Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/23/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/23/2009The news continues to focus on Iran. The regime’s crackdown has been fairly effective, so that dissident citizens are forced into less obvious ways of protest. Neda Soltani has become the movement’s martyr — even though she is far from the only casualty to have her death recorded on video, she is the one whose face has captured popular attention.

In other news, California has decided to combat its budget deficit by… wait for it… reducing the state income tax exemption for minor children! Way to go, guys — that’s bound to help your re-election prospects.

Thanks to Aeneas, Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, Diana West, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, islam o’phobe, KGS, TB, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
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Financial Crisis
The Coming Economic Collapse
U.S. Credit Rating a “Solid Triple-A”: Moody’s
World Bank Sees Most Economies in Deeper Slump
 
USA
700 NYC Teachers Are Paid to Do Nothing
Climate Bill Set for Vote After Deal is Reached Article Comments
Judge Orders Guantanamo Detainee Freed
Pentagon Approves Creation of Cyber Command
State Cuts Tax Exemptions for Kids
White House to Abandon Spy-Satellite Program
 
Europe and the EU
£100m Black Hole Discovered in 2012 Olympics Accounts
Denmark: Iranian Embassy Issues Warning
EU: Mandelson Criticises Weaknesses on the ‘Yes’ Side
France Sets Up Burka Commission
France Announces Cabinet Shake-Up
Google Trial in Italy: Freedom V. Responsibility
Islam on the Way to Legal Equality With Christianity in Germany
Italy: Wire Taps: Di Pietro, A New Law to Save His Caste
Netherlands: Muslim Broadcasters Spend Subsidies Fighting Each Other
Romanians Leave Northern Ireland After Attacks
Sweden: Man Killed During Midsummer Knife Fight
Switzerland Moves to Dilute Bank Secrecy
UK Muslim Group Faults Sarkozy Over Burqa Remarks
UK: BNP Dismisses Legal Action Threat
UK: New Cyber Chief to Protect Against Computer Attacks
WWIII? British Release Secret Planning Manual
 
North Africa
Al-Qaeda Claims Algerian Ambush: Site
Terrorism in Algeria: Press Says Gendarmes Killed in Ambush
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Italy Backs Netanyahu’s Peace Plans
Mahmoud Abbas Orders Release of Hamas Prisoners
 
Middle East
Canadian PM Calls for Iran to Release Journalists
Christopher Hitchens: Persian Paranoia
Diana West: Blushing for Bret
Iran Says Courts Will Teach Protesters a Lesson
Iran’s ‘Angel of Freedom’ Neda Soltan Vowed to Protest Against Injustice
Iranian Film Maker Speaks
Israeli Minister’s Al-Aqsa Mosque Visit Angers Muslims
Kurdistan Brands Iraq Oil Contracts ‘Unconstitutional’
Middle East Politics: The Ideal, the Real, and the Imaginary
Mousavi, Celebrated in Iranian Protests, Was the Butcher of Beirut
Netanyahu Slams Iran at Start of Europe Trip
Obama Condemns Violence Against Iran Protesters
Protest Organisers Held in Iranian Raid — Report
U.S. Contacted Iran’s Ayatollah Before Election
Unrest Could Hinder Tehran’s Regional Goals
 
South Asia
Bangladesh: The Daughter Converts to Christianity, Muslims Marginalize the Family
India Bans Maoist Communist Party
Report: US, Kyrgyz Deal on Airbase Use
US Missile Strike Kills 60 at Funeral in Pakistan
 
Far East
China and US Hold Military Talks
 
Australia — Pacific
Notorious Bikie Boss Allan Sarkis Breaks His Silence
Perth Dobs in Bikies
Weapons Found in Unit: Ibrahim Guilty
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
Mau Mau Veterans Lodge Compensation Claim Against UK
Nigerian Militants Attack Three Shell Oil Sites
Somali ‘Thieves’ Face Amputation
 
Latin America
Mexico: ‘Green Fund’ Better Than Carbon Credits
Official: No Black Box Signals From Flight 447
 
Immigration
28,000 Illegal Attempts to Enter UK Foiled
Problem for EU, Emergency Plan Soon
 
General
Thomson Reuters Plans to End Dual-Company Structure
UN: Islamic Law is Major Influence on Refugee Law, Says Study

Financial Crisis


The Coming Economic Collapse

by Graham Summers

Today’s essay details the ongoing collapse of the US economy with a focus on why this coming fall will prove the “worst is over” crowd wrong yet again. Earlier this week, I detailed three major developments. They were:

  • The US’s economic shift from manufacturing to services (mainly financial)
  • The massive drop in US incomes
  • The beginning of the debt bubble

Today, we’re addressing how the debt bubble encapsulated the US government as well as why Obama’s Stimulus Plan won’t fix anything.

To revisit the above three points, the US began outsourcing jobs in earnest soon after we re-opened trade with China in 1971. As outsourcing spread to higher and higher skilled jobs, this meant fewer jobs in the US market. This resulted in US consumers having to use credit to maintain their standard of living. It also meant more than one parent working to make ends meet.

On a national level, the US government began living beyond its means as well. Adjusted for inflation, gross tax receipts have only risen 40% in the last 39 years. However, over the same time period, total government spending increased 2,600%!!!

To fund this insanity, the US issued debt in the form of Treasuries. Foreign governments (most notably China) which were generally getting richer selling us stuff loaded up. The whole scheme is similar to buying a toy from the store, then having the store lend you money to buy another toy… ad infinitum: hardly a sensible long-term plan for financial solvency.

Now, everyone knows we run deficits. But not everyone knows that the deficits we publish are unbelievably understated. Corporations, in order to qualify for generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) have to count their pension and healthcare expenses for retirees.

Uncle Sam doesn’t…

[Return to headlines]



U.S. Credit Rating a “Solid Triple-A”: Moody’s

TOKYO (Reuters) — Moody’s Investors Service said on Tuesday that the U.S. government’s triple-A credit rating was safe but added that it could be at risk if Washington were unable to bring its public debt back to a downward trajectory.

Financial markets have repeatedly been spooked this year by concern that triple-A rated governments such as the United States and Britain could face credit ratings downgrades as they borrow heavily to spend their way out of recession.

“The U.S. government triple-A is safe,” Pierre Cailleteau, team managing director of Moody’s Sovereign Risk Group, said at a media briefing on sovereign credit ratings held in Tokyo.

Moody’s has a stable outlook on the U.S. rating, which indicates a change is not expected over the next 18 months.

Replying to a question about the sovereign rating of the United States, Cailleteau said the U.S. rating “remains a solid triple-A.”

But he added that there were possible risks that could lead to a downgrade.

“That will happen for two reasons. Either our assumptions in terms of debt reversibility prove to be wrong. That is, in fact the U.S. government is unable to bring public debt back to a downward trajectory,” he said.

The other reason would be if the United States’ ability to raise a large amount of debt at a low cost were to be put at risk, Cailleteau said.

“It could be put at risk if the U.S. dollar was severely challenged as the main international reserve currency,” he said.

But the possibility of the dollar being replaced as the main international reserve currency in the near future was a “pretty remote risk,” he added.

Debate has flared in the past few months about the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency at a time when the United States’ debt issuance is ballooning to pay for financial and economic rescue programs.

The bulk of the world’s foreign exchange reserves are held in dollars, and Russia, the holder of the world’s third-largest reserves after China and Japan, has repeatedly called for less global reliance on the dollar.

Moody’s Investors Service said in May that it was comfortable with the triple-A sovereign rating on the United States, but it was not guaranteed forever.

It also warned in May that if the United States failed to reduce current debt levels once economic growth returned, the triple-A rating could come under pressure.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



World Bank Sees Most Economies in Deeper Slump

SEOUL (Reuters) — The World Bank warned on Monday prospects for the global economy remained “unusually uncertain” despite recent signs of improvement in parts of the world and cut its 2009 growth forecasts for most economies.

The World Bank, which has recently cut its forecast for the global economy to a contraction of 2.9 percent from a projection for a 1.7 percent decline set in March, released details on individual economies for the first time on Monday.

It also called on the governments around the world for “vigilance” in drawing up exit strategy to reverse the recently expansionary monetary and fiscal policy once the world economy takes off for recovery.

The bank said in a Global Development Finance report released on the sidelines of an international conference in Seoul that the unprecedented expansionary policy could result in heavy adverse effects on the future policy if maintained after the recovery.

Following are the World Bank’s revised gross domestic product

forecasts for 2009 and 2010 for major economies.

(percent change in calendar 2009 over a year earlier unless stated)

2009 2010

revised prev revised prev

World -2.9 -1.7 2.0 2.3

High-income economies

Euro Area -4.5 -2.7 0.5 0.9

Japan -6.8 -5.3 1.0 1.5

United States -3.0 -2.4 1.8 2.0

Developing economies

*China 7.2 6.5 7.7 7.5

Russia -7.5 -4.5 2.5 0.0

Brazil -1.1 0.5 2.5 3.2

^India 5.1 4.0 8.0 7.0

* Updated forecasts for China were first released on June 18

Forecasts on a fiscal year basis

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


700 NYC Teachers Are Paid to Do Nothing

NEW YORK — Hundreds of New York City public school teachers accused of offenses ranging from insubordination to sexual misconduct are being paid their full salaries to sit around all day playing Scrabble, surfing the Internet or just staring at the wall, if that’s what they want to do.

Because their union contract makes it extremely difficult to fire them, the teachers have been banished by the school system to its “rubber rooms” — off-campus office space where they wait months, even years, for their disciplinary hearings.

The 700 or so teachers can practice yoga, work on their novels, paint portraits of their colleagues — pretty much anything but school work. They have summer vacation just like their classroom colleagues and enjoy weekends and holidays through the school year.

“You just basically sit there for eight hours,” said Orlando Ramos, who spent seven months in a rubber room, officially known as a temporary reassignment center, in 2004-05. “I saw several near-fights. ‘This is my seat.’ ‘I’ve been sitting here for six months.’ That sort of thing.”

Ramos was an assistant principal in East Harlem when he was accused of lying at a hearing on whether to suspend a student. Ramos denied the allegation but quit before his case was resolved and took a job in California.

Because the teachers collect their full salaries of $70,000 or more, the city Department of Education estimates the practice costs the taxpayers $65 million a year. The department blames union rules.

“It is extremely difficult to fire a tenured teacher because of the protections afforded to them in their contract,” spokeswoman Ann Forte said.

City officials said that they make teachers report to a rubber room instead of sending they home because the union contract requires that they be allowed to continue in their jobs in some fashion while their cases are being heard. The contract does not permit them to be given other work.

Ron Davis, a spokesman for the United Federation of Teachers, said the union and the Department of Education reached an agreement last year to try to reduce the amount of time educators spend in reassignment centers, but progress has been slow.

“No one wants teachers who don’t belong in the classroom. However, we cannot neglect the teachers’ rights to due process,” Davis said. The union represents more than 228,000 employees, including nearly 90,000 teachers.

Many teachers say they are being punished because they ran afoul of a vindictive boss or because they blew the whistle when somebody fudged test scores.

“The principal wants you out, you’re gone,” said Michael Thomas, a high school math teacher who has been in a reassignment center for 14 months after accusing an assistant principal of tinkering with test results.

City education officials deny teachers are unfairly targeted but say there has been an effort under Mayor Michael Bloomberg to get incompetents out of the classroom. “There’s been a push to report anything that you see wrong,” Forte said.

Some other school systems likewise pay teachers to do nothing.

The Los Angeles district, the nation’s second-largest school system with 620,000 students, behind New York’s 1.1 million, said it has 178 teachers and other staff members who are being “housed” while they wait for misconduct charges to be resolved.

Similarly, Mimi Shapiro, who is now retired, said she was assigned to sit in what Philadelphia calls a “cluster office.” “They just sit you in a room in a hard chair,” she said, “and you just sit.”

Teacher advocates say New York’s rubber rooms are more extensive than anything that exists elsewhere.

Teachers awaiting disciplinary hearings around the nation typically are sent home, with or without pay, Karen Horwitz, a former Chicago-area teacher who founded the National Association for the Prevention of Teacher Abuse. Some districts find non-classroom work — office duties, for example — for teachers accused of misconduct.

New York City’s reassignment centers have existed since the late 1990s, Forte said. But the number of employees assigned to them has ballooned since Bloomberg won more control over the schools in 2002. Most of those sent to rubber rooms are teachers; others are assistant principals, social workers, psychologists and secretaries.

Once their hearings are over, they are either sent back to the classroom or fired. But because their cases are heard by 23 arbitrators who work only five days a month, stints of two or three years in a rubber room are common, and some teachers have been there for five or six.

The nickname refers to the padded cells of old insane asylums. Some teachers say that is fitting, since some of the inhabitants are unstable and don’t belong in the classroom. They add that being in a rubber room itself is bad for your mental health.

“Most people in that room are depressed,” said Jennifer Saunders, a high school teacher who was in a reassignment center from 2005 to 2008. Saunders said she was charged with petty infractions in an effort to get rid of her: “I was charged with having a student sit in my class with a hat on, singing.”

The rubber rooms are monitored, some more strictly than others, teachers said.

“There was a bar across the street,” Saunders said. “Teachers would sneak out and hang out there for hours.”

Judith Cohen, an art teacher who has been in a rubber room near Madison Square Garden for three years, said she passes the time by painting watercolors of her fellow detainees.

“The day just seemed to crawl by until I started painting,” Cohen said, adding that others read, play dominoes or sleep. Cohen said she was charged with using abusive language when a girl cut her with scissors.

Some sell real estate, earn graduate degrees or teach each other yoga and tai chi.

David Suker, who has been in a Brooklyn reassignment center for three months, said he has used the time to plan summer trips to Alaska, Cape Cod and Costa Rica. Suker said he was falsely accused of throwing a girl’s test sign-up form in the garbage during an argument.

“It’s sort of peaceful knowing that you’re going to work to do nothing,” he said.

Philip Nobile is a journalist who has written for New York Magazine and the Village Voice and is known for his scathing criticism of public figures. A teacher at Brooklyn’s Cobble Hill School of American Studies, Nobile was assigned to a rubber room in 2007, “supposedly for pushing a boy while I was breaking up a fight.” He contends the school system is retaliating against him for exposing wrongdoing.

He is spending his time working on his case and writing magazine articles and a novel.

“This is what happens to political prisoners throughout history,” he said, alluding to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “They put us in prison and we write our ‘Letter From the Birmingham Jail.’“

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Climate Bill Set for Vote After Deal is Reached Article Comments

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has scheduled a vote Friday on a sprawling climate-change bill, signaling the Democratic leadership’s confidence that it can overcome objections from Farm Belt Democrats.

Opponents and supporters of landmark climate legislation are ramping up their public-relations campaigns ahead of the planned vote. The Obama administration is pushing the measure as a job-creator, while critics, including many Republicans, are portraying the bill as an energy tax that could slow the economy.

The legislation, co-sponsored by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D., Calif.) and Rep. Edward Markey (D., Mass.), had stalled last week because of opposition from Farm Belt Democrats concerned their states will face heavier costs under the proposed law to curb greenhouse-gas emissions.

Discussions were still continuing Tuesday. Josh Syrjamaki, chief of staff for one of those Democrats, Minnesota Rep. Timothy Walz, said his boss hadn’t yet given his support for the bill because he hadn’t yet seen details of a deal.

Drew Hammill, a spokesman for Ms. Pelosi, said in an email late Monday evening: “There are some issues still under discussion, but we are confident we can resolve them by the time the bill goes to the floor on Friday.”

The bill aims to cap greenhouse-gas emissions at 17% of 2005 levels by 2020 and at roughly 80% by 2050, creating a market for companies to buy and sell the right to emit carbon dioxide and other gases. It also mandates a new renewable electricity standard and establishes new national building codes.

It would mark the first time that either of the two chambers of Congress have voted to impose mandatory reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions — a goal President Barack Obama wants to achieve before a round of international climate talks in December in Copenhagen.

Mr. Obama on Tuesday said the House climate bill is “extraordinarily important for our country,” urging House members “to come together and pass it.” The president said it would create millions of new “green” jobs that can’t be shipped overseas.

Mr. Obama also sent his top cabinet officials, including his Energy, Interior, Transportation and Labor secretaries, around the country to gather public support.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Judge Orders Guantanamo Detainee Freed

WASHINGTON — The discovery of suicide martyr videos seemed certain proof that Abd al Rahim Abdul Rassak was part of al-Qaida. A closer look at his video, though, showed he was actually being tortured by al-Qaida.

The confusion over the video collection found in an al-Qaida safehouse is one of the stranger twists in the unusual case of Rassak, a Guantanamo detainee. On Monday, a federal judge ordered Rassak released, chastising the government for claiming he was still part of the same terror network that tortured, imprisoned and abandoned him.

U.S. District Judge Richard Leon emphatically rejected the government’s claims against Rassak, even going so far as to add punctuation to get his point across.

Federal prosecutors had argued that even though Rassak was tortured by al-Qaida as a suspected Western spy and imprisoned by the Taliban for a year and a half, he still maintained some kind of allegiance to his tormentors.

“I disagree!” wrote the judge, adding that U.S. officials are “taking a position that defies common sense.”

The judge said the government and the U.S. media initially mistook Rassak as one of a number of suicide martyrs, based on a videotape captured at an al-Qaida safehouse. Further investigation found the tape actually showed al-Qaida torturing him.

In a 13-page written decision, the judge heaped scorn on the suggestion that Rassak could be part of the same terrorist organizations that had abused him.

Rassak, a Syrian, had admitted to U.S. interrogators that in 2000, he stayed for several days at a guesthouse used by Taliban and al-Qaida fighters, where he helped clean weapons, and then briefly attended a terror training camp.

“There is no evidence — from either side — as to why he suddenly was suspected by al-Qaida leaders of spying and was tortured for months into giving a false confession,” Leon wrote. “It is highly unlikely that by that point in time al-Qaida (or the Taliban) had any trust or confidence in him. Surely extreme treatment of that nature evinces a total evisceration of whatever relationship might have existed!”

One of the detainee’s lawyers, Steven Wax, said the judge’s decision “is yet another reminder that there are innocent men in Guantanamo.”

Wax said his client “was conscripted by the Taliban and, when he wanted to leave, was imprisoned and then subjected to barbaric torture. He was imprisoned by the United States when he tried to provide information to us about his torturers.”

Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said it was reviewing the judge’s ruling.

Since his captivity at Guantanamo, Rassak has adopted a different last name, Janko.

There are 229 detainees still held at the U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. President Barack Obama ordered the detention center closed by early next year.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pentagon Approves Creation of Cyber Command

WASHINGTON, June 23 (Reuters) — The Pentagon will create a Cyber Command to oversee the U.S. military’s efforts to protect its computer networks and operate in cyberspace, under an order signed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Tuesday.

The new headquarters, likely to be based at Fort Meade, Maryland, outside Washington, D.C., will be responsible for defending U.S. military systems but not other U.S. government or private networks, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said.

Asked if the command would be capable of offensive operations as well as protecting the Department of Defense, Whitman declined to answer directly.

“This command is going to focus on the protection and operation of DoD’s networks,” he said. “This command is going to do what is necessary to be able to do that.”

U.S. officials have voiced growing concern in recent years about being vulnerable to attacks on the country’s civilian or military networks as technology takes on an ever-increasing role, including in military operations..

President Barack Obama said last month he would name a White House-level czar to coordinate government efforts to fight cybercrime.

The United States has said many attempts to penetrate its networks appear to come from China but it has stopped short of accusing Chinese authorities of being responsible.

Whitman said the new command will consolidate existing Pentagon efforts to protect its networks and operate in cyberspace.

Those efforts currently come under the auspices of U.S. Strategic Command in Nebraska, which will also oversee the new headquarters.

The U.S. Department of Defense runs some 15,000 electronic networks and runs some 7 million computers and other information technology devices, Whitman said.

“Our defense networks are constantly probed. There are millions of scans every day,” he said.

“The power to disrupt and destroy, once the sole province of nations, now also rests with small groups and individuals, from terrorist groups to organized crime to industrial spies to hacker activists, to teenage hackers,” he said.

“We also know that foreign governments are trying to develop offensive cyber capabilities,” he added, saying more than 100 foreign intelligence services were trying to hack into U.S. networks.

The new command should begin initial operations by this October and be fully up and running a year later.

The head of the Cyber Command would also be the director of the U.S. National Security Agency, which conducts electronic surveillance and communications interception and is also based at Fort Meade. (Editing by Eric Walsh)

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



State Cuts Tax Exemptions for Kids

California parents beware: Those little tax deductions running around the house are now worth less (in a strictly financial sense, of course).

To help balance its budget, California has reduced the state tax credit for dependents.

The change will increase a family’s California taxes for 2009 by about $210 per dependent compared with 2008.

A family with one dependent that normally gets a state-tax refund will get back $210 less when they file their 2009 return next year. A family that normally owes money will have to pay $210 more. Multiply that by two or more dependents, and it really adds up.

This may come as a shock to parents who have been too busy shuttling between soccer games and viola lessons to keep up with the state’s budget fiasco. The Franchise Tax Board is trying to get the word out, so families can prepare.

At issue is the exemption you get for each person listed on your tax return. The credit reduces your tax bill dollar for dollar. (The exemption credit phases out for couples with more than roughly $326,400 in adjusted gross income and singles with more than $163,200. This column applies to those under the limit.)

The change essentially takes us back to where we were before 1998.

Before then, the credit was the same for adults and dependents. But in 1998, when the state was awash in cash, it roughly tripled the amount for dependents.

In 2008, the exemption was $99 for each adult and $309 per dependent.

Now that the state is swimming in red ink, it decided to take away that gift to families and set the dependent credit equal to the adult amount for 2009 and 2010. So the dependent credit will shrink from $309 to roughly $99. (The credit is indexed for inflation; the final amount for 2009 will be announced later this summer.)

If you are in this boat and would rather not face a big tax bill early next year, you could pay more state tax this year, either by increasing the amount withheld from your paycheck or — if you are self-employed — by making bigger estimated quarterly tax payments.

To increase your withholding, file a new Form DE 4 with your employer. (This is the state version of the federal Form W-4.) You can get one at work or download it at links.sfgate.com/ZHLJ.

You don’t have to do this now. The Franchise Tax Board will not slap you with an underpayment penalty that results from this change on your 2009 taxes. But it could for 2010.

If you don’t increase your withholding, make sure you’re saving enough to pay the tax next year, says Gina Rodriquez, Sacramento bureau chief with Spidell Publishing, which provides education and research to tax professionals.

Tax rates raised

At the same time it slashed the dependent credit, the state also raised all tax rates by one-quarter of 1 percent.

A married couple with $100,000 in taxable income that paid $4,689 in California income tax last year would pay $4,939 next year — a difference of $250.

The state sent new tax-withholding tables reflecting this change to employers in April. Employers should have started using them in May.

Many employees will have been underwithheld for the first four months of the year. That means a slightly bigger tax bill (or smaller refund) when they file their 2009 taxes.

Again, states won’t penalize people for underwithholding that results from this tax change. So if you don’t have dependents, there’s probably no need to file a new Form DE 4 because of the change in the tax rates.

Just to be clear: The new withholding tables do not account for the decrease in the dependent credit. Parents who want to avoid that tax shock should consider filing a new DE 4.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



White House to Abandon Spy-Satellite Program

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration plans to kill a controversial Bush administration spy satellite program at the Department of Homeland Security, according to officials familiar with the decision.

The program came under fire from its inception two years ago. Democratic lawmakers said it would lead to domestic spying.

The program would have provided federal, state and local officials with extensive access to spy-satellite imagery — but no eavesdropping capabilities— to assist with emergency response and other domestic-security needs, such as identifying where ports or border areas are vulnerable to terrorism.

It would have expanded an Interior Department satellite program, which will continue to be used to assist in natural disasters and for other limited security purposes such as photographing sporting events. The Wall Street Journal first revealed the plans to establish the program, known as the National Applications Office, in 2007.

“It’s being shut down,” said a homeland security official.

The Bush administration had taken preliminary steps to launch the office, such as acquiring office space and beginning to hire staff.

The plans to shutter the office signal Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano’s decision to refocus the department’s intelligence on ensuring that state and local officials get the threat information they need, the official said. She also wants to make the department the central point in the government for receiving and analyzing terrorism tips from around the country, the official added.

Lawmakers alerted Ms. Napolitano of their concerns about the program-that the program would violate the Fourth amendment right to be protected from unreasonable searches-before her confirmation hearing.

Once she assumed her post, Ms. Napolitano ordered a review of the program and concluded the program wasn’t worth pursuing, the homeland official said. Department spokeswoman Amy Kudwa declined to speak about the results of the review but said they would be announced shortly.

The lawmakers were most concerned about plans to provide satellite imagery to state and local law enforcement, so department officials asked state and local officials how useful that information would be to them. The answer: not very useful.

“In our view, the NAO is not an issue of urgency,” Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton, wrote to Ms. Napolitano on June 21.

Writing on behalf of the Major Cities Chiefs Association, Chief Bratton said that were the program to go forward, the police chiefs would be concerned about privacy protections and whether using military satellites for domestic purposes would violate the Posse Comitatus law, which bars the use of the military for law enforcement in the U.S.

Rep. Jane Harman (D., Calif.), who oversees the House Homeland Security subcommittee on intelligence, said she was alarmed when she recently saw that the Obama administration requested money for the program in a classified 2010 budget proposal. She introduced two bills that would terminate the program.

“It’s a good decision,” Ms. Harman said in an interview. “This will remove a distraction and let the intelligence function at [the department] truly serve the community that needs it, which is local law enforcement.”

Supporters of the program lamented what they said was the loss of an important new terrorism-fighting tool for natural disasters and terrorist attacks, as well as border security.

“After numerous congressional briefings on the importance of the NAO and its solid legal footing, politics beat out good government,” said Andrew Levy, who was deputy general counsel at the department in the Bush administration.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


£100m Black Hole Discovered in 2012 Olympics Accounts

A £100m black hole in the 2012 Olympics accounts of the London Development Agency (LDA) is to be investigated by independent auditors, it was revealed last night.

A routine check on the accounts of the LDA, which is the business and development arm of Mayor Boris Johnson, hasrevealed huge irregularities with the accounting of taxpayer’s money. A team of external accountants from KPMG, the consultancy that has been advising other parts of the London 2012 set-up on cost-cutting measures, has now been called in to investigate the whereabouts of the missing money.

Two senior members of staff at the LDA have been suspended. Gareth Blacker, who oversaw the purchase of the huge Olympic site on the Lea Valley, adjacent to Stratford in east London, is on indefinite leave, as is his accountant. No evidence of wrongdoing is attached to either Mr Blacker or his accountant.

Concerns began to mount after the Mayor announced a comprehensive audit of LDA accounts in March. The Olympic Legacy Directorate (OLD) was the last of the LDA departments to be reviewed. Analysis of its accounts revealed that between £60m and £100m, which was due to be put aside as compensation for businesses forced to relocate from the site, is unaccounted for.

Previously a highly contaminated industrial waste land, the Olympic site in Stratford is being redeveloped in the biggest construction project in Western Europe. The LDA has so far paid around £750m for its work on the land, which included deals of close to £1m per acre with each of the 193 small and medium-sized businesses forced to relocate. Many have moved to nearby industrial complexes in east London but more than four years after London’s bid proved successful 72 claims are yet to be settled.

The LDA is due to stop existing in October when its £1.1bn budget, which is mostly tied up in the price of land, is handed over to an Olympic legacy company set up to ensure lasting benefits from the games. The LDA budget has no bearing on the overall £9.3bn budget for the construction of the Olympic site by the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA), which continues to be ahead of schedule.

The auditors will be tasked with discovering whether or not taxpayer’s money was wasted or misplaced through incompetence — and whether or not it is now retrievable. A source told The Times: “This has gone beyond a routine audit, into the realms of a fraud investigation”.

The revelations will come as a fresh blow to Johnson. In December, David Ross, the founder of Carphone Warehouse who oversaw the Olympic budget and advised on legacy issues for the Mayor, quit from his position following a shares scandal. Just this week, Ian Clement, a deputy Mayor, resigned after irregularities were found in the use of his taxpayer-funded credit card..

A spokesman for the LDA said “additional spending commitments” have been identified.

KPMG declined to comment.The two suspended LDA employees were unavailable for comment, and the agency refused to discuss personnel issues.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Iranian Embassy Issues Warning

Demonstrations in Iran against the results of the presidential election are an insult to democracy, according to the Iranian embassy in Denmark The Iranian embassy in Copenhagen has issued a veiled threat to Danish politicians and media regarding their stance…

The Iranian embassy in Copenhagen has issued a veiled threat to Danish politicians and media regarding their stance on the current demonstrations gripping the Central Eurasian country following recent presidential elections.

The presidential election on 12 June saw the incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Mir Hossein Mousavi both claim victory after the polls closed. In what the embassy said was a democratic, competitive and transparent election, Ahmadinejad was found to have received 63 percent of the vote.

Clashes between rival supporters and claims of vote tampering followed and demonstrations on the streets of Iran have seen scores wounded and killed in recent days.

In a statement sent to The Copenhagen Post, the Iranian embassy said the supervision of the elections means there was zero chance of ballot manipulation and spoke out strongly against those who support the demonstrators, whose actions they said were ‘an insult to democracy’.

‘The Islamic Republic of Iran is closely monitoring all stances and positions taken by different countries,’ read the statement, ‘and will no doubt take into future consideration the irresponsible and inflammatory positions of officials and media of other countries.’

The embassy continued by saying that some Western countries only support human rights and democracy in their own self-interest.

The ambassador in Copenhagen was called to a meeting with the Foreign Ministry yesterday on the back of an EU plan to summon all Iranian diplomats to protest against the violence in Iran.

Foreign Minister Per Stig Møller yesterday warned against the international community embracing the demonstrators issues as their own as it will isolate them in their own country as ‘foreign agents’.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



EU: Mandelson Criticises Weaknesses on the ‘Yes’ Side

BRITISH EU Commissioner Peter Mandelson yesterday hit out at the Government’s failure to convince voters to say ‘Yes’ to Lisbon.

The former British MP and Northern Ireland Secretary attempted to deflect criticism directed against him by the farm lobby here over his controversial negotiating tactics at World Trade talks.

Instead, he turned on anti-Lisbon campaigners, who, he claimed, made “completely fallacious assertions”, about abortion, conscription and neutrality.

And he accused the Government and ‘Yes’ campaigners of failing to face down the Lisbon opponents.

“An appalling number of rumours, on which people’s prejudices and fears were built, had contributed to the ‘No’ vote in Ireland,” he said.

“All of those fears should have been addressed, all those misrepresentations should have been corrected.”

However, the major parties who campaigned for a ‘Yes’ vote here, last night refused to respond to Mr Mandelson’s criticisms.

A Fine Gael spokesman would only say Mr Mandelson was entitled to his opinion. Labour were also reluctant to defend themselves against his criticisms.

“A lot of people could say a lot of things about the referendum, but some things are better left unsaid,” a spokesman told the Irish Independent.

Meanwhile, Britain yesterday ratified the Lisbon Treaty after legislation passed by parliament was given Royal Assent. The Queen’s approval of the European Union (Amendment) Bill represents the final stage in Britain’s ratification of the treaty.

It follows the Bill’s passage through the House of Lords, despite last ditch efforts by opponents of the treaty to delay its adoption.

Arriving at the summit yesterday, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told reporters the EU had to respond to the Irish no vote in a manner that was “respectful, calm and above all listens”.

“I think there is unity across the European Union that the respect and space that the Brian Cowen has asked for should be delivered,” he said.

[Return to headlines]



France Sets Up Burka Commission

France is to set up a commission to study the extent of burka-wearing in the country, after President Nicolas Sarkozy said the veils reduced dignity.

He said the burka — a garment worn by Muslims that covers the body from head to toe — “deprived women of identity”.

The French National Assembly has appointed 32 lawmakers on a fact-finding mission to look at ways of restricting its use.

France is home to Western Europe’s largest population of Muslims.

In a speech, Mr Sarkozy said it was unacceptable to have women in France who were “prisoners behind netting”.

He said it was not a sign of religion but a “sign of subservience”. However, he also called for respect for Muslims.

Assembly Speaker Bernard Accoyer said the lawmakers from right and left-wing parties would have six months to examine the issue before making recommendations.

In 2004, France banned the Islamic headscarves in its state schools.

About five million Muslims live in France.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



France Announces Cabinet Shake-Up

PARIS — President Nicolas Sarkozy revamped France’s Cabinet on Tuesday, turning to conservative loyalists and ousting two poorly performing ministers in the second reshuffle of the government since he took office in 2007.

Prime Minister Francois Fillon will stay on, and crucial international posts including the foreign and defense ministers remained unchanged. Newcomers are set to take charge in important posts at the Justice, Education and Interior Ministries.

The announcement of the Cabinet shake-up by Elysee Palace secretary-general Claude Gueant had been expected after two ministers — Justice Minister Rachida Dati and Agriculture Minister Michel Barnier — were elected to the European Parliament on June 7.

But the changes also gave Sarkozy a pretext to jettison two women who were widely considered failures in their jobs — Dati, and Culture Minister Christine Albanel.

Dati, the highest-ranking woman of North African descent ever to serve in France’s Cabinet, struggled against violent protests by prison workers that enflamed an-already tense situation in the country’s overcrowded prisons.

Albanel mishandled the presentation in parliament of a bill to punish people who illegally download music and films by cutting off their Internet connections. The bill should have sailed through the conservative-dominated National Assembly, but a clever maneuver by the opposition Socialists caused it to fail clumsily on a first run through the chamber.

Both women are said to be close to Sarkozy’s ex-wife, Cecilia Attias.

The changes also make the top ranks of the government less diverse — only four women are among the 18 full ministers, down from seven in the previous one. Including the junior ministers, the Cabinet is made up of 38 members.

Among the biggest surprises was the choice as culture minister of Frederic Mitterrand, a nephew of late Socialist President Francois Mitterrand and current head of the Rome branch of the Alliance France cultural organization.

Dati and Barnier had been expected to leave the government as part of an unofficial rule under Sarkozy that ministers should not hold other elective posts while serving in the Cabinet.

However, an exception was made for Brice Hortefeux, a longtime Sarkozy confidant, who was also elected to the European Parliament but will remain in the Cabinet — moving from the Labor Ministry to the Interior Ministry.

Other Sarkozy allies taking high-ranking posts include Xavier Darcos, who was moved from the Education Ministry to the Labor Ministry, and Luc Chatel — once the spokesman for Sarkozy’s conservative party — will take over as education minister.

Prime-time newscasts cut away from their regular programming to broadcast Gueant’s simple reading of the new lineup from the front steps of the presidential palace.

The Cabinet changes are the second since Sarkozy and a conservative majority in parliament were elected in mid-2007.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Google Trial in Italy: Freedom V. Responsibility

ROME — Testimony begins Tuesday in the Italian trial of four Google executives accused of defamation and violating privacy for allowing a video to be posted online showing an autistic youth being abused.

All four deny wrongdoing. The case could set the tone for new limits on sharing videos and other content on the Web.

Google says the case violates EU rules by trying to place responsibility on providers for content uploaded by users.

The Mountain View, California, company also considers the trial a threat to freedom on the Internet because it could force providers into an impossible task — prescreening the thousands of hours of footage uploaded every day onto Web sites like the Google-owned YouTube.

Prosecutors and civil plaintiffs insist they don’t want to censor the Internet, and maintain the case is about enforcing Italy’s privacy rules as well as ensuring large corporations do their utmost to block inappropriate content, or quickly delete it.

“It’s the first case of this kind in Italy and Europe,” said Alessandro del Ninno, a lawyer and expert on Internet law. “The risk is that it will force providers to preventively control the content, something that goes against the very nature of the Internet.”

The defendants, who are being tried in absentia in Milan, are Google’s senior vice president and chief legal officer David Drummond, former chief financial officer George Reyes, senior product marketing manager Arvind Desikan and global privacy counsel Peter Fleischer.

The probe was sought by Vivi Down, an advocacy group for people with Down syndrome, which alerted prosecutors to the 2006 video showing an autistic student in Turin being beaten and insulted by bullies at school. In the footage, the youth is being mistreated while one of the teenagers puts in a mock telephone call to Vivi Down.

The events shortly preceded Google’s 2006 acquisition of YouTube.

Google Italia, which is based in Milan, eventually took down the video, though the two sides disagree on how fast the company reacted to complaints. Thanks to the footage and Google’s cooperation, the four bullies were identified and sentenced to community service by a juvenile court.

But prosecutors also sought trial for the Google executives, who could face up to three years in jail, for failing to protect the youth’s privacy by allowing the video to be uploaded.

“We feel that bringing this case to court is totally wrong,” Google said in a statement ahead of Tuesday’s session. “It’s akin to prosecuting mail service employees for hate speech letters sent in the post.”

“Seeking to hold neutral platforms liable for content posted on them is a direct attack on a free, open Internet,” it said.

The trial opened in February, with the court so far dealing with procedural matters. In Tuesday’s session a company technician is expected to take the stand to explain how Google Video works.

A ruling is expected in July or after a summer break.

The family of the youth withdrew from the trial when it opened, leaving Vivi Down as the main plaintiff in a civil lawsuit attached to the case.

“It is not correct to talk about censorship, this is not our goal,” said Guido Camera, a lawyer for the group. “We ask that at least users be made aware of their responsibilities.”

Prosecutors say they are aware Google cannot screen all videos, but maintain the company didn’t have enough automatic filters in place as well as warnings to users on privacy and copyright laws. They also say Google didn’t have enough workers assigned to its Italian service in order to react quickly to videos flagged as inappropriate by viewers.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Islam on the Way to Legal Equality With Christianity in Germany

Calls are growing in Germany for Islam to be granted the same legal status, rights and duties as other recognised religions, with the idea forming the main focus for this week’s Islam Conference.

Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble of the conservative Christian Democratic Union has said this is his long-term aim, while the Greens this week urged the conference to take concrete steps in that direction.

But a number of formalities have to be fulfilled for the German constitution to recognise Islam as an official religious community, including the ability to provide teachers to give children education in state schools about their faith.

The Muslim communities in Germany are still a way away from this, Schäuble recently told the Tageszeitung.

He said the conference was, “a fair way along the road to reaching the point of being able to offer religion classes at schools to Islamic children. We have developed a more exact understanding together that one can only introduce religion classes in a partnership.”

He acknowledged the fact that the state governments have jurisdiction over education, and are far from accepting the idea of putting Islamic religion classes on an equal footing with Catholic and Evangelical classes.

But he said: “This process needs time. So, for example, existing associations such as the Islam Council, are religious associations, but not a religious community as far as the constitution is concerned. Religious instruction is needed for that.”

Schäuble perhaps unwittingly illustrated how far integration still had to go when he admitted forgetting to invite any Muslim representative to last month’s celebration of the 60th anniversary of the German constitution.

“It’s completely clear that the fact that there was no invitation, was a regrettable mistake. I asked my people directly afterwards… why we did not do it.”

When asked why an invitation had not been sent out, he said: “We did not think about it. Integration is a learning process — also in my department.”

The Greens party this week drew up a discussion paper which set out further conditions which any formalised religious community would be expected to fulfil. This included active campaigning for religious freedom of non-Muslims, as well as working for the rights of Muslim women, and against anti-Semitism and against homophobic violence.

Germany’s Bishops’ Conference has also spoken out in favour of the long-term legal equality of Islam. Its secretary Hans Langendörfer wrote in a piece for the Tageszeitung it was, “fundamentally desirable that the Muslim community be set on a legally equal level as the Christian Churches. Above all, the status of a ‘legal public corporation’ is not a right exclusive to the churches.”

The Islam Conference meets on Thursday.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Italy: Wire Taps: Di Pietro, A New Law to Save His Caste

(AGI) — Rome, 10 June — Antonio Di Pietro has criticised the government bill on wiretaps on which the government has asked the confidence vote. “Premier Silvio Berlusconi, after presenting the Alfano Law to make sure of his impunity, and the Apicella Law to fly around with his court in the state airplane, now passes the law on wiretaps to allow the political and financial caste of this country to escape justice” the leader of the IDV party said in a statement. “The Republic is in full crisis and we must stop this fascist dictatorship before it’s too late”. Di Pietro will not be in Parliament today due to medical tests. “It’s clear: the Berlusconi era is coming to an end” Di Pietro continued, “the Italians are realising that he is not the leader he wants us to believe he is, but only someone who takes advantage of the media, public and private, which he controls and uses to his advantage and to have his acolytes elected”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Muslim Broadcasters Spend Subsidies Fighting Each Other

THE HAGUE, 23/06/09 — The two Muslim broadcasters subsidised by the Dutch government have spent hundreds of thousands of euros of that money on legal battles against each other. This emerges from annual accounts obtained by Trouw newspaper.

Every big religious movement receives a subsidy in the Netherlands for its own public broadcaster. Islam however has two broadcasters because Muslim groups have been unable to agree among themselves on a single umbrella broadcaster.

The Foundation for the Care of Islamic Broadcasting Time (SVIZ) was set up in 2007 to keep the two Muslim broadcasters — Netherlands Muslim Broadcasting (NMO) and the Netherlands Islamic Broadcaster (NIO) — in dialogue. But due to internal fights, SVIZ now also threatens to fall apart.

Four of the nine SVIZ management board members have lost confidence in chairman Mohamed Sini. The board members accuse him of not being independent. Court cases to oust Sini have already cost the Muslim broadcasters nearly 200,000 euros in one and a half year’s time, according to Trouw.

Additionally, there is another legal question at play; NMO is refusing to give SVIZ access to its accounts. In this dispute as well, subsidies have been used to pay lawyers.

In March, the Fiscal Intelligence and Investigation Service (FIOD-ECD) raided NMO. It is investigating it on the basis of a report by the Media Commissariat against former NMO director Frank William. The investigation is according to a spokesman focused on forgery, misappropriation and swindling.

Last week, it already emerged that the business director of SVIZ, Maurice Koopman, receives 1,500 euros per week for one and a half working days. His job consists of dividing up the subsidies between the two Muslim broadcasters. Koopman said he does not feel overpaid. “Have you ever worked with Muslims?”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Romanians Leave Northern Ireland After Attacks

One hundred Romanians who fled their homes in Belfast after a spate of recent attacks have decided to leave Northern Ireland and return to Romania.

Social Development Minister Margaret Ritchie said 25 people had already left and 75 were going to leave as soon as they could, 14 will stay in NI.

Meanwhile, a man has been remanded in custody charged with intimidating Romanian people in Belfast.

Shane Murphy, 21, of Donegall Road in the city, denies the charge.

His solicitor, who had applied for bail on his client’s behalf, said Mr Murphy also denied a further charge of acting provocatively by shouting racist comments at a rally held on Lisburn Road in the city last week.

The judge, sitting at Belfast Magistrates Court, refused a bail application because he said there was a danger Mr Murphy could interfere with witnesses.

On Monday, a 15-year-old boy appeared in court charged in connection with the same incidents.

A 16-year-old boy appeared alongside him accused of provocative behaviour at the anti-racism rally.

The Housing Executive is paying for the families, members of the Roma ethnic group, to return to Romania using emergency funds.

A spokesman for the Northern Ireland Council for Ethnic Minorities said it was likely the remaining families would leave before the end of the week.

“We have all spoken to the the Romanian families and the majority of them want to go home,” he said.

City Church, which last week provided temporary overnight shelter for the ethnic Roma, was targeted by vandals on Monday night.

Three men, all aged 20, were arrested in connection with the attack but later released.

Police are not linking this incident to the ongoing investigation into the attacks on Romanian families in south Belfast.

They said there was no indication that the attack on the church was hate or racially motivated

Pastor Malcolm Morgan said the church was covered in broken glass.

“I arrived this morning to find windows smashed at the front of our church and our main glass doorway smashed as well,” he said.

“Stones were lying scattered on the floor inside and outside and obviously broken glass was everywhere.”

On Monday night, another two youths, aged 16 and 17, were arrested in connection with alleged provocative conduct and intimidation. They were released on Tuesday.

Police do not believe paramilitaries were involved in last week’s attacks, which were condemned by all political parties.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Man Killed During Midsummer Knife Fight

A man was stabbed to death during a fight near Borgholm on Öland, an island off the east coast of Sweden and a popular spot for Midsummer celebrations. But in many parts of the country, poor weather put a damper on the Midsummer festivities.

One person was stabbed to death during a fight north of Borgholm, and several other people sustained less severe knife wounds. Police were called shortly after midnight on Midsummer Day but do not want to release further details.

“To say the least, this is a mess. A lot of youth were on Öland to celebrate Midsummer and this was a fight between rival gangs. Knives were involved, one person died and several are injured. Their relatives have not yet been informed,” Alf Jacobsson of the Kalmar police told TT.

The celebrations in Gothenburg were characterized by fights and drunkenness, but there were no major incidents.

“It was like a more troublesome Saturday. But now it’s pouring rain and that is a good preventative measure when it comes to criminal activity,” said Thomas Gorner of the Gothenburg police.

In Skåne in southern Sweden, midsummer celebrations remained calm until around 1 am.

“Then it was like …all hell broke loose. There have been a lot of incidents. There has been drunkenness, fights, assault, but not at a bar, but rather at a camp sites and private parties,” said Anders Nilsson, commander on duty in Skåne and Blekinge.

No major injuries were reported, however, and no particular location has stood out, he added.

Other parts of Sweden reported that things were business as usual.

“Like a normal Midsummer. Things have been relatively calm in Luleå all year, and also now. Things have been more problematic in the northern part of the municipality, in particular in Pajala where a festival is going on,” said Catrin Hedqvist of the Norrbotten police in northern Sweden.

In Dalarna in central Sweden, things were calmer than usual, partially due to the weather.

“But in Leksand, where we normally have trouble, things were calm and we have had a lot of officers out,” said Kent Link of the Dalarna police.

In Stockholm, it was like a regular weekend and many were thought to have gone out of town.

“Of course we’ve had a lot to do, but I had expected much worse. The city centre has been the most calm,” said Jens Mårtensson of the Stockholm police.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Switzerland Moves to Dilute Bank Secrecy

Switzerland emphasised on Tuesday its willingness to dilute bank secrecy, as the US Department of Justice indicated that it planned to continue with legal action to force UBS to reveal the names of its American offshore private banking clients.

Hans-Rudolf Merz, Switzerland’s finance minister, said Bern intended to negotiate 12 revised double taxation treaties this year, extending substantially the range of countries benefiting from greater transparency..

The need for fresh agreements followed Switzerland’s acceptance in March of transparency standards set by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the industrialised nations’ club.

Six deals have already been negotiated, taking Switzerland halfway to the total of 12 required to remove the country from a “grey list” of countries not fully compliant with the new rules.

Talks with the US were concluded last week, surprisingly quickly, suggesting Swiss negotiators were keen to secure a settlement against the background of the UBS case.

The world’s biggest wealth manager is to fight a demand by the US Internal Revenue Service that it reveal 52,000 offshore relationships with US clients.

UBS has resisted fiercely, arguing acquiescence would involve breaking Swiss law and that such issues are best negotiated by governments, rather than by legal actions against companies.

The bank’s position has been upheld by the Swiss government and important trade federations. UBS is due to go to trial over the issue at a federal court in Miami on July 13.

Bern has also lobbied in Washington, reminding legislators about Switzerland’s services in countries such as Iran and Cuba, where the US has no diplomatic representation. The Swiss have also stressed the potential threat to the financial system of destabilising UBS, which has extensive operations in the US.

Legal experts expected next month’s court case to be long and complex. An adverse ruling would have triggered an appeal, with the issue possibly lingering for years until going to the Supreme Court.

The New York Times reported on Tuesday the IRS was considering dropping the action. “To have a complete meltdown in Swiss-US relations and go to the mat with Switzerland three years from now when money is getting back into the system doesn’t make sense,” said an unnamed US official.

However, the US Justice Department on Tuesday said it was not planning to drop its lawsuit. “There is no basis for the report in the New York Times,” it said.

UBS and the Swiss finance ministry declined to comment.

Analysts noted that to drop the case would remove a source of uncertainty for the bank — and for Swiss private banking in general.

Switzerland’s image as a confidential haven for private assets — whether declared or not — suffered a blow in February. UBS was forced by the Swiss bank regulator to disclose the names of 255 US clients to the American authorities.

The decision was a response to intense US pressure on Switzerland. It reflected fears in Bern UBS might otherwise face indictment. To publish the names was justified by the Swiss on the grounds those involved had used sham companies to evade tax, and so were not covered by the previous — restrictive — interpretation of laws to govern co-operation with foreign tax authorities.

Transfer of names was central to a deal by which UBS paid $780m to settle criminal charges that it had helped rich Americans evade tax. The agreement did not cover the linked — but separate — civil case by the IRS to require the bank to reveal the 52,000 client relationships.

To backtrack on that demand may reflect awareness in Washington of diplomatic and business repercussions. It may also stem from the fact many US taxpayers with undeclared accounts have come forward voluntarily.

Many accounts have also been closed after the bank’s decision last year to terminate offshore services for US clients.

UBS has offered to give client data to the IRS on an “anonymised” basis. The information, already assessed by independent auditors, is thought to show only a few account holders breached the rules. Anonymised access would allow the IRS to verify that.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK Muslim Group Faults Sarkozy Over Burqa Remarks

PARIS — A top Muslim group in Britain lashed out at Nicolas Sarkozy as “patronizing and offensive” on Tuesday, after the French president said body- and face-covering Islamic garments such as the burqa turn women into prisoners.

In Paris, parliament formally created a commission Tuesday to study the wearing of body-cloaking Muslim robes in France, a day after Sarkozy told lawmakers that the burqa would not be welcome in the country.

A top official with the Muslim Council of Britain, an umbrella organization for British Muslim groups, accused Sarkozy of “divisive politics,” and said his comments could fan an “Islamophobic reaction” in Europe.

“It is patronizing and offensive to suggest that those Muslim women who wear the burqa do so because of pressure or oppression by their male partners or guardians,” the council’s assistant secretary-general, Reefat Drabu, said in a statement. “Such suggestions can legitimately be perceived as antagonistic towards Islam.”

One of Britain’s highest-profile Muslim politicians also joined the debate, saying it was not the government’s job to decide what people should or should not wear.

“This freedom to choose is one of the great values of our nation and why we are revered around the world,” Communities Minister Shahid Malik said.. “There are no laws stating what clothes or attire are acceptable and so whether one chooses to wear a veil or burqa, a miniskirt or goth outfit is entirely at the individual’s discretion.”

In Paris, the 32-member commission set up by parliament, with members from France’s four major political parties, will hold hearings that could lead to legislation banning burqas from being worn in public — a move a top human rights group said would be counterproductive.

“Banning the burqa will not give freedom to women,” Jean-Marie Fardeau, director of the Paris office of Human Rights Watch, said in a statement. “It will only stigmatize and marginalize women who wear it.”

France has Western Europe’s largest Muslim population, estimated at 5 million. A small but growing group of French women wear burqas and niqabs, which either cloak the entire body or cover everything but the eyes.

Mohammed Moussaoui, the head of the French Council for the Muslim Faith, said he disagreed with the wearing of burqas as inconsistent with religious precepts — but said a ban would be counterproductive.

“A commission on a marginal phenomenon astonishes us — even more so because the current debate tends to stigmatize Muslims in France,” Moussaoui was quoted as saying in comments to be published Wednesday in France’s Le Parisien daily. The Associated Press received an advance copy of his remarks.

On Monday, Sarkozy told a joint session of parliament that he supported banning burqas in public, calling them “a sign of debasement” for women.

“We cannot accept that women be prisoners behind a screen, cut off from all social life, deprived of all identity,” Sarkozy said. “It will not be welcome on the territory of the French Republic.”

Last week, a group of 60 lawmakers from all political parties signed a petition demanding a parliamentary study on the wearing of burqas. Muslim groups and government officials say it is difficult to know how many women wear burqas and niqabs in France, but estimate the number to be at least in the hundreds. They are far less prevalent than simpler Muslim head scarves..

The commission is expected within six months to complete its work, which could lead to a proposed law on burqas.

A similar type of commission led to a 2004 law banning the wearing of Muslim head scarves at public schools, along with Jewish skullcaps and large Christian crosses.

In France, the terms “burqa” and “niqab” often are used interchangeably. A burqa is a full-body covering worn largely in Afghanistan — with only a mesh screen over the eyes. A niqab is a full-body veil, often black, with slits for the eyes.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: BNP Dismisses Legal Action Threat

The British National Party has dismissed threats of legal action over its membership policies by the Equality and Human Rights Commission.

The commission said it had written to the party over possible breaches of the law in the BNP’s constitution, membership rules and recruitment.

It asked the BNP to pledge to comply with the Race Relations Act by 20 July or face a potential legal injunction.

But BNP leader Nick Griffin said the party’s rules were “entirely legal”.

Mr Griffin — who was elected as an MEP for the North West on 4 June — said the BNP was an exempted organisation under Section 25 and Section 26 of the Race Relations Act.

He said this meant “ethnic groups who need special protection such as the English in their own country, who are now second class citizens” were “entitled to discriminate on that basis and not on the grounds of colour”.

He added: “We are not discriminating on grounds of colour.”

On 4 June, the BNP won their first two MEPs in the European Parliament elections.

‘Deliberate omission’

In a statement, the commission said the BNP’s constitution and membership criteria appeared to discriminate on the grounds of race and colour, in breach of the Race Relations Act.

The party’s rules appeared to restrict membership to those within what the BNP regarded as particular “ethnic groups”, the commission added.

It also said the party’s website asked job applicants to supply a membership number, which appeared to be in breach of legislation banning the “refusal or deliberate omission to offer employment on the basis of non-membership of an organisation”.

The statement added: “The commission is therefore concerned that the BNP may have acted, and be acting, illegally.”

John Wadham, the commission’s legal director, insisted it had a duty to take action against possible breaches of anti-discrimination laws.

He said: “The legal advice we have received indicates that the British National Party’s constitution and membership criteria, employment practices and provision of services to constituents and the public may breach discrimination laws which all political parties are legally obliged to uphold.”

The commission said it had received around 50 recent calls from members of the public about the membership policy of the BNP, although it is understood it was already investigating the party.

Teachers

The BNP’s Deputy press officer John Walker said the party would not be making a formal response to the commission at this stage as it wanted to “wait until the Equalities Bill has gone through”.

“We are not going to respond to threats like this. We will look at it, but it is an entirely politically-motivated attack,” he told BBC News.

The Equalities Bill, currently making its way through Parliament, is expected to include a move to outlaw the BNP’s membership policy, which is limited to various groups it defines as “indigenous Caucasian”.

Mr Walker said the BNP would be prepared to change its membership rules “to remain within the law”.

But he added: “I don’t think we should be bullied by outside forces. They are asking us to change our whole political ideology.”

On Monday, the Department for Children, Schools and Families said it was considering banning teachers in England from joining the BNP.

In its constitution, the BNP says it exists to represent the “collective National, Environmental, Political, Racial, Folkish, Social, Cultural, Religious and Economic interests of the indigenous Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Norse folk communities of Britain and those we regard as closely related and ethnically assimilated or assimilable aboriginal members of the European race also resident in Britain”.

It says membership of the BNP is “strictly defined within the terms of, and our members also self define themselves within, the legal ambit of a defined ‘racial group’ this being ‘Indigenous Caucasian’ and defined ‘ethnic groups’ emanating from that Race”.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: New Cyber Chief to Protect Against Computer Attacks

Prime Minister creates security post after warnings of electronic espionage

Britain is to appoint its first national cyber security chief to protect the country from terrorist computer hackers and electronic espionage, Gordon Brown will announce tomorrow.

The Prime Minister’s move comes amid fears that the computer systems of government and business are vulnerable to online attack from hostile countries and terrorist organisations.

Neil Thompson, a senior civil servant, will be charged with protecting the national computer network.

Last month, President Barack Obama said he was making it a “national security priority” to protect the US computer network from attack and that he would set up a “cyber security office” in the White House to lead the counter-attack against hackers.

Mr Brown’s plans were endorsed by the Cabinet yesterday after a presentation by Lord West of Spithead, the Security minister. Concern has grown in Whitehall that hackers are targeting its computer systems and those of Britain’s largest companies.

Officials have said the biggest threat comes from China, but they have also expressed worries about the activities of criminal gangs based in Russia.

There are also fears that terrorists could switch to online attacks to try to cripple the national infrastructure.

Britain has discussed ways of boosting computer security with foreign allies including the US. President Obama said that terrorist attacks could come “not only from a few extremists in suicide vests, but from a few key strokes of a computer — a weapon of mass disruption”.

British security representatives have been observing cyberspace procedure used by the Americans. They include how US forces lured senior members of al-Qa’ida into a trap by hacking into the group’s computers and altering information that drove them into an ambush by US and British special forces in Anbar province in the middle of last year. Defence sources say that the Americans are moving cyber-warfare equipment into Afghanistan. The technology was used to block Taliban anti-aircraft defences.

According to security sources the US has commissioned research to study what it will take to close down enemy power stations and communications including air transport. The American authorities have barred Chinese companies from taking part in joint projects with its firms on a number of sensitive projects, something, it is claimed, the British have failed to do.

The security services have warned recently of renewed activities by Russian and Chinese intelligence in cyberspace research with the potential to interfere with communications in the UK. Four years ago, the Government issued a formal warning to Whitehall departments and business that they faced “trojan email” attacks from the Far East on an “almost industrial” scale.

Last August, the Government’s first national risk register also highlighted Britain’s vulnerability by cyber spies. It said: “The UK does remain subject to high levels of covert non-military activity by foreign intelligence organisations. They are increasingly combining traditional intelligence methods with new technical attacks, for example attempting to penetrate computer networks via the internet.”

The security services are also fighting a constant war in cyberspace against extremist Islamist internet sites that attempt to radicalise young people or co-ordinate attacks. The new Office for Security and Counter Terrorism has been given the task of disrupting terrorist networks, as well as carrying out a “hearts and minds” campaign within Britain’s Muslim population.

Tomorrow’s national security strategy, the second produced by Mr Brown, will also highlight the risk to the country from a wide range of man-made threats and natural disasters.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



WWIII? British Release Secret Planning Manual

LONDON — It’s October 1968, and the Soviet Union has just landed cosmonauts on the moon. Warsaw Pact troops are massing on the Austrian border, and nuclear showdown looms between east and west.

This scenario never happened — except in planning exercises by British civil servants, who meticulously rehearsed how they would govern Britain in the days before, and after, World War III. The details are included in the “War Book,” a secret Cold War manual declassified this month for the first time.

The book, which featured the doomsday scenario in a 1970 version, is a step-by-step guide for dealing with a crisis, from the first stages of conflict to “R hour,” the designation for the release of all Britain’s nuclear weapons.

“It’s a manual of how to go to war,” William Spencer, military history specialist at Britain’s National Archives, said Tuesday.

“It’s a technical manual in a way, for the people who needed to know,” he added. “But it could be seen as a horrific document for some people.”

Britain became a nuclear power in 1952 and British politicians were under no illusions about the devastating effects of nuclear war. A 1955 report, kept secret until 2002, estimated that an attack by Soviet hydrogen bombs would kill 12 million people instantly.

So every two years during much of the Cold War, British civil servants participated in a dry run for the end of the world, practicing how they would do everything from crack down on subversives to evacuate art treasures from London.

The exercises, played out over weeks, included daily mock news briefings from intelligence chiefs. Senior civil servants played the prime minister and Cabinet, deciding how to respond.

The 1968 exercise, revealed in the newly released manual, imagined Soviets landing on the moon as tensions mounted along the Iron Curtain. Day by day, the crisis escalated: Soviet troops invaded Austria, West Germany, Finland, Turkey, Greece and Italy, eventually invading “Danish islands.” Britons got more and more nervous — first writing letters to newspapers, then staying home from work, stocking up on food and buying supplies to build bomb shelters.

In calm bureaucratic language — loaded with code words to render the book meaningless to those not in the know — the document describes how as the crisis worsened, civil servants would introduce censorship, evacuate all but the sickest patients from hospitals and eventually be sent to one of 12 underground bunkers scattered around the country.

Britain was to be governed from these bunkers after a nuclear attack, with officials exercising powers of martial law over the remaining population.

Peter Hennessy, a historian who has studied the book and pushed for its release, said it provided a glimpse into “one of the darker bits of the British secret state in the Cold War.”

“The surprise really is the width and magnitude of it — 16 chapters to get the nation from a peacetime footing to a total war footing. It is a remarkable enterprise,” he told the BBC.

“When you consider where this road of decision-taking is leading to, it’s the end of the world. There’s no other way of looking at it. You would expect it to be cold print, coldly analytical, but this is sheer hell, really, the thought of it.”

Retired senior civil servant David Omand said he played the prime minister in one planning exercise and recalled the experience as “quite scary.”

“It just gives you a sense of humility that we expect our political leaders to take that kind of responsibility,” he told the BBC.

He told the broadcaster about what he called his “favorite measure” — the introduction of censorship for private correspondence — saying it “always aroused a lot of debate when we played these exercises.”

The document is the latest in a chilling series of Cold War artifacts that have recently been made public. In October, the National Archives released the scripts of statements the government planned to broadcast over the BBC in the event of nuclear war in the 1970s. “This is the wartime broadcasting service,” the announcement began. “This country has been attacked with nuclear weapons.”

The government’s first “War Book” was created in 1911, and it was updated regularly as warfare and the threats to Britain changed. Its contents were top secret — Spencer said only 96 copies were made of the 1964 book.

It’s not known how many copies were made of the 1970 version. Parts of it were published in 2000, but the whole book was only released by the National Archives this month. Later versions remain classified.

The government no longer plans for war with the Soviet Union, which collapsed in 1991, but it still keeps a “War Book” and rehearses for disasters such as a major terrorist attack.

A Cabinet Office spokesman would give no details of the current plans, saying only that there are “lots of contingency plans to deal with lots of different crises we face today.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Al-Qaeda Claims Algerian Ambush: Site

DUBAI (AFP) — Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb claims to have carried out an attack in Algeria which is believed to have killed 18 police and a civilian, US-based monitoring group SITE Intelligence said on Sunday.

The statement circulated by AQIM, the North African wing of Al-Qaeda, includes a claim of responsibility for last Wednesday’s ambush on a security convoy for Chinese construction workers in Mansoura, Bordj Bou Arreridj province in Algeria, SITE said.

AQIM claims to have killed 24 Algerian paramilitary police in the strike but denies that it killed “innocents” during the attack, alleging that the Algerian police intentionally killed a civilian, the monitoring group said.

The AQIM statement says the Mansoura attack was one of 10 it carried out in Algeria between May 22 and June 18, killing or wounding more than 73 members of Algerian security forces, according to SITE.

Wednesday’s attack was the biggest by AQIM since the suicide bombing of a police academy killed 48 people in August last year.

The military convoy was returning to barracks after escorting Chinese construction workers to a motorway project when it came under attack on Wednesday evening.

The Chinese group CITIC-CRCC has a contract to build a section of motorway from Algiers to Bordj Bou Arreridj.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Terrorism in Algeria: Press Says Gendarmes Killed in Ambush

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 18 — Several members of the gendarme were killed yesterday evening in an ambush laid by an armed group near Bordj Bou Arreridj (230 km south-east of Algiers), according to the Arab-language press, though the information has not yet been confirmed by official sources. According to the daily papers Ennahar and Echourouk, 24 gendarmes were killed in the attack. After having their path blocked by the explosion of a number of bombs along the road, the military convoy was attacked by a group of armed men who opened fire on them. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Italy Backs Netanyahu’s Peace Plans

ROME — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu got a warm and supportive welcome Tuesday from Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, while postponing a potentially less comfortable meeting with President Barack Obama’s Mideast envoy.

At a joint news conference after talks lasting about two hours, Berlusconi endorsed Netanyahu’s plan for a future demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes Israel as a “Jewish state.” That means that Palestinians must give up any notion of refugees who left what is now Israel — or their millions of descendants — resettling in their former homes.

And although the U.S. says emphatically that Israel must call an immediate halt to all forms of Jewish settlement activity in the West Bank, Berlusconi was more gentle, speaking only of the need for Israel “to send signals” on stopping settlement.

“It was a very warm welcome,” an upbeat Netanyahu briefed Israel-based journalists traveling with him after the Berlusconi meeting. “It would be hard to find a better friend.”

Both men also discussed Israel’s concerns about what many Western countries say are Iran’s nuclear arms ambitions.

Italy is perhaps Israel’s greatest ally in Europe, but at the same time is Iran’s No. 1 European trading partner, accounting for about 26 percent of total import-export trade between EU countries and Tehran.

Last year alone, Italian imports from Iran amounted to euro4.1 billion ($5.73 billion) and Italian exports amounted to euro1.8 billion, according to the Italy-Iranian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Standing next to Netanyahu, Berlusconi said Italy’s economic ties to Tehran had always had the blessing of Israel and the U.S., and would continue as long as Washington approved.

Both leaders said they discussed at length the situation in Iran following the disputed June 12 election that returned hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power. Opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi says he was the true winner, and his supporters have protested for days to demand a new election.

Netanyahu said the violent crackdown on the protesters “shows the true nature of this regime” that is making governments everywhere reassess their relations with Tehran.

“I believe that the courage shown by the people of Iran in facing bullets in the streets for the sake of freedom is something that deserves the salute of free men and women everywhere,” he said.

Making his first European tour since taking office, Netanyahu flies to Paris on Wednesday for talks with President Nicolas Sarkozy who says he is a firm supporter of Israel but nevertheless has also called for “an immediate and complete halt to settlement.”

In addition, he insists that Israel must cede sovereignty over parts of Jerusalem claimed by the Palestinians, something that is anathema to Netanyahu and his right-wing political partners at home.

While in the French capital Netanyahu had been due to also meet the U.S. Middle East peace envoy, former Sen. George Mitchell, who analysts and Israeli officials had expected to press Israel on the settlement issue.

But Netanyahu aides accompanying him in Rome said Defense Minister Ehud Barak would instead travel to Washington next week to hold talks with Mitchell.

A statement read out to reporters said the Netanyahu-Mitchell meeting was being postponed until after the talks with Barak in order to “clarify issues.”

Netanyahu says he will not allow construction of new settlements nor allow existing enclaves to expand beyond their current boundaries but he is not prepared to stop building within existing communities.

He says that the ultimate fate of settlements should be dealt with negotiations for a final, lasting peace agreement with the Palestinians and that in the meantime a compromise with the Americans can be found.

“Can we reach agreement on the settlement issue? Yes, if there is a will,” he told reporters.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Mahmoud Abbas Orders Release of Hamas Prisoners

(ANSAmed) — GAZA, JUNE 22 — The president of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), Mahmoud Abbas, has ordered the release of Hamas supporters detained in Palestinian prisons in the West Bank. The news was reported by the Palestinian press agency Maan. Initial assessments estimate that this could involve the release of more than 200 people. According to Azzam al-Ahmad, head of the Fatah parliamentary group in the Palestinian Legislative Council in Ramallah, the order — which could be brought into force in the coming days — would be carried out as part of Egyptian diplomatic efforts to bring the positions of Fatah and Hamas closer, in view of a joint meeting in Cairo on July 7. The press agency Maan reports that PNA security services already released around 20 Hamas activists last week. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Canadian PM Calls for Iran to Release Journalists

OTTAWA (AFP) — Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper Monday called on Iran to halt its assault on press freedoms and release all political prisoners and journalists, including Canadians.

Iranian authorities should “immediately cease the use of violence against their own people, to release all political prisoners and journalists — including Canadians — who have been unjustly detained,” he said.

Tehran must “allow Iranian and foreign media to report freely on these historic events, and to conduct a full and transparent investigation into allegations of fraud in the presidential election,” he said.

On Sunday, a Canadian journalist working in Iran for Newsweek magazine was detained without charge by Iranian authorities, the magazine said, adding Maziar Bahari had not been heard from since.

The New York-based magazine also said in a statement that as many as 20 journalists and bloggers were reported to have been detained since Iran’s June 12 elections, which set off mass protests after official results gave incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a landslide victory.

Among them, a reporter for the Toronto-based Globe and Mail newspaper was briefly detained last week after being swept up in police crackdown. Authorities eventually apologized and released him.

Harper said: “The reaction of the Iranian authorities to the demonstrations in Iran is wholly unacceptable.”

He accused Iran of trampling on freedoms of assembly and free expression, beating demonstrators and then arresting them when they arrive at hospital for treatment.

“Journalists have been prevented from covering protests and subjected to arbitrary detention and arrest,” he said. “Foreign press credentials have been revoked.”

“The regime has chosen to use brute force and intimidation in responding to peaceful opposition regarding legitimate and serious allegations of electoral fraud,” he said.

Canada’s distaste for these goings-on in Iran would be strongly conveyed to its envoy in Ottawa, he added.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Christopher Hitchens: Persian Paranoia

Iranian leaders will always believe Anglo-Saxons are plotting against them.

I have twice had the privilege of sitting, poorly shaved, on the floor and attending the Friday prayers that the Iranian theocracy sponsors each week on the campus of Tehran University. As everybody knows, this dreary, nasty ceremony is occasionally enlivened when the scrofulous preacher leads the crowd in a robotic chant of Marg Bar Amrika!—”Death to America!” As nobody will be surprised to learn, this is generally followed by a cry of Marg Bar Israel! And it’s by no means unknown for the three-beat bleat of this two-minute hate to have yet a third version: Marg Bar Ingilis!

Some commentators noticed that as “Supreme Leader” Ali Khamenei viciously slammed the door on all possibilities of reform at last Friday’s prayers, he laid his greatest emphasis on the third of these incantations. “The most evil of them all,” he droned, “is the British government.” But the real significance of his weird accusation has generally been missed.

One of the signs of Iran’s underdevelopment is the culture of rumor and paranoia that attributes all ills to the manipulation of various demons and satans. And, of course, the long and rich history of British imperial intervention in Persia does provide some support for the notion. But you have no idea how deep is the primitive belief that it is the Anglo-Saxons—more than the CIA, more even than the Jews—who are the puppet masters of everything that happens in Iran.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Diana West: Blushing for Bret

Ahistorical and illogical things have been been written by many observers of the Iranian election protests who, looking at what the evidence to date suggests is little more than an intra-Islamic power struggle, see a glorious revolution of liberty-loving secularists ready to propel Iran into the heart of the Western world. Maybe it’s the blue jeans that confuse them. Anyway, I think we have a winner in this dubious category: Bret Stephens of the Wall Street Journal. His column begins this way:

It isn’t always that the words Allahu Akbar sound this sweet to Western ears.

I’m actually going to let “Allahu Akbar” sounding so “sweet to Western ears” pass because there is so much more….Stephens continues…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Iran Says Courts Will Teach Protesters a Lesson

TEHRAN (Reuters) — Iranian authorities said they would teach an exemplary lesson to “rioters” held in the worst unrest since the birth of the Islamic Rapublic and pressed accusations that violence was being incited by Western powers.

(EDITORS’ NOTE: Reuters and other foreign media are subject to Iranian restrictions on their ability to report, film or take pictures in Tehran.)

Ten days of protest against elections that confirmed hardline anti-Western President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in office have produced unprecedented protests and a public split in the Islamic establishment. Defeated candidates accuse the authorities of rigging the election and have demanded a rerun.

A moderate cleric defeated in the June 12 poll signaled on Tuesday opposition would continue, calling on Iranians to hold ceremonies on Thursday to mourn those killed at protests. At least 10 were killed in the worst violence on Saturday, and about seven more early last week.

Iranian state television, in broadcasts clearly intended to discredit opponents defying a ban on protests, paraded people it said had been arrested during weekend violence.

“I think we were provoked by networks like the BBC and the VOA (Voice of America) to take such immoral actions,” one young man said. His face was shown but his name not given.

A woman whose face was pixilated said she had carried a “war grenade” in her hand-bag. “I was influenced by VOA Persian and the BBC because they were saying that security forces were behind most of the clashes.

“I saw that it was us protesting … who were making riots. We set on fire public property, we threw stones … we attacked people’s cars and we broke windows of people’s houses.” The troubles have erupted against a background of tension between the West and Iran, a major oil and gas producer and pivotal factor in regional stability.

POLICE IN RIOT GEAR

Trucks and police in riot gear were deployed on the main squares of Tehran on Tuesday, but there were no signs of any protest gatherings in the city by mid-afternoon.

A group of about a hundred hardliners gathered in front of the British embassy in Tehran, chanting “British embassy should be closed,” a witness told Reuters.

The Revolutionary Guard, fiercely loyal to the conservative religious establishment, has declared a crackdown on protests. Hundreds have been detained by police using tear gas and batons since poll results published on June 13 gave Ahmadinejad a landslide victory over chief rival Mirhossein Mousavi.

“Those arrested in recent events will be dealt with in a way that will teach them a lesson,” the official IRNA news agency quoted senior judiciary official Ebrahim Raisi as saying on state television late on Monday.

He said a special court was studying the cases.

“The rioters should be dealt with in an exemplary way and the judiciary will do that,” Raisi said.

Tehran’s hardline leadership is locked in dispute with Western powers over its nuclear program, which it says is intended for power generation but which the West suspects could yield nuclear weapons that could destabilize the region.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the protests had led to the “beginnings of change” in Iran. But he said President Barack Obama would not endorse any general strike there or otherwise involve himself with specific actions.

Mousavi was quoted by an ally on Saturday as calling for a national strike if he was arrested.

Iran’s top legislative body, the Guardian Council, rejected demands for a rerun from two losing candidates, former prime minister Mousavi and pro-reform cleric Mehdi Karoubi.

An Iranian parliamentarian, Mahmoud Ahmadi, said on Tuesday Tehran would temporarily recall its ambassador to Britain, which the leading oil and gas producer has accused of fomenting trouble. A senior Iranian government source did not confirm the report carried by several Iranian news agencies.

NUCLEAR PROGRAMME

Karoubi maintained pressure on authorities.

“Karoubi calls on Iranians around the country to hold ceremonies on Thursday to remember those (killed) at protests,” said aide Issa Saharkhiz.

People in Tehran, in a gesture of defiance first used in the 1979 Islamic revolution and now adopted by pro-reform protesters, again chanted “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) from their rooftops at nightfall on Monday.

Mousavi, himself a scion of the Islamic establishment that seized power 30 years ago, says he does not seek confrontation with the country’s leaders but wants to root out what he calls lies and deceit exposed in the elections.

Iranian state TV said on Tuesday Tehran had been calm for a second night. “The presence of police and Basij forces in parts of the city has raised people’s feeling of security,” IRIB said.

Iranians on social networking sites called for mourning for “Neda,” a young woman shot dead on Saturday. Footage of her death has been watched by thousands on the Internet.

Iranian TV, quoting unnamed source, said Neda was not shot by a bullet used by Iranian security forces. It said filming of the scene, and its swift broadcast to foreign media, suggested the incident was planned.

Her fiance Caspian Makan told BBC Persian TV that Neda Agha-Soltan had been caught up accidentally in the protests.

“She was near the area, a few streets away, from where the main protests were taking place, near the Amir Abad area. She was with her music teacher, sitting in a car and stuck in traffic,” it quoted him as saying. “She was feeling very tired and very hot. She got out of the car for just a few minutes.”

A Greek journalist working for the Washington Times newspaper has been arrested on charges of “illegal activities,” a friend told Reuters. The friend said the journalist, Greek national Iason Athanasiadis, was arrested three days ago in Tehran and that his embassy had been informed

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran’s ‘Angel of Freedom’ Neda Soltan Vowed to Protest Against Injustice

Relatives and friends of Neda Soltan, the 26-year-old protester who’s become an international symbol of Iranian resistance, wanted her to be remembered for her love of music and passion for travel.

“She was a person full of joy,” the Los Angeles Times quotes her music teacher and close friend Hamid Panahi, who was among mourners at her family home. “She was a beam of light. I’m so sorry. I was so hopeful for this woman.”

Details continue to emerge Tuesday about the murdered protester nickamed “Angel of Freedom,” after graphic videos of her apparent murder at a Tehran protest hit the Internet.

Images of Soltan’s bloody death on Saturday have galvanized the country and many insist on speaking out about this young woman and who she was, despite authorities banning anyone from mourning her.

Neda was reportedly gunned down during protests in the capital city. Videos posted on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter show her bleeding from the nose and mouth as a crowd tries unsuccessfully to stanch the flow and save her life.

The video also shows a moving clip of a man identified as Panahi cradling her head and yelling out, “Neda, don’t be afraid. Neda, stay with me. Neda stay with me!”

The second of three children, Soltan studied Islamic philosophy at a branch of Tehran’s Azad University before deciding to take private classes to become a tour guide, hoping to ultimately lead Iranians on trips abroad, the L.A. Times reported.

She was reportedly passionate about traveling and had gone with friends to Dubai, Turkey and Thailand. The young Iranian was also an accomplished singer who was taking piano lessons, according to Panahi.

Soltan was not a hardcore activist, but had started attending the mass protests because she felt deeply outraged by the election results.

“She couldn’t stand the injustice of it all,” Panahi told the L.A. Times.

A close friend of Soltan, who the L.A. Times identified only as “Golshad,” said Neda’s parents had asked her not to go to the protest, fearing it was too dangerous.

“I told her, ‘Neda, don’t go,’“ the Times quotes Golshad. “She said, ‘Don’t worry. It’s just one bullet and it’s over.’“

Friends say Soltan, Panahi and two others were stuck in traffic on their way to the demonstration sometime after 6:30 p.m.

When they stepped out of the car to get some air, Panahi heard a crack and then realized Soltan was on the ground.

“We were stuck in traffic and we got out and stood to watch, and without her throwing a rock or anything they shot her,” the Times quoted Panahi. “It was just one bullet.”

“I’m burning, I’m burning!” Panahi recalls Soltan’s final words.

Doctors, fellow protesters and medical staff at Shariati Hospital made heroic efforts to rush Soltan to surgery and save her, but she was reportedly dead by the time she arrived at the emergency room.

Mehdi Khalaji, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near Eastern Affairs, told FOXNews.com that Neda has become “one of the pillars of this movement now,” and the bloody images of her dying in the street are its “main icons and symbols.”

Her family scheduled a memorial service to be held in a mosque in northern Tehran, but the government forbade ceremony. She was buried quietly at Tehran’s Behesht Zahra cemetery on Sunday with only her family present, says Soona Samsami, executive director of the Women’s Freedom Forum, who has been relaying information about protests inside Iran to international media.

All mosques were given a direct order from the government barring them from holding any memorial services for Neda, and her family was threatened with grave consequences if anyone gathered to mourn her, said Samsami.

Soltan’s loved ones were outraged by the authorities’ order not to eulogize her.

“They were threatened that if people wanted to gather there the family would be charged and punished,” Samsami told FOXnews.com.

Much of the attention and blame for Neda’s apparent murder is now being focused on Iran’s leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose threatening speech Friday preceded the violent protests Saturday at which apparently Neda lost her life. Khamenei is now the prime target for protesters’ outrage, Khalaji said.

“For the first time since the election it seems that people are including in their slogans ‘Down with Khamenei,’ and ‘Death to Khamenei,’“ he told FOXNews.com.

Iranian authorities have vehemently denied that police used lethal force to quell protests. They suggest loyalists to the exiled, outlawed opposition group Mujahedin Khalq may be responsible for the killing, the L.A. Times reported.

Her fiancé, Caspian Makan, said in an interview with BBC Persian that she had not supported any candidate in the allegedly fraudulent elections. Neda wanted “freedom for all,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Aeneas [Return to headlines]



Iranian Film Maker Speaks

I have had the privilege of meeting Lila once or twice in Ottawa Canada. She is a beautiful and effervescent woman who works hard producing films exposing the rot in the post revolutionary government of Iran. I think the most interesting thing she said to me about making films was, (paraphrasing) that if she expressed the truth about Iran, Islam and barbarity no Canadian or Western European film festival or theater would show her work. So she had to dumb it down the horror of it due to political correctness. In fact when she tells the simple facts about Islam, women and Iran, it violates Canada’s hate crimes laws.

What a tragic state of affairs for a film maker. In any case please read this excellent and impassioned article she wrote about current events in Iran. She is also connected to the excellent documentary recently posted to Vlad on the sex trade in Iran and how it is a creation of a repressive government who would not allow women the right to work at equal pay or without being someone’s mistress…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Israeli Minister’s Al-Aqsa Mosque Visit Angers Muslims

Muslim authorities denounce hardline Aharonovitch’s visit of Jerusalem mosque compound as ‘provocation’.

JERUSALEM — A far-right Israeli minister visited Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound on Tuesday, fuelling the anger of Muslim authorities who called the visit a provocation.

Police accompanied Interior Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch of the Yisrael Beitenu party as he visited the site, which is also holy to Jews, who call it Temple Mount.

Jerusalem Mufti Mohammad Hussein expressed outrage that the minister set foot in the compound, the third holiest site in Islam.

“This visit is a provocation; it will encourage other Israelis to carry out similar provocations,” Hussein said.

“He came to stir up trouble; it is an aggression against the Al-Aqsa mosque, which every Palestinian and every Muslim rejects.”

Hamas, the Islamist rulers of Gaza, accused the minister of “hurting the feelings of millions of Muslims.”

“This visit betrays the intentions of the Jewish state to continue seeking to judaise the holy mosque of Al-Aqsa,” Hamas said in a statement issued in Gaza.

It added that “any aggression on the Al-Aqsa mosque will have unfortunate consequences,” calling to mind a controversial visit by then conservative opposition leader and later premier Ariel Sharon in 2000 that sparked the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising.

The compound is the third holiest site in Islam, after Mecca and Medina. It is located on the site of the Jewish Second Temple, which was destroyed by the Romans in 70 AD.

It is located in east Jerusalem, which Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed in a move not recognised by the international community.

           — Hat tip: Aeneas [Return to headlines]



Kurdistan Brands Iraq Oil Contracts ‘Unconstitutional’

ARBIL, Iraq (AFP) — Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region hit out at Baghdad on Tuesday, describing oil and gas contracts due to be awarded by the federal government at the end of this month as “unconstitutional”.

Iraq is due to announce which of 31 foreign and state-owned bidders have won deals to operate six major oil fields and two gas fields, for which the government will pay fees rather than share profits, on June 29 and 30.

The Iraqi oil ministry and Kurdistan, however, are at loggerheads over how international companies involved in the tapping of the nation’s vast energy reserves should be paid.

Iraq’s decision to award service contracts differs from Kurdistan, where numerous profit-sharing deals have been struck.

A statement issued by the Kurdish government said Baghdad’s policy was “unconstitutional and against the economic interests of the Iraqi people.”

“The regional government of Kurdistan has made clear progress in increasing Iraq’s oil exports and oil revenues in a short time,” it said.

“This progress has been made by focusing on exploration and not on existing fields, in line with the best practices of international markets, and in accordance with the principles of the Constitution of Iraq.

“The regional government regrets that it cannot say the same thing on the procedures taken the Federal Ministry of Oil of Iraq,” the statement added.

Article 109 of Iraq’s constitution says that oil and gas resources must be developed “in a way that achieves the highest benefit to the Iraqi people,” in a way “consistent with market principles and that best encourages investment.”

Iraq’s Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani has been accused of taking an ultra-nationalist approach, possibly deterring investment, by insisting that oil wealth — meaning profits — cannot be shared with foreign companies.

He has also come under criticism from MPs who accuse him of mismanagement resulting in 10 billion dollars in lost revenue for a federal budget that is projected to go into deficit.

The service agreement shortlist was first announced by Baghdad in June 2008 and includes global energy giants Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron and Sinopec, as well as large Iraqi state-owned operators.

The oil ministry has since repeatedly delayed announcing the bid winners.

Although Iraq has the world’s third largest proven reserves of oil after Saudi Arabia and Iran, development of the conflict-ravaged country’s fields has been very slow.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Middle East Politics: The Ideal, the Real, and the Imaginary

By Barry Rubin

A reader asks: Do we really want to promoting the making of deals with “moderate dictators” or are we better urging them to turn their countries into liberal democracies?

This writer answers:

What we “really want” to do is not the issue here. Political reality is what is important.

Under normal and current conditions we—meaning North America and Europe—are better off making deals with relatively moderate dictators while supporting liberal forces to make them stronger so they can play a role some day. The same principle applies for Israel.

Today—except for Lebanon—there is no real liberal democratic alternative in the Arabic-speaking world regarding real political power. If you want to understand why this is true, read my book The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East.

The main threats to the West, to Israel, and even to the Arabs themselves are radical Islamists (Iran’s regime, Hamas, Hizballah, Muslim Brotherhoods, al-Qaida) and their radical nationalist allies (Syria particularly).

Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain, and—most problematically given its pro-Tehran stance—Qatar are on the same side of this battle as we are—despite all their problems, shortcomings, and appeasement behavior—in this battle.

Let’s take the worst-case eample on the above list, Saudi Arabia…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Mousavi, Celebrated in Iranian Protests, Was the Butcher of Beirut

He may yet turn out to be the avatar of Iranian democracy, but three decades ago Mir-Hossein Mousavi was waging a terrorist war on the United States that included bloody attacks on the U.S. embassy and Marine Corps barracks in Beirut.

Mousavi, prime minister for most of the 1980s, personally selected his point man for the Beirut terror campaign, Ali Akbar Mohtashemi-pur, and dispatched him to Damascus as Iran’s ambassador, according to former CIA and military officials.

The ambassador in turn hosted several meetings of the cell that would carry out the Beirut attacks, which were overheard by the National Security Agency.

“We had a tap on the Iranian ambassador to Lebanon,” retired Navy Admiral James “Ace” Lyons related by telephone Monday. In 1983 Lyons was deputy chief of Naval Operations, and deeply involved in the events in Lebanon.

“The Iranian ambassador received instructions from the foreign minister to have various groups target U.S. personnel in Lebanon, but in particular to carry out a ‘spectacular action’ against the Marines,” said Lyons.

“He was prime minister,” Lyons said of Mousavi, “so he didn’t get down to the details at the lowest levels. “But he was in a principal position and had to be aware of what was going on.”

Lyons, sometimes called “the father” of the Navy SEALs’ Red Cell counter-terror unit, also fingered Mousavi for the 1988 truck bombing of the U.S. Navy’s Fleet Center in Naples, Italy, that killed five persons, including the first Navy woman to die in a terrorist attack.

Bob Baer agrees that Mousawi, who has been celebrated in the West for sparking street demonstrations against the Teheran regime since he lost the elections, was directing the overall 1980s terror campaign.

But Baer, a former CIA Middle East field officer whose exploits were dramatized in the George Clooney movie “Syriana,” places Mousavi even closer to the Beirut bombings.

“He dealt directly with Imad Mughniyah,” who ran the Beirut terrorist campaign and was “the man largely held responsible for both attacks,” Baer wrote in TIME over the weekend.

“When Mousavi was Prime Minister, he oversaw an office that ran operatives abroad, from Lebanon to Kuwait to Iraq,” Baer continued.

“This was the heyday of [Ayatollah] Khomeini’s theocratic vision, when Iran thought it really could export its revolution across the Middle East, providing money and arms to anyone who claimed he could upend the old order.”

Baer added: “Mousavi was not only swept up into this delusion but also actively pursued it.”

Retired Adm. Lyons maintained that he could have destroyed the terrorists at a hideout U.S. intelligence had pinpointed, but he was outmaneuvered by others in the cabinet of President Ronald Reagan.

“I was going to take them apart,” Lyons said, “but the secretary of defense,” Caspar Weinberger, “sabotaged it.”

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Netanyahu Slams Iran at Start of Europe Trip

ROME (AFP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu harshly criticised Iran on Tuesday as he began his first trip to Europe since taking office, saying the country’s current turmoil revealed its “true nature.”

“Something very fundamental has taken place in Iran, and the world now sees the true nature of this regime,” the hawkish Netanyahu told a joint news conference with his Italian counterpart Silvio Berlusconi.

Slamming arch-foe Iran for “repressing its own people,” Netanyahu said: “The courage shown by the people of Iran, in facing bullets on the streets for the sake of freedom, is something that deserves the salute of free men and women everywhere.”

Iran on Tuesday ruled out canceling its disputed presidential vote as the world voiced increasing alarm at a crackdown on demonstrators who are posing the most serious challenge to the Islamic regime in 30 years.

“This undoubtedly is being assessed in every capital in the world, and I’m sure it’s being assessed as well in Washington,” Netanyahu said when asked about US President Barack Obama’s restrained stance on Iran.

Berlusconi said he reiterated to Netanyahu his “firm condemnation of the statements of the Iranian leader that Israel should be wiped off the map..”

He added: “Italy, like other Western nations, believes Iran should not have nuclear weapons.”

Meanwhile, an Israeli official told AFP in Rome that a planned meeting between Netanyahu and the US special envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell, had been cancelled.

Instead, Mitchell will meet Monday in Washington with Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barack, the official said.

“This delay will enable us to throw light on topical questions which are now hanging in the air and have not been resolved,” he said, without elaborating.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Israel’s Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman recently clashed over US demands for a freeze on Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

On May 27, the chief US diplomat said Obama had made it clear during Netanyahu’s earlier visit to Washington that he wants no “natural growth exceptions” to his call for a settlement freeze.

Lieberman had insisted that would not be possible.

Netanyahu, on his first official trip to Europe since his election in late March, was expected to push for stiffer sanctions against Tehran in both Rome and Paris over its nuclear programme.

He has repeatedly said the programme constitutes the biggest threat to Israel since the Jewish state’s founding in 1948.

Shortly before Netanyahu arrived in Rome, Foreign Minister Franco Frattini called on Israel to declare a moratorium on the expansion of its settlements in the West Bank.

“We would very much appreciate a gesture on the Israeli side announcing a moratorium on the expansion of existing settlements,” Frattini told reporters.

Frattini said Rome would also seek “clarity” from Netanyahu on the growth of settlements.

“The Israeli side has told us it refers to development following natural demographic growth. If that means adding a floor to one’s own house after the birth of a child, that is not a problem,” Frattini said.

“If it means expanding settlements like wildfire, that is a problem.”

Netanyahu came under fire for adding a raft of conditions to Israel’s acceptance of a Palestinian state in a speech on June 14.

Israel has refused to freeze settlements as demanded by the international community, which sees building in the West Bank as undermining prospects for a Palestinian state.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Obama Condemns Violence Against Iran Protesters

WASHINGTON (AP) — Dramatically hardening the U.S. reaction to Iran’s disputed elections and bloody aftermath, President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters Tuesday and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations the hardline victory was a fraud.

Obama, who has been accused by some Republicans of being too timid in his response to events in Iran, declared himself “appalled and outraged” by the deaths and intimidation in Tehran’s streets — and scoffed at suggestions he was toughening his rhetoric in response to the criticism.

He suggested Iran’s leaders will face consequences if they continue “the threats, the beatings and imprisonments” against protesters. But he repeatedly declined to say what actions the U.S. might take, retaining — for now — the option of pursuing diplomatic engagement with Iran’s leaders over its suspected nuclear weapons program.

“We don’t know yet how this thing is going to play out,” the president said. “It is not too late for the Iranian government to recognize that there is a peaceful path that will lead to stability and legitimacy and prosperity for the Iranian people. We hope they take it.”

Obama borrowed language from struggles throughout history against oppressive governments to condemn the efforts by Iran’s rulers to crush dissent in the wake of June 12 presidential elections.

[Return to headlines]



Protest Organisers Held in Iranian Raid — Report

Iranian police raided a building in downtown Tehran Monday night and arrested a number of people accused of organising illegal protests and acting against national security, an Iranian news agency said Tuesday.

The searched building was located in Haft-e Tir square, where witnesses had said police Monday dispersed a group of demonstrators protesting against the official results of a disputed June 12 presidential election.

“Last night a building in Haft-e Tir square was searched … in which activities in favour of one of the candidates took place,” the semi-official Fars News Agency said, without naming the candidate.

These included “organising illegal gatherings, encouraging people to riot, acting against the country’s security,” Fars said. Documents about “relations with the enemies’ media and the interference of foreigners were discovered at this centre.”

It said those arrested were held on the basis of “criminal documents” that had been discovered, and were being interrogated. Two other such centres have been identified, Fars said.

Official results showing hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won re-election by a landslide sparked days of protests by supporters of moderate former prime minister Mirhossein Mousavi, his main challenger. Mousavi says the election was rigged, a charge the authorities reject.

The elite Revolutionary Guards, seen as fiercely loyal to the values of the Islamic Republic, Monday threatened to crush any further street unrest. State media have reported at least 17 people killed in post-election violence, blaming “terrorists.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



U.S. Contacted Iran’s Ayatollah Before Election

Administration overture to Khamenei ridiculed in sermon

Prior to this month’s disputed presidential election in Iran, the Obama administration sent a letter to the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, calling for an improvement in relations, according to interviews and the leader himself.

Ayatollah Khamenei confirmed the letter toward the end of a lengthy sermon last week, in which he accused the United States of fomenting protests in his country in the aftermath of the disputed June 12 presidential election.

U.S. officials declined to discuss the letter on Tuesday, a day in which President Obama gave his strongest condemnation yet of the Iranian crackdown against protesters.

An Iranian with knowledge of the overture, however, told The Washington Times that the letter was sent between May 4 and May 10 and laid out the prospect of “cooperation in regional and bilateral relations” and a resolution of the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program.

The Iranian, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the topic, said the letter was given to the Iranian Foreign Ministry by a representative of the Swiss Embassy, which represents U.S. interests in Iran in the absence of U.S.-Iran diplomatic relations. The letter was then delivered to the office of Ayatollah Khamenei, he said.

The letter was sent before the election, whose outcome — delivering a supposed landslide to incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — has touched off the biggest anti-government protests in Iran since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The Obama administration, while criticizing a violent crackdown on demonstrators by Iranian security forces, has said that it will continue efforts to engage the Iranian government about its nuclear program and other issues touching on U.S. national security.

In his news conference on Tuesday, however, President Obama gave his most forceful statement yet about Iran’s actions, which have led to the deaths of at least 17 protesters, including a young woman whose shooting death has become known around the world through the Internet.

“I strongly condemn these unjust actions, and I join with the American people in mourning each and every innocent life that is lost,” Mr. Obama said. “I’ve made it clear that the United States respects the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran and is not interfering with Iran’s affairs. But we must also bear witness to the courage and the dignity of the Iranian people, and to a remarkable opening within Iranian society. And we deplore the violence against innocent civilians anywhere that it takes place. … Those who stand up for justice are always on the right side of history.”

Mr. Obama added, however, that the United States has “core national security interests in making sure that Iran doesn’t possess a nuclear weapon and it stops exporting terrorism outside of its borders.”

“We have provided a path whereby Iran can reach out to the international community, engage, and become a part of international norms.

“It is up to them to make a decision as to whether they choose that path.”

A senior Obama administration official, who spoke on the condition that he not be named because he was discussing private communications, would not confirm or deny that a letter had been sent to Ayatollah Khamenei and would not say if there had been a response.

However, the official said, “We have indicated a willingness to talk for a long time and have sought to communicate with the Iranians in a variety of ways. We have made it clear that any real dialogue — multilateral or bilateral — needed to be authoritative.”

Under the Iranian Constitution, Ayatollah Khamenei makes the final decisions on Iran’s foreign and defense policies.

In a lengthy sermon Friday that reaffirmed the disputed re-election of Mr. Ahmadinejad, Ayatollah Khamenei made an oblique reference to a letter from the U.S. but embedded the reference in a diatribe against purported U.S. interference in Iranian affairs.

“The American president was quoted as saying that he expected the people of Iran to take to the streets,” Ayatollah Khamenei misquoted Mr. Obama as saying, according to a translation by Mideastwire.com.

“On the one hand, they [the Obama administration] write a letter to us to express their respect for the Islamic Republic and for re-establishment of ties, and on the other hand they make these remarks. Which one of these remarks are we supposed to believe? Inside the country, their agents were activated. Vandalism started. Sabotaging and setting fires on the streets started. Some shops were looted. They wanted to create chaos. Public security was violated. The violators are not the public or the supporters of the candidates. They are the ill-wishers, mercenaries and agents of the Western intelligence services and the Zionists.”

An Iranian news site, Ayandehnews.com, first reported on the U.S. letter on Tuesday.

Asked about the letter, the Swiss ambassador to Washington, Urs Ziswiller, told The Times, “I cannot comment on that.”

Past U.S. efforts to engage Iran have foundered, in part because the overture was addressed to Iran’s president rather than the supreme leader. This was the case in the late 1990s when then-President Clinton wrote a letter to then-President Mohammed Khatami seeking cooperation against terrorism in the aftermath of a bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 Americans. The 1996 bombing at Khobar Towers, thought to have been committed by Iran-backed Saudi Shi’ites, took place before Mr. Khatami took office.

Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, said the Obama administration would do better to “avoid any talk of engagement” with Iran until the outcome of the current political ferment is clearer.

“The fact is, we will by necessity engage, but not at the moment,” he said. “I don’t think we want to suggest it will be business as usual, regardless of the outcome” of the political struggle in Iran.

Patrick Clawson, an Iran specialist at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Mr. Obama’s tougher remarks on Tuesday showed that he understands that “the prospects for a successful engagement are declining.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Unrest Could Hinder Tehran’s Regional Goals

CAIRO — Iran has had an impressive run for the past decade — expanding its regional muscle through proxy militias, its expanding missile capabilities and its big brother role with Iraq’s Shiites after the toppling of arch-foe Saddam Hussein.

But the fallout from the post-election unrest will most likely bring tougher times for Iran’s ambitions beyond its borders.

“Instability inside Iran will minimize the state’s capacity to project power in the region and beyond, a practice in which Iran has been very successful recently,” said Amr Hamzawy, a Middle East expert with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington-based think tank.

It’s been a steady string of advances claimed by Iran or its allies.

In 2000, Iranian-backed Hezbollah guerrillas proclaimed victory after Israel pulled its troops out of south Lebanon after 20-plus years of occupation. In 2003, a U.S.-led invasion toppled Saddam Hussein’s hostile regime, replacing it with a new political system dominated by Shiite parties closely linked to Iran.

Armed and trained by Iran, Hezbollah again withstood an invasion by far superior Israeli forces in a 35-day 2006 war. A year later, Iranian-backed Hamas militants seized control of the Gaza Strip, defeating forces loyal to the Western-backed Palestinian president.

Iran’s economic and political support also has enabled Syria to survive U.S. sanctions and international isolation, thus keeping it firmly in the hard-line camp opposed to U.S.-backed rivals Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

But the ironclad image of a confident Iran — united behind its clerical leadership — has been shattered in the violent challenge to June 12 election results that showed a landslide re-election of hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Clashes erupted over the past week between supporters of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi and militiamen loyal to the regime in the worst unrest in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution. The violence, captured in thousands of compelling images posted on the Internet for the world to see, has brought harsh criticism from a United States that has been reaching out to Iran to end 30 years of animosity and, significantly, from key trading partners France and Germany.

If the regime rides out the crisis over the election, experts say a much more ideologically entrenched Iran could emerge and pursue regional goals more forcefully, including seeking to broaden its footprint in neighboring Iraq and resisting compromises over the scope of its nuclear program.

But if it bows to demands by Mousavi for a new election — which now appears unlikely — the regime would be seen as weakened by Arab states but perhaps less of a regional rival.

Iran has in the past few years taken advantage of the waning powers of such regional heavyweights as Saudi Arabia and Egypt to gain leverage in the Middle East. Its effort was helped by a surge of anti-American sentiments among Arabs after the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the war on terror waged by former U.S. President George W. Bush.

However, continuing unrest would distract Iran from regional affairs, leaving Iranian proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas unable to count on Tehran’s largesse and vulnerable in the face of domestic rivals.

“If there is a more serious and violent repression of protests and a consolidation of power behind the ruling bloc, then the Arab world could be facing a more entrenched and hostile regime for years to come,” said Michael W. Hanna, a Middle East expert from the Century Foundation in New York.

Under normal circumstances, Iran’s immediate regional policy objective now would be to revive a Shiite alliance in Iraq ahead of a Jan. 30 general election. This would ensure that Tehran’s Iraqi allies maintain their grip on power at a time of growing uncertainty about security in view of the diminishing U.S. military presence in the run-up to a full withdrawal of forces by the end of 2011.

The absence of an active, high-level Iranian role could doom the alliance, thus fragmenting Shiite power and seriously hurting the comeback chances of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, Tehran’s closest Iraqi ally. The council suffered embarrassing losses in provincial elections in January in what is believed to be a backlash against religious parties.

“Continued instability … will blunt Iranian initiative in shaping political events in its strategically significant neighbor,” said Hanna.

But Iraqi lawmaker Mustafa al-Hiti, a Sunni Muslim, offers a different take.

“Neither of them (Ahmadinejad and Mousavi) will change his country’s policy toward Iraq,” he said. “Both will want to gain as much control as possible of our country and by any means possible.”

Besides Iraq, Hezbollah would be the group most affected by who wins Iran’s confrontation — the militant wing led by Khamenei and Ahmadinejad or the camp of reformist-minded politicians and clerics to which Mousavi belongs.

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah shares with Khamenei and Ahmadinejad a deeply rooted hatred for the United States and a firm belief that years of peace talks with Israel have come to nothing and only armed struggle would restore Palestinian rights.

“Your re-election represents a great hope to all the oppressed people, holy warriors and resistance fighters,” Nasrallah wrote to Ahmadinejad two days after the June 12 vote.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Bangladesh: The Daughter Converts to Christianity, Muslims Marginalize the Family

The relatives of the young woman, who lives in the United States, speak of a “wrong” choice and demand an end to bullying. The woman risks a fatwa for apostasy, her husband seeks a divorce. Solidarity from Catholics activists who denounce the violation of religious freedom.

Dhaka (AsiaNews) — Marginalized by the local Muslim community as a result of their daughter’s conversion to Christianity. This is the story of a family from Dhaka that has condemned the woman’s decision as “wrong” and stressed that “it can not endure for much longer” the harassment they are suffering. Catholic activists are in solidarity with the couple and talk about a new case of violation of human rights and religious freedom.

Kazi Quamrunnessa Luna moved to the United States after earning her degree in Bangladesh. She is married to Tazim Bhuiyan, of Muslim faith, with whom for over a decade, she tried to have children without success. The repeated condemnations and curses launched against her by her husband’s family because she failed to get pregnant, gave rise to tensions and malaise that the woman tried to relieve by starting a journey of faith. After attending Hindu temples and several churches, Luna met Pastor James Roy — of the Missouri Lutheran Church — with whom she embarked on a spiritual path.

This year she decided to convert to Christianity and received baptism in the United Bengali Lutheran Church of America. Her husband has returned to Bangladesh and family members are crying out for divorce if “Luna does not return to Islam.” Kazi Zebunnessa, Luna’s younger sister, reports that “since that man has spread the news” a climate of exclusion and threats has been created around the family

“My brother — says Kazi — can not even go to mosque. We are surrounded by an atmosphere of stigma, and if the Luna returns to Bangladesh, it is likely they will issue a fatwa against her and her life will be in danger”. Luna’s mother added that she could not “take any more pressure from people” for a decision that is “just my daughter’s” and denounces a general climate of “insecurity”.

Annie Halder, a Catholic activist, speaks of an ever-growing violence against women in particular and “against all those who decide to convert to Christianity”. In this context, the activist recalls the case of Christina Gomez Goni, “killed by extremists” for apostasy.

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



India Bans Maoist Communist Party

The Indian government has banned the Maoist Communist Party of India as a terrorist group, giving security forces enhanced powers of arrest.

The move provides Indian police with the power to detain members of the party even if they have not been involved in insurgent activity.

Earlier, five states across east and central India were put on a high alert as the Maoists called a two-day strike.

One district in West Bengal briefly fell under almost total Maoist control.

The rebels said the strike they declared was in response to the “war” on people in Lalgarh, West Bengal, where security forces launched an offensive in recent days.

Lalgarh had been under the virtual control of the rebels since November.

But police and paramilitary troops have been attempting to consolidate their grip on the jungle enclave over which they re-established control over the weekend.

Monday’s strike began a day after 11 police officers died in a rebel attack in Chhattisgarh state and two days after 16 policemen were killed in landmine blasts triggered by the Maoists in the same state.

Issuing a high alert for the five states in which the strike was declared, the interior ministry said India’s federal Intelligence Bureau had “specific inputs” that Maoists were planning possible attacks.

“Security forces, as well as economic infrastructure like railways, buses and crowded markets, may be targeted by the Maoists to make their presence felt during the strike,” the interior ministry advisory said.

India’s prime minister, Manmohan Singh, has described the Maoists as the greatest threat to India’s internal security.

The ban on the Communist Party of India (Maoist) comes just a month after the Congress party won a decisive victory in elections — leaving it with no need to turn to communist parties for support in shoring up a coalition.

Correspondents say it is unclear how big an impact the ban will have in the fight against the rebels.

Lalgarh unrest

Villagers in Lalgarh say their young men are being forced by police to hunt for explosives planted by the Maoists.

“They are giving the village boys an S-shaped iron rod each, asking them to hook it to wires sticking out anywhere and pull it. This is dangerous because they will be too close to the explosives if the wires are linked to them,” said Chattradhar Mahato, chairman of the Peoples Committee on Police Atrocities (PCPA), active in the Lalgarh area.

Some of Bengal’s leading artists, including film-maker Aparna Sen, visited Lalgarh on Sunday in a attempt to broker peace between the West Bengal government and the Maoists.

But neither appeared to be in a mood to talk.

“The Maoists have no specific demand, they are just out to create trouble. We have to continue the operations to deal with them,” said Bengal’s chief secretary Ashok Mohan Chakrabarty.

Maoist leader Kishneji told the BBC: “We will show the government what is people’s power. No police or army can crush that.”

Thousands of villagers have fled their homes in the Lalgarh region to avoid getting caught in the fighting, heading towards neighbouring areas of Bankura district.

The Bengal government started the offensive to retake Lalgarh, which had effectively been under Maoist control since November.

The Maoists skilfully harnessed people’s anger over police excesses following an Maoist attempt to kill chief minister Buddha Bhattacharya through a landmine blast, says the BBC’s Subir Bhaumik in Calcutta.

Maoist-linked violence has killed 6,000 people in India over two decades.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Report: US, Kyrgyz Deal on Airbase Use

MOSCOW — The United States and Kyrgyzstan have reached a deal for use of a Kyrgyz airport to transport U.S. military supplies to Afghanistan, Russian news agencies reported Tuesday.

Kyrgyz officials were quoted by Interfax and RIA-Novosti as saying that the deal was reached Monday to make the Manas airbase a “center of transit shipments.”

RIA-Novosti said a committee in the Central Asian country’s parliament will discuss the agreement as early as Tuesday.

U.S. and Kyrgyz officials could not immediately be reached for comment on the reports.

Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev stunned Washington in February when he announced that his country would be evicting U.S. forces from the Manas airbase.

The base has been an important transit point for U.S. personnel and supplies heading to Afghanistan, particularly with supply lines through Pakistan threatened by fighting in the border regions.

But in recent weeks, Kyrgyz officials have signaled that they were open to reconsidering the decision. The U.S. has a pressing need for use of Manas for logistical support for the thousands more troops being sent to Afghanistan by President Barack Obama.

Bakiyev made the announcement about the eviction just hours after reaching a deal with Russia for more than $2 billion in financial aid and loans to the ex-Soviet republic.

That led U.S. officials to suggest that Moscow, which has long been wary of the U.S. presence in Central Asia, was behind the Kyrgyz decision.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



US Missile Strike Kills 60 at Funeral in Pakistan

A US drone aircraft killed at least 45 Pakistani Taliban militants in south Waziristan yesterday when it fired missiles at the funeral of an insurgent commander killed earlier in the day, Pakistani intelligence officials said.

“Three missiles were fired by drones as people were dispersing after offering funeral prayers for Niaz Wali,” one intelligence official said, referring to a Taliban commander who was one of six militants killed in an earlier drone attack.

The army had no information on the attack on the funeral in the remote area under the control of Baitullah Mehsud, the country’s enemy number one, a military official said.

One local security official, who could not be identified as he was not authorised to speak to media, said that more than 60 had died of whom “half are civilians”. Funerals of Taliban are attended by local villagers, not just militants.

Waziristan, which borders Afghanistan, is part of Pakistan’s lawless tribal area, where US forces have mounted about 60 drone attacks against suspected militants since early last year.

But bombing a funeral is unusual and may be unprecedented. Local media reports said a local commander named Sangeen, originally from Afghanistan, was among the dead.

Mehsud, an al-Qaida ally accused of plotting the assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in 2007, had been in the area but was not hurt, a Taliban official said.

The US has offered a reward of $5m for information leading to Mehsud’s location or arrest.

The attacks came as Pakistan’s efforts to tame the burgeoning Taliban movement in the west of the country suffered a blow when a rival of Mehsud was shot dead, apparently by one of his own guards.

Qari Zainuddin, who had repeatedly criticised the Pakistani Taliban’s chief for targeting civilians, was shot in his office in the town of Dera Ismail Khan. Baz Mohammad, one of Zainuddin’s aides who was wounded in the attack, said a guard barged into a room at the leader’s compound after morning prayers and opened fire. Mohammad accused Mehsud of being behind the attack and vowed to avenge the death.

“It was definitely Baitullah’s man who infiltrated our ranks, and he has done his job,” Mohammad told AP.

The guard, who is thought to have insinuated himself into Zainuddin’s circle about four months ago, fled in a waiting car after the attack. Mehsud, described as the mastermind behind much of the terrorist activity in Pakistan, has yet to comment on the killing.

Zainuddin was estimated to have about 3,000 armed followers in Dera Ismail Khan and nearby Tank. Earlier this month, he denounced Mehsud for the killing of civilians in recent attacks, which were apparently launched in retaliation for the army offensive in the Swat valley.

The country’s armed forces are driving militants from the valley and have been pounding Mehsud’s strongholds in the South Waziristan tribal region, near Afghanistan, in apparent preparation for a big offensive against the warlord.

While some saw the killing as a sign of a schism within the Pakistani Taliban, other analysts argued that Zainuddin’s death removes from the scene an important threat to Mehsud. Some believe Mehsud feared Zainuddin more than the Pakistan army because he was an opponent from within, with intimate knowledge of his methods and personnel.

Zainuddin could have rallied the Mehsud tribe, perhaps the only way of eliminating Baitullah Mehsud and his network. For the first time since Mehsud became leader of the main group of the Pakistani Taliban four years ago, Zainuddin’s bold stance had given others in the Mehsud clan the courage to speak up against his vicious reign, which broke all tribal traditions.

A tribal leader from South Waziristan, too scared to be named, said: “The message from Baitullah Mehsud is that who-ever wants to come openly against me will meet the same fate.”

Zainuddin, 30, was protected by two dozen armed guards at his compound, but the security was not as strong as might be expected for someone who had taken on so violent an enemy. The danger was obvious. Mehsud had demonstrated his ruthlessness by killing hundreds of the Mehsud tribe’s traditional elders — who might have led resistance — as he came to power.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Far East


China and US Hold Military Talks

Defence officials from the United States and China are meeting in Beijing for two days of high-level talks.

They are expected to discuss several recent naval confrontations between the two countries in the South China Sea.

North Korea’s recent nuclear and missile tests — and how to react to them — will also be on the agenda.

Military relations between China and the US have been strained since last year because of the US sale of arms to Taiwan.

Sovereignty claim

Michele Flournoy, the US under secretary of defence for policy, is leading the US delegation for the talks, set up in 1997.

She will meet Lieutenant General Ma Xiaotian from the People’s Liberation Army, China’s armed forces.

One of the top concerns for the US team is the confrontations between ships from the two countries in the South China Sea.

Already this year, there have been a handful of incidents off China’s southern coast.

Just a few weeks ago, a Chinese submarine collided with sonar equipment being towed by the USS John S. McCain off Subic Bay in the Philippines.

China says that was an accident, but the US says it is worried about the increasing number of such incidents.

There is already a mechanism to deal with this kind of conflict.

“We would hope to reinvigorate those discussions so that we can make sure that we’re both operating in a safe and prudent manner,” said a US defence department spokesman before the US delegation arrived in Beijing.

China says the South China Sea, and its island chains, are part of its sovereign territory and it has previously complained about US naval activity in the region.

The Defence Consultative Talks between China and the US are usually held every year, although not last year.

Beijing suspended military ties between the two nations last October in protest at the US decision to sell $6.5bn-worth of arms to Taiwan, an island China considers its own.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Notorious Bikie Boss Allan Sarkis Breaks His Silence

THE head of Sydney’s newest and most-feared bikie gang last night revealed membership is growing rapidly — mainly young men of Middle Eastern heritage who don’t all ride motorbikes.

Allan Sarkis, named publicly yesterday as the president of Notorious, made no apologies for his gang’s reputation and said they would not be dictated to by traditional bikies.

“We’re not following anybody’s existing rules,” Sarkis said.

“As far as us being the new age bikies, if that’s a problem for somebody, we don’t apologise.

“We’re a bike club that was formed as a motorcycle club to not be undermined and not be dictated to by existing clubs.”

Sarkis said the warring outlaw motorcycle clubs should be sorting out their differences behind closed doors — not in public.

After a week in which one man was bashed to death, there were a string of shootings, arrests of gang members and police launched an anti-bikie crackdown, Sarkis said he was “far from panicked”.

“I don’t have a guilty conscience,” he said.

Dressed in jeans, white T-shirt, Nike shoes and no motorbike in sight, Sarkis said Notorious lived by their own strict rules and were not like other bikie gangs.

Just two days after being charged with possessing a prescribed restricted substance, Sarkis said he believed the club was misunderstood and denied the club played a part in Sydney’s escalating bikie war.

He said he wouldn’t apologise for representing the “new age” in outlaw bikie clubs.

Sarkis, 34, admitted the public perception of Notorious was not “real good”, but said he was unworried by the club’s reputation within Sydney’s bikie underworld.

He said the club had been vilified in the media.

“(Reports) that we’re a criminal gang, that we’re fighting over drugs. We’re not. That we’re fighting over security; we’re not,” he said.

Sarkis said the club was growing at a comfortable rate, but refused to comment on the number of members or chapters in Sydney.

“We’re as big as we need to be,” he said.

Notorious was formed following the dissolution of the Parramatta chapter of the Nomads. The club has reportedly been involved in a dispute with rivals the Bandidos over drugs and nightclub security.

Sarkis denied any knowledge of a feud with the Bandidos and refused to comment on drive-by shootings in Sydney’s west and southwest linked to the club in recent weeks.

He said the club drew members from all religions and ethnic groups.

“Australia has been used to the clubs that have been around for a while and the appearance of a new club has maybe been taken as a threat to them,” he said.

He said the club was open to communication with other clubs.

“If there’s any club out there that does have an issue with us, or would like to raise an issue with us, I believe it should be kept out of the media, and out of the police,” he said.

He said he was not concerned about what other clubs thought of Notorious members.

He described Sydney’s bikie wars as “sensationalism”.

“The boys we have put together are all leaders. They are not followers,” he said.

“We are doing our own thing.”

He said the club had a strict policy on drugs: “One thing we don’t condone in this club is drugs or anything to do with drugs.

“Linking us to drugs, or the drug trade, is way out of line.”

The club lived by a strict code and “we won’t allow any of our members to disrespect the club. We keep our house in order”.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Perth Dobs in Bikies

West Australian police say they have fielded more than 100 calls from people wanting to dob in bikies.

Phone-in-a-bikie day was launched earlier this month, with WA Police Minister Rob Johnson announcing a print and radio advertising campaign asking the public to call with information to boost the force’s intelligence efforts.

Police urged the public to give information about where bikies worked, what businesses they were involved in, where they drink and who they were associated with.

They said the anonymous calls were needed to monitor the state’s 260 patched bikie members.

The words “phone in” were used rather than “dob in” as market research showed the latter was regarded as “un-Australian”, specialist crime assistant commissioner Wayne Gregson said.

Sergeant Graham Clifford said that by late on Tuesday, 111 calls had been received on the bikie hotline.

“There’s been 57 inquiries activated by those calls,” Sgt Clifford said.

WA joined police in SA, NSW and Queensland in the initiative, which encourages members of the public to pass on information related to bikie gangs.

In South Australia, the focus was on offences related to blackmail and extortion, which SA police say is a feature of illegal bikie activity.

Following a meeting of police ministers in Perth last week, Mr Johnson announced support for a national push to outlaw criminal bikie gangs, mirroring laws already in place in NSW and South Australia.

Under the NSW and SA models, membership of bikie gangs can constitute a criminal offence.

The push for the laws followed a fatal bikie brawl at Sydney Airport in March.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Weapons Found in Unit: Ibrahim Guilty

Former Nomads bikie Sam Ibrahim has pleaded guilty to four weapons charges relating to a police raid at a Parramatta unit.

Ibrahim, the eldest of the four Ibrahim brothers, had been arrested in December 2006 over a shooting at the Nomad’s Newcastle clubhouse. He was charged over the kneecapping of two Newcastle Nomads, but along with two other accused, was found not guilty on all charges in October last year.

However, Bankstown Local Court heard today that police working on the shooting had gone to a unit on Campbell Street in Parramatta in 2006 where they believed Ibrahim was staying.

“A telephone service known to be used by the accused was rung and a phone was heard to ring inside … shortly after the accused opened the front door of the premises for police wearing only underpants in a state suggesting he had only just woken up,” a police document tendered to court today stated.

The court was told that once inside the unit, police found several items in the master bedroom, including a walking stick with a concealed sword, two pairs of nunchucks and a ceramic chest plate from a NSW Police Force ballistic vest.

Ibrahim pleaded guilty to the possession of all four weapons today.

He was sentenced to two separate good behaviour bonds and fined $1500.

Brett Galloway, acting for Ibrahim, told the court that Ibrahim had spent about two years in segregation in prison following his arrest in 2006 and had already been sufficiently punished.

Ibrahim had the sword stick because “he had a serious motorcycle accident in 2004 and he was given the walking stick as a present”, Mr Galloway told the court.

He also said that Ibrahim used the ballistic vest as a platform for a trolley in the apartment and the nunchucks for martial arts training.

Ibrahim is on remand over an alleged kidnapping earlier this year. He was expected to apply for bail on that matter at Liverpool Local Court tomorrow.

One of his brothers, Fadi, is in hospital after being shot five times in an attempted assassination

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Mau Mau Veterans Lodge Compensation Claim Against UK

A group of elderly Kenyans allegedly tortured and assaulted during the repression of their country’s independence movement in the 1950s is to present a letter to No 10 tomorrow morning calling on the British government to launch an investigation into their treatment.

Today three men and two women, who say they were variously beaten, raped and castrated during the Kenyan “emergency” from 1952 to 1960, lodged a claim for compensation against the government at the high court and demanded an official apology. Tomorrow, they will ask Gordon Brown for a meeting to discuss their position.

The five are veterans of the Mau Mau movement, which rose up against the British colonial administration. Their lawyer, Martin Day, said he believed they had a good chance of success.

“This will be the first time that the British government has had to account for its terrible, terrible deeds. This case is about justice for those individuals who had a terrible, terrible time. A number of them suffered from castration, women suffered from horrendous sexual abuse, many, many Maus Maus were beaten, tortured and killed,” he said. “This case is about bringing all those issues before the British court and a British judge to say ‘what we did was wrong’.”

The Mau Mau movement remained proscribed as a terrorist movement in Kenya until 2003, leaving those who had been members or accused of being members to “live under a shadow”, Day said. This was part of a “quiet conspiracy” between the Kenyan and British governments.

The five plaintiffs travelled to Britain from rural Kenya, many clutching walking sticks as they made their way along London’s streets.

Paul Multe, a former Kenyan MP, pointed out that the youngest of their number was in their late 70s. “Is it really moral that Britain should delay the hearing of this case?” Multe asked. “Is it not highly immoral that Britain should choose to do that for the purpose that these veterans will just die away?”

The five are: Ndiku Mutua and Paulo Nzili, who both say they were castrated, Jane Muthoni Mara and Susan Ngondi, who say they were seriously sexually assaulted, and Wambugu Wa Nyingi, who was imprisoned for nine years in spite of never having taken the Mau Mau oath.

Nyingi said he witnessed 14 men being killed in one camp and 11 in another, surviving only because he lay for three days amid their corpses and the guards assumed he was dead.

The Foreign Office said: “It is, of course, right that those who feel they have a case are free to take it to the courts. But as we have previously indicated to the solicitors, we expect to contest the cases on questions around liability and limitations. Because of the prospect of legal action and without seeing the detail of this, it would not be right to comment further on the particular aspects of this case.”

The figures for the number of people detained during the Kenyan emergency period is disputed; the official estimate is 80,000.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Nigerian Militants Attack Three Shell Oil Sites

LAGOS (Reuters) — Nigeria’s main militant group said on Sunday it had attacked three oil installations belonging to Royal Dutch Shell in the Niger Delta, widening a month-old offensive against Africa’s biggest energy industry.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said in an emailed statement it had attacked Shell pipelines at Adamakiri and Kula, both in Rivers state in the eastern Niger Delta, in the early hours of Sunday morning.

It said it had also attacked the Afremo offshore oilfields, which it believed were operated by Shell, and which it said were 14 miles from an export terminal through which crude oil from Shell’s Forcados fields is pumped..

Shell said it was investigating reports of attacks against its installations at three locations and was carrying out fly-overs to try to assess any impact on output or the extent of any environmental damage from potential spillage.

A senior industry source said the third attack was not thought to have been on a deepwater installation, but on a facility located in or close to the mangrove creeks, where pipelines and equipment run across broad stretches of water.

The attacks are the first to strike Rivers state, the easternmost of the three main states in the Niger Delta, since the militants launched their latest campaign of sabotage following a military offensive in the western delta last month.

Persistent attacks by MEND over the past three years have cut oil output in the OPEC member, the world’s eighth biggest crude oil exporter, to less than two thirds of its installed capacity of 3 million barrels per day (bpd).

ISOLATED LOCATIONS

Industry and security experts say it is virtually impossible to prevent opportunistic attacks on hundreds of kilometers of pipeline and equipment in the remote mangrove creeks of the Niger Delta, one of the world’s biggest wetlands.

“The militants are going about attacking pipelines in isolated parts of the creeks where they know they will not encounter resistance,” said Colonel Rabe Abubakar, spokesman for the joint military taskforce in the Niger Delta.

MEND first burst onto the scene in late 2005, knocking out more than a quarter of Nigeria’s oil output — then around 2.4 million bpd — in a matter of weeks.

But it has largely failed to carry out such spectacular attacks since then, although the latest campaign has nibbled further at production levels in a country that relies on oil for around 90 percent of its foreign earnings.

Agip said on Friday a pipeline attack in Bayelsa state had halted production of around 33,000 barrels of oil and 2 million cubic meters of gas per day.

Shell said on Thursday some oil production had been halted following an attack on the Trans Ramos pipeline late on Wednesday at Aghoro-2 community in Bayelsa.

Chevron shut down its operations around Delta state after MEND’s first attack in its latest campaign on May 24, halting around 100,000 barrels per day (bpd).

MEND has dubbed its offensive “Hurricane Piper Alpha” after the North Sea oil platform that blew up in July 1998 and was the worst offshore oil disaster, and warned that it might attack deepwater facilities off the Nigerian coast.

Security sources say some oil firms have been removing non-essential personnel from some offshore sites.

MEND says it is fighting against the militarization of the Niger Delta and for a fairer share of the wealth for local villagers. But the leaders of armed gangs it works with have grown rich from a lucrative trade in stolen oil and from ransoms paid for hundreds of oil workers kidnapped in recent years.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Somali ‘Thieves’ Face Amputation

[At the end of this news story the phrase “moderate Islamist” is used, unironically, to describe Somalia’s current President. — io’p]

Hardline Islamists have condemned four young Somali men to a double amputation for stealing mobile phones and guns.

They will each have a hand and a leg cut off after being convicted by a Sharia court in the capital, Mogadishu.

The al-Shabab group has carried out amputations, floggings and an execution in the port of Kismayo but such punishments are rare in the capital.

Al-Shabab and its allies control much of southern Somalia and are battling the UN-backed government.

Hundreds of residents attended the hearing in north Mogadishu.

Armed al-Shabab militants were on guard, while the accused were chained around their ankles.

‘Too hot to amputate’

Three mobile phones and two assaults rifles were displayed, which the accused had allegedly stolen, reports the AFP news agency.

“The defendants admitted the charges brought against them and were sentenced accordingly. Each one of them will have his right hand and left leg amputated publicly,” said Judge Sheikh Abdallah al-Haq.

It is not clear where the leg will be cut.

No date was set for the punishment, which will be carried out after the health of the accused is assessed.

Furthermore, Monday was very hot and the court decided that carrying out an amputation in such conditions could lead the accused to bleed to death.

Amnesty International said the four men had not been given a fair trial.

“We are appealing to al-Shabab not to carry out these cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments,” said Tawanda Hondora, a spokesperson for the human rights group.

“These sentences were ordered by a sham al-Shabab court with no due process or guarantees of fairness.”

The punishments already carried out in Kismayo have shocked many Somalis, who traditionally practise a more tolerant form of Islam.

The transitional government says that al-Shabab has links to al-Qaeda and has brought hundreds of foreign fighters to Somalia.

President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, has declared a state of emergency and has appealed to Somalia’s neighbours to send troops to help fight the hardliners.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Mexico: ‘Green Fund’ Better Than Carbon Credits

MEXICO CITY — Mexican President Felipe Calderon made a push Monday for his proposal for a $10 billion “green fund” as a more efficient way to fight climate change than carbon credits.

Calderon spoke at the opening of the latest session of the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, which brings together representatives of 19 countries and the European Union that together account for 80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions.

“The current carbon credits would not have to disappear, but they are not an efficient mechanism,” Calderon said, noting that the credits market “has to match an industry that wants to pollute with another” that has projects to compensate or reduce gas emissions.

The two-day meeting opened near the city of Cuernavaca. It is the third in a series of talks called for by President Barack Obama that will culminate with a June summit in Italy.

The goal is to help broker a replacement for the expiring Kyoto Protocol, ahead of a United Nations conference in Copenhagen next December on a new international treaty for dealing with global warming.

Calderon said the green fund could be administered by the World Bank or some other multilateral agency.

It would be funded by contributions from all nations — and open to finance projects from all nations — as opposed to largely private-sector carbon credit market.

“It will have a framework of greater multilateral participation, which will result in a more equitable and efficient distribution of funds,” Calderon said.

He said the idea “does not seek, as has been traditional, that the funds to fight climate change … come from the same old donors as an act of charity or a handout given to developing countries.”

“It is time to move on from mutual reproaches, to a shared scheme of responsibility,” Calderon said.

The amount each country would donate to the fund would be open to negotiation, but rich countries would be expected to give more.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Official: No Black Box Signals From Flight 447

PARIS — French military ships searching for the black boxes of Flight 447 have detected sounds in the Atlantic depths but they are not from the Air France plane’s flight recorders, a French official said Tuesday.

The official and French investigators denied a report on the website of the French newspaper Le Monde that French ships had picked up a signal from the black boxes.

French military ships searching in the area where the plane crashed have “heard sounds” but “the black boxes have not been detected,” said an aide to France’s minister in charge of transport, Jean-Louis-Borloo. The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because she was not authorized to be publicly named.

The two recorders, key to helping determine what happened to the Air France plane that plunged into the ocean May 31, will only continue to emit signals for another eight days or so.

The Airbus A330 plane fell into the Atlantic after running into thunderstorms en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. All 228 people aboard were killed. The cause of the crash remains unclear.

The French air accident investigation agency, BEA, said in a statement Tuesday that “no signals transmitted by the flight recorders’ locator beacons have been validated up to now.”

The BEA said work is continuing “aimed at eliminating any doubts related to any sounds that may be heard, and any findings will be made public.”

Last week, BEA director Paul-Louis Arslanian sternly warned against any unconfirmed leaks in the investigation, saying they could mislead the public and unnecessarily worry or encourage the families.

Le Monde said a mini research submarine, the Nautile, dived Monday to search for the boxes based on a “very weak signal” from the flight recorders picked up by the French ships.

French military spokesman Christophe Prazuck said he could not confirm or deny the Le Monde report. French air accident investigators and officials with the French marine institute that operates the mini-sub, Ifremer, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Brazilian and American officials said that as of Sunday evening no signals from the black boxes had been picked up.

Searchers from Brazil, France, the United States and other countries are methodically scanning the surface and depths of the Atlantic for signs of the plane.

French-chartered ships are trolling a search area with a radius of 50 miles (80 kilometers), pulling U.S. Navy underwater listening devices attached to 19,700 feet (6,000 meters) of cable. A French submarine is also searching.

The black boxes send out an electronic tapping sound that can be heard up to 1.25 miles (2 kilometers) away.

Ten of 50 bodies recovered from the Air France flight that plunged into the Atlantic three weeks ago have been identified as Brazilians, medical examiners said.

Dental records, fingerprints and DNA samples were used to identify the bodies. Investigators are reviewing all remains, debris and baggage at a base set up in Recife, Brazil.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


28,000 Illegal Attempts to Enter UK Foiled

New figures reveal the increasingly desperate battle to protect borders

The number of illegal immigrants caught trying to enter Britain from the continent has nearly trebled in the past five years, new figures show.

Nearly 20,000 attempts by immigrants to enter Britain illegally were thwarted in Calais last year compared to 7,500 in 2004.

A further 9,000 were stopped in Coquelle and Dunkirk, Belgium and Paris. It is not known how many more immigrants succeeded in outwitting the UK border forces.

The Home Office figures paint a picture of an increasingly desperate battle between the UK Border Agency and the growing number of foreigners who believe they have a chance of a better life in the UK.

This year, immigration officers found 13 Afghanis and two Iranians hiding in a lorry-load of light bulbs. The Hungarian-registered lorry was stopped at Calais before it could board a ferry across the Channel.

Similarly, failed attempts were made by two Vietnamese men concealed in a consignment of nappies. And last year, border officers thwarted a bid by four Afghans who were found in lorry-load of champagne.

The immigration crisis in Calais, the temporary home to thousands of immigrants trying to come to Britain, has worsened in recent weeks.

On Monday, there were reports that the French town was under siege after hundreds of protesters arrived to demand an end to border controls between France and Britain. Riot police were on alert in the streets after intelligence reports raised fears of widespread violence.

The record number of successful interventions by UK border officers has been largely due to a marked increase in immigration controls and freight searches carried out by British officers on the Continent. Last year, there were 738,474 searches.

There have also been developments in methods used to detect people who are trying to cross the border. Body detection dogs are trained to smell humans who are inside vehicles simply by sniffing the air outside.

Heartbeat detector sheds contain mobile computers that uses four special vibration sensors to detect movement inside a vehicle.

And carbon dioxide probes detect carbon dioxide, the gas which is expelled by the lungs.

The Border and Immigration minister Phil Woolas said: “The UK has one of the strongest borders in the world. We work closely with our French partners to tackle illegal immigration using state-of-the-art technology such as carbon dioxide and heartbeat detectors.

“Last year alone, UK Border Agency staff at our French and Belgium controls not only searched more than one million lorries but also stopped 28,000 attempts to cross the Channel illegally.

“The illegal migrants in France are not queuing to get into Britain — they have been locked out,” Mr Woolas said. But the Liberal Democrat spokesman for Home Affairs, Chris Huhne, said: “The huge rise in detections last year begs the question how many illegal immigrants were slipping through the net before.

“These figures are worrying precisely because they suggest that control at our borders is still far too weak, and for everyone detected there may be far more who are not.

“We need a national border force with police powers to ensure that only legal migrants enter Britain, and that the human trade in trafficked migrants is stopped and its organisers are brought to justice. Our borders have been too porous for too long.

“We need an immigration system that is firm but fair but we currently have neither.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Problem for EU, Emergency Plan Soon

(by Chiara De Felice) (ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — The flow of illegal immigrants that cross the Mediterranean and land in Italy, Malta, Cyprus and Greece is now a problem that will have to be dealt with by the European Union. After pressure from Rome, the leaders of the 27 countries are jointly looking at the “dramatic situation in the Mediterranean”, drawing up an emergency plan and studying how to distribute immigrants in a well-balanced manner. The conclusions of the EU summit state that “Recent events in Italy, Malta, Cyprus and Greece are proof of the need to increase efforts to prevent and combat illegal immigration within the southern borders of the EU, thereby avoiding tragedies”. Leaders of the 27 “are very worried by the dramatic situation” and intend to “help the most affected members to counter these flows”. Help will mainly come in the shape of an European emergency plan that will be drawn up by the EU Commission in the next weeks, as explained by Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini. Frattini stated that today’s summit “went beyond” the well known European pact for immigration which is not working because “certain member states are not compliant”. The closing chapter on immigration, contained in the final statement, cites Italy, Malta, Cyprus and Greece as the countries most affected by illegal immigration issues. The European Union “acknowledged” that immigration “is a problem for all of Europe”, said Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, who explained that Italy asked for, among other things, joint patrols and repatriations, with shared costs. In practice, immigrants who land on the southern shores of the EU and are granted protection will be moved to other member states who agree to look after them in order to alleviate the burden of states such as Italy, “that are exposed to a specific and disproportionate pressure” of clandestine flows, as indicated in the report issued by the 27. Operations will start immediately with a pilot project in Malta, while France has already announced that it is ready to welcome approximately 80 refugees from Valletta. Other countries are not as willing to help. Today German Chancellor Angela Merkel stated that “Germany helps in many ways, now we need to boost security along our borders, not share out refugees between us”. The matter of repatriation, which is currently regulated by bilateral agreements between member and non-member countries, is now of European significance. The Council invited the Commission to work on repatriation agreements with the refugees’ main countries of origin and transit, such as Libya and Turkey. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


Thomson Reuters Plans to End Dual-Company Structure

LONDON (AFP) — Financial information provider Thomson Reuters intends to end its dual-listed company structure, a move that will see the group no longer traded in London or on the Nasdaq market.

In a statement issued late Monday, the Canadian-British group urged shareholders to vote on changing the dual-listed company (DLC) structure at meetings set for August 7.

Thomson Reuters was created in April 2008 after Canada’s Thomson Corp bought Britain-based news agency Reuters.

Currently, New York-headquartered Thomson Reuters is divided into Thomson Reuters Corporation in Canada and Britain-based Thomson Reuters Plc.

“The equity markets are increasingly global and electronic, and our investors deserve the very best capital structure we can provide,” Thomson Reuters chief executive Tom Glocer said in the statement.

“Our board has determined that consolidating the trading of our shares into a single, global and deep pool of liquidity, listed on the Toronto and New York Stock Exchanges, is in the best interests of all shareholders.

“When we formed Thomson Reuters, we believed a DLC structure was the best way for Reuters shareholders to stay invested in our shares and participate in our growth,” said Glocer.

“However, the shareholders of Thomson Reuters have changed considerably and UK shareholders now only constitute five percent of the combined shareholder base,” he added.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UN: Islamic Law is Major Influence on Refugee Law, Says Study

New York, 23 June (AKI) — The 1,400-year-old Islamic custom of welcoming people fleeing persecution has had more influence on modern international refugee law than any other traditional source, according to a new study sponsored by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

High Commissioner Antonio Guterres said that more than any other historical source, Islamic law and tradition underpin the modern-day legal framework on which UNHCR bases its global activities on behalf of the tens of millions of people forced from their homes around the world.

This includes the right of everyone to seek asylum as well as prohibitions against sending those needing protection back into danger, Guterres said in the foreword to “The Right to Asylum between Islamic Sharia and International Refugee Law: A Comparative Study.”

In the study, Professor Abu Al-Wafa, Dean of the Law Faculty at Cairo University, describes how Islamic law and tradition respects refugees, including non-Muslims; forbids forcing them to change their beliefs; avoids compromising their rights; seeks to reunite families; and guarantees the protection of their lives and property.

“The international community should value this 14-century-old tradition of generosity and hospitality and recognize its contributions to modern law,” wrote Guterres.

He said that “racism, xenophobia and populist fear-mongering manipulate public opinion and confuse refugees with illegal migrants and even terrorists.”

These attitudes have contributed to misperceptions about Islam, and Muslim refugees — who account for the majority — have paid the price, said Guterres.

“Let us be clear: refugees are not terrorists. They are first and foremost the victims of terrorism. This book reminds us of our duty to counter such attitudes.”

The study, published by UNHCR in cooperation with Naif Arab University and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, is scheduled to be launched on Tuesday at Naif Arab University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

The Party’s Over

The party’s over
It’s time to call it a day
They’ve burst your pretty balloon and taken the moon away
Now you must wake up, all dreams must end
Take off your makeup, the party’s over…
It’s all over, my friend



It was a good run, folks. Lots of fun, lots of enthusiastic responses and donations. Your generosity will allow us to pay all our internet connection expenses for the year, and then some. At least it will if our contracts don’t increase in price. Given the trickle-down inflation that is coming, we’ll have to see. But at least we know we’re good to go for a year.

We heard from all over –

  • Austria to Australia to Arizona to *Arkansas* (thanks, Charlemagne)
  • the Danes, for sure, plus Norway and Sweden
  • even tiny Finland, and Floridians by the score!
  • the Netherlands paid a visit or two, and Germans came,.
  • While Mississippi, Minnesota and New York, like
  • Texans in bunches, showed up to tip the cup.
  • Beleaguered Californians appeared.
  • We heard from North Dakota, (but they can’t pump their oil)
  • North Carolina was here, plus Georgia and the Cajuns.
  • Oregon came despite the rain, and (lower) Michigan repeated.
  • Ohio marched in. Why even Illinois (despite Obama) was in
  • Followed by Massachusetts, bless him.
  • And thanks to Pennsylvania, too.
  • Plus Indiana and New Hampshire, living free…

I’m relying on memory for my list. If any of you have been overlooked, please let me know and I’ll add your state.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


Oh dear, I forgot the Canadians! From Vancouver (yes, there’s a conservative hiding there) to Nova Scotia, the Canadians were a generous bunch.

But they’re so polite and unassuming, one forgets. It was only because I was planting impatiens in the garden and had to move some smooth, purplish rocks that I remembered: omg, CANADA! How could you forget??!! Those rocks were brought back from Nova Scotia to line some of the flower beds…

Sorry, Canada. My bad. I hope I didn’t forget anyone else…

**UPDATE:** I forgot France. No smart remarks, they make great wine. And cheese. And found truffles.

Here’s to Francis Porretto for his limerick about the Baron’s job prospects:
– – – – – – – –
An unwanted elderly programmer
Was approached by a blog-trackback spammer,
Who asked him to form
An invincible worm
To strike righties’ blogs like a hammer.

But our hero demurred, saying “Virtue
“Commands I write nothing to hurt you.
“And the mite I might write
“Would erase your foul site,
“Before you quite knew what had hit you!”

And let’s not forget sweet Temoc, who left love notes to the Baron. The feeling is mutual wherever you are, dear boy.

The party may be over, but it sure was fun.

Let’s have another next year!

Gratefully,

Dymphna

Sweden Cracks Down on Asylum-Seekers

Sweden has finally decided to toughen its policy on asylum-seekers.

After you recover your dentures from your lap, please note the details of the case: the victims of Sweden’s newfound callousness are Iranian asylum-seekers, young people who are suffering under the current wave of violent government repression.

Indigent and criminal Somalis and Iraqis are presumably still being off-loaded in Gothenburg and Malmö, but Iranian protesters need not apply.

According to the EU Observer, the entire EU is balking, but Sweden is the only European country specifically mentioned as having cold feet about oppressed Iranians. Italy, for example, is being quite forthright in its outreach to the protesters:

EU Embassies Wary of Hosting Iranian Protesters

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — Italy said Sunday (21 June) it had instructed its embassy in Tehran to provide humanitarian aid to wounded protesters, pending a co-ordinated response from all EU countries. But Sweden — which is about to take over the EU presidency — said it cannot grant asylum to refugees.

Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini said he would discuss a European Union-wide proposal to co-ordinate assistance for wounded demonstrators during a meeting in Stockholm on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the country — Iran’s leading trading partner in the EU — has instructed its embassy to help out “where there is a request or need for help from injured demonstrators,” the foreign ministry said in a statement. [emphasis added]

Now the motivation becomes clear: it’s all about the benjamins. In this particular case, traditional Swedish high-mindedness has been forced to take a back seat to economic self-interest.

Other European countries are displaying varying degrees of support for the Iranian uprising:
– – – – – – – –

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the attitude of Iranian authorities was “inexcusable,” and highlighted the government’s “pariah” status. Tehran, already isolated due to its nuclear ambitions, is now “depriving its people of their most basic democratic rights,” he said.

Earlier on, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a full vote recount. “Germany stands by the people in Iran who want to exercise their right to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly,” she said. A new analysis of voting figures by independent British think tank Chatham House found “irregularities” in the turnout and “highly implausible” swings to Ahmadinejad.

British foreign secretary David Miliband warned the death toll “will raise the level of concern among Iranians and around the world,” while US president Barack Obama toughened his stance, calling on Tehran to stop “violent and unjust actions against its own people.”

As of today, Barack Hussein Obama finally emerged from his cone of silence and condemned — in mush-mouth fashion — the mullahs’ violent crackdown on the protesters:

Dramatically hardening the U.S. reaction to Iran’s disputed elections and bloody aftermath, President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters Tuesday and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations the hardline victory was a fraud.

[…]

“We don’t know yet how this thing is going to play out,” the president said. “It is not too late for the Iranian government to recognize that there is a peaceful path that will lead to stability and legitimacy and prosperity for the Iranian people. We hope they take it.”

How’s that for taking a hard line?

For speaking truth to power?

For being willing to bear any burden and pay any price?

Not only that, the Messiah waited until after Finland — Finland! — condemned the Iranian government before finally swinging into action.

He’s definitely a man of initiative, decisiveness, and steely-eyed resolve.



Hat tip: islam o’phobe.

Barry Soetoro: Muslim or Apostate?

A reader wrote to us a few days ago with some questions about Barry Soetoro:

I’m doing research on “the great one”. I read your article, “Indonesia, Terrorism, and Barry Soetoro” from October 30, 2008, about Obama studying in Indonesia, praying and speaking Arabic. I believe it’s true, in light of the fact that now we know he speaks fluent Arabic, whereas before he said he spoke “no” foreign languages.

I wanted to know your references so I can specify the following as true.

1. How do you know that Ann, his mother, was a Muslim?

2. How do you know he prayed each day?

Barry Soetoro in Indonesia


The post in question was researched and almost entirely written by our Flemish correspondent VH, who has in-depth experience with Indonesian affairs. I asked him for answers to our reader’s inquiries, and he sent the following response:

1. How do you know that Ann, his mother, was a Muslim?

A non-Muslim can only marry a Muslim when he/she converts in a mosque, preceding the marriage (which must take place in a mosque):

Stanley Ann Dunham’s relationship with the Kenyan-born Muslim Barack Hussein Obama Sr. might have brought her in contact with Islam*. If she married him to become his second wife, she must have converted to Islam first: no Muslim will marry a non-converted woman, certainly not in a religiously-devoted Muslim family like the Husseins. Although it is less strict with extra wives, concubines, or slaves.

When Stanley Ann Dunham married the Indonesian citizen and Muslim Lolo Soetoro, she was already a Muslim, or had converted. Otherwise she could not have married him (and that must have taken place in a mosque). The marriage in Indonesia, or the legalization of the marriage documents (which had to be accompanied by a marriage document from a mosque) would also have been necessary to achieve an Indonesian residency permit for herself, and citizenship for Hussein Jr.

2. How do you know he prayed each day?

– – – – – – – –

Barry Soetoro was a devoted Muslim. Devout Muslims pray five times a day:

The most important clue about this is that Barry Soetoro not only received the regular Islamic teachings in primary school like everyone else, but he was even sent to a Mengaji: voluntary orthodox Islamic teachings (basically madrassa-like classes, reciting in Arabic). This happened during his formative years (6-11). Indonesians, when asked about Mengaji, are very clear: only the very devout (strict) Muslims would send their children to a Mengaji.

Another clue is from the witnesses: Rony Amir, for instance, who knew Barry*, stated that he was a remarkably devoted Muslim in his Indonesian years: A non-devout Muslim will usually still try to do the morning prayer before sunrise or the prayer at night. Almost every day. Devoted Muslims, however, will pray five times a day. Barry was a devout Muslim, as Rony Amir remembered.

This combined with the voluntary Mengaji classes makes it certain that he prayed at least once a day. This also leads to the following conclusion: Barry Soetoro is a Muslim, or he is an apostate (In Indonesia, many are convinced he is not an apostate and forgive him the taqiyya).

His connection with Islam might have faded a little over the years, though, as result of the upbringing by his non-Muslim grandparents, but it only takes an all-Muslim environment for a devoted Muslim to switch back.

I hope this will answer the questions. As footnote I would like to refer to the links in the article on Soetoro at Gates of Vienna.


* In those days Islam was — at least in Indonesia — still considered by some as a religion of the “resistance”, as opposed to Christianity being the religion of “the West”. There are rumors that Ann Dunham might even have had a relationship with Malcolm Little (a.k.a. “X”). Little was also a Muslim and even a member of the radical Nation of Islam.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/22/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/22/2009The Iranian disturbances still dominate the news from the Middle East. Britain has decided to evacuate the families of its diplomatic staff. European embassies in Tehran are reluctant to shelter asylum-seekers. And the regime has officially banned prayers for Neda Soltani, the woman who was shot dead on the street last Saturday.

In other news, South Korean intelligence believes that a North Korean weapons ship is illegally transporting arms to the regime in Burma.

Thanks to Andy Bostom, Barry Rubin, CB, CSP, EMET, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, islam o’phobe, JD, Paul Green, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Firestarter
Global Economy to Sink Deep, World Bank Says
 
USA
4 Dead After Metro Train Derailment, Collision
Bricks Without Straw
Child Molester’s Dream Come True
Drenched in Blood of Slavery
Every “Law” Obama Signs Brings US Closer to…
Frank Gaffney: Missile Defense Misjudgment
From Bias to Adoration: The Absurd Reporting of Political News
FTC Plans to Monitor Blogs for Claims, Payments
Glenn Beck: The Letter
High Court Rules Narrowly in Voting Rights Case
Islamic Society Reaches Out to Other Faiths
Italy-USA: Berlusconi, With Obama It’ll be as it Was With Bush
Reading Miranda Rights to Terrorists is ‘Crazy’ and ‘Stupid, ‘ Say GOP Congressmen
Sherman Frederick: Why I Dumped Obama’s Party
Work Begins on World’s Deepest Underground Lab
 
Europe and the EU
British Passports to be Given to a Record 220,000 Migrants This Year
Burqas Are ‘Not Welcome’ in France: Sarkozy
Cyprus: Former Russian MP Charged With Triple Murder
Cyprus: EU Info Point to Serve Turkish Cypriots
EU Asks Horse Owners to Pledge Not to Eat Their Animals
Germany: Censorsula Can’t Stop Child Porn
Ireland: What Did We Expect When We Chose to Pay for a Madrasah?
Italy: Kercher Murder: Knox’s Mom on Stand
Italy: Gondoliers Face 173 Years in Jail
Man Involved in Achille Lauro Hijacking Dies
Mixed Marriages Increasing in Italy
Polish City Ravaged by Nazis to Cut Hitler’s Tree
Pope: Refugees Must be Welcomed Despite Problems
Swedish Cops Dump Toilets to Save Money
The Curious Case of the $134.5 Billion Briefcase
The Eurosceptics Are Just as Phoney as President Blair
UK: ‘Suicide Bomb Plot’ Schoolboy Learned About Explosives at 12 ‘To Feel Cool’
UK: BNP Teacher Ban ‘Is Considered’
UK: Conservative MEPs Form New Group
UK: Europe and a Squalid Blair, Cameron Pact That Could Tear the Tories Apart Again
UK: The Shocking Moment Police Officer Grabs Female Climate Change Protester by the Throat
UK: Tories Head New Rightwing Fringe Group in Europe
 
Balkans
Serbia: Two Thirds of Citizens Support EU Integration
 
North Africa
Muslim Mob Attacks Church and Loots Christian Homes in Egypt
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Carter Helping Hamas Open Talks With White House
Dead Sea Peril: Sinkholes Swallow Up the Unwary
 
Middle East
Abusing EU Bid for Political Means Will Benefit Nobody
Analysis: Most Arabs Won’t Miss Iran’s Ayatollahs if They Fall
Andrew Bostom: Perpetuating Iran’s Islamic Culture of Hate
Bahrain Closes Paper in Iran Row
Britain Evacuating Families of Staff in Iran
Clare Lopez: Supporters of ‘Dialogue’ With the Iranian Mullahs Help Keep the US From ‘Meddling’ on Behalf of Freedom
EU Embassies Wary of Hosting Iranian Protesters
Gaza: Reconstruction; Turkish NGO Asks for Financial Support
Iran Bans Prayers for ‘Angel of Freedom’ Neda Agha Soltan
Iran Expert Afshin Molavi
Iran’s Guardian Council Admits to Election Irregularities
Iran’s Twitter Revolution
Iran: The Internal Balance of Power
Iran: Italy ‘Would Open Embassy’
Italy: No Response From Iran to G-8 Invitation
Potential for Apocalypse: Is War Between Iran and Israel Inevitable?
Report: Assad Wants Men Behind Attack on Israeli Embassy Free
Spiegel Interview With Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu
The Iranian Leadership ‘Has Lost Its Legitimacy’
Turkey: Beats Wife, Sentenced to Public Apology
 
Caucasus
Attack on Russian Regional Leader
Leader of Russian Region Wounded in Suicide Attack
 
Far East
N. Korea Accuses Obama of Nuclear War Plot
Official: N. Korean Ship Carries Weapons to Myanmar
 
Latin America
11 Bodies From Air France Disaster Identified: Officials
 
Immigration
76 Migrants Sent Back to Libya
Calais on Riot Alert as Protesters Flood Town in Bid to End Border Controls
 
General
In Cairo President Obama Betrayed Jesus Christ When He Claimed to be a Christian
Jeff Jacoby: Orwell’s Time-Tested Warnings
SSRI Antidepressants Linked to Male Infertility
Swine Flu Tolls Leaps Past 52,000
The Plan for Socialist World Government
WHO: 51 More Swine Flu Deaths as Pandemic Spreads

Financial Crisis


Firestarter

Last week, I considered the possibility that Barack Obama would fail to reappoint Ben Bernanke as chairman of the Federal Reserve. Events last week, however, would seem to indicate that this would be a very surprising move. Despite various provocations Federal Reserve officials have given the White House and Congress, most notably their refusal to make public any information regarding the funds provided to them through the various bailout plans, the administration’s white paper actually proposes to expand the scope of the Federal Reserve’s legal authority.

In package of financial reforms announced on June 17, the Obama administration proposed a new role for the Federal Reserve described as the Systemic Risk Regulator. This would involve giving the private central bank responsibility to regulate large financial institutions that are not banks, which is ironic given the fact that it is the Federal Reserve, more than any other party, that creates systemic risk to the economy by its constant expansion of the money supply. This isn’t putting the proverbial fox in charge of the henhouse; it is more like taking a very fat fox with feathers in its mouth out of the henhouse and putting it in with the flightless birds at the zoo.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Global Economy to Sink Deep, World Bank Says

WASHINGTON — Despite optimistic reports from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank remains pessimistic on the global economy. In its latest report, the Washington-based international lender said the global economy will contract 2.9 percent this year. In contrast, the IMF is forecasting a global economic contraction of 1.3 percent this year.

The World Bank said the global recession this year will be deeper than it predicted in March and warned that a flight of capital from developing nations will swell the ranks of the poor and the unemployed.

The world economy will contract 2.9 percent, compared with a previous forecast of a 1.7 percent decline, the Washington-based lender said in a report Monday. Growth will be 2 percent next year, down from a 2.3 percent prediction, the bank said.

The bank, formed after World War II to fund health and development projects in poor countries, said that while a global recovery may begin this year, impoverished economies will lag behind rich nations in benefiting. The lender called for “bold” actions to hasten a rebound and said the prospects for securing aid for the poorest countries were “bleak.”

“The recovery is not going to be V-shaped,” said Alvin Liew, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore. “We may see slower consumer demand over a prolonged period.”

The bank is more pessimistic than its sister organization, the International Monetary Fund. The IMF, which is forecasting a global contraction of only 1.3 percent this year and growth of 2.4 percent in 2010, said June 19 that it plans to revise estimates “modestly upward.”

The lender’s view also contrasts with that of billionaire hedge fund manager George Soros, who on June 20 told Polish television that the worst of the global financial crisis “is behind us.” The MSCI Asia Pacific Index of stocks rose 1.3 percent as of 2:22 p.m. Monday in Tokyo, led by BHP Billiton and China Mobile.

US, Japan forecasts

The World Bank cut its forecast for the U.S. this year, calling for a 3 percent drop in the world’s biggest economy, after predicting a 2..4 percent contraction in March.

Japan’s gross domestic product will shrink 6.8 percent, more than the previous prediction of a 5.3 percent decline, the lender said. The euro area’s economy may shrink 4.5 percent, compared with the previous estimate of a 2.7 percent contraction.

Global trade may drop by 9.7 percent, compared with a March forecast of a 6.1 percent decline.

“Unemployment is on the rise, and poverty is set to increase in developing economies, bringing with it a substantial deterioration in conditions for the world’s poor,” the World Bank said. While the world is set to return to growth in the second half of 2009, a recovery will be subdued, the report said.

Reduced capital inflows from exports, remittances and foreign direct investment means “increasingly grave economic prospects” for developing nations, the lender said. After peaking at $1.2 trillion in 2007, inflows this year may fall to $363 billion, it said.

Reduced aid from advanced economies because of the economic crisis will also likely weigh on their finances, the bank said.

Economic growth in the developing world will be 1.2 percent, the World Bank said, scaling its outlook back from 2.1 percent. Developing nations in eastern Europe and Central Asia will be some of the hardest hit, the revised forecasts show. The region’s economy is likely to shrink 4.7 percent this year, down from the 2 percent decline projected in March.

China, which is the biggest of the developing economies, will keep pumping money into its financial system during this “critical” phase of its recovery, Premier Wen Jiabao said in a statement on the government’s Web site Sunday.

Efforts to revive economies through stimulus spending should be coordinated, the bank said.

“Any country that acts alone — even the United States — may reasonably fear that increases in government debt will cause investors to lose confidence in its fiscal sustainability and so withdraw financing,” the report said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


4 Dead After Metro Train Derailment, Collision

WASHINGTON — A Metro train smashed into the back of another at the height of the Monday evening rush hour, killing at least four people and injuring scores of others as cars from the trailing train jackknifed into the air and fell atop the first.

One of the fatalities was a female train operator, Metro officials say. The woman’s name has not been released.

D.C. Fire Chief Dennis Rubin says 70 people are injured. Of those, two people have life-threatening injuries and 50 are classified as “walking wounded” injuries.

D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier says people who believe their loved ones were on the train can call 202-727-9099.

“It looks to be the worst Metro accident in D.C. history,” D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty says.

Metro General Manager John Catoe says it appears one of the trains was stopped on the tracks awaiting permission to clear the station when another train came up behind it and slammed into the back of the train.

“I give my deepest condolences to the families of those who lost their lives today,” Catoe says.

Washington Hospital Center is treating seven of the injured people, WTOP’s Kate Ryan reports.

The National Transportation Safety Board is now leading the investigation.

[Return to headlines]



Bricks Without Straw

As U.S. government authorities debate “cap-and-trade,” a gigantic new tax and rationing burden with which they plan to further hobble American coal, oil, and natural gas technology, consider for a moment the qualifications and accomplishments of the lawyers, bureaucrats, and now community organizers who have gradually displaced, as energy “decision makers,” the engineers and industrialists who built America’s energy industries.

Under the guidance of these worthies over the past several decades, a vast system of taxation, regulation, and government-sponsored litigation has been imposed upon our energy industries.

Cap-and-trade is just more of the same. Much more! These policies have created a business climate in the United States that is unfavorable for the production of energy, so most new energy production has been located abroad. Americans, therefore, now import 30% of their energy — a luxury they can no longer afford.

How much do we import? While most eyes glaze over in discussions of “gigawatts” and “zillions” of dollars, many have seen or read about Hoover dam — the great engineering miracle that harvests energy from the Colorado River. Hoover dam is still considered so important that it is now hidden behind “homeland security” precautions so rigorous that public photographs of the dam are forbidden, lest terrorists plot its destruction.

Today, the three-reactor Palo Verde nuclear power station near Phoenix, Arizona produces six times the electrical energy of Hoover Dam — electricity that powers Los Angeles. Palo Verde was supposed to have ten reactors, but the other seven were stopped by anti-nuclear propaganda in the 1970s and 1980s. Actual replacement cost of the three-reactor Palo Verde power station in 2009 — leaving out the extra costs imposed by government — is about $6 billion. So, the capital cost of nuclear equipment to replace the electrical output of Hoover Dam is about $1 billion. American energy imports currently cost about $1 billion per day.

Every day — every 24 hours — the energy policies imposed by Washington destroy an amount of capital that could build the electrical generating capacity of one complete Hoover Dam.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Child Molester’s Dream Come True

Two recent government actions, one legislative and one judicial, have called into question our society’s willingness to protect its youngest and most vulnerable members.

A hate crimes bill (H.R. 1913 and S. 909), dubbed by critics the “Pedophile Protection Act,” has already passed the House and is up for vote in the Senate. The bill earned its unofficial name when Democrats rejected an amendment to exclude pedophiles from legal protection. No doubt this legislation serves as a precursor to onerous hate speech legislation in the future.

On the judicial front, the Georgia Supreme Court ruled in a divorce case that two minor children must be forced to mingle against their will with their homosexual father’s “gay” and lesbian friends during visitation. Claiming the children of Eric and Sandy Mongerson will not suffer harm from this contact, Justice Robert Benham overturned an earlier lower court ruling protecting the children from exposure to “overnight company with a member of the opposite sex, or with any person deemed to be a paramour, unrelated by blood or marriage, in the presence of a child.”

Beth Littrell, an attorney for the pro-homosexual group Lambda Legal, said, “The court has done the right thing today by focusing on the needs of the children instead of perpetuating stigma on the basis of sexual orientation.”

An AP report said the mother’s attorney, Lance McMillian, “claimed the father subjected the children to an ‘array of violent, sexual, abusive and wholly inappropriate conduct’ during a trip to Arkansas and contended the father was in a series of affairs with other men while still married.”

[…]

In a recent correspondence, Stefanowicz shared her own experiences and her concerns drawn from discussions with other adults who were raised in homosexual households. The following aspects typify these children’s experiences:

* Associating with the parent’s GLBT community creates painful gender identity confusion and prevents healthy development.

* Children are “silenced and forced to tolerate hearing speech, witnessing sexual behaviors, and going places they find offensive.”

* Children are saddled with “stress, depression, anxiety, suicidal tendencies, anger, sexuality confusion, and tremendous insecurity.”

* During Stefanowicz’s childhood, her father “traveled all over North America and to the Islands, finding ample cruising partners and locations.” She said it was not safe “to bring my good-looking boyfriends” home because they could be propositioned by her father to have threesome sex with another homosexual adult.

* A number of children feel sexually abused though association with the sights of the GLBT subculture and “witnessing their parent in sexual situations and multiple relationships.” She said it’s common for parents to take children to gay pride events sporting offensive sexual material, discussion and behavior.

* Stefanowicz says, “Some adult children express they have been sexually abused by a parent or partner(s) who have attempted to recruit them either directly or by innuendo and by example. Pedophilia is a big part of the subcultures.” Sadly, she recounts her father being sexually involved with an underage boy who later committed suicide.

* Stefanowicz has heard personal accounts from children who have contacted her. “They have been exposed to hepatitis and other pathogens because of living in close association with sexually active parents and partners. When young, dependent children share snacks, utensils, drinking glasses, use bathroom facilities and do not wash hands, touch washcloths … toothbrushes … children are at risk of becoming infected.” She recounts picking up “feces-covered sheets” after one of her father’s encounters and is concerned that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention acknowledges the high level of disease risk associated with GLBT behaviors, yet fails to discuss infection transmission risk to children in their care.

* Stefanowicz sees firsthand the effect of hate crime laws in Canada. Predicting what is ahead for America should such legislation pass, she says, “It is deeply saddening to see how many churchgoers/conservatives/Republicans are in favor of hate crime (laws). Americans have no idea what hate crime really is all about.”

* Her concerns are backed up by statistics. A 2007 Gallup poll indicated a majority of Americans (68 percent) support expanding hate crimes laws. According to USA Today, “Majorities of frequent churchgoers (62 percent), conservatives (57 percent), and Republicans (60 percent) also were in favor of the legislation.”

Continuing, Stefanowicz says, “Unfortunately, charities that speak against homosexuality will lose their charitable status and be fined. Media will also get shut down by the FCC if anything negative is said about homosexuality, and mention is made of the health risks, research on causes, and possibility of people leaving the lifestyle. “Gay” activists will go back into web archives and make complaints about offensive articles and links. Pastors will also be sued and church denominations could lose their tax exempt status.”

Stefanowicz sees a dire future if hate crime laws are strengthened, stating, “With hate crime federally implemented, soon Human Rights Commissions — the likes of what we have in Canada — will hold tribunals in every state, prosecuting those who speak against the sin of homosexuality or mention any health dangers associated with homosexuality. … In Canada, it is a 100% conviction rate.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Drenched in Blood of Slavery

The U.S. Senate voted unanimously last week to adopt a resolution apologizing for slavery.

Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, lead sponsor of the resolution, said, “You wonder why we didn’t do it 100 years ago. It is important to have a collective response to a collective injustice.”

Only after decades of public education ignoring and distorting U.S. history can such a huge lie be said with a straight face.

Senator, you didn’t do it 100 years ago because 100 years ago you Democrats were enforcing Jim Crow segregation laws, poll taxes to keep blacks from voting, and riding around in sheets and pointy hats just in case blacks didn’t get the message.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Every “Law” Obama Signs Brings US Closer to…

Removing this usurper from office. How, you ask?

Those not walking around in a self induced coma are aware of the 38 lawsuits regarding Barack Hussein Obama aka Barry Soetoro aka Barry Obama aka Barack Dunham aka Barry Dunham, over his false citizenship claims. Double digit millions of Americans now know the legal facts or at least are questioning why Obama/Soetoro won’t release his long form birth certificate. Of course, that isn’t the core issue, but millions of us know there is something wrong or Obama/Soetoro would have released it by now, as well as his college transcripts as have other candidates and presidents.

Despite the bald faced lies by the compromised media, not a single case to date has been heard on merit or legal arguments..

Obama recently crowed to an audience of his cult followers and fellow Marxists:

“Why bother hanging out with celebrities when I can spend time with the people who made me one?” Obama asked the crowd of black tie journalists and media personalities gathered at the Washington Convention Center. “I know where my bread is buttered.” And: “I have to admit though, it wasn’t easy coming up with fresh material for this dinner,” Obama said. “A few nights ago, I was up tossing and turning trying to figure out exactly what to say. Finally, when I couldn’t get back to sleep, I rolled over and asked Brian Williams what he thought.”

Obama/Soetoro thinks that’s funny. It is the compromised media that helped “elect” this usurper and continues the black out regarding his real citizenship status. All these cable network anchors and reporters for the MSM are fake reporters and journalists. They have shamed their profession, and as Joseph Pulitzer said, “A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will produce in time a people as base as itself.”

[…]

This usurper president is by far and and away the most aggressive destroyer ever to sit in the White House. A devout Marxist, Obama/Soetoro (with the blessing of his co conspirators in Congress) is ripping this country apart, shredding what’s left of the Constitution, destroying the free market, and in his narcissistic arrogance, thinks he can get away with it.

Each time this usurper signs another piece of unconstitutional legislation passed by a corrupt body of law breakers (Congress), we get closer to forcing the issue of his dual citizenship.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: Missile Defense Misjudgment

What on earth are they thinking? The Obama administration and its Democratic allies on Capitol Hill are significantly reducing America’s missile defense programs at the very moment when the need for such systems is becoming ever more palpable. It is hard to believe — especially in the wake of the President’s much-ridiculed decision to close Guantanamo Bay without a better plan for safely incarcerating its dangerous detainees — that either the Chief Executive or legislators really want to impale themselves on another national security decision that defies common sense.

The issue will be joined this week when the House of Representatives debates a GOP-sponsored amendment to the defense authorization bill that would restore funding for anti-missile systems cut or terminated by Team Obama and the majority on the House Armed Services Committee. The backdrop will be reported preparations by North Korea to launch a ballistic missile in the direction of Hawaii, possibly on the Fourth of July…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



From Bias to Adoration: The Absurd Reporting of Political News

The facts don’t lie; almost all programming conceived and controlled by the elites of network programming contains a blatant liberal and pro-big-government bias.

But the attacks on Palin go beyond bias and are a clear attempt to destroy her because as a beautiful, well-spoken, conservative female, she is threatening to the liberal machine that runs America.

As John Ziegler in his excellent documentary “Media Malpractice” has demonstrated, during the 2008 election the press moved from liberal bias to advocacy. In the movie, Ziegler demolishes Letterman’s employer, CBS, for their earlier mistreatment of Palin.

But CBS is not alone in the 2008 distortion game. While The New York Times published a highly critical report alleging that John McCain had an affair with a lobbyist and questioned whether he was eligible to be president because he was born on a military base, they ignored questions about Obama’s eligibility and his extreme inexperience.

Rather than talk about the issues, the media were busy ogling a shirtless Obama and elevating him as the world’s newest celebrity. Chris Matthews even reported that Obama gave him a tingly feeling in his leg, and he stated it was his job to make the Obama presidency a success.

The media have only gotten worse since the election. In recent weeks, Obama made the claim that his stimulus bill has “created or saved” over 150,000 jobs and will do the same for roughly 600,000 jobs this summer. This claim is completely fabricated; even the director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics admitted they could not prove how many jobs they have created and saved. Would President Bush have been allowed to con these same journalists by fabricating a story to back up his economic proposals?

The news media have ceased reporting the news; instead they focus on celebrity worship of Obama.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



FTC Plans to Monitor Blogs for Claims, Payments

Savvy consumers often go online for independent consumer reviews of products and services, scouring through comments from everyday Joes and Janes to help them find a gem or shun a lemon.

What some fail to realize, though, is that such reviews can be tainted: Many bloggers have accepted perks such as free laptops, trips to Europe, $500 gift cards or even thousands of dollars for a 200-word post. Bloggers vary in how they disclose such freebies, if they do so at all.

The practice has grown to the degree that the Federal Trade Commission is paying attention. New guidelines, expected to be approved late this summer with possible modifications, would clarify that the agency can go after bloggers — as well as the companies that compensate them — for any false claims or failure to disclose conflicts of interest.

It would be the first time the FTC tries to patrol systematically what bloggers say and do online. The common practice of posting a graphical ad or a link to an online retailer — and getting commissions for any sales from it — would be enough to trigger oversight.

“If you walk into a department store, you know the (sales) clerk is a clerk,” said Rich Cleland, assistant director in the FTC’s division of advertising practices. “Online, if you think that somebody is providing you with independent advice and … they have an economic motive for what they’re saying, that’s information a consumer should know.”

The guidelines also would bring uniformity to a community that has shunned that.

As blogging rises in importance and sophistication, it has taken on characteristics of community journalism — but without consensus on the types of ethical practices typically found in traditional media.

Journalists who work for newspapers and broadcasters are held accountable by their employers, and they generally cannot receive payments from marketers and must return free products after they finish reviewing them.

The blogosphere is quite different.

“Rules are set by the individuals who create the blog,” said Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet and American Life Project. “Some people will accept payments and free gifts, and some people won’t. There’s no established norm yet.”

Bloggers complain that with FTC oversight, they’d be too worried about innocent posts getting them in trouble, and they say they might simply quit or post less frequently.

Between ads on her five blogs and payments from advertisers who want her to review products, Rebecca Empey makes as much as $800 a month, paying the grocery bill for a family of six. She also has received a bird feeder, toys, books and other free goods.

Now the 41-year-old mother of four in New Hartford, N.Y., worries that even a casual mention of an all-natural cold remedy she bought herself would trigger an FTC probe.

“This helped us. This made us feel great. Will I be sued because I didn’t hire a scientist to do research?” Empey said.

Empey, whose blogs include New York Traveler and Freaky Frugalite, said she discloses compensation arrangements on a page on her blogs or through a “support my sponsor” logo. She said most of her readers understand that she sometimes gets compensated.

By contrast, a mommy blogger on Double Bugs praised Skinny Cow low-fat ice cream sandwiches and thanked a Web site called Mom Central for the chance to try them. But there’s no clue that Nestle SA’s Skinny Cow division was giving bloggers coupons for free products.

Some bloggers believe more uniform disclosure and practices would help instill trust and make advertisers more comfortable working with bloggers. To them, the question becomes whether the FTC should be the one crafting standards.

“It would always be better for bloggers to self-police,” said Robert Cox, president of Media Bloggers Association in New Rochelle, N.Y. “We have laws on the books. They apply to everybody, not just people who write blogs..”

Yuli Ziv, who writes a fashion blog from New York, is working on one such effort at self-regulation, helping craft an ethics policy for about 15 Web sites as part of the Style Coalition started in January to help bloggers become more professional.

“It’s been an issue, regardless of the FTC,” she said. “It’s about trust.”

Existing FTC rules already ban deceptive and unfair business practices.. The proposed guidelines aim to clarify the law and for the first time specifically include bloggers, defined loosely as anyone writing a personal journal online.

“It’s sort of a recognition that word-of-mouth marketing in whatever form, whether electronic or not, is a significant part of the marketing strategy of modern companies,” Cleland said. “Because it’s new, I think it is imperative that we provide some kind of guidance.”

If the guidelines are approved, bloggers would have to back up claims and disclose if they’re being compensated — the FTC doesn’t currently plan to specify how. The FTC could order violators to stop and pay restitution to customers, and it could ask the Justice Department to sue for civil penalties.

Any type of blog could be scrutinized, not just ones that specialize in reviews.

So parents keeping blogs to update family members on their child’s first steps technically would fall under the FTC guidelines, though they likely would have little to worry about unless they accept payments or free products and write about them.

But they would need to think twice if, for instance, they praise parenting books they’ve just read and include links to buy them at a retailer like Amazon.com Inc.

That’s because the guidelines also would cover the broader and common practice of affiliate marketing, in which bloggers and other sites get a commission when someone clicks on a link that leads to a purchase at a retailer. In such cases, merchants also would be responsible for actions by their sales agents — including a network of bloggers.

Amazon declined to comment.

Cleland said the FTC would likely focus on repeated offenses that continue after a warning to stop.

Still, the agency has a big job ahead as new communications channels continually emerge. Advertisers now are paying some Twitter users to post short items through the increasingly popular messaging service. The FTC says the guidelines would cover such arrangements, regardless of the medium.

Even before the FTC commissioners vote on the final guidelines this summer, some in the blogging world have taken pre-emptive measures.

In May, IZEA, an Orlando, Fla.-based firm that matches advertisers with 265,000 bloggers, began sending reports to advertisers on whether hired bloggers are disclosing compensation arrangements, as IZEA requires. Such bloggers are paid as much as $3,000 for a 200-word post.

Over the holidays, IZEA ran a campaign in which bloggers who don’t normally shop at Sears Holdings Corp.’s Kmart stores were given $500 gift cards and encouraged to write about their experiences in the stores. To reduce the chance of a bad review, the retailer said it avoided bloggers who previously made negative remarks about the company.

Meanwhile, a blogger on TravelingMom was whisked away on a free Disney cruise in January. She stayed in an ocean-view stateroom, where she was greeted by Champagne on ice and a plate of cheese and fruit. Later in the trip, she and other bloggers basked in the sun on Castaway Cay, Disney’s private island.

“I’ve been on cruises before, but never like this one. The Disney Wonder (cruise ship) is … well … wondrous,” she gushed on her blog.

She did disclose the free trip.

Mandatory disclosures could change how reviews are perceived online because many Internet users might never imagine that bloggers get compensation.

“I don’t think, for the average reader of a blog, it immediately comes to mind that they actually have a relationship with the company,” said Sam Bayard, a fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society. “You think about (blogs) as personal, informal, off the cuff and coming from the heart — unfiltered, uncensored and unplanned.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Glenn Beck: The Letter

GLENN: I got a letter from a woman in Arizona. She writes an open letter to our nation’s leadership:

I’m a home grown American citizen, 53, registered Democrat all my life. Before the last presidential election I registered as a Republican because I no longer felt the Democratic Party represents my views or works to pursue issues important to me. Now I no longer feel the Republican Party represents my views or works to pursue issues important to me. The fact is I no longer feel any political party or representative in Washington represents my views or works to pursue the issues important to me. There must be someone. Please tell me who you are. Please stand up and tell me that you are there and that you’re willing to fight for our Constitution as it was written. Please stand up now. You might ask yourself what my views and issues are that I would horribly feel so disenfranchised by both major political parties. What kind of nut job am I? Will you please tell me?

Well, these are briefly my views and issues for which I seek representation:

One, illegal immigration. I want you to stop coddling illegal immigrants and secure our borders. Close the underground tunnels. Stop the violence and the trafficking in drugs and people. No amnesty, not again. Been there, done that, no resolution. P.S., I’m not a racist. This isn’t to be confused with legal immigration.

Two, the TARP bill, I want it repealed and I want no further funding supplied to it. We told you no, but you did it anyway. I want the remaining unfunded 95% repealed. Freeze, repeal.

Three: Czars, I want the circumvention of our checks and balances stopped immediately. Fire the czars. No more czars. Government officials answer to the process, not to the president. Stop trampling on our Constitution and honor it.

Four, cap and trade. The debate on global warming is not over. There is more to say.

Five, universal healthcare. I will not be rushed into another expensive decision. Don’t you dare try to pass this in the middle of the night and then go on break. Slow down!

Six, growing government control. I want states rights and sovereignty fully restored. I want less government in my life, not more. Shrink it down. Mind your own business. You have enough to take care of with your real obligations. Why don’t you start there.

Seven, ACORN. I do not want ACORN and its affiliates in charge of our 2010 census. I want them investigated. I also do not want mandatory escrow fees contributed to them every time on every real estate deal that closes. Stop the funding to ACORN and its affiliates pending impartial audits and investigations. I do not trust them with taking the census over with our taxpayer money. I don’t trust them with our taxpayer money. Face up to the allegations against them and get it resolved before taxpayers get any more involved with them. If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, hello. Stop protecting your political buddies. You work for us, the people. Investigate.

Eight, redistribution of wealth. No, no, no. I work for my money. It is mine. I have always worked for people with more money than I have because they gave me jobs. That is the only redistribution of wealth that I will support. I never got a job from a poor person. Why do you want me to hate my employers? Why — what do you have against shareholders making a profit?

Nine, charitable contributions. Although I never got a job from a poor person, I have helped many in need. Charity belongs in our local communities, where we know our needs best and can use our local talent and our local resources. Butt out, please. We want to do it ourselves.

Ten, corporate bailouts. Knock it off. Sink or swim like the rest of us. If there are hard times ahead, we’ll be better off just getting into it and letting the strong survive. Quick and painful. Have you ever ripped off a Band-Aid? We will pull together. Great things happen in America under great hardship. Give us the chance to innovate. We cannot disappoint you more than you have disappointed us.

Eleven, transparency and accountability. How about it? No, really, how about it? Let’s have it. Let’s say we give the buzzwords a rest and have some straight honest talk. Please try — please stop manipulating and trying to appease me with clever wording. I am not the idiot you obviously take me for. Stop sneaking around and meeting in back rooms making deals with your friends. It will only be a prelude to your criminal investigation. Stop hiding things from me.

Twelve, unprecedented quick spending. Stop it now.

Take a breath. Listen to the people. Let’s just slow down and get some input from some nonpoliticians on the subject. Stop making everything an emergency. Stop speed reading our bills into law. I am not an activist. I am not a community organizer. Nor am I a terrorist, a militant or a violent person. I am a parent and a grandparent. I work. I’m busy. I’m busy. I am busy, and I am tired. I thought we elected competent people to take care of the business of government so that we could work, raise our families, pay our bills, have a little recreation, complain about taxes, endure our hardships, pursue our personal goals, cut our lawn, wash our cars on the weekends and be responsible contributing members of society and teach our children to be the same all while living in the home of the free and land of the brave.

I entrusted you with upholding the Constitution. I believed in the checks and balances to keep from getting far off course. What happened? You are very far off course. Do you really think I find humor in the hiring of a speed reader to unintelligently ramble all through a bill that you signed into law without knowing what it contained? I do not. It is a mockery of the responsibility I have entrusted to you. It is a slap in the face. I am not laughing at your arrogance. Why is it that I feel as if you would not trust me to make a single decision about my own life and how I would live it but you should expect that I should trust you with the debt that you have laid on all of us and our children. We did not want the TARP bill. We said no. We would repeal it if we could. I am sure that we still cannot. There is such urgency and recklessness in all of the recent spending.

From my perspective, it seems that all of you have gone insane. I also know that I am far from alone in these feelings. Do you honestly feel that your current pursuits have merit to patriotic Americans? We want it to stop. We want to put the brakes on everything that is being rushed by us and forced upon us. We want our voice back. You have forced us to put our lives on hold to straighten out the mess that you are making. We will have to give up our vacations, our time spent with our children, any relaxation time we may have had and money we cannot afford to spend on you to bring our concerns to Washington. Our president often knows all the right buzzword is unsustainable. Well, no kidding. How many tens of thousands of dollars did the focus group cost to come up with that word? We don’t want your overpriced words. Stop treating us like we’re morons.

We want all of you to stop focusing on your reelection and do the job we want done, not the job you want done or the job your party wants done. You work for us and at this rate I guarantee you not for long because we are coming. We will be heard and we will be represented. You think we’re so busy with our lives that we will never come for you? We are the formerly silent majority, all of us who quietly work , pay taxes, obey the law, vote, save money, keep our noses to the grindstone and we are now looking up at you. You have awakened us, the patriotic spirit so strong and so powerful that it had been sleeping too long. You have pushed us too far. Our numbers are great. They may surprise you. For every one of us who will be there, there will be hundreds more that could not come. Unlike you, we have their trust. We will represent them honestly, rest assured. They will be at the polls on voting day to usher you out of office. We have cancelled vacations. We will use our last few dollars saved. We will find the representation among us and a grassroots campaign will flourish. We didn’t ask for this fight. But the gloves are coming off. We do not come in violence, but we are angry. You will represent us or you will be replaced with someone who will. There are candidates among us when hewill rise like a Phoenix from the ashes that you have made of our constitution.

Democrat, Republican, independent, libertarian. Understand this. We don’t care. Political parties are meaningless to us. Patriotic Americans are willing to do right by us and our Constitution and that is all that matters to us now. We are going to fire all of you who abuse power and seek more. It is not your power. It is ours and we want it back. We entrusted you with it and you abused it. You are dishonorable. You are dishonest. As Americans we are ashamed of you. You have brought shame to us. If you are not representing the wants and needs of your constituency loudly and consistently, in spite of the objections of your party, you will be fired. Did you hear? We no longer care about your political parties. You need to be loyal to us, not to them. Because we will get you fired and they will not save you. If you do or can represent me, my issues, my views, please stand up. Make your identity known. You need to make some noise about it. Speak up. I need to know who you are. If you do not speak up, you will be herded out with the rest of the sheep and we will replace the whole damn congress if need be one by one. We are coming. Are we coming for you? Who do you represent? What do you represent? Listen. Because we are coming. We the people are coming.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



High Court Rules Narrowly in Voting Rights Case

WASHINGTON — The Voting Rights Act, the government’s chief weapon against racial discrimination at polling places since the 1960s, survived a Supreme Court challenge Monday in a ruling that nevertheless warned of serious constitutional questions posed by part of the law.

Major civil rights groups and other defenders of the landmark law breathed a sigh of relief when the court ruled narrowly in favor of a small Texas governing authority while sidestepping the larger constitutional issue.

After argument in late April, it appeared the court’s conservatives could have a majority to strike down part of the law as unnecessary in an era marked by the election of the first African-American president.

But with only one justice in dissent, the court avoided the major questions raised over the section of the voting law that requires all or parts of 16 states — mainly in the South and with a history of discrimination in voting — to get Justice Department approval before making changes in the way elections are conducted.

The court said that the Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No.. 1 in Austin, Texas, could apply to opt out of the advance approval requirement, reversing a lower federal court that ruled it could not. The district appears to meet the requirements to bail out, although the high court did not pass judgment Monday on that point.

Five months after Barack Obama became president, Chief Justice John Roberts said the justices decided not to determine whether dramatic civil rights gains means the advance approval requirement is no longer necessary. That larger issue, Roberts said, “is a difficult constitutional question we do not answer today.”

Attorney General Eric Holder called the decision a victory for voting rights and said the court “ensured that this law will continue to protect free and fair access to the voting booth.”

Debo Adegbile, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund lawyer who argued for the preservation of the law at the high court, said, “The fact is, the case was filed to tear the heart out of the preclearance provision of the Voting Rights Act and that effort failed today.”

But critics of the law said the court made clear that it may not take such a restrained approach the next time a voting rights challenge comes it way.

“It leaves the courts wide open to another challenge. If someone files a new lawsuit, I think there’s a very good chance that down the line they might find it unconstitutional,” said Hans von Spakovsky, a legal scholar at the conservative-oriented Heritage Foundation.

Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga., one of only 33 lawmakers who opposed renewal of the law in 2006, said, “I’m disappointed that the justices laid out the case for why the law is unconstitutional and then stopped short of tossing it. I do feel optimistic, however, that the court’s dim view … means the law will not survive for the full length of its 25-year renewal.”

The court’s avoidance of the constitutional question explains the consensus among justices in the case rendered Monday, where they otherwise likely would have split along conservative-liberal lines.

Justice Clarence Thomas, alone among his colleagues, said he would have resolved the case and held that the provision, known as Section 5, is unconstitutional. “The violence, intimidation and subterfuge that led Congress to pass Section 5 and this court to uphold it no longer remains,” Thomas said.

Roberts himself noted that blacks and whites now register and turn out to vote in similar numbers and that “blatantly discriminatory evasions of federal decrees are rare.”

He attributed a significant share of the progress to the law itself. “Past success alone, however, is not adequate justification to retain the preclearance requirement,” Roberts said.

Still, the court did not decide that question in what Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg recently described as “perhaps the most important case of the term.”

The Voting Rights Act, first enacted in 1965, opened the polls to millions of black Americans. In 2006, the Republican-controlled Congress overwhelmingly renewed the part of the law which provided for the advance approval requirement for 25 years and President George W. Bush signed it.

The Austin utility district, backed by a conservative group opposed to the law, brought the court challenge. It said that either the district should be allowed to opt out or the entire provision should be declared unconstitutional.

Based on the tone of the questions when the case was argued in late April, many civil rights and election law experts predicted the Roberts-led court would indeed strike the measure down.

The court ruled instead on a provision of the law that allows a state or local government to seek to be free of the advance approval requirement.

The three-judge court in Washington, D.C., that originally decided the case said the utility district did not qualify as a local government that is eligible to bail out. The high court reversed that ruling Monday, saying “all political subdivisions” are eligible to file a bailout suit.

The Austin utility district is in the heart of Canyon Creek, an affluent suburb of about 3,500 residents that didn’t break ground on its first house until the 1980s. About 80 percent of residents in Canyon Creek are white, according to the 2000 census.

As recently as 2002, voters in Canyon Creek used a neighbor’s garage to cast their ballot in their utility board elections. The board wanted to change the polling location to a school, but first had to seek federal clearance.

The community got it, but Canyon Creek’s board felt that needing approval from Washington was an unnecessary obstacle in a tiny neighborhood with no history of minority voter discrimination.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Islamic Society Reaches Out to Other Faiths

D.C. convention to feature popular pastor; area group hopes Obama will attend

The Plainfield-based Islamic Society of North America is holding out hope President Barack Obama might make an appearance at its convention this year in Washington, D.C., over the Fourth of July weekend.

But even if Obama doesn’t show, the nation’s largest Muslim organization already landed a high-profile guest: Saddleback Church pastor Rick Warren. Advertisement

He will join a panel discussion that is the main session of a four-day convention expected to attract 40,000 Muslims from across the country. Warren will be joined on the panel by Islamic Society President Ingrid Mattson and noted Muslim scholar Hamza Yusuf, among others.

“We are living in a pluralist country. It is critical for us to have positive relationships with people of other faiths,” said Sayyid Syeed, a longtime leader with the Islamic Society who focuses on building the organization’s interfaith ties. “(Warren) realizes that it is equally critical for him to work with people of other faiths.”

[…]

“ISNA is very interested in extending their connections with Protestant groups,” said Rafia Zakaria, an Indiana lawyer and associate editor at altmuslim.com, a Web site that looks at Muslim issues. “Having a figure as high profile as him gives them legitimacy to extend those kinds of alliances with church groups that have a significant amount of power in the United States.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy-USA: Berlusconi, With Obama It’ll be as it Was With Bush

(AGI) — Washington, 16 Jun. — We have a friend in the White House: with Barack, it’ll be just like it was with George Bush.

Silvio Berlusconi is in Washington for the first time since Obama came to office. Yesterday he had a meeting with the US president for almost two hours, skipping over the rules of protocol which had set a time limit of 1 hour for the meeting between the two delegations. The issues discussed included those announced the day before: G8, Afghanistan, the economic crisis, Iran, the Middle East, Guantanamo. And the commitments were largely confirmed. What was surprising was not the contents but rather the tone. Obama repeated the word “friend” a number of times in reference to Berlusconi: he did so for the first time when he welcomed Berlusconi to the West Wing, putting his arms affectionately around his shoulders. He repeated it during the press conference in the Oval Office, when he described the Italian PM as a “great friend” whose “leadership he values” and whose “advice he accepts”. “I like Berlusconi as a person and our two countries love each other.

The bonds that have always existed between the two countries have been strengthened and cooperation will continue”. Obama made no direct mention of Fiat but he underlined his satisfaction with the bilateral economic dossier that has been concluded between the two countries. He twice thanked Italy for its involvement in Afghanistan and for having accepted the proposal to receive three Guantanamo detainees in Italy.

Berlusconi reciprocated, explaining that nothing has changed in relations between Italy and the US after the change in administration in Washington and the end of the Bush era. “I am bound to an oath of recognition towards the US who brought peace back to my country after the Second World War. I am here to work with President Obama as I did with Clinton and with Bush”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Reading Miranda Rights to Terrorists is ‘Crazy’ and ‘Stupid, ‘ Say GOP Congressmen

The Justice Department confirmed last week that FBI agents in Afghanistan are reading Miranda warnings to suspected terrorists captured there, a practice that Republican congressmen this week branded as “crazy” and “stupid.”

[…]

The Obama administration’s decision to make this statement to terror suspects captured on the battlefield in a foreign country has sparked outrage among several Republicans in Congress who spoke with CNSNews.com. It also contradicts what President Barack Obama said in March, when he indicated that Miranda rights did not apply to terror suspects captured overseas.

[…]

Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), as first reported in The Weekly Standard, said he was recently in Afghanistan and personally witnessed FBI agents reading the Miranda warning to captured combatants.

“I was a little surprised to find it taking place when I showed up because we hadn’t been briefed on it, I didn’t know about it,” said Rogers. “We’re still trying to get to the bottom of it, but it is clearly a part of this new global justice initiative.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sherman Frederick: Why I Dumped Obama’s Party

Nope, I don’t think I could have picked a worse time to go Republican. However, because KXNT-AM radio’s Alan Stock revealed my party switch last week, I feel the need to explain.

First, I’m not trying to time anything. Enough was enough. Could stand no more. So, when it came time to renew my driver’s license on June 9, I also gave the Democratic Party the pink slip.

I pushed the DMV clerk the paperwork. She shoved it back and said I didn’t have to fill out that form if my address remained the same.

“No, I want to change party affiliation.”

“Oh,” she said. “Had enough of the president, have we?”

“Up to here. I quit.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Work Begins on World’s Deepest Underground Lab

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Far below the Black Hills of South Dakota, crews are building the world’s deepest underground science lab at a depth equivalent to more than six Empire State buildings — a place uniquely suited to scientists’ quest for mysterious particles known as dark matter.

Scientists, politicians and other officials gathered Monday for a groundbreaking of sorts at a lab 4,850 foot below the surface of an old gold mine that was once the site of Nobel Prize-winning physics research.

The site is ideal for experiments because its location is largely shielded from cosmic rays that could interfere with efforts to prove the existence of dark matter, which is thought to make up nearly a quarter of the mass of the universe.

The deepest reaches of the mine plunge to 8,000 feet below the surface.. Some early geology and hydrology experiments are already under way at 4,850 feet. Researchers also hope to build two deeper labs that are still awaiting funding from Congress.

“The fact that we’re going to be in the Davis Cavern just tickles us pink,” said Tom Shutt of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, referring to a portion of the mine named after scientist Ray Davis Jr., who used it in the 1960s to demonstrate the existence of particles called solar neutrinos.

Davis and a colleague named John Bahcall won a share of the 2002 Nobel Prize for physics for their work.

The old Homestake Gold Mine in a community called Lead (pronounced LEED) was shut down in 2001 after 125 years. Pumps that kept the mine dry were turned off years ago, so workers have been drying it out to prepare for the new research.

Before the labs are built, crews must also stabilize the tunnels and install new infrastructure. The lab at 4,850 feet is not much to look at yet.. A rusty orange film covers the walls, floors, ceilings and debris left behind by miners.

The first dark matter experiment will be the Large Underground Xenon detector experiment — or LUX — a project to detect weakly interacting particles that could give scientists greater insight into the Big Bang explosion believed to have formed the universe.

Shutt, along with Brown University’s Rick Gaitskell and nearly a dozen collaborators will work at the site to search for dark matter, which does not emit detectable light or radiation. But scientists say its presence can be inferred from gravitational effects on visible matter.

Scientists believe most of the dark matter in the universe contains no atoms and does not interact with ordinary matter through electromagnetic forces. They are trying to discover exactly what it is, how much exists and what effect it may have on the future of the universe.

Physicists have said that without dark matter, galaxies might never have formed. By learning more about dark matter, they hope to understand better whether the universe is expanding or contracting.

The research team will try to catch the ghostly particles in a 300-kilogram tank of liquid xenon, a cold substance that is three times heavier than water. If they tried to detect dark matter above ground, the highly sensitive detector would be bombarded by cosmic radiation.

Scientists hope to start construction on the two deepest labs by 2012 and open them by 2016. The projects are expected to cost $550 million.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


British Passports to be Given to a Record 220,000 Migrants This Year

The number of British passports given to migrants is set to hit a record 220,000 this year.

In the first three months of 2009, 54,615 citizenship applications were approved — up 57 per cent on the same period in 2008.

At that rate, the number receiving passports — and with them the right to full benefits — this year will smash the record of 164,540 set in 2007.

Last year the total was 129,310, and when Labour came to power in 1997, just 37,010 people were given citizenship.

It means approvals have rocketed by almost 500 per cent under the current Government.

[…]

The top five native countries of those gaining citizenship in the past two years have been India, Pakistan, Iraq, Somalia and Zimbabwe.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Burqas Are ‘Not Welcome’ in France: Sarkozy

French President says full-body veil is attack on dignity, and a sign of the “debasement” of women

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the Muslim burqa would not be welcome in France, calling the full-body religious gown a sign of the “debasement” of women.

In the first presidential address to parliament in 136 years, Mr. Sarkozy faced critics who fear the burqa issue could stigmatize France’s Muslims and said he supported banning the garment from being worn in public.

“In our country, we cannot accept that women be prisoners behind a screen, cut off from all social life, deprived of all identity,” Mr. Sarkozy said to extended applause at the Chateau of Versailles, southwest of Paris.

“The burqa is not a religious sign, it’s a sign of subservience, a sign of debasement — I want to say it solemnly,” he said. “It will not be welcome on the territory of the French Republic.”

Dozens of legislators have called for creating a commission to study a possible ban in France, where there is a small but growing trend of wearing the full-body garment despite a 2004 law forbidding it from being worn in public schools.

France has Western Europe’s largest Muslim population, an estimated 5 million people, and the 2004 law sparked fierce debate both at home and abroad.

Even the French government has been divided over the issue, with Immigration Minister Eric Besson saying a full ban would only “create tensions,” while junior minister for human rights Rama Yade said she was open to a ban if it was aimed at protecting women forced to wear the burqa.

The terms “burqa” and “niqab” often are used interchangeably in France. The former refers to a full-body covering worn largely in Afghanistan with only a mesh screen over the eyes, whereas the latter is a full-body veil, often in black, with slits for the eyes.

A leading French Muslim group, the French Council for the Muslim Religion, has warned against studying the burqa, saying it would “stigmatize” Muslims.

Mr. Sarkozy was due to host a state dinner Monday with Sheik Hamad Bin Jassem Al Thani of Qatar, where women wear Islamic head coverings in public — whether while shopping or driving cars.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Cyprus: Former Russian MP Charged With Triple Murder

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 19 — Russian police have charged 52-year-old former State Duma Deputy Mikhail Glushchenko with masterminding the triple murders of three Russian nationals in Peyia in 2004, daily Cyprus Mail reports. As the murders took place outside of Russia, Cyprus police said that an extradition request will be made so that the suspect can appear before a Cypriot court. Glushchenko was arrested at St Petersburg on Tuesday when he appeared at a local police station to pick up his renewed Russian passport. Authorities initially announced that Glusenko was being arrested on suspicion of involvement in a blackmail case, but later confirmed that he was charged with involvement in the murders of businessman Yury Zorin, translator Viktoria Tretyakova and fellow former LDPR Deputy Vyacheslav Shevchenko. The murders took place on March 24, 2004 at the villa in Peyias, where the three Russians lived. The violent crime in the quiet village took the nation by surprise. The bodies of the three victims were dismembered with an axe and were found wrapped in plastic bags in the two bedrooms and bathroom of the villa. Cypriot police at the time suspected that the Russian mafia was behind the murders, as they appeared to be the work of professionals. Glushchenko was an MP at the Russian Duma between 1995-1999 with the ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party headed by Vladimir Zhirinovsky. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Cyprus: EU Info Point to Serve Turkish Cypriots

(ANSAmed) — NICOSIA, JUNE 19 — The EU Info Point located at the northern part of Nicosia is opening its doors to the public. The Info Point project has a budget of EUR 1.3 mln, financed by the Financial Aid Programme and aims to bring the Turkish Cypriot community closer to the European Union (EU), through information on the European Union’s political and legal order, as well as its main policies and activities. There is special emphasis on the EU Aid Programme for the Turkish Cypriot community in addition to the activities carried out by the EC Representation. Visitors of the Info Point will be able to obtain up-to-date information on various aspects of the EU via books, brochures, CDs, documents, leaflets and other informative materials available, as well as having access to information on the web using four terminals located at the premises. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Asks Horse Owners to Pledge Not to Eat Their Animals

Horse owners will have to sign a pledge not to eat their animals under new EU legislation, it has been reported.

The rule, aimed at continental Europe, where two million horses are reportedly eaten every year, will still have to be signed in Britain.

The Horse Identification Regulations, which will come into force at the beginning of next month, is partly to stop vets’ drugs from entering human diets.

Anyone who refuses to sign up to the regulations could face prison or an unlimited fine.

Nigel Farage, leader of UKIP, said: “I’d like to be a fly on the wall when the Queen and Princess Anne are asked to sign a form saying they’re not going to eat their horses.

“Measures to stop the trade in horse flesh may be a good thing. But any common sense in Brussels is drowned by the sheer weight of ludicrouse suggestions.”

The new law has left British horse and stable owners perplexed.

Kate Gillanders, of Kindross, Pertshire, told The Sun “We don’t see our horses as cattle. The thought of them being eaten is utterly repulsive. Brussels is poking its nose in where it should not be.

“The EU knows nothing about me and cares even less. This nonsense is somebody else’s obsession.”

A European Commission spokesman said the Government had agreed to the directive.

“It someone thinks we don’t understand the British mentality, then neither does the UK Government,” the spokesman added.

The new regulations come into force on July 1. Horses born after this date, and those born before June 30 who have not been issued a horse passport, will also have a microchip implanted.

A spokesman for the Department for the Environment Food and Rural Affairs said: “Horse passports will clearly identify those horses which are not eligible for the food chain if they have been treated with substances which are potentially harmful to humans.

“By strengthening the current passport system we reduce the risk to human health, avoid the withdrawal of key veterinary medicines, and protect the horse meat trade in this country.”

Zebras and other “exotic equines” will also be subject to the legislation.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Germany: Censorsula Can’t Stop Child Porn

Let’s just get this out of the way upfront: I’m against child pornography. I’ve got two kids of my own and … well I don’t think I have to spell it out for you. Kiddie porn is bad, okay?

But authorising a spooky government agency to create a secret framework for blocking internet sites that politicians deem distasteful is a recipe for a dark future and a distraction for those that were actually fighting the good fight against child abuse.

Nonetheless, the German parliament on Thursday is expected to approve legislation that will allow the Bundeskriminalamt, or the country’s federal criminal police, to index and block alleged child pornography sites. Fair enough, we can all agree, those places are vile, as are the people that operate and visit them.

This legislation is the brainchild of Ursula von der Leyen, Germany’s conservative family minister and previously my favourite member of Chancellor Angie’s otherwise bumbling cabinet. She’s been rebranded Censorsula — Zensursula in German — by the web community despite her protestation she merely wants to protect the children. But then you have to wonder why she’s pushing legislation that sends Germany’s G-Men after websites rather than criminals.

Which serves as a handy transition to the first problem with this loopy legislation — the index will serve as a handy warning to kiddie porn peddlers that the government is on to them. It’s like a postcard informing them that their time is up. Only, it’s not — just their website’s time is up.

And to anyone who’s delved beyond the e-mail and HTML levels of the web, it’s apparent that the block will do little. Ever heard of newsgroups? IRC filesharing? How about USB sticks? Friends tell me these are the places you can get your favourite English-language TV shows, Lily Allen albums and viruses that attack bytes, not pigs and people.

But these superficial loopholes just show how little thought went into the thing. The reason I and 134,000 German internet users signed a digital government petition are against this thing is the door it opens: Once the architecture is in place — and the country’s internet service providers are complying — it won’t take much to expand the block.

I can hear the rumblings over on the right already: the status-quo crowd doesn’t believe Berlin would expand the ban. Oh really?

Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble has already tried this once. He asked the Justice Ministry to consider updating a law that allowed video cameras and automated toll stations on the autobahn designed for toll collecting to be used for crime-fighting — even though no one mentioned this during parliamentary debates over the toll system. The cameras are there, he said. It would be a shame to not allow them to reach their full potential.

And his Christian Democratic colleague Thomas Strobl already said he wanted to consider aiming the new law at violent video games too.

The concept of censoring the internet is nothing new — American corporations have floated the idea for years using the logic that if they provide it to you, they should have some say in what’s on it. And other countries are already doing it, all of them bastions of democracy such as China and North Korea.

So, you know, Germany will be in good company. Thanks a bunch, Censorsula.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Ireland: What Did We Expect When We Chose to Pay for a Madrasah?

Was anyone in the Department of Education even remotely surprised by the virtual failure of the Muslim school in Cabra to achieve even minimal standards of education?

It was effectively established as a madrasah, which would produce good little Muslims. That, I have no doubt, is what it has achieved. To be sure, they might not be well-educated little Muslims, and their career prospects are probably poor. But at least they are Muslims, the production of which was the intended function of the school.

Needless to say, no other country in Europe has allowed the creation of a separate Muslim educational system. That is Ireland’s melancholy contribution to the brainless heresy that is multiculturalism.

However, we are not alone in such cultural folly. In his truly wretched speech in Cairo on June 4, Barack Obama created a Muslim world which simply doesn’t exist, and never has. He accordingly reimagined history to credit Islam with the invention of the compass, of algebra, of pens and of printing. Sorry, Barack, old fellow, but the Chinese got to most of those first; and the greatest mathematic concept of all — the notion of zero, with a digit to represent it (a truly staggering intellectual advance), was the creation of Hindu civilisation.

But that’s what Western commentators always do when talking about the glories of Islam: they go back a thousand years or more and talk of Alhambra and how Islam cherished the great works of Ancient Greece, while Christian Europe had forgotten them. Blah blah blah. And President Obama indulged in another stereotype when he added western imperialism had denied “rights and opportunities to many Muslims”.

Hold on there. The first great truly global empire was the Islamic one, which spread from Arabia into Europe, North Africa and Europe in the century after Mohammed. It conquered by the sword, and ruled by the sword, and the Crusades were merely a logical European response to its ruthless imperial ambitions. And later, what would have happened to western civilisation if Don John had not been victorious at Lepanto? Or if Vienna in 1683 had fallen to the armies of the Caliph?

Islamic imperialism under the Moguls changed India: hence Pakistan today. Islamic slave traders ranged across the world, from west Cork to east Africa. It was Muslims who introduced the great slave bazaars, where western Europeans obtained the poor creatures to work in their Caribbean and American plantations. And the longest-lasting empire of them all in recent centuries was that of the Ottomans, whose writ ran from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean. I personally regret the destruction of that empire: I would rather Saudi Arabia were ruled from Istanbul, than by the urbane savages who now govern it. But let us not pretend that the Ottoman Empire was other than an empire, in which Christians were second-class citizens, or that Muslims were always the colonised, rather than what they actually often were: conquerors and empire-makers.

Obama fatuously boasted in Cairo that the US government had gone to court to defend the right of Muslim women to wear the hijab “and to punish those who would deny it” (his words). Well, for a US President to be proud of American legal measures to intensify gender-apartheid tells us how far down the road of cultural-appeasement the West has gone. And believe me, when the legal triumph of the hijab leads to the full facial veil — as it inevitably will, as part of the great Islamic imperial project — that legal victory is one that the US government will come to regret, and sooner or later, have to undo.

History aside, what is the Islamic world achieving today? The Islamic School at Cabra might be seen as a template for the triumphs of Greater Arabia. Not one of its universities is in the top 200 universities of the world. It has no great institutions of research. No branch of science or technology prospers in any Muslim country. No electronic or medical discoveries are ever made in a Muslim society. No Islamic country has its own indigenous aircraft factory or computer industry. The combined GDP of all Arab countries, once gas and oil are discounted, is the same as that of Finland.

More foreign-language books are translated into Spanish every year than have been translated into Arabic in the past 300 years.. No Muslim country is so successful that immigrants are queuing to get in, which is just as well, because no Muslim country is so tolerant that it welcomes even moderate numbers of non-Muslim immigrants.

These are basic truths, that are so simple and obvious that A) no one ever says them, and B) our vigilante thought-police will probably seek to imprison those who do say them.

But let Cabra, which of course is funded by the taxpayer, speak for itself. Over an hour every day is spent in rote-learning of Arabic and the Koran, and in ritual cleansing. That is perhaps one fifth of the available teaching time, so educational standards are bound to suffer.

But, at least the school is mass producing devout little Muslims, which will be just fine and dandy, if Cabra ever becomes Cabrabia.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Italy: Kercher Murder: Knox’s Mom on Stand

Amanda and victim “got along great”

(ANSA) — Perugia, June 19 — The mother of an American exchange student on trial here for the murder of her British roommate took the stand on Friday and said the two girls “got along great” and had done “fun things together”.

Edda Mellas, the mother of defendant Amanda Knox, added that her daughter had been “very upset” over the murder of 22-year-old Meredith Kercher, who was found semi-naked and with her throat slit on November 2, 2007 in the house she shared in Perugia with Seattle-born Knox and two Italian women.

Mellas was called to testify about three phone calls she received the night Kercher was murdered.

She said the first call was made before the body was discovered and her daughter said she thought there was someone else in the house.

In the second two calls, Knox was clearly “very upset”, her mother said.

In her testimony, Mellas denied her daughter had considered leaving Italy after the murder, and before her arrest, and that she felt very bad about having accused Perugia-based musician Patrick Lumumba of being the murderer.

Democratic Republic of Congo national Lumumba, who had employed Knox in his pub, spend 15 days in jail before an alibi confirmed he had been working at his pub on the night of the murder and police failed to find any forensic evidence linking him with the crime scene.

He is suing Knox for damages as a civil plaintiff as part of the murder trial. Knox is on trial for the murder along with her former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito whose father, Francesco Sollecito, also took the stand on Friday and said his son “wouldn’t hurt a fly”.

The father also said that his son had been very fond of Amanda and that they had had a “very beautiful love story”.

Speaking after his court appearance, Mellas said “they have no evidence against Amanda and she is telling the truth”.

“I think things are going well. Amanda was worried about me, as she always is, even if she’s the one on trial. She’ll be free very soon,” she added.

Prosecutors believe Knox, Sollecito and Ivory Coast national Rudy Guede killed Kercher while forcing her to participate in “a perverse group sex game”.

They claim Sollecito and Guede held Kercher’s arms while Knox slashed her throat with a kitchen knife.

The prosecution said Guede had also tried to rape Kercher.

Guede, 21, was sentenced in a separate trial to 30 years for sexual assault and murder. He is appealing the conviction and claims the crime was carried out by Knox and Sollecito alone.

The prosecution claims DNA evidence linked all three to the crime.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Gondoliers Face 173 Years in Jail

Protests were ‘naval blockade’, prosecutors say

(ANSA) — Venice, June 19 — Some 72 gondoliers who blocked Venice’s Grand Canal in a series of protests between 2003 and 2005 are facing a total of 173 years in jail.

Prosecutors on Friday accused the gondoliers, who were demonstrating against a restriction in working hours, of mounting a “naval blockade”.

Defence lawyers said this charge was not applicable because the protests took place on an inland waterway.

They also noted that the gondoliers let water buses through.

Gondoliers blocked Venice’s most famous canal and left gondolas outside the city mayor’s office in protest at rules aimed at solving the problem of the violent waves produced by boats going too fast.

In 2002, then Venice mayor Paolo Costa was tasked with resolving the so-called ‘moto ondoso’ which swept fragile buildings and monuments. Costa issued an ordinance to keep delivery vessels and gondolas from being on the Grand Canal at the same time.

The famed steerers of the black boats said the move was an unfair limitation of their trade.

Delivery firms, shops and businesses were also unhappy with the new rules and joined with the gondoliers in their protest.

Gondoliers also argued the orders would not work unless there were enough traffic police to make sure boats stuck to the rules.

The rules were later eased as city hall cracked down on the speeding boats.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Man Involved in Achille Lauro Hijacking Dies

ROME — A Palestinian man who helped plan the 1985 hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship during which an American passenger was killed has died in an Italian jail.

Lawyer Sandro Clementi said Khaled Hussein died of a heart attack early Monday in a jail in Benevento, near Naples. He was 73.

Clementi said Hussein was convicted in absentia by a Genoa court and sentenced to life in jail in 1987 for helping plan the attack. Clementi said Hussein did not take part in the hijacking but provided logistical support..

Hussein was arrested in Greece in 1991 and then extradited to Italy.

Four Palestinian militants hijacked the ship off the Egyptian coast, killing Leon Klinghoffer, an elderly Jewish man from New York who was shot and dumped in the sea in his wheelchair.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Mixed Marriages Increasing in Italy

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, JUNE 17 — Mixed marriages are on the rise in Italy: in 2007 around 24,000 were celebrated, against 5,000 marriages between two non-Italian citizens and 221,000 between two Italian partners. According to Iamu Foundation — the autonomous and independent scientific institute for research and initiatives on the multiethnic and multicultural community with special focus on international migration — weddings in which the bridegroom was not Italian increased from 5,000 in 2006 to 6,000 in 2007. Marriages between an Italian bridegroom and a foreign bride decreased from 19 to 18 thousand in the same period. In 2007 most brides were from Romania, followed by the Ukraine, Brazil, Poland, Russia and Moldavia. The number of Romanian brides fell sharply though from 4 thousand in 2006 to 2.3 thousand in 2007. The list of grooms is led by Moroccans, followed by Albanians and Tunisians. The group of Romanian bridegrooms dropped in one year from fourth to twelfth place. Three quarters of all weddings in Italy in which both partners were non-Italian nationals involved two partners of the same nationality, mainly Chinese, Senegalese and Albanians. Ukrainian, Polish and Moldavian brides are more open to marriages with other nationalities. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Polish City Ravaged by Nazis to Cut Hitler’s Tree

WARSAW, Poland — The towering tree is believed to have been Adolf Hitler’s gift to the occupied town of Jaslo — planted to the sound of a Nazi band during World War II.

Town authorities now want it cut down and burned to make way for a new roundabout. But some residents have become attached to the 40-foot (12-meter) oak and are lobbying to save it.

“The tree has not hurt anyone and is not guilty of anything,” protest organizer Kazimierz Polak said, adding that his group was appealing to local and regional authorities to preserve the tree. “It is growing healthy and tall. Let it grow.”

But Mayor Maria Kurowska said it was a reminder of Jaslo’s connection to Hitler, whose Nazi troops razed the town in late 1944 as the Soviet Army advanced.

“It’s only a tree; we have hundreds of them here,” Kurowska said. “Instead, I can plant trees in honor of Hitler’s victims.”

The tree also interferes with a planned roundabout that would increase road safety, she said, explaining why authorities were only now looking to have to removed.

But the mayor said she had received e-mails and letters from residents both for and against saving the oak.

Polak said he remembers the tiny tree arriving in April 1942 in a box wrapped in the Nazis’ swastika flag. It was a gift from Hitler on his birthday and came from the Austrian city of Braunau am Inn, where the Nazi leader was born in 1889.

With two friends, Polak watched German authorities plant the tree with great pomp — part of an effort to “Germanize” the town, he said.

Two years later as the Red Army approached, the Nazis ordered that the town be evacuated and looted, according to historians. By the time they left, only 39 of the town’s more than 1,200 houses remained.

Polak, now 81 years old, is the town’s source for information about the tree’s provenance. The mayor noted that he is active in studying Jaslo’s history and there is no reason to doubt his account.

Nevertheless, she said she was not convicted the tree should be spared.. The town will decide within weeks about the proposed roundabout.

“You plant trees in honor of truly great people, like John Paul II,” she said. “If we keep it, we will walk in the city center remembering this is Hitler’s tree.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pope: Refugees Must be Welcomed Despite Problems

SAN GIOVANNI ROTONDO, Italy — Pope Benedict XVI said Sunday that countries must continue receiving refugees despite the difficulties they create while also addressing the causes that drive so many people from their homes.

Italy has been battling waves of illegal migrants and has enacted a controversial accord with Libya under which it turns back refugees intercepted at sea before they can reach Italian shores to apply for asylum.

Vatican officials, the U.N. refugee agency and aid groups have denounced the new policy.

Benedict did not specify Italy in his comments marking the U.N. World Refugee Day, which was celebrated Saturday, making his appeal more general to all countries that deal with refugees.

“Many people seek refuge in countries fleeing situations of war, persecution and calamity, and their reception creates not a few problems” for the receiving countries, he said. But he stressed that welcoming them was “still right.”

Benedict spoke during a pilgrimage Sunday to San Giovanni Rotondo in southern Italy to pray before the remains of St. Pio of Petrelcina, the hugely popular Italian saint who purportedly bore “stigmata,” or wounds like those Jesus suffered at his crucifixion.

Tens of thousands of the faithful braved thunderstorms to attend an open-air Mass in front of the Renzo Piano-designed church built to cater to the throngs of pilgrims who visit Padre Pio’s shrine each year.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Swedish Cops Dump Toilets to Save Money

The Malmö police department will stop at no lengths to refrain from spending a penny, employees learned recently.

At first, staff thought they were getting a bum deal when two toilets near the surveillance unit’s offices were closed last week, the Sydsvenskan newspaper reports.

But when employees from the narcotics and criminal divisions also found themselves locked out of the bathrooms in their wings, employees began to suspect the closures were no accident.

As it turned out, officials at the department had decided to shut down several of the station’s toilets over the summer in an effort to keep from draining the public purse.

But someone forgot to tell workers at the police station, prompting the station’s workplace safety officer to lodge a complaint, at which point the toilets were once again opened for business.

“It didn’t quite go right. The toilets were closed too early,” Anita Elf, head of the station’s maintenance divison , told Sydsvenskan.

But Elf emphasized that the toilets would be closed during the summer, primarily on floors expected to be virtually devoid of employees over the summer holiday season.

Fewer toilets mean less cleaning, according to Elf, although the exact savings haven’t been calculated.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]



The Curious Case of the $134.5 Billion Briefcase

A funny thing recently happened at the Italian-Swiss border. Italian authorities found a briefcase filled with $134.5 billion in U.S. government bonds. While this now appears to be merely a massive counterfeiting case, initial worries were that a major nation clandestinely attempted to unload a staggering sum of genuine U.S. dollar securities.

[…]

These bonds were not obvious forgeries. For nearly two weeks, Italian authorities probed their authenticity and eventually requested the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s appraisal. Asked what it concluded, SEC spokesman John Heine told me Wednesday: “I think I need to decline to comment on this.”

Wednesday evening, however, Bloomberg News quoted Treasury spokesman Stephen Meyerhardt. He called the bonds “clearly fakes” and added: “That’s beyond the fact that the face value is far beyond what’s out there.” Meyerhardt noted that only $104.5 billion in bearer bonds exist — $30 billion less than what that briefcase contained. That amount jointly would have made those Asian gentlemen America’s fourth-largest creditor, Bloomberg calculates, “ahead of the U.K. with $128 billion of U.S. debt and just behind Russia, which is owed $138 billion.”

A $500 million U.S. bond may sound fanciful. However, the federal government indeed produced them between 1955 and 1969. To alleviate some of the physical burdens and administrative costs of storing and handling lower-denomination bonds, the Treasury began offering securities with much higher face values.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Eurosceptics Are Just as Phoney as President Blair

Any day now you could wake up and find that you are subject to the rule of President-of-Europe Anthony Blair.

After the Irish and the Czechs have been clubbed into submission this autumn, the long-planned European Superstate will at last come into being. And Mr Blair is likely to be its Head of State. For those of a sensitive disposition, this means two horrible things happening at once.

It is bad enough that the ghastly Blair creature might rise from the political tomb, hands clasped in pious prayer, upper lip trembling with fake emotion, pockets crammed with money from the lecture circuit, drivel streaming from his mouth. That would perhaps be the only thing that might make the nation warm to Gordon Brown again.

But far worse is the awful truth, which so many have hidden from themselves, that Britain will from that moment cease to be an independent nation in any important way.

The EU will take on a ‘legal personality’ of its own, become a nation in its own right, one in which we are a subject province for the first time in more than a thousand years, less independent than Texas is of Washington DC.

And this is why I hate the people in politics and the media who call themselves ‘Eurosceptics’. What are they for? What good have they done? They stand about, mainly in the Unconservative Party, claiming to be concerned about the way the EU is swallowing this country.

But they refuse to take the one step that would actually make a difference. They will not call for this country to leave the EU. You will have to ask them why not. There is no reason Britain could not exist outside the EU, which sells more to us than it buys from us, drags us into trade disputes with the USA which are not in our interest, steals our fish, chokes our small business, mucks up our farms and milks us each year of incalculably large sums of money we could spend better ourselves.

There is every reason for us to go our own way, especially if we wish to preserve our unique laws and liberties against the fast-approaching ‘Stockholm Programme’ which aims to impose continental law on this country, together with a menacing set of surveillance powers quite beyond the control of our Parliament.

So the next time a ‘Eurosceptic’ presents himself to you for election, ask him why he won’t go the extra yard (not metre), and if he won’t do so, find a man who can. The time for scepticism is long past. What is there left to have doubts about? The thing is as bad as we feared. The time for secession has arrived.

**************************************

Tearing down another safety net

Why would the Government be so keen to repeal a law which protects free speech? You decide. Here are the details. Last year, in a law called The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act, New Labour created a new criminal offence, called ‘incitement to hatred on grounds of sexual orientation’.

I will not argue here about whether such a law is necessary or right. My point is different. What is important is that several Peers were concerned that such a law might one day be misused to prosecute the expression of opinion.

They rightly did not trust assurances that such a law could never be used for such purposes. They had noticed the increasing tendency of the police to menace individuals for voicing unfashionable opinions about homosexuality..

So they fought to insert a clause saying ‘for the avoidance of doubt, the discussion or criticism of sexual conduct or practices or the urging of persons to refrain from or modify such conduct or practices shall not be taken of itself to be threatening or intended to stir up hatred’.

Government spokesmen claimed this was not necessary.

Maybe they’re right. Maybe they’re wrong. Who can tell the future? That’s the whole point, and wise law-makers know that laws are often used in ways never intended by those who drafted and passed them. But what harm can such a safeguard possibly do? None, obviously.

Yet, probably this Tuesday, the liberal State will mobilise its forces in the House of Lords to rip away this sensible safety net. If it succeeds, I predict that the result will be the persecution of Christians and others who wish to resist the sexual revolution.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Suicide Bomb Plot’ Schoolboy Learned About Explosives at 12 ‘To Feel Cool’

Isa Ibrahim, a former public schoolboy accused of planning to blow up a shopping centre in a suicide bomb plot, has told how he started learning to make explosives at the age of 12 to feel “cooler”.

The hospital consultant’s son, who changed his name from Andrew, told a court how he had been expelled from a series of private schools and had become addicted to drugs and computer games.

He is accused of conducting a reconnaissance trip around the Broadmead Shopping Centre in Bristol and making a suicide vest and a quantity of the homemade explosive HMTD, the same substance used in the July 7 attacks.

Asked by his defence counsel, David Spens QC, if there was “any truth that you were going to blow yourself up?” he answered, “There’s no truth in it.”

But Winchester Crown Court heard computer evidence showed Ibrahim first took an interest in the making of explosives at the age of 12.

“I didn’t like football, he said. “It’s difficult to know how to put it, it made me feel cooler. I didn’t have friends or a social life and it made me feel better about myself. I felt not such a sad loser.

“I was overweight and I didn’t have friends. It made me feel a bigger, cooler person.”

Wearing a polo shirt and tracksuit, he told Winchester Crown Court his father, Nassif is a Coptic Christian from Egypt who works as a consultant pathologist at Frenchay Hospital in Bristol and collects antique pottery, stamps, coins and Nazi memorabilia.

His mother, Victoria, is a Protestant Christian who works as an administrator at Bristol University Medical School and his older brother, Peter, went to Oxford University and is now studying to be a barrister and working in the City of London.

Ibrahim said he was at Queen Elizabeth Hospital School in Bristol when he started smoking cannabis and taking LSD at the age of 12.

“People in my year I thought were a bit geeky, a bit nerdy. A lot of it was the taboo of taking drugs in a private school at that sort of an age,” he said.

Ibrahim said he was suspended and asked to leave the school the day before his 13th birthday, and went on to be expelled from Colston’s School in Bristol and Downside Catholic boarding school near Bath.

He eventually passed eight GCSEs, including English language at grade A, five at grade B and one each at grades C and D in June 2005 at Bristol Cathedral School but by then he was taking magic mushrooms, cocaine and ecstasy, the court heard and his parents had decided to split up.

Ibrahim said his mother asked him to move out when she caught him using ecstasy and ketamine but his parents helped pay the rent on a flat.

He said he became addicted to heroin and crack cocaine and began stealing to fund his habit, forcing him to move into a hostel because he was not paying the rent.

He said he sold the Big Issue outside the Broadmead Shopping Centre to fund his £60-a-day drug habit where his father found him and started meeting him once a week to buy him food and take him for a meal.

Ibrahim was given a council flat in Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol, and went back to college to study for his A-levels but never managed to kick his drug habit, the court heard.

Ibrahim said he had also become addicted to on-line computer games involving “role playing” such as Diablo II, Mass Effect and Metal Gear Solid, playing from 7am to midnight during the school holidays, and later dropping out of college.

“I would just forget about everything else. I felt I didn’t need real friends because I had friends on the internet I could chat to. The whole point of the game was to beat them and get respect from them.”

At the end of 2006, after dropping out of college, he said he started attending the Empire Gym in Bristol where he took up body building and started taking steroids.

But he said he gave up after three months and went back to heroin and crack cocaine.

Ibrahim also showed the court some of his five tattoos, which included “HTID” on his right bicep, said to represent “Hardcore Till I Die,” and Hardcore across his stomach,

Ibrahim had nine teddy bears in his bedroom in Westbury-on-Trym, and said they would tell jokes and he would laugh.

He said one of the bears, called Mr Fox was “mischievous and “rude” and “makes jokes at others expense.”

Ibrahim admits possessing explosives but denies plotting a terrorist attack and planning to endanger life or property.

The trial continues.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: BNP Teacher Ban ‘Is Considered’

A possible ban on teachers in England from being members of the British National Party is under consideration, a government spokesman has confirmed.

A spokesman for the Department for Children, Schools and Families says ministers are investigating a ban.

But the profession’s watchdog, the General Teaching Council, has said membership of a legal party cannot be seen as “unprofessional conduct”.

A BNP spokesman said moves for such a ban were “naked intimidation”.

There have been calls from teachers’ unions for a ban on teachers belonging to the BNP.

Legal doubt

The NASUWT teachers’ union argues that belonging to the party is incompatible with “respecting ethnic, cultural and religious diversity”.

It says a ban could follow the example of serving police officers who are not allowed to be BNP members — and says that such an exclusion could be achieved through an amendment to teachers’ contracts.

The DCSF has now confirmed reports that ministers are exploring the possibility of introducing a ban for teachers — but without giving any further details of how or when such a ban might be introduced.

But suggestions that teachers could be “struck off” for membership of the BNP have been rejected by the teachers’ regulatory body in England — the General Teaching Council for England.

“The clear legal advice we have received is that membership of any lawful political party per se cannot amount to unacceptable professional conduct, nor can it of itself bar someone from registration with the GTC,” says the teaching council.

A spokesman for the BNP said that moves towards preventing teachers from BNP membership were an attempt to “corrupt the democratic process”.

The party had proved its popular appeal in recent elections, said the spokesman, and a ban on BNP membership for teachers would be a “vindictive” and “totalitarian” response.

“People have different opinions, but they can leave their politics outside of the classroom.”

It was unfair that such proposed restrictions would not apply to extreme left-wing teachers, the party’s spokesman argued.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Conservative MEPs Form New Group

Senior Tory William Hague has said the Conservatives’ new “anti federalist” bloc in the European Parliament will be “good for European democracy”.

The new European Conservatives and Reformists Group includes 55 MEPs from across eight member states.

Former Tory MEP Caroline Jackson warned it would create “bad blood” with traditional centre-right allies.

But Mr Hague said it would still work with the EPP group but differed from it on the extent of European integration.

He told BBC Radio 4’s World at One the way the Conservatives had left the European People’s Party grouping had been been “perfectly amicable”.

However, Foreign Secretary David Miliband said the Tories “have dragged themselves from Euro-scepticism to Euro-extremism”.

‘Federal Europe’

Mr Hague said: “We do work, on a regular basis, with President Sarkozy’s party, with Chancellor Merkel’s party — that doesn’t mean we have to be in the same group in the European Parliament.

“These groups will often work together but clearly we differ with those parties about the extent of European integration.

“We don’t believe in the so-called federal Europe and it has got to be good for European democracy and diversity to have a grouping in the European Parliament with which we agree and can put an alternative point of view.”

“ The Tories have left the mainstream of European politics and joined forces with a rag-bag of parties with extreme views “

Ed Davey Liberal Democrats

The Conservatives will be the biggest party in the new group with 26 MEPs, including Northern Ireland’s Jim Nicholson of United Conservatives and Unionists — New Force.

Others who have signed up include 15 MEPs from the Poland’s Law and Justice Party (PiS), nine from the Czech Civic Democratic Party (ODS), and one each from the Dutch ChristenUnie, Latvian National Independence Movement (TB/LNNK), Hungarian Democratic Forum (MDF) and Belgian Lijst Dedecker (LDD).

One member of Finland’s Centre Party will also join the group, although the remainder of the party’s MEPs will remain in the liberal ALDE bloc.

Lib Dem foreign affairs spokesman Ed Davey said the Tories had chosen “ideological isolationism” over influence.

He added: “This announcement confirms that the Tories have left the mainstream of European politics and joined forces with a rag-bag of parties with extreme views.”

‘Odds and sods’

But Mr Hague disagreed. He said the ODS — the party of former Czech PM Mirek Topolanek, who lost a confidence vote in May — were still the “leading party of the Czech Republic”.

The PiS were “the party of the president of Poland”, he said. Poland is governed by the centre-right Civic Platform.

Other allies in Finland, the Netherlands and Latvia were part of ruling coalitions, he added.

“These are no marginal parties they are mainstream parties that we are very happy to work with,” he said.

All members of the new group have signed up to the “Prague Declaration”, negotiated in the Czech Republic, which argues for EU reform and opposes federalism.

To form a group in the European Parliament and access EU funding, the Conservatives had needed to attract a minimum of 25 MEPs from at least seven states.

Mr Cameron pledged to cut the Conservatives’ ties with the EPP grouping during his 2005 Conservative leadership campaign.

The Tories have also been criticised for joining forces with the PiS, who in the past have tried to ban gay marches in Poland. Mr Hague told the BBC that the PiS’s attitudes to gay rights had changed.

Robert Oulds, director of the Eurosceptic Bruges Group, said: “The Conservative Party’s federalist rump, both at Westminster and Brussels, should now recognise that the tide has turned.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Europe and a Squalid Blair, Cameron Pact That Could Tear the Tories Apart Again

More than 12 years have passed since the last Tory government, fatally split over Europe and brought low by sleaze, was driven from office.

Although David Cameron now seems certain to lead the Tories back into power at the next general election, the problem of sleaze still exists (as shown by MPs’ scandalous expenses claims) — as do difficulties concerning Europe.

[…]

On top of this, there is a third issue of contention involving Europe — and this, I believe, is potentially the most divisive.

It concerns the plan, which has been backed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, to appoint Tony Blair as the EU’s first president.

Giving this dazzling international role to the former Labour prime minister would not only be highly controversial but it would also disgust many loyal Conservatives, who regard Blair with profound contempt.

William Hague spoke out for these Tories last week when he said: ‘We haven’t spent ten years opposing Tony Blair as Prime Minister of Britain to agree to him becoming President of the European Union.’

However, Cameron has been silent on the Blair candidacy. Many Conservatives fear that this is because a deeply cynical deal has been struck.

It works like this: Cameron has pledged to do nothing that would damage Blair’s chances; while Blair himself has agreed not to speak out and join the Labour campaign to prevent Cameron getting into Downing Street. This remarkable non-aggression pact has advantages for both sides.

Cameron strategists-believe that Labour has a better chance of recovery if Blair comes out and supports his embattled successor. Instead, they want to keep him out of the fray and see Brown struggle on — and lose — on his own.

As for Blair, he is acutely aware that his chances of becoming European President would be torpedoed if David Cameron, seen by all European leaders as the next British prime minister, sent out strong signals that his presidency would be unacceptable to a Tory government.

For David Cameron, this quiet compact with a man he has long admired looks like sensible politics which enhances his chances of winning the next election. But there are many Tory voters who see any Blair/Cameron axis as a squalid pact that sells out British interests.

Unless David Cameron comes clean on all this — as well as bringing Ken Clarke and William Hague back in line — Labour will be able rightly to claim that a Tory government would mark a return to the Cabinet feuding and acrimony of the 1990s.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



UK: The Shocking Moment Police Officer Grabs Female Climate Change Protester by the Throat

Dramatic footage has been released of two women protesters being bundled to the ground after asking a policeman for his identification number.

The video shows one of the climate change protesters being held by the throat by a police officer.

The footage shot by police, who were policing the protest at the Kingsnorth power station in Kent last August, has been handed to the Independent Police Complaints Commission, according to the protesters.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Tories Head New Rightwing Fringe Group in Europe

David Cameron finally delivered on a four-year-old pledge to establish a new centre right grouping in the European parliament when the Tories announced they would lead a 55-strong bloc of social conservatives in Strasbourg and Brussels.

Labour accused the Tories of moving to the extremes of Europe after the party confirmed that its 26 MEPs would sit with Poland’s homophobic Law and Justice party among others on the right.

The launch of the new movement means Cameron has abandoned two decades of Tories being in the mainstream of European politics for a new alliance on the rightwing fringes.

When the new parliament meets for the first time on 14 July the Tories will sit in a new block, known as the European Conservatives and Reformists. This fulfils a pledge by Cameron during the 2005 Conservative leadership contest to leave the EPP-ED group in Strasbourg, the largest group, with members from the main centre right parties across the EU.

While the EPP centre-right mainstream encompasses governing parties in half the EU, the new grouping is almost exclusively made up of opposition figures from eight countries.

The Tories will be joined by 29 MEPs from seven other EU countries. Poland’s Law and Justice party will be the second largest in the group, with 15 MEPs, while the Civic Democratic party (ODS) from the Czech Republic will provide nine MEPs. The five other countries represented in the group will provide one MEP apiece, making it potentially unstable.

William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, yesterday hailed the founding of the new group, declaring that it dispelled the doubts of critics who said the Tories would struggle to meet the parliament’s rules for establishing groups. These say groups must have a minimum of 25 MEPs, from at least seven member states.

Hague dismissed “out-of-date and ill-informed” criticisms that Poland’s Law and Justice party was homophobic. “The Law and Justice party is a party committed to be against discrimination, for equality under the law,” he told the BBC.

Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the Law and Justice leader, underlined his mainstream credentials when he appeared in Warsaw with Cameron on 29 May. The former Polish prime minister, whose brother Lech is the Polish president, said: “European institutions should be effective, economical, and aid co-operation between member states. They should never interfere with individual rights or the free market.”

But the following day, at a rally in the city of Bialystock, Kaczynski appeared to revert to type. The Economist quoted him as saying: “If Europe is to be strong, it has to be Christian. And today it is anti-Christian, and especially anti-Catholic.”

The Tories strongly defend the new grouping on the grounds that it is wrong for the party to campaign on a Eurosceptic ticket in Britain only to sit in the highly federalist EPP-ED group in Strasbourg. Dan Hannan, a Eurosceptic Conservative MEP who wants Britain to leave the EU but to remain in the single market along Norwegian lines, has been pushing this case for the best part of a decade.

Critics of the new grouping cite three objections: that it includes a hotchpotch of different parties, some with mainstream views and others with views that would be on the hard right in Britain; that leaving the EPP-ED, which includes Angela Merkel’s CDU party from Germany and Nicolas Sarkozy’s UMP party from France, will diminish British influence in the European parliament, and that pledging to oppose EU federalism in the European parliament makes no sense because it has little say in deciding institutional changes.

David Miliband, the foreign secretary, said: “The Conservatives … have dragged themselves from Euroscepticism to Euro extremism. By removing the Conservatives from other mainstream centre right parties in Europe, David Cameron has isolated his party and potentially this country”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Two Thirds of Citizens Support EU Integration

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, JUNE 19 — Director of the EU Integration Office Milica Delevic today stated that almost 61% of Serbian citizens support Serbia’s EU integration, reports Emportal. At a press conference presenting the results of the survey concerning Serbian citizens’ stance regarding Serbia’s EU integration, carried out in May, Delevic said that although some decrease has been recorded, a majority of citizens still believe that Serbia’s future lies within the EU. According to the survey 82% of citizens believe that visa liberalisation is of great importance for our country, 10% think that it is not important at all and 8% do not have any opinion on the issue. 49% said visa liberalisation matters to them while 33% said visa abolition is not important while 85% said they did not travel to the Schengen zone last year. 52% expect that life in the EU will make life better for the young, 44% expect better employment, and 40% hope to travel to the EU, while 30% see EU integration as a chance to settle the situation in Serbia. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Muslim Mob Attacks Church and Loots Christian Homes in Egypt

By Mary Abdelmassih

(AINA) — An Egyptian Muslim mob attacked a church on Sunday, 6/21/2009 in the village of Ezbet Boshra-East, El-Fashn, smashing its windows and assaulting Copts with clubs and white weapons, wounding 25 Copts, in the presence and with the instigation of the State Security.

On Monday 6/22/2009, El-Fashn prosecution issued an order for the village priest, Reverend Isaac Castor, to appear before them, on charges of sectarian sedition after three Muslim women accused him of hurling stones at them from inside the church.

The Church is still besieged by State Security and the priest is still confined to the Church walls, together with 10 people and three children not exceeding the age of five years. “The prosecution wants to get me out there, together with those who are with me, in order to make arrests. None of us are leaving the Church premises,” the priest said. “I do not know why I am besieged inside the Church in this way, together with my toddlers. I am not a criminal, neither are the people who are with me.”

Bishop Estephanos of Beba El Fashn Diocese, together with other priests called for a sit-in at the Cathedral of the Holy Virgin in El-Fashn, demanding the release of the unlawfully arrested Copts. The sit-in included families of those arrested, who refused to leave the Cathedral. (video of sit-in).

“As if I’m dreaming what went on, such savagery! It broke my heart to see my children [congregation] treated in such beastly and barbaric way” said Rev. Isaac to Coptic News Bulletin. “It is as if we are back to the Era of Diocletian” (Roman emperor who carried out the worst persecution in the history of the Copts) .

“A curfew was placed on Copts on Sunday in Ezbet Boshra-East village including me and my family, while Muslim offenders are free,” said Reverend Isaac

Homes of nearby Copts were broken into on Sunday by the Muslim mob, which included women, assaulting the residents including young girls, and destroying their furniture and looting electrical equipment. “These assaults were followed by security officers, assaulting Copts and destroying what remained of their belongings. When asked by a Coptic woman why they are doing this, the officers answered that they have ‘orders’ to do so,” added Reverend Isaac. “Now the Coptic inhabitants are living in terror.”

“State Security went into homes of the Copts and forcibly rounded up the men. At present 19 Copts are under arrest including children under twelve and people over 60 years of age,” said Reverend Isaac. “I have sheltered 10 other Copts in the Church to save them.”

The incident happened when 6 young Copts living outside the village came to visit the priest who lives at the top floor of a 3-storey building owned by the Church and which used for ceremonies and prayers. The same church was attacked by Muslims in August 2008. The security police tried to prevent the visitors from entering the village, but after an altercation they were allowed in. Later a police constable asked them to end their visit and leave separately. While on their way out, they found a Muslim mob awaiting them. Muslims harassed the young visitors and one Muslim woman struck a Coptic woman on the face. At that moment violence broke out, and Muslims began to attack the building using bricks and sticks, injuring 25 Copts, and destroying the priest’s car.

State Security has cut all telephone lines and the internet in the village, which is inhabited by 1500 Copts of the total 3000 inhabitants, to prevent them from getting in touch with the outside world, according to Reverend Isaac. “With all this strife, the Security wants to have grounds to issue a report confirming that this village is not suitable to have a church. We have no Church in the village and the nearest is 3 miles away, and can hardly accommodate its own congregation”

Human rights organization ‘Sunshine’ said that what is happening now in El-Fashn is a new trend in the violations carried out by the State Security against Coptic clergy. This trend began with the imprisonment of Father Mettaos Wahba for five years on false charges of forgery, and now an order has been issued against Father Isaac to ‘apprehend and bring,’ which has no legal grounds. “This is proof to the whole world that Egypt is persecuting the Copts,” according to Sunshine.

During his Sunday appeal to the world through Coptic News, Reverend Isaac said “Please help us, the whole world just looks and does nothing, where is President Obama’s talk about peace? All what we want is to raise our hands and worship God, equal to Muslims. We cannot take it any longer; we are ready to give up our lives, just let us pray.”

During the sit-in, Bishop Estephanos said: “We will all pray. Since matters reached this stage, if necessary we will all become martyrs. Our Coptic Church has been built on the blood of martyrs.”

[Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Carter Helping Hamas Open Talks With White House

Proposes plan bypassing U.S. demand for terrorist group to recognize Israel

Former President Jimmy Carter presented Hamas with a written initiative intended to open talks between the Islamist group and the U.S. without Hamas having to accept all conditions previously laid out for dialogue by the American government, top Hamas officials told WND.

Those conditions, expressed twice by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are Hamas’ renouncement of violence, recognition of Israel and agreement to abide by previous PLO commitments. The conditions were adopted by the Mideast Quartet, which consists of the U.S., United Nations, Russia and the European Union.

Carter, however, handed Hamas last week a letter “that aims to open dialogue between Hamas and U.S.,” Mushir al-Masri, a member of Hamas’ parliament and a spokesman for the Islamist group, told WND today.

Two top Hamas sources told WND Carter’s initiative bypasses Clinton’s conditions and instead asks Hamas to recognize the so-called two-state solution as well as the Arab Peace Initiative.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Dead Sea Peril: Sinkholes Swallow Up the Unwary

EIN GEDI, Israel (AP) — Eli Raz was peering into a narrow hole in the Dead Sea shore when the earth opened up and swallowed him. Fearing he would never be found alive in the 10-meter-(30 foot-) deep pit, he scribbled his will on an old postcard.

After 14 hours a search party pulled him from the hole unhurt, and five years later the 69-year-old geologist is working to save others from a similar fate, leading an effort to map the sinkholes that are spreading on the banks of the fabled saltwater lake.

These underground craters can open up in an instant, sucking in whatever lies above and leaving the surrounding area looking like an earthquake zone.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Abusing EU Bid for Political Means Will Benefit Nobody

ANKARA — PM Erdogan predicts campaigns against Turkey will continue in the coming months due to the national elections in European states. ‘On this occasion let me tell you once again that making domestic politics over Turkey’s membership issue will not bring any benefits to any country,’ he says. Parliament will not recess before EU reforms pass, notes PM

The prime minister Monday warned against any attempt to abuse Turkey’s European Union membership process for political ends, saying such an approach would beneficial to nobody.

“I believe that using Turkey and Turkey’s membership issue as a political took in some countries is very wrong,” Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told a luncheon given for Ankara’s ambassadors from EU member states.

Turkey formally began membership negotiations with the EU in October 2005 but the talks have slowed down over the years for a number of reasons, including Ankara’s refusal to open its ports to member Greek Cyprus as well as some countries opposition to the Turkish bid. In its last report, the EU Commission criticized Turkey over its slow pace of reforms.

No backtracking

“From time to time critics claimed we lost momentum and swept the EU issue to the peripheries. Let me put it very clearly and honestly that there is no a single instance of backtracking in Turkey’s speed and efforts,” assured the prime minister.

“However, certain statements made by the EU side and certain attitudes opened the way for a serious erosion in public enthusiasm and agreement,” warned Erdogan.

Early this month, a number of candidates in the European Parliament elections campaigned against predominantly Muslim Turkey’s EU bid, giving an upper hand to French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who have proposed to Ankara a privileged partnership instead of full membership in the EU.

In his address, while talking about several alternatives floated around by some EU member states, Erdogan looked at the ambassadors of France and Germany.

“There is no such term as ‘privileged partnership’ in our book,” he said.

Erdogan predicted that campaigns over Turkey would continue in the coming months due to the national elections in European states. “On this occasion let me tell you once again that making domestic politics over Turkey’s membership issue will not bring any benefits to any country. In the short run parties may believe it is beneficial but it must be seen that in the middle and long run such populist remarks will harm both the EU and Turkish-EU relations.”

Erdogan noted he would travel to Brussels this week to participate in the Crans Montana Forum set for Thursday and Friday. In remarks on an alleged military coup plan published in daily Taraf, Erdogan said no tension broke out in Turkey because of the alleged document and ruled out a conflict among the institutions.

“On the contrary, Turkey has the chance to demonstrate through this document that Turkey is acting one heart, one body in the face of anti-democratic scenarios,” said Erdogan.

The prime minister noted that Parliament would not go into recess before EU reforms passed. He also criticized Brussels for not opening entry talks with Turkey over the remaining chapters. The talks on taxation are expected to begin at an intergovernmental conference later this month. Turkey cannot start talks on social policy and employment chapter because the unions’ law has not yet passed in Parliament.

Fair game

In a televised interview Monday, the ambassador of the Czech Republic said the Turkish prime minister’s criticism of some EU member states for their firm opposition to Ankara’s membership in the EU was not wrong.

“The promises given to Turkey must be kept and the game must be played fair,” Eva Filipi was quoted as saying. “The Czech Republic is supporting Turkey’s EU membership.” Upon a question on the alleged military coup plan, she said the issue was not discussed during the luncheon but stressed the claims were a source of concern and that the EU was closely following the matter.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Analysis: Most Arabs Won’t Miss Iran’s Ayatollahs if They Fall

Many Arab governments, including the Palestinian Authority, are quietly hoping that the latest crisis in Iran will mark the beginning of the end of the radical regime of the ayatollahs and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Frustrated with Teheran’s long-standing policy of meddling in their internal affairs, representatives of the relatively moderate, pro-Western governments in Ramallah, Cairo, Beirut, Riyadh and other Arab capitals are hoping that regime change in Iran would undermine radical Islamic groups such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hizbullah.

These proxy groups, together with Syria — Iran’s strategic ally and facilitator in the Arab world — have long been viewed as a main source of instability in the Middle East.

Yet the Arab heads of state and their government officials appear to be doing their utmost to downplay the Iran crisis. They are obviously concerned that their constituents would follow suit and demand reforms and free elections.

Invoking Palestinian terminology, Arab editors and columnists have been describing the anti-government protests in Iran as an intifada.

“The pro-Iran camp in the Arab world is very worried,” said Abdel Rahman Rashed in an op-ed in the London-based Saudi newspaper Asharq Al-Awsat. “It’s natural for Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other pro-Iran groups to be afraid because their existence depends solely on the radical regime in Iran. If anything bad happens to this regime, they will suffer even more.”

Rashed hailed the Iranian protesters for opposing their government’s policy of funding Hizbullah and Hamas at a time when the economy in Iran is not doing well.

A number of Palestinian officials in Ramallah said they expected the collapse of the regime in Iran to have a “positive” impact on what’s happening in the PA-controlled territories. “The Hamas leaders must be in a state of panic,” said an adviser to PA President Mahmoud Abbas. “Without Iran’s support, Hamas couldn’t have staged a coup in the Gaza Strip two years ago.”

The official claimed that the Iranian government had given Hamas more than $150 million in the past three years, enabling the radical Islamic movement to maintain its tight grip on the Gaza Strip. He said that more than 80% of Hamas’s weapons come from the Iranians.

“Ahmadinejad and the Ayatollahs have long been working hard to export their radical Shi’ite ideology to Palestine,” said another PA official in Ramallah. “We will be more than happy to see the regime in Teheran disappear, together with Hamas and Islamic Jihad.”

But there is also concern in Ramallah that the crisis would force US President Barack Obama to focus on Iran rather than the Israeli-Arab conflict.

The “intifada” in Iran erupted just when it seemed that the issues of West Bank settlements and the two-state solution had been placed, thanks to the Obama administration, at the top of the world’s agenda.

Unlike former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, Ahmadinejad never succeeded in winning the hearts and minds of the Palestinian masses despite his fiery rhetoric and threats to eliminate Israel.

Teheran’s open support for Hamas in the power struggle with Fatah, as well as its continued attempts to undermine the relatively moderate regimes in Egypt, Jordan and the Gulf countries, have alienated many Palestinians. Echoing these sentiments, Hafez Barghouti, editor of the PA-funded Al-Hayat Al-Jadeeda, held Teheran responsible for the ongoing sharp differences between Hamas and Fatah.

Egyptian mediation efforts between the two rival parties have failed because of the Iranians, who have turned Khaled Mashaal into another ayatollah, he said, referring sarcastically to the Syrian-based Hamas leader as “Ayatollah Mashalati.”

Like many of his colleagues throughout the Arab world, Barghouti expected the crisis in Iran to escalate, resulting ultimately in the downfall of the ayatollahs. “The winds of change will eventually reach the top brass of the Iranian regime,” remarked Palestinian columnist Muwafak Matar. “What’s happening there is more than a power struggle in the regime. It could be the beginning of a new era of awareness among the young people, who are aspiring for stability and rejoining the international community. They want a new Iran that does not interfere in the internal affairs of its neighbors or countries that are far away.”

Noting that Teheran had been meddling in the internal affairs of the Palestinians, Lebanese and Egyptians over the past few years, another Palestinian columnist, Rajab Abu Siriyyeh, said he did not rule out the possibility that Obama’s conciliatory approach to the Arabs and Muslims could have been one of the main reasons why tens of thousands of Iranians decided to take to the streets.

“They see the last election as an opportunity for real change in Iran,” he said. “Ahmadinejad’s policies have strained relations between his country and the Arab countries. We saw how Teheran recently dispatched a Hizbullah cell to attack Egypt.”

Abu Siriyyeh said that the Arab world, which is worried about Iran’s territorial ambitions in the Middle East, would not tolerate another four years of Ahmadinejad’s rule.

“The Arab countries will benefit in many aspects from the collapse of the current regime in Iran,” said Mohammed Husseini, secretary-general of the Arabic-Islamic Council in Lebanon. “The demise of the regime will remove a real threat to Arab national security and put an end to Teheran’s meddling in the internal affairs of others.”

Husseini voiced hope that the next regime in Iran would learn from the mistakes of its predecessors and refrain from “sticking its nose” into the Arab people’s affairs. He said that Iran’s proxy groups in the Arab world will then realize that they had made a “huge mistake” by placing Teheran’s interests above the interests of their own people.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]



Andrew Bostom: Perpetuating Iran’s Islamic Culture of Hate

Commenting on the factional protests in Iran, anthropologist Roxanne Varzi [1], who is touted in a NY Times report today [2] (6/22/09)as having analyzed the methods by which Iran’s Islamic government spreads its ideology, notes how these demonstrations have “remained within religion,” i.e., Iran’s heritage of Shiite Islam. Varzi concludes that the opposition and erstwhile “reformist” movement also expounds “the whole Islamic discourse,” because “[I]t is not meant to be something anti-Islamic.”

But how can a “reformist” movement that shares the same oppressive core ideology—rooted in a half millennium old incarnation of Shiite Islam—overcome what amounts to nothing less than a culture of hate?

The profundity of this Shiite Islam-inspired culture of hate—which even 50 plus years of secular Pahlavi reforms (from 1925-1979) targeting the mullahs, specifically, could not undo—is no where better illustrated than in the plight of Iran’s indigenous Zoroastrian community.

Mary Boyce, Emeritus Professor of Iranian Studies at the University of London, has written comprehensive assessments of those Zoroastrian communities which survived the devastating jihad conquests of the mid 7th through early 8th centuries. The Zoroastrians experienced an ongoing, inexorable decline over the next millennium due to constant sociopolitical and economic pressures exerted by their Muslim rulers, and neighbors. This gradual, but continuous process was interspersed with periods of accelerated decline resulting from paroxysms of Muslim fanaticism- pogroms, forced conversions, and expropriations- through the latter half of the 19th century. During a lecture series given at Oxford in 1975, Boyce also noted how the Iranian ancestors of the Zoroastrians had a devoted working relationship (i.e., herding livestock) with dogs when they lived a nomadic existence on the Asian steppes. This sustained contact evolved over generations such that dogs became “a part in (Zoroastrian) religious beliefs and practices…which in due course became a part of the heritage of Zoroastrianism.” Boyce then provided an historical overview of the deliberate, wanton cruelty of Muslims and their children towards dogs in Iran, including a personal eyewitness account. Boyce describes these complementary phenomena based on an historical analysis, and her personal observations living in the (central Iranian) Yezd area during the 1960s. She spent a 12-month sabbatical in 1963-64 living in the Zoroastrian community of Iran (mostly in Sharifabad, on the northern Yazdi plain).

Below are extracts of her analysis of these phenomena which highlight the overwhelming obstacles to permanent, meaningful change of societal mores still posed today by the culture of hate Iranian Shiite Islamic supremacism has engendered…

           — Hat tip: Andy Bostom [Return to headlines]



Bahrain Closes Paper in Iran Row

Bahrain has ordered the closure of a prominent newspaper after it printed an article critical of political leaders in its powerful Gulf neighbour Iran.

No official reason was given for the closure of Akhbar al-Khaleej apart from that it had violated press laws.

Local sources said it was connected to a piece about Iran’s election crisis by a consultative council member.

Correspondents say Sunni-ruled Bahrain is wary of unrest being stirred up among the majority Shia population.

In the article entitled the Islamic Republic: Vehement Public Anger, Samira Rajab attacked Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Islamic revolutionary regime.

Poll winner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the election thanks to “millions of fraudulent votes”, the article alleged.

“After 30 years, the cover has been pulled away… and Islamic democracy has been shown in its most repugnant dictatorial forms,” the article said.

The writer, who like Iran’s leaders is a Shia Muslim, also referred to speculation that Mr Ahmadinejad may have Jewish ancestors.

The Bahraini Journalists Association expressed concern at the decision by the Ministry of Culture to suspend the publication of the paper until further notice, inviting it to reconsider it “to promote the atmosphere of freedom and democracy in Bahrain”.

There are long-running tensions between Bahrain’s Sunnis and the Shia Muslim majority, which have on occasion spilled over into civil unrest.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Britain Evacuating Families of Staff in Iran

LONDON — Britain’s Foreign Office said Monday it was evacuating the families of staff based in Iran amid continued violence in the wake of the country’s disputed election.

The decision came after repeated criticism of Britain by Iranian leaders, and an increasingly tense atmosphere following angry clashes between demonstrators and security officials.

Staff will remain in Iran for now, and the Foreign Office confirmed that it was not advising other British nationals to leave. However, it said officials are monitoring the situation with the utmost vigilance.

“The families of our staff have been unable to carry out their lives as usual. As a result, we are withdrawing the dependents of embassy staff,” a Foreign Office spokesman said on customary condition of anonymity in line with policy.

The Foreign Office later said that 12 people would be affected. It added that there had been no specific incidents at the British Embassy, apart from a small protest there a week ago.

Iran says at least 17 protesters have been killed in a week of unrest after the electoral council declared hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad winner of the country’s June 12 election. Followers of his main challenger, Mir Hossein Mousavi, claim the result was a fraud and have been staging rallies on an almost daily basis.

Riot police attacked demonstrators with tear gas and fired live bullets in the air during a rally Monday in central Tehran.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki has accused Britain of sending spies to manipulate the election, while the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei singled out the U.K. as the worst example among Western powers which he claims are seeking to interfere in Iran’s affairs.

Britain is one of the six nations involved in negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program. The West accuses Iran of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, a charge Iran denies.

Foreign Secretary David Miliband has denied that Britain has sought to influence events in Iran.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Clare Lopez: Supporters of ‘Dialogue’ With the Iranian Mullahs Help Keep the US From ‘Meddling’ on Behalf of Freedom

The Obama administration’s failure to stand firmly with the forces of opposition to the mullahs’ regime in Tehran is drawing criticism at home and around the world. Even as many thousands of young Iranians take to the streets, furious at brazen election-rigging and fed up with corrupt clerics and their thuggish enforcers, the United States, erstwhile leader of the free world, has maintained a strict official policy of neutrality.

The question is, how did America fall from the soaring rhetoric of President George W. Bush’s 2005 State of the Union address — when he said: “And to the Iranian people, I say tonight: As you stand for your own liberty, America stands with you” — to a position on the sidelines, passively watching Iranian security forces club and shoot unarmed demonstrators on the streets of Tehran?

The apparent answer is that advocates of a policy of accommodation that is more in sync with the priorities of the Tehran regime than with U.S. national security interests now wield influence from inside the Obama administration…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



EU Embassies Wary of Hosting Iranian Protesters

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — Italy said Sunday (21 June) it had instructed its embassy in Tehran to provide humanitarian aid to wounded protesters, pending a co-ordinated response from all EU countries. But Sweden — which is about to take over the EU presidency — said it cannot grant asylum to refugees.

Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini said he would discuss a European Union-wide proposal to co-ordinate assistance for wounded demonstrators during a meeting in Stockholm on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the country — Iran’s leading trading partner in the EU — has instructed its embassy to help out “where there is a request or need for help from injured demonstrators,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Iranian state media reported that at least 10 more people died and over 100 were injured in clashes on Saturday between demonstrators contesting the re-election of president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and riot-police using truncheons, tear gas and water cannons.

The Iranian government also arrested the daughter and four other relatives of former president Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of the country’s most powerful men, in a move that indicated a rift among the ruling Islamic clerics over the disputed presidential election.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the attitude of Iranian authorities was “inexcusable,” and highlighted the government’s “pariah” status. Tehran, already isolated due to its nuclear ambitions, is now “depriving its people of their most basic democratic rights,” he said.

Earlier on, German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a full vote recount. “Germany stands by the people in Iran who want to exercise their right to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly,” she said. A new analysis of voting figures by independent British think tank Chatham House found “irregularities” in the turnout and “highly implausible” swings to Ahmadinejad.

British foreign secretary David Miliband warned the death toll “will raise the level of concern among Iranians and around the world,” while US president Barack Obama toughened his stance, calling on Tehran to stop “violent and unjust actions against its own people.”

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Gaza: Reconstruction; Turkish NGO Asks for Financial Support

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 18 — Erol Yarar, the chairman of the Palestine Platform, a Turkish non-governmental organization (NGO), asked for financial support for projects to reconstruct Gaza. “The Gaza Reconstruction Commission has carried out feasibility works of 460 projects for Gaza’s reconstruction, prepared projects and is seeking support,” Yarar said yesterday during an international conference in Istanbul where the Palestine Platform and the International Gaza Reconstruction Commission are organizing the First International Gaza Reconstruction Conference. Representatives from 30 countries participated in the conference that will end on Thursday, as Anatolia news agency reports. Also speaking in the conference, Irfan Gunduz, a MP from the ruling Justice & Development (AK) Party, said that Turkey expected the international community to lift the embargo on Palestine and Gaza, and give back the territories under invasion to their real owners. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran Bans Prayers for ‘Angel of Freedom’ Neda Agha Soltan

Iran’s regime has issued a ban on memorials for a young woman whose death has become the focal point of protests against the clerical regime.

Neda Agha Soltan, 27, was dubbed the Angel of Freedom after a video which appeared to show her being shot by a government sniper was posted on the internet.

Graphic scenes show Neda — her name means “the call” — walking with her father among demonstrators, then separately when she was shot as well as attempts to save her life.

Online posters of the woman covered in blood quickly emerged, included one modelled on a prominent image of Barack Obama during the last US presidential campaign.

Some online posts speculated the image would rank alongside that of the unnamed man standing in front of a tank in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square in 1989 and the summary execution of a Vietnamese Communist prisoner by Colonel Nugyen Ngoc Loan in 1968.

Footage was posted on YouTube, Twitter and Facebook and was viewed by tens of thousands. Messages of sympathy and outrage flooded the internet following the posting of the videos.

The Iranian authorities have now sent out a circular to mosques banning collective prayers for the woman.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran Expert Afshin Molavi

‘Khamenei Has Never Seen a Crisis Like This’

This week’s protests in Iran are truly unprecedented, says Iran expert Afshin Molavi in an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE. The demonstrators come from all walks of life and from across the country. Discontent with Tehran’s hardline leadership is widespread.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: On Thursday, a million people demonstrated in the streets of Tehran. Are we witnessing a revolution in Iran?

Molavi: What we are witnessing on the streets is truly unprecedented in the history of the Islamic Republic. We have seen protests in Iran over the past years, such as student protests or teacher strikes. The world only sees the demonstrations in Tehran but they are taking place all over the country.

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Who are the demonstrators? What part of society do they come from?

Molavi: We are witnessing the return of the Iranian middle class to the political space. This middle class is vibrant, modern, wired, eager to engage with the outside world, hungry for more social and political freedoms, and for better economic management. Many members of Iran’s urban middle class — and its important to remember that Iran is 70 percent urbanized — chose not to vote in the 2005 election, disillusioned with the failures of the reform movement led by (former Iranian president) Mohammad Khatami. They are returning in full after four years of Ahmadinejad and demanding that their votes be counted…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran’s Guardian Council Admits to Election Irregularities

Tehran — Iran’s powerful Guardian Council said Sunday there were some irregularities in the June 12 presidential election, which has been widely disputed and triggered bloody street protests. The Guardian Council admitted that the number of votes collected in 50 cities was more than the number of eligible voters, the council’s spokesman Abbas-Ali Kadkhodaei told the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) channel.

He said this amounted to about 3 million questionable votes, but added that “it has yet to be determined whether the amount is decisive in the election results.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iran’s Twitter Revolution

Ahmadinejad’s Fear of the Internet

With the Iranian authorities cracking down on the international press, the West is reliant on the Internet to find out what is happening on the ground. Hard as it might try, it will be difficult for the regime to easily stop the flow of information online. Web users around the world are rallying behind the protesters.

Even before the protests over Iran’s disputed presidential election began, it was clear that the Iranian regime feared the power of the Internet. But now an open war has broken out between the government and its security forces on the one side and protesting Web users on the other. Web sites are being blocked and Internet access in general seems to be more difficult — or even paralyzed.

On Wednesday, a senior spokesman for Iran’s military issued an open threat against bloggers and Web site operators in the country: Content which could “create tension” must be removed immediately, otherwise there would be legal consequences.

Iran’s rulers are afraid of the Internet partly because it is one of the main tools being used to organize mass protests and also because it undermines — at least partially — the current heavy restrictions on the international media in the country.

Within just a few days, a totally new symbiosis of “old” media and explicitly partisan “citizen journalists” has emerged. Given the crackdown on the international media, there is no other way to get the news out of the country: Western journalists who are still in the country are being threatened and are not allowed to leave their offices or to report from the streets of Tehran. Some are even being expelled from the country, like SPIEGEL ONLINE correspondent Ulrike Putz, who had to leave Iran on Monday.

But it’s evidently proving harder to quell the information flow out of the country on Internet sites such as Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and Picasa, to name just a few sites being used by protesters. The micro-blogging site Twitter, which allows users to send messages of up to 140 characters and which has special feeds such as “#IranElection” devoted to the issue, remains an important tool, despite growing fears of infiltration by the Iranian secret service. It is hard to effectively block access to the platform, as it can be accessed through various different applications, including ones that run on mobile phones, as well as via the Twitter.com Web site. The service is a labyrinth with many entrances and exits…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran: The Internal Balance of Power

By Jonathan Spyer

One would need a heart of stone not to be moved by the scenes currently emerging from Iran: Hundreds of thousands of youthful demonstrators, taking to the streets to express their frustration at the restrictions of life under a theocratic oligarchy — with the communications revolution enlisted to bypass the heavy hand of the regime’s censors.

Nevertheless, at such a time, it is particularly important to employ the tools of cool and dispassionate analysis. It is therefore worth keeping three crucial facts in mind, when considering the events in Iran. Firstly, in so far as a real struggle for power is currently taking place, it is taking place within the boundaries of the Islamist regime, and not against it. Secondly, if one were to imagine for a moment the emergence of a real, popular leadership opposed to the regime, and were then to assess its chances of success, the following conclusion would be inescapable: at the present time, the regime possesses both the will and the means to ensure its survival. Thirdly, no such popular leadership currently exists.

Consider: Mir Hossein Moussavi, the hero of the demonstrators, is a product of the Islamic revolution of 1979 no less than is Mahmoud Ahmedinejad. Moussavi served in the now defunct position of prime minister of Iran in the period 1981-89. In the latter part of that period, in 1987, the Iranian nuclear program was revived. Moussavi is a committed supporter of the Iranian system of governance known as Vilayet a-Faqih (rule of the jurisprudent), and of the severe and brutal repression which this system brings in its wake. He represents the establishment, conservative wing of the regime, as personified by former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Iran: Italy ‘Would Open Embassy’

Wounded demonstrators could take refuge if EU decides

(ANSA) — Rome, June 22 — Italy would open its Tehran embassy to wounded Iranian demonstrators as long as this was done in a European Union framework, the foreign ministry said Monday.

Italy “will not shrink from its willingness,” which has already been stated, the ministry said.

It said no request had so far come from demonstrators.

Demonstrators would have to be treated in hospital, the ministry added.

On Sunday Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he had already told the embassy to get ready to take in wounded demonstrators in the event of EU members agreeing to Sweden’s suggestion to coordinate the move.

Sweden takes over the EU’s rotating presidency from the Czech Republic on July 1.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: No Response From Iran to G-8 Invitation

ROME — Italy considers its G-8 meeting invitation to Iran rejected since Tehran has not yet responded, the foreign minister said Monday in a sign of Rome’s growing impatience.

Italy had invited Iran to attend talks on Afghanistan and Pakistan to be held during the Group of Eight foreign ministers’ meeting starting Thursday in Trieste. Rome says Tehran could contribute to discussions on stabilizing the region.

Italy is Iran’s leading trading partner in the European Union and has long maintained that no lasting solution in the Middle East conflict can be found without Tehran’s involvement.

Rome kept its invitation to Trieste open even during the bloody crackdown on protests over Iran’s disputed presidential election. As of late Sunday, a Foreign Ministry communique expressed the hope that Iran might make its contribution to the region at the Trieste meeting.

But on Monday, Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said that Iran had to respond by the end of the day. Later, he told TV evening news program TG5 that “I must consider that Iran has rejected the invitation.”

At that point, the Iranian Embassy in Rome was closed for the day, so it was not immediately possible to get Iranian comment about Italy’s decision.

Frattini’s spokesman, Maurizio Massari, said it would be difficult for Iran to focus on discussing stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan given its domestic turmoil — saying that its potential contribution was the very reason why Iran had been invited in the first place.

Frattini told TG5 that the regime’s silence on the invitation shows that “it has no interest in explaining to the world if it can be constructive at least in the Pakistani and Afghan region.”

The three-day meeting in the northeastern city of Trieste brings together the Group of Eight most industrialized nations and several other countries for wide-ranging talks.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will not attend the summit because she is recovering from surgery to repair a broken elbow, the State Department said Monday. William Burns, the undersecretary of state for political affairs, will head the U.S. delegation.

The Quartet of key parties trying to promote Mideast peace — the U.N., the U.S., the European Union and Russia — are also among the participants.

Reports of voting irregularities in the June 12 vote in Iran that re-elected hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have raised concerns in many European capitals, including London, Paris and Berlin.

“Italy will continue to strongly condemn the violence, the aggression against peaceful demonstrators,” Frattini told RAI state TV. “We will ask that the votes be recounted.”

Rome has also defended European allies from Iran’s accusations of foreign meddling, directed especially at Britain, France and Germany.

“There is no plot, no Western country has ever thought about a plot,” Frattini said in the interview with RAI. “We want transparency and truth, exactly what millions of Iranians in the streets want.

The Foreign Ministry statement Sunday urged Iran to take urgent but peaceful measures to end the violence and hold an open meeting with the country’s opposition.

Italy has instructed its embassy in Iran to provide humanitarian aid to the protesters wounded during the clashes, pending an EU-wide proposal to coordinate assistance. But so far the Italian Embassy has received no such requests for assistance, Massari said.

Also on Monday, the ministry issued a travel warning for Iran, advising Italians to postpone trips to the country.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Potential for Apocalypse: Is War Between Iran and Israel Inevitable?

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad may seem very different, but they are united in their apocalyptic religious visions. Their respective beliefs may be propelling them on a collision course with potentially horrific consequences.

A pair of more disparate twins hasn’t existed since the muscle-bound Arnold Schwarzenegger and the sharp-tongued, diminutive Danny DeVito played twins in the Hollywood movie of that name. One, the Israeli, is tall and thickset and often wears tailored suits. He is a gifted speaker and a militant anti-Iranian. The other, the Iranian, is short and slight and is almost always seen wearing an ordinary-looking beige windbreaker. He tends to be somewhat gauche and is a rabble-rousing populist and a self-declared enemy of Israel. The two men couldn’t be more different.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 59, and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, 52, are twins in spirit, which is not to imply in any way that they are morally equivalent. Both men are convinced of the absolute validity of their beliefs, both are obsessed by what they see as their higher calling, and both are convinced that theirs is a Messianic mission — a mission to “honor” a religion or “save” a people.

There is every indication that the coming nuclear negotiations between Washington and Tehran — if, indeed, they begin in the next few months with Ahmadinejad still Iranian president — will end in a stalemate by the end of the year. If that happens, US President Barack Obama will push for tougher sanctions against Tehran in early 2010, with the reluctant support of the Russians and Chinese. The leadership in Tehran will interpret this as an aggressive act and will likely speed up its uranium enrichment, meaning that Iran will only be a few months away from having the capability to build a nuclear bomb. At some point next spring, things could have proceeded so far that the Israelis could decide, even without Washington’s approval, to launch attacks against Iranian nuclear facilities. The entire Middle East would see thousands of casualties, and the consequences for the global economy would be devastating.

To understand what motivates the Iranian president and the Israeli prime minister, and what convictions guide their policies, it is important to examine the deeply religious ideas that shape both Ahmadinejad and Netanyahu and practically destine them to clash with each other: the theology of the Islamic Haqqani school and the Jewish concept of Amalek. And to understand why Tehran and Jerusalem, with Ahmadinejad and Netanyahu at their respective helms, have embarked on such an alarming and potentially devastating course, it helps — as this author has done — to have personally met the people involved and to have studied their milieu during numerous trips to Iran and Israel over the past three-and-a-half decades. These experiences form the pieces of a puzzle, and although the resulting image is not all-encompassing and does not explain everything, it is at least an image based on a concrete search for evidence and on personal experience of the reality on the ground…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Report: Assad Wants Men Behind Attack on Israeli Embassy Free

Syrian President Bashar Assad asked his counterpart from Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, to release two Hizbullah operatives who were arrested on suspicion of plotting a terror attack on Israel’s embassy in the capital Baku last year, the Kuwaiti newspaper Al Seyassah report Sunday…

           — Hat tip: EMET [Return to headlines]



Spiegel Interview With Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu

‘Turkey Doesn’t Want Chaos in the Middle East’

With protests in Iran continuing, the Middle East seems as unstable as ever. SPIEGEL spoke with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, 50, about the regional implications of the unrest and about his country’s difficult relationship with Europe.

SPIEGEL: Minister Davutoglu, Iran, Turkey’s neighbor, is in the midst of the worst unrest since the Islamic Revolution 30 years ago. After having served for many years as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s foreign policy advisor, you are very familiar with Iran. What is your assessment of the situation?

AFP

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants stable relations with all his neighbors. Here, with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in 2008.

Davutoglu: Turkey and Iran share a very long common history. We know our neighbor — and have for more than 1,000 years. No one should underestimate or misunderstand this proud country. The political atmosphere there is incredibly dynamic, as is Iranian society. It is very complex and multifaceted.

SPIEGEL: Did you expect political developments in Iran to take such an explosive turn?

Davutoglu: Yes, absolutely. As a country with very close relations with Iran, we knew how dynamic both the society and the political culture there are. I noticed two particularities in this election. First, there was the extremely animated and fiercely contested campaign phase, and then there was the high election turnout. This led to the emergence of very different interpretations of results after the election. I think that we should take this as a sign that the political process in Iran is very healthy.

SPIEGEL: But it is precisely the result that all of the president’s challengers are calling into question. According to the opposition, this election was seriously manipulated.

Davutoglu: We must leave the discussion of the issue to the Iranians. We cannot intervene from the outside.

SPIEGEL: Is there not much more at stake here, namely a struggle for democracy?

Davutoglu: That may be true, in the sense that the Iranian masses want to be heard. The people are unwilling to leave politics solely to the state, and they are very passionate. But I am not prepared to pass judgment as to whether or not the elections were properly carried out.

SPIEGEL: Have you congratulated Iranian President Ahmadinejad on his victory?

Davutoglu: Of course. This is standard procedure between two nations with friendly relations.

SPIEGEL: Perhaps you will have to congratulate a new Iranian president once again in the coming weeks.

Davutoglu: In any case, we will respect the outcome of the political conflict in Iran.

SPIEGEL: Then perhaps you could help us to better understand your neighbor Iran. Have we in the West underestimated the “green movement” of reformist candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi?

Davutoglu: It isn’t just about Mousavi. I believe that the West generally has a simplified view of the situation. The West is still dominated by a Cold War-like logic when it comes to Iran. This results in a black-and-white image of the country. The true picture is far more complex. Iran also has a system of checks and balances, and it has more than one center of power. And there are various competing movements and individuals. This “human factor” in Iranian politics is often overlooked in the West.

SPIEGEL: Let’s talk about President Ahmadinejad, who visited Turkey in the summer of 2008. Doesn’t the alleged victory of hardliner Ahmadinejad have to be described as a political step backward for the peace process in the Middle East?…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



The Iranian Leadership ‘Has Lost Its Legitimacy’

Tehran is moving to stop massive protests in Iran, cracking down on the media and arresting hundreds of protesters. The Guardian Council, meanwhile, has said it will stand behind Ahmadinejad’s re-election despite electoral irregularities. German commentators see a change coming — possibly for the entire region.

As Iran faces its worst crisis since the Islamic revolution, the regime is hitting out at the West and cracking down on journalists. The persistance of the opposition movement and disunity among the powerful clerics may be revealing cracks in the regime but the leadership is fighting back with force.

With 17 people already reported killed since the disputed June 12 elections, opposition leaders on Monday called for people to show their solidarity with the victims by carrying black candles with green ribbons. Mir Hossein Mousavi, the opposition leader who is contesting his defeat at the hands of incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, also asked motorists to drive for two hours with their headlights turned on “to show their solidarity with families of martyrs killed in recent events.” Meanwhile, the powerful Guardian Council has admitted that there were some voting irregularities in the elections but said it should have no effect on the final results.

Guardian Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhoadai stated that the number of ballots in 50 districts exceeded the number of legal voters in those areas. He added, however, that “this has no effect on the results of the elections.”

According to the official results, Ahmadinejad received 63 percent of the vote, with Mousavi securing only 34 percent. The extent of the president’s win provoked widespread protests, particularly amongst young people and women who had been hoping for an end to Ahmadinejad’s hardline regime.

Brutal Force

The outburst of street protests continued for days, but by the weekend the regime had started to respond with brutal force. At least 10 people were killed on Saturday and 457 were arrested. Images posted online, including footage that purports to show the fatal shooting of a teenage girl, suggest that sharpshooters belonging to the religous militia, the Basij, may have been targeting the crowds.

According to reports, the streets of Tehran remained quiet on Monday. The challenge for the opposition now is to maintain the momentum of the demonstrations while at the same time avoiding further bloodshed. Mousavi, in statements posted to his Web site on Sunday, said he would stand by protestors “at all times” but added that he would “never allow anybody’s life to be endangered because of my actions. Significantly, the former prime minister called the Basij militia “our brothers” and “protectors of our revolution and regime.” He also urged supporters to refrain from violence and show self-restraint. On Saturday, Mousavi emphasized that he did not question the foundations of the Islamic Republic but that he simply aimed to renew it and purge it of what he called deceit and lies.

In what could be a sign of a split among Iran’s ruling clerics, relatives of former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, who runs the powerful Assembly of Experts, were briefly arrested. Rafsanjani and his family have been accused of corruption by Ahmadinejad and the 75-year-old ayatollah was notably absent on Friday when Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave an address calling for national unity and backing of the current president.

Meanwhile, the government has continued its attacks on foreign interference in Iranian affairs and is cracking down on the media. It expelled a BBC correspondent and arrested a reporter with Newsweek. In an English-language broadcast, Iranian state television accused an exile group known as the People’s Mujahedeen of being behind the street protests, while broadcasting the alleged confessions of what it described as agents working for Britain. An Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman on Monday lashed out at “meddling Western powers and international media.”

Reactions in Europe

British Foreign Secretary David Milliband rejected the accusations that protestors were being “manipulated or motivated” from abroad and denounced Tehran’s attempt to turn the election dispute into a “battle” with the outside world.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel meanwhile called on the authorities in Iran to conduct a recount of the votes. “Germany stands on the side of the people in Iran who want to exercise their right to freedom of expression and freedom of assembly,” she said in a brief statement released on Sunday. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that Iran stood at a “crossroads” and appealed to the leadership in Tehran to “do everything to prevent further escalation.”

Most German newspapers on Monday are searingly criticial of the Iranian leadership while some ponder what the opposition movement can do to keep up the momentum.

The center-right Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes:

“Those who so brazenly manipulate elections and then use brutal repression to beat down people who would protest are clearly not interested in any kind of dialogue … much less that which would include talks on its nuclear program. The US government cannot just look over recent events and renew its offer of talks.”

“It is correct that US President Barack Obama’s tone has become sharper and called a spade a spade. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been more decisive in this regard and has clearly sided with those in Iran who are, despite the grave dangers, demanding their human and civil rights. For the powers that be in Iran, this is all too much: They have attacked Germany, Britain, France and the US, regardless whether they have been reserved in their critique. The president of Iran’s parliament, Ali Larijani, has called election-related comments from these countries ‘shameful.’“

“Shameful? He knows only too well that these elections were a farce. It will take more than just a recount before Iran can win the ‘respect of the international community,’ as Barack Obama said on Saturday. It must change its behavior. The regime is not prepared to do this, much less change its own character.”

The Financial Times Deutschland writes:

“With his political sermon, the Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei missed a big opportunity to bring the two camps closer. His open threat to the opposition will, if anything, have the opposite effect. The revolt now has its heroes, its martyrs. Blood is flowing and the opposition will do everything to ensure that its victims haven’t died in vain.”

“It remains unclear where the opposition’s courage will lead. But the longer the protests last — and the longer the regime refuses to compromise — the less the protests will be about the actual election results. ‘The Islamic Republic is dead’ and ‘when we say dictator, we mean Khamenei,’ are remarks heard among the protesters after the election.”

“But the man spearheading the uprising is seeking everything but revolution. Mousavi wants to preserve and improve the Islamic Republic — not overthrow it. The same applies to his most important supporter, Iranian former President Hashemi Rafsanjani.”

“The momentum of the protest movement may soon steam past both of them.. Even if that doesn’t happen, even if the security forces manage to crush the protest, nothing will be the same again in Iran…”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Beats Wife, Sentenced to Public Apology

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 15 — “I apologise to my wife and the people of Arac for beating her”. In northern Turkey the court of Arac sentenced Mustafa Kadinci to print a leaflet with these words apologising for his wife-beating habits. He had to print 1,000 leaflets containing his apologies and hand them out in city streets and public offices in order to avoid spending two years in prison. The unusual sentence was issued by a local (female) judge, who also ordered Kadinci to plant 50 trees and nurture them for 6 months. The sentence was issued after the man was found guilty of locking up his wife at home after an argument sparked off by the fact that the woman, going against her husband’s will, went to visit her family. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Attack on Russian Regional Leader

The president of the southern Russian republic of Ingushetia has been wounded in an assassination attempt, apparently launched by a suicide bomber.

Yunus-Bek Yevkurov is said to be in a critical but stable condition in hospital, with head and chest injuries.

Reports said one bodyguard was killed and several others were wounded, after a car travelling at high speed rammed the president’s vehicle.

Ingushetia, which neighbours Chechnya, has seen violence soar recently.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev called the attack, in the city of Nazran, “an act of terror”.

He has ordered the interior ministry and the Federal Security Service (FSB) “to fully investigate the attack on the Ingush president’s life and to take all the necessary law-enforcement efforts”, presidential press secretary Natalya Timakova said.

[…]

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but it seems probable that it was carried out by Muslim separatists fighting against Moscow’s rule in Ingushetia, says the BBC’s Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Moscow.

Monday’s attack is the third on a senior figure in Ingushetia in as many weeks.

On June 10, gunmen killed the deputy chief supreme court justice in Nazran as she dropped her children at a kindergarten.

Three days later, the region’s former vice prime minister was shot dead outside his home in Nazran.

Hundreds of refugees from the wars in Chechnya have settled in Ingushetia, a mainly Muslim republic, which is itself one of Russia’s poorest regions.

The insurgency in Chechnya has largely been suppressed, but the violence has spilled over and now seems to be escalating in Ingushetia and Dagestan.

President Yevkurov, a former paratrooper general, was installed by the Kremlin last year to try to bring stability to Ingushetia.

Mr Medvedev paid tribute to the progress made by Mr Yevkurov, saying: “The Ingush president did much recently both to bring order and… civil peace to the republic. The bandits did not like this activity.”

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Leader of Russian Region Wounded in Suicide Attack

NAZRAN, Russia — A suicide bomber badly wounded a provincial president in Russia’s North Caucasus on Monday, an assassination attempt that undermined the Kremlin’s claim that it has brought stability to the predominantly Muslim region.

Yunus Bek Yevkurov was the third top official to be wounded or killed in the last three weeks in the area of southern Russia around Chechnya, which was devastated by two separatist wars in the last 15 years.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing in Ingushetia province, where Yevkurov has tried to halt violence by Islamic militants.

A car rigged with TNT exploded as the presidential convoy traveled outside the provincial center, Nazran. The blast tore Yevkurov’s armored sedan to pieces and killed two of his bodyguards.

Yevkurov spokesman Kaloi Akhilgov said the president suffered a serious concussion and broken ribs, but that his life was not in danger. Hospital and emergency officials, however, said Yevkurov was in critical condition with burns, brain injuries and damage to internal organs.

Yevkurov’s burnt-out car stood in the grass off the roadside, its windows shattered, its wheels missing and most of its front end destroyed. Shrapnel was scattered for hundreds of meters (yards) and there was blood on the ground in several places. Two roadside houses had their roofs damaged and their windows shattered.

Russia’s chief prosecutor said Yevkurov was most likely targeted by militants or local criminal clans angry about his crackdown on corruption.

Rebels have felt increasingly cornered under Yevkurov, a former military intelligence officer who was named president in October as the Kremlin sought to bring a measure of stability to Ingushetia. The province had been plunged into violence under the previous leader, former KGB officer Murat Zyazikov.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev called for “direct and ruthless” action against the perpetrators of the attack.

Alexei Malashenko, a North Caucasus expert at the Carnegie Moscow Center, said the attack demonstrated the federal government’s inability to stem the spread of Islamic militancy in the region. “The Kremlin can’t control anything in the Caucasus,” he said.

Malashenko said that while Yevkurov made enemies among corrupt officials in the region, the attack was most likely triggered by his actions against Islamic militants, who have moved easily between Chechnya and Ingushetia.. The attack came exactly five years after Chechen militants raided law enforcement offices in Nazran on June 22, 2004 — a coincidence that appeared to signal rebel involvement.

Last month, Yevkurov pooled efforts with Chechnya’s Kremlin-backed President Ramzan Kadyrov to conduct a security sweep along the forested border between the two provinces.

“The attempt to kill Yevkurov was a response to the joint operation by Chechen and Ingush police,” said Yulia Latynina, a political commentator who writes extensively about the North Caucasus. “Yevkurov has been very efficient on the job, and he angered the militants.”

While going after rebel leaders, the Ingush president also sought to negotiate pardons for some rebels who would agree to put down their weapons, as Kadyrov did in Chechnya.

Yevkurov had also moved quickly to end abuses against civilians by security forces — actions that contrasted sharply with the repressive rule of his predecessor and quickly made him popular in the region.

He flew economy class and until recently had refused to use an armored vehicle, Latynina said.

“Yevkurov was absolutely fearless,” she said. “He was a model officer.”

Ingushetia, one of Russia’s poorest regions, saw its scare resources drained by an influx of refugees from Chechnya. While Chechnya has become relatively more stable under Kadyrov, Ingushetia and other neighboring provinces have been increasingly plagued by violence.

On June 10, gunmen killed a deputy chief justice of Ingushetia’s Supreme Court opposite a kindergarten in Nazran as she dropped off her children. Three days later, the region’s former deputy prime minister was gunned down as he stood outside his home in Nazran.

On June 5, the top law enforcement officer of another North Caucasus region, Dagestan, was killed by a sniper as he stood outside a restaurant where a wedding was taking place

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Far East


N. Korea Accuses Obama of Nuclear War Plot

North Korea has accused US President Barack Obama of plotting a nuclear war on the communist nation by reaffirming a US assurance of security for South Korea, the North’s state media said.

In a first official response to last week’s US-South Korean summit, the state-run weekly Tongil Sinbo said in its Saturday edition Obama and South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak “are trying to ignite a nuclear war”.

“The US-touted provision of ‘extended deterrence, including a nuclear umbrella’ (for South Korea) is nothing but ‘a nuclear war plan,’“ Tongil Sinbo said.

It said it wasn’t a coincidence that the United States has brought “nuclear equipment into South Korea and its surroundings and staged massive war drills every day to look for a chance to invade North Korea.”

Pyongyang has created weeks of tension by conducting a second nuclear test and test-firing missiles.

At a summit with Lee in Washington Wednesday, Obama warned that North Korea is a “grave threat” and vowed to defend South Korea.

A Seoul presidential official told Yonhap news agency Lee would seek a written US commitment to provide a nuclear “umbrella” for Seoul as part of “extended deterrence” against Pyongyang.

North Korea detonated its second nuclear device on May 25, following the first one in 2006. It also went ahead with what Washington said was a disguised test of a long-range missile in April.

The United Nations Security Council in response agreed to tighter cargo inspections, a stricter arms embargo and new targeted financial curbs to choke off revenue for the North’s nuclear and missile sectors.

In response Pyongyang has vowed to build more nuclear bombs and start enriching uranium for a new atomic weapons program.

Some analysts say the sabre-rattling is part of an attempt by 67-year-old ailing North Korean leader, Kim Jong-Il, to bolster a succession plan involving his youngest son, Kim Jong-Un.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Official: N. Korean Ship Carries Weapons to Myanmar

SEOUL, South Korea — A North Korean-flagged ship under close watch in Asian waters is believed to be heading toward Myanmar carrying small arms cargo banned under a new U.N. resolution, a South Korean intelligence official said Monday.

Still, analysts say a high seas interception — something North Korea has said it would consider an act of war — is unlikely.

The Kang Nam, accused of engaging in illicit trade in the past, is the first vessel monitored under the new sanctions designed to punish the North for its defiant nuclear test last month. The U.S. military began tracking the ship after it left a North Korean port on Wednesday on suspicion it was carrying illicit weapons.

A South Korean intelligence official said Monday that his agency believes the North Korean ship is carrying small weapons and is sailing toward the Myanmar city of Yangon.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity citing the sensitive nature of the information, said he could provide no further details.

Myanmar’s military government, which faces an arms embargo from the U.S. and the European Union, reportedly has bought weapons from North Korea in the past.

The Irrawaddy, an online magazine operated by independent exiled journalists from Myanmar, reported Monday that the North Korean ship would dock at the Thilawa port, some 20 miles (30 kilometers) south of Yangon, in the next few days.

The magazine cited an unidentified port official as saying that North Korean ships have docked there in the past. The magazine’s in-depth coverage of Myanmar has been generally reliable in the past.

South Korean television network YTN reported Sunday that the ship was streaming toward Myanmar but said the vessel appeared to be carrying missiles and related parts. The report cited an unidentified intelligence source in South Korea.

Kim Jin-moo, an analyst at Seoul’s state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, said the North is believed to have sold guns, artillery and other small weapons to Myanmar but not missiles, which it has been accused of exporting to Iran and Syria.

The U.N. sanctions, which toughen an earlier arms embargo against North Korea, ban the country from exporting all weapons and weapons-related material, meaning any weapons shipment to Myanmar would violate the resolution..

The Security Council resolution calls on all 192 U.N. member states to inspect North Korean vessels on the high seas “if they have information that provides reasonable grounds to believe that the cargo” contains banned weapons or material to make them. But that requires approval from the North.

If the North refuses to give approval, it must direct the vessel “to an appropriate and convenient port for the required inspection by the local authorities.”

North Korea, however, is unlikely to allow any inspection of its cargo, making an interception unlikely, said Hong Hyun-ik, an analyst at the Sejong Institute think tank outside Seoul.

A senior U.S. military official told The Associated Press on Friday that a Navy ship, the USS John S. McCain, is relatively close to the North Korean vessel but had no orders to intercept it. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Any chance for an armed skirmish between the two ships is low, analysts say, though the North Korean crew is possibly armed with rifles.

“It’s still a cargo ship. A cargo ship can’t confront a warship,” said Baek Seung-joo of the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses.

Tension on the Korean peninsula has been running high since the North’s May 25 nuclear test, with Pyongyang and Washington exchanging near-daily accusations against each other.

President Barack Obama assured Americans in an interview broadcast Monday that the U.S. is prepared for any move North Korea might make amid media reports that Pyongyang is planning a long-range missile test in early July.

“This administration — and our military — is fully prepared for any contingencies,” Obama said during an interview with CBS News’ “The Early Show.”

Still, ever defiant, North Korea declared itself a “proud nuclear power” and warned Monday that it would strike if provoked.

“As long as our country has become a proud nuclear power, the U.S. should take a correct look at whom it is dealing with,” the country’s main Rodong Sinmun said in commentary. “It would be a grave mistake for the U.S. to think it can remain unhurt if it ignites the fuse of war on the Korean peninsula.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Latin America


11 Bodies From Air France Disaster Identified: Officials

SAO PAULO (AFP) — Eleven of the 50 bodies recovered from an Air France jet that plunged into the Atlantic three weeks ago have been identified by fingerprints and dental records, Brazilian officials said Sunday.

The bodies were identified as “10 Brazilians and one foreigner,” officials in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco said in a statement.

Five of the Brazilians were male, the other five were female and the foreigner was male, it added.

The officials, part of a task force that also includes Brazilian police and forensic specialists conducting autopsies in the city of Recife, did not give further details about those identified.

They said the families of the identified Brazilians had been visited personally Friday and Saturday by police officers who broke the news.

The embassy of the foreigner who was identified was also notified.

A special morgue in Recife has received 49 of the 50 bodies recovered from the crash site 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) off Brazil’s northeast coast. The 50th body was due to be delivered by ship on Monday.

There were 228 people from 32 countries onboard the airliner, which went down June 1 off the coast of Brazil on a flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. The cause of the disaster — the worst in Air France’s history — was not known.

Seventy-two French citizens, 59 Brazilians, 26 Germans and passengers from 29 other countries were on the flight.

Identification was initially being attempted using fingerprints, scars, surgical or dental characteristics, and tattoos on the bodies.

If those failed, DNA tests were to be carried out in a Brazilian police laboratory in Brasilia based on samples taken from relatives.

After bodies were identified, they were to be released to the families for burial, the statement said.

The Brazilian officials said they were still waiting for records and other information to identify bodies of foreigners.

“The lack of premortem data explains the small number foreigners identified,” they said in the statement.

Brazilian authorities leading the search for bodies and debris have fading hopes of finding any more remains. On Saturday, a sophisticated plane with on-board radar that found the first traces of the downed plane was taken off the operation.

A separate French operation looking for the plane’s black boxes was continuing, with a French military nuclear submarine scouring the crash zone.

It was trying to detect homing beacons that are expected to fade within a week.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


76 Migrants Sent Back to Libya

(ANSAmed) — PALERMO, JUNE 19 — A boat with 76 migrants on board, sighted yesterday 29 miles south of Lampedusa in waters where Malta is responsible for search and rescue operations, has been intercepted by a patrol boat of the Italian Coastguard. According to Maltese military sources, the non-EU citizens on board, including women and children, have been handed over to a Libyan patrol boat and taken back to Tripoli. The boat was spotted yesterday afternoon by a private Maltese aircraft which was flying over the Strait of Sicily. A German military aircraft of the joint Frontex patrol mission in the Mediterranean, stationed at the Maltese airport of Luqa, was also sent to the area. According to the same sources, the immigrants were handed over this morning to a Libyan military unit. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Calais on Riot Alert as Protesters Flood Town in Bid to End Border Controls

Calais was a town under siege yesterday as hundreds of protesters arrived to demand an end to border controls between France and Britain.

Riot police were on alert in the streets after intelligence reports raised fears of widespread violence.

Local authorities banned the sale or possession of any item with the potential to be used as a weapon — including bottles of gas and petrol.

Up to 2,000 police officers are expected to patrol the town.

Protestors — including many from Britain — have pledged to destroy the barbed wire fences and other security measures preventing illegal migrants getting across the Channel to England.

There have also been threats to burn ‘symbols of capitalism’ including local government offices, and even hotels run by prominent global chains.

There are currently some 2,000 migrants living rough in the Calais area, including many in shanty towns next to the ferry port.

A group calling itself ‘No Borders’ It is calling on protestors from all European countries to join them in ‘tearing down borders.’

The group is a mainly Internet based loose network of organisations and individuals in Britain and Europe which advocates freedom of movement and equality for all. T

he network says it operates on ‘an anti-authoritarian basis to struggle in solidarity with migrants to work towards a world without borders, capitalism or the state.’

Speaking of his concerns, local prefect Pierre de Bosquet said no less than 2,000 CRS riot officers would be ‘in the vicinity’ of the town, along with a squadron of mounted officers.

Mr De Bosquet said: ‘As a precaution, I’ve also obtained a prefect’s order allowing for a week-long ban on the sale, transport and carrying of any material which can be used as a weapon, or present a risk to anyone.

‘The sale of petrol and bottles of gas will also specifically be banned.’

Mr De Bosquet said police intelligence had revealed plans for wide scale violence.

‘We’ve intercepted messages from organisers calling on people to turn up with protective clothing but also with tear gas bombs,’ he said.

Last month Natacha Bouchart, the mayor of Calais, said the UK’s lax asylum system and benefits culture had ‘imposed’ thousands of illegal migrants on her town.

In a blistering attack in which she also called for millions in compensation, Mrs Bouchart said the UK was entirely to blame for the those who use the port as a staging point.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

General


In Cairo President Obama Betrayed Jesus Christ When He Claimed to be a Christian

On Radio Ulster’s ‘Sunday Sequence’ programme on Sunday morning, 7th June 2009, there was an item analysing the speech delivered by President Barack Obama at Cairo University on the previous Thursday, 4th June 2009. What was interesting was that the guests who were interviewed by presenter, William Crawley basically represented Jewish and Palestinian opinion — there was no Christian analytical input into the programme.

As a result the programme focussed very much on the possible political ramifications of the speech for the Middle East area and Israel in particular. I want in this article to look at some of the spiritual ramifications of this speech, particularly as they impact upon the line in the speech when Barack Obama declared, “I am a Christian”.

To do this I’m going to pose some questions, then look at some specific extracts of this speech by Mr Obama, this self-proclaimed “Christian”, comment upon these extracts and show how such comments do represent a betrayal of the Lord Jesus Christ.

[…]

Question 2:

Would a true convert to and faithful disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ give credence to any story that reduces Him to the level of a mere ‘prophet among prophets’, elevates a mere creature to a level greatly above Him and in a spiritual context declares non-Christians to be children of Abraham?

Speech extracts [2]:

All of us have a responsibility to work for the day… when Jerusalem is a secure and lasting home for Jews and Christians and Muslims, and a place for all of the children of Abraham to mingle peacefully together as in the story of Isra, when Moses, Jesus, and Mohammed (peace be upon them) joined in prayer.

Comments [2]:

In this portion of his speech, Mr Obama, supposedly a Christian, has set his seal of approbation and approval upon an incident known fully to Muslims as ‘Isra and Mi’raj’ — an incident also referred to as ‘The Night Journey’.

Sura 17 in the Koran is titled ‘Al Isra’ or ‘The Night Journey’ and it opens with these words ‘Glory be to Him (Allah) who made His servant (Mohammed) go by night from the Sacred Temple (Mecca) to the farther Temple (believed by some Muslim scholars, though not all, to refer to Jerusalem) whose surroundings We have blessed, that We might show him (Mohammed) some of our signs’.

It is clear from what Muslims claim happened that their Jesus is merely ‘a prophet among prophets’ and that in fact Mohammed is the pre-eminent one. In his book ‘The Muslim Christ’ that I have already quoted from, Samuel M Zwemer quotes a Muslim account of this incident. In his pre-amble to the account Mr Zwemer wrote ‘The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ is surpassed by the story of Mohammed’s ascent into heaven, where he had personal communication with all the previous prophets, and leaving Jesus far below in the second heaven, himself mounted to the seventh, where, according to Muslim tradition, he ate and drank with God’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Jeff Jacoby: Orwell’s Time-Tested Warnings

‘NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR’’ opens with one of the most famous first lines in modern English literature — the vaguely unnerving “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.’’ The line it ends with is even more famous, and considerably more sinister: “He loved Big Brother.’’

George Orwell’s brilliant, bitter novel turns 60 this month, but after all these years it has lost none of its nightmarish chill. Its hero is the decidedly unheroic Winston Smith, a weak and wistful man who lives in the totalitarian police state of Oceania, which is ruled by the Party — personified in Big Brother, whose menacing image is everywhere — and in which the Thought Police ruthlessly suppress any hint of dissent. The Party enforces its will through constant surveillance, relentless propaganda, and the annihilation of anyone who rebels against its authority, even if only in private thoughts or conversation. Winston engages in such thought-crimes, first by secretly recording his hatred of Big Brother in a diary, then through a love affair with a young woman called Julia. Eventually he is arrested, interrogated, tortured, broken.

“Nineteen Eighty-Four’’ was Orwell’s warning of what unchecked state power can become…

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



SSRI Antidepressants Linked to Male Infertility

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a warning a few years ago that pregnant women taking the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressant paroxetine risk giving birth to infants with major birth defects, including heart abnormalities.

Now comes word that the same drug (sold as Paxil, Paxil CR, Seroxat, Pexeva, and generic paroxetine hydrochloride) carries another danger that could keep babies from being born in the first place. A new study just published in the online edition of the journal Fertility and Sterility concludes as many as fifty percent of all men taking the antidepressant could have damaged sperm and compromised fertility.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Swine Flu Tolls Leaps Past 52,000

The World Health Organisation has reported a huge leap in the swine flu pandemic toll to more than 52,000 people infected and 231 dead.

The toll has risen by more than 7873 cases and 51 deaths since Friday, highlighting the steady spread of the A(H1N1) virus.

Swine flu has now been reported in 100 countries and territories.

And figures yet to be incorporated into the UN health agency’s official figures indicate an even higher toll. The Philippines has reported the first swine flu death in Asia, Iran joined the countries reporting their first cases, while Singapore quarantined a Hong Kong football team.

The United States led a group of countries that have seen dramatic increases in cases of virus, according to the new WHO figures released on Monday.

There were an extra 3594 cases taking the US total to 21,449 with 87 deaths. Mexico was stable with 7600 cases and 113 deaths.

But Chile, which is entering the southern hemisphere winter has also been badly hit with 1190 more cases (4315), including four deadly.

There have been an extra 805 extra cases in Canada (5710), where there have been 13 deaths.

Britain remains the worst-hit country in Europe. It has recorded 754 extra cases taking its total to 2,506, including one death.

In Australia there are 237 extra cases at 2436, with one death, though health officials are still to determine what role swine flu played in the death of the 26-year-old man who suffered from a range of health issues.

In Japan there are 160 more cases at 850. China has an extra 220 cases at 739. China’s health ministry website on Sunday said 414 people had fallen ill with swine flu.

A 49-year-old woman in the Philippines became Asia’s first fatality linked to swine flu, health authorities said.

She had been suffering from heart and liver ailments for some time, and the department said in a statement that her infection with the influenza A (H1N1) virus had worsened her condition.

The woman’s case had gone undetected until a doctor visited her in her home when she was already in critical condition, the department said.

Singapore on Monday quarantined 18 members of the Hong Kong youth football team after three players tested positive for swine flu ahead of the Asian Youth Games.

Thirteen players, three coaches, a physiotherapist and a team official were placed under quarantine at a suburban beach resort, a Games spokeswoman said.

Singapore authorities quarantined 19 members of the Philippine football squad at the weekend after one player tested positive for A(H1N1).

The spread of swine flu was highlighted when Iran’s health ministry reported the country’s first virus case in a 16-year-old boy who had just been to the United States, the the official IRNA news agency said.

The WHO said that its figures could not be considered reliable because some countries were no longer keeping total figures while other poor countries did not have the means to reliably detect cases.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



The Plan for Socialist World Government

These proposals, the document says, include initiatives involving “taxation for global objectives.”

While meaningless United Nations hand-wringing over the North Korean nuclear weapons program garnered the headlines, the world body is moving ahead with a global conference to lay the groundwork for world government financed by global taxes. The communist head of the U.N. General Assembly is leading the effort, but he is getting crucial support from “progressive” economists who advise the Obama Administration and the Democratic Party.

The United Nations Conference on the World Financial and Economic Crisis and Its Impact on Development, previously scheduled for June 1-3, will now take place on June 24-26.

U.N. General Assembly President Miguel D’Escoto is the U.N. point man on these “global governance” issues. We noted his role at the United Nations in a column last October. Now, even the New York Times is paying attention to what this crackpot has been up to.

D’Escoto, the Times said, believes the way out of the global financial crisis “should be lined with all manner of new global institutions, authorities and advisory boards,” including the Global Stimulus Fund, the Global Public Goods Authority, the Global Tax Authority, the Global Financial Products Safety Commission, the Global Financial Regulatory Authority, the Global Competition Authority, the Global Council of Financial and Economic Advisers, the Global Economic Coordination Council, and the World Monetary Board.

D’Escoto is the former foreign minister of Communist Sandinista Nicaragua and Catholic Priest of the Maryknoll Order who advocates Marxist-oriented liberation theology and won the Lenin Peace Prize from the old Soviet Union. D’Escoto also claims a Master’s of Science from Columbia University’s School of Journalism.

The Times interviewed Paul Oquist, D’Escoto’s senior adviser for the conference, who sat beneath portraits of Fidel Castro of Cuba, Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua, among others.

The problem is that the Times, in its story, “At U.N., a Sandinista’s Plan for Recovery,” didn’t mention until the 13th paragraph that the official U.N. list of “experts” behind the plan include an American economist, Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning professor from Columbia University who supported and contributed to Obama’s presidential campaign and advises Congressional Democrats on economic policy.

Stiglitz, an advocate of nationalizing U.S. banks, is also a member of the Socialist International Commission on Global Financial Issues and his name appears on a separate list of 15 “special advisers” to D’Escoto obtained from the U.N. by Inner City Press. Another name on the list-Noam Chomsky-is on the board of the Communist Party spin-off, the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



WHO: 51 More Swine Flu Deaths as Pandemic Spreads

GENEVA — The World Health Organization says the global tally of deaths from swine flu has increased by 51 to 231.

WHO says most of the latest deaths occurred in the United States.

It says Colombia, Chile and Canada have also reported fatal cases.

WHO says the number of reported cases reached 52,160 on Monday. This is an increase of 7,873 since Friday.

The global body says Algeria, Bangladesh, Brunei, Fiji and Slovenia reported their first cases over the weekend.

Earlier this month, WHO declared swine flu a “moderate” pandemic that would likely continue for 1-2 years.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Fundraising Finale: “Dear Hearts and Gentle Friends”

Note: this post will be kept at the top for the rest of today, until Fundraising Week officially concludes with tonight’s news feed. New posts are being added below it.

Update June 22nd (by Dymphna):



I’m glad the Baron chose the song “Hard Times Come Again No More” as the theme for this bleg. Even though it was written before the Civil War (Foster died in 1864, the last year of the War), things were roiling and unsettled even in 1855. The states were stretching the bonds of federation and there had been a financial depression which only egged on the problems of the agrarian South.

This version of “Hard Times” by Mavis Staples is considered to be the best interpretation.

Several of Foster’s songs became state anthems in the South, though he wasn’t born here and only visited briefly once or twice. It didn’t matter: he had figured out the soul, both the black and the white aspects, of America’s southern regions.

You can also look at the wiki on “Oh! Susannah!” for more information.

For our readers who aren’t familiar with Foster, he captured and transmitted via music the mood of the mid-nineteenth century in America (de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America was pusblished then). That’s why you hear underneath most of his tunes a strain of melancholy. On the other hand, “Oh Susannah!” became the theme for the California Gold Rush at the time. Eventually, there was a “Oh California!” variation.

Here is some biographical background on Stephen Foster. For those who already know him, this may provide a bit more context:

Rather than writing nostalgically for an old South (it was, after all, the present day for him), or trivializing the hardships of slavery, Foster sought to humanize the characters in his songs, to have them care for one another, and to convey a sense that all people–regardless of their ethnic identities or social and economic class–share the same longings and needs for family and home. He instructed white performers of his songs not to mock slaves but to get their audiences to feel compassion for them. In his own words, he sought to “build up taste…among refined people by making words suitable to their taste, instead of the trashy and really offensive words which belong to some songs of that order.” Stephen Foster was a man with a mission, to reform black-face minstrelsy, then the most pervasive and powerful force in American popular culture.

It is possible that Foster’s sense of mission was aided and encouraged by his boyhood friend and artistic collaborator, Charles Shiras. Pittsburgh was a center for abolitionist activities in Pennsylvania, and Shiras was a leader of the movement…He and Stephen wrote at least one song together, and a stage work that was performed but never published and is now lost.

[…]

At first, Foster wrote ballads and dances for parlor singers and pianists as well as minstrel songs, often referred to as “Ethiopian” songs, for professional theatrical performers. The minstrel songs, like the ballads, had simple melodies and accompaniments, but their texts, written in dialect, depicted African-American slaves as simple, good-natured creatures. Some of his earliest minstrel texts even had crude caricatures and terms, i.e. “Away Down Souf” (1848) and one verse that was later deleted from “Oh! Susanna.”

But as Foster grew more ambivalent about the earlier “Ethiopian” songs, he began offering a different image, that of the black as a human being experiencing pain, love, joy, even nostalgia. “Nelly Was a Lady” (1849) is an eloquent lament of a slave for his loved one who has died, apparently the first song written by a white composer for the white audience of the minstrel shows that portrays a black man and woman as loving husband and wife, and insists on calling the woman a “lady,” a term reserved for well-born white women. “Angelina Baker” (1851) similarly laments a slave who has been sent away by “old Massa.” “Ring, Ring de Banjo!” (1851), despite its apparent surface of frivolity, has the slave/singer leaving the plantation “while the ribber’s running high,” a reference to escaping while the bloodhounds could not pick up his scent, and traveling to freedom on the Underground Railroad. “Old Folks at Home” (1851), which was to become the most popular of all Foster’s songs, conveys a sentiment that had almost universal appeal–yearning for lost home, youth, family, and happiness. Increasingly, the “Ethiopian” songs used the same musical style that Foster created for his parlor ballads.

Because Foster was a careful listener and writer, he created songs that touched the American soul. There is simply some eternal echo, some chord, that thrums the American heart.

Somewhere we have a collection of his music. It was from that book that the future Baron learned to play “Hard Times”.

American Protestant hymns of the mid to late nineteenth century owe much to Stephen Foster. Because the germ of most of his songs was spiritual in nature, he was also the grandfather of many crossover tunes, the ones that both black and white Americans learned by heart.

Foster’s “Hard Times Come Again No More,” published in early 1855, was both a reflection of recent events in his personal life and a portent of things to come. He and Jane (his wife) separated for a time in 1853 and his close friend, Charles Shiras, died during that same period. During 1855, both his parents died. His song output diminished–only four new songs in that year–and his debts increased. He was forced to draw advances from his publishers, then found himself unable to supply the new songs he had promised them.

It was downhill from there. When he died, they found a slip of paper in his pocket which read, “dear hearts and gentle friends”.

That is you, our readers: dear hearts and gentle friends. Even those who only come to argue, those contentious few, are welcome.



Note for first-time donors: Expect to see “Natural Intelligence of Central Virginia” when you open up our Paypal, because that’s the business name that I use for software development, etc.
– – – – – – – –
Update June 20th (by Dymphna): Bumped up again, but no one’s on duty.

Unlike NPR, we’ll take both Sabbaths off and return on Monday for the finale. I have it already done, ready to go just in case I fall down the stairs or something.

Enjoy your day of rest. See you Monday and will follow with a report on Tuesday. It’s been fun for me.

I finally found the signature line that no2liberals uses, so I’ll leave it with you. From James Lewis:

Gratitude is a noble virtue; you have to respect yourself to be grateful to others. Only those who feel blessed can be filled with gratitude. It is a kind of courtesy of the heart.

I have given and received much gratitude during these fund-raising days.

Thank you.



Update June 19: This post will be moved to the top each day as a part of Fundraising Week. If you’ve read it already, scroll down for newer articles.

I’ve been down with “Stonewall Jackson’s Revenge” all day, so posting is light.

But the fundraising must go on! We’re just like NPR, annoying you with our refusal to shut up until you pay up…



Update June 18:Due to Zonka’s video tip, I can’t get “sixteen tons of number nine coal” out of my mind. Dymphna dug up (so to speak) the Tennessee Ernie Ford original, which is definitely preferable.

I may be deeper in debt, but there’s no company store that I can owe my soul to.

Thanks to everyone who has donated. You all are magnificent, as usual. And the email exchanges have been worthwhile in their own right.



Update June 17: One of yesterday’s donors sent this in an email:

There has to be a good joke somewhere that starts off with the line “an unwanted elderly programmer”. Maybe a limerick…?

An unwanted elderly programmer: That’s me! You’ll see me standing on a street corner holding a sign that says “WILL CODE SQL FOR FOOD”.

We were surprised and gratified with the response during the first twenty-four hours of our fundraiser. Gates of Vienna readers are an uncommonly generous lot. Rest assured that there is a special place in heaven reserved for you — even the atheists.

What was even more inspiring was the fact that several of the donors said that they were unemployed, too.

Many thanks to everyone who has contributed so far.


Let us pause in life’s pleasures and count its many tears,
While we all sup sorrow with the poor;
There’s a song that will linger forever in our ears:
Oh, hard times come again no more.

               — Stephen C. Foster, 1854

This is not a good time to be fundraising.

Bread line 1There’s no point in hyping my unemployment; I’m hardly the only one in this fix. Times are tough, and they’re going to get tougher yet.

Still, it’s been quite a while since our last fundraiser, so it’s past time to rattle the pencil in the tin cup once again.

My job prospects are not as good this time around. People don’t want to hire old fogeys like me as computer programmers — they prefer young wet-behind-the-ears punks, who are presumably well-versed in the latest up-to-the-minute high-tech wizardry.

Because of Dymphna’s various medical conditions, I can no longer undertake the long commutes like I did some years ago. There was a time when I would drive to Northern Virginia or Richmond at the beginning of each week, stay for several days, and come home on the weekends. But she needs me here with her more now, so that’s no longer an option.

Tip jarI’m going to patch together a combination of telecommuting piecework contracts, odd jobs, and whatever we can scratch out of blogging. My goal is to arrange my schedule so as keep Gates of Vienna up and running despite the obstacles.

Nilk suggested that I devise a subscription system in addition to the option for a one-time donation. Last week I made a “subscribe” button that connects with a $10/month automatic payment option using Paypal. I’ve never tried setting up such a thing before, so if you attempt to use it and run into any problems, please let me know. It’s on the sidebar just above the tip cup and the “donate” button.

If you prefer, you can use a credit card without actually setting up a Paypal account.

Nobody — probably not even Glenn Reynolds — can make a living entirely from blogging. But I hope we can eke out the hard times with your help, and keep body and soul and our connectivity together until such time as I can find a real job.

After Pajamas Media gave us our walking papers last year, we made a commitment to our readers not to take on any more annoying advertising. You all leapt into the breach with full élan, and made up for over a year’s worth of lost advertising revenue with your generous donations.

But much more time has gone by since our initial appeal, and I’m now unemployed, so I’m banging my cup on the table one more time.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


It’s important to remember that Gates of Vienna is very much a team effort. If we ever earn more than a pittance doing this, I’ll start doling out pieces of it to the volunteers who spend so much time helping us.

In the meantime, I’d like to acknowledge some of the folks who give so unstintingly of their time and expertise to make this blog work. Some of them you will recognize as regular contributors — Fjordman, El Inglés, Paul Weston, ESW, Henrik Ræder Clausen, and Takuan Seiyo.

Others toil doggedly on in relative obscurity. I can’t possibly name them all, but among them are the ICLA research team, which includes Gaia, Aeneas, AMDG, and KGS. Then there are the translators Kepiblanc, CB, TB, Piggy Infidel, H. Numan, Rolf Krake, Zonka, Alma, and Yorkshire Miner. Vlad Tepes, Erenicus, and Steen are invaluable for photos, video, and news items.

Our regular tipsters deserve a mention, especially those who supply bulk material for the news feed: Insubria, C. Cantoni, Heroyalwhyness, Islam O’Phobe, JD, and Tuan Jim. Other frequent tipsters are Abu Elvis, Larwyn, LN, Zenster, REP, The Frozen North, Paul Green, and Nilk.

Bread line 2Last but not least is our Flemish correspondent VH, who is in a class all his own. Not only does he send news tips and translate from Dutch, French, and German sources, but he is also a top-notch researcher and collator of information. Nobody can do a better job of diving into the sewers of Antifa and Indymedia for the purposes of opposition research. We owe a big debt of gratitude to VH — much of the valuable content here at Gates of Vienna is available because of his efforts.

All of these doughty souls are foot soldiers in the Army of Midgets. If my ship ever comes in, they’ll get first pick of the cargo.

’Tis the song, the sigh of the weary,
Hard times, hard times, come again no more!
Many days you have lingered around my cabin door;
Oh, hard times come again no more.

Pay No Attention to That Woman Behind the Veil

What’s heartening about this news story is that Michigan judges may now order women to remove their veils in court. We’re so used to decisions that go the other way that even a small victory like this seems significant.

But the battle is far from over, and a different court with a more politically correct composition could rule the opposite. The idea that “religious freedom” trumps everything else, including the Bill of Rights and the common law, is well-entrenched among the elites. According to such legal reasoning, the wearing of hijab is a fundamental human right which may not be abridged.

The following article from Al Arabiya takes an Islamic perspective on the ruling:

US Judges Can Demand Removal of Muslim Veil

NiqabJudges in the United States can now order a veiled woman witness to remove her face covering to testify in court, according to a new court ruling issued last week that has human rights groups worried about its potential discrimination against veiled Muslim women.

In a majority vote of 5-2, a Michigan U.S. Supreme Court [sic — should be Michigan Supreme Court] ruled that judges should “exercise reasonable control” over the appearances of witnesses to judge their body language and facial expressions and to ensure proper identification.

The new ruling was passed following the 2006 Hamtramck case, in which Ginnah Mohammad, a Detroit veiled Muslim woman who wore the face veil, niqab, refused to testify in court after Judge Paul Paruk asked her to remove her facial covering in order to determine whether she spoke the truth.

Mohammed sued Paruk in federal court and her case was dismissed. The Michigan Judges Association and Michigan District Judges Association then requested a court ruling giving judges authority over a witness’s attire.

Think of the implications if the Michigan Supreme Court had not been so sensible:

Prosecutor:   Do you see the person in this courtroom, Mrs. Veeble?
Witness:   Yes, sir; it’s one of those eight women wearing burkhas sitting in the front row.

Or maybe a lineup, with six women in niqab: “Ma’am, can you identify the person who struck you?”

Common sense has won out in Michigan, at least for the time being. But, needless to say, CAIR is promising to fight this injustice to the last petrodollar:
– – – – – – – –

The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) criticized the ruling for giving judges more leeway without guidelines and warned that the ruling could backfire as veiled women may shy away from reporting crime for fear of having to unveil in front of a judge.

“It allows a large degree of leeway for the judges to make their own decisions without clear legal guidance,” Dawud Walid, executive director of the CAIR in Southfield told Detroit News. “There isn’t any clear articulation in regards to what will or will not be acceptable according to a judge’s general discretion.”

Well, no — that’s why it’s called “judging”, and not “doing what the Emir says.” It’s possible that this concept is not well-known in the Middle East.

Strangely enough, the ACLU did not go along with CAIR:

However Jessie Rossman, an attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) was not worried and said that the language of the ruling was broad enough to not explicitly prohibit judges from allowing women to remain veiled.

“Trial court judges have retained their power to exercise their discretion,” Rossman, who was optimistic that judges would respect religious beliefs, said. “We’re hopeful and encouraging trial court judges to honor women’s constitutionally protected freedom and allow women to testify in the niqab.”

Even so, the ACLU won’t rule out the possibility of litigation:

Rossman added that while ACLU cannot challenge the adoption of the new rule, it could challenge its enforcement on a case by case basis if a trial court judge discriminates against a woman because of religious attire.

But Angela Wu, a lawyer with the Washington-based Beckett Fund for Religious Liberty, warned that the Michigan ruling could be the start of legalized greater restrictions on religious liberty that may govern behavior in all walks of life.

The implications are breathtaking: the constitutional right to confront one’s accusers might violate those same accusers’ religious rights. Or the necessity of public identification may have to take a back seat to the traditions of purdah.

I don’t think we’re done with this issue yet. It has been popping up all over the West recently: Denmark has fought vigorously against a blanket (so to speak) right to veil, and Nicolas Sarkozy very publicly condemned the use of the burkha in France. But other countries and localities are quite squishy about the right of niqab, and the UK has caved almost completely.

Expect Muslim organizations to keep pushing this one at every opportunity.



Hat tip: TB.

Putting the World to Right

Don’t start me talking, I could talk all night
My mind goes sleepwalking while I’m putting the world to right

                          — Elvis Costello, “Oliver’s Army”

The opportunity for the United States to protect the long-term value of its currency has passed.

The Obama administration has responded to the financial crisis by taking on an unprecedented additional burden of debt, bailing out and buying up shaky banks and financial institutions, and increasing federal meddling in the operations of failing private enterprises. This poison cocktail — an inflated currency plus measures that are all but guaranteed to drive down productivity — is certain to deepen and extend the current recession and generate a run on the dollar before the economy fully recovers.

The rest of the world is beginning to sense that the United States will likely be unable to repay all its debts without degrading the value of the dollar. At some point the creditor nations are going to stop buying new Treasuries as the old ones come due, and when that happens the USA will not have enough dollars to pay off its outstanding notes. Inflation will be the only way out, and the funny money that the Fed has been spreading around for the last three quarters will have to be converted into dollar bills worth substantially less than they are now.

Last week’s meeting of the BRIC nations in Yekaterinburg was a preliminary attempt by the major developing nations to chart a way out of this dilemma. Russia and China hold large amounts of dollar-denominated debt, and are searching for a way to rid themselves of it and find an alternative reserve currency, one which will remain largely untouched when the dollar and the euro finally collapse.

Lula da Silva, the president of Brazil — another member of the BRICs — is confident that his country will be one of the leaders of the new order that emerges from the smoking ruins of American hegemony. According to AFP:

Time for ‘New World Order’: Brazilian President

ASTANA (AFP) — The global financial crisis has reduced the differences between nations and created the opportunity to form a new world order, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said Wednesday.

Speaking after a meeting with Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev in the Kazakh capital Astana, Lula called on the global community to seize on the crisis to create a fairer world for developing nations.

A “fairer world” — what does that mean?

Presumably it means that the various corrupt sinkholes of the Third World will be able to scavenge the corpse of the industrial West with impunity as soon as American protection vanishes.

Or maybe not. Maybe Lula is more high-minded than that, and really does have the interests of the poor and downtrodden at heart.

He went on:
– – – – – – – –

“I want to say that before the crisis, there were many countries which had greater significance than others, and some countries which had no significance at all,” he said through a translator.

“After the crisis, everyone has become similar. We have the possibility to create a new world order and together we should improve our relations.”

He’s right about that — when the current global fever runs its course, everyone will be similar. But the similarity will likely result from the developing nations becoming more like the Third World, and not vice versa. In a decade or so, after Obama and the European Commission get through with us, we’ll all look like Zimbabwe.

The primary power brokers of the New Order will be Russia and China, if the BRIC discussions are any indication. Russia is much smaller than China, and still quite damaged from seven decades of communism, but given its military and nuclear capability, it manages to wield a lot of clout.

Asia News analyzes the results of the meeting in Yekaterinburg:

BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China) yesterday ended their historic first summit saying the world needs a more diversified international monetary system that is less dependent on the dollar. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who hosted the summit in Yekaterinburg, invited the four emerging nations to “create the conditions for a fairer world order”. But experts observe that their differences still outweigh their common interests.

Their primary common interest is to somehow maintain the value of the assets they hold as the dollar enters its inevitable decline. But it will be very difficult to engineer a new reserve currency without one country having control of it — the yuan, the rupee, the ruble: something has to replace the dollar.

It would be all but politically impossible to pool their various resources and create a new currency that is independent of any one country, at least in the amount of time they have to work with. After all, it took the European Union forty years to birth the Euro, and that was a group of nations sharing a contiguous geography under the military umbrella of the United States.

What happens when Russia and China run into a major dispute about the new currency? Who will mediate between them?

But the pressure is on. Something has to be done, and soon:

The four BRIC countries account for 40% of the world’s population and 15% of the global economy, for which they claim a greater voice and representation in international financial institutions. They said there was a strong need for a stable, predictable and more diversified global monetary system and urged support for a more democratic and just “multipolar” world order. There was no explicit mention of the US dollar or the United States in the statement, but the desire to remove it from the role of dominant international currency is evident.

However, a common vision on immediate steps is lacking. Medvedev called for a “more diversified” monetary system yesterday to reduce dependency on the world’s reserve currency. But China has over 2 billion US dollars in its reserve and does not want the American currency to lose its value now. Instead Beijing is in favour of a progressive extension of Yuan value across neighbouring states: yesterday the Chinese Communist Party’s official newspaper, the People’s Daily, explained in an editorial that the substitution of the dollar with other currencies had already begun through bi- or multilateral agreements between states and that the process will be gradual.

That’s the problem: how to get rid of all those dollars without taking a bath when their value drops.

There are so many players in this game: the Fed, the central banks of all the major countries, the World Bank, and the IMF, not to mention all the international corporations and wealthy speculators who hold large dollar reserves.

They’re playing a high-stakes game of chicken. Nobody wants the value of his stockpile to drop, and nobody wants to be the first to dump dollars.

But nobody wants to go second, either — especially if China or George Soros goes first. Once that happens, the dollar will go into freefall.

Hong Kong is up for grabs
London is full of Arabs
We could be in Palestine
Overrun by a Chinese line
With the boys from the Mersey and the Thames and the Tyne



Hat tips: C. Cantoni and heroyalwhyness.

SÄPO: “Radical Muslims? Fine With Us!”

Our Swedish correspondent CB has translated an account of an interview with the press secretary of SÄPO, the Swedish security police.

First, a prefatory note from the translator:

This article is by the blogger Roger from the blog Muslimska Friskolan, “the Muslim free-school”. The blogger quite often does his own journalism, as well as discussing different articles and reports, like the much-discussed Rosengård report, by the Defense College of Sweden (which this article is also about).

The article is an interview with the press secretary of the Swedish Security Police (SÄPO). If this is a fairly accurate representation of the interview, it speaks volumes about how political correctness in the Multicultural age is hampering and harming the work of the Security Police and forces their press secretary to practice dissimulation. That in itself gives us a frightening picture of the price of the political elite’s abdication of responsibility for the issue of Muslim radicalization; in fear of the Islamophobia and racism-brand, Swedish authorities are practicing taqiyya.

It’s a tragic irony that the Security Police can’t stand up and say that radical Muslims are a threat to Swedish democracy, given that their crest contains the words: The Security Police — We protect Sweden and democracy.

Here we have the standard trademarked fallback position of “the few violent radicals”. And all the other radicals present no danger, and they are welcome to influence Swedish society as much as they want and can — since they aren’t violent at the moment. This interview shows us that either the Security Police are very much unaware of what Islam is, its history and tenets and the inbuilt supremacy of all the Islamic sects, that Islam is a political ideology as much as a religion, and the legally prescribed subjugation of women and non-Muslims, or the Security Police do know about this, but fear the public stigma to say so aloud. So, the press secretary has to wiggle like a worm on a hook, until the logical finishing statement, that the Security Police are fully OK with Muslim radicalism and that they do not see that as constituting a threat. Only the few radicals turning to violence.

He says this as the representative of the Security Police, who hold the responsibility to protect my country and family from those who want and are intent on the destruction of Swedish constitutional democracy and its replacement with Islamic shari’a law. It is to the shame of all Swedes that this continues, most especially to those in power.

And now CB’s translation of the Muslimska Friskolan post:

Interview with SÄPO about the Rosengård report

Today, Monday June 15th, the blog Muslimska Friskolan [Muslim free-school] obtained an interview with SÄPO. It was the Security police’s press secretary Patrik Peter who promised the blog that he would answer a couple questions and examine the SÄPO commissioner’s Saturday interview [on Swedish public radio] from June 13, 2009:

(Earlier blog post)

“Press contact

Journalists may phone the Security police’s press secretary Patrik Peter at 010-568 79 00.

You may also reach Patrik by e-mail

info@sakerhetspolisen.se”

Source

SÄPO’s press secretary Patrik Peter is a diligent and accessible person. He answered his work-phone on Sunday June 14, 2009. It was only a day later, and he had already gone through the contents of the radio interview with SÄPO commissioner Anders Danielsson. He had also familiarized himself with the extent to which the Defense College’s Rosengård report agrees with SÄPO’s view.

Press secretary Patrik Peter recounted that when Anders Danielsson earlier was county police commissioner, regular meetings with SÄPO were part of the agenda. Now that Danielsson is SÄPO commissioner the meetings with police authorities are also regular. How regular the meetings are is classified.

The press secretary can or will not answer whether or not radicalization among Muslims in Rosengård has increased. He says that in his Saturday interview the SÄPO commissioner meant that radicalization in Rosengård is not worse than in other similar suburbs in Sweden.

– – – – – – – –

The blog now puts forward its objection that at least two of three SÄPO co-workers witnessed that the Rosengård report said that radicalization in Rosengård had increased. The press secretary answered that he does not know what the three co-workers answered. The blog reported to the press secretary that 29 of the 30 interviewed answered independently of each other that radicalization has increased. Three of those interviewed were from SÄPO. Thus, at least two of these are of the opinion that radicalization in Rosengård has increased.

The press secretary then answers that radicalization of Muslims in Rosengård isn’t a threat to democracy, according to SÄPO commissioner Anders Danielsson. He continues by saying that only if radicalization turns violent is it a threat to democracy.

The blog then asks the press secretary whether the closed basement mosque in Rosengård with ensuing riots signified violence. The press secretary agrees.

In addition, the blog asks about the closed basement mosque that belonged to the Islamist Islamic Culture Association. The blog claims that the basement mosque wasn’t closed for the premises to become a living-school, but because SÄPO, among others, participated in closing the basement mosque since it constituted a threat to democracy.

The press secretary had nothing to object to in that description.

The blog further asks whether the current daily stone-throwing against firemen and police by Muslims in Rosengård means that radicalization has turned violent and become a threat to democracy.

The press secretary answers that the SÄPO commissioner in the Saturday interview meant that it’s impossible to compare it with the unrest in France.

The blog then wonders if firemen who are pelted daily with stones and bottles and are on the sick-list, and the police who have to back off in Rosengård, will be of the same opinion as the SÄPO commissioner, that it’s OK for them to be subjected to this, since it’s nothing compared to how it is in France.

The press secretary now understands that the SÄPO commissioner’s comparison with France is lame.

The blog also asks about the SÄPO commissioner’s judgment when he compares Rosengård with France. When the riots started in France the police, the press, and other authorities said that something similar could not happen in Sweden. Shortly after that, it started in Rosengård. Is it not the same radicalization that turns violent?

The press secretary answers that in Paris it was of a much larger scope.

The blog answers that Paris is Europe’s largest city, with ten million inhabitants and many times more suburbs. But the exact same things happens with burned cars, war against the police and stone throwing against firemen in Rosengård in the forty times smaller city of Malmö. Shall then the inhabitants who are insecure in Rosengård say only that it’s no danger, since it happens in more suburbs in France?

The press secretary does not know how he should answer.

The blog continues to criticize the judgment of the SÄPO commissioner and relate how the academic essay about Anders Danielsson showed that those working under him when he was county police commissioner in Skåne gave many examples of his poor judgment and bullying management. Just some months prior to the essay’s presentation, Justice Minister Beatrice Ask appointed county police commissioner Anders Danielsson to the new commissioner of SÄPO. If the essay had been published before, the appointment might never have become appropriate, because then his leadership style would have been revealed:

www.sr.se/cgi-bin/malmo/nyheter/artikel.asp?artikel=1475573

www.uppsatser.se/uppsats/6e2f714c4e/

www.fek.lu.se/supp/supp_download.asp?EB_iid=CBFFB5F5-EF15-462A-9358-8AD845DBD559&id=3207&filename=FEK-00013086.pdf

The blog returns to ask the SÄPO commissioner’s view of the Rosengård report.

The press secretary answers that SÄPO’s objection is that it was drawn from as few persons as 30.

The blog wonders about at least two and perhaps three SÄPO co-workers who assert that radicalization has increased in Rosengård.

The press secretary says that radicalization is no threat to democracy.

The blog then wonders why SÄPO maps Muslims with radical views as one of its tasks, if increasing radicalization is not a security threat.

The press secretary grows silent.

The blog wonders why free-religious [free-religious as opposed to the former, Lutheran, state church] Christian sects with radical views are not being mapped by SÄPO, while Muslims who are radical are being mapped.

The press secretary does not want to answer.

The blog continues to ask if that depends on the fact that free-religious Christians with radical views do not turn to violence in Sweden, while some radical Muslims do.

The press secretary has no objections.

The blog wonders if it is indeed true that radicalization of Muslims is a threat to democracy, since SÄPO is mapping them, and SÄPO has the task of mapping threats to democracy.

The press secretary stands by his statement that it is only a threat to democracy when violence ensues.

The blog wonders whether radicalization of Muslims means increasing violence against subjugated and oppressed women, increasing violence against moderate Muslims, and also increasing violence against Swedish society in the shape of stone-throwing and bottle-throwing, honor-violence, and more.

The press secretary answers that SÄPO commissioner Anders Danielsson only means that the Defense College has gone to far when calling increased radicalization in Rosengård a threat to democracy.

The blog then asks about the meaning of the decision in the first place to do the Rosengård report and examine if radicalization in Rosengård has increased, if radicalization among Muslims is no threat to democracy?

The press secretary answers that SÄPO is fully OK with a radicalization of Muslims. They do not constitute a threat. Only a few radical Muslims who resort to violence are a threat.

Therefore, to sum up, the blog Muslimska Friskolan can only draw one conclusion. Congratulation to all Muslims in Sweden. You can freely radicalize. Get to it! You have SÄPO by your side.

The Permanent Refugee Camp in Montenegro

I’m in the middle of an anthology of articles called Kosovo: The Score 1999 – 2009, published by the American Council for Kosovo and the Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies. I don’t know where one can get a copy since the Baron brought this one home from Copenhagen. Serge Trifkovic gave it to him at the conference in May.

It has been an eye-opener for one who didn’t understand the conflict in the first place, and had no idea of the over-reach of NATO at the time.

In the Foreword to the book the Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia from 1990 to 1992, James Bisset, ends his essay with these words: [my emphasis – D]

Perhaps it is too much to hope for that the critical financial problems faced by the United States and many European countries will curtail their meddling in the affairs of smaller nations and give them pause to reflect that the rule of law applies to all and that international disputes must be resolved without the use of force [outside force? – Dymphna]. This is the hope – however tenuous – expressed by the contributors to this volume on the tenth anniversary of the bombing of Serbia.

His words echoed back when Islam O’Phobe sent the following article from the BBC:

Living in filth for 10 years

More than 2,000 Roma (Gypsies) who fled Kosovo during the conflict in the 1990s still live in Konik refugee camp near Podgorica, the capital of Montenegro.

The sprawling slum of tents and shacks is built near the largest rubbish dump in Montenegro.

The mayor of Podgorica recently said the refugees should go back to where they came from.

Does “where they came from” exist in any real sense anymore? Does the mayor care that they would return to almost certain death? Is he or his municipality willing to pay for their transport?

Save the Children is working to integrate the Roma, but few stay long in the local school.

As the UN marks World Refugee Day, Save the Children’s Phoebe Greenwood meets two men who describe appalling living conditions at the largest refugee camp in the Balkans.

Save the Children needs to institute a school in the refugee camp itself. Expecting to “integrate” them into the local schools is pie-in-the-sky “Save the Children” meaningless cant. The children need their own school, one with a kitchen and bathroom and basic meals so they are not so hungry and dirty that study is impossible.

What is the matter with these aid workers? Were they standing behind the door when common sense was handed out or do they have to turn theirs in when they join STC?

VESEB BERISA, AGED 37

Veseb My family and I have nothing to eat, nothing to wear, nowhere to take a proper shower. We have been living like this for 10 years.

I work all day every day scouring the rubbish tips for metal to sell and maybe, if I’m lucky, earn 200 euros (£170) a month to feed my family. We cope because we have to.

I had a job in Kosovo. I ran my own business buying and selling fruit and vegetables. I would like to do that here in Montenegro but I can’t. I don’t have any resources. I’ve no money to get started.

What is needed here is the micro-loan concept used so successfully in Bangladesh. Mr. Bersia already has the work ethic to succeed. He simply has no place in which it can operate now.
– – – – – – – –

The worst thing about the camp is that it’s dirty. The hygiene here is terrible. It causes so many health problems. Everything we have is dirty. Nothing can stay clean here. It causes so many health problems.

A lot of people are sick in the camp for lots of different reasons, most often in their lungs because the air here is so foul. Lots of others have problems with their hearts and blood pressure. But in 10 years of living here, I’ve only seen the UN help one boy who was sick.

Every single country that participated in the attacks back in 1999 ought to be tasked with supplying and maintaining the basic amenities: water, showers, soap, hygienic latrines. And that is just for starters.

It’s too hot here, over 40C in the summer and there isn’t enough water. Water comes into the washing area near the toilets but the water pressure is so low, there isn’t enough for all of us.

That’s because the refugees will die quicker that way. How else do you explain the deliberate not-enough-of-anything in this camp? We could auction off a few UN limousines and build what they need.

But the mayor mutters they should “go back where they came from”. I wonder which “where” he is considering when he says that.

Some of the kids here go to the local school. They were given books there but they have no clothes and most of the time they are hungry, so how are they meant to think about learning?

They’re not meant to do so. This is a slow motion concentration camp, not much different in purpose than the ones from the 1930s and ‘40s. If they’re going to die of disease anyway, what is the point in teaching them? It will simply be slower, Mr. Bersia.

I would leave now if I could, but where would I go? I would like to have a proper house, if only to know that I have my own home, a roof over my head. I want to leave a house for my children as my father left a house for me.

I have five children and I’m worried about their future. My heart aches for them. I was sitting here half-an-hour ago, I heard music coming from somewhere and I imagined my family dancing. But I can only imagine that now. I know I won’t see it – it’s not possible any more.

We are in a critical state. It’s too much. No-one helps us anymore. No-one comes to see how we are or how we live.

We want to live as other normal people live do. We are the same as the other refugees, the Bosnians and Croats who came to this country during the war. But the refugees from Bosnia have been given houses, all around this camp. Why do they have different conditions to us? Why do we have to live like this?

Why indeed?

We are people too. We are humans. We need help from the UN, from the Albanians and Serbs who put us in this situation. What do they think in America, in the UK? They are also responsible for the conditions we live in. They have done nothing to help us.

You ask what do they think in America? Why, they remember jolly Bill Clinton and how he helped bomb you right into Montenegro. Maybe he could let loose some of his millions to help the mayor and your refugee camp. After all, messing with you helped him avoid the scandals of messing with young women.

How about it, Mr. ex-President, the mad bomber from Arkansas. Want to help a few Roma gypsies?

I’ll bet you really feel their pain, don’t you? Or maybe not. After all, they’ll never be your constituents, right?

They belong to no one and are not permitted to belong anywhere. The refugees are superfluous people, unseen and unheard. We are too busy watching the blood and melodrama in Iran to notice people who have spent ten years trying to stay alive.

What do you think? If we sent a letter to

Veseb Bersia
Konik Refugee Camp
Podgorica, Montenegro

would it get to him in one piece?

I do wonder if the Grameen Foundation would take this on? Or is this situation supposed to continue, put into place by the powers that be?

Not that I’m paranoid or anything.

Why does the Beeb simply report on this and walk away? They’re as irresponsible as those who caused the situation: find a story of deeply impotent suffering, tell it, and then go back to the hotel for dinner and drinks.

Yawn. On to the next spectacle.

No wonder we loathe “journalists”. They create what Bob at One Cosmos calls “mind parasites”.

Happy World Refugee Day, one day later. See you next year for a wash, rinse repeat.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/21/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/21/2009Prime Minister Erdogan of Turkey has sent his congratulations to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on the latter’s re-election as president of Iran. The last I heard, President Obama had not yet done the same.

In other news, Al Qaeda says that if it ever got its hands on Pakistan’s nukes, it would use them against the United States. Well, duh!

Thanks to Amil Imani, C. Cantoni, CB, Gaia, Insubria, Islam in Action, islam o’phobe, JD, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

USA
NY Muslims Openly Call for Attacks on Non-Muslims
 
Europe and the EU
Comment: Prime Minister Berlusconi and His Ghost
Italy: Police Arrest Dangerous Mafia Boss
Italy: 37% of Prison Inmates Are Foreigners
Premier Slams Journalists as Spies
UK: Muslim Prisoners Get Their Own Cells After Sharing Row 2
 
Balkans
Living in Filth for 10 Years
Slovenia Investment in Serbia at 1.7 Billion Euro
 
North Africa
Atr: 16 Planes Ordered by Royal Air Maroc and Air Nostrum
Cinema: Claudia Cardinale Presents Her Book in Tunisia
Tourism: Tunisia Sees More Libyans, Fewer Italians/Germans
 
Israel and the Palestinians
S.Craxi: Italy to Lead ‘Marshall Plan’ in Palestine
 
Middle East
Brisbane Woman Raped Then Jailed for Sex in United Arab Emirates
EU: Drought Emergency, 6 Mln Euros to Palestinians and Syrians
Iran: Turkey, Erdogan Congratulates Ahmadinejad Victory
Today Everyone is an Iranian
 
South Asia
Al Qaeda Says Would Use Pakistani Nuclear Weapons
British Army Officer Launches Stinging Attack on ‘Failing’ UK Strategy in Afghanistan
 
Far East
When China Rules the World
 
Latin America
Government Report Faults US Gun Owners for Mexico’s Violence
 
Culture Wars
Abortion: Spain, Bishops to Catholic Representatives, Vote No

USA


NY Muslims Openly Call for Attacks on Non-Muslims

[Video at link]

In the past I have posted videos from NY based RevolutionMuslim.com. In the last one Muslim convert Yousef al-Khattab preached for Muslims to understand the terms of engagement in jihad. Now he has stepped up his up rhetoric and stated that Muslims need to use “your limbs, your bodies, their weapons, to promote the religion of Allah” and then finally a straight out call to “attack” the kafir. This man is obviously dangerous and needs to be locked up.

           — Hat tip: Islam in Action [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Comment: Prime Minister Berlusconi and His Ghost

by EZIO MAURO

And so we have reached the point then where Prime Minister Berlusconi has publicly denounced a subversive plan to depose him and have him replaced by someone “not elected by the people”. In other words a coup right in the heart of democratic Europe. This reads like an epilogue to Berlusconi’s adventures following on from fifteen years of continual tensions that have been forced upon Italian public debate: to keep this unfortunate country at the right emotional temperature so fitting for the kind of populism that can only dominate the institutions by defying them until the point of evoking political martyrdom. This is indeed the dramatic picture of Italy that the country’s richest and most powerful man carries with him today to America, for his meeting with Obama.

Only Berlusconi knows why he is saying such things, because he is the only one who knows the truth about the disaster that awaits him, a truth that he cannot publicly reveal. Here we can observe the drama of a leader who is prisoner to a climate of defeat even when he wins. All this because in the last fifteen years he hasn’t managed to transform himself into a Statesman even after three victories in his country’s national elections. This man has the consensus, the votes, the numbers and the faithful crowds. But he is not at peace: he lacks security in his leadership and the tranquillity that transforms power into responsibility.

He is being pursued by his other half, from whom he’s constantly trying to escape, feeling the danger of being engulfed by the darker side of his personal history. It’s a tragedy full of excessive and theatrical power because everything is titanic in an affair where personal destinies coincide with that of Italy itself. It’s a tragedy of Shakespearian proportions where Berlusconi himself seems to already know the outcome, to the point of evoking his own political end in front of the country.

But in reality of course, as every right minded Italian knows, there is not and never will be a coup. There is, on the other hand, a rapid decomposition of a leadership that has never known how to make itself into a political culture but has rather closed itself off in the contemplation of its own dominion, believing that it could substitute a man in place of the State, command in place of government and absolute power and charisma in place of politics.

Today this power is beginning to feel the limits of its self sufficiency. What’s distressing Berlusconi is the new institutional scepticism that he’s aware of. Then there’s the international aloofness, the disorientation of the European elite, the criticism by the international press, the decidedly cool treatment by the chancelleries (with the exception of Putin and Gheddafi), the consternation within his own camp where Chamber of Deputies President Fini’s impeccable institutional role contrasts with the Premier’s failings with every passing day.

Berlusconi feels as though he’s losing his touch; a touch that used to transform his every act into an event. Now the tragicomic performance of the three Italian-Libyan days has shown us, on the contrary, that the laws of politics are not those of a ramshackle variety show. But above all Berlusconi has understood that the thread of his uninterrupted fairy tale of victorious and uncontaminated adventures has snapped simply because all of a sudden the Italians have started to really see him for what he is and not just watch him. And they’ve started to judge him too, instead of just listening to him.

It’s an unveiling act.. This is the crack that the vote has opened up within his victory, filling it with worries. The Premier is indeed correct when he quotes the four pilasters that delimit the perimeters of his recent woes: the veline (or TV soubrettes), mixing with minors, the Mills scandal and the suspected illegal use of State aeroplanes. Giuseppe D’ Avanzo, who has been investigating into these very issues for reasons that Berlusconi knows very well, has explained today why these represent something other than the slander the Premier claims. These are four cases that Berlusconi built with his own hands, that pursue him because he can’t explain them and that materialize in front of him daily as he tries to escape. Added together these four issues constitute a public scandal rather than a private one as they show, one together with the others, the abuse of power as public opinion is beginning to perceive more and more as events unfold. And it’s this sense of danger that is currently uppermost in Berlusconi’s mind. Since he’s incapable of really talking to the country, of confronting questions posed by the press, of assuming responsibility for his behaviour, he reacts by raising the bets and dragging everyone — both the Institutions and the State- along with him into this, his personal tragedy. Only he and his wife know exactly the depths and implications of this tragedy (as she publicly warned him a short while ago) He therefore reacts by threatening: in fact this market champion has even invited Italian manufacturers not to advertise in “defeatist” newspapers, that’s to say those that criticise him, because his destiny must coincide with that of the country’s. Then he corrects himself by saying he only wanted to limit coverage given to opposition leader Dario Franceschini as if it wasn’t enough having control of six television channels he has had to pass an edict. The likes of this have never been seen in the western world, even if the Italian press, prisoner of a new sense of conformism, prefers to talk about other matters as if liberty of expression, the basis for public opinion in every other democracy, has not already been compromised.

Actually Berlusconi himself is his biggest threat as he reveals his instability, his fear. We must expect the worst if he’s faithful to his words. What can possibly come after denouncing a coup attempt? What will his next move be? And if there really is a subversive threat then everything will be allowed: so how will the Premier use the services and the state apparatus against the presumed “subversives”? How is he already using them? Who’s controlling and who can guarantee in time what Prime Minister Berlusconi transforms into an emergency? We wait for an answer. As far as we’re concerned we’ll continue to behave as if we were in a normal country where dialectics and also the clash between the free press and legitimate power of the country are part of the democratic game.

Then, everyone will be able to judge whether he’s gone too far and where this private and already violent use of state power can lead with a man who we know is capable of anything; even to transform his leadership crisis into the tragedy of an entire country.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Arrest Dangerous Mafia Boss

Rome, 12 June (AKI) — One of Italy’s most dangerous mafia leaders was arrested by police in the southern region of Calabria on Friday. Seventy-seven year-old Antonio Pelle was detained by members of the paramilitary Carabinieri at the Polistena hospital where he was recovering from surgery.

Ranked among the top 30 most dangerous mafia leaders in the country, Pelle was considered the head of a Calabrian mafia or ‘Ndrangheta cell based in the town of San Luca that bore his name.

Pelle had been a fugitive since the year 2000 and was known as “Gambazza”.

The Calabria-based ‘Ndrangheta has become one of the most powerful criminal organisations in Italy, and some experts believe it has overtaken the Sicilian Mafia, the Cosa Nostra, with the expansion of its international drug trafficking activities in Europe and elsewhere.

Police believe the killings of six Italians in the German city of Duisburg in 2007 were part of a feud among ‘Ndrangheta members.

They were linked to the Pelle-Votari clan, while the gunmen were believed to from the rival Nirta-Strangio clan, based in the southern Italian town of San Luca.

The feud has left at least 16 people dead since 1991.

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



Italy: 37% of Prison Inmates Are Foreigners

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, JUNE 17 — According to data provided by the ISMU Foundation, an independent and autonomous scientific body promoting studies, research, and initiatives on multi-ethnic and multi-cultural society, 37% of the prison population in Italy is made up of foreigners. The group reports that almost 22,000 foreign inmates were counted in Italy’s prisons at the beginning of 2009. Of these, 6,000 are awaiting trial. Inmates making appeals and claims total 7,000, while 8,000 have been sentenced. For the Italian population, 0.7 per 1,000 individuals are in prison, while there is an eightfold increase for foreigners in Italy, with 5.5 per 1,000 individuals in prison. On January 1 2009, reports showed that the group with the most individuals in Italy’s prisons are Moroccan nationals (4,700), followed by Romanians (2,700), Albanians (2,600), and Tunisians (2,500). For the Romanian population, the percentage of the population in prison is relatively low (3.5 per 1,000), while the Albanian population has a higher percentage (6.0 per 1,000), as well as Moroccans (11.8 per 1,000), and Tunisians (25 per 1,000). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Premier Slams Journalists as Spies

Berlusconi’s phone call to lawyer recorded by Sky news

(ANSA) — Rome, June 19 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi, who is fending off reports he allegedly hosted paid escorts at his home, told journalists who recorded a private phone call with his lawyer on Friday they were “spies” who should be “ashamed of themselves”.

“I can’t face an Italy like this,” the premier said in Brussels, on the sidelines of a meeting of European Union leaders.

The phone call with lawyer Niccolo’ Ghedini, who is also an MP with the premier’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, was picked up by a Sky news video camera microphone prior to the start of the EU meeting and a transcript was released to news agencies.

During the call, Berlusconi tries to reassure Ghedini that phrases attributed to him and carried in headlines by the Italian press on Friday were wholly made up.

“I never said that phrase, that really makes me blow my top ..that is, ‘that I’ll hit back blow by blow’…it’s really incredible…there are things (in the papers) which I never said: I never said anything about ‘an obscure plot’, I never said I was ‘afraid of being spied on’ and I never said ‘my lawyer is crazy’…they’re scoundrels,” the premier told Ghedini.

“Come on, Niccolo’, how can you believe I’d say that?,” said Berlusconi, in reference to other alleged remarks about the lawyer carried by the press.

“At this point, I’m the one who is taking offence. I’m going to phone (government spokesman Paolo) Bonaiuti so we can release a statement,” the premier is heard telling Ghedini.

Ghedini later told reporters in Milan that he was “kidding Berlusconi” during the phone call while telling him that Italy’s privacy watchdog had accepted their injuction request for 5,000 paparazzo photos shot with a long lens of events at the premier’s private villa in Sardinia.

“I don’t need to be reassured by Berlusconi: when I referred to the remark about my madness, it was said in jest, affectionately. I’d never think the premier would refer to me in that manner,” said Ghedini. Speaking at a news conference after the summit, the premier lashed out at reporters from the left-leaning press, accusing them of printing “rubbish and trash”.

“I will not reply to questions about presumed scandals, maybe I’ll do so in Milan or Rome,” said the premier.

“There’s nothing to clear up. It’s all clear: it’s all trash,” said Berlusconi, stressing that he had fended off personal attacks in the past and would do again.

The premier also dismissed rumours of rifts within his PdL party and the possibility he would be forced to quit and would be replaced by Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti or Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi.

“These stories I read about plots in the PdL are just make-believe politics. I get along well with Tremonti, he’s absolutely a friend whom I respect and have faith in… and I also appreciate Mario Draghi’s abilities and fairness,” said the premier.

Speaking in Rome, Bonaiuti said some of the press headlines were “completely made up but to make it seem like they were quotes they were placed in inverted commas and attributed to the premier by anonymous sources”.

Government Programs Minister Gianfranco Rotondi also waved off suggestions of a rift in the centre right coalition, saying “this is just a little black cloud that will go away”.

He also accused some dailies of “cooking up a scandal with set-up interviews and accusations in line with the best policies of the gutter they come from”.

House Speaker Gianfranco Fini, a PdL heavyweight joined the chorus of those who brushed off talk of a government crisis. But he voiced concern of “a risk that citizens could lose faith in politics and the institutions”.

CATHOLIC DAILY TAKES PREMIER TO TASK.

The premier, however, was taken to task by the influential Catholic daily Avvenire which urged him to provide explanations “as soon as possible” on a number of private issues.

It warned him that he could not always “bank on” the government’s efficiency to avoid clearing up a series of allegations about his private life.

Berlusconi has been at the centre of a media storm since a public divorce spat with Lario and allegations of links with a teenage girl — Noemi Letizia — which surfaced after his wife accused him of “consorting with minors”.

But the premier, 72, has categorically denied any “steamy or more than steamy” involvement with teenagers, explaining there was nothing “spicy” about his attendance at the birthday party of 18-year-old Letizia because he had a long friendship with her family.

The Milan daily Corriere della Sera added fuel to the fire this week when it reported that prosecutors investigating a kick-back scandal in the southern city of Bari had wiretappings of a suspect, who has met Berlusconi, talking about parties at the premier’s Rome home to which he had taken paid escorts.

One of these escorts allegedly stayed the night.

The leader of the opposition Italy of Values Party and former graft-busting magistrate Antonio Di Pietro urged Berlusconi to tell parliament what was happening.

Comparing Berlusconi to the ancient emperor Nero is said to have played the fiddle while Rome burned, Di Pietro urged opposition MPs to sign a no confidence vote his party has been hoping to present to parliament since the storm over the premier’s personal life broke two months ago.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Prisoners Get Their Own Cells After Sharing Row 2

A prison has agreed to give Muslims their own cells after they complained about sharing with other inmates.

They were said to be unhappy at praying and eating near non-Muslims at Birmingham’s Winson Green jail.

It is thought to be the first time inmates have been segregated by religion. Prison bosses have decided to place them with other Muslims, or give them single cells when space is available.

More than 1,400 inmates, including murderers and robbers, are housed at the jail.

‘So far around 15 Muslim inmates have been accommodated either by being moved to a cell with another Muslim or put on their own,’ said a prison source. ‘They initially asked for their own wing but this was turned down.’

In June 2006, a High Court judge warned that Ministers must find cash to cope with growing prison numbers and called for an end to forced cell sharing. Mr Justice Keith’s concerns were included in his report into the racist murder of Asian prisoner Zahid Mubarek by his cellmate Robert Stewart at Feltham Young Offenders’ Institution in West London.

The judge called for a new concept of ‘institutional religious intolerance’ to combat prejudice against Muslim inmates.

There has also been concern among the 200-strong Muslim contingent in Winson Green about the halal meat served there. It had been prepared on site but, after complaints, is now brought in by an authorised supplier at what is thought to be extra cost.

One prison officer said: ‘This has caused resentment because it is felt the Muslim inmates are getting special treatment.’

A Prison Service spokesman said: ‘Prisoner requests to share cells can be accommodated in some circumstances, such as prisoners sharing religious and dietary needs. All requests are subject to a risk assessment.’

About ten per cent of the 80,000-strong jail population in England and Wales is Muslim.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Living in Filth for 10 Years

More than 2,000 Roma (Gypsies) who fled Kosovo during the conflict in the 1990s still live in Konik refugee camp near Podgorica, the capital of Montenegro.

The sprawling slum of tents and shacks is built near the largest rubbish dump in Montenegro.

The mayor of Podgorica recently said the refugees should go back to where they came from.

Save the Children is working to integrate the Roma, but few stay long in the local school.

As the UN marks World Refugee Day, Save the Children’s Phoebe Greenwood meets two men who describe appalling living conditions at the largest refugee camp in the Balkans.

VESEB BERISA, AGED 37

My family and I have nothing to eat, nothing to wear, nowhere to take a proper shower. We have been living like this for 10 years.

I work all day every day scouring the rubbish tips for metal to sell and maybe, if I’m lucky, earn 200 euros (£170) a month to feed my family. We cope because we have to.

I had a job in Kosovo. I ran my own business buying and selling fruit and vegetables. I would like to do that here in Montenegro but I can’t. I don’t have any resources. I’ve no money to get started.

The worst thing about the camp is that it’s dirty. The hygiene here is terrible. It causes so many health problems. Everything we have is dirty. Nothing can stay clean here. It causes so many health problems.

A lot of people are sick in the camp for lots of different reasons, most often in their lungs because the air here is so foul. Lots of others have problems with their hearts and blood pressure. But in 10 years of living here, I’ve only seen the UN help one boy who was sick.

It’s too hot here, over 40C in the summer and there isn’t enough water. Water comes into the washing area near the toilets but the water pressure is so low, there isn’t enough for all of us.

Some of the kids here go to the local school. They were given books there but they have no clothes and most of the time they are hungry, so how are they meant to think about learning?

I would leave now if I could, but where would I go? I would like to have a proper house, if only to know that I have my own home, a roof over my head. I want to leave a house for my children as my father left a house for me.

I have five children and I’m worried about their future. My heart aches for them. I was sitting here half-an-hour ago, I heard music coming from somewhere and I imagined my family dancing. But I can only imagine that now. I know I won’t see it — it’s not possible any more.

We are in a critical state. It’s too much. No-one helps us anymore. No-one comes to see how we are or how we live.

We want to live as other normal people live do. We are the same as the other refugees, the Bosnians and Croats who came to this country during the war. But the refugees from Bosnia have been given houses, all around this camp. Why do they have different conditions to us? Why do we have to live like this?

We are people too. We are humans. We need help from the UN, from the Albanians and Serbs who put us in this situation. What do they think in America, in the UK? They are also responsible for the conditions we live in. They have done nothing to help us.

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



Slovenia Investment in Serbia at 1.7 Billion Euro

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, JUNE 18 — Slovenian companies have so far invested 1.7 billion euro in Serbia and would like to continue, the Serbian and Slovenian economy ministers, Mladjan Dinkic and Matej Lahovnik, stated, reports BETA news agency. Lahovnik said after the meeting with Dinkic in Ljubljana that Serbia has received the brunt of Slovenian investment since 2000, adding that his country stands to benefit from even better business ties. “The recession will certainly be felt in trade, but we have concluded that the recession could also be a reason for strengthening economic cooperation and trying to improve the already very good contact that exists,” Lahovnik said. Dinkic remarked that the Slovenian market “has lately become more open to Serbian investment than it used to be.” He went on to say that about 500 Slovenian companies are successfully doing business in Serbia. In addition, Dinkic said that Serbia and Slovenia are collaborating in the automobile industry and that several Slovenian companies have expressed an interest in expanding their operations in Serbia or setting up shop there. Dinkic stressed that agreements signed by Serbia give Slovenian companies operating in Serbia access to the markets of Russia, the EU, Belarus, Turkey and the CEFTA countries.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Atr: 16 Planes Ordered by Royal Air Maroc and Air Nostrum

(ANSAmed) — LE BOURGET (FRANCE) — ATR (a joint venture between Alenia Aeronautica, a Finmeccanica subsidiary, and EADS) signed contracts for a total of 18 planes with the option for another 12 today at the Le Bourget Aeronautics Show. The Spanish airline, Air Nostrum, ordered 10 ATR 72-600s with the option of another ten of the aircraft for a total value of 425 million dollars. Royal Air Maroc ordered 4 ATR 72-600s and two 42-600s, with the option for another two ATR 72-600s. The turbo-props will be used by the regional Air Maroc Express that will be launched in coming weeks. Deliveries will begin in 2011. These ATR 42-600s and ATR 72-600s, configured with 48 and 70-seats respectively, will be equipped with a new avionics suite featuring the most advanced technologies in navigation aid and communication tools. The aircraft will also be equipped with an enhanced cabin in order to offer higher comfort to the passengers. Commenting on this contract, Driss Benhima, President of Royal Air Maroc, declared: “We are very pleased to introduce the ATR ‘-600 series’ aircraft in Morocco and to become its first operator in the Mediterranean region. The ATR’-600 series’, because of their low operating costs and their performances, particularly in hot and high environments, are perfectly adapted to the needs of our regional transport. With these aircraft, we will offer our passengers aircraft featuring the highest standards of comfort and environmental friendliness”.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Cinema: Claudia Cardinale Presents Her Book in Tunisia

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JUNE 17 -Yesterday in Tunisia, Claudia Cardinale presented a book on the country where she was born 71 years ago to a family of Sicilian origins. The book, entitled ‘La Mia Tunisia’ (‘My Tunisià), came out last year in France. Yesterday the Italian actress autographed a number of copies in a small bookshop in central Tunis, in the same area in which she had spent several years of her childhood. “My roots are here,” she said, “I wanted to tell the story of three generations in Tunisia. One’s roots are never forgotten, they remain in the depth of one’s heart”. Prior to the presentation, the Grand Cordon of the Order of Merit was bestowed on the actress by Tunisian president actress was Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. “It was a wonderful surprise, and as was going back to my childhood haunts and my favourite beach,” she said. The book, which also came out in Spain, will soon be published in Italy, according to her publisher, Jean Paul Nadé, who was also born in Tunisia.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tourism: Tunisia Sees More Libyans, Fewer Italians/Germans

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JUNE 12 — Libyan tourism to Tunisia increased by 17% in the first five months of 2009. Visits by European citizens, on the other hand, have not proven as promising: particularly negative data is seen as concerns Italy (-10.5%) and Germany (-7%). Algerian tourists, too, are in decline, marking a 3% decrease in visits to the neighbouring country. Overall data for the period, with respect to the same period the previous year, is +1.3% with a total of 2,240,000 visits. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


S.Craxi: Italy to Lead ‘Marshall Plan’ in Palestine

(ANSAmed) — TRIESTE, JUNE 19 — “We want to put Italy forward as a candidate to manage investments by other donor countries for a Palestinian ‘Marshall Plan’ “, said the undersecretary of Foreign Affairs, Stefania Craxi, today in Trieste. During her speech, Craxi mentioned the aims of her recent mission to the West Bank with a delegation of Italian businesses, stressing that the government “supports the US administration’s actions towards achieving peace in Palestine, but believes that economic development and the consequent civil progress it creates, will make peace stable and long-lasting”. “Our idea”, Craxi said, “comes from the impressive system of SMEs that we have in Italy today, a sector in which we have absolute leadership and that creates social stability. This is why we are aiming for a ‘Marshall Plan’, not only because of its financial importance but also because we want to link economic operation in the area to the energy that comes from ‘underneath’. This is the way we want to go”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Brisbane Woman Raped Then Jailed for Sex in United Arab Emirates

A BRISBANE woman was jailed for eight months in the United Arab Emirates for claiming she was raped by three men after her drink was spiked in a hotel bar.

The woman, identified only as Amanda, said she ordered one drink from the bar in the United Arab Emirates hotel she was staying, but then remembered nothing until waking up the next afternoon.

Amanda, interviewed on ABC radio this morning, said she was arrested after reporting her rape to police and later sentenced to 11 months’ jail for having illicit sexual relations and one month for consumption of alcohol.

“I don’t remember anything except for having that drink … in one way that’s a good thing but from what happened following, it’s still an extremely traumatising,” she said.

She was released five months ago after securing a royal pardon after serving eight months, and is now home in Australia.

She said the jails were overcrowded, inmates were often beaten and the water was frequently turned off.

Amanda said she had extensively researched the customs of the largely Muslim country before living there, but was not aware of the laws surrounding women and sex and drinking.

“It was such a glamorous lifestyle and at the moment there are so many Australians working over there,” she said.

“It is a very glamourous lifestyle and you can make a lot of money but unfortunately there’s the other side that people just aren’t aware of.”

She said four high-ranking muslim men had to witness penetration to prove a rape charge, so women who reported rapes were typically seen as confessing to illicit sexual relations or prostitution.

“I can move on, and I’m working on that, part of my process is to help other people with awareness of what’s going on and making changes,” she said.

Amanda met with several state MPs this week to tell her story.

Amnesty International’s Michael Hayworth said he sent a letter to United Arab Emirates officials, asking them to comply with United Nation’s Women’s Rights Conventions and remove discriminatory laws.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]



EU: Drought Emergency, 6 Mln Euros to Palestinians and Syrians

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 16 — Six million euros will be provided by the EU to supply food and water to drought victims in the Palestinian Territories and Syria, thanks to an emergency decision made by the European Commission. “The Middle East is going through one of the worst droughts in recent memory,” explained Louis Michel, Development and Humanitarian Aid Commissioner, “in addition to the other difficulties in the region. The Palestinian Territories and Syria have been hit hard, especially the rural communities, and whether suffering is caused by man or natural disasters, the EU has once again demonstrated its solidarity and is responding to this critical situation with emergency water supplies”. Rural inhabitants, and Bedouin communities in particular, as well as livestock farmers in isolated zones in the West bank will benefit from the EU finds. Two million euros will be provided to Syria for the governorates in the Badia region in the eastern part of the country. Four million euros will be provided to assist Palestinians. The funds will be used for water, food, and seeds for people with insufficient quantities to meet their domestic and survival needs; water and food for animals; improved water collection systems and water supply trucks. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran: Turkey, Erdogan Congratulates Ahmadinejad Victory

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 18 — Despite internal and international pressing to investigate about Friday’s vote regularity in Iran, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has already congratulated Ahmadinejad for his election victory, Referans daily newspaper says. According to Referans, before the vote Ankara made projections for the victory of Ahmadinejad. In addition, Turkish officials do not believe that possible irregularities in the elections would have any impact on the outcome of the vote. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Today Everyone is an Iranian

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.” John F. Kennedy

Today, all Iranian expatriates are united in solidarity with the Iranian people in Iran. Today, we are all standing tall to let the world hear our continuous aspiration for a free and democratic Iran. Today, we pledge ourselves, under the divine inspiration, to stand beside the Iranians in Iran and echo their voices around the globe. Today, we make history, yet again.

It is critical that freedom-loving people, governments and media, rally behind the Iranian people and end the tyrannical mullahcracy that is a scourge on Iran as well as the world. The Iranian people themselves are fully capable and are determined to remove the cancer of Islamism from their country. The United States and Israel and other democracies have a huge stake in the success of the Iranian people to rid themselves of the Islamic oppression and tyranny.

The situation in Iran is dire indeed. Anyone who believes that sane rational people on both sides are engaged in brinkmanship to secure the best advantage, but would eventually work out a compromise, is deluding himself. In some cases, time works as a healer and even as a solution of thorny problems. Yet, this problem will not go away, and time would only make the cataclysmic clash more likely and deadly. The best chance for resolving the impasse is regime change in Iran…

           — Hat tip: Amil Imani [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Al Qaeda Says Would Use Pakistani Nuclear Weapons

DUBAI, June 21 (Reuters) — If it were in a position to do so, Al Qaeda would use Pakistan’s nuclear weapons in its fight against the United States, a top leader of the group said in remarks aired on Sunday.

Pakistan has been battling al Qaeda’s Taliban allies in the Swat Valley since April after their thrust into a district 100 km (60 miles) northwest of the capital raised fears the nuclear-armed country could slowly slip into militant hands.

“God willing, the nuclear weapons will not fall into the hands of the Americans and the mujahideen would take them and use them against the Americans,” Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, the leader of al Qaeda’s in Afghanistan, said in an interview with Al Jazeera television.

Abu al-Yazid was responding to a question about U.S. safeguards to seize control over Pakistan’s nuclear weapons in case Islamist fighters came close to doing so.

“We expect that the Pakistani army would be defeated (in Swat) … and that would be its end everywhere, God willing.”

Asked about the group’s plans, the Egyptian militant leader said: “The strategy of the (al Qaeda) organisation in the coming period is the same as in the previous period: to hit the head of the snake, the head of tyranny — the United States.

“That can be achieved through continued work on the open fronts and also by opening new fronts in a manner that achieves the interests of Islam and Muslims and by increasing military operations that drain the enemy financially.”

The militant leader suggested that naming a new leader for the group’s unit in the Arabian Peninsula, Abu Basir al-Wahayshi, could revive its campaign in Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter.

“Our goals have been the Americans … and the oil targets which they are stealing to gain power to strike the mujahideen and Muslims.”

“There was a setback in work there for reasons that there is no room to state now, but as of late, efforts have been united and there is unity around a single leader.”

Abu al-Yazid, also known as Abu Saeed al-Masri, said al Qaeda will continue “with large scale operations against the enemy” — by which he meant the United States.

“We have demanded and we demand that all branches of al Qaeda carry out such operations,” he said, referring to attacks against U.S.-led forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The militant leader said al Qaeda would be willing to accept a truce of about 10 years’ duration [where have I heard that before? — io’p] with the United States if Washington agreed to withdraw its troops from Muslim countries and stopped backing Israel and the pro-Western governments of Muslim nations.

Asked about the whereabouts of al Qaeda’s top leaders, he said: “Praise God, sheikh Osama (bin Laden) and sheikh Ayman al-Zawahri are safe from the reach of the enemies, but we would not say where they are; moreover, we do not know where they are, but we’re in continuous contact with them.”

           — Hat tip: islam o’phobe [Return to headlines]



British Army Officer Launches Stinging Attack on ‘Failing’ UK Strategy in Afghanistan

A British Army officer has launched a devastating attack on the UK’s “failing” strategy in Afghanistan.

The officer, who works in defence intelligence, has described the British presence in Helmand as an “unmitigated disaster” fuelled by “lamentable” government spin and naïvety.

Writing in the British Army Review, an official MoD publication, Major SN Miller, stated: “Lets not kid ourselves. To date Operation Herrick [the British codename for the War in Afghanistan] has been a failure”.

He claimed that hundreds of millions of pounds of taxpayers money had been wasted on a war which had failed to deliver any real reconstruction, governance or security.

Rather than “winning hearts and minds”, Major Miller, who serves in the Defence Intelligence Staff serving Intelligence Corps, said the British presence had had the opposite effect.

But his most blistering attack was on the UK’s counter-narcotics policy, where the illicit sale of drugs has been successfully used by the Taliban to fund the insurgency and kill British troops.

He wrote: “British policy towards the poppy crop has been an unmitigated disaster. The chief “effect” of the British presence in Helmand has been to transform Helmand into the opium centre of the world.

“This remarkable milestone was achieved just two years into the British intervention.”

Major Miller’s indictment of Britain’s Afghan strategy can be revealed just a day after the Ministry of Defence announced that another soldier had been killed in an explosion in Helmand.

The death of the soldier, who was a member of the Welsh Guards, brings to 169 the number of British troops killed in Afghanistan since 2001.

Maj Miller claimed that the British government “sleepwalked” into Helmand in 2006 “without any meaningful reconstruction plan, without the resources to undertake-nation building tasks, and, critically, without any desire to fight a major insurgency”.

He added: “It was thanks to the tenacity of the common soldier and the paratrooper that British embarrassment was saved.”

In direct contradiction to the view of the defence chiefs and the government, Major Miller added that the much-vaulted British strategy of “winning the hearts and minds” of the Afghan people in Helmand had failed.

Instead, he claimed, the opposite had happened, with polls showing that 23 per cent of the population support the Taliban in the south west of the country, a threefold increase compared with 2008.

He wrote: “Where a year (2008) ago, 81 per cent stated that the Taliban have “no significant support at all” in the area, now only 52 per cent judged this to be the case.

“Just 45 per cent of polled Afghans supported the Nato presence in the south west, down from 83 per cent in the previous year. The often repeated statement that ‘the Afghans don’t want the Taliban back’ is increasingly open to question.”

He continued: “Last year there were just 57 doctors in Helmand Province — a scandalous figure three years into the British campaign.

“Positive opinion of overall living standards have dropped by 20 points — a remarkably bitter under achievement for a campaign that purported to improve the lives of Afghans.”

Maj Miller, who has served in Afghanistan, also attacks the Department For International Development (DFID) for pumping millions of pounds of taxpayers money into a government where he claimed “corruption, inefficiency and incompetence” are “endemic”.

Maj Miller also castigated senior officers for the strategy of “Clear, Hold, Build”, which he stated had become a “parody of itself”.

He added: “We are really only clearing the immediate vicinity of the security force bases, we are only holding the major settlements, and we are not building.

“Self-protection has become the main tactic, reinforced by air strikes that can backfire and undermine the campaign.

“Even as the Army renders itself more and more immobile with heavier vehicles and infantrymen weighing as much as a medieval knight, still the fantasy of the “manoeuvrist approach is peddled in staff courses.

“There is nothing manoeuvrist about weeks of petty, attritional fire fights within a few kilometres radius of a Forward Operating Base. The reason for all this is clear — zero casualties has become the tacit assumption behind operations.

“The Taliban are not being “coerced”, “deterred”, or “destabilised”. They simply disperse, knowing that the British cannot sustain pressure, and they return like the tide when the British troops withdraw, after a short period, back to their bases.”

In concluding his essay, Maj Miller wrote the “British Army must believe that it can win wars again”.

He added: “Politics needs to be squeezed out of the military campaign. The point of going to war is not to then save ministerial discomfort by avoiding casualties and buttering the media.

“Wars cost lives and the media better get used to it. The British people understand this. They are far tougher than a worried government PR man imagines. We need to win a war, not spin one.”

Patrick Mercer, the Tory MP for Newark and a former infantry commander, said: “This castigates the Labour government.

“A succession of defence and foreign secretaries have tried to present the campaign in Afghanistan as benign and bloodless but that is just spin and nonsense.

“Until the government properly resources the war in Afghanistan, our strategy will fail.”

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Far East


When China Rules the World

It is clear that the rise of China marks the end of western global hegemony, but just what the coming Chinese ascendency will look like is another matter.

By John Gray

On his first visit to China as US treasury secretary, at the start of this month, Timothy Geithner attempted to reassure an audience at Peking University that there is no need to worry about the enormous holdings China has built up in US government bonds. “Chinese assets are very safe,” he declared. Geithner’s statement produced loud laughter from the largely student audience.

Unlike most western commentators, who still give the Obama administration the benefit of the doubt, China’s emerging elite know there is no prospect that the United States will pay back its debts at anything like their current value. The only way the US can repay its vast borrowings is by debasing the dollar — a process in which China will inevitably be short-changed. Significantly, the students’ response was not anger, but derision — a clear sign of how the US is now perceived. Resentment at US power is being replaced by contempt, as the impotence and self-deception of the American political class in the face of the country’s problems become increasingly evident…

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Government Report Faults US Gun Owners for Mexico’s Violence

[On Friday, June 19, 2009, the Government Accountability Office released a report to the US Congress regarding the so-called firearms problem in Mexico. NewswithViews.com studied the report for the following news story.]

“[This report may be] used in a phony attempt to show that the ban is needed. It even may be used as part of an outrageous attempt to argue that Americans have to give up some of their Second Amendment rights to an international authority so that international trafficking in firearms can be properly and efficiently regulated,” warns gun rights expert John Snyder.

While the United States continues to allow borders to be left unprotected, the US Congress through its investigative arm — the Government Accountability Office — is blaming the violence occurring in Mexico on American gun owners.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Abortion: Spain, Bishops to Catholic Representatives, Vote No

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 18 — Spain’s Episcopal Conference presented a document today which expresses the hard-line position taken on the law for the voluntary interruption of pregnancies approved by the government, and is making an appeal to Catholic representatives not to support it with their votes in parliament. In an 11 page document, unveiled to the media by CEE spokesman, Juan Antonio Martinez Camino, the bishops accuse the government of utilising health ‘as an excuse to eliminate babies in the womb” and to ‘deny or undervalue the human being in order to justify its elimination.” ‘Before a law that considers the violation of the fundamental right to life a right in itself, the conscientious objection is legitimate,” Camino said, quoting rulings from the Constitutional Court which support that ‘the Constitution is directly applicable, especially regarding fundamental rights.” The bishops’ spokesman denounced the government for ‘imposing a determined moral education to citizens,” above all, he added, when it comes to morals on abortion practices and ideas of gender. The document opens with a condemnation of the ‘more obscure” aspects of the socialist ‘reforms”: ‘In the first 14 weeks the expectant mother decides on the death of the baby: the violation of the right to life is treated like a right itself,” the ecclesiastic leaders maintain, stating ‘deciding to have an abortion is the choice to end the life of a child already conceived and goes beyond choices regarding ones own body, the health of the mother and the choice to become a mother.” The document quotes the Second Vatican Council, which defined abortion as a ‘horrible crime”, an ‘intrinsically evil act that violates the dignity of an innocent human being by ending its life.” According to the bishops, the reforms, which legalise abortion in the first 14 weeks, with the possible extension to 22 weeks in the case of serious deformations or psychological or physical risks for the mother ‘use health as an excuse to end the foetus’s life,” with ‘ambiguous medical and social information” dedicated to ‘death’s service.” Camino also stressed that the law ‘does not support women in order to save them from the trauma of abortion and its serious consequences,” or ‘prevent them from becoming victims.” The bishops, in the end, accuse the government of using education to impose ‘a determined view on sexual morals, abortion and gender.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Become Danes!

Our Danish correspondent TB has translated an op-ed by Søren Espersen from Friday’s Politiken. Of Mr. Espersen, TB says, “He is a proud member of parliament for Dansk Folkeparti (Danish People’s Party) and a true clone of Holger Danske.”

Søren Espersen


Here’s the translation:

Søren Espersen: Become Danes

Assimilation shouldn’t really be a shameful word, but something that we can demand of immigrants, writes Søren Espersen.

While I worked on my book The Israeli War of Independence and the Danish Volunteers I had a huge pile of private letters lying all around me — the letters which the volunteer soldiers had send home to their relatives and friends in Denmark.

Most of these volunteers were second- or third-generation immigrants — children or grandchildren of extremely poor Jewish immigrants who came to Denmark in large numbers from Russia, Ukraine, the Baltic area and Poland.

Their parents or grandparents had clustered in and around areas where cheep apartments where available — in those days that was in the most miserable part of inner city Copenhagen slum districts — Adelgade, Aabenraa, Borgergade, Prinsensgade, Landemærket — and Nørrebro.

These apartments were old and neglected. The courtyards were narrow and evil-smelling. Only a small amount of light could reach these second or third courtyards. The young people who were the product of these miserable conditions observed the Shabbat and the Jewish holidays; they ate according to Jewish eating traditions — the kosher rules — although they were not always good about visiting the synagogue. Usually the language they spoke in their homes was Yiddish.

A few years later, a doctor from Rigshospitalet [The main hospital in Copenhagen] who was in contact with these kids from time to time told the author and priest Paul Borchsenius how surprised he was to see such incredible poverty:

“The kids were lying on piles of old rags and carpets instead of beds — usually they were full of fleas. It was horrible to experience how poor people can actually be. Also I was surprised a few years later when I watched how quickly most of these Jews worked their way up. After a few years many of them where in a better position than the educated Danish workers”

Wrote a fine and elegant Danish

Indeed it was a surprise to everyone how quickly these working boys, apprentices, tailors, shoemakers and hatters were able to take care of themselves — and after few years, in general, they were able to establish themselves in a good job or maybe even own their own company. But first and foremost these young people had become Danes — and not the least Copenhagen Citizens — with a ‘capital C’.

The first thing that struck me when I started to read these letters was that each and every one of these letter writers wrote a fine and elegant Danish. A fine handwriting indeed! No misspellings, mostly no comma errors [Translator’s comment: That is incredible since almost nobody can do that. The comma rules in the Danish language are very difficult. As I remember it only around one percent or less of the Danish population can actually write Danish and use the comma rules correctly]. And we are talking about kids who left school after seven years at the most.

– – – – – – – –

Young immigrants who had grown up in miserable apartments in second or third backyards in Nørrebro. It was not like they had forgotten their Jewish lives because they kept on with that. And with great interest.

They established multiple Jewish associations — unions of craftsmanship, sports clubs, youth associations, singing and theater associations — where they met and found common ground around their Yiddish songs and the traditions which were theirs.

From these letters from the Jewish soldiers shines a huge amount of love for Denmark and the Danish people, whom they have become part of. And which they were proud of being a part of.

Yes, of course they fought in Israel, so that the Jewish people, whom they were also a part of, could have a spot of their own, where Jews did not have to be persecuted, but that was not a fight for themselves in Denmark — that fight was for fellow Jews in all the other countries. As for themselves they were busy to get back to Denmark to continue their Danish — and Jewish — lives.

For these immigrants had indeed allowed themselves to be assimilated!

Not for a second did they plan to stay in those lousy apartments in inner Copenhagen and Nørrebro to be squashed together with other Jews. No, as soon as they got the possibility, their dream was to get a light, airy house with a small garden in Amager, in Valby, Østerbro — or maybe even further north in the upper class district located on Strandvejen.

Nor did they expect Danish society to change so that it would fit better with Jewish habits and traditions.

If they, as apprentices, were lucky enough to get a Jewish boss they were allowed to get off work on Shabbat, but if they had a Christian boss, well, then they worked on Saturdays as well, cause that was the way one did it there.

The pupils in the Jewish School, Carolineskolen, were quickly made aware of what they had to expect from the program of the day — Danish, Danish, and Danish! Of course you could chat with each other in Yiddish on your way to school, but at the moment you entered the gate at the school you started speaking Danish. The Jewish guard took care of that. Actually, you got a slap in the face if you spoke Yiddish on school property — break or no break.

The parents gave their kids some clear and unambiguous messages: Become Danes! Speak Danish without that foreign accent that we unfortunately cannot get rid of. Get yourself an education, so that you can advance in Denmark and become a respected citizen in this country that is now ours. Honor your father and your mother. Honor the Jewish people and honor Denmark. Do your duty to this country. Ask what you can do for you new country. In short: Assimilate!

From their parents they were confronted with some inexorable, personal demands. And they demanded a lot of themselves as well.

On the other side there were no demands from the immigrants about anything, about how Denmark and the Christian Danish people should adapt to them!

At no time did they demand that Danish public schools should be teaching in their mother tongue; Yiddish. There were no demands about special arrangements to accommodate them with respect to the school calendar.

There were no demands on special arrangements in the working places — or on the citizens using the institutions of the surrounding society — to eat meat slaughtered in a specific way.

There were no demands whatsoever that the Christian part of the Danish people should learn a lot about Jewish traditions or study the Jewish law system, so that we should better understand these newcomers.

So, it was not Denmark who faced a task. It was the immigrants.

The pupils at Danish public schools were not granted permission to stay home on Jewish holidays; Pesach, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

At no time did society feel an urgent need to establish an army of social workers, immigrant counselors or integration workers with the single purpose to educate the Danes how to act towards these new arrivals.

It was not Denmark which had a task.

It was the immigrants who had a task.

Assimilation is taboo

Originally, assimilation is an expression from medical science that means ‘to equalize with’ or to ‘absorb’ or to ‘integrate’. In medical terminology it is about how nutrients are being absorbed and transformed to become part of the organism. The organism needs nutrition.

But it worth to pay attention to the fact that it is the nutrients that need to be absorbed in the organism — not the other way around! In today’s debate about immigrants assimilation has become almost a taboo. And I really never quite understood why.

In the name of peace, security and tolerance it is exactly assimilation that we should demand of the foreigners who — here 100 years after the major Jewish immigration — have started to pour into the country.

To the first, second, third, and soon fourth generation of immigrants I will say this: You are welcome in Denmark. But I have a clear message for you: Assimilate — or find another country…!

State and municipality, along with hundreds of treating beau-esprits, using the most low-browed, solemn and empty phrases have been competing for years to see who can be most self-effacing, submissive, humane, and considerate.

Not towards the Danish people. But towards people from all the other nations in the world. Instead of demanding that the foreigners assimilate. The natural demand, which only a few of present-day immigrants demand from their kids. On the contrary, many demand the opposite.

In recent years we have seen that the authorities have started to ‘resaddle’ — to state demands. It is not an easy transformation for the apparatus of public officials who have been brainwashed since 1983 [when the catastrophic immigration law was implemented] to try to make the Danish people change — instead of the foreigners.

But why should it take so long before the matter of course became obvious? Think about all the troubles this country could have avoided.

Think about how much Denmark and the Danish people could have been spared from!

We are in the process of normalization

And even though The Danish People’s Party cannot be blamed for one second for the situation the country is now in, it is nevertheless we, together with the government, who have to clean up. We are working on it.

But we have only just started. The task that we have taken upon ourselves is to normalize the conditions in Denmark. To normalize. It does not sound that extreme, does it? — no, but it is worth underlining that it is normality we are on the way back to when talking about immigration politics in this country.

It is the abnormal — chaos — that has been ruling in our country since that catastrophic immigration law of 1983. What we are now seeing is that Denmark is in the process of being normalized.

Normalization is to say goodbye to the affected. Normalization is to turn your back on extremism. Normalization is to stop living in a fantasy world.

Normalization is to get both your feet back on the ground again. After 25 years of abnormality Denmark is little by little finding her own feet again.

When, after 25 years, you rediscover your legs and start to feel that they are strong enough to carry you, a lot of positive psychiatric side effects follow.

Most importantly one gains a lot of self-consciousness. You find out that you have nothing to be embarrassed about. You find out that you are just as skilful, loving, and good as everybody else who claims to be exactly that.

You find out that people listen to what you have to say. And then you find out that you have a lot to contribute materially and spiritually — not only among your closest associates, but in a much larger forum.

Suddenly you are able to seize the day. To set the agenda. To be where it happens. And we, the Danes, become proud when that is where we are!

I am full of joy when I see Denmark in the forefront on the international stage. Because we have gained self-consciousness. Denmark has gained self-consciousness.

When we are being threatened by men from the Dark Ages it is only because they cannot tolerate our freedom.

If we were in chains or kneeling, nobody would want to waste their energy threatening us. As hated as we are in these medieval countries — equally loved and admired are we in the free world. Just think if it was the other way around…!

Mimi Jacobsen [irrelevant former Danish MP — translator] talked a lot about “exporting Danish values” — and Poul Nyrup Rasmussen [former Danish prime minister and Social Democrat who from the chair in the parliament once stated concerning the Danish Peoples Party: “No matter how hard you try you will never become house-trained.” — translator] talked a lot about Denmark as a pioneer country. Both have now succeeded!

But then again; they are gone from politics… let us just say that in these years there are good reasons for us to be proud of being Danes.

Let’s straighten our backs and acknowledge that our small country is now a pioneer in Europe.



Photo © Snaphanen.

Diana West Looks Under the Covers

What Ms. West found isn’t very encouraging. But my intuition was already in place before I read her post so I’ve been avoiding the story of the Iranian “elections” and their aftermath ever since our Supreme and Hallowed Leader started dispensing bromides about it.

Yes, it is a good idea to spread the story of this abomination. If we wait for the MSM to change their tune ( the song-and-dance first originated by Jimmah) poor Iran will indeed be lost.

At the same time it is crucial to understand the background and context of these farcical Iranian “elections”.

Here is Ms. West’s take on recent events:

Having been in transit during the start of the Iranian election protests, I’ve taken a little time to come up to speed on the issue. Scanning English-language (UK) papers in airports, I will say that my initial reaction to the euphoria I saw breaking out all over the West — especially the US? — to the obtusely labeled “green” revolution was, Why should we be so happy about Mousavi? When I learned that Mousavi was Mullah Rafsanjani’s boy, that A-jad was Mullah Khameini’s boy, my wonder deepened, as in: What’s the diff?

Well, I haven’t “been in transit” unless you count major avoidance as transit. I just couldn’t bear the predictability of the whole thing. The “whole thing” is a rigged election followed by killing young people. You could smell it coming a mile off. I’m too tired to be outraged anymore. Our pusillanimous President does nothing but cringe and play nice. No use speaking truth to power when power is busy bowing and scraping to those who want to kill us, too, not just their own people.

Ms. West turns to John Bolton’s essay at Politico to back up her assertions:

Iran’s “democracy” under the Islamic Revolution of 1979 is a wondrous thing, as the June 12 presidential election and its riotous aftermath proved.

First, only candidates screened and approved by the mullahs in the Guardian Council could run – in this case, exactly four presidential candidates out of nearly 500 who applied. Second, Iran’s highest official is not the president but, rather, the supreme leader, currently Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Third, Iran’s election officials are not independent but rigorously controlled by the supreme leader. Fourth, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and other security forces stand ready, willing and able to preserve public safety if the “wrong” candidate appeared to win or protested in defeat.

And fifth, whoever won wasn’t going to change Iran’s 20-year campaign to acquire deliverable nuclear weapons or its role as the central banker for international terrorism. The supreme leader and the IRGC control Iran’s foreign and national security policies, under both “reformist” presidents like Seyed Mohammad Khatami (1997-2005) and incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad alike.

Credulous foreign reporters missed all of this, partly because they spent their time talking to middle-class Iranians or Iranian ex-pats who think like them rather than doing hard investigative work to understand what was actually afoot.

“Credulous”? That’s being kind. They’re lazy. They’re ignorant. They’re overpaid. Big time malfeasance in the media corps. If any military person filed an after-action report which resembled what the MSM is churning out on Iran, he’d be on his way out of the field of action real quick. We can’t afford these people any more. The media class is a parasite.

Mr. Bolton continues:
– – – – – – – –

Perhaps these reporters never covered elections in Chicago. Some commentators predicted that President Barack Obama’s June 4 speech in Cairo would benefit Iranian “moderates,” and some compared the main challenger’s wife to Michelle Obama. Even Obama, self-referential as always, was caught up in the rapture, citing his Cairo speech as signaling “the possibility of change” in Iran.

Oh, they’ve covered Chicago all right. And any time Obama is in the Chicago picture frame, they cover it with flowers and kisses. They people can’t become much more craven without reverting to a form of invertebrate.

Ms. West quotes John Bolton again, this time from Fox:

When Bolton further noted that Mousavi had been the Ayatollah Khomeini’s prime minister that was more than enough for me. Still, there was more. As Bolton put it to Fox’s Greta van Susteren:

“Well, he [Mousavi] was the Ayatollah Khomeini’s prime minister. I mean, let’s get started there. So that qualifies him. He is the person who negotiated with A.Q. Khan to set up the beginnings of the Islamic revolution’s nuclear weapons program. He’s fully committed to Iranian terrorism, a lot of it began under his administration. So whatever changes there might be inside Iran, make no mistake, the foreign policy would remain essentially the same.”

As Ms. West said in the beginning: what’s the diff?

There is more, much more, at Andrew Bostom’s site, particular posts on background and context which Ms. West has linked in her post. Thus, I won’t repeat them here.

An essay to be highly recommended. We are fortunate to have Ms. West’s voice on the internet. It is always reasoned and careful.

I’m returning to a horizontal position with a pillow over my head, the position I’d assumed before all the email horrors began to trickle in. It is awful to know there is nohting, not one damned thing, we can do to save those young people.

May God have mercy on Iran. And on us, for the stupidly short-sighted and interfering foreign diplomacy that helped land Iran in this mess. We certainly were not innocent bystanders.

Territory, Islam, and the Submission of the Danes

Our Danish correspondent TB was so appalled by an article in yesterday’s newspaper that he felt compelled not just to translate it, but to fisk it. The result, which he sent us in an email, is below.



The article translated here appeared on Saturday, June 20, in Politiken – the Danish equivalent of The New York Times – so I guess one has to read it with a grain of salt. I just simply could not. The editors of Politiken have a nasty habit of trying to impose their own self-righteous opinions upon whatever they find convenient. This is probably why they can state that the notion revealed here is the notion of a political majority by clinging to the comments made by a handful of MPs.

Hells Angels DenmarkThe article is about the ongoing so-called ‘gang war’ between Hells Angels on the one side and some – never precisely defined – immigrant gangs on the other. From the very beginning of this war it has been clear to me, and to many others, that this was never primarily about drugs, as the PC media like to present it. This is about territory, Islam, and the submission of the Danes.

You have previously written about this subject like in the “Fighting Fire With Fire” report last year. Also, Kepiblanc did us all a great favor by translating the insane outburst from HuT two weeks ago in which they threatened Danish society with all kinds of “unrest” in the streets of Copenhagen if we did not learn to behave according to the our new Masters and their fragile nerves.

If one follows the media, even in the most superficial way, one has to acknowledge that something is terribly wrong. Numerous articles suggest this. And more and more evidence confirms it in a more and more scientific way.

But let’s keep it superficial and ask some simple questions. For example: why is it that in our newspapers we can read, on a daily basis, about how our girls cannot walk the streets anymore without fear of sexual harassment and stone-throwing? Or obscene taunting? It has never been like that before. Not even, to my knowledge, during the Nazi occupation in the 1940s.

Why is it that we can read stories about how young ethnic Danish boys more and more frequently find themselves surrounded by five, six, seven or more “cultural enrichers” just to be stripped of their mobile phones and the money they got at their confirmation? Or simply just beaten up.

Why is it that my old man can no longer walk the streets of his neighborhood without fear of being kicked down by hordes of immigrant kids waiting out there in the darkness for their next weak prey? (This has actually happened twice to him now. Hospitalization was the result.)

Why is it that people – and I am not talking about a certain group here, because this minority (strangely enough) is somehow exempt from this kind of entertainment – are no longer safe in their own homes?

Our homes have always been sacred for us. But they are no more.

And why is it that the following description of the perpetrators in most of the referenced news stories almost always includes the “…of-an-ethnic-origin-other-than-Danish” part?

You can read these stories every day now. It is standard. Obviously, even for the most superficial reader, there is a pattern here.

Is some kind of discrimination in force ? Well, of course there is. This is basic knowledge to me and most of the readers of GoV. What we are seeing is just the natural consequence of filling up your country with supremacist Muslims who do not give a damn about anything or anyone who is not somehow associated with common Islamic doctrine, rules of life, or other Muslim dogmas.

What is going on is that the purest form of organized discrimination, better known as Islam, is now claiming what the Muslims believe is theirs. Our souls and submission. It is racism at its finest.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


So, imagine my reaction when I saw this headline in Politiken Saturday morning: “Politicians: Racism nourishes the gang conflict”. Since there are several foreigners among the Members of Hells Angels and their supporters AK81 I was thrilled. In a split-second, naïve as I was, I thought: “At last! They have all seen it now! The ‘gang war’ is not primarily about drugs. It is primarily about the intolerance and racism which is an appalling symptom of this terrible political ideology called Islam.”

Of course, I was soon to be very disappointed. And I really blame myself. I should have known better.

Before I go on I should say that this piece of “news” was soon endorsed by the rest of the PC media machine as a mere fact. Even Jyllands-Posten, my favorite newspaper.

Here is how the Politiken article goes:

POLITICIANS: RACISM NOURISHES GANG WAR

A majority in Christiansborg [the Danish Parliament] wants the police to acknowledge that the gang war is also about racism.

Hells Angels defends their participation in the gang war by claiming that it is about fighting a special kind of mentality among young immigrants.

According to HA this mentality leads to harassment of ethnic Danish girls, among others.

These claims are made not only by the opposition, but also the ruling parties, to demand that the national police [Rigspolitiet, the nationwide police force] change their perception of the gang war. The parties think that the police should acknowledge that the gang war is also about racism.

At this point I was still optimistic, due to the fact that Jønke’s claims supported my perception of the obvious racism ethnic Danish girls are exposed to. And that this should be obvious to anybody.

But then reality kicked in:
– – – – – – – –

The national police maintain their perception that the gang war is primarily a fight about the drug market. But a majority of the parties are shocked that HA spokesman Jørn Jønke Nielsen describes the gang war as a fight against the mentality among certain ‘groups’ of immigrants.

I guess you have an idea about where we are heading now.

Jønke: We have had enough

About these (the ‘groups’) Jørn Jønke Nielsen says:

“Through many years we have tried to integrate them and be friends. In the end though, we’ve simply had enough of these people. Their ridiculous behavior and terror against ordinary people. They shout at blond girls on the streets; call them whores and harass people who are out to have a good time, at the discotheques and so on. We also have kids in school and girlfriends who would like to walk down the street without being harassed. It might be that the rest of Denmark does not want, or does not dare, to do anything about it, but we certainly do not accept this behavior.”

To me, this a brave man talking, criminal or not criminal.

Venstre’s [the ruling party] spokesman on justice matters, Kim Andersen has, until now, not wanted to comment on statements from Jørn Jønke Nielsen because he does not like the kind of rock-star status the media, according to him, give Jønke.

“But it is clear that these statements have a racist content. It is not for me to be a counselor for the police about how to devise their strategy. But I assume that the police take all kinds of motives into consideration when making plans about how to deal with this war,” Kim Andersen states.

This was where I lost my jaw. It went all the way down to the bottom of my morning coffee. Stains on my shirt and everything. It actually needed help to get it back in place.

So this is it: As a politician I decide to open the borders of the country without even asking the public. I decide to let my country be invaded by lunatics and when the original citizens try to protect themselves against the disasters that I have imposed upon them, I call them racists.

Holger DanskeIt is the ultimate betrayal. It cannot get any worse than this. What kind of racism is this guy talking about?

Is it racism to stand up against someone who systematically harasses your women?

Is it racism not to insist that your kids be left alone when they go to school?

Is that what racism is about now?

Sure, I want to be a racist now. I have never even come near to supporting the Hells Angels. At best, to me, these guys were plain criminals. This is changing, though.

I am sorry to admit it, but I salute them, even though I know that with HA types as rulers of my country I would be in deep s***.

Back to the article where management techniques are now introduced:

The Police: It is a sales trick

Kim Kliver, head of the Center for National Police Investigations, does not want to comment on Jørn Jønke Nielsen’s claims. He has explained that HA uses this kind of rhetoric to recruit members to their support group AK81.

Therefore he merely sees the rhetoric as a ‘sales trick’, rather than as a reflection of racism as being a fundamental reason for the gang war.

“I see nothing that should make me change that perception” he says.

So, now it is a ‘sales trick’. A sales trick. Taste it.

More likely this policeman is humiliated to the bone that he is no longer capable of securing the safety of ordinary Danes. He cannot do a damned thing about it. Jønke can. And he does. Of course it is not in the slightest way in this officer’s interest to expose this fact, so why not try to downgrade Jønke, who is more and more singled out as the only brave man among all these miserable politicians. It is pathetic.

And the officer’s political “friends” continue:

Politicians: the police have to acknowledge racism

But all political parties in Christiansborg except The Danish People’s Party think that the police have to drop this kind of differentiation.

Morten Østergaard (Radikale Venstre) states that it is ‘obvious’ that the gang war acquires a racial element when young men join AK81 to fight immigrants.

“Police cannot ignore this. Police and the social authorities have to go out and tell the young people that this racist rhetoric should not make them join this war, neither on the bikers nor on the gangs’ side,” he says.

Wow, sure this will help. How original. Especially the “go out and tell” part. But also the “neither on the bikers nor on the gangs’ side” part is brilliant and deserves applause. Though I am sure he will not be able to define this more specifically without joining the “racists” from HA.

And the madness just keeps gaining momentum:

The same message comes from the spokesman from the Social Democrats, Karen Hækkerup: “When Jønke plays racism card, then racism is part of the gang war.”

So there we are: Racism — which one must now define as being defending yourself and your loved ones — is now part of the “gang war”. This is true since the creators (Social Democrats) of the multicultural disaster say so themselves. The absurd article ends with a statement from The Danish People’s Party:

DPP: It is about drugs

Danish People’s Party disagrees completely.

“The gang war is about drugs. Jønke is right in the fact that there are immigrants who do not respect law and order. But that of course is no excuse for participating in a war,” says DPP spokesman Peter Skaarup.

“No excuse for participating in a war!”

Well, I bet my most precious parts that no ordinary or non-ordinary Dane asked for this war. The fact is that there is no way around it any more.

Whether you are part of HA or just a lonely ordinary law-abiding citizen working your butt off, you are left with two choices only: To become a Muslim or to become a racist and fight.

It is the ultimate treason imposed on all of us by a political elite who had no clue whatsoever about what they initiated when they opened our borders to an uncontrolled influx of some of the worst kind of totalitarian criminals that the world has ever seen.

(To be fair: DPP are the only ones have been opposing this multiculti madness from the very beginning. They are doing an excellent and outstanding job and generally deserve all the credit that they can get.)