Allah’s Pimp, BOEH!, and Al Qaeda in Belgium

On Thursday our Flemish correspondent VH reported on Filip Dewinter’s remarks about Imam Nordine Taouil, whom the Vlaams Belang leader referred to as “Allah’s Pimp”. It seems that his words must have hit home, since the “youths” of Belgium have started rioting.

Below are several brief news reports on the latest from Belgium, as translated by VH. First, from Het Nieuwsblad:

Police arrest rioting youth in Antwerp

The police arrested five persons today in Antwerp, who wanted to participate in a non-authorized demonstration in the Kerkstraat in Antwerpen-Borgerhout. They refused to leave when they were asked to. One of them behaved in a very unruly fashion.

Contrary to what the police earlier reported, the event had nothing to do with the headscarf ban, but merely with the statements of Filip Dewinter, who had called imam Nordine Taouil “Allah’s Pimp”. There was also a banner confiscated with a slogan that was directed against Filip Dewinter.

Not connected with the event at the Turnhoutsebaan, another six people were arrested. One of them had thrown a stone at a bus. That brings the total number of arrests today to eleven.

And a response from headscarf opponents, as reported by Het Laatste Nieuws:

300 people demonstrate in Brussels for headscarf ban

Around 300 people in Brussels took to the street, in front of the building of the PM of the French Community, for a ban on headscarves in French-language schools. Such a ban should be imposed through a decree, according to the organizers.

The debate over the wearing of headscarves in schools is current, both in Flanders and in the southern part of the country, where some schools have already introduced a ban. The organizations that were demonstrating today in Brussels think the politicians should introduce a general ban on religious symbols in all schools.

Nadia Geerts, of the organizing RAPPEL [“Reminder”], called on politicians to make a choice “to urgently protect girls who are forced to wear a headscarf”. Among the demonstrators were also some parliamentarians, especially members of the MR [Mouvement Réformateur, Wallonian center-right].

But BOEH! is not letting up:
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BOEH! announces legal proceedings against headscarf ban.

The feminist action platform Boss Your Own Head (BOEH!) will start legal proceedings in the course of next week against the headscarf ban for students in public schools. The lawyers of BOEH! view the headscarf ban as an infringement of the constitutional equality and the Equal Opportunities Law of 2008. […] BOEH! is convinced that a lasting solution can not be achieved through unilateral, radical decisions but by mutual agreement and based on mutual respect in the interest of all parties.

And — possibly unrelated — an Al Qaeda cell in Morocco sponsored from Belgium:

Wealthy Moroccan Al Qaeda cell sponsored from Belgium

The Moroccan security services have rounded up a network of Al Qaeda terrorists: 24 people were arrested. The quite wealthy terrorist network was sponsored by donations from Western sympathizers, including some in Belgium.

Whether our countrymen have provided more than financial assistance is being investigated at the moment. According to a source close to the investigation, further arrests will follow.

This is the first time that a network was found operating under the direct command of Al Qaeda, and not through the Maghrebi Islamic branch (AQMI). The group had three goals in mind: an attack in Morocco, to train fighters for the wars in Afghanistan and in Somalia, and to prepare suicide bombers for Iraq.

The federal public prosecutor confirmed that he was aware of the Belgian link, but keeps his lips together. “The information exchange with the judicial authorities of Morocco is in full swing,” is all that the spokeswoman of the Belgian prosecutor Leen Nuyts wanted to say.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/25/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/25/2009President Obama has announced that non-military aid to Pakistan will rise to $1.5 billion per year — three times the previous level — over the next five years. When this is juxtaposed with the sudden outraged “discovery” by Obama, Gordon Brown, and Nicolas Sarkozy that the Iranians have a secret underground nuclear fuel plant, it makes me wonder whether portentous events are about to unfold in that part of the world.

In other news, a taped interview with the late Michael Jackson reveals that the singer considered Adolf Hitler to be a genius, based on his oratorical skills and his showmanship.

One other item to note: Safia Benaouda — the “Swedish” woman recently arrested in Pakistan along with her husband and a third culturally enriched Swede — has been released from custody. She and her child were turned over to the Swedish embassy by the Pakistani authorities.

Thanks to Amil Imani, C. Cantoni, CB, Diana West, ESW, Fausta, Henrik, Insubria, JD, Sean O’Brian, Steen, TB, Tuan Jim, TV, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
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Financial Crisis
Fed Audit Review Beginning in Congress
Federal Reserve Admits Hiding Gold Swap Arrangements, Gata Says
Japanese Exports Drop by 36 Per Cent
 
USA
Ahmadinejad Booted From Third New York Hotel
An Enfeebled Obama
Barack Obama, College Administrator
Charles Manson Follower Susan Atkins Dies at 61
FBI Payout for Egyptian Over 9/11
Get a Handgun, Save a Life
Health Reform is Just Subterfuge; Dream is Democratic Dictatorship
How a Power Giant Profits From Greenhouse Regs
Hunt Begins for Records on ACORN’s Fed Funds
Importer Tries to Get Around Clove Smoke Ban
Kirk to Obama: Withdraw Grants to Libyan Charities
Mohammed Cartoonist to Speak at Yale
Muslims Gather at the Capitol for Prayer Event
Newly Declassified Files Detail Massive FBI Data-Mining Project
Obama Makes Brown Feel Welcome at UN
Obama’s Policies Would Redistribute Nearly $1 Trillion in Wealth Every Year
Obama to Congress: Forget it!
Obama Won’t Win by Calling Opponents Cowards
Obama’s Malpractice on Medical Lawsuits
Right’s Czar Mania is a Distraction
Schoolhouse Shariah
Sen. Jim Inhofe: Obama’s “You’re on Your Own” Foreign Policy
States Reassert Sovereignty With Legislation
Video: Shocker: Kids Taught to Sing Obama’s Praises
White House Dismisses Fox News as ‘Ideological Outlet, ‘ Renewing Feud
 
Europe and the EU
Ahmadinejad Did Not Cross EU ‘Red Line’ With UN Speech, Says Sweden (EU Presidency)
Austria: Turkish Diplomat Accused of Drunk Driving
Austrian Right Holds on to Power in Regional Election
Climate: Franceschini, Premier’s Choices Against Obama’s
Denmark: Police Grab Illegal Arsenal
Ethnic Minorities Hope for Breakthrough in German Elections
Euro Project to Arrest Us for What They Think We Will Do
European Commission Accused of Breaching Rules With Ryanair Stunt
Finland: Hospitals Ponder Treatment Priorities
Greece: Terror Breakthrough for Police
Ireland: O’Leary and Ganley Lock Horns in Bitter TV Showdown
Italy: New Lottery Prize — 4,000 Euros for 20 Years
Italy: Indian Burns Victim on Road to Recovery
Italy: Filipinos Held Over 116 Billion Dollars of Bogus US Bonds
Netherlands: In Crime, Women Are ‘More Dangerous’ Than Men
Poland Can’t Issue More Polluting Permits Despite Court Win: EU
Polish Bloggers Urge No Vote
Sweden: Björklund Against Burka Ban
Swiss Parliament Votes for Stricter Integration
UK: Foreign Office Chief Faces Sack After ‘Anti-Semitic’ Rant Verdict
UK: General Quits ‘Over Afghanistan’
UK: MPs’ Expenses Leaked Over Failure to Equip Troops on Front Line in Afghanistan and Iraq
UK: Miliband Accused Over Iran Exiles
 
Balkans
Macedonia: Ethnic Albanian ‘Encylopedia’ Withdrawn
 
North Africa
Egypt Bloggers Sound Out on Hosni’s UNESCO Bid
Egypt Suspicious of European Language Students
 
Middle East
Al Ahram Compiles a List of Failed Arab States
Exclusive Interview: Gaddafi on Obama, Israel and Iran
Obama, Brown, Sarkozy to Iran: ‘J’Accuse!’
Saudi Arabia: Beacon Shed Light on Art
 
South Asia
Afghanistan: The Rules Murdering Our Troops
Christian Medical Centre Helping Muslims and Pakistan’s Poor
Diana West: Ready, Aim, Fire McChrystal
Indonesia: Surakarta: People Say No to Burial of Islamic Terrorist
Indonesia: Muslim Group Refuses Verdict
Indonesia’s Terror Burial Anger Boils Over
LTTE: The Jihadi Connection
Malaysia: Close Watch on Polygamy Club
Obama Announces Pakistan Aid
Pakistan: Taliban Blamed for Deaths of Seven Tribal Leaders
Pakistan Discovers ‘Village’ Of White German Al-Qaeda Insurgents
Pakistan: Moon Madness
Sri Lanka: PTGTE New LTTE Front
Swedish Woman Freed in Pakistan Terror Probe
 
Far East
9 N.Korean Refugees Flee Into Danish Embassy in Hanoi
China Selling Petrol to Iran, Report Says
N. Korea’s Concentration Camps Are a Burning Issue
S. Korea: On Deterring a Nuclear Attack
Why Are Seoul and Washington Out of Sync?
 
Australia — Pacific
Australia How-to Jihadist Jailed
 
Immigration
Cyprus: People Traffickers Arrested in Sting
Immigration: Frontex Report Implicates Turks
Iraqi Refugees Face a Hard Life in Asylum Countries
Italy: Illegal Nigerians Deported From Rome
Minister of Migration Says Finland Could Face Pressures to Accept More Refugees
Netherlands: Multicultural Forum to Cost Immigration
‘We Are All Immigrants’: Swedish Researchers
 
Culture Wars
10 Years Later: Media Bury Jesse Dirkhising
Remembering Jesse Dirkhising
Sunstein: Fetuses ‘Use’ Women, Abortion Limits ‘Troublesome’
 
General
Amil Imani: Islam is Misunderstood
Benign Shariah Finance
Europe and the USA Face Spread of ‘Severe’ Disease, Doctor Warns
Michael Jackson: ‘Hitler Was a Genius’
The Dog Ate Global Warming

Financial Crisis


Fed Audit Review Beginning in Congress

‘This is history in the making and victory is within reach’

Members of Congress will holding a hearing tomorrow on a plan by U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, to audit the Federal Reserve, which oversees U.S. monetary policy, and his supporters are calling it a precedent-setting event.

“This is history in the making and victory is within reach,” said a statement on the RonPaul.com website, which is maintained in support of the congressman but is not linked to him.

WND reported just days ago that the congressman, who has sponsored similar legislation on and off since the 1980s, believes this is the year there actually will be progress on his efforts to open up the books of the private organization that sets interest rates, controls the U.S. money supply and impacts consumers in a hundred ways.

The Federal Reserve, an independent organization apart from the U.S. government, largely has operated behind a veil of secrecy for decades, but Paul told WND its operations could be about to face the light of day.

[…]

When the plan was introduced, Paul said, “How long will we as a Congress stand idly by while hard-working Americans see their savings eaten away by inflation? Only big-spending politicians and politically favored bankers benefit from inflation.

“Since its inception, the Federal Reserve has always operated in the shadows, without sufficient scrutiny or oversight of its operations. While the conventional excuse is that this is intended to reduce the Fed’s susceptibility to political pressures, the reality is that the Fed acts as a foil for the government. Whenever you question the Fed about the strength of the dollar, they will refer you to the Treasury, and vice versa. The Federal Reserve has, on the one hand, many of the privileges of government agencies, while retaining benefits of private organizations, such as being insulated from Freedom of Information Act requests.”

Paul has warned, “The Federal Reserve can enter into agreements with foreign central banks and foreign governments, and the GAO is prohibited from auditing or even seeing these agreements. Why should a government-established agency, whose police force has federal law enforcement powers, and whose notes have legal tender status in this country, be allowed to enter into agreements with foreign powers and foreign banking institutions with no oversight? Particularly when hundreds of billions of dollars of currency swaps have been announced and implemented, the Fed’s negotiations with the European Central Bank, the Bank of International Settlements, and other institutions should face increased scrutiny, most especially because of their significant effect on foreign policy. If the State Department were able to do this, it would be characterized as a rogue agency and brought to heel, and if a private individual did this he might face prosecution under the Logan Act, yet the Fed avoids both fates.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Federal Reserve Admits Hiding Gold Swap Arrangements, Gata Says

The Federal Reserve System has disclosed to the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc. that it has gold swap arrangements with foreign banks that it does not want the public to know about.

The disclosure, GATA says, contradicts denials provided by the Fed to GATA in 2001 and suggests that the Fed is indeed very much involved in the surreptitious international central bank manipulation of the gold price particularly and the currency markets generally.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Japanese Exports Drop by 36 Per Cent

World demands continue to stagnate. Exports towards the United States, China and Europe drop. The positive signs seen of the second quarter were due to the government stimulus package. Imports decline as well. For the fourth time, Japan Airlines asks the government for aid.

Tokyo (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Japan’s exports fell for an 11th month in August making it harder for the economic recovery to gain traction.

Shipments abroad dropped 36 percent from a year earlier compared with a 36.5 percent decline in July, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo.

In a report, the ministry suggests the boost measured in the second quarter of this year may be moderating as governments exhaust stimulus spending.

Given low world demand, exports are recovering very slowly. Japan’s economy remains hard-pressed because the worldwide crisis has cut demand for cars and electronics.

Exports to the US are down 34.4 per cent from a year earlier, the least since November, the ministry said. Shipments to China, Japan’s biggest market, fell 27.6 per cent, and sales to Europe slid 45.9 per cent.

The yen’s 7 per cent gain over the past six months has added another obstacle for exporters.

In addition, this year imports fell 41.3 percent in August from a year earlier.

Even Japan’s main airline carrier, Japan Airlines (JAL), has had to weather turbulent time.

JAL has the heaviest debt among Asia’s carriers, and for the fourth time since 2001 has had to ask for government aid.

In June JAL posted a 99 billion yen loss (US$ 109.2 billion) in the first quarter, the most in at least six years, as business and leisure travel plummeted during the country’s worst postwar recession.

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

USA


Ahmadinejad Booted From Third New York Hotel

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, had another door slammed in his face Thursday when a third New York venue refused to allow the Holocaust-denying leader a place to throw a reception while he was in town for the United Nations General Assembly.

On Thursday, the Essex House, a Manhattan hotel, cancelled a presumably alcohol- and pork-free dinner Ahmadinejad planned to host Friday, less than 24 hours after he went on a hate-filled rant at the U.N., which caused members of the U.S. delegation to walk out of the room.

Ahmadinejad and his fellow pariah, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi , have received welcomes as cold as desert nights since they landed in New York this week, each of them cancelling plans after locals demanded they pack up their things.

The hotel said “that no accommodation or banqueting facilities have been booked at the Essex House for the president of Iran or members of his delegation,” making it the third place in a week to bow to local pressure.

A nonprofit group called United Against Nuclear Iran says it has spearheaded the campaign to keep venues from hosting the president and successfully encouraged General Electric to divest its holdings in Iran.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



An Enfeebled Obama

If Zbigniew Brzezinski had his way, the US would go to war against Israel to defend Iran’s nuclear installations.

In an interview with the Daily Beast Web site last weekend, the man who served as former US president Jimmy Carter’s national security adviser said, “They [IAF fighter jets] have to fly over our airspace in Iraq. Are we just going to sit there and watch? We have to be serious about denying them that right. If they fly over, you go up and confront them. They have the choice of turning back or not.”

Brzezinski has long distinguished himself as one of the most outspoken Israel-haters in polite circles in Washington. Under normal circumstances, his remarks could be laughed off as the ravings of a garden variety anti-Semite. But these are not normal circumstances. Brzezinski served as a senior foreign policy adviser to Barack Obama during his 2008 presidential campaign, and his views are not terribly out of place among Obama’s senior advisers in the White House. In an interview in 2002, Samantha Powers, who serves as a senior member of Obama’s national security council, effectively called for the US to invade Israel in support of the Palestinians.

The fact of the matter is that Brzezinski’s view is in line with the general disposition of Obama’s foreign policy. Since entering office, Obama has struck a hard-line position against Israel while adopting a soft, even apologetic line toward Iran and its allies.

For eight months, Obama has sought to force Israel to the wall. He has loudly and repeatedly ordered the Netanyahu government to prevent all private and public construction for Jews in Israel’s capital city and its heartland in order to facilitate the eventual mass expulsion of Jews from both areas, which he believes ought to become part of a Jew-free Palestinian state.

Until this week, Obama conditioned the resumption of negotiations toward peace between Israel and the Palestinians on such a prohibition of Jewish building and so encouraged Fatah leader Mahmoud Abbas to further radicalize his positions toward Israel. Until Obama came around, Abbas had no problem negotiating with Israeli leaders while Jews were building homes and schools and other structures in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. But with Obama requiring a freeze of all such construction, Abbas made clear in an interview with The Washington Post in May that he couldn’t talk to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu without looking like a sellout.

Obama made no equivalent demands of the Palestinians. He did not precondition talks on freezing illegal Arab construction in Jerusalem, or on dismantling the Aksa Martyrs Brigades terrorist group, or even simply on setting aside the Palestinian demand that Israel release convicted terrorists from its prisons. To the contrary, he has energetically supported the establishment of a Palestinian unity government between Fatah and Hamas — which the US State Department has since 1995 designated as a foreign terrorist organization to which US citizens, including the US president, are required by law to give no quarter.

As for Iran, during his meeting with Netanyahu in May, Obama gave the clear impression that the Iranian regime had until September to accept his offer to negotiate the disposition of its nuclear installations. But it is now September, and in its belated response to Obama’s generous offer of engagement, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s regime rejected the terms of Obama’s engagement out of hand. Obama did not retaliate by taking his offer to negotiate off the table or — perish the thought — working to implement the sanctions he had pledged would follow an Iranian rejection of his open hand.

Instead, Obama announced that he is sending a senior US official to meet with the Iranians on October 1. And with that announcement, any residual doubt that Obama is willing to live in a world in which Iran is armed with nuclear weaponry dissipated completely.

In the meantime, in his address to the UN General Assembly on Wednesday and in his remarks at his meeting with Netanyahu and Abbas on Tuesday, Obama made clear that, in the words of former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton, he has “put Israel on the chopping block.” He referred to Israeli communities located beyond the 1949 armistice lines as “illegitimate.”

Moreover, Obama explained that Israel can no longer expect US support for its security if it doesn’t bow to his demand that it surrender all of the land it has controlled since 1967.

Apparently it is immaterial to the US leader that if Israel fulfilled his demand, the Jewish state would render itself defenseless against enemy attack and so embolden its neighbors to invade. That is, it matters not to Obama that were Israel to fulfill his demand, the prospect of an Arab war against Israel would rise steeply. The fact that Obama made these deeply antagonistic statements about Israel at the UN in itself exposes his hostility toward the country. The UN’s institutional hostility toward Israel is surpassed only by that of the Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic Conference.

So given Obama’s positions toward Israel on the one hand and Iran and its allies on the other, it seems clear enough that the logical endpoint of Obama’s policies would look something like Brzezinski’s recommended course of action. Moreover, Obama’s foreign policy as a whole makes it fairly easy to imagine him ordering the US military to open hostilities against a US ally to defend a US adversary — even as that adversary goes out of its way to humiliate Obama personally and the US in general.

Since Obama took office, he has been abandoning one US ally after another while seeking to curry favor with one US adversary after another. At every turn, America’s allies — from Israel to Honduras, to Columbia, South Korea and Japan, to Poland and the Czech Republic — have reacted with disbelief and horror to his treachery. And at every turn, America’s adversaries — from Iran to Venezuela to North Korea and Russia — have responded with derision and contempt to his seemingly obsessive attempts to appease them.

The horror Obama has instilled in America’s friends and the contempt he has evoked from its enemies have not caused him to change course. The fact that his policies throughout the world have already failed to bring a change in the so-called international community’s treatment of the US has not led him to reconsider those policies. As many Western Europeans have begun to openly acknowledge, the man they once likened to the messiah is nothing but a politician — and a weak, bungling one at that. Even Britain’s Economist is laughing at him.

But Obama is unmoved by any of this, and as his speech at the UN General Assembly made clear, he is moving full speed ahead in his plans to subordinate US foreign policy to the UN.

His stubborn insistence on advancing his feckless foreign policy in the face of its already apparent colossal failure is of a piece with his unswerving commitment to his domestic agenda in spite of its apparent colossal failure. Obama’s economic stimulus package failed to stimulate the US economy and increased the US’s economic deficit to heights undreamed of by his predecessors. His nationalization of major US corporations like General Motors, his cash-for-clunkers program to stimulate the US auto industry and his massive encroachments on the banking and financial industries have done nothing to increase economic growth in the US and indeed, unemployment has reached generational highs. And yet, rather than reconsider his belief in vastly expanding the size of the federal government’s control over the private sector, Obama has insistently pushed for further governmental control over the US economy — most notably in his drive to transform the US health care industry.

Both Obama’s supporters and his opponents have claimed that his presidency may well stand or fall on his ability to pass a health care reform law in the coming months. But the fact of the matter is that if he succeeds in passing such a law, his success will be a Pyrrhic victory because Obama has promised that his plan will do the impossible, and therefore it will unquestionably fail.

He has promised that the health care plan he supports will increase access to health services and improve their quality, but simultaneously will not increase the size of the federal deficit or be funded with tax hikes — and this is impossible. Obama’s health care plan will fail either to pass into law, or if it becomes law, it will fail to live up to his promises.

Obama’s failures in both foreign and domestic policy have weakened him politically. His response to this newfound weakness has been to put himself into the public eye seemingly around the clock. Apparently the thinking behind the move is that while Obama’s policies are unpopular, Obama’s personal popularity remains high, so if he personalizes his policies, it will become more difficult for his opponents to argue against them.

But alas, this policy too has failed. The more Obama exposes himself, the less he is able to leverage his personal celebrity into political power.

The question for the US’s spurned allies in general — and for Israel in particular — is whether we are better off with a politically strong Obama or a politically weak Obama. Given that the general thrust of his foreign policy is detrimental to our interests, America’s allies are best served by a weak Obama. Already this week Israel benefitted from his weakness. It was Obama’s weakness that dictated his need to stage a photo-op with Netanyahu and Abbas at the UN. And it was this need — to be seen as doing something productive — that outweighed Obama’s desire to put the screws on Israel by preconditioning talks with a freeze on Jewish construction. So Obama was forced to relent at least temporarily and Netanyahu won his first round against Obama.

During a television interview this week, Sen. John McCain was asked for his opinion of Brzezinski’s recommendation that the US shoot down IAF jets en route to Iran in a hypothetical Israeli air strike against Iran’s nuclear installations. He responded with derisive laughter. And indeed, the notion that the US would go to war against Israel to protect Iran’s nuclear installations is laughably absurd.

The weaker Obama becomes politically, the more readily Democrats and liberal reporters alike will acknowledge that attacking US allies while scraping and bowing before US foes is a ridiculous strategy for foreign affairs. Certainly no self-proclaimed realist can defend a policy based on denuding the US of its power and forsaking a US-based international system for one dictated by its foes.

It is true that a weakened Obama will seek to win cheap points by putting the squeeze on Israel. But it is also true that the weaker Obama becomes, the less capable he will be of carrying through on his bullying threats against Israel and against fellow democracies around the world.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Barack Obama, College Administrator

Is the commander-in-chief really president of the University of America?

If you are confused by the first nine months of the Obama administration, take solace that there is at least a pattern. The president, you see, thinks America is a university and that he is our campus president. Keep that in mind, and almost everything else makes sense.

Obama went to Occidental, Columbia, and Harvard without much of a break, taught at the University of Chicago, and then surrounded himself with academics, first in his stint at community organizing and then when he went into politics. It shows. In his limited experience, those who went to Yale or Harvard are special people, and the Ivy League environment has been replicated in the culture of the White House.

Note how baffled the administration is by sinking polls, tea parties, town halls, and, in general, “them” — the vast middle class, which, as we learned during the campaign, clings to guns and Bibles, and which has now been written off as blinkered, racist, and xenophobic. The earlier characterization of rural Pennsylvania has been expanded to include all of Middle America.

For many in the academic community who have not worked with their hands, run businesses, or ventured far off campus, Middle America is an exotic place inhabited by aborigines who bowl, don’t eat arugula, and need to be reminded to inflate their tires. They are an emotional lot, of some value on campus for their ability to “fix” broken things like pipes and windows, but otherwise wisely ignored. Professor Chu, Obama’s energy secretary, summed up the sense of academic disdain that permeates this administration with his recent sniffing about the childish polloi: “The American people . . . just like your teenage kids, aren’t acting in a way that they should act.” Earlier, remember, Dr. Chu had scoffed from his perch that California farms were environmentally unsound and would soon disappear altogether, “We’re looking at a scenario where there’s no more agriculture in California.”

It is the role of the university, from a proper distance, to help them, by making sophisticated, selfless decisions on healthcare and the environment that the unwashed cannot grasp are really in their own interest — deluded as they are by Wal-Mart consumerism, Elmer Gantry evangelicalism, and Sarah Palin momism. The tragic burden of an academic is to help the oppressed, but blind, majority.

In the world of the university, a Van Jones — fake name, fake accent, fake underclass pedigree, fake almost everything — is a dime a dozen. Ward Churchill fabricated everything from his degree to his ancestry, and was given tenure, high pay, and awards for his beads, buckskin, and Native American—like locks. The “authentic” outbursts of Van Jones about white polluters and white mass-murderers are standard campus fare. In universities, such over-the-top rhetoric and pseudo-Marxist histrionics are simply career moves, used to scare timid academics and win release time, faculty-adjudicated grants, or exemption from normal tenure scrutiny. Skip Gates’s fussy little theatrical fit at a Middle American was not his first and will not be his last.

Obama did not vet Jones before hiring him because he saw nothing unusual (much less offensive) about him, in the way that Bill Ayers likewise was typical, not an aberration, on a campus. Just as there are few conservatives, so too there are felt to be few who should be considered radicals in universities. Instead everyone is considered properly left, and even fringe expressions are considered normal calibrations within a shared spectrum. The proper question is not “Why are there so many extremists in the administration?” but rather “What’s so extreme?”

Some people are surprised that the administration is hardly transparent and, in fact, downright intolerant of dissent. Critics are slurred as racists and Nazis — usually without the fingerprints of those who orchestrated the smear campaign from higher up. The NEA seems to want to dish out federal money to “artists” on the basis of liberal obsequiousness. The president tells the nation that his wonderful programs are met with distortion and right-wing lies, and that the time for talking is over — no more partisan, divisive bickering in endless debate.

That reluctance to engage in truly diverse argumentation again reveals the influence of the academic world on Team Obama. We can have an Eric Holder—type “conversation” (a good campusese word), but only if held on the basis of the attorney general’s one-way notion of racial redress.

On most campuses, referenda in the academic senate (“votes of conscience”) on gay marriage or the war in Iraq are as lopsided as Saddam’s old plebiscites. Speech codes curb free expression. Groupthink is the norm. Dissent on tenure decisions, questioning of diversity, or skepticism about the devolution in the definition of sexual harassment — all that can be met with defamation. The wolf cry of “racist” is a standard careerist gambit. Given the exalted liberal ends, why quibble over the means?

Some wonder where Obama got the idea that constant exposure results in persuasion. But that too comes from the talk-is-everything mindset of a university president. Faculties are swamped with memos from deans, provosts, and presidents, reiterating their own “commitment to diversity,” reminding how they would not “tolerate hate speech,” and in general blathering about the “campus community.” University administrators instruct faculty on everything from getting a flu shot, to covering up when coughing, to how to make a syllabus and avoid incorrect words.

Usually the frequency of such communique’s spikes when administrators are looking for a job elsewhere and want to establish a fresh paper trail so that their potential new employers can be reminded of their ongoing progressive credentials.

Obama has simply emulated the worldview and style of a college administrator. So he thinks that reframing the same old empty banalities with new rhetorical flourishes and signs of fresh commitment and empathy will automatically result in new faculty converts. There is no there there in healthcare reform, but opponents can be either bullied, shamed, or mesmerized into thinking there is.

Czars are a university favorite. Among the frequent topics of the daily university executive communique’s are the formulaic “My team now includes . . . ,” “I have just appointed . . . ,” “Under my direction . . . “ (that first-person overload is, of course, another Obama characteristic), followed by announcement of a new “special” appointment: “special assistant to the president for diversity,” “acting assistant provost for community affairs and external relations,” “associate dean for curriculum enhancement and development.”

Most of these tasks are either unnecessary or amply covered by existing faculty, department chairs, and deans. Czars, however, proliferated on campuses for fairly obvious reasons. First, they are spotlights illuminating the university administration’s commitment to a particular fashionable cause by the showy creation of a high-profile, highly remunerative new job. When loud protests meet the university’s inability to create a new department or fund a trendy but costly special program, administrators often take their loudest critics and make them czars — satisfying the “base” without substantial policy changes.

Second, czars are a way to circumvent the usual workings of the university, especially faculty committees in which there is an outside chance of some marginalized conservative voting against putting “Race, Class, and Gender in the Latina Cinema” into the general-education curriculum.

Special assistants for and associates of something or other are not vetted. Czars create an alternative university administration that can create special billets, hire adjuncts (with de facto security), and obtain budgeting without faculty oversight. The special assistant or associate rarely is hired through a normal search process open to the campus community, but rather is simply selected and promoted by administrative fiat.

One of the most disturbing characteristics of the new administration is a particular sort of whining or petulance. Dissatisfaction arises over even favorable press coverage — as we saw last weekend, when Obama serially trashed the obsequious media that he had hogged all day.

Feelings of being underappreciated by the public for all one’s self-sacrificial efforts are common university traits. We’ve seen in the past a certain love/hate relationship of Professor Obama with wealthy people — at first a Tony Rezko, but now refined and evolved much higher to those on Wall Street that the administration in schizophrenic fashion both damns and worships.

Michelle Obama during the campaign summed up best her husband’s wounded-fawn sense of sacrifice when she said, “Barack is one of the smartest people you will ever encounter who will deign to enter this messy thing called politics.”

Academic culture also promotes this idea that highly educated professionals deigned to give up their best years for arduous academic work and chose to be above the messy rat race. Although supposedly far better educated, smarter (or rather the “smartest”), and more morally sound than lawyers, CEOs, and doctors, academics gripe that they, unfairly, are far worse paid. And they lack the status that should accrue to those who teach the nation’s youth, correct their papers, and labor over lesson plans. Obama reminded us ad nauseam of all the lucre he passed up on Wall Street in order to return to the noble pursuit of organizing and teaching in Chicago.

In short, campus people have had the bar raised on themselves at every avenue. Suggest to an academic that university pay is not bad for ninth months’ work, often consisting of an actual six to nine hours a week in class, and you will be considered guilty of heresy if not defamation.

University administrators worship private money, and then among themselves scoff at the capitalism that created it. Campus elites, looking at a benefactor, are fascinated how someone — no brighter than they are — made so much money, even as they are repelled by a system that allows those other than themselves to have pulled it off. No wonder that Obama seems enchanted by a Warren Buffett, even as he trashes the very landscape that created Berkshire Hathaway’s riches. No president has raised more money from Wall Street or has given it more protection from accountability — while at the same time demagoguing it as selfish and greedy.

Many of the former Professor Obama’s problems so far hinge on his administration’s inability to judge public opinion, its own self-righteous sense of self, its non-stop sermonizing, and its suspicion of sincere dissent. In other words, the United States is now a campus, we are the students, and Obama is our university president.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Charles Manson Follower Susan Atkins Dies at 61

Atkins was California’s longest-serving female prisoner at the time of her death. She was involved in one of modern history’s most shocking killing sprees, the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders in L.A.

Susan Atkins, who committed one of modern history’s most notorious crimes when she joined Charles Manson and his gang for a 1969 killing spree that terrorized Los Angeles and put her in prison for the rest of her life, has died. She was 61.

Atkins was diagnosed in 2008 with brain cancer, which caused paralysis and the loss of one leg. She was receiving medical treatment at the Central California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla and entered hospice care in recent days. She died there at 11:46 p.m. Thursday of natural causes, said Terry Thornton, spokeswoman for the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

Convicted of eight murders, Atkins served more than 38 years of a life sentence at the California Institute for Women in Corona. She was the longest-serving prisoner among women currently held in the state’s penitentiaries, Thornton said. . That distinction now falls to Patricia Krenwinkel, who was convicted along with Atkins for the Tate-LaBianca murders.

Although prison staffers and clergy workers commended Atkins’ behavior during her many years behind bars, she was repeatedly denied parole, with officials citing the cruel and callous nature of her crimes. In June 2008, she appealed to prison and parole officials for compassionate release, but the state parole board denied the request. On Sept. 2, she was wheeled into her last parole hearing on a hospital gurney but was turned down by a unanimous vote of the 12-member California Board of Parole.

Atkins confessed to killing actress Sharon Tate, the pregnant wife of director Roman Polanski, who was stabbed 16 times and hanged; Tate’s nearly full-term fetus died with her. The next night, Atkins accompanied Manson and his followers when they broke into the Los Feliz home of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca and killed them.

“She was the scariest of the Manson girls,” said Stephen Kay, who helped prosecute the case and argued against Atkins’ release at her parole hearings. “She was very violent.”

Former chief prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, who sought and won death sentences for Atkins, Manson and other followers, said Atkins would be remembered “obviously as a member of a group that committed among the most horrendous crimes in American history. She apparently made every effort to rehabilitate herself.”

He added: “It has to be said that she did pay substantially, though not completely, for her incredibly brutal crimes. And to her credit, she did renounce — and, I believe, sincerely — Charles Manson.”

It was Atkins who broke open the case when she bragged of her participation in the slayings to cellmates at Sybil Brand Institute in East Los Angeles, where she was being held on other charges…

[Return to headlines]



FBI Payout for Egyptian Over 9/11

An Egyptian man has received a $250,000 payout from the FBI because of the way he was treated following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks.

Abdallah Higazy, 38, sued the bureau, saying he had been unjustly criminally charged and imprisoned for 34 days.

He had been accused of lying to investigators about an aviation radio found in his hotel room in New York.

Mr Higazy said he told conflicting stories about the radio because he had been intimidated by an FBI agent.

He asserted that the agent shouted at him, lied to him and threatened to endanger his family.

A judge approved the settlement payment in July 2009.

Mr Higazy was studying at the Polytechnic University in Brooklyn on a US government-funded scholarship and staying at the Millennium Hilton Hotel near the Twin Towers.

He was detained in December 2001 when he returned to reclaim his belongings from the hotel which he had left when the hotel was evacuated during the attacks.

‘Traumatic memory’

Mr Higazy had acknowledged in court that he had served in the Egyptian Air Corps and had expertise in communications.

The aviation radio found at the hotel could be used to communicate with planes and monitor pilot conversations.

He was freed in January 2002 after another hotel guest, a pilot, told hotel officials the radio belonged to him.

Mr Higazy’s lawsuit against the FBI agent that questioned him was initially thrown out by a lower court judge but was reinstated in 2007 by the Court of Appeals in Manhattan.

When he was released he married an American and returned to Egypt, where he lives in Cairo and works at a school, according to his lawyer Jonathan Abady.

“He was entirely innocent and was coerced to the point where he confessed to participation in the crime of the century. Had the pilot not returned to retrieve the radio, he [Higazy] might still be in prison,” Mr Abady said.

He said that Mr Higazy was pleased to put the ordeal behind him but that the ordeal was a “traumatic memory that will never leave him completely”.

An admission of liability or fault was not part of the FBI agreement.

US government lawyers on the case have declined to comment.

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



Get a Handgun, Save a Life

With one swift slash from a samurai sword, John Pontolillo made a convincing case for … private ownership of handguns?

Oh, you betcha.

Pontolillo is an undergraduate at Johns Hopkins University. Before Sept. 15, that’s all he was: One of the many JHU students who have to bust their humps studying so they can graduate from one of the most challenging and academically competitive campuses in the country.

But nine days ago, Pontolillo went from being a simple college guy to being in the center of the maelstrom that developed after he slashed a burglar in the backyard of a house he shared with fellow JHU students.

Pontolillo used a samurai sword to defend himself after the burglar lunged at him. With one swish he nearly severed the burglar’s left hand and pierced his chest. The man bled to death before paramedics could arrive.

The alleged burglar — and I’m using that word “alleged” guardedly here — was a career criminal with more than 20 arrests to his credit, based on what I was able to learn from the Web site www.courts.state.md. Donald Rice was 49 years old and had been charged over the years with assault, resisting arrest, drug possession and theft.

On Aug. 16 of last year, apparently Rice went completely bonkers. Baltimore County police charged him with 28 offenses stemming from one incident. Most of the charges were dropped, but Rice served at least six months anyway.

He’d only been out of prison three days when he met his tragic but predictable end in that backyard. Rice sounds much like the character Vernon Johns notoriously eulogized. (Johns was the immediate predecessor of Martin Luther King Jr. at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala.)

The deceased was, like Rice, a career miscreant. Those expecting a sympathetic eulogy didn’t know Johns very well.

“He lived a trifling and useless life,” Johns said. “He walked around Montgomery daring someone to slit his throat. Last week somebody obliged him. He lived like a dog; he died like a dog. Undertaker, claim the body.”

Rice seemed cut from the same cloth, which may be why some in the Baltimore area cheered his death. But, inevitably, some cast him as a victim too. A Baltimore Sun editorial lamented the killing, claiming that “even burglars don’t deserve to be killed with a razor-sharp sword.” (That leaves us all to ponder this question: What, exactly, DO burglars deserve to be killed with?) Later, in the same editorial, the writer pondered what would have happened if Rice had been armed.

And there, dear readers, you have a classic example of what I call lib-think. I take it you noticed the underlying assumption: Criminals are supposed to be armed. It’s kind of in their job description. But law-abiding citizens being armed? Oh, perish the thought.

Let’s suppose how the scenario would have played out had Pontolillo been armed, not with a samurai sword, but a handgun.

Would Rice have been so quick to lunge? Or would he have turned tail and skedaddled, which is what criminals tend to do when confronted with gun-toting, law-abiding citizens?

I can see the scenario: Pontolillo says to Rice, “Mr. Burglar, I’d like you to meet two of my best buddies ever, those esteemed Americans Mr. Smith and Mr. Wesson. You might want to stay put until police arrive.”

And Rice would have done so. Or fled. Bottom line: He’d be alive today to tell the tale. So private ownership of firearms actually saves lives, and could have saved Rice’s.

That’s not just my opinion. Gary Kleck, a criminologist at Florida State University, has done research to show that Americans use firearms one million times a year to defend themselves.

According to the book “The Seven Myths of Gun Control” by Richard Poe, Kleck found that “in 98 percent of those cases, no shots [were] fired. The criminal [fled] at the mere sight of the gun.”

If there’s a lesson for Pontolillo to learn, it’s to give up that sword and buy a handgun.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Health Reform is Just Subterfuge; Dream is Democratic Dictatorship

By now the realization should be taking hold that the Democrats’ health care plan has been exposed as a hoax. And it was the Democrats themselves who discredited and exposed it, but in a very ironic way. Of course, you won’t hear this bombshell news reported by Democrat partisans Katie Couric, Charles Gibson and Brian Williams.

As for the substance, remember the Democrats’ original rationale for their national health care takeover scheme? They wanted all uninsured Americans to be covered, right? Remember?

But now they concede that their mega-upheaval of a plan would still leave about 15 million without medical insurance. Yet they still advocate the plan! Why?

[…]

When American business, American jobs and the American people become totally dependent on Obama and the Democrats for money and credit, including student loans for good measure, how much power will that give the Obama Democrats over our country?

The portrait coming into focus is one of either totalitarian socialism or an unholy socialist hybrid with fascism. And when you are dependent on the decision of a Democrat bureaucrat for crucial medical treatment, how much power does that give the Democrats over you?

(Do you suppose party registration or political contributions might enter the bureaucrats’ calculus? Recall how, in the GM reorganization, the Dems axed profitable dealers who were known to be Republican.)

When the Democrats achieve literal death-grip power over the lives of all our people, that is when they also achieve their long-cherished dream of absolute power and a Democrat dictatorship.

Dictatorship in a virtual one-party state is the correct forecast because our present rulers can never be voted out of national power after they grant amnesty to the millions of illegal aliens, who would promptly be registered as mostly Democrat voters by Acorn!

Now do you see what the real scheme is? Now does it all make sense? This is not your father’s Democrat party. This is also not about health care, ultimately. It’s about raw political power and the long-promised socialist takeover of the United States.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



How a Power Giant Profits From Greenhouse Regs

No electricity source emits as much greenhouse gas as coal, and no power company uses as much coal as American Electric Power. So why is AEP lobbying for the climate-change legislation restricting greenhouse emissions?

AEP emphatically endorsed the American Clean Energy and Security Act last week in a public letter signed by Michael Morris, its chairman, chief executive officer, and president. In its second-quarter lobbying report, AEP wrote that it was “for and against various provisions, generally in favor.”

The bill in question — also called by its initials, ACES, or by its House sponsors, Waxman-Markey — places a national cap on greenhouse-gas emissions from many industrial sources. In effect, this adds to the cost of burning coal.

“Without this bill, without a strict regime for controlling carbon emissions, Big Oil and Big Coal win,” said Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif. “And the environment, endangered species, our kids, our grandkids, you, and I will be the losers.”

Got that? It’s Big Coal against the children.

AEP, however, qualifies as Big Coal. One of the biggest electricity producers in the country, AEP generates more than two-thirds of its electricity by burning coal. Many years, the company is the Western Hemisphere’s largest consumer of coal.

So how come AEP is on the same side as Woolsey, Reps. Henry Waxman and Edward Markey, not to mention “our kids” and the “endangered species”?

The reason has little to do with kids and everything to do with self-interest: Waxman-Markey, if it passes the Senate in similar form, could profit AEP at the expense of its customers and probably smaller competitors.

The bill requires many businesses to “pay for” their GHG emissions with permits, also known as “carbon credits,” whose supply is controlled by the government. Waxman-Markey would give away 85 percent of the credits initially, allocating the credits among different industries. AEP, a diverse company, might be able to tap three of the bill’s piles of free credits — the 30 percent going to electricity distributors, the 2 percent going to electric utilities, and the 5 percent going to merchant coal generators.

While AEP would get credits for free, that doesn’t mean they’re worthless. If the company has more credits than emissions, AEP could sell these credits to needy companies. That means Waxman-Markey could spell profits.

Also, because much of AEP’s business is as a regulated utility — meaning it effectively faces no competition, and the state government sets its rates — some of its costs can be passed onto consumers.

Morris told Forbes that Waxman-Markey would benefit the company. Morris said, “I’ll have both enough allowances and I will have created or bought enough offsets to handle” the smaller emissions reductions the bill would mandate. He added: “I’ll probably be putting capital to work on carbon-capture and storage technology … because the current climate bill includes substantial incentives for early carbon capture.”

Morris predicted rate increases of between 30 and 50 percent in the long run, which the company couldn’t impose without the clean-energy or carbon-capture investments that Waxman-Markey would subsidize. “So for my business it’s good as long as my customers don’t leave,” which he doesn’t expect to happen.

There are other angles to AEP’s embrace of Waxman-Markey. Richard L. Sandor sits on AEP’s 12-member board of directors, and he is also the chairman and CEO of the Chicago Climate Exchange. CCX is a for-profit company that serves as the trading floor for carbon credits, which is fairly slow business these days, as there are no mandatory carbon caps in the United States.

But if Waxman-Markey becomes law, the CCX will be the heart of carbon-trading action.

AEP’s interest in Waxman-Markey — in crafting fine print and ensuring its passage — helps explains the company’s eleven-fold increase in lobbying. From 1999 through 2007, the company averaged less than a million dollars in annual lobbying expenses. Since the beginning of 2007, AEP has spent almost $1 milllion on lobbying every month — $16 million over the last six quarters.

AEP officials say this lobbying, although it will boost rates, isn’t against its customers’ interests. The Environmental Protection Agency will regulate GHGs if Congress doesn’t, they say.

Although Congress could block EPA regulation if it wanted to, AEP argues that greenhouse-gas regulation is inevitable — and that the lobbyists’ job is to make sure that regulation is profitable for AEP.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Hunt Begins for Records on ACORN’s Fed Funds

‘Obama needs to come clean about relationship with disgraced organization’

“The Obama administration needs to come clean to the American people about its relationship with this disgraced organization, especially in light of President Obama’s personal connections to ACORN,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said in a statement.

“Given ACORN’s scandalous record, the federal government has no business supporting the organization with taxpayer dollars,” Fitton said. “It is troubling, given President Obama’s promises of transparency, we have had to sue to try to gain access to the ACORN documents.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Importer Tries to Get Around Clove Smoke Ban

[Comment from Tuan Jim: This article doesn’t show it as well as the SCMP.com article “Smoke and Ire” (can’t read without a subscription), but this is ban is another dumb decision that could spark some major trade wars. The FDA bans flavored cigarettes including clove cigarettes — MAJOR Indonesian export — along with all the fruity things — not sure how much clove cigarettes appeal to kids compared to other stuff…but other “flavors” like menthol which are common in US-made brands aren’t affected by the ban at all…]

RICHMOND, Va. — The nation’s top distributor of clove cigarettes is offering fans a new way to get their fix after the spice-flavored cigarettes are banned later this year — cigars.

The new filtered cigars — close to the size of a cigarette and flavored with clove, vanilla and cherry — allow Kretek International Inc., which imports Djarum-brand tobacco products from Indonesia, to avoid new federal laws banning flavored cigarettes other than menthol.

The ban on flavored cigarettes, which critics say appeal to teenagers, goes into effect at the end of September. It doesn’t include cigars.

The difference? Cigarettes are wrapped in thin paper, cigars in tobacco leaves. While the cigars also are made with a different kind of tobacco, the taste is similar. The cigars come 12 to a pack, rather than 20 for cigarettes, but cost nearly half as much.

The ban is one of the first visible effects of a new law signed by President Barack Obama in June that gives the Food and Drug Administration wide-ranging authority to regulate tobacco, though it can’t ban nicotine or tobacco outright.

The new law gives the FDA the power to ban other products like flavored cigars, but that hasn’t happened yet.

Whether the cigars are truly different or just an attempt to circumvent the ban by making superficial changes is in the hands of the FDA, said Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

“The key is the legislation gives the FDA the authority to respond to these types of frankly totally irresponsible actions,” Myers said.

Myers joined executives from the American Cancer Society, American Heart Association, American Lung Association and the Amercian Legacy Foundation late last month urging the FDA to take a closer look at the issue.

Often associated with hippies and other bohemians, clove cigarettes may be the most well-known target of the ban. Some major cigarette makers experimented with mint- or chocolate-flavored blends earlier this decade, but many of those products are no longer made after coming under fire, accused of targeting children.

John Geoghegan, director of brand development for Moorpark, Calif.-based Kretek International, said the private company has been “puzzled about (the ban) since the very beginning” because clove cigarettes constitute less than 1 percent of cigarettes sold in the U.S.

“For people to say, ‘Well, clove is a starter cigarette or a trainer cigarette’ or something was just preposterous,” Geoghegan said, citing company research about when and how consumers begin smoking.

Kretek International holds a 97 percent U.S. market share with its line of Djarum clove cigarettes, a staple of Indonesian smoking culture.

The U.S. market for clove cigarettes is about $140 million annually, with about 1.25 million clove smokers. Cloves have been imported to the U.S. since the 1960s and are mostly smoked by people younger than 30.

While Geoghegan said clove cigarettes make up about 65 percent of Kretek International’s business, the ban is “damaging but not fatal” because of the company’s other products like lighters and pipe tobacco.

Now, clove smokers are being forced to decide whether to switch to the new cigars, or quit. Many will likely stock up or try to buy product over the Internet.

And how the ban will work remains a point of contention for shop owners who sell clove cigarettes. But the FDA says the message is clear: Flavored cigarettes are banned, and the agency has the authority necessary to enforce the prohibition.

“So, what do we do with the stuff that’s on the shelves? Who eats that? Is it legal to sell until it’s gone or what?” asked Jim Carlson, owner of two CVille Smoke Shop stores in Charlottesville, Va., about 70 miles northwest of Richmond.

Carlson said he sells about 3,000 packs of the flavored cigarettes a year.

“You don’t make a lot of money, but still it’s income … and it brings customers into the store,” he said.

Lake Isabella, Calif., resident Terry Day, 42, used to drive 240 miles round trip to buy clove cigarettes when he lived in rural Valentine, Neb. He said he might try the cigars but was dubious about whether he would like them.

“I certainly don’t like to be forced into that choice,” said the clove smoker of 14 years. “I’m probably going to buy me enough to last until Oct. 1, then I’m just going to have to quit.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Kirk to Obama: Withdraw Grants to Libyan Charities

The Obama Administration plans to give $400,000 in funding to a Libyan charity run by the Gadhafi family, and U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) wants the grant withdrawn.

[…]

“Just weeks after the Gadhafi family celebrated the return of a terrorist responsible for the murders of 189 Americans, the U.S. taxpayer should not be asked to reward them with $400,000,” Kirk wrote to the president. “For the sake of the victims’ families who have endured so much pain these last few weeks, I ask you to withdraw your Administration’s request.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Mohammed Cartoonist to Speak at Yale

Free speech will be on the agenda when Kurt Westergaard and Lars Hedegaard visit students at Yale

The artist behind the infamous Mohammed cartoon, Kurt Westergaard, and the president of the International Free Press Society, Lars Hedegaard, will speak to Yale University students as a new book about the cartoon crisis is set to be published.

Yale University Press, an autonomous publishing house associated with the university, is releasing Danish author Jytte Clausen’s book ‘The Cartoons That Shook The World’ on Monday. The publisher has removed images of the cartoons from the book, reasoning that they might incite violence.

Westergaard’s cartoon, which depicts the prophet Mohammed with a bomb in his turban, was first published by Jyllands-Posten newspaper in 2005.

He and Hedegaard have been invited by a student organisation to speak at the university campus on 1 October, just three days after the book’s scheduled release.

Hedegaard told The Copenhagen Post that he would talk about the background of the crisis and the situation today. He expected Westergaard to talk about his art and what he wanted to express through his drawings.

The timing of the talk was appropriate, he said.

‘The decision of Yale University Press is of course despicable and a sign of censorship and fear. It’s a sad comment of our times that a well-respected company should bow to fear of threats,’ Hedegaard said.

Hedegaard also noted that 30 September is the fourth anniversary of the original publication of the drawings and announced plans to establish an annual event promoting free speech.

When asked if creating an International Free Speech Day on the cartoon anniversary would stir up negative feelings, Hedegaard said that it was not his intention to offend people.

‘We are simply making a statement that we have free speech in our country so that any ideology, or group or political party can be exposed to ridicule,’ said Hedegaard. ‘We can’t control people’s feelings’.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Muslims Gather at the Capitol for Prayer Event

About 1,000 people gathered Friday morning on the west front lawn of the Capitol, with more streaming in via charter buses and Metro, for a day of Muslim unity that organizers said was about prayer, not protest.

“We are decent Muslims,” said one of the organizers, Imam Ali Jaaher from Dar-ul-Islam mosque in Elizabeth, N. J. “We work, we pay taxes. We are Muslims who truly love this country.”

Organizers had said they hoped 50,000 worshipers would show up for the traditional Muslim afternoon prayer at 1 p.m. But they said many people have been frightened away by the backlash against the event. Some conservative Christian groups and bloggers have been calling it anti-Christian and un-American.

Two groups of protesters gathered across the traffic circle from the gathering, waving banners and flags and passing out flyers with crosses and pro-Christian messages. One group, which stood next to a large wooden cross and two giant wooden tablets depicting the 10 commandments, was led by the Rev. Flip Benham of Concord. N.H.

“I would suggest we convert to Christ,” Benham shouted over a megaphone that was barely audible from the Muslim gathering. Islam “forces its dogma down your throat.”

Benham said he heard about the event last week and brought about a dozen supporters from around the country to protest it. He called Islam a “false religion.”

“Unfortunately, our president has opened up the door to this,” he said, gesturing toward people streaming toward the gathering. He “has prostrated Christianity to the level of other religions. That’s just stunning to me.”

[Return to headlines]



Newly Declassified Files Detail Massive FBI Data-Mining Project

A fast-growing FBI data-mining system billed as a tool for hunting terrorists is being used in hacker and domestic criminal investigations, and now contains tens of thousands of records from private corporate databases, including car-rental companies, large hotel chains and at least one national department store, declassified documents obtained by Wired.com show.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Makes Brown Feel Welcome at UN

Gordon Brown and President Obama made a conspicuous show of friendship at the UN today as they attended a Security Council summit on nuclear non-proliferation.

The US President greeted the Prime Minister with a handshake and a pat on the back as he circled the horseshoe-shaped council table to meet the assembled world leaders.

Because of the alphabetical seating plan, Mr Brown and Mr Obama sat separated only by a single seat, filled by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

After the meeting, Mr Brown and Mr Obama left the room together for a Security Council ante-chamber and emerged smiling past the cameras about 10 minutes later with Mr Obama guiding Mr Brown with a hand on the back.

They then headed together to their next engagement — a meeting of the “Friends of Democratic Pakistan” at the Waldorf Hotel — which they were co-chairing with Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistani Prime Minister.

As Mr Obama greeted other leaders, Mr Brown also had a lengthy conversation with Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State.

The Prime Minister had been rebuffed this week in his request for a formal one-on-one sit-down with Mr Obama and was reduced to having a “walk-and-talk” through a UN kitchen after a reception on Tuesday night.

After media reports about tensions between the leaders, London and Washington both released statements today insisting that the Special Relationship was in fine fettle.

A White House spokesman said: “Any stories that suggest trouble in the bilateral relationship between the United States and UK are totally absurd.

“We would add that President Obama and Prime Minister Brown enjoy a terrific relationship, they speak regularly on a range of the most difficult challenges facing our two nations, and meet frequently.”

Downing Street denied that Mr Brown had been snubbed over five potential get-togethers while Lord Mandelson said he did not recognise the reports of No 10 desperately trying to arrange face-to-face meetings.

“I don’t really understand what all this hoo-hah is about, to be perfectly honest,” said the Business Secretary.

“The Prime Minister talks regularly to President Obama. I doubt whether President Obama has a closer ally for the US than the British Prime Minister.

“They are doing that because they have a lot in common. They share values, they share interests and their policies are very similar as well.”

Although Mr Brown appeared to have patched up any tension with Mr Obama, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev left the Security Council half way through Mr Brown’s speech.

David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, got a warm double-fisted handshake from Mr Obama at the end of the Security Council mission.

[Return to headlines]



Obama’s Policies Would Redistribute Nearly $1 Trillion in Wealth Every Year

By 2012, nearly $1 trillion from the top 30 percent of American families will be redistributed among the bottom 70 percent if Obama’s proposals on taxes, health care, and climate change become law, according to the Tax Foundation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama to Congress: Forget it!

President ‘disregards’ missile defense mandate

President Obama’s decision to cancel a plan to deploy defensive missiles in Poland and the Czech Republic may have put him at odds with a 10-year-old requirement from Congress “to deploy as soon as technologically possible an effective National Missile Defense,”according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

[…]

In doing its analysis of various missile defense options, the CBO looked at three approaches in addition to the Bush administration’s proposal.

The alternatives included the sea-based system which the Obama administration now has selected, mobile missile defenses located in Germany and Turkey and forward-positioned Kinetic Energy Interceptors also located in Germany and Turkey.

The CBO concluded the Bush administration proposal was preferable to the three alternative solutions. In fact, the Kinetic Energy Interceptors weren’t even an option during the latest round of consideration since it was cut from the Pentagon’s missile defense budget earlier this year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Won’t Win by Calling Opponents Cowards

During his current media bombardment, President Obama is wisely downplaying the charges of racism his allies have been making.

He told CNN’s John King that race wasn’t “the overriding issue” for the opponents of his health care plan. Not exactly an exoneration of his critics’ racial attitudes, but at least an acknowledgment that there is more than bigotry at work.

What Obama says is really driving the negative response to his policies is fear. Fear of “big changes.” Fear of “uncertainty.”

The president likes to equate the resistance he’s facing with that met by Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal.

It’s nice that Obama wants to put himself in such elite presidential company, but Roosevelt’s first year saw the passage of at least 10 major pieces of domestic legislation and two constitutional amendments. Obama has so far managed to produce two very large spending bills, keep his predecessor’s bailouts going and little else.

Roosevelt actually changed the country in his first eight months. And did it with a quarter of the work force idled and the banks out of money. People were afraid that the republic might fail and mostly welcomed FDR’s boldness.

Today, Americans aren’t so much afraid as they are tired of treading water economically and pessimistic that anything the government can do will make it better.

Even so, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel last week compared the president’s detractors to Father Coughlin, the racist, populist radio priest whose anti-Roosevelt rants were the targets of some of the first free-speech restrictions on the airwaves.

Coughlin actually wanted more changes and more socialism than Roosevelt, not less. But you get where Team Obama is coming from. It sees demagogues leading flocks of fearful followers away from the bright light of progress.

Emanuel pictures a nation of modern-day Joads. He sees victims of the foreclosure dust bowl huddled around their laptops, hanging on Glenn Beck’s every blog post and too panic-stricken to see the wisdom of Obamacare.

First, we were told it was fear of the unknown. Once we understood the plan, we would cease to be afraid.

When the president was selling a nonexistent plan this summer, it did sound pretty sketchy.

At his July 22 news conference, when asked about what people would have to sacrifice for the sake of universal coverage, Obama said: “They’re going to have to give up paying for things that don’t make them healthier.”

So yes, Dr. Obama’s Traveling Medicine Show did not inspire confidence. But it is rational to be skeptical of a politician who proposes huge changes and promises only good results.

The president, though, blamed the peddlers of “myths” and “distortions” of his imaginary plans for droopy polls and the outrage being expressed at town hall meetings.

The White House said the anxieties would begin to fade when Obama came forward with his own robust plan and sold it aggressively.

And the president did just that Sept. 9, including all of the elements his liberal supporters wanted in a rousing speech. And again he saw fear, not disagreement, as the problem.

“It has never been easy, moving this nation forward. There are always those who oppose it and those who use fear to block change,” Obama told a joint session of Congress.

There was a brief bounce in support for the plan based on the delivery of the speech. And then people found out that the president was really proposing federally mandated coverage, cuts to popular existing programs and new financial burdens on middle-class families.

Now, Obama is trying to recapture the momentum by assaulting the airwaves like a buttoned-down Billy Mays, pitching national health care instead of synthetic chamois cloths.

He says he is on TV to battle fear at a time “of transition,” as if all roads lead in the direction of government health care but foolish fears can delay the inevitable.

The best liberal thinkers, including Obama, have been working for years to bring working-class whites back into the Democratic Party and re-create the unbeatable coalition of the New Deal. FDR built that coalition by addressing the shared, urgent fears of blacks and whites, farmers and mill workers, and Yankees and Southerners. And Obama believes he can do it again.

But telling people that fear is the reason they have misgivings about an outlandish-sounding solution to a long-term problem is insulting, not reassuring.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Malpractice on Medical Lawsuits

Since Mississippi passed lawsuit abuse reform in 2004, including caps on medical malpractice awards, the Magnolia State has seen the number of such claims decline 91 percent. The state’s largest medical malpractice insurer dropped its premiums by 42 percent, and it has offered an additional 20 percent rebate to doctors and hospitals of the premiums they pay each year.

Following his recent address to a joint session of Congress, President Obama announced plans to implement token “demonstration projects” on lawsuit abuse, but he’s still not willing to address the issue meaningfully in health care reform legislation. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a Republican, has a message for him: “If they want a demonstration project, come down to Mississippi. I’ll show you a demonstration project.”

As Barbour puts it, medical malpractice reform is the “lowest-hanging fruit” in the debate over spiraling medical costs. Such reform cannot solve all of the complex problems in our health care system, but it will reduce the drag that high health care costs are having on our economy — a major goal of the president’s reform effort. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimated in 2003 that unreasonable medical malpractice jury awards add as much as $126 billion to Americans’ health care costs each year.

Unfortunately, Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., are wholly owned by the trial lawyer lobby, so they will bypass this low-hanging fruit without giving it a second thought. They will thus miss a simple, proven reform in favor of implementing a government-run health care system that is certain to cause health care costs to skyrocket while the quality of health care plummets.

Trial lawyers argue that limits on non-economic damages deprive aggrieved patients of their right to sue. But the experience in California, where such limits have been in place since 1975, does not bear this out. Legitimately harmed patients still sue and win reasonable awards. And hordes of trial lawyers are still gainfully employed there.

Obama entered this debate promising to fight “well-financed foes” who “profit from the status quo.” Yet, he has cultivated every special interest that stands to profit from health care “reform.” The big drugmakers and insurers have spent tens of millions promoting his plan. He stands ready to ditch the “public option,” the only provision that the insurers oppose. And he won’t take on the trial lawyers, despite the proven benefits and low cost of medical malpractice lawsuit abuse reform.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Right’s Czar Mania is a Distraction

“No more czars!” is the new tea party rallying cry, as conservatives across the country fear that President Obama has unleashed a legion of unaccountable bureaucratic overlords on the body politic.

Having helped oust Van Jones, Obama’s “green jobs” czar, Fox News’ Sean Hannity swears that he won’t rest until he’s gotten “rid of every other one.” But if he succeeds, will the country be appreciably freer, or the government noticeably smaller?

No, it won’t, because the conservatives’ current bout of czar mania elevates symbolism over substance. All the focus on a scary moniker for certain executive officials misses the real problem: Unconstitutional delegation of power to the executive branch. Whether those illegitimate powers are exercised by unconfirmed presidential advisers or the president himself is quite beside the point.

Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., notes that you won’t find the word “czar” in the Constitution; but you won’t find it in federal law either. That’s because “czar” is a media-coined, catchall term for presidential assistants tasked with coordinating policy on issues that cut across departmental lines.

Officials dubbed “czars” range from the truly powerful, like Nixon’s National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger, to the ineffectual such as cybersecurity czar Melissa Hathaway, who quit last month because she lacked real authority.

Often, czars are mere figureheads, appointed to signal concern over the latest hot-button issue. As one presidential scholar puts it, “when in doubt, create a czar.”

True, it’s problematic that some of these appointees aren’t vetted by the Senate, and that presidents claim czars don’t have to answer to Congress — as when the Bush administration asserted in 2002 that executive privilege shielded then-homeland security czar Tom Ridge from testifying on the Hill.

But as the Washington Independent’s Dave Weigel has pointed out, many of the “czars” who appear on the conservative target list already have to be confirmed by the Senate. Others don’t, but when Obama is hell-bent on taking over the health care sector — one-sixth of the U.S. economy — it’s bizarre to agonize over the allegedly unchecked power exercised by the likes of the AIDS and urban affairs czars.

Similarly, while it’s great to see a 9/11 “Truther” like Van Jones denied a federal salary, few of those cheering Jones’ defenestration can coherently explain what the green jobs czar actually does, or the threat he was supposed to represent.

What, was Jones going to give 9/11 “Truthers” and black nationalists jobs weatherizing homes? Will we stop wasting money on such projects now that he’s gone?

In contrast, the “pay czar” and the “car czar” have considerable power, and such offices have no place in a free country. But it was Obama himself, not his car czar, who summarily fired the chief executive officer of General Motors. Is that power less disturbing when it’s exercised directly by the president, rather than delegated to a so-called “czar”?

Blame Congress. The “pay czar” grew out of a provision Congress passed with the stimulus package, ordering the Treasury Department to come up with rules on executive compensation for firms taking Troubled Assets Relief Program money.

The auto bailout itself is a result of congressional fecklessness. Many in Congress protested when President George W. Bush used the TARP statute to lend billions to Chrysler and GM. How, they asked, could that possibly be authorized by a law allowing the purchase of “troubled assets” from “financial institutions”?

If they’d bothered to read the bill, they’d know. Those terms were so loosely defined in the statute that they gave Bush and Obama a colorable argument for reshaping the bailout as they saw fit. Here congressional outrage was more than a day late and $700 billion short.

There’s plenty Congress can and should do to enhance oversight over executive branch officials. Yale Law’s Bruce Ackerman argues that “we need to seriously consider requiring Senate approval of senior White House staff positions.” But as long as Congress continues to write blank checks to the executive branch, it’s the height of hypocrisy for them to complain about that branch’s unchecked power.

Examiner Columnist Gene Healy is a vice president at the Cato Institute and the author of “The Cult of the Presidency.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Schoolhouse Shariah

Multiculturalism: California’s educrats have put out new rules for teaching Islamic studies to seventh-graders in public schools, and they are as biased as ever. They’ll also likely spread eastward.

The lesson guidelines adopted by the bellwether state whitewash the violence and oppression of women codified in Islamic law, or Shariah. And they’re loaded with revisionist history about the faith.

For example, the suggested framework glorifies Shariah as a liberal reform movement that “rejected” the mistreatment of women that existed in Arabia before Muhammad and his successors conquered the region, according to Accuracy in Academia. The guidelines claim that Islamic law established for the first time that men and women were entitled to equal “respect.”

Not so, says Islamic scholar and author Nonie Darwish, who grew up Muslim in Egypt.

“I am shocked that that is what they teach,” she said. “Women had more rights in Arabia before Shariah.”

In fact, “wife beating is allowed under Shariah” today, she added. “It allows a woman seen without a headdress to be flogged, punishes rape victims, and calls for beheading for adultery.”

California’s course on world religions also omits Islam’s long history of jihadist violence, while portraying Christianity as an intolerant and bloodthirsty faith…

           — Hat tip: Fausta [Return to headlines]



Sen. Jim Inhofe: Obama’s “You’re on Your Own” Foreign Policy

When President George W. Bush was in the White House, U.S. foreign policy was widely criticized as arrogantly unilateral, and was branded by critics here and abroad as the “go it alone” approach to international relations.

Now, it seems that a dangerous new strategy for American international relations has taken shape. In stark contrast to Bush, Obama favors a “you’re on your own” approach to foreign policy, leaving our allies and strong supporters of democracy second-guessing America’s intentions.

Obama’s decision against fielding the U.S. missile-defense sites for Europe that Poland and the Czech Republic previously agreed to host is only the most recent illustration of Obama’s approach.

In June of this year, Obama let democratic protesters in Iran know that they were on their own after the contested elections there, even as the ayatollah’s police thugs violently assaulted the demonstrators.

Not a month later, Obama sided with the likes of Hugo Chavez and in effect said “you’re on your own” to democrats in Honduras as they tried to enforce the country’s democratic constitution to prevent a slide into a Venezuelan-style dictatorship. Similarly, Obama’s support for Israel, democracy’s clearest beacon and America’s greatest ally in the Middle East, has been consistently reserved, at best.

But when Obama turned his back on our European allies by canceling the European-based missile-defense site, his attitude struck especially hard. When the missile-defense site agreement was signed in 2008, Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski said, “this is a great success for Poland.”

Under the original U.S. plan, the United States would provide protection against long-range ballistic missile threats with 10 ground-based interceptors in Poland, working with a radar in the Czech Republic. Protection against short- and midrange missile threats would come from NATO forces.

The European GBI system, would be tested in 2010 and in place to protect Europe and the U.S. against intermediate and long-range ballistic missiles from Iran by 2013.

With the shield now scrapped, Poland’s Kaczynski has said that the new strategy leaves his nation in a dangerous “gray zone” between Western Europe and the old Soviet sphere.

Similarly, former Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek, who signed the missile agreement with the United States, said, “This is not good news for the Czech state, for Czech freedom and independence. It puts us in a position wherein we are not firmly anchored in terms of partnership, security and alliance, and that’s a certain threat.”

White House officials argue that Obama has an alternative method to provide missile-defense coverage for Europe, but the alternative will take five years longer to field, and his 2009 budget cut $1.4 billion, or about 16 percent, of the Missile Defense Agency’s budget.

With Iran actively pursuing its development of long-range ballistic missiles, and being well on its way to having a nuclear weapon, canceling the European GBI missile-defense site will unnecessarily put our long-time allies in Europe at risk.

Whatever Obama says to the United Nations, his foreign policy is already devastating to this nation’s credibility.

Hopefully, Obama will realize the error in an approach that turns our back on our allies, while appeasing our enemies. If not, when we have need for support from our allies, we may find ourselves on our own.

U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-OK, is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and a senior member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



States Reassert Sovereignty With Legislation

There’s a growing movement on the part of states to override federal laws and regulations under the 10th Amendment, which reserves powers to the states not delegated to the federal government. So far, the battle lines have been drawn at Real ID, medical marijuana and firearms, but federally mandated health insurance may not be far behind.

State sovereignty resolutions were introduced in 37 states this year; seven passed. Although the resolutions are not legally binding, Tenth Amendment Center founder Michael Boldin said they “serve notice” that states will no longer automatically enforce federal mandates in areas they believe the central government has no constitutional authority.

Montana’s first-in-the-nation law reasserting state authority with the regulation of firearms manufactured and sold within state boundaries was soon followed by a similar law in Tennessee. Officials from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives have already sent letters to gun dealers and federal permit holders in both states telling them to ignore the state law. A court battle is next.

Nearly 20 other states have similar legislation in the works, including directives to their governors to order National Guard troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan. Next year, Arizona will have a state constitutional amendment on the ballot that allows residents to opt out of any national health care program.

“The federal government doesn’t rule to limit its own power very often. I don’t think going to court and trying to litigate is the best way to put the federal government in a constitutional box,” Boldin said, pointing out that popular resistance to the hated Stamp Act led by Revolutionary War heroes Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry “effectively nullified the law.” The same thing happened with the Real ID Act, which many states refused to enforce. “The feds had to back off three times,” Boldin said.

State sovereignty supporters stand on solid historical ground. James Madison’s “Virginia Plan,” which would have given Congress veto power with state laws and allowed the federal judiciary to hear all disputes, was soundly defeated by the signers of the Constitution. A needed check on an overreaching federal government that grows bigger by the day, the reassertion of state sovereignty should be a welcome development to Americans concerned about losing their liberties — just like the Founders were.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Video: Shocker: Kids Taught to Sing Obama’s Praises

Lyrics to historic melody: ‘Hooray, Mr. President, you are No. 1’

School children in New Jersey have been taught to both chant and sing praises to President Obama, with a YouTube video revealing them singing, “Mr. President, We Honor You Today” to the tune of the “Battle Hymn of the Republic.”

The children also are seen being taught the chant: “Barack Hussein Obama.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



White House Dismisses Fox News as ‘Ideological Outlet, ‘ Renewing Feud

President Obama’s Sunday media blitz of five networks deliberately left out Fox News, with the administration calling it an “ideological outlet.”

But by passing over “Fox News Sunday” with host Chris Wallace, Obama skipped over an audience of up to 3 million viewers who tune in regularly to watch the show and its reruns.

Some political strategists are calling the move a mistake.

“Cutting this network out actually sends a larger message of just how sensitive and petty the West Wing has become,” said Republican strategist Ron Bonjean, who was a top aide to former House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.

The White House indeed took aim at Fox, with a spokesman saying, “We figured Fox would rather show ‘So You Think You Can Dance’ than broadcast an honest discussion about health insurance reform,” referring to the network’s decision to run the popular dance show on its broadcast stations instead of airing an Obama news conference in July.

The news conference ran on the Fox News cable network.

In an interview with Fox News host Bill O’Reilly, Wallace called the administration “the biggest bunch of crybabies I’ve ever dealt with in my 30 years in Washington.”

On Sunday, Wallace interviewed Bertha Lewis, chief executive officer of the embattled Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, which is on the verge of losing federal funding after undercover filmmakers found staffers aiding people posing as pimps and prostitutes.

Obama refused to appear on the show throughout the 2008 election. Wallace had an “Obama Watch” that counted up 768 days from when Obama agreed to appear and his first and only sit-down with Wallace in April.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Ahmadinejad Did Not Cross EU ‘Red Line’ With UN Speech, Says Sweden (EU Presidency)

Sweden, Finland and non-EU Norway stayed in the room when Ahmadinejad spoke

STOCKHOLM (AFP-EJP)—-Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did not cross the “red line” that would have prompted a walkout by all EU states in his speech at the United Nations, the Swedish foreign ministry said Thursday.

“There were certain criteria set for when the EU would leave the room and those criteria were not fulfilled,” spokeswoman Cecilia Julin said.

Sweden currently holds the rotating EU presidency.

The criteria agreed in New York before the Iranian leader spoke included denying the Holocaust and calling for the annihilation of Israel, which Ahmadinejad avoided doing this time.

Even so, a number of EU states did walk out when Ahmadinejad attacked Israel, including Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary and Italy.

“We’re not commenting on who left or who didn’t leave,” Julin said. “I think there were other reasons for other countries that decided to leave.”

In his address, Ahmadinejad again took aim at Israel but without mentioning the country or Jews by name, referring only to the “Zionist regime.”

He accused Israel of “inhumane policies in Palestine,” including genocide, and seeking to “establish a new form of slavery, and harm the reputation of other nations, even European nations and the US, to attain its racist ambitions.”

Suggesting there was a Jewish conspiracy, Ahmadinejad added: “It is no longer acceptable that a small minority would dominate the politics, economy and culture of major parts of the world by its complicated networks.”

He accused Jews of seeking to “establish a new form of slavery, and harm the reputation of other nations, even European nations and the US, to attain its racist ambitions.”

Israel had called for a boycott of the speech, and was not present when the Iranian leader spoke.

Canada heeded the boycott call, while delegations from Argentina, Australia, Costa Rica, New Zealand and the United States also left the room as Ahmadinejad began to rail against Israel, a European source said.

Earlier this week, the European Union presidency issued a statement condemning Ahmadinejad for his statements on the Holocaust and on Israel, saying such remarks “encourage anti-Semitism and hatred”.

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



Austria: Turkish Diplomat Accused of Drunk Driving

A Turkish diplomat has been ordered to prove he was on official duty after he refused to take a breath test when stopped by cops in Salzburg yesterday (Tues) morning.

Police said they had been called out at 5:25am after witnesses reported seeing an “obviously drunk” man driving in the city’s Parsch district.

The man, who showed them a diplomatic passport, refused a breath test and now police have said he will only be immune from prosecution under diplomatic immunity laws if he can prove he was driving in the course of his official duties.

They added the man had caused problems in the past and had hurled drunken abuse at passersby just months ago.

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



Austrian Right Holds on to Power in Regional Election

The Austrian right looks to have held its grip on power in the Western province of Vorarlberg following regional elections on Sunday.

Early estimations put Herbert Sausgruber’s OVP ahead with just over 50 per cent of the vote.

But it is the far right Austrian Freedom Party which made the biggest gains, Dieter Egger’s party is accredited with 25 per cent — enough to put it ahead of the Social Democrats, who picked up just 10 per cent of votes.

261 000 people were called on to elect 36 members to the regional parliament.

The rise of the Freedom Party has concerned observers who accuse its leader Egger of making anti-semitic statements, notably telling a museum director that as a “jew in exile in America” he should shut up and not mix in Austrian politics.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Climate: Franceschini, Premier’s Choices Against Obama’s

(AGI) — Rome, 24 Sep. — Dario Franceschini, secretary of the Italian Partito Democratico, issued a statement today: “At the same exact time when the environmental issue becomes, to the eyes of the whole world, on of the key factors to overcome the crisis, the Italian premier, despite his own words, insists in demanding reductions in the Italian effort to reduce CO2 emissions. It is a serious stance, which ridicules Italy also in front of international organizations. On the other hand, only yesterday, the government has inflicted further cuts, through the financial bill, to the detriment of the environment and of the great opportunities of economic recovery based on environmental choices. The y scrapped the eco-bonus funding, which guaranteed a 55% reimbursement for building or renovating with an eye to energy saving and eco compatibility. This bonus had been used so far by hundreds of thousands households and proved to be a great economic engine. Hundreds of small or medium sized enterprises, thousands of artisan, were the stronghold of a budding ‘green economy’ with the government is now risking to sink. On the other hand, not much can be expected of a premier whom considered thinking about the environment during an economic crisis the same as going for a perm when having pneumonia. But instead, it is the crisis itself that must encourage us to make energy saving, alternative energy sources and eco-compatible building the sector on which to build economic recovery, It is useless to claim to agree with Mr. Obama with words, to then contradict oneself with choices that go in the exact opposite direction”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Police Grab Illegal Arsenal

Northern Jutland Police have found and confiscated almost 500 illegal firearms from an underground group of weapons dealers.

Northern Jutland police have infiltrated a major network of allegedly illegal weapons dealers and have confiscated 480 guns, among others firearms that have been used in the ongoing gang war in Copenhagen.

Dept. Chief Superintendant Frank Olsen tells TV2News that 11 men have been arrested, adding that the men have denied trading in weapons, but have said that they have a big interest in firearms.

According to the police, which terms the weapons discovery ‘unusual’, the 11 have been involved in repairing older weapons and are suspected of cross-border trading in more modern firearms.

Investigations have been ongoing since December 2008 and two men have already been sentenced in the case.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Ethnic Minorities Hope for Breakthrough in German Elections

Germany’s ethnic minorities are hoping for a historic breakthrough at Sunday’s general election as record numbers of candidates have overseas links.

Politicians of Turkish origin are expected to join the Bundestag in unprecedented numbers as the minority shakes off its “Cinderella” status as the guest workforce of the post-war economy.

Only 45 per cent of Germany’s four million Muslims — five per cent of the overall population — are registered as citizens but they have become increasingly influential.

Most gained citizenship only after laws were changed in 2000 to allow people of “non-German blood” to gain full political rights, opening the door to those who had lived in the country for decades.

“The dark-haired voters will show themselves,” said Safter Cinar, a spokesman for the Turkish Association in Berlin. “It is a great chance to voice their basic demands related to integration.”

Until now, few ethnic minority Germans have played a prominent role in national life and have never been appointed to a senior ministerial post or ambassador.

The Green Party has lead the efforts to recruit minority voters having elected Turks Cem Ozdemir as a co-leader and running other high profile candidates, such as Ozcan Mutlu in Berlin. “German politicians, for the first time in history, are campaigning in an effort to gain migrants’ votes, or at least, not to alienate them,” he said.

Other prominent candidates are standing for the hard-Left Die Linke and the mainstream SPD.

But the country’s leading party, the Christian Democrats (CDU) has struggled to find a footing with the new citizens. Its opposition to Turkish membership of the EU continues to overshadow its attempts at bridge-building. It has not emulated the Conservatives by promoting the candidacies by successful outsiders.

Turks in the CDU claim German’s leading party is changing but complain its not moving fast enough. Bulent Arslan, a CDU officer holder, said: “It’s right that immigrants be asked to love Germany, but Germany has to learn to love its immigrants too.”

The development has also triggered a backlash from Neo-Nazis. Police have opened an investigation into the extremist NPD party for inciting racial hatred after it served fake “deportation” orders on minority candidates.

One of those who received a letter from the “foreigners deportation” office of NPD acknowledged the difficulties of campaigning as a minority.

Hanaa al-Hussein, a candidate for the German Liberals (FDP), has faced harassment in the Lichtenberg district of Berlin, a bastion of racist groups and socially ostracised families associated with the East German Stasi secret police.

“The first time I was shocked,” she said. “I have no fear, but an inner insecurity has set in. Will I be watched where ever I go now?”

The 42-year-old consultant, who is the daughter of a road builder, came to Germany from Lebanon at the age of seven and gained citizenship after laws were changed in 2000.

While her campaign slogan of “Germany is diversity” proclaims a changing mood in Germany towards migrants the constituency she is contesting is unpromising territory. Almost one-fifth of Berlin’s racist crimes are committed in Lichtenberg.

There is also a philosophical divide between the new generation of Muslims and the deprived populations where immigrant candidates are standing.

Lichtenberg has voted in past elections for the far-Left Die Linke party which calls for wealth distribution to all. In contrast Miss Hussein believes in enabling “achievers” who can emulate her second generation record of self-improvement. She said: “My parents always said the only thing that cannot be taken from you is your education.”

[Return to headlines]



Euro Project to Arrest Us for What They Think We Will Do

Radical Think Tank Open Europe has this week exposed a study by the EU that could lead to the creation of a massive cross-Europe database, amassing vast amounts of personal data on every single citizen in the EU. The scope of this project also reveals a growing governmental preference for systems capable of locking people up not for what they have done, but for what they might do.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



European Commission Accused of Breaching Rules With Ryanair Stunt

The European Commission has been accused of a blatant breach of neutrality rules in Ireland’s Lisbon Treaty referendum after taking part in a Ryanair “Vote Yes” stunt involving airline boss Michael O’Leary.

Antonio Tajani, EC vice-president and transport commissioner, is alleged to have broken impartiality rules by accepting an invitation to fly across the country on a Ryanair Boeing 737, emblazoned with “Vote Yes for Europe” logos.

Ryanair is spending £445,000 on giving away free air tickets to promote the campaign as it struggles to reverse Irish referendum rejection in June 2008.

During six hours of flights on Tuesday, the commissioner was served chicken Bellenaise and wild rice as Michael O’Leary, Ryanair’s boss, taunted the “No” campaign.

Mr Tajani stood silently by during a press conferences in which Mr O’Leary mocked Lisbon Treaty opponents as “numpties”, “numb nuts” and “clowns”.

But Mr O’Leary’s view was very different to the one he held last October, following Ireland’s first referendum rejection.

At the time he said: “It seems that only in the EU, Ireland and Zimbabwe are you forced to vote twice. The vote should be respected. It is the only democratic thing to do.”

Critics have accused him of changing his mind and launching the “Yes” campaign to curry favour with Brussels.

As transport commissioner, Mr Tajani plays a key role in competition rulings concerning the low-cost airlines and recently blocked a Ryanair takeover of Aer Lingus.

Joe Higgins, an Irish Socialist MEP opposed to the EU Treaty, has called for the commissioner’s resignation.

“Mr Tajani as removed any remaining shred of the Commission’s impartiality,” he said. “This tour seriously compromises his position. Ryanair is one of the biggest airlines in Europe.

“It has already and may come into further conflict with the Commission. It puts him in an utterly compromised position to have travelled around Ireland in a Ryanair plane, campaigning alongside Mr O’Leary.”

Erik Wesselius, of the Corporate Europe Observatory, a group that monitors links between the EU institutions and big business, described Mr Tajani’s presence as “a big mistake”.

“Tajani’s dealing with the decisions Ryanair is most interested in. This is a good lobbying opportunity for O’Leary,” he said.

“O’Leary might come back later to Tajani with some request and then he can remind Tajani of that day in September when O’Leary took him on tour through Ireland to supported the Yes campaign.”

Nigel Farage, the leader of Ukip, said: “The volte-face of Mr O’Leary stinks of financial opportunism, He is clearly a man of no political principles whatsoever.”

But Fabio Pirotta, Mr Tajani’s spokesman, insisted that “the commissioner was invited simply to give information on his portfolio”.

“There was absolutely no lobbying involved,” he said. “There was no discussion at all about commission decisions. The mention of Aer Lingus was only made at press conferences in full public view.”

A Ryanair spokesman said: “We want to remind Irish people of the tremendous benefits the EU has brought Ireland.”

The controversy comes just days after Brussels lobbyists organised a 500,00 euro (£445,000) whip-round in a last-ditch effort to boost Ireland’s ‘Yes’ campaign. The lobbyists were accused of interfering in the Oct 2 referendum in order to shore up the EU institutions they make profits from lobbying.

[Return to headlines]



Finland: Hospitals Ponder Treatment Priorities

Some hospitals in Finland are being forced to decide who should receive treatment on the basis of priority. The University Hospital of Turku, for example, is cutting nursing staff levels as a savings measure. Departments are being asked to determine what functions should be trimmed.

Similar efficiency measures are being planned at other hospitals as surgery queues grow.

A national treatment guarantee has forced hospitals to reduce queues for surgical treatment but the growing crisis in local government finances threatens this development. Hospitals are being forced to find savings in order to prevent a growth in queues for surgery.

The Hospital District of South Western Finland plans to divide care provision into five different categories. Life threatening cases would top the list while those further down the scale would not be treated in the public health care sector.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Greece: Terror Breakthrough for Police

Four suspected members of Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire face prosecutor after Athens blast

Four suspected members of a militant anarchist group believed to have organized Wednesday’s bloodless attack on the central Athens home of an opposition PASOK deputy, and several other bomb blasts this year, faced a prosecutor yesterday.

According to sources, police had been monitoring the suspects for months and had originally believed them to belong to the ranks of another militant group called Armed Revolutionary Action, best known for a tax office hit in Argyroupoli in 2007. But police said that evidence found after a raid on the home of two of the suspects in the northeastern Athens district of Halandri “indisputably” links them to a group called Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire, which has become increasingly active over the past year. A homemade explosive device virtually identical to the one used in the bomb blast on the Kolonaki home of Louka Katseli on Wednesday was found in the Halandri house. Both devices had been deposited in cooking pots, as had been the case with a bomb that targeted the home of former Deputy Interior Minister Panayiotis Hinofotis in Palaio Faliro in July that was claimed by Conspiracy of the Cells of Fire.

The four suspects detained, aged between 19 and 21, are all unemployed but from well-to-do families, sources said. The two arrested at the Halandri apartment on Wednesday night were the 21-year-old nephew of the apartment’s owner and his 20-year-old girlfriend. The other two were reportedly arrested in raids in Galatsi.

The police raid on the Halandri property turned up a homemade time bomb along with quantities of explosives, timers and numerous written documents that police were analyzing yesterday.

In what was seen as a protest at the arrest of the four terrorism suspects, a group of around 500 self-styled anarchists staged a rally in the central district of Exarchia late last night. At one point around 200 of them started throwing stones at a local police station and set fire to trash cans. No arrests or injuries were reported.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Ireland: O’Leary and Ganley Lock Horns in Bitter TV Showdown

ireland:O’Leary and Ganley lock horns in bitter TV showdown

RYANAIR chief executive Michael O’Leary and the main face of the ‘No’ to Lisbon campaign Declan Ganley locked horns last night in one of the most rancorous exchanges in the ongoing referendum campaign.

Mr Ganley was branded a failed politician who did not get a seat in an area where “even Dana got elected”.

Meanwhile, the airline chief was dubbed a puppet of Brussels who did not know what he was talking about.

Reversing

Earlier this week, Mr O’Leary called for a ‘Yes’ vote next week, reversing his position on the previous referendum. It was during a round of press conferences that Mr O’Leary agreed to a debate with Mr Ganley.

On RTE’s ‘Prime Time’ last night, Mr O’Leary said he supported the ‘Yes’ campaign after Ireland got assurances on keeping a commissioner and determining tax policy into the future. This was ridiculed by his opponent.

In return, Mr O’Leary threw scorn on Mr Ganley for returning to politics after committing to a withdrawal following his failure in the European elections. “You are only here because you wouldn’t accept the vote of the Irish people last year in the European elections. You couldn’t get elected.

“Even Dana got elected in your constituency. You wanted to be Dana. You said you could take no for an answer and yet here you are like another failed politician,” said Mr O’Leary.

During the frequently aggressive and abusive debate, host Miriam O’Callaghan called on the pair to stop the insults.

Mr Ganley said the Ryanair chief executive had been “rolled out to defend the indefensible”.

Mr Ganley added that he had got 67,638 votes “which is more votes than anyone sitting in Dail Eireann has got at the moment”.

“The fact is that this effectively ends democracy as we know it in the European Union. It is not alarmist, it is factual.”

Mr O’Leary said Libertas and other groups on the ‘No’ side were “economic illiterates”.

“Declan doesn’t like it which is why he is back campaigning again, having been denied a vote,” he said. When Mr Ganley responded, he said his opponent was manifesting his “complete lack of understanding of what the issue is”.

[Return to headlines]



Italy: New Lottery Prize — 4,000 Euros for 20 Years

Ten numbers to guess. Cards cost one euro with draws every hour

ROME — It won’t be the same thing as winning 148 million euros like the lucky Superenalotto punter in Bagnone. You’re not going to become super-rich overnight but you will have a 4,000 euro a month annuity. It’s like unexpectedly finding a very well-paid job but without having to work. A very decent, secure income for life. From next Monday, that’s the prospect for winners of the new Sisal lottery, Vinci per la vita (also known as Win for Life). Designed in collaboration with the state monopolies enterprise, it will give punters an easier-to-understand alternative to scratchcards or Superenalotto. “It’s immediate and more involving”, explains the state monopolies’ director of strategy, Antonio Tagliaferri. “It doesn’t encourage people to go crazy and bet too much. It’s a safe, responsible lottery to support Italy’s reconstruction effort in Abruzzo”.

Treasury revenue, 23% of each stake, will go to help earthquake victims. Sixty-five per cent will go into the prize fund, agencies’ commission will account for eight per cent and the rest will go to Sisal. Here’s how Win for Life will work. From Monday 28 September, there will be hourly draws every day from 8 am to 8 pm. Punters will be able to play ten out of twenty numbers on a special card at any lottery agency. Each player will be given a “numerone”, or wildcard number, by the computer. For a one-euro stake, punters who correctly guess all ten numbers and the wildcard number win the annuity of 4,000 euros a month. Spread over twenty years, that comes to almost one million euros (960,000 to be precise), not index-linked but tax-free and inheritable. There is a one in three and a half million chance of winning the annuity but, to take one example, it is 200 times more difficult to win the Superenalotto prize, or to guess the Lotto draw, which involves ninety numbers instead of twenty.

For a two-euro stake, the probability doubles. There are also four other prizes: 10,000 euros for guessing the ten numbers without the wildcard number; 100 euros for nine numbers; ten euros for eight numbers and two euros for seven. Winning numbers will be broadcast live on Sisaltv, the lottery agency TV channel, and on the sisal.it and giochinumeri.it websites. Numbers can also be checked at any time on Sisal computer terminals. “In the first half of 2009, we experienced 32.6% growth”, says Sisal’s CEO Emilio Petrone. He stresses that this had nothing to do with August’s mega-jackpot win, “because in June, the jackpot was still at a normal level”. Referring to the impact of the economic crisis, which supposedly encourages people to bet more, Mr Petrone is satisfied that “it’s just a popular fallacy. There’s actually been a slowdown in the gambling sector. We notice it as early as the third week in the month when stakes decline. However, we are reaping the reward for our substantial investment in extending our distribution network”.

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Indian Burns Victim on Road to Recovery

Rome, 25 Sept. (AKI) — An Indian immigrant who nearly died after being set on fire by a gang of youths in Italy early this year has made a remarkable recovery and begun to walk again. Navtej Singh Sidhu, an unemployed labourer, suffered burns to 40 percent of his body in the savage attack that occurred at a railway station in Nettuno, south of Rome.

“The pain was indescribable. I was in shock. I couldn’t even cry out,” he told Adnkronos International (AKI) as he recalled the pain in Rome.

Three young men allegedly attacked Sidhu, doused him with petrol and set him alight in the early hours of the morning on 1 February. The three youths are now on trial for attempted murder.

Sidhu was taken to Rome’s Saint Eugenio Hospital and has undergone 10 painful skin graft operations, mainly on his feet and legs, which were burned to the bone.

The 35-year-old has also suffered serious depression in hospital, where doctors say he will have to undergo further surgery to his lower legs to reconstruct major tissue and muscles, as well as skin, flesh and bone.

“Sometimes, I am depressed, due to the pain in my legs and feet that even small movements cause me,” Sidhu said.

“And I have circulation problems due to being immobile for much of time, especially at night.”

Sidhu is now undergoing intensive physiotherapy at the hospital’s burns unit and for the past month has begun to walk short distances without crutches after being bed-ridden for months.

He said it is too early to decide whether he will remain in Italy or return his home in the northern state of Punjab where his family lives.

“Will I stay in Italy or return to India? I don’t know — my legs are in such a bad way that I don’t know what to do,” Sidhu said.

A Sikh from a small village in Punjab’s Moga district, Sidhu sold all his possessions to come to Italy in 2002 in search of new opportunities.

He worked as a building and agricultural labourer before losing his job and became homeless after his work permit expired.

Many people in Italy were outraged by the barbarity of the attack against Sidhu, but it was not an isolated incident. Xenophobic and racist attacks against immigrants have been on the rise in recent years.

The three Italian youths who are are currently on trial for Sidhu’s attempted murder, had allegedly drunk alcohol and taken drugs before the attack.

The young men told police after their arrest they had not singled out Sidhu because he was an immigrant but because he was “a bum who we wanted to teach a lesson”.

But immigrants living in the Nettuno area told AKI that only immigrants sleep at the station and they are sure the attack was racially motivated.

Sidhu said he was looking for justice and the three youths charged with the attack would be punished with jail terms.

A leading Italian surgeon, Gaetano Esposito, who has operated on Sidhu many times, said he was shocked at the severity of the attack and that the Indian labourer had made staggering progress.

“It’s completely unpredictable what will happen. But physiotherapy can work miracles: for example, Singh is able to stand and walk without a stick, even though he’s lost his Achilles tendons,” Esposito told AKI.

Esposito said that Sidhu would never be able to work as a manual labourer again. But in the coming months he hoped that Italian authorities would keep their promises to help Sidhu when he is ready to leave the hospital that has become his second home.

The president of the Italian Senate, Renato Schifani, and Rome’s mayor, Gianni Alemanno, both visited Sidhu in hospital earlier this year and pledged to give him a job and accommodation.

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



Italy: Filipinos Held Over 116 Billion Dollars of Bogus US Bonds

Italian police said on Friday they had arrested two Philippine members of a religious order on suspicion of trying to fraudulently sell 116 billion dollars worth of fake US bonds.

The brother and sister were detained after police discovered bogus bonds dated 1934 worth 103 billion dollars in a package addressed to the pair passing through Milan’s Malpensa airport last month.

“It wasn’t hard to see that they were fake,” said Lieutenant Colonel Emilio Fiora of the Italian financial police.

The brother remains in custody but the sister has been released as police said there was insufficient evidence to charge her.

It is the second time Italian authorities have seized a huge haul of fake US Treasury securities in recent months and they said the cases could be linked.

Police detained the two Filipinos, members of a Pentecostalist religious order in the northern city of Genoa, at the end of August.

More fake securities with a value of 13 billion dollars were discovered when police carried out a search as they arrested the pair.

With the bonds found in the airport package, this made a total of 116 billion dollars (79 billion euros) of bogus Treasury securities.

The brother and sister planned to “exchange these securities fraudulently for money, probably in the United States,” Fiora added.

Authorities disclosed details of the case after receiving confirmation from the United States that the bonds were fake, Lieutenant Colonel Antonello Urgeghe of the financial police added.

The latest seizure came after Italian authorities in June arrested two Japanese men trying to enter Italy from Switzerland carrying 134 billion dollars worth of bogus American bonds.

Lieutenant Colonel Fiora said there could be a connection between the two cases, adding that the bonds “could have been printed in the same place”.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: In Crime, Women Are ‘More Dangerous’ Than Men

Antillean men are overrepresented in Dutch crime statistics, but it is their mothers and wives who keep crime going, says professor Marion van San.

The wives of Antillean drug criminals are often accomplices in their husbands’ crimes. In many cases these women also raise their sons to be drug criminals, which keeps the cycle of crime going.

This is the conclusion reached by Marion van San as she prepares to take up her position as professor of youth and education of Antilleans at the University of Utrecht. The chair is financed by the municipalities of Rotterdam and Amsterdam, two cities where Antilleans are overrepresented in crime statistics.

Van San’s inaugural lecture, The appeal of ‘dangerous’ men, which is scheduled for next Monday, is an almost romantic account of the appeal of criminal men to certain women.

Van San compares women from the former Dutch colony Curaçao, whom she spent fifteen years researching, with the wives and mistresses of famous mafia figures. She sees an important parallel: both groups are irresistibly attracted to criminals and many get involved in crime via their husbands.

Why are these women so attracted to dangerous men?

“These men offer them a better life. If you read the biographies of the women, mistresses and wives of the mafia figures, almost all of them grew up in poverty. And they all love nice cars, expensive clothing, jewels and luxury. These men can offer them that. It is the same with the women in Curaçao. The nature and seriousness of the crime committed by Antillean drug criminals cannot be compared to that of the mafia. But these men too can offer women a better life financially.”

Is it only about the money?

“It is also about status. About power. At the side of their husband or boyfriend they go from being a poor wretch to a woman of stature. And it is also about love and passion. In the biographies of the mafia wives you read that they feel uncontrollably drawn to these men. They are macho, they emanate danger: don’t kid around with me.”

Don’t the men tend to keep their women as far away as possible from the crime?

“There is definitely that impression. In the Cosa Nostra, for example, the men swear before joining the organisation that they will never tell their wives about the business that takes place. Women take care of their husbands and the family and don’t need to know anything further. At first glance that seems to be the same for Curaçao women. Both women in the mafia and the wives of Antillean men who operate in the drug economy would prefer to be seen as innocent mother figures who are only there to serve their husband and family. But that impression is mainly created and kept alive by men. It is not accurate. The women often support their husband from home in his criminal practices. They hide weapons or fugitive friends, that kind of thing.”

They do odd jobs?

“Yes, but these women have also become more active outside the home. In the 1990s Curaçao women started smuggling drugs themselves. They were also recruited for this, as women they were less conspicuous. They did not undergo any emancipation process like the mafia women. These Curaçao women are among the subclass, without money or education. For them this is their only chance of some prosperity. But the women make an even more important contribution to crime. They keep the dynasty going.”

What do you mean?

“The women often raise their sons to be dangerous men. It is the mothers who shape them, who teach them values and standards. I saw it when I was researching poor Curaçao women. They taught their children to always defend themselves against enemies, if necessary with violence. This is what they had always done themselves. So they prepare their children for a life in crime.”

Why would they do that?

“A criminal son is attractive for the simple reason that he brings in money.”

Do they say: go out and steal?

“No, they do not deliberately encourage their sons to go into crime, but they often turn a blind eye. They don’t say anything if the son comes home with expensive things even though he is not working. If he drives around in an expensive car without having a steady income. And they say nothing if he slips them money. And these young men are in turn attractive to young women. The vicious circle is complete.”

How can you break this cycle?

“Girls have to be closely coached to get their own income via education and work. Preferably work with some status, like in healthcare. Criminal men are less attractive to them then. Antillean mothers must be supported in raising children so that they do not raise their sons to be dangerous men. They are responsible for an important part of the problem, but also the solution.”

Most projects now focus on the young men involved in crime.

“Exactly. They are also often temporary, without coherence or structure. The only solution is a robust, intensive and structural programme that focuses on Antillean girls and women. That is expensive of course, but ultimately it will pay for itself. Because you don’t want to know how much this crime is costing us.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Poland Can’t Issue More Polluting Permits Despite Court Win: EU

BRUSSELS — The European Commission hit back Thursday in a legal battle over heavy industry pollution, saying Poland and Estonia cannot issue extra carbon permits despite a court victory the previous day.

A top European court on Wednesday annulled an EU attempt to limit the amount of greenhouse gases that Estonia and Poland can let heavy industry emit.

That decision sets a precedent that could see other countries seek to raise their emission caps and upset the EU’s emissions trading scheme. a key plank in Europe’s plans for tackling climate change.

EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas issued a statement Thursday seeking to put a lid on events by preventing Warsaw and Tallinn from issuing extra carbon permits to their industries.

“The EU ETS is of central importance for combating climate change,” he said.

While acknowledging that the court ruling required the EU’s executive arm to re-evaluate its decision on Poland and Estonia he stressed that “those countries are not allowed to issue any additional allowances beyond those created in the EU Emissions Trading Scheme” until this was done.

He also suggested that such a reevaluation was unlikely to lead to any major change in carbon allowances handed out.

“The actual 2008 emissions in Estonia and Poland correspond closely to those anticipated in the Commission Decisions,” he said.

Italy has became the latest EU nation to get involved, with Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi sending a letter to EU Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso seeking to renegotiate the caps on his country’s carbon dioxide emissions.

“I’m well aware of that,” and EU Commission spokesman said “the CO2 limits are set and are normally non negotiable.”

Six other EU countries — Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania and Romania — are pursing a similar appeal to Poland and will be encouraged by Wednesday court ruling.

The National Allocation Plans (NAPS) are a major part of EU policy for fighting global warming. Under them, governments fixed the total number of allowances they would allocate to industry for the 2008-2012 period, part of efforts to meet emission targets.

These pollution permits are granted to around 10,000 installations in the 27-nation bloc’s energy and industrial sectors which combined account for about half the EU’s emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.

The commission then assesses the plans to see whether they are compatible with EU guidelines.

The court ruled, that in the cases of Estonia and Poland, the commission had overstepped its authority by rejecting the plans based only on doubts it had about how the countries collected their data.

Brussels is examining the courts judgment and “considering whether to appeal,” Dimas said.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Polish Bloggers Urge No Vote

A group of Polish political bloggers have made an appeal to Irish people to vote No to the Lisbon Treaty.

Bloggers from political website Niepoprawni.pl have contacted The Irish Times urging Irish people to vote No. The group is against the Lisbon Treaty because, it says, the EU is trying to pass the treaty without asking Europeans to vote on it. “Ireland is an exception. In the second referendum Irish people will speak for all the European countries.”

The arguments include claims that the treaty is an attempt to establish a European superstate.

France and Netherlands voted no to the European Constitution which, the group says, was changed little before it later became the Lisbon Treaty.

The group said the 2008 Irish No vote on Lisbon had been disregarded, which was “an obvious violation of all democratic principles”.

Higgins and De Rossa battle for Google staff

An audience of 300 people gathered at Google headquarters in Dublin yesterday to hear two left-wing MEPs debate the treaty. Socialist Joe Higgins urged a No vote, while Labour’s Proinsias De Rossa argued for a Yes.

Most Google employees seemed well disposed to a Yes vote. Some made up their minds during the debate.

Niamh Nolan (23), from Kilkenny, said she had been undecided before the debate, but would now “definitely vote Yes”.

However, Marissa Selman (31), from Limerick, said the debate had swayed her “towards the No side”.

“I thought there was much more definite information from Joe. He seemed to pay attention better to answering the questions.”

[Return to headlines]



Sweden: Björklund Against Burka Ban

Education Minister Jan Björklund says he doesn’t want to legislate against the use of headscarves, niqab, and burkas in Swedish schools.

Teachers unions have called for common rules for teachers and teaching students working in the Swedish education system, as it is currently up to each school to decide, which can sometimes cause conflict with students and teachers.

In a recent case a niqab-wearing teaching student was told that she couldn’t wear the face-covering head scarf by a school she was going to work in.

Björklund says that he doesn’t want to regulate schools ad infinitum, claiming that “one day teachers say there are too many regulations, the next they say there aren’t enough”. He says that headmasters should ban them if they think it affects teaching, and to simply allow them if they don’t.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Swiss Parliament Votes for Stricter Integration

Poorly integrated foreigners could have their residence permits revoked and even face deportation.

The Senate on Wednesday followed the House of Representatives in approving a proposal by the rightwing Swiss People’s Party, despite opposition by the centre-left.

A second motion imposing stricter pre-conditions for naturalisation applicants was also passed. Successful candidates must demonstrate a good level of integration and have a good knowledge of one of the four national languages, it said.

Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf pointed out that the law on naturalisation was already in the process of being modified by her ministry, independently of the current parliamentary moves.

She said integration and language skills would be the central focus of the amended law, rendering the latest motions superfluous.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Foreign Office Chief Faces Sack After ‘Anti-Semitic’ Rant Verdict

A senior civil servant is facing the sack after being found guilty yesterday of shouting that Israelis should be “blown off the f***ing earth” while exercising in a gym.

Rowan Laxton, 48, head of the South Asia desk of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, was watching a television report about the death of a farmer killed by Israeli bombs when he exclaimed: “F***ing Israelis, f***ing Jews”.

Fellow gym members Gideon Falter and William Lemaine, who were on a lower floor using weights, overheard Laxton, who was on an exercise bike, and complained to staff at the gym.

The incident, which took place at the London Business School gym in January, was described by Laxton’s counsel as a “moment of madness”.

Julian Knowles said: “It is a cliché, but it’s a cliché that fits in this situation.

“It was a moment of madness for Mr Laxton, which is going to have very grave and long-term consequences.”

Mr Falter claimed that he also heard Laxton say: “If I had my way, the f***ing international community should be sent in, and if the Israelis got in the way, they’d be blown off the f***ing earth.”

Laxton denied saying that, however, and told Mr Falter that he was sorry if he had offended him.

Laxton previously told the court that he was embarrassed by what happened and was aware he had embarrassed the Foreign Office.

He said during an earlier hearing: “We are all human. I erred. I don’t normally swear.”

Laxton also said “f***ing despicable” while watching the television report and admitted that it was an “unhelpful and gratuitous comment”.

Laxton, whose salary after tax is £3,000 a month, was fined £350 at the City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court after District Judge Howard Riddle found him guilty of racially aggravated harassment, a charge he had denied.

He was also ordered to pay £500 prosecution costs and a £15 victim surcharge.

Mr Knowles told the court that Laxton had completed divorce proceedings that morning and added: “Whatever happens in court is secondary to the effect it will have on his career and his reputation.”

The outburst was not premeditated, Mr Knowles said, adding: “It was extraordinarily out of character for Mr Laxton. He used utterly debase comments, but he is not an anti-Semite.”

In a written judgment, District Riddle said that Laxton had been under stress on the day and may have been oblivious to others around him.

He said: “This was not a legitimate protest — it was an emotional reaction.

“It is hard to imagine the circumstances when saying ‘f***ing Jews’ in a gym used by other people and overheard by two strangers 20 feet away could be considered reasonable.”

Speaking outside court, Mr Knowles said: “Mr Laxton is very disappointed by the outcome of today and he will be considering his next steps with his legal team.”

Laxton was suspended from his job earlier this year and could now face the sack. A misconduct hearing is likely to start this week.

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: “The FCO takes very seriously any suggestion of inappropriate behaviour by its staff.

“The case will now be considered under the FCO’s misconduct procedure. This is an internal matter and it would therefore be wrong to comment further.”

[Return to headlines]



UK: General Quits ‘Over Afghanistan’

An army general who is reported to have criticised aspects of the war in Afghanistan has resigned.

Reports said Maj Gen Andrew Mackay, General Officer Commanding Scotland, Northern Ireland and Northern England, was unhappy about strategy.

Prince Harry spent 10 weeks from December 2007 in Afghanistan under the command of Maj Gen Mackay.

The Ministry of Defence has insisted that the general’s departure was a “personal matter”.

Maj Gen Mackay’s operational tour to Afghanistan was notable for the re-capture of Musa Qaleh, a strategic town, from the Taliban.

He was subsequently awarded a CBE for his role in the mission.

Maj Gen Mackay’s resignation comes as the Daily Telegraph reported that a mole who leaked details of MPs’ expenses said he was partly motivated by anger at inadequate equipment for UK troops.

‘Serious blow’

Maj Nick Haston, who was Maj Gen Mackay’s deputy chief of staff, resigned from the Army earlier this year in protest at policy and equipment shortages.

Maj Haston told BBC Radio 4’s World at One programme that he was “very shocked and surprised” at the news of his superior’s resignation.

“I’d be assuming that frustration… over issues in Afghanistan would be part of the issue. I would be guessing, but I would assume there’d also be other issues such as the general funding problems in the military just now.

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



UK: MPs’ Expenses Leaked Over Failure to Equip Troops on Front Line in Afghanistan and Iraq

Expenses claims made by MPs were leaked because of anger over the Government’s failure to equip the Armed Forces properly while politicians lavished taxpayers’ money on themselves, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

Workers who processed the MPs’ claims included serving soldiers, who were moonlighting between tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan to earn extra cash for body armour and other vital equipment.

The soldiers were furious when they saw what MPs, including the Prime Minister, were claiming for and their anger convinced one of their civilian colleagues that taxpayers had a right to know how their money was being spent.

The mole who leaked the data has told his story for the first time, in the hope that it will shame the Government into finally supplying the right equipment for the thousands of soldiers risking their lives in Afghanistan.

His account appears in No Expenses Spared, a book which is published today and discloses the full story of what Gordon Brown described as “the biggest Parliamentary scandal for two centuries”.

Five months after The Daily Telegraph broke the story of MPs’ expenses, the mole angrily denounced politicians who “still don’t get it” and were still preoccupied with their own financial situation rather than the plight of troops.

“It’s not easy to watch footage on the television news of a coffin draped in a Union Jack and then come in to work the next day and see on your computer screen what MPs are taking for themselves,” he said.

“Hearing from the serving soldiers, about how they were having to work there to earn enough money to buy themselves decent equipment, while the MPs could find public money to buy themselves all sorts of extravagances, only added to the feeling that the public should know what was going on.

“That helped tip the balance in the decision over whether I should or should not leak the expenses data.”

The Daily Telegraph’s investigation of MPs’ expense claims exposed widespread abuse of the Parliamentary allowance system, including the “flipping” of second homes, systematic tax avoidance, “phantom” mortgages and claims for fripperies such as moat cleaning, manure and a duck house. Some MPs even attempted to claim for wreaths which they laid at remembrance ceremonies.

No Expenses Spared, written by two members of the Telegraph’s investigation team, describes how employees at The Stationery Office, where the expense files were sent for censorship before their intended publication by Parliament, reacted when they first saw the claims for second homes, furniture and luxury goods.

The workers, who included Parliamentary staff on secondment, became so agitated that they had to be told to calm down by managers.

One of the expenses that particularly enraged staff was Gordon Brown’s claim for a Sky TV sports package, which cost £36 per month.

But it was the position of the soldiers, who had used their annual leave to find temporary work as security guards, that caused the most outrage. “As the days progressed the soldiers joined in the conversations and became as angry as those doing the editing,” the mole said.

“When they’re out in Afghanistan they’re out there for Queen and country, earning £16,000 or £17,000 a year, knowing they’re going to take losses, while the MPs are sitting in Parliament on £65,000, with massive expenses, and meanwhile you’ve got bodies coming home.”

The Prime Minister, who faces a critical test of his leadership at next week’s Labour Party conference, has faced repeated criticism over the equipment that has been issued to troops and for his lacklustre handling of the expenses scandal.

No Expenses Spared discloses that the mole was employed to censor MPs’ expenses paperwork in 2008 before it was published this year.

Around 20 people at a time worked on blacking out parts of the files. The soldiers were among the security guards who were there to prevent any of the information being leaked.

One of the soldiers had taken on the temporary work, in contravention of Army regulations, to earn enough money to buy a lightweight Kevlar ballistic vest similar to those issued to US troops. Many British soldiers have complained that the standard issue body armour was so heavy and bulky that it was more of a hindrance than a help in a firefight.

Another soldier was there to earn money to buy desert boots, gloves and sunglasses, while other servicemen were earning to buy Christmas presents for their families.

The mole said: “The people who were working on redacting the MPs’ expenses were people who were proud to be British, and they were saddened by what they saw.

“Everyone in that room was of the same mind. This was our money and these were our employees, effectively, but no one could hold them to account.

“Pretty much everyone working in that room was being paid a pittance to do their job. Meanwhile the MPs were being well paid and claiming a fortune on their expenses, yet what have they done for us in the last 10 years?

“That was why I leaked the information: because the British public deserves better.”

The furore over the leak of the expenses data has put the mole under intense pressure and he faced the threat of a police investigation. He wishes to remain anonymous.

The mole leaked the MPs’ expenses data, which amounted to more than 1.5 million individual receipts, to John Wick, a former SAS officer who acted as a middle man in negotiations with The Daily Telegraph.

The mole told the book’s authors that he was “bloody glad” he released the information. “There’s no two ways about it. I saw what was happening. I saw that information, and you just couldn’t keep that from people,” he said.

“Now that The Daily Telegraph has put this in the public domain, it has to bring about reform.”

But the mole said he had been disappointed with the response of MPs so far.

“Do they get it? I don’t know. We had a knee-jerk reaction from all the parties initially… [But now] when you listen to MPs I think they are more concerned about themselves and keeping their jobs than getting on with reform and changing our Parliament.

“Do you think Alan Duncan gets it? I don’t know. I listen to various statements made by MPs and I’m not so sure they do get it at all yet.

“I know certain members do and I know that not all MPs were guilty. Not all MPs had their snouts in the trough. Nevertheless they all knew what was happening. Those that didn’t have their snouts in the trough did nothing to stop it.”

Despite public anger over their expenses, MPs have continued to claim thousands of pounds for food, mortgages and other costs.

Within the next month, Sir Christopher Kelly, the official standards watchdog, is expected to recommend radical changes to the Parliamentary expenses system. However, MPs are pushing for large pay rises to compensate for any loss of the lucrative expenses. They can currently claim more than £24,000 a year towards the cost of a second home.

Meanwhile, the Government has refused to bow to soldiers’ demands for better equipment similar to that given to American troops.

The disclosure of such a direct link between the summer’s scandal and the ongoing row over military equipment will put ministers under increasing pressure to ensure that soldiers are properly equipped before sending them into battle. Dozens of deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan have been blamed on inferior or faulty equipment issued to the Armed Forces.

Last weekend, the widow of Sjt Paul McAleese, who was killed on August 20 by a Taliban bomb, suggested that the Government’s failure properly to equip soldiers was akin to manslaughter.

Sjt McAleese had spent £1,000 of his own money to buy a lightweight ballistic vest, desert boots and ballistic goggles, the same equipment as that wanted by the soldiers who worked at The Stationery Office.

Jo McAleese said: “We must either give our soldiers the kit they need to survive or get them out of there.”

Last night, the Ministry of Defence insisted that the Armed Forces were properly equipped.

A spokesman said: “Our top priority is to provide the best equipment and training for our people in Afghanistan.

“Both are excellent, and are improving all the time. Commanders now have a variety of helicopters, protected patrol vehicles, unmanned aerial vehicles and other key equipment at their disposal, and we are committed to ensuring that their needs are met, both in the short and long term.

“Since 2006, we have delivered equipment valued at more than £10 billion to the Armed Forces, including over £4 billion on urgent operational requirements since 2006.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



UK: Miliband Accused Over Iran Exiles

A Labour peer has accused Foreign Secretary David Miliband of maintaining “a shameful silence” on attacks on Iranian dissidents at a camp in Iraq.

British Parliamentary Committee for Iran Freedom chairman Lord Corbett hit out in a strongly-worded open letter.

More than 3,000 people live in the Camp Ashraf, and supporters say several died in a raid by Iraqi security forces.

The Foreign Office says officials will visit the camp soon and have written to Iraq’s government over the matter.

Those at the camp, which was previously under US control, are members of an exiled Iranian opposition group, the People’s Mujahadeen of Iran (PMOI).

Their relatives and friends have been demonstrating outside the US Embassy in London for 60 days. Several are on hunger strike.

Their case has won the backing of senior Church of England clergy, led by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams.

Lord Corbett wrote: “At Labour’s conference you will rightly join the chorus of condemnation at Iran’s menacing nuclear deception.

“Then, why your shameful silence over the vicious assault Iran orchestrated Iraq to make two months ago on 3,500 Iranian dissidents at Camp Ashraf?”

He described it as “a brutal assault on refugees who offered no more than passive resistance against ‘security forces’ armed with hand-held chains, axes, iron bars and wooden clubs embedded with nails as well as live ammunition”.

Lord Corbett claimed this raid, on 28 July, had left 11 dead and more than 500 injured.

“Some 36 were arrested and remain detained despite court orders for their release. Is this the kind of democracy for which our government sent troops to die and be injured?”

He said the UK had a responsibility to help ensure the safety and security of the refugees and called on Mr Miliband to try to ensure a UN monitoring force could go to the camp. camp.

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

Balkans


Macedonia: Ethnic Albanian ‘Encylopedia’ Withdrawn

Skopje, 24 Sept. (AKI) — Macedonia’s academy of arts and sciences has blocked the distribution of a newly published encyclopedia which sparked a storm of protest because of references to minority ethnic Albanians, local media reported on Thursday.

The encyclopedia — the first since Macedonia became independent in 1992 — referred to ethnic Albanians using the pejorative terms ‘Shiptars’ and ‘mountaineers’.

The academy was quoted as saying 50 copies of the country’s first encyclopedia had so far been distributed.

All further distribution will be stopped until controversial references “allegedly insulting to the ethnic Albanian community” are re-examined, it said.

In addition, the encyclopedia said that members of American and British intelligence services had helped train the so-called ‘People’s Liberation Army’ (ONA) which led to the 2001 armed rebellion demanding more autonomy and human rights for ethnic Albanians.

The rebellion ended with the Ohrid peace accord in 2001, which granted ethnic Albanians regional autonomy and declared Albanian as the second official language in the country.

Ethnic Albanians account for about 25 per cent of Macedonia’s two million people and an ethnic Albanian party (DUI) is a junior coalition partner in prime minister Nikola Gruevski’s government.

The US and British embassies in Skopje sharply condemned some references in the encyclopedia, denying their countries’ involvement in training ONA rebels.

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

North Africa


Egypt Bloggers Sound Out on Hosni’s UNESCO Bid

[Comment from Tuan Jim: Contrast this to all the other articles in the media blaming the Jews]

CAIRO: “Prayers are mandatory today for all — Christian, Muslim or Bahai: Pray that God lets the Bulgarians win and strengthens them in the UNESCO elections” — was the message sent out Tuesday on Twitter by Egyptian blogger Wael Abbas as the race for UNESCO director general entered its final phase.

The face-off between Bulgarian Irina Bolkova and Egypt’s incumbent Culture Minister Farouk Hosni saw bloggers and Twitter users in the Egyptian blogosphere almost unanimously rejecting Hosni’s bid for UNESCO’s top post.

While international opposition to Hosni’s bid has largely centered around his comment that he would “burn any Israeli books” which appeared in the Library of Alexandria, opposition within Egypt broadly speaking has two aspects. First and foremost is his association with a regime which has consistently been accused of violating freedom of opinion and artistic expression in general. Secondly is his contribution — or failure to prevent — the deterioration of Egypt’s cultural life and heritage.

Hosni — a stalwart of Mubarak’s regime who has served in his current position for 22 years — has responded to allegations of anti-Semitism in both the international press and on his recently launched website (wwws.faroukhosny.com).

In a slightly garbled “message to the world” on his website Hosni claims responsibility for his statements but appeals “to all those who are attacking me not to fall into the trap of confusion.”

“To them I say, look at my life, personality and contributions to the dialogue of cultures and faiths and to the promotion of mutual understanding among people without discrimination.

“Do not look at one sentence. Review 27 years spent in the service of culture and make an assessment of what I did in the service of humanity, creativity, writers and books.

“I opened many libraries in poor villages in my country and contributed to the revival of the Alexandria Library. Who can believe in superstitious matters that would make of me an organizer of execution by burning?”

Hosni writes on his website that UNESCO should “relentlessly defend freedom of belief, freedom of thought, freedom of expression as well as independent information media [sic], [and] the right to obtain information…”

He has not, however, responded to the charges brought domestically that the stifling of all forms of expression and the stagnation of culture under his tenure disqualify him from running for the UNESCO post.

On the blogsphere

For Abbas, Hosni’s election as UNESCO chief equates to “fresh recognition of, and international support for, Mubarak’s criminal regime.”

“His winning is a rejection of our freedom as Egyptians,” Abbas continues on Twitter.

Ursula Lindsay writing at the Arabist agrees, saying that Hosni shouldn’t be elected “not because of his disrespect for Israeli culture—but because of his much deeper, more damaging disrespect of Egyptian culture.”

She continues, writing that Hosni shouldn’t win his UNESCO bid “mostly because he is the longest-serving minister (22 years) in an autocratic state that does not respect freedom of expression; because he presides over a corrupt and mediocre ministry and has acted in the interest of the regime rather than the interests of culture time and again; because he is generally loathed by Egyptian artists and writers of any standing.”

Blogger Zeinobia writing at Egyptian Chronicles says of Hosni that “Egyptian culture was humiliated for two decades by the hands of this man.”

“I do not need to speak about the corruption in the ministry but I will speak and say that it is enough in his time whole temples were stolen completely, our monuments from ancient times were being stolen from our museums and nobody cared,” she said.

Zeinobia makes reference to the Beni Suef theater fire in September 2005 which killed 48 people unable to escape the flames because the theatre’s only exit was blocked.

While Hosni submitted his resignation during the intense criticism he received in the wake of the fire, it was rejected by the Egyptian Prime Minister.

Blogger Nora Younis meanwhile hopes that Hosni doesn’t win “only because NDP is pushing Mohamed Kamal (Gamal [Mubarak]’s office manager) to [the] Culture Minister seat.”

Zeinobia says of Kamal’s holding the post “it will be a very strong sign that Gamal Mubarak is accelerating … his inheritance plan.”

One of the few bloggers who have not rejected Hosni’s candidature outright is Nawara Negm writing at tahyyes.org

“That’s it, he’s Egypt’s candidate, like the national football team. I can’t stand against him,” Negm writes. She adds however that “at least this way we’ll be rid of him, and nobody will die in a fire again God willing — and our antiquities will have a bit of a break. And maybe his replacement will show more concern for our Islamic antiquities.”

At least some of Egypt’s antiquities are being looked after, according to blogger Mostafa Hussein — but not as you might expect.

In a post entitled “NDP Synagogue” Hussein presents photos of the Maghen Abraham Synagogue in Cairo’s Hadayeq El-Qobba which has been turned into an office of the ruling National Democratic Party.

“Yes, it is ‘the most looked after’ synagogue as in the wooden floors are in a horrible shape, cables coming and going everywhere, horrible neon lights, overstuffed filing cabinets piled over each other, rusting, broken window panes replaced with cardboard and the whole sanctity of the place, that was once there and can be vaguely felt radiating from the large dome and the star of David windows, is replaced with a grim dark grey government office [Mogamaa] feel.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Egypt Suspicious of European Language Students

Many deeply religious students from Europe come to Egypt to learn Arabic. The question is: are these European Salafists coming to study the language of the Koran or to prepare terrorist attacks?

Young men with downy beards, caps, kneelength galabeyas and sandals sat chatting in a MacDonald’s restaurant in Nasr City, a large middle class district in the eastern part of Cairo. Women wearing concealing black garments and veils over their faces scurried around the small dusty streets between their apartments and the neighbourhood shops. They were not from here and they barely spoke any Arabic. Asking around revealed that every one of them came from Europe and most of them have North African roots.

Amidst the neighbourhood Egyptians, the European Salafists — Sunni religious fundamentalists — are outsiders. Ashraf (26), a Dutchman of Moroccan descent, came to Cairo a year ago. “To learn Arabic,” he said, “the language of my religion.” He had just visited the mosque, where many kindred spirits go to pray five times a day. A not-so-secret agent of the security service stood outside the mosque. The house of prayer is under surveillance. “We aren’t hurting anyone,” said Ashraf, whose apartment was recently searched. “We only come to study and pray.”

Arabic language schools in Nasr City are doing good business. Young Salafists from Europe come to Egypt in great numbers to learn the language of the Koran, the holy book that Salafists believe can only be understood in the original language in which it was divinely revealed to the prophet Mohammed. In addition to language lessons, they usually follow courses in Islamic law offered by teachers ranging from the renowned Al-Azhar University to clandestine imams without permits.

Looking for trouble

“Religious fanatics want to be taken seriously,” said Walid al-Gohari, founder and director of the Al-Fajr institute, one of the many language schools in Nasr City. “But Salafists who don’t even know Arabic are not considered credible.” Al-Fajr is popular among import Salafists and Al-Gohari acknowledged that some come to Egypt with bad intentions. “Most students are mainly centred on themselves and their faith, but some come here with firm opinions about Islam and call anyone who sees it differently an infidel,” the director said. “We try to teach them the language so they learn to understand the true message of the Koran, but they often look for trouble. They get in with a bad crowd, visit the wrong mosque and listen to the wrong sheik.”

The Egyptian security service is concerned about the situation. It therefore keeps a close eye on fundamentalist visitors with a European passport. Students said their homes are regularly searched and they are randomly taken in for questioning. “They ask stupid questions, like how often do I pray each day,” Ashraf described his brief time in custody. “As if you are an extremist if you do what Allah has ordered.”

The fact that the students are a source of concern became clear before US president Barack Obama’s visit to Cairo at the beginning of June. As a precaution, the security service picked up hundreds of foreign students in a few days’ time, among them a few from the Netherlands. Although most were released soon after, dozens were deported. Those who remained have really had a fright. “Some have shaved off their beards so as not to stand out,” said Ashraf. Others have left the country out of fear.

Jihadist intentions

The Egyptian authorities claim there are dangerous individuals with jihadist intentions among the European students. A number of students from France, Belgium and the United Kingdom for instance are suspected of involvement in a bomb attack in Cairo in February which killed a French tourist. The chief suspects — Dodi Hoxha, a French woman of Albanian descent, and Farouk Taher Ibn Abbas, a Belgian of Tunisian origin — have been subjected to heavy-handed interrogation since April, a diplomatic source reported on condition of remaining anonymous. Both studied at Al-Fajr, director Al-Gohari confirmed when asked.

The Belgian chief suspect reportedly confessed that he had been ordered to return to Belgium to prepare a bomb attack in Paris. Questions from this reporter about evidence were not answered. But an informal source in the Egyptian public prosecution department said the suspects had travelled from Egypt to the Gaza strip and became involved with extremist groups there.

It is not the first time the Egyptian security service claimed to have rounded up a cell of jihadist European students. Three years ago, nine French people, two Belgians and a Dutch person, all of North African origin, were picked up. They were allegedly recruiting suicide commandos in Egypt for the war in Iraq. After just over a week of questioning they were deported. There was no evidence. Back in Europe authorities saw no reason to hold the students.

Creating an enemy

Al-Gohari was not at all surprised. He said the Egyptian security service often keeps surveillance on specific foreign students at the request of European secret services. “I know it for certain, because an agent himself told me.” He sees a paradox in this. “The West often accuses Egypt of being a breeding ground for fanatics, but in actuality we are getting extremists from Europe.”

The director did not see it as a problem that language institutes like Al-Fajr are thought to provide intelligence. “We coordinate everything with the security service. It is for a good cause.” But he believed the Egyptian security service’s hard-line approach makes the problem worse than it actually is. “Agents treat the foreign students who are arrested terribly.” He said this has an adverse effect. “This way you create an enemy you might not have had before.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Al Ahram Compiles a List of Failed Arab States

Al Ahram Weekly 10.09.2009 (Egypt)

With an eye on Yemen, Sudan, Palestine and even Egypt, Khalil El-Anani asks why Arab states are not more successful. He lists three contributing factors: “The first is the declining credibility of the Arab nation state due to political incompetence, economic corruption, social injustice, the failure to achieve domestic cohesion and to embrace religious and sectarian minorities, and the inability to meet the growing demands and aspirations of certain segments of society, notably young people. The second is the growing tendency on the part of the Arab state towards exclusiveness and an ever tighter monopoly on power, expressed daily in the form of police repression and tighter social surveillance and the natural reaction to which is social and sectarian discontent and rebelliousness.(…) The third factor is outside forces eager to exploit internal tensions to strengthen their influence in Arab society and whose success in such designs is contingent upon the existence of the foregoing conditions.”

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



Exclusive Interview: Gaddafi on Obama, Israel and Iran

Given your experience in dealing what the United States offered in return for giving up your [nuclear] program, what advice would you give to a country like Iran? And what advice would you give to the United States in dealing with Iran’s nuclear ambitions? America has the responsibility to reward and encourage such countries who take such decisions, so that they will be able to use nuclear energy or nuclear power in peaceful means. (Watch the video of TIME’s interview with Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi.)

Upon the advice of our American friends, and others, when they told us to maybe get in touch with Pyongyang and Iran, and encourage them and talk to them so that they would not go to the use of nuclear energy for military purposes, divert the potentials of the capability they have for peaceful means, the actions or the answers from those such countries was, What did Libya gain in the trade?

Are you saying that Iranians and North Koreans don’t think that Libya got enough benefits for giving up its program? Indeed that’s what they said to us. Indeed.

Libya spoke to both the Iranians and the North Koreans on this topic? Yes, indeed. Of course, I mean we have conveyed to them the wish of the friends, that they got in touch with us, mainly in the interest, the wish that they would take the peaceful road.

You’re chairman of the African Union at the moment. You referred to President Obama in your speech yesterday as the “son of Africa.” Do you feel a kinship with President Obama? And what would you like the United States to do in Africa? Indeed this kinship is there, is existing.

Regarding the second part of the question, Africa, I mean there are good intentions, legitimately speaking, particularly with international governing toward Africa — some sort of sympathy.

In the conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people you have advocated a one-state solution. Many people criticize that kind of idea as something that would lead to the end of Israel as a Jewish state, a homeland for the Jews. Do you believe that Israel has a right to exist as a Jewish state? I am keen and anxious for the safety of both the Jews and the Palestinians.

The position that we are in, the road that the world is going on, would lead to the destruction of the Jews. Because generally speaking, Jews as a community are limited, their number is limited, all over the world. We know that they’re not that big. Unfortunately, they were persecuted by all nations. They were persecuted by the Romans and King Edward I. And we all know the Holocaust during Hitler’s time. Once seeing the history like that we can only but sympathize with them as Jews. The Arabs actually were the ones who gave them the safe haven and the protection along all these areas when they were persecuted.

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



Obama, Brown, Sarkozy to Iran: ‘J’Accuse!’

This morning President Obama, French President Sarkozy, and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will accuse Iran of building a clandestine underground nuclear fuel manufacturing plant, which Iran’s leaders have hidden from weapons inspectors, senior administration officials tell ABC News.

Yesterday at the UN Security Council, where President Obama chaired a meeting where a de-nuclearization resolution passed unanimously, all three leaders pressed the need for stronger sanctions against Iran for its nuclear weapons pursuits, but they were met with some resistance from China.

Today’s announcement is being made to press their case, along with a demand that Iran allow inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency to see the facility, as first reported by the New York Times.

The president is expected to say that this news “increases pressure on Iran to come clean about its nuclear program,” a senior administration official tells ABC News. He will described “great and increasing doubts about the strictly peaceful nature of the program — which is what the Iranians suggest.”

Over the summer US intelligence officials, working aggressively with the French and British had been preparing a case to present to the IAEA this week about the secret underground facility, officials say. Then recently the intelligence officials had “reason to believe that the Iranians thought the secrecy of the site was no longer guaranteed, and this week Iran’s government wrote in a “vaguely worded letter to the IAEA apparently confessing to the construction of a new enrichment facility,” one official says.

IAEA spokesperson Marc Vidricaire told ABC News’ Jean Fievet that on September 21 “Iran informed the IAEA in a letter that a new pilot fuel enrichment plant is under construction in the country.” The letter stated that the enrichment level would be up to 5%, and “Iran assured the Agency in the letter that ‘further complementary information will be provided in an appropriate and due time.’“

Vidricaire said that the IAEA in response “has requested Iran to provide specific information and access to the facility as soon as possible. This will allow the Agency to assess safeguards verification requirements for the facility. The Agency also understands from Iran that no nuclear material has been introduced into the facility.”

The IAEA’s chief inspector, Olli Heinonen, has been briefed on the matter by US intelligence officials.

The senior Obama administration official, asked if this would convince China of the need for stronger sanctions, said, “I don’t know. I’m not going to jump to any conclusions. Obviously this increases pressure on Iran to come to the October 1 meeting in a position to say what it’s doing and to suspend its program.”

Iranian officials are scheduled to meet on October 1 with officials from Britain, China, France, Russia, the US and Germany to discuss Tehran’s nuclear weapons program.

The Obama administration believes Iran has now lied to inspectors three times. In addition to today’s news there were revelations in 2002 about a different clandestine plant, and news discovered in 2007 that Iran had been working to design a nuclear warhead.

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



Saudi Arabia: Beacon Shed Light on Art

BRISBANE: Leading international design studio Urban Art Projects (UAP) had completed the 60-meter-high Breakwater Beacon, the centerpiece of King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), according to a press release.

The Breakwater Beacon was unveiled during the inauguration of KAUST as part of the two-day celebration. Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah hosted more than 3,000 guests, including prominent Saudis, foreign leaders and Nobel laureates during the glittering inauguration ceremony.

Daniel Tobin, principal of Australia-based UAP, which creates site-specific art and design commissions for architectural and landscape environments, including the arts program for the Shanghai World Expo 2010, designed the beacon. The striking structure creates a contemporary interpretation of a lighthouse and will act as a symbol for the university.

Led by Tobin, UAP’s design draws inspiration from ancient Arabic maritime traditions, in-region artwork and architectural detailing, linking to the marine ecology of the Red Sea.

Built in pre-cast concrete blocks, Breakwater Beacon’s complex structure is a collection of unique amorphous hexagonal sections stepping up out of the Red Sea into an elliptical spire. The reverential interior space — with the patterned skin of the atrium creating a dappled shaded effect — is designed for communal gatherings and includes an amphitheater and reflection pond. Breakwater Beacon is part of a major international arts program at KAUST to celebrate its international platform of collaboration and exchange. Curated by UAP, the primary focus of the program is to interpret and present interdisciplinary art and design that stimulates creativity and interaction, drawing inspiration from KAUST’s unique geography, science and technology-based research, language, text, regional histories and traditions.

The program includes work by the renowned Tunisian artist Nja Mahdaoui and Swedish artist Carsten Holler, who is known for his Unilever installation at the Tate Modern.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: The Rules Murdering Our Troops

When enemy action kills our troops, it’s unfortu nate. When our own moral fecklessness murders those in uniform, it’s unforgivable.

In Afghanistan, our leaders are complicit in the death of each soldier, Marine or Navy corpsman who falls because politically correct rules of engagement shield our enemies.

Mission-focused, but morally oblivious, Gen. Stan McChrystal conformed to the Obama Way of War by imposing rules of engagement that could have been concocted by Code Pink:

  • Unless our troops in combat are absolutely certain that no civilians are present, they’re denied artillery or air support.
  • If any civilians appear where we meet the Taliban, our troops are to “break contact” — to retreat.

These ROE are a cave-in to the Taliban’s shameless propaganda campaign that claimed innocents were massacred every time our aircraft appeared overhead. (Afghan President Mohammed Karzai and our establishment media backed the terrorists.)

The Taliban’s goal was to level the playing field — to deny our troops their technological edge. Our enemies more than succeeded.

And what has our concern for the lives of Taliban sympathizers accomplished? The Taliban now make damned sure that civilians are present whenever they conduct an ambush or operation.

So they attack — and we quit the fight, lugging our dead and wounded back to base.

We’ve been through this b.s. before. In Iraq, we wanted to show respect to our enemies, so the generals announced early on that we wouldn’t enter mosques. The result? Hundreds of mosques became terrorist safe houses, bomb factories and weapons caches.

Why is this so hard to figure out? We tell our enemies we won’t attack X. So they exploit X. Who wouldn’t?

It isn’t just that war is hell. It’s that war must be hell, otherwise why would the enemy ever quit?

This week’s rumblings from the White House suggest that we may, at last, see a revised strategy that concentrates on killing our deadliest enemies — but I’ll believe it when I see the rounds go down-range.

Meanwhile, our troops die because our leaders are moral cowards.

Over the decades, political correctness insinuated itself into the ranks of our “Washington player” generals and admirals. We now have four-stars who believe that improving our enemies’ self-esteem is a crucial wartime goal.

And the Army published its disastrous Counterinsurgency Manual a few years back — doctrine written by military intellectuals who, instead of listening to Infantry squad leaders, made a show of consulting “peace advocates” and “humanitarian workers.”

The result was a manual based on a few heavily edited case studies “proving” that the key to success in fighting terrorists is to hand out soccer balls to worm-eaten children. The doctrine ignored the brutal lessons of 3,000 years of history — because history isn’t politically correct (it shows, relentlessly, that the only effective way to fight faith-fueled insurgents is with fire and sword).

The New York Times lavished praise on the manual. What does that tell you?

A few senior officers continue to push me to “lay off” the Counterinsurgency Manual. Sorry, but I’m more concerned about supporting the youngest private on patrol than I am with the reputation of any general.

As a real general put it a century ago, “The purpose of an Army is to fight.” And the purpose of going to war is to win (that dirty word). It’s not to sacrifice our own troops to make sad-sack do-gooders back home feel good.

We need to recognize that true morality lies in backing our troops, not in letting them die for whacko theories.

The next time you read about the death of a soldier or Marine in Afghanistan, don’t just blame the Taliban. Blame the generals and politicians who sent them to war, then took away their weapons.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Christian Medical Centre Helping Muslims and Pakistan’s Poor

The Bishop Paul Community Center was built on a plot of land owned by the Holy Rosary Catholic Church. It provides free medical care for the poor and Muslim women; making up for some of the country’s many shortcomings.

Faisalabad (AsiaNews) — One doctor per 900 people and one hospital bed per every thousand potential patients describe the state of health care system of Pakistan. Basic health services, especially in rural areas and among refugees, are far from meeting the population’s needs, and this comes on top of widespread poverty and an active insurgency by Islamic extremists. Getting medical treatment in Pakistan is often impossible.

The list of grim statistics does not end there. Pakistan’s defence budget last year came to US$ 3.45 billion, and is expected to reach $3.65 billion next year. Public spending in health care stood at under US$ 150 million this year. The government says it plans a 56 per cent increase next year, bringing the budget to $300 million. However, without international humanitarian agencies, Pakistan’s health care system would simply collapse.

In such a dire scenario, Christians are doing all they can do to make up for some of shortcomings.

Parishioners from the Holy Rosary Church in Faisalabad’s Madina Town were able to get their priest, Fr Bashir Francis, to use a plot of land near their Church to build a dispensary. It provides much needed medical care for residents, especially the poorest.

With the assistance of the local Caritas a three-room facility with lavatories was built, and named after the ‘Bishop Paul Community Center’ in honour Mgr Paul Andreotti, a Dominican missionary and Faisalabad bishop, who passed away in 1995.

Thanks to Caritas Pakistan, the dispensary does more than hand out drugs. Twice a month, two doctors and nurse perform free check-ups and tests as well as bring pharmaceutical supplies (Pictured).

There is also an ecumenical aspect to the initiative because it is being run in cooperation with the Care Channel International organisation, which is connected to the Evangelical Calvary Church.

The Bishop Paul Community Center is one of the few health centres open to pregnant Muslim women.

Covered in their parda so as not to show their face in the presence of men, these women know that at the centre they have access to equipment and personnel who can help them skirt around Islamic rules without breaking them.

In Pakistan, small but significant initiatives such as the one above constitute a network that links together Pakistan’s many Christian communities, helping them cope with the failures of the country’s health care system.

Another example is St. Raphael’s Hospital in Faisalabad, which is run by Franciscan nuns. The very existence of this place allowed Shahana, 35, to bring to term her pregnancy. Poor with an unemployed husband, she was going to get an abortion. Close to despair, she turned to Fr Bashir Francis who directed her to St Raphael’s where the nuns took care of her, free of charge.

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



Diana West: Ready, Aim, Fire McChrystal

There are many reasons to fire Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, and all of them are contained within his 66-page “assessment” of the war in Afghanistan.

The document is fascinating, just as the work of zealots is always fascinating. As a high priest of the politically correct orthodoxy, McChrystal has laid out a strategy to combat Taliban jihad in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan without once mentioning Islam, and forget about jihad (fireable offense No. 1).

he resulting black hole leads the commander to conclude, for example, that the reason the 99 percent-plus Muslim people of Afghanistan are “reluctant to align with us” is due to the “perception” — eight years and untold billions in largesse after we entered the country — “that our resolve is uncertain.” Nothing so simple as what a member of the Afghan parliament recently told the Economist: “The Taliban tell them the Koran says they have to fight the Crusaders and they believe them.”

No, it’s all our fault…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Surakarta: People Say No to Burial of Islamic Terrorist

Tens of thousands of people do not want to see Susilo, a terrorist killed in a police raid, buried in their city. Moderate Muslim leaders back the population and condemn the political use of Islam.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Tens of thousands of people took part in demonstrations in Surakarta (central Java) because they do not want to see a terrorist named Susilo (AKA Adib) buried in their city, and this despite the fact that he was born there. Moderate Muslim leaders have used the occasion to slam terrorism as “un-Islamic”.

Susilo is one of five terrorists killed in a gun battle with police on 17 September. The notorious Noordin M Top was also killed on the occasion (see “Central Java: Five dead in a raid on terrorists, perhaps Noordin M. Top,” AsiaNews, 17 September 2009).

Susilo’s family and their neighbours would like to bury him in Pracimoloyo Cemetery in Solo (Surakarta’s colloquial name), but many other residents were outraged by the suggestion.

A group calling itself the Solo Youth Alliance covered the city in banners condemning terrorism and saying no to Susilo’s burial. The group’s coordinator, Kusumo Putro, said the slogans used, like ‘Solo united against terrorists’, express how people feel.

“We are friendly people,” he explained, “and we are against terrorism. We don’t want the people of Solo to victims of terrorist propaganda”.

However, the Islamic Defenders Front (Front Pembela Islam or FPI) and the Jamaah Anshorut Tauhid, headed by the extremist Abu Bakr Baasyir, have come against the Youth Alliance.

Only the large-scale deployment of police prevented bloody clashes between the two groups.

Still tens of thousands of moderate Muslims took to the streets, shouting, “Every terrorist act is against Islam and is not part of Islamic teaching.”

Representatives of the Majelis Ulama Indonesia (the Indonesian Ulema Council or MUI) led the rally, which lasted for hours.

During the event, three figures spoke, Mudrick Sangidoe, a nationalist politician; Kiai Hajj Wahyudin, from Pesantren, a organisation that represents moderate Islamic educational boarding schools; and Kiai Hajj Ahmad Sukino, an important local Muslim leader.

All three warned against possible “manipulations” of the Islamic religion, and its use as a political tool, alluding to the idea of an Indonesian Islamic state, which is the goal of Muslim extremists and terrorists.

Residents of Kudus and Purbalingga, which is also in central Java, refused to allow the burial of Urwah and Aji, two other terrorists killed on 17 September.

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



Indonesia: Muslim Group Refuses Verdict

A conflict between a Protestant group and a Muslim group in Cinere, Depok, may continue to heat up as a local group opposing the construction of a Huria Kristen Batak Protestan (HKBP) church in the area objected to a recent court verdict acquitting Depok mayor’s decision to revoke the church’s building permit (IMB).

Budi Waluyo, chairman of Cinerebased Muslim Solidarity Forum (FSUM), said he was disappointed with the verdict after learning that the court did not consider the community refusal to the construction of the church to be signifi cant.

“The judges only see this case as an administrative matter. They were supposed to also consider how the church construction has triggered serious confl ict in our community,” he told The Jakarta Post.

In September last year, dozens of FSUM members raided the church’s construction site in the Bukit Cinere Indah residential complex (BCI), erecting provocative banners and posters and forcing the workers to stay away.

The organization has long claimed that the church’s construction committee used “fake” residents signatures to obtain their building permit. The group, however, could not prove that the signatures were fake.

Regulations stipulate that one can build a worship place after securing 60 approving signatures from non-Christians.

Budi, a retired army general, said he and several other FSUM leaders would soon meet Depok Mayor Nurmahmudi Ismail to discuss a plan to face the upcoming legal battle over the revocation case.

“We will advise the mayor to hire top lawyers for the next appeal.”

The HKBP church construction committee received their building permit from the administration in 1998, but left the land untouched for almost 10 years as former Depok mayor Badrul Kamal suggested the committee stop the church’s construction in May 1999, following a series of protests.

In September 2008, the committee decided to continue building the church, but stopped after FSUM members attacked its workers and sealed the construction site. After the attack, the committee sent three letters to Nurmahmudi, a former president of the Muslimbased Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), asking the mayor to facilitate a dialogue. Instead they received a permit cancellation on March 27.

The HKBP, represented by lawyer Junimart Girsang, fi led a lawsuit on May 6 to get the revocation cancelled, saying it had fulfi lled all required stipulations, including a recommendation from the government-sponsored Interfaith Communication Forum (FKUB).

After running eight hearings since June, the Bandung State Administrative Court (PTUN) overturned on Thursday the Depok mayor’s decision to revoke the HKBP church building permit, saying he had no legal right to cancel the permit as long as the church did not misuse it.

Depok municipality spokesman Eko Herwiyanto confi rmed that the administration would appeal the verdict at the higher court.

Junimart said his clients were prepared for another legal battle.

“Public pressure is a normal thing, but when the court has handed over its fi nal verdict, everyone is supposed to be able to accept that.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Indonesia’s Terror Burial Anger Boils Over

Solo. The suspected terrorists killed here last week continued to cause trouble on Thursday, with anger between groups of armed protesters over one of their burials nearly sparking a street battle.

Bagus Budi Pranoto, a.k.a Urwah; Ario Sudarso, a.k.a Aji; and Susilo, a.k.a Adib, were shot dead along with Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorist, Malaysian Noordin M Top, during a raid on Susilo’s rented house in Kepuhsari near Solo, on Sept. 17.

Urwah’s family wants to bury him in their home village in Kudus, Central Java, but has this week faced strong opposition from locals there, while Aji’s family has also generated anger over their plan to bury him in his home village of Purbalingga, also in Central Java.

Susilo’s family and neighbors have prepared for him to be buried at Solo’s Pracimoloyo public cemetery.

Thursday’s stand-off came as a result of friction over posters criticizing Susilo’s burial. A group calling itself the Alliance of Solo Youth Organizations on Wednesday night put up scores of banners expressing their objections. Later that night they were pulled down by members of the Solo chapters of two radical Islamic groups — the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and the Jamaah Anshorut Tauhid, chaired by hard-line Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir.

Alliance supporters put up new posters on Thursday morning, and when the FPI and JAT members tried to pull them down again around noon, the rival groups swelled to about 800 people, mainly from the FPI and JAT.

The stand-off occurred on Solo’s busy main thoroughfare, Jalan Slamet Riyadi, although armed officers from the police’s elite Mobile Brigade (Brimob) unit dispersed the crowd before they clashed.

Police arrested six FPI and four JAT members for possessing weapons including rocks, sticks, knives and chains, Solo Police Chief Sr. Comr. Joko Irwanto said.

“If there is enough evidence to support the case, they will be charged with violating Article 170 of the Criminal Law on violence against people and property.”

He said the alliance had a police permit to conduct a rally and put up the banners, so removing them was criminal. “Especially because they were caught red-handed with weapons that might cause injury to others,” he said.

Alliance coordinator Kusumo Putro, said the posters, with slogans such as: “Solo United Against Terrorists,” reflected the community’s sentiments. “We don’t want the people of Solo, who are actually friendly and against terrorism, to become victims of terrorist propaganda,” he said.

Khoirul Rus Suparjo, FPI chairman in Solo, said he regretted the arrests of the group’s members, especially because it allegedly involved police violence. “Even if they had to make the arrests, there was no need to beat them.”

Sholeh Ibrahim, a JAT leader from Bashir’s Al Mukmin Islamic boarding school in nearby Ngruki, agreed, saying it had been a “peaceful rally.”

Central Java Police Chief Insp. Gen. Alex Bambang Riatmodjo said he could sympathize with the anger felt by residents. “Poor Solo. Its people are actually kind and friendly, but because of the terrorists, with the ring leader even killed here, the city’s image had been more or less besmirched,” he said.

Meanwhile, in the suburb of Kagokan, where Susilo’s parents live, residents said they had prepared a grave at a local cemetery two kilometers away.

“Even though [Susilo] turned out not to be a good citizen outside of his village, he remains remembered as a good citizen here,” said Katino, a neighborhood head.

Meanwhile, Endro Sudarsono, a lawyer representing the families of Urwah, Aji and Susilo, said representatives would collect the bodies from Jakarta on Friday.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



LTTE: The Jihadi Connection

In an article for the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism in March 2008, Shanaka Jayasekara analyzed the LTTE links with Islamic militant groups in South Asia and beyond. Jayasekara stated that as the LTTE benefited from its worldwide “influence within the informal arms market [it has such] attracted collaborative arrangements with other terrorist groups.” The Taliban and some Al Qaeda affiliates would have enjoyed limited but real contacts with Velupillai Prabhakaran’s organization. Although there hasn’t been any new development regarding the LTTE’s arms supply network, it is fortunate that Dawn chose to publish an article about these connections in September, as terrorism experts call attention to the fact that the LTTE’s network still are to be dismantled.

Experts have been pointing out the fact that the LTTE pioneered the most effective armament supply system ever for a non-state actor. The Tamil organization had contacts in almost every country bordering the Bay of Bengal and the South China Sea. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the LTTE began to diversify its sources of supply — the Air Tigers component flew with Czech-manufactured ZLIN-143. It is then not surprising that Prabhakaran’s worldwide network was an object of interest for other terrorist groups, especially with regard to its nature and ideology.

Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the highest-ranking Tiger alive and head of the arms procurement wing of the LTTE — currently held by the Sri Lankan government at an undisclosed location — is said to have established contacts with the Taliban as early as May 2001. According to Jayasekara, Pathmanathan would have bought weapons from the Taliban “Sharjah network,” named after the third largest emirate of the UAE, where Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout operated three to four flights a day to Kandahar. The affiliation between a secular-nationalist group fighting for a homeland in a Singhalese-ruled country and the hard-line Islamic movement of the Taliban is nothing if not unusual, but when it comes to business, ideology does not matter. Hence the LTTE was operating a company flying a flag of convenience — Otharad Cargo — only 17kilometers from Sharjah, in the larger emirate of Dubai.

The implication of the LTTE’s entry into the “Afpak” region was debated during a recent meeting between Pakistani Prime Minister Gilani and Sri Lankan President Rajapakse, with the latter one indicating that he believed Sri Lankan elements could have favoured terrorism in Pakistan, most especially the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team on 3 March 2009. The assumption could be true, for Jayasekara argues that the LTTE installed a front company in Karachi that procured weapons to other Pakistani groups, and managed to maintain a safe house in Peshawar. In 2007, the Sri Lankan navy destroyed a shipment of weapons from this company before it could reach the island. A lot of this information was made available thanks to the arrest of the LTTE’s procurement agent Prathapan Thavarajah by a joint Indonesian-US operation in early 2009, whose laptop seemed to have delivered many secrets about the organization’s implants in the region. But the fact the LTTE had settled in Pakistan’s safe haven was known prior to this date. In 2002, the Harakat al-Mujahideen received logistic assistance from the LTTE’s fleet in its effort to trade weapons with the Philippine based Abu Sayyaf Group. The jihadi connection was not an ideological one but the lucrative opportunity for both the Tamil group and the various Islamic factions to trade overcame the fact that none of the partners shared the same motive, or the same belief.

The LTTE ultimately faced jihadi presence all over Asia, up to the East African shores where the group operated transport companies. Trading with groups affiliated to Al Qaeda thus became a commercial necessity for the Tigers, though they never engaged in direct talks with Bin Laden’s network. Truth is the LTTE did not wait for the gravity centre of jihadi groups to move towards the Horn of Africa to exapnd contacts. Jayasekara affirms that the Tigers operated from ports in Eritrea, a major hub in worldwide arms smuggling. Prabhakaran would have even communicated by fax with President Afewerki on this matter. In fact, in its mid-December 2006 report, the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee considered the Eritrean government to have directly supplied the LTTE.

In August 2009, a Sri Lanka journal reported the army found 12 fighter planes in an Eritrean Airport. Though the news cannot be confirmed, it would indicate thatt the Eritrean government feels the tide is changing, and that it would be better to postpone if not forget about any further support for the weakened LTTE. The same journal reported that government officials are trying to establish an embassy in Eritrea in order to prevent any new appearance of a Tiger network in this part of Africa. Even so, the LTTE’s networks are far from dismantled, and though Pathmanathan’s capture is clearly an accomplishment for the government, Sri Lanka can hardly manage to do the job by itself. How much President Rajapakse is willing to listen to his regional partners is another story.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Malaysia: Close Watch on Polygamy Club

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia: The Home Ministry is keeping a close eye on the Ikhwan Polygamy Club, which is alleged to be a front for the banned Al-Arqam movement.

The ministry’s secretary-general, Datuk Seri Mahmood Adam, said the security division was gathering information and intelligence on the club, and was waiting for the right time to act.

“We are aware of the activities of this club and of Al-Arqam, and we know what they are up to,” he said yesterday.

The polygamy club hit the headlines when the New Sunday Times reported that it had 900 members, all for polygamous marriages.

The spokesman for the club is Hatijah Aam, the second wife of Ashaari Muhammad, founder of the now-defunct Al-Arqam movement.

The National Fatwa Council had declared the Al-Arqam movement illegal in August 1994 after it was found that the group’s teaching and beliefs were against Islam.

Islamic Development Department (Jakim) director-general Datuk Wan Mohamad Sheikh Abdul Aziz later hit out at the club, calling it Al-Arqam’s attempt to resurrect the cult and make it palatable to society.

Mahmood’s deputy in charge of security, Datuk Ahmad Fuad Ab Aziz, also said that Home Ministry officials would be meeting Jakim next week over the matter.

“When it comes to Islamic deviant sects like this, we work together with Jakim.”

He said it was likely that Al-Arqam was using the club as a “softer approach” in attracting members with its public stand on polygamy.

It was reported that the club was established because Ashaari wanted to show the world that he was living proof that polygamous marriages could be successful.

The club is a part of the Global Ikhwan Sdn Bhd group, with interests in bakeries, sundry shops and restaurants.

There were claims that Ashaari had also tried to revive Al-Arqam through Rufaqa Corporation Sdn Bhd, of which he is the executive chairman. -NST

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Obama Announces Pakistan Aid

NEW YORK, Sept. 25 (UPI) — U.S. President Barack Obama announced U.S. Senate passage of a bill tripling non-military aid to Pakistan at a meeting in New York Thursday.

The Kerry-Lugar bill to provide $1.5 billion a year to Pakistan for the next five years passed Thursday in time for Obama to announce it at a New York summit meeting of the Friends of Democratic Pakistan.

“How nice that the U.S. president could announce it personally,” Richard Holbrooke, U.S. Special Envoy for Afghanistan-Pakistan, told a briefing, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari also stressed the significance of Obama’s gesture, saying it reflected the confidence of the international community in Pakistan’s democracy, Dawn said.

Zardari said Pakistan has made progress in the past year under democratic government.

“We have a message for the extremists: There’s no place for them in the civilized world,” he said.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who addressed a joint news conference with Zardari after the meeting, was quoted as saying “leaders from more than 20 countries” expressed confidence in the new government in Pakistan. He also announced a separate aid of 50 million pounds for the areas bordering Afghanistan, Dawn said.

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Taliban Blamed for Deaths of Seven Tribal Leaders

Peshawar, 24 Sept. (AKI/DAWN) — Suspected Taliban insurgents on Thursday shot dead seven pro-government tribal leaders in a northwest Pakistan town troubled by militant violence, police said. The victims were ambushed by the militants in the town of Janikhel town in the Bannu district.

They included tribal chief Malik Sultan, who was active in raising a government-sponsored militia against militants in the area, local police chief Iqbal Marwat said.

“Taliban militants attacked the tribal elders who were on their way to a nearby village to mediate a dispute between local people,” Marwat said.

“All seven, who were on foot, were killed on the spot while the militants fled,” he added.

Janikhel is close to the rugged tribal region of North Waziristan where Al-Qaeda and Taliban have been active since the 2001 US-led invasion ousted the Taliban regime in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Residents said Sultan had helped to raise the lashkar, or tribal army, after Taliban militants abducted scores of students and teachers in June on their way home from an army-run college for summer vacation.

The students were freed to tribal elders. The abduction was claimed by Pakistani Taliban, whose then leader Baitullah Mehsud was killed in a US drone attack in August.

Saddled with a traditional standing army that lacks adequate equipment and counter insurgency specialists, one of Pakistan’s answers to counter militants has been to arm and support tribesmen to protect local communities.

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



Pakistan Discovers ‘Village’ Of White German Al-Qaeda Insurgents

Investigators have discovered a “Jihadi village” of white German al-Qaeda insurgents, including Muslim converts, in Pakistan’s tribal areas close to the Afghan border.

The village, in Taliban-controlled Waziristan, is run by the notorious al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which plots raids on Nato forces in Afghanistan.

A recruitment video presents life in the village as a desirable lifestyle choice with schools, hospitals, pharmacies and day care centres, all at a safe distance from the front.

In the video, the presenter, “Abu Adam”, the public face of the group in Germany, points his finger and asks: “Doesn’t it appeal to you? We warmly invite you to join us!”

According to German foreign ministry officials a growing number of German families, many of North African descent, have taken up the offer and travelled to Waziristan where supporters say converts make up some of the insurgents’ most dedicated fighters.

The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which has a foothold in several German cities, has capitalised on growing concern over the rising profile of German forces in Afghanistan. Their role has become increasingly controversial in Germany in recent weeks after dozens of civilians were killed in an air strike ordered by German officers.

Last night a foreign ministry spokesman told The Daily Telegraph they were now negotiating with Pakistani authorities for the release of six Germans, including “Adrian M”, a white Muslim convert, his Eritrean wife and their four year old daughter, who were arrested as they were making their way to the “German village”. They are particularly concerned about the welfare of the child.

They are being held in custody in Peshawar after their arrest in May shortly when they crossed the border from Iran. They are understood to have left Germany in March this year.

The spokesman said negotiations were “under way” with Pakistani authorities “concerning a group of German citizens” and that it had been aware that the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan had been recruiting in Germany “since the beginning of the year”.

Their recruitment drive has been led by “Abu Adam”, a 24-year-old German believed to be of Turkish or North African descent who was raised with his, and fellow Jihadi, Abu Ibrahim, in the smart Bonn suburb of Kessenich.

Adam, whose real name is Mounir Chouka, received weapons training from the German army as part of his national service, and later spent three years training at the Federal Office of Statistics where colleagues described him as a “nice boy”.

He left in 2007, telling colleagues he was joining a trading firm in Saudi Arabia, but is believed to have joined a terrorist training camp in Yemen.

In another recruitment video released earlier this year he urged supporters to: “Die the death of honour.”

Khalid Khawaja, a former Pakistan intelligence officer, who describes himself as a friend of Osama bin Laden, said he was aware of a German contingent and that there were a number of Swedish converts too who had arrived in Pakistan “for Jihad”.

“The Europeans are there [in Waziristan]. The most dedicated people there are from Europe. They will do anything for Islam. They are not there because their father’s are Muslim, but by choice,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Moon Madness

Once more we have seen discord over the question of when Eid should have been celebrated. Indeed the issue has flared up into a full-fledged political row, with the federal railways minister demanding the removal of the chairman of the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee. The dispute involves the question of when the new moon was sighted. Many in the NWFP celebrated Eid a day ahead of the rest of the country. To add to the confusion a small group in Lahore also followed the Saudi calendar and marked Eid on that day. There were bitter fights, some ending in blows, as clerics who argued that the Ruet-e-Hilal decision must be followed attempted to prevent ANP workers and others from offering Eid prayers. This is all rather unseemly. It detracts from the harmony and sense of peace that should mark one of the most important occasions on the Islamic calendar. The federal government has so far refused to get involved and has not backed the remarks by the railways minister, Ghulam Haider Bilour, a senior member of the ANP, that the Ruet-e-Hilal chairman is a remnant of the Musharraf era. The chairman, Mufti Munibur Rehman, has struck back, asking what authority the secular ANP has in matters of religion.

It is quite absurd that a matter as simple as spotting the crescent can assume such ugly proportions. There are predictions that the fallout could hit PPP-ANP relations. Opponents of the alliance already seem to be rubbing their hands in glee. Beyond the political, many ordinary people too have been distressed by the chaos and the failure to celebrate a united Eid. In practical terms the divide creates issues for families who live in different towns and must decide which order to follow. The time has come to find rationality. Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries seem able to use science to predict the date of the new moon and announce Eid well in advance. Much angst is avoided as a result of this simple, and sensible, measure. The example set by the Saudis in using the modern ability to predict the cycle of the moon can be emulated and an end put to the chaos over Eid that we witness each year.

[Comment from Tuan Jim: Ah yes, because the cycles of the moon are such fickle, unpredictable things after who-knows-how-many years of astronomy…]

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Sri Lanka: PTGTE New LTTE Front

The US based Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) leader has announced that the LTTE proposed Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (PTGTE) will function as an organization of the Tamil Diaspora. In the United States, UK and Canada where there are large communities of Sri Lankan Tamils and where the LTTE is banned as a terrorist organization, the so-called PTGTE will function as a front of the old LTTE carrying on activities aimed at separatism in Sri Lanka.

The LTTE leader based in New York, USA, Vishuanadan Rudrakumaran has made this announcement in www.puthinam.com.

Under the US terrorist law, together with the LTTE, some front organizations of the outfit are mentioned as banned organizations. The PTGTE is a new front introduced after the killing of Prabhakaran, by Selvarasa Padmanathan alias KP before he was caught. He is in custody in Sri Lanka.

There was no unanimity regarding the acceptance of the leadership of KP and another leader called Nadevan (the tall one) in Norway was challenging him.

But the vast amount of LTTE wealth was in the KP’s hands. At the time the PTGTE was proposed there was no assurance that the LTTE remnant would give up violence completely and accept democracy.

Though democracy was claimed, there had never been a framework or a constitution for any LTTE democracy to function. Prabhakaran’s word was law and the so-called LTTE courts worked at Prabhakaran’s behest.

The PTGTE is a ploy by the LTTE to carry on its usual activities of extortion among the Tamil Diaspora and move forward with all its illegal businesses and use the money for the bifurcation of Sri Lanka, LTTE watchers said. The PTGTE will continue to lobby with governments for the establishment of separate state in the North and East, the website said.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Swedish Woman Freed in Pakistan Terror Probe

Safia Benaouda, the 19-year-old Swedish woman arrested in Pakistan earlier in September in the company of former Guantanamo inmate Mehdi Ghezali, is reported to have been released, according to local media.

Benaouda, who is the daughter of Helena Benaouda, the head of the Muslim Council of Sweden, was released with her two and half year old son on Friday morning from the Islamabad prison in which they have been held for the past four weeks, according to local media sources.

“They have confirmed that a woman and a small child have been handed over to the Swedish embassy today and there are no suspicions held against them,” the Pakistani journalist Naveed Siddiqui, working for GEO News, said after talking to the Pakistani interior ministry.

The Swedish foreign ministry was unable to confirm the release on Friday morning.

“We have not received any information about this from the Swedish embassy,” Karin Nylund at the ministry told news agency TT.

Neither sources elsewhere within the ministry nor even the Benaouda’s mother were able to confirm the reports, which by 1pm on Friday had received wide coverage in the Swedish media.

“I have received so many contradictory reports and am now waiting for confirmation from the foreign ministry,” Helena Benaouda told TT.

Naveed Siddiqui however was able to add that the authorities have confirmed that a further eleven prisoners are set to be released, implying that Swedish national Mehdi Ghezali and Benaouda’s 28-year-old partner Munir Awad, could be among them.

He also claimed that the Pakistani authorities had detained a further Swede in connection to the terror probe, a 28-year-old man, but this has neither been confirmed by Swedish authorities.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]

Far East


9 N.Korean Refugees Flee Into Danish Embassy in Hanoi

Nine North Korean refugees sought shelter at the Danish Embassy in Vietnam on Thursday morning. They had arrived in Vietnam on early morning of Sept. 14 via China. They are reportedly asking the embassy to send them to Seoul.

Originally, 14 fled from North Korea and arrived at the China-Vietnam border together, but Chinese police arrested five of them near the border on Sept. 18.

A local source said the five are in danger of being sent back to the North. Among them are a six-year-old boy and his mother.

The Danish Embassy is reportedly reluctant to shelter the nine North Koreans or send them to South Korea due to diplomatic considerations. The refugees include a married couple, a mother and her daughter, two women in their 40s and 20s, a teenage girl, and a 20-something man.

The refugees reportedly knocked at the doors of the Australian, Swedish and Philippine embassies in Hanoi. When there was no answer, they went into the Danish Embassy, where security was relatively loose.

The source said Vietnamese police officers guarding the embassy did not deter them as they took them for tourists.

“With an increasing number of North Korean defectors arriving in South Korea via China and Southeast Asian nations recently, the countries that maintain ties with the North as well as China are stepping up crackdowns,” a knowledgeable source said. “It seems that the North Korean defectors entered the embassy because they had failed to find another appropriate escape route.”

A South Korean government official said, “We’re trying to find out what happened. We’ll try to guarantee their safety.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



China Selling Petrol to Iran, Report Says

SINGAPORE — China is potentially undermining US-led efforts aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions by supplying the Middle Eastern state with petrol, a report said Wednesday.

Citing unnamed traders and bankers, the Financial Times said state-owned Chinese oil companies were selling the petrol through intermediaries and now accounted for a third of Tehran’s gasoline imports.

It added that the sales are legal because the current sanctions do not cover fuel imports.

Analysts said although Iran is a major crude producer and exporter, it imports refined products such as gasoline because it lacks the refining capacity.

Between 30,000 and 40,000 barrels of gasoline per day of Chinese petrol makes its way from Asian spot markets to Iran through third parties, the report said, quoting Lawrence Eagles, head of commodities research at JP Morgan.

This accounts about 33 percent of Iran’s import of 120,000 barrels per day, the report said.

The exports will deal a blow to Washington’s moves to impose sanctions on Iran for continuing with a nuclear programme that Tehran says is for peaceful purposes, while the US and it allies fear it is trying to build an atomic bomb.

The White House wants to cut out Iran’s petrol imports, which it sees as the nation’s economic Achilles heel.

The news also comes as the United Nations meets for its General Assembly where it will discuss Iran’s nuclear programme.

Analysts contacted by AFP said China is a “logical” source for petrol imports for Iran because of their close ties and that the figures appear to be within range.

“I’m sure it’s true,” said Victor Shum, senior principal at Purvin and Gertz energy consultancy in Singapore.

“It is logical in the sense that Iran has a need and China has surplus supply and Chinese gasoline exports are actually quite high.”

Shum said China this year added new refining capacity and in August exported 140,000 barrels of gasoline per day, the highest level this year, although the data did not give a breakdown of the destination countries.

He said one third of Iran’s imports is “well within the capacity of China to supply” given the high volume of its gasoline shipments.

Clarence Chu, a trader with Hudson Capital Energy in Singapore, said he was not surprised with the Financial Times report, which said that the exports began this month.

“China has very good relations with Iran,” he said, noting that China is helping Iran develop its oilfields.

In January, Iran and China signed a 1.76 billion dollar contract for the initial development of the North Azadegan oil field in western Iran.

The agreement between China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and the National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) foresees production from the field reaching 75,000 barrels a day in four years’ time.

In March, Iran’s state-owned gas company, Iran LNG, and a Chinese consortium signed a 3.39 billion dollar deal to produce liquefied natural gas in the Islamic republic’s South Pars field.

“Iran does not have a lot of refineries. They produce crude but they have to import gasoline. Their refinery is not good,” Chu said.

Shum said China most likely sells the petrol to Iran through trading subsidiaries of state-owned Chinese firms.

“Some international trading houses also supply the product to Iran, so it’s not like just one source,” he said.

CNPC had no comment to make on the report.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



N. Korea’s Concentration Camps Are a Burning Issue

Twenty years since the cold war ended with the demise of the Soviet Union and changes in China, the international community has begun to understand North Korea but is still far from seeing it whole. The Lee Myung-bak administration intends to offer the North sizable aid once the North is denuclearized. The international community, led by the United States, also equates the North Korea problem with the nuclear issue.

But the nuclear issue is merely one of many problems with the North, and the fundamental problems will remain unsolved even if it dismantles its nuclear program and weapons under international pressure. Almost all socialist countries have collapsed or been transformed except Cuba and North Korea. And it is not because of its nuclear weapons and missiles that the North survives without reform and opening stuck between South Korea, China and Japan.

The strongest prop of the North Korean regime is concentration camps. These are less like Stalin’s Siberian gulags or Mao Zedong’s Laogai concentration camps than Hitler’s Auschwitz. After World War II, humanity promised never again to permit such camps on earth, and the world community intervenes in crimes against humanity across borders. The collective insanity of the Hitler regime was intricately linked with the concentration camps, which crushed all dissent.

By running the concentration camps, the North Korean regime has been able to maintain power even after starving 3 million people to death in peacetime. These camps house some 200,000 to 300,000 political prisoners and their families, who are systematically slaughtered. Even party officials are afraid of being sent there. Hwang Jang-yop, a former secretary of the Workers’ Party who defected to the South, said, “Even senior party members can’t talk freely at homes for fear of being wiretapped, so they always have important conversations outside.”

The silence of the international community on the barbaric massacres in the concentration camps committed by Kim Jong-il borders on the criminal. Some 17,000 North Korean defectors in the South are complaining about the atrocity, but no country pays any attention. Even the South Korean government and people do not realize how serious the problem is.

As a surgeon may kill a patient with a wrong diagnosis, so more and more North Korean citizens may lose their lives if the international community makes a wrong diagnosis of the North Korea issue.

Had the U.S. diverted a tenth of the effort it invested in freeing the two journalists imprisoned in the North on the concentration camp problem, the groundwork for resolving the North Korea issue would already have be done. Had the Seoul government demanded the elimination of the concentration camps in return for the massive economic aid it provided to the North a decade ago, the North would have long started on the path to reform and opening.

The closure of the concentration camps would end the reign of terror, and the public would be able to criticize the regime. This would lead to weakening the totalitarian system and forming a new leadership, resulting in reform and opening.

Once the North achieves a collective leadership similar to China’s under Deng Xiaoping, its people would be able to think rationally and build a society where the priority shifts from leader Kim Jong-il’s personal interests to the public interest. Once the dictatorship ends, the North would, like Ukraine, denuclearize even without international pressure.

We need a paradigm shift for the resolution of the North Korean issue. Six-country human rights talks must be held, and the Lee administration must shift its priority and tell the North that it will help only if it shuts down all the concentration camps before denuclearizing.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



S. Korea: On Deterring a Nuclear Attack

[Comment from Tuan Jim: If Obama and Clinton think that S. Korea, Japan and our other Asian “allies” are going to sit on their a** while the State Dept and KJI keep “dialog” going, they’re going to get a rude awakening.]

The weaknesses in the American umbrella are too risky and perilous and the North Koreans are too belligerent.

In a recent confirmation hearing, Defense Minister nominee Kim Tae-young told lawmakers that if North Korea indicates the possibility of using nuclear weapons against the South, the South could decide to make a pre-emptive attack to destroy the North’s nuclear arms after a discussion with the United States. He has suggested that the U.S. guarantee of a protective nuclear umbrella over South Korea includes military attacks on North Korean nuclear facilities. But can we be assured that the American umbrella will work that easily and extensively?

As deterrence against nuclear weapons remains a theory, how it would work in practice is unknown. The idea is that any use of nuclear weapons would lead to a nuclear response and, therefore, annihilation. The theory has helped maintain equilibrium and peace on the global stage. The strategy dubbed “mutually assured destruction,” or MAD, has been in effect since the Cold War to keep full-scale confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union in check.

In theory, the strategy appears effective, but is nevertheless not without drawbacks.

If one country attacks another with nuclear weapons without warning and immediately declares an armistice, how should the assaulted party react?

The state leader would be at a crossroads. He could retaliate, which would translate into the total destruction of all. Or he could opt for reconciliation to protect the lives of the surviving countrymen as well as the rest of the world.

A rational leader would choose the latter because he cannot jeopardize the entire global community over damage already done. That would be as senseless as going on pouring good money after bad into a poor investment.

Some American strategists worried that such a quandary could invite a nuclear provocation. So they came up with the idea of an automated retaliatory system, leaving the decision of nuclear weaponry use to computers and not humans. The so-called doomsday machine, which has never actually been created, highlighted the perils of the MAD doctrine.

U.S. President Ronald Reagan launched the strategic defensive missile system to replace the suicidal MAD policy. At that time, such deterrent missile technology sounded fictional and Reagan’s vision was derided as far-fetched as the sci-fi film “Star Wars.”

But as technology advanced, the strategy became a reality and a part of the nuclear deterrence system.

If North Korea strikes us with nuclear arms, would the umbrella over our heads really work as planned?

It is a question none can answer as the umbrella has never been tested.

But whether the American president would actually order the firing of ballistic missiles with nuclear warheads against North Korea remains unknown. The U.S. chief executive may hesitate to chance nuclear apocalypse over a relatively small North Korean nuclear provocation if it doesn’t pose immediate danger to Americans. Washington may close the affair with sanctions or similar action if the North gives an explanation and apologizes for its attack.

There is no guarantee that North Koreans won’t exploit this weakness in the American nuclear umbrella. They have gotten away with atrocious terrorist attacks before. Even if they don’t actually launch a strike, they could use the threat to achieve other ends.

Whatever the case, we cannot tolerate North Korea as a nuclear power.

Unfortunately, many are beginning to accept North Korea’s position as a nuclear power.

When one possesses something for a long time, its ownership becomes acceptable and seemingly justified.

The United States and a few others were grandfathered into rights to nuclear arms because they already possessed them before the non-proliferation pact. So the duration of possession does make a difference.

Hence, there are some suggestions coming from China to permit North Korea to hold onto existing nuclear arms if it promises to stop making more. Washington may buy that as it is becoming worn out by a long tug of war with the North.

If North Korea becomes a nuclear weapons state, we too have to develop a doomsday machine, or nuclear weapons.

We must speak up. The weakness in the American umbrella is too risky and perilous and the North Koreans are too belligerent.

We must pronounce that if North Korea is recognized as a nuclear power, we cannot do anything but develop weapons ourselves.

That is the only deterrence against North Korea becoming a nuclear arms state.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Why Are Seoul and Washington Out of Sync?

[Comment from Tuan Jim: Is there anyone actually working at the state dept?]

The unthinkable happened between South Korean and U.S. diplomats after President Lee Myung-bak proposed offering North Korea a “grand bargain” of security guarantees and economic aid in exchange for scrapping its nuclear weapons program. Lee made the suggestion during a speech on Monday at the Korea Society in New York.

When asked by reporters about Lee’s proposal, Assistant U.S. Secretary of State for East Asian Affairs Kurt Campbell said, “Actually, I — to be perfectly honest, I was not aware of that.” Campbell added, “Nothing of the sort came up in our session with the South Korean counterparts” before Lee’s speech. U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said, “I think it’s really not for me to comment on the particulars, because it’s — this is his policy. These were his remarks.” The New York Times reported that the U.S. government feels Lee’s proposal had “surprised” American officials and that Washington felt it was “far-fetched.”

But it was the U.S. government itself that first proposed a “comprehensive package” of political and military guarantees and economic assistance. Feeling that it is impossible to resolve the nuclear impasse by offering piecemeal rewards to the North at each stage of denuclearization, the U.S. had brought up a comprehensive approach envisioning various forms of support to North Korea if it scraps its nuclear weapons program. The “grand bargain” proposed by Lee is essentially the same.

That was precisely the plan Campbell, who said he never heard of it, had brought with him during his visit to South Korea in July. “There was a consensus on the fact that the North Korean nuclear negotiations should be approached comprehensively, rather than in different stages,” a South Korean official said. “But it is possible that U.S. officials had heard the term ‘grand bargain’ for the first time.”

If that is the case, it means that the U.S. government ended up publicly refuting a speech by the South Korean president simply because of a difference in wording. This is rare in diplomacy. Some are saying that the U.S. government may have been displeased because it got the impression that sanctions against the communist country may have been overshadowed by Lee’s proposal, especially at a time when Washington is pursuing a dual-track approach, simultaneously involving dialogue and sanctions. But the U.S. knows that the consistent stance of the South Korean government is to continue sanctions against the communist country.

“In fact, the point that we tried to make was how careful that we need to be at this juncture to be consolidated in our approach,” Campbell said. Yet when it comes to Lee’s proposal, the exact opposite has happened between South Korea and the U.S. The future of talks with North Korea remains doubtful now that this has happened, especially at a time when fresh nuclear dismantlement talks have yet to begin.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Australia How-to Jihadist Jailed

A man who produced a do-it-yourself jihad book has been sentenced to 12 years in prison in Australia.

Bela Khazaal was found guilty last September of producing a 110-page book, in Arabic, entitled Provisions Of The Rules of Jihad.

This advised about terrorist acts such as exploding bombs, shooting down planes and assassinating people such as former US President George W Bush.

Khazaal had claimed his book was never intended to incite terrorist acts.

At his sentencing in Sydney, Justice Megan Latham said she found it “unsurprising” a jury had rejected his defence.

“It beggars belief that a person of average intelligence who has devoted themselves to the study of Islam over some years would fail to recognise the nature of the material,” she said.

“The dissemination of extremist activity, connected or unconnected with a terrorist plot, is caught by the government’s (anti-terror) scheme … (because such material) is capable and is shown to foment terrorist activity.”

Khazaal, a former Lebanon-born Qantas Airways baggage-handler, compiled the book from a range of Internet sources, his lawyer George Thomas told the court at an earlier sentencing hearing.

Its full title is Provisions Of The Rules of Jihad — Short Judicial Rulings And Organisational Instructions For Fighters And Mujahideen Against Infidels.

He is the first person to be convicted on the charge of making a document connected with assistance in a terrorist act, which carries a maximum jail term of 15 years.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported that US international terrorism consultant Evan Kohlmann, who was called as a witness at Khazaal’s trial, described the book as a “do-it-yourself jihad” manual, aimed at people who “don’t have Osama bin Laden’s telephone number”.

The Supreme Court heard that, in December 2003, a military court in Lebanon sentenced Khazaal to 10 years’ hard labour for terrorism-related offences, including forming a terrorist association for the purpose of committing crimes against people and property.

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

Immigration


Cyprus: People Traffickers Arrested in Sting

SIX PEOPLE have been arrested for smuggling illegally immigrants into Cyprus through the occupied areas, in what police believe to be a major bust in a human trafficking ring.

The people traffickers are mainly from Palestine and Iraq and all have refugee or asylum seeker status. One of the six is from Pakistan and married to a Cypriot.

The Police Headquarters are also looking for other suspects in connection with the trafficking ring. The network allegedly has partners in Syria, Turkey and the occupied areas.

The men were arrested for several offences, including conspiracy to commit a crime, smuggling migrants, assisting illegal entry into the territory of the Republic, blackmail, extortion, intimidation and threat of force.

The arrests were made following information from a retired Iraqi general from Saddam Hussein’s regime.

The man, who is now believed to be in protective custody, fled Iraq under threat of execution after the US invasion and the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime. It is alleged that two of his sons were murdered and his daughter was killed by a car bomb.

He escaped to Syria with his wife and three remaining children. He reportedly struggled in mainly Sunni Muslim Syria because of religious differences and was eventually approached by a Palestinian who offered to get him to Cyprus.

He arrived in Cyprus last December through Turkey and the occupied areas. However he stepped on a mine in the buffer zone and suffered serious injuries. According to the man, the smuggler accompanying him refused to help him but instead took his wallet and documents.

It was also alleged that, while in hospital, he was visited by the members of the trafficking ring who repeatedly threatened to kill him and his family if he spoke to the police. However, to protect himself and his family from further threat he contacted the police and assisted in securing Wednesday’s arrests.

The Police Headquarters and Immigration Officials confirmed only that six asylum applicants had been arrested for assisting illegal immigration and for various offences including threats and intimidation.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Immigration: Frontex Report Implicates Turks

Photographs taken from a Latvian helicopter participating in Frontex patrols over the Aegean and published yesterday in Kathimerini, show Turkish coast guard officials failing to obstruct a smuggling vessel from leaving the Turkish coast, an apparent vindication of Greek claims that Turkish authorities are not cooperating in the fight to curb illegal immigration.

The photos, submitted to the European Commission along with a written report by the helicopter pilots, also appear to show a Turkish coast guard vessel escorting a smuggling boat into Greek national waters off the tiny islet of Farmakonisi.

An extract from the report by the Latvian Frontex pilots reads as follows: “We have to mention… at 8.01 [a.m.] a suspicious target detected in Greek territorial waters moving to the east… At 8.02, the suspicious target has been recognized as a Turkish Coast Guard vessel.”

The photographs were submitted to the EC by the Latvian pilots on September 14, when their Frontex aircraft was harassed by Turkish radar several times. The pilots said they received a series of emergency signals via Turkish radar, warning that their aircraft had entered Turkish air space. The signals had been sent while the aircraft was flying over the Aegean islet of Farmakonisi, according to the Frontex pilots, who said they ignored these signals and continued their patrol duties.

Last week, the EC issued a statement — which was rather too balanced for the liking of Greek diplomats — noting that the Frontex helicopter had “never violated Turkish air space” but also added that the aircraft “had never received threats from Turkish authorities.”

In a related development, the French government is said to have submitted a proposal to the EU’s Council of Justice and Internal Affairs Ministers, calling for Turkey and Libya to cooperate with EU member states in the drive to curb illegal immigration. The proposal reportedly calls on the EU to provide the two countries with a “decisive reminder” of their obligations.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Iraqi Refugees Face a Hard Life in Asylum Countries

A report by the Minority Rights Group International shows that asylum countries are sending refugees back. The absence of a proper integration policy is leading to refugee dispersion, condemning refugees to cultural extinction.

London (AsiaNews/MRG) — Refugees from Iraq’s minorities face insecurity and risk losing their religious and cultural identity as they seek refuge in neighbouring countries and Western Europe, a minority rights group said on Thursday.

In report based on interviews conducted with refugees in 2008, the Minority Rights Group International (MRGI) notes that members of Iraqi minority groups that fled because of persecution find themselves in no-man’s land in Europe, often met by restrictive asylum policies, discrimination and in some cases forcible return.

According to the United Nations refugee agency, around 1.9 million people fled Iraq as a result of sectarian killings following the 2003 US-led invasion.

A disproportionate number of those fleeing Iraq—somewhere between 15-64 per cent, depending on the country of refuge—are minorities, including Christians, Circassians, Sabian Mandaeans, Shabaks, Turkmen and Yazidis.

The countries with the largest number of Iraqi refugees are Syria (1.1 million), Jordan (450,000), Lebanon (50,000), Sweden (32,120), Egypt (30,000) and the United States (4,700).

According to Carl Soderbergh, the MRGI’s director of policy, European nations like Sweden and Great Britain are turning down many asylum applications and have begun forcibly returning a number of rejected asylum seekers to Iraq, and this despite rising attacks in some areas against minorities.

Although Jordan and Syria have welcomed a large number of Iraqi refugees, many live in a state of limbo, as they are unable to secure residency or work permits. Both countries have since 2007 begun to tighten their visa policies, making it increasingly harder for Iraqis to live there legally.

The MRG report shows how difficult life is for Iraqi refugees when asylum countries do not have a real policy geared towards integration.

The problem is especially bad for certain minorities like the Mandaeans and the Shabak that are very small. Dispersing them within and between countries could lead to their cultural extinction.

The report also provides a number of moving personal stories.

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



Italy: Illegal Nigerians Deported From Rome

Rome, 25 Sept. (AKI) — Italy is certain to provoke fresh international debate after deporting 50 Nigerian illegal immigrants on a charter flight from Rome’s Fiumicino airport on Friday. Thirty-six of the illegal migrants were expelled by Italian authorities while 14 others had been served with expulsion orders from other countries, the Italian interior ministry said in a statement.

The Rome flight was bound for the Nigerian capital, Lagos.

Italy’s conservative government has drawn widespread international criticism from the United Nations, Catholic church and humanitarian groups for its hardline policies on illegal immigration.

Under a law enacted in July, people entering Italy without permission face fines of up to 10,000 euros and immediate expulsion.

The law also provides for citizen anti-crime patrols in towns and cities and triples the amount of time illegal immigrants can be detained in holding centres from two to six months.

Italian coastal patrol vessels have turned back thousands of would-be illegal immigrants in the Mediterranean without first screening them for asylum since May.

The Italian government has defended the policy of returning migrants, agreed under a controversial ‘friendship’ pact with Libya signed last year.

But the illegal immigration crackdown has already opened up a rift within the government and the tough measures have drawn sharp criticism from the UN and top rights groups, as well as Italy’s centre-left opposition and the Catholic Church.

The European Commission in August sought an investigation into the repatriation issue after 73 African migrants died aboard a dinghy which drifted in the Mediterranean for three weeks.

Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi won elections in April 2008 on an anti-crime platform, vowing to curb illegal immigration which, according to surveys, many Italian associate with a growing security problem in their towns and cities.

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



Minister of Migration Says Finland Could Face Pressures to Accept More Refugees

Minister of Migration and European Affairs Astrid Thors (Swedish People’s Party) has doubts that the European Union could create a common EU asylum system by 2012.

This could lead to increasing pressures to accept more refugees to Finland.

“Those countries behaving decently will be facing more pressure if there is no joint scheme”, Thors said on Monday in Brussels.

The European Commission is currently urging that the member-states should take more refugees from third countries.

This so-called resettlement programme aims at a common European asylum system. At present, participation in the programme is voluntary.

Finland does not intend to accept more refugees. Finland is already today one of those few countries who accept quota refugees.

In 2009, Finland’s quota is 750. Sweden, the current holder of the European Union’s rotating presidency, has the largest number of quota refugees, namely 2,000.

The number of asylum-seeker minors arriving in Sweden is also considerably larger than that coming to Finland.

In 2009, the number of minors applying for asylum in Sweden was 1,300 by the end of August, while the corresponding figure for Finland was 400.

Thors feels that it is wrong that Finland is often spoken about as the favourite destination of minor asylum-seekers.

“At present refugees are arriving in Finland at a slower pace than before”, said Thors on Monday, speaking at a meeting of immigration ministers in Brussels.

Those minors who come to Nordic countries from third countries typically seek for asylum, while those who go to Southern European countries often end up in black labour markets straight away.

It is difficult and expensive to establish the ages of minors and to track down their families. Moreover, if the parents can be found, often they are also accepted to Finland.

The rules are much stricter in many other EU countries. Minor asylum-seekers have been transferred to orphanages that have been founded in the countries of departure, from where the parents of these minors have taken them back home.

Tobias Billström, the Swedish Migration and Asylum Policy Minister, says that the European Union should have a joint programme which could be used to solve the problem of underage asylum-seekers.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Multicultural Forum to Cost Immigration

The institute for multicultural development, Forum, confirmed on Friday it is to carry out a cost benefit analysis of immigration in the Netherlands, news agency ANP reports.

The institute believes a thorough analysis is necessary to facilitate a proper discussion about immigration in general, ANP said. VU university professor Peter Nijkamp will be involved in the research.

At the beginning of the summer, the anti-immigration PVV caused an outcry when it asked ministers to calculate the cost of non-western immigration.

Integration minister Eberhard van der Laan said earlier this month detailed figures would not be made available as a matter of principle.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



‘We Are All Immigrants’: Swedish Researchers

Swedish researchers have concluded from DNA samples that Scandinavians are descended from immigrants that landed in the region 4,000 to 6,000 years ago.

The researchers have studied DNA samples from stone age graves. The samples come from 19 people who were hunters and gatherers and lived in Scandinavia until about 4,000 years ago.

The DNA has then been compared with common DNA sets collected from contemporary residents of the region.

“They differ very substantially. The gene pool that we have today could not have evolved by chance alone from that which existed then. Something else must have been added. Either a complete population replacement or gene flow,” said Anders Götherström, who led the study at Uppsala University.

Götherström explains that the gene pool must have been mixed.

“We have not quantified the results so we do not know that much, but my initial conclusion is that it is a mix. But there has to have been an immigration. The gene pool among the hunters and gatherers is not sufficient,” he said.

Götherström led the study which has involved researchers from Denmark and the UK.

According to the researchers the hunters and gatherers lived side by side with groups that began to till the soil. These farmers started to turn up in Scandinavia during the so-called new (Neolithic) stone age, from around 4,000-1,800 BC.

The study, which has been presented in the scientific journal Current Biology, also included analysis of DNA samples taken from three farmers buried at around the same time.

Among the hunters and gatherers there was no trace of the DNA sets common in the region today.

“But we found them in the farmer group,” Götherström revealed.

Götherström said that the researchers have concluded that there is only one direction from where the presumed wave of immigrants could have come.

“That is from the south. But from where and how far they have travelled, is difficult to say.”

The study will now continue and will include the collection and analysis of more samples collected from individuals belonging to the farmer group.

The purpose is to discern from where the immigrants may have come, Götherström said.

“Now want to know more exactly where they may have come from.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


10 Years Later: Media Bury Jesse Dirkhising

Press focuses on Shepard death, ignores homosexuals’ brutal murder of boy

As the 10th anniversary of 13-year-old Jesse Dirkhising’s tragic murder and rape by two homosexuals approaches, the young boy remains victim of a second burial — by the American media.

The press is still buzzing about the murder of Matthew Shepard — an adult homosexual brutally murdered in Wyoming by heterosexuals — and his mother’s newly released memoir, “The Meaning of Matthew: My Son’s Murder in Laramie, and a World Transformed” describing the gory details of her son’s murder in a descriptive narrative. Shepherd’s parents have been lobbying for a hate-crimes bill since the murder.

USA Today reported “The Laramie Project — 10 Years Later” will debut in more than 100 theaters in all 50 states and seven countries Oct. 12, the 11th anniversary of Shepard’s death, in an effort to raise awareness about “hate crimes.” NBC aired a drama, “The Matthew Shepard Story,” in June 2006.

But, even on the anniversary of his death, another boy’s horrific murder continues to be largely ignored — with no plays, books or TV dramas to honor his memory. No local memorials have been held since Dirkhising’s brutal death at the hands of two homosexual predators who confessed to using the boy as a sex toy while torturing him to death.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Remembering Jesse Dirkhising

[Comments: WARNING. Article contains graphic details of this horrific crime.]

In the news business, you’ve got to have a strong stomach.

It’s like being a cop.

You get to see the darkest side of a dark world. And what you see, hear and read is often unforgettable — and not in a good way.

The case of 13-year-old Jesse Dirkhising continues to haunt me since I first wrote about it 10 years ago — before anyone else in the national press.

The details of the crime in Prairie Grove, Ark., Sept. 26, 1999, were chilling enough before I read more than I cared to read in the affidavit filed the next day. This is not an easy story to write nor read about. Be warned.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sunstein: Fetuses ‘Use’ Women, Abortion Limits ‘Troublesome’

Obama regulatory chief offers radical new interpretation of Constitution

Restrictions on access to abortion would turn women’s bodies into vessels to be “used” by fetuses, according to President Obama’s newly confirmed regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein.

“A restriction on access to abortion turns women’s reproductive capacities into something to be used by fetuses. … Legal and social control of women’s sexual and reproductive capacities has been a principal historical source of sexual inequality,” Sunstein wrote in his 1993 book “The Partial Constitution.”

In the book, obtained and reviewed by WND, Sunstein sets forth a radical new interpretation of the Constitution. In one chapter, titled “Pornography, abortion, surrogacy,” Sunstein argued against restrictions on abortion and pornography.

[…]

In addition to Sunstein’s moral disregard for human embryos, WND reported the Obama czar several times has quoted approvingly from an author who likened animals to slaves and argued an adult dog or a horse is more rational than a human infant and should, therefore, be granted similar rights.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Amil Imani: Islam is Misunderstood

Everybody just relax. Islam is badly misunderstood. The negative stereotype of Islam is the usual evil-doings of Zionists in America and their foolish fellow travelers, fundamentalist Christians. Please don’t listen to what these hatemongers say about Islam and hear us out. So implies the nationally-launched campaign of Muslim organizations in the United States…

           — Hat tip: Amil Imani [Return to headlines]



Benign Shariah Finance

By Lorne Cutler, National Post

Islamic or shariah-compliant financing is becoming increasing popular, both in Muslim countries and Western countries with large Muslim populations. It was therefore quite a surprise to read Dr. Sebastian Gorka’s assertion (Shariah finance: A zero-sum game, Aug. 28) that the primary reason for Islamic financing is to funnel funds into political and military Jihad to destroy the West. This is based on Dr. Gorka’s view that Islam doesn’t actually prohibit interest, only usury, and as such Islamic banks have really been established to fund jihad with the prohibition of interest really being a ruse.

This is equivalent to saying that the real reason for conventional interest-based banking is to launder money for organized crime. Leading Western banks such Citibank, HSBC, Deutschebank and ABN-Amro have opened up Islamic subsidiaries. It is hard to believe that they would knowingly funnel money to terrorist groups.

At one time, Christianity and Judaism also considered interest as usury and prohibited it. This was at a time when lending was considered taking advantage of the poor. The poor would borrow money to pay off debts of servitude. Any interest added to the burden of the poor was considered usurious. Gradually, however, capital was required in the creation of real wealth. Charging interest was no longer taking advantage of the poor but a critical tool in creating wealth and raising standards of living. While Christianity and Judaism changed their views regarding interest, Muslim scholars did not.

Given the aversion in Canada to shariah family law, it is critical we understand the principles of shariah financing and why conventional banking is problematic for religious Muslims.

Islamic financing is based on three principles. First, interest is prohibited. Islam believes that you can’t make a profit on something that is not physical, and since money is only a concept, charging interest is not allowed whether at usurious rates or not. A bank can earn money, however, by becoming part of the underlying commercial transaction.

Islamic banks provide funds in one of three ways. If Party A wishes to buy goods from Party B,

but needs financing, the bank would buy the goods from Party B and either resell the goods to Party A or lease the goods to Party A. The bank charges a markup to cover its profit and risk. The third structure involves the bank going into partnership with Party A. The bank provides the funding and Party A provides its expertise. Similar to conventional equity financing, the bank is repaid from the profits generated by the venture.

The second key principle of Islamic banking deals with the types of goods that can’t be financed. Alcohol, pornography, gambling and agriculture/ food processing industries based on pork are prohibited.

Thirdly, an Islamic bank is not allowed to engage in speculative practices such as derivatives.

While Muslims are required to donate a certain amount to charity or zakat, this is no different than Jewish tzedakah (charity) to the poor or Christian tithing. Muslim companies and banks should also give to charity. We call this corporate social responsibility.

Each Islamic bank has a panel of three Islamic scholars who opine on whether something is shariah-compliant. These panels can only determine what constitutes shariah-compliant financing, not whether the structure complies with the laws of the country, and they have no authority to act against the country’s law.

There are international agreements prohibiting banks from money laundering and funding terrorist groups. If required, existing international agreements can be modified to ensure Islamic banks are governed by these agreements if they aren’t already. If certain banks don’t abide by these rules, Western banks will be prohibited from working with them. Canada’s criminal code also makes it an offense to support terrorist groups. If a religious scholar advising a particular Islamic bank also preaches jihad, regulations could be established to prevent our banks from dealing with that bank. Islamic banks would be subject to the same regulations and supervision as are conventional banks.

Interest is a merely a tool, not a fundamental Canadian or Western value. If certain groups have problems charging interest, there is nothing inherently wrong in setting up financial institutions that can provide funding in a way that does not abrogate religious principles. Our existing and future banking laws and regulations can protect us against the risk of a bank engaging in illegal activities.

Cutler is an Ottawa-based independent financial consultant.

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



Europe and the USA Face Spread of ‘Severe’ Disease, Doctor Warns

The United States and Europe face a new health threat from a mosquito-borne disease far more unpleasant than the West Nile virus that swept into North America a decade ago, a U.S. expert said on Friday. Chikungunya virus has spread beyond Africa since 2005, causing outbreaks and”Unlike West Nile virus, where nine out of 10 people are going to be totally asymptomatic, or may have a mild headache or a stiff neck, if you get Chikungunya you’re going to be sick,” he said. “The disease can be fatal. It’s a serious disease,” Diaz added. “There is no vaccine.” Chikungunya infection causes fever, headache, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, muscle pain, rash and joint pain. Symptoms can last a few weeks, though some suffers have reported incapacitating joint pain or arthritis lasting months. The disease was first discovered in Tanzania in 1952. Its name means “that which bends up” in the Makonde language spoken in northern Mozambique and southeastern Tanzania. scores of fatalities in India and the French island of Reunion. It also has been detected in Italy, where it has begun to spread locally, as well as France.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Michael Jackson: ‘Hitler Was a Genius’

Michael Jackson admired Adolf Hitler’s showmanship and described him as a “genius”, taped interviews with the deceased star disclose.

The singer, who died of heart failure in June aged 50, was also convinced that he could have cured the Nazi leader’s evil, had he been alive to speak to him.

He said that the dictator — responsible for the murder of 6 million Jews — needed “help” and “therapy”.

Jackson made the claims during interviews with Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, with whom he became close friends. The conversations were recorded with Jackson’s approval and have been published in a new book — The Michael Jackson Tapes — which goes on sale in the US and online on Friday.

During one interview, Jackson said: “Hitler was a genius orator. To make that many people turn and change and hate, he had to be a showman and he was.”

Boteach then asked the star: “You believe that if you had an hour with Hitler you could somehow touch something inside of him?”

Jackson replied: “Absolutely. I know I could.”

He went on to argue that nobody is totally evil, adding: “You have to help them, give them therapy, teach them that somewhere, something in their life went wrong.”

Boteach, 42, who recorded more than 30 hours of interviews with Jackson, told The Sun: “Michael despised what Hitler had done. When it came to believing he could heal Hitler, that was hopeless naïvety.”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



The Dog Ate Global Warming

Interpreting climate data can be hard enough. What if some key data have been fiddled?

Imagine if there were no reliable records of global surface temperature. Raucous policy debates such as cap-and-trade would have no scientific basis, Al Gore would at this point be little more than a historical footnote, and President Obama would not be spending this U.N. session talking up a (likely unattainable) international climate deal in Copenhagen in December.

Steel yourself for the new reality, because the data needed to verify the gloom-and-doom warming forecasts have disappeared.

Or so it seems. Apparently, they were either lost or purged from some discarded computer. Only a very few people know what really happened, and they aren’t talking much. And what little they are saying makes no sense.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

The FPÖ Wins Big in Vorarlberg

Earlier this week regional elections were held in western Austria, and the results confirmed that the anti-immigrant right is continuing to increase in popularity, despite the thick cloud of media smog trying to transform the FPÖ into Nazis.

To begin our report, here is a brief summary from the Vlaams Belang website, as translated by our Flemish correspondent VH.

Spectacular win for the FPÖ in Austria

In the elections held on September 20 in the Austrian state of Vorarlberg, both Socialists (SPÖ) and Christian Democrats (ÖVP) received serious blows. Compared with the state elections of 2004, the Christian Democrats were reduced by about 4 percent. The Socialists lost almost 7 percent and with the barely 10 percent remaining, settled to a historic record low. That loss was not compensated by the marginal profit the Greens gained (+ 0.2%), who were also stuck at 10 percent.

The only undisputed victor this time again was the FPÖ (Austrian Freedom Party) with 25.2 percent. With this the right-wing national party almost doubled its number of votes.

This result is also a new and resounding confirmation of the electoral trend that started when the party under the leadership of Heinz Christian Strache again stood up for a clear right-wing national profile.

The campaign of the “Freiheitlichen” [“Freedommers”] — with such central themes as identity, immigration, security, and freedom of expression — indeed met with fierce criticism from the established political class, but was clearly appreciated by “the man in the street”. With their voting behavior, the electorate in any case made it clear that they no longer let leftist opinion leaders and other politically correct preachers prescribe for them what they should think, and most of all for whom they are not allowed to vote.

Our Austrian correspondent ESW kindly agreed to write some background material about what happened in Vorarlberg:

Elections in Vorarlberg
by ESW

The westernmost Austrian province of Vorarlberg was called to local elections this past Sunday. Given the current situation in Europe vis-à-vis immigration, the results were predictable. Vorarlberg has traditionally been ruled by a conservative majority (ÖVP), albeit in voluntary coalitions with other parties. One of these parties was the Freedom party (FPÖ). The election campaign covered the usual topics and was mostly boring and predictable. Until FPÖ candidate Dieter Egger made a statement that in post-Nazi era and multiculti Austria just should not have been uttered (sarcasm off). Here’s the background:

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The Jewish Museum in Hohenems has objected to a Freedom Party (FPÖ) campaign poster for the 20 September provincial election.

The poster bears the slogan “Money for the Parents of Native Families.”

Museum Director Hanno Loewy and Vorarlberg FPÖ leader Dieter Egger had it out over the poster yesterday (Thurs) evening during a confrontation on ORF’s TV programme “Vorarlberg Heute” (Vorarlberg Today).

Loewy claimed the FPÖ’s poster mixed two very-different things, money for needy families, which no one could object to, and race, since use of the word “native” implied families of people born in Austria should be given preference.

He said the word native was a biological term that applied to flora and fauna rather than to human beings.

In response, Egger said he could only wonder at Loewy’s comments. Egger cited the provincial FPÖ’s homepage, which, he said, limited the circle of people who should get family subsidies to Austrian citizens.

Egger then committed a cardinal sin: He verbally attacked Loewy, calling him an “exile Jew from America.” The uproar from all walks of life in Austria was deafening. Loewy himself did not really react to the “attack”; he did not need to since this was taken care of by every “Gutmensch” available. FPÖ leader Hein- Christian Strache defended his colleague’s remarks:

Freedom Party (FPÖ) leader Heinz-Christian Strache defended his parties’ provincial election candidate over what has been dubbed an anti-Semitic statement.

Strache said in last night’s “Sommergespräche” (Summer Talks) debate show on national broadcaster ORF he did not regard “exile Jew” a swear word or an insult. FPÖ Vorarlberg leader Dieter Egger caused outrage last week when he claimed Hanno Loewy, the head of the Jewish Museum in Hohenems, was an “exile Jew from America.”

Vorarlberg Governor Herbert Sausgruber warned he would not consider a coalition of his People’s Party (ÖVP) and the FPÖ after the 20 September provincial election if Egger did not apologise.

Strache yesterday claimed Sausgruber’s reaction was “exaggerated”, explaining: “Egger wanted to stress that the FPÖ did not accept that permanent kind of criticism of our poster campaign and other things by citizens of other countries.”

The federal FPÖ leader added there would be no consequences for Egger, stressing his party would not allow the ÖVP to give them advice on how to manage their human resources. “(Former SPÖ Chancellor Bruno) Kreisky was also an exile Jew and a great patriot,” he added.

[…]

Strache dismissed criticism of former poster campaigns with slogans such as “Abendland in Christenhand!” (Occident in the Hands of Christians!). “This is poster language that is short and precise and gives people a chance to discuss the matter.”

Strache, who took over as FPÖ leader in 2005 when former party chief Jörg Haider went on to found the BZÖ, pledged: “We are a democratic party that disassociates itself from all forms of extremism, regardless of whether it comes from the left or the right side of the political spectrum.”

The public prosecutor’s office in Feldkirch, Vorarlberg, meanwhile, has announced they will check statements made by Egger to find out whether legal action should be taken.

Head prosecutor Franz Pflanzner said: “There is a possibility the statements could lead to consequences under sedition paragraph number 238 because of wide media coverage.”

Hanno Loewy, who was called an “exile Jew from America” by the politician, said he would “rather not” press for legal action over the statement. Loewy said: “What Egger said is not insulting but just wrong.”

Egger reacted with newspaper ads in which he called for financial subsidies for Austrian families in the province. “The director of the Jewish Museum does not like that. He would love to ban our efforts for our home country. But we will not accept that. This has nothing to do with anti-Semitism.”

Award-winning, Vorarlberg-based author Michael Köhlmeier, who interviewed BZÖ leader Josef Bucher in last week’s edition of ORF’s “Sommergespräche”, blasted Egger, saying: “A man who says such things is discredited for all time. This person is done.” [Translator’s comment: the Left’s modus operandi for years. Strache stands behind his people, a trait I admire.]

Köhlmeier, best known for his epic 2007 masterpiece “Abendland”, added he would write a complaint to ÖVP Justice Minister Claudia Bandion-Ortner asking her to check if legal action could be taken against Egger.

Loewy said: “Egger knows where I’m coming from – Frankfurt. And not as an immigrant, but because I was asked to settle down here by Vorarlberg.”

FPÖ General Secretary Herbert Kickl backed Egger. Kickl said it would be “ridiculous” to label Egger’s statements anti-Semitic. “There is no reason to apologise,” Kickl added.

Kickl said Egger had only rejected interference by Loewy, who had criticised FPÖ slogans in an open letter.

Kickl said: “Politics is made by politicians, and we do not want any pseudo-moralistic intervention.”

The discussion is only one of several regarding actions by the right-wing party or statements by its members this year. A few months ago, FPÖ MP and Third President of Parliament Martin Graf came under fire for accusing Ariel Muzicant, the head of the Austrian Jewish Community (IKG) of being the “godfather of anti-fascist, left-wing terrorism in Austria.”

Egger’s remarks are definitely not the reason for FPÖ’s success, as the MSM would like us to believe. This would be a gross oversimplification: The vast majority of Austrians are not anti-Semitic and do not view Egger’s remarks as an “anti-Semitic slur.” Instead, the political parties should start realizing that there countless problems Austrians as well as other Europeans face daily, and that it is the politicians’ responsibility to provide solutions. Our politicians keep forgetting that their salaries are paid for by the taxpayer. And these Austrians make their anger public by voting for FPÖ. Perhaps, just perhaps, the Vorarlberger are starting to realize how much Turkish Muslim cultural enrichment there is in cities like Hohenems, where FPÖ made the highest gains: up more than 17% to 36.9%. Could it be that the people of Hohenems are sick of the Turkish presence? They do, after all, make up more than 46% of the population, according to the official census (pdf).

Well, the voters reacted. And the way they reacted was impressive. The headlines keep repeating themselves: “Heavy losses for SPÖ, massive gains for FPÖ, ÖVP stagnant with small loss.”

The trend is bound to continue.

Vorarlberg governor, Herbert Sausgruber, has kept his promise by refusing another coalition with FPÖ, ignoring the 75-percent majority of the center-right. Sausgruber today announced ÖVP would not form a coalition government, but rule on its own, made possible by its absolute majority.

The same headlines will be written come Sunday, whether in Upper Austria or in Germany.

We’ll wrap up with the MSM take on Vorarlberg, as reported by Euronews (hat tip Tuan Jim):

Austrian Right Holds on to Power in Regional Election

The Austrian right looks to have held its grip on power in the Western province of Vorarlberg following regional elections on Sunday.

Early estimations put Herbert Sausgruber’s OVP ahead with just over 50 per cent of the vote.

But it is the far right Austrian Freedom Party which made the biggest gains, Dieter Egger’s party is accredited with 25 per cent — enough to put it ahead of the Social Democrats, who picked up just 10 per cent of votes.

261,000 people were called on to elect 36 members to the regional parliament.

The rise of the Freedom Party has concerned observers who accuse its leader Egger of making anti-Semitic statements, notably telling a museum director that as a “jew in exile in America” he should shut up and not mix in Austrian politics.

Al-Aftonbladet

John Sobieski is a Swede who keeps an English-language blog called The Fight Against Jihad. He sent me an email the other day relating his correspondence with Aftonbladet, the newspaper that published the notorious blood-libel article about alleged organ-harvesting performed on Palestinians by the IDF.

To add extra irony to the newspaper’s behavior, not long after defending the blood-libel article as an exercise of “free speech”, Aftonbladet publicly announced that it would not accept any paid advertising ahead of the upcoming election from the anti-immigration political party Sverigedemokraterna (the Sweden Democrats).

John Sobieski was motivated by all this to write a letter to the editor. Here’s his story:

Baron,

After reading Aftonbladet and their reasons for not publishing SD adds — and your article on IFPS — I decided to mail them and ask for a comment.

This is what I sent them:

Dear Sir/Madam,

It has come to my attention that the infinite wisdom of the great omnipotent aftonbladet may be in conflict with its own common rules.

In reading an article on the International Free Press societies web site, I have learned that aftonbladet has made it their business to decide what freedom of the press actually means. I wonder as to whether the actual role of news agencies in Sweden are different than in other parts of the world? Is it true that Sweden is a democratic nation? Is it also true that Sweden upholds the value of freedom of the press?

The Swedish government itself said that it would not get involved in the matter concerning your fabricated Israeli organ harvesting article because it was a part of the freedoms that we as Swedes uphold. In this respect, the mere fact that you yourselves will not publish SD advertisements is indicating that you yourselves are taking a political standing against specific ideologies. This will lead any reasonable person to the conclusion that you have chosen sides, and now have become a mere political puppet?

I must ask — is your paper a political puppet? Is Mona Sahlin holding little strings above you?

You argue that a populist Xenophobic movement is beginning in Sweden right now, and it has already happened in countries around Europe. You say that you are trying to shield the public from this argument, trying to conceal this ideology. I have to know, is this the job of the press? Are you so all knowing that you know what is best for the Swedish public? Do you have such little faith in your readers?

This action shows the following things.

1.   The left-wing monopoly is shifting in Sweden (something shown by the latest elections).
2.   You yourselves are scared.
3.   Aftonbladet is no longer concerned with the truth, but has become part of a political ideology.
4.   Aftonbladet has accused the Swedish people of being stupid.

I only hope that the freedoms that are so often preached by the media in Sweden do not continue to be selective.

Mvh John

I was surprised to find in my inbox the next day a reply:

– – – – – – – –

Sorry, you are not correctly informed.

Lena Mellin

I was concerned for the welfare of Al-Aftonbladet. Having such articulate reporters must have been of concern for the omnipotent one. I decided to reply:

Lena,

Thank you for your response, however brief.

If that is in actual fact the case, then may I ask you for comment regarding this? If it is not your intention to corrupt the public opinion, and force the SD ideology into premature retirement then what is your goal as an impartial media agency?

There are many in the public who are sick of the situation where Aftonbladet is preaching a leftist pro-islamic stance. I have even seen that your newspaper has a new nickname. You are called by many Al-Aftonbladet. Is that how you want to be perceived?

I would much appreciate a more fruitful reply next time, but I do realise that time is money. You may have more pressing things to do.

Mvh John

As of yet, I have not received a reply, but “watch this space” for any reaction.

I do wonder, why is it so difficult for them to formulate a comprehensive reply? The points I outlined were fair (IMO) and straightforward enough, and the fact that of all European countries, the Swedes comprehension of English is beyond reprove.

I hope for a reply, but I am not holding my breath.

Al-Aftonbladet. That has a nice ring to it.

Like Al Jazeera, only with surströmming.

An Alternate History for an Alternate Culture

AMDG of La Yijad en Eurabia has written a thoughtful article about democracy and its relationship with other forms of government. He was moved to write his essay after reading a review of a book by the political scientist John Keane, who maintains (among other things) that Islam had a formative influence on modern democracy.

This is how AMDG begins his essay:

Let me start with a disclaimer: I am not a democrat. I think that “the people” cannot really rule a polity, save temporarily and under very special circumstances. I am for the Rule of Law against the rule of majority, even if it is an encompassing majority. And not of any Law, but only the traditional Christian Natural Law.

On the other hand, that people cannot rule does not mean they should not have a role in political affairs. Possibly, that role could be more influential than the one they currently have in the “oldest democracies” of our world. In particular, I agree with the “no taxation without representation” rule (a representation of auditors, not “lawmakers”). People have the right to scrutinise how the taxes collected from them are spent; as a matter of fact this was the most important role of the medieval parliaments, the real predecessors of our “democratic” ones.

The first of those parliaments was not — as it is usually stated — the English parliament, but the Cortes of Leon, a kingdom taken over by Castilla later on during the Reconquista. The wikipedia has the following details on the Cortes de Leon:

Although there are documented councils held in 873, 1020, 1050 and 1063, there was no representation of commoners. What is considered to be the first Spanish Parliament (with the presence of commoners), Cortes — was held in the Kingdom of Leon in 1118. Prelates, nobles and commoners met separately in the three estates of the Cortes. In this meeting new laws were approved to protect commoners against the arbitrarities of nobles, prelates and the king. This important set of laws is known as the “Carta Magna Leonesa”

I had never read any suggestion regarding an Islamic influence on that institution up until this summer, in a local newspaper from Leon, the old capital of the kingdom and a quiet provincial city nowadays. This is my inverse translation, from Spanish, of a quotation from the book:

[…]

‘With some exaggeration, one could say that Muslims were responsible for the emergence of parliaments, since they were born from the power struggles among Christians aiming at the military conquest Islamic territory from Spain to Constantinople. “

I was thinking about buying the book (The Life and Death of Democracy, by John Keane), but my to-read-list for the next months is already fully booked (pun intended). I decided therefore to have a look to the online information on this book and its author. His home page has a summary of the book; Democracy. A short history and this Introduction, whose extension is double that the former. These summaries are enough to conclude that we have, once more, another case of “deconstruction” of our institutions and of demeaning of the Greek, Rome and Christian roles in the framing of our culture. I list the main ideas and copy the most relevant points from the latter, adding some comments…

See AMDG’s post for the details on the main points made by Keane in his deconstruction of Western institutions. This is a list of the premises under consideration:
– – – – – – – –

1.   Democracy is not originally Greek.
2.   Only democratic forms of government are really human.
3.   Democracy knows no limits.
4.   Islam contributed greatly to the development of democracy.
5.   The EU experiment is a democratic endeavor.
6.   The current enemies of democracy: markets, populism, material insecurity, US militarism…

The process at work here is one that has become quite familiar in recent years: the rewriting of history in order to denigrate European civilization and elevate Islam. Historians, social scientists, government employees, and politicians are busy creating an alternative version of history and thus paving the way for the ascendancy of Islam.

According to the New History, the emergence of Islam is a natural development arising out of indigenous democratic conditions, and it is not at all incompatible with our European heritage. Only racism and xenophobia cause its critics to see things any differently.

It doesn’t really matter whether the intention of the New Historians is to elevate Islam or simply to engage in the favorite pastime of the Left, the destruction of Western Civilization. The end result is the same: a field of rubble where the cherished institutions of our culture used to be, and a totalitarian Islamic theocracy built upon the ruins.

Iraqis in Denmark, Part 5: Retired in Denmark, Mayor in Turkey

This is the fifth in a series of reports by our Danish correspondent TB about the ongoing scandal of Iraqi refugees in Denmark who defraud the state pension system.

For the earlier reports, see part 1, part 2, part 3, and part 4.

TB includes this introduction with his translation:

Another revealing article from Ekstra Bladet.

Actually, the problem is so enormous that it will never become possible to try all these people. Every week Ekstra Bladet has yet another story of this kind. Last time they revealed that most of the staff employed at the Iraqi embassy in Copenhagen were receiving some kind of social benefit while having full-time jobs at the embassy.

It’s just one rotten layer after another. Every time they take a small look beneath the surface the stench is unbearable. It’s like a parasitic disease…

The brief article and video from Ekstra Bladet are below. Many thanks to TB and Vlad the Subtitler for the English-language version of the video:

Uncovering: Retired in Denmark, Mayor in Turkey

The retired Danish-Turk Muzaffer Yüksel (MY) has for a number of years enjoyed a retirement pension from the Danish state. Now Ekstra Bladet can reveal that during the same many years he had a significant income in Turkey.

The Video:



A complete English transcript of the video is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –

00:01   Henriette Skov Andersen (SKA): We are in Nørrebro, Copenhagen.
00:03   SKA: Here on the second floor lives the 71-year-old Danish-Turk MY.
00:07   SKA: He is a completely ordinary retired person, looking like any other citizen.
00:12   SKA: You do not know who he is?
00:14   Woman: No! Never seen him before.
00:15   SKA: You have never seen him before?
00:16   Man: Never!
00:17   SKA: You do not know who he is?
00:17   Woman: No, I haven’t a clue!
00:20   SKA: You do not know who he is?
00:21   Man: Not a clue.
00:22   SKA: But MY is actually far more famous than the citizens in Nørrebro know.
00:27   SKA: He is far from just an elderly gentleman whose only source of income is the pension from the Danish state.
00:32   SKA: Actually the man lives a double life.
00:37   Old man in barbershop: I voted for him!
00:38   Young man at barbershop: We are very happy with him!
00:41   Thomas Gøsta Svensson (TGS): In reality MY is the mayor and ‘city king’ in the Turkish city of Pinarbasi, where the inhabitants know the 71-year-old Danish-Turkish mayor very well.
  Inhabitants of Pinarbasi, Turkey:
00:52   Old woman: That is a picture of the mayor.
00:55   Another old woman: Yes, that is the mayor.
00:59   SKA: A job which provides him with a salary of between 10 and 12 thousand Danish kroner a month.
01:02   SKA: An income which MY has not declared to the Copenhagen Municipality or the tax authorities.
01:07   SKA: And for that there is a very good reason, since his income in Turkey would mean a reduction in his paycheck from the Danish state.
01:13   SKA: Ekstra Bladet arranges for a surprise visit to the mayor’s office in Turkey.
  Hidden Camera, Mayor’s Office in Pinarbasi, Turkey.
01:20   SKA: MY does not want to be taped but he admits that he has not declared his extra income.
01:28   SKA: It has now been revealed that MY has not declared to the Danish authorities that he also is the owner of six houses.
01:33   TGS: According to these documents, MY owns the yellow house there where he lives.
01:40   TGS: Then he also owns the house in here… but that is not enough for the 71-year-old Danish-Turkish mayor.
01:45   TGS: He is also in the process of building the light blue house in here.
01:50   SKA: On top of the income from renting out the houses and his mayoral job, Ekstra Bladet learns out that MY for many years has owned and run a farm..
01:57   SKA: A farm that only last year yielded some 260,000 Danish kroner, according to the Danish consulate in Turkey.
02:06   Old man from barbershop: He is a retired from Denmark.
02:09   SKA: MY has for several years committed social fraud and had a retirement pension far beyond what he rightfully deserves. Read all about in Ekstra Bladet today.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/24/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/24/2009Two articles below support what has been predicted in this space (and in many other places) for almost a year: China and Japan, the USA’s two largest creditors, are expressing increasing reluctance to purchase any more short-term U.S. Treasury securities. The new Japanese prime minister indicates that America’s reckless fiscal policy has induced him to try to diversify his country’s debt portfolio. If either Japan or China decides to reduce its purchase of Treasuries significantly, the dollar will drop and the United States will be in for a major round of inflation, with a renewed recession as a result.

Some good news, for a change: Kurt Westergaard, the Danish cartoonist who drew the famous “Turban Bomb” Motoon, will visit Yale University next month along with Lars Hedegaard of Trykkefrihedsselskabet. Mr. Westergaard was invited by the Yale Committee for a Free Press, which was formed in protest of the decision by Yale University Press to remove all illustrations of Mohammed from a book about the history of the Mohammed Cartoon Crisis. Mr. Westergaard will speak to the group on October 1st.

Thanks to C. Cantoni, CB, Fausta, Henrik, Insubria, JD, Lurker from Tulsa, RRW, Sean O’Brian, Steen, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Fed Up?
Japan Abandons America
US May Face ‘Armageddon’ If China, Japan Don’t Buy Debt
 
USA
Author Confirms Bill Ayers Helped Obama Write ‘Dreams’
CAIR Branch Boasts of Getting DVD Censored
G-20 Opponents, Police Clash on Pittsburgh Streets
Give Me Ten Dollars and I’ll Tell You Why Capitalism is Evil
Muhammad Cartoonist to Speak at Yale
NRG to Build State’s Largest Solar Array for City of Houston
Redistributing Wealth?!
The Art of Corruption
Welcome Global Governance
 
Canada
Toronto Police Seize 400 Guns in Safety Push
 
Europe and the EU
Europe Must Come Clean on Its Involvement in CIA Torture
Finally an Italian: Silvio Berlusconi
Germany : US Terror Warning
Italy: Living Will: Fini, Respect Opinion of Deputies
Italy: EU Rebuffs Berlusconi’s CO2 Emissions Request
Italy: Thieves Use Drug- Laced Madonna Card
Italy: Savoy Sent to Trial in Bribery Case
Staffordshire Hoard: Amateur Treasure Hunter Finds Britain’s Biggest Haul of Anglo-Saxon Gold
Sweden: Hunt Continues for Helicopter Robbers
Sweden: Trucker Flips His Rig After Masturbating While Driving
Swiss Vote Against Piracy Force
Switzerland: Parliament Torpedoes Anti-Pirate Proposal
UK: BBC Bans Comedians From Using Word Gipsy in Sketch. Because It’s ‘Racist’
UK: Britain’s Top Police Officer Attacks Fixed Penalty Notices for Reducing ‘Respect’ For Law
UK: Now It’s Speed Bumps for Cyclists . . . to Stop Them Rampaging Down a Road
UK: Pictured: The Young Woman Ravaged by GBL — The Legal Party Drug the Government Won’t Ban
UK: Revealed: The Uninsured Captital of Britain Where Half of All Motorists Have No Cover
Vatican Informed About Williamson
 
Balkans
Serbia: Nine Kosovar Rebels Charged With War Crimes
 
North Africa
Morocco: True Modernity Only From Cultural Reform, Bennis
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Gaza Rocket Hits Israel, No One Injured
Michael Freund: He’s No Mahatma Obama
Obama Orders Israel to ‘End the Occupation’
Yom Kippur: Tensions in Mixed Cities
 
Middle East
“Palestinism”, the Real UN Disease
‘Al-Qaeda Group’ Flees Iraq Jail
‘Last Ottoman’ Dies in Istanbul
Lebanon’s Madoff Tarnishes Hezbollah Reputation
Shah’s Widow: Carter Behind 30 Years of Terror Woes
UN: Ahmadinejad Attacks Israel, The West Refuses to Listen
 
Russia
Italy: Political Leaders Urge Russia to Respect Human Rights
U.S. Protests Russian ‘Sex Tape’ Used to Smear American Diplomat
 
South Asia
Afghanistan: Italian Soldiers Injured in Latest Attack
Militants Kill Pakistani Elders
Pakistan: President Urges US to Reimburse $1.6 Bn for Terror War
Pakistan: Taliban Recruit European Families as Militants Kill Nine Elders in Pakistan Gun Battle
Two Wounded in Afghan Firefight
UK: Christians Escape Muslim Who Kidnaps, Beats Them
 
Australia — Pacific
Australia: Loneliness of the University Liberal
 
Latin America
“Chavez Orchestrated Zelaya’s Return”
 
Immigration
Australia: Nearly 100 Asylum-Seekers on Latest Boat
Barrot: Libyan Situation Unacceptable
France: Jungle Migrants Set Up Six New Camps
Malta: Resettlement Offers Total Just 100 Migrants
National Conference With Maroni in Milan
UK: Baroness’s Housekeeper Arrested
UN: Stop Refused Entries, No Guarantees in Libya
 
Culture Wars
Barney Frank Pushes Fed Gay Rights Bill
Diversity Boss: Whites Must ‘Step Down’
Holdren: Sterilize Welfare Recipients
School Warns Parents About Bible Giveaway
Sunstein: Force Broadcasters to Air ‘Diversity’ Ads
 
General
Man “Not to Blame” For Early Carbon Emissions
UN Demands End of Nuclear Proliferation in Historic Agreement (But Where’s Gaddafi?)
UN: Gaddafi Attacks World Powers in Key Address

Financial Crisis


Fed Up?

“Banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale.” — Thomas Jefferson

The Federal Reserve is not federal and it is not reserve. It is a coalition of independent banks and is not subordinate to the U.S. Federal government. That is an annoying axiomatic fact. It may not be ‘right’, fair, or even reasonable, but hey, that is the way it was specifically crafted at Jekyll Island in 1913.

It should be no big surprise to anyone who understands what the Fed is and isn’t that their Board rejected a request by U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner for a public review of the central bank’s structure and governance. Come on…”Badges? Badges? We don’t need no stinking badges…”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Japan Abandons America

The USS America is sinking—and Japan is getting off while it can.

September 22, 2009 From theTrumpet.com

by Robert Morley

For over 50 years, one party ruled Japan virtually uninterrupted. During that time, Japan remained a loyal ally and supporter of U.S. policy. This month, a historic event took place.

Japan has new leadership. In a landslide victory, a new party has done the seemingly impossible. A new freshman class of leaders now governs the Land of the Rising Sun. The effects are already rippling across the Pacific toward America.

Yukio Hatoyama is Japan’s new leader. He officially took office last Wednesday, and he is already threatening to split with the United States.

Hatoyama blames America for the global economic crisis and says that the U.S. is responsible for “the destruction of human dignity.” He campaigned on protecting traditional Japanese economic activities and reducing U.S.-led globalization.

During the run-up to the election, Hatoyama’s finance minister told the bbc he was worried about the future value of the dollar, and that if his party were elected in the upcoming national elections, it would refuse to purchase any more U.S. treasuries unless they were denominated in Japanese yen.

Japan is the world’s second-largest economy. It is also America’s second-most-important creditor. The U.S. government owes Japan over $724 billion! The only nation America owes more money to is China ($800 billion). The U.S. also imports $140 billion worth of goods from Japan each year.

If Japan were to follow through with its threat to only lend in yen, the dollar would probably fall hard. What would that mean? America gets more expensive consumer goods, higher unemployment, and currency inflation. If other nations like China follow suit, we would be looking at a currency crisis—Zimbabwe-style.

The new government in Japan has also pledged to diversify its foreign currency reserves away from the dollar. This means that at some point, it will need to dramatically reduce how much money it lends to America. America is planning to borrow record amounts over the next couple of years, so something isn’t adding up here. Where will the money come from?

“The financial crisis has suggested to many that the era of U.S. unilateralism may come to an end,” Hatoyama wrote in an August 26 New York Times article titled “A New Path for Japan.” “It has also raised doubts about the permanence of the dollar as the key global currency.”

But Hatoyama isn’t just charting a separate economic course for Japan. His campaign also promised a more “independent” foreign policy from Washington, and closer relations with Japan’s Asian neighbors.

More alarming for American policymakers, Hatoyama has authorized a wide-ranging review of the U.S. military presence on Japanese soil. He is reexamining the agreement that permits U.S. warships to dock at Japanese ports, and has said Japan should take a second look at why it is spending billions to house and transfer U.S. troops between its islands. Hatoyama has also moved to quickly end Japan’s fueling support for the U.S. naval anti-terrorism efforts in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

On Wednesday, an even bigger torpedo hit. Both U.S. and Japanese officials confirmed that discussions were underway to remove all U.S. fighter aircraft from Japan.

So many alarm bells have been clanging in Washington that the Australian reports the U.S. administration has requested “immediate clarifying discussions” on just how far Japan wants to take the disengagement. But there may not be too much America can do if Japan is intent on reducing America’s presence in Japanese territory. Regarding the U.S.-Japan security relationship, Richard Armitage, former U.S. deputy secretary of state, said: “If the government of Japan asked us to change things, we’d argue, we’d kick and scream, but ultimately we’d have to do it.”

Japan is a major platform for American power projection. Losing it would be devastating to U.S. security.

Japan is America’s most important forward base in the Pacific. It is an unsinkable aircraft carrier from which American task forces can operate to secure the flow of trade and resources across the Pacific.

At a time when China is increasingly challenging American authority in the East and South China Sea, when North Korea is brandishing nuclear weapons, and Islamic terrorism is on the upswing in the Philippines and Southeast Asia, America can ill afford to lose Japanese military and logistical support.

But it is losing it.

In his New York Times article, Prime Minister Hatoyama asked, “How should Japan maintain its political and economic independence and protect its national interest when caught between the United States, which is fighting to retain its position as the world’s dominant power, and China, which is seeking ways to become dominant?” (emphasis mine throughout).

Being allied with America has become a problem for Japan.

The new prime minister is no doubt asking himself: How do I protect Japan’s interests? The distant Americans sit 5,500 miles across the Pacific Ocean. One billion Chinese could fly to Tokyo for breakfast, Taiwan for lunch, and back home for kung pao dinner before America’s fastest jets could make it much past Hawaii.

In the same article, Hatoyama answered his own question: “[W]e must not forget our identity as a nation located in Asia,” he said. “I believe that the East Asian region, which is showing increasing vitality, must be recognized as Japan’s basic sphere of being.”

“I also feel that as a result of the failure of the Iraq war and the financial crisis, the era of U.S.-led globalism is coming to an end ….” Hatoyama even said that Japan must “spare no effort to build the permanent security frameworks” essential to creating a new anti-dollar regional Asian currency shared by China, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Hatoyama doesn’t just think America’s economy and power are fading fast, he’s publishing it in the New York Times! He sees Japan’s future as being with Asia. And he’s right.

There is a bold movement occurring in Asia. Old animosities are being forgotten, or resolved. “I believe that regional integration and collective security is the path we should follow,” Hatoyama reiterated. Only “by moving toward greater integration” can Asia’s problems be solved, he said.

This movement toward greater Asian cooperation will soon speed up drastically. Not only do the facts prove it, biblical prophecy forecasts it. A major military alliance between Russia, China and Japan is about to be locked in. (Read about this specific prophecy in Russia and China in Prophecy.)

Prime Minister Hatoyama may be the most pro-Asian Japanese prime minister yet. He has pledged to ignore Japan’s World War ii shrine that honors the country’s war dead, to avoid offending Korea. His only son is attending a prestigious Russian engineering university. And he is the first Japanese prime minister to receive election coverage by any Chinese print media—and it was front-page news in the Communist Party’s People’s Daily. Also, for the first time, a Chinese television station provided live coverage of the election that saw Hatoyama take power.

Japan’s new policy is focused on Asia—and winning friends on the Asian continent.

America is about to lose its Japanese ally. “The U.S. has been critical of new trends in Japan, but we are not a colony of Washington and we should be able to say what we want,” said Makoto Watanabe, a professor of media and communication at Hokkaido Bunkyo University in Japan. “[W]hile under previous governments Japan had become a yes-man to the U.S., this suggests to me that healthy change is taking place.”

But that change will not be healthy—especially for America.

The Bible describes a time when America will be besieged by its former trade partners. This siege, warned about in Deuteronomy 28:52, is both economic and military in nature. “And he shall besiege thee in all thy gates, until thy high and fenced walls come down, wherein thou trustedst, throughout all thy land: and he shall besiege thee in all thy gates throughout all thy land, which the Lord thy God hath given thee.”

America is about to be blockaded. For this to occur, Japan would need to take a radical turn from its recent historical political and economic persuasions.

It is radically turning. Today we are witnessing a dramatic fulfillment of this prophecy. America is about to become perilously isolated. The nation with the single largest merchant fleet in the world will turn its back on an economically waterlogged America. And America, without its most important military bases in Asia, will be one step closer to being pushed right out of the Asia Pacific altogether.

America’s ship of state is sinking. Japan’s lifeboat has already left.

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



US May Face ‘Armageddon’ If China, Japan Don’t Buy Debt

The US is too dependent on Japan and China buying up the country’s debt and could face severe economic problems if that stops, Tiger Management founder and chairman Julian Robertson told CNBC.

“It’s almost Armageddon if the Japanese and Chinese don’t buy our debt,” Robertson said in an interview. “I don’t know where we could get the money. I think we’ve let ourselves get in a terrible situation and I think we ought to try and get out of it.”

Robertson said inflation is a big risk if foreign countries were to stop buying bonds.

“If the Chinese and Japanese stop buying our bonds, we could easily see [inflation] go to 15 to 20 percent,” he said. “It’s not a question of the economy. It’s a question of who will lend us the money if they don’t. Imagine us getting ourselves in a situation where we’re totally dependent on those two countries. It’s crazy.”

Watch the Interview With Julian Robertson (Pt. 2)

Slideshow: The Biggest Holders of US Government Debt

Robertson said while he doesn’t think the Chinese will stop buying US bonds, the Japanese may eventually be forced to sell some of their long-term bonds.

“That’s much worse than not buying,” he said. “The other thing is, they’re buying almost exclusively short-term debt. And that’s what we are offering, because we can’t sell the long-term debt. And you know, the history has been that people who borrow short term really get burned.”

The only way to avoid the problem, he said, is to “grow and save our way out of it.”

“The U.S. has to quit spending, cut back, start saving, and scale backward,” Robertson said. “Until that happens, I don’t think we’re anywhere near out of the woods.”

Robertson is not very optimistic about the short-term.

“We’re in for some real rough sledding,” he said. “ I really do think the recession is at least temporarily over. But we haven’t addressed so many of our problems and we are borrowing so much money that we can’t possibly pay it back, unless the Chinese and Japanese buy our bonds.”

[Return to headlines]

USA


Author Confirms Bill Ayers Helped Obama Write ‘Dreams’

New release on president’s marriage verifies work of WND’s Jack Cashill pointing to ex-terrorist’s role

Confirming the literary detective work of WND columnist Jack Cashill prior to the 2008 election, author Christopher Andersen says in a newly released book that former domestic terrorist William Ayers helped Barack Obama write the president’s highly acclaimed memoir “Dreams from My Father.”

Obama’s 1995 book won the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album and drew praise from Time magazine, which called it “the best-written memoir ever produced by an American politician.”

But since July 2008, Cashill has unveiled in nearly two dozen columns, summarized here, his compelling evidence that the unrepentant co-founder of the radical Weather Underground group — dismissed by Obama during the campaign as “just a guy who lives in my neighborhood” — shaped and refined the book with his exceptional writing skill and radical ideas.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



CAIR Branch Boasts of Getting DVD Censored

District officials assure ‘Obsession’ won’t be used in class

The Pennsylvania state affiliate of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a national Islamic organization that has extensive ties to terrorism and extremism, is boasting that it has succeeded in convincing a school district there to censor the DVD “Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West.”

The Pennsylvania chapter said in a press announcement that officials had written to the superintendent of the Council Rock School District “expressing concerns about a hate-filled video.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



G-20 Opponents, Police Clash on Pittsburgh Streets

PITTSBURGH — Police fired canisters of pepper spray and smoke at marchers protesting the Group of 20 summit Thursday after anarchists responded to calls to disperse by rolling trash bins and throwing rocks.

The march turned chaotic at just about the time that President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama arrived for a meeting with leaders of the world’s major economies.

The clashes began after hundreds of protesters, many advocating against capitalism, tried to march from an outlying neighborhood toward the convention center where the summit is being held.

The protesters banged on drums and chanted “Ain’t no power like the power of the people, ‘cause the power of the people don’t stop.”

The marchers included small groups of self-described anarchists, some wearing dark clothes and bandanas and carrying black flags. Others wore helmets and safety goggles.

One banner read, “No borders, no banks,” another, “No hope in capitalism.” A few minutes into the march, protesters unfurled a large banner reading “NO BAILOUT NO CAPITALISM” with an encircled “A,” a recognized sign of anarchists.

The marchers did not have a permit and, after a few blocks, police declared it an unlawful assembly. They played an announcement over a loudspeaker telling people to leave or face arrest and then police in riot gear moved in to break it up.

Protesters split into smaller groups. Some rolled large metal trash bins toward police, and a man in a black hooded sweat shirt threw rocks at a police car, breaking the front windshield. Protesters broke windows in a few businesses, including a bank branch and a Boston Market restaurant.

Officers fired pepper spray and smoke at the protesters. Some of those exposed to the pepper spray coughed and complained that their eyes were watering and stinging.

Police were planning a news conference to discuss their response. Officers were seen taking away a handful of protesters in cuffs.

About an hour after the clashes started, the police and protesters were at a standoff. Police sealed off main thoroughfares to downtown.

Twenty-one-year-old Stephon Boatwright, of Syracuse, N.Y., wore a mask of English anarchist Guy Fawkes and yelled at a line of riot police. He then sat cross-legged near the officers, telling them to let the protesters through and to join their cause.

“You’re actively suppressing us. I know you want to move,” Boatwright yelled, to applause from the protesters gathered around him.

Protesters complained that the march had been peaceful and that police were trampling on their right to assemble.

“We were barely even protesting,” said T.J. Amick, 22, of Pittsburgh. “Then all of a sudden, they come up and tell us we’re gathered illegally and start using force, start banging their shields, start telling us we’re going to be arrested and tear gassed. … We haven’t broken any laws.”

Bret Hatch, 26, of Green Bay, Wis., was carrying an American flag and a “Don’t Tread on Me” flag.

“This is ridiculous. We have constitutional rights to free speech,” he said.

The National Lawyer’s Guild, a liberal legal-aid group, said one of its observers, a second year law student, was among those arrested. Its representatives were stationed among the protesters, wearing green hats.

“I think he was totally acting according to the law. I don’t think he was provoking anyone at all,” said Joel Kupferman, a member of the guild. “It’s really upsetting because he’s here to serve, to make sure everyone else can be protected. … It’s a sign that they are out of control.”

The march had begun at a city park, where an activist from New York City, dressed in a white suit with a preacher’s collar, started it off with a speech through a bullhorn.

“They are not operating on Earth time. … They are accommodating the devil,” he said. “To love democracy and to love the earth is to be a radical now.”

The activist, Billy Talen, travels the country preaching against consumerism. He initially identified himself as “the Rev. Billy from the Church of Life After Shopping.”

The G-20 summit was beginning Thursday evening with a welcome ceremony at the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Garden and ends late Friday afternoon after a day of meetings at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center.

Dignitaries were arriving in waves and were heading to a city under heavy security. Police and National Guard troops guarded many downtown intersections, and a maze of tall metal fences and concrete barriers shunted cars and pedestrians.

Hundreds of police in riot gear were seen massing at Phipps, but only a handful of demonstrators were there.

[Return to headlines]



Give Me Ten Dollars and I’ll Tell You Why Capitalism is Evil

The advance promotion and interviews for Michael Moore’s latest agitprop movie, Capitalism: A Love Story are well underway. The message of the movie, produced and distributed by the millionaire capitalists at Paramount, the Weinstein Company and TCI cable company spinoff Overture Films has as its message, what else but the evils of capitalism. Capitalism you see is bad, except when it’s good.

The Weinstein Company, the production company behind Capitalism: A Love Story, does have its reasons to be down on capitalism. After leaving behind Miramax, the company they sold for a cool 70 million to Disney, the Weinstein Company has not been faring too well in the free market. Capitalism requires actually getting people to give you money in exchange for your products and services. And the Weinstein Company’s biggest success up until this year was another Michael Moore screed against free market health care, Sicko. Now the Weinsteins are hoping to cash in with Capitalism: A Love Story in order to bring in new investors so that their company can continue its capitalistic existence.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Muhammad Cartoonist to Speak at Yale

Kurt Westergaard’s famous drawing of Muhammad with a bomb for a turban won’t grace the pages of the Yale University Press’s new book when it comes out next week. But Westergaard himself will put in a campus appearance at Yale’s Branford College.

Westergaard is one of the Danish cartoonists whose work, critical of Islam, sparked riots worldwide in 2005 — the subject of Jytte Klausen’s book The Cartoons That Shook the World. That book in turn sparked outrage last month, when the New York Times reported that the Yale University Press, citing fears of renewed violence, had decided to publish a book about cartoons without the cartoons.

The book is scheduled for release on Monday. Three days later, on October 1, Westergaard will speak in the Branford College Common Room, along with Lars Hedegaard, founder of the Danish Free Press Society.

Jamie Kirchick ‘06, a member of the Yale Committee for a Free Press — formed by alumni to protest what they see as YUP’s and the university’s caving in to Islamist pressure — first mentioned Westergaard’s planned visit to campus in the New York Daily News last week. Since then, the news has popped up on a few blogs, notably the National Review’s The Corner.

Branford College Master Steven Smith, a political scientist, couldn’t be reached on Wednesday for comment about the event.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



NRG to Build State’s Largest Solar Array for City of Houston

NRG Energy won a bid to develop the state’s largest solar power project for the city of Houston.

The city will buy the output of the 10-megawatt, photovoltaic solar array at 8.2 cents per kilowatt hour, according to a release to be issued shortly. That’s about 6.25 percent of Houston’s power load, enough to power 7,000 homes.

Still, 10 megawatts it tiny compared with most power plants. A traditional coal-fired plant has a capacity of around 800 megawatts.

The facility would come online in the second quarter of next year.

The release doesn’t say how much the project will cost.

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



Redistributing Wealth?!

The Obama White House is attempting to perpetrate the biggest hoax in the nation’s history by insisting that the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and ‘60s was really about the redistribution of wealth. The claim is that had the Civil Rights Movement not gotten bogged down in court action, the focus would have shifted to how wealth was distributed in America. Would have, could have, should have…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Art of Corruption

Through the work of artist and blogger Patrick Courrielche, Andrew Breitbart’s new website Big Government—reporting the news so the mainstream media won’t have to—has just released a sickening transcript of an August 10 conference call jointly hosted by the National Endowment for the Arts, the White House’s Office of Public Engagement, and United We Serve, an initiative overseen by the Corporation for National and Community Service, a federal agency. The purpose of the call was to urge a group of pro-Obama artists to get out there and start creating art that would support the president’s agenda on health care, the environment, education, and community services. Speaking at the request of “folks in the White House and folks in the NEA,” Michael Skolnick, political director for Obama-mad hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, told the assembled artists, “All of us who are on this phone call were selected for a reason, and you are the ones that lead by example in your communities. You are the thought leaders. You are the ones that, if you create a piece of art, or promote a piece of art or create a campaign for a company, and tell our country and our young people sort of what do and what to be into, and what’s cool and what’s not cool.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Welcome Global Governance

If there were ever a question about Barack Obama’s dedication to the concept of global governance, it has now been answered fully. His track record to date points toward his commitment to global governance; his speech to the United Nations removes all doubt.

In order to fully appreciate the effectiveness of Obama’s pursuit, it is necessary to have an accurate picture of what global governance really is. The picture of global governance has been deliberately camouflaged by images of black helicopters and imagined blue-helmeted U.N. forces invading nations to enforce its mandates. This is the picture of global governance that its proponents want people to see so they will not see the real events that are constructing the actual global governance. Global governance is a new procedure for creating and administering laws that govern all nations.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Toronto Police Seize 400 Guns in Safety Push

Toronto police have seized almost 400 firearms from registered owners in a six-month push aimed at reducing the number of guns on the city’s streets.

In March, officers began soliciting registered firearm owners across the city as part of what they call the Safe City Project. Many of those who had to surrender their firearms had either let their registrations lapse, or had stashed their guns improperly under beds or in closets.

The Canadian Firearms Registry stipulates guns must be stored in a secure place.

No charges were laid in the push, police said Tuesday.

Targeting people who had registered their guns is a preventative measure, said Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair.

“Legal handgun owners are not dangerous individuals,” Blair told reporters at a Tuesday news conference. “But we know from experience that their firearms can become extremely dangerous when they get into the hands of criminals. And so we have undertaken a number of initiatives to reduce the availability of those handguns.”

[…]

However, a critic says, the push to target registered gun owners is not getting at the root of the problem.

“The system doesn’t work. It’s broken. It doesn’t target the right people,” Greg Farrant, a spokesman for the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, told CBC News. People who are barred from owning weapons are the ones who should be registered and tracked, he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Europe Must Come Clean on Its Involvement in CIA Torture

EU governments should reveal the true extent of torture carried out on their soil. The ‘war on terror’ long ago added ‘waterboarding’ and ‘rendition’ to the language of public life, but only now is the scale of abuse committed during the ‘war’ truly becoming apparent. Courtesy of a report released in August by the CIA inspector-general, we now know, for example, that CIA officers also carried out mock executions and threatened to kill detainees’ children.

Even so, the public account of the CIA’s activities remains incomplete. Several parts of that report were almost entirely deleted — and one of those described the operation of secret detention sites in Europe. EU governments should fill in those gaps in our knowledge.

To those in Brussels, the charge sheet should be familiar. In November 2006, the European Parliament confirmed that EU member states “had knowledge of the programme of extraordinary rendition and secret prisons”; it accused Italian intelligence officials of assisting in the CIA’s kidnapping and rendition; it condemned the Swedish government’s complicity in two CIA renditions in 2001; and it identified the German government as complicit in two renditions. All those ‘rendered’ were subsequently tortured.

Then, in a 2007 report, the Council of Europe confirmed the existence of secret CIA torture centres in Poland and Romania. This summer, ABC News reported that Lithuania had housed a ‘black’ — secret — site. Some EU governments have responded, but their investigations have been truncated or short-circuited. Courts in France and Sweden quickly shelved criminal complaints. An Italian court is now trying Italian agents for the abduction of a suspect, Abu Omar, to Egypt, but the constitutional court ruled that key evidence should remain secret, and the CIA agents allegedly involved are being tried in absentia because the government refused to seek their extradition.

Similarly, the German government is refusing to seek the extradition of CIA agents for the rendition of Khaled el-Masri; a Bundestag inquiry into alleged state complicity in that and another case proved a whitewash. Spain has only now acknowledged that— under the previous government — the CIA used its airspace for rendition flights.

The UK has opened investigations into two instances of secret-service agents’ alleged complicity in the torture of US-held detainees, but has refused to order a full inquiry into complicity in abuse in third countries. In Romania, a parliamentary investigation unconvincingly dismissed accusations of a ‘black site’, while Poland will keep secret the results of its investigation into similar accusations. In Lithuania, a special parliamentary committee has yet to begin work.

With the election of Barack Obama in the US and an end to the most outrageous CIA practices, the temptation may be to argue that the worst is over, that nothing is to be gained by coming clean and that the principal issue left by the ‘war on terror’ is to find homes for Guantánamo Bay detainees.

In fact, however, the Obama administration has indicated that it may send suspects to third countries that are willing to provide diplomatic assurances that they will not use torture. But in case after case, assurances given by the Bush administration proved completely ineffective.

Mechanisms need to be created to ensure that Europe is not again hoodwinked into rendition and housing torture sites. It is equally important that Europe hold accountable those who authorised torture. Until then, the stain of torture will remain on its soil.

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



Finally an Italian: Silvio Berlusconi

The Nobel Peace Prize has never been given to an Italian from 1907 up today. It has finally come the time to discredit a taboo which has lasted for over a century, that means from the time it was given to Ernesto Teodoro Moneta in 1907. Throughout the years, many politicians and heads of states have aimed at this acknowledgement, amongst these we can cite Yasser Arafat, the President of South Korea, Kim Dae-Jung, former American President Jimmy Carter, and Al Gore. Today, we believe that, Italy too deserves to receive such acknowledgement, and that it can be worthily represented by Silvio Berlusconi, for his undoubted humanitarian commitment in Italy and abroad.

On the 26th May in Rome in Piazza di Pietra, from 10:30 am to 6:30 pm, the Comitato della Libertà, which backs the candidacy of Silvio Berlusconi, started the collection of adhesions, that will end on the 16th January 2010 in Amalfi.

All those who wish to back this initiative will be able to do it both by filling in the form of adhesion and by creating a civic Committee.

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



Germany : US Terror Warning

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

Bureau of Consular Affairs

————————————————————————————————————————

This information is current as of today, Thu Sep 24 2009 09:52:09 GMT+0200 (Romance Daylight Time).

Germany

The Department of State alerts U.S. citizens that Al Qaeda has threatened it will conduct terrorist attacks in Germany immediately prior to and following the federal elections on September 27. This Travel Alert expires on November 11, 2009.

Al Qaeda recently released a video specifically warning Germany of attacks. German authorities are taking the threat seriously and have taken measures to enhance the level of security throughout the country.

The Department of State urges U.S. citizens to maintain good security practices at all times, and to maintain a heightened situational awareness and a low profile. Americans are advised to monitor news reports and consider the level of security present when visiting public places or choosing hotels, restaurants, and entertainment and recreation venues.

We encourage U.S. citizens to read the Department of State’s current Worldwide Caution. It provides additional information on potential threats to U.S. citizens overseas, along with advice on how to reduce your vulnerability to such threats. Additional general information on residing and traveling abroad, including the latest Country Specific Informationfor Germany, may be found on the Bureau of Consular Affairs website.

Contact information for the U.S. Embassy in Berlin and U.S. Consulates in Frankfurt, Hamburg, Dusseldorf, Munich, and Leipzig may be found on the U.S. Diplomatic Mission to Germany’s website. All U.S. citizens traveling to or living in Germany are urged to register with the U.S. Embassy through the State Department’s travel registration website.

Travelers may also obtain up-to-date information on security conditions by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll-free in the United States or outside the United States and Canada on a regular toll line at 1-202-501-4444.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Italy: Living Will: Fini, Respect Opinion of Deputies

(AGI) — Rome, 23 Sept. — The living will is about to be discussed in the Italian Chamber and Gianfranco Fini will make sure that the discussion in parliament will take place “in full respect for the right of each MP to give his opinion”. He said this today during his meeting with the members of the Radical Party Marco Cappato, president of the Coscioni Association and Rocco Berardo, president of the Good Rights association, and Luigi Manconi and Mina Welby. Fini added that he hopes the debate will take place in “a calm climate without bias”.

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



Italy: EU Rebuffs Berlusconi’s CO2 Emissions Request

Brussels, 24 Sept. (AKI) — The European Commission on Thursday rejected a proposal by Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi to renegotiate the European Union’s proposed limits on carbon emissions. “The national cap limits were adopted with procedure based on European legislation and are no longer negotiable,” Barbara Hellferich, EC executive spokeswoman told journalists.

“The ceilings have been established already,” said Hellferich.

The European Commission has extensive powers over antitrust policy, trade, agriculture and other areas.

Berlusconi sent a letter to the commission’s president Jose Manuel Barroso last week asking it to renegotiate the caps for the period 2008-2012, which according to him will make industry uncompetitive.

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



Italy: Thieves Use Drug- Laced Madonna Card

Woman, 94, knocked out in home raid

(ANSA) — Florence, September 23 — An elderly woman was robbed in her Florence home after two thieves knocked her out with a drug-laced card of the Madonna.

The two women, in their 40s, stole 20,000 euros’ worth of jewels from the dazed 94-year-old, police said Wednesday.

The victim said she was forced to kiss the card, in a sign of devotion, despite protesting that it “smelled odd”.

There has been a recent rise in such cases, Italian police say.

Devotional or holy cards, showing patron saints, Padre Pio, the Madonna or late popes, are very popular among Italian Catholics.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Savoy Sent to Trial in Bribery Case

Son of Italy’s last king puts trust in justice

(ANSA) — Potenza, September 24 — Prince Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy, the son of Italy’s last king, has been sent to trial on charges of conspiring to bribe public officials.

The prince, 72, is accused of conspiracy to obtain licences and supply contracts for illegal gambling machines procured by a Sicilian businessman, Rocco Migliardi.

The prince, who denies all wrongdoing, is accused of using his high-level contacts to help sell the video poker games to a casino in Campione d’Italia, an Italian enclave in Switzerland.

Vittorio Emanuele said the affair was “inexplicable” and he was “confident” of proving his innocence.

“Despite this trying and painful episode,” he said, “I have complete faith I will be vindicated”.

The trial opens in this southern Italian city on December 21.

In June 2006, when the case broke, the news of the prince’s arrest flashed worldwide — especially because he was initially accused of procuring Eastern European prostitutes for the casino.

He spent a week in jail and a month under house arrest.

Italy’s former royal family was banished in 1946 following a national referendum introducing the Republic, their name tainted by the links of Vittorio Emanuele’s grandfather, Vittorio Emanuele III, with Fascism.

Vittorio Emanuele was nine years old when his father King Umberto II and mother Maria Jose’ went into exile in Portugal.

The male members of the Savoy family were subsequently banned from entering Italy by the 1948 Constitution.

But in November 2002 the Italian parliament lifted the ban.

Although the Savoy family now regularly stay in Italy, Prince Vittorio Emanuele has maintained his Swiss residency.

His son Emanuele Filiberto recently moved from Paris and, on the back of a win in the Italian version of Dancing with the Stars, is expected to go into politics despite an unsuccessful run for the European Parliament.

Vittorio Emanuele’s popularity in Italy has fluctuated. His long campaign to get the Savoy ban lifted was damaged by his trial and eventual acquittal on manslaughter charges in the 1978 death of a young German tourist killed by a hunting gun following a quarrel at a Corsican marina.

More recently the Savoys sparked outrage with a request, subsequently withdrawn, for massive damages for their exile.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Staffordshire Hoard: Amateur Treasure Hunter Finds Britain’s Biggest Haul of Anglo-Saxon Gold

The largest haul of Anglo-Saxon gold ever found has been discovered by a metal detector enthusiast on farmland in Staffordshire, it was revealed today.

Experts say the hoard is at least as significant as any other treasure from the Anglo-Saxon era ever unearthed and believe it could have belonged to a king.

They predict the discovery of at least 1,345 different items, thought to date back to the seventh century, will redefine perceptions of the period.

Terry Herbert, from Burntwood, Staffordshire, came across the collection as he searched a field near his home with his trusty 14-year-old detector.

It had been hidden for more than 1,300 years but was recently thrown up by ploughing and amazingly, some was just sitting on the top of the ground.

[Return to headlines]



Sweden: Hunt Continues for Helicopter Robbers

Swedish police continue to hunt for suspects and faced criticism following the well-orchestrated, helicopter-aided theft at a cash depot in Västberga south of Stockholm on Wednesday.

Man arrested in helicopter heist probe (23 Sep 09)

So far no one has been arrested for direct involvement in the daring pre-dawn raid.

The two people arrested on Wednesday afternoon during the initial phases of the investigation are suspected of receiving stolen goods in crimes unrelated to the heist.

One of the men was released late Wednesday night, while the other remains in police custody. He was wanted for having failed to serve out the entirely of a previous prison sentence.

Police estimate that there are no more than 25 career criminals in Sweden capable of carrying out such a unique and professionally-executed robbery.

Officially, police don’t want to publicize exact estimates of how many people may have participated in the stunning heist.

“But we’re probably talking about a figure in the two digits,” said Christian Agdur of the Stockholm police.

Police intelligence units are now working furiously to determine how many of Sweden’s most-capable criminals are currently out of prison, where they are, and whether or not there have been any rumours circulating in criminal networks about a major planned crime.

The possibility that the theft was an inside job is also being explored.

Police sources believe that one or several of the robbers likely had military training.

“The complicated logistics are comparable to something from the military. It’s not just anyone who can get themselves up and down in a helicopter like that. It requires something like infantry or operations training,” a police source told TT.

Meanwhile, police are facing criticism for the lax security at the Stockholm police heliport at Myttinge on Värmdö, a problem which has been known for at least a year.

The robbers were able to stay ahead of police in part by grounding police helicopters through placing a fake bomb in the entrance of the hangar.

Sten-Olov Hellberg, commissioner of the Dalarna County Police in central Sweden, submitted a report in June 2008 about police helicopter units around the country to the National Police Board (Rikspolisstyrelsen).

In the report, he criticized the security at Myttinge, the Dagens Nyheter (DN) newspaper reports.

“The helicopters are basically kept in a tent. As far as I can tell, the site isn’t manned around the clock,” he told DN.

He is highly critical of the security lapses, especially in light of a previous incident in which police helicopters had been shot at a hangar in Gothenburg.

The Stockholm police’s two helicopters are only at Myttinge on a temporary basis, according to Tommy Hydfors of the National Criminal Investigation Department (Rikskriminalpolisen).

Following a 2002 fire at the previous hangar in Tullinge south of Stockholm, police have been unable to find a new permanent location to house the helicopters.

As a result, the temporary facilities at Myttinge haven’t been outfitted with the tougher security measures police would want at a permanent facility.

National Police Chief Bengt Svenson told Sveriges Television (SVT) that it’s not acceptable that the police’s helicopters weren’t better protected at the temporary base.

He has proposed moving them again to the Berga naval base in the Stockholm archipelago, a site where the helicopters had been placed previously.

“I think it’s the best place for us and I assume that after we have a conversation with the Supreme Commander, we’ll be able to go back there,” said Svenson.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Trucker Flips His Rig After Masturbating While Driving

A German trucker suspected of driving under the influence of drugs crashed his vehicle near Borås in western Sweden on Tuesday. He subsequently admitted to masturbating at the time of the accident.

The trucker, apparently unable to reach a satisfactory climax, then proceeded to continue to pleasure himself while in the midst of a police interrogation, according to the local Borås Tidning newspaper.

“He was masturbating while the police interrogated him,” police prosecutor Åsa Askenbäck told the newspaper.

“He has admitted that he was not paying full attention at the time of the accident. He was playing with himself instead of focusing on the road.”

The truck driver was en route from Gothenburg to Borås at around 4am on Tuesday morning. The truck and trailer flipped over when he rammed his vehicle into the central division on route 40 south of Borås.

The upturned vehicle blocked all traffic towards Gothenburg and one lane was closed in the direction of Borås.

The man remained in the vehicle with his hands apparently still clasped around his own gear stick and was subsequently arrested for reckless driving and driving while under the influence of drugs.

The suspicions against the man have now been extended to sexual molestation.

The German trucker, who is in his thirties, has admitted all of the charges directed against him.

           — Hat tip: CB [Return to headlines]



Swiss Vote Against Piracy Force

Swiss troops will not take part in an EU anti-piracy operation off the coast of Somalia, lawmakers have ruled.

Switzerland’s parliament rejected a government proposal to take part in the Atalanta mission by 102 votes to 81.

Defence Minister Ueli Maurer said Thursday’s vote was a “missed opportunity”, Swiss radio reported.

The government had proposed sending 30 troops to the Gulf of Aden, but opponents said the bill compromised Switzerland’s long-held neutrality.

“It’s about being involved in combat operations, and this clearly contradicts neutrality,” said Martin Baltisser, of the nationalist Swiss People’s party, AP reported.

Switzerland’s upper house had backed the proposal, which analysts say was an attempt to boost the landlocked Alpine nation’s relations with its EU neighbours.

Operation Atalanta has some two dozen ships from EU nations — including Britain, France, Germany and Italy — patrolling an area of about two million square miles off the Horn of Africa.

In June, EU ministers agreed to extend the anti-piracy operation until the end of 2010.

Somalia has been without a stable government since 1991.

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



Switzerland: Parliament Torpedoes Anti-Pirate Proposal

The Swiss military will not take part in a European Union-sponsored campaign to fight pirates off the coast of Somalia.

The House of Representatives on Thursday voted against participating in the Atalanta mission, with an anti-interventionist, left-right alliance defeating a centrist bloc by a count of 102-81 votes.

As a political matter, the anti-pirate force is now finished even though the Senate — the other parliamentary chamber — had come out in favour.

Defence Minister Ueli Maurer of the rightwing Swiss People’s Party called the decision “a missed opportunity”.

“It would have been a chance to do something for international solidarity,” he said after the vote.

Ironically, it was Maurer’s own party that sank the initiative. The People’s Party had earlier argued that the military was unprepared to respond to pirate attacks.

“We also support stopping this march forward and having a fundamental discussion about the form and context of military operations abroad,” said Ulrich Schlüer, a People’s Party parliamentarian.

The EU said it had taken note of the decision but did not issue further comment. It had earlier ruled out Switzerland providing a financial contribution.

“Bad signal”

Switzerland’s political left had demanded increased humanitarian commitments instead of a military force. It dovetailed with the right, which has historically been wary about the potential to compromise the country’s neutrality.

Schlüer said the proposal was “pointless and crude”. He has said he was open to intervention “but not in military uniform”.

Hans Widmer, a centre-left Social Democrat, said the rejection could send “a bad signal to the outside world”.

“ …we will risk worsening our already-battered credibility and image as a nation committed to solidarity. “

Peter Malma, Radical Party Proponents of the mission, which included the centre-right, had argued that the country’s image was at stake among other points.

“If Switzerland does not participate, we will risk worsening our already-battered credibility and image as a nation committed to solidarity,” said Peter Malama of the Radical Party.

Defence Minister Maurer had also warned that Europe would have difficulty understanding Switzerland turning down the mission, which includes vessels and aircraft from eight countries.

The mandate of the Swiss soldiers and experts would have been limited to protecting vessels of the United Nations World Food Programme and Swiss cargo ships crossing the Gulf of Aden, according to the foreign ministry.

The foreign ministry framed it as part of the country’s humanitarian obligations.

A Swiss force of around two dozen would have included elite troops, legal experts and a medical team, as well as senior officers, at a cost of nearly SFr10 million ($9.8 million).

Switzerland’s government had previously discussed participation in the operation several times without taking a decision.

Debate

In June, the EU extended the Atalanta mission through the end of 2010. One Swiss vessel was pursued by pirates off the coast of Somalia in December but there was no attack.

The centre-right Radicals and the Christian Democrats argued several months later that the Atalanta mandate was clear and Swiss elite soldiers were trained for missions abroad.

Most centre-left Social Democrats responded with cautious approval.

The People’s Party on the other hand accused the government of undermining Swiss neutrality.

The Campaign for an Independent and Neutral Switzerland said the Swiss move would have been a “serious mistake”.

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



UK: BBC Bans Comedians From Using Word Gipsy in Sketch. Because It’s ‘Racist’

The BBC has stepped in to stop the word ‘gipsies’ being used in a TV comedy sketch for fear of being seen as racist.

Ben Miller, one half of the comedy duo Armstrong and Miller, said he had a ‘debate’ with TV bosses over plans to use the word in a sketch poking fun at racist attitudes in Britain in the 1970s.

Last night, after Miller’s claims appeared in the latest issue of FHM magazine, it appeared the BBC had won the day.

Miller told the Daily Mail he and partner Alexander Armstrong had now dropped plans to use the word ‘gipsies’ in the sketch.

After discussions they had decided to use a different word so that the target of the joke was clearer and it was funnier, he said.

Miller told the November issue of FHM: ‘We’re having a debate at the moment with the BBC over whether we can say gipsies, because they say gipsies is a racist term, and you think “Yes it is but that’s the point that we’re making, that we were more racist in the 70s than we are now”.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Britain’s Top Police Officer Attacks Fixed Penalty Notices for Reducing ‘Respect’ For Law

Thugs and thieves should be hauled before the courts instead of getting on-the-spot fines, Britain’s most senior police officer said today.

Met Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson criticised the use of cautions and fixed penalty notices for offences today, saying police were getting the balance wrong.

He told the Metropolitan Police Authority that on-the-spot penalties and cautions undermined the ‘majesty’ of the courts.

Instead he said up to 400,000 more suspects a year could be dealt with in so-called virtual courts, where the offender appears via video-link from police cells.

His comments will inflame the row over the march towards ‘soft justice’ under Labour.

More than half of all crimes are now dealt with outside court as hundreds of thousands of offenders escape with cautions or on-the-spot fines for burglary, shoplifting, assault and loutish behaviour.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Now It’s Speed Bumps for Cyclists . . . to Stop Them Rampaging Down a Road

It is generally agreed that speed bumps are an effective way of slowing down speeding motorists and improving road safety.

But now one council has introduced the bumps in a bid to stop speeding cyclists rampaging down one road.

In the exclusive area of Canonbury, in London’s Islingston, they have laid 14 bumps on the no-car backstreet after a catalogue of complaints about cyclists careering down the road.

The move comes after Government advisers claimed motorists should be made legally responsible for all accidents involving cyclists, even if they are not at fault.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Pictured: The Young Woman Ravaged by GBL — The Legal Party Drug the Government Won’t Ban

Just days after the Government made the controversial decision to classify GBL as a Class C drug, these shocking pictures are a stark reminder of the devastating effects of the legal party drug.

Mikaila Tyhurst was an attractive 18-year-old when she started taking GBL. She dreamed of being an air stewardess.

Now 22 but appearing much older than her years, she has lost her looks and her health after becoming an addict.

Her front teeth were knocked out in a drug-induced fall, she has severe liver damage and three months ago she nearly died of an overdose.

Mikaila, from Crumpsall, Manchester, has been admitted to hospital dozens of times, often unconscious, after drinking GBL (Gamma butyrolactone).

The drug — similar to the date rape drug GHB is currently legal in this country although it is set to be banned before the end of the year. It is readily available online, at specialist shops, and in beauty products.

The Government plans to make GBL a Class C when meant for human consumption drug by the end of the year, a lower classification than cannabis and ecstasy.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Revealed: The Uninsured Captital of Britain Where Half of All Motorists Have No Cover

A suburb of Bradford is named today as the ‘uninsured driving capital of Britain’ with nearly half the motorists there driving illegally without cover.

Every second motorist (49.5 per cent) in Barkerend in the West Yorkshire town is uninsured — the highest concentration of uninsured drivers anywhere in the country according to a post-code map of the problem.

[…]

Ethnically, it is described as 61 per cent white, 34 per cent Asian, 2 per cent mixed race, and 1.3 per cent black.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Vatican Informed About Williamson

Pope did not know of bishop’s Holocaust denial, spokesman

(ANSA) — Vatican City, September 23 — The Vatican was told that ultraorthodox bishop Richard Williamson had denied the Holocaust in a TV interview aired two days before his excommunication was lifted, the Bishop of Stockholm said on Wednesday.

Monsignor Anders Arborelius said he had “informed” the Vatican that Williamson had denied the existence of gas chambers during World War II in an interview broadcast by the Swedish TV programme Uppdrag granskning on January 21. The British-born cleric told the programme that in his view not six million but only 200,000 to 300,000 Jews died in Nazi concentration camps “and not one of them in a gas chamber”.

In a message posted on the diocese’s web site, Msgr Arborelius stressed that “as customary, we always inform the Vatican of issues relating to the Church and so there was nothing exceptional in this case”.

The comment prompted Vatican spokesman, Father Federico Lombardi, to reiterate that Pope Benedict XVI was not aware of Williamson’s views when the excommunication was lifted.

“It’s absolutely groundless to say or even simply to insinuate that the Pope had been told before (his rehabilitation) of Williamson’s views”.

Lombardi added that this did not imply that he was denying Arborelius’s statement, suggesting that the bishop may have informed other Vatican officials who had not passed on the news to the pope.

Bishop Arborelius will be heard repeating his comment to Uppdrag granskning in a programme to be broadcast Wednesday which will also feature an interview with Cardinal Walter Kasper, head of the Pontifical Council for Christian Unity.

According to the conservative Catholic blog Rorate Coeli, Kasper told the programme in an interview taped in July that he had not been consulted on the rehabilitation.

The blog quotes Kaspar as saying that he “had a general knowledge of the sympathies of Bishop Williamson”.

“He further states in the interview that he thought this was something widely known making it a matter of surprise for him that the Pontifical Comission Ecclesia Dei did not know,” Rorate Coeli says. Pope Benedict XVI sparked dismay among Jews and some Catholics on January 24 when he rehabilitated Williamson along with three other bishops from the traditionalist Catholic group St Pius X (SSPX) that split with Rome over the liberal reforms of the Second Vatican Council.

The Vatican was forced to clarify that Benedict was unaware of Williamson’s stance at the time of his rehabilitation and, in an unusual personal letter to Catholic bishops in March, the pope admitted his “mistakes” in handling the affair, including not checking the Internet where Williamson’s comments were posted.

Benedict said he had rehabilitated the clerics as a first step towards bringing the breakaway SSPX back to the Church, stressing that it will only be accepted back into the fold if — during negotiations — it accepts the reforms of the Vatican Council II.

After initial tensions with Jews over Williamson’s rehabilitation, the Holy See worked hard to defuse the situation and Jewish leaders said they were satisfied after the pope issued an explicit condemnation of Holocaust denial.

Since then, Benedict has repeatedly denounced the Holocaust, renewing his view that it was the work of a “godless regime” and must always be remembered as a universal warning of the sanctity of life.

Taking leave of Israeli President Shimon Peres during a visit to the Holy Land in May, the German pope said: “That appalling chapter of history must never be forgotten or denied. On the contrary, those dark memories should strengthen our determination to draw closer to one another as branches of the same olive tree, nourished from the same roots and united in brotherly love”.

SSPX is the only group to break away from the 1.1-billion strong Roman Catholic Church since the reforms of the early 1960s.

Talks between the Vatican and the ultratraditionalist Society on formal reunification with the Church will begin in the next few days, the Archbishop of Vienna was quoted as saying Monday.

Cardinal Christoph Shoenborn told the German daily Passauer Nue Presse that the Church would tell the fraternity “very clearly what is ‘not’ negotiable”.

In an apostolic letter released in July entitled Ecclesiae Unitatem, Benedict warned the group that a number of doctrinal issues needed to be cleared up, stressing that it could not have “canonical status” within the Church until it does. photo: Richard Williamson

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Nine Kosovar Rebels Charged With War Crimes

Belgrade, 23 Sept. (AKI) — Nine Kosovar rebels went on trial for war crimes before a special Belgrade court on Wednesday, while five Serbs were arrested in Kosovo also on suspicion of having committed war crimes.

The Kosovar rebels, who allegedly belong to the “Gnjilane group”, were arrested last December in the southern Serbian town of Presevo, bordering Kosovo.

They have been charged with killing at least 80 Serbs and other non-Albanians in the central Kosovar town of Gnjilane in 1999 when Serbian forces withdrew from Kosovo and the region was put under United Nations control.

Another eight members of the group are on the run and will be tried in absentia.

A spokesman for the special court for war crimes, Bruno Vekaric, said it was a “high risk trial” because of its inter-ethnic character and because the whereabouts of the eight fugitives were unknown.

All 17 members of the indicted “Gnjilane group” were members of the Kosovo Liberation Army, which started a rebellion against Serbian rule in 1998.

Many ethnic Albanians outside Kosovo are also believed to have joined the fighting in the ranks of the KLA.

At the same time international police in Kosovo, belonging to the European Union mission (EULEX) said it arrested four Serbs in the Kosovo town of Novo Brdo on suspicion of war crimes. A fifth person was detained for obstructing the arrests, the police said.

Some 200 Serbs gathered in Novo Brdo on Wednesday to protest against the arrests.

Around 200,000 Serbs have fled Kosovo since 1999, but about 100,000 have remained, relying mostly on Belgrade’s financial help.

Serbia continues to oppose the independence of Kosovo, which has been recognised by 62 countries, including the United States

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

North Africa


Morocco: True Modernity Only From Cultural Reform, Bennis

(by Cristina Missori) (ANSAmed) — ROME, SEPTEMBER 24 — “To reach a true, deep and lasting modernisation in Morocco, current judicial, political and economic changes are not enough; to revolutionise the country and push it towards progress there is a need to radically change its cultural world”. This is the strong criticism that came from Mohammed Bennis, Moroccan poet and intellectual who is one of the most famous in the Arab world, towards the power structure and the choices made in the last 10 years by the sovereign King Mohammed VI. “In this moment the will to modernise the country is very strong”, Bennis, who is currently in Italy for the release of his book ‘The Mediterranean and the Word’ (‘Il Mediterraneo e la parolà, Donzelli), admits. “In any case, without a true cultural revolution, judicial changes like the Mudawana (the family code, ed.) reforms, along with political and economic changes will remain merely superficial”. It is not enough, the writer maintains, “to change the Mudawana to modify perceptions that men have of women. The beliefs in their souls must be turned upside down”. Until now, Bennis says, the country’s cultural reform has not been one of great strategies undertaken by the government to relaunch Morocco. “The state gives much more importance to the modernisation of religion than it does to the modernisation of culture”. Born in 1948, Bennis teaches Arabic literature at the University of Rabat. During his life, he recounts, he has simply worked to contribute to the modernisation of his country. “I founded a magazine, a publishing house and an institute, the House of Poetry. I think that intellectuals can do a lot to help Morocco come out of its backwardness”. But, he warns, they must work in their own language, Arabic. “They must know their history and their origins”, the Moroccan writer continued, according to whom in the Alawite Kingdom the intellectual class has lost all of its critical spirit. “Without it, fundamentalism and Islamism advance”. For the author of ‘The Gift of Emptiness’ (‘Il dono del vuotò, San Marco dei Giustiniani edition, 2001), hindering the development of the country is the traditional culture. “It is widespread in the country and deeply connected to the unchanging vision of politics, society and culture. Traditional culture is a handicap which doesn’t allow the country to keep up with the rest of the world”. However, not everything about Bennis’ land of origin takes on a negative hue. The freedom of expression for example “has made enormous progress”. Among intellectuals as well, he concludes, “the country can count on a group of up and coming figures, courageous, with imagination, who dare to write as they wish in their mother-tongue, Arabic, and thanks to internet they are in communication and can exchange ideas with other young Arabs”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Gaza Rocket Hits Israel, No One Injured

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, SEPTEMBER 24 — A rocket launched this morning from the Gaza Strip has hit Israeli territory but did not injury anyone, according to an Israeli Army spokesman quoted by AFP. According to Israeli state-run radio, a rocket hit southern Israeli but caused neither victims not material damage. At the end of 2008 Israel began a violent offensive against the fundamentalist movement Hamas, in power in the Gaza Strip, to put an end to the unceasing launching of Qassam rockets at its territory.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Michael Freund: He’s No Mahatma Obama

If anyone still thinks of US President Barack Obama in superhuman or pseudo-messianic terms, those thoughts can now surely be put to rest.

Just prior to his joint meeting on Monday in New York with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, the leader of the free world put on a performance that was so dreadfully uninspired as to border on the unpresidential.

In a statement to reporters, Obama could barely contain his annoyance, emphatically declaring that “simply put, it is past time to talk about starting negotiations — it is time to move forward. It is time to show the flexibility and common sense and sense of compromise that’s necessary to achieve our goals.”

Sounding like a scorned substitute teacher being ignored by his pupils, Obama lectured his Middle Eastern guests, telling them, “Permanent-status negotiations must begin, and begin soon. And more importantly, we must give those negotiations the opportunity to succeed.”

SOME MAY cheer this “straight talk” as precisely the kind of push that is needed to restart the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. But the truth is that it is more a reflection of the president’s impetuosity than of a well-crafted policy. As such, its chances of success are highly doubtful.

Indeed, the US media was rife with leaks from administration officials about how “impatient” Obama is. Fox News, for example, reported: “Though it’s early in the Obama administration, aides suggest he’s running out of patience with both sides.” The New York Times took note of “the president’s impatience with the slow pace of the peace negotiations,” and Politico revealed that White House “aides indicated that Obama is frustrated and impatient with what they described as foot-dragging by the Israelis and inflexible positions from the Palestinians.”

The president is clearly a prisoner of his own restlessness, diving head-first into one complex and knotty problem after another with little to show for it but bruises. Thus, the same man who tried to rush through an unprecedented overhaul of America’s colossal health-care system in just a matter of a few weeks, now seeks to solve a century-old conflict by forcing a photo-op meeting in New York in order to jump-start negotiations in its wake.

This is no way to run a country, and certainly no way to bring about a real and lasting peace — not among bickering members of Congress, and certainly not between Arabs and Israelis.

YET PERHAPS the strangest thing of all is that Obama himself should know better than to act with such rashness. After all, just two weeks ago, on a highly-publicized visit to a high school in Arlington, Virginia, he cited Mahatma Gandhi, who was a pillar of patience, as one of his key influences.

Asked by a precocious ninth-grader whom he would like to dine with, the president replied, “You know, I think that it might be Gandhi, who is a real hero of mine… He is somebody whom I find a lot of inspiration in.”

Assuming that to be true, it is hard to understand how Obama failed to learn the key lesson that embodied Gandhi’s storied political career, which India’s founding father once pithily summed up as follows: “Patience and perseverance, if we have them, overcome mountains of difficulties.”

As he stood alongside Netanyahu and Abbas, Obama sounded nothing like the iconic Indian leader. “We have to find a way forward,” he said, as though offering some profound new insight that no one else had thought of previously. “Success depends on all sides acting with a sense of urgency,” Obama added, once again invoking haste as a cornerstone of his approach.

Little thought seems to have gone into how to reach his stated goals, other than to express irritation and let off some steam.

But instead of coming across as willful and determined, Obama sounded petulant and arrogant, particularly when he sought to suggest that the Middle East’s complexity and history must be shunted aside to move forward.

With all due respect to the American president, he is obviously no Mahatma Obama. He is a man in a rush, who obviously thinks he knows best — better than Israel’s public and its leaders — what is in Israel’s interests.

But here, too, the president would do well to recall the words of his icon. It was Gandhi who proclaimed that “it is unwise to be toosure of one’s own wisdom. It is healthy to be reminded that the strongest might weaken and the wisest might err.”

Even the man occupying the White House.

[Return to headlines]



Obama Orders Israel to ‘End the Occupation’

United States President Barack Obama issued a stinging condemnation of the Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria on Wednesday in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly. The U.S. “does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements,” Obama announced.

Using unusually harsh terminology, Obama called to “end the occupation that began in 1967” — referring to Israel’s control of Judea and Samaria.

Obama also stated that the U.S. must put more pressure on Israel to accept Arab demands. “The United States does Israel no favors when we fail to couple an unwavering commitment to its security with an insistence that Israel respect the legitimate claims and rights of the Palestinians,” he said.

[…]

Former United States ambassador to the UN John Bolton said the president’s message had strong significance, particularly given the venue. Obama has put Israel “on the chopping block,” Bolton warned.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Yom Kippur: Tensions in Mixed Cities

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, SEPTEMBER 24 — The police have increased the level of alert to avoid clashes between Jews and Muslims in Israel during Yom Kippur (which will start on Sunday evening), as happened last year in Acre. The police will set up roadblocks in Acre to separate the Jewish and Muslim districts as far as possible. In the mostly Jewish districts, Muslim visitors will be protected by policemen, in the Muslim areas the police will escort Jewish visitors. Busses that enter the city will be searched by the police to keep extremists from entering the city. Today the press reports that similar measures will be taken in Jaffa (Tel Aviv), Ramle and Lod (in the suburbs of Tel Aviv) and in Karmiel and Nazrat Illit (Galilea). Last year life in Acre was disrupted for days by serious clashes on the eve of Yom Kippur, after an Arab man driving a car hit a Jewish passer-by in a mostly Hebrew district. Religious leaders in the city and Israeli President Shimon Peres had to intervene to restore the peace. Israel will close its borders for more than 24 hours during Yom Kippur. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


“Palestinism”, the Real UN Disease

The report by the Goldstone Commission sponsored by the U.N. is a danger for all of us; it is a written document stating that it is necessary to give up the fight against systematic terrorism that hits and uses civilians. A quick look at the 575 pages of the report designed to establish what happened in Gaza in the 2008-2009 war: it is clear that the Commission set up by the United Nations during the ninth special session of the Human Rights Council in January 2009 has is not at all interested in truth, but only in still another criminalization of Israel: the U.N. embodies once again an example of moralistic Palestinism that exploits the guilty feelings of the contemporary world to delegitimize the West. And it practically aims to the physical and institutional death of the Jewish State.

Every year, the U.N. devotes two thirds of its resolutions on human rights to condemn Israel; its Assembly has already echoed the anti-semitic speeches by President Ahmadinejad, and now it is going on with a whipping version by Judge Goldstone, indeed a Jew with a daughter who lives in Israel.

Let us proceed step by step. Israel attacked only because it was cornered by thirteen thousand missiles that have fallen on its territory since the year 2000. It asked so many times the U.N. to stop Hamas after completely withdrawing from Gaza. But this terrorist organization aims at destroying all (all) Jewish people in the world and it is financed by Iran: in fact it went on pursuing its task. Israel’s appeals to the U.N. were received by a yawn similar to the one by Goldstone’s in front of the Sderot citizen Noam Bedein, when he went to the meeting of the Commission to testify on the suffering of people from his Country.

Secondly, the report consistently refers to international law — whose lies will be mentioned later — and does not speak about Hamas’ crimes. In fact it does not link the war with the repeated bombing of Israel. Only Israel is to blame and so it was right from the start, so much so that even anti-Israel people like the UN Commissioner Mary Robinson, the organizer of the Durban conference of 2001, refused to participate in the Committee, by considering it “not balanced”. It is evident instead that the main violators of the Geneva Convention are those who fight by shooting civilians, by strategically using their women and children as human shields and by dressing their fighters as civilians. Hamas, in this case.

And so Goldstone does not answer the question by the contemporary world on how to fight beyond the Geneva convention in situations, for example, such as the ones described by Lorenzo Cremonesi in the Corriere: terrorized people who were obliged to protect Hamas men because they were kept prisoners as human shields in their homes, in schools, hospital, ambulances… Goldstone condemns Israel for having fought in a situation of great difficulty where its civilians were at stake. He forgets that the Hamas headquarters was located in the basement of the Shiba Hospital and that Israel has not touched it although it was used by the worst terrorists in the world in a cynical way.

Where did Goldstone obtain his information, since he accuses Israel to have voluntarily hit civilians and claimed around 1200, 1400 deaths? Can this information be verified? The answer is that the report is full of conscious lies. The Commission was already set up by people like the Law Professor Christine Chinkin, who before the survey had “categorically rejected” Israel’s right to self defense and who had already called Israel “aggressor and perpetrator of war crimes”.

As a study by Gerald Steinberg’s NGO-Monitor points out, if we closely look at the sources consulted, we find that many cannot be identified. The others are simply the most politicized anti-Israeli NGO’s: Betzelem and the Palestinian Center for Human Rights. They are mentioned 70 times, the Palestinian organization Al Haq 30 times and so on. The assumption that civilian places and people were intentionally hit is fraught with factual mistakes: Abdullah Abdel Hamid Muamar, 22 years of age, who was killed, was defined by the Palestinian Center “a student” and therefore a civilian. Also Human Rights Watch, another favorite source, defines him as an innocent victim. But according to a publication by the Al Qassam Brigades, Muamar was member of Hamas. He appears on an Arab website while holding a Qassam missile. According to a survey by the Israeli army, 564 victims were armed members of Hamas, 100 belonged to the Islamic Jihads. The members of Fatah, who were present, were not counted. The policemen of the Hamas regime, identified as civilians, accounted for 84% of the Hamas security mechanism; among them, Muhammad el Dasuqi, a member of the Resistance Committee, was probably one of the terrorists who attacked an American Embassy convoy in 2003. The attack against the U.N. school in the Jabaliya refugee camp was initially indicated as a massacre, while later this was denied: also according to some local sources, the school was not hit. The army shot against an adjacent facility sheltering Hamas militants.

These examples show that Goldstone has accepted the notion that those who do not wear a military uniform, are victims. And this does not work. In general, according to the data reported by the journalist Ben Dror Yemini, the Interdisciplinary Center of Herzliya states that around 63%-75% of the victims were killed because they were involved in the war: about 900 people and unfortunately the civilians used as human shields have to be added to them. Hamas is indeed the true responsible for war crimes.

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



‘Al-Qaeda Group’ Flees Iraq Jail

Sixteen members of al-Qaeda in Iraq have escaped from a prison north of Baghdad, Iraqi security officials say.

Reports said five of the group, who were being held at a facility in Tikrit, had been sentenced to death for involvement in attacks.

A security official said that the men removed the windows from a bathroom, crawled through the opening and climbed a ladder over the prison walls.

One of the men has since been caught, but the rest remain at large.

Checkpoints have been set up around Tikrit, which is a predominantly Sunni town in Salah al-Din province about 80 miles (130km) from Baghdad.

Iraqi military spokesman Maj Gen Abdul-Karim Khalaf said extra surveillance had also been ordered at Iraq’s borders and throughout the north-west of the country.

A senior provincial security official told AFP news agency that the escapees had probably received assistance from within the prison system.

“It is clear there was co-operation with specific groups that helped them escape. Probably one of the officials helped them,” he said.

In a separate development, 24 people have been arrested in Morocco on suspicion of having links to a cell recruiting suicide bombers for Iraq, according to a state news agency.

It said the group, based in towns and cities across Morocco, was also suspected of recruiting men to fight in Somalia and Afghanistan.

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



‘Last Ottoman’ Dies in Istanbul

Ertugrul Osman — the would-be sultan known in Turkey as the “last Ottoman” — has died in Istanbul at the age of 97.

Osman would have been sultan of the Ottoman Empire had Turkey’s modern republic not been created in the 1920s.

As the last surviving grandson of Sultan Abdul-Hamid II, he would have been known as his Imperial Highness Prince Shehzade Ertugrul Osman Effendi.

Born in Istanbul in 1912, Osman spent most of his years living modestly in New York.

No political ambition

He was a 12-year-old at school in Vienna when he heard the news that his family was being expelled by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the soldier who founded the modern Turkish republic out of the ashes of the old empire.

Osman eventually settled in New York, where for more than 60 years he lived in a flat above a restaurant.

Always insisting he had no political ambition, he only returned to Turkey in the early 1990s at the invitation of the government.

During the visit, he went to Dolmabahce — the palace by the Bosphorus where he had played as a child.

Characteristically, he joined a tour group in order to avoid any red-carpet treatment.

Ertugrul Osman is survived by his wife, Zeynep, a relative of the last king of Afghanistan.

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



Lebanon’s Madoff Tarnishes Hezbollah Reputation

A reproduction of an undated family photograph obtained by AFP from the municipality of the southern Lebanese town of Maaroub shows Lebanese financier Salah Ezzedine posing with family members. Ezzedine, dubbed “Lebanon’s Bernard Madoff” by the Beirut press over allegations he squandered more than one billion dollars of his clients’ money, has been charged with embezzlement and fraud.

A Mideast version of the Bernie Madoff scandal is threatening to tarnish Hezbollah’s reputation in Lebanon for being incorruptible, and the powerful Shiite militant movement faces calls to bail out small investors to keep its position from being undercut. Hundreds of Lebanese sold land or drained their retirement savings and handed over hundreds of millions of dollars to Salah Ezzedine, a Shiite businessman with connections to Hezbollah.

The anti-Israeli Hezbollah is on a U.S. list of terrorist organizations and maintains the strongest military force in Lebanon. For its Shiite followers, however, it is seen as a trusted quasi-government that provides social services and aid. The group gets substantial funding from Iran and paid out millions to rebuild the Shiite heartland in south Lebanon after a devastating 2006 war with Israel.

Hezbollah has said it had nothing to do with the alleged swindle and has so far resisted pressure to rescue the investors.

Nevertheless, many investors put their trust in Ezzedine, principally because of the financier’s connections to Hezbollah and because of his reputation as a pious, respectable Shiite. Ezzedine’s investment company promised as much as 40 percent in annual returns, according to residents of this southern Lebanese village.

Ezzedine and his partner, Youssef Faour, have been arrested on suspicion of cheating investors out of perhaps up to $1 billion, prosecutors say. Earlier this month, they were charged with fraudulent embezzlement, a crime punishable by 15 years in prison. Alleged victims included well-off Shiites but also smaller investors who sold land or pulled out savings to bundle the cash and give it to Ezzedine.

Connection denied:

Lebanese are comparing this to the swindle by Madoff, now serving a 150-year prison sentence for masterminding a multibillion-dollar scheme that burned thousands of investors. Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah earlier this month denied the group had any connection with the financier. A parliament member from Hezbollah reportedly lost money with Ezzedine and is suing him — a sign, the group’s supporters say, that it, too, was victimized.

Still, Hezbollah is trying to ward off any blow to its status among loyalists. Nasrallah spoke recently by video link to a group of investors in the south to hear their complaints and reassure them, although he made no promises of compensation, according to an investor who lost money, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the meeting.

The losses among people of all economic levels have stunned Shiites, who hold an abiding faith in Hezbollah’s integrity and incorruptibility. While many still vow loyalty to the movement, they feel it should support its followers and pay compensation.

“That is what we hope,” Wajih Shour, an investor from Toura, told The Associated Press. He said he paid several installments — including one of $150,000 — into the scheme. He refused to say the total amount he invested with Ezzedine but showed two checks worth hundreds of thousands of dollars that were given to him by one of Ezzedine’s companies as a guarantee on his investment. The checks bounced because there was no money in the accounts, he said.

In Maaroub, a town of about 4,500 people, no one was home at the financier’s large villa surrounded by a garden. Residents refused to say anything bad about Ezzedine, insisting he is a decent man.

Rida Dbouki, 75, has known Ezzedine since he was a little boy and describes him as a “man who did all the good for this village.” Asked about the losses, the grocer said, “We don’t know how all this happened.”

Another Maaroub resident, Hussein Khalil Khamis, 78, recounted how Ezzedine paid for his wife’s diabetes and high blood pressure medications that he could not afford — amounting to $200 a month.

Only one man in Maaroub, who identified himself only as Abu Ali because of the sensitivity of discussing the scheme in Ezzedine’s hometown, acknowledged he invested a small amount of money, was promised 40 percent in annual returns and never got it back. He would not say how much he invested.

Fadi Ajami, owner of a hardware shop in Toura, proudly proclaims himself a Hezbollah supporter — his office is decorated with pictures of its leaders, including Nasrallah and its military commander, Imad Mughniyeh, who was killed by a car bomb in Syria last year.

“What really hurts is that those people (Ezzedine and Faour) used their connections with Hezbollah as a cover to gain people’s trust. Hezbollah had nothing to do with them,” Ajami said.

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



Shah’s Widow: Carter Behind 30 Years of Terror Woes

‘Iraq would never have dared to even send a plane over our country’

THE widow of the Shah of Iran, Empress Farah Pahlavi, is still around to remind us how bad Jimmy Carter was as president — long before his recent Israel-bashing and his calling Obama detractors racist. If Carter hadn’t let the Shah be overthrown in 1979, “there wouldn’t be this problem in Afghanistan, nor would there have been the Iran-Iraq war,” Pahlavi tells Avenue magazine. “Iraq would never have dared to even send a plane over our country. The Gulf War wouldn’t have happened, nor would any of the problems of the past 30 years, including the exporting of religious fanaticism.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UN: Ahmadinejad Attacks Israel, The West Refuses to Listen

(by Alessandra Baldini) (ANSAmed) — NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 24 — Iranian president Mahmud Ahmadinejad has railed against Israel in the UN headquarters, leading to a sensational protest by numerous delegations from Western countries — including the United States, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy and Canada — who left the hall when Ahmadinejad began his ranting against Israel. Ahmadinejad said that Israel is to blame for “inhuman policies against Palestinians”. The Israeli delegation had decided to boycott the Iranian leader’s speech from the very beginning, but other diplomats had wanted to give a more visual sign of their disagreement with the “hateful and offensive anti-Semitic rhetoric” of Tehran’s leader, in the words contained in a statement issued by the US delegation. Ahmadinejad therefore spoke to a semi-empty hall which during his speech emptied even further. He was lavish in his wide-ranging criticism of the West, saying that “a small minority” should not dominate world politics, the economy and culture, and stood up for the disputed elections in June which saw him re-elected to power in Iran. In his words, the elections in Iran were “glorious and entirely democratic”, and were the beginning of a new chapter in the history of his country. In a dark jacket and without a tie, Ahmadinejad began speaking after 7pm in New York (1am in Italy), much later than had been scheduled for the first day of the UN General Assembly, due to the long tirade by Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, who in the early morning had monopolised the UN podium for an hour and a half instead of the prescribed 15 minutes. The Iranian president also spoke much longer than scheduled, and said that foreign troops are spreading “war, blood, aggression, terror and intimidation in Iraq and Afghanistan”. However, in his speech to the General Assembly, shortly after a ministerial meeting of the five permanent members of the Security Council for the talks on his country’s nuclear ambitions, Ahmadinejad did not mention the nuclear issue for which Tehran may soon see fresh sanctions inflicted on it. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Italy: Political Leaders Urge Russia to Respect Human Rights

Rome, 24 Sept. (AKI) — The lower house of Italy’s parliament has passed an almost unanimous bi-partisan motion urging the Italian government to guarantee respect for human rights in Russia, in particular in regard to jailed oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

The lower house on Wednesday voted in favour of the motion to activate all “diplomatic channels, together with other European partners, to guarantee the respect for human rights and the right of defence for Mikhail Khodorkovsky” and others.

The motion was proposed by the leader of the centrist Christian Democrat party, Pier Fernando Casini.

“ The almost unanimity of the vote will push the government to carry out an important role,” said Roberto Rao, Italian MP and UDC leader in an interview with Adnkronos.

The anti-immigrant Northern League party — and a key ally of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s government — abstained from voting.

Rao, however, said the motion was important because “in the last few years, progress in democracy and freedom in Russia were halted”.

He said it would allow for a resumption of efforts to restore freedom and democracy, because it would push the Italian government to play an important role in the matter.

Italy has important economic ties with Russia being the third largest trading partner, while Berlusconi and Russia’s prime minister Vladimir Putin have a close friendship.

“The Khodorkovsky case is only the tip of the iceberg, by which we wanted to show Italian public opinion in regard to the numerous violations of human rights committed in Russia,” Rao said.

“Government opposition figures and various journalists want to tell the story about what happens in Russia, such as the issue in Chechnya for those who are deprived of this freedom,” said Rao.

Khodorkovsky arrested in 2003 for what the defence team calls “politically-motivated charges”, have passed the last six years in prison and are now facing a second trial and the prospect of a twenty-two year sentence if convicted.

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



U.S. Protests Russian ‘Sex Tape’ Used to Smear American Diplomat

The U.S. Ambassador in Moscow has lodged a formal protest with the Russian Foreign Ministry over an “attempted smear” of an American diplomat with a purported sex video recorded in a Moscow hotel room.

“This kind of effort to discredit an American diplomat really has no place in the sort of relationship that we are trying to build with the Russian federation,” Ambassador John Beyrle told ABC News in an interview to be broadcast tonight on World News with Charles Gibson and Nightline.

American officials say the Russian intelligence agency that replaced the KGB, the Federal Security Service (FSB), produced the video in an attempt to either recruit or discredit the diplomat, Brendan Kyle Hatcher, a 34-year-old married State Department employee who serves as a liaison with religious and human rights groups in Russia.

As recently as this summer, Hatcher attended a meeting with Ambassador Beyrle with the Russian Patriarch Metropolitan Kiril.

When Hatcher rejected the Russian blackmail approach, officials said, the tape was posted last month on a supposed Russian internet news site that has no known reporters and that many Russian journalists believe is closely tied to the FSB.

The Russian Foreign Ministry declined comment to ABC News.

The video begins with surveillance video of Hatcher on a darkened street with a cell phone in his hand. Audio of Hatcher speaking with several women in Russian is dubbed over the scene and a still photograph of a topless woman is posted over the video.

Finally, the video shows footage of Hatcher recorded with a camera hidden in the ceiling of a hotel room. The lights are on and Hatcher is seen on the bed in his underwear. Then the video cuts to the same room without the lights on and shows a man and a woman seemingly having sex on the bed. Hatcher denies he is the man seen in the darkened scenes, and U.S. officials say they believe him.

“Kyle Hatcher has done nothing wrong,” said Ambassador Beyrle. “Clearly the video we saw was a montage of lot of different clips, some of them which are clearly fabricated,” he told ABC News. “We had our security office back in Washington take a look at that and they are convinced Kyle has done nothing wrong. I have full confidence in him and he is going to continue his work here at the embassy.”

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

South Asia


Afghanistan: Italian Soldiers Injured in Latest Attack

Rome, 24 Sept. (AKI) — Two Italian soldiers were injured in southwest Afghanistan on Thursday after being attacked by militants. Sources in the Italian defence ministry told Adnkronos that the attack occurred during a humanitarian operation in Shindand, around 100 kilometres north of Farah, in the southwest.

As soon as the attack occurred, two A10 fighter aircraft from the multi-national International Security Assistance Force were called to reinforce the troops under attack.

One of the Italian soldiers was injured in the hand, while another was wounded in the neck.

The injured paratroopers, who belong to the same 186th Lightning Brigade which lost six soldiers in the massive bomb attack in the capital, Kabul, last week, were recovering at the hospital in the Italian base in Herat

“Their condition is not serious,” said Maj. Marco Amoriello, Italy’s spokesman at the camp in Herat in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI).

Italy’s defence minister Ignazio La Russa expressed his “strong solidarity” with the injured soldiers.

The attack occurred a day after another Italian soldier was injured when his patrol came under fire on Wednesday.

All those killed in last week’s attack were from the 186th Lightning Brigade. State funerals were held for the slain soldiers in Rome on Monday in a national day of remembrance in Italy.

Ten Afghans and dozens of Afghan civilians were also injured in the Kabul blast.

There are around 3,000 Italian troops serving in Afghanistan, mostly in the west of the country.

Twenty Italian soldiers have been killed in the conflict between insurgents and the NATO-led international force since the Taliban was ousted in 2001.

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



Militants Kill Pakistani Elders

Seven pro-government tribal elders have been killed by the Taliban in north-west Pakistan, police say.

The victims of the Taliban ambush in the town of Janikhel included tribal chief Malik Sultan, who was active in raising a militia against militants.

Janikhel has often been troubled by militant violence and is close to the tribal region of North Waziristan where the Taliban is known to be active.

The area has been under periodic curfews by the army since June.

“Taliban militants attacked the tribal elders who were on their way to a nearby village to mediate in a dispute between local people,” local police chief Iqbal Marwat told the AFP news agency.

“All seven, who were on foot, were killed on the spot while the militants fled,” he added.

The attack happened in Bannu district.

Residents said that Malik Sultan was part of a government-sponsored initiative to form militias in the north-west to combat the Taliban.

Correspondents say the militias are seen as a way of offsetting the fact that the Pakistani army lacks adequate equipment and counter-insurgency specialists. They are also seen as a way of protecting villages and remote communities.

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



Pakistan: President Urges US to Reimburse $1.6 Bn for Terror War

Islamabad, 23 Sept. (AKI/DAWN) — Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari has urged the United States government to reimburse the 1.6 billion dollars that Pakistan spent on fighting extremism in the tribal areas earlier this year.

The United States pays Pakistan for the anti-extremist operations from a special account called the Coalition Support Fund. Pakistan has not been paid for more than a year, Pakistani daily Dawn said.

President Zardari made this demand in two separate meetings with US officials including special envoy Richard Holbrooke.

President Zardari also called for an early realisation of about six billion dollars pledged to Pakistan in the Tokyo conference earlier this year where international donors promised to help Pakistan overcome its economic crisis.

The President also sought an early adoption of the Kerry-Lugar Bill that may bring in another 1.5 billion dollars of annual US assistance over a period of five years.

The Pakistani army launched an offensive in early May against the Taliban in the northwest districts of Buner, Lower Dir and Swat after militants advanced to within 100 kilometres of Islamabad in defiance of a peace deal.

The offensive sparked a huge evacuation, displacing more than 2 million civilians. The army claims it has completed its three-month-long military campaign, has killed over 2,000 militants and has defeated the Taliban in the region.

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



Pakistan: Taliban Recruit European Families as Militants Kill Nine Elders in Pakistan Gun Battle

The Taliban are recruiting whole families from Europe to a ‘terror colony’ in the badlands between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The colony, dubbed the ‘Village of the Damned’, is run by a former army recruit who is gathering Muslims — and their families — to join his band of brigands to train for Holy War.

Abu Adam, 24, who started out in life as Mounir Chouka in the quiet German city of Bonn, has been luring Europeans to the area since the start of the year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Two Wounded in Afghan Firefight

Second attack in two days

(ANSA) — Rome, September 24 — Two Italian soldiers were slightly wounded in a firefight with insurgents in western Afghanistan Thursday.

It was the second such incident in the restive Shindand district in as many days.

One of the soldiers suffered a minor hand wound and the other sustained a slight wound to the neck, military sources said.

The paratroopers, who lost six men last week, were distributing aid and medical supplies when they came under attack from insurgents using automatic rifles and anti-tank missiles, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) command in nearby Herat said.

The Italians fired back and killed “several” insurgents thanks to cover from two A10 fighter planes, said the command’s spokesman, Major Mauro Amoriello.

Amoriello stressed, however, that insurgents were gradually losing control of Shindand, a major cross-roads for arms and drugs, thanks to the “increased activity of Afghan security forces”.

“More important, the insurgents are losing the support of the local population which is now clearly behind the Afghan and ISAF forces,” he said.

The Herat area, where Italy leads the local ISAF effort, was relatively peaceful until this summer when Italian forces came under some 380 attacks compared to 180 last summer. Italy has had less than a hundred wounded since it joined NATO-led peacekeeping efforts in 2003, compared to tens of thousands United States wounded.

Last Thursday’s six deaths raised the Italian death toll in Afghanistan to 21, the same as the Netherlands and behind Spain and Denmark’s 25, France’s 31, Germany’s 33, Canada’s 131, the United Kingdom’s 217 and the US’s 843. The six soldiers were killed in a car bombing in Kabul and represented Italy’s worst loss of life since 19 died in Iraq in 2003.

The six deaths led to some calls for Italy to pull out of Afghanistan but the government insisted it would stay as long as it took for a “transition strategy” to be put in place to stabilise the country.

However, 500 troops sent to help police the recent elections will be back by Christmas.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Christians Escape Muslim Who Kidnaps, Beats Them

Persecuted couple granted asylum in ‘critical victory’

A Christian couple has been granted asylum in the U.K. after a Muslim man kidnapped them for several months, beat them and tried to force them to recant their faith.

A Pakistani Christian married a Muslim woman who converted to Christianity. The two endured persecution from the woman’s Muslim family because of their marriage and Christian faith. Her uncle attacked the couple in their home, detained them in his home for several months and sought the services of a Muslim cleric to teach the couple about Islam, according to the American Center for Law and Justice, or ACLJ, the nation’s top conservative civil liberties law firm.

The European Centre for Law and Justice, or ECLJ, international affiliate of the ACLJ, helped the couple seek asylum in the U.K.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Australia: Loneliness of the University Liberal

Ridicule and hatred are ritualistic hurdles for women rejecting the leftist emphasis of our campuses, writes Paul Sheehan.

[Note: in Australia, the Liberal party is conservative]

At the start of her Sydney University orientation, Sasha Uher checked out the political clubs. She found the Socialist Alternative, the Greens, the Marxists, the anti-war party, the Labor Left, the Labor Right. “I knew university would be more left-leaning but the extreme nature of some of these clubs really concerned me.”

She wondered why the choice was between soft left, mid-left, hard left, far left, lunar left. The Liberals, so important in national politics, seemed not to exist, but Uher eventually found them tucked away in a corner, and decided on the spot to join them.

The abuse started soon after.

“Liberals cop a lot of abuse from the Socialist Alternative, a radical leftist group on campus,” she told me. “They label us racist, sexist, homophobic. During an election campaign one socialist came up to me and said ‘I campaign against scum like you every day’. There is a particularly strong anti-Israel bias, crossing into anti-Semitism. An insult I’ve often heard thrown at Liberal students is that we are ‘dirty, war-mongering Jews’.

“This is why I am such a passionate advocate for voluntary student unionism. It is a matter that has rallied the Liberals. We strongly believe in individual responsibility … not expecting the government to be the solution to all problems.”

A commerce student, she is president of the university’s Liberal Club. Hate speech, Uher says, is not the biggest problem in campus political life because most students are apolitical and steer away from the obsessives and zealots. More insidious, she believes, is the ideological bias of the faculty, and the subtle pressure to conform. “Lecturers and tutors are predominantly left-leaning and this bias is often reflected in course material and in the way in which class work is marked.”

Every young Liberal woman interviewed for this story said the same thing.

“Unfortunately the only acceptable view within the mainstream of university politics is that of the left,” said Sarah Constable, 20, an arts student at Sydney University. “Of course, there is a minority of those who share Liberal values but we are often ostracised. It is pretty tough on campus for us because the minute someone realises you are a Liberal, you are automatically branded a heartless extremist.

“I cannot quantify the countless times I have been called a fascist because I’m a Young Liberal. Tutorials are some of the toughest times. Politics tutorials in particular are filled with people who, if the name John Howard is mentioned, go into some sort of a frenzy. The worst part is that the tutors are often even more extreme.

“At first I thought it was just the Socialist Alternative-types who were extreme; however I have had to sit through countless America-bashing tutorials.”

She joined the Liberal Club after returning from an extended period living in Britain. “Growing up under an ineffective Labour government just served to reaffirm my Conservative values. I want to see Australia grow and prosper, so I’ll work to see the Liberal Party re-elected.”

Prue Gusmerini, 26, studied law at the University of NSW, was apolitical at university, but came to the conclusion she was being fed rubbish by her teachers after two years of volunteer work for poor children. The work led her, after graduation, to her current job as campaign manager for Give Us A Go, a coalition of indigenous groups from Cape York. The campaign is headed by the Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson.

“I worked in some of toughest neighbourhoods in Australia in an effort to understand how the world really worked,” she said. “And let me tell you, that reality rarely accorded to the lessons being taught in university halls.

“The predominance of leftist thinking amongst the arts/law faculty was so strong that it took me almost two years to shirk some of its core teachings. I wasn’t political at university, but I realised that the emphasis on leftist ideas divorced students from the political realities at play in the outside world.”

Ideological pressure and unreality within universities is a serious issue, but most universities pretend the problem does not exist. An outspoken exception is the vice-chancellor of Macquarie University, Steven Schwartz. “Universities once had clear ethical purposes but over the years we have lost our moral direction,” he said in a speech last month. “The central ethical premise of universities has changed fundamentally … Postmodernists sneered at the achievements of the West and universities slowly sank into the morass of moral relativity.”

Schwartz believes that theory-dominated universities are divorced from practical realities. He is implementing a radical measure to require all students to undertake volunteer work off campus.

He could talk to Prue Gusmerini: “My first gig in the real world was tutoring children at the Police Citizens and Youth Club at Waterloo, where most of the children were indigenous or the children of recently arrived migrants. From the get-go, it was obvious to me that there were massive institutional barriers to progress.”

She said she later joined the Liberal Party “because the party’s values complement my own conservative disposition, which is in part an extension of my childhood experiences and an extension of my experiences in indigenous politics and communities”.

She was also offended by the left’s sneering attitude. “Within the left there was a group of Howard haters who had no interest in fighting for a strong set of ideas or principles, which I respect, but were motivated by a deep hatred of and contempt for John Howard. It was this group that irked me the most. They stood for nothing.”

Being a Liberal at university can be politically very lonely. Courtney Dunn, 19, has never knowingly met another Liberal at the two University of Western Sydney campuses where she studies for a combined arts and law degree. “The most visible political students on campus are the hard left, who the average student doesn’t relate to, which is further reason why voluntary student unionism is such a positive thing.

“Our assigned reading materials clearly reflect [‘progressive’] views. Texts can be so blatantly biased it can be frustrating. One of my lecturers even had the nerve to claim that Anzac Day is a celebration of war and touted it as a strange tradition. One textbook I had this year criticised the Howard government in almost every chapter and did not question a single Labor policy. It is obviously quite intimidating to challenge the views of your peers and ultimately the views of those marking their papers.”

Dunn’s family is largely working-class and Labor-voting. She grew up in Campbelltown, and joined the Liberal Party at 17, much to the dismay of Labor-voting uncles.

“I think one of the dangers facing upcoming generations, including my own, is that we are developing an attitude of ‘what will the government do about it?’ I think the Rudd Government is sending the wrong message to Australians that we can’t function without the Government’s help in each area of our lives and I feel that this is fundamentally wrong.”

She expects ridicule for being a Liberal at the University of Western Sydney, but adds: “No-one should be ashamed of being a member of a political party in a country like Australia, which is a democracy and is supposed to be a fair country. Universities are meant to be centres of critical thought.”

[Return to headlines]

Latin America


“Chavez Orchestrated Zelaya’s Return”

Honduran newspaper El Heraldo’s headline states that… Chávez ‘orchestrated’ Zelaya’s arrival — Sources state that the Brazilian embassy shelters Zelaya because “president Lula’s government is behind the pressure to return him to power”.

The article (in Spanish) quotes Brazilian government sources interviewed by Brazilian daily Estadão (link in Portuguese. My translation),

Advisors to president Luiz Inácio Lula da SIlva and Itamaraty (the Brazilian Ministry of the Exterior) stated that Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez provided the infrastructure and logistics for Manuel Zelaya’s clandestine return to Honduras. The Venezuelan leader also advised Zelaya to head to the Brazilian embassy.

According to sources at the Palácio do Planalto and at Itamaraty, Chávez decided that the Brazilian embassy was the safest for Zelaya….Chávez had told Zelaya that the embassies of Venezuela, México, Costa Rica and El Salvador, among others, could be attacked by forces of the de facto government because of the ties of the deposed president and the governments of those countries. Unlike them, the Brazilian diplomatic mission offered every safeguard to sheltering the president, since Lula’s government is at the forefront of the pressure towards Zelaya’s reinstatement. Additionally, the US government, which does not recognize the interim Honduran government, agrees with Brazil’s stance…

           — Hat tip: Fausta [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Australia: Nearly 100 Asylum-Seekers on Latest Boat

AN Australian navy patrol vessel has intercepted a boat carrying 98 suspected asylum-seekers off Australia’s north-west coast.

The vessel was initially detected about 2am (AEST) today before it was intercepted after it entered Australian waters.

Home Affairs Minister Brendan O’Connor said HMAS Glenelg, operating under the control of Border Protection Command, intercepted the vessel at 5am (AEST) north-west of Christmas Island.

The group will be transferred to Christmas Island where they will undergo security, identity and health checks as well as establish their reasons for travel.

More than 1400 people have arrived on 26 unauthorised boats so far this year, with the latest arrival taking the number of boat arrivals in the past two weeks to seven.

The arrivals have sparked a political row in Canberra, where the Opposition has accused the Government of going soft on border protection.

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



Barrot: Libyan Situation Unacceptable

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, SEPTEMBER 21 — “We must make Libya understand that the present situation in unacceptable and cannot be allowed to continue”, said today the vice-president of the EU Commission and Immigration Commissioner, Jacques Barrot, in presenting to the EU Interior Ministers Council his programme for repartitioning immigrants with right of asylum. Barrot, during a press conference with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, said he hoped to receive the “support of the High Commission” in order to change as soon as possible the asylum seekers’ situation in Libya. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Jungle Migrants Set Up Six New Camps

CUNNING migrants set up new camps in Calais yesterday just 24 hours after their Jungle shanty town was demolished.

They stuck two fingers up to the French authorities with at least six makeshift sites appearing overnight. Immigration chiefs had vowed to stop the Chunnel port being used as a stepping stone to soft-touch Britain.

But the asylum seekers made a mockery of the Jungle being bulldozed by simply pitching their tarpaulin tents elsewhere.

Critics say the operation involving 500 French riot police was just a publicity stunt.

Defiant groups of Afghans, Iraqis and Iranians vowed nothing would stop them trying to sneak into Britain.

Many had set up camp just a few hundred yards from the former Jungle scrubland.

Others made squats out of old bunkers Hitler erected to stop Britain invading occupied France.

Some headed back to the Sangette area where the old Red Cross refugee camp was pulled down five years ago.

British truckers also claimed the scheming migrants had switched tactics. Many were prowling next to the main motorway out of the French port and frustrated drivers pleaded with PM Gordon Brown to end the farce once and for all.

The refugees temporary homes are a short walk from Diesel Alley, where lorries bound for Britain refuel and drivers take a break before crossing the Channel.

Migrants wait at turns in the road for the lorries to slow down before trying to get in the back.

Rawezh Osman, 18, from Iran, paid a people trafficker £7,000 to get him to the UK.

He has been in Calais for 10 days and is waiting for a gang member to help him to sneak into a lorry.

He said: There are too many police. I will wait for them to go and then get on a lorry to the UK.

The police operation had been scaled back to just a handful of officers last night and many of the 278 migrants detained in the Jungle raid were back on the streets.

The number of foreign-born council tenants has shot up 54% in the past 10 years, Migrationwatch told a National Housing Federation conference yesterday.

The report added that the waiting list has risen by 80% in six years, just as Britains migrant population rose by three million.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Malta: Resettlement Offers Total Just 100 Migrants

The six EU member states who have indicated they intend to help resettle some of Malta’s 2,000 refugees pledged to take a total of 100 people altogether, EU sources revealed yesterday.

Although the Commission has kept the number of pledges under wraps, sources yesterday confirmed that only “token pledges” were made and that “Brussels is finding it difficult to convince member states to share Malta’s burden”.

“The Commission knew from the beginning that this would be an uphill struggle. Although many member states speak in favour of solidarity, this is easier said than done. If it wasn’t for France, the only one of the large member states to show interest in this project so far, the number of pledges would be much lower,” a Commission official told The Times informally.

During a presentation to EU Justice Ministers last Monday, Commissioner Jacques Barrot said that out of the 26 member states invited to participate in the Malta pilot-project last July, only France, Portugal, Slovenia, Slovakia, Luxembourg and Lithuania replied favourably. He urged the other member states to follow their example as this was “a test of their solidarity” with other member states.

The EU under a pilot scheme, is offering EU member states €4,000 for every migrant they resettle.

The Home Affairs Minister Carmelo Mifsud Bonnici put a positive spin on the response, saying it was a step forward and that Malta expected more countries to participate in the future.

But his Labour counterpart Michael Falzon was not as optimistic. He said European countries were only showing solidarity on paper and that the response reinforced his party’s call for a tough stance on immigration in the interest of the country.

“We cannot be content with half-baked measures,” he said, expressing hope that discussions would continue in the hope that other countries would come aboard.

He said if burden sharing remained voluntary, it would be unlikely to reap the required results. “If they believe in solidarity, other countries should shoulder their share of a problem which is affecting Malta,” he said.

Alternattiva Demokratika chairman Arnold Cassola said the news showed there was still not enough awareness, or political will, on part of a number of countries to help Malta.

It is understood that there are between 2,000 and 2,500 immigrants who enjoy refugee or humanitarian status in Malta at the moment.

The French Ambassador to Malta, Daniel Rondeau, seemed to share the views of the Home Affairs Minister. He said this was just the beginning, adding that he would do his best to continue in this direction.

France took 92 migrants last July and Mr Rondeau had said that France would take another 100 next year, but did not want to be alone.

Laura Boldrini, spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said people should not expect miracles overnight. “It is a start. We need to continue working and not give up,” she said.

According to EU sources, the Commission will now be meeting representatives of member states one-to-one in the coming weeks to try and convince them to take part in this pilot resettlement project.

The sources said some member states like Germany and Sweden have not ruled out their participation. Germany, which usually takes a leading role in such solidarity programmes, is expected to make its position official once next Sunday’s federal elections are over.

On the other hand some member states are flatly refusing to take part, including the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark and Austria. “These four member states have made it clear that they don’t agree with such a programme as they believe it will serve to attract more illegal migrants towards the EU,” the sources said.

Malta is hoping to be able to resettle the majority of its protected persons through this EU project. This will happen only if every member state pledges to take an average of 80 refugees each from Malta.

           — Hat tip: RRW [Return to headlines]



National Conference With Maroni in Milan

(ANSAmed) — ROME, SEPTEMBER 24 — Immigrants and work, security and integration as well as cooperation with the countries from which immigrants come are the issues to be dealt with in the Second National Conference on Immigration scheduled for tomorrow and Saturday in Milan. The conference, entitled “Immigration in Italy: Identity and Cultural Pluralism”, was organised by the Ministry for Internal Affairs with ANCI (the association of Italian town councils), in collaboration with the Catholic University “Sacro Cuore”, which will be the venue for the event. In such a complex topic as immigration, the two days of debates — according to the Interior Ministry — aims to focus on a large metropolis (one of those most affected by migratory pressures in Italy) and the cultural institutions that record and analyse in a reliable way the real situation that political institutions and civil society are called upon to manage. The first day will begin with greetings from the mayor of Milan, Letizia Moratti, and Lombardy regional president Roberto Formigoni and after the introduction by ANCI chairman Sergio Chiamparino, speeches by Professor Zygmunt Bauman, CENSIS president Giuseppe De Rita and the founder of the Sant’Egidio community Andrea Riccardi will follow. There will then be around table discussion moderated by the head of the department for civil liberties and immigration, Mario Morcone, which will see the participation of a number of mayors and the general director of immigration for the Labour Ministry, Maurizio Silveri. In the second part, work, security, immigration and cooperation with countries of origin will be discussed in four separate round table discussions. On Saturday Gianni Riotta, editor of Sole 24 Ore, will be moderating a round table to be taken part in by former Interior Minister Giuliano Amato, Morocco’s Minister for Internal Affairs Chakib Ben Moussa, the undersecretary of the French Ministry for European Foregin Affairs Pierre Lellouche, the undersecretary for the Spanish Interior Ministry Antonio Camacho Vizcaíno, the undersecretary for the Italian Foreign Ministry Stefania Craxi and the president of the conference of regions, Vasco Errani.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Baroness’s Housekeeper Arrested

A housekeeper who worked illegally for Attorney General Baroness Scotland has been arrested, police have said.

Tongan Loloahi Tapui, 27, and a man aged 40 thought to be her husband, were arrested by UK Border Agency staff at their home in West London on Wednesday.

Police said they were arrested over alleged immigration offences and both bailed until next month.

Baroness Scotland’s job is under pressure after she was ordered to pay a £5,000 fine by the UK Border Agency.

The agency said the attorney general had taken steps to check that Ms Tapui was eligible to work, but had not kept copies of the documents, as required by law.

Baroness Scotland apologised for what she called a “technical breach”, but opposition parties have called on her to resign.

Gordon Brown has insisted she acted in “good faith” and should not lose her job over the matter.

But on Wednesday, MP Stephen Hesford quit his post as parliamentary aide to Solicitor General Vera Baird in protest at Baroness Scotland’s refusal to step down.

Baroness Scotland is the government’s chief legal adviser and oversees criminal prosecutions in England and Wales.

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



UN: Stop Refused Entries, No Guarantees in Libya

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, SEPTEMBER 21 — The UN high Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, reiterated his “strong reservations” on Italian authorities refusing migrants entry and sending them back to Libya. “Our position is very clear. We do not think that the necessary conditions exist to guarantee protection for asylum-seekers”, explained Guterres. The high commissioner spoke about “terrible prison conditions” and “serious risks for asylum-seekers who are sent back to their countries of origin”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Barney Frank Pushes Fed Gay Rights Bill

WASHINGTON — Two openly gay members of Congress are urging their colleagues to pass a bill that would protect gays and transsexuals from workplace bias.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Diversity Boss: Whites Must ‘Step Down’

Obama appointee declares positions of power should go to ‘people of color, gays’

With former Obama green jobs czar Van Jones gone, along with his views about whites directing poisons to minorities, focus is now shifting to race-based views of “diversity czar” Mark Lloyd, who has suggested “white people” step down from positions of power to allow “more people of color, gays” and “other people” to take those positions.

Lloyd, the Federal Communications Commission chief diversity officer appointed to the newly created position by President Obama in early August, has talked about issues such as a 100 percent tax on broadcast outlets to collect money to provide alternative viewpoints, mandatory diversity in station ownership and the idea of requiring broadcast businesses to cater to the demands of local activism committees.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Holdren: Sterilize Welfare Recipients

Obama boss suggested ways to save planet, said fetus not a person

Obama science czar John Holdren stated in a college textbook that compulsory, government-mandated “green abortions” would be a constitutionally acceptable way to control population growth and prevent ecological disasters, including global warming, because a fetus was most likely not a “person” under the terms of the 14th Amendment.

Holdren further suggested government-mandated population control measures might be inflicted in the United States against welfare recipients, writing on page 840: “There has been considerable talk in some quarters at times of forcibly suppressing reproduction among welfare recipients (perhaps by requiring the use of contraceptives or even by involuntary sterilizations). This may sadly foreshadow what our society might do if the human predicament gets out of hand.” (Parenthesis in original text.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



School Warns Parents About Bible Giveaway

Gideons will be ‘confronting students’

The “phone tree” message began just like any other: “Good evening, this is Sean Gallagher, principal of Beverly High School with a brief announcement.”

The principal explained to parents that members of the Gideons International group plan to give away Bibles in front of two schools in Beverly, Mass.

“The superintendent of schools and the Beverly police were contacted by the Gideons International organization and informed they plan on distributing free Bibles outside of Briscoe Middle School and Beverly High School sometime this fall,” the recorded message said.

“This distribution will not occur on school property. This organization plans on distributing the Bibles on public sidewalks and walkways and the school administration will be notified only on the day of the distribution.”

Then Gallagher got to the heart of the message — a suggestion that parents counsel their children on what to do.

“I encourage you to discuss this scenario with your son or daughter and determine how you wish them to handle the situation. Thank you and have a great night,” said the message.

Over the past three years, a variety of other groups have stood in front of the Beverly schools to give out subject matter regarding other causes, but never before have school officials provided such a warning to parents.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sunstein: Force Broadcasters to Air ‘Diversity’ Ads

Obama chief argues media must not have final say in selection of commercials

The U.S. government should have the right to force broadcast media companies to air commercials that foster a “diversity” of views, argued President Obama’s newly confirmed regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein.

“If it were necessary to bring about diversity and attention to public matters, a private right of access to the media might even be constitutionally compelled. The notion that access will be a product of the marketplace might well be constitutionally troublesome,” wrote Sunstein in his 1993 book “The Partial Constitution.”

In the book — obtained and reviewed by WND — Sunstein cites hypothetical examples of private groups or individuals attempting to buy advertising time in the broadcast media to promote a certain view only to have their ads rejected by a private media company.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Man “Not to Blame” For Early Carbon Emissions

The question over who—or what—caused an increase in CO2 emissions thousands of years ago has dogged climatologists for years. Now Swiss scientists have an answer.

Some researchers have argued that ancient farmers could be to blame for a noticeable rise in greenhouse gases 6,500 years ago as they cleared primordial lands for agriculture.

As it turns out, man had nothing to do with it, scientists argue in Thursday’s issue of Nature.

The findings produced by researchers at the Bern-based Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research and a polar institute in Bremerhaven, Germany, suggest that natural processes involving a growing biosphere and the sea released more carbon dioxide into the air after the end of the Ice Age.

Man’s measurable impacts on CO2 concentrations would not come until thousands of years later during the Industrial Age with its appetite for fossil fuel energy, said Thomas Stocker, a Bern climatologist and one author of the three-page report.

“We don’t directly contribute to the discussion about climate change as a natural cycle or whether what we see happening today is man-made,” Stocker told swissinfo.ch.

“The focus of the study is to investigate if man already left a measurable imprint in CO2 levels many of thousands of years ago.”

The answer is now clear: No.

Antarctic answers

It took a decade of work to get it. The study was a multinational effort that involved expeditions to Antarctica, reams of computer model data and a breakthrough combination of measuring techniques that allowed scientists for the first time to accurately quantify carbon isotopes trapped in ancient ice.

The researchers began by harvesting 199 ice cores from 59 different depths near a European-run Antarctic base on Dome C, a 3,233m-high region of the world’s largest, coldest desert, where summertime temperatures rarely rise above -25 degrees Celsius.

What’s this?

Carbon isotopes

This pristine region of the Antarctic Plateau 1,100km inland is a treasure trove for scientists seeking prehistoric climatic data.

Stocker says scientists were interested in the types and amount of carbon dioxide entombed in bubbles found in the cores.

By studying the various forms and concentrations of carbon atoms, scientists could create a “fingerprint” of what was happening on Earth to produce carbon dioxide, the second most potent greenhouse gas after water vapour.

“It’s a very challenging measurement,” Stocker said, “but we now have a complete record over the last 11,000 years.”

The answer to the mystery of what had caused the Stone Age spike then boiled down to a relatively simple equation: If farming and land-clearing were to blame, bubbles in the ice would contain more of the carbon preferred by plants. They did not.

Large, slow buffer

The Nature report — Stable isotope constraints on Holocene carbon cycle changes from an Antarctic ice core — points to a different culprit.

Thomas Stocker says scientists now have a complete CO2 record for the past 11,000 years (Keystone)As the last vestiges of the Ice Age’s massive glaciers retreated, more vegetation began to grow. The increase meant a greater demand for carbon dioxide, which plants sucked from the atmosphere for photosynthesis. Air trapped in ice cores show this initial reduction in the greenhouse gas.

But the record then shows a notable increase in carbon dioxide emissions thousands of years later. The study says the oceans, not early farmers, were largely to blame.

“Oceans tend to reset whatever change you inflict upon the total carbon cycle. It’s a huge buffer,” Stocker said. “The response time is very slow, though. So this increase is actually the ocean taking over and releasing more gas.”

With the sea level rising, new corals could also grow. Reefs change the chemistry of the ocean in such a way that the sea releases more carbon dioxide.

Stocker says the findings answer a key question about humans and their role in changing in carbon levels in the atmosphere—at least from a long time ago.

“Our study can now conclusively show that man was not responsible for that part of the CO2 increase starting 6,000 years ago,” he said. “We are not talking about the present CO2 increase, which is much faster and much larger.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UN Demands End of Nuclear Proliferation in Historic Agreement (But Where’s Gaddafi?)

Iran was handed an ultimatum today to agree to end its nuclear programme in the next two weeks or face harsh economic sanctions.

Britain and five other major powers today joined forces to call for a ‘serious response’ from the regime in Tehran by 1st October, or swingeing economic, business and energy sanctions will be imposed.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the world was drawing a ‘line in the sand’ and was no longer prepared to tolerate Iran ‘misleading’ the world about its nuclear intentions.

[…]

There has been little sign of compromise from Iran during the annual United Nations general assembly.

British diplomats walked out during a speech by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over ‘anti-Semitic’ remarks by the Iranian leader on Wednesday night.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UN: Gaddafi Attacks World Powers in Key Address

New York, 23 Sept. (AKI) — Controversial Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi used his first address to the United Nations, on Wednesday to attack the Security Council, accusing it of betraying the principles of the United Nations charter.”The preamble (of the charter) says all nations are equal whether they are small or big,” Gaddafi said through an interpreter.

“The veto is against the charter, we do not accept it and we do not acknowledge it.”

Dressed in a brown robe with an emblem of Africa pinned to his chest, the Libyan leader dropped his copy of the charter on the podium before throwing it over his shoulder.

The United States, Britain, France, Russia and China are permanent veto-wielding members of the Security Council, the most powerful body within the United Nations.

Libya has a temporary council seat and will be on the 15-nation panel until the end of 2010.

Earlier Gaddafi wrote his name with a marker on the chair of the United Nations general assembly president Ali Treki, who is also from Libya.

“We are here, Muammar Gaddafi,” wrote the Libyan leader, both in English and Arabic, ahead of the historic 64th session of the UN’s general assembly.

It was the first time the Libyan leader had entered the United States and his first address to the UN since he assumed power over 40 years ago.

Gaddafi, who is also the president of the African Union, arrived in the United States on Tuesday.

He has provoked a storm of protest in New York after pitching his notorious Bedouin tent there.

Local officials said Gaddafi’s tent was not in compliance with zoning codes and wanted it removed.

The tent was being erected on a property owned by Donald Trump.

A previous proposal to erect the tent in New York’s Central Park was rejected by the city’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg.

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

Allah’s Pimp

Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter weighs in against Imam Taouil, one of the instigators of school boycotts in the wake of the Antwerp headscarf ban. See the links in the article below for earlier Gates of Vienna posts about the contention and unrest in Antwerp.

Our Flemish correspondent VH begins his report with a translation of an article from Filip Dewinter’s website:

Filip Dewinter: “Imam Taouil is Allah’s pimp”

By Lex Moolenaar of the Flemish newspaper Gazet van Antwerpen

Filip Dewinter wants to mobilize his “troops” for a long battle. “Vlaams Belang [VB, Flemish Interest] is more than ever a resistance movement against the threat of the coming decades: the Islamization of Europe.”

Filip Dewinter has had enough of the discussions within the VB. He returns to the theme that always has had his greatest attention: the multicultural society. “At last we are beginning to be proven right,” he says.

“More than a political party, the VB is a resistance movement,” Dewinter says. “Resistance against the Belgian state, radical Islam, crime, and politically correct thinking. And we are no longer willing to seek compromises on those issues.”

“Over and over, the circumstances prove we were right all along. The headscarf issue, the devastating wave of new legalizations, the establishment of Muslim schools, the riots in Brussels: we have always predicted this.”

— How happy are you with the ban on the headscarf in all schools?

“I think it is a good thing. The headscarf is not only a prison of cloth for those women, but also and above all a political symbol, a weapon in the conquest of Islam. Muslims express their sense of superiority this way. The headscarf ban is a feather the VB may put in its cap.”

— Imam Nordine Taouil apologizes for his appeal to Muslim women not to go to school anymore. He also denies being an extremist.

“He applies the principle of taqiyya, which allows any Muslim to lie and dissemble when it is required in the interest of Islam. Taouil is Allah’s pimp, he coerces young Muslim women — through their moral obligation to wear the headscarf — into religious prostitution. And he is indeed a radical Salafist, trained in an extremist London mosque and arranging suspicious travels to Saudi Arabia. I have understood this from renegade Muslims myself. Taouil strives for a segregated society with separate districts for Muslims where they practice their own law. I have no hard evidence, but according to my sources, some imams in Antwerp already apply Sharia in civil matters.

“This debut of Sharia, of Islamic law, is only the first phase. The second phase will be Muslims demanding that Sharia be integrated into our Civil Code. And in the end there is only the Sharia. The holy war, the jihad against the Western hereditary enemy is a duty for every Muslim.”

– – – – – – – –

— All Antwerp Muslims we know are very peaceful and moderate.

“Then I call on all those well-thinking Muslims to renounce Islam. And we must put an end to our ambiguous and hypocritical relationship with Islam. Stop the recognition of mosques and of Islam, because that is the main obstacle to the integration of immigrants. The freedom of religion is an individual right. That does not include any acknowledgments or subsidies for Muslim schools. Besides, the current outrage of CD&V [Christian Democrats], Open-VLD [Liberal Democrats] and SP.a [Socialists] about those schools is hypocritical. These parties have established the pillar of Islam themselves and have shaped it.”

— What to do then with subsidizing private education?

“You can, and may not compare Islam with Catholicism. Christianity lies at the root of our civilization and deserves a privileged position. It is something very different from Islam. May I compare Islam with a crocodile? Let me quote Churchill: “One feeds the crocodile, hoping to be eaten last.” Soon the crocodile will be ready for its main course, after having been fed all these years by such parties as the SP.a [Socialists] and Green [Environmentalists]. Those former anti-clerical parties increasingly evolve — due to their multicultural faith and ditto background of their electorate — into ever more religious parties. The alliance of progressive, anti-clerical socialists and Greens with the Muslims is unnatural, because Muslims are by nature very conservative. They do not at all appreciate gay rights, abortion and euthanasia.”

— You seem right back where the Vlaams Blok [the predecessor of Vlaams Belang] stood twenty years ago, am I right?

“Yes, we were right much too early. Only now, when I read what [Jean-Marie] Dedecker [LDD, List Dedecker], [Bart] de Wever [NV-A, New Flemish Alliance] and some CD&V’ers are saying, we have been proven right.

The riots in Brussels-Molenbeek are not just about drugs, they are the prelude to an ethno-religious guerrilla war. And after the new legalizations, the population in Antwerp will not number thirty, but forty percent foreigners. Between 2040 and 2050, the “half-plus-one” will be reached and a huge crisis of our democracy will develop. Then the power take-over will be a fact without even one shot having been fired.”

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


“After all the commotion of the past weeks, I would rather not have given any feedback,” Nordine Taouil said. “I regret the statements of Mister Dewinter; he clearly tries to set communities against each other. Of everything he says, nothing is true. I am a pure person, a moderate Muslim. I was born and raised here, and I respect everyone in this city. I do not require anyone to wear a headscarf. I also do not organize suspicious trips, I just go along sometimes as guide on the pilgrimage to Mecca. As far as the Sharia is concerned: that is a method of the Shiites. I am a Sunni Muslim and am not allowed to lie. I will not attack Mister Dewinter and I respect his opinion, but I hope he has the wisdom not to repeat these unfortunate allegations.”

Supplemental material from VH:

The colloquium below was referred to at the end of the interview, and was held this Thursday [today] but it may be interesting to get more information before a full posting (such as the speeches, and more on the presented book).

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


VB in Antwerp is organizing a colloquium with the title “Islam can harm your freedom” [more information can be obtained on www.filipdewinter.be]

Cities Against Islamization and the publishing house Egmont present the new book Al-Hijra, immigration as a Trojan Horse for Islam

Cities Against Islamization together with Vlaams Belang organize a symposium “Islam can harm your freedom” in Antwerp, with the following speakers:

Karim Van Overmeire

“Presentation of the Dutch translation of the book Al-Hijra”

Sam Solomon

Al-Hijra, immigration as a Trojan Horse for Islam

Sam Solomon was trained as an imam in a madrassa, and later converted to Christianity. As an expert on Islam, he is a prominent lecturer and leading researcher, a human rights activist, and an adviser to British and European parliamentarians. Sam Solomon is the author of a number of thought-provoking books and numerous publications on the relationship between the Judeo-Christian world and the Islam.

Professor Hans Jansen

“Islam: a threat to Europe or multicultural enrichment?”

Prof. Dr. Hans Jansen is an Arabist. He has studied Arabic and Semitic languages in Amsterdam, Leiden and Cairo. The common thread in his career is the study of religion in general and Islam in particular. He is one of the few Islam watchers in the Netherlands who dares to view the recent developments within Islam without rose-colored glasses. He recently published the sensational book Islam for pigs, monkeys, donkeys and other creatures.

Filip Dewinter

“Islam can harm your freedom”

Filip Dewinter is a Flemish Parliamentarian and chairman of Cities against Islamization.

Prior to the colloquium there will be a short press conference on the new book Al-Hijra, immigration as a Trojan Horse for Islam and then the campaign by Cities Against Islamization, “Islam can harm your freedom”, will be presented.

Education is Haram

Our Swedish correspondent CB has translated an article about an educational crisis among the children of Sweden’s Muslims. Some of the required activities in school are “haram”, and therefore the students more and more often don’t participate.

First, a prefatory note from the translator:

This is an article about the cultural battle that we in the West are fighting every day against Islamic concepts.

The daily fight looks like this: Some Muslim immigrant parents are concerned about certain subjects or activities in school and ask for special treatment for their kids. Sometimes it’s about swimming lessons. It might be not wanting their kids to shower in front of other kids, or even not wanting the kids see their own nakedness. At other times it’s the food in school. Nice as Swedes are in the school world, we try to accommodate them — not realizing that we are accommodating a ready-made system that is regarded by its followers as vastly superior to Western culture.

Swedish schools have looked the other way on this issue, and during recent weeks we have seen the results of allowing kids to drop out of school with incomplete grades and be locked out of the job market: the car-burnings and various other arsons and vandalism in Swedish towns by kids with no future, susceptible to criminality.

The legal demands on all children require participation in everything in school, and that should apply to all Muslim kids too. There should be no exceptions. And Swedish authorities should promptly abandon multiculturalism for assimilation, and convey the clear notion that if you come to Sweden, you come here to become a Swede and nothing else. You may keep some of your customs, but no ideas prompted by shari’a will ever be accepted as a norm governing public life.

Lastly, a clarification for all our non-Swedish readers: I seriously doubt that Mrs. Maja Lundberg advocates children being naked at school and holding hands — since that would have very poor support indeed among Swedes. We should see that as hyperbole to emphasize a crucial point, that children must not regard their bodies as impure or something similar.

Below is the translated article from Aftonbladet:

Schools must fight — against the word haram

To not hold hands.

To not dance and sing.

To not sit beside a girl or boy in school.

The little word haram is about to disrupt Swedish schools.

So, what does the word mean?

Haram is a word in Islamic jurisprudence that means forbidden or sinful.

A concept with great pervasive force. At least in a school where most of the children have an immigrant background.

There is much that can be called haram: Swedish culture is haram. Christmas trees and lit candles are haram. To speak about Jesus is haram. That boys and girls play together is haram. Physical training is haram. To take your underwear off and shower is haram. To be homosexual is haram.

But the word haram can also determine what a child is allowed to learn.

According to a new survey, parents forbid more than one out of ten pupils in the Stockholm area to participate in lessons on biology, sex and living together, music, swimming and athletics.

Another survey: 27 percent of the girls and 17 percent of the boys don’t participate in all classes.

– – – – – – – –

A prohibition with consequences. Children who are forced to skip the mandatory education will not get any final grades.

And then the risk are that they can’t continue their studies and will end up unemployed.

During the school year 2004-2005, four out of ten students with immigrant backgrounds left the 9th year with incomplete grades.

In the spring of 2008, almost every other 9th year student in Rinkebyskolan was failed in some of the core subjects Swedish, English and math.

What happens with these children? the teacher Maja Lundberg asked in the TV program “Skolfront” [School-front] which was aired last week.

Maja Lundberg is one of the few teachers who stands up for immigrant children’s equal right to an education, and said, “Swedish schools are in a crisis. The special treatment of immigrant children enhances segregation”.

And Maja Lundberg has been fighting the word haram every day:

“I’ve told the children that school is a religion-free zone. That boys and girls have the same value here. I’ve said that our bodies aren’t sinful and that the concept of haram doesn’t exist at school. I’ve said that the children’s beliefs belong at home with their parents, and that they are free in school. Here they can be naked and hold each others hands.”

— Monica Gunne



Hat tip: Steen.

The Battle of the Bodyguards

This is a very strange story. As far as I can tell, it hasn’t been reported in the American press, and I only became aware of it when the ANSAmed report fell into my hands this afternoon.

It seems that a spot of American-Turkish trouble occurred yesterday on the sidewalks of New York. Just after Barack Hussein Obama spoke at Bill Clinton’s Global Initiative at the Sheraton Hotel, the bodyguards of Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan encountered the bodyguards of President Obama (presumably the Secret Service), and a scuffle between the two groups ensued. The Turkish guards did not understand English, resisted their American counterparts, and had to be restrained by the laying on of hands.

I searched Google News just now, and turned up this list of articles about the incident. They’re from Turkey, Russia, Italy, and Armenia, but nothing showed up in the American media:

It’s not that big a story, but given that the American media normally cover every footstep and gesture of the Messiah, why was this incident ignored? When Mr. Obama swats a fly, it’s big news, so why not a brawl between entourages?

Here’s the report from ANSAmed:

USA-Turkey: Brawl Between Bodyguards of Obama and Erdogan

ANKARA, SEPTEMBER 24 — The front page of the daily paper Cumhuriyet has today called it a “scandal”: the scuffle which broke out yesterday evening in New York between the body guards of US president Barack Obama and those of Turkish premier Tayyip Erdogan who, according to some eyewitnesses, intervened in the brawl by grabbing the arm of a US security guard to stop him.

– – – – – – – –

All Turkish papers have set aside space this morning to the incident which occurred when Obama was on his way out of the Sheraton Hotel where he had spoken at Clinton’s Global Initiative. At the same time Erdogan and his delegation were arriving and were stopped by an escort of the head of the White House to allow the latter to leave. Almost certainly a result of linguistic misunderstanding (Erdogan’s Turkish bodyguard do not speak English), the American guards were forced to stop their Turkish counterparts by grabbing hold of them.

This then caused Erdogan’s guards to react, resulting in a scuffle. “The foreign (Turkish) delegates became confused and were trying to go in through the entrance where the president was leaving. They did not understand the verbal instructions that we gave them and so we had to stop them physically,” said Ed Donovan, Obama’s security services spokesman. After the incident, the papers reported, Erdogan decided not to take part in Clinton’s Global Initiative programme and left the Sheraton.



Hat tip: Insubria.

Killed for Wanting to Live Like a Westerner

Cultural Enrichment News


The brutal murder described in the article below was not an “honor killing” per se, at least not in the way the term is usually understood, since the victim was not related to her killers, nor had she shamed their families.

Nonetheless, she didn’t want to live like a Muslim, and for that she had to die.

Many thanks to Gaia for translating the article from the Belgian news service DH.be:

Claudia was killed because of the veil

(24/09/2009) ©D.R.

The police found the car in Anderlecht and have located the place in Forest where she was the victim of three fundamentalist brothers.

BRUSSELS The investigation into the murder in Brussels of the 32-year-old Claudia Lalembaïdje from Schaerbeek — killed by three Pakistani fundamentalist brothers because she refused to wear the veil and wanted to live as a Westerner — is making great progress. The place where she was abducted and killed by her kidnappers is located in the area of Brussels, Neerstalle in Forest. “She arrived here on foot and left in a suitcase.”

Her car, a Citroen C4 registered VNW-096, was found in Anderlecht, close to the canal. The forensic police found invaluable information there, including a small piece of the plastic identity card of the victim, whom the autopsy revealed had been strangled or asphyxiated after having undergone the worst. Two brothers Raza Syed are held in Saint-Gilles, where they deny the crime and say they were set up. The third is still at large.

– – – – – – – –

DH has received mail written from prison by one of the suspected murderers: “I did nothing to Claudia.”

The most recent victim in Belgium of an honour crime, Claudia disappeared last June 14 in the Helmet district in Schaerbeek. Her body was fished out of the Scheldt at the Trith-Saint-Leger canal (in the north of France, close to Valenciennes) floating in a bag on the 29th. Her hands were tied behind her back and her feet were tied.

According to our information, the three brothers had already killed a woman in Pakistan, and for that they had left the country, where they were being sought, to install themselves in Europe and to find three women to marry there, three stool pigeons, in order to regularize their situations under the Schengen Agreement. One of the brothers, Ali, seduced Claudia quite simply by helping her to park her C4 at the Porte de Namur. Claudia, who had the figure of a model and had worked for an agency in Brussels, fell passionately in love.

After killing her, the murderers cut up her identity card and threw the pieces away, all except a tiny fragment that the police force recovered on the carpet of the C4 found abandoned close to the canel in Anderlecht. This small piece of evidence will prove invaluable at the trial in Court.

Gaia asked me to include one line of her own commentary:

Disgusting bastards! I hope they rot in Hell!



For a complete listing of previous enrichment news, see The Cultural Enrichment Archives.

Hat tip: TV.

Holding Their Feet to the Fire

I posted last night about Former Muslims United, a group of American apostates from Islam who have joined together to confront the illiberal and violent tenets of sharia law as it applies to those who leave Islam.

Former Muslims United is being formally launched at a press conference even as I write this, in Hearing Room 1334 of the Longworth House Office Building in Washington D.C.:

Former Muslims United will be formally launched at a press conference Thursday, September 24, to announce the start of their national campaign to educate the American public and policymakers about the threat from authoritative Shariah— Islamic law— to the religious freedom and safety of former Muslims.

At the press conference, FMU has just now released the text of letters that it sent to Gerald A. Reynolds, the chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and Eric Holder, the Attorney General of the United States. The two letters are similar, so I’ll reproduce the text of the one that was sent to Gerald Reynolds:

Dear Mr. Reynolds:

We, as founders of Former Muslims United, respectfully request that your office inform us of your policies, programs and plans to protect and support former Muslims who because of authoritative Shariah doctrine, are the targets of discrimination, intimidation, assault, and the threat of execution. Your organization’s stated mission is “to study and collect information relating to discrimination or a denial of equal protection of the laws under the Constitution” and “to appraise federal laws and policies with respect to discrimination or denial of equal protection of the laws.” Please inform us how you apply this mission to former Muslims, the only group in the U.S. whose persecution and execution is permitted by a consensus of leading authorities of all schools of Shariah.

– – – – – – – –

Please describe current and planned investigations on the Shariah doctrine concerning former Muslims, and on specific cases of civil rights abuses against former Muslims. Please describe as well the statistics and research processes in place for gathering information on civil rights abuses against former Muslims, and provide copies of any reports, speeches or press releases indicating the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights policies and programs protecting the rights of former Muslims.

The Commission’s powers include the right to hold hearings and issue subpoenas (within the state in which the hearing is being held and within a 100-mile radius of the site) for the production of documents and the attendance of witnesses at such hearings. The Commission also consults with representatives of federal, state, and local governments, and private organizations. We ask that you direct these powers to hold hearings, issue subpoenas and consult with such representatives concerning the immediate threats to civil rights of apostates from Islam in the United States. We are all aware of incidents of intimidation and threats of violence against former Muslims.

The recent case showing the lack of professionalism in the Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigation of the possible Shariah doctrinal threat against former Muslim Rifqa Bary, demonstrates the need for national policies and programs to educate law enforcement and other government officials officials about the threat to apostates from Shariah. We request that you review the possible civil rights abuses of Ms. Bary throughout the FDLE investigation. Of particular note was the fact that the FDLE interviewed Ms. Bary’s Muslim family, whom she had identified as a threat to her safety, in the presence of Mr. Babak Darvish and Mr. Romin Iqbal of the Council on American Islamic Relations, an organization named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation trial by the U.S. Department of Justice, and from which the FBI has distanced their relations.

CAIR supports Shariah doctrine as “the ongoing consensus of Islamic scholars” and CAIR’s former legal director singled out as “one of the most famous Muslim scholars” the Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, head of the European Council for Fatwa and Research and president of the International Union for Muslim Scholars. In 2006, Qaradawi issued an influential ruling on death for former Muslims, stating “the Muslim jurists are unanimous that apostates must be punished, yet they differ as to determining the kind of punishment to be inflicted upon them. The majority of them, including the four main schools of jurisprudence (Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi‘i, and Hanbali) as well as the other four schools of jurisprudence (the four Shiite schools of Az-Zaidiyyah, Al-Ithna-‘ashriyyah, Al-Ja‘fariyyah, and Az-Zaheriyyah) agree that apostates must be executed.”

The FDLE investigation and its involvement with CAIR may be representative of a lack of knowledge throughout the law enforcement and social services communities about Shariah doctrine. If investigations of possible death threats against apostates from Islam are influenced by organizations, such as CAIR, that support Shariah scholars who endorse death threats against apostates, we think that is a serious problem worthy of your immediate attention.

We look forward to learning about your efforts in protecting the civil rights of former Muslims, and particularly of Ms. Bary. Our organization is launching a national campaign to ask Muslim leaders to sign “The Muslim Pledge for Religious Freedom and Safety from Harm for Former Muslims.” We enclose a copy of that pledge, and a representative cover letter, for your reference.

FMU signatures

The civil rights establishment — under both Republican and Democratic administrations — has danced for too long around the issue of sharia. Islamic law, according to all the interpretations of the mainstream schools of Muslim jurisprudence, explicitly contradicts the right to religious freedom as guaranteed to all Americans by the U.S. Constitution.

Up until now our government has been willing to accept the misleading bromides about sharia issued by CAIR and other similar organizations. But apostates from Islam know all too well that such explanations are taqiyya, religiously sanctioned Islamic disinformation. The truth about sharia is not hard to discover, but it won’t come from CAIR.

It’s about time that somebody held the federal government’s feet to the fire, and Former Muslims United is doing exactly that.

Fjordman: What was the First Novel?

Fjordman’s latest essay, “What was the First Novel?”, has been published at Atlas Shrugs. Some excerpts are below:

As I’ve demonstrated in my review of it, Human Accomplishment is for the most part an excellent book. However, there is a long debate about what constitutes the “first novel,” both globally and within the European tradition. Murray claims that nothing quite like the European novel developed independently in China, Japan or India until the late nineteenth century when Asians began to adopt it from the Western model.

China and Japan (but not India) had produced works that portrayed common people and gave detailed descriptions of social life, for instance Jin Ping Mei or The Plum in the Golden Vase from the late Ming Dynasty (printed in the early 1600s, but based on slightly older written manuscripts), which is sexually very explicit. It still contained elements of the supernatural and the plots were more episodic than in the Western form of the novel. Murray considers this to be true even of Cao Xueqin or Cao Zhan’s (ca. 1715-1763) Dream of the Red Chamber, by universal acclaim one of the great masterpieces of Chinese literature.

– – – – – – – –

The Tale of Genji, attributed to the Japanese noblewoman Murasaki Shikibu or Lady Murasaki (ca. 978-ca. 1014) is by some observers considered the world’s first novel, but Murray believes that the term should indicate something more than a long fictional prose narrative. Japanese literature could achieve great beauty, rivalling anything in the European tradition, but the literary energy was usually directed toward poetry and drama. The drama existed in ancient Greece and in India as well, where the playwright Kalidasa (fifth century AD) was one of the greatest writers of Sanskrit literature, yet at Charles Murray states:

“Perhaps the best evidence that the Western novel never really had a counterpart in China, Japan, and India before their contact with the West comes from the commentary of Chinese, Japanese, and Indian intellectuals after contact with the West. In each case, it was recognized that the Western novel was something unlike anything in their own tradition. The emergence of the novel is important for many reasons, but the most salient is the way in which the novel added a new dimension not just for creating beauty, but for seeking out truths. Writers since Homer had been trying to get at the truth of the human condition in it psychological dimensions, and the greatest writers succeeded spectacularly well even in ancient times. But there was hardly anything at all in the fictional literatures of the world about humans as social creatures. The novel made that inquiry possible, and in so doing made literature a partner with the social and behavioral sciences in understanding how humans and human societies work.”

Read the rest at Atlas Shrugs.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/23/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 9/23/2009The variously-spelled Col. Moamar Ghedafi of Libya has been snubbed by the town of Bedford, New York. It is Col. Qadafi’s habit to pitch a Bedouin tent wherever he travels, and inhabit it in lieu of hotels or other buildings. The Colonel was in the area to rant at the UN, and had rented a piece of property in Bedford from Donald Trump for the occasion. His minions began to erect their leader’s abode, but the town authorities found the tent to be in violation of local ordinances, and issued a stop order to force it to be taken down.

There’s no word whether Col. Ghaddafi thereupon took advantage of the hospitality offered by one of Manhattan’s many homeless shelters.

In other news, female Swedish soldiers are complaining about inferior government-issued brassieres, which they allege have a tendency to catch fire. It’s understandable why this might be a concern, since Swedish women are reported to be quite hot.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, Diana West, Fjordman, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, JD, Lurker from Tulsa, Sean O’Brian, Steen, TB, VH, Zenster, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Italy: Crisis for Foreigners as Well
UK: Tobin Tax ‘Worth a Look’: Brown
 
USA
AA Cuts Insurance Coverage for Retirees
Are Communists (Or Neo-Communists) Dangerous?
CAIR: Penn. High School Drops Anti-Islam ‘Obsession’ Video
Catholic Church Funding ACORN
Different Discipline for Kids Based on Their Race
FCC Wants to Extend Net Neutrality to Wireless Networks, But AT&T and Others Are Opposed
FCC’s Diversity Czar: ‘White People’ Need to be Forced to ‘Step Down’ ‘So Someone Else Can Have Power’
Giuliani: Free Enterprise in America is ‘Under Assault’
Health Bill’s Deadly Fine Print
High School Class in Shock After Seeing Fitna
New Case to Demand Evidence of Hawaiian Birth
Obama Says U.S. ‘Determined’ To Combat Climate Change, Despite Senate Delay
Pork Loin Thief in OKC Stashes Stolen Meat Down Pants
Reid Threatens ‘Nuclear Option’ To Pass Health Care Reform as Panel Starts Work
Running the Numbers on Spreading the Wealth
Too Much Obama
US Town Bans Libyan Leader’s Tent
US, Switzerland Sign Treaty to Share Tax Info
 
Europe and the EU
Brown to Offer to Cut Nuclear Sub Fleet: Downing Street
Dell Wins EU OK to Get Euro54.5 Million Polish Aid
EU: US Views Europe as Little More Than a Trade Partner
Female Swedish Soldiers Complain About ‘Flammable’ Bras
France: Fashion: Emir of Ajman Bids to Take Over Maison Lacroix
France: 9 Bln Euros for Council Houses From Bank
Germany: Fresh Challenge to Lisbon Could be ‘Explosive’
Germany: Police Raid NPD Office for Sending Racist Hate Mail
Ireland: Banks Face Crackdown by EU Over Hidden Fees
Ireland: Archbishop Lashes Tiernan for Joking About Holocaust
Italy: Health Inquiry Reveals ‘Criminal System’ In Bari
Netherlands: Can Cousin Marriages be Banned?
Spain: Women’s Wages Are 34% Less Than Those of Men
Sweden: Helicopter Heist Causes Cash Flow Concerns
Sweden: Man Arrested in Helicopter Heist Probe
The Euro: Why Britain is Still Better Off Out
UK: Boy, 9, Told to Apologise for ‘Racist’ Taunt to Polish Classmate While Playing Soldiers in Lesson
UK: Judge Won’t Name Feral Youth Who Punched Artist Into Car That Killed Him
UK: Kent Attracts New Type of Tourist: Europeans Seeking Easy Bankruptcy
UK: Outrage and Hope in Today’s England
UK: Student Jailed Over Internet Guns
UK: Thousands of Young Children Are Buying Coloured Wristbands Every Week. But Parents Have No Idea of Their True Disturbing Meaning…
UK: Why David Cameron is Keeping Quiet About Europe
Welsh Steam Train Forced to Use Coal Shipped 3,000 Miles From Siberia When Local Coal Mine is Only Three Miles Away
‘Yes’ Camp’s Funding Under Fire as Second Irish Vote on Lisbon Treaty Looms
 
Balkans
Croatia-EU: Ambassador Hopes Entry Treaty Signed by July
EU Police Snatch Serb War Crimes Suspects
Kosovo: EU Police Arrest 4 Serb War Crime Suspects
Serbia: Former Policemen Cleared Over Murder of Three Ethnic Albanians
 
Mediterranean Union
Music: Maestro Briouel Awarded ‘Civilta’ Mediterranea’ Prize
 
North Africa
Italy: Algerian Terror Suspect Arrested in Rome
Morocco: After Rainfalls, Dams’ Levels Exceed 90%
Tunisia: Film Festival to Focus on Women
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Cast Lead: Gaza Pays the Price, 514 Mln Euros of Damages
 
Middle East
Barry Rubin: the Increasingly Obvious Failure of Obama’s Middle East Policy
Christian Tombs Desecrated in an Historic Istanbul Cemetery
Iran Bans “Curvy” Mannequins in Shop Windows
Iran Police ‘Target Mannequins’
Israel Won’t ‘Dignify’ Brzezinski With Response
Russian Links Iran Sanctions to US Missile Change
Russian Leader Open to New Iran Nukes Sanctions
Saudi Arabia to Send Troops to Iraq?
Tehran Dumps Dollar for Euro
Turkey: Shooting Stone Throwers Not a Crime
 
Caucasus
Chechen Leader Claims US, Britain Back Rebels
 
South Asia
Afghanistan: Grief and Emotion at Funerals of Parachutists
Diana West: Surging for Nothing
Diana West: “The War in Washington”
Indonesia: Central Government to Deal With Provincial Adultery Stoning Law
Pakistani President Comes Out Against the Misuse of the Blasphemy Law
Russia Presses US to Destroy Afghan Poppy Crop
Swedish Officials Meet Suspects in Pakistan Terror Probe
UK’s Brown Seeks Fewer UK Troops in Afghanistan
 
Far East
Obama, Hu Vow to Forge Dynamic Ties
Policy Center Urges Deeper US-China Relationship
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
S. Africa: Murder Down; Rape, Robbery, Hijacking Up
U.S. To Keep South Africa Embassy Closed After Threat
 
Latin America
Dutch Pilot Held Over Argentine “Death Flights”
 
Immigration
Italy: 757 Migrants Pushed Back in 4 Months, Gov’t
Italy: Govt Rejects ‘Push- Back’ Criticism
Keep Out, Britain is Full Up
Netherlands: No New Research Into Cost of Immigration
Swedish Integration Policies ‘A Failure’
The Calais ‘Jungle’ Has Been Cleared — But This Tide of Despair Has Only Just Begun
Web Forums Help Iraqi Refugees Adapt to America
 
Culture Wars
Declaration of Independence Gets PC Revision for Kids
 
General
Rename UN Security Council the Terror Council: Gaddafi’s Bizarre Rant at General Assembly
The UN Loves Barack Obama Because He is Weak
U.N. Climate Summit Leaves Large Carbon Footprint

Financial Crisis


Italy: Crisis for Foreigners as Well

(ANSAmed) — ROME, SEPTEMBER 22 — The economic crisis is also being felt by foreign workers in Italy. Italian businesses have resized their hiring forecasts for immigrants: 92,500 new hirings for 2009, compared to the 171,900 foreseen for 2008. So emerged from the most recent ‘International Migration Outlook’ report, that every year Censis compiles for the OECD as a part of its role as Italian correspondent, presented to CNEL. A home has become an ever more pressing problem for immigrants: there has been an increase in evictions due to lack of payment caused by rent increases or loss of work (above all in the north, where immigrant families represent 22% of the total number of families evicted). At the same time the purchasing of homes has also come to a stop for immigrants: between 2007 and 2008 property purchases by immigrants decreased by 23.7% interrupting a four year growth cycle. The effects of the crisis has also been seen in remittances: the per capita figure that immigrants send home every month has decreased 10% (155 euros in 2008 compared to 171 in 2007) and the total amount of remittances has also decreased (6.4 billion in 2008). Difficulties connected to the crisis that Italians are feeling, the report revealed, can also have caused lower tolerance towards immigrants, as increasing episodes of discrimination show, 22.1% of which are suffered at work: 32.1% of reported cases regard access to the job market, 23.2% work conditions, 19.6% mobbing. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Tobin Tax ‘Worth a Look’: Brown

LONDON (AFP) — Prime Minister Gordon Brown said the introduction of a global tax to reduce risky behaviour by banks was “worth looking at”, as he prepares for a G20 summit next weekend.

But Brown said greater cooperation between countries to stop excessive risk taking was required before such a tax could be considered.

France has proposed introducing a tax to be levied on every financial transaction, known as a Tobin Tax, with the billions of euros raised to be used to support economic development.

Brown said such an idea was worth consideration, but global cooperation that is “cemented” and “action that is successful against tax havens” were required before taking any steps towards the measure.

The prime minister, briefing journalists on Monday before leaving for the UN General Assembly in New York and then the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh, said the level of cooperation to prevent risky deals was still unsatisfactory.

“The first thing is to have the global coordination to involve every major country and we are not there yet,” he said.

“The second thing is to deal with tax havens. If one jurisdiction can fail to implement a proposal such as this it makes it difficult for other jurisdictions to follow.

“So I think what you will see this week and particularly next week is action against tax havens that are non-cooperative around the world.”

Most commentators expect Britain and the United States to oppose such a tax, fearing its impact on their major financial centres.

The Tobin Tax is named after the US economist James Tobin, who first suggested it in the 1970s.

The idea was revived in August by Adair Turner, the chairman of the financial watchdog, the Financial Services Authority (FSA), as a way of providing a safeguard against another economic slowdown.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


AA Cuts Insurance Coverage for Retirees

This is a story that affects a lot of people, but they’re all former American Airlines employees and their families.

American Airlines has provided insurance coverage for its retirees to supplement their Medicare coverage. In fact, since 1990, many retirees contributed money while they were in the work force to pre-fund their insurance.

Now, American says the coverage costs too much. As of Jan. 1, retirees age 65 and older, those who didn’t belong to a union, will have to pay for supplemental insurance themselves.

For non-union retirees under age 65, they’ll still get American-provided insurance. But those who prefunded their benefits must begin paying 25 percent of the insurance premium.

American will refund any unused portion of the prefunding contributions made by retirees. But the retirees are mad because they thought there was a promise — if they did their job and helped pay for their retiree health coverage, American would provide the insurance. They did their part, and they want American to do its part.

American is seeking to make its unionized employees go under the same setup as well, just another item of disagreement between it and its unions.

For those affected, American has provided some background information. Keep reading if you’re interested…

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



Are Communists (Or Neo-Communists) Dangerous?

Neo-communism is a view whose members consider themselves “citizens of the world,” not of America, and who therefore agitate for open borders and want the morally repulsive collection of autocracies, slaveocracies and kleptocracies called “the United Nations” to reign over us and the world.

A neo-communist is someone who believes that America is ruled by corporations who put “profit over people” — and thereby show that they don’t understand either profit or people. A neo-communist is someone who is convinced that race, class, and gender hierarchies make it not only legitimate but necessary to describe America as a “white supremacist” society. Neo-communists believe that a revolution is necessary (if not opportune at the moment), that the Consitution is a disposable document, and that America’s communist and Islamo-fascist enemies (Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua, Hizbollah, the PLO and Hamas), are freedom fighters or at least on the right side of the armageddon that faces us.

These are views shared by The Nation magazine, by Commonsense.org, by the Indymedia crowd, by the social justice movement, by the majority of the Black Caucus and the Progressive Caucus on the Democratic side in Congress, and by tens of thousands of university professors who indoctrinate their students in these pernicious ideologies every day. They are the views held by the leaders of ACORN, the SEIU, AFCSME and other leftwing unions, by radical feminists, by organizations like MALDEF and La Raza, by the ACLU and the Center for Constitutional Rights who are working to support the Islamo-fascist agenda in America, by the major Muslim organizations including the Muslim Students Association, CAIR, and the Islamic Circle of North America. And I could continue, but why bother? (Those curious enough can pick up a copy of my book Unholy Alliance and read for themselves my views on “The Mind of the Left” and its global struggles.)

This coalition, which I have called the “unholy alliance,” presents a massive threat to America’s security and its individual freedoms and its free market system, and if someone who has been as gutsy in going after America’s enemies generally (and going after the ACLU in particular) as Bill O’Reilly has still doesn’t see this, we have a lot of consciousness raising left to do.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



CAIR: Penn. High School Drops Anti-Islam ‘Obsession’ Video

Civil rights group calls film ‘vehicle for promoting anti-Muslim bigotry’

WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Pennsylvania chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-PA) announced today that a high school in that state has dropped an anti-Islam video listed for use in one of its classes.

Earlier this month, CAIR-PA sent a letter to the superintendent of the Council Rock School District expressing concerns about a hate-filled video, “Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West,” listed in the syllabus of a course at Council Rock High School in Newtown, Penn.

In her letter, CAIR-PA Director of Civil Rights Marwa El-Turky wrote in part:

“‘Obsession’ is a vehicle for promoting anti-Muslim bigotry that seeks to blur the distinction between violent extremism and mainstream Islam. The use of such an inaccurate and inflammatory film in a world history class would inevitably result in both the promotion of stereotypes and the creation of a hostile learning environment for Muslim students.

“The hate-filled agenda promoted by the film has been repudiated by the Hate Hurts America Multifaith Community Coalition (HHA), a group of religious and civic organizations seeking to challenge hate speech in our society… Those interviewed in Obsession constitute a veritable who’s who of Muslim-bashers. SEE: http://www.obsessionwithhate.com/

“. . .this film is obviously not suitable teaching material for a captive audience of impressionable youth. We therefore respectfully ask that ‘Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West’ be dropped from the curriculum and that representatives of the local Muslim community be invited to offer balanced and accurate information about Islam and the American Muslim experience.”

In his response to CAIR-PA’s concerns, Superintendent of Schools Mark J. Klein noted that the course was eliminated from the curriculum for the 2008-2009 school year and that, “Along with the elimination of this course, we will represent to you that this film will not be used in any other course in Council Rock.”

“We appreciate the school district’s prompt and appropriate response and hope that any future courses touching on Islam will use accurate and balanced educational materials,” said El-Turky.

She noted that a high school in Kentucky was recently involved in a controversy over a similarly anti-Islam video shown in a classroom. The producer of that video, an extremist Dutch politician, recently called for a “head rags tax” on Muslim women who choose to wear Islamic scarves.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Catholic Church Funding ACORN

While Obama has strong ties to ACORN, they were originally established through the U.S. Catholic Church, which has also funded ACORN and similar organizations to the tune of millions of dollars. This is another taboo topic for most of the media. Even conservative news organizations are afraid of raising the issue, apparently fearing being tagged with the “anti-Catholic” label.

But the truth has been seeping out in mysterious ways. In a Politico.com story about Barack Obama’s friendly meeting with the Pope, reporter Josh Gerstein featured information that made it clear that the President’s Catholic connection goes back to his days as a community organizer and that Obama’s associates understand and appreciate this fact.

[…]

Conservative Catholics concerned about this problem have documented that millions of dollars of Catholic money over the last four decades has gone into Saul Alinsky-style networks which pursue their own brand of socialist direct action. CCHD itself acknowledges funding ACORN projects with grants totaling more than $7.3 million during the last 10 years.

[…]

The grants are being used, however, not just to seize power, but to change the minds of traditional Catholics. Indeed, this is a necessary prerequisite for taking power.

Alinskyian training sessions in the religious context are designed not to develop or cultivate a personal relationship with Christ and promote traditional values and cultural institutions but to engage in Marxist political activity and radical change. Stephanie Block puts it this way: “Their worldview is marred by visions of class struggle and perpetual revolution. They are systematically trained to renounce moral truth in favor of consensus-based ‘values.’“

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Different Discipline for Kids Based on Their Race

Opponents call plan 2-tiered double standard, officials call it ‘restorative’

A school district in Arizona has come under fire after a newspaper columnist highlighted the district’s newly adopted racial policy and called it a “two-tiered form of student discipline: one for black and Hispanic students; one for everyone else.”

Arizona Republic columnist Doug MacEachern drew attention to a decision made by the Tucson Unified School District’s board over the summer to adopt a “Post-Unitary Status Plan,” which includes the goal of reducing suspensions and expulsions of minority students to reflect “no ethnic/racial disparities.”

“TUSD principals and disciplinarians (assuming such creatures still exist) are being asked to set two standards of behavior for their students,” MacEachern commented. “Some behavior will be met with strict penalties; some will not. It all depends on the color of the student’s skin.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



FCC Wants to Extend Net Neutrality to Wireless Networks, But AT&T and Others Are Opposed

The FCC sure has a lot on its plate right now.

In addition to sorting out a definition of the term “broadband” and figuring out how to get broadband Internet access to every American, the federal agency is also now looking at whether it should impose net neutrality on the wireless data networks used by cellphone carriers.

But the carriers say that the rules, while they might make sense for traditional broadband, will have unintended consequences in the wireless world.

From AT&T’s statement:

“To paraphrase a recent analyst comment, net neutrality is rooted in an assumption that broadband networks are instantly expandable, to an infinite extent, at little or no cost. To base policy assumptions on such fallacies is to conduct a risky experiment with American broadband investment, nearly all of which is private investment on which our nation depends. This is especially so with U.S. wireless networks, which are facing incredible bandwidth strains, and which require continued private investment at very high levels, and pro-active network management, to ensure service quality for 270 million customers.”

But critics say the carriers are stifling innovation in wireless applications and net neutrality is required to change that situation. For example, this Cnet article points out that Skype — which lets you make free or low-cost phone calls over the Internet — is banned on many carriers, but net neutrality would force those carriers to allow it.

What do you think? Are the carriers right that throwing open wireless networks to any type of application would cripple everyone’s bandwidth? Or should they just suck it up, increase their capacity and embrace net neutrality? And if net neutrality does come to the wireless world and the carriers all raise the prices of their data plans by $10 or $20 a month to pay for the capacity expansion, would you still be in favor of wireless net neutrality?

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



FCC’s Diversity Czar: ‘White People’ Need to be Forced to ‘Step Down’ ‘So Someone Else Can Have Power’

Mark Lloyd is the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)’s Chief Diversity Officer, a.k.a. the Diversity Czar. And he has in a recently discovered bit of archive audio goodness detailed his rather disturbing perspective on race, power and the American system.

This is of course in addition to Lloyd’s rather disturbing perspective on the First Amendment.

“It should be clear by now that my focus here is not freedom of speech or the press. This freedom is all too often an exaggeration. At the very least, blind references to freedom of speech or the press serve as a distraction from the critical examination of other communications policies.

“[T]he purpose of free speech is warped to protect global corporations and block rules that would promote democratic governance.”

And Lloyd’s rather disturbing perspective on Venezuelan Communist dictator Hugo Chavez’s “incredible…democratic revolution.” To go with Lloyd’s bizarre admiration for the thuggishly fascistic manner in which “Chavez began to take very seriously the media in his country.”

We have said repeatedly that Lloyd is a man myopically focused on race. What is revealed here is more than just that. Listening to excerpts of his offerings at a May 2005 Conference on Media Reform: Racial Justice reveals a man that finds great fault with our nation’s power structure — as he defines and sees it. And in his racially-warped, finite pie worldview, too many white people sit alone in the too few spots atop the heap. They’re “good white people,” mind you, but …

This… there’s nothing more difficult than this. Because we have really, truly good white people in important positions. And the fact of the matter is that there are a limited number of those positions. And unless we are conscious of the need to have more people of color, gays, other people in those positions we will not change the problem.

We’re in a position where you have to say who is going to step down so someone else can have power…

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Giuliani: Free Enterprise in America is ‘Under Assault’

Rudy Giuliani must have been a powerful narcotics prosecutor early in his career — singularly focused on swinging the verdict his way.

That’s the Giuliani I met at the downtown Dallas office of law firm Bracewell & Giuliani LLP when the two-term New York mayor, 2008 presidential candidate and now vociferous Obama detractor swept through town earlier this week.

Giuliani was here to meet with partners and clients, which took place in a private box at the “spectacular” Cowboys Stadium.

He carved out a half hour for an interview that was Monday-morning quarterbacking of a different sort.

I set up my first question with a touch of humor, hoping for an icebreaker: “Since we’re limited on time, I thought we ought to narrow the focus: What do you see as the state of free enterprise in America?”

He didn’t blink, smile or miss a beat.

“The state of free enterprise in America is under assault,” he said, moving closer across the conference room table.

We spent the next 34 minutes eye-to-eye, discussing why he’s so concerned.

The Obama administration, he said, has spent the last eight months attempting to take command of the financial industry, banking, auto companies and health care — using crisis as an excuse to implement long-wanted philosophical changes.

“Those of us who disagree with this have to fight to maintain the core principle of private enterprise as the guiding force in America,” he said, tapping a pen to accentuate his point. “Government is not the guiding force in America; private enterprise is.”

Government is a guilty party for the morass we’re in, he said. “So the idea that one of the major players in the mistakes that were made can now bail everyone out is somewhat simplistic …What you’re seeing now with the American people is a reaction against the Obama administration going too far.”

He kept his voice steely calm, his face matter of fact and never relinquished a bipartisan inch.

“I used to run the second-largest hospital system in the country — the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation,” he said. “There’s never been a health care estimate that’s been accurate or accurate low…If he [Obama] says a trillion, I’m afraid you might have to say two trillion. You might have to say two and half.”

If he were president

Giuliani said things would be different if he were president:

He wouldn’t have added a second stimulus package — “pork legislation of massive proportions” — to the one initiated by President George W. Bush.

And he’d be tackling health care with malpractice reform and free-market competition.

He gave kudos to Texas’ malpractice legislation passed in 2003. “States that have not done malpractice reform have doctors leaving and coming to Texas because they can practice medicine here without going bankrupt.”

He’d let competition push down premiums by allowing consumers — you and me — to buy health care coverage across state lines with $15,000 in tax-free income. If we find coverage for less, we’d be able to accumulate the difference in a tax-free health savings account.

“We do not get to make decisions about our health care, which is why it is an out-of-control escalating market,” he said.

But are we really capable of picking out health care plans?

Of course, he said. We buy life and car insurance, don’t we?

Giuliani used plasma TVs to drive home his point: Once a $12,000 purchase, these high-definition flat-screens now run under $4,000 with better technology.

“Companies selling them realized, ‘We can sell 100,000 plasma TVs at the low price point, but we can only sell 10,000 at the high price point. At the high price point, we make a profit. But at the low price point, because of volume, we make a bigger profit.’ “

Still at risk

Giuliani said it’s unfair to classify Republicans as the just-say-no crowd. He and his political cohorts have ideas that have been summarily rejected. “President Obama said he was going to have a meeting with Republicans to discuss health care. He never held a meeting.”

As for banking, Giuliani did allow that a big mistake was made under the Republicans’ watch before the election. Bad assets should have been auctioned off instead of just forking over cash to troubled financial institutions.

By not getting rid of bad loans on balance sheets, banks held on to the money instead of lending it, Giuliani said. “We were hitting them from both ends. One end was saying, ‘Give out the money.’ The other end was saying, ‘You better watch your capital.’… I would have freed that up.”

Commercial real estate will be “the next transition,” he predicted, avoiding the crisis word. “We’re going to have big bumps rather than major catastrophes before we straighten out.”

His law firm was actively engaged in the Troubled Asset Relief Program. So what’s he telling clients today?

Be careful but stand ready, he said. Many investors have stockpiled cash. “They’re beginning to realize that they have to move their cash because there is an inevitable thing that’s going to happen…inflation.”

When does he expect buying distressed real estate to pick up?

Any day now, he said, but we’re not quite there yet. “Everybody wants to buy at the bottom. When they feel they’re at the bottom, you’re going to see a lot of money start to come out.”

Will he run?

So will Giuliani run for president in 2012?

“I’m keeping my options open is how I put it — meaning who knows?” said the 65-year-old, who pulled out of the 2008 race after being defeated by John McCain in the Florida primary. “Things outside yourself determine whether you can run for president and then whether you can win in running for president. Before I would decide to run for president again, I’d have to see those things outside myself lined up correctly.”

How did Sept.11 change his perspective?

“It allows me to accept almost anything that happens,” Giuliani said.

After losing his first New York mayoral race in 1989, Giuliani said he was depressed for four months — rehashing the campaign, feeling he’d let down so many people.

When he lost the primary in 2008, he was extremely disappointed but got over it in less than a week.

“I’d gone through things in life that tell you what is really important: life and death and the security of this country,” he said. “The thing that makes me feel bad about the election now is: I do not agree with the direction of this administration.”

Rudy Giuliani can pack a lot of punch into 34 minutes.

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



Health Bill’s Deadly Fine Print

I am postponing my second column on the direct complicity of doctors and psychologists during the CIA’s torturing of terrorism suspects because of the sudden disclosure that, in the influential Senate Finance Committee’s health-care bill, there is a dangerous provision that could deny crucial health treatments for Medicare patients.

This is the much-publicized and debated Baucus bill, named for Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus. In its news section, the Wall Street Journal reported (Sept. 17) that this bill “breaks a logjam and is likely to form the core of a bill in the full Senate.”

During the continuous, extensive coverage of this proposed legislation, there has been only very limited mention — and none I’ve seen in the mainstream press — of a section that penalizes doctors for Medicare patients who, for at least five years (from 2015 to 2020), authorize total treatments that wind up in the top 10 percent of national annual Medicare costs per patient.

The 1 in 10 Medicare doctors who spend beyond this limit will themselves lose 5 percent of their own total Medicare reimbursements. Considering the already low rates Medicare doctors get — and the president pledges they will get lower — this could be a heavy penalty.

As Burke Balch, director of the National Right to Life’s Center for Medical Ethics, says: “This (part of the Baucus bill) means that all doctors treating older people will constantly be driven to try to order the least-expensive tests and treatments for fear they will be caught in that top 10 percent. Note that this feature operates independently of any considerations of quality, efficiency or waste. If you authorize enough treatment for your patients, however necessary and appropriate it may be, you are in danger of being one of the 1 in 10 doctors who will be penalized each year.”

[…]

The bluntest assessment of this approach to health-care “reform” is by National Right to Life executive director David N. O’Steen:

“It takes the telltale fingerprints from the government: Instead of bureaucrats directly specifying the treatment denials that will mean death and poorer health for older people, it compels individual doctors to do the dirty work.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



High School Class in Shock After Seeing Fitna

[translated from the Dutch by VH]

“American parents are angry with a teacher from a secondary school, after Fitna was shown in class. One student -according to her father- needed psychological assistance after seeing the film of Geert Wilders.”

A teacher from the County High School in Pulaski (Kentucky), screened the film by Geert Wilders in class on September 11. Students came home so upset after having seen the sixteen-minute film that several parents demanded an apology from the teacher and the school.

“This movie should never have been screened in the classroom of my daughter,” said Bill Curey, one of the fathers. “There are so many violent scenes in Fitna. Since my daughter saw the film, she is no longer the same anymore. She does not go to school and needs professional help now”.

Click here for a video of one of the fathers.

           — Hat tip: VH [Return to headlines]



New Case to Demand Evidence of Hawaiian Birth

Health department chief has affirmed Obama’s records on file

The chief of Hawaii’s Department of Health twice has issued statements trying to convince doubters that President Obama was born in the state, and now those words may backfire if a new legal challenge comes to fruition.

Leo Donofrio, who brought one of the first legal challenges to Obama’s eligibility to be president and unsuccessfully tried to get the U.S. Supreme Court to get involved at the time of the election, is reporting on his website that Hawaiian state law requires “information collected and maintained for the purpose of making information available to the general public” be released.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Says U.S. ‘Determined’ To Combat Climate Change, Despite Senate Delay

A failure to address climate change could create an “irreversible catastrophe,” President Obama warns in a speech at the United Nations.

President Obama promised the United Nations Tuesday that his administration is “determined” to do more to address the nation’s climate change obligations.

But left out of the speech to the General Assembly special session on climate change was the political reality the president faces in trying to keep that promise.

While the House passed a sweeping climate change bill this year, it has stalled in the Senate as health care reform dominates the domestic agenda.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pork Loin Thief in OKC Stashes Stolen Meat Down Pants

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK — Police have arrested a man accused of stealing meat from an Oklahoma City Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market.

According to police, a Wal-Mart security officer at the Wal-Mart located at 1500 S.W. 59th Street, witnessed 40-year-old Rojelio Martinez enter the store’s meat department and select eight pork loin ribs and put them down his pants.

Martinez attempted to exit the store without paying, and the security officer approached him and identified himself as security. Martinez attempted to run, and the security officer placed him on the ground and handcuffed him.

According to police, the security officer noticed Martinez had tied his shoelaces around his ankles to prevent the meat from falling out of the bottom of his pants.

Martinez was subsequently booked into the Oklahoma County jail on one count of larceny.

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



Reid Threatens ‘Nuclear Option’ To Pass Health Care Reform as Panel Starts Work

The Nevada senator threatened to use a budgetary tool called reconciliation — also known as the “nuclear option” — which would allow Democrats to pass key parts of health care legislation with a simple majority, as opposed to the 60 votes usually needed to avoid a filibuster.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Running the Numbers on Spreading the Wealth

When Barack Obama told Joe the Plumber he planned to “spread the wealth around,” many people didn’t realize he was not talking about spreading the wealth only of the super-rich. Now that Obama is elected, he is moving rapidly to expand welfare handouts for non-taxpayers, running up a tremendous national debt that will inevitably lead to higher taxes on the middle class.

The enormity of this transfer of money away from working, taxpaying Americans to non-taxpayers (who voted overwhelmingly for Obama for president in 2008) has just been detailed in a sensational 53-page report by Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation. There are not enough superlatives in the English language to adequately describe the colossal amounts of money involved in the Obama administration’s shocking cash transfers.

Most people don’t realize that the federal budget has become a vast machine for transferring wealth from the upper third of Americans (who pay 90 percent of federal income taxes) to the lowest third of people, who earn less than 200 percent of the government-stipulated “poverty” level and pay no income tax. The size of this massive annual transfer rose by 40 percent to $714 billion over the last 10 years and is projected to rise to $1 trillion per year by the end of Obama’s first term.

[…]

Under Obama’s budget, which has already been passed by Congress, federal welfare spending will increase by $88 billion in 2009, plus an additional $175 billion in 2010. This two-year increase of $263 billion will bring total federal and state welfare handouts to $890 billion a year, which is more than 6 percent of GDP.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Too Much Obama

In the projection of presidential authority, less is more

The President of the United States said that it was remarkable, and it was. He was on the set of Late Show with David Letterman, talking about a shrivelled heart-shaped potato presented to him by a member of the audience. He kept a straight face for a moment, then laughed, and the crowd laughed with him. The President is vulnerable in all the debates that currently fill his time and America’s airwaves, from healthcare to Afghanistan. But his gravest danger is that less friendly crowds will start to laugh at him.

Barack Obama still has an opportunity to change America and rebuild the status of his office. He is not tarnished by a record of philandering. He is in the White House on merit, not on the strength of name recognition. His ambitions match the challenges of the moment, and his instincts on the direction that US public policy needs to go on health, climate change, regulatory reform and international engagement, though abhorrent to his most conservative critics, are broadly sound. And yet his wheels are spinning.

Considering his energy, his oratory and the political capital that he brought to the Oval Office, his scorecard nine months into the job is disappointing. Not one Republican has yet broken ranks to back his preferred health insurance reform Bill. The climate change legislation that he promised last year is stalled in the Senate. His speech to the Arab world in Cairo in June was praised as pitch-perfect but Palestinian leaders mocked his aspirations for the Middle East peace process last week, and Israel has all but ignored his Administration’s pleas for an end to settlement building.

Setbacks go with the territory. As Mr Obama has told six interviewers in two days, all presidents who attempt to enact major social reforms involving a change in the role of the State face intense opposition. But he has also adopted flawed tactics for which he has only himself to blame.

One of these is to be everywhere, all the time. Five television interviews in one day, an unprecedented appearance on a late-night talk show and eight speeches in two weeks have guaranteed him blanket coverage since his summer holiday. But what is on show is the personality of the office holder, not the authority and mystique of the office, which dissipate with every soundbite.

Mr Obama’s advisers say that he is their most effective spokesman and that the fragmented media universe requires multiple appearances where in a earlier generation a single “fireside chat” or network interview would have sufficed.

They are right when the argument is broken down like this — but still wrong in the end. Until Watergate, the American presidency was without question the most powerful branch of the US Government; more powerful than the legislature and the judiciary, with the power concentrated, naturally, in one person. There had been nothing like it in the annals of democracy. It was a power that could validate a peace conference by its mere presence, and in the right hands could intimidate a Soviet prime minister with a simple invitation to Camp David. Mr Obama could have revived that power, but is diluting it instead. The perquisites of American celebrity — among them the indulgent ten-foot grin of David Letterman — are to certain A-type personalities immensely tempting. He is an A-type personality. He has to be. He is somewhat vain. So are most presidents. He must now rein in his vanity, and husband his authority.

[Return to headlines]



US Town Bans Libyan Leader’s Tent

US officials have ordered workers to stop the construction of a tent for Libyan leader Colonel Muammar Gaddafi near New York, a local attorney says.

The erection of the tent “violated several codes and laws of the town of Bedford”, attorney Joel Sachs says.

It also emerged the Bedouin-style tent was being set up on property rented from real estate mogul Donald Trump.

Col Gaddafi had reportedly planned to use the tent for entertaining during the UN General Assembly in New York.

Libyan officials have so far not publicly commented on the issue.

Col Gaddafi — who arrived in New York on Tuesday — traditionally shuns official residences during his trips abroad.

Trump’s statement

Bedford town attorney Joel Sachs said officials had given “a stop work” order to teams pitching Col Gaddafi’s tent in the town, about 30 miles (48km) north of New York.

But he said the workers did not speak English and the order was then issued to the property caretaker.

“There is no such thing as diplomatic immunity when it comes to complying with local laws and ordinances,” Mr Sachs was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.

“This is a private piece of property and they have to comply with the laws of this municipality.”

Mr Sachs said the authorities in Bedford had learned of Col Gaddafi’s plans from the US secret service.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump said in a statement that part of the estate “was leased on a short-term basis to Middle Eastern partners, who may or may not have a relationship to Mr Gaddafi”.

“We are looking into the matter,” the statement added.

Last week, Libyan officials agreed not to pitch Col Gaddafi’s tent in the grounds of a Libyan-owned property in the New Jersey town of Englewood because of opposition from local residents.

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



US, Switzerland Sign Treaty to Share Tax Info

BERN, Switzerland — Switzerland and the United States have signed a treaty to increase the amount of tax information they share to help crack down on tax evasion, Swiss officials said Wednesday.

The agreement follows a model set out by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development designed to make it harder for taxpayers to hide money in offshore tax havens.

U.S. tax authorities will be able to request information on Americans suspected of concealing Swiss bank accounts, the Swiss Finance Ministry said.

The treaty forbids so-called ‘fishing expeditions,’ meaning U.S. authorities have to provide specific details on the person they are seeking further information about and can’t simply ask for wholesale lists of Americans with Swiss accounts, the ministry said.

The agreement, which comes into force immediately, won’t be retroactive.

Washington has been aggressively pursuing suspected tax evaders in Switzerland, the world’s biggest offshore banking center.

In August, the U.S. and Switzerland resolved a court case in which Swiss banking giant UBS AG agreed to turn over details on 4,450 accounts suspected of holding undeclared assets from American customers.

The case against UBS, as well as pressure from other OECD countries such as France, Britain and Germany, prompted Switzerland earlier this year to agree to soften its stance on banking secrecy for foreigners.

Since March, Switzerland has signed 11 tax information exchange agreements, one short of the number required by OECD for it to be removed from a ‘gray list’ of uncooperative tax havens.

Switzerland has also signed agreements with Denmark, Luxembourg, France, Norway, Austria, Britain, Mexico, Finland, Faeroe Islands and Spain and the government has authorized the signing of a 12th with Qatar.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Brown to Offer to Cut Nuclear Sub Fleet: Downing Street

LONDON (AFP) — Prime Minister Gordon Brown will announce Britain is prepared to scale back its nuclear capability as part of global disarmament efforts, Downing Street confirmed Wednesday.

Brown will reveal Thursday plans to cut the number of planned replacement nuclear submarines from four to three, at a special session of the UN Security Council, a spokeswoman confirmed.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Dell Wins EU OK to Get Euro54.5 Million Polish Aid

BRUSSELS — Dell Inc. won EU approval Wednesday to receive a euro54.4 million ($80.4 million) subsidy from the Polish government to build a new plant there, replacing Ireland as the computer maker’s new European manufacturing hub.

The European Commission said it could allow the government aid the company because the new factory would create jobs in a disadvantaged part of Poland — Lodz, the country’s third-largest city — where there is an unusually low standard of living and high unemployment.

The state will pay just over a quarter of the total investment of euro189.58 million in the plant which will eventually employ up to 3,000 people to make desktops, notebooks and servers, including Latitude and Inspiron models.

Open since January 2008, the factory currently employs 1,700.

EU regulators said they investigated the subsidy carefully because they initially doubted that the plant needed state help and wanted to check that it didn’t enrich Dell or help it make more of a product that wasn’t selling.

When Dell announced plans to build the plant in Poland, it was hailed as a landmark project for bringing high-skilled work to the country where hundreds of thousands of young, educated people were leaving for higher-paid jobs in other parts of the EU.

Round Rock, Texas-based Dell said it had picked Poland as a manufacturing center because it was close to a large, growing customer base in central and eastern Europe where it expected sales to increase by nearly 14 percent a year.

It also helps the company cut manufacturing costs, as profits decline and it loses its status as the world’s No. 1 PC maker to rival Hewlett-Packard Co.

Dell said earlier this year that it would shift its European manufacturing center from Limerick, Ireland to lower-wage Poland with the loss of some 2,000 Irish jobs and another 840 in local supplier companies.

Dell was Ireland’s second-largest corporate employer, its biggest exporter and in recent years has contributed about 5 percent to the national gross domestic product. Economists warn that each Dell job underpins another four to five jobs in Ireland.

Some 1,000 Irish workers will remain in Limerick to coordinate manufacturing throughout Europe and research and develop new products. Dell also employs another 1,300 people in a Dublin-based marketing and sales center for Europe.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



EU: US Views Europe as Little More Than a Trade Partner

More than a generation ago, Henry Kissinger was asked what help the expanding European Communities would be in the event of a global crisis.

His reply — “Who do I call if I want to call Europe?” — has been cited ever since by Euro-doubters and sceptics as the sharpest summary of the confusion caused by multilateral leadership.

But like it or not, Europe is, at least ostensibly, a great deal closer to providing an answer to the old statesman’s question. It has had a foreign minister of sorts for several years. If the Treaty of Lisbon is ratified, it will have a new President of the European Council, a newly empowered foreign minister and a diplomatic corps.

In Kissinger’s day, Britain, Denmark and Ireland had just expanded the EC membership to nine. Now the Americans face dealing with a 27-member mammoth and, from Washington’s perspective, the need for simpler lines of communication is greater than ever.

The Obama administration is audibly keen on European integration. Hillary Clinton, the Secretary of State, made her views clear to the voters of Ireland in an interview with the Irish Times this year. An EU interlocutor, she said, “wouldn’t in any way eliminate the bilateral relations which the United States pursues with individual countries, but on a number of matters, the EU being organised in that way could facilitate decisions”.

She continued: “I believe [political integration is] in Europe’s interest and I believe that is in the United States’ interest because we want a strong Europe.”

The new administration’s enthusiasm for integration may be stronger than that of predecessors, but successive White Houses, ever keen to simplify their European contacts book, have broadly supported a robust EU.

In some ways, the bloated, bureaucratic, slow-moving and increasingly centralised European project seems very un-American. Washington furthermore deals with Europe through a baffling array of diplomatic forums: the EU3 + 3 on Iran, the Quartet on the Middle East, the troika on the Balkans. Then there are informal policy coordination groups such as the “quad” — the US, Britain, France and Germany — and the “quint” — those four plus Italy — which often discusses south-east Europe.

“It can be very clunky, and the function of many groups seems to be to allow the Europeans to organise themselves,” says Kurt Volker, who was US ambassador to Nato in the latter stages of the Bush administration.

But then, perhaps a federally governed continent of several hundred million inhabitants, with a diversity of geography, ethnicity and cultures, sounds rather like the United States itself. Cooperation on a grand scale is a concept Americans understand. At a time when many Europeans are nervous about deeper integration, the American political establishment is happy with the idea of more of it. They just want it done better.

“Europe is a lot about process and Americans hate process,” says Mr Volker, who is now at the Centre for Transatlantic Relations at John Hopkins University. “But when you think what Europe stands for — democratic foundation, rule of law, free markets, secularism, standing up against radical Islam — these are things we are very passionate about.”

In Washington’s halls of power, few are under any illusions that dealing with Europe after Lisbon will become easy overnight. “If there could be a single interlocutor, who held the full balance of interests — economic, security, defence, political and intelligence — at the same time, then fine, it would be like dealing with a single state,” Mr Volker says. “But the EU still doesn’t have the full balance of things, which rest with member states, and I am not sure how far Lisbon would change that.”

Despite the dramatic growth of the European institutions, Washington still primarily regards the EU as a regional economic bloc. “Policy makers tend to see Europe as a benign trade partner and little more,” says Steven Hill, a European expert at the New America Foundation. “They are not used to thinking of Europe as a union but as individual countries that occasionally move in an aggregated way. As for the EU as a structure, debates on the constitution and so on, I don’t think most policy makers have any clue, and nor does the media.”

“The Americans are interested in power,” says Reginald Dale, a senior fellow in the Europe programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. “When they look at the EU, they judge the extent of its power. Since Suez, to get the attention of Washington, Europeans have had to produce a good reason why Washington should listen. There is a certain giving up on Europe here, and it will take more than Lisbon to change that.”

A weaker Europe can be useful to the Americans when they want to deal directly with national governments on issues such as airline security, which would run into stiffer opposition at the European Commission.

But the main reason for that disappointment in Washington is the lack of European commitment to Afghanistan, with a few notable exceptions led by the British. It may be a Nato mission but the tepidness of the European effort has reflected poorly on the continent’s political establishment and its ability to act collectively.

The frustration has been shared by the Bush and Obama administrations. Mr Volker, who dealt directly with European governments, says: “Afghanistan affects our security and Europe’s security. You would think that after all the terror attacks and attempted attacks in Europe, there would be strong European interest in making sure this doesn’t happen in the future.”

Instead, two US presidents have been offered negligible increases in fighting forces, diluted commitments even to training the Afghan police and diminishing financial contributions.

“Strong and visionary leadership could bring Europe together, but a lot of politicians would rather cater to their domestic publics rather than challenge them on the basis of defining European values and interests,” Mr Volker says.

Speaking in 2008, Kissinger identified a “vacuum between Europe’s past and Europe’s future”. “Nation states have not just given up part of their sovereignty to the European Union but also part of their vision for their future. Their future is now tied to the European Union, and the EU has not yet achieved a vision and loyalty comparable to the nation state,” he said.

Unless that vision is achieved, Kissinger’s successors will be obliged to make more than one call when they want to speak to Europe for years to come.

[Return to headlines]



Female Swedish Soldiers Complain About ‘Flammable’ Bras

Swedish female soldiers have demanded that the army provide them with combat-tested bras, amid complaints that the garments issued to them easily catch fire and unhook too easily.

The Swedish Conscription Council, a rights group representing the country’s 500-odd women soldiers, said the poor quality of the standard-issue sports bras was unacceptable.

“Our opinion is that the Swedish Armed Forces should have ordered good, flame-proof underwear,” Paulina Rehbinder, a union spokeswoman, told The Local, Sweden’s English-language newspaper.

The bras unhook too easily during strenuous exercise, soldiers said, forcing women to interrupt their activities to remove their equipment in order to re-fasten the brassieres.

The bras are also highly flammable, according to a report in the Göteborgs-Posten newspaper.

Ms Rehbinder told AFP that women had been forced to buy their own undergarments, whereas men were given suitable underwear by the army.

She criticised the military for its lack of gender equality, in a country widely considered a pioneer in the field.

“This sends a signal to women. You should be able to come to your workplace and be provided with equipment that works and that is safe,” she said.

“There have been women in the Swedish military for more than 30 years, but bras have never been provided by the military,” she said, noting, however, that the military gave conscripts money to buy their bras.

But things look set for a change.

With between 800 and 1,000 women expected to become conscripts next year, the military is now developing a new battle-safe bra.

“It’s supposed to be ready either later this year or next year,” Ms Rehbinder said.

Sweden has allowed women conscripts since 1980. Four to five per cent of Sweden’s armed forces are women.

[Return to headlines]



France: Fashion: Emir of Ajman Bids to Take Over Maison Lacroix

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, SEPTEMBER 22 — The reigning family of the smallest of the seven Arab Emirates, Ajman, is planning to take over the Maison Christian Lacroix, which is undergoing a judicial restructuring. According to Le Figaro, sheikh Hassan Ben Ali al-Naimi, nephew and business associate of the Emir, wrote a letter of intent, announcing the offer to Regis Valliot, legal administrator of the fashion house, whic has many faithful costumers and admirers of the designer’s haute couture. The Emir offered 50 million euros and would keep 119 of the current 125 employees. He also intends to collaborate with Lacroix, with whom is going to meet in the near future. The Emir is hoping to bring the Maison back into a favourable economic situation, after 22 years of losses (in 2008 alone the recorded loss was 10 million euros, with a 30 million euro yearly turnover). The recovery of the Maison, according to the Emir’s plan, should take place within the next three years, by creating synergies with other activities belonging to the royal family in the real estate and luxury yachting sectors. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: 9 Bln Euros for Council Houses From Bank

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, SEPTEMBER 22 — French credit institute Caisse Des Depots has allocated loans destined to council houses (managed in France by the HLM — Habitations a ‘Loyere Modere’, for an overall 9 billion euros. According to the Italian Foreign Trade Commission (ICE) offices in Paris, this is an unprecedented amount, which should allow to finance construction and renovation works for over 90,000 homes. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Germany: Fresh Challenge to Lisbon Could be ‘Explosive’

GERMAN COURT: A LEADING German constitutional lawyer has warned that Berlin’s ratification of the Lisbon Treaty could have an “explosive” effect on its future relationship with the European Union.

Prof Dietrich Murswiek, of the University of Freiburg, was commenting on a fresh constitutional challenge to the treaty that could delay Berlin’s ratification until after Ireland’s referendum next month.

The challenge lodged on Monday says that laws created to allow ratification of the treaty in Germany leave the Bundestag ill-equipped on integration matters.

It maintains that the laws do not sufficiently guarantee the role of the constitutional court (BVG) as “guardian of the constitution”.

It asks the constitutional court in Karlsruhe to issue an injunction until they deliver their final verdict, halting ratification by president Horst Köhler.

A spokesman for the president’s office said yesterday that his legal experts were examining the new challenge and could not say if or when they would act.

Prof Murswiek, who led one of the original challenges to the Lisbon Treaty on behalf of Bavarian MP Peter Gauweiler, said he was doubtful the new challenge would be successful.

But, he said, it highlighted future difficulties Berlin may have in interpreting the Lisbon Treaty if and when it is ratified.

In its ruling, the BVG said the Lisbon Treaty was constitutional in Germany, but only within the court’s own limited interpretation.

“A citizen could, for instance, complain to the constitutional court that his freedom to operate his company is hindered by a German law originating in a specific EU regulation,” said Prof Murswiek.

“If, under the BVG’s interpretation of the treaty, the EU has no competence in this area, the court would agree with the complainant.”

To get around the potential clash with the European Court in Luxembourg, some legal watchers have suggested that Berlin note these limitations in a written proviso to be lodged alongside the ratification documents.

A German government spokesman said yesterday that there was no plan for this.

He said that Chancellor Merkel would inform her EU colleagues verbally of the limitations.

“The court ruling is explosive — even jurists who were for the treaty see it this way,” said Prof Murswiek.

“I think the court went so far because they saw a danger to their continued control of the limits of constitutionality and decided to strongly underline their own powers.”

[Return to headlines]



Germany: Police Raid NPD Office for Sending Racist Hate Mail

Police said on Wednesday they had raided the Berlin headquarters of Germany’s neo-Nazi NPD party after it sent racist letters to ethnic minority candidates in this weekend’s election, telling them to “go home.”

A spokesman for Berlin prosecutors confirmed they had launched an investigation over suspected incitement to racial hatred.

The letters, signed by an “officer for the deportation of foreigners,” were presented as a “notice” to candidates of Turkish origin ahead of elections on September 27.

According to one recipient, Green politician Ozcan Mutlu, the two-paged letter contained a “five-point plan” for “moving foreigners gradually back to their home countries.”

The letters sparked outrage from mainstream politicians who called for renewed efforts to outlaw the NPD, which has no seats in the national parliament but is represented in two of Germany’s powerful regional assemblies.

The NPD is on the verge of bankruptcy and has next to no chance of winning a seat in Sunday’s election, polls show.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Banks Face Crackdown by EU Over Hidden Fees

THE European Commission yesterday condemned Irish banks for bamboozling customers with hidden charges and shoddy advice.

It said retail banks offered poor value to customers, and it warned bankers across Europe that it may begin a major crackdown on the sector.

The damning report will further enrage the public less than a week after Finance Minister Brian Lenihan announced plans for a €54bn bailout for Irish banks.

EU Commissioner Charlie McCreevy, in charge of the EU single market, said the commission was ready to “set the ground rules” for the conduct of banks towards their customers, if the banks failed to tackle the issue themselves.

The Internal Market Commissioner said: “This consumer market monitoring shows the difficulties consumers face in their dealings with retail financial products and services. The commission is determined to combat those problems.

“That means imposing transparency with understandable and comparable information and setting the ground rules for the conduct of business.”

The hard-hitting commission report pointed out that complaints about bad financial advice had doubled in Ireland last year. This is based on a surge in complaints to Financial Services Ombudsman Joe Meade in 2008 compared with 2007. Almost three-quarters of the complaints were resolved in favour of the consumer.

Banks were castigated for having a conflict of interest when giving consumers advice. This was because they were more inclined to push the sale of products where bank staff got high commissions.

The report added that there was suspicion that many of those selling financial products did not have a good enough understanding of them. Irish banks were also criticised for having high charges for current accounts.

The commission said many banks appeared to try to hide charges with complex fee structures that many customers said they found difficult to understand. Information from the Financial Regulator in Dublin shows that:

• AIB charges €10 if a standing order is not paid because there is insufficient money in a bank account.

• Bank of Ireland charges €12.70 for a bounced cheque.

• Ulster Bank has an overdraft rate of 13.55pc.

• Permanent TSB charges €2.50 for a duplicate bank statement.

The commission referred to a 2008 Eurobarometer survey that revealed 30pc of Irish consumers had difficulties comparing current-account offers.

“Only 7pc of consumers have switched their current account in the previous two years, despite the fact that 71pc of those who did reported finding a cheaper provider,” the report points out. Banks were also accused of using legal and financial jargon in documents and of hiding important details in small print.

The sharp criticism of Irish banks comes a day ahead of Permanent TSB chief executive David Guinane being hauled in front of an Oireachtas committee to explain why his bank has increased mortgage rates for existing customers.

Increase

The chairman of the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Finance and the Public Service, Michael Ahern, said the bank would be asked to explain why its standard variable rate would be going up by half a percentage point. This move would see monthly repayments on a €300,000 mortgage increase by €70 a month.

A spokesman for the Irish Banking Federation said recent European Central Bank statistics confirmed that average rates in Ireland for mortgages and consumer loans were among the lowest in the EU.

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Ireland: Archbishop Lashes Tiernan for Joking About Holocaust

Award-winning comedian Tommy Tiernan has been “floored by a belt of the crozier” for allegedly making offensive remarks about the Holocaust.

Departing from his prepared sermon at the end of a Mass last night for teachers in Bray, Co Wicklow — and without referring to Tiernan by name — Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin said remarks attributed to an Irish comedian were “offensive to the Jewish community and offensive to all who feel revulsion concerning the Holocaust, one of the most horrific events in human history”.

Tiernan was reported to have said he would have killed twice as many of the six million Jews liquidated in the Nazi Holocaust. “F***ing Christ-killing bastards,” he reportedly added. “F*** six million? I would have got 10 or 12 million out of that. Two at a time they would have gone. Hold hands, get in there, leave us your teeth and your glasses.” But in a defiant statement placed on his website, the uncontrite comedian had hit back at accusations that he made “anti-semitic” comments during a public interview at the Electric Picnic festival earlier this month.

Upset

Tiernan confessed that he was “greatly upset” that his comments had caused hurt to others, as that was never his intention, but he insisted he was “quite bewildered” that his interview had been taken so far out of context.

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Italy: Health Inquiry Reveals ‘Criminal System’ In Bari

Bari, 16 Sept. (AKI) — Italian prosecutors investigating allegations of corruption in the southern region of Puglia have said the health system there was dominated by a “criminal system” that controlled the contracts, appointment of medical staff and finance.

Bari prosecutor Antonio Laudati spoke to the Italian media about the health system after a local councillor, Tommaso Fiore, said that the system was not run by a “mafia cell” but that there were signs of criminal “distortions” in the system.

Laudati said the inquiry currently underway was not a normal inquiry into public administration because what had emerged was “ a type of much more complex criminality, much more organised”.

“Obviously the mafia is another thing altogether,” he said. “But the level of danger of these crimes is different to what is committed by an individual or a criminal system.”

The inquiry’s brief includes an investigation into Bari businessman Giampaolo Tarantini who is at the centre of a sex scandal surrounding Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Tarantini, who is being investigated on allegations of corruption and abetting prostitution, has told prosecutors that he supplied 30 women for parties hosted by the prime minister, some of whom were paid to have sex with him.

The businessman, under investigation for allegedly paying Italian and foreign women to go to Berlusconi’s villas, said that he set out to get to know the Italian leader because of his power and influence.

Laudati said that there were several inquiries being conducted into the health system — and several of them involved Tarantini.

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



Netherlands: Can Cousin Marriages be Banned?

NRC HANDELSBLAD: The Dutch government wants to prohibit marriages between cousins, but experts wonder if that is possible.

What if two cousins sleep together, have a baby and then want to get married. Is that allowed? What about this situation: a young Moroccan Dutch man marries his female cousin in Morocco and then brings her to the Netherlands. Is that permitted? Or rather: will that still be permitted in future?

According to Ashley Terlouw, professor of sociology of law at Radboud University in Nijmegen, it is doubtful whether such cases can be prohibited. Aside from the question of whether it is a good idea.

“Everyone’s right to a family life is protected in section 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. If the Netherlands does not respect that, the Court in Strasbourg will have something to say about it.”

Experts have responded with surprise — and some with shock — to the plan that Deputy Minister for Justice Nebahat Albayrak announced last week to ban marriages between cousins. It is one of the measures aimed at reducing the number of so-called import brides (and grooms).

Increase in import marriages

Detailed information on the ban and its enforcement is expected in a few weeks, but it is already clear that the ban will apply to everyone, not just ethnic minorities among whom most marriages between cousins take place. The ban will not be imposed with retroactive effect.

“It does not seem right to me to apply family law to migration policy,” said Terlouw. “Moreover it is a measure that affects more people than you want it to.” Nor will the ban necessarily bring about any decline in marriage migration. “The Netherlands cannot ban marriages in other countries and will have to recognise most cases. Added to this is the fact that it is certainly not the case that all foreign marriages are between cousins.”

A driving force behind the measure is the increase in the number of Dutch residents who ‘import’ a spouse from the country of their parents.

After years of decline, the number went up last year by thirty percent to 15,000. But the municipal records do not keep track of how many of these marriages involved cousins marrying each other.

According to researchers from Leiden University, a quarter of Turks and Moroccans marry a relative. A European survey, which only looked at second-generation immigrants, indicated that just over eight percent of Turks and six percent of Moroccans reported they were married to a cousin.

Does Albayrak have her facts straight?

Albayrak said last week that marriage between cousins was prohibited in the past, but that is a stubborn misconception said Frans van Poppel of the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute. Only since 1970 has the law permitted an uncle or aunt to marry their nephew or niece, but there has never been a ban on marriage between cousins, according to Van Poppel.

It seems as if Albayrak does not yet have all her facts straight, said Han Entzinger, professor of integration and migration studies at Erasmus University in Rotterdam.

“I see that Moroccans and Turks are in fact bringing partners from abroad less frequently.” That is also due to the income requirement that the Netherlands has introduced. The partner here must now earn at least 120 percent of the minimum wage before he can bring a partner from abroad.

“Which incidentally has an adverse effect in that many young people stopped their college education to try and earn as much money as possible,” said Entzinger.

Proponents of a ban on marriage between cousins stress that they hope this ban will put a stop to forced marriages. Entzinger has serious doubts whether this goal will be achieved. He responds with questions: “What is defined as a forced marriage? Is an arranged marriage also forced? How many forced marriages actually take place? And how would such a ban be enforced?”

Health risks not significant

It seems as if politicians are seeking a new way to ban marriage between cousins. From 2003 there have been efforts to introduce the ban on grounds of health risks. This has failed time and again. Last year health minister Ab Klink decided that a ban would be disproportionate. Research has shown that parents who are related, including cousins, have a four percent chance of a child with a genetic defect. That risk is two percent for parents who are not related.

If politicians are really concerned about stopping forced marriages and preventing health risks, Albayrak should instead concentrate on better information provision, said the researchers. And on a harsh approach to those who impose forced marriages.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Spain: Women’s Wages Are 34% Less Than Those of Men

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, SEPTEMBER 22 — In the Spain of equal opportunity and the executive branch of Zapatero with a female majority, that instituted the Ministry of Equality, women continue to be discriminated against at work, receiving salaries that are lower than those of men. So emerged from data published today by the National Statistics Institute (INE), according to which in 2007, the average gross salary for men was 22,780 euros, compared to 16,943 euros for women, equal to 34% less than their male counterparts. The spread between ‘male’ and ‘female’ salaries has reduced over recent years, as demonstrated by the fact that in 2004 men earned 38% more than women and in 2006 35.7% more; but the differences are far from disappearing. On the other hand, the same INE warns that the gap reduces if “similar situations compared to variables like employment, type of work day or contract” are considered. In the case of full-time, men earn 21% more than women; in part-time work the difference is 14%. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Helicopter Heist Causes Cash Flow Concerns

While police continue to gather evidence, traders and store owners in the Stockholm area are concerned over a possible shortage of cash following the spectacular robbery of a cash depot south of the city.

The helicopter used in the heist was later found near a lake in Arninge north of Stockholm and police continue to search the area for clues.

As the investigation unfolds, however, business owners are raising concerns about a possible shortage of cash due to the robbery.

“The depot provides a large share of the local cash reserves,” Dick Malmlund of the Swedish Federation of Trade (Svensk Handel) told the TT news agency.

“If a facility like this is taken out of the game…we don’t have a large reserve capacity. No one can afford to make that happen these days.”

He fears that Wednesday’s daring attack on a Västberga cash depot may lead to a cash shortage in Stockholm’s local teller machines and stores.

“It’s a bit like stopping traffic on an entry road, all of Stockholm will be affected. This is the same thing,” he said.

The heist comes just days before Swedes across the country are set to be paid their monthly salaries.

While most salary payments are transmitted by wire, the once-a-month occurrence usually prompts a flurry of cash withdrawals by Swedes who mark their paydays with a weekend spending binge on consumer goods, entertainment, and restaurant meals.

As a result, there may have been more cash on hand on the depot than usual.

While no official details have been released regarded the amount of money that may have been at the depot at the time of the heist, crime expert Leif G W Persson told TT there may have been as much as 1 billion kronor ($146 million).

Malmlund was also critical of the apparent ease with which police helicopters were grounded as a part of the caper due to fake bombs being placed in the hangar.

“If we at the Trade Federation are to put measures in place to prevent these sorts of occurrences, its critical that police resources shouldn’t be taken out of the game so easily,” he said.

“We know that the robbers were using caltraps [a spiked weapon laid out to puncture car tyres], so police vehicles were out of the game in no time. So we really needed helicopters to support us.”

Stefan Wikman, the head of production at Loomis, a competitor with G4S in the field of cash flow management, confirms that the robbery may result in local cash shortages.

“Sure, there is a small risk. In certain cases there may be short-term problems with automatic teller machines and so forth,” he told TT.

Aside from the cash depot hit in Wednesday’s robbery, two others exist in Stockholm. The largest is managed by Loomis.

“We’re working full out now trying to manage the situation and to ensure that there won’t be any significant money shortages.”

According to Wikman, much depends upon the length of time that police barricades remain in place at G4S locations. He compared the current situation with the attempted robbery of Loomis that took place earlier in the spring:

“The greatest damage for us occurred during the time that police had blocked off the premises. But, naturally, we completely understand that they need to carry out thorough investigations,” he said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Man Arrested in Helicopter Heist Probe

Swedish police have one person into custody for suspected involvement in the Hollywood-esque helicopter-aided robbery which took place at a cash depot near Stockholm early Wednesday morning.

Stockholm police during a Wednesday afternoon police conference, according to the Aftonbladet newspaper.

The man has not been formally named as a suspect, but remains in police custody pending the outcome of an interrogation.

The spectacular robbery, which took place early Wednesday morning and targeted a cash depot in Västberga, involved a stolen helicopter and fake bombs in a highly orchestrated caper.

“The robbery was well-organized, well-planned, and technically well-equipped. Taken together, it can lead to a number of possible hypotheses about who could have been involved,” said Agdur.

Shortly after 5am, a white helicopter hovered over the depot, several explosions were heard, and several masked men climbed down onto the roof of the building.

According to eye-witness accounts, several objects were then loaded up into the helicopter before it left the scene.

It was later found abandoned in a field north of Stockholm.

Some experts have theorized that at least one of the robbers may have had a military background. Others marveled at the skill displayed by the pilot of the helicopter, which had been stolen from a heliport north of Stockholm overnight.

“It was very professionally done. Not even a police of ambulance helicopter would land in that way,” said Anders Jansson of the Stockholm police.

A high ranking official who wished to remain anonymous told TT he suspects the crime was an inside job.

“The robbers must have had access to drawings and other detailed information about how they could get in and how they should orient themselves once inside the cash depot,” the source told TT.

Police continue to come up with a list of possible assailants of which there like isn’t “all that many” according to the source.

He wouldn’t rule out that the robbers may have had military training, “perhaps somewhere outside of Sweden”.

According to the source, the perpetrators were armed with “weapons bigger than usual”, which he hinted referred to a specific type of automatic weapon, although he refused to be more specific.

The G4S cash transport company which operated the depot said in a statement on its website that the robbers made off with “an unconfirmed sum of money”.

“We’re doing all we can to help the police with their investigation,” writes the company, promising “a large reward” for information which helps solve the crime.

Public prosecutor Leif Görtz of the international section of the Stockholm prosecutor’s office has been chosen to lead the preliminary investigation in the case.

“Just because I work in the international section doesn’t automatically mean that the crime has any international connections. We also deal with other cases involving serious organized crime,” he told the TT news agency.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



The Euro: Why Britain is Still Better Off Out

When the historical dust clears, Gordon Brown may find that his greatest achievement was to keep Britain out of the euro and preserve the fire-fighting powers of the Bank of England.

Had we joined monetary union in 1999, interest rates set by the European Central Bank would have been near 2 per cent during the mid-years of this decade. This would have been like pouring petrol on the housing fire. The credit bubble would have been even worse.

Once the bubble burst, the UK authorities would have been left with few instruments to cushion the downturn and manage the highest household debt burden in history. Britain would now be facing the sort of debt-deflation spiral under way in Ireland and Spain.

By keeping its freedom of action, Britain has been able to launch “quantitative easing” (printing money) the most radical monetary experiment tried in a modern industrial nation. We do not know yet how this will end. Yet what is clear is that Bank of England was able to act with stunning speed after the debacles of Northern Rock, Lehman Brothers, and AIG, slashing rates to 0.5 per cent. It is buying almost a third of all UK government gilts in order to prevent a repeat of the early 1930s when the money supply was allowed to contract.

The European Central Bank was slower to ease monetary policy, and has largely held back from QE — in part because Frankfurt views such action as unnecessary, but also because any move to buy bonds is viewed by German hawks as the start of a slippery slope towards a bail-out of the Club Med bloc.

The point for Britain is that the steady-as-you-go strategy of the ECB would have left Britain in a very serious position as the crisis unfolded, given the particular circumstances of the UK as a banking hub.

The Bank of England’s emergency policies have stabilised the UK economy. The 20 per cent plunge in sterling has in this instance been a life-saver, prompting a tourist mini-boom in London. Scores of companies survived which would otherwise have gone bankrupt, saved by the boost in profit margins on exports.

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UK: Boy, 9, Told to Apologise for ‘Racist’ Taunt to Polish Classmate While Playing Soldiers in Lesson

A nine-year-old schoolboy was branded racist by teachers after playing a game of soldiers with a Polish friend, his parents have claimed.

Steven Cheek was reprimanded for pointing a finger at the Eastern European classmate and said: ‘We’ve got to shoot the German army’.

His teacher immediately sent him to see the deputy head, who forced him to stand in front of the class and make a humiliating apology.

Steven’s mother Jane Hennessey, 37, of Harlow, Essex, slammed teachers for ‘over-reacting to kids playing games’.

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UK: Judge Won’t Name Feral Youth Who Punched Artist Into Car That Killed Him

The family of an artist killed by a teenage thug spoke of their anger yesterday after the attacker was jailed for only two years and allowed to remain anonymous.

Jonathan Harper, 47, was set upon by a ‘feral youth’ after he refused to give one of the teenager’s friends a cigarette.

The 15-year-old punched him in the face with such force that he fell on to the road into the path of a car.

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UK: Kent Attracts New Type of Tourist: Europeans Seeking Easy Bankruptcy

Tourists have come to Kent for its castles, where widowed queens lived out their days and kings organised the defence of the realm of England. They have come to see Canterbury Cathedral, founded by St Augustine at the end of the 6th century, site of the murder of Thomas à Becket.

Then there is the stately retreat where Winston Churchill brooded, the house where Joseph Conrad wrote, the chalky white cliffs. There are the oast houses, the ancient pubs, the crumbling Cinque Ports and a ragged coastline of beach and marsh and “knolls where Norman churches stand”.

To that formidable list of attractions may now be added another, which is pulling in a different type of tourist from countries across Europe. Kent is increasingly considered one of the finest places in Europe to declare oneself bankrupt.

Among the indebted of Germany, Austria, France and Ireland, the English insolvency laws look beautifully lenient. Insolvency experts say that the number of foreign debtors seeking bankruptcy in Britain has risen by 20 per cent, with Kent being a popular destination because of its easy access to continental Europe.

Crippling insolvency laws in Germany mean that it takes between six and nine years to escape debts after being made bankrupt. A bankrupt in Ireland will normally remain an “undischarged bankrupt” for 12 years, maybe longer. However, in this country a bankruptcy can end in as little as 12 months.

So to Kent, to pay a restorative visit to an insolvency agency and make another trip to a court to file bankruptcy papers.

Observers are calling the phenomenon “bankruptcy tourism”. The Insolvency Service confirmed that it had identified dozens of cases of people from Europe filing for bankruptcy after appearing to have been resident here for less than 12 months with all or most of the debts being owed to creditors outside Britain.

One German debt expert based in Kent said that he was helping management consultants, doctors, accountants, dentists and lawyers to discharge their bankruptcy.

Marcus Kray, a director of the Erith-based Insolvenz Agentur, which advises German and Austrians how best to take advantage of British bankruptcy laws, said: “They come from all over the European Union. They like the tax laws here as they are better than the ones in their country.”

Mike Gerrard, a partner specialising in personal insolvency at Grant Thornton, the chartered accountants, said: “As far as the law is concerned, this [debt tourism] is a legitimate thing to do. However, you could have a long and difficult argument about the ethics of it.”

In 2002, new European insolvency legislation came into force that made cross-border bankruptcies between member states easier to complete. The regulation covers personal as well as corporate insolvencies and, in theory, allows individuals saddled with debt to “shop around” for the most lenient bankruptcy jurisdiction within the Union.

Many foreign debtors live in Tunbridge Wells, a spa town with its fair share of historic castles. Others go to Greenhithe, whose nearby attractions include the not particularly historic Bluewater Shopping Centre. Some have paid insolvency agencies up to £7,000 for their resettlement.

Mr Kray, whose company promises to “get rid of the rest of your debts in England after just 12 months”, said that he had helped a management consultant with debts of £16 million to complete the bankruptcy process. Many of his clients opted to stay in Britain after their names had been cleared, he added.

“They come to us with problems. They may not have enough money to pay their income tax, sometimes they are self-employed and their clients haven’t paid their bills. They come from all over the EU. Given the economic climate, we have 20 per cent more than normal. We now have about 150 clients a year.”

Under the current system, there is no minimum time limit for a foreign national to be resident and “economically active” in England and Wales before petitioning for bankruptcy. However, the Government closely scrutinises applications from people who have been resident for less than 12 months. Being economically active includes being employed or having a source of income, owning a bank account, having a national insurance number or paying rent.

More than 60,000 people in England and Wales were made bankrupt in the past financial year. The Insolvency Service says that foreign nationals account for only a small percentage of this figure.

A spokeswoman said: “The service examines the affairs of recently relocated foreign nationals very closely, and, if there is evidence that the order ought not to have been made in the courts of England and Wales, will report the matter back to the court with a view to having the bankruptcy order cancelled.”

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UK: Outrage and Hope in Today’s England

The United States of America has many problems. Regardless of the party in the presidency, the government becomes more socialistic. Immigration is out of control and multiculturalism is dismantling traditional America. Plus, there’s the general all-around decadence of our society.

But it’s not just our country — such problems affect the Western world in general.

Our fellow English-speaking countries have these same problems and politically speaking, have slid farther downhill than we have.

In England, significant restrictions have been put on free speech, gun rights have been taken away and the UK is losing its sovereignty to the European Union. Not only that, but mass immigration combined with multiculturalism is leading to the Islamization of Britain. Mohammed is now the third-most popular name for newborn baby boys in England, and the most popular in the city of London. The Muslim population is growing 10 times faster than the general population.

Here’s one recent outrage in the formerly-Great Britain. Ben and Sharon Vogelenzang, a Liverpool couple who operate a hotel, have been charged under Section 5 of the Public Order Act for “causing harassment, alarm or distress.”

[…]

The future of England looks bleak. But there are signs of life in the old Mother Country yet. I read recently of a mayor in an English town who has a lot of spunk.

The mayor’s name is Peter Davies, who was recently elected mayor Doncaster (approximate population 70,000) and took office in June. Davies belongs to the small English Democrats party (not to be confused with the American Democratic party).

Here’s a description of what Davies has done as mayor. I quote from Gerald Warner writing in the Telegraph, The Beginning of the End for Political Correctness: The Counter-Revolution Has Begun in Doncaster:

“In his first week in office [Davies] cut his own salary from £73,000 to £30,000, which is putting one’s money where one’s mouth is. He also scrapped the mayoral limousine. He is ending Doncaster’s twinning with five towns around the world, an arrangement which he describes as ‘just for people to fly off and have a binge at the council’s expense’. He intends now to reduce (that’s right, reduce) council tax by 3 per cent this year.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Student Jailed Over Internet Guns

A student found with 200 weapon parts in his East Lothian home has been jailed for almost four years.

Ramsay Scott, 21, bought £20,000 worth of gun components on the internet using his mother’s credit card.

The High Court in Edinburgh heard how the former public schoolboy was interested in extreme violence and had trawled websites linked to massacres.

Scott, who was sentenced to three years and nine months in jail, earlier admitted breaches of the Firearms Act.

Passing sentence at the High Court in Edinburgh, judge Lord Uist said: “It is probably impossible to say what, if anything, you would have done with the weapons had the police not intervened.

“But there must have been at least the possibility you would have used them to cause injury to others — particularly in view of the websites you had accessed on your computer dealing with extreme violence and shooting massacres at Hungerford and Dunblane.”

The court heard that Scott claimed his only interest had been in solving the mechanical problems involved in assembling the weapons from the parts he bought — using an elaborate scam to avoid import restrictions.

But later the bio-medical sciences student admitted he planned to shoot himself if he failed his exams at Durham University.

By the time police staged a dawn raid on his home in Longniddry, Scott had two fully-assembled pistols, sub-machine gun parts and dum dum bullets scattered about his bedroom floor.

He also had a collection of Rambo-style knives.

First offender Scott had faced the possibility of a sentence which would keep him under strict supervision for the rest of his life.

But Lord Uist said because background reports assessed Scott as only a “medium” risk to the public he could not impose such a sentence.

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



UK: Thousands of Young Children Are Buying Coloured Wristbands Every Week. But Parents Have No Idea of Their True Disturbing Meaning…

They are thin, plastic bracelets, the kind of innocent-looking friendship bands that schoolgirls like to wear.

Available in a variety of colours and cheap enough to be bought with pocket money, they have become an overnight sensation in primary school playgrounds across the country.

But it is their name that causes alarm bells to ring: Shag-bands. And they are worn by children far too young to truly understand what that crude term means.

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UK: Why David Cameron is Keeping Quiet About Europe

‘I will do such things. What they are, yet I know not: but they shall be the terrors of the earth.” King Lear’s incoherent threat could be the inspiration for David Cameron’s policy on the European Union’s Lisbon Treaty.

The Tory leader has promised a referendum on the document, but only if it has not been ratified by all 27 EU members. If he comes to power and the Treaty is in force, the Tories “will not let matters rest”.

In effect, Mr Cameron’s policy is one of prevarication: we’re not telling you, yet. But the moment of clarity may be drawing closer. On October 2, the Irish vote for a second time on the treaty, with polls predicting a narrow Yes vote. By baleful coincidence for Mr Cameron, the Irish vote comes barely 48 hours before the Conservatives’ annual conference in Bournemouth.

Publicly, Tory frontbenchers insist that all is still to play for, that the result remains in doubt and until the last Irish vote is counted, their policy remains unchanged. Privately, however, there is real anxiety among senior Conservatives. People close to Mr Cameron fear that an Irish Yes will refocus attention on his non-policy over the referendum and stir up trouble among the grassroots and on the backbenches.

An outbreak of Tory infighting over Europe in Bournemouth is very much not part of the Cameron script, which describes a party united in preparation for Government. Mark Francois, the shadow Europe minister, accepts that the current position cannot last. “We will not go into the general election simply with a policy that we shall not let matters rest,” he told The Daily Telegraph. “We will have more to say between now and then.”

But what? That remains studiously unclear. Kenneth Clarke, the last remaining pro-European Tory heavyweight, has suggested that after ratification the party would abandon all hope of a referendum and focus instead on a pledge, first made in 2005, to return some legal powers over social and employment law from Brussels to Westminster.

Such dry, technocratic fare would hardly satisfy the majority of Tories, who crave red meat on Europe. Yet Mr Cameron is painfully aware that a referendum on a ratified treaty would be the nuclear option: many in Brussels would argue that the vote would effectively be a decision on Britain’s continued membership of the EU. And while some Tories (and not a few voters) might relish the prospect, leaving the EU is not on the Cameron agenda. Nor is any major institutional European battle, at least not in the early years of a Cameron government. The Tory leader knows that he will need all his political capital to enact the deep cuts in public spending that will be required.

So, for as long as possible, Mr Cameron hopes to keep his European intentions hidden, and pray that the subject stays out of the headlines. The good news for Mr Cameron is that some of his party are prepared to go on giving him the benefit of the doubt. His decision in June to honour a promise to withdraw Tory MEPs from the European People’s Party bloc in the European Parliament has led to Labour accusations of extremism and riled pro-EU Tories.

But, just as he intended, it has given Mr Cameron credibility in the eyes of Eurosceptics. In the words of one heavyweight Eurosceptic: “He has a lot of credit in the bank from the EPP withdrawal. A lot of people didn’t think he would ever do it. The fact that he did is very reassuring.”

The imminent election also weighs in Mr Cameron’s favour. After more than a decade in opposition, Tory MPs are hungry for power. For many, getting back into Government is even more important than airing their European grievances. They are prepared to hold their tongues, at least until after an election victory.

One strong sceptic on the Tory frontbench is frank: “Is our current policy satisfactory? Of course not. But if you think I’m going to jeopardise an election victory by starting to speak out about that in public, you’ve got another think coming.”

Assuming the Irish vote Yes, Mr Cameron will reach for one last figleaf to conceal the absence of a clear plan on the treaty. His last hope lies in Prague, where Vaclav Klaus, the Czech president, is dragging his feet over ratifying the treaty. The Czech constitutional court is currently considering one appeal relating to the Treaty, and Mr Klaus says he won’t sign it while the court is deliberating. A court appeal will soon be launched by Czech senators from the ODS party, part of the same European Parliament bloc as the Conservatives.

Geoffrey van Orden, a Tory MEP, is clear about his party’s message to the Czechs: “Our hope is they will not ratify this treaty until the general election in the UK.” If the Czechs are able to hold up ratification until after a UK election, a new Tory government could then quickly move to a UK referendum.

Few in Brussels doubt the outcome of such a vote, and the European establishment is putting intense pressure on Mr Klaus. Mr Cameron’s team know that there is only a faint hope that Mr Klaus will be able to hold out until next summer. So they are fearfully preparing to come to power with the Treaty set in stone.

The likely arrival of a staunchly sceptical generation of new Tory MPs only sharpens that anxiety. Given the pent-up feeling within his party and the (domestic and international) political stakes, it is perhaps understandable that William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, has privately advised Mr Cameron that Europe is a “ticking timebomb” under his leadership.

A few optimistic Tories believe that Mr Cameron will ultimately be able to defuse that bomb. But most think that the best he can hope for is to keep resetting the clock and delay the eventual explosion.

[Return to headlines]



Welsh Steam Train Forced to Use Coal Shipped 3,000 Miles From Siberia When Local Coal Mine is Only Three Miles Away

Regulations are forcing a Welsh steam train to use coal shipped 3,000 miles from Siberia rather than from a mine three miles away.

Planning conditions on the Ffos-y-Fran mine in South Wales mean that coal has to be transported by rail rather than via local roads.

However there is no rail link between the mine and the Brecon Mountain Railway, so the local coal cannot be used.

[Return to headlines]



‘Yes’ Camp’s Funding Under Fire as Second Irish Vote on Lisbon Treaty Looms

With ten days to go before the Irish Republic votes again on the Lisbon treaty, questions are being asked about the funding of the “yes” campaign.

Joe Higgins, a Socialist Party MEP, claimed that the “yes” side was spending “obscene” amounts of money compared with the meagre resources of the “no” camp. “The role of big business in this referendum has ensured that the relatively slim resources on the ‘no’ side are absolutely dwarfed by the obscene amounts of money the Ryanairs and Intels are putting into the ‘yes’ side,” he said.

His accusations mark a turnaround from last year when the “yes’ camp, led by the Fianna Fáil Government, cast aspersions on the origins of the finances behind Libertas, founded by the multimillionaire businessman Declan Ganley. After the Republic rejected the treaty, which seeks to repackage the European constitution, Mr Ganley was cleared of any wrongdoing by a government watchdog. Now the source and scale of the “yes” camp’s finances are under scrutiny.

Michael O’Leary, the head of Ryanair, announced that the low-cost airline would spend €500,000 (£455,000) on promoting a “yes” vote. Ryanair paid for a full-page advertisement in the biggest-selling Irish daily newspaper yesterday that proclaimed: “1 million reasons to vote ‘Yes to Europe’. 1 million FREE seats. Vote Yes to Europe.”

Last October Mr O’Leary attacked the idea of forcing the Republic to vote again on the treaty. “It seems that only in the European Union, Ireland and Zimbabwe are you forced to vote twice,” he said.

Intel, which employs about 4,000 people at its microchip plant in Leixlip, west of Dublin, announced that it was spending €200,000 on advertisements and posters urging a “yes” vote. The company was given a €1 billion antitrust fine by the European Union in May.

The role of lobbyists in raising funds in Brussels for the “yes” campaign has also been exposed. One, Eamonn Bates, sent e-mails to fellow EU lobbying firms seeking donations of up to €30,000 to help a pro-Lisbon campaign.

Mr Bates said in his e-mail: “Personally, I do not think it was right to ask the Irish to vote again. However, now there is a rerun, I am convinced it would be wrong to allow a second ‘no’ vote to occur.”

He was seeking funds on behalf of Europe for Ireland, an organisation established by Irish people working in Brussels who want a “yes” result. The group plans to spend €500,000 on advertisements.

An e-mail sent on behalf of the group to companies in the European Public Affairs Consultancy Association last week called the situation in the Irish Republic “truly an emergency” and warned that the future of Europe was at stake.

Mr Bates said in his e-mail: “Powerful and misleading campaigning against the Lisbon treaty is under way and making inroads once again. Declan Ganley, who was so destructive in the first campaign, has re-entered the public debate bringing considerable financial resources to bear.

“If your company believes in a strong EU, then now is definitely the time to contribute financially.”

The appeal was passed to The Irish Times by another lobbyist, who commented: “The Irish electorate are likely to take a very dim view of commercial lobbyists entering the debate simply to protect their own profits, derived in part from lobbying the very institutions that would benefit most from a ‘yes’ vote.”

Mr Ganley told The Times yesterday: “The fact that this money trough is being tapped to overturn the democratic decision of the Irish people adds to the insult to democracy that is central to the Lisbon treaty process and content.

“The lobbyists win, the people lose. It epitomises what is going so very wrong in Brussels and why it needs to be fixed now. The European Union is a great idea, being rent asunder by unaccountable greed for money, influence and power underpinned by a quite stunning contempt for democracy.”

José Manuel Barroso, the newly re-elected European Commission President, used a visit to Limerick at the weekend to announce €14.8 million funding for 2,400 Dell workers in the city who have lost their jobs. Dell is moving its production facilities to Poland. The announcement of the money, under the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund, was criticised by “no” campaigners as an “opportunistic stunt … clearly designed to influence the outcome of the referendum”.

Niamh Uí Bhriain, a spokeswoman for Cóir, which supports a “no” vote, said the money was a “drop in the ocean in terms of what will be lost in jobs and revenue if the EU goes ahead with plans to attack Ireland’s low corporate tax rate following the passage of the Lisbon treaty”.

Mr Barroso also used his visit to dispense reminders of a bankrupt Iceland, where “people went to the ATM machine and there was no money”.

He also reminded voters that Irish banks had received €120 billion in loans from the European Central Bank.

[Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia-EU: Ambassador Hopes Entry Treaty Signed by July

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, SEPTEMBER 21 — “We hope to close negotiations by the end of next summer and to sign the EU Entry Treaty with the Spanish presidency,” by the end of June 2010, said the Croatian ambassador to Brussels, Branko Baricevic, following the meeting of the workgroup of the EU regions Committee on Croatia, today in Brussels. After the agreement on the border dispute with Slovenia, which has vetoed the Croatian entry process since December 2008, “we hope we will be able to open all negotiation chapters, and to close half of them, by the end of 2009”. On a long term forecast, according to the Croatian ambassador, “taking into consideration the vote of the European Parliament and the ratification by all 27 member countries, the EU entry should take place between the second half of 2011 and early 2012”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Police Snatch Serb War Crimes Suspects

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — EU police in Kosovo arrested a group of war crimes suspects in a dawn raid on Wednesday (23 September). But the top Serb fugitive, Ratko Mladic, remains at large.

The EU police mission in Kosovo, EULEX, captured four ethnic-Serb men and a woman during an operation in Novo Brdo in north eastern Kosovo at 06.00 am local time. Kosovo police and Nato soldiers also took part.

Four of the detainees are suspected of killing two ethnic-Albanians in 1999 while the fifth person stands accused of obstruction of justice.

The action comes in the context of the EU mission’s rising unpopularity among ethnic Albanians, following the signing of a EULEX agreement with Serbia on cross-border policing earlier this month.

“It will improve our public image among Kosovo Albanians. There are a lot of expectations about EULEX and what we will achieve in terms of fighting serious crimes, such as organised crime, corruption and war crimes,” EULEX spokesman Christophe Lamfalussy told EUobserver.

“[But] our prosecutors work independently of any public image concerns,” he added.

The five suspects are likely to be tried under local jurisdiction as the international war crimes tribunal in the Hague, the ICTY, is slowly winding up its mandate.

ICTY is expected to shut down in 2012 after the trial of Radovan Karadzic. It is keen to try two more ethnic-Serb war crimes suspects, Ratko Mladic and Goran Hadzic, before ending its work. But the men remain at large.

Serbia is planning to submit a formal application for EU membership before the end of this year.

Its legal relationship with the EU is currently on hold after the Netherlands and Belgium in 2008 blocked ratification of Serbia’s Stabilisation and Association Agreement, saying that it was not co-operating fully with the Hague.

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



Kosovo: EU Police Arrest 4 Serb War Crime Suspects

PRISTINA, Kosovo — Four Serbs were arrested Wednesday under suspicion of committing war crimes against ethnic Albanian civilians during the 1998-99 Kosovo war, EU police said.

NATO peacekeepers and Kosovo police also took part in the arrests in eastern Kosovo, said Karin Limdal, spokesman for the EU’s 2,000-strong police and justice mission in Kosovo.

Limdal said the charges relate to “alleged inhuman treatment, violation of bodily integrity or health, intimidation and terror, and illegal arrest and detention.” The three men and one woman were not identified.

The crimes were allegedly committed in April 1999 during NATO’s 78-day airstrikes on Serb forces that halted the war.

A fifth person also was arrested for allegedly obstructing the authorities during the arrests in the village of Novo Brdo, 30 kilometers (20 miles) east of the capital Pristina. Several dozen Serb villagers protested the police action.

About 10,000 people were killed during the Kosovo war as Serbia’s forces cracked down on ethnic Albanian separatists, and more than 1,000 people remain missing.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia last year, but is still under loose international supervision while European Union police are in charge of sensitive cases such as war crimes.

The U.N. war crimes tribunal in the Hague tried the late Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic for carrying out a campaign of murder, rape and deportations that forced nearly 800,000 ethnic Albanians to flee Kosovo before the NATO airstrikes. The court also has convicted five other senior former Serbian officials.

Two senior ethnic Albanian leaders of the guerrilla Kosovo Liberation Army were tried but were freed of the charges.

Local courts have focused on lower-level subordinates suspected of war crimes, but the process has faced difficulties due to challenges on gathering evidence and arresting the suspects.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Former Policemen Cleared Over Murder of Three Ethnic Albanians

Serbia, 22 Sept. (AKI) — A special Belgrade war crimes court on Tuesday acquitted two former Serb policemen accused of complicity in the murder of three Albanian Americans during the 1999 rebellion in Kosovo. Prosecutors said they would appeal the sentence.

The ex-policemen, Sreten Popovic and Milos Stojanovic, were accused of handing over the three brothers — Illy, Mehmet and Agron Bytyqi — to members of a special Serbian police unit who shot and killed them in their training camp in eastern Serbia.

Explaining the verdict, the judge, Vesko Krstajic, said it was sad that three young lives had been lost, adding: “It is completely unclear why it happened and for what purpose.”

Krstajic said that after hearing fifty witnesses and experts, the charges against Popovic and Stojanovic had not been proven before the court.

The Bytyqi brothers had left their New York pizza business to join Kosovar rebels fighting for secession from Serbia. They were arrested by Serbian authorities after illegally crossing border into Serbia in July 1999 and were released after two weeks detention in the central town of Prokuplje.

Popovic and Stojanovic handed the brothers over to other unidentified policemen. Their bodies were found in 2001 in a trash-filled mass grave on a police training ground in eastern Serbia, their hands tied with wire.

Popovic and Stojanovic were initially charged with aiding the killing, but prosecutors later charged them with depriving the Bytyqi brothers of a fair trial.

Kosovo was put under United Nations control after NATO airstrikes drove Serbian forces out of Serbia’s former province in June 1999. Kosovo Albanians declared independence from Serbia last year.

Although prosecutors announced they would appeal the sentence, defence lawyer Bozo Prelevic said he was satisfied with the verdict.

“The murder of the Bytyqi brothers is a horrible crime, but it wasn’t determined in the process who killed them and for what motive,” he said.

Prelevic said police need to explain what happened to the brothers after their release from Prokuplje jail.

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

Mediterranean Union


Music: Maestro Briouel Awarded ‘Civilta’ Mediterranea’ Prize

(ANSAmed) — CROTONE, SEPTEMBER 22 — The “Civiltà Mediterranea” (Mediterranean Civilisation) award has been given to Mohammed Briouel, director of the Ensemble de Fez (Morocco) at the Festival of the Arab World currently underway in Crotone. The award was given at the Charles V castle by the councillor for Identity from the Crotone Town Council, Silvano Cavarretta, and the artistic director of the festival, Gianfranco Labrosciano. The explanation for giving the award to Briouel was “for his work of safeguarding and spreading Arab-Andalusian musical heritage. Over the last 25 years, the Ensemble de Fez has distinguished itself as the most important ensemble in Morocco and the Arab world for its interpretational quality of a repertory dating back to medieval times and which represents a cultural bridge and dialogue between the western and Arab civilisations. In the exchange, the Mediterranean is a symbol and a concrete place in the form of a crossroads of common heritage.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Italy: Algerian Terror Suspect Arrested in Rome

Rome, 22 Sept. (AKI) — A 41 year-old Algerian man with alleged links to a terror organisation has been arrested in the Italian capital, Rome. The man is wanted by Algerian authorities for forming and participating in the Islamist organisation, the Armed Islamic Group or GIA.

Police said the man had been on the run since 2003, after an extradition order was issued against him.

The man, who at the time of his arrest held an Irish passport, was arrested by anti-terrorism police or DIGOS, at a hotel in Rome.

He was detained after he matched aspects of a fugitive profile issued by international authorities.

Italian police and anti-terrorism authorities, in conjunction with Interpol allege the man had obtained Irish citizenship after he provided slightly different data and this had enabled him to evade capture.

Anti-terrorism police said the man was passing through Rome and was arrested before he was due to return to Ireland.

According to the US think-tank, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Armed Islamic Group waged a violent war against Algeria’s secular military regime in the 1990’s.

It developed after its members appeared to “trace their radicalization to Afghanistan, where they fought as mujahadeen, or Islamic guerillas, against the Soviet army from 1979 to 1989,” the council said on its website.

“In its most active period in the 1990s the GIA established a presence in France, Belgium, Britain, and Italy. While the GIA is now largely defunct, (carrying out its latest attack in 2001) it remains designated as a foreign terrorist organisation by the US state department.”

The council also said most of the GIA’s members may have defected in recent years and joined Al-Qaeda or its sister organisation, the Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.

The Algerian man was being held at Rome’s Regina Coeli jail while he awaited extradition to his native country.

Authorities there have been informed of his arrest.

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



Morocco: After Rainfalls, Dams’ Levels Exceed 90%

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, SEPTEMBER 22 — A fortnight of rain over the whole country has brought Morocco’s dams to their full capacity. The news was announced by the State secretary for Water and Environment, whom also added that, between September 1 and 16, rainfalls added another 500 million cubic meters to the water reservoirs, taking their overall volume to 15.6 billion cubic meters. “It is an historic record for Morocco,” Rabat authorities declared, “all dams have exceeded 90% capacity and this opens up great prospects for the 2009-2010 agricultural seasons, following a great harvest recorded this year for fruit, cereal and vegetables”. According to the online edition of newspaper L’Economiste, the water reserves will guarantee drinking water supplies for cities and villages for a period varying between two and four years and the production of electricity may exceed the current 10%. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Film Festival to Focus on Women

Tunis, 22 Sept. (AKI) — Women are the main focus of the third annual Tunisian Film Festival which begins on Thursday. The theme of the festival is “Women, I love you”, will feature special guests such as Italian actress Claudia Cardinale, Bosnian filmmaker Emir Kusturica, the French writer Frédéric Beigbeder and presenter Jean Pierre Foucault.

During the festival, 20 films from 15 Arab and foreign countries will be presented, but only eight of them will be in competition.

The third festival “will celebrate women’s creative side in cinema, to support dialogue among civilisations, tolerance and cultural diversity”, said Nicolas Brochet, founder and director of the festival in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI).

The jury will consist only of women — Mouna Nouredine, Mireille Darc, Natacha Amal, Catherine Jacob and several other women filmmakers who will assess the entries.

Countries participating in this year’s festival are Egypt, Lebanon, Iran, France, the Netherlands, Mexico, Germany and Bosnia, the United States, Chile, Canada, China and South Korea.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Cast Lead: Gaza Pays the Price, 514 Mln Euros of Damages

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, SEPTEMBER 22 — Damage of 514.3 million euros: this is the estimate of the consequences of the last war in the Gaza Strip, the one that the Israelis called operation ‘Cast Lead’. Tallying the count was the report from an EU mission charged with the task of evaluating the situation, according to which the sustenance of the inhabitants of Gaza is gravely compromised: 84% of the damage regarded three key areas, that is homes, agriculture and the private sector, vital for food safety, economic development and employment for the Palestinian people. The report, underlines the ENPI website (www.enpi-info.eu) edited by EUNIDA (European Network of Implementing Development Agencies) for the cooperation office of EuropeAid, focused on diverse sectors. The northern governorates where those hardest hit by the conflict (37%), then Gaza (27%) and Rafah (17%). The data shows that the In Gaza, half of the active population is unemployed today, 80% depend on aid, 90% of companies have closed, public health needs and risks have increased, while due to the deterioration of water and sewage systems is causing an environmental crisis. What are the EU’s proposals? Activate 41 plans in seven sectors, firstly for the removal of debris, the private sector and the environmental crisis, with a price tag of some 514.2 million euros. The following is a toll of the damage: — HOMES: Over 15,000 damaged homes, of which 4,036 are completely destroyed and 11,512 partially destroyed, creating about 100,000 homeless; — AGRICULTURE: More than 46% of agricultural terrain has been damaged or made inaccessible. An important socio-economic impact in terms of employment and food safety. At least 30% of farm workers have lost their jobs (11,600 people), while prices increase and wages decrease; — PRIVATE SECTOR: Over 700 companies engaged in commerce, industry and services have experienced direct consequences: about 268 have been completely destroyed. The industrial sector was the hardest hit, especially construction, food production and metals. Already seriously damaged in 2007, due to the blockade, nine businesses out of ten closed down, leaving 94% of workers at home, with a direct impact on the banking sector; — PUBLIC BUILDINGS: The last conflict brought the situation to worsen even further. During the last war, over a third of public structures were damaged, with an impact on schools for half of students and on healthcare structures for a third of the population of Gaza; — ENERGY: The electric power grid is in need of permanent repairs after the temporary work to restore the service; — TRANSPORT: Road infrastructure in the cities in the north (Jabalya, Izbet Abed Rabo and Al Montar) were the hardest hit and must be rebuilt, while other roads are in need of maintenance. The international airport was hit in spite of the fact that it has been closed since 2001; — WASTE: Everyday thousands of cubic metres of sewage is dumped into the sea, creating pollution and a risk for public health. The damage to the gathering of solid waste was not so heavy as it was for the water and sewage systems, but the impact is significant. About a million inhabitants in Gaza during the war did not have access to water and 300,000 to the solid waste collection service. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Barry Rubin: the Increasingly Obvious Failure of Obama’s Middle East Policy

It’s a development of shocking proportions if properly noticed and evaluated. President Barack Obama’s entire Arab-Israeli and Iranian policies are miserably failing, though partly concealed by theatrical events and media protection.

Here’s the latest development. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner arriving at the UN General Assembly session, stated that he doesn’t favor blocking the export of refined oil products to Iran, the keystone of the new sanctions proposed by Obama.

The New York Times reported this story but grossly underplayed its implications:

“But if France is to come out against fuel sanctions analysts said, they will most likely be off the table as an option for increasing the pressure on Iran.”

Ha! If France does so it will be the end of Obama’s whole strategy against Iran. For Tehran, it will be a straight, largely untroubled stroll to nuclear weapons, unless derailed by an Israeli attack.

“I think this is a bit dangerous,” Kouchner said about the proposed sanctions. Would that be more dangerous than Iran getting nuclear weapons? But Kouchner didn’t make clear to whom or in what way it’s dangerous. He did say, however, that it would mostly harm “poor people” in Iran.

[An aside: This is the kind of phony “humanitarian” considerations that paralyze Western policy today. Sure, there is some patriotic reaction against foreign pressures in places like Iran, but do the millions opposing that regime as a repressive dictatorship really want the West to coddle and court their oppressors? Do Gazans favor Western actions ensuring Hamas remains in power? Do Iraqis retrospectively curse Western sanctions against Saddam Hussein’s regime?

[Can the West fight no war because there will be civilian casualties; can it not preserve its freedoms because Muslims or others might be offended? Is the “zero-harm” approach an effective way for policy to be conducted, or even for democracies to survive at all?]

Of course, French President Francois Sarkozy may reverse his foreign minister’s stance. Yet it is extraordinarily significant that a major ally supposedly wowed by Obama’s charisma and popularity, can publicly do the equivalent of throwing a pie into the president’s face with no consequences.

And there’s a virtual parade of pie-throwers…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Christian Tombs Desecrated in an Historic Istanbul Cemetery

About 90 tombstones are broken. Incidents of this nature are not rate in the city but the local press failed to report it. Only recently and through a movie, have young Turks begun to learn about past anti-Christian pogroms. Ecumenical patriarch Bartholomew visits the cemetery in question.

Istanbul (AsiaNews) — A Christian cemetery was desecrated in Istanbul. Unknown person or persons broke 90 tombstones that bore the sign of the cross and the name of the deceased. The incident occurred a few days ago in the historic cemetery of Valukli near the ancient Valukli Monastery, the only monastery dedicated to Our Lady still open in Istanbul, located outside the ancient walls of Theodosius, and which five non-resident nuns care for.

Istanbul’s Christian cemeteries have been desecrated on a number of occasions in the past 20 years. The latest outrage brought back memories of the tragic events of September 1955 when churches, cemeteries and properties owned by Istanbul’s Orthodox community were desecrated and destroyed in a pogrom. Eventually dubbed the September pogrom, the event was the brainchild of Turkey’s political-bureaucratic-military establishment, known here as Derin Devlet or ‘deep state’.

The pogrom has remained engraved in the memories of Istanbul’s Christians who at that moment realised that their survival in the city would be difficult, if not impossible.

Young Turks have learnt about such tragic episodes only recently, when Guz Sancisi, a movie by young Turkish woman director Tomris Giritlioglu, was screened in local theatres to great review and box office success.

It is also important to keep in mind that Christian cemeteries are very large and serve as a reminder of the small Christian presence in this country.

Given Istanbul’s huge urban development, Christian cemeteries have become surrounded by human habitation and are coveted by developers.

A law adopted in the 1930s transferred title to cemeteries to municipalities; hitherto, they had belonged to religious foundations

Outraged and grieved by what happened, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew (pictured) went to see the desecrated cemetery, asking why such acts continue to strike Christian graveyards.

Despite the seriousness of the incident, the local press did not report it.

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



Iran Bans “Curvy” Mannequins in Shop Windows

“Using unusual mannequins exposing the body curves and with the heads without Hijab (Muslim veil) are prohibited to be used in the shops,” Iran’s moral security police in charge of Islamic dress codes said in a statement carried by IRNA.

Iranian police have stepped up a crackdown on both women and men, boutiques and small companies which fail to enforce strict religious dress codes since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to office in 2005.

The measures are the latest in a country-wide campaign against Western cultural influences in the Islamic Republic, where strict dress codes are enforced.

“Both showing necktie and bowtie behind the windows … and (the) selling (of) women’s underwear by men are prohibited,” said the police statement.

In the past, crackdowns tended to be launched at the start of Iran’s hot summers and petered out soon after. But last year they extended into winter and included a drive against tight women’s trousers and even men with spiky “Western” hairstyles.

Those who violate dress codes are usually cautioned on a first offence, sometimes after a brief visit to a police station. But they can be detained for longer, taken to court and required to have “guidance classes” after repeat offences.

Dress codes are most often flouted in wealthier, urban areas. Conservative dress is the norm in poorer, rural areas.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Iran Police ‘Target Mannequins’

Iranian police have warned shopkeepers not to display female mannequins without a hijab, or showing bodily curves, Irna news agency reports.

Display of bow ties and neckties, and the sale of women’s underwear by men are also banned, the police said.

The move is part of a crackdown on Western influences and enforcement of dress codes in recent years.

“Un-Islamic behaviour” has been targeted since President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s first election in 2005.

“Using unusual mannequins exposing body curves and with heads without hijabs [Muslim veils] are prohibited to be used in the shops,” police said in a statement carried by Irna.

Correspondents say that in the past such campaigns usually only lasted throughout the summer, but last year’s crackdown, including on tight trousers for women, was still continuing in the winter.

Iranians who violate dress codes for the first time are generally cautioned, but repeat offenders can face court action and “guidance classes”.

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



Israel Won’t ‘Dignify’ Brzezinski With Response

Carter adviser suggested U.S. shoot down Jewish state’s aircraft if they attack Iran

Both the Israeli government and the military here refused to respond to comments by Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national security adviser during the administration of President Jimmy Carter, who said the U.S. should confront Israeli jets if that nation chooses to take military action against Iran’s nuclear installations.

“We will not dignify Brzezinski with a response,” a source in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office told WND.

Netanyahu’s spokesmen and the Israel Defense Forces refused to provide an official reply.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Russian Links Iran Sanctions to US Missile Change

NEW YORK — With a diplomatic wink and nod, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev opened the door Wednesday to backing potential sanctions against Iran as a reward to President Barack Obama’s decision to scale back a U.S. missile shield in Eastern Europe.

While U.S. and Russian officials denied a flat-out quid pro quo, Medvedev told the U.N. General Assembly that Obama’s pivot on a missile defense plan long loathed by Moscow “deserves a positive response.” Obama himself has said his missile decision may have spurred Russian good will as a “bonus.”

“We believe we need to help Iran to take a right decision,” Medvedev said after the two leaders met on the sidelines of the U.N. assembly.

The prospect of a unified U.S.-Russian stance on new sanctions would put Iran under added pressure to yield some ground on its nuclear program. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has taken a softer tone on many matters since arriving in New York for the U.N. meetings, emphasizing his interest in improving relations with the United States and expressing an openness to include nuclear matters on the negotiations agenda.

He has given no sign, however, that his country is willing to bargain away its nuclear program, which he insists is for peaceful purposes only.

In his speech to the General Assembly on Wednesday night, Ahmadinejad made no explicit reference to nuclear matters or prospective sanctions.

Obama’s chief Russia adviser, Mike McFaul, told reporters after the meeting with Medvedev that there was no deal with Moscow on missile defense and Iran. Pressed further, he said: “Is it the case that it changes the climate? That’s true, of course. But it’s not cause-and-effect.”

A member of the Russian delegation, speaking on condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Russians, said Moscow’s final position on the question of imposing further sanctions would be determined, to a large extent, by Medvedev’s consultations here.

The U.S. and Russia are among six countries that will hold talks in Europe next week with Iran over its nuclear ambitions. Obama wants to reserve the possibility of pursuing tougher sanctions if those meetings lead to no restraint by Iran in the weeks ahead. And yet Russia, which has strong economic ties with Tehran, has stood in the way of stronger action against Iran in the past.

In remarks to reporters with Medvedev at his side, Obama said both agree that negotiations with Iran are still the best approach.

“We also both agree that if Iran does not respond to serious negotiations and resolve this issue in a way that assures the international community that it’s meeting its commitments, and is not developing nuclear weapons, then we will have to take additional actions and that sanctions, serious additional sanctions, remain a possibility,” Obama said.

Medvedev told reporters that the intent is to move Iran in the right direction and to ensure that it does not obtain nuclear weapons.

“Sanctions rarely lead to productive results but in some cases are inevitable,” he said through an interpreter.

Medvedev also mentioned that his government welcomed Obama’s decision last week to scrap a Bush administration plan for a missile defense system to be based in Poland and the Czech Republic. He gave no indication that his remark about the sanctions on Iran was a diplomatic payoff for Obama’s missile defense move.

In his address to the U.N. General Assembly earlier Wednesday, Obama stuck to his two-pronged approach to Iran — acknowledging its right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy while warning of unspecified penalties if it veers onto the weapons path.

“We must insist that the future not belong to fear,” he said.

Ahmadinejad was speaking Wednesday evening.

The public rhetoric Wednesday suggested little improvement in the long-shot outlook for a diplomatic breakthrough next week when the U.S. will, for the first time, fully participate in European-led talks with Iran.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met Wednesday with her counterparts from Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany to prepare for the Oct. 1 meeting in Geneva. Afterward British Foreign Secretary David Miliband read a statement on behalf of all six countries saying they expect a “serious response” from Iran at the meeting. What happens after that, Miliband said, will be determined by the outcome of the meeting.

Ahmadinejad told The Associated Press on Tuesday that in Geneva he would ask to purchase enriched uranium for a research reactor. That could put the U.S. and its five negotiating partners in a bind. Until now, Iran has produced only low-enriched uranium not suitable for a research reactor. But it could use refusal of its request as a pretext to start producing highly enriched material.

In his speech Obama did not mention the Geneva talks, which fulfill a campaign pledge to engage adversaries. He framed the Iran issue as central to his broader push to strengthen international limits on the spread of nuclear weapons.

Obama singled both Iran and North Korea, which has made more progress than Iran in becoming a nuclear power, as countries that now are at a crossroads.

“Those nations that refuse to live up to their obligations must face consequences,” Obama said.

The risk for Obama, in the case of Iran, is that the government will use the new talks to stall for time even as international patience wears thin. That is essentially what has happened with North Korea, which agreed at one stage to dismantle its nuclear weapons facilities but then balked and has since defied the will of the U.N. by conducting underground nuclear tests and test-launching missiles.

Obama came into office promising a more vigorous diplomatic effort with Iran, which also stands accused by the U.S. of supporting international terrorism, undermining Mideast peace efforts and secretly supplying arms to insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Obama has not ruled out the eventual use of military force to stop Iran, but his focus now is on diplomacy.

In the meantime, Iran is expected to continue expanding its capacity for enriching uranium, the building block of a nuclear weapon. Still, Ahmadinejad said Iran has no interest in nuclear weapons and favors a push for global nuclear disarmament.

“We are not pursuing a nuclear weapons program,” he said in the AP interview.

The Iranian leader insisted that it is the United States that bears the greatest burden in nuclear disarmament. The U.S., he noted, possesses thousands of weapons, is the only country in history to have used them in war and refuses to promise never to initiate another nuclear attack.

Iran, he said, is “the wrong address” for delivering international pressure to pull back.

Obama, however, indicated that Iran needs to clarify its intentions and the nature of its nuclear work by cooperating more fully with the International Atomic Energy Agency, the U.N. agency that is supposed to monitor nuclear programs to ensure they are not used to make weapons.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Russian Leader Open to New Iran Nukes Sanctions

NEW YORK — Giving some ground on a top priority of President Barack Obama, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Wednesday that sanctions are rarely productive but he opened the door to tougher ones to halt Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons program.

“In some cases, sanctions are inevitable,” the Russian leader said after he and Obama held talks on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly meetings.

Negotiations are scheduled for Oct. 1 between Iran and a group of six nations, including the U.S. and Russia, over its nuclear ambitions. Obama wants to pursue tougher sanctions if those meetings yield nothing. And yet Russia, which has close economic ties with Tehran, has stood in the way of stronger action against Iran in the past.

That made Medvedev’s admittedly muted support for sanctions bigger news, and something that pleased the White House.

“Unfortunately, Iran has been violating too many of its international commitments,” Obama said. “What we’ve discussed is how we can move in a positive direction that can resolve a potential crisis.”

He and Medvedev share the goal of allowing Iran to pursue peaceful nuclear energy, but not nuclear weapons, Obama said. “This should be resolved diplomatically and I am on record as being committed to negotiate with Iran in a serious fashion to resolve this issue.”

However, if Iran does not respond during negotiations, “serious additional sanctions remain a possibility,” Obama said.

Medvedev said Russia and the U.S. could help ensure success by providing incentives for Iran to comply. He did not elaborate.

Before the meetings, Russian news agencies had cited an official in Medvedev’s delegation in New York as saying Russia does not rule out new sanctions.

For its part, Russia got some good news last week when Obama announced his decision to scrap a plan for a new U.S. missile defense shield in Eastern Europe that deeply angered the Kremlin. Obama has emphatically denied that the missile defense change had anything to do with trying to get better cooperation from Russia on Iran, and Moscow had not until now appeared to be moving closer to the U.S. position on Iran in response.

To reporters, Medvedev called Obama’s missile defense decision “reasonable” and that it took into account Moscow’s concerns.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was meeting Wednesday with her counterparts from Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany to prepare for the Oct. 1 meeting in Geneva with Iran. And White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Obama as well as aides were spending considerable time this week, in New York and later in Pittsburgh at another international meeting, on the issue of Iran.

“This is a topic that comes up in virtually every conversation that he has,” Gibbs said.

On Thursday, as his last act at the U.N., Obama was to chair a Security Council meeting on curbing the spread of nuclear weapons that is largely aimed at Iran.

In his speech Wednesday to the U.N. General Assembly, Obama singled out both Iran and North Korea, which has made more progress than Iran in becoming a nuclear power, as countries that now are at a crossroads.

“Those nations that refuse to live up to their obligations must face consequences,” Obama said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia to Send Troops to Iraq?

Alarms raised over Iran’s increasing agitation of Shiites

A key Saudi Arabia leader is organizing a pushback against Iran’s plans to agitate Shiite Muslims across Iraq and other Middle Eastern nations, an effort that may even involve introducing Saudi Arabian troops into Iraq to protect the Sunni Arab minority there, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

Saudi Prince Nayef Bin Abdul Aziz has become the point man in the efforts to defuse Iran’s planning.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tehran Dumps Dollar for Euro

Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has ordered the replacement of the US dollar by the euro in calculating the value of the country’s Oil Stabilisation Fund (OSF).

The edict, issued on Sept 12, follows a recommendation by the trustees of the country’s foreign reserves, Iran’s English-language daily The Tehran Times said on Monday, citing Iran’s semi-official Mehr News Agency.

The move was taken because the government wishes to protect itself from the fragility of the US economy and the weak dollar.

The OSF, which forms part of Iran’s foreign exchange reserves, is a contingency fund set aside to cushion the economy against fluctuating international oil prices.

It is also used to help both the public and private sectors with their hard currency needs by extending loans.

Press TV meanwhile reported that following the switch the interest rate for facilities provided from the foreign exchange reserves is to be cut to 5 percent from 12 percent.

Since its introduction in 1999 by the EU the euro has gained popularity internationally and there are now more euros in circulation than the dollar.

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



Turkey: Shooting Stone Throwers Not a Crime

The top appeals court decided a soldier who shot at a group of protesters throwing stones and killing one in Turkey’s Southeast could not be punished because of the “special circumstances of the region.”

In a decision that is expected to set a legal precedent, the top board of the Supreme Court of Appeals decided the noncommissioned officer who shot seven bullets at protesters throwing stones at his military vehicle in the southeastern province of Siirt in 2005 was not guilty, dismissing the prosecutor’s office’s argument that the officer should have fired in the air.

The officer, traveling in a military jeep with two conscripts, suddenly found himself among a 150-200-strong group of protesters clashing with the police in the city center. Some people from the group threw stones at his car, slightly injuring the two conscripts.

Despite his repeated warnings, the crowd continued to throw stones, with the officer eventually firing on the crowd, killing a person.

The local court in Siirt found the officer not guilty, a decision that was appealed. Supreme Court of Appeals prosecutor Ömer Faruk Eminagaoglu, who is also the head of the Union of Turkish Judges and Prosecutors, or YARSAV, asked the appeals court to annul the not-guilty verdict arguing for a conviction.

Eminagaoglu said the individual who was killed was not part of the crowd of protesters, adding that the three bullet holes found on the car next to the individual showed that the officer had chosen to shoot not at the feet or the air, but in a lethal way. Eminagaoglu said the criminal investigation against those who threw stones resulted in 37 people being charged. He said the crowd was much smaller than the 150 to 200 cited in the report and the claim that the crowd surrounded the gendarmerie vehicle was untrue.

The prosecutor asked the officer to be punished for negligent homicide.

A lower appeals court rejected the prosecutor’s arguments, backing the not-guilty verdict.

The Supreme Court of Appeals Prosecutor’s Office appealed the not-guilty verdict again, resulting in the case being sent to the top board of the appeals court.

The top board on March 18 rejected the prosecutor’s office’s arguments. In the written verdict sent to relevant sides on the case last week, the board argued that the crowd, which was shouting “Kurdish will be the death of fascism,” and “This is Kurdistan, not Turkey,” had seriously damaged the military vehicle and injured two conscripts.

The accused, after the attacks, had the right to defend himself but had exceeded its bounds. The excessive reaction based on excitement or fear could be tolerated, the board said.

The written verdict also argued that the incident, which it described as an assault with verbal threats, had occurred in the Southeast and that the crowd had failed to move away despite repeated warnings. Coupled with the special circumstances of the region, the officer’s reaction was within legal bounds, the board decided.

The board’s decision was based on the assumption that the man killed was part of the crowd even though the local prosecutor’s office and the local court, the appeals court and the Supreme Court of Appeals Prosecutor’s Office all noted that the man was a bystander.

According to the decision, if a security official facing a crowd of stone throwers fears for his or her safety and fires on the crowd to kill, he or she will not be seen as criminally culpable.

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

Caucasus


Chechen Leader Claims US, Britain Back Rebels

MOSCOW — The controversial Kremlin-backed president of Chechnya claims that militants in the violence-plagued Russian province are backed by U.S. and British intelligence agencies.

Ramzan Kadyrov’s remark was probably the bluntest claim by a Russian official that insurgents in the restive North Caucasus have Western support. Western officials have dismissed such assertions as nonsense.

A statement from Kadyrov’s office Wednesday quoted him as suggesting that Western-backed mercenaries are fighting the government in Chechnya. It quotes him as saying, “We are fighting in the mountains with the American and English special services.”

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin suggested during his presidency that the West was encouraging unrest in the North Caucasus.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Grief and Emotion at Funerals of Parachutists

(ANSAmed) — ROME — United by the same emotions, politicians and ordinary people took part in the State funerals of the six parachutists who died during the attack in Kabul: Lieutenant Antonio Fortunato, Corporal Matteo Mureddu, Corporal Davide Ricchiuto, Sergeant-Major Roberto Valente, Corporal Gian Domenico Pistonami, and Corporal Massimiliano Randino. At the basilica of San Paolo fuori le Mura in Rome to pay their respects to the brave men who died in Afghanistan were President Giorgio Napolitano, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Presidents of the House and the Senate, Gianfranco Fini and Renato Schifani, the whole Government, and all the heads of the armed forces. Before the start of the service, Napolitano and Berlusconi greeted and comforted the families of the victims, and the four soldiers wounded during the attack (Air Force Field Marshall Felice Calandriello, and Corporals from the Special Forces (Folgore) Rocco Leo, Sergio Agostinelli and Ferdinando Buono), who returned to Italy yesterday night to pay their last respects to their comrades. The arrival of the coffins, draped in the Italian flag, was greeted by applause. The ceremony was led by military Archbishop of Italy, mons. Vincenzo Pelvi, who read a message from Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, with condolences from Pope Benedict XVI, who was “deeply saddened by the tragic attack”. In his homily, monsignor Pelvi remembered the victims one by one, calling them by name and exalting their lives, devoted “to the service of peace”. At the end of the funeral mass former parachutist Gianfranco Paglia, a PDL member of parliament, who is wheelchair-bond after being wounded in Somalia, read the prayer of the parachutists. Beside him was the son of Antonio Fortunato, seven-year-old Martin, wearing the maroon Special Forces beret, and who touched the whole congregation before the ceremony by getting up from his seat and going to caress his father’s photo, which was placed on his coffin. Immediately after the prayer, a trumpeter played the Silenzio, which heralded the blessing of the coffins and the hymn ‘Risorgero” (I will rise again), which concluded the service. The Frecce Tricolori made two fly-pasts over the Basilica, in a final salute to the six parachutists, who were greeted by a long round of applause as they exited the Basilica, along with the cry ‘Folgore’, and by the waving of the Italian tricolour. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Diana West: Surging for Nothing

Now that all eyes are on Afghanistan, it is more important than ever that we keep our experience in Iraq in view. We must now assess the net effect of the Iraqi “surge” strategy, however shocking that may be, before we recommit to that same disastrous strategy in Afghanistan. The simple lesson of Iraq is that nation-building in Islam builds a nation that is Islamic, and, therefore, constitutionally, legally, religiously, and culturally incapable of standing as an ally against global jihad.

The fact is, we don’t “get” anything from our heavy investment in Iraq, just as we won’t “get” anything out of our heavy investment in Afghanistan. We urgently need a new line of battle drawn around the West served by a multilevel strategy organized and coordinated around a simple principle: opposition to the spread of Islamic law. (While our leaders NEVER point this out, the spread of Islamic law is the inspiration of jihad violence, more delicately known as “violent extremism” or “terrorism.”) Such a multilevel strategy would include not just military means (lily pads), but, for example, an energy policy designed for energy independence, immigration policy designed to halt the creation of sharia demographics in the West, economic policy to bar sharia-compliant finance and purchase of our educational institutions, and travel restrictions on sharia nations to prevent the physical movement of jihadis to their battle stations. After all, pre-9/11 Afghanistan provided a base for al Qaeda, but al Qaeda didn’t launch its WTC attack from an Afghan hilltop. It had to get from the Islamic world into the Western world. In this time of war (jihad), we would need to restrict such access acordingly.

When you take this global view, our current focus on Afghanistan appears hopelessly, mindlessly narrow. But it remains the focus of debate today. Do we surge, or do we not?

Let’s get something clear: The US military aquitted its “surge” mission in Iraq successfully and professionally. But that was only one half of the surge strategy as conceived by its authors — and the only part of that strategy under US control. The US military surge was ordered specifically to trigger actions and behaviors in the Iraqi body politic that would justify all that US investment and sacrifice. These have not happened and will not happen, again, because an infidel nation cannot fight for the soul of an Islamic nation and come away having won its heart and mind. We set up a sharia-supreme state, and we will leave behind a sharia-supreme state (and the sooner, the better, I would add.)

What follows is a reprise of an August column which takes a look at conditions in post-surge Iraq…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Diana West: “The War in Washington”

The title of this post was the title of a panel this week sponsored by the Foreign Policy Initiative (FPI), the same group that sponsored a conference last spring I wrote up as “What Do You Mean ‘If We Ever Want to Leave’ Afghanistan?” The group includes many of the conservative/neoconservative champions and theorists of the Bush war strategies, including the vaunted “surge” in Iraq, and now supports a similar strategy for Afghanistan as specifically laid out in what I consider to be the appalling terms of population protection by Gen. Stanley McChrystal. GIven softening Democratic support for the war, this largely Republican/conservative group seems to be Obama’s core Washington think-tank ally in advocating and securing continued backing for the war — if, given Obama’s own reversing intentions, he even wants such an ally.

Almost six months after the first conference, there was a very different feel to this week’s affair. Whereas the last gathering conveyed an almost triumphal pre-triumphalism vis a vis the Obama administration’s then-apparent committment to democratization and nation-building in Afghanistan, today’s discussion much less ebulliently focused on the need to stay Gen. McChrystal”s COIN course. Talk of “good government” as the key to ending the insurgency had given way to talk of “population protection,” which seems to be the term of art for what McChrystal has called protecting the Afghan people from “everything that can hurt them.” There was not one single solitary mention of Islam (nothing new there) and just one reference in passing to the unconscionable burden McChrystal has placed on troops by restricting already restricted ROE in the unicorn-like pursuit of Afghan hearts and minds.

This whole policy of COIN population protection started in Iraq, of course. Remember back in May 2007 Gen Petraeus wrote: “This fight depends on securing the population, which must understand that we — not our enemies — occupy the moral high ground.” More on Petraeus’ “hearts and minds” here.

Back to the conference. That single glancing reference to our troops came when Rep. Mark Kirk noted that when he served in Afghanistan (the first congressman since 1942 to serve in a war zone), “force protection was everything.” That’s all changed under McChrystal’s COIN strategy, which places Afghan protection above all, and that’s “the right way to go,” said Kirk.

Do these people know what they’re saying?…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Indonesia: Central Government to Deal With Provincial Adultery Stoning Law

Most people in Aceh are against the law, and so is the national government. Usually adulterers are paraded in public to be shamed or reprimanded in private. For Commission on Violence against Women, the law violates the constitution. However, Islamic scholars argue the law is rooted in centuries-old practices that go back to prophet Muhammad. For Aceh’s rulers, Sharia is counterproductive.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Aceh’s recently adopted anti-adultery law could be suspended or repealed because of legal flaws, Indonesia’s Home Minister, former General Mardiyanto, said.

The law, which imposes the death penalty by stoning, was approved by the provincial legislature. It has not yet come into force because it was signed only by the governor and not by the speaker of the local parliament.

Mardiyanto noted that the law is controversial among ordinary Indonesians because it runs contrary the country’s traditional customs, and is creating security and unity problems.

Law and Human Rights Minister Andi Mattalatta said, “The issue should be solved on the basis of the national interest.” In his view, Aceh’s stoning law could dry up investments for the strongly Muslim Aceh.

Even though Muslims constitute a majority of Indonesia’s population (86 per cent), stoning (rajam) is not a common practice. Adulterers are usually paraded in public to be shamed or made to feel guilty. Even this is quite rare. Most Indonesians today prefer re-educating the guilty parties behind closed doors, where the latter are urged not to commit “moral crimes”.

Under Aceh’s new law, married offenders would be pelted with 100 stones, even onto death if that should pass. Unmarried offenders would get 100 lashes with a cane. Also, the law would punish homosexuals and pedophiles with caning and impose penalties on the venues where such acts are performed, namely (hotels, bungalows, rented houses and entertainment sites). It would apply to Muslims and non-Muslims alike.

The controversial law was approved just a few weeks before the end of the current legislature. It was adopted thanks to the votes of the Golkar and the Islamic United Development Party.

In October, a new legislature is set to be sworn in and changes to the law are likely. Most of the new provincial lawmakers were elected under the banner of the Aceh Party, once known as the Free Aceh Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka or GAM), the guerrilla group that for decades fought for local autonomy and reached a peace deal in 2005 with the central government.

Under the terms of this deal, the province was granted substantial legislative and financial autonomy, including the right to implement Sharia. However, many GAM leaders believe that certain violent forms of punishment mandated under Islamic law are too counterproductive.

Aceh’s Deputy Governor Nazar said that the “provincial government would prefer education over stoning. Even cutting off the hand of a thief must be reviewed. If too many people lose their hands to amputation, they are sentenced to a life of poverty and to stealing again.” Sharia must be moderated; otherwise people will think that the “government is cruel and against its population.”

The national Commission on Violence against Women (Komnas Perempuan or KP) is also against the law. KP’s director, Kamala Chandrakirana, said that “rajam is against our constitution.”

Some Islamic legal experts disagree. As far as they are concerned, “stoning is part of Islamic law since the time of the prophet Muhammad, even if its implementation should meet stringent criteria.”

Asmawi MA, who heads Islamic Criminal Law and State Administration of Islamic Studies at Syarif Hidayatullah University in Jakarta, said that in order to stone an offender, it must be “determined whether the punishment fits the crime, and this must be done in a trial where charges are backed by four witnesses.”

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



Pakistani President Comes Out Against the Misuse of the Blasphemy Law

In London President Zardari says his government will make sure that the law is not misused against religious minorities and dissenters. Some Islamic circles organise protests against possible changes to the law, even if many media are in favour.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said that his government would ensure that the blasphemy law is not misused by anyone. He made the important statement last Saturday, after a series of very serious episodes of religious intolerance and persecution and after a number of prominent political leaders asked for changes to the law. Eventually, these were met with protests by Islamic extremists.

Mr Zardari discussed the issue in London, where he met Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and acknowledged that extremists were misusing the law.

The law punishes any offense against religion and anyone trying to convert others. Muslim extremists, often with the complicity of police and local authorities, have used it to persecute and jail non-Muslims, especially Christians, and moderate Muslims.

At least 33 people accused of proselytising have been massacred by enraged mobs or killed by individual fanatics.

The problem re-emerged recently when a young Christian man was found dead on 15 September in Sailkot Prison where he was held on blasphemy charges.

Last Friday during a visit to Washington, Pakistan’s Minority Minister Shahbaz Bhatti, a Catholic, said that the Pakistani government would change the law that extremists “are using [. . .] to victimise [religious] minorities as well as Muslims of Pakistan. [. . .] The stand of the Pakistani government is to review, revisit and amend blasphemy law so it will not remain a tool in the hands of extremists.”

Shahbaz Bhatti was in Washington at the invitation of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom, which gave him an award for championing the rights of minorities in Pakistan.

Last Saturday the Governor of Punjab Salman Taseer said that the law must be repealed to protect minorities, especially Christians, against violence and persecution, a position he had asserted already two days earlier.

Peter Jacob, executive secretary of the National Commission for Justice and Peace (NCJP), told AsiaNews that the “statement from the governor of Punjab’ was “important and welcome”, adding that he hoped the central government would take the same view.

Various Islamic-based opposition parties slammed Salman Taseer’s statement, demanding his resignation and accusing him of trying to use a few violent anti-minority incidents for his own purpose. They also announced that they would take to the streets to oppose any changes to the law.

Taseer responded on Saturday to his critics, asking what clerics and politicians did to prevent Christians from being burnt alive in the name of this law.

A wind of change appears to blowing across the country and even a sizable section of the press has come out against the law.

In an editorial article, the Daily Times wrote on 17 September that “Christians killed in the name of Islam never get justice. The only way an accused can be saved is to bundle him out of the country after releasing him on bail.”

Another editorial that appeared on 18 September in the Dawn said that the “Punjab government needs to take urgent steps to protect minorities in the province for the situation there is deteriorating. The centre, meanwhile, should start working towards the repeal of the blasphemy laws. For too long they have been used to settle personal scores, grab land—and to kill. These draconian laws must be struck off the books.”

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



Russia Presses US to Destroy Afghan Poppy Crop

MOSCOW — Russia is pressing the White House to resurrect the Bush-era policy of large-scale eradication of poppy fields in Afghanistan, an effort that critics say angered Afghan farmers and rallied support for the Taliban but did little to curb the cultivation of opium.

The Kremlin’s counter-narcotics chief, Viktor P. Ivanov, said in an interview published in the daily Izvestia on Wednesday that the U.S. and Russia should work more closely together to stem the rising tide of heroin addiction and prevent extremist organizations from financing attacks with profits from the drug trade.

One of the chief strategies the U.S. and NATO are currently pursuing to curb the multibillion-dollar heroin trade in Afghanistan is to replace the cultivation of opium poppies with grain and fruit crops.

Ivanov said such measures were insufficient.

“It’s not enough to offer alternative farming,” Ivanov said, according to Izvestia. Instead, he told The New York Times this week, the Obama administration should use the kind of aerial spraying of herbicides the U.S. has employed against the illicit coca crop in Colombia. Cocaine is derived from coca.

“I would call on the United States to use defoliation from the air,” Ivanov told the Times. He was on his way to the U.S. on Wednesday to meet with his counterparts there the following day.

Afghanistan provides more than 90 percent of the heroin consumed around the world. Russia and some other states in the former Soviet Union, which lie along Afghan drug smuggling routes, suffer from high addiction rates.

The Bush administration had long supported the manual eradication of opium poppy crops in Afghanistan. At one point, it tried to persuade President Hamid Karzai to accept aerial spraying as well and even transferred U.S. Ambassador William Wood from Bogota to Kabul because of his expertise in the issue.

But Karzai opposed aerial spraying on environmental grounds, preferring manual eradication efforts. The U.S., meanwhile, has become increasingly leery of destroying crops at all, fearing that the effort turns farmers into insurgents.

While the Afghan government continues its own manual crop eradication program, the Obama White House has all but abandoned the Bush administration’s efforts to destroy Afghanistan’s opium harvest.

Instead of eradication, the U.S. is now helping farmers plant alternate crops, destroying drug labs, trying to arrest major traffickers and interdicting shipments.

“Large-scale eradication efforts have not worked to reduce the funding to the Taliban,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said Wednesday. He added that destroying crops has also driven farmers who have lost their livelihoods into the “hands of the insurgency.”

A recent U.S. Senate report labeled the Afghan eradication program “an expensive failure,” and special U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke called the practice “a waste of money.”

Eradication efforts in 2007 and 2008 destroyed less than 4 percent of the annual crops, according to a U.N. report, which also called eradication a failure.

But Ivanov contends that aerial spraying would work.

At a July conference, Ivanov blamed the failure of the U.S. and NATO counter-narcotics operations on poor tactics, and urged aerial spraying.

“If they used such methods in Afghanistan, all poppy fields there will be completely eradicated in just one year,” Ivanov predicted at the time.

That month Ivanov told the business daily Kommersant that the U.S. was reluctant to fight poppy cultivation more forcefully because, he claimed, Washington feared a backlash from powerful drug barons allegedly living in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

Some Western counter-narcotics officials have also urged the continuation of eradication programs, saying that even if such efforts destroy only a small fraction of the crop, they can discourage cultivation by raising the risk to farmers of planting poppies

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Swedish Officials Meet Suspects in Pakistan Terror Probe

Swedish embassy officials have now met with the four Swedish terror suspects currently imprisoned in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs (Utrikesdepartementet) said on Wednesday.

Given their present circumstances, the group is said to be doing well.

The four Swedes — Mehdi Ghezali,a former inmate of Guantánamo Bay, 28-year-old Munir Awad, his 19-year-old girlfriend Safia Benaouda, and their two and half-year-old boy — were arrested on August 28th.

According to the foreign ministry spokesperson Karin Nylund, the meetings were conducted collectively and individually. The consulate will now continue its assignment in accordance with established protocol, however, Nylund was unable to provide concrete details about what will happen next.

“We will remain in contact with the detainees to the extent that they want and try to help if needed,” she said.

The Swedish prisoners were part of a group of foreigners thought by Pakistani police to be travelling in the company of a terror suspect.

The man’s alleged mission was to bring the foreigners to the lawless region of northern Waziristan to meet an Zahir Noor, an individual suspected of being a Taliban leader.

The group was arrested on the border of the North-western province, a region heavily targeted in the ongoing civil war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The group was arrested in a forbidden zone containing nuclear facilities, and is suspected of collaborating with terrorists.

The prisoners insist that they were on their way to a harmless religious gathering.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK’s Brown Seeks Fewer UK Troops in Afghanistan

LONDON — British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Tuesday he was focused on cutting back on the number of the country’s troops in Afghanistan, despite a report from the top U.S. commander calling for an increase in the number of soldiers.

Brown insisted he was hoping to withdraw some British soldiers as soon as Afghanistan’s local forces become able to carry out their own security duties.

His comments follow the reported assessment of Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the senior American commander in Afghanistan. McChrystal, who is also the NATO commander in Afghanistan, has concluded that more, not fewer, international troops were required.

“Our big challenge is to build up the Afghan army,” Brown said. “It used to be very few. It is 80,000 now. It is going to go up to 135,000 in the next year, so gradually the Afghan army can take more control of their own affairs, and allow our forces to train them, and then allow our force numbers to come down as we see the Afghan army going up.”

The Times of London newspaper reported Tuesday that Britain is considering the deployment of a further 1,000 troops in response to McChrystal’s assessment.

McChrystal claims that without more troops, the U.S. and allies could lose the war. By the end of the year, the U.S. troops will have a record 68,000 troops in Afghanistan, working alongside 38,000 NATO-led forces.

Britain has about 9,000 troops — the second largest force after the U.S. — based mainly in the southern Helmand province. A total of 217 British troops have died in Afghanistan since the U.S.-led invasion following the Sept. 11 attacks.

Brown’s office said no decision had been made on whether to send an extra 1,000 soldiers. “Nothing has been ruled in, and nothing has been ruled out,” a spokesman for Brown said while speaking on condition of anonymity in line with government policy.

The spokesman said that troop levels are under constant review, and that officials were studying the details of McChrystal’s report.

A recent surge in the number of British troop deaths — a result of an increasing use of roadside bombs by insurgents and an aggressive campaign to oust Taliban fighters before the country’s Aug. 20 elections — has led to some public skepticism over the mission.

“We are not a squeamish people. We can take sacrifice and pain if we are convinced we know what the war is for and there is a reasonable prospect of success,” Paddy Ashdown, a House of Lords legislator and former U.N. High Representative for Bosnia, told BBC radio.

“Both of these things have been absent for the last three or four years. I think there is a real possibility now that we will lose the campaign in Afghanistan in the pubs and front rooms of Britain, before we lose it in the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Far East


Obama, Hu Vow to Forge Dynamic Ties

NEW YORK (AFP) — US President Barack Obama said Tuesday he was looking forward to visiting China in November, as he met Chinese President Hu Jintao and both sides vowed to forge a “comprehensive” relationship.

The leaders met on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly here and both spoke warmly of improving Sino-US ties during a photo-op, without mentioning a trade dispute sparked by US duties on Chinese tire imports.

“I am committed to pursuing a genuinely cooperative and comprehensive relationship with China,” Obama said at the meeting at the Waldorf Astoria hotel.

“We can make our relationship more dynamic and effective,” Obama said, adding, “I am very much looking forward to my visit to China in November.”

Hu, who sat opposite Obama along a long table, which also provided seating for a large group of aides from each side, echoed Obama’s words, vowing to work for a “positive, cooperative and comprehensive relationship for the 21st century.”

“The Chinese side is also willing to work with the United States to properly handle essential issues to ensure our relationship will continue to grow on a sound and steady course,” Hu said, through a translator.

Hu earlier made a key speech at a United Nations climate conference and pledged to curb the growth in China’s carbon dioxide emissions by a “notable margin” by 2020 from their 2005 levels, though did not give an exact figure.

He is set to attend the General Assembly meeting on Wednesday, before heading on to Pittsburgh on Thursday for the G20 summit of developed and developing nations.

Washington has imposed punitive tariffs of 35 percent on Chinese-made tire imports — a move that prompted Beijing to lodge a complaint with the World Trade Organization.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Policy Center Urges Deeper US-China Relationship

WASHINGTON — A strategic think tank with close connections to the Obama administration is calling on the White House to develop better and broader relations with China.

The Center for a New American Security, in a study prepared by a panel of 10 academics, declared Tuesday that the first principle of China policy should be: “China should not be treated as a threat.”

The center was co-founded two years ago by two now-high-ranked administration officials, Kurt Campbell, the assistant secretary of state for Asia, and Michele Flournoy, undersecretary of defense for policy. President Barack Obama and Chinese President Hu Jintao were meeting in New York on Tuesday.

Obama said he would be visiting China in November.

China’s influence is increasingly global. The United States, consequently, “should make a concerted effort to engage China as a major partner in confronting global problems.”

These include, the study said, the economic crisis, climate change and energy security. At the same time, the two sides should be open and comfortably address issues of disagreement, the study said.

Thirty years after President Jimmy Carter established diplomatic relations with China, after a groundbreaking visit by President Richard M. Nixon, the United States “has been slow to articulate a comprehensive framework that moves beyond the simplistic,” the study said.

In the meantime, it said, neo-conservatives advocate containment while isolationists try to adopt protectionist policies.

“The truth of the matter is that the United States and China’s mutual interdependence is significant and continues to grow,” the study said.

Over the last decade, economic and political relations between the United States and China have expanded, with bilateral trade topping $409 billion this year.

At a high-level meeting in July in Washington, the United States and China pledged closer cooperation to deal with global hot spots such as Iran and the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.

While Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner portrayed the talks as a positive development in relations, the list of accomplishments on the economics side basically reaffirmed steps both nations have already taken to deal with the financial crisis.

On foreign policy, there were no apparent breakthroughs although the countries pledged closer cooperation in dealing with the nuclear ambitions of North Korea and Iran.

Clinton conceded that differences remained in many areas such as human rights.

There have been differences over trade, as well, and China is resistant to major climate change proposals.

It has given its support to negotiations with North Korea over its nuclear weapons program and the fate of tougher sanctions on Iran over its nuclear activities could rest on the stand China takes at the United Nations.

The study coincides with the high-level meetings at the United Nations and meetings of the so-called G-20 nations later in the week in Pittsburgh.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


S. Africa: Murder Down; Rape, Robbery, Hijacking Up

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — South Africa’s murder rate — one of the world’s highest — has dropped slightly, but the country faces a distressing rise in rapes, robberies and hijackings, South African police said Tuesday.

The number of murders decreased 3.4 percent to 18,148 between April 2008 and March 2009. That still leaves 50 murders a day in the country of some 50 million people.

Sexual offenses increased 10.1 percent, with a total of 71,500 reported offenses. Robberies at homes and businesses increased more dramatically, up 27.3 and 41.5 percent respectively.

South Africa has one of the worst crime rates in the world, putting the government under pressure to show that safety is improving ahead of next year’s soccer World Cup.

“There are areas where we are making progress. At the same time there are areas where we are still lagging behind,” Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa said. “Government is unshakable in its resolve to fight crime.”

Many observers and opposition parties are not convinced the government is winning the war against crime.

“It’s a bad year. It’s definitely a bad year,” said analyst Johan Burger, with the Pretoria-based Institute for Security Studies.

President Jacob Zuma has appointed a new police commissioner Bheki Cele and charged him with ridding the police force of corruption and boosting morale as the country approaches its first World Cup, expected to draw 400,000 visitors.

In a small bright spot, the number of muggings dropped for the third consecutive year. The latest figures show a 7.4 percent decrease.

Of more concern to South African residents was the increase in house and business robberies and an increase in car hijackings. Figures show that business robberies increased by a staggering 41.5 percent, house robberies increased by 27.3 percent, truck hijackings increased by 15.4 percent and car hijackings increased by 5 percent.

This year, well-coordinated armed gangs have blazed through several shopping malls in Johannesburg, killing bystanders and terrifying shoppers and store owners.

Mthethwa said he believes the worsening economy may be the real culprit for the rise in robberies. South Africa is in its first recession in two decades. He said he was deeply concerned about the increase in house robberies.

“It is one of the crimes that are the most intrusive and personalize the crime experience,” he said.

The main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, condemned the figures as a “serious deterioration” of the crime situation in South Africa.

“With the 2010 World Cup fast approaching, the usual rhetoric and empty promises must once and for all be brought to an end,” spokeswoman Dianne Kohler Barnard said in a statement, in which she called for more police and better training.

Joe Mcgluwa, from the Independent Democrats, said his party viewed the statistics with mixed feelings. They welcomed the decrease in murders but were very concerned about increase in other forms of violent crime.

“The increase in sexual offenses is most worrying of all and shows we still have a very long way to go to create a society where our women and children are safe,” he said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



U.S. To Keep South Africa Embassy Closed After Threat

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) — The United States will keep its embassy and other American government offices in South Africa closed on Wednesday after it received an undisclosed security threat, the embassy said on its website.

U.S. embassy spokeswoman Sharon Hudson-Dean had said earlier on Tuesday that the assumption was that the U.S. offices would reopen on Wednesday.

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the threat was “pretty credible information” against U.S. government facilities in South Africa, the continent’s biggest economy.

South Africa, due to host the soccer World Cup next year, is not itself seen as a target for attacks. Hudson-Dean said it was the first time in a decade the offices had been closed due to a security threat.

Somali rebels have vowed to avenge last week’s killing of one of the continent’s most wanted al Qaeda suspects in a raid by U.S. commandos, but there has been no previous link between Somali insurgents and South Africa.

Bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 killed 224 people and wounded thousands.

“The embassy is tracking developments very closely and assessing its security posture and formulating an appropriate course of action,” said Kelly.

South African Police Commissioner Bheki Cele did not give details of the threat and said he could not rule out the possibility of a hoax while investigations continued.

“It is under control,” he told reporters in Cape Town.

A U.S. embassy message told American citizens to refer back to a July 29 U.S. State Department worldwide caution.

It included a warning that information suggests al Qaeda and affiliated organizations continue to plan terrorist attacks against U.S. interests in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.

As well as the embassy, there are U.S. consulates in Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town and other U.S. government offices, including that of USAID, the Agency for International Development.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Dutch Pilot Held Over Argentine “Death Flights”

MADRID/BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) — A Dutch-Argentine airline pilot accused of running “death flights” to dump political prisoners at sea under Argentina’s military government 30 years ago was arrested in Spain, Spanish officials said on Wednesday.

Argentina issued an international arrest warrant last year for Julio Alberto Poch after an Argentine judge traveled to Europe and interviewed colleagues who said he had boasted about disposing of drugged prisoners into the River Plate or the ocean.

Poch, 57, a retired Argentine navy lieutenant, was arrested on Tuesday at Valencia’s Manises Airport during a stopover as he flew a plane to Amsterdam. Poch works for Holland’s Transavia, an airline owned by Air France-KLM.

Argentina had asked that the Netherlands extradite Poch, but he was protected by his Dutch citizenship while in the Netherlands, Argentina’s Human Rights Secretariat said in a statement.

Spain arrested him on the international warrant and a justice system source in Buenos Aires, who asked not to be named, said Argentina will now request his extradition from Spain.

Poch is accused of being involved in the deaths or disappearance of hundreds of people held in the Naval Mechanics School, Argentina’s infamous political prison, the source said.

Prisoners at the school, known as the ESMA, were tortured and many were drugged and then put into helicopters or airplanes to be cast into the river or the sea while still alive.

“THEY WERE TERRORISTS”

An Argentine government report says more than 11,000 people died or disappeared during the so-called Dirty War, a crackdown on alleged leftists and other opponents of the military regime that ruled from 1976 to 1983.

Argentine Federal Judge Sergio Torres traveled to the Netherlands in December last year to gather testimony from work colleagues of Poch who said he confessed to them his involvement in the “death flights” and the way prisoners were thrown out of planes, the Human Rights Secretariat said.

“(Poch) told me how aboard his plane, people who were still alive were thrown off with the intent of executing them,” a pilot told Torres during an interview with the judge in the Netherlands, official Argentine news agency Telam reported.

Poch justified the killings by saying “they were terrorists,” according to the testimony cited by Telam.

Another pilot who worked with Poch said “his behavior was outrageous, he defended throwing people off planes into the ocean,” Telam said.

Poch has worked for Transavia since the 1980s when he fled Argentina to the Netherlands, where he lives with his family, Telam said.

In 2005 Argentina’s Supreme Court, at the urging of then-President Nestor Kirchner, struck down two amnesty laws that shielded hundreds of former officers from charges of human rights abuses during the dictatorship.

Courts have since issued a handful of severe prison sentences for members of the security forces — many now elderly — who were convicted of kidnapping, torturing or killing dissidents.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Italy: 757 Migrants Pushed Back in 4 Months, Gov’t

(ANSAmed) — ROME, SEPTEMBER 22 — In almost four months, from May 6 to August 30, there have been a total of eight operations carried out to repel a total of 757 migrants in the Sicilian Channel to Libya. The data was reported by the Interior deputy Minister, Alfredo Mantovano, during a hearing at the Schenghen Commission, who then stressed the Italian position: “the government has no intention of interrupting or suspending repulsion operations”. The deputy minister also affirmed that Italy, in all of these occasions guaranteed at sea rescues and “never denied to the illegal immigrants who were intercepted” the right to ask for asylum. During the hearing, Mantovano stressed that the procedures were “carried out in conformity with internal and international regulations”, with the Italian bodies that, “with agreements with Libya and Malta, operated in such a way that all rescue operations were carried out”. Regarding the possibility for immigrants who have been pushed back to ask for asylum, the deputy minister guaranteed that “Italy has never denied this to them”. Every operation, he explained, “lasted more than ten hours and the possibility was given to all but none” of the 757 illegal immigrants “asked for refugee status or stated that they were oppressed in their country of origin”. Therefore Italy will not change direction. Also because, Mantovano continued, “if the repulsion procedures obtained a single effect, it was that of saving the lives of people who would have died under other conditions”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Govt Rejects ‘Push- Back’ Criticism

Undersecretaries defend Italy’s refugee and migrant record

(ANSA) — Rome, September 22 — The Rome government hit back at international critics of its migrant ‘push-back’ policy on Tuesday, saying refugee rights were fully recognized under Italian law. The United Nations Refugee Commissioner, the UN Human Rights Commissioner, the European Commission Vice-President and Human Rights Watch have all expressed concern in recent days over the policy of forcibly escorting boat migrants approaching Italian shores to Libya instead of bringing them to Italy.

Fears over policy, which provides for asylum claims to be vetted by Tripoli, have centred on the lack of any asylum legislation in Libya.

But Interior Undersecretaries Alfredo Mantovano and Nitto Francesco Palma both insisted no one escorted back to Libya by Italian patrols had been denied the right to request asylum. Speaking at the presentation of an immigration report, Palma said there had been eight “push-back operations” since the policy was launched in May, in which 757 people had been taken back to Libya. “Not a single request for international protection was made during this journey,” he said. “If there had been, we would not have had problems bringing these people to Italy”. Answering questions at a House parliamentary committee, Mantovano noted that the journeys back to Libya took ten hours, during which time “anyone could have asked for protection or informed staff they feared persecution but no one did”. He said all Italy’s actions had fully complied with international laws protecting the rights of asylum seekers, refugees and migrants. Responding to questions about a drop in the number of asylum applications, which had led to suggestions the push-back policy was preventing people making claims, Mantovano said the 2008 and 2009 figures could not be compared. He said this was because 2008 had seen an abnormally high number of applications. The undersecretary said the number of asylum applications received by Italy during the first eight months of 2009 were higher than those received during the same period in 2007, and more than those received over the entire years of 2004, 2005 and 2006.

Palma and Mantovano both said Italy had done as much as possible to help foreigners in need. Palma said Italy had carried out 653 rescue operations, saved the lives of 41,200 migrants at sea and accommodated them in Italy a cost of over 77 million euros between January 2007 and April 2009 Mantovano pointed to Italy’s record with asylum applications, saying it set an example for the rest of Europe. In the first eight months of 2009 it processed 17,203 asylum applications and granted refugee status to 1,246 people. A further 5,418 people received another form of protection while around 10,000 had their claims refused. Mantovano said that over the last decade, the percentage of applicants granted some form of protection had remained constant, at around 40%.

INTERNATIONAL CRITICISM. The push-back policy has been the subject of heated internal debate in Italy, ever since it was launched four months ago, attracting fierce criticism from opposition MPs, Catholic groups and rights organizations, But in recent days, the topic has also drawn international comment. Last week, UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay sparked anger in the centre-right government by referring to “the hardship of those who are left stranded near the shores of Libya, Malta, and Italy”, while on Monday, the European Union’s Justice and Security Commissioner Jacques Barrot said Libya’s treatments of migrants and asylum seekers was “unacceptable”. On the same day, UN Refugee Chief Antonio Guterres expressed “strong reservations” over Italy’s push-back policy, warning Libya did not provide “proper safeguards to protect asylum seekers”. The international organization Human Rights also published a scathing 92-page report on the policy, suggesting Italy was “sending people back to abuse”. HRW refugee policy director Bill Frelick said the policy was an “open violation of Italy’s legal obligation not to commit refoulement”, which is the forced return of people to places where they risk abuse or death. Libya is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, which provides internationally recognized rights for asylum seekers and refugees, has no asylum laws and does not distinguish between refugees, asylum seekers and other migrants. People entering Libya without documents or permission are treated as illegal entrants and subject to arrest. The Italian government says its policy is compliant with international law and EU regulations and draws attention to fact its location on the EU’s southernmost border means it has to cope with a disproportionate number of arrivals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Keep Out, Britain is Full Up

Migrants on the move yesterday after the French authorities bulldozed their shanty town

BRITAIN must not take in any of the migrants massing in France because the country is full, it was claimed last night.

French authorities yesterday finally destroyed the Calais shanty town, known as The Jungle, used by migrants as a launch-pad to Britain.

But Tory politicians urged them to act quickly to ensure those displaced from the newly cleared camp did not simply come straight to the UK.

Critics of yesterday’s operation said that while it was essential the five-year-old camp was knocked down, there seemed no proper plan in place to deal with the 1,000 or so Afghans or Iraqis left homeless.

While some reports said the French would use British taxpayers’ cash to offer the migrants financial incentives to go home, most experts believe they will simply disperse to smaller makeshift camps around the Calais docks and continue their attempt to enter Britain illegally.

Their attitude was summed up by one Afghan immigrant removed from The Jungle yesterday who said: “We’re determined to stay as close to the port as possible because it’s the way to England.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: No New Research Into Cost of Immigration

There will be no new research into the cost of immigration in the short term, the Volkskrant reports on Tuesday.

Three motions aiming to force integration minister Eberhard van der Laan to carry out the research will be voted down in parliament later today, the paper says.

One motion from the Liberals (VVD) calling for an update of a 2003 report on immigration and the economy was thought to have a small chance of success. But Labour MPs have decided to vote against it as well, the paper says.

Van der Laan said earlier this month the cabinet had met its legal obligations on answering MPs questions. In July Geert Wilders’ anti-immigration party PVV asked a number of government ministers to calculate exactly how much non-western immigrants cost Dutch society.

Refugees

Meanwhile, former prime minister Ruud Lubbers says in an interview with the Nederlands Dagblad that the country needs to be more generous in admitting refugees and highly-skilled migrants. ‘Foreign workers are needed to combat the effect of the aging population, Lubbers said.

‘We need unorthodox policies. Instead of saying ‘no unless’ we should be saying ‘yes, as long’ when we are talking about letting in foreigners,’ Lubbers, the former UN high commissioner on refugees said.

The Netherlands is placing too much emphasis on getting rid of people, he said. ‘Our refugee policy is characterised by its restrictive nature and inefficient implementation. We are wasting a lot of talent,’ he told the paper.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Integration Policies ‘A Failure’

Immigrants to Sweden continue to flock to a few, high-immigrant concentration areas, new statistics show, prompting one politician to conclude the country’s integration politics have failed.

According to a fresh report from Statistics Sweden (SCB), the number of inhabitants with foreign backgrounds has escalated in all of the country’s most immigrant-dense areas over the past ten years.

Employment has increased to some extent in many city districts, and the number of individuals reliant upon government benefits has decreased to an equal degree.

By far the greatest change, however, relates to the concentration of inhabitants with a foreign background, which has increased dramatically in most of the 38 city districts.

“What the statistics show is that our migration and integration policies have totally failed,” said Anders Lago, the Social Democratic mayor of Södertälje, to the TT news agency.

For 38 the districts deemed to have a high concentration of immigrants, from Malmö’s Rosengård in the south to Hertsön in Luleå in the north, municipalities have signed special development agreements with the Swedish government.

The goal of the agreements is to improve coordination between the state and the various municipalities and to increase cooperation between administrative authorities and the private and non-profit sectors within each district.

In order to follow the development process, the government has also requested Statistics Sweden with tracking developments in all 38 districts.

The initial results of the agency’s investigation, presented on Wednesday, paint a dismal picture of how well Sweden has succeeded in promoting a diverse society over the past ten years, with the concentration of foreign born increasing in most of the districts surveyed.

“In practice, more of these areas are functioning like huge refugee reception centres. They become a passage way for asylum seekers and refugees, which makes it clear that this is a very, very, serious problem for society,” said Lago.

In Ronna, a district of Södertälje, south of Stockholm, for instance, the concentration of inhabitants with a foreign background has increased from 66 to 84 percent in ten years.

In Linköping’s Skäggtorp neighbourhood in central Sweden, the concentration has increased from 22 to 49 percent.

In nine of the 38 districts, more than 80 percent of inhabitants have a foreign background. The most densely populated immigrant district was Hjällbo in Gothenburg, with a concentration of 90 percent.

Sweden’s Minister for Integration, Nyamko Sabuni, however, refused to see the increased concentration of immigrants in city districts as an indication of the success or failure of Sweden’s integration politics.

“The purpose of integration politics is not to spread people out. We don’t see it as a problem that many individuals with a foreign background live in areas with a high concentration of immigrants. The problem is that many people with an immigrant background are unemployed. The purpose of integration politics is to support people so they can establish themselves in the job market,” she told the TT news agency

“The statistics show that employment is on the rise and the need for economic support is decreasing, which is encouraging.”

The agency’s statistics also contained data on a number of positive developments, including a marked increase in the number of gainfully employed individuals in most city districts.

Both Andersberg in Halmstad and Hjällbo in Gothenburg witnessed a 19 percent increase between 1997 and 2007. In 2007, almost half the population of both districts was employed.

Similarly, during the same period, the number of working individuals in Rosengård rose from 19.9 to 34.2 percent, while employment figures for the entire country oscillated between 72 and 78 percent.

In most districts, the proportion of inhabitants receiving government benefits dropped by as much as six percent between 2004 and 2007.

Despite this reduction, in areas such as Rosengård almost 26 percent of the population retained some form of economic support in the year 2007.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



The Calais ‘Jungle’ Has Been Cleared — But This Tide of Despair Has Only Just Begun

The desperate scenes at the Calais ‘Jungle’ have shone a grim light on Britain’s immigration problem. But the ineffective policies and porous borders of the EU mean that much worse is to come, says Philip Johnston.

By the time the French police arrived in force yesterday, only a few hundred immigrants were left in the Calais “Jungle”. Alerted to the authorities’ plans, many had already moved on. It is rumoured that a new squatter camp is taking shape close to Dunkirk. The Calais shanty might have been dismantled; the people, however, remain and more will come. The big question is: what does Europe do about it?

From this side of the Channel, the problem looks like something the French should deal with. After all, there is an EU rule, the Dublin Convention, whereby anyone seeking asylum should do so in the first member state they arrive in. But we are not talking here about political refugees, even if many of the countries they come from are politically unstable. By and large, they are economic migrants looking for a better life. More than 100 in the Calais camp were unaccompanied children sent from villages in Afghanistan by family and friends who club together to pay people traffickers to get them to Europe, preferably to Britain, where they might have prospects that do not exist at home.

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Bulldozing ‘The Jungle’ will not stop immigrants coming to UK

This human tide was captured brilliantly in Michael Winterbottom’s 2002 film In This World, which followed the journey of two 14-year-old Afghani boys from a refugee camp in Peshawar. They could equally have been from Africa, Kurdistan or even China. What they all want is to get to Britain; and after braving the blazing sands of the Sahara, risking their lives crossing the Mediterranean or spending days cramped and hungry in the back of a lorry from central Asia, they are not about to be thwarted by 22 miles of English Channel.

Across Europe, shanty towns are springing up to house the flood of illegal immigrants who pose one of the greatest long-term challenges to the EU. Climate change, population growth, water shortages, famine and war will all drive more and more people from their homelands and towards Europe. Many want to get to the UK, but the idea that this country is being hit hardest is wide of the mark. As an island with border controls still intact, Britain can at least keep some limits on the numbers arriving, even if some will inevitably make it across the Channel.

But in the countries closest to the EU’s external borders, serious problems are emerging. In Greece, tens of thousands of migrants are living in squatter camps in Athens and on the Aegean Islands. Many eventually make their way to Italy, which also is bearing the brunt of the influx. The Mediterranean coasts of Spain and France are seeing a large rise in numbers. In 2008, an estimated 70,000 tried to cross from North Africa. Corpses are sometimes washed up on the beaches, the result of ill-fated attempts to cross the sea from Africa, often in small craft unable to withstand the elements.

Immigration is potentially the biggest crisis facing the EU at a time when the economies of the 27 member states are themselves under pressure. Within Europe itself, there are large movements of migrant workers depending on the prevailing economic climate. When the economy was booming, hundreds of thousands of eastern Europeans headed west after their accession in 2004, principally to the UK, which was the only major economy to let them in to work.

Although the Home Office initially predicted that a maximum of 13,000 east Europeans would come each year, the numbers peaked at close to a million, mostly from Poland. Many have returned home now the recession has taken hold and there are better job opportunities in their own countries. But hundreds of thousands have stayed on to await an upturn.

While they may be considered by indigenous workers to be immigrants, they are in reality part of the internal EU labour market. Nothing can be done to prevent them seeking work in the UK, or anywhere else for that matter. From 2011, all remaining restrictions on the movement of migrant workers within the 27 member states, introduced with the accession of the eastern states in 2004, must be lifted, though they will remain in place until 2014 for workers from Romania and Bulgaria.

Free movement of workers is a fundamental right in the EU, which is why the arguments over the number of eastern Europeans working in Britain are somewhat redundant since nothing can be done about them, short of leaving the EU and erecting new barriers. However, the problem is that the Europeans who have come to Britain are mostly young single men who are competing for jobs with the very group in our own society who are least able to get work.

The only immigration that can be controlled is that into the EU, not that within it; and those curbs can only be as good as the weakest border — and some are very weak indeed. There has been agreement to establish an EU frontier force of about 400; but given the extent of the borders from Finland in the north to Greece in the south, how effective could this be?

Another suggestion, being pushed by the French in particular, is for “burden sharing” around the EU. Many of the migrants are claiming political asylum, which current law says can only be done in the first country in which they arrive. Inevitably, by the time migrants have reached the Channel they have already been to four or five other EU countries and may even have already applied for asylum and been rejected.

In 2008, there were 240,000 would-be political refugees in the 27 member states. The highest number of applications was in France with 42,000, followed by 30,500 in the UK (though this is way down on 2002 when 100,000 were recorded). But the figures do not tell the whole story. Greece had only 19,000 applications, but it has far more illegal immigrants who choose not to come to the attention of the authorities or who are planning to move on elsewhere. As the immigration crisis grows, pressure will be applied on Britain, in particular, to take more of them because other European countries, rightly or wrongly, believe the UK acts as a magnet to many migrants who speak English, have communities in Britain and believe that work or benefits are easily available to sustain them.

Despite the Dublin Convention, countries such as Greece or Italy do not wish to spend the money and effort processing the asylum applications of migrants who would rather move on to Britain. For all the talk in Europe about an EU-wide approach, the problem is simply being passed from one country to another.

It is made worse by the ease of travel in continental Europe, where most national frontiers have been abolished under the Schengen treaty. It is not difficult to get from one end of the EU to the Channel without ever showing a passport or any other document. If the EU’s external borders are impossible to police, perhaps one answer is to restore internal controls.

Removing illegal immigrants is also a complex and expensive process; and if they claim asylum, it cannot be done until the legal procedures have been exhausted. Under the 1951 UN Refugee Convention, the key provision — known as non-refoulement — means that no one claiming asylum will be returned to a country where he might be persecuted. A second requirement is that proper consideration should be given to each claim and that no one will be prosecuted for entering a country illegally. It can be impossible to tell where an asylum seeker has come from, since they often arrive without any papers. The gangs that control “people smuggling” tell them to destroy all documentation.

Another solution is to treat the European Union as one area for asylum purposes and to process applications outside the EU, with a quota system to ensure the refugees are shared around the 27 member states. This system would replace the Dublin Convention, which was supposed to be a “burden sharing” arrangement but merely ensured that certain countries became targets for the traffickers.

It would be nigh on impossible to sell such an idea to EU voters and could act as a spur to greater migration. Only this week, a suggestion by the European Commission and the UN that Britain should accept some of the Calais Jungle’s inhabitants was rejected by ministers as a breach of international rules. The Home Office said: “There are processes in place for claiming asylum, in particular that you claim in the first safe country you get to.”

However, we cannot ignore the problem either. In his apocalyptic novel The Camp of the Saints, written in 1973, the French writer Jean Raspail contemplates the dilemma facing Western nations as a mass of starving boat people from the Third World arrive on the shores of southern Europe.

“They were a million poor wretches, overwhelmed with misery, ready to disembark on our shores,” he wrote. “To let them in would destroy us; to reject them would destroy them.” It is a dilemma with which Europe will have to grapple for a long time to come.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Web Forums Help Iraqi Refugees Adapt to America

BAGHDAD — “Mozart” is the screen name of a 44-year-old guitar-playing Iraqi refugee who was resettled in the United States recently.

In a posting this month to a popular online forum for Iraqis emigrating to the West, Mozart rattled off his many accomplishments: an economics degree from a prestigious Iraqi university, a diploma from an arts institute, experience in tourism and restaurant management, and 25 years as a musician with an Iraqi band.

“All this to tell you: I’m now working in a warehouse, doing manual labor for $8 an hour. My brothers and sisters, work is never shameful,” Mozart wrote in Arabic. “In time, you will find your opportunity in the land of opportunity.”

There’s a growing online audience for Mozart ‘s encouraging words. After years of backlog, the United States is admitting Iraqis in record numbers — 17,000 were resettled this year, up from just 202 in 2006 — but the refugees are arriving in the midst of a dire economic crisis with few job prospects and only a few months of federal assistance before they’re left to fend for themselves.

Iraqis who are approved for resettlement often flee death threats and torture only to find a new set of fears in their U.S. sanctuaries: lack of employment, alienation, language barriers and concern over loved ones who are still in Iraq . The U.S. government teaches Iraqi refugees the basics of life in the United States , such as applying for a driver’s license or paying utility bills.

Resettlement manuals don’t explain the nuances of American society, however, and the “overly positive” literature was published before the financial crisis wiped out the entry-level jobs that refugees typically fill, said Bob Carey , the nonprofit International Rescue Committee’s vice president for resettlement and migration issues.

The online forums “are a good thing because they’re not filtered. It’s an accurate depiction of life in the States,” Carey said. “However, they’re hearing about one person’s experience in one state, in one economic situation, at one given time.”

One of the best-known Iraqi forums is Ankawa.com, which draws about 30,000 visitors a day, or nearly a million a month. Ankawa, named after a small town in northern Iraq , began 10 years ago as an online meeting place for Iraq’s Christian minority, said the site’s Sweden -based manager, Amir al Malih .

Malih, responding by e-mail to questions from McClatchy , said the site’s popularity had soared with the exodus of Iraqis displaced by the U.S.-led war and sectarian violence. In the early days, Malih said, a volunteer legal adviser monitored refugee-related forums to ensure accuracy. Now, he said, so many resettled Iraqis of all backgrounds visit the site that the community is self-policing.

“They have enough information and experience to denounce any false or incorrect information,” Malih said.

In this dismal employment market, displaced Iraqis can’t offer one another much but encouragement and prayers, small consolations for a remarkably educated refugee population that has trouble finding even fast-food work these days. Instead, Ankawa users do their best to smooth other parts of the transition, helping to decipher the mysteries of American life.

Forum regulars offer do’s and don’ts for airport screenings and remind new arrivals to report any changes of address “so you don’t become a national security concern.” They get into the nitty-gritty of an Iraqi household in America: Long skirts for Muslim women? Bring them, because U.S. shops are filled with miniskirts and shorts. Electrical appliances? Leave them in Baghdad because of the voltage difference. Hookah pipes? Don’t worry, the tobacco and coals are available. Need cheap furniture and household goods? Try a site called Craigslist , “where you can buy and sell anything!”

An Iraqi refugee whose online handle is “Arizona” is a particularly astute observer of his new world. One of his most recent posts describes how he walked into a Wal-Mart and was shocked to be welcomed by “a person who’s over 85 years old and works as a tracker of shopping carts.” Apparently unfamiliar with Wal-Mart greeters, who are often senior citizens, Arizona made a phone call to make sure that the chain wasn’t exploiting the elderly, and later he published relevant labor laws for other Iraqis to see.

Another time, Arizona wrote of a stroll through a park and his first encounter with homeless street performers. He struck up a conversation and learned about their tenuous lives. He wrote with admiration that the U.S. government provides them with food assistance and medical care.

“God bless you, my brother,” an Iraqi named Basel commented on Arizona’s post about the street musicians. “I always see you trying to shed light on American society and to show us the corners we’ve never heard of.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Declaration of Independence Gets PC Revision for Kids

Text tells 5th graders: ‘All people are created equal’

A textbook publisher known for painting a sunny, non-violent picture of Islamic jihad in its history books has rewritten part of the Declaration of Independence.

The Lone Star Report revealed that a fifth grader in Ector County Independent School District in Odessa, Texas, was told to memorize the Declaration of Independence as printed in “History Alive! America’s Past,” published by the Teachers’ Curriculum Institute, or TCI.

But there was one hitch — an essential word had been altered.

[…]

WND reported earlier when “History Alive! The Medieval World and Beyond,” also published by the Teachers Curriculum Institute, totally omitted any mention of the violence in a lesson on Islamic jihad.

“Jihad is defined as a struggle within each individual to overcome difficulties and strive to please god. Sometimes it may be a physical struggle for protection against enemies,” the book states. It notes that Islam requires “that Muslims should fulfill jihad with the heart, tongue and hand. Muslims use the heart in their struggle to resist evil.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Rename UN Security Council the Terror Council: Gaddafi’s Bizarre Rant at General Assembly

Muammar Gaddafi today launched a bizarre attack on the United Nations during a shambolic speech to its General Assembly.

The Libyan leader’s address got off to an inauspicious start after a mass walkout by world leaders who believed he should not be given the floor.

America was represented by a couple of mid-ranking diplomats after Hillary Clinton left the chamber. Gordon Brown had also stayed away from the event.

However, Gaddafi appeared undaunted and strode to the podium in brown and tan Bedouin robes, a shiny black pin in the shape of Africa placed over his heart.

He began by praising Barack Obama, who had just given his first speech as US President to the forum.

But proceedings quickly went downhill. Speaking rapid-fire Arabic, Gaddafi said the organisation was responsible for failing to prevent some 65 wars that had erupted since its foundation in 1945.

He then went on to call for the abolition of the veto power of the five permanent members or expanding the body with additional member states to make it more representative.

‘It should not be called the Security Council, it should be called the “terror council,” he said.

At one point he also claimed that swine flu had been deliberately manufactured for military purposes.

Gaddafi — who was making his first appearance at the UN — repeatedly brandishing a document and railing against the ‘inequality’ of member states.

He claimed the original purpose was that all members — large and small — should be equal and that this was had never been the case.

The Libyan dictator’s speech followed Obama’s first General Assembly address, but a recess of some 15 minutes was called by the Libyan president of the General Assembly so diplomats could be take new seats.

Gaddafi laid a yellow folder in front of him and opened some of the handwritten pages as he received scattered applause.

The chamber was half-empty as began his speech, holding a copy of the UN Charter in his hands.

For a moment, it seemed he lost his place while he sorted through the pages of his yellow folder.

He appeared to be speaking without a text, looking at a set of notes before him on handwritten pages. He was not reading from the TelePrompTer.

Earlier in the day, Gordon Brown told BBC Radio 5 Live he was unlikely to be present for Gaddafi’s speech, and renewed his criticism of the hero’s welcome given to bomber Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi when he was released on compassionate grounds last month.

The move is a marked contrast from his much criticised silence on the issue in the wake of Al Megrahi’s release.

‘I don’t think I will be there for that,’ the PM said today. ‘I have made my views very clear to the Libyans.

‘The way that Megrahi was received in Libya was completely unacceptable. I think it did a lot of damage to the Libyans’ reputation in the international community.’

Downing Street officials stressed leaders did not routinely attend each others’ speeches, and Mr Brown would be missing other significant addresses.

Mr Brown insisted that Britain still believed that Megrahi was responsible for the bombing, despite the his continued protestations of his innocence.

‘Let us be in no doubt that Megrahi is regarded by us as the person responsible for that crime,’ he said.

However he pointed to the changed international context since Megrahi was convicted of the attack.

‘Twenty years ago, Libya was seen by all of us as a leading player in international terrorism,’ he said.

‘Over these last ten years, we have seen them try to move to a better position in the international community by renouncing nuclear weapons and at the same time renouncing engagement in international terrorism.’

The Prime Minister denied that the fact that there would be no one-to-one meeting with US President Barack Obama during his time at the UN and the G20 summit in Pittsburgh represented a snub.

‘I do say that the special relationship is strong, it continues to strengthen,’ he said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



The UN Loves Barack Obama Because He is Weak

It is not hard to see why a standing ovation awaits Barack Obama when he addresses the United Nations General Assembly today, writes Nile Gardiner.

Barack Obama’s Gallup approval rating of 52 percent may well be lower at this stage of his presidency than any US leader in recent times with the exception of Bill Clinton. But he is still worshipped with messiah-like adoration at the United Nations, and is considerably more popular with many of the 192 members of the UN than he is with the American people.

The latest Pew Global Attitudes Survey of international confidence in Obama’s leadership on foreign affairs shows strikingly high approval levels for the president in many parts of the world — 94 percent in Kenya, 93 percent in Germany, 88 percent in Canada and Nigeria, 77 percent in India, 76 percent in Brazil, 71 percent in Indonesia, and 62 percent in China for example. The Pew survey of 21 countries reveals an average level of 71 percent support for President Obama, compared to just 17 percent for George W. Bush in 2008.

As the figures indicate, Barack Obama is highly likely to receive a warm reception when he addresses the United Nations General Assembly today, whereas his predecessor in the White House was greeted with undisguised contempt and stony silence.

It is not hard to see why a standing ovation awaits the president at Turtle Bay. Obama’s popularity at the UN boils down essentially to his willingness to downplay American global power. He is the first American president who has made an art form out of apologizing for the United States, which he has done on numerous occasions on foreign soil, from Strasbourg to Cairo. The Obama mantra appears to be — ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do to atone for your country. This is a message that goes down very well in a world that is still seething with anti-Americanism.

It is natural that much of the UN will embrace an American president who declines to offer strong American leadership. A president who engages dictators like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hugo Chavez will naturally gain respect from the leaders of the more than 100 members of the United Nations who are currently designated as “partly free” or “not free” by respected watchdog Freedom House.

The UN is not a club of democracies — who still remain a minority within its membership — it is a vast melting pot of free societies, socialist regimes and outright tyrannies. Obama’s clear lack of interest in human rights issues is a big seller at the UN, where at least half its members have poor human rights records.

The president scores highly at the UN for refusing to project American values and military might on the world stage, with rare exceptions like the war against the Taliban. His appeasement of Iran, his bullying of Israel, his surrender to Moscow, his call for a nuclear free world, his siding with Marxists in Honduras, his talk of a climate change deal, have all won him plaudits in the large number of UN member states where US foreign policy has traditionally been viewed with contempt.

Simply put, Barack Obama is loved at the UN because he largely fails to advance real American leadership. This is a dangerous strategy of decline that will weaken US power and make her far more vulnerable to attack.

As we saw last week with his shameful surrender to Moscow over missile defence, the president is perfectly happy to undermine America’s allies and gut its strategic defences while currying favour with enemies and strategic competitors. The missile defence debacle is rightly viewed as a betrayal by the Poles and the Czechs, and Washington has clearly given the impression that it cares little about those who have bravely stood shoulder to shoulder with their US allies in Iraq, Afghanistan and the wider war on terror.

The Obama administration is now overseeing and implementing the biggest decline in American global power since Jimmy Carter. Unfortunately it may well take another generation for the United States to recover.

[Return to headlines]



U.N. Climate Summit Leaves Large Carbon Footprint

To hear world leaders and others addressing the United Nations Summit on Climate Change, the threat could not be more real and the need more urgent to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.

But in stark contrast to the earnest statements is the carbon footprint associated with their gathering.

It happens every autumn: midtown Manhattan becomes the motorcade capital of the world. Each foreign leader in town has a convoy of vehicles. Some of them, like President Obama’s motorcade, are 20-to-30 vehicles in length. It’s so long — it seems that when the front of it reaches the U.N., the back end is still back at his hotel.

Exacerbating the annual exercise in diplomatic gridlock are police actions, blocking intersections and closing streets for security to facilitate motorcade movements. It renders countless other vehicles immobile while waiting for motorcades to pass, their engines idling but still blowing exhaust into the midtown air.

Does it undermine the goal of the climate change summit and cause the pledges of environmental concern to ring hollow?

Asked about it, White House climate change negotiator Todd Sterns had a suggestion.

“I think the U.N. should make a pledge to electric vehicle motorcades within five years,” he said.

Right. As soon as all U.N. diplomats pay their parking tickets.

           — Hat tip: Zenster [Return to headlines]