for legal status, officials said. The current system requires the applicant to first leave the U.S. to seek a legal visa, but under the proposed change illegal immigrants could claim the time apart from a spouse, child or parent would create “extreme hardship” and allow them to remain in the U.S. as they begin the process.

Once approved, the person would be required to briefly leave the country to pick up the legal visa abroad.

Currently, families are often separated for several months as they await resolution of their applications. The change could reduce that time apart to one week in some cases, officials said. The White House hopes the new procedures could be in place by the end of the year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


In the Shadow of the Sword, By Tom Holland [Book Review]

This is a book of extraordinary richness. I found myself amused, diverted and enchanted by turn. For Tom Holland has an enviable gift for summoning up the colour, the individuals and animation of the past, without sacrificing factual integrity. He writes with a contagious conviction that history is not only a fascinating tale in itself but is a well-honed instrument with which we can understand our neighbours and our own times, maybe even ourselves. He is also a divertingly inventive writer with a wicked wit — there’s something of both Gibbon and Tom Wolfe in his writing. Thus Theoderic… “for all the sheen of his classical education… had been given to murdering courtiers with his own hands, and sporting a moustache.” I also relished the description of a shaman “vomiting up revelations”.

He possesses a falcon eye for detail, whether it’s the royal Sassanian battle flag as it advances north towards its doom into the steppes of Central Asia, or the reported vision of the Avar Khan who knew Constantinople would survive his assault after he saw its walls defended by the Virgin Mary “a woman alone in decorous dress”, or how Rabbinical scholars recommended anointing the scalp with the blood of a dead rooster as a cure against migraine. We catch a glimpse of a workaholic Byzantine Emperor burning the midnight oil in the recesses of his administrative palace just as we witness the repulsive retching death spasms suffered by the victims of the 6th-century bubonic plague. But Holland can also do the far horizons in a few telling brush strokes, skillfully colouring in our mental map of ‘barbarian Western Europe’ with Ostrogoths, Vandals, Franks and Visigoths.

The ostensible subject at the heart of In the Shadow of the Sword is the sudden and totally unexpected rise of the Arab Empire of the Caliphate in the seventh century. Holland charts its emergence out of the two Empires that preceded it: the Byzantine Empire of the eastern Mediterranean and the Sassanian Empire of Persia and Mesopatamia. To disentangle the nature of these two very particular states, Holland looks back over the centuries to identify their different spiritual legacies and political dynamics. But the core of the narrative starts in 480 AD and takes us on a roller-coaster of an adventure, ending with the mutually assured destruction of each others territory by Heraclius and Khusrow, which allows for the sudden emergence of an Arab Empire in around 650 AD. Over the next hundred years the Caliphate expands its dominions, indulges in civil war and gradually defines itself around a new culture. Holland’s end date is around 750 AD — with the failure of the last great Arab attempt to storm Constantinople, the fall of the Ummayad dynasty (centred on Damascus) and the emergence of the Abbasid Caliphs of Baghdad. This is an understandable end-date for another reason, for this is when paper replaced parchment and when the first great Arab chronicles were penned, not to mention the vast corpus of Hadith sayings and Koranic exegesis by a new class of literate Muslim jurists.

But running like a stream of molten lava beneath the narrative of Holland’s history is an even more intriguing story. This is a history of the history as it were, telling how the warrior-dominated Empires of Antiquity were transformed into the first monotheistic states; how the old inclusive conquest states, with their comparatively simple desire for submission and tribute were replaced by states which imposed systems of total belief and demanded exclusive loyalty. As Holland reveals this was a slow, incremental achievement by literate and inventive clerics, teachers and jurists. On the one hand they are heroes, proving to the world that the pen is mightier than the sword, building a world dominated by passionate beliefs, schools, hospices and hospitals (rather than theatres, fora and amphitheatres) but they are also the villains, the crabby, jealous, legalistic men who forge prisons from the bricks of religion. We observe the Eastern Roman Empire morphing itself into Byzantium, first with the closure of the last pagan temples and schools of philosophy, then with a slow tightening of the definitions of Christian Orthodoxy, which will progressively condemn Jews and Samaritans before advancing to exclude the so-called Arian, Monophysite or Nestorian churches. In the same period the Talmudic schools of Mesopotamia create modern Judaism and Sassanian Iran becomes the homeland of a national, priest-ridden Zoroastrian orthodoxy. Many of its rituals, the habit of five daily prayers, of an obsessive dental hygiene and intolerance of dissent (which led to the martyrdom of such a God-loving individual as the prophet Mani) will be grafted into early Islam. This is wonderful, hard-hitting analysis, elegantly tied into the unfolding narrative of events, with each religious establishment exposed in all its glory and treacherous realpolitik.

Holland has also set himself a third task, as judge of the traditional Muslim narrative. He explains that the traditional story of Islamic origins and the life of the Prophet was only written down a hundred years after the events occurred, and was edited by writers whose primary motivation was theological, and who needed to ground their own political and legal innovations by creating retrospective case history. This is true enough, and as he also demonstrates this happened all over the ancient world, but the craft of the historian is to surely sift and winnow, not to throw the baby out with the bath-water. But instead of interpreting the traditions, Holland follows the brilliant, challenging ideas that Patricia Crone threw into the goldfish bowl of Islamic scholarship a few decades ago to stir things. In essence the full deconstructionist interpretation of nascent Islam denies the existence of pre-Islamic Mecca, tries to divide the Prophet Muhammad into two characters (along the obvious fault line of the different tone of the revelations from Mecca and Medina) and imagines early Islam as a Jewish-Christian heresy aspiring to conquer the Holy Land. They also tend to site non-Muslim sources in preference to anything that can be seen to have been composed in Abbasid Baghdad. But interestingly enough, Holland’s vivid selection of non-Muslim texts all prove broadly supportive of the traditional narrative of events — even the most remarkable chance find of them all, a humble receipt for sheep paid over to a very early Arab military detachment operating in Egypt.

Despite this, Holland keeps rigidly to the deconstructionist interpretation, indeed pushes out the boundaries with some rather wild suggestions, such as placing the original homeland of Islam in a base-camp on the desert borders of Palestine, not to mention the creation of Mecca by an Ummayyad Caliph. I was intrigued to read these suggestions, but ultimately unconvinced. Take the issue of Mecca as an example. We know that the ritual actions of the Meccan Haj are pagan in origin, and can usefully be compared to the survival of other pagan rituals in this period, such as at Harran. No-one interested in creating a brand new, pure Islamic cult centre in the middle of the Arabian desert would have instituted ritual actions connected with the annual commemoration of the death and rebirth of the great Goddess! And of course the geographical location of Mecca allows us to understand the many Ethiopian and Red Sea influences that have been discerned in the language of the Koran. Even with these slight flaws In the Shadow of the Sword remains a spell-bindingly brilliant multiple portrait of the triumph of monotheism in the ancient world.

Barnaby Rogerson’s latest book is ‘The Heirs Of The Prophet Muhammad: And The Roots Of The Sunni-Shia Schism’

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120401

Financial Crisis
» EU Gives Madrid Hardest Time of All
» Greece is Our Vanguard
» Italy Must Adopt More Reforms, Barroso Says
» Italy: Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena Lost 4.69 Bln Euros in 2011
» More Greeks Drawn by Village Life, Survey Says
» Spain: We Are Building a “War Economy”
» World is Watching Italy’s Labour Reforms, Says Monti
 
Europe and the EU
» Detained Islamists in France ‘Planning a Kidnap’
» French Terror Group Await Charges
» Italy: Holy See Approved Criminal’s Burial in a Basilica
» Italy: API’s Rutelli Pledges Recovery of Lusi’s Embezzled Eur20m
» Observatory on Religious Freedom in Rome Against Fundamentalism and Relativism
» Spain: €500,000 in Damages After Barcelona Vandalism
» Unicorn Cookbook Found at the British Library
» Will a Cashless Society Lift All Boats, Or Will it Sink the ‘99 Percent’?
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Belgrade Protests Growing Arrests of Serbs
 
Mediterranean Union
» Turkey: Bagis Asks EU to Grant Visa Facilitation
 
North Africa
» Ceasefire Reached Between Rival Tribes in Libya’s South
» Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Nominates Presidential Candidate
» Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Names Presidential Pick
» Tunisia: $100 Million in Aid From USA
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Qatar: Normal Life Tough for Palestinian Ex-Prisoners
» The UN Acts in Violation of International Law While Claiming to Uphold it
 
Middle East
» Iran’s Nuclear Attack Plan
» Lebanon: UNIFIL Anti-Riot Units/Lebanese Army Joint Exercise
» Syria: Mass Exodus of Refugees to Jordan
» Syrian Regime: Revolt Over, Gradual Withdrawal From Cities
» Turkey: Islamic School Reform Passed
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Tragedy of the Children Killed Just for Being Friends: Girl: 12, And Boy, 15, Murdered in Horrific Acid Attack
» Afghanistan: Hundreds of Women Jailed for ‘Moral Crimes’
» Burma: Suu Kyi Wins Landmark Seat in Parliament, Party Says
» Clashes Break Out Across Indonesia Over Rising Diesel and Gasoline Prices, Many Injured
» India Boat-Shooting Jurisdiction Ruling Put Off Again
» India: Karnataka: Protestant Clergyman Risks Jail, Attack Against Him Seventh Case in 2012
» Indonesia: The Diocese of Padang Challenges the Government Attempts to Stop the Building of a Church
» Italy Not Giving Up on Marines Incarcerated in India
 
Far East
» A Hidden Threat as Asia Tops the West in Centa-Millionaires
» Amid Rumors of Unrest, China Cracks Down on the Internet
» Monti and Italy’s Dream of “Chinese Investment” And Religious Freedom
 
Immigration
» Dutch Hire Fewer Romanians and Bulgarians
» Greek Police Start Sweeping Athens of Illegals
» Italy ‘Responsible’ For 63 Migrant Deaths Says CE
» More Than 100,000 Spaniards Leave Country in One Year
» Refugee Boat Survivor Arrested in Netherlands
» ‘Regularisation of Illegal Immigrants is a Mistake’
 
General
» Anthropocene — Age of Man

Financial Crisis


EU Gives Madrid Hardest Time of All

El País

“Brussels is imposing a larger cut on Spain than on Greece, Portugal and Ireland,” complains El País. The European Commission requires, in effect, that Madrid trim back its deficit from 8.5 percent to three percent of GDP in two years. This reduction is twice that demanded from Dublin and Lisbon — and higher than that required from Athens. According to El País —…

.

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



Greece is Our Vanguard

Hospodárské noviny Prague

The near-collapse of Greece is the scenario that awaits other countries if they fail to get their debt under control. The aid to Athens is a sign that the European Union is still alive, but without the discipline of the fiscal pact, it won’t be enough, says a Czech economist.

Tomáš Sedlácek

Economies look for differences, and they converge. By now we are so interconnected commercially that for us the fall of a minor economy threatens such a huge emotional and economic-financial shock that we will do anything to avoid it, so long as there is at least one straw to clutch at.

Because of the two world wars that pushed Europe into a Union — we’re not threatened by external attack, nor by famine, nor by “lack of living space” — we have begun to feel that we have lost the moral, political, economic, military and philosophical right to lead the world, and therefore to be a superpower.

Europe emerged from the dust and confusion of post-war reconstruction thanks to the substantial aid of the Marshall Plan. It was an American plan, to help the continent where the Second World War had broken out and from where it had spread across the whole world — and the aid came not as loans, but as gifts. Europe did get back on its feet and built something totally unprecedented out of its history: a free union of nations, which don’t go to war with each other, but negotiate and trade.

Increase in solidarity

Another precept, however, is more important: to ruin (or fail to help) economically stricken nations or regions is unwise. Once we thought that we could profit only at the expense of someone else. But today the opposite is true. We can profit best working together, not against each other…

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



Italy Must Adopt More Reforms, Barroso Says

‘New labor code by summer’ Schifani promises Brussels

(ANSA) — Brussels, March 30 — Italy must adopt more crisis-averting reforms despite the progress it has already made, European Commission President Jose’ Manuel Barroso said Friday. “It must rapidly adopt further reforms in order to restabilize faith in its competitiveness,” said Barroso after meeting with Italian Senate President Roberto Schifani. Schifani is in Brussels to discuss Italy’s role in fighting the euro crisis.

He also presented Premier Mario Monti’s proposed labor reforms to European Council Speaker Herman van Rompuy.

“By summer, there will be a shared labor reform,” he told van Rompuy. The government last week approved hotly contested labour reforms that include measures to make it easier for firms to fire workers and new benefits for people out of work.

Monti says the reform package will boost productivity and make it easier for young people and women to enter the job market, but trade unions and the center-left Democratic Party have demanded changes to the measure on worker dismissals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monte Dei Paschi Di Siena Lost 4.69 Bln Euros in 2011

Siena, (AKI) — Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the world’s oldest bank, said it lost 4.69 billion euros in 2011 after a string of writing down the value of acquisitions that were hurt by the European debt crisis.

“The reasons justifying the need for a reduction in goodwill lie primarily in the new macroeconomic scenario, which was penalized by the sovereign debt crisis, tensions in the main financial markets and persisting uncertainty about global economic recovery,” the bank said.

Italy’s third-biggest lender had writedowns worth 4.51 billion euros, the Siena-based company said on Thursday.

Under new management, the bank has launched a restructuring initiative which includes possible asset sales.

The Tuscan bank was founded in 1472.

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



More Greeks Drawn by Village Life, Survey Says

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 28 — More than 1.5 million Greeks are considering moving from the city to the provinces, daily Kathimerini reports quoting the results of a survey commissioned by the Agricultural Development Ministry that were made public Tuesday. The survey, conducted by polling firm Kapa Research on a sample of 1,286 respondents in Athens and Thessaloniki, found that seven out of 10 (68.2%) have considered leaving the city for a new life in the provinces while one in five (19.3%) has already made the initial moves to relocate. Three-quarters of the respondents who expressed a desire to move to the provinces are aged under 44. Around half said they were interested in going into farming — with most drawn to cultivating olives or producing olive oil — while 18.3% would like to work in the tourism or culture sectors. Cultivation was not the only pastime of interest to those eyeing the agricultural and food sectors.

Some said they would like to work in the processing or distribution of agricultural goods. Two-thirds of those who said they would like a new life in the provinces have been to college with a quarter of them boasting a postgraduate degree. The majority of respondents (70%) said they would accept a lower salary for a better quality of life. An initiative launched by the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, which is renting out small parcels of farmland for a nominal fee to cash-strapped Greeks who want to grow their own fruit and vegetables, has already received some 4,000 applications, Skai TV reported earlier this month.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: We Are Building a “War Economy”

El País Madrid

In the midst of deep recession and massive unemployment, with a higher than expected deficit and a general strike round the corner, Spain — despite reforms and deep budget cuts — is struggling to emerge from the crisis and is causing new concern within the euro area.

Joaquín Estefanía

One hundred days after the inauguration of his government with its absolute majority, Mariano Rajoy can point to at least three major economic reforms: in labour, in finances, and in budgetary stability. Looking beyond the opinions that might be expressed on each of them (all point in the same direction: to satisfy the obligations imposed by Brussels and to reassure the markets) the PP government cannot be accused of inaction.

The result so far, however, has not been the intended one. The EU is suspicious, and Spain has overtaken Italy at the forefront of problems associated with risk premium, moving into the red zone of eurozone investor concerns. Moreover, in recent days, the Spanish economy has come in for the severest attacks from the main bibles of the global economic press, from various reports by investment banks and, most ironically, from the Italian prime minister himself, Mario Monti, who said “Spain is giving Europe serious concerns”…

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



World is Watching Italy’s Labour Reforms, Says Monti

Govt faces opposition to plans to make firing easier

(see related stories) (ANSA) — Rome, March 30 — The progress of Italy’s contentious labour-market reforms is being keenly watched outside the country, Premier Mario Monti said on Friday.

Italy has moved out of the centre of the eurozone crisis after Monti’s emergency administration of non-political technocrats passed an austerity package and structural measures, such as liberalisations in the service sector and pension reform.

But former European commissioner Monti suggested Friday that parliament needed to approve his government’s labour reforms without watering them down in order to maintain the credibility gained with investors and international leaders.

“I have seen that abroad, especially in Japan, they are waiting to see the outcome of the fourth big group of reforms after the consolidation of the public finances, pension reforms and liberalisations,” Monti said in Tokyo during a visit to the Far East.

“There is a lot of attention on the proposal the government has made to reform the labour market and people are waiting to see what will happen in parliament”. One of the three main political parties backing Monti, the centre-left Democratic Party, and Italy’s biggest union, the leftwing CGIL, are demanding changes to the measures that will make it possible for firms to dismiss workers if they have economic grounds to do so.

The government says this measure is necessary as companies are reluctant to hire people on regular contracts at the moment because it is so hard to dismiss them.

It says the reform, which also includes new benefits for people out of work, will boost productivity and growth and make it easier for young people and women to find jobs. Monti added that there is “a strong residue of concern about the eurozone” around the world, with the situation of Spain now causing fears of contagion to other European countries.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Detained Islamists in France ‘Planning a Kidnap’

Seventeen people detained by French police in a crackdown on suspected Islamist networks might have been plotting a kidnap, the head of the police intelligence’s unit has said.

A French Muslim convert convicted in 2007 for planning an attack on an Australian nuclear plant is one of the suspected militants being held for questioning after a series of raids throughout France, a police source said on Saturday.

Willy Brigitte was arrested on Friday at his home in Asnieres, a northwestern suburb of Paris. Authorities found no weapons but seized his computer and a mobile phone, the source told Reuters.

The crackdown followed a pledge by President Nicolas Sarkozy, who is three weeks away from the first round of presidential elections, to rid France of radical Islamists.

His public approval rating has edged up slightly due to what most French believe to be his able handling of this month’s killing spree by an al Qaeda-inspired gunman in Toulouse.

The latest raids by masked police commandos were not linked directly to the rampage in southwestern France, a police source has said, but they have still sent a strong message of force as security issues shot up to the top of agenda ahead of the vote.

On Saturday, authorities extended their detention of the 17 suspects, including Brigitte, held for questioning. A normal detention period of 24 hours under French law can be extended up to 96 hours in terrorism investigations.

The head of the DCRI domestic intelligence agency, Bernard Squarcini, told La Provence daily in an interview published on Saturday the suspected militants were planning a kidnapping.

“They appeared to be preparing a kidnapping. As regards their financing, we’re waiting for them to explain themselves,” he told the newspaper.

Brigitte was convicted by a French court in March 2007 for plotting an attack against the Lucas Heights nuclear research facility outside Sydney. He was sentenced to nine years in jail.

Australia, targeted by Islamist militants for its role alongside US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, had deported the Islamic convert, originally from the French territory of Guadeloupe, to France in October 2003 after he breached his tourist visa, before any attack could be carried out.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



French Terror Group Await Charges

THE 17 people held by French police, including Sydney man Willie Brigitte, will remain in custody for another day.

Friday’s arrests were made in connection with a probe into an alleged terror plot and under French anti-terror laws the suspects can be held without charge until tomorrow.

The head of France’s Central Directorate for Domestic Intelligence (DCRI), Bernard Squarcini, said yesterday that those arrested were “French nationals” involved in “collective war-like training, linked to a violent, religious indoctrination.”

Brigitte, who was extradited to France nine years ago to face trial for charges related to his membership of a terror cell which planned to bomb the Lucas Heights nuclear plant, was detained by French police on Friday in Asnieres, north of Paris

Some of the other people arrested belonged to a suspected extremist group called Forsane Alizza, Mr Squarcini said, and had been involved in paintball gun games.

The arrests took place in several cities, including Toulouse, where extremist gunman Mohamed Merah was shot dead by police last week after a series of cold-blooded shootings that left seven dead, including three Jewish children.

President Nicolas Sarkozy said the arrests were not directly linked to the Merah case, but he has called on police to increase its surveillance of “radical Islam” in what the opposition has described as a vote-catching move less than a month ahead of a presidential election.

Socialist Michel Sapin admitted that the arrests were “legitimate” but said that the presence of television news cameras during the roundup was not, after the footage was beamed into French homes.

“The presence of cameras at that moment to film the scene so that it can then be reproduced and comment on is not legitimate,” Mr Sapin told Radio J.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Italy: Holy See Approved Criminal’s Burial in a Basilica

(AGI) Rome — The Holy See approved a request to bury the leader of a criminal organisation in Rome’s Saint Appolinare basilica.

Interior Minister Annamaria Cancellieri wrote in a letter to Walter Veltroni that Cardinal Ugo Poletti approved the decision to bury the leader of the infamous Banda della Magliana, Enrico ‘Renatino’ De Pedis, in the basilica on March 10 1990, when he served as president of the Italian bishops conference (CEI).

The decision was also approved by the Rome city council. The documents mentioned by the minister in her letter includes one certifying that De Pedis’s family was authorised by municipal authorities, on April 24 1990, to transfer his body from Rome to the Vatican City. The lawyer of De Pedis’s relatives, Lorenzo Radogna, said they wouldn’t oppose “any decision by judicial or administrative authorities to transfer their loved one’s tomb”.

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



Italy: API’s Rutelli Pledges Recovery of Lusi’s Embezzled Eur20m

(AGI) Milan — Former Margherita Party leader, Francesco Rutelli, pledges to recover funds embezzled by treasurer Luigi Lusi. Speaking as the current president of the API party during an interview at popular weekend talk show “Che Tempo che Fa,” Rutelli pledged to “recover all funds embezzled by this man, and the Italian people will get their money back and more.” With Lusi accused of appropriating some 20m euro in party funds, Rutelli said sums recovered will directed at “a public concern.”

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



Observatory on Religious Freedom in Rome Against Fundamentalism and Relativism

The new institution is expected to collect, check and release information on violations of religious freedom in the world. It will be helped in its task by Italian and Vatican diplomats. Dangers to religious freedom are not only found in countries like Nigeria or Pakistan but also in Western nations where a dominant laicism has expelled God from society.

Rome (AsiaNews) — In a world of violent fundamentalisms and intolerant relativism, where atheistic and ultra-religious states marginalise and persecute minorities, it is important to have an institution that can assess religious freedom around the world. For this purpose, Italy and the Vatican have jointly set up an Observatory on Religious Freedom based in Rome.

The proposal was made public at a meeting held at the Italian Embassy to the Holy See in a room of the beautiful Borromeo Palace. Aid to the Church in Need Foundation President Card Mauro Piacenza, Secretary for Relations with States Mgr Dominique Mamberti, Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi di Sant’Agata and Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno spoke at the event. Italy’s Ambassador to the Holy See Francesco Maria Greco acted as moderator.

Mayor Alemanno said that the idea of an observatory was first thought as an “ideal gift” to Benedict XVI back in 2009. For the mayor, Rome, in terms of religious freedom, is most qualified place because it is the “headquarter” of one the largest religious communities in the world, the Catholic Church. It is also one of the freest cities in the world, with Europe’s largest mosque and the world’s oldest diasporic Jewish community.

In his address, Foreign Minister Terzi spoke about what Italy’s diplomatic efforts on behalf of religious freedom in a number of countries, together with the European Union and in cooperation with the Vatican.

Card Piacenza explained the notion of religious freedom, indicating what risk factors may jeopardise it. Citing John Paul II and Benedict XVI, he described religious freedom as the “mother” of all freedoms, the litmus test to measure the state of human rights in a country.

To respect religious freedom, we need “reason and truth,” the cardinal noted. Without them, arbitrariness, which rules religious fundamentalisms, prevails as so does relativism, which leads us towards nothingness, with the danger of destroying the bases of democracy. “The prevailing relativism is the least favourable ground for religious freedom,” he said.

What concerns the prelate is the dominant culture of the West, which “has expelled God”, and tries to undermine further its social importance.

“Rediscovering the ‘public role of God’, i.e. the presence and role of God in history and society, is consequently the essential premise to exercise religious freedom. Society will more fully guarantee the religious freedom of its citizens when it will stop excluding God from the public sphere.”

Mgr Mamberti, who is just back from the papal trip to Mexico and Cuba, cited Benedict XVI, who emphasised to Cubans (and the government of Raul Castro) the importance of religious freedom as a source of creativity and social harmony.

The secretary for Relations with States expressed his concern not only for what is happening in countries like Nigeria and Pakistan, but also in the West.

In his view, intolerance can be seen at three levels, namely that of cultural hostility, legal discrimination (for instance, the presence of crucifixes in Italy) and violent crimes of persecution.

These levels stand on a slippery slope and people can easily go from one to the other.

For the full text (in Italian) of Card Mauro Piacenza’s presentation, click here.

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



Spain: €500,000 in Damages After Barcelona Vandalism

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 30 — At least half a million euros’ worth of damage was done to urban fixtures, 300 rubbish bins and numerous shop windows. This is the estimate given today by Barcelona mayor Xavier Trias of the damage caused by a group of violent individuals who yesterday wreaked havoc in some of the city’s central streets at the same time as protests during the national strike. In statements to the media, Trias announced that the town council would act as the complainant against those arrested for vandalism, and has called for a revision of the penal code to raise the fines inflicted on those responsible for the damage. The mayor then stressed the difference between the incidents involving isolated groups of violent individuals and the protest marches organised by unions as part of the general strike, which was carried out “in an exemplary manner”. About 45 people were arrested for yesterday’s incidents in the Catalan city.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Unicorn Cookbook Found at the British Library

A long-lost medieval cookbook, containing recipes for hedgehogs, blackbirds and even unicorns, has been discovered at the British Library. Professor Brian Trump of the British Medieval Cookbook Project described the find as near-miraculous. “We’ve been hunting for this book for years. The moment I first set my eyes on it was spine-tingling.”

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Will a Cashless Society Lift All Boats, Or Will it Sink the ‘99 Percent’?

Sweden’s push to become the first nation to phase out physical bills and coins marks the next major evolution in the creation of the cashless society. In some areas of Sweden, people no longer need to carry bills or plastic cards, and payments for everyday items such as bus tickets and groceries are made by mobile devices. The ultimate point of arrival, of course, is the creation of the truly cashless society in which all payments are digital and mobile devices contain all the information we once entrusted to our wallets.

So will this new era of digital money lead to a rising tide that lifts the boats of America’s “99 percent” — or will it lead to a further chasm in the digital divide?

In addition to this economic effect, there are other positive social consequences to moving to a cashless society. Sweden’s proponents for the cashless society, for example, highlight the potential for lower crime rates and fewer cases of fraud and corruption. Intuitively, this makes sense. If fewer people are carrying around cash, it’s just not as easy to pull off robberies or make under-the-table cash payments. In 2011, there were only 16 bank robberies in all of Sweden — down from 110 just a few years ago.

Not all is rosy, however. A cashless society is also a society where there is no longer any anonymity. (Have you ever tried to give someone some “unmarked” 1’s and 0’s when you’re making payments online?) There are understandably concerns about privacy, especially when payments are made through social networks. At the end of the day, however, there is a direct correlation between becoming a cashless society and becoming a digitally innovative society. The end of money may just mean the beginning of prosperity.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Belgrade Protests Growing Arrests of Serbs

Belgrade, 28 March (AKI) — Serbian authorities on Wednesday protested against growing arrests of Serbs in Kosovo, which declared independence in 2008, saying it was a proof “that Serbs in Kosovo are exposed to terrible pressure”.

At least twelve Serbs have been arrested over the past week by Kosovo police on suspicion that they worked for Serbian institutions which Belgrade still operates in its former province, but Pristina claims they were “illegal”.

Four Serbs were arrested Tuesday evening at border crossing with Kosovo on charges that they carried election material for 6 May Serbian elections parliamentary and municipal elections, which Pristina opposes.

Five people were arrested on Monday for allegedly carrying Serbian political literature and for “fomenting national and ethnic hatred”.

Belgrade opposes Kosovo independence, declared by majority ethnic Albanians, but has agreed under international pressure to a joint border control, freedom of movement and on representation of Kosovo in international forums.

The European Union has tied Serbia’s bid for membership to normalization of relations with Kosovo, short of formal recognition, and pro-European president Boris Tadic is eager to please Brussels to achieve that goal.

“It is quiet clear that Pristina by such acts stultifies the agreement on freedom of movement and by frequent arrests of Serbs, who work for Serbian institutions, wants to intimidate Kosovo Serbs,” the ministry said in a statement.

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

Mediterranean Union


Turkey: Bagis Asks EU to Grant Visa Facilitation

EU court rulings in favour, govts should comply

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 29 — Another appeal has been made by Turkey to EU member states and the EU Commission to ease visa restrictions on Turkish nationals. The latest was made yesterday by European Affairs Minister Egemen Bagis, who based the appeal on principles of international law. “We ask member states,” Bagis said, “to comply with — in an unequivocal manner and without delay — the rulings by the European Court of Justice and national courts, in line with the Rule of Law principle.” Bagis holds that Turkish citizens do not need to request a visa from EU member states, referring to a clause in the so-called “Ankara Protocol”, an agreement on the customs union between the EU and Turkey. Supporting this view are recent judgments issued by courts in Germany and the Netherlands as well as one by the European Court of Justice.

“EU governments, added Bagis, “should abide by these rulings,” and comply with international agreements. The Turkish minister then addressed the EU Commission, “guardian of the treaties, which should take appropriate action.” The Ankara protocol is the same agreement that the EU wants to apply in Turkey, especially as concerns opening Turkish ports and airports to naval and air traffic from the Republic of Cyprus.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Ceasefire Reached Between Rival Tribes in Libya’s South

The National Transitional Council said it brokered a ceasefire between rival tribes in Libya’s south, as it struggles to maintain order in the fractious nation. Scores have died in tribal violence over the past week.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Nominates Presidential Candidate

Egypt’s most powerful Islamist organization on Saturday nominated one of its members for president, breaking a promise that it would not enter the race and angering critics who called the decision an attempt to control the country. The Muslim Brotherhood announced at a news conference that Khairat el-Shater, the group’s top financier and arguably its most influential member, would be the candidate of its political wing, as a rift grows between the Islamist group and the country’s ruling military leaders.

The group recently said it was considering fielding a candidate in the May election only because it was concerned that former regime figures backed by the ruling military council would win if it did not. The Muslim Brotherhood is the most powerful political force in Egypt, and its political wing won nearly half the seats in the newly elected parliament. But at least two other prominent Islamists are running for president, and the Brotherhood’s move could split the vote.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Names Presidential Pick

The Muslim Brotherhood has announced the candidate it will support in Egypt’s presidential election. The Brotherhood had originally said it would not field a candidate to allay fears that it sought a power grab.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: $100 Million in Aid From USA

Hillary Clinton announces to PM Djebali

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, MARCH 29 — The US will donate 100 million dollars to Tunisia in order to reduce their current debt situation. This was communicated yesterday, as stated by a government press release, by the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton during a long telephone conversation with Prime Minister Hamadi Djebali as part of recurring consultations.

This gift, according to the government statement, is part of the plans and permanent talks with our Tunisian friends”.

The American Secretary of State said that the US administration decided to donate the large sum of money in view of its support for a democratic transition in Tunisia and to consent the country to benefit from financial aid in order to tackle public debt. The initiative should also encourage other countries to donate to Tunisia after a number of nations have already stood forward in aid of the North African state.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Qatar: Normal Life Tough for Palestinian Ex-Prisoners

Freed in Shalit exchange, Hamas chief at collective wedding

(ANSA) — DOHA, MARCH 29 — Around 6 months have passed since 15 Palestinian prisoners convicted for murder and other serious terrorist crimes were freed and transferred to Qatar following a deal between Hamas and Israel that saw the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit freed in exchange for the release of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners. In the last few months, the lives of the Palestinian former prisoners has changed dramatically and the discovery of freedom has, in some cases, been devastating.

Many of the prisoners were arrested more than 20 years ago, when Internet and mobile phones had not yet been invented and now find themselves in a world with no points of reference. “I entered an Israeli prison when I was 25 and when I came out I was 50, I am learning everything now” says Hazem Osaily, one of the prisoners released, who now lives in Doha. “In prison, for some time there was not even television, but after an 18-day hunger strike they gave us a TV with 12 channels, including the Israeli ones. I feel like a child in front of the Internet and my wife is helping me to learn how to use a computer”. Osaily and another 12 of the 15 prisoners freed in Qatar got married in Doha shortly after their release in a collective ceremony celebrated in the presence of the exiled Hamas leader, Khaled Meshaal.

Many of the former prisoners were university student when they were arrested and were unable to complete their studies. Zaher Jebreen, one of the founders and former leaders of Al Qassam, the armed wing of Hamas, went on hunger strike for 30 days, demanding the right to study in prison and managed to gain a degree in Political Science while behind bars. Many of them, however, say that political prisoners in Israeli jails are not allowed to study or to work. Majdi Amro, who was sentenced to 190 years in prison, is now 33, having spent a third of his life in an Israeli prison. As soon as he was freed, he enrolled at Qatar University to continue the studies he was forced to interrupt after being arrested.

None of the men will ever return to the Palestinian Territories.

The deal between Hamas and Israel stipulated a ban on repatriation. But none of them express any regret for their actions. On the contrary, they express a wish to continue the struggle for Palestine.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The UN Acts in Violation of International Law While Claiming to Uphold it

The acronym “OPT”stands for “Occupied Palestinian Territory.” The Arabs no longer refer to Judea and Samaria as the “West Bank,”which was Jordanian nomenclature during its period of occupation from 1948 to 1967; they now prefer to brand it as Palestinian land which is occupied.

Not only is the land not “occupied,”but it is also not “Palestinian.”It never was “Palestinian”—i.e., subject to Palestinian sovereignty. Sovereignty of Judea and Samaria has never been allocated, nor has sovereignty been claimed. Israel refers to the region’s status as “disputed,”but I personally reject such a description because the Palestinians have no legal claim to this territory. Israel alone has the right to claim sovereignty over these lands.

During the first half of the last century until the State of Israel was declared in 1948, the Jews living under the Palestine Mandate were referred to as Palestinians and thought of themselves as such. The Arabs living there were generally considered Syrians or Jordanians or just plain Arabs. It was not until the sixties and seventies that they began calling themselves Palestinians so as to claim all of Mandated Palestine for themselves.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran’s Nuclear Attack Plan

Last Thursday I had the pleasure of speaking with Dr. Hugh Cort, author of The American Hiroshima: Iran’s Plan for an Attack on the United States. Related to this interview, readers may listen to my interview with CIA agent Reza Kahlili, who agrees with Dr. Cort that a nuclear Iran cannot be deterred by the threat of Mutual Assured Destruction. According to Dr. Cort, “[D]eterrence will not work with the fanatical Islamic radicals that rule Iran. These rulers are like suicide bombers, who do not care if they die, as long as their victims get blown up as well.”

In his analysis of Islamist motivation, Dr. Cort follows the work of Reza Kahlili, who affirms that the leaders of the Islamic Republic believe in a ruthless ideology. “If you read [the] Koran, many verses talk about killing enemies of Allah and infidels,” Kahlili explained. “And there is no mercy, absolutely none, unless you convert to the religion. Nobody can say otherwise. Allah is a dictator… Many Muslims will be offended, but many do not even know what the Koran says.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: UNIFIL Anti-Riot Units/Lebanese Army Joint Exercise

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 30 — The Anti-Riot units of UNIFIL (the UN force under Italian command deployed in southern Lebanon along the Israeli border) have conducted a joint military exercise with Lebanese Armed Forces at the Shama base, the headquarters of the west sector command and where the mechanized Pinerolo brigade is based. For the first time since the implementation of the UNIFIL mandate by the United Nations in 2006, west sector units have conducted joint training exercises aiming to develop coordination on the field, in the case of intervention by UN peacekeeping troops to support the local armed forces to maintain order. Taking part in the exercise was a company with Italian training with troops from the Eighth Lancieri di Montebello Regiment and the Seventh Bersaglieri one, an Irish company and a Malayan one. After the activities, in thanking all the personnel who took part, General Carlo Lamanna (commander of the west sector) underscored that the presence of the Lebanese Armed Forces in the exercise had given a practical and legitimate sense to it, and stressed that every contingent — though endowed with diverse techniques and equipment — had shown itself able to achieve the target.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Mass Exodus of Refugees to Jordan

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, MARCH 29 — Hundreds of Syrian families arrived in Jordan illegally on Thursday after crossing the border line with Syria to escape rising violence in their country. Jordanian officials said the exodus is the largest that the kingdom has seen since the Syrian uprising started a year ago.

Eye witnesses said the refugees arrived overnight and are in stable condition. The families have been given shelter and food by aid groups amid concern that an influx of refugees will start in the near future as security situation in the neighbouring Arab country is deteriorating.

Resident from Ramtha say the families come from Harak, Basr al Hareer and other parts of Deraa that have been witnessing difficult humanitarian situation since a month.

Activists say the Syrian army has sealed the villages and prevents aid to arrive as residents suffer from sever shortage of food and medical supplies.

Officials from UNHCR in Amman told ANSA Jordan is hosting tens of thousands of refugees from Syria, although the official number registered at the UNHCR is limited to less than 5000.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syrian Regime: Revolt Over, Gradual Withdrawal From Cities

(AGI) Damascus — Syria announced that it had defeated the armed revolt, but warned that the army’s withdrawal would be gradual.

The regime of Bashar al-Assad said that its security forces would only pull back from residential areas when ‘peace and security’ had been restored. ‘The attempt to overthrow the state is over, and the battle to consolidate stability and embark on the path towards a new Syria has begun,” said Jihad Makdis, a spokesman for the ministry of foreign affairs.

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



Turkey: Islamic School Reform Passed

Erdogan uses parliamentary strength, vote preceded by protests

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, MARCH 30 — Realising a decades-old objective amid protest from the secular opposition, Turkey’s moderate Islamic premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pushed through a reform today that favours the Koranic institutions, introduces an hour of Muslim religious instruction and exposes girls to danger of being kept at home away from school. Thanks to an overwhelming parliamentary majority thanks to a near 50% majority at last June’s general election, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) has pushed through a controversial education law with 295 votes in favour and 91 against. Three days of street protest preceded this vote, two of them being supressed by the use of water cannon and tear gas and opposition parties raised banners before leaving the lower house. Known by the formula “4+4+4”, the reforms prolong compulsory schooling from eight to 12 years but divides this period up into three segments of four years: in this, opposition parties see a danger of promoting an exodus from schools and into child labour and above all into the “Imam Hatip Lisesi”, the Islamic religious schools such as the one attended by Erdogan and, according to sources, four out of ten ministers in his government. These schools are in the tradition of closed Madrases banned by the founder of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk, who gave Muslim Anatolia a modern, European direction. Although they returned, the Imam-Hatip were penalised by the generals following the anti-Islamic military coup of 1997, preventing the admission to them of children (boys) aged under fifteen. At his access to power in 2003, Erdogan obtained a reduction to 10 for boys studying to be Imams. The introduction of optional Islamic religious h (the Koran and the life of Mohammed) to secondary schools has also been criticised over the past week as further Islamisation, although opportunities for Christian, Hebrew and other religions are provided for. This alleged turn to religious schools was presaged by the premier in January in a speech speaking of “religious youth”. Until now, the 540 religious institutes have had around 300,000 children (just 2% of Turkey’s 18 million school children. The showdown in parliament has been so fierce that three weeks ago opposition MPs came to blows with those of Erdogan’s party. Also criticised by the lay wing of Turkey’s business community (Tusiad) is that part of the reform allowing for distance education, which poor or Islamic families could use to send boys out to work or keep girls veiled at home. The Prime Minister has rejected such criticisms over the past week, saying that this “historic” reform education-inspired reform was needed to heal the “wound” inflicted by “non-democratic forces”. This was a reference to the military coup of 1997 that ousted premier Necmettin Erbakan, Erdogan’s mentor.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Tragedy of the Children Killed Just for Being Friends: Girl: 12, And Boy, 15, Murdered in Horrific Acid Attack

A 12-year-old girl and a 15-year-old boy have been killed in an acid attack because they were friends, it has been claimed.

A shocking photograph shows their fully clothed bodies lying on stretchers — the extent of the damage to their faces clearly visible.

The bodies of the youngsters were discovered on Friday in wasteland in the Ghazni province in southern Afghanistan.

Acid attacks are used as a form of religious and social persecution in the country.

Their bodies are now lying in a hospital and no families have come forward to claim them, AFP said.

People who discovered the bodies say the pair were probably killed for being friends with each other.

Despite the fall of the Taliban, the country still has a very conservative attitude towards women and relationships and anyone who opposes the traditional order often fear for their lives.

Up until 2001, women were not allowed to work and could not leave their homes without a male escort.

Last year, Afghan gunmen burst into a family home and poured acid over a father, wife and three daughters because they stopped their eldest from marrying an ageing warlord.

The attack was carried out in the belief that no-one would then want to marry them.

Officials said the oldest daughter Mumtaz, 18, had been pursued by a local gunman who the family considered a ‘troublemaker.’

With her parents support, she turned him down and instead got engaged to a relative.

In November 2008 extremists subjected schoolgirls to acid attacks for attending school.

Meanwhile, just a few days ago a Pakistani former dancing girl who was left heavily facially disfigured by an acid attack 10 years ago committed suicide.

Fakhra Younus, 33, leapt to her death from a sixth floor building in Rome 12 years after the acid attack which she said left her looking ‘not human’.

At the time of her attack in May 2000, her ex-husband Bilal Khar was the man accused of entering her mother’s house and pouring acid over Younus’s face as she slept.

The attack, which took place in front of Younus’s then five-year-old son, left her unable to breathe and fighting for life.

Her nose was almost completely melted and she has since undergone 39 separate surgical procedures to repair her disfigured face over the past decade.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Hundreds of Women Jailed for ‘Moral Crimes’

Kabul, 28 March (AKI) — Afghanistan has jailed around 400 women for “moral crimes” according to Human Rights Watch.

The US-based organisation called for governments around the world to pressure the Afghan government to free the women detained behind bars mostly after fleeing domestic violence or forced marriage. Some were convicted of zina, or sex outside of marriage, after being raped or forced into prostitution, HRW said in a report released on Wednesday.

“No one should be locked up for fleeing a dangerous situation even if it’s at home. President Karzai and Afghanistan’s allies should act decisively to end this abusive and discriminatory practice,” HRW executive director Kenneth Roth said in a statement posted on the organisation’s website.

The situation for women in Afghanistan has generally improved since the Taliban were overthrown. A 2009 law boosts women’s rights making forced marriage and other acts crimes. But enforcement is weak, especially in rural areas where enforcement is largely up to conservative make tribal elders.

The report said jailed women struggled to find support amid a “dysfunctional criminal justice system.”

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



Burma: Suu Kyi Wins Landmark Seat in Parliament, Party Says

Burmese democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi has won a seat in parliament following landmark by-elections, according to the opposition. The victory marks Suu Kyi’s first election to public office after decades of repression.

The opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) confirmed the by-election results, which were displayed on a digital signboard at party headquarters in Myanmar’s main city of Yangon.

NLD supporters erupted in euphoric cheers after the announcement was made.

The elections were the first that Suu Kyi has contested, as she was under house arrest at the hands of Myanmar’s military junta during the past two ballots in 1990 and 2010.

Forty-five seats in the 664-member parliament were up for grabs in the nation-wide vote, with the NLD contesting 44 seats.

The chief of the regional bloc the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Surin Pitsuwan, said voting had been conducted “rather smoothly.” Observers from ASEAN were among those invited by Myanmar’s government to oversee the polls.

Suu Kyi, however, had complained of irregularities during the campaign, including alleged intimidation of candidates and the appearance of deceased people on election rolls.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Clashes Break Out Across Indonesia Over Rising Diesel and Gasoline Prices, Many Injured

The government raises fuel prices by 33 per cent without parliamentary approval. More demonstrations are planned for the coming days. More than 20,000 police agents are deployed in Jakarta, the highest number since Suharto’s regime.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Thousands of university students clashed violently with police at the Gambir railway stations in central Jakarta during a rally against fuel price hikes. Armed with Molotov bombs, wooden sticks and stones, protesters attacked security forces deployed along the main access road to the State Palace and the National Monument of Monas in Central Jakarta. Scores of people were injured.

Subsidised fuel is set to increase on 1 April by 33 per cent to US 65 cents, a decision the government took without parliamentary approval. Experts are concerned that it might push up the price of basic necessities and threaten the lives of millions of people scraping by on a few dollars a day.

The fear of an economic crisis caused by higher fuel prices has caused similar protests in Medan (North Sumatra), Makassar (South Sulawesi) and Gorontalo (North Sulawesi), where demonstrators torched the car of a local government official. More demonstrations against higher fuel prices are expected in the coming days.

From Seoul, where he is attending the nuclear summit, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono accused the opposition of fomenting the clashes in order to discredit the government and take power.

In order to quell the unrest, the government has deployed 20,000 police agents in central Jakarta, the largest number since 1998 when violent anti-Chinese protests left scores of people dead.

Higher gasoline and diesel fuel prices were the cause of that unrest as well, lasting for the whole of May, and eventually forcing then President Suharto to leave power after 32 years of dictatorship.

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



India Boat-Shooting Jurisdiction Ruling Put Off Again

Judge to decide Monday on where to try Italian marines

(ANSA) — Kochi, March 30 — An Indian judge on Friday put off until Monday a ruling on whether India or Italy should have jurisdiction in the case of two Italian anti-pirate marines accused of killing two Indian fishermen, judicial sources told ANSA.

It is the fourth time this month that the ruling on jurisdiction over last month’s incident has been postponed.

Italian Defense Minister Giampiero Di Paola met with his Indian counterpart A.K. Antony on Friday to work on a “friendly solution” to the dispute, echoing Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s words in recent talks with Italian Premier Mario Monti on his Monday visit to the Indian capital. Italy says it should have jurisdiction for the case, not India, as the soldiers were guarding an Italian merchant vessel in international waters.

The Italian government also believes that, regardless of who has jurisdiction, the marines should be exempt from prosecution in India as they were military personnel working on an anti-piracy mission.

Italy has said the marines fired warning shots from the merchant ship they were guarding, the Enrica Lexie, after coming under attack from pirates.

It said they followed the proper international procedures for dealing with pirate attacks, which are frequent in the Indian Ocean.

The Indian authorities, on the other hand, said the marines failed to show sufficient “restraint” by opening fire after mistaking the fishermen for pirates.

Massimiliano Latorre and Salvatore Girone, who have been at the centre of a diplomatic row between the countries since being detained last month, are in jail in the city of Thiruvananthapuram.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



India: Karnataka: Protestant Clergyman Risks Jail, Attack Against Him Seventh Case in 2012

Hindu nationalists from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) beat Rev Mallikarjun Sangalada and four of his parishioners, after accusing him of engaging in forced conversions. The five victims were coming home from a prayer meeting. The pastor has been the head of a community of 35 members for the past two years.

Mundargi (AsiaNews) — Rev Mallikarjun Sangalada could go to jail on false charges of forced conversions. The accusations levelled against him are the seventh case of anti-Christian action since January in the Indian state of Karnataka.

Two days ago, people from the Hindu ultranationalist Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) attacked the pastor and four members of his congregation. They were coming back from a prayer meeting in Dhoni (Gadag District) and were handing out flyers.

After beating and insulting them, the RSS activists dragged the five Christians to the Mundargi police station, where they filed a complaint against them for forcibly converting Hindus to Christianity.

The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) intervened quickly, gaining the release of three of the five people involved in the evening of the incident, Wednesday.

Meanwhile, police formally charged Rev Sangalada under Sections 107 (“abetment” and “conspiracy”) and 157 (“Harbouring persons hired for an unlawful assembly”) of the Indian Penal Code. But during the night, GCIC lawyers managed to get the clergyman and the other parishioner released.

However yesterday, the pastor went before the chief administrative officer (tehsildar) in Mundargy Sub-district (taluk) who will rule in the matter. If he goes against the clergyman, the latter could go to jail.

Speaking about the incident, GCIC president Sajan George lamented the fact that “Christians are the target of a violent propaganda campaign orchestrated by Hindu nationalists. Thanks to the Somasekhar report*, they feel encouraged to do whatever they want. We pray for Rev Sangalada’s life.”

Rev Sangalada, 37, has been in charge of the Sukrantham Samaja Seva Sangha Pentecostal Church in Mundargi for the past two years. He ministers to a congregation of some 35 people.

He and his wife Manjula, 33, have two daughters (1 and 5 years old respectively) and a seven-year-old son.

*On 28 January 2011, a report by the Justice Commission, chaired by formed judge BK Somasekhar, found that the Bajrang Dal and its coordinator Mahendra Kumar were not responsible for attacks against Christian churches and places of worship in Karnataka in 2008.

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



Indonesia: The Diocese of Padang Challenges the Government Attempts to Stop the Building of a Church

Local officials have blocked access to the site and require the removal of the sacred building, dedicated to St. Ignatius. The curia emphasizes that building permits are in order and defends respect for the legitimate rights. Diocesan Secretary: the Church “will never sell property to others.”

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — The Diocese of Padang strongly defends the legitimate right to build the church of St. Ignatius in Pasir Pangarayan in the district of Rokan Hulu, Riau province, Sumatra island. In recent days, local authorities have decided to revoke the building permits and give notice to the Catholic community to transfer the place of worship to a different area. Fr. Kus Aliandu Pr, a priest in Padang, West Sumatra province, tells AsiaNews that the diocese “will never sell the property to others.” This stance follows a meeting of the Committee of construction of the church and local government officials.

“The district chief — says Fr. Aliandu Pr — told us that they will not remove the blocks that prevent access to the site of construction of the church. However, we told them that we are not willing to move the church to another site”. The secretary of the diocese also states that “we will provide an official response to the request for removal of the authorities after the Easter holidays.” The priest then adds that the local bishop, Mgr. Martinus Situmorang, “will never accept” a proposal for resettlement. “The construction site and the property — the prelate is reported to have said to the priest — in the future will belong to the Church.”

On 21 March, dozens of public officials raided the construction site located in the village of Sukamaju, sub-district Rambah. The authorities forced the workers to down their tools, to the distress of the faithful who have shown — in vain — the permits complying with applicable regulations. The area is fenced with barbed wire and has been impounded.

The faithful denounce the “blatant violation” of religious freedom and confirm the validity of the documentation allowing the construction. Local authorities respond that the land will be allocated for other purposes, because the Muslim community is no longer willing to accept the presence of a place of Christian worship.

In Indonesia, buildings that will serve as places of worship must approved by the Izin Mendirikan Bangunan (IMB), building permits granted by local authorities that enables the opening of a construction yard. In the case of Christian places of worship, the permission must include written authorization signed by at least 60 residents — Muslims — of the area where the place of Christian worship will be located.

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



Italy Not Giving Up on Marines Incarcerated in India

Envoy warns that jurisdiction debate sets dangerous precedent

(ANSA)- Rome, March 28 — Italian authorities remain “determined” to take the case of the two Italian anti-pirate marines incarcerated in India for the alleged killing of two Indian fisherman to the “highest level possible,” said envoy Staffan de Mistura on Wednesday.

“We are not giving up” and will do everything to bring the marines back home, he said. Rome is insisting on jurisdiction in the case and that India’s claim to maintain jurisdiction sets “a dangerous precedent” that could inevitably work against them, said de Mistura.

De Mistura said during a briefing at the Italian foreign ministry that what has happened to the Italian marines “could happen to military members from any country, including India”.

On Tuesday an Indian judge delayed a scheduled ruling until Friday on whether India or Italy should have jurisdiction in the case.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Far East


A Hidden Threat as Asia Tops the West in Centa-Millionaires

Is it actually bad news for Asia that it now trumps the West in individuals with over $100 million in disposable assets?

The east’s ultrarich boom looks like further proof that Asian economies are set to avoid Europe and America’s bumpy fiscal landing. But with the outlook closer to the base of the social pyramid not so rosy, a growing class of superwealthy might actually exacerbate class tensions at a moment when the promise of cherry-picking Western hypercapitalism could turn more sour than ever.

Consider how Asia’s wealthy are spending. Bloomberg reports that Citigroup’s new tally of the prestige stat augurs continued growth in eastern luxury markets, with wine, sports, and art among top investments: “Greater interest in art investments was expressed last year by a net 32 percent of the region’s holders of more than $25 million, and interest in wine rose 29 percent.” But The Wall Street Journal complicates this pretty picture.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Amid Rumors of Unrest, China Cracks Down on the Internet

After weeks of Internet-fueled rumors suggesting fissures in the top leadership ranks, Chinese authorities struck back this weekend, closing 16 Web sites and arresting at least six people in a broad crackdown on the freewheeling world of cyberspace.

Xinhua, the official Chinese news agency, said in a dispatch late Friday that the Web sites were closed, and the unnamed individuals detained, for “fabricating or disseminating online rumors.” For the past two weeks, the Internet has been filled with rumors of an internal power struggle after the largely unexplained March 15 ouster of the popular provincial Communist Party chief Bo Xilai.

Xinhua also said Saturday that the two most popular Twitter-like microblogging sites, “weibo.com” run by Sina and “t. qq” run by Tencent, had suspended their comment functions, “after they were punished for allowing rumors to spread.” The suspension of the user comments function was said to last until next Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Monti and Italy’s Dream of “Chinese Investment” And Religious Freedom

Hu Jintao’s promises to invest in Italy not covered in Chinese newspapers. The need for structural reforms in China countered by Communist Party’s monopoly of power, which results in repression, government corruption, predatory economics heedless of the social and environmental issues with consequent revolts by peasants and workers. The pope’s invitation to defend religious freedom to create a “harmonious society”. Chinese newspapers exalt the end of Article 18: CGIL defeated by Mao’s heirs.

Rome (AsiaNews) — Italian newspapers devoted vast space, perhaps too much so, to Hu Jintao’s promises to Prime Minister Mario Monti to direct Chinese investment towards Italy. According to media reports, from sources in Monti’s staff, Hu Jintao “gave precise instructions to the heads of the financial authorities (including sovereign wealth funds) and the Chinese business community to return to investing in our country.”

Some experts have already identified the areas where these investments might go: ports, infrastructure, electronics, fashion, electrical appliances … Others swear that China is moving towards an ever greater economic success, that the middle class is growing, as well as their consumer power, that the next change at the top, with Xi Jinping as party secretary and president, marks the coming of a “ reformer “.

Some foundations in contact with Italy and China have foreseen a rosy future for China in 2012 and 2013

It strikes me that they are describing a dream-like scenario.

These are the reasons why:

Not one Chinese newspaper, not even Xinhua reported that phrase or quoted a line of dialogue between our prime minister and president of China. This suggests that perhaps the phrase is not as important for the Chinese, as it is for us, or they were just polite but meaningless words suited to the occasion. Remember the promises made by Wen Jiabao during his visit to Germany last February, in which he said that China “might” help Europe, provided that puts its accounts to rights… Of course we are open to see that maybe in Mario Monti’s upcoming visit to Beijing and Boai, Hu’s promises may be more precise. In this way, our hopes would not be just a dream, but something more concrete.

b) I’m no economist, but looking at graphs on imports-exports between Italy and China, we realize that our problem is that we do not export enough to that Eldorado in the East. Will the investments help increase these longed for exports or instead serve to wipe out and the Italian labor market? These are indeed the results of many Chinese investments in Africa, where the hand of Beijing has destroyed the local economies. I understand that Italy is better off than African countries, but this doubt still arises.

c) China’s current problem is the lack of domestic demand. And this will only grow the people who work are given higher salaries and a voice. On this point, just yesterday, the economist Minxin Pei pointed out that China has received some wonderful advice from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, which calls for the Asian giant to launch structural reforms such as privatization and an increased reduction of state intervention in the economy. But the ever-sharp Pei points out that these reforms (which would allow a truly “harmonious society” as intoned for over a decade by Hu Jintao) mean reducing the power of the Communist Party. And on this it seems that no one will agree, neither the recently dishonoured Maoists, nor the “reformists”, nor Xi Jinping, who so far has played on both sides to keep all career options open .

d) How many times have we here at AsiaNews reported that, without these reforms, China is destined to a social and economic failure. The party’s monopoly power means repression, government corruption, predatory economics heedless of the social and environmental issues, which catalyze the many revolts which punctuate the geography of the country.

e) A further element is the issue of human rights and religious freedom. Two months ago, we dared to make the request to Hu Jintao and the Chinese Ambassador in Italy to release two senior bishops who have been imprisoned for 40 to 51 years. Without hoping for an answer, which of course never came. Apart from some rare cases, neither was there any support forthcoming from the political world (even though it is merely a “technical” government). Perhaps because this political class always hoped in this future Chinese investment. If Paris is worth a mass, two bishops in prison are well worth the (hypothetical) investment (in chorus the media cry: “Money. Lots of money”).

f) It is worth noting here what Pope Benedict XVI said yesterday in Cuba regarding religious freedom, a right which “manifests the unity of the human person, who is at once a citizen and a believer. It also legitimizes the fact that believers have a contribution to make to the building up of society. Strengthening religious freedom consolidates social bonds, nourishes the hope of a better world, creates favourable conditions for peace and harmonious development, while at the same time establishing solid foundations for securing the rights of future generations”. In short, our politicians (even the “technical” ones) must push China to implement religious freedom even for economic stability.

g) A final note of “nemesis”: there is much talk on Xinhua and in Chinese newspapers regarding Italy’s labor reform in Italy and Article 18 in praise of Monti. Who knows: maybe this reform will push Beijing to make its much-needed investments in Italy, importing the form of labour typical in the Middle Kingdom. What a terrible revenge of history to see the CGIL defeated by Mao Zedong’s heirs.

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

Immigration


Dutch Hire Fewer Romanians and Bulgarians

There has been a sharp drop in the number of work permits Dutch market gardners request for Romanian and Bulgarian workers.

In the first three months of this year the UWV employment agency received just 57 work permit applications, compared with 768 in the same period last year and 569 in 2010. Social Minister Henk Kamp last year urged market gardners to employ more temporary workers who do not need a work permit, such as jobless people or Polish workers.

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



Greek Police Start Sweeping Athens of Illegals

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 29 — Greek police intensified their sweeps targeting undocumented migrants and illegal street vendors in central Athens on Wednesday as authorities continued efforts to designate sites for temporary detention centers where migrants without papers are to be kept before being deported or, in a tiny percentage of cases, granted asylum. A crackdown by police outside the premises of Athens University Law School and the Athens University of Economics and Business resulted in the arrest of 21 illegal street vendors, all immigrants. Officers also evicted 26 undocumented migrants from a half-derelict building on central Marni Street and detained a foreign national alleged to have been charging the migrants rent to live in the squat. Sources told Kathimerini that police are to continue with their crackdown, adding that they have been instructed by their superiors to eliminate the illegal street trade in the city center within a week. During a meeting of top police officials chaired by Citizens’ Protection Minister Michalis Chrysochoidis on Wednesday, it was decided that the ranks of the police would be boosted immediately with 200 special guards who have just completed their training. The aim is for an extra 1,100 officers to join the motorcycle-riding rapid-reaction squad DIAS soon.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy ‘Responsible’ For 63 Migrant Deaths Says CE

NATO also blamed for March 2011 incident during Libya war

(ANSA) — Strasbourg, March 29 — Europe’s top human rights body the Council of Europe (CE) on Thursday said Italy was indirectly responsible for the deaths of 63 migrants from war-torn Libya who were not rescued in the Mediterranean in March 2011.

“Italy, as the first State to have received the call for help and knowing that Libya could not meet its obligations, should have taken on the responsibility for coordinating the rescue operations,” the CE said in a report.

The report also blamed NATO and the countries making up the coalition blockading Libya at the time, “who had ships in the area”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



More Than 100,000 Spaniards Leave Country in One Year

Due to crisis, most moved out to South America

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, MARCH 28 — The number of Spanish citizens who leave the country because of the crisis increased by 6.7% from January 1 2011 to the same date this year, according to the figures released today by the national statistical institute (INE). A total of 1,816,835 Spanish citizens live outside the country’s borders, 114,957 moved out in 2011. Most of the emigrants go to South America (83,763) and to other European countries, which have recorded the arrival of 26,222 Spanish citizens. The statistics indicate that most migrants actually return to their country of origin, particularly South Americans who have obtained the Spanish nationality. Only 36% of Spanish citizens living abroad were born in Spain, while 58.2% were born in their current place of residence and 5.1% in other countries.

Argentina, France, Venezuela and Germany are the countries that host the most Spanish residents.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Refugee Boat Survivor Arrested in Netherlands

One of the nine survivors of last year’s refugee boat tragedy, in which 63 refugees from Libya died, was arrested by the Dutch immigration police on Thursday morning. He is due to be deported to Italy, according to Dutch senator Tineke Strik.

The arrest of the 23-year-old Ethiopian Abu Kurke Kebato came only hours after a special committee of the Council of Europe investigating the incident had adopted a resolution recommending that “in view of the ordeal of the survivors, member states use their humanitarian discretion to look favourably on any claims for asylum and resettlement coming from these persons”.

At the time of his arrest Mr Kebato was staying with his wife at a refugee centre in the south-eastern village of Ter Apel. In accordance with European legislation, the Dutch immigration police want to send him back to his first port of entry, Italy.

Humanitarian discretion

Ms Strik, who was commissioned by the Council of Europe to investigate this refugee drama, thinks that Mr Kebato should be given permission to stay in the Netherlands on humanitarian grounds:

“He is traumatised and was sent back to Libya once before by Italy, where he ended up in prison. He also didn’t receive any medical care in Italy. After spending two weeks out on sea in the bright sunshine, his eyes are badly damaged. I think that, in this case, the Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service should be lenient, even though it may have the law on its side.”

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



‘Regularisation of Illegal Immigrants is a Mistake’

Sat 31/03/2012 — 14:07 The Head of Belgium’s Centre for Equal Opportunities and the Fight Against Racism Jozef De Witte has attacked past regularisation campaigns for illegal immigrants. Speaking in an interview with the daily ‘De Standaard’, Mr De Witte said that regularisation of those living in Belgium illegally encourages other illegal immigrants to take extreme measures such as going on hunger strike in an effort to obtain leave to remain here.

Mr De Witte adds that regularisations give illegal immigrants the impression that they will be given papers if they hold out for long enough.

He says that the current hunger strike by a group of illegal immigrants in Brussels is a form of blackmail.

Mr De Witte told the VRT that “I understand that they are at the end of their tether, but you can’t obtain rights by going on hunger strike.

“Rights are rights and if you don’t have the right to live in Belgium, you should leave.”

Government policy is blamed for people taking such extreme measures to try and get leave to remain here…

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

General


Anthropocene — Age of Man

We must stand up to United Nations and to homegrown environmentalists’ quest to de-grow America, control our lives, and impose their “vision” of the world on the majority.

If you have not seen this word, it is because it was invented by the global warming crowd, supported by United Nations Agenda 21’s goal of total global control through environmental protection policies that will fundamentally alter the way humans exist.

According to a National Geographic article published in March 2011, “Age of Man,” the word “anthropocene” was conceived ten years ago by the Dutch chemist Paul Crutzen who said, “we are no longer in the Holocene, we are in the Anthropocene.” The Holocene was the period between the last ice age, 11,500 years ago, and present time. Paul Crutzen received a Nobel Prize for the discovery of ozone-depleting compounds. (Elizabeth Kolbert)

[…]

“Little Ice Age” (300 to 500 years ago) and “Medieval Warm Period” were climate events documented in Northern Europe via crystals found in earth’s layers. Lu and his team were able to ascertain that these two events reached Antarctica because they found and studied heavy oxygen isotopes in the ikaite crystals. “The water that holds the crystal structure together — called hydration water — traps information about temperatures present when the crystals formed.” (Ted Thornhill)

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), established by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), is still arguing that the “Medieval Warm Period” was limited to Europe.

[…]

“Man’s catastrophic damage to the environment and disparities between rich and poor head the daunting challenges facing the Rio +20 Summit in June, experts say. The summit must sweep away a system that lets reckless growth destroy the planet’s health yet fails to help billions in need.” (Agency France Presse)

Therein lies the true intent of the global warming scam and the United Nations Agenda 21 — fleecing developed nations, spreading the wealth to developing nations, population control, energy control, economic control, education control, confiscation of private property, control of the seas, commerce, military, and de-growing the biggest “offender,” the United States, to a primitive lifestyle.

The educational propaganda is getting more intense. Planet under Pressure has commissioned a 3-minute film “from the start of the industrial revolution to the Rio +20 Summit,” the world’s first educational web portal on the Anthropocene. The film exaggerates the growth of humanity in the last 250 years into such a global force “on an equivalent scale to major geological processes.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120331

Financial Crisis
» EU Finance Ministers Near Compromise on Transaction Tax
» EU: Governments Due to Raise Rescue Ceiling
» Europe Inches Towards Finance Tax Compromise
» Greece: Trade Deficit Down 29.1% in January
» How Much is the U.S. Dollar Worth?
» Italy: Artichoke Plunder on Rise Amid Economic Crisis
» Monti ‘Has Restored Italy’s Credibility’ Says Japan PM
» Monti: Measures Against Crime Needn’t Please Tax Evaders
» PM Monti: Better Tax, Tariff Increases Than End Like Greece
» Spanish Unions Revolt Against Labor and Fiscal Reform
 
USA
» A Cashless Society May be Closer Than Most People Would Ever Dare to Imagine
» Abolish the EPA
» Christian Pastor to Hold Easter Services at Local Mosque
» Climate Change Skepticism a Sickness That Must be “Treated, “ Says Professor
» Complete Collapse of Common Sense in America: 20 Signs
» Florida Dems Can’t Find Voters to Protest Allen West, So They Hire Some
» For ‘Earth Hour’ Let There be Light
» Gene Behind Van Gogh’s Sunflowers Pinpointed
» IRS Wants 4,000 New Agents, $300 Million Budget to Enforce Obamacare
» Love Bacon to Death? Now You Can be Buried in it as First-Ever Bacon Coffin Hits the Shelves (Not Recommended for Vegetarians)
» Massive $17 Trillion Hole Found in Obamacare
» Obama’s Legalization of Slavery and Systematic Population Reduction
» Obama Channeling His Inner Lenin for 2012 Election
» Shell Overcomes Legal Obstacles to Arctic Drilling
» Sign at Wegmans Draws Attention
» The Ruins of Chaco Canyon in Northwest New Mexico
» War Veterans Prone to Drug Addiction Often Prescribed Risky Painkillers
» What Many Churches and the SPLC Have in Common
» Where Does the Supreme Court Get Its Power?
» Will it Take Revolution?
 
Canada
» Alberta’s Sad Battle for Leadership
 
Europe and the EU
» Archeology: EU, Italy to Spend 105 Mln to Save Pompeii
» Central Europe: Democracy in Decline
» Denmark: Police Prevent Attack Against Demo
» Denmark: Black-Clad Activists Lob Cobblestones at Police in Aarhus
» European Court Rules Against Ryanair Over Alitalia Loan
» France: Perfume Maker Guerlain Handed 6k Euro Racial Slur Fine
» Greeks Not Big on Using Computers, Says Eurostat
» Ireland: TV Watchdog’s Targeting of Ads for Cheese Grates With Farmers
» Italy: ‘Unemployed’ Man Employs 15
» Italy: Fight Against Tax Evasion Reaping Results
» Italy: Parma: A New Grana Cheese Suitable for Muslims
» Italy: Rome Mayor Alemanno Will Call a Referedum on Skyscrapers
» Italy: Cardinal Invites Prayers for Rain as Drought Continues
» Italy: Gladiators to be Booted From Colosseum
» Italy: Effort to Clear Colosseum of ‘Centurions’ Prompts ‘Fight’
» Italy: Man Who Beat Daughter for Reciting Koran Incorrectly Broke Law, Court Says
» Leaders of Controversial Neutrino Experiment Step Down
» Netherlands: The Hague Mosque Suspends Radical Sheikh
» Skye Cave Find Western Europe’s ‘Earliest String Instrument’
» Sweden: Malmö: Reepalu’s Future ‘Hangs in the Balance’
» Swedish Defense Minister Steps Down Following Controversy
» Swiss-German Row Over Tax Evasion Escalates
» The Fall of the Roman Empire and the Rise of Islam
» Toulouse Killer Buried in the City Where He Carried Out His Merciless Killing Spree After His Body is Turned Away by Algeria
» UK Oceanography Cuts Make Global Waves
» UK: A Runaway Victory for George Galloway and All Praise to Allah
» UK: Bullfinch: 38 Girls Now Thought to be Involved in Child Prostitution Ring
» UK: Double Mosque Attack Shocks Queens Park [Bedford]
» UK: George Galloway Defeats Labour to Become Bradford Respect MP
» UK: Galloway’s Ugly Politics
» UK: Hitchens vs Galloway
» UK: Rrrrrespect!
» Why the EU Airline Tax Won’t Fly
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: 4 Serbs Arrested, Accused of Organising Elections
» Kosovo: Fuele Hands Pristina EU Document on Feasibility Study
 
Mediterranean Union
» Tunisia: EuroMed Youth: Web Radio to Promote Free Speech
 
North Africa
» Egypt: First Constituent Assembly, Without Quarter of Members
» Libya’s Arab and Toubou Militia Reach Sebha Ceasefire Deal
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Luxury Carmaker Ferrari Opens Tel Aviv Showroom
» Obama’s Knife in the Back?
 
Middle East
» Al Qaeda Suspects Attack Army Base in Southern Yemen
» Arming Syrian Rebels Means Fighting a “Proxy War”, Maliki
» Britain to Give Syria’s Opposition £500,000 Aid to ‘Gain Skills to Build Democratic Future’
» Clash Between Yemeni Regulars and Al Qaeda Claims 29 Lives
» Emirates: Hotels for Women Gaining Success
» Lebanon: UNIFIL Commander Serra Meets With Donor Ambassadors
» Lebanon: Appeal From Beirut for More Arabic on Wikipedia
» Lebanon Hands Over Stolen Artifacts to Iraq
» Saudi Arabia Says Arming Syrian Opposition is a “Duty”
 
Russia
» Moscow: Odd Man Out at BRICS for Experts
» Russian Protesters Detained at Freedom of Assembly Rallies
 
South Asia
» Bomb Attacks Kill 11, Injure More Than 100 in South Thailand
» Bombs in Thailand Kill 14, Wound 340
» Indian Christians Against the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Who Wants to Eliminate All Churches
» Indonesian Workers Expelled From Malaysia
» New Security for US Troops in Afghanistan to Guard Against Afghan Insider Threats
» Pakistan: Faisalabad: The Battle of a Christian Woman for Her Family and Religious Freedom
» Pakistan: Strike Shuts Down Quetta Businesses
» Thailand: Three Deadly Bomb Blasts Hit Yala in Southern Thailand
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Ancient Human Ancestor Had Feet Like an Ape
» Grenade Attacks in Kenya Leaves 15 Wounded
 
Latin America
» Argentina’s Carlos Menem Faces Bombing Trial
 
General
» “Earth Hour’s” Global Propaganda Campaign
» Cattle DNA Traced Back to Single Herd of Wild Ox
» ‘Faster-Than-Light’ Study Coordinator Resigns
» Oldest Alien Planets Found-Born at Dawn of Universe
» Pictures: Dinosaur’s Flashy Feathers Revealed
» UN-Backed Scientists Call for Mega-City Population Lockup
» While Rare-Earth Trade Dispute Heats Up, Scientists Seek Alternatives

Financial Crisis


EU Finance Ministers Near Compromise on Transaction Tax

A compromise plan on the disputed transaction tax tabled by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble found some approval at an EU finance ministers’ meeting in Copenhagen. The plan suggests a step-by-step approach.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU: Governments Due to Raise Rescue Ceiling

Brussels, 29 March (AKI/Bloomberg) — European governments are preparing for a one-year increase in the ceiling on rescue aid to 940 billion euros to keep the debt crisis at bay, according to a draft statement written for finance ministers.

The euro-area finance chiefs will probably decide at a meeting in Copenhagen on Friday to run the 500 billion-euro permanent European Stability Mechanism alongside the 200 billion euros committed by the temporary fund, a European official told reporters in Brussels yesterday.

Beyond that, they are also set to allow the temporary fund’s unused 240 billion euros to be tapped until mid-2013 “in exceptional circumstances following a unanimous decision of euro-area heads of state or government notably in case the ESM capacity would prove insufficient,” according to the draft dated March 23 and obtained by Bloomberg News.

The boost to the war chest would come after Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, the dominant power in two years of crisis fighting, this week warned of “fragility” in Portugal and Spain. It would also be designed to lure the rest of the world into putting more money into the International Monetary Fund’s arsenal.

European policy makers are wrangling over amendments to rules written last year that limit total available bailout funds to 500 billion euros. The IMF has made additional aid contingent on Europe first doing more to help itself.

Crisis Buffer

Finance ministers may make changes to the draft statement at their meeting tomorrow. In yesterday’s briefing, the European official said the likeliest outcome is an anti-crisis buffer somewhere between 700 billion and 940 billion euros, without saying how long these amounts would be available.

The language in the draft also emphasizes the political hurdles to tapping the unused parts of the temporary fund, the European Financial Stability Facility. Merkel or any other euro- area government leader could exercise a veto.

Extra money won’t put the debt crisis to rest, said Jens Weidmann, who was Merkel’s economic adviser until he became head of Germany’s central bank last year.

“Just like the ‘Tower of Babel,’ the ‘Wall of Money’ will never reach heaven,” Weidmann said yesterday at Chatham House in London. “If we continue to make it higher and higher, we will, in fact, run into more worldly constraints,” which might include setting “incentives that lead to new problems in the future.”

Capital Call

In addition, an increase in the aid ceiling wouldn’t make the entire sum available upfront. It would require a capital call in an emergency to mobilize the ESM’s entire 500 billion euros before mid-2014.

Assuming that the temporary fund expires in mid-2013 without making further commitments, the permanent aid ceiling would revert to 700 billion euros, according to the draft. The ESM’s provisions allow the finance ministers to raise or lower its capital at any time.

Discussion of the lending cap will coincide with a possible further speedup of the capitalization of the permanent fund. The first of five planned annual payments will be made in July and the second in October, the draft statement said.

The remaining payments may also be accelerated, with two in 2013 and the final installment in the first half of 2014, two years earlier than previously planned, the statement said.

As a result, Europe would be capable of making a theoretical three-year aid pledge of 500 billion euros on July 1 and having enough money to follow through, the European official said.

The firewall “has to be credible,” German government spokesman Steffen Seibert told reporters in Berlin yesterday when asked about calls for the backstop to be as much as 1 trillion euros. At the same time, “it’s regrettable that in this discussion no number is ever big enough.”

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



Europe Inches Towards Finance Tax Compromise

Europe’s finance ministers crawled towards a compromise on a disputed financial transactions tax Saturday, after a German plan to break a months-long deadlock on the issue won cautious support.

Ministers effectively agreed to park a European Commission proposal for a wide-ranging EU-wide levy on the financial sector and consider Berlin’s plan to tax trades on company stocks and shares.

In a letter to his colleagues, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble acknowledged that his wish to see a wide-ranging tax introduced was unlikely in the face of British opposition and instead proposed “an intermediate step.”

“This would entail a tax payable on all transactions involving shares of corporations listed on a stock exchange, with the tax levied according to the place where the corporation has its registered office,” said Schaeuble.

Such a move would be based on a tax already in force in Britain — stamp duty — added the Berlin proposal, making it harder for London to block.

The suggestion won broad approval, with French Finance Minister Francois Baroin deeming it “wise” and stressing that “we have to move forward on this issue.”

The finance minister of Sweden, which along with Britain, has been sceptical over a broad financial transaction tax, also showed a willingness to compromise.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Trade Deficit Down 29.1% in January

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 28 — As domestic consumption continues to fall, the country’s trade deficit fell by 29.1% in January, according to provisional figures released by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (Elstat) on Tuesday ad reported by daily Athens News. In a survey, Elstat said that the total value of imports, excluding oil products, in January 2012 amounted to 2.23 billion euros, a fall of 15.6% year on year. In the same month, the total value of exports amounted to 1.2 billion euros, a light increase of 1% on the Jan 2011 figure of 1.18 billion euros. This resulted in trade deficit of 1.03 billion euros, a drop of 29.1% on January 2011’s figure of 1.46 billion euros.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



How Much is the U.S. Dollar Worth?

According to data from the University of Illinois professors Lawrence H. Officer and Samuel H. Williamson, the value of the dollar had depreciated so much by 2008 that it took $5.31 to buy what it cost $1 in 1971 when Nixon decided that the dollar would no longer be backed by gold. Until then, $35 could buy a troy ounce of gold every day. Our dollar today is worth less than 19 cents when compared to 1971 and the price of gold fluctuates between $1,500-1,700 per ounce.

Between February 2002 and December 2004, the value of the dollar dropped against the euro by 40 percent, a significant decline that was largely ignored by the media. (William J. Baumol and Alan S. Blinder)

The U.S. dollar has continued its decline in spite of the rosy economic picture presented by the MSM in the last four years.

Members of Congress cannot claim ignorance about the declining trend of the U.S. dollar because Craig K. Elwell, a specialist in Macroeconomic Policy, wrote a report on February 23, 2012 for the Congressional Research Service, “The Depreciating Dollar: Economic Effects and Policy Response.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Artichoke Plunder on Rise Amid Economic Crisis

Rome, 12 March (AKI) — The crunchy fried artichokes cooked with garlic and smothered in olive oil in Rome’s restaurants might be the fruit of a crime.

Chalk the rape of the Rome area’s farms up to the latest documented effect of Italy’s economic doldrums, according to a new report.

Thousands of artichokes and heads of lettuce are disappearing from the fields in Rome’s Lazio region, plucked at night under the cover of darkness and resold on the black market, or brought to eat at home, according to a report published Monday by Italian agricultural trade group Coldiretti.

Italy’s artichoke season starts in Sicily in December and ends a few months later in Rome where the fried vegetable — Carciofi alla Romana — is a delicacy. Though Italy’s recession means fewer people are eating out, it means that the chance of eating stolen vegetables has increased.

“The artichokes have been pulled up one by one causing damage even to future harvests,” said the report that call the culprits “agro-thieves.”

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



Monti ‘Has Restored Italy’s Credibility’ Says Japan PM

‘Great appreciation for his abilities,’ says Noda

(ANSA) — Tokyo, March 28 — Mario Monti has restored Italy’s credibility with the international community by enacting reforms since taking over as emergency prime minister when the euro crisis deepened in November, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said Wednesday.

“I have great consideration and appreciation for Premier Monti and for his abilities to lead his country,” Noda said after talks with the Italian premier.

Monti said both he and Noda were trying to implement structural reforms and deregulation “in a more modern way”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Monti: Measures Against Crime Needn’t Please Tax Evaders

(AGI) Beijing — Mario Monti’s schedule in China is seeing him change environment a couple of times a day. Today began with the Italian Prime Minister meting his Chinese counterpart, Wen Jiabao, in the immense halls of the People’s Assembly, continuing in the Chinese Communist Party’s gigantic Central Party School, an unusual setting for a Bocconi graduate, as Monti himself recognised, however much it might remain a training centre for the ruling class. Monti’s attention then turned to issues back home. First was the storm caused by his words, spoken in English, in Tokyo on the level of party agreement, before focus turned to lower wages and the fight against tax evasion, which, Monti warned, is not a reform upon which agreement needs to be found, but rather a form of crime that needs tackling, albeit by governments who are determined to do so.

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



PM Monti: Better Tax, Tariff Increases Than End Like Greece

(AGI) Beijing — Mario Monti does not hide his awareness of the impact on the budgets of Italian families provoked by increases. He remarked on his knowledge of the impact of “fiscal and also tariff increases, a part of which I am ready to assume my responsibiliy for as well, they were decided upon by this government”. He commented, “I realize that this will be a period which will see these inconveniences grow.” The Prime Minister, however, would remind all that the contrary of this sacrifice would be much more onerous, “I must still remind the Italians that the fate of their families would have been much more serious in ending up like Greece.” .

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



Spanish Unions Revolt Against Labor and Fiscal Reform

Madrid protests fail to intimidate retail sector.

excerpt:

Madrid, March 31, 2012, by El Marco Thursday’s general srike in Madrid, unlike Barcelona’s, was largely a pacific affair. Two communist unions, the CCOO and the UGT, did their best to shut down the capital of Spain, and were met with solid resistance from the retail sector. The two unions, which represent a majority of unionized Spanish workers, failed to paralyze the retail sector, with approximately 80 percent of businesses remaining open. 17% of Spanish workers belong to unions with membership being voluntary. Huge mobs of union-led protesters attempted to force the closure of retail shops in the streets adjacent to the Puerta del Sol Plaza in Madrid’s city center.

[Return to headlines]

USA


A Cashless Society May be Closer Than Most People Would Ever Dare to Imagine

Most people think of a cashless society as something that is way off in the distant future. Unfortunately, that is simply not the case. The truth is that a cashless society is much closer than most people would ever dare to imagine.

To a large degree, the transition to a cashless society is being done voluntarily. Today, only 7 percent of all transactions in the United States are done with cash, and most of those transactions involve very small amounts of money. Just think about it for a moment. Where do you still use cash these days? If you buy a burger or if you purchase something at a flea market you will still use cash, but for any mid-size or large transaction the vast majority of people out there will use another form of payment. Our financial system is dramatically changing, and cash is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. We live in a digital world, and national governments and big banks are both encouraging the move away from paper currency and coins. But what would a cashless society mean for our future? Are there any dangers to such a system?

Those are very important questions, but most of the time both sides of the issue are not presented in a balanced way in the mainstream media. Instead, most mainstream news articles tend to trash cash and talk about how wonderful digital currency is.

[…]

But are there real dangers to going to a system that is entirely digital?

For example, what if a devastating EMP attack wiped out our electrical grid and most of our computers from coast to coast?

How would we continue to function?

Sadly, most people don’t think about things like that.

Our world is changing more rapidly than ever before, and we should be mindful of where these changes are taking us.

Just because our technology is advancing does not mean that our world is becoming a better place.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Abolish the EPA

The EPA’s recent move toward strangling the coal-fired electricity generating plants in America is another power grab by the “greenies” in the US government. If not stopped by the Congress these new regulations will close and shutter dozens of coal-fired plants around the country and thousands upon thousands of workers in the electricity generating business, and businesses associated with them, will be out of a job.

We are looking at a shortage of electricity in America if Congress does not vacate these regulations. Rolling blackouts will be common here (in America) as they already are in developing countries.

I reside in Hurricane Alley so I know a thing or two about having no electricity for days and weeks on end. You are not going to like it, America. But you’d better prepare yourself because it is coming as surely as a Martin flies to its gourd.

[…]

The Environmental Protection Agency has become a rogue agency. It is power hungry and it has an agenda. That agenda is based on a lie and a hoax, but it makes little difference because the EPA has the power to FORCE Americans to abide by the will of the EPA or be destroyed. There is another agenda, akin to a “back story” to the pubic agenda of the EPA and that is the furtherance of socialism in America.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Christian Pastor to Hold Easter Services at Local Mosque

Michael MoranRev Michael Moran is senior pastor of The Spiritual Life Center in Sacramento, California and he recently announced plans to hold his Easter morning service at a Muslim mosque. He said the idea of holding Easter service in a mosque run by the Sacramento Area League of Associated Muslims (SALAM) came to him in a vision,

“In my dream state when I was wrestling with this problem I actually saw a newspaper on my kitchen counter that said ‘Easter at the mosque’ and I thought, ‘oh boy that’s really far out, that will never happen,’ but the next morning as I was driving into work it ran across my mind again.”

Acting upon his vision, he called Dr Metwalli Amer of SALAM to ask permission to use the mosque for Easter morning service. After several days of praying about it, Amer called and told Moran that they would let him use the mosque.

Moran’s church has been sucked into the false teachings of the Unity movement that believes in one God but many paths. Founded in 1889 by Charles and Myrtle Fillmore, the Unity movement preaches peace and harmony amongst all of the world religions and believes that we all worship the same God that this all loving God provided many different paths to heaven.

Following the Unity teachings, Rev. Moran says he does not believe in the bodily resurrection of Jesus, but that it was only his spirit that ascended into heaven. He says he believes that all of Jesus’ teachings are valid but they are also transformative. In this context, Moran and other Unity members believe that Jesus is not the only way to heaven even though that is precisely what Jesus said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Climate Change Skepticism a Sickness That Must be “Treated, “ Says Professor

Comparing skepticism of man-made global warming to racist beliefs, an Oregon-based professor of sociology and environmental studies has labeled doubts about anthropogenic climate change a “sickness” for which individuals need to be “treated”.

Professor Kari Norgaard, who is currently appearing at the ‘Planet Under Pressure’ conference in London, has presented a paper in which she argues that “cultural resistance” to accepting the premise that humans are responsible for climate change “must be recognized and treated” as an aberrant sociological behavior.

Norgaard equates skepticism of climate change alarmists — whose data is continually proven to be politicized, agenda driven and downright inaccurate — with racism, noting that overcoming such viewpoints poses a similar challenge “to racism or slavery in the U.S. South.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Complete Collapse of Common Sense in America: 20 Signs

[WARNING: Disturbing Content.]

What do you do when an entire nation begins to lose the capacity to think rationally? Many Americans spend a great deal of time criticizing the government, and there is certainly a lot to complain about, but it is not just the government that is the problem.

All over America, people appear to be going insane. It is almost as if we have been cursed with stupidity. Sadly, this applies from the very top of our society all the way down to the very bottom. A lot of us find ourselves asking the following question much more frequently these days: “How could they be so stupid?” Unfortunately, we are witnessing a complete collapse of common sense all over America. Many people seem to believe that if we could just get Obama out of office or if we could just reform our economic system that our problems as a nation would be solved, but that is simply not true. Our problems run much deeper than that. The societal decay that is plaguing our country is very deep and it is everywhere. We are a nation that is full of people that do not care about others and that just want to do what is right in their own eyes. We hold ourselves out to the rest of the world as “the greatest nation on earth” and an example that everyone else should follow, and yet our own house is rotting all around us. The words “crazy”, “insane” and “deluded” are not nearly strong enough to describe our frame of mind as a country. America has become a sad, delusional old man that can’t even think straight anymore. The evidence of our mental illness is everywhere.

The following are 20 signs that we are witnessing the complete collapse of common sense in America:

[…]

#5 The U.S. military is buying huge amounts of electronic parts from China (mistake number one) and a government investigation has uncovered the fact that a large percentage of these parts are counterfeit. Yet the U.S.military continues to buy huge amounts of electronic parts from China (mistake number two).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Florida Dems Can’t Find Voters to Protest Allen West, So They Hire Some

Democrats and the left are inherently a sham with little actual grassroots support and the race for Florida’s 18th Congressional District is yet another example of this truism.

Repeatedly, and across the country, we see unions, Democrats, and other far left groups planning rallies and protest marches but finding that they simply can’t put bodies in the streets to make all the effort worthwhile. They just don’t really have the support of the common man, the folks in the streets, to carry off these protest marches and rallies.

But these out-of-the-mainstream groups do have a solution to this problem: the rent-a-protester. Whenever you see a left-wing protest, almost invariably you’ll find that many of the folks walking around with signs in their hands were hired to be there. They are paid protesters, faux activists only there for some change in their pockets, not because they care anything about the issue being protested.

Such is the case in the 18th CD race where Florida Congressman Allen West is running to represent the newly redistricted area. The Democrats that are trying to raise hate against West there wanted to stage a protest but, like most of these left-wing groups, just didn’t have the bodies for it. So, off to rent-a-protester they went.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



For ‘Earth Hour’ Let There be Light

There’s a dark side to ‘Earth Hour’ coming our way again 8:30 local time, tonight.

With the help of an unknowing public, environmentalists like those in the World Wildlife Fund, (WWF) stretch their arms into private homes and businesses to switch off the lights of the world.

Through millions of dollars in advertising, WWF is the leading advocate in encouraging average folk to turn off all electrical devices and sit in the dark. Acolytes of “Earth Hour”, caught up in environmental hypocrisy, light candles and celebrate reducing their non-existent “carbon footprint”.

Man made-global warming having been all but toppled off the public radar screen by the advance of truth and commonsense, environmentalists are more desperate than usual this year to plunge the world into night darkness.

[…]

The dark side of Earth Hour via one of its co-founders would have been smothered were it not for savvy and courageous writers like American Thinker’s Thomas Lifson.

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Gene Behind Van Gogh’s Sunflowers Pinpointed

‘Double-flowered’ mutation sheds light on the evolution of an iconic bouquet.

A team of plant biologists has identified the gene responsible for the ‘double-flower’ mutation immortalized by Vincent van Gogh in his iconic Sunflowers series.

Van Gogh’s 1888 series includes one painting, now at the National Gallery in London, in which many of the flowers depicted lack the broad dark centre characteristic of sunflowers and instead comprise mainly golden petals. This was not simply artistic licence on van Gogh’s part but a faithful reproduction of a mutant variety of sunflower. In a paper published this week in PLoS Genetics1, researchers at the University of Georgia in Athens report that they have pinned down the gene responsible for the mutation, which they say could shed light on the evolution of floral diversity.

A wild sunflower (Helianthus annuus) is not so much a single flower as a composite of tiny florets. The golden ray florets, located at the sunflower’s rim, resemble long petals, are bilaterally symmetrical and do not produce pollen. That job belongs to the disc florets, tiny radially symmetrical blossoms that occupy the sunflower’s darker centre. In combination, the two types of florets create the impression of a single large flower, and presumably an attractive target for insect pollinators.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



IRS Wants 4,000 New Agents, $300 Million Budget to Enforce Obamacare

More than quadrupling an estimate it put forth last year for new agents (http://dailycaller.com), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) now says that it will need more than 4,000 new agents to enforce the provisions of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), also known as Obamacare. And in addition to these new agents, the IRS is also asking for more than $300 million in new funding to help fortify the infrastructure it will supposedly need to unconstitutionally force Americans to purchase government healthcare.

The constitutionality of Obamacare is currently being reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court, and yet the IRS is already acting as though the overhaul is definitive law. According to IRS budget requests, the agency says it needs a massive cash infusion to “continue the development of new systems and modifications of existing systems required to support new tax credits.” But in reality, this money will more than likely be used to spy on Americans and fine them for failing to purchase adequate health coverage.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Love Bacon to Death? Now You Can be Buried in it as First-Ever Bacon Coffin Hits the Shelves (Not Recommended for Vegetarians)

Those who love bacon to death can now be buried in it — for $2,999.99.

J&D Foods, a Seattle-based company that specialises in all things bacon — including bacon lip balm and bacon lubricant — claims to have launched a genuine bacon coffin.

The casket is allegedly made of 18-gauge gasketed steel with a ‘Premium Bacon Exterior/Interior’.

It also includes a bacon air freshener ‘for when you get that buried-underground, not-so-fresh feeling.’

The firm claims they are putting the ‘fun’ back into funerals by helping bacon-lovers live out their piggish fantasies into the afterlife.

More…

‘You ate bacon, you decorated your body with bacon, your car with bacon and your home with bacon. And now, you can peacefully rest wrapped in bacon,’ the company said in a press release..

But with April Fools Day fast approaching, some cynics are questioning the authenticity of the bizarre invention.

Company founders Justin Esch and Dave Lefkow, however, are adamant that the bacon coffin is not a hoax.

‘Yes, this is really real,’ the pair said in a press release.

‘Bacon Coffins are finished with a painted Bacon and Pork shading and accented with gold stationary handles. The interior has an adjustable bed and mattress, a bacon memorial tube and is completed in ivory crepe coffin linens.’

Esch, who admitted the coffin was not made of real bacon, claims he has already sold one to someone in Iowa and is getting interest from all around the world, including funeral homes in Great Britain.

‘Don’t you judge us,’ Esch and Lefkow posted on their company Facebook page.

‘After baconlube we all knew it was just going to keep getting weirder. And yeah, you’re right, we’re probably going to hell for this one.’

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Massive $17 Trillion Hole Found in Obamacare

Two years ago, when introducing then promptly enacting Obamacare, the president stated that healthcare law reform would not cost a penny over $1 trillion ($900 billion to be precise), and that it would not add ‘one dime’ to the debt.

It appears that this estimate may have been slightly optimistic… by a factor of 1700%. Because coincident with the recent Supreme Court debacle, in which a constitutional law president may be about to find that his magnum opus law is, in fact, unconstitutional, someone actually read the whole thing cover to cover, instead of merely relying on the CBO’s, pardon Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs’, funding estimates. That someone is Republican Jeff Sessions who after actually running the numbers has uncovered that the true long-term funding gap is a mind-boggling $17 trillion, just a tad more than the original sub $1 trillion forecast.

This latest revelation means that total underfunded US welfare liabilities: Medicare, Medicaid and social security now amount to $99 trillion! Add to this total US debt which in 2 months will be $16 trillion, and one can see why Japan, which is about to breach 1 quadrillion in total debt (yen, but who’s counting), may want to start looking in the rearview mirror for up and comer competitors. And while Obama may have been taking creative license with a number that is greater than total US GDP, he was most certainly correct when saying that Obamacare would not add a penny to US debt. Because the second the US government comes to market to fund a truetotal debt/GDP ratio of 750%, it is game over, and the Fed will have its hands full selling Treasury puts every waking nanosecond to have any time left for the daily 3pm stock market ramp.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Legalization of Slavery and Systematic Population Reduction

“If people let government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny.” -Thomas Jefferson

The lessons of history clearly demonstrate that dictatorial regimes, whether they be Socialists, Communists, and Marxists will not hesitate to use food as a weapon against their own people in order to solidify power and impose absolute autocratic control. Food can be withheld from the masses by preventing it from being grown and harvested, by contaminating it and rendering it unfit for human consumption or by simply preventing food from being distributed to a targeted population.

The two most notable examples of dictators using food a weapon in order to destroy the free will of their people comes from the regimes of Stalin and Hitler.

[…]

The use of food by the U.S. government has been a matter of official U.S. governmental covert policy since 1974-1975.

In December, 1974, National Security Council directed by Henry Kissinger completed a classified study entitled, “National Security Study Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests.” The study was based upon the unproven claims that population growth in Lesser Developed Countries (LDC) constituted a serious risk to America’s national security.

In November 1975 President Ford, based upon the tenets of NSSM 200 outlined a classified plan to forcibly reduce population growth in LDC countries through birth control, war and famine. Ford’s new national security adviser, Brent Scowcroft, in conjunction with CIA Director, George H. W. Bush, were tasked with implementing the plan and the secretaries of state, treasury, defense, and agriculture assisted in the implementation of these insane genocidal plans.

NSSM 200 formally raised the question, “Would food be considered an instrument of national power? … Is the U.S. prepared to accept food rationing to help people who can’t/won’t control their population growth?” Kissinger has answered these questions when he stated that he was predicting a series of contrived famines, created by mandatory programs and this would make exclusive reliance on birth control programs unnecessary in this modern day application of eugenics in a scheme that would allow Henry to have his cake and eat it too in that the world would finally be rid of the “useless eaters!”

Third world population control, using food as one of the primary weapons, has long been a matter of official covert national policy and a portion of President Obama’s Executive Order (EO), National Defense Resources Preparedness is a continuation of that policy. Only now, the intended target are not the LDC’s but, instead, the American people.

With the stroke of his pen, Obama has total and absolute control over all food where his EO states:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Channeling His Inner Lenin for 2012 Election

It only stands to reason that where there’s sacrifice, there’s someone collecting the sacrificial offerings. Where there’s service, there is someone being served. The man who speaks to you of sacrifice is speaking of slaves and masters, and intends to be the master. — Ayn Rand

… Matters are becoming especially nasty in US politics as we approach a seminal election.

The country is irreconcilably divided between hard-core liberals and conservatives. Fortunately, there are enough independents that neither hard-core can muster a majority without modifying, to various degrees, their views. At least that is the way that elections worked before this one.

President Obama sees within his reach his dream of transforming the country. Unfortunately for Obama, his failures are apparent to growing numbers of citizens, many of whom supported him the first time around and are now suffering “buyers remorse.”

He is so close to what he planned, yet it is slipping away and his desperation is showing. Apparently in an effort to prevent this from happening, he is willing to employ his community organizer skills on a national level. These Marxist-Leninist-Alinsky tools were not planned to be unveiled until after his re-election. Now that this occurrence is at risk, he appears to be willing to use them as tools for re-election. This strategy reflects either desperation or misjudgment.

What do I mean by Marxist-Leninist-Alinsky tools? Quite simply, they are practical tools designed to accomplish an objective without regard to the legality or morality of the means. Obama has committed all out to an “ends justifies the means” campaign. Here, for example, are instructions from Lenin on power:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Shell Overcomes Legal Obstacles to Arctic Drilling

Oil giant Shell last week overcame the last major legal obstacle to its plans in the Arctic Ocean this summer. On Wednesday, the US Department of the Interior (DoI) approved the firm’s oil spill response plan, effectively granting permission for exploratory drilling in the Beaufort Sea, north of Alaska.

Shell intends to drill from the start of July and must stop by the end of October, before the dark, cold and ice set in for winter. They received permission to drill in the nearby Chukchi Sea in February, and are now awaiting permits from environmental agencies.

The DoI upped the ante in the wake of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon leak in the Gulf of Mexico. It required Shell to prepare for a blowout three times larger. Shell’s response was that they would first deploy a cap similar to the one that eventually sealed the Deepwater well, and if that failed, employ extensive backup measures.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sign at Wegmans Draws Attention

It’s a first for Wegmans in this area. They’ve put up a sign asking customers buying pork or alcohol not to use a particular checkout line when a Muslim teenager is on duty as the cashier.

The sign went up a week ago at their Lyell Avenue store.

Wegmans says they haven’t gotten any in store complaints and Wegmans was very upfront about the cashier. They just wouldn’t allow us in the store to talk with her or customers.

Spokeswoman Jo Natale says the cashier is a teenaged girl who wears a head covering. She told her supervisor she was uncomfortable handling those items because of religious reasons. So the store manager who had experience with this type of situation outside of Rochester decided to put up a small sign whenever the girl was at the checkout counter.

It says, “If your order contains pork or alcohol product, we respectfully ask that you choose another lane.”

Wegmans also says the girl has been coached what to say if customers ask why. People News10NBC spoke with outside the Lyell Avenue Wegmans store said they were okay with it and one even knows Christians who don’t like the idea of serving alcohol.

Bernard Thomas said, “I feel like if they’re going to hire her and she’s got to have the job, why shouldn’t we respect her. Just go to another cashier.”

Darlene Hucko said, “I would respect her beliefs and go to the next line if I had alcohol.

Levato said, “You think that’s okay.”

Hucko said, “I think it is okay.”

Alex Gritsvuta said, “I’m from a Christian background and waiters…the Christian girls that I know have a problem serving alcohol to people in a bar. Not in the bar necessarily, maybe in the restaurant.”

The girl attends school and works part-time. Wegmans characterizes her as happy, someone who likes what she does and a good worker.

Because of her age, Wegmans says state law limits the types of jobs teenagers can do inside a supermarket.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



The Ruins of Chaco Canyon in Northwest New Mexico

[WARNING: Disturbing content.]

They came. They built. They vanished. Unique among Native American prehistoric civilizations, the gradual rise and terribly swift fall of the Ancient Pueblo Indians of America’s Southwest, the Anasazi, continues to transfix modern man. Understandably, admiration for the ancients’ beautiful architectural triumphs and preconceived notions about this relatively peaceful utopian civilization of farmers have been tarnished by what is considered heresy among many archeologists and self-proclaimed descendants of the Anasazi — the Hopi, Zuni and other pueblo peoples.

According to experts in the field, and others, it appears as though they ate each other, or were sacrificed and devoured between the ninth and 12th centuries by a ruling elite of Mesoamerican cannibals intent on maintaining their grip on power through sheer terror. Or maybe they were gobbled up in the 1100s by invading hordes from Old Mexico, the Toltecs. Regardless of who perpetrated this unseemly culinary tradition, or why, it’s virtually certain that human sacrifice and the feast that followed were not limited to country folk in far-flung communities, but likely practiced in a big way in the big city at Chaco Canyon as well. The debate rages on.

Among the thousands of ancient Anasazi ruins scattered throughout the Southwest, none captivate more than the incredible, sandstone brick-and-mortar remains of fifteen major building complexes in and around Chaco Canyon in sparsely populated Northwest New Mexico. These large urban structures form the centerpiece of 33,000-acre Chaco Culture National Historical Park which you’ll find off Highway 550 at the end of a long and insanely bumpy dirt road near the eastern fringe of the Navajo Nation.

[…]

Depending on your sources, by the 1200s the Anasazi of Chaco Canyon had vanished into thin air, and by the 1300s that entire civilization throughout the Southwest disappeared. It is one of the great archeological and anthropological mysteries yet to be solved, though many theories have been advanced. A crippling 50-year drought appears to be the seminal culprit; a lack of water lead to inevitable crop failure and famine.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



War Veterans Prone to Drug Addiction Often Prescribed Risky Painkillers

According to a recently released government study, vets who have been diagnosed with PTSD are being prescribed morphine and similar powerful painkillers two times more often than vets with only physical pain, when they are already at risk for alcohol and drug abuse.

Even more shocking, the study found, is that Iraq and Afghanistan vets who developed PTSD and already had pre-existing substance abuse issues were four times more likely to be prescribed addictive painkillers than those without mental health problems.

As a result suicides, other self-inflicted injuries and drug and alcohol overdoses, while still rare, were more prevalent in vets with PTSD who received painkilling drugs, said the study’s authors.

Overall, relatively few veterans are prescribed drugs like hydrocordone and morphine, which work to dull severe pain. With that said, some physicians may still prescribe them to vets who have symptoms of mental anguish and suffering “with the hope that the emotional distress that accompanies chronic pain will also be reduced,” Michael Von Korff, a chronic illness researcher with Group Health Research Institute in Seattle — who was not involved in the study — told the Associated Press.

“Unfortunately, this hope is often not fulfilled, and opioids can sometimes make emotional problems worse,” he added.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



What Many Churches and the SPLC Have in Common

If you want to know where America is quickly heading, go watch the movie “The Hunger Games,” currently playing in theaters everywhere. Or read Orwell’s “1984,” or Huxley’s “Brave New World.” Or better yet, take your eyes off ESPN just long enough to take a good look outside. America, as “the land of the free,” is disappearing. It is already unrecognizable from the country I grew up in, not to mention the country that our Founding Fathers fought and died to create. What happened in fascist Germany is happening right now in America. And one of the telltale marks of this emerging fascist society is the way people who believe in constitutional government, liberty, and individualism are being treated by the mainstream media, mainstream religion, and mainstream politics.

For years, the mainstream media has characterized constitutionalists, patriots, and traditionalists as “far-right,” “extremist,” “radical,” etc. Establishment politicians in both major parties have likewise branded anyone who would not subscribe to their big-government agenda. Groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) have regurgitated the same inflammatory rhetoric, throwing “racist” and “anti-government” into the mix. And since 9/11/01, the Naziesque Department of Homeland Security has picked up the hype and fomented fear and suspicion of anyone so identified in the hearts of law enforcement personnel nationwide. Now, just like in Nazi Germany, even churches and professing Christians are getting into the act.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Where Does the Supreme Court Get Its Power?

This week the eyes of everyone concerned with the continuance of limited government were riveted on the Supreme Court. For three days the nine Justices heard arguments by the Solicitor General in favor of ruling the individual mandate which is the keystone of Obamacare constitutional. They also heard the representatives of twenty-six States argue that it is unconstitutional. This is the first time that a majority of the States have combined to protest an act of Congress. Now We the People must wait while the fate of our Republic is decided in secret by our Black Robed rulers from whom there is no appeal.

How did we get here?

We elect our representatives and they enact laws which are supposed to be within the framework of the Constitution. It should be the expectation of Americans that those we entrust with our delegated sovereignty would craft laws in accordance with our wishes as expressed in the founding document of our government. These laws should reflect our desire for limited government, personal liberty, and economic freedom.

And the unicorns danced with the elves until the cow jumped over the moon.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Will it Take Revolution?

In my Constitution Classes I teach that we have four tools on our tool belt for taking back America. Those tools were provided by the Founding Fathers through the instruction booklet for taking back this nation, the United States Constitution.

As we enter Constitution crisis after Constitution crisis with this very dangerous Obama administration, it can be easy to lose sight of the truth. I am an optimist, and it is never too late to turn around a system like ours. . . if we are willing to do what it takes to get it back. It won’t be easy, and it won’t be quick, but it can be done.

Like I tell my students regularly, the way to eat an elephant is one bite at a time.

Education is the key, for how can we use the tools given to us if we don’t even realize they exist? Then, when educated, the populace can work to create what needs to be done to take back this nation. Eventually, it all comes to a tipping point, and the cockroaches in Washington have no choice but to listen, and once again become obedient to the Constitution, and servants to the people and the States.

The four tools, with the one that ties in with the title of this piece at the end, are as follows:

Nullification

Article VI, Clause 2, of the United States Constitution states that all laws of the United States made in pursuance of the U.S. Constitution, and all treaties made and ratified by the United States Senate, are the supreme law of the land. All other federal laws are not the supreme law of the land. Therefore, any law made by the federal government that is not in line with the authorities granted to the federal government by the States through the Constitution are unconstitutional, and are then not legally binding. The Constitution is a contract between the States and the federal government, and the States DO NOT have to obey unconstitutional laws for they are a breach of that contract. In other words, not all federal laws trump all State laws as we have been taught, only those laws passed by Congress under the authority of the U.S. Constitution are supreme.

We are told that it is up to the Supreme Court to determine what laws are constitutional, but that is hardly in line with the limiting principles offered by the U.S. Constitution. That power the courts claim to have is called Judicial Review, and it is addressed nowhere in the Constitution. In fact, the federal courts seized that power for themselves through an opinion written by Justice John Marshall in the Marbury v. Madison case of 1803.

Yes, that’s right, the courts gave that power to themselves.

By deciding if laws are constitutional, and since the Supreme Court is a part of the federal government, what is happening is that the federal government is deciding for itself what its own Constitutional authorities are. That, my friends, is hardly in line with the original intent of the Founding Fathers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Alberta’s Sad Battle for Leadership

Alberta is having a provincial election April 23. On the one hand, is the tired Progressive Conservative Government newly handed over to an extreme leftist Alison Redford.

On the other, is a populist/’libertarian party The Wildrose Party headed by Michelle Smith. Sadly, as this observer relates, even Wildrose is deeply infected with political correctness.

Redford is a protegee of far left former Progressive Conservative Party leader Joe Clark. She worked in South Africa as a loyal groupie of terrorist Nelson Mandela. She won the Tory leadership through the support of the leftist Alberta Teachers’ Federation. Party rules allow late sign-ups, even during the runoff and Redford won with the support of many teachers who were by no means “conservative.”

Columnist Lorne Gunter penned a damning indictment: “The Premier doesn’t like Albertans much. She thinks we drink too much and are a menace on Alberta’s streets and roads. Indeed, in her holier-than-thou mindset, she is sure that any drinking before driving is too much, even just a glass of wine during a restaurant dinner.

Ms. Redford is also convinced that Alberta parents are a hindrance to the teaching of communal values in the classroom. Her Education Minister is pushing amendments to the provincial Education Act that would remove parents as the “primary educators” of their children (with schools as complements to the home), and replace home values with the provisions of the Alberta Human Rights Act.

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Archeology: EU, Italy to Spend 105 Mln to Save Pompeii

The European Union has given the green light to a plan to join forces with Italy to jointly spend 105 million euros to keep Pompeii from crumbling.

“We gave our approval to this important restoration work that is not only in the interest of Italy, but for all of Europe’s historic patrimony,” said European Union Commissioner for Regional Policy, Johannes Hahn, on Thursday.

Hahn’s commission and Italy from 2000 to 2006 together spent 7.7 million euros on 22 restoration projects at Pompeii.

Highly-publicised collapses of ancient buildings at the UNESCO World Heritage site has prompted an outcry that Italy is neglecting the world’s largest archeological site.

The 2010 crumbling of a portion of the House of the Gladiators led to the resignation of Italy’s culture minister. Former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s government was accused by critics of starving culture of needed funds as the country implemented austerity measures to save tens-of-billions of euros to put its financial house in order.

More recently, in October a chunk of the wall from Domus of Diomede building on Via Consolare collapsed on the day the EU said it was considering the 105 million-euros investment plan.

Pompeii, near Naples, was buried by volcanic ash when Mt. Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Central Europe: Democracy in Decline

Die Presse, 26 March 2012

“A setback for democracy in Eastern Europe,” leads Die Presse, using terms like “dramatic” and “explosive” to describe the results of the latest Transformation Index from the Bertelsmann Foundation, which tracks the evolution of democracy and the market economy in 128 countries.

“Most countries in central, eastern and south-eastern Europe have seen qualitative losses in their democracies, their market economies and their political management in recent years,” says the foundation, which is very close to business circles. It attributes the change to political polarisation and some leaders’ hunger for power. Among the European states highlighted are Hungary (top of the rankings), Slovakia, Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia and Montenegro, while Poland and, to a lesser extent, Serbia get better marks.

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



Denmark: Police Prevent Attack Against Demo

A large group of activists have tried to access a right-wing demo but have been held back by police.

A large contingent of police officers moved in between right and left-wing demonstrators in Aarhus this afternoon.

Police were met with a rain of bottles and other projectiles in their attempt to prevent an attack against a right-wing demonstration in Mølleparken.

The incidents caused police to surround Mølleparken, preventing anyone from entering the location where a couple of hundred Danish and international right-wingers are meeting.

According to Politiken.dk’s reporter at the scene, those who attempted to break into the area were dressed in black and masked.

Police vehicles and a large contingent of officers have pushed the intruders back…

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



Denmark: Black-Clad Activists Lob Cobblestones at Police in Aarhus

Aarhus police have detained a total of 82 people in connection with left-wing demonstrations in Denmark’s second city.

Fifty left-wing activists were detained after refusing to leave an area near Mølleparken in Aarhus where some 200 Danish and international far right-wingers had been holding a demonstration.

Prior to that arrests were made when a large group of black-clad activists split off from a main anti-racism demonstration and attacked police in an attempt to reach the far right-wing demonstration.

“About 100 activists left the peaceful demonstration. In an attempt to get to the other demonstration at Mølleparken. They attacked police with cobblestones,” says Georg Husted of the East Jutland Police.

By 5 p.m. police had detained some 20 people in connection with Saturday’s demonstrations.

Later activists attempted to stop a bus under police escort in which right-wing demonstrators were being transported out of the area at the end of their demonstration…

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



European Court Rules Against Ryanair Over Alitalia Loan

Airliner’s owners do not have to repay illegal state aid

(ANSA) — Rome, March 28 — The European Union’s General Court on Wednesday rejected a bid by Ryanair to force Alitalia’s owners to repay a 300-million-euro loan from the Italian state.

The court upheld a 2008 decision by the European Commission that approved the sale of Alitalia’s main assets to a consortium of Italian investors called CAI. The court confirmed that the loan, which Alitalia granted before CAI’s takeover, was illegal state aid.

However, EU regulators have previously stated that new investors are not responsible for paying back illegal state aid if they have acquired the assets at the market price.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Perfume Maker Guerlain Handed 6k Euro Racial Slur Fine

(AGI) Paris — Paris Courts sentence world famous perfume maker Jean-Paul Guerlain to a 6k euro fine on racial slur charges. In a 2010 interview aired by France 2, addressing questions on the launch of his then new Samsara fragrance, Guerlain said “for once, I have had to work like a nigger. In fact, I don’t know if a nigger has ever had to work as hard as I did.” The Paris Court ranked the second part of the sentence as “racial slur,” a crime which under French Law envisages convictions of up to 6 months and fines as hefty as 22,50o euro. At the time of its broadcast, Guerlain’s statements had caused widespread outrage and led to protest pickets outside the Guerlain boutique in Paris’ Champs Elysees.

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



Greeks Not Big on Using Computers, Says Eurostat

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, MARCH 27 — The percentage use of computers between the ages of 16 and 74 in Greece is among the lowest in the European Union, based on a Eurostat report unveiled on Monday. Based on Eurostat’s figures, as Athens News Agency reports, only 59% of the Greek population between the ages of 16 and 74 used a computer in Greece in 2011. This was the third lowest percentage in the EU after Romania (50%) and Bulgaria (55%). The highest percentages recorded were in Sweden (96%) and then Denmark, Luxembourg and the Netherlands (94%).

The average figures for the 27 EU member-states was 78%. For young people aged 16-24 years old, the use of computers in Greece was 97%, compared to 96% for the EU27 average. Computer use among people in the same age group in the Netherlands, Austria, Luxembourg, Sweden, Finland and the United Kingdom was 100%. The lowest percentage use was in Romania (81%), Bulgaria (87%) and in Italy (90%).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Ireland: TV Watchdog’s Targeting of Ads for Cheese Grates With Farmers

CHEESE IS a danger to children? You gouda be kidding, say farming groups, who have set themselves on a collision course with the State’s broadcasting watchdog over a draft advertising code published yesterday.

Among the foods the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland wants to ban from breaks during children’s television is cheese — both high and low fat.

Public observations on the draft Children’s Commercial Communications Code are invited over the next two months.

Once submissions have been taken into account and a final code written it will be legislated for and is expected to come into force next January.

The targeting of cheese in the plan — signalled in recent weeks — has grated with industry groups as well as politicians, including Fine Gael party chairman Charlie Flanagan, who in the Dáil recently likened the proposal to the “nanny state gone mad”.

That was mild by comparison to some of the criticism yesterday. Stressing it was no laughing matter, the Irish Dairy Industries Association said the authority’s decision “sends mixed messages to consumers and threatens the reputation of Ireland’s dairy industry at home and abroad”.

Kevin Kiersey, chairman of the Irish Farmers Association’s national dairy committee, said that the approach was more likely to damage than improve children’s diets.

“Cheese provides a concentrated source of calcium — an element lacking from many children’s and teenagers’ diets — and many other valuable nutrients,” he said.

Other blacklisted foods include potato crisps, including low fat; most breakfast cereals; biscuits and cakes; confectionery; most pizzas, sausages and burgers; mayonnaise; sweetened milkshakes and fruit juices; cola and fizzy drinks, except diet versions; and butter and margarine.

Also, if advertisements for such products are shown during programming likely to be watched by children — such as X-Factor, Coronation Street or The Voice — they cannot be aimed at children, include celebrities or sports stars, include television or cinema “characters” or personalities or contain nutritional or health claims.

Cheese advertisements during children’s television should be banned as it was high in fat “and saturated fat”, the draft code says. An exception was made only for cottage cheese.

Declan McLoughlin, policy officer with the authority, said that it had adopted the nutrient profiling model developed by the UK Food Standards Authority for broadcasting regulation in Britain to assess whether a food or drink had a high fat/sugar/salt content.

“We are not interested in telling people what they should and should not eat. Our interest is in the environment in which they make informed choices,” he said.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘Unemployed’ Man Employs 15

Ex-flight attendant ordered to repay benefits

(ANSA) — Rome, March 21 — Police uncovered an unemployment scam on Wednesday when investigators reported an ex-Alitalia flight attendant claiming unemployment benefits was actually the owner and manager of a gardening business based in Rome with 15 employees.

The man has been charged with aggravated fraud and damages to the State and ordered to repay 120,000 euros of unemployment compensation collected over the last three years.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fight Against Tax Evasion Reaping Results

15% more recovered last year says Befera

(ANSA) — Rome, March 29 — The fight against tax evasion is reaping good results, tax agency head Attilio Befera said Thursday.

His agency recovered 15% more of dodged taxes last year compared to 2010 and believes it “will do even better this year”, helped by the strong backing of the Mario Monti government.

Befera said high-profile tax sweeps such as those in Italian resorts and chic shopping districts “will continue”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Parma: A New Grana Cheese Suitable for Muslims

‘Verdiano’ aimed at India and Islamic countries markets

(ANSAmed) — PARMA — They have chosen the name ‘Il Verdiano’ for Parma’s first hard grana-type cheese to be produced using vegetable rennet. The copyright was applied for by Gisella Pizzin (from the Animal Health Department of Parma’s School of Veterinary Medicine)along with the University to which it belongs. The cheese will be produced for the present in a dairy unit in Soragna, a village in the Province of Parma. This new technology opens new and significant market prospects for the production of grana cheese. The product will be able to access those world markets such as India or countries of predominantly Muslim faith, whose ethical and religious considerations rule out traditional grana cheese made with rennet extracted from the stomach of a suckling calf.

As Doctor Afro Quarantelli, who runs the animal production department at Parma University explains: “The creation of ‘Verdiano’ will enable this famed global product to be placed on global markets, giving traders and marketing experts as well as consumers the clear message that the Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese making area is moving with the times and meeting the justifiable requirements of innumerable consumers who would otherwise be among those enjoying the traditional product”.

To mark the presentation of the patent, the trademark that will go with the new product was also on show.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rome Mayor Alemanno Will Call a Referedum on Skyscrapers

(AGI) Rome — “My intention is to call a real popular referedum” on the plan to build skyscrapers in suburban Rome. “The referendum could be called concomitantly with municipal elections so as to guarantee real popular attendance”. The statement was made by Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno during the Conference on Urban Development organized jointly with the Regional Authorities of Latium. “We are awaiting the result of the Skyscrapers Committee which comprises, among others, architects Fuksas and Libeskind: a Conference to illustrate the results is scheduled for October”, Alemanno explained highlighting that the demolition and reconstruction works to be implemented in Rome’s suburbs “should not exclude the option of building upwards even if, for example, in the case of Tor Bella Monica, it should go in the opposite direction, with a community-style architecture on a human scale. Things should be analyzed on a case-by-case basis but we cannot simply surrender to immobility due to pure ideology”.

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



Italy: Cardinal Invites Prayers for Rain as Drought Continues

Why meteorologists are predicting a thirsty summer after hot March

Drought is threatening much of Italy. One of the worst-hit regions is Tuscany, where Cardinal Giuseppe Betori has issued an invitation to pray for rain. Meanwhile, the situation looks set to deteriorate. Massimiliano Pasqui from the national research council’s (CNR) biometeorology institute said: “All the ingredients are there. Winter months were characterised by a significant lack of precipitation that will project negative effects into the near future, probably for the whole year”. Why?

December 2011 and January 2012 were much less rainy than usual. February brought some mainly snow-derived water but in fairly restricted zones, the areas most affected being those on the Adriatic coast. Traditionally, February is a dry month and does not guarantee much water. However, it should be followed by abundant rainfall in the three months of spring from March to May but instead the whole of central and northern Italy was dry. In contrast, the south of the country has plenty of water, although this will probably not be of much help. Mr Pasqui points out: “So even if April and May bring normal rainfall, the territory will still experience a water shortage because it will be insufficient to restore the normal situation. Next week’s forecasts are for rain. This will bring a little bit of relief to fields and woodlands but it will not be enough”.

The monthly forecasts suggest rain will continue into April but there is uncertainty over May, when the indications are for above-average temperatures. This is unencouraging as the impact of any rainfall would be diminished by the accelerated evaporation induced by higher temperatures…

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



Italy: Gladiators to be Booted From Colosseum

Rome city officials said the costumed gladiators and centurions will no longer be allowed to ask for money around the Colosseum. Davide Bordoni, the city’s councilor for commerce, said a task force will be in effect starting Friday to stop the costumed performers from asking tourists to pay them money to pose for pictures, ANSA reported Thursday.

Archeology Superintendent Maria Rosa Barbera, who ordered the crackdown, also told licensed vendors around the Colosseum to distance themselves from the costumed characters. Officials said the gladiators and centurions will still be able to work in locations including the road leading to the Colosseum, the Trevi Fountain and the Renaissance Piazza Navona.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Effort to Clear Colosseum of ‘Centurions’ Prompts ‘Fight’

Rome says they have until April 6 to leave. Centurions at the Roman Colosseum say they’ll stay put and promise blood — or at least a fight. A plan by the Eternal City to clear Rome’s most popular tourist attraction of the unauthorized vendors that clutter the area surrounding the 2,000 year-old Flavian Amphitheatre raised the hackles of the gladiators and centurions.

Legions of Roman legionaries donning chest plates, tunics, and military sandals draw their weapons for a price. With one hand resting on a tourist’s shoulder and another gripping a sword, the armed centurion says “cheese,” or growls in a gruff pose. Click. “Ten euros, grazie.”. Disoriented foreigners at times cough up 20 or 30 euros. Detecting a scam, a tourist is periodically beaten up for not paying, but centurions are generally gregarious. They need to work and have been earning a tax-free living working off the tourist trade in plain view for decades. Now the city says “basta.”

“This will end badly. We’ll wage a revolution. We’ll burn down the Colosseum rather than move from here,” a 21st century centurion told reporters.

There’s a potential fortune to be made from the 6 million people who visit the Colosseum every year. An entrenched illegal industry revolves around Rome’s attractions. Artists painting caricatures in Piazza Navona crowd out Gian Lorenzo Berninis’ 17th century Fountain of the Four Rivers, unregistered tour guides pace outside the Vatican Museums in search of customers, and touts invite diners to sit at tables placed illegally in some of the world’s most breathtaking squares.

But everything pales in comparison to the Colosseum where dozens of tour buses line the street to give passengers an hour to visit the same site where Russel Crowe battled for revenge in the 2000 epic blockbuster “Gladiator.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Man Who Beat Daughter for Reciting Koran Incorrectly Broke Law, Court Says

Italy’s Supreme Court on Friday agreed with a lower court that a different culture was no reason for a Moroccan man to be allowed to beat his 12-year-old daughter for failing to correctly recite the Koran. The court upheld a ruling that the father was guilty of abuse and aggravated assault for hitting his daughter with a broom handle.

A defense lawyer argued that the culture of resident in northeastern coastal city of Ravenna allowed him to strike his daughter for “educational” reasons. In the ruling, the judge said the father’s actions were “violent and unjustifiable” for Italians and foreigners alike.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Leaders of Controversial Neutrino Experiment Step Down

The supposedly super-speedy neutrinos may have slowed, but they haven’t stopped creating turmoil in the physics world. Two leaders of the OPERA experiment behind the controversial result stepped down this week.

Spokesperson Antonio Ereditato of the University of Bern in Switzerland turned in his resignation on 29 March, and physics coordinator Dario Autiero of the Institute of Nuclear Physics in Lyon, France, resigned on 30 March. Both cited tensions within the collaboration as the reason for their departures.

In September, the OPERA collaboration reported that they had measured neutrinos making the 730-kilometre trip from CERN in Switzerland to the Gran Sasso underground laboratory in Italy 60 nanoseconds faster than if they had been travelling at light speed.

If it panned out, the result would have turned much of modern physics on its head, contradicting Einstein’s theory of special relativity and opening the theoretical door to exotic possibilities like extra dimensions and time travel.

The result, however, seems to be down to experimental error. OPERA announced last month that they had found a malfunctioning clock and a leaky fibre-optic cable that could explain part or all of the neutrinos’ extra speed. And another experiment in the same underground cavern in Italy, ICARUS, re-did the same measurement and saw no faster-than-light speeds.

“We don’t think anymore that the neutrinos were superluminal,” says OPERA team member Luca Stanco of Italy’s National Physics Institute.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: The Hague Mosque Suspends Radical Sheikh

The Sunnah mosque in The Hague has suspended Sheikh Fawaz for at least three weeks for allegedly insulting board members and disturbing a meeting. In an interview with Radio Netherlands Worldwide, Fawaz al-Jneid voiced anger and frustration. Sheikh Fawaz is known for his extreme opinions. In the past, he said he wished Dutch politician and anti-Islam activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali and writer and film maker Theo van Gogh, who was murdered in 2004, would contract a deadly disease. He sued populist MP Geert Wilders over his anti-Islam film . He is also said to approve of polygamy. But he has also denounced groups such as Sharia4Belgium and Shariah4Holland saying their views were too radical.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Skye Cave Find Western Europe’s ‘Earliest String Instrument’

Archaeologists believe they have uncovered the remains of the earliest stringed instrument to be found so far in western Europe. The small burnt and broken piece of carved piece of wood was found during an excavation in a cave on Skye. Archaeologists said it was likely to be part of the bridge of a lyre dating to more than 2,300 years ago.

Music archaeologist Dr Graeme Lawson said the discovery marked a “step change” in music history. The Cambridge-based expert said: “It pushes the history of complex music back more than a thousand years, into our darkest pre-history. “And not only the history of music but more specifically of song and poetry, because that’s what such instruments were very often used for.

“The earliest known lyres date from about 5,000 years ago, in what is now Iraq, and these were already complicated and finely-made structures. “But here in Europe even Roman traces proved hard to locate. Pictures, maybe, but no actual remains.”

The remains, which were unveiled in Edinburgh, were found in High Pasture Cave, where Bronze and Iron Age finds have been made previously. Cultural historian Dr Purser said: “What, for me, is so exciting about this find is that it confirms the continuity of a love of music amongst the Western Celts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö: Reepalu’s Future ‘Hangs in the Balance’

Social Democrats in Malmö say Ilmar Reepalu is an “embarrassment” to the party and that his future as the city’s mayor may be in jeopardy following recent comments labelled as “anti-Semitic” by Sweden’s Jewish community, The Local’s Patrick Reilly discovers. Reepalu sparked a scandal last week in an interview with liberal-leaning magazine NEO in which he discussed the “strong ties” between the Jewish community and the Sweden Democrats, a political party with a clear anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim line which has its roots in Sweden’s neo-Nazi movement.

According to Reepalu, “Sweden Democrats have infiltrated the Jewish community in order to push their hate of Muslims”.

While he later admitted he had “no basis” for the claims, party colleagues fear that his latest comments may have already put his future as Malmö mayor in doubt.

“Reepalu has damaged the party with his comments. It is an embarrassment and very bad for the party,” Milan Obradovic, a Social Democrat on Malmö’s local council, tells The Local.

“If this were to happen again then he would probably have to resign.”

Last weekend’s election of a new chair of Malmö’s Social Democrats was dominated by discussions over Reepalu’s remarks, which have infuriated the Jewish community.

Obradovic says young Social Democrats in particular have turned their back on the city’s 68-year old mayor.

“Many young people said they felt Reepalu’s comments were racist and that he doesn’t represent them. Older members of the party know Reepalu well and know that he isn’t a racist,” he says.

“He has done a lot of tremendous work for the city but that can get forgotten when he says things like this. What he said was totally unacceptable.”

Obradovic explains that Reepalu can’t simply defend the comments as a “misunderstanding” or by claiming his views don’t represent those of the Social Democrats.

“Even if he was making these comments as a private individual, as a politician you are always representing the party when you do interviews,” he says.

“He needs to think before he speaks in future.”

Joakim Sandell, the newly elected chair of the Social Democrats in Malmö, says he was stunned when he learned of Reepalu’s comments, which prompted Jewish leaders to write an angry letter to party head Stefan Löfven demanding action.

“When I read what he had said I couldn’t believe it,” Sandell tells The Local.

“As a politician it is never good if you have to apologize for your comments but what he said was inappropriate.”

Sandell adds it was right for Reepalu to apologize, but dares not speculate as to what would have happened if Reepalu hadn’t reacted.

Regardless, Sandell plans on taking up the matter at next week’s emergency talks with Löfven and goes on to emphasize that Reepalu has done a lot for the city, despite the numerous public gaffes which have shattered his reputation among Jews in Malmö and elsewhere.

“Reepalu is a good politician who has done fine work for Malmö and our party. I think most people still have confidence in him,” says Sandell.

Meanwhile journalist Paulina Neuding, who conducted the interview with Reepalu published in the liberal-leaning magazine NEO, refutes claims that she had somehow misquoted the Malmö mayor explaining that he read over his comments prior to publication.

Neuding tells The Local that Reepalu had requested some changes, which she agreed to, but was happy to leave in his quotes about the Swedish Democrats and the Jews.

Reepalu has since stated in his defence, however, that he’s “never been an anti-Semite and never will be”.

Nevertheless, Jewish anger on the ground in Malmö remains high following Reepalu’s comments.

Local Rabbi Shneur Kesselman tells The Local that he has tried to keep a low profile following the publication of the interview in NEO.

“We are not happy about what is going on. Reepalu is not the kind of person who just goes around saying stupid things. He is a clever politician who knows what he is doing,” says Kesselman.

And George Braun, head of the Jewish Community in Gothenburg tells The Local that what was most disturbing with Reepalu’s statements was that this was not a one-time misunderstanding but something that’s been going on for years.

“He’s made a lot of comments off which are going in the same direction. Once wouldn’t be so bad, but we’ve seen the same attitude expressed in different ways over the years all of which have an anti-Semitic touch,” Braun says, adding that he thinks it is time for the Social Democrats to take a stand on this issue.

According to Braun, the situation for Jews in Malmö is different than for the rest of the country.

“They continue to experience threats and comments on a daily basis. It’s primarily harassment from young men that have a background from the Middle East, from what I understand,” he says.

And in Malmö, Kesselman has stated in previous interviews that he has been attacked for making his beliefs obvious by dressing in traditional Jewish attire.

“Sometimes (an attack) can happen twice in one day and then nothing for two months. It all depends,” he told The Local previously.

Reepalu has also been mocked by the Malmö wing of the Sweden Democrats, who found themselves dragged into the long-running spat between the mayor and the city’s Jews when Reepalu charged the party had “infiltrated” the local Jewish community.

“None of our members have infiltrated the Jewish community to spread some message. This is just Reepalu lying again. Honestly, we are laughing at him,” Jörgen Grubb, chair of the Sweden Democrats in Malmö, tells The Local.

Reepalu’s conduct — and future — will be the subject of talks scheduled to take place on Monday between leaders from Sweden’s Jewish community and top Social Democrats; talks which Reepalu’s Malmö colleague Obradovic expects will be difficult.

“We are going to have a serious discussion about this matter and there will be a lot of hard words at the meeting,” he says.

In an interview with local paper Sydsvenskan published on Friday, Reepalu said that he thinks it is important that the matter is cleared up.

“I am hoping to see the Jewish community straight after their talks with Stefan Löfven so that we together can work out what it is I think and feel,” Reepalu said to the paper.

“We must work out what I must correct so that it cannot be misinterpreted in that coarse way, like anti-Semitic rhetoric.”

Despite the storm of reactions he is confident that he will be staying on as mayor of Malmö.

“Of course, I take for granted that the work I do in Malmö, I will continue to do,” said Reepalu to Sydsvenskan.

           — Hat tip: Freedom Fighter [Return to headlines]



Swedish Defense Minister Steps Down Following Controversy

(AGI) Stockholm- Swedish Defense Minister Sten Tolgfors stepped down following weeks of controversy. His resignation has also come in the wake of a probe into plans to build a weapons plant in Saudi Arabia. Speaking at a press conference in the capital, Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt stated, “At his own request, I have decided to relieve Sten Tolgfors of his duties”. The investigation was conducted by Swedish public radio and comprised hundreds of classified documents and interviews with former Swedish Defense Research Afency FOI.

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



Swiss-German Row Over Tax Evasion Escalates

A lengthy Swiss-German dispute on how to catch wealthy tax evaders has escalated on news that Switzerland has issued arrest warrants for three German tax inspectors.

The Dusseldorf-based government of Germany’s most-populous state North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) has confirmed that Swiss prosecutors want three NRW tax inspectors arrested for alleged “economic espionage.”

NRW premier Hannelore Kraft said on Saturday she was outraged by the development. “The NRW tax inspectors were only doing their duty to chase German tax cheats who had put their untaxed money in Swiss bank accounts,” she said.

The affair — initially reported by the newspaper Bild am Sonntag — goes back two years to a stolen CD that exposed German customers of the Credit Suisse bank. It was purchased in 2010 by NRW, reportedly for 2.5 million euros (3.2 million dollars), enabling NRW prosecutors to extend tax evasion probes within Germany.

German Federal Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble, reacting to the new spat while attending EU talks in Copenhagen, said he saw no connection between the Swiss warrants and a draft German-Swiss deal. Switzerland was “just as independent” as Germany in its tax set-up, he said.

That pending deal would allow German tax evaders to make one-time payments to German tax authorities to legalize money hidden in Swiss bank accounts. A withholding tax would similarly extract revenues from future asset earnings in Switzerland.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Fall of the Roman Empire and the Rise of Islam

by Tom Holland

Rome’s collapse inspired many gripping tales, from Gibbon’s history to Dune and Battlestar Galactica. The story of Arthur’s Camelot has its origins in this era of political convulsion, as does a narrative that has taken on vast global importance — the foundation of Islam

Whenever modern civilisations contemplate their own mortality, there is one ghost that will invariably rise up from its grave to haunt their imaginings. In February 1776, a few months after the publication of the first volume of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Edward Gibbon commented gloomily on the news from America, where rebellion against Britain appeared imminent. “The decline of the two empires, Roman and British, proceeds at an equal pace.” Now, with the west mired in recession and glancing nervously over its shoulder at China, the same parallel is being dusted down. Last summer, when the Guardian’s Larry Elliott wrote an article on the woes of the US economy, the headline almost wrote itself: “Decline and fall of the American empire”.

Historians, it is true, have become increasingly uncomfortable with narratives of decline and fall. Few now would accept that the conquest of Roman territory by foreign invaders was a guillotine brought down on the neck of classical civilisation. The transformation from the ancient world to the medieval is recognised as something far more protracted. “Late antiquity” is the term scholars use for the centuries that witnessed its course. Roman power may have collapsed, but the various cultures of the Roman empire mutated and evolved. “We see in late antiquity,” so Averil Cameron, one of its leading historians, has observed, “a mass of experimentation, new ways being tried and new adjustments made.”

Yet it is a curious feature of the transformation of the Roman world into something recognisably medieval that it bred extraordinary tales even as it impoverished the ability of contemporaries to keep a record of them. “The greatest, perhaps, and most awful scene, in the history of mankind”: so Gibbon described his theme. He was hardly exaggerating: the decline and fall of the Roman empire was a convulsion so momentous that even today its influence on stories with an abiding popular purchase remains greater, perhaps, than that of any other episode in history. It can take an effort, though, to recognise this. In most of the narratives informed by the world of late antiquity, from world religions to recent science-fiction and fantasy novels, the context provided by the fall of Rome’s empire has tended to be disguised or occluded.

Consider a single sheet of papyrus bearing the decidedly unromantic sobriquet of PERF 558. It was uncovered back in the 19th century at the Egyptian city of Herakleopolis, a faded ruin 80 miles south of Cairo. Herakleopolis itself had passed most of its existence in a condition of somnolent provincialism: first as an Egyptian city, and then, following the conquest of the country by Alexander the Great, as a colony run by and largely for Greeks. The makeover given to it by this new elite was to prove an enduring one. A thousand years on — and some 600 years after its absorption into the Roman empire — Herakleopolis still sported a name that provided, on the banks of the Nile, a little touch of far-off Greece: “the city of Heracles”. PERF 558 too, in its own humble way, also bore witness to the impact on Egypt of an entire millennium of foreign rule. It was a receipt, issued for 65 sheep, presented to two officials bearing impeccably Hellenic names Christophoros and Theodorakios and written in Greek.

But not in Greek alone. The papyrus sheet also featured a second language, one never before seen in Egypt. What was it doing there, on an official council receipt? The sheep, according to a note added in Greek on the back, had been requisitioned by “Magaritai” — but who or what were they? The answer was to be found on the front of the papyrus sheet, within the text of the receipt itself. The “Magaritai”, it appeared, were none other than the people known as “Saracens”: nomads from Arabia, long dismissed by the Romans as “despised and insignificant”. Clearly, that these barbarians were now in a position to extort sheep from city councillors suggested a dramatic reversal of fortunes. Nor was that all. The most bizarre revelation of the receipt, perhaps, lay in the fact that a race of shiftless nomads, bandits who for as long as anyone could remember had been lost to an unvarying barbarism, appeared to have developed their own calendar. “The 30th of the month of Pharmouthi of the first indiction”: so the receipt was logged in Greek, a date which served to place it in year 642 since the birth of Christ. But it was also, so the receipt declared in the Saracens’ own language, “the year twenty two”: 22 years since what? Some momentous occurance, no doubt, of evidently great significance to the Saracens themselves. But what precisely, and whether it might have contributed to the arrival of the newcomers in Egypt, and how it was to be linked to that enigmatic title “Magaritai”, PERF 558 does not say.

We can now recognise the document as the marker of something seismic. The Magaritai were destined to implant themselves in the country far more enduringly than the Greeks or the Romans had ever done. Arabic, the language they had brought with them, and that appears as such a novelty on PERF 558, is nowadays so native to Egypt that the country has come to rank as the power-house of Arab culture. Yet even a transformation of that order barely touches on the full scale of the changes which are hinted at so prosaically. A new age, of which that tax receipt issued in Herakleopolis in “the year 22” ranks as the oldest surviving dateable document, had been brought into being. This, to almost one in four people alive today, is a matter of more than mere historical interest. Infinitely more — for it touches, in their opinion, on the very nature of the Divine. The question of what it was that had brought the Magaritai to Herakleopolis, and to numerous other cities besides, has lain, for many centuries now, at the heart of a great and global religion: Islam.

It was the prompting hand of God, not a mere wanton desire to extort sheep, that had first motivated the Arabs to leave their desert homeland. Such, at any rate, was the conviction of Ibn Hisham, a scholar based in Egypt who wrote a century and a half after the first appearance of the Magaritai in Herakleopolis, but whose fascination with the period, and with the remarkable events that had stamped it, was all-consuming. No longer, by AD 800, were the Magaritai to be reckoned a novelty. Instead — known now as “Muslims”, or “those who submit to God” — they had succeeded in winning for themselves a vast agglomeration of territories: an authentically global empire. Ibn Hisham, looking back at the age which had first seen the Arabs grow conscious of themselves as a chosen people, and surrounded as he was by the ruins of superceded civilisations, certainly had no lack of pages to fill.

What was it that had brought the Arabs as conquerors to cities such as Herakleopolis, and far beyond? The ambition of Ibn Hisham was to provide an answer. The story he told was that of an Arab who had lived almost two centuries previously, and been chosen by God as the seal of His prophets: Muhammad. Although Ibn Hisham was himself certainly drawing on earlier material, his is the oldest biography to have survived, in the form we have it, into the present day. The details it provided would become fundamental to the way that Muslims have interpreted their faith ever since. That Muhammad had received a series of divine revelations; that he had grown up in the depths of Arabia, in a pagan metropolis, Mecca; that he had fled it for another city, Yathrib, where he had established the primal Muslim state; that this flight, or hijra, had transformed the entire order of time, and come to provide Muslims with their Year One: all this was enshrined to momentous effect by Ibn Hisham. The contrast between Islam and the age that had preceded it was rendered in his biography as clear as that between midday and the dead of night. The white radiance of Muhammad’s revelations, blazing first across Arabia and then to the limits of the world, had served to bring all humanity into a new age of light.

The effect of this belief was to prove incalculable. To this day, even among non-Muslims, it continues to inform the way in which the history of the Middle East is interpreted and understood. Whether in books, museums or universities, the ancient world is imagined to have ended with the coming of Muhammad. Yet even on the presumption that what Islam teaches is correct, and that the revelations of Muhammad did indeed descend from heaven, it is still pushing things to imagine that the theatre of its conquests was suddenly conjured, over the span of a single generation, into a set from The Arabian Nights. That the Arab conquests were part of a much vaster and more protracted drama, the decline and fall of the Roman empire, has been too readily forgotten.

Place these conquests in their proper context and a different narrative emerges. Heeding the lesson taught by Gibbon back in the 18th century, that the barbarian invasions of Europe and the victories of the Saracens were different aspects of the same phenomenon, serves to open up vistas of drama unhinted at by the traditional Muslim narratives. The landscape through which the Magaritai rode was certainly not unique to Egypt. In the west too, there were provinces that had witnessed the retreat and collapse of a superpower, the depredations of foreign invaders, and the desperate struggle of locals to fashion a new security for themselves. Only in the past few decades has this perspective been restored to its proper place in the academic spotlight. Yet it is curious that long before the historian Peter Brown came to write his seminal volume The World of Late Antiquity — which traced, to influential effect, patterns throughout the half millennium between Marcus Aurelius and the founding of Baghdad — a number of bestselling novelists had got there first. What their work served to demonstrate was that the fall of the Roman empire, even a millennium and a half on, had lost none of its power to inspire gripping narratives.

“There were nearly twenty-five million inhabited planets in the Galaxy then, and not one but owed allegiance to the Empire whose seat was on Trantor. It was the last half-century in which that could be said.” So begins Isaac Asimov’s Foundation, a self-conscious attempt to relocate Gibbon’s magnum opus to outer space. First published in 1951, it portrayed a galactic imperium on the verge of collapse, and the attempt by an enlightened band of scientists to insure that eventual renaissance would follow its fall. The influence of the novel, and its two sequels, has been huge, and can be seen in every subsequent sci-fi epic that portrays sprawling empires set among the stars — from Star Wars to Battlestar Galactica. Unlike most of his epigoni, however, Asimov drew direct sustenance from his historical model. The parabola of Asimov’s narrative closely follows that of Gibbon. Plenipotentiaries visit imperial outposts for the last time; interstellar equivalents of Frankish or Ostrogothic kingdoms sprout on the edge of the Milky Way; the empire, just as its Roman precursor had done under Justinian, attempts a comeback. Most intriguingly of all, in the second novel of the series, we are introduced to an enigmatic character named the Mule, who emerges seemingly from nowhere to transform the patterns of thought of billions, and conquer much of the galaxy. The context makes it fairly clear that he is intended to echo Muhammad. In an unflattering homage to Muslim tradition, Asimov even casts the Mule as a mutant, a freak of nature so unexpected that nothing in human science could possibly have explained or anticipated him.

Parallels with the tales told of Muhammad are self-evident in a second great epic of interstellar empire, Frank Herbert’s Dune. A prophet arises from the depths of a desert world to humiliate an empire and launch a holy war — a jihad. Herbert’s hero, Paul Atreides, is a man whose sense of supernatural mission is shadowed by self-doubt. “I cannot do the simplest thing,” he reflects, “without its becoming a legend.” Time will prove him correct. Without ever quite intending it, he founds a new religion, and launches a wave of conquest that ends up convulsing the galaxy. In the end, we know, there will be “only legend, and nothing to stop the jihad”. There is an irony in this, an echo not only of the spectacular growth of the historical caliphate, but of how the traditions told about Muhammad evolved as well. Ibn Hisham’s biography may have been the first to survive — but it was not the last. As the years went by, and ever more lives of the Prophet came to be written, so the details grew ever more miraculous. Fresh evidence — wholly unsuspected by Muhammad’s earliest biographers — would see him revered as a man able to foretell the future, to receive messages from camels, and to pick up a soldier’s eyeball, reinsert it, and make it work better than before. The result was yet one more miracle: the further in time from the Prophet a biographer, the more extensive his biography was likely to be.

Herbert’s novel counterpoints snatches of unreliable biography — in which Paul has become “Muad’Dib”, the legendary “Dune Messiah” — with the main body of the narrative, which reveals a more secular truth. Such, of course, is the prerogative of fiction. Nevertheless, it does suggest, for the historian, an unsettling question: to what extent might the traditions told by Muslims about their prophet contradict the actual reality of the historical Muhammad? Nor is it only western scholars who are prone to asking this — so too, for instance, are Salafists, keen as they are to strip away the accretions of centuries, and reveal to the faithful the full unspotted purity of the primal Muslim state. But what if, after all the cladding has been torn down, there is nothing much left, beyond the odd receipt for sheep? That Muhammad existed is evident from the scattered testimony of Christian near-contemporaries, and that the Magaritai themselves believed a new order of time to have been ushered in is clear from their mention of a “Year 22”. But do we see in the mirror held up by Ibn Hisham, and the biographers who followed him, an authentic reflection of Muhammad’s life — or something distorted out of recognition by a combination of awe and the passage of time?

There may be a lack of early Muslim sources for Muhammad’s life, but in other regions of the former Roman empire there are even more haunting silences. The deepest of all, perhaps, is the one that settled over the one-time province of Britannia. Around 800AD, at the same time as Ibn Hisham was drawing up a list of nine engagements in which Muhammad was said personally to have fought, a monk in the far distant wilds of Wales was compiling a very similar record of victories, 12 in total, all of them attributable to a single leader, and cast by their historian as indubitable proof of the blessings of God. The name of the monk was Nennius; and the name of his hero — who was supposed to have lived long before — was Arthur. The British warlord, like the Arab prophet, was destined to have an enduring afterlife. The same centuries which would see Muslim historians fashion ever more detailed and loving histories of Muhammad and his companions would also witness, far beyond the frontiers of the caliphate, the gradual transformation of the mysterious Arthur and his henchmen into the model of a Christian court. The battles listed by Nennius would come largely to be forgotten: in their place, haunting the imaginings of all Christendom, would be the conviction that there had once existed a realm where the strong had protected the weak, where the bravest warriors had been the purest in heart, and where a sense of Christian fellowship had bound everyone to the upholding of a common order. The ideal was to prove a precious one — so much so that to this day, there remains a mystique attached to the name of Camelot.

Nor was the world of Arthur the only dimension of magic and mystery to have emerged out of the shattered landscape of the one-time Roman empire. The English, the invaders against whom Arthur was supposed to have fought, told their own extraordinary tales. Gawping at the crumbling masonry of Roman towns, they saw in it “the work of giants”. Gazing into the shadows beyond their halls, they imagined ylfe ond orcnéas, and orthanc enta geweorc — “elves and orcs”, and “the skilful work of giants”. These stories, in turn, were only a part of the great swirl of epic, Gothic and Frankish and Norse, which preserved in their verses the memory of terrible battles, and mighty kings, and the rise and fall of empires: trace-elements of the death-agony of Roman greatness. Most of these poems, though, like the kingdoms that were so often their themes, no longer exist. They are fragments, or mere rumours of fragments. The wonder-haunted fantasies of post-Roman Europe have themselves become spectres and phantasms. “Alas for the lost lore, the annals and old poets.”

So wrote JRR Tolkien, philologist, scholar of Old English, and a man so convinced of the abiding potency of the vanished world of epic that he devoted his life to conjuring it back into being. The Lord of the Rings may not be an allegory of the fall of the Roman empire, but it is shot through with echoes of the sound and fury of that “awful scene”. What happened and what might have happened swirl, and meet, and merge. An elf quotes a poem on an abandoned Roman town. Horsemen with Old English names ride to the rescue of a city that is vast and beautiful, and yet, like Constantinople in the wake of the Arab conquests, “falling year by year into decay”. Armies of a Dark Lord repeat the strategy of Attila in the battle of the Catalaunian plains — and suffer a similar fate. Tolkien’s ambition, so Tom Shippey has written, “was to give back to his own country the legends that had been taken from it”. In the event, his achievement was something even more startling. Such was the popularity of The Lord of the Rings, and such its influence on an entire genre of fiction, that it breathed new life into what for centuries had been the merest bones of an entire but forgotten worldscape.

It would seem, then, that when an empire as great as Rome’s declines and falls, the reverberations can be made to echo even in outer space, even in a mythical Middle Earth. In the east as in the west, in the Fertile Crescent as in Britain, what emerged from the empire’s collapse, forged over many centuries, were new identities, new values, new presumptions. Indeed, many of these would end up taking on such a life of their own that the very circumstances of their birth would come to be obscured — and on occasion forgotten completely. The age that had witnessed the collapse of Roman power, refashioned by those looking back to it centuries later in the image of their own times, was cast by them as one of wonders and miracles, irradiated by the supernatural, and by the bravery of heroes. The potency of that vision is one that still blazes today.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Toulouse Killer Buried in the City Where He Carried Out His Merciless Killing Spree After His Body is Turned Away by Algeria

Al Qaeda gunman Mohammed Merah has today been buried outside the French city of Toulouse.

A police helicopter buzzed overhead and around 100 policemen stood guard as the serial killer was laid to rest in the Cornebarrieu cemetery.

According to reports, his body was accompanied by around 15 men whose identities were unknown, but were said to be unrelated to the Merah.

The government of his home country of Algeria, where today’s burial had been scheduled to take place, also banned him from being laid to rest there over ‘security concerns’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK Oceanography Cuts Make Global Waves

Layoffs will hit international research and collaboration.

Oceanographers around the world are warning that cuts to the United Kingdom’s National Oceanography Centre (NOC) could damage international projects in their field — and cuts at more UK environmental-research centres could soon follow.

Nature reported yesterday that 35 posts are to be lost in the science section at the NOC’s sites in Southampton and Liverpool. The cuts stem from financial strictures imposed by the centre’s main funder, the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), which have necessitated savings of £3.5 million (US$5.6 million) a year on the centre’s £45-million annual budget. The job losses amount to nearly one-quarter of the science staff at the NOC.

In a statement, the NOC confirmed that the cuts were driven by “an overall squeeze on the Natural Environment Research Council’s budget and the rebalancing of NERC’s spend from core national capability funding towards more competitive research programme funding”.

The centre has played a pivotal part in a number of major international projects, including the European Space Agency’s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity satellite and the Census of Marine Life. Peter Challenor, an ocean scientist at the NOC in Southampton, says that the cuts have hit the physics and climate groups particularly hard.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Runaway Victory for George Galloway and All Praise to Allah

by Andrew Gilligan

George Galloway fought his by-election campaign in Bradford West as a champion of Islam, nakedly appealing to race and faith.

In the last few days before George Galloway’s amazing by-election triumph in Bradford, a crudely photocopied leaflet flooded the Asian areas of the seat. “God KNOWS who is a Muslim. And he KNOWS who is not,” it said. “Let me point out to all the Muslim brothers and sisters what I stand for. I, George Galloway, do not drink alcohol and never have. Ask yourself if the other candidate [the Labour candidate, Imran Hussain] in this election can say that truthfully. I, George Galloway, have fought for the Muslims at home and abroad, all my life, and paid a price for it. I, George Galloway, hold Pakistan’s highest civil awards.” The leaflet contains no official logo of Mr Galloway’s Respect party, or the names of an agent or printer, as required by electoral law; Mr Galloway denies that it came from him. Its allegations that Mr Hussain is a heavy drinker are totally false and libellous.

At Mr Galloway’s official campaign rally in Bradford’s Hanover Square last Sunday, footage of which was still available yesterday on his own website, he said: “I’m a better Pakistani than he [Mr Hussain] will ever be. God knows who’s a Muslim and who is not. And a man that’s never out of the pub shouldn’t be going around telling people you should vote for him because he’s a Muslim. A Muslim is ready to go to the US Senate, as I did, and to their face call them murderers, liars, thieves and criminals. A Muslim is somebody who’s not afraid of earthly power but who fears only the Judgment Day. I’m ready for that, I’m working for that and it’s the only thing I fear.” There was a Respect campaign banner behind Mr Galloway as he spoke. The slogans on it were in English and Urdu. The Urdu slogans were above the English ones. At another rally that evening, the man who is now Bradford’s MP talked again about divine judgment. “We stand for justice and haqq [the Islamic concept of truth and righteousness],” he told the overwhelmingly Muslim crowd. “Many of us, myself included, believe that for religious reasons… I believe in the Judgment Day, that all of you do. And I just say this: how will you explain, on the Last Day, that you had a chance, on 29 March 2012, to vote for the guy who led the great campaign against the slaughter of millions in Iraq, but instead you voted for a party which has killed a million Iraqis?”

In the early hours of yesterday morning, God, it seems, delivered. Even at 2am, an ecstatic, 100-strong crowd still waited outside the Richard Dunn Sports Centre, where Mr Galloway had just achieved the third largest swing in modern British political history — 36 per cent, annihilating Labour, which has held this seat since 1974, with more than double the number of votes they got. Allah’s messenger emerged, carried aloft by his supporters like a victorious football captain, to be driven off to his victory party in a Hummer, a variant of the vehicles used by American troops in all Mr Galloway’s least favourite imperial wars. Inside the building, Labour was still trying to take in a result that had utterly shattered the best political week they’d enjoyed since 2007. “We went into the count thinking we’d won,” says one Labour source involved in the campaign. “The Tories thought we’d won. It was when the postal votes were opened that we knew we were in trouble. They were 75 per cent for Galloway. We thought it was going to be very tight. Then we thought we’d lost by a couple of thousand. Then we realised we’d lost by 10,000. We were stunned. We are in double-digit leads in the [national] polls. We fought our campaign against the Tories. We totally underestimated Galloway, we treated him as a minor party. The Tories were as appalled as we were. It’s incredible what he’s done.”

Mr Galloway, meanwhile, was on Sky News, declaring that he had won more than an hour before it was officially announced. With the Galloway crowd outside, Labour’s Mr Hussain left the sports centre by the back door. George Galloway’s victory yesterday was of a kind most often seen in the US Bible belt, and unknown in Britain for many years. His was the first election for a generation or more so nakedly fought through the invocation of race and faith. “All praise to Allah!” said the new MP, through a loud hailer, to the crowd in front of campaign HQ yesterday. And throughout the campaign, Mr Galloway expressed no doubt that there was another, guiding hand at his side. “It’s happened by fate, or destiny, that this by-election has occurred, and that I am available,” he said, at a doorstep meeting on March 17. “This is a place which is almost a perfect fit for the politics I represent.” His election would, he said, help satisfy voters’ “wajib [duty] to care about the Aqsa [Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem], about the people under occupation in Kashmir, about the massacre in Kandahar.” He developed his theme the next day, saying: “Neither will I forget those who are bleeding elsewhere in the Ummah [the global community of Islam]. We have problems here in Bradford, but the people of Gaza have even more problems.”

Mr Galloway had some useful earthly allies in Yorkshire, too. At his main rally last Sunday, one of his supporting speakers was Abjol Miah, a leading activist in both Respect and the extremist Islamic Forum of Europe (IFE), which wants to create a sharia state in Europe. Mr Miah has been an important figure in the IFE’s ever-growing influence in the east London borough of Tower Hamlets. He had taken a key part in the election of Lutfur Rahman, thrown out of Labour for his links with the IFE, as mayor of Tower Hamlets. The IFE also played what Mr Galloway himself, in a secretly recorded tape, called “the decisive role” in his previous shock election victory, in Tower Hamlets in 2005. “I am indebted more than I can say to the Islamic Forum of Europe,” he said. The IFE also has an active operation in Bradford. Then there was the Muslim Public Affairs Committee (MPAC), another radical group that campaigned against a Labour MP for being “Jewish” (she wasn’t, as it happened). It waded in strongly for Mr Galloway, repeating the baseless smears against Mr Hussain. “Thirsty Imran Hussain (hic) likes his refreshments,” smirked MPAC’s website. “And campaigning in this unseasonably good weather is thirsty work indeed … George Galloway is giving Hussain a real run for his money.” Mr Galloway, said MPAC, was a teetotaller, “a defender of Muslims and Bradford West’s last hope”.

His links with radical Islam are real enough. As well as the IFE, he remains a presenter for the Iranian regime’s state-controlled Press TV channel. He has repeatedly praised and met the leaders of the banned Palestinian terrorist group, Hamas. Yet, ironically, Mr Galloway probably didn’t need to go so far overboard to win in Bradford. The truly striking thing about his result was that he won across the seat, in the mixed and mainly white wards of Thornton & Allerton, Heaton, and Clayton & Fairweather Green as well as in the inner-city wards which comprise one of Britain’s most ethnically Asian seats. Bradford West had a strong Tory vote, and was a serious Conservative target at the 2010 election. Large parts of that Tory vote, as well as Labour’s, must have gone to Galloway. “This was a massive defeat for both the major parties, and in our relief about derailing Miliband’s bandwagon we must not forget that,” says a Tory strategist closely involved in the by-election. “There is clearly a huge disaffection which mainstream politics is not capturing.”

For so many London politicians, their main contact with the North is stepping off the train in Leeds or Manchester. In the centres of both those cities, you could be forgiven for thinking that the old industrial areas were doing well. But only a few miles beyond these honeypots, secondary cities like Bradford and Oldham are in deep economic trouble. Bradford is number one on a recent list of “at-risk” shopping towns produced by the banking group BNP Paribas. Galloway made hay with the number of derelict sites in the city’s centre, blaming an “incompetent” local council dominated by Pakistani “village politics”. In fact, the main empty site is about to be developed, with the council playing a key role — but the criticism chimed with a lot of Bradfordians, of all races, who haven’t been able to find satisfying work. Bradford’s Muslim voters, and the white ones, responded as much to Galloway’s economic pitch as to his religious one. This victory could have delivered the slap that Westminster politics needs. It’s a shame, then, that it has been so thoroughly contaminated with the politics of religion.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Bullfinch: 38 Girls Now Thought to be Involved in Child Prostitution Ring

POLICE believe 38 girls may have been involved in a child prostitution ring, it emerged this morning.

Detectives had originally identified 24 girls but prosecutor Simon Heptonstall said at Amersham Crown Court said this morning that it was now thought to be 38 girls aged between 13 and 15.

Six men — Zeshan Ahmed, Akhtar Dogar, Anjun Dogar, Kamar Jamil, Bassan Karrar and Mohammed Karrar — appeared in court today for a preliminary hearing.

They were all remanded in custody.

The men are: Thirty-one-year-old hospital porter Akhtar Dogar, of Tawney Street, East Oxford, who faces three charges of rape, one of conspiring to rape a child, three of arranging the prostitution of a child, one of making a threat to kill and one of trafficking.

His 30-year-old unemployed brother Anjun Dogar, who faces one charge of conspiring to rape a child, one of arranging prostitution of a child and trafficking.

Twenty-six-year-old security guard Kamar Jamil, of Aldrich Road, Summertown, who faces four charges of rape, two of arranging the prostitution of a child, one of making a threat to kill and one of possession of cocaine with intent to supply.

Unemployed Zeshan Ahmed, also 26, of Palmer Road, Headington, who faces 10 charges of sexual activity with a child.

Security guard Bassan Karrar, 32, of no fixed address, who is accused of raping a girl.

And his brother Mohammed Karrar, who is 37 and lives in Cowley Road, Oxford, and is accused of two charges of conspiracy to rape a child and one of supplying a class A drug to a child. He is unemployed.

Seven other men also arrested last Thursday are now on police bail while detectives’ enquiries continue.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



UK: Double Mosque Attack Shocks Queens Park [Bedford]

BEDFORD’S Islamic community has been left ‘devastated’ by attacks on two Queens Park mosques on Saturday. Burglars raided the Jamia Masid Hafia Ghousia Mosque in Ford End Road and the Gulshan-e-Baghdad Mosque in Westbourne Road causing thousands of pounds worth of damage and stealing items including CCTV equipment. Saturday’s events meant that Jamia Masid Hafia Ghousia Mosque had been burgled twice that week. Around £2,500 worth of damage to doors and equipement has been calculated at Gulshan-e-Baghdad Mosque, but chairman Tariq Hussain claimed that the very fact that someone broke in is the most upsetting. He said: “If I could speak to the person really I would like them to realise that material things you can replace, but the community are devastated and upset that people can rob places of worship. But if that person wanted any help they can come and see us.” He added: “It’s really, really upsetting that people could do that to a place of worship. I don’t think it’s racist, I think it’s just a burglar doing his job. I don’t think it can be a local person because we are a very close community.” Police scene of crime officers attended both of the properties and an investigation is currently ongoing. Mr Hussain added: “We don’t keep any money on the property so the damage is mainly broken doors and locks. “The kids were devastated because the mosque is somewhere you can go and forget the world and feel safe.” Councillor Mohammad Yasin, who represents the Queens Park Ward also called on the police to take serious action to stop the events happening again. He said: “This is a very worrying situation. People are really upset and frightened and are feeling very unsafe. This is a time when the police should take a swift action to tackle these crimes.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: George Galloway Defeats Labour to Become Bradford Respect MP

Anti-Israel campaigner George Galloway has won a seat in parliament. The Respect Party candidate won 10,000 more votes than Labour in the Bradford West by-election. He described his win of nearly 56 per cent of the vote as “the most sensational result in British by-election history bar none”. Earlier in the campaign Mr Galloway had been accused of using “personal” attacks against his Labour rival, councillor Imran Hussain, with efforts to appeal to the constituency’s high Muslim population. More than 50 per cent of the electorate turned out for the vote, a much higher proportion than is typical in a by-election. Mr Galloway, who has worked as a presenter for Iranian channel Press TV, previously served as a Respect MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, but was defeated at the last general election. Before then he was a Labour MP, elected in Scotland in 1987, but he was expelled from the party in 2003 after his outspoken attacks on Tony Blair and the war in Iraq. The Labour Party had held the Bradford West seat since 1983. Mr Galloway said it was “a very comprehensive defeat for New Labour” and “a pathetic performance by the Government parties”. He told Sky News: “The people of Bradford have spoken this evening for people in inner cities everywhere in the United Kingdom.” He also wrote on Twitter after his victory: “Long live Iraq. Long live Palestine, free, Arab, dignified.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Galloway’s Ugly Politics

Helen Pidd’s report of George Galloway’s victory in Bradford West recounts what happened just after he had arrived back from the count:

‘Galloway climbed on top of a grey car and was handed a megaphone to preach to the assembled faithful. All praise to Allah!” he yelled, to jubilant cries of “Allah Allah!” And on it went. “Long live Iraq! Long live Palestine!” ‘

First of all this suggests that enthusiasm for Galloway wasn’t, as some are suggesting, driven by his opposition to austerity but by his sectional appeal. Second, it is a depressing reminder of what is happening to British politics. There’ll be a lot of ink spilled in the next few days on the limitations of Britain’s political parties. Much of this will be accurate: it is hardly inspiring that the argument of the three main parties so often boils down to we are the least worst option. But Galloway represents an even uglier form of politics, one based around crude communal appeals.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Hitchens vs Galloway

Since he has previously been elected in Glasgow and London, I don’t know if it is so astonishing that George Galloway won a by-election in Bradford. Anyway, if you have a couple of hours to spare ou might enjoy this debate between Galloway and Christopher Hitchens. As Christopher put it: “The man’s hunt for a tyrannical fatherland never ends. The Soviet Union let him down, Albania’s gone. Saddam’s been overthrown. But on to the next, in Damascus.” Quite.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Rrrrrespect!

George Galloway has done it! He scored a historic victory against Labour in the Bradford-West by-election. He beat the Labour candidate, Imran Hussain, by over 10,000 votes. Sulky Hussain shunned electoral tradition and refused to give a speech after the result. A Tory from nearby Keighley branded Respect an “extremist” party. His remarks are just another example of an Islamophobic politician. Galloway’s victory has sent a shockwave through the political establishment. The victorious candidate described it as an “uprising against mainstream parties.” Muslim voters should note that despite Labour’s strength and dirty tactics on the ground and the media’s attempts to scare the electorate, their votes can make a difference. The turnout was good, particularly amongst the young.

Having witnessed the energy in the Respect campaign, it was a realistic proposition that they could beat the incumbent Labour party who had held the seat since 1974. The by-election was called as a result of the Labour MP, Marsha Singh, stepping down due to ill health. George Galloway, himself a former Labour MP and a veteran in the House of Commons, will take care to represent all the constituents of Bradford-West. The victory is, of course, tinged with sadness. During the campaign, one of our members, Abu-bakr Rauf, tragically lost his life. Abu-bakr was without doubt one of those people everyone loved and respected. A young man dedicated to justice and known amongst political activists internationally for his work on behalf of the oppressed Palestinians. This victory is tribute to our dear departed brother Abu-bakr. Your work will never be forgotten — may Allah grant him Janaah.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Why the EU Airline Tax Won’t Fly

China has already cancelled orders for 35 European Airbus A330 jets, and is threatening to cancel on 10 more. India has just banned its airlines from submitting any carbon emission data by the EU’s March 31 deadline. In February, the two Asian giants, along with 21 other countries including the United States, signed up to the Moscow Declaration, a strategic blueprint for global trade ‘war’. It has a single aim: to make sure the EU’s Airline Tax never gets off the ground.

While the EU’s unelected Climate Czar Connie Hedegaard bullishly dismisses threats from the Moscow group of nations as “hypothetical” — exactly how is a cancelled order for planes “hypothetical” Connie? — actual elected leaders in European capitals are unlikely to remain as sanguine. Well before the first payment Airline Tax invoices are mailed in 2013 it is becoming clear becomes clear just how economically damaging a global trade war would be to European national economies.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: 4 Serbs Arrested, Accused of Organising Elections

Serbia protests. ‘Serbian aggression’, Kosovo’s premier

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE/PRISTINA, MARCH 28 — Four Kosovo Serbs were arrested last night by the Kosovar police under charges of unconstitutional activities linked to the elections that will be held on May 6 in Serbia. The media in Serbia report, quoting Kosovar police spokesperson Baki Keljani, that the four were found in possession of electoral material, stamps, lists of candidates and propaganda brochures. They are the mayor of Vitina, a small town in the south of Kosovo with a Serb majority, two employees of the Municipality and a police official. All four are representatives of institutions which Serbia holds in the area of Kosovo with a Serb majority, considered illegal by Kosovo. The incident is likely to increase tensions between Serbia and Kosovo, which does not accept the organisation of general and local elections on May 6 in Kosovo as well. The Serbian authorities have protested against the arrest, and have asked the European EULEX mission to intervene. Kosovo’s Premier Hashim Thaci has said during a government meeting that Serbia “will not succeed in holding the elections in Kosovo as well,” calling such attempt “a Serbian aggression against Kosovo.” Serbia does not recognise Kosovo’s independence and wants to hold its elections in what it sees as its southern province as well. The U.S. and EU have spoken out against this stance.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kosovo: Fuele Hands Pristina EU Document on Feasibility Study

Pristina, 27 March (AKI) — European Union commissioner for enlargement, Stefan Fuele, on Tuesday handed Kosovo officials EU document on the beginning of work on feasibility study for the Agreement on Stabilization and Association, as a first step towards EU membership.

Kosovo majority Albanians declared independence from Serbia in 2008, which Belgrade opposes, but recent agreement between Belgrade and Pristina on border control, regional representation and several other issues, paved the way for Kosovo’s advances towards the EU.

Kosovo has been recognized by over eighty countries, including the United States and 22 out of 27 EU members. Ending a two-day visit to Pristina, Fuele told local media he was coming “as a friend”.

“It is customary that when you visit a friend you don’t go empty-handed”, Fuele said in an article published by the Albanian language daily Koha ditore. “I’m coming in the name of the European Commission, your partner and friend, who will accompany you on your European path which you decided to follow,” he said.

He said the feasibility study would offer “stable framework” for “all issues important for Kosovo’s European future”. Kosovo can count on EU support in “consolidation of democracy, the rule of law, economic development, regional cooperation, promotion of trade and investments and the program of reforms in the country”, Fuele said.

The EU granted Serbia a status of an official candidate for membership earlier this month, and Brussels hopes to resolve the dispute between Pristina and Belgrade by making it possible for both countries to join the 27-nation club in the future.

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

Mediterranean Union


Tunisia: EuroMed Youth: Web Radio to Promote Free Speech

European programme supports projects for youth sector

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, MARCH 28 — A web radio has been launched in Tunisia this month by the Tunisian Association of Audiovisual and Multimedia Animation (ATAAM), funded under a Euromed Youth grant, aiming to serve as a platform to allow citizens to express themselves on themes like human rights and citizenship.

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), as part of its project “Open window on the promotion of democratic culture through the practice of projects using multimedia”, ATAAM this week also held its Multimedia and Democracy action, aimed at using access to multimedia tools (local radio, web TV, neighbourhood papers) and use of blogs and social media as a way to reinforce democratic culture among young people. The action was organised in partnership with groups from Dresden and Marseille. The project is funded under Euromed Youth’s Action 3 (Training and networking), which includes projects that support youth organizations and players in the youth sector in the Euro-Mediterranean region. It focuses on the exchange of experiences, expertise and good practices as well as activities that can promote projects, partnerships and perennial and high-quality networks.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: First Constituent Assembly, Without Quarter of Members

Constitutional Court also withdraws its representative

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, MARCH 28 — The Egyptian Constituent Assembly has come together for the first time today, but in the absence of a quarter of all its member, a protest against the Islamic predominance. The Assembly was able to meet because the threshold for doing so, 51 out of 100, was reached. The constitutional court has also announced the withdrawal of its representative to avoid involvement “in the ongoing controversy on the assembly’s composition,” a spokesperson explained. A protest march to the Parliament has been scheduled today.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya’s Arab and Toubou Militia Reach Sebha Ceasefire Deal

(AGI) Tripoli — Days of bloody ethnic clashes between Arab and Toubou militia claim at least 150 lives. A ceasefire agreement was reached at the Sebha oasis in the Fezzan desert region, in south-western Libya. The ceasefire was announced during a joint press conference in Tripoli today.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Luxury Carmaker Ferrari Opens Tel Aviv Showroom

Expansion continues in overseas markets

(ANSA) — Maranello, March 30 — Historic Italian carmaker Ferrari opened a Tel Aviv showroom on Thursday continuing their expansion of overseas outlets now totalling 59.

The 2,000-square-meter showroom is the largest Ferrari has opened to date.

In addition to the showroom and service center, the venue also houses a Ferrari museum that includes memorabilia like Michael Schumacher’s 2006 model that he drove during his final season with the Ferrari Formula 1 team and an Italian coffee shop. Ferrari posted record sales for 2011, with revenues of 2.3 billion euros, which they have partially attributed to overseas expansion aimed at offsetting slumping revenues in traditional markets such as Europe and North America amid the economic crisis.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Knife in the Back?

Is the Obama administration using either leaks or black propaganda to sabotage Israel’s defence against the threat of genocide? America’s former ambassador to the UN John Bolton certainly thinks so — and he is not a man given to rash speculation. An article on the website of Foreign Policy magazine last Wednesday, written by former unofficial Yasser Arafat adviser and established Israel-basher Mark Perry, quoted four unnamed ‘senior diplomats’ and ‘intelligence officers’ saying that Israel had been granted access to air bases in Azerbaijan on Iran’s northern border. The article suggested that this meant Israel planned to use Azerbaijan either for a strike at Iran or for other support for such an attack. An Azeri official has subsequently said the claim that Azerbaijan has granted Israel access to its air bases for an attack is ‘absurd and groundless’. That denial, however, is clearly limited. And several observers have concluded that whether this is a genuine leak or disinformation, the story is an attempt to harm Israel by its principal western ally. Indeed, assuming it is not a total fabrication but is based on actual briefings, it is hard to conclude anything else.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Al Qaeda Suspects Attack Army Base in Southern Yemen

In southern Yemen, suspected al Qaeda militants have attacked army checkpoints in the town of Mallah, setting off clashes that left at least 30 people dead.

Yemeni army officers said air force and ground forces were brought in to repel the attackers. Saturday’s fighting had left dead 17 soldiers and 13 militants, said one officer. Eleven more soldiers were missing and were presumed killed.

They said two tanks and three vehicles used by the militants were also destroyed. Militants had taken over one army post.

The news agency AFP says it received a message in which a group calling itself “Partisans of Sharia” claimed responsibility for assaulting the base and claimed to have killed “30 soldiers.”

Residents said the army had begun distributing machineguns among them so they could oppose the militants. Mallah lies in Lahij province along a road leading to Abyan, another southern province which is an al-Qaeda stronghold.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Arming Syrian Rebels Means Fighting a “Proxy War”, Maliki

(AGI) Baghdad — Arming the Syiain rebels means fighting a “regional proxy war”, as the Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki warned, underlining that Al Qaeda could profit from the Arab Spring and find other areas to put down roots. “What we must worry about”, the minister said during the Arab League summit in Baghdad, “is that, after being defeated in Iraq, Al Qaeda could find new fissures and worm out its way into the Arab Countries that now see important events”. The Iraqi government is particularly worried about the positions of Qatar and Saudi Arabia, that have more than once announced to be ready to supply weapons and ammunitions to the Syrian rebels.

The line of Scythian Maliki towards Damascus has always been soft, and the hypothesis of a terrorist infiltration inside the Arab Spring movement draws the attention on the accusations made by the Syrian regime against internal dissidents, that Damascus considers collateral to terrorists. It is not a case that the most committed leaders against the Syrain regime, the Qatar and Saudi Arabia Sunnite leaders, did not take part to the Baghdad summit.

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



Britain to Give Syria’s Opposition £500,000 Aid to ‘Gain Skills to Build Democratic Future’

Britain will provide a further £500,000 to support Syria’s political opposition in the face of president Bashar Assad’s regime, the Foreign Secretary said.

William Hague is expected to announce the extra funding tonight during his annual speech at the Lord Mayor’s Easter Banquet.

Mr Hague said the money would help ‘hard-pressed’ opposition groups to document the regime’s violations.

His announcement comes as Arab leaders at a regional summit in Iraq’s capital today endorsed a UN-backed peace plan for Syria which they said should be implemented ‘immediately and completely’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Clash Between Yemeni Regulars and Al Qaeda Claims 29 Lives

(AGI) Sana’a — Clashes between Al Qaeda militiamen and Yemeni regulars has claimed the lives of 29 in southern Yemen.

According to one military source the attack took place in the southern Lahij province, where the militia attacked military outposts in Mallah. According to one Yemeni solider “seventeen soldiers were killed and eleven are missing.” The militia’s casualties totalled twelve.

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



Emirates: Hotels for Women Gaining Success

Niche market expanding, 4 hotels offer reserved floors

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, MARCH 26 — The economy is picking up, while tourism and business trips requiring hotels offering services and entire floors set aside for women are seeing a recovery — especially in Gulf countries.

The trend, which began in the US where 40% of business travellers are women, has taken off even in Europe as well as (perhaps more out of cultural concerns than career ones) in wealthy Arab states. A number of services have become consolidated in the region which cater to the aesthetic, religious and emotional needs of women, like pink taxis, a few trains of the underground, and days on which only women are allowed onto beaches and into pools, sports clubs, and even art exhibitions. The latest addition is that of hotel floors designed and set aside for the female sex, a niche market growing in line with the regional demand for hotels attentive to Islamic dictates: no alcohol, no ingredients prohibited by the Koran in meals and discrete atmospheres.

With a few variations from one hotel to the next, what is being offered are welcome messages and more “female” colours in the furnishings, availability of mats for pilates, women’s magazines, cosmetics, hairdryers with brushes for different hairstyles and menus with a focus on calorific needs.

There is also the element of “security”, meaning the tranquility to move about and be assisted by female staff: female maids, maintenance workers, IT technicians, and translators.

Surveys carried out by the hotels themselves show that serving a female clientele can be a double-edged sword: women are tidier than their male counterparts, but are also more demanding and tend to complain more. While Riyadh, in Saudi Arabia, was the first city to inaugurate an entire hotel for women, it is Dubai — which in January had an over 86% occupancy rate for hotels — which offers greater choice, with four hotels boasting floors exclusively for females: Jumeirah Emirates Towers, Grosvenor House, Tamani Marin and Maydan, known for hosting the wealthiest equestrian competition in the world.

Despite the clearly positive response, some criticism has been had from the most frequent hotel users: some men say that it is reverse discrimination, while others claim it is a mere marketing ploy, since most hotels pay special attention to women’s needs.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: UNIFIL Commander Serra Meets With Donor Ambassadors

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 29 — The Italian General Paolo Serra, UNFIL commander (the UN force deployed in southern Lebanon along the border with Israel), has met with the ambassadors of donor countries of the mission to update them on the operative framework.

According to reports by the UNIFIL press office, General Serra went on to speak about the main aspects of a strategic revision of the mission contained in a document recently approved by the United Nations, which represents the result of a study conducted with the aim of tailoring the UNIFIL mission to the current operating context. The main feature of the document is that of greater responsibility to be taken on by the Lebanese armed forces in the region.

Taking part in the meeting were the ambassadors of 22 countries including the Italy, the US, Russia and a number of European countries.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Appeal From Beirut for More Arabic on Wikipedia

Middle East providers meet in Arab Digital Summit

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, MARCH 30 — Barry Newstead, head of global development of the Wikimedia Foundation has asked for more contributions in Arabic “to build an Arab Wikipedia.” He launched this invitation during the Arab Digital Summit, a conference of internet and mobile network providers that is currently in progress in Beirut. Newstead underlined in his address that despite the sector’s strong development in the Middle East, boosted by the young people in the area and by the Arab Spring, the region’s language remains under-represented. Ten million inhabitants of the region visit Wikipedia every month, explained Newstead, but “only 154,000 articles on the site are in the Arabic language, despite the fact that 374 million people talk the language worldwide.” The result, he continued, is that Arabic is only 27th of the 280 languages available on Wikipedia.

The same is true for applications. Many people have an iPhone in the Middle East, said Rashid AlBallaa, president of National Net Ventures. “In Saudi Arabia for example,” he continued, “26% of all mobile phones are smartphones. This percentage is higher than in the UK with 25%. Still, we need more local applications focusing on the region, instead of applications that copy international apps.” But at a conference held in Beirut the problem of slow internet connections in Lebanon obviously came up. The country is at the bottom of the global efficiency list, despite its dynamic economy and the sharp increase in users. Telecommunication Minister Nicolas Sehnaoui has promised that work on the extension of the fibre optic network will start in the coming month. But he also admitted that it will take at least three years to give the country a “really fast internet,” on the level of the most developed countries.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanon Hands Over Stolen Artifacts to Iraq

Lebanon has handed over 78 ancient artifacts to Iraq, the Iraqi ambassador to Lebanon has said. The pieces were passed to the Iraqi embassy early this week and include cuneiform tablets, statues and reliefs belonging to the Sumerian civilization that flourished in ancient Iraq some 5000 years ago.

The artifacts were passed to the embassy in a ceremony attended by the Lebanese Culture Minister Gabi Leon and the Iraqi ambassador in Lebanon Omer al-Barazanji. “The artifacts belonged to the Iraqi civilization. We are handing them over as part of an agreement we have with Iraq on the repatriation of archaeological treasures,” said the Lebanese minister. He said the pieces were seized by the Lebanese police and border guards.

Barazanji used the occasion to remind the world of the plundering of the Iraq Museum shortly after the 2003-U.S. invasion. “The plundering, the theft, the destruction of museums and archaeological mounds that took place in Iraq is a dangerous precedent in human history,” the ambassador said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia Says Arming Syrian Opposition is a “Duty”

(AGI) Dubai — Arming the opposition is a duty, according to the Saudi Foreign Minister, Saud al-Faisal. “Arming the opposition is a duty because it can only defend itself with arms,” the Saudi minister said during a joint press conference with the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton.

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

Russia


Moscow: Odd Man Out at BRICS for Experts

New Delhi hosts the fourth summit of the five countries, representing 40% of world population and 23% of the global economy. But Russia is increasingly different from China, Brazil, India and South Africa.

Moscow (AsiaNews) — The leaders of BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) have met for their fourth summit scheduled for March 28 to 29 in New Delhi. But according to experts Russia is the odd man out at the table of those economies for which Goldman Sachs coined the lucky acronym. It lacks all those features that are common to the four other members of the group: high population, strong GDP growth and attractive to foreign investors.

Compared to China and India with an slowing growth, but still 7.5% and 6.9%, Russia is still at 3.5%. With the advanced economies such as Europe, who are in full crisis and risk of stagnation, the Federation — which has its main market in the Old Continent — there are big risks. Especially since the state budget depends heavily on natural resources and the price of crude oil.

Unlike all the other BRICS nations, Russia has failed to broaden its product base for exports in the last ten years. Oil and natural gas, which “represented less than half of exports in 2000 — says the World Bank — in ten years have come to represent two-thirds of total exports, with another 15% on other minerals, while only 9% is for export of high technologies, mainly produced by the defence industry. “

For some time now, the Nobel Laureate, Nouriel Rubini has been saying that Russia no longer deserves to be included in so-called “fantastic five”. Speaking in February at an economic conference in Moscow, Roubini warned that without serious structural reforms, the Russian economy will grow too slowly in the coming years. According to the New York University professor, real growth in the near future will be just over 0.5%, added to the worrying demographic decline that has beset the country. Russia, he said, has yet to recover from the severe crisis of 2008-2009, prior to which its rate of growth was at around 8%, with nothing to envy the Chinese.

The Russian economic model, also may prove fragile without a substantial flow of private direct investment, a real campaign of privatization, a reduction of bureaucracy and the presence of the state economy. According to a World Bank report on the Russian economy, the lack of competition on the domestic market, dominated by public companies, which account for 17% of the workforce, discourages both competitiveness and productivity.

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



Russian Protesters Detained at Freedom of Assembly Rallies

Russian police have detained a number of activists protesting in support of freedom of assembly. Among those taken into custody were leading opposition figures. Dozens of Russian activists were arrested Saturday during obstensibly unauthorised rallies in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

Police detained about 75 people protesting against the political dominance of Vladimir Putin — who will return to the Kremlin in May for a third term as president after four years as prime minister — and calling for freedom of assembly.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Bomb Attacks Kill 11, Injure More Than 100 in South Thailand

Three bomb blasts have struck the southern town of Yala, killing eleven people and wounding dozens more, local officials say.

The first two bombs are thought to have been hidden inside motorcycles, while the third was planted in a nearby car.

They detonated only minutes apart, damaging vehicles and setting the surrounding shops and buildings on fire.

The public health ministry said 10 people were in critical condition with severe burns.

Yala city is the main commercial hub in the country’s south.

Thailand’s restive South is plagued by regular terrorist attacks and violence from Muslim extremist insurgent groups operating in the region.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Bombs in Thailand Kill 14, Wound 340

Suspected Muslim insurgents staged the most deadly coordinated attacks in years in Thailand’s restive south, killing 14 people and wounding 340 with car bombs that targeted Saturday shoppers and a high-rise hotel frequented by foreign tourists.

A first batch of explosives planted inside a parked pickup truck ripped through an area of restaurants and shops in a busy area of Yala city, a main commercial hub of Thailand’s restive southern provinces, said district police chief Col. Kritsada Kaewchandee.

About 20 minutes later, just as onlookers gathered at the blast site, a second car bomb exploded, causing the majority of casualties. Eleven people were killed and 110 wounded by the blasts.

More than 5,000 people have been killed in Thailand’s three southernmost provinces — Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala — since an Islamist insurgency flared in January 2004.

“This is the worst attack in the past few years,” said Col. Pramote Promin, deputy spokesman of a regional security agency. “The suspected insurgents were targeting people’s lives. They (chose) a bustling commercial area, so they wanted to harm people.”

Most attacks are small-scale bombings or drive-by shootings that target soldiers, police and symbols of authority, but suspected insurgents have also staged large attacks in commercial areas.

Separately, a blast occurred at a high-rise hotel in the city of Hat Yai, in the nearby province of Songkhla, that officials initially attributed to a gas leak and said was unrelated to the attacks blamed on insurgents.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Indian Christians Against the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Who Wants to Eliminate All Churches

The appeal of the All India Christian Council (AICC) to the Indian government. In Saudi Arabia and the Gulf region home to many Indian and Filipino Christians who suffer violence and discrimination. The mufti’s words contrary to United Nations Charter.

Mumbai (AsiaNews) — In mid-March, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah, the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, said that all existing churches in the Arabian Peninsula should be destroyed. Reacting to this the All India Christian Council (AICC) organization has condemned this statement as “bigoted” and “dangerous” for the many Christians who live in Arab states.

The All India Christian Council (AICC) condemns the statement of the Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah, who claims it is “necessary to destroy all the churches in the region.”

According to Joseph D’Souza, president of the AICC, the muftis’ controversial demand endangers the Christian Churches throughout the Arabian Peninsula, and could have repercussions for religious minorities in other countries.

John Dayal, AICC General Secretary, calls on the Government of India and other civilized countries to ensure that the nations of the Arabian Peninsula clearly reject the Wahhabi imam’s bigoted statement, and ensure security and protection to the churches in Yemen, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and UAE. Christianity is already banned in Saudi Arabia, there are no churches.

Local media reported the controversial statement together with the proposal of the Parliamentary Assembly of Kuwait, calling for the “removal” of the churches in his country.

Kuwait’s parliament recently proposed to introduce laws on the removal of Christian churches from the country and imposition of strict laws inspired by sharia. Later, it clarified that the law was not talking about removing the churches, but forbade the construction of new churches and Christian places of worship in the Islamic country. The Grand Mufti stressed that Kuwait, as a State of the Arabian Peninsula, should destroy all the churches on its territory. There are many Christians living in Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries, many of whom come from India and the Philippines: More than 3.5 million in total, of which at least 800 thousand just in Saudi Arabia.

The All India Christian Council has been following the developments in the region for some time with growing alarm and concern, given that Christians continue to suffer violence and discrimination. The situation is particularly disturbing, because India has many of its citizens — mostly workers, but also businessmen, engineers and medical personnel — in the region. A large number of migrants from the southern states of India are Christian.

The All India Christian Council reiterates that the declaration of the Grand Mufti is contrary to the Charter of the United Nations and the UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and Discrimination based on religion or belief.

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



Indonesian Workers Expelled From Malaysia

Jakarta, 30 March (AKI/Jakarta Post) — At least 173 Indonesian workers, consisting of 104 men and 69 women, along with six children, have been deported from Malaysia for various legal violations, an official says.

The workers will be temporarily sheltered in Tanjungpinang, Riau.

“We will provide temporary shelter before sending them to their villages of origin,” troubled migrant worker chief Juramadi Esram said in Tanjungpinang on Friday.

Juramadi said that the workers failed to show valid documents to work in Malaysia and most of them had entered Malaysia on tourist passports.

One of the workers, Ari, said that they were treated roughly during their detention in Malaysian prisons, and that their belongings were seized by the Malaysian authorities.

“Nothing’s left but the clothes on our backs. Everything has been taken away by the Malaysian police,” Ari said as quoted by Antara news agency.

Some workers also reportedly were caned as punishment for their legal violations.

“I had just been in Malaysia for two days when the police arrested me. They took my passport and destroyed it, and punished me with two rounds of canning,” said Jemi of Medan, North Sumatra.

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



New Security for US Troops in Afghanistan to Guard Against Afghan Insider Threats

***Unclosed Item!***{WARNING: Disturbing content.]

“U.S. troops in Afghanistan now have far-reaching new protections against rogue killers among their Afghan allies, including assigned “guardian angels” — fellow troops who will watch over them as they sleep. Marine Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, ordered the added protections in recent weeks to guard against insider threats, according to a senior military official. They come in the wake of 16 attacks on U.S. and coalition forces by Afghans that now represent nearly one-fifth of all combat deaths this year.”

[…]

While the troops are there to protect the opium poppy crops, a sick culture of death, and where pedophilia is common in some regions, here’s what their president, Hamid Karzai, said as the flag draped coffins continue to arrive back on US. soil: “The Americans in Afghanistan are demons.”

[…]

US army’s top commander in Afghanistan, General John Allen, exactly 22 days ago. Indeed, it was so unusual a statement that I clipped the report of Allen’s words from my morning paper and placed it inside my briefcase for future reference.

“Allen told his men that “now is not the time for revenge for the deaths of two US soldiers killed in Thursday’s riots”. They should, he said, “resist whatever urge they might have to strike back” after an Afghan soldier killed the two Americans. “There will be moments like this when you’re searching for the meaning of this loss,” Allen continued. “There will be moments like this, when your emotions are governed by anger and a desire to strike back. Now is not the time for revenge, now is the time to look deep inside your souls, remember your mission, remember your discipline, remember who you are.”

“Now this was an extraordinary plea to come from the US commander in Afghanistan. The top general had to tell his supposedly well-disciplined, elite, professional army not to “take vengeance” on the Afghans they are supposed to be helping/protecting/nurturing/training, etc. He had to tell his soldiers not to commit murder. I know that generals would say this kind of thing in Vietnam. But Afghanistan? Has it come to this? I rather fear it has. Because — however much I dislike generals — I’ve met quite a number of them and, by and large, they have a pretty good idea of what’s going on in the ranks. And I suspect that Allen had already been warned by his junior officers that his soldiers had been enraged by the killings that followed the Koran burnings — and might decide to go on a revenge spree. Hence he tried desperately — in a statement that was as shocking as it was revealing — to pre-empt exactly the massacre which took place last Sunday.” Rest at link.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Faisalabad: The Battle of a Christian Woman for Her Family and Religious Freedom

Hanifan Bibi was segregated at home by her husband who converted to Islam following an extramarital affair with a Muslim woman. He wanted to take the house bought with money earned by his wife. The intervention of NCJP activists has helped justice prevail. Now the court will assess civil damages.

Faisalabad (AsiaNews) — She fought a tough battle against her husband, who wanted to drive her from the house she built over time thanks to the hard earned money of her own work, while the man — converted to Islam in November 2011 — spent his time on women and drinking. Hanifan Bibi’s tenacity and the support of NCJP activists have allowed the woman to get justice in court so she can remain in her home with her children, pending the decision of the civil court in Faisalabad, which is to assess the instance of separation and alimony.

This is the story of suffering, abuse and oppression that emerges from the story of Hanifan Bibi (pictured), a 37 year old Christian, mother of two children, born and raised in a poor family of Gurala Dajkot, a district of Faisalabad (Punjab). For years her husband was abused her, leaving her alone at home with their children to waste his wife’s hard earned money on drinking, women and partying. And when he returned, for short periods, the situation certainly did not not improve, because he beat her brutally.

However, the reality came crashing down four months ago when her husband Sarwar Masih decided to convert to Islam, taking the name of Muhammad Sarwar, following an extramarital affair that had been going on for some time with a Muslim woman, Nasreen Bibi. “Since I have not decided to change faith like him — Hanifan tells AsiaNews — he segregated me in the house” and by March 10 she found herself a prisoner in her own home.

Muhammad Sarwar, after locking up his wife, denounced her illegal possession of the house. With the collaboration of a group of Muslim families he filed a lawsuit in court and threatened the woman if she resisted.

Speaking to AsiaNews, local Christians and Muslims confirm that the man is a “despicable person who does not deserves trust,” because he “engaged in dishonest behavior” and never wanted to work and help support the family. Instead he treated Hanifan like a maid, to “bring home money to feed the families” and ensure a decent life to their children.

Having learned of the issue, the activists of the National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP) of the Catholic Church in Faisalabad intervened in defense of women. They obtained the dismissal of Harifan’s trial, while judges have opened a civil case against the man for the separation and compensation. “I continue to receive threats from my ex-husband and his fellow Muslims,” Hanifan Bibi, tells AsiaNews, but she remains steadfast in her faith and intention to see her rights recognized.

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



Pakistan: Strike Shuts Down Quetta Businesses

Quetta, 30 March (AKI/Dawn) — A strike in Quetta on Friday shit dowan all markets and business centres on Friday, DawnNews reported.

The strike was called by the Pashtoon Khuwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP) and by the Hazara Awami Ittehad.

Police and Frontier Corps (FC) have been deployed in sensitive areas.

On March 29, at least eight people, a woman and a policeman among them, were killed and 13 others injured in what appeared to be a sectarian attack on a group of Hazara people and in ensuing clashes between police and protesters.

Also, hundreds of people belonging to the Hazara tribe gathered on roads to protest against the attack.

They blocked the Brewery Road by erecting barricades and burning tyres.

Several vehicles were torched. The mob set a girls college on fire and attacked a number of government buildings.

Some people fired at police when they were trying to disperse the mob.

Two people were killed and six others injured when police fired back.

Heavy contingents of police and Frontier Corps were deployed at various places in and around the city after the incidents

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



Thailand: Three Deadly Bomb Blasts Hit Yala in Southern Thailand

Muslim separatists blamed for co-ordinated explosions that have killed at least eight in main shopping area of the city

At least eight people have been killed and 68 wounded in co-ordinated bomb attacks by suspected Muslim insurgents in the main shopping area of a city in southern Thailand. The casualties made it one of the largest attacks in months in the troubled southern provinces where smaller-scale violence occurs on an almost daily basis. Three blasts occurred minutes apart within a 100m radius in Yala, a main commercial hub of Thailand’s restive southern provinces. “We are not sure which group of suspected Muslim insurgents were behind this but we are looking,” said Yala Governor Dethrat Simsiri. The first bomb was hidden inside a motorcycle parked near a shopping area and detonated by a mobile phone at about noon, the governor said. Within minutes, a second bomb hidden in another motorcycle exploded, followed by a third explosion from a device placed in a car that set fire to nearby buildings, he said.

Such bombings are a common tactic of Islamist separatists who have been waging an insurgency in Thailand’s three southernmost provinces since early 2004. The violence has claimed more than 5,000 lives. The suspected insurgents mainly target soldiers, police and other symbols of authority with roadside bombs and drive-by shootings, but have also staged large co-ordinated attacks in commercial areas. Last September, three bombs hidden in vehicles hit a busy section of Sungai Kolok in Narathiwat province, killing four people and leaving more than 60 wounded. Yala, Narathiwat and Pattani are the only Muslim-dominated provinces in the predominantly Buddhist country. Muslims in the area have long complained of discrimination by the central government. The insurgents have made no public pronouncements but are thought to be fighting for an independent Muslim state. The area used to be an Islamic sultanate until it was annexed by Thailand in the early 20th century.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ancient Human Ancestor Had Feet Like an Ape

Fossil foot hints that tree-dwellers lived alongside species built for walking.

A fossil discovered in Ethiopia suggests that humans’ prehistoric relatives may have lived in the trees for a million years longer than was previously thought. The find may be our first glimpse of a separate, extinct, branch of the human family, collectively called hominins. It also hints that there may have been several evolutionary paths leading to feet adapted for walking upright.

The fossil, a partial foot, was found in 3.4-million-year-old rocks at Woranso-Mille in the Afar region of Ethiopia. Bones of the hominin Australopithecus afarensis — the species to which the famous ‘Lucy’ skeleton belongs — have also been found in this location and from the same period.

But unlike Au. afarensis, the latest find has an opposable big toe — rather like a thumb on the foot — that would have allowed the species to grasp branches while climbing. Modern apes have similar toes, but the youngest hominin previously known to have them is Ardipithecus ramidus, which lived about 4.4 million years ago. The details of the discovery are published today in Nature.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Grenade Attacks in Kenya Leaves 15 Wounded

(AGI) Nairobi — Two grenade attacks have left 15 people wounded in Mombasa and in the nearby city of Mtwapa. The first grenade was launched during a religious meeting in Mtwapa, just outside Mombasa and the second one was launched in Mombasa itself, in a crowded pub-restaurant opposite the stadium, in Kenya’s second largest city. Hand grenade attacks have been increasing in the country since the government decided to send its troops to Somalia to fight the Shabaab rebels. Mombasa is a popular tourism resort and the number of visitors is constantly rising as the Easter holidays are approaching.

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

Latin America


Argentina’s Carlos Menem Faces Bombing Trial

Former Argentine President Carlos Menem is to stand trial for allegedly obstructing an investigation into an attack on a Jewish cultural centre in Buenos Aires, officials have said

           — Hat tip: Fausta [Return to headlines]

General


“Earth Hour’s” Global Propaganda Campaign

On Saturday, 8:30 PM local time, everyone will be invited to turn off all their electrical devices and presumably sit in the dark. According to the World Wildlife Fund, Earth Hour is intended to “encourage American cities to prepare for the costly impacts of climate-related extreme weather and reduce their carbon footprint.”

Earth Hour is an example of the enormous funding available to the Greens and of their continued assault on the world’s population to encourage and maintain its message that the Earth is imperiled by mankind’s activities, i.e., the use of energy. Earth Hour is a huge piece of international propaganda. Millions of dollars and man-hours have been expended to get the lights turned off from the Eiffel Tower to the Empire State Building, the Leaning Tower of Pisa to Australia’s Opera House.

You may have noticed there is no longer any reference to “global warming.” That’s because a growing percentage of Americans have concluded that global warming is a hoax. The same charlatans behind Earth Hour and the forthcoming Earth Day on April 22nd have mostly abandoned any reference to global warming and are now lying to you about “climate change” and, soon enough, will shift their message to “sustainability.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cattle DNA Traced Back to Single Herd of Wild Ox

A genetic study of cattle has claimed that all modern domesticated bovines are descended from a single herd of wild ox, which lived 10,500 years ago.

A team of geneticists from the National Museum of Natural History in France, the University of Mainz in Germany, and UCL in the UK excavated the bones of domestic cattle on archaeological sites in Iran, and then compared those to modern cows. They looked at how differences in DNA sequences could have arisen under different population history scenarios, modelled in computer simulations.

The team found that the differences that show up between the two populations could only have arisen if a relatively small number of animals — approximately 80 — had been domesticated from a now-extinct species of wild ox, known as aurochs, which roamed across Europe and Asia. Those cattle were then bred into the 1.4 billion cattle estimated by the UN to exist in mid-2011.

The process of collecting the data was tricky. Ruth Bollongino, lead author of the study, said: “Getting reliable DNA sequences from remains found in cold environments is routine. That is why mammoths were one of the first extinct species to have their DNA read. But getting reliable DNA from bones found in hot regions is much more difficult because temperature is so critical for DNA survival. This meant we had to be extremely careful that we did not end up reading contaminating DNA sequences from living, or only recently dead cattle.”

The research has implications for the study of the history of domestication. Mark Thomas, geneticist and an author of the study, told Wired.co.uk: “This is a surprisingly small number of cattle. We know from archaeological remains that the wild ancestors of modern-day cattle were common throughout Asia and Europe, so there would have been plenty of opportunities to capture and domesticate them.”

However, it tallies with existing research on the matter. Jean-Denis Vigne, a CNRS bio-archaeologist and author on the study, said: “A small number of cattle progenitors is consistent with the restricted area for which archaeologists have evidence for early cattle domestication 10,500 years ago. This restricted area could be explained by the fact that cattle breeding, contrary to, for example, goat herding, would have been very difficult for mobile societies, and that only some of them were actually sedentary at that time in the Near East.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Faster-Than-Light’ Study Coordinator Resigns

The media and scientific ripples after a shocking announcement that physicists had detected particles seeming to travel faster than light have culminated with the project’s coordinator, Antonio Ereditato, stepping down, according to Italy’s National Institute of Nuclear Physics (INFN).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Oldest Alien Planets Found-Born at Dawn of Universe

Jupiter-like worlds likely about 12.8 billion years old, study says.

Two huge planets found orbiting a star 375 light-years away are the oldest alien worlds yet discovered, scientists say. With an estimated age of 12.8 billion years, the host star-and thus the planets-most likely formed at the dawn of the universe, less than a billion years after the big bang. “The Milky Way itself was not completely formed yet,” said study leader Johny Setiawan, who conducted the research while at the Max-Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pictures: Dinosaur’s Flashy Feathers Revealed

According to a new study, Microraptors-four-winged, feathered dinosaurs that lived 125 million years ago-sported Earth’s earliest known iridescence, as pictured in this illustration.

Recent research suggests the pigeon-size Microraptor’s feathers glimmered black and blue in sunlight, like feathers of modern crows or grackles.

The findings are the earliest evidence of iridescence in any creature-bird or dinosaur, said study leader Julia Clarke, a paleontologist at the University of Texas at Austin.

Clarke and colleagues also suggest this iridescent coloring may have helped make Microraptor’s tail feathers even more eye-catching to mates.

Using an electron microscope, the researchers compared tiny, pigment-containing structures called melanosomes in a Microraptor fossil to melanosomes of living birds.

The team found that Microraptor’s melanosomes were narrow, elongated, and organized in a sheetlike orientation-features that produce an iridescent sheen on modern feathers.

“This study gives us an unprecedented glimpse at what this animal looked like when it was alive,” study team member Mark Norell, chair of the American Museum of Natural History’s Division of Paleontology, said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UN-Backed Scientists Call for Mega-City Population Lockup

In a recent statement put out by “Planet Under Pressure” several scientists call for denser cities in order to mitigate worldwide population growth. When in doubt that UN’s Agenda 21 is not the Mein Kampf of our day, one should consider yet another in-your-face confession from yet another certified biocratic control freak.

According to an MSNBC article one of the scientists while speaking about human populations worldwide, stated:

“We certainly don’t want them strolling about the entire countryside. We want them to save land for nature by living closely [together].”

Insisting the world’s population be locked up within the confounds of mega-cities, the elite realizes that if the herd is to be properly controlled walls are needed- thick walls, and by constructing these walls, making the masses go this or that way will be made easier.

Chief scientist Michail Fragkias involved with “Planet under Pressure” told MSNBC that “the answer (to population growth) is denser cities.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



While Rare-Earth Trade Dispute Heats Up, Scientists Seek Alternatives

In the 21st century, natural resource battles will be fought not only over oil and water, but over elements with tongue-twisting names like dysprosium, yttrium, and neodymium.

Perhaps the most important clash so far over these so-called “rare-earth minerals” opened up on March 13 when the United States, Japan, and the European Union filed a complaint at the World Trade Organization against China, which controls 95 percent of world production.

These obscure 17 elements are called rare, but they are actually common. They are just found scattered in such small amounts that the potential return seldom makes the cost of mining them worthwhile. But they help the modern world run, making cell phones buzz, producing the vivid colors we see on TV, allowing computer hard drives to store data. But what makes rare-earth minerals a strategic resource is that they are a crucial component in new energy technologies, enabling regenerative braking in hybrid cars, more efficient large wind turbines, high-efficiency fluorescent lighting, and photovoltaic thin films.

The U.S. Department of Energy says that deployment of clean energy technology could be slowed in the coming years by supply challenges for at least five rare-earth metals.

The new trade action seeks to force China to loosen export restrictions that other nations argue has kept the price of rare-earth metals artificially high outside the People’s Republic. But while the diplomatic process moves slowly forward, scientists worldwide are prospecting for breakthroughs that might circumvent China and win greater rare-earth metal independence for their countries.

These scientists view their objective as “inventing our way around any critical dependence on rare-earth materials,” says Mark Johnson, program director at the U.S. Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E). His agency, set up to fund transformational energy innovation in the United States, is among the participants meeting this week in Tokyo at a trilateral EU-Japan-U.S. conference on research into rare-earth alternatives.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120330

Financial Crisis
» Austrian Minister Steals Show on Euro-Firewall Announcement
» ‘Even a 1-Trillion Euro Firewall Wouldn’t be Enough’
» ‘Furious’ Eurozone Chief Scraps News Conference After Leak
» Greek PM Does Not Rule Out Third Bail-Out
» Italy: Economic Desperation Pushes Moroccan to Set Himself on Fire
» Norway’s Oil Fund to Reduce Exposure in Europe
» Polish Minister: EU and NATO Might Fall Apart
» Spain Braces for Further Budget Squeeze
» Three in Four Germans Against Increase in Firewall Fund
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Raids on Radical Islamists in Various Cities
» French Police Swoop on ‘Islamic Extremists’
» Ireland: Funeral Orators Urged Not to Glamorise Suicide
» It’s Wrong to Make Victim of Child Killer
» Lithuania: Beer Really is an “Essential Service”
» North Sea Gas Leak: Total Weighs Options as Explosion Fears Mount
» Primary Schoolgirl Aged Five Could be UK’s Youngest Victim of Forced Marriage
» School Shooting in Southern Finland
» Srdja Trifkovic: Sarkozy the Demagogue
» UK: Scout Clothing for Muslim Girls
» UK: Why Did He Take Her Shoes and Handbag?
» Wales: Cardiff Taxi Incident: Majid Rehman Remanded in Custody
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Alexandria’s Patriarch Hopes for Peaceful Coexistence
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Caroline Glick: The State Department’s Jerusalem Syndrome
» Israeli Forces Deploy for Protests at Borders
 
Middle East
» Churches Condemn Saudi Fatwa
» Obama Clearing Way to Tighten Sanctions Targeting Iranian Oil
» Turkey Cuts Iran Oil Purchases by 20%: Company
» Turkey: Conquering Middle East With New Soap Opera
 
South Asia
» Afghan Police Officer Kills 9 Comrades as They Sleep
» On the Run: Bin Laden Had 4 Children and 5 Houses, A Wife Says
» Pakistan: Waziristan: US Drone Kills 4 Arab Militants
» The Indonesian Government Wants to Ban Miniskirts
 
Far East
» Apple Hit by Report on China Factory Conditions
» Chinese Learning French to Emigrate to Quebec
» Japan Threatens to Intercept North Korea Missile
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Outer Mogadishu Clashes Target Hospital, MSF Reports
 
Immigration
» Illegal Immigrants Flocking to Denmark
» NATO Among Those Accused of Letting Migrants Die at Sea
» Tens of Thousands of Immigrants Illegally Entered Britain Under New Visa System
 
Culture Wars
» Swedish Boys’ New Hero: Pram-Pushing Spiderman
 
General
» Dolphins Form Groups Like Humans: Swiss Study
» Flowing Water on Mars? Strange Red Planet Features Stir Debate
» How Water on the Moon Could Fuel Space Exploration
» Human Brain Organised Like a 3D ‘New York City’ Grid
» Spectacular Brain Images Reveal Surprisingly Simple Structure
» Where the World’s Parliaments Meet Eye to Eye

Financial Crisis


Austrian Minister Steals Show on Euro-Firewall Announcement

Eurogroup chief Jean-Claude Juncker cancelled a press conference and sent an emailed statement instead after Austrian minister Maria Fekter went out and briefed journalist on the firewall decision. Juncker also wanted to have the Spanish budget announced in Madrid first, diplomats say, as he anticipated questions on the matter.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Even a 1-Trillion Euro Firewall Wouldn’t be Enough’

European finance ministers meeting in Copenhagen on Friday agreed to boost the euro-zone firewall to over 800 billion euros. The move marks another U-turn on the part of the Merkel administration, which recently dropped its opposition to increasing the fund. German commentators warn that even the new firewall may still be too small.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Furious’ Eurozone Chief Scraps News Conference After Leak

An angry head of the eurozone finance ministers cancelled a planned news conference on Friday after Austria’s minister left a crunch meeting to brief reporters on the outcome, an EU diplomat said. Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg’s prime minister and a veteran of EU affairs, scrapped the briefing after Maria Fekter told reporters that the group had struck a deal to boost their “firewall” against the crisis. A European Union diplomat said Juncker was “furious” with Fekter. Fekter strode into the media centre in the Danish capital and was immediately surrounded by around 100 reporters from around the world.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek PM Does Not Rule Out Third Bail-Out

“Greece will do everything possible to make a third adjustment programme unnecessary,” Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos told Il Sole 24 Ore newspaper in an interview published Friday. “It is difficult to forecast market conditions and expectations in 2015,” he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Economic Desperation Pushes Moroccan to Set Himself on Fire

Verona, 29 March (AKI) — A Moroccan construction worker who had not received a paycheck in four months doused his body in gasoline and set himself aflame Thursday in front of city hall in the the northern city of Verona. It was the second case of self-immolation by fire in as many days.

Financial desperation has driven about 10 people in Italy towarded botched or successful suicide this month.

The 27-year-old Moroccan was rushed Verona hospital after trying to kill himself near Verona’s 2000-year-old amphitheatre. His condition is considered serious but not life threatening.

Italy is the third-richest country among the 17 countries that use the euro currency. But its economy is in recession and is expected retreat this year. One-third of Italy’s workers under 24 year of age can’t find a job. With tax hikes and other reforms designed to reduce the world’s fourth-highest debt, the situation is expected to get worse.

The incident in Verona follows yesterday’s attempted suicide 150 kilometres south in Bologna where a 58-year-old man set himself on fire in front of the Italian tax collection agency, claiming he has paid his taxes and is being mistreated by the tax authorities.

Hardly a day passes without news or a suicide or attempted suicide.

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



Norway’s Oil Fund to Reduce Exposure in Europe

Norway’s massive state pension fund will significantly reduce its exposure to crisis-hit European economies and will instead invest more in emerging economies, the Norwegian government said on Friday.

The current 54 percent of Norway’s so-called oil fund — one of the biggest sovereign wealth funds in the world — invested in European stocks and bonds will drop to 41 percent, the government said in a report to parliament on the long-term changes in the management of the fund.

“The proportion invested in Europe will be reduced gradually over time,” Finance Minister Sigbjørn Johnsen said in a statement. At the same time, “the fund is growing, so that its (European) investments measured in Norwegian kroner will still increase over time,” Johnsen said, adding “the fund shall continue to be a considerable investor in Europe.”

The Norwegian oil fund, which contains all state revenues from the country’s massive oil and gas sector, is currently valued at around 3,470 billion kroner ($609.2 billion) and is Europe’s biggest

investor.

Parallel with the relative reduction in European stocks and bonds, the fund will increase its investments in the Americas and in Africa from 35 to about 40 percent of its total portfolio, while its portion of Asian investments will rise from 11 to 19 percent.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Polish Minister: EU and NATO Might Fall Apart

Polish foreign minister Radek Sikorski has said the EU could unravel and the US might quit Nato, leaving Poland alone to face an increasingly assertive Russia. He painted the “black scenario” in a speech to MPs in Warsaw on Thursday (29 March), at a time when other EU leaders are saying the worst of the financial crisis is over. Noting that the US is already more interested in the Pacific than in Europe and that EU countries are becoming more selfish, he outlined a future in which open borders and open labour markets are dismantled, less money goes into the EU budget and important projects — such as the European External Action Service — become “completely eroded.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Braces for Further Budget Squeeze

A day after strikes and protests put the public’s anger at government austerity measures on display, the Spanish government is set to unveil another round of budget cuts. Spain is set to unveil its budget for 2012 on Friday, and the purse strings will be tight. In an effort to keep in line with agreements made with the European Union to get the nation’s deficit under control, Madrid is expected to slash at least 35 billion euros ($46.7 billion) from public spending. That would bring down the country’s debt as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) to 5.3 percent, a figure put forth by the EU, to avoid being forced to accept an international bailout.

The EU’s original target was 4.4 percent, but this was relaxed slightly. Still, Spain is expected to struggle to meet even the revised figure of 5.3 percent, as its economy is expected to shrink and make even more budget slashing necessary. As the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, should Spain require a bailout it would be much bigger than emergency funding given to Greece and Portugal as they struggled to combat similar deficit problems.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Three in Four Germans Against Increase in Firewall Fund

(AGI) Berlin — The increase in firepower to 800 billion euros of the European fund set up to assist struggling states is not to the taste of the German people. The Politbarometer poll by the second biggest state television network, ZDF, shows that 3 in 4 Germans (74%) reject the broadening of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) with the addition of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), which was approved in Copenhagen today at the Eurogroup summit. Opposition to the new euro bailout instrument is dominant among the supporters of all parties represented at the Bundestag.

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

Europe and the EU


France: Raids on Radical Islamists in Various Cities

Around 20 arrests. Sarkozy: operations to continue

(ANSAmed) — PARIS — French police arrested around 20 radical Islamists at dawn this morning, in a series of raids carried out in the suburbs of Toulouse, Nantes, Marseille and Nice. The operations were geared towards “dismantling organisations”, according to a source close to the investigation into the recent killings in Toulouse, who added that today’s arrest are not “directly related” to the investigation into crimes committed by Mohamed Merah.

Following Merah’s death on March 22, President Nicolas Sarkozy asked the police to “assess” the level of danger posed by people known to have links with or sympathy for the most radical forms of Islam. The chief prosecutor in Paris, François Molins, indicated that inquiries would “focus on the search for any form of complicity”. Today’s vast operation, which was carried out by France’s intelligence agency (DCRI) with assistance from the police and special units, is still going on in Le Mirail, the most deprived suburb of Toulouse. In Nantes, operations were focussed on a warehouse in Coueron, on the outskirts of the city, which is suspected to have been used by senior members of the now disbanded group, Forsane Alizza.

Nineteen people were arrested in the raids, while Kalashnikov rifles were also seized, Sarkozy told the radio station Europe 1. The President confirmed that the operations were not all linked to the killings in Toulouse and Montauban but said that “they will continue”.

After a period of controversy and uncertainty, a brief funeral service was held for Merah, who was buried in the Cornebarrieu cemetery on the outskirts of Toulouse. The ceremony was attended by around thirty youngsters from the killer’s area of the city, though no members of his family were present. According to Abdallah Zekri, an advisor to the rector of the Paris Mosque, who was organising the funeral, of the young people who attended the service, “some behaved normally while four or five others were probably Salafists and were determined to cry “Allah is Great”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



French Police Swoop on ‘Islamic Extremists’

French police arrested about 20 suspected Islamists in dawn raids on Friday, most of them in the hometown of an extremist who was shot dead by police last week after a killing spree.

Agents from France’s DCRI domestic intelligence agency swooped in to carry out the arrests, most of them in the southern city of Toulouse a day after Al-Qaeda-inspired gunman Mohamed Merah was buried there, sources close to the investigation said.

The arrests were “not directly linked” to the Merah investigation, but were aimed at dismantling Islamist networks, one source said.

Some of the arrests also targetted people in the western city of Nantes.

The arrests came a day after Merah, who was shot dead by a police sniper on March 22 at the end of a 32-hour siege at his flat in Toulouse, was buried in the city under heavy police watch.

The 23-year-old had shot dead three soldiers, and three children and a teacher at a Jewish school in a killing spree that shocked the country.

The man branded a “monster” by French leaders was laid to rest in Toulouse’s Cornebarrieu cemetery after his family’s homeland Algeria refused to accept the body, citing security concerns.

French authorities have charged Merah’s brother Abdelkader with complicity in the attacks and said they were looking for other accomplices.

Abdelkader Merah was charged with helping his sibling steal the powerful Yamaha scooter used in the shootings and police have said they were seeking a third person who may have been involved in the theft.

Merah recorded his killings with a camera strapped to his body and police have said an accomplice may have been involved in mailing a montage of the videos to Al-Jazeera.

The video was reportedly sent to the channel’s Paris bureau from outside Toulouse while Merah was already besieged in his flat by police.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy vowed a crackdown on Islamist extremists in the wake of the killings, saying earlier this week that he had ordered the domestic intelligence agency to “check in detail the situation in our country of all persons identified as a potential risk to national security”.

On Thursday France banned four Muslim preachers from entering the country to attend an Islamic conference, saying their “calls for hatred and violence” were a threat to public order.

Saudi clerics Ayed Bin Abdallah al-Qarni and Abdallah Basfar, Egyptian cleric Safwat al-Hijazi and a former mufti of Jerusalem Akrama Sabri are banned from entering France, a statement said.

“These people’s positions and statements calling for hatred and violence seriously damage republican principles and, in the current context, represent a serious threat to public order,” said the statement from Foreign Minister Alain Juppé and Interior Minister Claude Guéant.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Funeral Orators Urged Not to Glamorise Suicide

Those who speak at funeral services of people who have died by suicide should not glamorise the deceased or give the impression that suicide is a normal response to life’s troubles, a new guide has stated.

Suicide Prevention in the community: A practical guide, which was launched by Minister of State Kathleen Lynch yesterday, is aimed at helping communities deal with suicides.

It recommends that there should not be permanent memorials to people who take their own lives; neither should there be dedications at sporting events, dances or community events.

Instead, attention should be focused on activity-focused memorials such as local or national suicide prevention, mental health and voluntary support groups.

It also contains information on how to adjust a suicide victim’s Facebook page in the event of their death.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



It’s Wrong to Make Victim of Child Killer

by Paul Sheehan

Shares in The New York Times Company have slid from $US25 to $US6.89 (S6.60) during the past four years. The company has stopped making money. Its flagship newspaper has also stopped making sense when confronted with realities that do not accord with its ingrained world view.

On March 20, after Europe was rocked by a string of murders in France, The New York Times ran a prominent story which inferred the killings were a byproduct of anti-immigrant sentiment: “The political debate around the shootings, and whether the deaths were somehow inspired by anti-immigrant talk, is likely to continue — both as a weapon in the presidential campaign and as a more general soul-searching about the nature of France . . . In a period of economic anxiety, high unemployment and concerns about the war in Afghanistan and radical Islam, the far right in Europe has made considerable gains.”

For the Times, the greatest threat to social cohesion in France is the far right, not the demographic challenge presented by an increasingly disaffected, de-assimilating, rapidly growing minority of 5 million Muslims.

Even after it was revealed that the killer was a Muslim who supported al-Qaeda, progressives went into overdrive to dissociate the violence from Islam. The most egregious example appeared on the ABC website, by Tariq Ramadan, a professor of Islamic studies at Oxford. He set new lows in rationalising bigotry:

“Twenty-three-year-old Mohamed Merah was a familiar face within and beyond his neighbourhood. People describe him as quiet, easy-going, nothing at all like an ‘extremist jihadi Salafist’ ready to kill for a religious or political cause . . .

“Religion was not Mohammed Merah’s problem; nor is politics. A French citizen frustrated at being unable to find his place, to give his life dignity and meaning in his own country, he would find two political causes through which he could articulate his distress: Afghanistan and Palestine. He attacks symbols like the army, and kills Jews, Christians and Muslims without distinction. His political thought is that of a young man adrift, imbued neither with the values of Islam, or driven by racism and anti-Semitism.”

What a load of reprehensible drivel.

Mohammed Merah did not kill without distinction. He was highly specific. He wanted to kill Muslim soldiers in the French army. He wanted to kill Jews. His killings were premeditated. He filmed the murders as he did them, a tactic frequently used and advocated by al-Qaeda. He had a history of crime and a collection of weapons. He told police he had travelled to Afghanistan and Pakistan to train as a jihad fighter. He had been on a watch list of Muslim extremists, one reason the police found him quite quickly. When they approached he opened fire.

His film of the shootings was mailed to the al-Jazeera TV network for dissemination. The footage depicted all seven murders, taken with a camera slung from the gunman’s neck. The film had been dubbed with verses from the Koran invoking jihad and the greatness of Islam.

Merah’s mother is married to the father of Sabri Essid, a member of an underground network that recruited fighters for al-Qaeda in Iraq. He was convicted on terrorism charges in France in 2009. Merah’s brother, Abdelkader, was also investigated but not charged. He has now been charged with complicity in the seven murders by his brother.

The more we learn about this story, the more sinister it becomes.

During Merah’s time in prison he studied the Koran. The French prison system has become a fertile recruitment ground for radical Islam. Merah had also formed a connection with Forsane Alizza, Arabic for “knights of honour”, which had 2000 followers on Facebook before it was banned in January by the French Interior Ministry for inciting racial hatred.

Forsane Alizza is one of several linked groups in Europe, notably Shariah4UK and Sharia4Belgium, with others in the Netherlands, Germany, Spain and Scandinavia. According to the Pew Research Centre in the US, about 100 million Muslims express support for al-Qaeda and thousands are in Europe.

In contrast, support for race war among the far right in Europe is minuscule. The killing rampage by a far-right gunman in Norway last year revealed no connections to a wider movement.

The primary objective of Forsane Alizza, according to its website, is to “support the mujahideen everywhere”. The group disavows democracy. It agitates for sharia in Europe. Its principal targets are the French military, especially Muslims in the military, and Jews. These are exactly the targets Mohammed Merah selected. But Professor Ramadan portrayed him as a frustrated, adrift, distressed, non-racist, non-political, non-religious Frenchman. A murderer of children becomes a victim.

Speaking of rationalisations for bigotry, tonight a debate will be held at the University of Sydney featuring a speaker from Hizb ut-Tahrir. The group is banned in many countries for advocating jihad.

           — Hat tip: Anne-Kit [Return to headlines]



Lithuania: Beer Really is an “Essential Service”

Lithuanian court reaffirms something many of us already knew

In a ruling designed to prevent brewery workers from striking over pay and working conditions, lawyers representing the Carlsberg brewery in Lithuania have managed to convince a court in that country to classify beer as an “essential service”. Workers classified as essential are banned by law from striking.

Employees of the Danish beer giant’s brewery in Lithuania had voted to strike but were prevented from doing so after the court ruled that beer is an essential service in the same category as medical supplies and water. The decision rendered the strike vote invalid and made the work stoppage illegal.

In an obvious play on Carlsberg’s “Probably the best beer in the world” tagline, a union leader representing the workers called the ruling “probably the most ridiculous decision in the world.” “Beer is great,” Jenny Formby, the spokesperson for the UK brewery workers’ union, told the Telegraph. “But it does not save lives.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Sea Gas Leak: Total Weighs Options as Explosion Fears Mount

French energy giant Total is frantically trying to respond to a natural gas leak discovered this week on one of its platforms off the eastern coast of Scotland. As it weighs options for plugging the leak, the threat of a major explosion and environmental catastrophe loom.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Primary Schoolgirl Aged Five Could be UK’s Youngest Victim of Forced Marriage

A girl aged five is thought to have become Britain’s youngest victim of forced marriage.

She was one of an astonishing 400 children helped by the Government’s Forced Marriage Unit during the last year, it has emerged.

The shocking revelations have come to light as a public consultation into criminalising forced marriage draws to a close today.

Amy Cumming, joint head of the Forced Marriage Unit (FMU), told the BBC that more than a quarter — 29 per cent — of the cases it handled in 2011-12 involved minors.

She said: ‘The youngest of these was actually five-years-old, so there are children involved in the practice across the school age range.’

A spokesman for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) told Mail Online that one in ten of the cases involved victims aged below 15, while 19 per cent of those affected were aged 16 to 17-years-old.

In the horrific case of the five-year-old girl, the authorities would not say where the marriage took place or give any more details to protect the child.

Fionnuala Murphy, of the Iranian and Kurdish Women’s Rights Organisation, said it deals with an alarming 100 cases of forced marriage every year.

She told the BBC: ‘We have had clients who are in their very early teens; 11-year-olds, 12-year-olds.

‘The youngest case we had was nine-years-old.’

The organisation is among many that want forced marriage to be made a criminal offence.

The Government said last year that there at least 5,000 to 8,000 cases of forced marriage in England and the number of reported cases is rising annually.

At the time, Conservative Party chairman Baroness Warsi said it was a disgrace that forced marriage was only a matter of civil law.

The politician said forcing someone to do anything against their will, by violence or by coercion, is ‘inhumane and unacceptable’.

She added: ‘I have met some of the victims. They speak about wedlock being used as a weapon and the horrors to which this can lead, such as rape, abuse and unwanted pregnancy.’

The FMU is a joint-initiative between the FCO and the Home Office. In 2011, the unit investigated 1,468 suspected cases of forced marriage, but many more are feared to go unreported.

Of those, 66 involved victims with disabilities and 10 identified themselves as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. A total of 78 per cent of victims were female.

Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone said: ‘We are determined, working closely with charities and other organisations doing a tremendous amount in this area, to make forced marriage a thing of the past.’

A decision on the consultation is expected later this year.

A spokesman for the Home Office said: ‘Forced marriage is an appalling form of abuse and we are determined tackle it.

‘That’s why we have held a consultation on making it a criminal offence.

‘That consultation closed today and we will analyse the responses before announcing the way forward.’

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



School Shooting in Southern Finland

HELSINKI — Finnish police say a gunman has been arrested after firing several shots at a school in southern Finland but no one was injured.

Detective Superindent Jari Kinnunen says the attacker shot through the door of a secondary school classroom Friday in Orivesi, 190 kilometres (120 miles) north of the Helsinki.

Kinnunen says the man, in his 20’s, did not resist arrest.

The school was evacuted after the incident on Friday morning.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Srdja Trifkovic: Sarkozy the Demagogue

President Nicolas Sarkozy announced March 30 that French police have arrested 19 persons suspected of belonging to violent Muslim networks. “These arrests are linked to the world of a certain sort of radical Islamism,” Sarkozy told Europe 1 Radio, and added that automatic weapons were found in the homes of some of those arrested in the raids in and around Paris and several other French cities.

It is striking that Sarkozy added matter-of-factly that the arrests were not related to Mohamed Merah, the Muslim terrorist killed by police last week after he murdered seven people in the Toulouse area. This raises some troubling questions.

If the arrests were not related to Merah, it stands to reason that the authorities were in possession of information warranting today’s action well in advance of his murderous spree. That the raids were not carried out earlier indicates either a culture of permissive negligence in the French security apparatus—the one that allowed Merah to operate freely, in spite of his long history of terrorist connections—or else a political ploy by Sarkozy, calculated to improve his rating in advance of a two-round presidential election scheduled for April 22 and May 6. Most likely both elements were present: the police had not considered those 19 potential jihadists worthy of a commando-style raid until prompted by the Élysée Palace to deliver a high-profile action now.

In his bid for a second five-year term, Sarkozy has been trailing his main adversary, Francois Hollande of the Socialist Party, and he sees his chance for victory in attracting votes from the supporters of Marine Le Pen. Over the years, the National Front leader has rightly criticized Sarkozy for being soft on immigration, and in the aftermath of Merah’s murders she declared that the “Islamic fundamentalist threat has been underestimated” in France, allowing political-religious groups to flourish due to the “laxism” of the authorities.

Le Pen’s recent warning that “security is a theme that has just signed up to the presidential campaign” seems to be confirmed by Sarkozy’s other gestures…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]



UK: Scout Clothing for Muslim Girls

The Scout Association has launched a new clothing range for Muslim girls in response to an increasing number from the faith joining the organisation.

A “hoodie dress” and a T-shirt dress, both with long sleeves, are to be made available for activities including abseiling and climbing following requests from the Muslim community.

The knee-length outfits feature a graphic print inspired by Scout badges and activities and have been designed by Sarah Elenany, a 27-year-old British designer of Palestinian and Egyptian origin.

The Scout Association — founded in 1907 — said more than a third of all scouts worldwide now are Muslim with an estimated 2,000 Muslim scouts in the UK.

There are around 40 active UK scout groups with a predominantly Muslim membership…

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



UK: Why Did He Take Her Shoes and Handbag?

CCTV Reveals Mystery Man After Woman is Hit by Lorry and Decapitated

Police investigating the decapitation of a woman by a lorry have revealed CCTV images of the victim before she was hit and a what appears to be a man seen walking off with her shoes and handbag afterwards.

Witnesses claim they saw an Asian man calmly bending down and picking up the possessions as pandemonium broke out in the aftermath of the tragedy near Manchester Royal Infirmary.

Police are still battling to identify the victim, who was dressed in in traditional Muslim attire, after no one reported a missing woman who matches her description.

She died instantly when she stepped into the path of the articulated lorry as it was being driven through the rush hour.

The ensuing impact propelled her handbag and shoes up to 100 yards from the rest of her body.

The grisly nature of the incident led to ghoulish onlookers taking sick pictures of the gruesome scene and posting them on Twitter.

Police want to track down the man who was captured on CCTV carrying objects including shoes.

Supt Wasim Chaudhry said: ‘We are really looking to speak to this man who is seen to pick up the ladies shoes and also possibly the handbag, maybe in good faith.

‘That handbag is key to establishing the identity of the victim. We have also looked at missing reports and at the moment there are no matches, so we are reliant on people coming forward.

‘I know the community will be very distressed and I want to reassure them that we have a team of very experienced officers investigating the matter.

‘The gentleman has been seen on CCTV picking up the shoes and then walking away.

‘It may well be the person has put them to one side or taken them for handing them in.

‘They haven’t come forward yet with those items.

‘Whilst the incident was on going those shoes have been collected. I can hope that this person has person has done so in good faith maybe thinking it was lost property, maybe handing them in to the police.

‘We haven’t had it handed in yet. It’s inevitable we will have family members and friends concerned that a loved one hasn’t come home. I would urge anyone who is concerned to come forward.

‘At this stage we are still working to identify who this victim was in what is a really tragic case.’

Police were called to the scene at 10am on Thursday on Upper Brook Street in Longsight to find the woman’s body parts strewn across the road.

They also discovered the truck driver had driven on apparently oblivious that he had hit the woman.

A 47-year old trucker was later arrested on suspicion of murder after his vehicle was pulled over by police at a side street near a council tip three miles from the death scene — but he was subsequently released without charge.

Police then arrested another lorry driver, aged 40, on suspicion of causing death by careless driving. Officers believe the dead woman was local to the area and had black hair.

She was wearing gold bangles on each wrist, had a pierced nose, a toe ring and was wearing saffron-coloured Asian clothing.

Supt Chaudhry added: ‘This continues to be a fast moving investigation. At the moment, we are treating this as a fatal road traffic collision.

‘We have currently not had reports of any missing people in the area, and we would urge anyone who has concerns to call us as soon as possible.

‘We have therefore released this description in an effort to try and identify the woman who has lost her life in what are clearly tragic circumstances.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Wales: Cardiff Taxi Incident: Majid Rehman Remanded in Custody

A taxi driver has been remanded in custody after a collision involving eight pedestrians in the centre of Cardiff.

Majid Rehman, 28, of Grangetown, Cardiff was arrested after an incident in Wood Street on Tuesday evening.

He faced one charge of inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent, and seven counts of attempting to inflict grievous bodily harm.

Mr Rehman will next appear at crown court on 10 April.

The defendant spoke only to confirm his name and address.

Presiding magistrate Christopher F Dale remanded him in custody despite a bail application from the defence which included the offer of a £5,000 surety from a family friend.

Six of the injured people were a group of railway workers.

One man, 35, from the Grangetown area of the city, was still being treated in hospital on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Alexandria’s Patriarch Hopes for Peaceful Coexistence

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, MARCH 30 — Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Alexandria and All Africa Theodoros II said that Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s dominant power in parliament, has shown goodwill for dialogue with other religious. Speaking after a meeting with Cypriot President Demetris Christofias, as CNA reported, he admitted that there is a rivalry between Christians and Moslems in Egypt, but believes that both sides have understood that troubles and fanaticism lead nowhere. “Egypt is passing through hard times and tries to find its way”, he said.

He added that Egypt will soon have a new President after the forthcoming elections, who will have a lot to do for the economy and the country. He wished for a peaceful coexistence in the area, which is troubled with many political and religious problems. Theodoros of Alexandria participated Tuesday in the synaxis of the primates of the Orthodox Churches to discuss the situation of Christians in the region of the Middle East, held in Cyprus.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Caroline Glick: The State Department’s Jerusalem Syndrome

I went to the US Consulate this week to take care of certain family business. It was a thoroughly unpleasant experience. I think it is ironic that two days after my extremely unpleasant experience at the consulate, State Department Spokeswoman Victoria Nuland refused to say what the capital of Israel is. It was ironic because anyone who visits the consulate knows that the US’s position on Jerusalem is in perfect alignment with that of Israel’s worst enemies.

Last time I went to the consulate was in 2007. At that time the building was located in the middle of an Arab neighborhood in eastern Jerusalem. It was unpleasant. In fact it was fairly frightening. Once inside the building I couldn’t shake the feeling that the Americans had gone out of their way to make Israeli-American Jews feel uncomfortable and vaguely threatened.

But then, I was able to console myself with the thought that the US has been upfront about its rejection of Israel’s right to assert its sovereignty over eastern Jerusalem. By treating Jews as foreigners in their capital city and behaving as though it belongs to the Arabs by among other things hiring only Arabs as local employees, the US officials on site were simply implementing a known US policy. True, I deeply oppose the policy, but no one was asking me, and no one was hiding anything from me…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Israeli Forces Deploy for Protests at Borders

Israeli security forces in riot gear Friday confronted Palestinian demonstrators after deploying in high numbers along Israel’s frontiers on an annual protest day.

By midday, minor skirmishes had broken out between thousands of protesters and security forces in the Jerusalem area. Palestinians threw rocks and Israeli troops responded with tear gas, stun grenades and rubber pellets. No serious injuries were reported.

In Gaza, Palestinians said Israeli forces shot and wounded two men who approached the border during a demonstration by about 15,000 people, organized by Gaza’s Hamas rulers.

Elsewhere, things were calm.

The “Land Day” rallies are an annual event marked by Israeli Arabs and Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza who protest what they say are discriminatory Israeli land policies.

Supporters in neighboring Arab countries also planned marches near the Israeli frontier, but organizers said they would keep protesters away from the borders.

Last year, demonstrators from Lebanon and Syria tried twice to break across the borders into Israel, setting off clashes with Israeli troops in which at least 38 people were killed.

In southern Lebanon Friday, more than 3,000 Lebanese and Palestinians gathered outside the Crusader-built Beaufort castle 15 kilometers (9 miles) from Israel. Lebanese security forces kept them from moving any closer to the border.

Sobhiyeh Mizari, 70, said she always taught her 12 children “never to forget Palestine.”

“We will liberate our land against the will of Israel and its backers,” said Mizari, who said her husband was killed in Israeli shelling of Lebanon in 1978.

Security forces were preparing for demonstrations in northern Israel, where a large portion of Israel’s Arab minority lives…

[Return to headlines]

Middle East


Churches Condemn Saudi Fatwa

German and Austrian church leaders have condemned a call by Saudi Arabia’s Muslim Grand Mufti for the destruction of Christian places of worship throughout the Arabian Peninsula.

“The Mufti clearly lacks any respect for religious freedom and the peaceful coexistence of religions. We stand firmly committed to religious freedom for everyone in our country, and we demand the same rights no less emphatically for Christians in countries where Muslims form the majority,” said Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, president of Germany’s bishops’ conference.

The archbishop was reacting to the mid-March declaration by Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah, the highest Saudi religious authority, who said Muhammad had decreed that “only one religion should exist in the Arabian Peninsula” and that existing churches should be destroyed.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Obama Clearing Way to Tighten Sanctions Targeting Iranian Oil

President Obama has determined there is enough oil in world markets to allow countries to rely less on imports from Iran, a step that could ramp up western sanctions to deter Tehran’s nuclear ambitions, an administration official said Friday. Mr. Obama is required by law to decide by March 30, and every six months after, whether the price and supply of non-Iranian oil is sufficient to allow for countries to cut their oil purchases from Iran. The new sanctions, passed as part of the defense budget and mandated by the Senate in a rare 100-0 vote, penalize foreign corporations or other entities that purchase oil from Iran’s central bank, which collects payment for most of the country’s energy exports. The sanctions are meant to pressure Iran to curb its nuclear program.

[Return to headlines]



Turkey Cuts Iran Oil Purchases by 20%: Company

Turkey’s national oil company Tupras said on Friday it had cut its purchases of oil from neighbouring Iran by 20 percent as western nations tighten sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear programme. “Given the situation, it was decided following an evaluation to reduce by 20 percent crude purchases from Iran,” the company said in a statement. Turkey, which imports a third of its oil from Iran, is seeking to obtain an exemption from new US sanctions against Iran.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Conquering Middle East With New Soap Opera

Major success and many fans in Emirates for Fatmagul

A new Turkish soap is capturing the imagination of audiences in the Middle East and Arab countries, the website of a Turkish daily newspaper has reported. “Fatmagul’un Sucu Ne?” (What’s Fatmagul got to do with it?) is confirming a trend seen as a neo-Ottoman cultural widening that is being met with some resistance.

Turkish soaps are watched in more than 20 countries (with peaks of 40 for the luckiest productions) and experts say that they are contributing to the spreading of Turkey’s values and lifestyle through the Middle East and North Africa, exerting a sort of “soft power” that is to the advantage of Ankara’s neo-Ottoman diplomacy. Between 2005 and 2011, Turkey’s Ministry of Culture announced in January, some 35,675 hours of Turkish television programmes were sold to 76 countries across the world.

The most successful were “Magnificent Century”, which is reawakening interest in Ottoman splendour, and the now historic “Kurtlar Vadisi” (Valley of the Wolves), which has been on screens since 2003, the year that Erdogan became Prime Minister.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Police Officer Kills 9 Comrades as They Sleep

KABUL — A police officer in eastern Afghanistan shot dead nine of his colleagues as they slept Friday morning and then fled in a government vehicle full of guns and ammunition, according to Afghan and American officials. The nine had been drugged earlier, an Afghan official said.

The incident, which took place in Paktika province, marks one of the deadliest cases of fratricide in Afghanistan this year. The apparent surge in such incidents — when Afghan soldiers and policemen target their American and Afghan colleagues — has raised concerns about the state of the war effort during a critical time, just as the Taliban’s yearly “spring offensive” has begun.

On Monday, also in Paktika province, a different Afghan police officer killed a U.S. soldier. Two British soldiers were also killed on Monday by an Afghan soldier in the southern province of Helmand.

Both assailants in the Paktika incidents are believed to have been members of the Afghan Local Police, a force of local recruits armed and trained to keep insurgents from gaining ground, authorities said. The ALP has recently been under fire for alleged human rights abuses, and some critics say the force amounts to little more than a smattering of militias. Still, U.S. and Afghan defense officials say the ALP is key to policing restive districts and gaining the trust of local populations.

Friday’s incident, which is under investigation by American and Afghan forces, ended with the suspect driving off in a white Ford Ranger filled with 10 AK-47s and 25 magazines, a U.S. official said. Afghan police brought in the suspect’s two brothers for questioning, said Mokhlis Afghan, a provincial spokesman…

[Return to headlines]



On the Run: Bin Laden Had 4 Children and 5 Houses, A Wife Says

Osama bin Laden spent nine years on the run in Pakistan after the Sept. 11 attacks, during which time he moved among five safe houses and fathered four children, at least two of whom were born in a government hospital, his youngest wife has told Pakistani investigators.

The testimony of Amal Ahmad Abdul Fateh, Bin Laden’s 30-year-old wife, offers the most detailed account yet of life on the run for the Bin Laden family in the years preceding the American commando raid in May 2011 that killed the leader of Al Qaeda at the age of 54.

Her account is contained in a police report dated Jan. 19 that, as an account of that frantic period, contains manifest flaws: Ms. Fateh’s words are paraphrased by a police officer, and there is noticeably little detail about the Pakistanis who helped her husband evade his American pursuers. Nevertheless, it raises more questions about how the world’s most wanted man managed to shunt his family between cities that span the breadth of Pakistan, apparently undetected and unmolested by the otherwise formidable security services.

Bin Laden’s three widows are of great interest because they hold the answers to some of the questions that frustrated Western intelligence in the years after 2001. They are currently under house arrest in Islamabad, and their lawyer says he expects them and two adult children — Bin Laden’s daughters Maryam, 21, and Sumaya, 20 — to be charged on Monday with breaking Pakistani immigration laws, which carries a possible five-year jail sentence.

The wives have cooperated with the authorities to varying degrees. Investigators say the older women, named in court documents as Kharia Hussain Sabir and Siham Sharif, both citizens of Saudi Arabia, have largely refused to cooperate with investigators. However, Ms. Fateh, who was wounded in the raid that killed her husband, has spoken out.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Waziristan: US Drone Kills 4 Arab Militants

(AGI) Miranshah — The toll of the new US drone raid in north Waziristan has reached at least 4 dead and 3 wounded. The drone attack took place in one of the most remote semi-autonomous tribal areas on northwestern Pakistan, near the border with Afghanistan. According to intelligence sources, all of the victims are foreigners, citizens of several undisclosed Arab countries .

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



The Indonesian Government Wants to Ban Miniskirts

The ban would take effect from May and is part of the country’s morality campaign. It will not regard the tourist resorts of Bali and Papua, where tribal people live. Criticism from human rights activists. Former President Megawati speaks of a diversionary tactic to divert attention from real problems.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Indonesia is banning miniskirts. According to Suryadharma Ali, Minister for Religious Affairs, the government is determined to “fight with seriousness,” the tendency of women to wear sexy outfits, including the world famous “mini” because it is inconsistent with Islamic principles and morals. The decision has been met with praise from radical movements, including the approval of the Ulema Council (MUI) which invites the female world to wear “Muslim clothing”. Opposition and human rights activists call on the executive to deal with the economy and dismiss the proposal as a desperate attempt to divert attention from the more concrete problems, such as rising fuel prices (see AsiaNews 28/03/2012 Clashes break out across Indonesia over rising diesel and gasoline prices, many injured), while ingratiating himself with the local extremist fringe.

The intention to ban “sexy” clothing was made by Ali — current president of the pro-Islamic United Development Party (PPP) — During a parliamentary session in Senayan, Central Jakarta. He has also covered the subject as a “secretary general” of the newly-created Presidential Task Force, called to fight against pornography as requested by Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in mid-March.

By Decree No 25/anno 2012, the Head of State marked the official birth of the Commission, under the direction of the minister for welfare Agung Laksono, it will monitor the customs, including clothing, and any performances of a sexual nature in public place. The “anti-miniskirt” law should come into force next May, tourist resort of Bali, where there are many foreigners, and the province of Papua, where tribal people native to the area continue to wear clothes traditional “mini” will be exempt.

Former President Megawati, leader of the nationalist Indonesian Democratic Party Struggle (PDIP) fiercely criticizes the government’s proposal, it only serves to distract the public from more concrete problems, such as rising fuel prices which has caused enormous social tensions. Criticism also from human rights movements: Andi Yentiani, the national commission for women’s rights, emphasizes that “there are more important issues that need to be addressed.”

Indonesia is famous for its campaigns of moralization, in the name of Shariah and Islamic custom: among them the recent proposal for cancellation of the Lady Gaga concert, the fight against the flag-raising “because Muhammad had never done it”; invectives against the popular social network Facebook because “amoral”, against yoga, smoking, jeans and the right to vote, especially for women.

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

Far East


Apple Hit by Report on China Factory Conditions

Workers who make iPhones and iPads at Foxxconn factories in China are often overworked and underpaid, a landmark report has found. The Apple partner has pledged to tackle all workplace violations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese Learning French to Emigrate to Quebec

Thousands of people in China are trying to write their own ticket out of the country — in French.

Chinese desperate to emigrate have discovered a backdoor into Canada that involves applying for entry into the country’s francophone province of Quebec — as long as they have a good working knowledge of the local lingo.

So, while learning French as an additional language is losing ground in many parts of the world — even as Mandarin classes proliferate because of China’s rise on the international stage — many Chinese are busy learning how to say, “Bonjour, je m’appelle Zhang.”

Yin Shanshan said the French class she takes in the port city of Tianjin near Beijing even includes primers on Quebec’s history and its geography, including the names of suburbs around its biggest city, Montreal.

“My French class is a lot of fun,” the 25-year-old said. “So far, I can say ‘My name is … I come from … I live at’ “ and, getting straight to the business of settling down in the province: “I would like to rent a medium-sized, one-bedroom flat.’ “

Despite China’s growing prosperity and clout, more and more of its citizens are rushing to the exits, eager to provide better education prospects for their children and escape from their country’s long-standing problems, including hazardous pollution and contaminated food. Canada joins the United States and Australia among the most favoured destinations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Japan Threatens to Intercept North Korea Missile

Japan has threatened to intercept a North Korean long-range rocket, scheduled to be launched next month, as South Korean newspapers reported that the north has test-fired two short-range missiles.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Outer Mogadishu Clashes Target Hospital, MSF Reports

(AGI) Rome — Somalia clashes between Shabaab militia and government regulars continue. Clashes broke out this morning in Daynile, outside Mogadishu with much of the fighting targeting a hospital accident and emergency ward and the surgery department, causing widespread damage. The incident was reported by the Medecins Sans Frontieres NGO. No victims are reported among the hospital’s 19 patients and medical staff

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

Immigration


Illegal Immigrants Flocking to Denmark

Police and tax authorities encounter more illegal immigrants on a daily basis

There are enough illegal immigrants in Denmark to populate a medium-sized town, and their numbers are growing, according to estimates from police.

Although pinpointing the exact number of illegal immigrants is difficult, the police approximate that the number is somewhere between 20,000 and 50,000, reports police union magazine Dansk Politi.

Assistant police commissioner Kjeld Farcinsen, who heads the immigration control group in Copenhagen, admitted to Berlingske newspaper that illegal immigration is a growing problem.

“It really doesn’t matter where we search, we always seem to find something.” Farcinsen said in reference to the random inspections the police undertake.

Officials from tax authority Skat are also aware of a rise in illegal immigration, according to public broadcaster DR.

“We’ve definitely seen an increase in cases, especially involving people from developing countries,” Skat spokesperson Christina Steinmetz told DR. “When we arrive they try and escape through windows and backdoors, obviously indicating that they do not want to talk to us.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



NATO Among Those Accused of Letting Migrants Die at Sea

Confusion, denial and ignored distress signals by Nato, warships and two fishing boats led to the death of 63 migrants (including children) on a boat which tried to cross the Mediterranean last year, according to a scathing report by the Council of Europe (CoE).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tens of Thousands of Immigrants Illegally Entered Britain Under New Visa System

Up to 50,000 immigrants illegally entered Britain by pretending to be students, a “shocking” report on the UK Border Agency will say today.

In a deeply critical study, the National Audit Office found a huge surge in students entering the country was largely fuelled by fake applications after a new visa system was introduced in 2009. The report reveals the UK Border Agency probably let through 40,000 to 50,000 illegal students in this year, largely from India, Bangladesh and China. Most of these people have never been traced. The number of illegal immigrants who pretended to be in education is more than ten times higher than the previous estimates.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Swedish Boys’ New Hero: Pram-Pushing Spiderman

A new Swedish toy catalogue has reversed the traditional gender roles by showing Spiderman pushing a pram, and a young girl riding a toy racecar. Kaj Wiberg is the CEO of the company behind the catalogue, “Leklust”, and claims that it is time to move forward from old-fashioned gender restrictions. “Gender roles are an outdated thing,” he told Metro newspaper.

Carl Emanuelsson, spokesman for Sweden’s Feminist Initiative, welcomes the concept. “It’s great that this company has tried to show that people don’t need to be stuck in gender roles,” he told The Local. “Examples such as these show other ways that we can break free from the roles that are forced on us, the roles that we are limited by.”

In the catalogue, on a predominantly pink page full of dolls and prams, a child dressed as spiderman can be seen pushing a pink pram. On another page, a blonde-haired girl with rolled up sleeves is pedalling what appears to be a racing vehicle. Elsewhere, the catalogue features another boy standing in front of a toy stove, apparently cooking a make-believe meal.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Dolphins Form Groups Like Humans: Swiss Study

A study carried out by the University of Zurich in Shark Bay, Australia found that male dolphins bond with one another in ways that are almost as complex as humans.

A joint team of researchers from the United States, Australia and the University of Zurich’s Anthropological Institute & Museum built on studies from the 1990s which found that two to three males would form an alliance to steal females from a group for mating purposes.

Interested in the way that these renegade dolphins formed their teams, researchers looked at the structure of these male relationships.

They found that dolphins have exceedingly complex bonds with one another, and that their relationships are not based on an obvious group structure. In this way, they are comparable only with humans.

The dolphins’ behaviour was also likened to that of chimpanzees, which are also known to forge alliances.

But whereas chimps develop alliances to defend territories from attack by members of the same species, the dolphins were bonding to defend their females.

It was previously thought that male dolphins would only come together for the mating season, but the study has shown that this is not in fact the case.

“Our study shows for the first time that the social structure and associated behavior of dolphins is unique in the animal kingdom,” University of Zurich’s Michael Krützen said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Flowing Water on Mars? Strange Red Planet Features Stir Debate

Flow-like features on Mars are a source of debate among scientists. While some experts say they are likely produced by liquid water or brine on the Red Planet’s surface today, other investigations interpret some of these features as dry mass movements, stirred up by various other processes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Water on the Moon Could Fuel Space Exploration

The vast deposits of water ice likely lurking at the moon’s poles could be tapped to help spur a sustainable economic and industrial expansion into space, researchers say.

At the moon’s north pole, Spudis said a minimum estimate for the amount of ice located there — as gleaned from Mini-RF data alone — is 600 million metric tons. “If you convert that to liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen to launch a rocket … that is the equivalent of a space shuttle launch every day for 2,200 years,” Spudis said. “And that’s just what we can see. I think the actual amount is at least an order of magnitude greater than that. So there’s plenty of water. The water is there. We can use it to actually bootstrap spacefaring infrastructure. That’s the real significance.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Human Brain Organised Like a 3D ‘New York City’ Grid

The human brain has been described as “the most complex object in the known universe”, comprising tens of billions of connecting nerve fibres seemingly tangled like a huge bowl of spaghetti. But if a team led by Van Wedeen of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston is correct, this staggering complexity arises from a seductively simple underlying structure, revealed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). If you straighten out its folds, Wedeen argues, the brain consists of a three-dimensional grid of fibres. It is a big idea that could help unravel mysteries of brain development and evolution, and help link neurological and psychiatric disorders to abnormalities in brain structure.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spectacular Brain Images Reveal Surprisingly Simple Structure

Stunning new visuals of the brain reveal a deceptively simple pattern of organization in the wiring of this complex organ. Instead of nerve fibers travelling willy-nilly through the brain like spaghetti, as some imaging has suggested, the new portraits reveal two-dimensional sheets of parallel fibers crisscrossing other sheets at right angles in a gridlike structure that folds and contorts with the convolutions of the brain. This same pattern appeared in the brains of humans, rhesus monkeys, owl monkeys, marmosets and galagos, researchers report today (March 29) in the journal Science.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Where the World’s Parliaments Meet Eye to Eye

The Inter-parliamentary Union (IPU) brings elected representatives from 159 of the world’s parliaments together. It serves as a democratic training ground, even when tensions between members run high.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]