Don’t Frighten the Dhimmis

This is an email response from our European correspondent Lexington to yesterday’s video of the panel with Filip Dewinter:

“Let us face reality…” Indeed.

Karim Hassoun’s taqiyya and kitman are puerile.

Dragging out Averroes, under his Arabic or Latin name, is part of the standard “contribution to Western civilization” line. Averroes was a Malik jurist, amongst his other talents, and wrote the following, a typical Malik legal opinion (which is shared by all the other major schools of Islamic jurisprudence) on the punishment for apostasy:

“An apostate is to be executed in agreement in the case of a man, because of the words of the Prophet (Muhammad): ‘Slay those who change their din(or deen, Islamic faith).’ Asking the apostate to repent was stipulated as a condition prior to his execution.” Vol 2, p 552

Just so that no Moslem comes in claiming this is all ancient history and just one man’s “interpretation”, here’s Al-Azhar Islamic Research Academy referring to the ‘Umdat al-Salik, a manual of Islamic law, p 595-6:

“Leaving Islam is the ugliest form of unbelief (kufr)…When a person who has reached puberty and is sane, voluntarily apostatizes, he deserves to be killed. In such a case, it is obligatory to ask him to repent and return to Islam. If he does, it is accepted from him, but if he refuses, he is immediately killed.”

– – – – – – – –

This mandate to kill an apostate does not depend upon any Islamic court’s ruling or any official’s order, and any Moslem carrying out such a death sentence will not be judged in Islamic law to have committed a crime since the mandate for death for apostasy is in both the Koran (4:89) and the ahadithof Bukhari and Abu-Dawud.

Hardly a contribution to “peace” in a Western society premised on “celebrating diversity” or “freedom of speech and conscience”.

Also, when Hassoun speaks of “peace” and says “the various communities are left to their dignity”, he is actually referring to the state of dhimmitude under which non-Moslems are allowed to practice their faiths, in highly restricted manners and upon payment of Jizya to the dominant Moslem “community.” That’s also why he wants “no debate” about Islam. Mustn’t frighten the dhimmis into realizing what’s coming.

— Lexington

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/23/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/23/2009The story about the hacked emails from Hadley CRU continues to bounce around the blogosphere, and has even leaked a little into the MSM. Some sources maintain that the emails were tampered with after they were stolen, and other commenters say this is beginning of the end for the global warming craze. We shall see.

In other news, in a follow-up on the story of the eight-year-old immigrant girl in Arizona who was raped by a gang of very young teenage boys, the parents of the victim have been charged with child abuse for their brutal treatment of their daughter.

Thanks to 4symbols, C. Cantoni, CSP, Esther, Insubria, JD, Paul Belien, RRW, Sean O’Brian, TV, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Spain: Last Among Developed Nations in Economic Recovery
 
USA
Chuck Norris: Thankful for Fading Freedoms
Frank Gaffney: Whose Side Are They on?
Lawyer: Hasan ‘Has No Sensation’ Below Chest
Obama’s Nice Guy Act Gets Him Nowhere on the World Stage
Obama to Present His Own Climate Plan
Rape Victim’s Parents Charged With Abuse
Terror Charges Unsealed in Minneapolis Against 8 Somalis
We’ve Made Muslims Our Guardians
 
Europe and the EU
Britain Begins Iraq War Inquiry
EU Seeks to End Discrimination Exemptions for UK’s Religious Employers
Greece Tests the Limit of Sovereign Debt as it Grinds Towards Slump
Harnessing the Power of Salt, Norway Tries Osmotic Power
Herman Van Rompuy: Europe’s First President to Push for ‘Euro Tax’
Italy: New Book Foretells North’s Secession
Italy: Transsexual May Have Been ‘Silenced’
McDonald’s to Turn Logo Green in Germany for Environment
MEP Clashes With Bishop Over ‘Climate Alarmism’
Netherlands: Former D66 Leader Coordinates Muslim Broadcasters
Netherlands: Holocaust Journal Published
Nobleman Wants to Build World’s Largest Solar Park in Bavaria
Report: Danish Welfare Under Threat
Sweden Hits Out at US Ahead of Climate Summit
The Belgianisation of Europe
UK: Children in Tears as Primary Teacher ‘Tells Them to Imagine Your Dad Had Been Killed in 9/11’
UK: Four Britons Linked to ‘Violent Jihad’ Plot Are Charged With Terror Offences
Upcoming Swiss Vote Over Minarets Raises Concerns
Van Rompuy: Man Without a Country
 
Balkans
Serbia: Huge Crowds Attend Patriarch’s Funeral
 
Mediterranean Union
EMPA MPs Urge Action
Syria: FEMIP: 50 Mln to Modernise Municipalities
 
North Africa
Egypt: Suez Canal Deepened for Large Ships
Energy: India Urged to Invest in Egypt’s Projects
EU-Libya Cooperation Deal on Infectious Diseases
Tunisia: Ben Ali, Country Bridge Between East and West
 
Israel and the Palestinians
First-Ever Conference on Arabs’ Anti-Jewish Sexual Harassment
Lebanon: EU Contributes to Rebuild School for Palestinians
 
Middle East
Ankara Ambivalent Toward New EU President
Cyprus Church Sues Turkey Over Occupied North
Just Five Bullets for Each Soldier: Iraq Inquiry Leak Reveals How British Troops Went in Woefully Unprepared
Lebanon Remains Confirmed as Missing UK Journalist
Saudi Prince Warns Against Disruptions to Hajj
Turkey Starts to Question Early Period of Republic
Turkey: Alevis Discover Their Stockholm Syndrome With Öymen’s Remarks
US Expert Links Obama’s Success to Role of Turkey
Yemen: Muslim Students Condemn ‘Massacre’ Of Houthis
Yemen Children Protest Child Abuse as War Continues in North
 
South Asia
Five Assam Rifles Troopers Killed in Manipur
Indian Govt ‘Eyes Extradition of Mumbai-Linked Suspects’ in Italy
India Parliament Uproar Over Ayodhya Mosque Report
 
Far East
China Slams US Report Warning of Spying by Beijing
Chinese Migrants Change Names to be ‘More Hong Kong’
Five Years in Prison for a Tibetan Writer for Denouncing Environmental Degradation
Mosques, Chinese Goods, Arabic Classes Rebuild Silk Road
 
Australia — Pacific
Over 100 Icebergs Drifting to N. Zealand: Official
 
Latin America
Leaders Meet in Trinidad for Climate Talks
 
Immigration
Germany to Draw Up ‘Values Contract’ For New Immigrants
 
General
Climate Change Emails Tampered With
Games ‘Permit’ Virtual War Crimes
Global Warming Meltdown: Climategate!
Gore’s Manipulation Allowed by Mainstream Media Climate Change Bias — Continues With Cru
Search the CRU Climate Fraud Emails by Keyword
The Great ‘Global Warming’ Hoax
The Global Warming Fraud Exposed
UN Negotiator Confident of Specific Climate Deal

Financial Crisis


Spain: Last Among Developed Nations in Economic Recovery

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, NOVEMBER 19 — Spain’s economy will perform better than expected, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which has revised up its forecast for Spain’s GDP, to fall by 3.6% in 2009 and by 0.3% in 2010, instead of the previously forecast fall of 4.5% this year and 0.9% next year. In any case Spain remains behind the other developed countries in terms of economic recovery. The OECD predicts a growth of 0.9% in Spain’s GDP for 2011, the lowest of all the developed countries, according to the Economic Prospects quoted today by the Europa Press agency. The predictions coincide with the latest figures from the Spanish government and go beyond those of the IMF, which estimates a fall in GDP of 3.8% in 2009, and 0.7% in 2010. The OECD warns that job losses will continue to be significant, with unemployment at 18.1% this year, 19.3% in 2010 and 19% in 2011. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Chuck Norris: Thankful for Fading Freedoms

Abraham Lincoln once said, “Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves.”

But what if those who restrict our freedoms are the very people who are in charge of securing them?

Over just the last year, Washington has worked double-time to limit your liberties, despite such reductions being cloaked under the guise of governmental progress.

First and foremost, Washington has reduced our freedoms and restricted our future by heaping upon our posterity astronomical amounts of debt, trying to jump-start the credit circus in our economy. Despite borrowing $787 billion from China to stimulate the economy with a promise to cap unemployment at 8 percent, unemployment has climbed to 10.2 percent and shows no sign of decreasing. And right now a record 14 percent of homeowners are either in foreclosure or behind at least one mortgage payment.

(Thanks to Ron Paul and others, last Thursday a House panel decided to audit the Federal Reserve, finally providing some accountability to this financial runaway train that doles out billions to whomever it pleases. Even with this mandatory audit, however, the Fed’s monetary policy deliberations will still need to be reined in. I recommend two insightful and strategic books toward that goal: Ron Paul’s “End the Fed” and Vox Day’s “The Return of the Great Depression.”)

Because of all their excessive spending, bailouts and borrowing, Washington has further restricted our financial freedoms by decreasing the value of the dollar. Since just March 2009, the U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the dollar against other major currencies, plunged more than 15 percent, making U.S. stocks also cheaper for foreign investors.

Washington is also reducing our medical choices or freedoms by mandating a government option upon all of us.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: Whose Side Are They on?

An unsettling question has begun to nag as Team Obama’s conduct of security policy becomes ever more inconsistent with common sense — and, at least in some cases, manifestly at odds with our national interests: Whose side are they on?

Consider the following illustrative examples of such troubling behavior:

The Obama administration has done everything possible to obscure the true nature of the jihadist attack perpetrated at Fort Hood, Texas earlier this month. Unfortunately, it may not be merely complicating the prosecution of the alleged perpetrator, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan. For instance, terrorism expert Steve Emerson has warned that, by charging Hasan only with murder rather than terrorist acts, the Justice Department is denying investigators tools available to law enforcement under the counter-terrorism Patriot Act…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Lawyer: Hasan ‘Has No Sensation’ Below Chest

Suspect in Fort Hood massacre has received letters, cards at Texas hospital

BELTON, Texas — Maj. Nidal M. Hasan, the Army psychiatrist charged with killing 13 people at Fort Hood, Tex., is paralyzed from the chest down and doctors believe his paralysis will be permanent, Hasan’s lawyer said Sunday.

“He has no sensation from the nipple area down,” Hasan’s civilian attorney, John P. Galligan, said in a telephone interview.

During a closed-door hearing in Hasan’s hospital room on Saturday that lasted about an hour, a magistrate ruled that Hasan be confined until his military trial, Galligan said.

“In the middle of this hearing, he started to nod off and go to sleep,” Galligan said. “When I’ve spoken with him, he’s coherent, but your ability to have any meaningful exchange with him is limited in time and subject.”

Hasan has been recovering from gunshot wounds at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, where he is in intensive care. He has been receiving letters and cards, which the government has been copying before delivering, Galligan said. Now under pre-trial confinement, Hasan faces greater restrictions on visitors and the military can transfer him to another hospital or jail, he said.

Hasan will remain in confinement until his court-martial, a date for which has not been set. He has been charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder in the Nov. 5 massacre, but Galligan said he “fully anticipates” that military prosecutors might file additional charges.

[Return to headlines]



Obama’s Nice Guy Act Gets Him Nowhere on the World Stage

By Gabor Steingart

US President Barack Obama is back in the US after an Asian trip that produced few results.

When he entered office, US President Barack Obama promised to inject US foreign policy with a new tone of respect and diplomacy. His recent trip to Asia, however, showed that it’s not working. A shift to Bush-style bluntness may be coming.

There were only a few hours left before Air Force One was scheduled to depart for the flight home. US President Barack Obama trip through Asia had already seen him travel 24,000 kilometers, sit through a dozen state banquets, climb the Great Wall of China and shake hands with Korean children. It was high time to take stock of the trip.

Barack Obama looked tired on Thursday, as he stood in the Blue House in Seoul, the official residence of the South Korean president. He also seemed irritable and even slightly forlorn. The CNN cameras had already been set up. But then Obama decided not to play along, and not to answer the question he had already been asked several times on his trip: what did he plan to take home with him? Instead, he simply said “thank you, guys,” and disappeared. David Axelrod, senior advisor to the president, fielded the journalists’ questions in the hallway of the Blue House instead, telling them that the public’s expectations had been “too high.”

The mood in Obama’s foreign policy team is tense following an extended Asia trip that produced no palpable results. The “first Pacific president,” as Obama called himself, came as a friend and returned as a stranger. The Asians smiled but made no concessions.

Lost Some Stature

Upon taking office, Obama said that he wanted to listen to the world, promising respect instead of arrogance. But Obama’s currency isn’t as strong as he had believed. Everyone wants respect, but hardly anyone is willing to pay for it. Interests, not emotions, dominate the world of realpolitik. The Asia trip revealed the limits of Washington’s new foreign policy: Although Obama did not lose face in China and Japan, he did appear to have lost some of his initial stature.

In Tokyo, the new center-left government even pulled out of its participation in a mission which saw the Japanese navy refueling US warships in the Indian Ocean as part of the Afghanistan campaign. In Beijing, Obama failed to achieve any important concessions whatsoever. There will be no binding commitments from China to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. A revaluation of the Chinese currency, which is kept artificially weak, has been postponed. Sanctions against Iran? Not a chance. Nuclear disarmament? Not an issue for the Chinese.

The White House did not even stand up for itself when it came to the question of human rights in China. The president, who had said only a few days earlier that freedom of expression is a universal right, was coerced into attending a joint press conference with Chinese President Hu Jintao, at which questions were forbidden. Former US President George W. Bush had always managed to avoid such press conferences.

Relatively Unsuccessful

A look back in time reveals the differences. When former President Bill Clinton went to China in June 1998, Beijing wanted to impress the Americans. A press conference in the Great Hall of the People, broadcast on television as a 70-minute live discussion, became a sensation the world over. Clinton mentioned the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre, when the government used tanks against protestors. But then President Jiang Zemin defended the tough approach taken by the Chinese Communists. At the end of the exchange, the Chinese president praised the debate and said: “I believe this is democracy!”

Obama visited a new China, an economic power that is now making its own demands. America should clean up its government finances, and the weak dollar is unacceptable, the head of the Chinese banking authority said, just as Obama’s plane was about to land.

Obama’s new foreign policy has also been relatively unsuccessful elsewhere, with even friends like Israel leaving him high and dry. For the government of Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, peace is only conceivable under its terms. Netanyahu has rejected Obama’s call for a complete moratorium on the construction of settlements. As a result, Obama has nothing to offer the Palestinians and the Syrians. “We thought we had some leverage,” says Martin Indyk, a former ambassador to Israel under the Clinton administration and now an advisor to Obama. “But that proved to be an illusion.”

Even the president seems to have lost his faith in a genial foreign policy. The approach that was being used in Afghanistan this spring, with its strong emphasis on civilian reconstruction, is already being changed. “We’re searching for an exit strategy,” said a staff member with the National Security Council on the sidelines of the Asia trip.

‘A Lot Like Jimmy Carter’

An end to diplomacy is also taking shape in Washington’s policy toward Tehran. It is now up to Iran, Obama said, to convince the world that its nuclear power is peaceful. While in Asia, Obama mentioned “consequences” unless it followed his advice. This puts the president, in his tenth month in office, where Bush began — with threats. “Time is running out,” Obama said in Korea. It was the same phrase Bush used against former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, shortly before he sent in the bombers.

There are many indications that the man in charge at the White House will take a tougher stance in the future. Obama’s advisors fear a comparison with former Democratic President Jimmy Carter, even more than with Bush. Prominent Republicans have already tried to liken Obama to the humanitarian from Georgia, who lost in his bid to win a second term, because voters felt that he was too soft. “Carter tried weakness and the world got tougher and tougher because the predators, the aggressors, the anti-Americans, the dictators, when they sense weakness, they all start pushing ahead,” Newt Gingrich, the former Republican speaker in the House of Representatives, recently said. And then he added: “This does look a lot like Jimmy Carter.”

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

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



Obama to Present His Own Climate Plan

Barack Obama ready to offer target for cutting greenhouse gas emissions

Obama administration officials have been consulting international negotiators and key players on Capitol Hill about signing up to a provisional target in Copenhagen

President Barack Obama is considering setting a provisional target for cutting America’s huge greenhouse gas emissions, removing the greatest single obstacle to a landmark global agreement to fight climate change.

The Observer has learnt that administration officials have been consulting international negotiators and key players on Capitol Hill about signing up to a provisional target at the UN global warming summit in Copenhagen, now less than three weeks away.

Todd Stern, the state department climate change envoy, said the administration recognised that America had to come forward with a target for cutting its emissions. The US, which with China is responsible for 40% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions, is the only major developed nation yet to table an offer.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Rape Victim’s Parents Charged With Abuse

(CNN) — The parents of an 8-year-old Liberian girl who was allegedly sexually assaulted by four boys in July were arrested Friday on child abuse charges, according to Arizona police.

The father, 59, and mother, 47, were arrested Friday in Phoenix on seven counts of child abuse, said police spokesman Sgt. Andy Hill. Police were waiting for them at their home after the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office issued the warrants.

The names of the parents have been withheld by CNN to avoid identifying the daughter, who is an alleged rape victim.

The child abuse investigation was based on documented incidents from the Phoenix Police Department and numerous referrals to Arizona Child Protective Services dating to 2005.

Police said the parents, refugees from the West African nation, used sticks, wires and their fists to hit their young daughter.

Witnesses told CNN affiliate KTVK that the parents left their daughter wandering their apartment complex alone at night, begging for food.

See KTVK’s coverage

Details of the girl’s assault last summer shocked the nation. She was allegedly lured to a storage shed, pinned down and gang-raped by four boys, none of them older than 14.

The parents said they felt they had been shamed by their child and blamed her for being victimized. As a result, the girl was taken from her home and placed in state custody.

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf said at the time that the parents’ reaction was wrong and that they needed counseling.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Terror Charges Unsealed in Minneapolis Against 8 Somalis

Earlier I reported that the FBI was holding a press conference today about the missing Somali (former refugee) case.* Thanks to a friend from Tennessee, below is the press release which I am posting in its entirety so we have it handy for future reference.

Terror Charges Unsealed in Minneapolis Against Eight Men, Justice Department Announces

WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The Justice Department announced that terrorism charges have been unsealed today in the District of Minnesota against eight defendants. According to the charging documents, the offenses include providing financial support to those who traveled to Somalia to fight on behalf of al-Shabaab, a designated foreign terrorist organization; attending terrorist training camps operated by al-Shabaab; and fighting on behalf of al-Shabaab.

Thus far, 14 defendants have been charged in the District of Minnesota through indictments or criminal complaints that have been unsealed and brought in connection with an ongoing investigation into the recruitment of persons from U.S. communities to train with or fight on behalf of extremist groups in Somalia. Four of these defendants have previously pleaded guilty and await sentencing.

The charges were announced today by David Kris, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; B. Todd Jones, U.S. Attorney for the District of Minneapolis; and Ralph S. Boelter, Special Agent in Charge of the Minneapolis field office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation…

           — Hat tip: RRW [Return to headlines]



We’ve Made Muslims Our Guardians

Muslims aren’t just officers in the U.S. armed forces, in which position no one reports them when they openly support jihad terrorism, a failure to act that leaves them at liberty to commit mass murder against U.S. soldiers. Muslims are installed in the highest level of our national security apparatus. As reported at Atlas Shrugs, Arif Alikhan, a U.S. born son of Pakistani immigrants, was appointed last June as assistant secretary of the Homeland Security Department, to the cheers of the radical Muslim organization CAIR. In his previous position, as a deputy mayor of Los Angeles in charge of public safety, Alikhan was instrumental in stopping a Muslim “mapping” plan that had been put in place by the Los Angeles Police Department.

Under liberalism, as soon as the society recognizes the existence of a non-Western enemy and begins to oppose him, as happened after the 9/11 attack, the society simultaneously begins reaching out to that non-Western enemy more than it has ever done before, in order to show that it is not bigoted against him. Thus the more dangerous the non-Western enemy becomes, and the more measures that are put in place against him, the greater the compensatory gestures toward that enemy that must also be put in place. The more of a threat he is, and the more we fight him, the more we must empower him.

It is useless to keep criticizing our suicidally liberal society in the hopes that it will change direction on its own. The liberalism is too deeply embedded, in every institution and in the minds of the elite and the people, for that to happen. Short of some catastrophic event, or a collapse of our economic system, or our surrender to a non-Western enemy, liberal society will not change. Liberal society is doomed, along with the liberal belief system that dooms it. But until that doom occurs, the belief system will remain in place. What is needed is a new, organized voice that stands outside the existing mainstream society, challenges its liberal presuppositions, shows their suicidal nature, and offers a radically different course.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Britain Begins Iraq War Inquiry

LONDON — AN INDEPENDENT inquiry into Britain’s role in the war in Iraq begins public hearings on Tuesday that will culminate in the eagerly-awaited testimony from former prime minister Tony Blair.

Military chiefs, diplomats, ministers and senior officials will all be called before the five-member committee as it looks into what lessons can be learned from the controversial war. The inquiry committee’s chairman, former civil servant John Chilcot, said on Monday he was confident of producing a ‘full and insightful’ account of the decision-making process which took Britain into the conflict.

John Scarlett, the former head of foreign intelligence service MI6, and one-time ambassadors to the United States, Christopher Meyer, and to the United Nations, Jeremy Greenstock, will be among the first to give evidence.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



EU Seeks to End Discrimination Exemptions for UK’s Religious Employers

The European Commission has called on the UK to end exemptions to equality laws that allow religious employers to discriminate on the grounds of sexual orientation.

The European Commission sent a “reasoned opinion” to the UK on Friday for “incorrectly implementing” EU rules prohibiting discrimination based on religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation in employment or occupation.

The reasoned opinion states that the Government’s “exceptions to the principle of non-discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation for religious employers are broader than that permitted by the directive”.

The UK Government permits exemptions for employers who could not conscionably employ homosexuals because of their religious convictions. The intervention means that anti-discrimination will have to be redrafted to ensure that churches and other religious bodies fall in line with all aspects of equality laws.

“Tackling all forms of discrimination — especially at work — has been a priority for this Commission and for me personally. Our legal action has led to better protection against discrimination in workplaces across the EU,” said Equal Opportunities Commissioner Vladimír Špidla.

“We call on the UK Government to make the necessary changes to its anti-discrimination legislation as soon as possible so as to fully comply with the EU rules. In this context, we welcome the proposed Equality Bill and hope that it will come into force quickly.”

Human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell said the ruling was a “significant victory” for gay equality and a “serious setback” for religious employers, according to the Guardian.

Christian charity Care voiced concern over the intervention: “If evangelical churches cannot be sure that they can employ practising evangelicals with respect to sexual ethics, how will they be able to continue?”

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



Greece Tests the Limit of Sovereign Debt as it Grinds Towards Slump

Greece is disturbingly close to a debt compound spiral. It is the first developed country on either side of the Atlantic to push unfunded welfare largesse to the limits of market tolerance.

Euro membership blocks every plausible way out of the crisis, other than EU beggary. This is what happens when a facile political elite signs up to a currency union for reasons of prestige or to snatch windfall gains without understanding the terms of its Faustian contract.

When the European Central Bank’s Jean-Claude Trichet said last week that certain sinners on the edges of the eurozone were “very close to losing their credibility”, everybody knew he meant Greece.

The interest spread between 10-year Greek bonds and German bunds has jumped to 178 basis points. Greek debt has decoupled from Italian debt. Athens can no longer hide behind others in EMU’s soft South.

“As far as the bond vigilantes are concerned, the Bat-Signal is up for Greece,” said Francesco Garzarelli in a Goldman Sachs client note, Tremors at the EMU Periphery.

The newly-elected Hellenic Socialists (PASOK) of George Papandreou confess that the budget deficit will be more than 12pc of GDP this year, four times the original claim of the last lot. After campaigning on extra spending, it will have to do the exact opposite. “We need to save the country from bankruptcy,” he said.

Good luck. Communist-led shipyard workers have already clashed violently with police. Some 200 anarchists were arrested in Athens last week after they torched streets of cars in a tear gas battle.

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



Harnessing the Power of Salt, Norway Tries Osmotic Power

OSLO — After wind, sun, currents and tides, a company is preparing to make clean electricity by harnessing another natural phenomenon, the energy-unleashing encounter of freshwater and seawater.

Taking a step further in the planet’s hunt for clean power, Norway is to unveil on Tuesday the world’s first prototype of an osmotic power plant on the banks of the Oslo fjord.

The project is small-scale but could prove the great potential of osmotic energy.

“It is a form of renewable energy which, unlike solar or wind power, produces a predictable and stable amount of energy regardless of the weather,” explained Stein Erik Skilhagen, in charge of the project at state-owned Statkraft, which specialises in renewable energies.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Herman Van Rompuy: Europe’s First President to Push for ‘Euro Tax’

Herman Van Rompuy, Europe’s first president, is to join forces with the European Commission to push for sweeping new tax raising powers for Brussels.

Within days of taking office in January, the former Belgian prime minister will put his weight behind controversial proposals already floated by the commission’s head, José Manuel Barroso, for a new “Euro tax”.

He will add credence to Mr Barroso’s plans, to be formally tabled in the New Year, by arguing for a Euro-version of a “Tobin Tax” — a levy on financial transactions already floated by Gordon Brown as a solution to the international banking crisis. It would result in a stream of income direct to Brussels coffers, funding budgets that critics say are already rife with waste and overspending.

Mr Van Rompuy, 62, who was appointed to the newly-created £320,000-a-year post at last week’s special EU summit, set out his stall on direct Euro-taxes during a private speech at a recent meeting of the Bilderberg group of top politicians, bankers and businessmen. The group officially meets in secret, but when selected details of his remarks leaked out, his office was forced to issue a public statement on his behalf.

“The financing of the welfare state, irrespective of the social reform we implement, will require new resources,” he said. “The possibility of financial levies at European level needs to be seriously reviewed.”

Mr Barroso, whose commission acts as the European Union’s executive arm and civil service, has set out alternative plans for a Euro tax that would involve Brussels taking directly a fixed percentage of VAT and fuel duties. While these taxes already help to fund EU spending — set at £121 billion next year — they are currently gathered by the treasuries of individual nation states, from which varying sums are paid into EU coffers.

A new Euro tax could appear on all shopping and petrol station receipts, showing the amount of VAT or fuel duty creamed off directly to Brussels. Supporters say it would take a fixed proportion of the existing tax revenue rather than increase it overall, and make the cost to taxpayers of running the EU more transparent. Critics argue this could backfire by increasing anti-Brussels sentiment.

Mr Van Rompuy has not set out in detail exactly which tax raising mechanisms he favours most, but after the Bilderberg meeting his spokesman said he would look favourably on either green taxes or a version of the Tobin Tax, originally proposed in 1972 by the US economist James Tobin as a tax on currency speculation.

Mr Brown floated this earlier this month as a way of financing future bail outs of the banking system, although he meant it for global rather than purely European purposes.

But whichever revenue-raising mechanism was used, the backing of two of Europe’s most senior apparatchiks for the idea in principle will give it extra momentum.

Opponents of the idea could also underestimate Mr Van Rompuy’s determination to get his own way. Ostensibly chosen for his new job because of his skill as a consensus-builder, he is also known as a skilled and ruthless political operator, who is happy to play rough as well as smooth. Last year he ordered the locks to be changed on a chamber in the Belgian parliament in order to prevent deputies holding a politically disruptive debate. According to Belgian newspaper De Morgen, van Rompuy told colleagues a few weeks ago that to achieve a top EU function you must “not ask for high office, but become a grey mouse, and offers will come.”

Mr Barroso, meanwhile, has just been reappointed to his post by member states for a second five year term, freeing him to push his tax agenda in bolder fashion than before. Any move towards Euro taxes, however, will encounter bitter opposition from British Conservatives.

“Any kind of harmonised tax system will remove control over our national tax systems,” said Timothy Kirkhope, leader of the Britain’s Conservative MEPs. “Competition in Europe depends on member states being allowed to have competitive tax regimes.”

In opposing any Euro-tax plans, the Tories will find an unlikely ally in Mr Van Rompuy’s sister Christine, 54, a left-wing nurse who joined the Marxist Belgian Workers’ Party after witnessing the Belgian government’s privatisation of the health service. She is now one of her brother’s staunchest political critics, and the brochure used by her party features a picture of her brother dressed as a clown.

“I disagree with my brother’s ideas for a green tax,” she said. “Any new taxes would be paid by the poor. We need to tax the rich.”

[Return to headlines]



Italy: New Book Foretells North’s Secession

Milan, 20 Nov. (AKI) — A new book which envisages the north of Italy seceding from the “thieving” south has been selling well in the country’s northeast. The book entitled, ‘Italian Brothers?’, canvasses the potential of the northern Veneto and Lombardy regions declaring independence after Italy’s regional elections next year.

Buoyed by strong gains in the regional elections, the book foresees the Northern League failing to back the government led by Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s ruling conservative People of Freedom party in a confidence vote, bringing it down.

A ‘national unity’ government is then formed and led by economist and former European Union competition commissioner Mario Monti as prime minister.

Despite initial promises of financial rigour, the new government cancels the debts of the southern cities of Naples, Taranto, Reggio Calabria and Palermo.

In the book, Italy’s current agriculture minister, Luca Zaia (photo) from the anti-immigrant Northern League party is elected governor of the northeastern Veneto region.

He announces the region will withhold all taxes collected by the central Italian government and that 700 new workers will be hired, while dissolving the regional parliament and calling fresh elections.

Shortly afterwards, a soccer match between the Sicilian city of Catania and the northern city of Veneto’s Chievo team, a dodgy penalty sparks violence in which six Chievo fans are killed.

The fans’ deaths and funerals stoke strong ‘nationalist’ emotions in the surrounding Veneto region and the momentum for independence becomes unstoppable.

Fresh regional elections are held and Zaia wins a landslide victory taking 74 percent of the vote.

Zaia issues a new constitution and cuts taxes to 35 percent.

The regional government raises five million euros in a matter of days via regional bonds underwritten by local banks and the Veneto region’s expropriation of Italian government property.

The neighbouring northern region of Lombardy is swept along by the momentum of Veneto’s secession and also declares independence.

In the book’s fanciful account, the north then secedes from the south.

“We wanted to highlight that such a future scenario is already a reality,” said Davide Corritore, one of the book’s authors and a centre-left opposition member of the northern city of Milan’s town council.

“Let’s not forget the independence of so-called Padania is enshrined in Article 1 of the Northern League’s statute.”

‘Padania’ is an alternative geographical name for northern Italy used by the Northern League party. It orignally referred to the Po Valley area.

The Northern League made the strongest gains of any party in Italy’s general election in April last year with 8.3 percent of votes nationwide — double its share in the 2006 election.

In the European Parliament elections in May, the party took 10.2 percent of the vote.

Corritore was formerly an advisor to former prime minister Massimo D’Alema and finance and investment director for Deutsche Bank.

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



Italy: Transsexual May Have Been ‘Silenced’

Rome, 20 Nov. (AKI) — Italian politicians have raised doubts about whether the death of a transsexual prostitute at the centre of a major sex, drugs and extortion scandal was a suicide. The Brazilian prostitute, known as Brenda, was found dead after a fire broke out at her apartment in northern Rome early Friday.

The transsexual was allegedly involved with Piero Marrazzo, who resigned as governor of the Lazio region surrounding the Italian capital, when news of their relationship broke in October.

“Evidently, someone wanted to silence her to prevent her from saying what she knew,” said Paolo Ferrero, secretary-general of Italy’s Communisty Refoundation Party.

“It is clear that not only Marrazzo frequented Via Gradoli (the address of Brenda’s apartment).

The deputy president of the centre-left Italy of Values party Fabio Evangelisti said that criminal organisations linked to government institutions could have taken part in Brenda’s death.

“It is evident that the hand of criminal organisations is behind this intrigue,” said Evangelisti. “I do not exclude the responsibility of people within government institutions or with links to them.”

The regional councillor of the Lazio region Alessio D’Amato, from the main opposition Democratic Party said that the transsexual’s death was an “obscure event, worthy of a thriller by (Swedish writer) Stieg Larsson”.

Media reports said that Brenda had suffocated from smoke inhalation and her body was not charred.

Investigators said that Brenda’s laptop computer had been submerged in water before the fire.

Questions have been raised about whether the computer was submerged to prevent it from being destroyed in the fire, or that someone wanted to destroy the contents of the computer’s hard drive.

As speculation continued about the prostitute’s fate, Italy’s interior minister Roberto Maroni on Friday declined to comment on Brenda’s death.

Meanwhile, Rome’s transsexuals said they feared for their lives after the prostitute was found dead.

Transsexuals in the area rejected claims that Brenda committed suicide.

Brenda made headlines after allegedly having more than one sexual encounter with the former governor of the Lazio region Piero Marrazzo in an extortion, sex and drugs scandal, which led to the governor’s resignation in October.

Authorities are treating the case as murder, court sources said.

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



McDonald’s to Turn Logo Green in Germany for Environment

McDonald’s in Germany has decided to colour it its famous logo sporting the golden arches green out of respect for the environment, a senior executive said on Monday.

At German branches of the US fast-food chain, the famous golden arches will be emblazoned on a green background, rather than its usual red, McDonald’s Germany vice-president Holger Beeck said.

The change will be made on all new and refitted restaurants “out of respect for the environment,” Beeck told the Financial Times Deutschland.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



MEP Clashes With Bishop Over ‘Climate Alarmism’

A controversial Conservative Euro MP has careered into a clash with a bishop over his claim that the Church of England has “abandoned religion” to preach the gospel of climate change.

Roger Helmer, Tory MEP for the East Midlands, has infuriated the Church with the accusation that it is more interested in “climate alarmism” than its traditional teachings.

The climate-change sceptic, who sparked fury recently by claiming homophobia did not exist, also questioned the Church’s political leanings. The broadside, in a local newspaper in the run-up to the Copenhagen summit, last night provoked outrage from political opponents — and the Bishop of Leicester.

The Rt Rev Tim Stevens said he was “surprised and saddened” at the attack. He also said Mr Helmer had failed to express his “extraordinary view that the earth is cooling” when he took up an invitation to debate climate change in Leicester Cathedral.

The Bishop was responding to a letter in the Leicester Mercury, in which Mr Helmer referred to the children’s writer GP Taylor’s decision to join the Catholic Church, “saying that ‘the CofE is a sinking ship that has become the spiritual arm of New Labour’“.

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



Netherlands: Former D66 Leader Coordinates Muslim Broadcasters

THE HAGUE, 21/11/09 — Former centre-left D66 leader Gerrit-Jan Wolffensperger has been appointed as chairman of Care of Islamic Broadcasting Time (SVIZ). This organisation is acting as intermediary in the conflict between the two Islamic public broadcasting organisations NMO and NIO.

Wolffensperger will head the executive of the Muslim umbrella group until 1 September 2010. That is the starting date of the new 5-year licence period for all the public broadcasters, currently more than 20 in number.

Each of the major religions has its own broadcasting organisation, but Islam has two because different Islamic groups refuse to work together. As each group does not wish the other to have Islamic broadcasting time either, SVIZ was set up in November 2007 as intermediary.

The Muslim broadcasters squandered a large portion of their 5.3 million euro annual subsidies on court cases against each other. In June, Media Minister Ronald Plasterk said they would have to make an end to their rows within six weeks, otherwise he would pull the plug on them. The solution was then found in the resignation of the entire board of the SVIZ.

Wolffensperger now has the task of trying to create a truce. He was previously chairman of public broadcaster NOS from 1998 to 2003. >From 1994 to 1997, he was the parliamentary leader of D66 in the Lower House.

Last week the FIOD-ECD fiscal fraud police arrested Frank Williams, the former director of NMO, for taking at least 600,000 euros in bribes. His son, daughter-in-law and a film producer were also arrested. Williams allegedly had the film producer, Mike K., pay him for assignments.

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



Netherlands: Holocaust Journal Published

From Dutch: The journal of Dutch Jew, Klaartje de Zwarte-Walvisch, was published this week. De Zwarte-Walvisch (32) was arrested with her husband in Amsterdam in 1943 and deported to Vught, Westerbork and then Sobibor, where she was murdered. She kept a journal of her life from her arrest and until just before she was sent to Sobibor.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Nobleman Wants to Build World’s Largest Solar Park in Bavaria

Albert Prinz of Thurn and Taxis, the German billionaire known for his car racing exploits, wants to build the world’s largest solar farm in Bavaria. The 115 million euro project could generate handsome earnings in green electricity sales for the family. First, though, they have to overcome local resistance.

One of Germany’s wealthiest families, known from the 16th to the 18th century for delivering mail, is trying its hand at delivering something new: power.

The House of Thurn and Taxis, headed by 26-year old Albert Prinz of Thurn and Taxis, wants to build the world’s largest solar energy park using farmland in the southern German state of Bavaria, according to the Financial Times Deutschland. The family plans to invest €115 million ($117 million) to build solar panels across 1.9 million square meters (20.5 million square feet) of land, equal to 280 soccer fields, in the town of Harthof near Straubing. The farm would provide up to 65 megawatts of peak power, making it the world’s largest.

“Even in the Sahara, there are no areas with topography as capable as here,” says Stefan Stehl, a representative for the family told the FT Deutschland.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Report: Danish Welfare Under Threat

A report from the Ministry of Economy and Trade says that Danish welfare is under threat due to inefficiency, a lack of ideas and the fact that Danes cost too much, adding that since 1995 only Spain and Italy have managed worse than Denmark in efficiency and productivity.

The bleak outlook for Danish welfare is part of a major analysis on Dansh productivity that the ministry is due to publish today, according to Berlingske Tidende.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Sweden Hits Out at US Ahead of Climate Summit

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS — As the UN Copenhagen climate change summit next month threatens increasingly to be a flop, the Swedish prime minister has begun laying the blame for failure at Washington’s doorstep.

In Saturday’s (21 November) edition of centre-right Swedish daily Svenska Dagbladet, premier Frederick Reinfeldt defended his work on a global climate pact while at the helm of Europe and expressed his disappointment in the new American administration.

He described a “pronounced difficulty from several sides” but then went on to salute all major global blocs other than the US and Canada.

After bountifully praising the offers on the table from Australia, Japan, South Korea, Russia, China, Indonesia and Brazil and developing nations in general, Mr Reinfeld bluntly stated that the US position is “not enough.”

“Protracted discussions of the proposed new American climate and energy legislation in Congress limit the opportunities for clear political leadership,” said the Swedish leader, whose country holds the EU’s six-month rotating presidency for a few more weeks, before handing over the reins to Spain and a new permanent EU Council president.

“We know that the proposal, should it be adopted, would lead to significant reductions of emissions by 2050. But …a lot of work is needed to live up to the ambitious promises of change.”

“Again — this is not enough. The process is too slow and the pledges made are still not binding, which is essential if we are to reach the two degree target [on limiting global temperature increases].”

He did however concede that the US is making “small steps in the right direction.”

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



The Belgianisation of Europe

To understand Mr Van Rompuy’s antagonism to such symbols and elements of sovereignty, you must understand what it means to be a Belgian politician — and I do mean ‘Belgian’ rather than Flemish, despite Mr Van Rompuy’s Flemish name.

There is no such thing as the Belgian nation. There is the Flemish nation, whose fatherland is Flanders and whose language is Dutch, and there is the Walloon nation, whose fatherland is Wallonia and whose language is French. In 1830, the big powers of the day forced the Flemings of Flanders and the Walloons of Wallonia to join together in a new, ‘non-identity’ state called Belgium.

All of which is exactly where the EU is heading. So far, democracy has been done away with. If you doubt it, consider the means used to select Mr Van Rompuy as president of the council — secret meetings controlled by the big powers. The man who emerged as president of the council of this new artificial superstate is a politician who despises the only source of democracy, the nation state.

This is the Belgianisation of Europe.

           — Hat tip: Paul Belien [Return to headlines]



UK: Children in Tears as Primary Teacher ‘Tells Them to Imagine Your Dad Had Been Killed in 9/11’

A primary school teacher has been suspended after reducing her class to tears after allegedly telling them to make up a story about their fathers dying in the 9/11 terror attacks.

Kathy Young, 29, is said to have left her seven-year-old pupils traumatised after asking them to imagine they had been involved in the World Trade Centre atrocity.

An investigation has now been launched after furious parents called for the teacher to be sacked from Oxclose Village Primary School, Washington, Tyne and Wear.

[…]

But a family member, who asked not to be named, told the Daily Telegraph that the claims were wide of the mark.

‘No children even seemed “upset” or “left the lesson in tears” or seemed “traumatised”,” the relative said.

‘Kathy never mentioned the alleged phrase, “dead dad”, but rather asked the children to imagine many reasons why they may have never met their fathers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Four Britons Linked to ‘Violent Jihad’ Plot Are Charged With Terror Offences

Three were charged with assisting others to take part in violent jihad while a fourth is charged with planning to take part in terrorist activity himself.

[…]

Muslim cleric Shaykh Asif Hussain Farooqui, from Bolton, was yesterday released without charge and thanked those who had called for his freedom.

Up to 2,000 people signed online petitions which called for the release of the scholar who is a member of the Al Rahman Mosque in Daubhill.

Campaigners expressed their ‘outrage’ that the ‘well-respected figure’ in the Muslim community in Bolton had been detained. Some protested outside Greater Manchester Police’s headquarters hours before he was released.

Shaykh Farooqui, who is not related to any of the charged men, was arrested at his home in Deane.

In a statement, he thanked his legal team, police custody staff — who he said respected his religion — and those who prayed and fasted for his ‘speedy release’.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Upcoming Swiss Vote Over Minarets Raises Concerns

A scheduled referendum in Switzerland on Nov. 29 over whether to allow the construction of minarets triggered by an initiative promoted by the far-right Swiss People’s Party has raised eyebrows in predominantly Muslim Turkey.

Supporters of the ban argue that the minarets are a symbol of political and religious claims to power, not just a religious sign, while those who oppose the ban say the initiative goes against freedom of religion and potentially will create tension and polarization in Swiss society.

Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman, Directorate of Religion Affairs Deputy Chairman Mehmet Görmez said: “It is sad to see religious precepts taken to referendum. In the case of a negative result, I am extremely concerned that this will spread across Europe. Besides, I don’t think this will serve the advancement of peace.” According to government data, less than 15 percent of Swiss Muslims actively practice their faith. Indeed, only four of the roughly 150 mosques in Switzerland have minarets.

Laws against noise pollution forbid mosques from using minarets to hold speakers for the call to prayer. Yet the Swiss government has tried to distance itself from the initiative, fearing that a clash over Muslim minority rights may have a negative impact on business and political interests for the country.

Stressing that the Swiss laws guaranteeing religious freedoms and human rights are being violated by this decision to hold a referendum, Ahmet Gökhan Sariçam, deputy chairman of Turkey’s parliamentary Commission on Human Rights, told Sunday’s Zaman that their commission will take action to make sure that any human rights violations caused by the results of the referendum will not serve as precedents.

In an interview with Sunday’s Zaman, Ahmet Faruk Ünsal, chair of the Association for Human Rights and Solidarity with the Oppressed (MAZLUMDER), said, “Discussing the acquired rights in a referendum contrary to their ontological character will promote hatred and build enmity and bellicosity.” Akin Birdal, a member of the parliamentary Commission on Human Rights, also told Sunday’s Zaman that the Swiss referendum is no different than holding a plebiscite over the mother tongue of a group.

Recalling that the Sept. 11 attacks have contributed to the emergence of discussions in Europe on the visibility and publicizing of Islamic symbols, Görmez underlined that the impact of these discussions was best observed in the pressure and restrictions against the construction of mosques in Germany, France, Italy, Belgium and Switzerland. Noting that it took a long time for Muslims in Germany to get approval to construct a mosque in Munich because of political wrangling, Görmez further said: “The construction of a mosque in Cologne has been a matter of debate for years. Demonstrations were held to protest the initiation of the construction of this mosque last week; everybody knows what a placard depicting a crossed mosque image means in Europe.”

Noting that the construction of mosques is a part of the right to religious freedom, Görmez said mosques and places reserved for worship serve as shelters for Muslim people in Europe. Görmez, who underlined that Muslims spend their weekends at these places, where they pray and socialize, further noted that mosques are extremely important for the minorities in their attempts to coexist with other communities in peace.

Stressing that the discussion of religious values and precepts in a referendum is not a good sign, Görmez referred to the probable repercussions of a negative vote; he noted that in such a case, Swiss Muslims may develop negative feelings about their neighbors who voted against the construction of minarets.

Minarets hold no non-religious meanings

Görmez noted that limiting the debate for the construction of minarets to a simple referendum creates a double standard, considering that special places are reserved for religious observance for many different religions, even in workplaces. He also pointed out that the trend against Muslim mosques and prayer rooms is spreading to other countries in Europe, a development he calls alarming. “There have been some comments on minarets. For instance, a far-right party made a statement in Vienna. They argued that mosques are political places rather than venues reserved for prayers. It was regrettable to witness a political party make such a grave statement over the religious buildings and places of an old religion.”

Recalling that some argue that minarets are linked to violence, Görmez drew attention to the seriousness of the distribution of pamphlets and fliers claiming that the minarets represent violence. Stressing that such allegations offended Muslims, Görmez said: “The minarets have a single meaning. This symbolic meaning is the Islamic belief and faith referring to the unity of God.” Görmez further recalled that the belief in the unity of God is a prerequisite for being a Muslim.

Noting that it would be unfair to assign non-religious symbolism to minarets, which are integral parts of mosques, Görmez said: “To whoever attributes violent and misleading meanings and symbols to minarets and makes improper comments based on these meanings, Muslims will see this not only as a misunderstanding but also as a distortion of the facts.”

Görmez further noted that Muslims have a fundamental right to construct mosques and minarets on their registered properties and land in compliance with local building laws, just as other religious groups have. “Wherever they live and reside, Muslims should have the right to construct their mosques and to establish places where they are able to perform and observe their prayers” he added.

“It is sad to see that this basic right is being violated under pressure from dominant groups in the country,” Görmez said, adding that he believes reason and wisdom will prevail in Switzerland. “Swiss skies are vast enough to host synagogues, steeples, churches, mosques and minarets” he said.

Noting that he is still hopeful that the Swiss people will extend their support for religious freedom, Görmez stressed that a positive outcome of the referendum, confirming the rights of Muslims by the Swiss people, will serve as a good model for other countries.

Vote is no different than discussing education in the mother tongue

Member of parliamentary Commission on Human Rights Akin Birdal: Issues relating to religious freedom are not eligible for referenda. If they are, it would be no different than holding a referendum to discuss the right to education in one’s mother tongue. This is unacceptable in modern democracies; to the contrary, these rights are protected. Undoubtedly, communities and individuals are not pleased with the obstacles to the enjoyment of their religious freedoms and rights. Their stance towards those who introduce the restrictions will inevitably change. Islamic communities will be the first to change their attitudes because some groups will no longer be tolerant due to this practice. Some concerns will be raised over the fate of a peaceful environment. Other religious minorities will be worried that the intolerance affecting Muslims may undermine their rights as well.

***

Many Swiss politicians are aware of serious mistake

Member of parliamentary Commission on Human Rights Ahmet Gökhan Sariçam: By misinterpreting Swiss law, extremists have made several advancements in their bid to violate human rights. Under Swiss law, an issue may be brought to a national referendum if a certain number of signatures are collected in a petition drive. A basic fact is that a fundamental rights issue may not become the subject of a referendum. Many Swiss politicians are aware of this grave mistake and stress that a referendum is not needed on the issue of acquired rights. Unfortunately, we are observing attempts in many European countries to introduce restrictions against liberties via manipulation. If a fellow believer of a religion other than Christianity makes a request for the free enjoyment of his faith, such a request is not considered a humane demand. If it is really necessary to clarify how a place of worship will be built this should be asked of the people who plan the construction of the building rather than the Swiss people.

***

Fundamental rights are not subject to others’ approval

Chairman of the Association of Human Rights and Solidarity for Oppressed Peoples A. Faruk Ünsal: I think that holding a referendum on fundamental rights symbolizes distrust. These rights are inherently and ontologically legitimate; holding a referendum on the enjoyment of these rights is not acceptable; is it possible to hold a referendum as to whether use of a native language in a certain part of Switzerland should be permitted? Legitimization of the use of a mother tongue is inherent and ontological; it does not require the consent and approval of others.

The UN seeks to establish mechanisms that will ensure mutual understanding between people via the introduction of a project called the Alliance of Civilizations. A group of extremists in Switzerland seek to undermine the values of other civilizations by relying on the use of the state apparatus. They are exploiting the institution of the referendum to wield state power effectively.

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



Van Rompuy: Man Without a Country

If you reckon you can take comfort in the fact that Herman Van Rompuy, the new president of the European Council, has the look and manner of an aging and dozy rodent, forget about it. His call for the imposition of EU taxes is just the first of his European policies that are going to mean pain for this country.

The man is no bumbler, despite the international joke of being a Belgian prime minister who rose to office without being elected — he was merely appointed last year by the king. Those in Brussels who know Mr Van Rompuy tell me he is a manipulator. As Paul Belien, the editor of The Brussels Journal, wrote in this paper on Saturday, Mr Van Rompuy is the ‘shrewd master of the shabby compromise.’ Dr Belien has known Mr Van Rompuy since the mid-Eighties, and he knows the new council president has just one political ideal: ‘The creation of a federal superstate, destroying national identities across Europe.’

He is, in short, exactly the man to help José Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission, throw the switches on all the new centralizing powers the European institutions now have thanks to the Lisbon Treaty. Take Mr Van Rompuy’s call for taxes to be imposed on all of us directly by the EU. He was not just thinking aloud at a private dinner. His call was not just the Belgian prime minister running a flag up a pole to see if anyone salutes. His call was for the EU to go ahead and implement the new tax powers it will have when Lisbon comes into force next month.

Article 311 of the section of Lisbon called the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union covers this. Not that our Government much advertised Article 311 during the referendum. Nor indeed much advertised the changes Lisbon makes to EU control over our level of corporation tax. Mr Van Rompuy’s established policy is to drive always towards greater and greater ‘harmonisation’ — that is, equalization — of all taxes across the 27 member states. Lisbon now clears the path for him and other ardent centralisers to ‘harmonise’ our low rate of corporation tax out of existence.

The ground for the change is already being prepared by Mr Barroso and the former European Commissioner for the single market, Mario Monti. Mr Barroso has commissioned Mr Monti to write a study of the single market. It is no surprise to learn that the study will be nothing but an excuse for the former commissioner to showcase the ‘big idea’ he now shares with the commission president — that the EU must suppress its competitive and liberal policies in order to insure social ‘redistribution’.

How to do this? According to a recent Charlemagne column in The Economist: ‘In concrete terms, Mr Monti talks of curbing tax competition between EU countries, so that governments can pay for social policies dear to European voters even as they fix their battered public finances. This could mean agreed minimum tax rates, he suggests, notably on capital and corporate profits.’

Of course, any mention of such harmonisation always brings the same response from the Finance Department. At the weekend, the department was at it again, dismissing Mr Van Rompuy’s calls for implementation of EU-wide taxes with the usual line: ‘Taxation matters remain the responsibility of member states and there is no agreement to change that situation.’

Which is not quite right. The agreement to ‘change that situation’ is Lisbon itself. Previous treaty law only demanded that taxes in member countries must not interfere with the functioning of the market. Lisbon adds the imperative that taxes in EU member states must also avoid the ‘distortion of competition’.

Now, the cry usually goes up from euro-enthusiasts that these restrictions only apply to indirect taxation, and corporation tax is a direct tax. To which one can reply: ‘Sez who?’ Dig deeper and you will come up with the fact that the new Lisbon line about ‘distortion of competition’ opens the way for more court cases at the European Court of Justice. Such cases can outlaw ‘distorting’ tax rules, whether in relation to direct or indirect taxes.

If you want to check that analysis, the man to ask is Jens-Peter Bonde, the Danish politician who served in the European Parliament from 1979 to 2008. He served as well in the convention which drafted the European constitution. He chaired the Democracy Forum at the convention. He has edited several editions of the constitution as it turned into the Lisbon Treaty, and has created the online EU abc, a lexicon of EU terms. In 2001, Mr Bonde was named European Politician of the Year by the European Voice, the Brussels weekly newspaper which is part of the same publishing empire as the Financial Times.

I say all of that so you will understand that Mr Bonde knows his Lisbon stuff. One of his most significant notes is the line that within the Lisbon Treaty, ‘there is no clear definition of indirect taxes’.

That fits in with reports I’ve already heard coming out of the commission — that the commission plans to take to itself the power to define what is and what is not a direct tax. Just as the commission plans to harmonise the tax base for corporate taxes — although our Government insists corporate taxes are nothing to do with the EU, they are powerless to stop this harmonisation going ahead — it now appears the eurocrats will soon have the power to decide that corporation tax isn’t a direct tax after all. Whatever the commission does about the definition, the challenges in the ECJ will come. The cases will be based on assertions that Lisbon’s new line about tax and the ‘distortion of competition’ mean that Ireland can no longer be allowed to ‘distort competition’ by applying a low rate of corporation tax.

Urging on such court cases will be Mr Van Rompuy. More than anything else, he wants to see the destruction of national control over taxes. That is because his political ideal is to destroy the national sovereignty of EU member states. As Mr Bonde has said: ‘Tax policy is a symbol and an important element of national sovereignty.’

To understand Mr Van Rompuy’s antagonism to such symbols and elements of sovereignty, you must understand what it means to be a Belgian politician — and I do mean ‘Belgian’ rather than Flemish, despite Mr Van Rompuy’s Flemish name.

There is no such thing as the Belgian nation. There is the Flemish nation, whose fatherland is Flanders and whose language is Dutch, and there is the Walloon nation, whose fatherland is Wallonia and whose language is French. In 1830, the big powers of the day forced the Flemings of Flanders and the Walloons of Wallonia to join together in a new, ‘non-identity’ state called Belgium.

As Dr Belien has written in the Brussels Journal, ‘To understand Herman, one must know something about Belgium, the prototype of the EU. ‘Belgians do not like their state. They despise it. They say it represents nothing. There are no Belgian patriots, because no one is willing to die for a flag which does not represent anything. Because Belgium represents nothing, multicultural ideologues love Belgium. They say that without patriotism, there would be no wars and the world would be a better place.

‘In 1957, Belgian politicians stood at the cradle of the European Union. Their aim was to turn the whole of Europe into a Greater Belgium, so that wars between the nations of Europe would no longer be possible as there would no longer be nations, the latter all having been incorporated into an artificial superstate.’

The result of this absence of national identity is that Belgium has been a fraud since its creation. As Dr Belien says, this ‘laboratory of Europe’ lacks more than patriotism, it also lacks democracy, respect for the rule of law and political morality.

All of which is exactly where the EU is heading. So far, democracy has been done away with. If you doubt it, consider the means used to select Mr Van Rompuy as president of the council — secret meetings controlled by the big powers. The man who emerged as president of the council of this new artificial superstate is a politician who despises the only source of democracy, the nation state.

This is the Belgianisation of Europe.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Huge Crowds Attend Patriarch’s Funeral

Belgrade, 19 Nov. (AKI) — Up to 500,000 people lined Belgrade’s streets on Thursday to pay tribute to the head of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Pavle. The patriarch died on Sunday at age 95 after two years in hospital suffering from heart and lung complaints.

Pavle was the Serb spiritual leader for the past 19 years and revered by many Serbs at the “living saint”.

Mourners joined a sombre funeral procession for several kilometres, accompanying Pavle’s open coffin to St. Sava Temple, where funeral rites were performed by his likely successor, Montenegro’s Archbishop Amfilohije.

In the past four days an estimated half a million people have lined up night and day at the Saborna church to view the patriarch’s casket draped in a white, green and golden embroidered shroud.

Amfilohije said the patriarch was God’s man, whose goodness, modesty and wisdom were unmatched.

Patriarch Pavle was the head of seven million Serb Orthodox Christians during the bloody wars that followed the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia.

He witnessed the demise of communism and an increase in Serb nationalism, during which the Serb Orthodox Church became more influential.

Pavle, a respected theologian and linguist, was known for his personal humility and modesty.

His critics said, however, he lacked the energy to control the bishops, who had succumbed to nationalist rhetoric.

Pavle was a staunch opponent of Kosovo’s independence, declared by majority ethnic Albanians in February last year.

President Boris Tadic said Pavle’s death was a “personal loss”, because he often relied on his advice. He thanked Pavle for teaching Serbia “not to respond to the evil in others with our own”.

Pavle was buried in St. Archangel Mikhail monastery in the Belgrade suburb of Rakovica.

According to the rules, the church’s highest body, the Holy Sabor, has to elect a new patriarch by February.

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

Mediterranean Union


EMPA MPs Urge Action

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO — There is a need to boost the Mediterranean Union, a project in which governments appear to have lost interest. This is the task for the Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary Assembly, (EMPA) said Sergio D’Antoni, speaking as member of the finance committee. He was in Cairo today where a series of meetings took place ahead of the next plenary assembly in Amman in 2010. For example, D’Antoni asked, “why are those 230 projects launched and also financed by the Mediterranean Union now at a standstill? Have they been blocked by bureaucracy in Brussels?”. Other members of the Italian delegation in Cairo are the deputy Vice Speaker of the European Parliament, Gianni Pittella, and Antonio D’Ali, in his role of representative of the Senate of the Euro-Mediterranean Assembly. Pittella was also critical of EU institutions, especially of yesterday’s appointment of Britain’s Isabelle Ashton as Europe’s ‘foreign minister’. Countries on the southern shore of the Mediterranean are expecting “a leading role from Europe” on issues concerning the whole of the Mediterranean area and the peace process in the Middle East. “If I had today been able to present a figure such as Massimo D’Alema, we would have been able to give them more reassuring replies”. And it is the Middle East, especially, which has often paralysed the activities of the Med Union, part of the official meeting of the EMPA presidency, which has been expanded to five subject-related commissions: a resolution which should, among other things, urge the Israeli government — runs the draft up for approval this evening — to call an immediate halt to settlement activity, and reaffirm the need to set up a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders. Concern is also being expressed, again by the president’s office, over the postponement of the foreign ministers’ conference of the Med Union, which was due to take place in Istanbul over the coming days, while there is a recommendation that the Union’s secretariat, which is to be based in Barcelona, “should reach full operation in the near future”. But EMPA is also calling for a higher degree of participation in the decisions and the activities of the Secretariat, as well as a controlling and steering role in the management of public funds. EMPA would also like to have a say in the setting up of a Euromed Bank, which is intended to be a branch of the European Investment Bank, D’Antoni asks, but it should be based in a Mediterranean country. The meeting was also attended by the president of the European Parliament, Jerzy Buzek. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: FEMIP: 50 Mln to Modernise Municipalities

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOV 23 — The Facility for Euro-Mediterranean Investment and Partnership (FEMIP), the European Investment Banks (EIB) financial arm for the Mediterranean Region, has provided the Syrian Ministry of Local Administration with a 50 million euros loan, corresponding to half of the total project cost, for significantly upgrading municipal infrastructure across Syria. The proposed framework facility concerns the financing of different investment schemes in Syrian cities mainly covering the fields of urban renewal, urban traffic and transport, public tourist facilities, wastewater, treatment of liquid waste from industry and solid waste management. This multi-scheme programme is the first of its kind to be approved by the EIB for the Syrian Arab Republic. The project aims to stimulate local economic growth, an objective set out by the European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI). The project is complementary to the European Commission Municipal Administration Modernisation (MAM) programme. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Suez Canal Deepened for Large Ships

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 20 — The international water way of the Suez Canal has been deepened to allow through ships with a draft of up to 66 feet (20 meters), the head of Egypt’s Suez Canal said. The move is part of an ongoing effort to expand the canal so that the larger oil tankers, in this case up to 240,000 tons, can now use it. Previously only ships with less than a 58 foot draft could use the canal, excluding most of the world’s large oil tankers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Energy: India Urged to Invest in Egypt’s Projects

(ANSAmed) — NEW DELHI, NOVEMBER 20 — Egyptian Electricity Minister, Hassan Younis, urged Indian investors today to contribute to Egypt’s future energy plans through setting up traditional power plants. Over the past few years, Egypt has embarked upon a reform program to establish open economic markets, Younis said while meeting some investors in India. “Renewable energy tops Egypt’s priorities as we possess huge capabilities of wind and solar energy,” the minister added. He also reviewed with he Indian investors Egypt’s strategy to set up a nuclear power station with the cooperation of the IAEA and international partners. Younis arrived here on Monday on a four-day visit upon an invitation from the Indian Minister of New and Renewable Energy Farouq Abdullah. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU-Libya Cooperation Deal on Infectious Diseases

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI, NOVEMBER 20 — An agreement was signed in Tripoli to improve cooperation between the European Union and Libya in the infectious disease field, including prevention, treatment, and control. Signing the document, which represents another step forward in cooperation in the health care sector between the European institution and the North African country, was the representative of the EU Commission in Libya, Adrianus Koetsenruijter, and the director general for European Affairs of the Libyan Foreign Ministry, Ahmed El Jarud. In 2007 an initial memorandum of understanding of the EU was signed with Libya to offer medical assistance to 400 children with HIV at the Bengasi Hospital and to transform the structure into a leading HIV centre in the region. Since then, cooperation in the health care sector between the EU and Libya has progressed and in order to limit the spread of infectious diseases, the EU has implemented a prevention programme. As part of this initiative, Libya has a medical team present at the University of Liverpool. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Ben Ali, Country Bridge Between East and West

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, NOVEMBER 19 — “The union of culture, civilisation and trade between the east and the west was and will continue to be a trait of Tunisia and it will also continue the commitment to “consecrate its Maghreb, Arab, African and Mediterranean dimensions”, to strengthen its role on the international landscape. This is a portion of the speech made by the president of the republic, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, to welcome the new ambassadors of France, the United States, Jordan, Greece, the Czech Republic, Kuwait, Hungary, Ireland and Slovakia for the reception of their credentials. Referring indirectly to the controversy that, in recent days saw Tunisia defending itself against France for the incarceration of the Tunisian journalist Taoufik Ben Brik, Ben Ali wished to reaffirm that, as “Tunisia respects the positions and choices of its allies, abstaining from involvement, we ask that our allies respect our positions and choices abstaining in their turn of mixing in our affairs”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


First-Ever Conference on Arabs’ Anti-Jewish Sexual Harassment

(IsraelNN.com) A panel of experts and activists assembled at Likud headquarters in Tel Aviv Sunday, the International Day for Combating Violence against Women, to discuss one feminist topic that leftist feminists do not talk about: nationalistic sexual harassment by Arabs.

Dr. Mordechai Kedar of Bar Ilan University provided a short history of women’s objectification in Islamic culture, from the days of Mohammed to the current mass rape in Darfur. He explained that from its outset, Islam allowed “mut’ah” marriages, a form of temporary marriage for pleasure, which enables a man to marry a woman for a period of time that can be measured in hours or even minutes, solely for the purpose of his gratification. This form of marriage is still allowed among Shi’ite Muslims, he said.

Jurist and journalist Daphne Netanyahu explained to the audience, which was made up mostly but not solely of women, that feminism was developed by the Left and is the successor to communism. She said that feminism, like communism, is opposed to nationalism and it expects a Jewish woman to identify with an Arab woman who raised her son to be a terrorist more than she identifies with her own husband, father or son.

Likud Knesset Member Tzipi Hotobeli told the gathering that several months ago she was invited, as the chairman of the Knesset Committee for Advancement of Women’s Status, to visit a hostel in Jerusalem for Jewish women who had left abusive relationships with Arabs. She met a group of 20 women aged 15 to 30, and discovered to her surprise that these women had not come from “peripheral” areas but from central Israel.

She also visited a religious group in Yafo, where Arabs frequently threaten their Jewish neighbors, and learned of a growing phenomenon of Jewish girls in the central Yafo High School who are seduced by Arabs and marry into Islam.

Anat Cohen of Hevron told of a repeated pattern of sexual harassment of women in Hevron by Arabs as part of an ongoing campaign aimed at intimidation and humiliation of the Jews. She said that she had turned to the police and repeatedly demanded, in vain, that they do something about the problem. When an Arab accosts a Jewish woman and a Jewish man intervenes to protect her, the police arrest the Jew and not the Arab, she said.

Gil Ronen, who heads the Familists organization, spoke of a leftist-feminist “mafia” in academia and the press which censors all attempts to challenge its absolute authority on all matters pertaining to men, women and the relations between them. The right wing, he says, needs to take back morality, because “he who controls morality controls the country.”

Amit Barak of the growing student movement Im Tirtzu told stories similar to Cohen’s regarding Upper Nazareth — a town founded to create a Jewish presence in a predominantly Arab environment. Gradually, he said, Arabs are moving into the town and Jews are moving out. The daily threat of harassment which women face when walking down the street in Nazareth Illit is a major consideration causing many families to leave, he explained.

Attorney Tamar Har-Paz of the Zionist Women’s Forum, the group that organized the panel, said that it intends to fight for recognition by the establishment and to seek funding for its activity. One idea the group would like to advance involves the creation of neighborhood patrols to give Jewish women and men greater safety in the streets of the mixed cities.

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



Lebanon: EU Contributes to Rebuild School for Palestinians

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOV 18 — The EU delegation in Lebanon and United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) have inaugurated an EU-funded school in the Saida area. The building provides a suitable education environment for 900 palestinian students and its construction has ensured the conversion of the school from double into single shift, with increased teaching time. The construction of the school — according to the Enpi site (www.enpi-info.eu) was funded by the European Union in the context of a 15 million euros educational project aiming at enhancing and improving the quality of UNRWA’s education system to open better employment prospects for palestinian youth residing in Lebano. “Young people said Karen Abou Zayd, UNRWAs Commissioner General — are the future and we need to invest in them”. “By 2012 affirmed Ambassador Patrick Laurent, Head of the European Commission Delegation to Lebanon — thanks to our joint endeavour, no school in Saida will be operating on double-shift and more than 6,000 palestinian children across Lebanon will have a new classroom. EU’s support also includes a university scholarship programme for Palestinian students in Lebanon. The EU has approved the continuation of this scheme for three more years which will bring the amount to palestinian scholarships to 8.3 million euros. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ankara Ambivalent Toward New EU President

Turkey is relatively comfortable with Belgium’s Herman van Rompuy becoming the new European Union president. Although Rompuy has a poor reputation in Ankara due to earlier remarks against Turkey’s membership, there is little fear of a reversal in negotiations. “It is important that he has vowed to be fair and objective in regard to Turkey’s accession,” chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis says.

Belgian Prime Minsiter Herman Van Rompuy, named the new EU president. AFP photo

Ankara is not uneasy with Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy becoming the European Union’s first full-time president since he has promised to be objective in Turkey’s membership process.

Rompuy has been known to make opposition statements regarding Turkey’s EU membership bid in the past.

“It is a result of a culture of compromise and the need to keep balances in the EU. The balances between conservative and socialist circles as well as small and big countries were considered,” chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis said Friday after Britain’s EU commissioner, Catherine Ashton, was also appointed the union’s news foreign policy chief.

Both the United Kingdom and Belgium support Turkey’s EU bid, Bagis said. “They have generally taken a positive stance toward the enlargement and have also supported our membership bid,” he said in a written statement.

“As a future member of the EU, Turkey will continue to back the union’s efforts to be a global actor,” Bagis said, calling on Rompuy and Ashton to act in this regard.

“It is important that Rompuy promised to be fair and objective related to our country’s membership bid. It suits the principle of pacta sunt servanda [agreements must be kept],” Bagis said.

Foreign Ministry Spokesman Burak Özügergin expressed a similar opinion on Friday in a phone interview with the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review. “We don’t think any negative incident will take place within the forthcoming period,” he said.

“Regardless of the different opinions of EU leaders; what we pay attention to are the responsibilities in connection to the negotiation framework document,” Özügergin said. “That’s the outline Mr. Rompuy drew when he was elected.”

Turkey is happy the Lisbon Treaty has now taken effect and is full of expectations for the negotiations. “We attach a high importance to a smooth period in which the Lisbon Treaty comes into force. We are expecting developments related to Turkey,” Özügergin said.

Cengiz Aktar, an EU expert, confirmed the official view by saying: “Rompuy’s personal opinion will not affect [his remarks as EU president] as the statement he made yesterday confirmed.”

“If he insisted on his earlier remarks, he would totally have changed the foreign policy of Belgium after being elected as prime minister. But he didn’t, so there is no need to worry,” Aktar told the Daily News in a phone interview on Friday.

“Belgium is a member of the union and has always been supportive of Turkey’s EU bid. Whatever the color of the government, it’s been supportive,” Aktar said, adding that, regardless of the fact, neither Rompuy nor Ashton will be an ultimate decision-maker.

Hesitations stemming from past

Rompuy has not had a good reputation in Ankara ever since making remarks that firmly opposed Turkey’s accession to the EU. “Turkey is not a part of Europe and will never be part of Europe,” he said during a meeting held at the Belgian parliament in December 2004.

“An expansion of the EU to include Turkey cannot be considered as just another expansion, as in the past. The universal values which are in force in Europe, and which are also the fundamental values of Christianity, will lose vigor with the entry of a large Islamic country such as Turkey.”

These remarks put him on the side of French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, both of whom favor offering Turkey a privileged partnership, instead of full membership within the union.

Suat Kiniklioglu, foreign relations deputy chairman of the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, expressed his surprise with the election of a “low-profile name” for the EU presidency.

“It does not compromise with the spirit of the Lisbon Treaty, which envisages the EU to be an important actor on the international scene,” Kinikoglu told the Daily News.

“[But] we do see it as very telling that the EU opted for a man who spoke firmly against Turkish membership. It is clear that German-French duo is the dominant power in the union’s decisions.”

The newly elected Ashton is predicted to be a balancing factor under Rompuy’s presidency. “She is not well experienced in foreign policy, but is from a country that always has supported Turkey’s bid. She will be leading the union’s foreign affairs and I find her assignment positive regarding membership negotiations,” Kinikoglu said.

Italy reacts at decision to remove Roman law class

Roman law, which has been a core requirement course for Turkish law students, will no longer be mandatory after a decision from the Higher Education Board, or, YÖK. The lessons will continue to be optional, however.

The Italian Embassy in Ankara criticized the decision and called for a revision in a written statement on Friday. “The Italian Embassy has regretfully learned in surprise that Roman law has been removed as a mandatory lesson in law departments.”

“Roman law is the basis for both public and private law in Western legal science,” the statement said. “Such a decision is a harsh blow against Turkey’s image in Europe in a period when Italy is doing its best to contribute a positive impact.”

The embassy called on the officials to reconsider their decision, saying, “We really hope the decision in question will be revised.”

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



Cyprus Church Sues Turkey Over Occupied North

Cyprus’ Greek Orthodox church says it has sued Turkey for allegedly preventing worship at religious sites in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north of the divided island.

Church lawyer Simos Angelides said Monday the lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights concerns 520 churches, monasteries, chapels and cemeteries. He said the court’s past rulings hold Turkey responsible for the north because it maintains 35,000 occupation troops there.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Just Five Bullets for Each Soldier: Iraq Inquiry Leak Reveals How British Troops Went in Woefully Unprepared

British military operations in Iraq were so badly resourced that some soldiers went into battle with only five bullets each, secret documents have revealed.

Troops were put at ‘significant risk’ on the front line as they struggled with an ‘appalling’ shortage of rounds, and radios which collapsed in the heat.

The kit revelations are among the most shocking contained in hundreds of pages of classified papers leaked in advance of Sir John Chilcot’s inquiry into the Iraq war, which begins on Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Lebanon Remains Confirmed as Missing UK Journalist

Human remains found in Lebanon have been confirmed as those of a British journalist kidnapped by Palestinian militants nearly 25 years ago.

The body of Alec Collett was one of two dug up by British experts last week in Bekaa Valley, the Foreign Office said.

The freelance journalist was 64 when he was snatched at gunpoint from a car near Beirut airport in 1985.

The United Nations is to transport the body home. UK embassy staff in Beirut are assisting Mr Collett’s family.

The excavation, in a village near the town of Aita al-Foukhar in the eastern Bekaa Valley, followed a tip-off, it has been reported.

A team of nine British military and intelligence specialists carried out the search under tight police security.

Civil war

The abduction, on 25 March 1985, happened after Mr Collett had been commissioned by the UN Relief and Works Agency to write about Palestinian refugee camps.

It came at the height of the 1975-1990 civil war, when dozens of foreigners were kidnapped.

Mr Collett’s driver, an Austrian national, was released shortly after, but Mr Collett remained missing.

The following year, a militant Palestinian group — the Abu Nidal organisation — claimed to have killed him in retaliation for US air raids on Libya.

A video showing the hanging of a hooded figure said to be Mr Collett was released, but the victim was never officially identified.

Several searches for Mr Collett followed but failed to turn up his body or clues to his whereabouts.

Every year UN staff remember Mr Collett during a day of solidarity for detained and missing humanitarian workers at the organisation’s headquarters in New York.

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]



Saudi Prince Warns Against Disruptions to Hajj

Saudi Arabia’s interior minister said Sunday the kingdom hopes not to have to “resort to force” to maintain security for the hajj, in a reference to worries Iranian pilgrims may demonstrate.

“We hope we will not be obliged to resort to force,” Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz said when asked about recent calls by Iranian figures for their pilgrims to protest against the United States and Israel while in Mecca.

“It is not permitted to undertake any actions which are not part of the ritual… and we will not permit anyone to damage the hajj or the pilgrims,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Turkey Starts to Question Early Period of Republic

Republican People’s Party (CHP) Deputy Chairman Onur Öymen’s comments on the Dersim Rebellion have led Turkey to examine the rebellions that were sparked during the early years of the republic from a different perspective.

Owing to the Kurdish initiative, the perspective has changed from one that simply blamed those who participated in the rebellions to one that questions the role of those who suppressed the rebellions. While scholars and historians concede that examining the mistakes of those who acted on behalf of the regime instead of questioning the regime itself was a correct move, they underline that opening archives is the only way to conclude the debates.

Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman, Professor Ali Arslan, a lecturer in the department of history at Istanbul University who specializes in the history of the Turkish Republic said: “It is understandable from the debates that no one has a problem with the republic or the regime today and no one is debating Atatürk. They are debating other leaders from that period. That is an indicator that we are conducting debates on solid ground. But these debates will consist of nothing but stories until the Republic Archives are opened for examination. Those archives need to be opened at once. But there are some people who are showing resistance to them being opened.”

Those who were negatively affected by the system top the list of people that find the debate sparked by Öymen’s comment very beneficial. Alevi, Kurdish and religious groups argue that the policies applied during that time must be questioned. Democratic Society Party (DTP) deputy Akin Birdal, talking to Sunday’s Zaman, explained that discussions on the Kurdish initiative in the Turkish Parliament on Nov. 13 were a turning point in the history of the republic and added that “the CHP’s real intentions and the model of Turkey it envisioned was exposed during that meeting. It turned into a confession of the views that were hidden by that mentality until now. They were virtually caught red-handed. Turkey saw what that mentality has done to the country. A major democratic reflex manifested after this event. The retributive and oppressive mentality started to be condemned. The authoritarian muscle against human rights, democracy and the culture of coexistence started to decay. It was like a crystal shattering into pieces. The continuation of the debate in this way will benefit Turkey.”

But there are some people who believe that raking the past up will not benefit Turkey and argue that the events should be evaluated with from the perspective of the time period. Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman, Democratic Left Party (DSP) Izmir deputy Recai Birgün accepted that Öymen made a huge mistake and gaffe, but said: “I do not think this debate is right. They’ve turned it into a lynching campaign. The events should be assessed in their own context. Raking over old wounds will have no benefits for anyone. We can’t even bring to light the events that took place in 2001. It will be much harder to bring to light the events from the past. The effort to confess to our past will harm, not benefit, Turkey.”

Foreign countries realized that they could achieve their goals concerning the Ottoman Empire by aggravating ethnic differences. Christian components of the empire were the first ones mobilized to fight for independence. The emergence of 28 United Nations-registered states in the living space of the empire as of today is enough to understand how great the plan was. Many Balkan countries obtained their freedom through the scope of this plan.

Foreign states later made various promises to different ethnicities, although the ethnicities were all of the Muslim faith. The living space of the Ottoman Empire, which had territory on four continents, was limited to just the inner countryside of Anatolia. When Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who refused the plan, and his comrades decided to establish the republic with young members of the Ottoman Empire, the same forces started exerting great efforts to collapse the Ottoman left-over republic.

It is for this reason that the first years of the republic were filled with rebellions, mandatory settlement laws and incidents of bloody suppression. History books have always described those who revolted as “traitors” who cooperated with foreign powers. Everyone else was declared obscurant, reactionary or an enemy of the republic. For years the children and even the grandchildren of the people who attempted to start the rebellions were labeled “enemies of the state” and were excluded from the state administration.

With the acceleration of the European Union process, which was encouraged after the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) came to power, Turkey could no longer ignore the demands for more democracy, more freedom and more human rights. This process’s most important feature was the return to the debate on the early years of the republic. Even though opposition parties consider this debate to be a questioning of the republic’s regime, recent polls shows that the Turkish people do not have a problem with the republic and democracy, but want the mistakes made by the guardians of the republic and regime to be investigated. Historians also concede that it is proper to question not the regime itself, but those who act on behalf of the regime. But since every truth cannot always be told, those who argue that the facts should be uncovered continue to be accorded labels such as traitor, obscurant-reactionary, collaborator or imperialist.

The facts that have been exposed within the scope of the Ergenekon investigation reveal that the “armed and civilian children” of the republic that became the guardians of the regime, planned in the name of protecting the regime. The trials in Silivri also reveal the views certain powers had of the people in the name of protecting and defending the country. In fact, it seems like that outlook has not changed in 86 years. Generations changed, but the ideas of the guardians of the regime did not.

Republic was a rebellion, too

The young Turkish Republic, which was born from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire, was actually the work of a handful of Ottoman officers who resisted the imperialist powers. It was very natural for there to be reactions to this new republic because for years the neglected Anatolian lands were used by the Ottoman Empire solely as a military depot. Everyone knew that there was a group of people there that could be both manipulated and deceived. The people who worked to instill the republic’s regime and reforms in the minds of the people knew this fact as well, yet they tried to impose their ideas on the people anyway. While the people voluntarily protected their new state in the early years of the republic, they turned into regime enemies because of the worsening practices of the republic’s administrators.

What happened in the early years of the republic? Even historians can not answer this question because even though 80 years has passed, the regime’s guardians refuse to open the archives pertaining to the early years of the republic. Those who want the archives opened are declared criminals. Hence, information about the events in the early years comprises theses written in history books by official historians and the stories told by people that listened to their grandparents talk about the events of that time. But there is no opportunity to compare the two and determine which is correct. Likewise, although some foreign historians recently claimed the Soviet Union had a hand in the Dersim events, it can not be proved.

Resettlement laws provoked rebellions

Despite external actors having played a role in the breakout of the rebellions in the eastern part of Turkey, the role of the public inspectors equipped with extensive authority by the government should also be considered. The reports drafted by these inspectors led to introduction of harsh measures against the local people in the region. These reports mostly recommended the resettlement of the people. Public inspectors remained active until 1952 when the Democrat Party (DP) administration abolished the position.

The introduction of 11 resettlement laws since 1925 is sufficient to prove the eagerness of the government to disperse the local people in the region. It was interesting to note that the first resettlement bill was introduced in the aftermath of the Sheik Said insurgency and the assassination attempt against Atatürk. The local names referring to a certain ethnic identity in the region were changed to Turkish following the introduction of the bill on the adoption of new family names.

Oppression and rebellions prevalent in early years of republic

Official records note that 16 insurgencies erupted in eastern Turkey; Ismet Inönü always played the leading role in the suppression of the rebellions. The most important insurgencies include the following:

Koçgiri Rebellion: It was the first insurgency against the republican regime in 1921; Alisan Bey, the leader of the Koçgiri clan, masterminded the rebellion which erupted in Sivas and Erzincan. Atatürk attempted to change Alisan Bey’s mind by noting that the new republic actually embraced the Kurds as well. While he accepted Atatürk’s offer to become a Sivas deputy at first, Alisan Bey subsequently decided to lead a rebellion, believing that he might create an autonomous Kurdish government. The administration sought to address the insurgency by appointing its leaders to some governmental posts. However, the rebels captured and subsequently executed Maj. Halis Bey, who went to there to suppress the insurgency. Atatürk also assigned Topal Osman to repress the rebellion. Osman, who was held responsible for the murder of Trabzon deputy Ali Sükrü Bey, suppressed the rebellion in three months. Families of the rebels argued that some 4,000 rebels were killed during the entire operation; however, official records note that this figure is around 500.

Nasturi Rebellion: On Aug. 7, 1924, the Nasturis launched a movement of independence. The Nasturis were part of a community that fought against the Ottoman Empire in World War I. During the insurgency, British warplanes aided the rebels by bombing the Turkish front. The insurgency that erupted at a time when the Mosul issue was about to turn into a row between Turkey and Britain started with the murder of two Turkish soldiers. Three hundred and fifty Turkish troops, including Capt. Ihsan Nuri and lieutenants Hursit, Rasim and Tevfik joined the rebels to fight against Turkish army. The British, in addition to aiding the rebels, issued a notice asking for the operations to cease. On Sept. 26, 1926, the rebellion was broken by Turkish soldiers. The Nasturis who had to flee the country asked for the protection of the British in Iraq. Official historians barely make reference to this rebellion; the troops who survived the suppression of the rebellion also took part in the Agri Rebellion.

Sheik Said Rebellion: The Sheik Said Rebellion, which allegedly erupted because of the abolishment of caliphate, is viewed as a reactionary movement by official historians. However, the insurgency actually started with an attempt by the state gendarmerie to arrest men loyal to Sheik Said in Piran, Diyarbakir. On Feb. 13, 1925, the rebels raided Genç, Bingöl, where they took the governor and other officials hostage. In the aftermath of the attack on Diyarbakir, Atatürk replaced Ali Fethi Bey with Ismet Inönü as prime minister, who declared state of emergency in the region. Two additional military courts were established in Diyarbakir; the insurgency was suppressed on March 26; and Sheik Said was captured in Varto. Seyit Abdülkadir and 12 of his companions were arrested because of the aid they extended to the insurgency. Sheik Said and 47 of his men along with Seyit Abdülkadir with five of his companions were executed. Atatürk, who intended to initiate the transition to a multiparty political system, shut down the opposition party on the pretext that the party supported the insurgency.

Agri Rebellion: The Agri Rebellion is known for its impact on the change of the border between Turkey and Iran. This was actually a series of insurgencies that erupted in 1926, 1927 and 1930 respectively. The Kurdish groups that lost influence and power after the suppression of the Sheik Said Rebellion decided to launch a new campaign against the Turkish Republic at the Kurdish National Convention in 1927. The Celali, Horman, Cibran and Boyduran clans launched a new insurgency campaign in Mount Ararat. The military took action against the rebels on May 15, 1926; however, the Turkish troops failed.

The government initiated a new operation on Sept. 10, 1927; many rebels were killed in the operation. The rebels declared the establishment of a government on the mountain and asked for the support of the local people. The administration declared amnesty for some rebels previously sent into exile; however, the measure did not succeed. In consideration of the support for the rebels by the local people, the government decided to resettle the local residents. In 1930, the rebels declared Agri a separate state. This time the government launched aerial attacks. A deal was reached with Iran to exchange lands in an attempt to prevent the escape of the rebels onto Iranian soil in the aftermath of every attack. On Sept. 25, 1930, the insurgency was suppressed. The death toll during the operations reached 5,000.

Koçusagi Rebellion: Kör Seyit Han, the leader of the Koçusagi clan, rejected the authority of the state and launched an insurgency in Sivas and Erzincan in 1926. The government, which cooperated with the other clans in the region, initiated an operation to suppress the rebellion; the campaign started on Oct. 4, 1926, and lasted through to Dec. 1, 1926. The rebellion was suppressed and 140 insurgents were killed. Mustafa Muglali, who led the operation, was convicted of killing 33 Kurds who crossed the Turkish border.

Dersim Rebellion: Atatürk paid the utmost attention to the support of the Dersim Alevis during the foundation of the republic. The Alevis, who had experienced oppression by the Ottoman authorities, supported Atatürk’s actions and moves. In return, he recognized their right to representation in Parliament. The Alevis were particularly pleased with subsequent moves including the abolishment of the caliphate, the lifting of the religious affairs office and the introduction of a secular legal system.

The Alevis’ problems with the new republic became apparent with the eruption of the Koçgiri Rebellion. They were particularly concerned about the resettlement bills, the first of which was introduced in 1925. The Alevis parted ways with the republican regime when a law shutting down religious lodges, including those attended by Alevis, was enacted. The followers of the Alevi faith no longer had any place to perform their religious duties and rituals. The Dersim Rebellion broke out in 1937, one year after the Dersim Resettlement Bill.

The Alevis came together under the leadership of Seyit Riza to discuss the issue. All soldiers at an outpost in Dersim were killed in an attack; 20,000 troops under the command of Gen. Abdullah Alpdogan were deployed to the region to fight against 6,000 rebels. The insurgency was suppressed, and Riza and six of his supporters were executed in Elazig. Riza’s body was buried in an unknown location. Following the insurgency, the name of Dersim was changed to Tunceli. The Dersim Resettlement Bill was introduced in 1936 and remained in effect up until 1947. According to unofficial records, 40,000 were killed and 206 villages were evacuated during the insurgency. Thirty thousand families were sent to exile in other parts of Turkey.

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



Turkey: Alevis Discover Their Stockholm Syndrome With Öymen’s Remarks

Alevis put up posters showing Onur Öymen with swastikas in the background after his remarks that the Turkish army’s response to the Dersim Rebellion was an example of fighting terrorism.

Alevis, who were taken for granted as strong supporters of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), have now started to question their loyalty after remarks by the CHP’s Onur Öymen that depicted a massacre in the Alevi town of Tunceli in 1937 as an anti-terror campaign.

Some Alevi organizations, such as the Federation of German-Alevi Unions (AABF), have demanded the resignation of Öymen from the CHP or the resignation of the Alevis from the CHP. The AABF said in a written statement: “We strongly condemn the speech Öymen delivered in Parliament. Öymen should apologize to the Alevi community and resign from his post and from Parliament in order to preserve his dignity.”

Professor Cengiz Güleç, the chairman of the Alevi Institute, says the Alevis should be thankful to Öymen for hinting at the racist tendencies of the CHP, which are valid as far as the Alevis are concerned, although traditionally they used to vote for the party. Cafer Solgun, the author of the “Trial of the Alevis by Kemalism,” describes the voting patterns of Alevis as “Stockholm Syndrome,” which is identification with one’s oppressor.

But both of them, as well as Tarhan Erdem, a prominent political analyst on voting patterns in Turkey, underline that one of the main reasons for this voting attitude is the Alevis sensitivity to secularism. “Traditionally, 60 to 70 percent of Alevis vote for the CHP although this pattern is now on the decline. In every election the CHP gets fewer votes from the Alevis,” Erdem told Sunday’s Zaman.

According to him Alevis vote for the CHP because they used to think that its existence was a guarantee of both democracy and secularism.

But contrary to the past, the discussions on democracy and secularism have been separate in Turkey for some time, and Alevis who are keen on democracy have started to vote for the other parties, too.

Erdem also points out that Alevi Kurds, like the ones in Tunceli a long time ago, gave up supporting the CHP although the city had been one of the bastions of the CHP in the past.

“Alevis of Turkmen origin still support the CHP as well as most of the Alevis who are in Istanbul. Perhaps the number of Alevis is not that high, but they are still powerful, and many intellectuals are of Alevi origin,” Erdem said.

Güleç also underlines the different attitudes of the Turkmen and Kurdish Alevis and points out that it should not be expected for Turkmen Alevis to have a radical movement similar to that of the Kurdish Alevis.

“One should keep in mind that Turkmen Alevis do not have any sympathy for the Kurdish movement,” he says.

Analyzing the voting behavior of Alevis and their political support for the CHP Solgun says that since the establishment of the republic, Alevis have been promised much but received nothing. Just the opposite took place: They were oppressed:

“Since the beginning of the republic, thank God, mosques were not closed down but cemevis [places of worship] were. Many traditional posts in Alevi faith, like being a dede [spiritual leader], were the reason for persecution. But also when the Kurdish question was brought to the agenda, the regime, in order to prevent the Alevi opposition from meeting the Kurdish opposition, allowed them to open cemevis and permitted the establishment of institutions. But prior to 1995 it was impossible to establish any association which included the term Alevi in its name. The Alevis are also used for secular-anti secular polarization, and some Alevis, unfortunately, like missionaries, implemented this plan,” Solgun says.

The phrase “Shariah is coming” has been used to instill fear in Alevis. “These tactics were used against the Alevis. There is no such danger, and this balloon should be burst,” Solgun said.

Güleç also underlines that Alevis are afraid of Shariah, as it comes from a Sunni understanding, and this fear is an important factor in their voting behavior.

“The Alevis should be convinced of the sincerity of the government’s democratization initiative. Not only should their demands for representation in the Religious Affairs Directorate be met, but their democratic demands should be answered, too,” he says.

Although some Alevis would prefer to abolish the Prime Ministry’s Religious Affairs Directorate rather than being represented in it, Alevi groups are voicing their demands for the abolishment of compulsory religious lessons in public schools; recognition of Alevi cemevis as places of worship; and the creation of a museum on the site of the Madimak Hotel, where 37 Alevis were murdered 15 years ago.

To discuss the demands of Alevis, the government has organized a series of Alevi workshops, the fifth of which was held last week in which Öymen was criticized for his remarks.

Erdem underlines that due to Öymen’s comments about Tunceli, the ties of Alevis with the CHP might be stretched, but the fate of this relationship is still very much dependent on the government’s Alevi initiative. “If the Alevis are convinced that the government is serious about the Alevi initiative, then their voting behavior may change in the long run,” he says.

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



US Expert Links Obama’s Success to Role of Turkey

The success of US President Barack Obama’s foreign policy hinges on Turkey’s role, said Walter Russell Mead, a senior fellow at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), during a seminar held at the US Embassy residence in Ankara on Thursday.

Mead, one of the America’s leading foreign policy experts, who has been described by The New York Times Book Review as “one of the country’s liveliest thinkers about America’s role in the world,” told the select group in attendance that “Turkey has a role to play in whether or not President Obama’s initiative [of reaching out to the Muslim world] will be seen as a success.”

Stressing that Turkey has influence in the region, Mead said Turkey has the ability to help President Obama appear as a successful leader in the eyes of his critics, “We can hope that the Turkish initiative in the region will complement and supplement what America is trying to do and lead to the kind of stable and peaceful Middle Eastern order that does not depend on a large American presence or high-profile American leadership.”

Calling Obama’s foreign policy approach Jeffersonian — a term coined after US President Thomas Jefferson, who advocated strict limits on foreign policy engagement by removing conflict points in global issues — Mead said, “I would say that in this case Turkish national interests and the interests of Jeffersonians in the US are closely aligned.” “When Jeffersonians succeed, they make lasting changes. When they fail, they are generally replaced by someone who tries to undo what they have accomplished,” he added.

Mead, who describes himself as a lifelong Democrat, praised Obama’s approach to foreign policy, saying Obama can leave a lasting legacy just like the Monroe Doctrine in the 19th century or the containment policy adopted by the US during the Cold War. According to Mead, Obama’s speeches in Ankara and Cairo, where he tried to reach out to the Muslim world, were very important. “He tried hard to reposition the US with Islam in order to remove conflict points and to find a common ground,” he underlined.

US needs Turkey more then ever

Mead went on saying that Turkey is one of a very small number of countries in the world that are more important to the US today than 10 or 20 years ago. He acknowledged, however, that Turkey and its neighborhood are a much more complicated place today than it was 20 years ago. “The US-Turkish cooperation is more important. We need each other more today than 20 years ago,” he emphasized.

The American scholar also noted that the US is absolutely committed to the idea that PKK [the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party] is a terrorist organization. “I am not aware of any shortcoming in US-Turkish cooperation on that issue,” he said. Mead praised the Turkish engagement in northern Iraq and said, “From a US viewpoint, the development of strong economic and political ties between Turkey and authorities in northern Iraq is a very positive sign for everybody concerned in order to bring stability in Iraq.”

On Iran’s nuclear ambitions, Mead argued that Iranian nuclear weapons would make all existing problems in the region worse. “It will not help solve any of the problems we have in the Middle East. It will narrow the range of choices for any American president.” He noted that any nuclear test in Iran would have fallout in the US and may put the entire Obama foreign policy approach into question.

Turkey’s foreign policy is commendable

Commenting on recent Turkish foreign policy engagement, the CFR scholar said Turkey has played a very constructive and positive role. “Turkey has continued to look for positive ways forward on the Armenian question and the Cyprus question. Turkey has showed commendable flexibility in dealing with the Kurdish situation in Iraq, for example. Turkey’s approach to the EU strikes me as solid, mature, and sound in every way.” “Overall, Turkey remains very stable and very important, a solid citizen in this part of the world,” he added.

On Turkey’s relations with Israel, Mead said he hopes Turkey would be able to retain Israel’s trust to continue as a mediator between Israel and Syria. Calling the mediation role a “difficult vocation,” he made the point that Turkey’s long-term strategic interests calls for it to maintain this kind of unique position in the region and in the world, as a place where everyone can come and feel that they will be understood. He criticized, however, the Israeli side for being premature. “In my opinion, criticism from Israel against Turkey is coming too fast,” he said.

On secularism, the American scholar suggested that Turkey needs to write its own chapter on relations between state and religion. Noting that there are different models in the West regulating the affairs of church and state, he provided examples from countries including Argentina, where the president until 1994 by law had to be Roman Catholic, as opposed to Great Britain, which prohibits royals from converting to Catholicism.

He said that though Turkey modeled its secularism on the French experience, which calls for a hostile attitude to all religions and public manifestations of religion, unlike France there was no hierarchal single religious entity in Turkey. “I would suggest looking at Western historical experiences, as there are many different ways of doing this,” he said.

‘Let historians sort out Armenian claims’

Mead also voiced strong opposition of any resolution recognizing Armenian killings during World War I as “genocide” in the US Congress. “I would be painfully surprised if a bill on that subject passed both houses and was signed by the president,” he said, adding that he would be opposed to such a resolution. He also expressed the opinion that the French law recognizing the Armenian genocide should be repealed as well.

He continued: “Some people describe me as a ‘working historian.’ I believe in the separation of state and history. Legislative bodies should not be issuing historical declarations. A legislative body should not be saying this was genocide or was not genocide. Let historians work on that, research it, argue with each other about it, publish nasty articles repudiating other historians’ claims. Let the general intelligence of the public over time reach their conclusion. These kind of issues need to be separated from diplomatic relations, which are complicated enough already.”

He criticized former US President George W. Bush’s notion of exporting democracy and said, “The progress of democracy around the world probably depends more on domestic political forces in other countries.” He stressed that the US has been more hostile to Iran than to any other nation, yet there are few countries today that have as vibrant a democratic movement as Iran. “Countries move in their own way and respond to domestic issues,” he said, adding to that, “I think President Bush looks back at his support for democracy as something that was not as successful as he would have hoped.”

21 November 2009, Saturday

ABDULLAH BOZKURT ANKARA

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



Yemen: Muslim Students Condemn ‘Massacre’ Of Houthis

The Union of Islamic World Students has condemned the Saudi-backed “massacre” of Yemeni Shiite Muslims by the government in north of the country, as Saudi jets continue bombing the fighters.

“We, Muslim students, condemn the massacre of oppressed Muslims” in north of Yemen, the union said in a statement released on Monday.

The statement slammed Saudi Arabia for its involvement in the killing and said: “We want Saudi Arabia and Yemen government to stop the violations against innocent people of Sa’da.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Yemen Children Protest Child Abuse as War Continues in North

Over 400 Yemeni children walked on Tuesday to the UNDP’s office in Sana’a in protest against child abuse in the far north.

At the office, a child representative delivered a letter to the UN Secretary General condemning using children for subversion and terrorism by the Houthi rebels who have been fighting the troops since 2004.

The letter urged the UN to protect the Yemeni children from exploitation during conflicts and delivered a reminder for civil society organizations and international childhood agencies to assume their responsibility toward childhood in Yemen.

Chairman of the walk organizer, the Shawthab Association for Childhood, Lamya’a Al-Eryani said the anti-child abuse protest was aimed at demonstrating what the children face in the war-hit areas in Saada and Amran provinces where the insurgents use underage fighters to confront the troops.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Five Assam Rifles Troopers Killed in Manipur

IMPHAL: Five paramilitary troopers, including a major and a captain, were killed in an ambush by separatists Monday in Manipur, officials said.

A defence spokesperson said heavily armed militants of the outlawed United National Liberation Front (UNLF) attacked a convoy of the paramilitary Assam Rifles near Samtol village in Chandel district, about 120 km south of Manipur state capital Imphal.

“UNLF militants opened indiscriminate fire with automatic weapons on the convoy in which two Assam Rifles officers, a major and a captain, and three troopers were killed,” the Assam Rifles commander said.

The UNLF is a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland for the majority Metei community in a state of 2.4 million people.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Indian Govt ‘Eyes Extradition of Mumbai-Linked Suspects’ in Italy

Rome, 23 Nov. (AKI) — The Indian government may seek a review of its extradition treaty with the Italian government in a bid to try terrorism suspects allegedly linked to the deadly Mumbai terror attacks in November last year.

“We are looking at appropriate measures, that’s all there is to say at present,” a source at the Indian embassy in Rome told Adnkronos International (AKI) on Monday on condition of anonymity.

The current extradition treaty covers crimes including narcotics trafficking but not terrorism.

The move follows the arrest in the northern city of Brescia on Saturday of two Pakistanis suspected of helping to finance the Muslim militant group held responsible for the attacks on Mumbai in November 2008 that killed at least 170 people.

The two suspects, Mohammad Yaqub Janjua and his son Janjua Aamer Yaqub, ran the Madina Trading money transfer business they owned in the north Italian town of Brescia in Italy’s Lombardy region.

Italy’s foreign minister Franco Frattini commented after the pair’s arrest that Italian security forces were tackling “a serious threat” from terrorism in Italy and globally.

Janjua, 60, and his 31-year-old son are accused of aiding and abetting international terrorism as well as illegal financial activity.

They allegedly supplied cash from Madina Trading to pay for an internet phone account used by people in contact with the attackers.

The pair are alleged to have transferred 400,000 euros abroad between 2006 and 2008 in over 300 transactions made by ‘Iqbal Javaid’, according to Italian anti-terror police investigators. One was made on 25 November last year, the day before the Mumbai assault began.

Javaid, a 46 year-old Pakistani national, was arrested earlier this year in Pakistan. He was allegedly one of the main conspirators behind the Mumbai attacks carried out by banned Islamist group Lashkar-e-Toiba.

Two other Pakistani citizens were arrested in the Brescia probe, and are accused of abetting illegal immigration. They are not linked to the Mumbai attacks, investigators said.

A third suspect is on the run, accused of involvement in illegal people trafficking, according to police.

After Iqbal’s arrest in February, Janjua denied any involvement in the Mumbai terror attacks in an interview with AKI.

“We, the Pakistani community are peace lovers, we have nothing to do with what happened. However, if someone is involved in something like the attacks in Mumbai, he should be punished,” he told AKI.

Italian police began the probe in December and identified Janjua and his son using leads from Indian authorities and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

In July, the sole attacker surviving the Mumbai siege, a 21-year-old Pakistani man, Mohammad Ajmal Amir Qasab, pleaded guilty to 86 charges, including waging war on India, murder and possessing explosives.

The maximum sentence in his case is the death penalty.

Qasab and nine other gunmen targeted luxury hotels, a Jewish centre and other sites in India’s financial capital during a three-day assault on 26-29 November last year.

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



India Parliament Uproar Over Ayodhya Mosque Report

India’s main opposition BJP has reacted angrily to reports that its leaders are implicated in an inquiry into the 1992 demolition of the Babri Masjid mosque.

Parliament was in uproar on Monday over the leaked inquiry report which is said to blame senior BJP figures including Atal Behari Vajpayee and LK Advani.

The Liberhan commission report was submitted to the government in June but its contents have not been made public.

Some 2,000 people died in riots across India after the mosque was demolished.

The commission was set up to investigate events that led to a Hindu mob tearing down the disputed mosque in the northern town of Ayodhya.

Led by former high court judge MS Liberhan, the inquiry took 17 years to complete its work, at a cost of more than 65m rupees ($1.3m). Details about the commission’s findings appeared in the Indian media on Monday.

‘Political motive’

“I am stunned. I was shocked to see that the report has been leaked. I want to know who has leaked the report,” senior Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader LK Advani said in parliament.

“If what is written is correct, the conclusions are false. There was no conspiracy, no planning. I was distressed by the demolition of the mosque.”

BJP leaders accused the Congress party-led government of “selective leaks” to distract attention from the economy and corruption — and demanded parliament see the report immediately.

Home Minister P Chidambaram denied his ministry was behind the “unfortunate” leak.

The angry opposition shouted: “No, it’s not just unfortunate, it’s shameful.”

Mr Chidambaram said Justice Liberhan’s 900-page report was being translated into Hindi. The report is due to be put before parliament on 22 December, along with an “action taken report” by the government.

The Indian Express newspaper reported the build-up to the demolition of the mosque had been meticulously planned, and said the commission of inquiry had described BJP leaders as “pseudo-moderates”.

The report apparently exonerates the Congress prime minister at the time, PV Narasimha Rao, of any responsibility — saying the federal government could not act in the absence of any recommendation from the state governor.

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

Far East


China Slams US Report Warning of Spying by Beijing

BEIJING — Beijing on Monday criticized a U.S. government report that said Chinese spies are aggressively stealing American secrets, saying the report was “full of prejudice” and warning that it could damage US-China relations.

The annual report by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission to lawmakers said last week that American officials believe Chinese spying is “growing in scale, intensity and sophistication” and urges Congress to review the U.S. ability to meet the “rising challenge” of Beijing’s espionage.

The report “ignores the facts and is full of prejudice and ulterior motives,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Chinese Migrants Change Names to be ‘More Hong Kong’

An increasing number of mainland Chinese migrants to Hong Kong are changing the spelling of their surnames to avoid discrimination in the former British colony, a report said Monday.

Lawyer Raymond Tang told the daily South China Morning Post that his firm was seeing more mainland-born clients legally changing the romanised spelling of their name to appear more like local Hong Kong residents.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Five Years in Prison for a Tibetan Writer for Denouncing Environmental Degradation

A Chinese court sentenced Kunga Tsayang for revealing state secrets. Fifteen years for Kunchok Tsephel, founder of a website dedicated to the literature of Tibet. The trial was held behind closed doors. TCHRD activists demand respect for human rights.

Dharamsala (AsiaNews) — A Chinese court sentenced Tsayang Kunga, Tibetan writer and photographer, to five years in prison. According to news reported by the Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) man, arrested last March 17, is accused of revealing state secrets.

The closed door trial was held on 12 November in the People’s Court of Kanlho in Gannan, a “Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture” in the province of Gansu. Among the charges against him: having published political speeches about Tibet on his website Jottings. The same day the court sentenced Kunchok Tsephel to 15 years in prison, a Tibetan official and founder of the website Chomei — dedicated to Tibetan literature — for revealing state secrets.

Kunga Tsayang (pictured), a monk from Amdo Labrang Tashikyil monastery, has written several essays on Tibet under the pseudonym of “the land of sun and snows”. He is originally from Chigdril County, in the “Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture” (TAP) of Golog, Qinghai Province. A lover of travel, literature and photography, he has published numerous photos denouncing the environmental degradation in Tibet and its impact on the population.

The monk’s sentencing to prison is just the latest in a long series of repressive measures by the Chinese authorities against writers, bloggers and publishers that promote Tibetan political activity or protests. They are people who wish to explore and publicize the views of Tibetans on the issues that affect their lives, the environment, culture and religion.

Chinese public security officials arrested him March 17 during a search late night of his home. For a long time family and friends had no news about his fate until the trial in court last week.

TCHRD activists express “grave concern” for the closed door trial of Kung Tsayang and Kunchok Tsephel. They are asking the Chinese government to respect basic human rights of the Tibetan people.

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



Mosques, Chinese Goods, Arabic Classes Rebuild Silk Road

Smoke from hookah pipes and the aroma of lamb skewers on the grill mix in the chilly autumn air as men talk loudly in Arabic over pulsating music beneath the neon glow of restaurant signs.

The scene could be unfolding in any number of cities in the Middle East — but this is eastern China.

Yiwu, a city of two million people 300 kilometres (190 miles) south of Shanghai, has become a crossroads on what has been dubbed a “New Silk Road” between China and the Middle East, attracting more than 200,000 Arab traders each year.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Over 100 Icebergs Drifting to N. Zealand: Official

SYDNEY — More than 100, and possibly hundreds, of Antarctic icebergs are floating towards New Zealand in a rare event which has prompted a shipping warning, officials said on Monday.

An Australian Antarctic Division glaciologist said the ice chunks, spotted by satellite photography, had passed the Auckland Islands and were heading towards the main South Island, about 450 kilometres (280 miles) northeast.

Scientist Neal Young said more than 100 icebergs — some measuring more than 200 metres (650 feet) across — were seen in just one cluster, indicating there could be hundreds more.

He said they were the remains of a massive ice floe which split from the Antarctic as sea and air temperatures rise due to global warming.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Leaders Meet in Trinidad for Climate Talks

Copenhagen — Danish Prime Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen is to discuss climate change at the Commonwealth heads of government meeting later this week, his office said Monday.

Rasmussen has been engaged in efforts to secure support for a politically binding deal at the United Nations climate change summit, which Denmark hosts in December.

About 50 heads of government are due to attend the two-day Commonwealth Summit in Trinidad and Tobago on Friday, including British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma, and Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Germany to Draw Up ‘Values Contract’ For New Immigrants

Germany is drawing up a new contract to bind new immigrants to the country’s values, officials say.

Newcomers should learn German and uphold values such as freedom of speech and sexual equality, said Commissioner for Immigration Maria Boehmer.

In return, immigrants could expect “help and support”, Dr Boehmer said.

“Anyone who wants to live here for a long time and who wants to work has to say ‘Yes’ to our country,” she told the Stuttgarter Nachrichten newspaper.

“We will draw up contracts with new immigrants,” said Dr Boehmer.

“In those contracts will be set out what they can expect in terms of support and help. But they will also set out what we can expect from immigrants.

“Everyone who wants to live and work here long term must say ‘Yes’ to our country. And for that we need a commonly accepted set of values.

“These include a good knowledge of the German language, but also a readiness to take part in society.”

‘Demographic problems’

Dr Boehmer said the number of highly qualified immigrants coming to Germany was too small.

The country must become more attractive to give it “the expertise that will enable us to ensure our leading economic role in world markets”, she said.

“Our demographic problems won’t be solved through immigration… But, we must also make sure we harness the potential of immigrants already living here.

“For that, we need good language teaching, schooling and a better recognition of qualifications gained abroad,” added Dr Boehmer.

Germany, which has around 15 million immigrants out of a population of around 82 million, last year introduced a test for would-be citizens on key facts about the country.

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

General


Climate Change Emails Tampered With

[ I could not find any English language source for this one, or in fact, any details in the article to substantiate the claim, but it did make the headlines on a respectable Belgian news site. — Esther]

From Dutch: The hacked emails from British and American climate-change scientists were tampered with. Most of the emails were altered and many passages were taken out of context.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Games ‘Permit’ Virtual War Crimes

Video games depicting war have come under fire for flouting laws governing armed conflicts.

Human rights groups played various games to see if any broke humanitarian laws that govern what is a war crime.

The study condemned the games for violating laws by letting players kill civilians, torture captives and wantonly destroy homes and buildings.

It said game makers should work harder to remind players about the real world limits on their actions.

War without limits

The study was carried out by two Swiss human rights organisations — Trial and Pro Juventute. Staff played the games in the presence of lawyers skilled in the interpretation of humanitarian laws.

Twenty games were scrutinised to see if the conflicts they portrayed and what players can do in the virtual theatres of war were subject to the same limits as in the real world.

“The practically complete absence of rules or sanctions is… astonishing,” said the study.

Army of Two, Call of Duty 5, Far Cry 2 and Conflict Desert Storm were among the games examined.

The games were analysed to see “whether certain scenes and acts committed by players would constitute violations of international law if they were real, rather than virtual”.

The group chose games, rather than films, because of their interactivity.

“Thus,” said the report, “the line between the virtual and real experience becomes blurred and the game becomes a simulation of real life situations on the battlefield.”

The testers looked for violations of the Geneva Conventions and its Additional Protocols which cover war should be waged.

In particular, the testers looked for how combatants who surrendered were treated, what happened to citizens caught up in war zones and whether damage to buildings was proportionate.

Some games did punish the killing of civilians and reward strategies that tried to limit the damage the conflict, said the study.

However, it said, many others allowed “protected objects” such as churches and mosques to be attacked; some depicted interrogations that involved torture or degradation and a few permitted summary executions.

The authors acknowledged that the project was hard because it was not clear from many of the games the scale of the conflict being depicted. This made it hard to definitively determine which humanitarian laws should be enforced.

It also said that the games were so complex that it was hard to be confident that its testers had seen all possible violations or, in games in which they found none, that no violations were possible.

t noted that, even though most players would never become real world combatants, the games could influence what people believe war is like and how soldiers conduct themselves in the real world.

It said games were sending an “erroneous” message that conflicts were waged without limits or that anything was acceptable in counter-terrorism operations.

“This is especially problematic in view of today’s reality,” said the study.

In particular, it said, few games it studied reflected the fact that those who “violate international humanitarian law end up as war criminals, not as winners”.

The authors said they did not wish to make games less violent, instead, they wrote: “[We] call upon game producers to consequently and creatively incorporate rules of international humanitarian law and human rights into their games.”

John Walker, one of the writers on the Rock, Paper, Shotgun games blog, said: “Games really are treated in a peculiar way.”

He doubted that anyone would campaign for books to follow humanitarian laws or for James Bond to be denounced for machine gunning his way through a super villain’s underground complex.

He said the authors did not understand that gamers can distinguish between fantasy and reality.

Said Mr Walker: “For all those who mowed down citizens in Modern Warfare 2’s controversial airport level, I have the sneaking suspicion that not a great deal of them think this is lawful, nor appropriate, behaviour.”

Jim Rossignol, who also writes on Rock, Paper, Shotgun, said there was scope to mix real world rules of war into games.

“Whether or not the rules of war are included in the game should be based entirely on whether that improves the experience for the player,” he said.

Mr Rossignol said there was plenty of evidence that gaming violence is “fully processed” as fantasy by gamers. Studies of soldiers on the front line in Iraq showed that being a gamer did not desensitise them to what they witnessed.

He added: “Perhaps what this research demonstrates is that the researchers misunderstand what games are, and how they are treated, intellectually, by the people who play them.”

           — Hat tip: 4symbols [Return to headlines]



Global Warming Meltdown: Climategate!

For those of us “skeptics” and “deniers” who have been jumping up and down, pointing at the Sun, and saying, “See, it’s the Sun that determines how warm or cool the Earth is. See it? Up there in the sky?” The truth about some of the scientists behind the global warming hoax has finally arrived.

The hoax has its roots in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an instrument of the United Nations Environmental Program, for whom global warming was the open sesame to achieving a one-world-government by scaring nations into signing a treaty that would control their use of energy, the means of producing it, and require vast billions to be sent to less developed nations in exchange for “emitting” greenhouse gases.

Energy is called “the master resource” because, if you have lots of it, you can call your own shots. If you don’t, you are condemned to live in the dark and keeping people in the dark about the global warming hoax was essential.

For years the IPCC has been controlled by a handful of the worst liars in the world, utterly devoted to taking actual climate data and twisting it to confirm the assertion that the Earth was not only warming dramatically, but that humanity was in peril of rising oceans, melting glaciers and polar ice caps, more hurricanes, the die-off of countless animal species, and every other calamity that could possibly be attributed to “global warming”, including acne.

So, around November 20, when some enterprising individual hacked into the computers of the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit (CRU), making off with thousands of emails and documents that demonstrate the level of collusion and deception being practiced by its scientists.

[…]

Now that Hadley CRU and its conspirators have been exposed, there truly is no need to hold a December UN climate change conference in Copenhagen; one in which nations would be required to put limits on “greenhouse gas emissions” even though such gases, primarily carbon dioxide, have nothing to do with altering the Earth’s climate.

And that is why you are going to hear more about “climate change” and far less about “global warming.” Hidden in such discussions, intended to justify legislation and regulation, is that the Earth’s climate has always and will always change.

It is, for example, shameful and deceitful for the EPA to claim carbon dioxide is a “pollutant” that should be regulated. The same applies to “cap-and-trade” legislation with the same purpose.

Billions of taxpayer dollars have been wasted on studies of global warming and poured into agencies such as NASA that have lent credence to the global warming hoax.

“The U.S. taxpayer has much exposure here in the joint projects and collaborations which operated in reliance upon what the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit was doing,” says Christopher C. Horner, a longtime global warming skeptic. “There are U.S. taxpayer-funded offices and individuals involved in the machinations addressed in the emails, and in the emails themselves.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Gore’s Manipulation Allowed by Mainstream Media Climate Change Bias — Continues With Cru

“It is a characteristic of all movements and crusades that the psychopathic element rises to the top.” Robert Lindner

How much longer will Al Gore get a pass from the mainstream media? A little bit longer if their failure to react to the devastating revelations of files hacked from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia is a measure. Their behavior reflects how most, especially from the left, have abetted the scientists who deliberately perverted climate science.

We now know Gore’s errors are based on the global warming fraud orchestrated by a few scientists centered round Phil Jones, Director of the CRU. Emails between those climate scientists, identified by Professor Wegman as publishing together and peer reviewing each other’s work disclose the complete manipulation of climate science and the Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Bishop Hill provides a useful summation of some of the outrageous comments and actions. What is missing is the nasty vindictive tone that permeates almost every item.

What are the mainstream media going to do? How can they ignore the biggest scandal in science history and then claim any credibility? We already have a strong indication because they either don’t cover it or claim, like Andrew Revkin of the New York Times, there is nothing of consequence. No surprise because he was in direct communication with the CRU gang. Other left wing outlets have similar reports such as the Guardian in England and Harrabin at the BBC. Delingpole at the Telegraph identifies some vapid responses.

[Return to headlines]



Search the CRU Climate Fraud Emails by Keyword

On 20 November 2009, emails and other documents, apparently originating from with the Climate Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia.

If real, these emails contain some quite surprising and even disappointing insights into what has been happening within the climate change scientific establishment. Worryingly this same group of scientists are very influential in terms of economic and social policy formation around the subject of climate change.

As these emails are already in the public domain, I think it is important that people are able to look through them and judge for themselves. As of today, Saturday 21 November, there have been no statements that I have seen doubting the authenticity of these texts. It is here just as a curiosity!

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Great ‘Global Warming’ Hoax

While the blogosphere buzzed all weekend with the contents of these e-mails (see for example powerlineblog.com) and analyzed what many began calling the biggest scientific scandal of all time, the Old Media went into protection mode. This scandal threatens the whole scientific rationale underpinning the campaign for world government, higher taxes and a decreased standard of living for all (except the Chinese). You’d never know it in the Old Media. The New York Times reported it as a third-rate e-mail burglary “causing a stir among global warming skeptics.”

Move on, nothing to see here.

The Washington Post (“Hackers steal electronic data from top climate research center”) quotes the “researchers” at the CRU saying “that the e-mails have been taken out of context.” No analysis of the “context” is provided.

The BBC assured its listeners that “the police have been informed” of the break-in. Just another hacker story. Ho hum. Just as the scientific method has suffered a reversion to dogma in the climate-change campaign, so too the “journalism” of the Old Media has degenerated into laughable propaganda.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Global Warming Fraud Exposed

I have an old T-shirt that I used to wear from time to time during my techno days with Psykosonik. Eric Bloodaxe of the Legion of Doom created it in honor of the “Hacking for Jesus” tour, complete with a listing of ISP addresses that were supposedly hacked during the LOD’s Internet World Tour of 1991. But last week, an anonymous hacker achieved a feat that will long be lionized by computer pirates, libertarians and genuine scientists alike, as he broke into the Climate Research Unit’s computers, copied 172 megs of data, and then released it into the digital wild.

Information wants to be free. And this information desperately needed to be freed.

Upon perusing the searchable archive of the online data, most of which consists of e-mails being exchanged between a small coterie of climate-change charlatans who presume to call themselves “scientists,” it soon becomes very clear why the anthropogenic global warming—climate-change industry has been so deeply and unscientifically secretive about the data they have used to reach their conclusions of imminent climate-based apocalypse. First, the data simply does not support their conclusions. Second, they know the data doesn’t support their conclusions. Consider this amazing admission by Kevin Trenberth, head of the Climate Analysis Section at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and a lead author of the 2001 and 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Scientific Assessment of Climate Change:

“The fact is that we can’t account for the lack of warming at the moment and it is a travesty that we can’t. The CERES data published in the August (Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society) 09 supplement on 2008 shows there should be even more warming: but the data are surely wrong.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UN Negotiator Confident of Specific Climate Deal

The UN’s top climate official voiced optimism Monday that some kind of agreement could be salvaged at world talks on global warming next month, sensing US President Barack Obama will come with a target and financing.

UN negotiator Yvo de Boer has already said it would be impossible to conclude a comprehensive climate treaty during the talks opening in Copenhagen. However, ahead of a meeting with EU ministers in Brussels, he told AFP that “I think we will have a very specific agreement.”

This was likely to include “a list of rich country targets (and) clarity on what major developing countries like India and China are willing to do,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

A Multicultural Sinterklaas

Sinterklaas letters


Yes, it’s that time of the year again.

As the days shorten and the first frost touches the fields, canals, and cities of the Low Countries, it’s time for the annual custom of abolishing Sinterklaas and Zwarte Piet in the Netherlands and Flanders.

Our Flemish correspondent VH has compiled a report on the latest attempts to do away with the venerable racist saint and his swarthy sidekick.

First, a translation from De Telegraaf:

Annoyance in the Netherlands about multicultural miter

SinterklaasThe miter that Sinterklaas wears is as sacred as the Dutch political party CDA [Christian Democrats] suggests, which is displeased that some municipalities want to get rid of the religious cross on the headgear of the good and holy man.

To the dismay of the ruling CDA party, St. Nicholas for several years [since 2006] has shown up in Amsterdam without a cross on his miter because “the demographics are multi-ethnic” and the children’s friend must be of “a universal character”.

The CDA now wants the PvdA (Socialists) ministers Ter Horst [Home Affairs and “elite revolt”] and Plasterk [Culture] to “stand up for maintaining the typical Dutch Sinterklaas feast, including all symbols and references that go with it”.

The CDA continues: “There is no reason to anxiously hide away the Christian origin of Saint Nicholas,” said CDA MP Koppejan. “We think it is fine that many ethnic groups have entered Dutch society with their own feasts, customs and religions, but that does not mean that the Christian origin of our own feasts have to be denied.”

Elsevier adds:

Last year discussions on this issue also arose in Belgium. In Antwerp it was forbidden for Sinterklaas to appear at public schools with a cross on his miter. But the miter is not the only dispute about Sinterklaas. The fact that the “Zwarte Pieten” with Sinterklaas are black would be discriminatory. In 2006, a debate flared up because on the Dutch [government-subsidized] TV news, yellow-, red-, green-, white- and blue-Peters appeared in a “Sinterklaas news” item for children, because “parcel-steamboat number 12 of Sinterklaas”, had supposedly “sailed through a rainbow”.

Zwarte Piet

Furthermore, in 2008 there was a call by a Modern Art Museum and artists, to abolish the Dutch “Black Peter” tradition completely and organize a protest rally against the “racist” Zwarte Piet, because it was supposed to be “full of racism and colonialism”. After the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven received dozens of angry e-mails and phone calls, it was called off all together.

– – – – – – – –

By 2006 Saint Nicholas had been banned from kindergartens in Vienna as result of the multicultural, diversity and tolerant society that is still under construction.

VH adds:

Hélène Beyers reports on HetVrijeVolk.com, that one of the large department stores in the Netherlands and Flanders, HEMA, now sells Arabic chocolate letters for Sinterklaas, in two types: the “S” for Sinterklaas [sold out] and also the beloved “P” for Piet “M” of the beloved …

Sinterklaas letters


After its headscarf advertising, this apparently is the next step in the Islamization of the Hema. Which is curious, because the El Hema art project in 2007 was not at all appreciated by the public, even when they had Arab chocolate letters and halal smoked sausage on sale. [The “El Hema” campaign was set up by mediamatic, of Willem Velthoven, who also initiated the “make Wilders’ upcoming film unfindable on youtube” with his campaign “sorry”.]

Furthermore, it remains strange that chocolate characters are exclusively created for Muslims, while they want nothing to do with the Christian feast, nor are they so modern that they by the “A” of Ahmed or Aïscha.

And the choice to add only Arabic letters in a so-called multicultural society is offensive to other nationalities who use different alphabetic characters — including Hindus, Chinese, Greeks, Israelis, etc. — who also live in the Netherlands.

“Let us Face the Reality…”

Below is a video of the opening debate of the KVHV (Catholic Higher Students Association) chapter Ghent, October 11, 2009

At the table are:

  • Filip Dewinter (fraction leader Vlaams Belang)
  • Mieke Van Hecke (managing director VSKO, Flemish Catholic Education Board)
  • Prof. Dr. Em. Urbain Vermeulen (Islamicist and classic Arabic, University of Laken/Louvain and the University of Ghent, Deputy Secretary General of the UEAI, European Union of Arabists and Islamicists)
  • Moderator: Ivan De Vadder (VRT, Flemish Radio and Television broadcaster)
  • Jean-Marie Dedecker (party chairman LDD, List Dedecker)
  • Prof. Dr. Johan Leman (professor Interculturalism, Migration and Minorities,
  • former director CGKR, Center for Equal Chances and Combat against Racism)
  • Karim Hassoun (chairman AEL, Arab European League)

Many thanks to our Flemish correspondent VH for the translation and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitles:



A full transcript is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –
Islam and Europe #4

00:02 [Ivan de Vadder]
Karim Hassoun, chairman AEL, what do you
think is the place of Islam in Flanders, …

00:08
not to limit the question, but this is maybe
the most concrete one.

00:14 [Karim Hassoun]
No, I do not know if my neighbors realize
nor the does society realize …

00:18
that Islam has been part of the society
already for over 40 years …

00:23
one reason being the migration of cultural
minorities from the Islamic world to Europe …

00:32
but historically Islam has been part of
European society for centuries.

00:41
There are two important points in this:
the historical presence of Islam, on the one hand —

00:46
if you take a look at Andalusia, Spain.
The Ottoman empire in the history of Europe …

00:51
has had a major civilizing influence
for European society.

00:57
I think here in the audience of students,
it is important to realize that Islam in history,

01:02
and its evolution, has also made significant
contributions for example to philosophy …

01:08
to the Enlightenment, the people knew
here in the 17th and 18th century…

01:13
the Enlightenment, in which the secularization
of society, and the separation of dogmatic religion

01:19
from political power, which is
necessary, because I believe in a secular society,

01:23
in which religion should indeed have no power,
should not exercise political power…

01:29
maybe we can come back to this later …

01:32
but the important thing is, that for instance philosophers
such as Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd,

01:42
known with the Latin name Averroes,
because one tries to mask the Arab link a little

01:49
by giving the name a Latin connotation,
but those are the sources of, for example, …

01:56
an important priest and scholar like
Thomas Aquinas, who has inspired…

02:01
and who also on the one hand brought questions
in the religious thinking in Europe,

02:07
And in the thirteenth century that was
a forerunner of what eventually became

02:12
the Enlightenment period with as its climactic point
the French Revolution.

02:16
This on the one side… Thus Islam has been part
of Europe for centuries and has also

02:20
made its contributions to very many
positive things in European society,

02:25
certainly in the sciences and in literature
and in philosophy.

02:29
On the other hand, I think it is also important that
— I already heard three opinions here —

02:35
but on two things I want to respond to the previous
speakers … Mr. Vermeulen has not described Islam,

02:45
he has given an interpretation of Islam,
his interpretation of Islam as there are a thousand …

02:51
there exist hundreds of interpretations of Islam.
This is his interpretation and his vision on the Islam.

02:56
I did not come here for a debate
about Islam, because I find that useless,

03:01
I find it pointless, it is not important, and is
a debate that Muslims must have among themselves.

03:06
They must among each other decide what can
and cannot accord with the Islamic rules of law…

03:11
Just as the Christians do, just as the Jews do.
As a society we must work towards a society

03:18
in which we can go together through that door.

03:20
So that is the important question
that we one should ask here.

03:24
Can one create a society model in which Muslims,
non Muslims, Christians, Jews, and atheists together

03:31
in one and the same Flanders, can go through
the same door, in which Muslims

03:36
enjoy the same rights as citizens, in which
that citizenship finally forms the backbone,

03:42
of a model of society in which there is respect,
and the various communities are left in their dignity…

03:50
and I think those are most important challenges
for today and not to … I am will not let myself

03:56
be tempted here to a substantive debate
on what is Allah, what is haram,

04:00
what’s in Islam, what’s in Christianity.
I had been expecting that for one thing,

04:05
and I can tell you, in five minutes time
I can give two alternatives from texts of the

04:11
Old and New Testament that are quite outrageous
matters, that would not be tolerated …

04:18
if one were to proclaim those opinions
here in Flanders today.

04:22
So in that sense it is meaningless to talk about
where Islam is now, and what is and what is not.

04:28
It is important that we talk about citizenship,
we talk about how cultural minorities …

04:33
and how one can give religious minorities
the same opportunities in society.

04:36
Because I hope the debate will go in that direction.
Because it is a public debate about exclusion,…

04:41
racism, and discrimination, on which a number
of right-wing, extreme right-wing …

04:46
populist parties live on, and lie in wait for,
to stir up things and to systematically exclude …

04:51
a community, and push from the system.
But we possibly will get back to that later here.

04:59 [Ivan de Vadder]
I now want the two politicians to have their say…

05:24 [Urbain Vermeulen, interruption]
Mr. [Johan] Leman has spoken and said
that he is talking about Muslims …

05:32
That is correct, isn’t it?

05:35
I have by way of introduction — someone
had to start here — discussed Islam.

05:41
Have talked about its behavior …

05:45
There is a monseigneur here who says
it is my interpretation …

05:51
That actually is someone who even if he were
one of my students would not have passed.

06:05
That is the opinion of 500 years of
scientific research on Islam!

06:14
That is the way it is, and nothing else!

06:17
Sir, I just told you that you are talking
nonsense … Let me continue …

06:23
When al-Andalus is spoken of,
and the Ottoman Empire, then it is better …

06:33
because when it is about tolerance and
multiculturalism, then when possible …

06:41
it is better remain silent in all languages,
that is including Arabic …

06:51
After three generations…

06:54
For one is obliged at every moment,
everybody has the duty to make remarks …

07:00
After three generations, in al-Andalus,
Christianity had disappeared!

07:07
And look what one now says again here.

07:11
That is to make someone forget!

07:21
But I may get back on that later, okay?

07:26 [Ivan de Vadder]
Okay, now Filip Dewinter.

07:29 [Filip Dewinter]
I am here as a politician, not as an Islamologist,
nor as an anthropologist, which means I have

07:35
a strong political opinion about Islam. I will therefore
not — as Madam Van Hecke and Mr. Leman did —

07:42
will not tell you multicultural fairy tales,
but will try to limit myself to reality.

07:48
Islam is a medieval rigid ideology bent on the
establishment of a theocratic society. That is the reality.

08:02
I do know, as I already have participated in many
debates as a result of the book Insh’Allah, …

08:07
The Islamization of Europe, that I wrote together
with Muslims — that Muslims will never talk about

08:13
the nature and essence of Islam. That should
never be discussed, but we must talk about

08:17
exclusion, racism, empowering, and things like that,
but never about the true nature of Islam.

08:23
I am not an Islamologist, but one thing I do know
is that the Koran should be interpreted literally,

08:30
because the Koran is the word of Allah, written down
by Muhammad, and nothing may be changed in it,

08:36
and it must be applied literally. That is great difference
with the Bible of course, where there has been …

08:42
an evolution, the enlightenment, etc., the separation
of church and state, something that Islam does not know,

08:49
… and never will know.

08:53
Now you also force me to talk about history,
I like to hear it, the great enrichment of Islam in Europe,

09:01
but let us face the reality, in which we have two
Islamic invasions behind us. Where

09:08
we pushed back one in 732 at Poitiers,
Charles Martel, …

09:13
and we did that again in 1683,
the 11th of September, …

09:16
does that say anything to you?
September the 11th … ?

09:20
This is no coincidence of course,
but it is the reality ….

09:26
September 11 and 12, 1683, when the Polish King
John III Sobieski finally pushed back the Turks,

09:37
again, Islam, to where they belong, and that is
on the other side of the Mediterranean Sea.

09:42 …

The Librarian and the Lawyer

I wish I could be more charitable to this woman who is now our First Lady, but her hubris is horrendous. Almost as bad as her wardrobe. The sad thing is that she pays people to advise her on her choice of clothing but she wears this kind of thing anyway. Ah well, at least winter is coming and she will have to dress more warmly. Think of it as a change of weather we can believe in.

Laura and Michelle


The world definitely needs many more librarians than it has now.

The world also needs to get shut of a whole lot of lawyer-types. You know the kind I mean: you hire one to resolve a problem and find out that a phone call on your behalf is worth more than a week’s worth of groceries even if you do all your shopping at Whole Foods, including their useless toilet paper.

Here’s to the librarians. They teach children to love reading; they forgive adults some of those horrendous overdue fines. Whilst talking to you, they run their hands over a book as though they were soothing one of their children.
– – – – – – – –
Oops…almost forgot the fB update.:

New coughing pattern has developed. Is he getting better or is it pneumonia setting up shop in his lungs? Only time will tell: another doctor visit tomorrow to read the entrails of a duck – or a swine – and give us the news.

He seems to feel better, but the cough is unsettling (if you have parents’ ears). On the other hand, the doctor’s ears and her stethoscope will provide enough information to know if he can leave for home and start that new job he’s been offered. They’ve been nice enough to keep his spot open until he gets better.

Good thing he has such an understanding employer because we went through his Sallie Mae loans tonight. The same people who wrote the health care bill must have written the college loan paperwork. Remember how obfuscatory those credit card “disclosures” are? Square that and you have Sallie Mae. Corruption, one of thy names is “higher” education. What a mess.

The fB’s girl friend is beautiful, however. I think I’ll keep her.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/22/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/22/2009A recent poll in the UK — which is hard to credit — shows that the Labour Party has reclaimed lost ground from the Tories, making the Lib-Dems the power brokers in the elections next spring. How likely is that? British readers are invited to voice their opinions.

In other news, at an international conference of communist parties in New Delhi, the representative of the American party said that there has never been a better time to be a communist in the USA.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, Diana West, Esther, Gaia, Insubria, JD, JP, KGS, REP, Sean O’Brian, Steen, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
In Spain: Supermarket for the Needy
The Coming Deficit Disaster
 
USA
American Faces Jail for Pulling Woman’s Headscarf
Black Gang Members Charged With Hate Crimes
Christian Conservatives Pray for God to Kill President Obama
Major Hasan and Holy War
‘No Better Time to be a Communist in US’
Obama, The Nobel Prize and the IRS
Palin’s Pastor Meets the Press
Parade Bars Mrs. Claus
Troubled Young Latinas in Therapy Embrace Ancient Mexican Wisdom
Ultimatum: Investigate ACORN or More Videos Coming
 
Canada
Smiling on Facebook Costs Depressed Woman Her Insurance
 
Europe and the EU
Brzezniski: East Europeans Should Stop Behaving Like Children
Czech Senate Bans Appearance by Controversial Dutch Politician Geert Wilders
Daniel Hannan: EU is ‘In a Democratic Mess’
Dutch Trouble Makers Whipped as Punishment
Finland Mulls Plea System to Unburden Courts
Gitmo Prisoner Slahi Tells Brother He Wants to Return to Germany
Italy: Transsexual Prostitutes ‘Afraid’ After Death
Police Confirm Car Bomb Attack in N. Ireland
Sister of UN ‘Suicide’ Scientist Who Died in Mysterious Fall Rescues Potential Evidence From Destruction
Spain: Inquiry Into Foundation Behind Pope’s Visit
Swiss Visas for Libyans Down to a Trickle
Switzerland: Minaret Challengers Gain Ground Ahead of Ballot
UK: Britain’s New Internet Law — As Bad as Everyone’s Been Saying, And Worse. Much, Much Worse.
UK: Envoys Called Back to Calm Muslim Hotspots
UK: Teacher ‘Suspended Over 9/11 Creative Writing Task’
UK: We’ll Give the Tories a Majority, Says Clegg: Lib Dem Leader Pledges to Avert Election Deadlock
Video: New EU President Confirms New World Order Desire
Video: Jihad Milkshake
 
North Africa
Agriculture: Tunisia, Date Harvest Increase Predicted
Alaoui: Morocco Has Turned the Page, Audience Says No
Algeria Acquits Two Former Guantanamo Bay Detainees
Books: Story of Italians in Morocco
Muslim Violence Ongoing in Egypt — Christians Plead for Help
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Barak: We Must Crush IDF Refusal With an Iron Fist
Frolicking in the Quicksand: How the Obama Administration Keeps Making Huge Mistakes in the Middle East
Ultra-Orthodox Pressure Stalling Mosque, Church at Ben-Gurion Airport
 
Middle East
Confront Deviant Ideologies, Says Saudi Arabian King
Iran Cleric: We’ll Hit ‘Heart of Tel Aviv’ If Attacked
Iran War Games to Defend Nuclear Sites
Iraq Report: Secret Papers Reveal Blunders and Concealment
Muslim Countries Seek Blasphemy Ban
NATO: Italy Launches Demining Project in Jordan
Sarkozy Outshines Obama as King of Mideast Mediation
Sleiman Seeks Abolition of Religion in Lebanese Politics
Turkey to Buy 6 Subs at Reduced Price From Germany
Turkish Figures Rank High on List of World’s Most Influential Muslims
U.S. Fears Iraq Development Projects May Go to Waste
UAE: 500 Mln Euros to Strengthen Air Force
Why Won’t the Arabs Protect Themselves From Iran by Actively Battling Against Tehran Having Nuclear Weapons?
 
South Asia
“Wall Street Would Gain From Pakistan Violence”
British Council: Pakistan Facing ‘Frightening’ Demographic Disaster
Hindu Nationalist BJP Against Equal Rights for Christian and Muslim Dalits
India: Wahabism Linked With Terrorism; Saudi Envoy Stages Walkout
Malaysia Opposition Aide Teoh Beng Hock’s Body Exhumed
Report Warns of Pakistan’s Younger Generation Losing Faith in Democracy
Taliban Suffocate Pakistan Buddhist Heritage
US Helps Build Anti-Taliban Afghan Militias: Report
 
Far East
EU: Herman Van Rompuy and Baroness Ashton: The EU’s Perfect Couple of Nobodies
Japan’s Native Ainu Fight for Cultural Survival
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
Somali Militants Al-Shabab ‘Seize Southern Town’
 
Latin America
Chavez Praises Carlos the Jackal as ‘Revolutionary Fighter’
It’s Called Darkest Peru for a Reason
 
Immigration
UK: Citizenship Language Scam Exposed

Financial Crisis


In Spain: Supermarket for the Needy

(by Paola Del Vecchio) (ANSAmed) — MADRID, NOVEMBER 20 — It has already been branded as “el super de los necesitados”, the supermarket for the needy. It is the first of its kind to open in Spain in Girona (Catalonia). An initiative headed by Caritas, the Red Cross, and the Girona Food Bank, the market will help the families that have been hit hardest by the economic crisis. At first glance it is similar to a department store: frozen food products in the freezers, perishables and vegetables in the refrigerators, products on the shelves, and shopping carts. Obviously, there is not a very wide selection since only basic necessities are offered: rice, pasta, milk, sugar, flour, oil, legumes, eggs, etc. All products will be free or will be sold for a nominal fee. Access, according to reports today in the Catalonian press, is limited only to the needy, unemployed, or families with no source of income due to the economic crisis whose difficult situation has been certified by the municipality’s social services department and by assistance groups such as Caritas or the Red Cross. Rising unemployment in the past year, which in Spain is over the 18-percent mark and will hit 19.3% next year according to OECD estimates, has created an new army of poor people that not even charitable organisations are able to handle. There are increasing numbers of families that are not able to pay their bills or risk losing their homes because they are not able to make their mortgage payments. This is why in Girona, Caritas and the Red Cross decided with the Municipality to join forces in a pilot project that will attempt to deal with this new dramatic social situation. The supermarket of the new poor will be able to supply food to about 5,000 families per year, 3,000 more than those who have turned to food distribution centres that Caritas has opened in various points in the city. Many do not go to these centres out of shame, hence the opening of a supermarket, which would provide a dignified alternative, explained Caritas. The profile of the new poor includes people between the ages of 25 and 40, the majority of which are families supporting two children, with at least one disabled family member, and who are not able to cover their food and housing expenses. Many live in makeshift homes, sheds, on the street, or in crisis centres, observed Pilar Cano of the Red Cross, which has the task of directing needy families to food centres. Food aid could be sporadic or be extended continuously for a maximum of three months, which could be lengthened further only in special circumstances in order to not create a situation of dependency on social services. The homeless will have the right to products free of charge, while those with greater resources will pay partially. The government will partially fund the centres and the other part will be paid for by those making use of them until their economic situation improves. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Coming Deficit Disaster

The president says he understands the urgency of our fiscal crisis, but his policies are the equivalent of steering the economy toward an iceberg.

President Barack Obama took office promising to lead from the center and solve big problems. He has exerted enormous political energy attempting to reform the nation’s health-care system. But the biggest economic problem facing the nation is not health care. It’s the deficit. Recently, the White House signaled that it will get serious about reducing the deficit next year—after it locks into place massive new health-care entitlements. This is a recipe for disaster, as it will create a new appetite for increased spending and yet another powerful interest group to oppose deficit-reduction measures.

Our fiscal situation has deteriorated rapidly in just the past few years. The federal government ran a 2009 deficit of $1.4 trillion—the highest since World War II—as spending reached nearly 25% of GDP and total revenues fell below 15% of GDP. Shortfalls like these have not been seen in more than 50 years.

Going forward, there is no relief in sight, as spending far outpaces revenues and the federal budget is projected to be in enormous deficit every year. Our national debt is projected to stand at $17.1 trillion 10 years from now, or over $50,000 per American. By 2019, according to the Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) analysis of the president’s budget, the budget deficit will still be roughly $1 trillion, even though the economic situation will have improved and revenues will be above historical norms.

The planned deficits will have destructive consequences for both fairness and economic growth. They will force upon our children and grandchildren the bill for our overconsumption. Federal deficits will crowd out domestic investment in physical capital, human capital, and technologies that increase potential GDP and the standard of living. Financing deficits could crowd out exports and harm our international competitiveness, as we can already see happening with the large borrowing we are doing from competitors like China.

At what point, some financial analysts ask, do rating agencies downgrade the United States? When do lenders price additional risk to federal borrowing, leading to a damaging spike in interest rates? How quickly will international investors flee the dollar for a new reserve currency? And how will the resulting higher interest rates, diminished dollar, higher inflation, and economic distress manifest itself? Given the president’s recent reception in China—friendly but fruitless—these answers may come sooner than any of us would like.

           — Hat tip: REP [Return to headlines]

USA


American Faces Jail for Pulling Woman’s Headscarf

An American woman has been charged with a hate crime after she verbally attacked and tugged at the hijab, or headscarf, of a Muslim woman following the Fort Hood murders, press reports said.

Two days after the Fort Hood shooting, Valerie Kenney approached U.S.-born Amal Abusumayah at a grocery store and shouted, “the guy that did the Texas shooting, he wasn’t American, and he was from the Middle East,”referring to Nidal Malik Hasan, the Fort Hood shooter, a U.S. citizen born in Virginia.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Black Gang Members Charged With Hate Crimes

26 incidents of verbal harassment, assault, robbery of white or Latino victims

The Denver Police Department arrested 32 men and juvenile boys after a months-long undercover investigation into what police said were racially motivated assaults and robberies in downtown Denver, including the LoDo entertainment district.

A task force composed of Denver police, the FBI and the Denver district attorney’s office investigated 26 incidents in which groups of black males verbally harassed, assaulted and at times robbed white or Latino males, according to Denver Police Chief Gerry Whitman.

All of the suspects are young black males, most of whom told police they were associated with either the Rollin’ 60s Crips gang or the Black Gangster Disciples gang.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Christian Conservatives Pray for God to Kill President Obama

That’s not very Christian-like, now is it? Nevertheless, a few religious zealots have taken their dislike of U.S. President Barack Obama to a new level — bumper stickers and t-shirts which command viewers to pray for the president’s death. Of course they don’t come right out and print “Pray for our President to die”. Instead, the perpetrators take a far more cowardly approach, utilizing the slogan “Pray for Obama — Psalm 109:8”.

If you take the time to look up Psalm 109:8, you’ll notice right off that it is not a happy and cheerful passage. Psalm 109 is better known as “A Cry for Vengeance”. Psalm 109:8 specifically reads:

“Let his days be few; and let another take his office.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Major Hasan and Holy War

A domestic Islamic threat is real, and the FBI is unprepared to fight it.

By REUEL MARC GERECHT

For those of us who have tracked Islamic militancy in Europe, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan’s actions are not extraordinary. Since Muslim militants first tried to blow a French high-speed train off its rails in 1995, European intelligence and internal-security services have increasingly monitored European Muslim radicals. Whether it’s anti-Muslim bigotry, the large numbers of immigrant and native-born Muslims in Europe, an appreciation of how hard it is to become European, or just an understanding of how dangerous Islamic radicalism is, most Europeans are far less circumspect and politically correct when discussing their Muslim compatriots than are Americans.

A concern for not giving offense to Muslims would never prevent the French internal-security service, the Direction de la Surveillance du Territoire (DST), which deploys a large number of Muslim officers, from aggressively trying to pre-empt terrorism. As Maj. Hasan’s case shows, this is not true in the United States. The American military and especially the Federal Bureau of Investigation were in great part inattentive because they were too sensitive.

Moreover, President Barack Obama’s determined effort not to mention Islam in terrorist discussions—which means that we must not suggest that Maj. Hasan’s murderous actions flowed from his faith—will weaken American counterterrorism. Worse, the president’s position is an enormous wasted opportunity to advance an all-critical Muslim debate about the nature and legitimacy of jihad.

European counterterrorist officers know well that jihadists can appear, self-generated or tutored by extremist groups, inside Muslim families where parents and siblings lead peaceful lives. Security officials live in fear of the quiet believer who quickly radicalizes, or the secular down-and-out European who enthusiastically converts to a militant creed. Both cases allow little time and often few leads to neutralize a possible lethal explosion of the faith.

It shouldn’t require the U.S. to have a French-style, internal-security service to neutralize the likes of Maj. Hasan…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



‘No Better Time to be a Communist in US’

NEW DELHI: The three-day international conference of communist and workers’ parties began on Friday amidst a call to intensify popular struggles and expand solidarities in the wake of the current world capitalist crisis.

So confident are communist leaders of the solution they can offer to current crisis in capitalism that even the leader of Communist Party of USA, Scott Marshall, said, “There could not have been a better time to be a communist in USA than this.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama, The Nobel Prize and the IRS

The President’s Expected Donation of His Nobel Prize Cash Could Cause Him Tax Headaches

Regifting has a long and honorable history. No doubt even ancient peoples did it, passing on to someone else a gift they didn’t want or need. But the term itself is of recent origin—credited to a 1995 episode of Jerry Seinfeld’s eponymous series.

Since then, regifting has literally come out of the closet. In an poll, 60% of women and 40% of men admitted to having regifted.

Even more respectable is the practice of regifting a cash award to charity. Most recently, President Obama said he’d be donating the $1.4 million Nobel Peace Prize to charity.

That raises the question: What are the tax implications of getting a gift or prize, and what are the tax consequences of regifting it? It turns out that the answers are different for gifts and prizes.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Palin’s Pastor Meets the Press

What would you do if you were the pastor of an ordinary evangelical church and a member of your flock suddenly became the most controversial person on this planet?

That is what happened to the Rev. Larry Kroon of Wasilla Bible Church when Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska became the GOP nominee to be vice president. To say that all heckfire broke loose would be an understatement. Kroon’s church was, quite literally, invaded by reporters from sea to shining sea and from, literally, all corners of the world.

The professionals showed up, of course. That would be the journalists who are experts at covering politics. After the first stage of hurricane Palin, Kroon realized that many or most of the reporters who were camped out on his church lawn had little or no interest in religion, his church or even the role that faith had played in Palin’s life and career. Many didn’t get it and they didn’t want to.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Parade Bars Mrs. Claus

At today’s Raleigh Christmas Parade, Santa Claus will go stag.

Parade organizers gave his wife the boot Friday afternoon, citing worry that children wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between Claus and Mrs. Claus if both were wearing red and white suits.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Troubled Young Latinas in Therapy Embrace Ancient Mexican Wisdom

‘Strength to know they come from people who built great pyramids and civilizations’

Nancy Villagran and her mother weren’t getting along, but that wasn’t the worst of it.

“I was running away from home,” said the petite 14-year-old Mexican-American from Gilroy. “My mother and father weren’t getting along, and I had depression.”

She’s back home now, and the whole family is in therapy, thanks to a special research project that introduces troubled young Latinas to the culture and wisdom of their Mexican ancestors. The thinking behind the approach is that the girls’ personal foundations have been shattered or were weak all along and the best way to build moral strength and pride is by connecting them to the philosophical and spiritual teachings of ancient Mexico.

“This is part of their ethnic identity,” said Rosalva Vargas, a therapist at Rebekah Children’s Services in Gilroy. “It gives them strength to know they come from people who built great pyramids and civilizations.”

According to Vargas, who holds a doctorate in child social development, a lot of mental health programs preach “cultural relevance” but don’t actually use culture in treatment. So she and colleague Randall Ramirez designed a treatment program with hefty doses of Mexican culture.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Ultimatum: Investigate ACORN or More Videos Coming

Undercover filmmakers warn Holder release will be timed to 2010 elections

Andrew Breitbart, whose BigGovernment.com rocked Washington with undercover videos exposing ACORN corruption, has issued U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder an ultimatum: Conduct an investigation into ACORN, or more videos will be released just in time to drop a bombshell on the 2010 elections.

“This message is to Attorney General Holder,” Breitbart said on the Fox News network’s “Hannity” last night. “I want you to know that we have more tapes, it’s not just ACORN, and we’re going to hold out until the next election cycle. … If you get into an investigation, we will give you the tapes; if you don’t give us the tapes, we will revisit these tapes come election time.”

[…]

“There’s a lot of hypocrisy,” Breitbart said. “At the end of the day they’ve recognized that Eric Holder, the Attorney General, has not initiated an investigation into ACORN after we now have seven tapes. … It was Hannah, James, and me who were being investigated, that’s why we’ve been forced to offer this latest tape.”

The “latest” tape Breitbart referred to was yet another undercover sting, this team exposing Lavelle Stewart of ACORN in South Central Los Angeles, who tells Giles and O’Keefe — posing as a prostitute and pimp hoping to establish a quiet, international, underage prostitution ring — that they will have to hook up with “someone who’s on that international sex business level.”

“14 and 15 year olds been traveling overseas for years,” Stewart said before offering to do research and hinting that she has had meetings with porn magnate Larry Flynt.

[Comments from JD: Video at article link]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Smiling on Facebook Costs Depressed Woman Her Insurance

Agent cites pictures showing her having good time at bar, birthday party, beach

Nathalie Blanchard, 29, has been on leave from her job at IBM in Bromont, Que., for the last year and a half after she was diagnosed with major depression.

The Eastern Townships woman was receiving monthly sick-leave benefits from Manulife, her insurance company, but the payments dried up this fall.

When Blanchard called Manulife, the company said that “I’m available to work, because of Facebook,” she told CBC News this week.

She said her insurance agent described several pictures Blanchard posted on the popular social networking site, including ones showing her having a good time at a Chippendales bar show, at her birthday party and on a sun holiday — evidence that she is no longer depressed, Manulife said.

Blanchard said she notified Manulife that she was taking a trip, and she’s shocked the company would investigate her in such a manner and interpret her photos that way.

“In the moment I’m happy, but before and after I have the same problems” as before, she said.

Blanchard said that on her doctor’s advice, she tried to have fun, including nights out at her local bar with friends and short getaways to sun destinations, as a way to forget her problems.

She also doesn’t understand how Manulife accessed her photos because her Facebook profile is locked and only people she approves can look at what she posts.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Brzezniski: East Europeans Should Stop Behaving Like Children

Washington, Nov 17 (CTK) — East Europeans should stop behave like small children, start to deal with their own problems by themselves and not to go to the United States complaining about Russian aggressiveness, for instance, Zbigniew Brzezinski said in in interview for the public Czech Television (CT) Tuesday.

Brzezinski, former national security adviser to U.S. president Jimmy Carter who is referred to as the “grey eminence” of U.S. politics, gave the interview on the day of the 20th anniversary of the events in Prague that resulted in the fall of the Communist regime.

He said he predicted the disintegration of the Communist system in 1968 already when Soviet troops [together with other Warsaw Pact soldiers] invaded then Czechoslovakia [to crush the Prague Spring reform movement].

Brzezinski said he declared then that this is the start of the final stage of the Communist system because its internal discords were clearly visible and were devastating.

He said Czechoslovakia was definitely not in such a revolutionary mood like Poland or Hungary.

Brzezinski said, however, he visited Czechoslovakia in the spring of 1968 and met many people. The political turmoil was very intensive and when the Soviet troops came, the regime alone had no more forces to fully eliminate all the people.

They lost work, they were discriminated against, they were treated very badly, but they still were there. And when the regime started to disintegrate more, they also started to be more committed, Brzezinski said.

Turning to Czech fears of Russia 20 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, he said there are reasons for embarrassment of the country, of its attempts to resume its influence by means of economic instruments, by gaining control in strategic firms of the energy system, for instance.

But people should not dramatise the problem and they should think of that it is mainly their responsibility to deal with it. They should not expect anyone to solve their problems for them, Brzezinski said.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Czech Senate Bans Appearance by Controversial Dutch Politician Geert Wilders

The Czech Senate on Thursday banned an appearance by the controversial Dutch politician Geert Wilders on its premises. Mr Wilders was going to screen his anti-Islamic film, Fitna, and address a conference held by Czech anti-Islamists and Euro-sceptics.

The controversial anti-Islamic movie Fitna by Geert Wilders, the leader of the Dutch Party for Freedom, was due to be shown in the Czech Senate on November 30. Mr Wilders, who will be coming to Prague at the invitation of a Czech anti-Islamist website, eurabia.cz, and Civic Democrat Senator Jirí Oberfalzer, was also going to deliver an address entitled “Free Speech and the Islamization of Europe”. The news immediately sparked a huge controversy, and Senate leaders eventually banned Mr Wilders from appearing on the premises of the upper chamber. Civic Democrat Premysl Sobotka is the Senate’s chair.

Premysl Sobotka “When I found out about the details, and when I learned about what he was going to talk about here in the Senate, I said clearly it was a problem that such a controversial politician should appear in one of the chambers of the Czech Parliament.”

The Senate’s media commission, which originally approved the event, revoked its decision. Meanwhile, the Civic Democratic Party distanced itself from the invite, and so did the heads of both chambers’ foreign committees. I asked one of the organizers, Daniel Kotula, whether he was surprised by the reaction.

“I expected that there would be some voices that would not welcome Wilder’s visit but I did not expect that they would be from the Civic Democrats because they and Mr Wilders have very similar opinions. So I don’t understand. I expected this from some Social Democrats or the Greens for instance, but not from Civic Democrats.”

Senator Jirí Oberfalzer, who is well-known for his opposition to the EU’s Lisbon treaty, and the editors of eurabia.cz are now looking for another venue. They want to draw attention to how the Lisbon treaty will change the immigration policies within the EU. Daniel Kotula again.

Geert Wilders “It’s also related to the Lisbon treaty because it has some paragraphs related to immigration. Now that the Lisbon treaty is ratified, the EU can change immigration flows within the European Union, from example from Italy to central Europe.”

The country’s several-dozen-thousand-strong Muslim community is unfazed by the event, regardless of where Geert Wilders will screen his anti-Islamic movie. Mohammad Abbas is the head of the Muslim Union of the Czech Republic.

“Traditionally, the Muslim community here ignore such provocations. This man is coming to provoke, and I think that if we react to this, it will be exactly what he wants. He wants to show Muslims as people who are not rational. I think the best thing is to ignore him, just like that.”

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Daniel Hannan: EU is ‘In a Democratic Mess’

The European Union is an economic, demographic and democratic mess, writes Daniel Hannan.

“It’s all very well to criticise, Hannan, but what would you do if you were in Van Rompuy’s shoes?” So asked a euro-enthusiast friend when I had finished tearing into Thursday night’s stitch-up.

It’s a fair question, and it won’t quite do to answer that I wouldn’t be starting from here. The EU is in an economic mess: its share of world GDP will fall from 26 per cent to 15 per cent in 2025. It is in a demographic mess: 40 years of low birth rates have left it with a choice between depopulation and mass immigration. And it is in a democratic mess, with turnouts plummeting.

So what would I do? Step one is easy: I’d abolish the Common Agricultural Policy, thereby giving a greater boost to Europe’s economies than any number of bail-outs and stimulus packages. Food prices would fall sharply: the average family would save more than £1,000 a year in grocery bills, with the greatest savings being made by those on the lowest incomes. Scrapping the CAP would also be the single greatest gift Europe could give the Third World. It would remove the main barrier to a full WTO agreement. Oh, and it would take a penny off income tax into the bargain.

With the CAP out of the way, it would be easy enough to dismantle the rest of the Common External Tariff. I’d phase out all structural, cohesion and social funds, releasing armies of consultants and contractors to more productive work. Ditto the staffs of dozens of euro-quangos: the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs, the European Food Safety Authority, the European Chemicals Authority, the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions and so on.

Now the biggie: deregulation. According to the Commissioner for Enterprise, Gunther Verheugen, the benefits of the single market are worth around 180 billion euros a year, while the cost of complying with Brussels rules is 600 billion euros. In other words, by its own admission, the EU costs more than it’s worth. The solution? Heap the bonfire with pages of the acquits communautaire: the EU’s amassed regulations. Scrap the directives that tell us what hours we can work, what vitamins we can buy, how long we can sit on tractors, how loudly we can play our music. Return power to national governments or, better, to local authorities — or, best of all, to individual citizens.

I would confine the EU’s jurisdiction to matters of a clearly cross-border nature: tariff reduction, environmental pollution, mutual product recognition. The member states would retain control of everything else: agriculture and fisheries, foreign affairs and defence, immigration and criminal justice, and social and employment policy.

The European Commission could then be reduced to a small secretariat, answering to national ministers. The European Court of Justice could be replaced by a tribunal that would arbitrate trade disputes. The European Parliament could be scrapped altogether; instead, seconded national MPs might meet for a few days every month or two to keep an eye on the bureaucracy.

You will, of course, have spotted the flaw in my plan: it would put an awful lot of Eurocrats out of work. Which, sadly, is why it won’t happen. For, whatever the motives of its founders, the EU is now chiefly a racket: a massive mechanism to redistribute money to those lucky enough to be on the inside of the system.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Dutch Trouble Makers Whipped as Punishment

From Dutch: Two boys who threw apples against a window in Wijk en Aalburg were caught by the owner of the house, and with the help of a neighbor he gave them a whippiing. The man admitted he went too far.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Finland Mulls Plea System to Unburden Courts

The Justice Ministry is considering a legal change that would allow criminals to cut down their sentences by literally paying for their crimes — in cash. Officials say such a system could shave time off lengthy trials; but some critics are wary of letting criminals buy lighter sentences.

The glut of cases at Finnish courts has created a backlog, extending the time it takes to get a hearing or trial.

Officials are now looking for innovative ways to unclog courts. The Justice Ministry is examining whether a plea bargain system could offer some relief. Criminals who plead guilty to their crimes could see reduced sentences or fines.

Justice Minister Tuija Brax says white-collar crimes may be ideal for plead-outs.

“Financial crime investigations demand vast resources from police and prosecutors,” says Brax.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Gitmo Prisoner Slahi Tells Brother He Wants to Return to Germany

A Guantanamo Bay prisoner who admitted — under torture — to having organised trips to Afghan training camps for aspiring Jihadists including three of those involved in the 9/11 attacks, says he wants to return to Germany if he is released.

Mohamedou Ould Slahi, 39, who comes from Mauretania but lived and studied in Duisburg and Essen between 1988 and 1999, told his brother, who lives in Düsseldorf, he wanted to come back to Germany.

Der Spiegel reported that the brother, Yahdih Ould Slahi, received an hour-long phone call from Guantanamo Bay, in which Slahi said he would be asking to return to Germany if he was released.

Slahi is seen as one of the most high-profile prisoners held in the notorious prison due to his admission to a string of allegations after being subjected to sleep deprivation, constant noise, sexual humiliation and threats against his mother.

These allegations included recruited Islamists and arranging for 9/11 ringleader Mohammed Atta to visit a training camp in Afghanistan.

He later retracted all his admissions, writing in a letter that he simply said yes to everything that was put to him, to stop the torture.

Military prosecutor Stuart Couch, who was expected to lead a case against Slahi, dropped the case in 2004 due to what he described as ‘cruel and inhumane’ treatment.

Since then Slahi has been held in Guantanamo Bay prison awaiting some kind of legal process — albeit in a cell kitted out with privileges such as a television and computer.

He is one of up to 70 prisoners currently held in the prison for which the US government has no plan.

He was arrested while in Mauritania where he was working in the IT industry. Slahi told his brother he would like to remain in that industry, but would prefer to work and live in Germany.

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



Italy: Transsexual Prostitutes ‘Afraid’ After Death

Rome, 20 Nov. (AKI) — Rome’s transsexuals feared for their lives after a transsexual prostitute linked to a major political sex scandal was found dead in the Italian capital on Friday, a friend told Italian media. Brenda, the Brazilian transsexual prostitute was found dead after a fire broke out in her northern Rome apartment early Friday.

Transsexuals in the area rejected claims that Brenda committed suicide.

Brenda made headlines after allegedly having more than one sexual encounter with the former governor of the Lazio region Piero Marrazzo in an extortion, sex and drugs scandal, which led to the governor’s resignation in October.

“They killed her. I do not know who. She was in a bad psychological state, she wanted to go back to Brazil. Now they must find who did this,” said Barbara, a transsexual friend of Brenda, told reporters.

Meanwhile, Rome’s public prosecutor said that the case would be investigated as a homicide, adding that Brenda had suffocated from the smoke after the fire.

“We are all at risk. We live in fear,” Barbara, told reporters, adding that police were not protecting them.

“The police have done nothing, and all the transsexuals who live in this area are at risk of death. We are very afraid of the Rumanians,” Barbara told reporters, adding that the owner of the house where she lived wanted to evict Brenda.

“Brenda wanted to leave, she had already prepared her suitcases,” said Barbara.

Early reports said that Brenda’s semi-naked body had no signs of violence and a bottle of whisky was found next to her.

Barbara also told reporters that she had a few drinks with Brenda before she died.

“Brenda had been living here for six years. I saw her last night, she was fine, but was very worried. We drank together at a parking lot and then we went to her house where we left her watching television.”

Marrazzo, the former governor of the Lazio region (photo), once tipped as a future leader of Italy’s centre-left, resigned from his post in late October after a video emerged that apparently showed him with a transsexual prostitute.

When questioned in early November, Marrazzo, who is married with three children, admitted to several encounters with Brenda and another transsexual prostitute named Nathalie.

Later, reports surfaced about another, longer and allegedly more compromising video of him with cocaine.

“I had encounters of this kind with another person, a so-called Blenda (the name Blenda was used in the police minutes), which is a name that I read in the newspapers recently and which I remember,” said Marrazzo.

“During one of the encounters with Blenda, I remember seeing another transsexual, but whose name I do not recall. I think I only had two encounters with Blenda,” said Marrazzo.

At the time, the magistrate asked the former Lazio governor if he knew anything about a video of him recorded by a transsexual.

Marrazzo said he did not remember “because of his state of confusion due to the occasional consumption of cocaine…”

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



Police Confirm Car Bomb Attack in N. Ireland

Police confirmed on Sunday a car bomb attack overnight outside a police building in Northern Ireland, in what officials called a “reckless” attempt to undermine peace in the province.

The vehicle was driven late Saturday night through barriers outside the Belfast headquarters of the supervisory Northern Ireland Policing Board, but the bomb inside failed to detonate properly, Northern Ireland police chief Matt Baggott said.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Sister of UN ‘Suicide’ Scientist Who Died in Mysterious Fall Rescues Potential Evidence From Destruction

The sister of a British scientist who died in a mysterious fall has told how she rescued potential evidence from being destroyed by police..

Beverley Hall, 49, said she has been forced to store the clothes her brother wore on the night he died after officers revealed they were due to be burned.

She is now campaigning for police to investigate properly the death of Timothy Hampton, who plunged from the 17th floor of a UN building in Vienna last month.

Austrian detectives have insisted that Mr Hampton, a 47-year-old scientist involved in monitoring nuclear activity, committed suicide.

But Mrs Hall, who runs a caravan park in Newbury, Berkshire, believes there is enough evidence — including signs of bruising around her brother’s neck consistent with strangulation — to suggest he did not kill himself.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Spain: Inquiry Into Foundation Behind Pope’s Visit

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, NOVEMBER 20 — The judge of Madrid’s Supreme Court, Antonio Pedreira, investigating in the Gurtel case of alleged corruption connected to the Partito Popolare, is now looking into the party’s links with the foundation that organised the visit by Pope Benedict XVI to Valencia in 2006. The news comes in statements made to El Pais by Paula Sanchez de Leon, the official responsible for justice and public administration and spokesperson for Valencia’s regional government. The judge has requested documentation relating to the Foundation for the 5th Global Family Meeting, the spokeswoman said. The Foundation, constituted between the regional, provincial and communal governments and the diocese of the Archbishop of Valencia to organise the Pope’s visit, had expenses of 12.2 million euros. The judge has also requested from regional state TV broadcaster Canal-9 Radio Televisi Valenciana, its contract with the company Teconsa for the sound recording and the installation of the giant screens during the Pope’s visit. A contract from which the corruption network around Francisco Correa of Orange Market is accused of having derived more than one million in kick-backs, police say. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swiss Visas for Libyans Down to a Trickle

Switzerland has drastically reduced the number of visas granted to Libyan citizens, with only 83 issued so far this year compared to 5,902 in the same period last year.

In response to a motion submitted by the Foreign Affairs Commission of the House of Representatives, the government on Thursday revealed the extent of the restrictions imposed since the detention of two Swiss businessmen by the regime in Tripoli.

The men were first detained in Tripoli in July 2008, days after the arrest of the Libyan leader’s son Hannibal Gaddafi and his wife Aline in Geneva on charges of mistreating their servants.

Swiss representatives abroad no longer have the right to issue visas to Libyans and all applications are currently being referred to the Foreign Ministry and Federal Migration Office.

Earlier this month, Libya complained about a European policy of restricting Schengen visas to Libyan citizens. Switzerland is part of the Schengen area, and under the agreement has a veto over the allocation of the visas which allow border-free travel throughout the 25 member countries in mainland Europe.

Claiming that the majority of Libyan applications were being denied, deputy foreign minister Khaled Kaïm denounced a “systematic and programmed solidarity with Switzerland”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Minaret Challengers Gain Ground Ahead of Ballot

A proposal to ban the construction of minarets appears to be winning support, but is still some way short of a majority, according to the latest opinion poll.

Two weeks ahead of the nationwide vote at the end of November, 53 per cent of respondents said they reject the rightwing initiative, while 37 per cent said they approve the ban. A further ten per cent were still undecided.

The survey was carried out by gfs.berne — a leading research and polling institute — on behalf of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation, swissinfo’s parent company.

“The percentage of supporters is on the increase, which is untypical for a people’s initiative. But the no side still has an edge,” said the head of institute, Claude Longchamp.

The survey, which was conducted among more than 1,200 citizens across the country between November 9 and 14, found that the ban appears to be popular among supporters of rightwing parties, residents of rural areas and towns in the German-speaking part of the country, as well as among less qualified people.

“This is a pattern known from other campaigns which target the fears and concerns of the population,” Longchamp added.

However, he was surprised by evidence that the divisive initiative has gained ground among citizens without clear party affiliation — this group accounts for up to 30 per cent of respondents — compared with a first poll in October.

Islam’s alleged pretension to power, symbolised by minarets, is the argument which has the most popular appeal, according to researchers.

Human right concerns were frequently quoted by opponents of a ban, while potential damage to Switzerland’s international relations also appeared to sway opinion their way.

There was clearly no dominant argument on the no side, and opponents of a ban had been wrongfooted by the direction the pro campaign took, according to Longchamp.

“It appears they underestimated the importance of a broad discussion about Islam in our society. It was clearly not sufficient to reject the anti-minaret posters,” he said.

“The rightwing cleverly extended the debate to issues including integration of Muslims and their faith. These concerns have never been addressed in a nationwide context before.”

He says opponents have so far failed to identify a political weakness in the initiative.

Uncertainty

Based on the findings of the latest poll, and given the increasing support for outlawing new minarets, experts conclude that the ballot is more open than after the first survey a month ago.

“The outcome of the ballot is uncertain, but the approval rate for a ban will most likely be below the 50 per cent threshold,” Longchamp said.

He said it was not possible to forecast the result on November 29, but the poll gave an indication of the mood among citizens two weeks before the vote.

Longchamp also pointed out that it is crucial to consider the focus of polls and the methods used.

A survey by the MIS market research institute earlier this month found opponents of minarets in Switzerland ahead of supporters.

The poll included people who are not eligible to vote and did not cover the Italian-speaking region of the country. The gfs.berne institute survey claims to be nationwide and to have been conducted only among potential voters.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Britain’s New Internet Law — As Bad as Everyone’s Been Saying, And Worse. Much, Much Worse.

The British government has brought down its long-awaited Digital Economy Bill, and it’s perfectly useless and terrible. It consists almost entirely of penalties for people who do things that upset the entertainment industry (including the “three-strikes” rule that allows your entire family to be cut off from the net if anyone who lives in your house is accused of copyright infringement, without proof or evidence or trial), as well as a plan to beat the hell out of the video-game industry with a new, even dumber rating system (why is it acceptable for the government to declare that some forms of artwork have to be mandatorily labelled as to their suitability for kids? And why is it only some media? Why not paintings? Why not novels? Why not modern dance or ballet or opera?).

So it’s bad. £50,000 fines if someone in your house is accused of filesharing. A duty on ISPs to spy on all their customers in case they find something that would help the record or film industry sue them (ISPs who refuse to cooperate can be fined £250,000).

But that’s just for starters. The real meat is in the story we broke yesterday: Peter Mandelson, the unelected Business Secretary, would have to power to make up as many new penalties and enforcement systems as he likes. And he says he’s planning to appoint private militias financed by rightsholder groups who will have the power to kick you off the internet, spy on your use of the network, demand the removal of files or the blocking of websites, and Mandelson will have the power to invent any penalty, including jail time, for any transgression he deems you are guilty of. And of course, Mandelson’s successor in the next government would also have this power.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Envoys Called Back to Calm Muslim Hotspots

BRITISH ambassadors to Muslim countries are travelling back to Britain to help to counter the propaganda of radical Islamic clerics. So far 25 senior diplomats have met Muslims in radical hotspots such as Luton, where, earlier this year, troops returning from Iraq were jeered on the streets by extremists. At the little-publicised “outreach” meetings, Muslims can talk to the diplomats directly about British foreign policy in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Violent extremists use misconceptions about foreign policy as a way to radicalise vulnerable young people in the UK,” said a Foreign Office spokesman.

“Through a programme of outreach events, ambassadors and senior officials work with local partners in Muslim communities across the country to challenge those misconceptions. These events are a chance for well-informed officials to explain our foreign policy and to get a better understanding of what people think about it.”

Ambassadors and other senior British diplomats in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia and Morocco have joined in the meetings. Sir William Patey, ambassador to Saudi Arabia, has flown back to Britain twice to visit Muslims — in Redbridge, Essex in July, and in Edinburgh in September. Last month the ambassador to Morocco met Muslims in northwest London.

The meetings are part of the Prevent initiative, which was set up after the London suicide bombings in July 2005 to stop people becoming terrorists or coming under the influence of “anti-British” ideas. The Foreign Office is also paying for senior British Muslims to travel to Pakistan and other Muslim countries to counter stories about the maltreatment of Muslims in the UK.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Teacher ‘Suspended Over 9/11 Creative Writing Task’

A primary schoolteacher has been suspended after telling seven-year-old pupils to write stories imagining that their fathers had died in the 9/11 terrorist attacks, it has been reported.

Kathy Young, 29, is said to have left children traumatised after also asking them to imagine that they had been killed in the destruction of the World Trade Center.

Parents complained to Oxclose Village Primary School in Washington, Tyne and Wear, after their children reportedly came home in tears following the creative writing lesson.

Mrs Young, who has a nine-year-old daughter, devised the task as children observed the anniversary of the 2001 al-Qaeda attacks in which 2,995 people died, it is claimed.

“How can she set young children this kind of essay? Many of them have been left traumatised by her ridiculous lesson,” one parent told a Sunday newspaper.

Unburied bodies tell the tale of Detroit — a city in despair

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article6926247.ece

The abandoned corpses, in white body bags with number tags tied to each toe, lie one above the other on steel racks inside a giant freezer in Detroit’s central mortuary, like discarded shoes in the back of a wardrobe.

Some have lain here for years, but in recent months the number of unclaimed bodies has reached a record high. For in this city that once symbolised the American Dream many cannot even afford to bury their dead.

“I have not seen this many unclaimed bodies in 13 years on the job,” said Albert Samuels, chief investigator at the mortuary. “It started happening when the economy went south last year. I have never seen this many people struggling to give people their last resting place.”

Unburied bodies piling up in the city mortuary — it reached 70 earlier this year — is the latest and perhaps most appalling indignity to be heaped on the people of Detroit. The motor city that once boasted the highest median income and home ownership rate in the US is today in the midst of a long and agonising death spiral.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



UK: We’ll Give the Tories a Majority, Says Clegg: Lib Dem Leader Pledges to Avert Election Deadlock

David Cameron could be forced to accept an offer of support from Nick Clegg after a poll suggested Britain is on course for its first hung Parliament since 1974.

The LibDem leader declared for the first time that he would back the Tories if they emerge as the largest party but do not secure an overall working majority.

It came after a survey put Labour only six points behind the Conservatives — enough to leave Mr Cameron 35 seats short of a majority.

The LibDem leader insisted he could not prop up the party with the second highest number of seats.

Mr Clegg’s intervention is a heavy blow to Gordon Brown, who has been working to entice the Lib Dems by pledging a referendum on reforming the voting system to allow proportional representation.

Labour insiders admit that their best hope is to close the gap with the Conservatives sufficiently to leave them short of a working Commons majority.

The party was boosted on Sunday by a poll putting it on 31 per cent, with the Tories on 37 per cent. Most recent polls have put the Tories between ten and 15 points clear.

It is the narrowest gap between the two main parties since last December and suggests Mr Cameron is struggling to win over enough floating voters.

If replicated at an election expected next spring, the poll — which also shows economic optimism at its highest level since 1997 — would deliver the first hung Parliament since the snap General Election of February 1974, after which Edward Heath resigned.

The findings left the main parties contemplating two elections next year, since whoever emerged as leader of the largest party would be likely to seek a more decisive mandate after a few months.

Mr Clegg indicated that if the Tories emerge as the largest party, as the poll suggests, he would put Mr Cameron in No 10 either by allowing him to form a minority government or in a formal coalition.

‘I think it is just an inevitable fact, it’s just stating the obvious, that the party which has got the strongest mandate from the British people will have the first right to seek to govern either on its own or with others,’ he told the BBC’s Andrew Marr programme.

‘It’s whichever party — whether it’s the Liberal Democrats, Labour or the Conservatives — have the strongest mandate from the British people.’

Saying he did not regard himself as a ‘kingmaker’, Mr Clegg added: ‘I start from a simple principle. The votes of the British people should determine what happens.’

Mr Cameron said he had never believed the result of the election was a foregone conclusion.

‘I think the state of the nation’s opinion is that people are disillusioned with Labour, with the Government, they are disillusioned also with politics, but they are not going to just hand it over to the Conservatives,’ he said.

‘We have got to work for it and earn it. I have got to work for it and earn it.’

The Tory leader rebuked business spokesman Kenneth Clarke for suggesting that a hung Parliament would be worse than a Labour victory.

‘Anything would be better than another five years of Labour,’ he said.

Shadow Commons leader Sir George Young told Sky News: ‘Any complacency that there may have been in my party will certainly have been put on one side by the poll showing the gap narrowing.

‘I would rather have a clear Conservative victory, then if we do not get that I would like the Conservatives as the largest party.’

Tory sources pointed out that the poll was conducted at the height of sympathy for Mr Brown after what was seen as unfair attack over a letter of condolence sent to the mother of a soldier killed in Afghanistan.

‘On the bright side, at least this poll should ensure Gordon Brown stays on,’ said one, who regards the Prime Minister as a huge drag on Labour fortunes.

But a former Labour minister said the poll showing the party closing the gap made it ‘more, not less likely’ that Mr Brown would face another assault on his leadership.

‘This poll should jolt people into realising that with a new leader, there really would be everything to play for,’ he said.

The Mori survey showed Mr Brown’s personal ratings remain in the doldrums.

Only 34 per cent of people are satisfied with his performance, against 59 per cent who are dissatisfied. Mr Cameron had approval ratings of 48 per cent, with 35 per cent against.

After the ‘Turnip Taliban’ rebellion in Norfolk, David Cameron is facing fresh unrest over attempts to promote women candidates.

Activists in Beckenham, South London, condemned as ‘ridiculous’ an edict there must be three women on the shortlist for the seat, and lodged a complaint with party chairman Eric Pickles.

And a group dubbed the ‘Suffolk Swedes’ are resisting attempts to parachute Katy Bourne, a businesswoman from a Labour-supporting family, into Mid Suffolk.

[Return to headlines]



Video: New EU President Confirms New World Order Desire

‘Copenhagen is another step towards the global management of our planet’

[Comments from JD: Paragraph below is by the poster of the video.]

As plain as it comes, the newly “elected” [****] that is the EUSSR president confirms the desire for a one world government, a New World Order of worldwide oppression and the spread of worldwide Communism. If it didn’t hit you what the EU project is all about, the new EU “president” confirms it for you in this clip. Recorded from BBC News 24, 19 November 2009.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Video: Jihad Milkshake

Anjem Choudary, the man behind Islam4uk, wants to turn Buckingham Palace into a mosque, impose sharia law in the UK, and destroy Britain’s porn industry. We took him for a milkshake (his favourite is chocolate). Click through to watch a movie of our date.

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

North Africa


Agriculture: Tunisia, Date Harvest Increase Predicted

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, NOVEMBER 19 — A ten percent increase has been predicted for the 2009-2010 date harvest in Tunisia, compared to the same period last year. Tunisia is the worlds top exporter of the high quality Deglet Ennour, and production is predicted to increase by 14 percent. Regarding exports in general, they reached 69,000 metric tons in the 2008-2009 season, destined for about 60 countries; the number one market is Morocco, followed in order by France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. There has also been a solid increase in this market for Turkey (2,230 metric tons), Russia (2,820 metric tons) and Malaysia (2,000 metric tons).(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Alaoui: Morocco Has Turned the Page, Audience Says No

(by Cristiana Missori) (ANSAmed) — ROME, NOVEMBER 18 — In the last 5 years the way of making film in Morocco has changed significantly: from the technology to the issues touched on, from the language used to nude scenes. It is a true revolution for the censorship army and the public not so inclined to “put up with” not just the images, but also the strong criticism of power and society. In this way, Sanaa Alaoui, a young Moroccan actress who has worked in a number of films, shorts and TV series in Morocco, Spain, France and Mexico, told ANSAmed of the evolution of the seventh art in her country of origin. “Today’s filmmakers”, she said, “have modernised the way of making a film. In addition to the quality, which is clearly superior, the stories that our films tell have also changed: talking about drugs, prostitution, corruption politics and sex ten years ago was simply unimaginable. There are censors, but the directors are daring to challenge them”. In a scene from Oud el Ward (La beaute’ eparpillee, 2007) by Lahcen Zinoun — a film that was presented at the XV edition of the Medfilm Festival in Rome. And for which she won the best actress award at the Tangiers Festival — Sanaa bared her chest. “In that moment”, ‘the actress explained, “the actresses clothes are torn off, she is humiliated and practically denuded’. It is a scene that was subject to debate in Morocco and for which the beautiful Sanaa was held as an example by the press. “I was just doing my job”, the artist replied, who wanted to stress that she would never do a gratuitous nude scene, because she “detests vulgarity”. If Moroccan film has taken steps forward, not all of the public has been willing to accept this evolution. A film like Casanegra (2008) by Noureddin Lakhgaari, shocked the eyes and ears of the more “chaste” population of the kingdom. “In Morocco”, Sanaa explained, “there are two types of spectators: Those ready to accept crude language, even if vulgar, and who want to see things change in their country, and those who don’t admit that the kingdom is spoken badly of, and don’t accept the bitterness of the tales”. The result is that Moroccan society and the public is split in two. “It is thanks to the work of these directors that Morocco will evolve”, Alaoui concluded. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria Acquits Two Former Guantanamo Bay Detainees

Two Algerian men held at Guantanamo Bay for seven years on terror charges have been acquitted at a trial on being returned home, state media report.

Faghoul Abdelli and Mohamed Terari were arrested in Afghanistan by Pakistani police after the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US, reports said.

They both denied having any connection to militant groups and said they were “brutally tortured” in US custody.

Algeria’s state prosecutor had called for a 20-year jail term for the men.

US President Barack Obama made closing the detention centre down a key part of his election campaign and set a deadline of January 2010.

But last week he said that date would be missed.

He did not set a specific new deadline for closing the camp, but said it would probably be later in 2010

Officials are trying to determine what to do with some 215 detainees still held at the Cuba prison.

Mr Obama’s administration says it will try some detainees in US courts and repatriate or resettle others not perceived as a threat.

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



Books: Story of Italians in Morocco

(ANSAmed) — BOLOGNA, NOVEMBER 20 — Travellers, artists, emigrants: Italians who have lived in Morocco during the ages and leaving traces of their presence. Their memories and journals, their stories and the result of 6 years of research to reconstruct a largely unknown history have been collected in the book “Schegge di memoria-Gli italiani in Marocco” (“Fragments of memory — Italians in Morocco”) by Roberta Yasmine Catalano, the Lebanese writer born in Rome in 1975 who has lived in Morocco for 15 years. The book was published recently but will unfortunately not be distributed in Italy. It will be presented tomorrow in Bologna by a Moroccan woman who has lived in Italy for a long time, Khadija Madda, teacher of the Arabic language and president of the Italo Calvino association in Bologna. She will discuss the book together with the writer and the immigration councilor of Bologna, Simona Lembi. The book tells the story of Italians in Morocco from the start of the 12th century. It tells the story of the first great emigration of Italians to Morocco early in the 20th century, looking for a better future, of their dramatic experiences in the French and American prisoner camps in WWII, and the contribution the Italians have given to Morocco’s economic development after its independence, also thanks to Enrico Mattei. The book offers a unique opportunity to get to know the stories and viewpoints of the Italians who have lived in Morocco between 1600 and 2000 and who have had an inevitable impact on the development of the country. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslim Violence Ongoing in Egypt — Christians Plead for Help

by Mary Abdelmassih

Farshoot, Egypt (AINA) — Since early morning on Saturday, November 21, the Upper Egyptian town of Farshoot, as well as the neighboring villages of Kom Ahmar, Shakiki and Ezbet Waziri, has been the scene of ongoing Muslim mob violence against Coptic Christian inhabitants. The mob looted, vandalized and burnt Coptic property, while Copts hid indoors fearing to venture out. Reuters Cairo reported that a witness said “chaos is overwhelming (in the city).”

The Violence is still going on. There are reports that seven Coptic women have been abducted.

Witnesses said that nearly 3000 angry Muslims have congregated since the early morning in front of the Police Headquarters in Farshoot, in an effort to kidnap Girgis Baroumi while being transported to court to renew his detainment, in order to kill him. Bishop Kirollos said it was agreed with the family of the Muslim girl Yousra to await the Court decision “but they did not wait for that.”

Coptic priest Rev. Benjamin Noshi was driving his car when the mob stopped and assaulted him, fracturing his skull. He is currently in hospital.

By the evening most Coptic businesses were looted and burnt. “They are destroying the Coptic economy in these areas,” says Wagih Yacoub of Middle Eadt Christian Association.

A witness said that some Coptic families were thrown out of their homes, which were occupied by Muslims.

Although security forces were deployed, they are not taking any action to stop the violence, they are stationed to protect the Farshoot police headquarters after the angry mob pelted it with stones before going in and attacking the officers. Chief Investigating Officer Essam Hany was injured along with others.

Witnesses said that the Police watched the mob but made no arrests and were just dispersing the mob from one street, only for them to appear in the next.

The violence was prompted by reports of sexual abuse of a girl by 21 year-old Copt Guirgis Baroumi, from Kom Ahmar, on Wednesday November 18, 2009. The 12-year-old Muslim girl has been identified as “Yousra.” Girgis is detained by the police pending investigations and awaiting results of forensics. Many Copts believe that the rape incident is by Muslims to use it as a pretext to start violence against them.

In an interview with Free Copts, Bishop Kirollos said that the attacks were definitely preplanned and made use of the students from Al-Azhar Institute in Farshoot. He also pointed out to the failing role of the security forces, which disappeared without giving proper justifications, despite several demands by the church to put an end to these grave violations against Christians and their property.

He also added that even if the story of the indecent assault on the Muslim teenager was true, this was purely an individual incident and does not call for an attack on masses of peaceful Christians, who denounced this individual act which does not comply with Christian teachings. “So why the barbaric attacks by the mobs? and why have the security forces not stopped them?”

Talking to Coptic News Bulletin, the Bishop said that after being informed of the accusations of the rape on Wednesday, he has taken the frightened Copts of the villages of Kom Ahmar and Shedid out of the village to safety. “However, Coptic-owned businesses, pharmacies and cars in Farshoot and Ezbet Waziri are completely destroyed,” he said.

Rev. Elisha, Pastor of St. Michaels Church in Farshoot described Saturday’s violence as “similar to the Tartar Wars, they burnt down shops, pharmacies, broke down doors of homes and terrorized the inhabitants.” Commenting on the alleged rape incident, he said that it is doubtful, besides prosecution did not allow anyone to meet with the accused Copt. “The Farshoot investigating officer told me that the Muslim girl was only sure that her attacker wore a black jacket — nothing more.”

“We have never been so frightened and humiliated as Christians in all our lives. The mob made wooden crosses and burnt them in the street,” according to one witness. “Our religion, and our Lord were openly insulted.”

As no one is venturing into the streets, none of the Coptic inhabitants contacted were able to confirm if there were any losses in human lives, or the number of injured.

Bishop Kirollos held an urgent meeting with all Coptic priests in the region, in view of the gravity of the situation. He gave instructions that no Sunday church services would be held on 11/22/09 fearing for the safety of the Christian congregations.

“If the International Human Rights Organizations around the world keep quiet about what is happening to the Copts in Egypt, then they are of no use, they just use slogans, nothing more,” one witness lamented.

[Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Barak: We Must Crush IDF Refusal With an Iron Fist

Defense Minister Ehud Barak reiterated on Saturday his pledge to crack down on Israel Defense Forces soldiers who refuse to carry out orders, saying Israel should not hesitate to act forcefully to crush the phenomenon.

“A country that wishes to live must put an end to refusal by the right and left with an iron fist,” said Barak in a closed meeting.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frolicking in the Quicksand: How the Obama Administration Keeps Making Huge Mistakes in the Middle East

by Barry Rubin*

Of course, the Obama Administration has its defenders. They either ignore criticism of the Administration’s foreign policy or claim it is all partisan and ideological. And yet the truth is that if you watch the government’s policy on a daily basis it is truly remarkable how many dumb, avoidable mistakes are made.

I won’t supply a long list here but instead will talk about the latest one. Let’s take it step by step to see what a mess is being created.

Background: Israel announced in 1993, at the time of the Oslo agreement with the PLO, that it did not view construction on existing settlements as a violation. The Palestinians, during the ensuing 16 years, never made this a big issue. The U.S. government, while it can say it technically opposed this, was pretty quiet about it, never did anything.

Then President Barack Obama came to office and made the construction issue the centerpiece of his Middle East policy, sometimes it has appeared to be the keystone of his whole foreign policy. It may seem like an exaggeration but often it seems as if the administration believes that if Israel stopped building 3000 apartments all the region’s problems would go away.

So far, the Administration has wasted almost ten months in this pursuit. First, it shouted at Israel as if it were some servant to do it fast or else. Then when Israel didn’t, the Administration realized that perhaps Israel should get something in exchange for the concession. So it went to Arab states and asked—presuming, wrongly, that they are desperate for a peace agreement—for some compromise but got nothing.

Now it had destroyed its own policy since the Palestinian Authority (PA) refused to come to negotiations until there was a complete freeze. How could it be less hardline than the president?

But there was a solution, sort of. Israel agreed to stop all construction once the apartments currently being built are finished. And naturally, Israel said, this didn’t apply to east Jerusalem.

The United States accepted the deal, with Secretary of State Hilary Clinton exulting about what a huge concession Israel was making. Aside from everything else, the U.S. government knew how big a risk Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was taking with his coalition.

Ok. Sorry to give you all this background but it is necessary to understand how the Administration loves to jump in the quicksand.

So what happened? The PA couldn’t stand to see Israel being praised and doesn’t want to negotiate peace any way. So it threw a temper tantrum: riots in Jerusalem, threats by PA leader Mahmoud Abbas to resign, refusal to go to negotiations with Israel, and a clamor for a unilateral declaration of independence.

The hubbub about a unilateral declaration of independence was almost universally described in the media as arising from Palestinian frustration. Not at all. It is based on their own position: Why make a compromise peace with Israel when you can just claim everything you want, ensuring the door be kept open for a future struggle to wipe Israel off the map entirely?…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Ultra-Orthodox Pressure Stalling Mosque, Church at Ben-Gurion Airport

Ultra-Orthodox political pressure has stalled the construction of a church and a mosque at Ben-Gurion International Airport for the past five years, aviation sources told Haaretz.

This came to light after several clergy members wrote to the Israel Airports Authority, requesting it allow for a church in Terminal 3.

Haaretz inquired, and learned that the plans for the new terminal included both a church and a mosque, but that they never were built.

IAA spokeswoman Ronit Ekstein said she “would rather not comment at this stage.”

The request for a church inside the terminal was made by one of the leaders of the Belgian church in Jerusalem, Father Christian Eeckhout.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Confront Deviant Ideologies, Says Saudi Arabian King

From Ahmad Kamil Tahir

MECCA, Nov 22 (Bernama) — Muslims are still paying a heavy price for the 9/11 incident and are losing out more with every act of terror, the Custodian of Islam’s two holiest mosques King Abdullah was reported as saying by Saudi Arabia’s English daily, Arab News.

“Enmity from within, which is the most perilous, can be seen in attempts to kidnap moderate Islam by gangs of ignorant people who propagate rigidity out of fear of everything that is new? without any consideration for the rules of the religion,” said the king in his opening speech of the Muslim World League’s 10th annual convention here Saturday.

His speech was read out on his behalf by Mecca Governor Prince Khaled Al-Faisal.

“Despite the fact that the (Saudi) Kingdom practices moderation and came into existence under the banner of Islam, it has suffered a lot because of a devious politicised doctrine which has sneaked incognito into the country,” he said.

He pointed out that the Kingdom had been successful to a great extent in removing deviant ideologies and closing all doors to them. He was referring to the extremist ideologies propagated by Al-Qaeda supporters.

The king urged Islamic scholars and organisations to stand firmly against deviant ideologies in order to protect Muslim societies from their proponents’ nefarious designs and prevent their further spread among Muslim youths.

He said enemies of Islam and Muslims were mobilising their political machinery and the media “to distort our image and create hatred against us.” He blamed the irresponsible actions of a few for the anti-Islam campaign.

King Abdullah urged Muslims to play an important role in rebuilding human civilization in this age of science and technology.

“We have to pay more attention to human development and teach our youths contemporary sciences and technologies while giving utmost attention to Shariah subjects and remaining committed to the Islamic constitution,” he said.

The king said there was no harm in taking science and technology from others and molding them to suit the moderate Islamic pattern.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Iran Cleric: We’ll Hit ‘Heart of Tel Aviv’ If Attacked

A senior Iranian cleric warned on Saturday that the Islamic Republic would fire missiles at Tel Aviv if attacked, shortly after Iran’s military announced it would begin large-scale drills on Sunday to help protect its nuclear facilities.

“If the enemy should want to test its bad luck in Iran, before the dust from its missiles settles in this country, Iran’s ballistic missiles would land in the heart of Tel Aviv,” said cleric Mojtaba Zolnour, the IRNA news agency reported.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Iran War Games to Defend Nuclear Sites

[Note: There is a short video at the link. — Sean]

Iran has begun five days of large-scale war games to simulate attacks on its nuclear sites, officials said, warning it will retaliate if provoked.

The head of Iran’s air defence said the aim of the exercises was to thwart aerial reconnaissance and air attacks.

Another official warned Tehran would retaliate with a missile strike on Tel Aviv, if it was attacked by Israel.

Iran is under intense pressure over its nuclear programme, which critics say is intended to produce nuclear weapons.

The US and Israel have not ruled out the prospect of a military attack to prevent Iran developing nuclear bombs. Tehran insists its programme is peaceful.

Annihilation warning

The head of Iran’s air defence, Brig Gen Ahmad Mighani, told state media the aim of the war games, which will cover an area of 600,000 sq km (230,000 sq miles), was “to display Iran’s combat readiness and military potentials.

“Due to the threats against our nuclear facilities it is our duty to defend out nation’s vital facilities,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mojhtaba Zolnoor, an aide to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned Iran would respond to any Israeli attack.

“If the enemy attacks Iran, our missiles will strike Tel Aviv,” he was quoted as saying by the official Irna news agency.

The commander of the elite Revolutionary Guards’ air force wing said Iran’s air defence forces would “annihilate” Israeli warplanes if they attacked.

“Their [Israeli] F-15 and F-16 fighters will be trapped by our air defence forces and will be annihilated,” Amir Ali Hajizadeh told Iran’s Fars news agency.

“Even if their planes escape and land at the bases from which they took off, their bases will be struck by our destructive surface-to-surface missiles.”

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



Iraq Report: Secret Papers Reveal Blunders and Concealment

On the eve of the Chilcot inquiry into Britain’s involvement in the 2003 invasion and its aftermath, The Sunday Telegraph has obtained hundreds of pages of secret Government reports on “lessons learnt” which shed new light on “significant shortcomings” at all levels. They include full transcripts of extraordinarily frank classified interviews in which British Army commanders vent their frustration and anger with ministers and Whitehall officials.

The reports disclose that:

Tony Blair, the former prime minister, misled MPs and the public throughout 2002 when he claimed that Britain’s objective was “disarmament, not regime change” and that there had been no planning for military action. In fact, British military planning for a full invasion and regime change began in February 2002.

The need to conceal this from Parliament and all but “very small numbers” of officials “constrained” the planning process. The result was a “rushed”operation “lacking in coherence and resources” which caused “significant risk” to troops and “critical failure” in the post-war period.

Operations were so under-resourced that some troops went into action with only five bullets each. Others had to deploy to war on civilian airlines, taking their equipment as hand luggage. Some troops had weapons confiscated by airport security.

Commanders reported that the Army’s main radio system “tended to drop out at around noon each day because of the heat”. One described the supply chain as “absolutely appalling”, saying: “I know for a fact that there was one container full of skis in the desert.”

The Foreign Office unit to plan for postwar Iraq was set up only in late February, 2003, three weeks before the war started.

The plans “contained no detail once Baghdad had fallen”, causing a “notable loss of momentum” which was exploited by insurgents. Field commanders raged at Whitehall’s “appalling” and “horrifying” lack of support for reconstruction, with one top officer saying that the Government “missed a golden opportunity” to win Iraqi support. Another commander said: “It was not unlike 1750s colonialism where the military had to do everything ourselves.”

The documents emerge two days before public hearings begin in the Iraq Inquiry, the tribunal appointed under Sir John Chilcot, a former Whitehall civil servant, to “identify lessons that can be learnt from the Iraq conflict”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Countries Seek Blasphemy Ban

Muslim countries prepare for a tough war on protecting religious symbols and beliefs from mockery by bringing a ban proposal on blasphemy to a vote in the UN General Assembly. The move comes four years after cartoons of the prophet Muhammad set off violent protests across the Muslim world

Pakistani protesters rally against the republishing of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad in Danish newspapers in Quetta, Pakistan. AP photo.

Four years after cartoons of the prophet Muhammad set off violent protests across the Muslim world, Islamic nations are mounting a campaign for an international treaty to protect religious symbols and beliefs from mockery — essentially a ban on blasphemy that would put them on a collision course with free speech laws in the West.

Documents obtained by The Associated Press show that Algeria and Pakistan have taken the lead in lobbying to eventually bring the proposal to a vote in the U.N. General Assembly. If ratified in countries that enshrine freedom of expression as a fundamental right, such a treaty would require them to limit free speech if it risks seriously offending religious believers. The process, though, will take years and no showdown is imminent.

The proposal faces stiff resistance from Western countries, including the United States, which in the past has brushed aside other U.N. treaties, such as one on the protection of migrant workers. Experts said the bid stands some chance of eventual success if Muslim countries persist. And whatever the outcome, the campaign risks reigniting tensions between Muslims and the West that President Barack Obama has pledged to heal, reviving fears of a “clash of civilizations.”

Four years ago, a Danish newspaper published cartoons lampooning the prophet Muhammad, prompting angry mobs to attack Western embassies in Muslim countries, including Lebanon, Iran and Indonesia. In a countermovement, several European newspapers reprinted the images. The countries that form the 56-member Organization of the Islamic Conference are now lobbying a little-known Geneva-based U.N. committee to agree that a treaty protecting religions is necessary.

The move would be a first step toward drafting an international protocol that would eventually be put before the General Assembly — a process that could take a decade or more. The proposal may have some support in the General Assembly. For several years the Islamic Conference has successfully passed a nonbinding resolution at the General Assembly condemning “defamation of religions.”

If the treaty was approved, any of the U.N.’s 192 member states that ratified it would be bound by its provisions. Other countries could face criticism for refusing to join. The United States has declared it won’t accept international treaties that restrict its Constitution’s First Amendment right to free speech. But there are signs the U.S. is worried by the Islamic Conference campaign. Behind the scenes it has been lobbying hard to quash the proposal, dispatching a senior U.S. diplomat to Geneva last month for talks described as akin to trench warfare. “The U.S. presence can be significant in determining the whole destiny of the process,” said Lukas Machon, who represents the International Commission of Jurists at the U.N.

From a legal point of view, “the whole exercise is dangerous from A-Z because it’s a departure from the practice and concept of human rights,” Machon said. “It adds only restrictions.” In a letter obtained by the AP, Pakistan said insults against religion were on the increase. The Islamic Conference “believes that the attack on sacredly held beliefs and the defamation of religions, religious symbols, personalities and dogmas impinge on the enjoyment of human rights of followers of those religions,” the letter said. It was sent last month to members of the Ad Hoc Committee on Complementary Standards, a temporary committee created to consider a previous anti-racism treaty.

In a separate submission to the committee, Pakistan proposed extending the treaty against racism to require signatories to “prohibit by law the uttering of matters that are grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion.” It’s not clear who would decide what is considered grossly abusive, but each country’s criminal courts would likely have initial jurisdiction over that decision, according to Marghoob Saleem Butt, a Pakistani diplomat in Geneva who confirmed the campaign’s existence and has lobbied for the ban. “There has to be a balance between freedom of expression and respect for others,” Butt said in a telephone interview. “Taking the symbol of a whole religion and portraying him as a terrorist,” said Butt, referring to the Muhammad cartoons, “that is where we draw the line.”

One American expert with more than 20 years experience of the U.N. human rights system said the treaty could have far-reaching implications. “It would, in essence, advance a global blasphemy law,” said Felice Gaer, a member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom. The independent, congressionally mandated panel issued a report last week warning that existing laws against blasphemy, including in Pakistan, “often have resulted in gross human rights violations.”

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



NATO: Italy Launches Demining Project in Jordan

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOVEMBER 19 — The headquarters of NATO today saw the launch of the Atlantic Alliance’s project, led by Italy, dedicated to demining activities and the elimination of non detonated military debris in Jordan. It is called the Nato Trust Fund, stemming from the programme “Partnership for Peace” as a part of “Mediterranean Dialogue”. This experience in Jordan, already the 2nd Nato project of its kind, does not only give concrete help to the local people who live with the mine emergency, but is a road opener for similar initiatives in other countries of the region, contributing to a new image for the Atlantic Alliance in the area. In this sense, the project “shows a new form of cooperation with civilians” affirmed Claudio Bisogniero, deputy secretary general of the Alliance, for the occasion of the signing of the deal with Namsa, the Nato agency for supply and maintenance, charged with managing the activity on the ground. The Italian ambassador, Stefano Stefanini, as well as stressing the humanitarian aspect of the project also wanted to highlight its political significance. “We are thinking of the strengthening of Mediterranean dialogue in Nato and the implementation of the Trust Fund will be a clear demonstration of the large potential for this partnership”. The initiative, which will begin in December of this year, provides for a programme of mine risk training “involving 100,000 people”, explained Jordan’s ambassador Ahmad Masadeh, “in three provinces heavily affected by the problem”, that is Ajloun, Jerash and Zarqa. The idea “is not just that of changing the lives of many people but that of opening new pathways for tourism and agriculture” added Masadeh, who stressed the efforts Jordan has made to make its territory safer, in the prospect for peace in the region. In addition to the training aspect, the project will involve the supply of equipment for the destruction of ordinance and ammunition at the Jordanian army’s demilitarization centre in Zarqa. This centre could become a future institution for training for dismantling open to other countries in the region. The Italian contribution to the project is 700,000 euros, while the total budget is that of 2.6 million euros for 2 years. Spain, who is already ready to begin, will probably be joined by the Netherlands. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy Outshines Obama as King of Mideast Mediation

For decades the cafe’s, classrooms and mosques of the Middle East have discussed American intervention in the region.

Eight years of American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and a subsequent promise by U.S. President Barack Obama to turn a new page in American relations with the Muslim world have only heightened the United States’ role in the Middle East.

But in the battle fields outside Kabul, the mosques of Tehran and Damascus and the halls of power in Jerusalem, people are discussing an entirely different international player: Sarkozy.

In what has been termed “diplomatic activism”, in the two years since he assumed the French presidency Sarkozy has launched a ‘Union for the Mediterranean’, pushed France to the forefront of international mediation in Syria, taken Europe’s most aggressive stance towards Iran, made friends with Israel, officially joined NATO in Afghanistan, and most recently flown to Saudi Arabia to convince the royals to support a Middle East peace conference in Paris.

Sarkozy’s saunter into Middle Eastern diplomacy is seen by the region’s pundits and politicians alike in stark contrast to the approach of the U.S. president, who after almost a year in office has made a brief stopover in Riyadh and a grandiose speech in Cairo.

“This is all a sort of French diplomatic activism which the president of France believes will give him international clout,” Shlomo Aronson, professor of politics at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, told The Media Line. “He also has a large Muslim minority in France, so he is showing his activism and refusal to sit on his hands.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Sleiman Seeks Abolition of Religion in Lebanese Politics

President Michel Sleiman called in a television speech on Saturday for the establishment of a committee to work towards the abolition of religion-based politics in Lebanon.

“To encourage vast participation (in political life), a national committee should be established and charged with abolishing confessionalism in politics,” he said in a speech marking Sunday’s 66th anniversary of independence.

Sleiman also proposed “changing the electoral law relating to general elections in order to obtain better representation and restore to expatriates their rights, including nationality and the right to vote.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Turkey to Buy 6 Subs at Reduced Price From Germany

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, NOVEMBER 20 — Turkey’s Navy will buy six modern non-nuclear submarines to be built by Germany’s HDW shipyards at a price nearly 20% lower than what the Germans had originally offered, daily Hurriyet reports quoting procurement officials as saying. The Defense Industry Executive Committee, Turkey’s top decision-making body on defense procurement, selected HDW over its French and Spanish rivals in the summer of 2008. At the time, the program’s expected cost was announced to be nearly 2.5 billion euros. After year long price and work-sharing negotiations between the Undersecretariat for Defense Industries, Turkey’s procurement agency, and the German company, a final contract was signed in July. No price was specified in the public announcements for the contract at the time, but Hurriyet Daily found out that the cost of the program was around 1.96 billion euros, which is nearly 500 million euros lower than the original price. The Kiel-based HDW, a subsidiary of the German conglomerate ThyssenKrupp, will now build six modern U-214 type submarines with Turkish partners. Ankara hopes the new U-214 submarines will start operating in 2015. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkish Figures Rank High on List of World’s Most Influential Muslims

Names like Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Fethullah Gülen, Abdullah Gül and Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu are ranked near the top of the world’s 500 most influential Muslims, according to a report published by the Amman-based Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre.

“The 500 Most Influential Muslims 2009,” a report edited by Georgetown University professors John Esposito and Ibrahim Kalin, was released in book format last week and aims to “provide a window into the movers and shakers of the Muslim world” and “highlight people who are influential as Muslims, that is, people whose influence is derived from their practice of Islam or from the fact that they are Muslim.” The book profiles the top 50 influential Muslims in descending order in a list topped by King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud of Saudi Arabia and Iran’s Ayatollah Khamenei. Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan comes in fifth on the list, with the book noting in its profile the efforts on the part of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government to increase religious freedom, bring the country into the European Union and increase rights for Turkey’s large Kurdish minority.

The other three Turks who made the top 50 list are Muslim preacher Gülen (No. 13), Turkish President Gül (No. 28) and Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) Secretary-General Ihsanoglu (No. 40). The report notes in the case of Gülen that he is an exception to the general status of the top-50 players as attributable to the influence they wield as a result of their being monarchs, religious scholars and leaders of religious networks.

“[An] … important exception is Fethullah Gülen, a preacher, thinker and educator, who having assumed the leadership of a religious movement started by Said Nursî (1878-1960) has gone on to become a global phenomenon in his own right. His popularity and authority in Turkey have been the driving force of the social movement that is widely thought to have brought around the social and eventually political changes of which politician Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been the ultimate heir — that is the enfranchisement of Muslim politics in Turkey,” the report says.

Zaman editor-in-chief, Gülen movement listed as influential

Outside of the top 50, the other 450 Muslims on the list are not in numerical order, but are rather grouped by nation within broader categories such as women, youth, media, arts and culture, and even radicals. Turkish daily Zaman’s Editor-in-Chief Ekrem Dumanli is on the list for his influence with the newspaper and for authoring five books and a play. Ali Bulaç, a columnist for both Zaman and Today’s Zaman, is also listed, as “an influential pro-Islamic intellectual and journalist who … promotes the advantage of Islamic values and the revival of Islamic intellectualism in contemporary Turkey.”

Three Turkish women made the list: Turkish first lady Hayrünnisa Gül (listed under women), Women’s Rights Association against Discrimination (AKDER) Vice President Fatma Benli (listed under development) and haute couture fashion designer Rabia Yalçin (listed under arts and culture).

A total of 20 Turks were listed in the book, with other names including Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, Religious Affairs Directorate head Ali Bardakoglu, Ibrahim Kalin, Harun Yahya, Hayrettin Karaman, Necmettin Erbakan, Fuat Sezgin, Mehmet Görmez, Halit Eren, Mehmet Aydin and Mustafa Çagrici.

In addition to the 500 individuals listed in the book, the book sets aside a section for international Islamic networks, in which the Gülen movement takes its place. Noting the Gülen movement’s peaceful means of preaching and community organization, the book notes: “The Gülen Movement started out as a distinctly Turkish movement but has since spread worldwide. Gülen has schools in almost every corner of the globe.”

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



U.S. Fears Iraq Development Projects May Go to Waste

$58 billion spent at risk because Baghdad can’t maintain facilities on their own

BAGHDAD — In its largest reconstruction effort since the Marshall Plan, the United States government has spent $53 billion for relief and reconstruction in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, building tens of thousands of hospitals, water treatment plants, electricity substations, schools and bridges.

But there are growing concerns among American officials that Iraq will not be able to adequately maintain the facilities once the Americans have left, potentially wasting hundreds of millions of dollars and jeopardizing Iraq’s ability to provide basic services to its people.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UAE: 500 Mln Euros to Strengthen Air Force

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, NOVEMBER 18 — During the third day of the aeronautics fair underway in Dubai, the armed forces of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) signed two agreements to step up air defence. The contract is for two Swedish-built Saab AEW reconnaissance planes, a 150-million-euro investment, and twenty-five PC-21combat planes for pilot training, ordered from the Swiss Pilatus Aircraft for 345 million euros. The purchase of the two Saab 340AEW is very important, commented the daily paper The National, since they are the first air surveillance system that the UAE have ever had, until now having always used land surveillance ones. The delivery of all the planes is expected to occur between the second half of 2011 and the first half of 2012. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Why Won’t the Arabs Protect Themselves From Iran by Actively Battling Against Tehran Having Nuclear Weapons?

by Barry Rubin

It isn’t hard to conclude that Iran having nuclear weapons is a direct threat to Arab states, except Syria—Tehran’s ally—which would benefit. Why, then, don’t Arab states and intellectuals public express more concern?

Western observers were shaken up when at a debate in Qatar, the relatively moderate Arab audience split almost down the middle between those cheering and those jeering the idea of Iranian nuclear weapons.

One member of the audience said:

“Why in the first place should Iran seek the trust of anyone? Iran is an independent, sovereign country, and it has every single right to defend itself. If it wants a bomb, definitely it should have one.”

The audience cheered.

Another man said:

“There is something called balance of power. As long as there is Israel, we need a nuclear bomb.”

A serious analysis would have to include three main points in explaining this seeming suicidal desire of many Arabs that the real worst enemy of the current Arab order become really, really powerful:

First, fear. Iran is strong, aggressive, close, and represents an ideology that appeals to some of their people. To stand up to Iran’s growing strength could incur costly hostility, pressure and subversion now. And once Tehran gets nuclear weapons, it will remember and take revenge on those who have tried to thwart it.

Second, there is the Middle Eastern version of Political Correctness which, unlike its Western version, has very sharp teeth…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]

South Asia


“Wall Street Would Gain From Pakistan Violence”

A dramatic rise in violence in Pakistan could be beneficial for Wall Street, which would like to capitalize on “world-wide fear” to rehabilitate the dollar, believes journalist Webster Tarpley.

“All the hot money of the world, under the condition of a world-wide panic might flee back into the dollar, which would allow the propping up of the dollar compared to the euro and the yen,” Tarpley told RT. “Suppose you have a full-scale civil war in Pakistan. Suppose the Taliban get somewhere near the nuclear forces of Pakistan. That would result in a large regional crisis causing some kind of a shocking, spectacular world panic. There are people in Wall Street who would like to do that.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



British Council: Pakistan Facing ‘Frightening’ Demographic Disaster

Young people in Pakistan are deeply frustrated, profoundly religious and have little faith in democracy, according to a British Council report which warns of a demographic disaster in the making.

One third of Pakistanis aged 18 to 29 who were surveyed believe in sharia, or Islamic law; half have “a great deal of confidence” in religious-based education; and more than 60 per cent have faith in the army — the only widely trusted institution of the state. They believe they do not have adequate skills for the workplace and little anticipation of being able to compete fairly for jobs.

The findings appear to show the basis of Pakistan’s difficulties in rallying the country against extremism and being an effective long-term partner for the West in the anti-terrorism fight.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hindu Nationalist BJP Against Equal Rights for Christian and Muslim Dalits

The Bharatiya Janata Party and a Hindu Dalit organisation announce a two-month long nation-wide mobilisation to defend the 1950 Constitution Order. The proposed action is in response to a sit-in sponsored two days ago by the Catholic Church of India for the repeal of the same Order because it discriminates Dalits based on religion. The BJP accuses the government of betraying the constitution and conspiring in favour of minorities.

Mumbai (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) announced nation-wide mobilisation against the extending to Christian and Muslim Dalits rights now available to Hindu Dalits alone. Between 26 November 2009 and 26 January 2010, the SC Reservation Rights Protection Manch, a Hindu Dalit organisation, will carried out a number of initiatives, round tables, sit-ins and meetings on the topic ‘Honour the Constitution’ in order to defend the 1950 Constitution (Scheduled Tribes) Order that grants rights and privileges to Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist untouchables.

BJP general secretary Thavar Chand Gehlot, who is a member of the Hindu Dalit organisation, said that extending the rights of scheduled castes to all outcastes would be a betrayal of the constitution. In line with this argument, he has accused the Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of sinister designs and of conspiring to usurp the rights of scheduled castes in favour of minorities.

The announcement was made two days after the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India, the National Council of Dalit Christians and the National Council of Churches in India sponsored a sit-in in New Delhi (picture). On that occasion, thousands of Christian and Muslim Dalits marched through the streets of the capital to demand changes to the 1950 Constitution Order (see Nirmala Carvalho, “Thousands of Christian and Muslim Dalits march against discrimination,” in AsiaNews, 18 November 2009).

Untouchables excluded from such protection have been demanding redress for many years. However, no measure of pressure has been able to force successive governments to change the Order for the past 59 years.

Yet, various parties and state legislatures have backed demands by Christian and Muslim Dalits, provoking the anger of the BJP.

Likewise, the main opposition party lambasted the National Commission for Linguistic Minorities for coming out in favour of discriminated outcastes.

For Gehlot, the Commission is acting in bad faith and in league with Christians and Muslims to distort the country’s culture and traditions.

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



India: Wahabism Linked With Terrorism; Saudi Envoy Stages Walkout

NEW DELHI: Saudi Ambassador to India Faisal Al-Trad walked out of an international conference of jurists in protest after noted Indian jurist Ram Jethmlani’s accusation that the Wahabi sect of Islam was responsible for terrorism. The conference was attended by Indian President Pratibha Patil, Chief Justice KG Balakrishnan and Law Minister Veerapa Moily. Jethmalani said “Wahabi terrorism” indoctrinated “rubbish” in the minds of young people to carry out terrorist attacks. He lamented that India was friends with a country that supported Wahabi terrorism. The event’s organiser, Adesh Aggarwala, said the ambassador had walked out but returned after Moily’s statement that Jethmalani’s views were not supported by the government or the organisers. Moily said terrorism could not be attributed to any particular religion. iftikhar gilani

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Malaysia Opposition Aide Teoh Beng Hock’s Body Exhumed

The body of a Malaysian opposition activist who died in police custody has been exhumed after a pathologist said there was an 80% chance he was killed.

Teoh Beng Hock fell nine stories to his death from the offices of the Malaysia Anti-Corruption Commission in July.

He was said to have committed suicide after being questioned over allegations that his boss had misused public funds.

The authorities will be conducting a second autopsy on the body, following suspicions of foul play.

Last month Thai pathologist Pornthip Rojanasunand said marks on the body suggested Mr Teoh had been tortured and strangled.

Her testimony had been sought by the opposition-led authorities in Selangor state — where Mr Teoh was an aide to a member of the state cabinet.

Abuse of power?

The BBC’s Jennifer Pak in Kuala Lumpur says her story gave credence to a widely held belief that Mr Teoh’s interrogation was part of a government drive to discredit opposition politicians after their success in 2008 elections.

The ruling coalition’s confidence was shaken after it lost its two-thirds majority for the first time in four decades.

The country’s anti-corruption commission has called on a British pathologist to observe the second post-mortem on Mr Teoh’s body.

The Malaysian government has accused the opposition of politicising his death.

In July, a member of the governing coalition quit to join the opposition Pakatan Alliance.

Chua Jui Meng said he was concerned about alleged abuse of power and Mr Teoh’s unexplained death.

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



Report Warns of Pakistan’s Younger Generation Losing Faith in Democracy

Pakistan faces a “demographic disaster” if its leaders fail to invest in a youth population that is disturbingly cynical about democracy, has greatest faith in the military and is resentful of western interference, according to a study published tomorrow.

The report, commissioned by the British Council, says the nuclear-armed country is at a critical point, with its population forecast to swell by 85 million, from its current 180 million, over the next two decades.

“Pakistan is at a crossroads,” said David Steven, an academic who helped write the report. “It can harness the energy of that generation, and collect a demographic dividend. But if they fail to get jobs and are poorly educated, it faces a demographic disaster.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Taliban Suffocate Pakistan Buddhist Heritage

AFP — Archaeologists warn that the Taliban are destroying Pakistan’s ancient Gandhara heritage and rich Buddhist legacy as pilgrimage and foreign research dries up in the country’s northwest.

“Militants are the enemies of culture,” said Abdul Nasir Khan, curator of Taxila Museum, one of the premier archaeological collections in Pakistan.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



US Helps Build Anti-Taliban Afghan Militias: Report

The United States has begun helping a number of anti-Taliban militias in several parts of Afghanistan in hopes for a large-scale tribal rebellion against the radical Islamic movement, The New York Times reported.

The newspaper said US and Afghan officials were planning to spur the growth of similar armed groups across the Taliban heartland in the southern and eastern parts of the country.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Far East


EU: Herman Van Rompuy and Baroness Ashton: The EU’s Perfect Couple of Nobodies

What her [Ashton’s] latest elevation might mean for the future of Europe remains anyone’s guess. Frantic to shed some light on her trajectoire météoritique, the EU-friendly Brussels daily Le Soir was able only to tell its readers that since arriving in town a year ago, she had signed a trade agreement with South Korea, and was “sur le point“ of ending a wrangle over customs duties on South American bananas.

[…]

When he isn’t trying to hold the place [Belgium] together, Herman writes Japanese-style haiku poems and an agonised blog wallowing in solitude, pessimism, and mortality, leading Belgian cartoonists to portray him as an elderly black-robed cleric bent beneath the burdens of conscience and duty. “All human beings must, at some point in their lives, choose between mystery and absurdity…” he mused recently.

Happily, the EU combines both qualities in abundance. The mystery flows from its famously opaque workings — and the absurdity, from appointments such as last week’s.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Japan’s Native Ainu Fight for Cultural Survival

Japan’s native people, the Ainu, once hunted bears and fished for salmon in the wild forests of the country’s far north, but today they are an ethnic minority fighting for their cultural survival.

Like indigenous peoples elsewhere, the Ainu suffered through an era of forced assimilation which took a heavy toll on their customs, language and way of life, leaving them a disadvantaged minority in modern Japan.

As the group keeps struggling to redress past wrongs and revive its rapidly fading traditions, its community leaders say they hope for support from Japan’s new centre-left government, which took power in mid-September..

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Somali Militants Al-Shabab ‘Seize Southern Town’

The Somali Islamist group al-Shabab says it has taken control of the southern town of Afmadow without any resistance from rival militants.

The town, in Lower Juba region, had been controlled by rival group Hisbul-Islam, but its members are reported to have withdrawn without a fight.

The two militant groups have been fighting each other for months for control of this region.

Al-Shabab wants a strict version of Sharia law imposed around the country.

The situation in the southern town is reported to be tense.

Witnesses told the BBC they had seen heavily armed al-Shabab fighters patrolling the town centre in trucks.

They say a large number of people have fled their homes in fear of violence.

Reports say a non-governmental organisation has shut its offices and stopped all essential work in the area. Some of its staff have left the town.

Al-Shabab issued a statement saying it had taken the town from Hisbul-Islam without a fight.

On Saturday, at least eight people died and many more were injured after clashes between Hisbul-Islam and al-Shabab on the outskirts of the town.

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

Latin America


Chavez Praises Carlos the Jackal as ‘Revolutionary Fighter’

‘I defend him. It doesn’t matter to me what they say tomorrow in Europe’

Hugo Chavez is defending alleged terrorist mastermind Carlos the Jackal, saying the Venezuelan imprisoned in France was a “revolutionary fighter” rather than a terrorist.

The Venezuelan president praised Carlos—whose real name is Ilich Sanchez Ramirez—during a speech Friday night saying: “I defend him. It doesn’t matter to me what they say tomorrow in Europe.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



It’s Called Darkest Peru for a Reason

A bunch of people in Peru have been arrested for killing their fellow citizens, then extracting the fat from the corpses, which they distil, package in smart bottles and sell to stupid European women as a beauty product. This is clearly not an ethical industry — particularly when you consider the huge number of air miles involved.

We do not read enough about Peru but when we do it is always diverting. You may remember their fabulously lunatic Maoist terrorists, the Shining Path, and stories about villagers living in terror of the chupacabras, a spiny, bear-like ghoul which sucks the blood of goats and sometimes interferes in an inappropriate manner with Peruvian peasants.

I sometimes wonder if Peru is a real country at all, or simply a fiction dreamt up by Jonathan Swift. Certainly he would have found much to admire in Peru’s unorthodox attempts to break into the cosmetics market. Is there anything women wouldn’t rub onto their faces if they thought it would make them look younger?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Citizenship Language Scam Exposed

Immigrants who don’t understand English have been able to buy language certificates that give them the right to settle in Britain.

An investigation by The Sunday Times has found that staff at English language colleges in London and Birmingham have been offering migrants who speak little or no English Home Office-regulated English and Citizenship certificates for £250 each. Tests are rigged to allow almost anyone to pass.

Staff hand out crib sheets with questions and answers in English. Others let candidates write the sound of English words on the sheets in their own tongue, so the answers appear right, but they don’t know what they are saying.

At the UK Learning Academy in Birmingham, a staff assessor told an undercover reporter that candidates did not have to take any courses or speak any English to pass the tests. The assessor simply asked if the candidate knew their own name, date of birth and address. When told that they did, the assessor replied: “That’s all right then. That’s a guaranteed pass.”

Yesterday the Academy said it had sacked the assessor for “gross misconduct”. Directors at a second college under investigation said they had suspended its English course, while a third college removed the website advertising its course. Chris Grayling, shadow home secretary, said: “These revelations are particularly alarming and reveal another major abuse of our system for immigration.” He called for the certificates to be suspended.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Cultural Genocide Against Christians

“One should be aware of the historical fact that Christians were the clear majority in many regions of the Middle East prior to Mohammed. And these majorities are now all but extinct.”

Our Austrian correspondent ESW has translated excerpts from an article by Andreas Unterberger about the current level of persecution suffered by Christians, especially in Muslim-majority countries. It is followed by a report about a panel discussion on the same topic hosted by Akademikerbund and the Political Academy.



Christians, Muslims, and Silence
by Andreas Unterberger

19 November 2009

Seldom have I experienced such a heavily attended event with such crowds of people, such emotion, such dismay. The evening’s topic: contemporary Christian persecution which has reached daunting dimensions and which, according to reliable sources and studies, has reached the highest levels in history, and which is ignored to an extent that can probably be only fathomed with the help of psychiatric analysis.

Only a few dry facts first: From China to South America, 230 million Christians are currently being persecuted for politically, culturally, or religiously motivated reasons. Last year, at least 500 Christians were killed in India during religious clashes. In North Korea, Christians have no legal protection at all and can be killed on the spot.

Coptic churchHowever, the worst situation for Christians can be found in Islamic countries. More than half of the 80,000 Iraqi Christians have fled Iraq due to countless targeted terrorist attacks. Only in the Kurdish part of Iraq can they live in relative safety. In Egypt a few media reports on the swine flu were sufficient for pogroms against the pork-eating Copts. Athanasios Heinein, the head of the exiled Coptic church in Greece calls this “cultural genocide”.

Even more harrowing are the individual reports. For example, the report about an abducted priest from Mosul for whom the parish had paid ransom, and who was still beheaded and returned mutilated. Or a report about a recent case of six male members of a Christian family who have been sentenced to death. Or another report of the abduction of Christian girls who are forcefully married and converted to Islam.

Most harrowing of all is what is happening in Europe: The total and utter ignorance of these persecutions against Christians. As soon the topic is mentioned, politicians and some pastors stiffen with fear: “Please do not say anything that could provoke the Islamic Faith Community. In any case, we all believe in Abraham.”

It is difficult to remain calm. The main accusation against Islam is the following: Not a single Islamic country allows freedom of belief, with the exception of the Islamic belief. Nine countries employ the death penalty for apostasy. However, if one asks — supposedly liberal — representatives of the Islamic Faith community, whether in the 21st century one should be able to choose one’s religion, one gets many words but no answers. Nobody says, “Yes, this is a [human] right, and condemn government restrictions.” The honest ones say, “No, the Quran forbids apostasy.”

This means that we have already said all there is to say about Muslim-Christian dialogues. Islam is a religion of direct power conquest, of total combination of state and religion, of combat readiness, which does not allow for one millimeter of tolerance or freedom. All this is proven by hundreds of unvarnished citations, which in turn no Muslim denies.

Does all this mean that Christianity with all its soft values like charity will disappear in the long run? Not necessarily. History has shown that Christianity has often come back even stronger after totally hopeless positions due to outward attacks or inner squalor. The laicist and anti-religious element is probably even more endangered, which still vehemently prepares its own demise with attacks against the relatively harmless cross in classrooms or with the potentially society-destroying legality of homosexual partnerships.
– – – – – – – –
[…]

I have never seen a TV report on Austrian television showing and analyzing the massive violations of all global human rights perpetrated by political Islam. Christine Schirrmacher, an expert on Islam from Germany, correctly elaborates that political Islam is much more lastingly dangerous than terrorist Islam.

This deficit can be seen in nearly all Western media. The oppression of the Tibetans or some Indian tribes garners more media interest than the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, even though the latter are geographically and culturally closer to us [in Europe]. Indeed, this must be addressed as well: All of the above, even though our descendants will face a similar fate in one hundred years once demography has bestowed a Muslim Austria and Germany upon us. One should be aware of the historical fact that Christians were the clear majority in many regions of the Middle East prior to Mohammed. And these majorities are now all but extinct.

And all this does not stop many superficially educated Europeans from finding only one answer to this complex topic: “Yes, but what about the Crusades?” With this argument they are ignoring the impossibility of comparing the past with the present, in addition to the historical fact that back then, Christianity tried to reconquer Christian territory. And even if the methods were gruesome, no one has so far been able to explain the difference between the ultimately failed attempt of reconquering Jerusalem and the successful attempt of reconquering Paris from the Nazis in 1944.

Already today it is the Austrian Muslims who, according to a recent study, demand the integration of sharia into Austrian law. How much longer will the whitewashing cowards in both religion and politics, as well as the culturally uprooted laicists, ignore reality? How much longer will we continue paying the salaries of Islamic teachers who are paving the way for the advance of political Islam?

It is a start that the Akademikerbund and the Political Academy [of ÖVP] dare to address the persecution of Christians. The oriental Christians in Austria are grateful to have found a docking station.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


Translator’s note: This is a translation of a report by the Political Academy. Photos may be found at Polically Incorrect:

This past Wednesday the Akademikerbund and the Political Academy hosted a panel discussion on the topic of Persecution of Christians in the Middle East.

The audience was captivated by speeches by the bishop of the Syrian-Orthodox Christians in Austria, the Archbishop of the exiled Copts in Greece, Christine Schirrmacher, as well as Efrem Yildiz, professor of philology at the university of Salamanca.

The president of the Akademikerbund, Franz Fiedler, said in his opening speech that Christian persecution has a name: Islam.

“There is segregation in Islamic countries, while Muslims are being integrated in Europe.” He also demanded that Muslims in Austria show solidarity with persecuted Christians in their home countries. Christians have the right to experience the same hospitality in the Middle East that the Muslims are accorded in Austria, where Islam has legal status.

Syrian-Orthodox bishop Aydin spoke of the fact that Christians in Arab countries are treated as second-class citizens, which is against all human rights. Every displaced Christian is one too many, he said. He is very proud that the Syrian Christians have been integrated in an exemplary fashion. Aydin demanded more solidarity from European Christians with their Arab-Christian brothers and sisters.

Copts attackedThe Coptic Archbishop, Father Athanasios, found dramatic words. “Christians must never get used to burning churches and forcefully Islamized children in Middle East.” Muslims and Arabs must stop the cultural genocide taking place among Christians. In Egypt, the Christian community is being destroyed by radical Islam. The Christian minority is currently fighting for survival. This is not a dramatization, but a narration of facts.

Christine Schirrmacher underlined that Islam is not the problem, but the combination of politics and religion that causes problems. Islam as a religion of laws must finally develop a constitutional tradition and reform itself. There are some liberal Muslims who are massively suppressed, and these Muslims should be especially supported by Europeans. Schirrmacher criticized Europeans: the topic of persecution against Christians has been ignored for too long. Here in Europe, Muslim converts to Christianity — and potential converts — are threatened. This is unacceptable because there is freedom of religion, which is non-negotiable. A European Islam must accept apostasy from Islam.

Professor Yildiz said, “For the persecution to end, it is imperative for Muslims to understand Christians. Nowadays, multi-confessional dialogue is basically a monologue. For there to be eternal peace, there has to be respect from both sides.

The Coming Crash

The Fjordman Report


The noted blogger Fjordman is filing this report via Gates of Vienna.
For a complete Fjordman blogography, see The Fjordman Files. There is also a multi-index listing here.



I am preparing a text which I will publish at The Brussels Journal in the not-too-distant future, but I will begin the discussion here first. When I read the various comments at Lawrence Auster’s place and Dennis Mangan’s blog, Takuan Seiyo’s recent piece at TBJ and the latest post by El Inglés at Gates of Vienna, I get the feeling that tensions are building up and that something big is going to happen within the coming generation, probably within the next five to ten years. Since I have been writing about geology lately I will use an analogy from plate tectonics: The tectonic plates of the Western world are now about to make a big move.

Tensions have been building slowly beneath the surface for many years and sooner or later these forces will be released in the form of a series of devastating earthquakes, followed by some secondary political and economic tsunamis. Some of the structures that currently appear to be rock solid will collapse like a house of cards during this period and the political landscape will change considerably. What appears unthinkable today will appear natural or inevitable twenty years from now. This is the discontinuity that El Inglés talks about. I would rank Britain as the Western European country most likely to first get a civil war caused by mass immigration and Multiculturalism. Denmark follows as number two and possibly Holland as number three. Both Belgium and Sweden are pretty bad, but too repressive to be first in line. Germany is too weighed down by her history to be first. This leaves France as a potential dark horse. I admit I don’t understand how the French think. On the surface, France looks screwed. On the other hand, France is historically speaking a revolutionary nation, for better or worse. Maybe there is some mini-Charles Martel in hiding somewhere. If so, he better show up soon.

I think we need to be realistic and realize that the current political-ideological order is completely broken and beyond repair. Instead of wasting time and energy on attempting to fix what cannot be fixed we need to prepare as best as we can for the coming crash and hopefully regroup to create something new and stronger afterward. There will be a pan-Western and perhaps international economic and social collapse in the not-too-distant future. I fear that this is too late to avoid by now. The people who support the ruling paradigm are too powerful and the paradigm contains so many flaws that it cannot be fixed. It needs to crash. We should focus on surviving this crash and on developing a new paradigm to replace the failed one.
– – – – – – – –
We need to learn from our enemies, both internal and external. The one thing I reluctantly admire about Marxists and Leftists of all stripes is above all their ability to organize and focus on long-term goals. Unfortunately, their goals are usually destructive, but we can and must learn from their organizational skills so that we can beat them at their own game. They must be squashed, otherwise we cannot deal rationally and adequately with our external enemies.

We must get rid of Feminism, which is destructive and merely an extension of Marxism, anyway. We must prepare as best as we can for a collapse of the US dollar and perhaps the Euro. We must document what is being done to us by treasonous elites for future references, for instance by making a video dedicated to anti-white verbal and physical violence around the world. We must take steps to ensure our physical safety and regain pride in our heritage.

We need to get rid of the EU, ridicule the UN and starve it for funds. I’m not sure whether we need NATO, either, although I’m willing to debate that part. The American defense umbrella may no longer be sustainable when the US economy fails. Besides, it is laughable to think that the US military would “protect” native Europeans from Muslims. It is the official policy of both major US parties to support — no accelerate — the continued destruction of Europe, just like it is their policy to continue the destruction of their own country. Just because the EU is awful, which it is, doesn’t necessarily mean that the USA is good. The American political elites are champions of dangerous and dysfunctional ideologies at home and abroad. The current US President Obama has publicly pledged himself to combat opposition to Islam rather than Islam itself, which means that it is official US policy to spread Islamic law. Uncle Sam is Uncle Sharia, as we have recently seen demonstrated. If the Soviet Union was the Evil Empire then the USA is the Diversity Empire, committed to spreading Multiculturalism and genetic Communism around the world, especially to white majority countries.

US General Wesley Clark during the bombing against Serbia in 1999 said more or less explicitly that the war was undertaken to impose “diversity.” I don’t hate Americans is general but their elites are just as hostile as the EU elites, and they have bigger guns. When I see how Nidal Hasan was treated by the US military I don’t think I want these people involved in my affairs. They would probably say that native Euros are Nazis who oppress the poor Muslims. Then they would bomb us and say it is for our own good, just like they did to the Serbs. The United States will not survive this century. It will be split into several countries according to ethnic, racial and perhaps even ideological lines. There is no such thing as a universal nation. People want to live with their own kind. The only ones who are not allowed to do so are whites, and they are starting to get tired of this double standard. People of European origins are among the least ethnocentric people on the planet and are currently being penalized heavily for this. Self-preservation is a natural instinct for all living things down to plants and bacteria. It’s about time that whites reclaim the same right without apology. I am increasingly convinced that the developments we are witnessing are deliberate. The lies we are being served are virtually identical in every Western country. I’ve had some discussions about this with my friend Ohmyrus who thinks this is about a structural failure in our political system. I don’t necessarily disagree with that, but I also believe there is a planned long-term goal of breaking down all white majority nations to create a new global oligarchy. Anti-white ideologies are now taught in every Western university and were arguably elevated to national ideology in the USA with the election of Obama. I suspect this is because whites have historically had an unusually high emphasis on self-rule, rule by consent and power sharing, not to mention the fact that we ask too many questions. This is annoying to those who desire an authoritarian system with themselves on top. We need to be broken, culturally and demographically. This is why the elites desire mass immigration. The leading “Multicultural theorist” in my country, Professor Thomas Hylland Eriksen of the University of Oslo, said frankly that the most important thing to do now is “deconstructing the majority so thoroughly that it can never be called the majority again.” He is essentially calling for dismantling his own people and he knows that he can do so with total impunity.

Also, I suspect that the main reason why many others hate us is that European civilization has been so incomparably much more influential and accomplished than any other civilization on this planet that our existence makes them feel inferior. The only way they can stop feeling inferior is by eradicating us. A terribly politically incorrect thing to say, but that’s my view.

Culturally Enriched Murder in Lappeenranta

Cultural Enrichment News


The article below concerns an enricher-vs.-enricher murder — possibly an honor killing — in Finland. Many thanks to KGS for the translation.

According to YLE:

Two Men of Pakistani Background Arrested in Possible Honor Killing

Those arrested in the murder in Lappeenranta are of Pakistani background.

The victim murdered in Lappeenranta on Thursday was revealed to have came from Pakistan. Also the two men who are suspected of murdering the woman came from Pakistan. The police have them in custody.

The police told of the background of both the victim and those arrested on Sunday. The police will bring the men arrested to the Lappeenranta District Court on Monday.

The killing occurred in a private residence in the city of Harapaista. The murdered woman was 34 years old and lived in Lappeenranta. The woman was killed with a knife.

– – – – – – – –

Detective Chief Inspector Kari Hyyryläinen did not provide any information on the victim nor on the victim’s connection with those arrested nor on any details of the case. He wouldn’t comment on the possibility of it being the question of an honor murder, but said all options will be investigated.

In some Islamic circles, but also in some other cultures, families or men control the women’s behavior in the family and assess the punishment for licentious activities. In the worst case, a woman can be killed.

Already on Friday, the police said they apprehended one suspect at the Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. Of the four held on Friday, two were released.



For a complete listing of previous enrichment news, see The Cultural Enrichment Archives.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/21/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 11/21/2009Contributions from Hindus, Muslims, and Christians have financed the construction of an interfaith cathedral in Baruipur, India. Representatives of the Christian sponsors hope that it will “promote harmony among various faiths”.

In other news, the current recession has prompted the Irish government to take the drastic step of paying immigrants to go home — and that home must be outside the European Union.

Thanks to C. Cantoni, Esther, Fjordman, Gaia, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, JD, JP, Sean O’Brian, Steen, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

USA
Muslim Mafia Author Appears to Completely Fold in CAIR Lawsuit
Hasan Was Worried About Results of Recent HIV Test
Hasan, Al-Awlaki Discussed Money Transfers
Illinois Congressman Defends ‘Savage Religion’ Comment
In Missouri Schools, Ancient Calendar at Center of Debate
They’re Still After Your Water
Tom Tancredo: Secretary Napolitano’s Nose is Growing
Virus in the Voting Machines: Tainted Results in NY-23
 
Canada
Why the Peaceful Majority May be Dangerous
 
Europe and the EU
A New Balance in Europe
Austrians Mute Israeli Anthem at Fencing Tourney
Berlin Wants No Part in Potential 9/11 Execution
EU History Will be All the History Taught in Schools
EU: Beware the Pygmies in Charge of Europe… They Will Grab Ever More Power for Brussels
EU: Daniel Hannan: EU is a Democratic Mess
EU: European Disappointment
EU: Half-a-Billion People Told Name of Their New Emperor President
EU: Napolitano: On Turkey Its Playing With Its Credibility
EU: We’ll be Watching You, Mr Van Rompuy
EU: Why President Whatsisname and Baroness Who Could be the Death of the EU Dream
Germany: Former ‘Nazi’ Faces Murder Charges
German-Born Criminal to be Deported to Turkey
Herman Van Rompuy is the ‘Shrewd Master of the Shabby Compromise’
Italy: Frattini, Turkey’s Aim is EU Integration
Italy: Minister Denies Alleged Mafia Links on TV
Italy: Knox Accused of ‘Hating’ Murder Victim
Italy: Ex-Governor’s Transsexual Escort Found Dead
Italy: Lega: “No to Parliamentary Immunity”
Mussolini’s ‘Brain and Blood for Sale on Internet’
UK: Turnip Taliban: A Brilliant Way to Turn Off Tory Voters
UK: Will the Great EU Stich-Up Cost US Our £3bn Rebate?
 
Balkans
Croatia: Presidential Elections, 12 Candidates in First Round
Gallup: People Pessimistic and Corruption Victims
Serbia: Belgrade, World’s “Party Capital”
 
Mediterranean Union
EU Foreign Minister Has to Show Leadership, Pittella
 
North Africa
Egypt-Algeria: Soccer, 35 Injured in Clashes in Cairo
Egypt-Algeria: Algiers Summons Egyptian Ambassador
Egypt-Algeria: Soccer, Phone Conversation Between Ministers
Egypt-Algeria: Football, Harsh Words in the Egyptian Press
Egypt: Violence Erupts Over World Cup Decider
Egypt: Team May Quit International Matches After Riots
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Clashes at the Wailing Wall
Press: Al Fatah Preparing for New Intifada
 
Middle East
Arab World Expects More Turkish Involvement in Mideast Area
 
Russia
Ban on Death Penalty Should be Followed by Ban on Abortion — Russian Priest
 
South Asia
Afghan Minister Accused of Major Bribery: Report
India: David Headley: Quiet American With Alleged Links to Mumbai Massacre
India: New Cathedral Unites Christians, Hindus, Muslims
Indonesian Ulema Boycott the Apocalyptic “2012”: It’s Blasphemous
Maldives: MPs Approve Bill to Outlaw Places of Worship for Non-Muslims
Pakistan: ‘Mastermind’ Of Mumbai Attack Preaches at Mosque in Lahore
Tamil, Muslim Parties Meet in Zurich
 
Far East
Video: Defector Tells of Life in North Korean Army
Vietnam Government Denies Blocking Networking Site
Why Did Barack Obama Fail in China?
 
Australia — Pacific
Obscene Anti-Muslim Emails Put Nile on the Defensive
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
A Navy Vessel Was Just 50ft Away as Pirates Kidnapped the British Yacht Couple. Why Didn’t Our Sailors Stop Them? Human Rights, Of Course…
European Union Gives Nigeria $1bn ‘For Peace’
Get US Out of Here Now or the Pirates Will Kill US!
 
Immigration
British People Think Immigration is Out of Control
Irish Government to Pay Immigrants to Go Home
Not at Home in Germany
UK: Angry ‘Unknown Warriors’ Of WWII: ‘This Isn’t the Britain We Fought For’
 
General
Coca-Cola Leads Cheering Section for 1-World Climate Change Taxes
GE Capital Completes First Sukuk Offering of $500m
Gene Change in Cannibals Reveals Evolution in Action
Islam is Not Compatible With a Republic

USA


Muslim Mafia Author Appears to Completely Fold in CAIR Lawsuit

The author of the book Muslim Mafia, which was based on documents taken by the author’s son while he was posing as a Muslim intern at the Council on American Islamic Relations, has agreed to return all documents and recordings obtained during the time at CAIR, according to a draft consent order filed in court yesterday.

The draft order, agreed to by attorneys for CAIR as well as for Dave Gaubatz and his son Chris, was filed along with a joint motion asking the judge to enter the order.

“We’re glad that there’s been an agreement to return all of the property that has been stolen from us,” CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper told TPMmuckraker this morning. CAIR says many thousands of pages of internal documents were taken. Now, Hooper said, “we’ll move forward with our legal action,” declining to specify what will come next.

Daniel Horowitz, one of Gaubatz’s lawyers who earlier this month told us in an interview that he was relishing the chance to butt heads with CAIR, told TPMmuckraker this morning that he didn’t negotiate the agreement. His colleague, the trial lawyer Martin Garbus, did not immediately return a call seeking comment about what happened in the case, and what, if anything, will come next.

Garbus told Politico, which first reported the news, that the Gaubatzs will continue to fight CAIR “in the context of the litigation,” but not over the preliminary injunction.

Muslim Mafia, the foreword of which was written by Rep. Sue Myrick (R-NC), prompted Myrick and three House GOP colleagues to pursue a probe of possibly Muslim intern “spying” on Capitol Hill. Gaubatz has made many controversial statements, most recently making, and then retracting, a call for a backlash against Muslims after the Fort Hood shootings.

The order filed yesterday goes well beyond a judge’s ruling earlier this month that Gaubatz had to return a narrower set of documents, including those that contain confidential employee information.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Hasan Was Worried About Results of Recent HIV Test

Major Nidal Hasan seemed worried about the results of an HIV blood test taken a week before the Fort Hood shooting rampage, according to federal investigators piecing together background details on Hasan’s life.

[Return to headlines]



Hasan, Al-Awlaki Discussed Money Transfers

The session was scheduled to decide whether he should be jailed after his release from hospital while he awaits trial for the killings of 12 fellow soldiers and a civilian on the Texas military base.

Maj Hasan, 39, who is believed to be paralysed from the waist down after being shot during the attack, has so far been placed in pretrial confinement in a military hospital in San Antonio by his commanding officer.

The hearing comes as new revelations about Hasan’s monitored email contacts with an extremist preacher in Yemen deepen questions about whether his behaviour should have set off red flags before the shooting rampage.

He told Anwar al-Awlaki that he “couldn’t wait to join him in the discussions they would having over non-alcoholic wine in the afterlife”, according to ABC News. He also asked the cleric when jihad (holy war) was appropriate and whether it was permissible if innocents were killed in a suicide attack.

The two men also discussed financial transfers abroad by Hasan in communications that intensified in the run-up to the shootings, The Washington Post reported on Saturday that the emails were obtained by an FBI-led task force in San Diego between late last year and June but were not forwarded to the military, according to government and congressional sources.

Some were sent to the FBI’s Washington field office, triggering an assessment into whether they raised national security concerns, but those intercepted later were not, the sources told the newspaper.

“He [Hasan] clearly became more radicalised toward the end, and was having discussions related to the transfer of money and finances,” said the source. “It became very clear toward the end of those emails he was interested in taking action.”

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Illinois Congressman Defends ‘Savage Religion’ Comment

CHICAGO—An Illinois congressman says his comment that suspected terrorists detained at Guantanamo Bay follow a “savage religion” has been misinterpreted.

U.S. Rep. Donald Manzullo told WREX-TV in Rockford, Ill., that alleged terrorists imprisoned at the Navy base are “really really mean people whose job it is to kill people, driven by some savage religion.”

The Republican lawmaker confirmed Tuesday those words were his. He said he never specified Islam and apologized for any misunderstanding.

Manzullo’s remarks come as federal officials consider buying an Illinois prison to house Guantanamo detainees.

Most prisoners at the base in Cuba come from Muslim countries.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations says Manzullo’s comments were an attack on Islam.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



In Missouri Schools, Ancient Calendar at Center of Debate

CLARKSON VALLEY, Mo. (RNS) Dean Mandis, insurance executive and father of two students, stood before the Rockwood School District’s superintendent and seven School Board members at Crestview Middle School. He had three minutes to broach an issue that had been bothering him for a month or so.

His daughter, an eighth-grader, had come home from school recently with evidence that she was being taught something other than the traditional calendar dates of B.C. (Before Christ) and A.D. (Anno Domini, Latin for “in the year of the Lord.”)

Instead, her teacher was quizzing social studies students on alternative calendar designations that are increasingly common in higher education — C.E., for Common Era, and B.C.E., for Before the Common

Era.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



They’re Still After Your Water

The Fourth Amendment is quite clear: An American citizen’s right to be secure in his property against search and seizure without a warrant — shall not be violated. The Fifth Amendment underscores this right: “… nor shall private property be taken without just compensation.”

This is the clear, unmistakable language of the highest law of the land: the U.S. Constitution.

Congress is about to pass another law that completely ignores the Constitution, the Clean Water Restoration Act (S. 787).

For the first 100 years, the states set water policy. The feds got into the business in 1886 with the River and Harbor Act, and expanded their interest in 1948 with the Federal Water Pollution Control Act. From the outset, the federal government was interested only in “navigable” waters that affected interstate and foreign commerce, consistent with federal powers authorized in Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution.

The federal government dipped its hand deeper with the 1972 Clean Water Act, in which the first goal was to “to attain a ‘zero discharge of pollutants’ into navigable waters by 1985.” It is significant that the word “wetland” did not appear in law.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tom Tancredo: Secretary Napolitano’s Nose is Growing

A few days ago, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano announced that the Obama administration plans to push amnesty legislation early in 2010. That Obama and Napolitano want amnesty for 15 to 20 million illegal aliens is not news. What was noteworthy about Napolitano’s “announcement” was the reason she gave for moving ahead on the amnesty plan in 2010.

The head of our federal agency for homeland security has announced that, unlike 2006 and 2007, when Congress said no to amnesty, today we can do it because our borders are now secure. That’s more than hype; it’s a lie, and a dangerous one.

That would be big news if true. It would mean that Border Patrol agents are no longer chasing hundreds of border jumpers into the brush each night and catching perhaps 30 percent of those they observe. But, hey, what’s a million new illegal aliens each year among friends?

Napolitano and Border Patrol management have been trumpeting the fact that apprehensions on the border are down for the third straight year — down from almost 1.2 million in 2005 to “only” about 800,000 last year. That decrease would be significant if that number meant what most people think it means. What it does not mean is that fewer people crossed the border successfully. It means simply that they caught fewer people, not that fewer people made it through their net. The decrease in apprehension numbers might mean that fewer people are attempting to cross the border, but it also might mean the Border Patrol is focusing more on interdicting drug smugglers instead of human trafficking.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Virus in the Voting Machines: Tainted Results in NY-23

GOUVERNEUR, NY — The computerized voting machines used by many voters in the 23rd district had a computer virus — tainting the results, not just from those machines known to have been infected, but casting doubt on the accuracy of counts retrieved from any of the machines.

Cathleen Rogers, the Democratic Elections Commissioner in Hamilton County stated that they discovered a problem with their voting machines the week prior to the election and that the “virus” was fixed by a Technical Support representative from Dominion, the manufacturer. The Dominion/Sequoia Voting Systems representative “reprogrammed” their machines in time for them to use in the Nov. 3rd Special Election. None of the machines (from the same manufacturer) used in the other counties within the 23rd district were looked at nor were they recertified after the “reprogramming” that occurred in Hamilton County.

Republican Commissioner Judith Peck refused to speculate on whether the code that governs the counts could have been tampered with. She indicated that “as far as I know, the machine in question was not functioning properly and was repaired” by the technician.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Why the Peaceful Majority May be Dangerous

Mubarka is a Canadian born woman of Pakistani parents. She grew up in Toronto among other Canadian children and attended university where she received a degree in commerce. Today she holds a prominent position with a transportation company.

Mubarka used to be as mainstream as any Canadian young adult could be; in fact, those who met her for the first time may have been struck by her vivacious personality. Her effervescence went hand in hand with her distinct Asian beauty which she shamelessly displayed with stylish clothing including the occasional low cut top. Mubarka used to converse for hours over topics as varied as business practices to Canadian politics to contemporary music.

It comes, therefore, as a shock, when one learns what path Mubarka has recently chosen for herself. She will be wedding a Pakistani man … a devout Muslim, whom she has never met but who was chosen for her when she was an infant. Not only that, but she has donned the Hijab for the first time in her life and is strictly observing Muslim tenets. She has chosen subservience to a man and subservience to his religion over the gender freedom offered her by the Western democracy she grew up in, and she’s done so without so much as a whimper of protest.

When asked why she has picked the life of Sharia, Mubarka simply states that it is as Muhammad would will, and that there is no greater prophet than Muhammad. When asked how she will raise her children, Mubarka makes it clear … they will be raised as Muslims first, and Canadians second.

Hardi, is perhaps one of the most pleasant Canadian women anyone could ever meet. In her capacity as a care giver of seniors, she is gentle, loving, and incredibly patient. She laughs deliciously at the kind of comical moments that only seniors can deliver and her mood seems to be permanently stuck on happy. Hardi is, an angel.

Those who encounter Hardi for the first time will be struck not by her character, that comes later, but by the fact that she is virtually covered from head to toe by tradition Indonesian Muslim attire. She covers her entire body with colourful costume that leaves only her hands and face exposed. Hardi is devout, in fact, so devout that during Christmas any appreciation given her by way of gifting must be void of any reference to the season. Furthermore, during quiet moments when Hardi is free to discuss her Muslim faith, it becomes clear that she believes wholeheartedly in the strict observance of Sharia. For her, Islam in it’s pure non-secular form, is truth.

Both Hardi and Mubarka present us with a perplexing conundrum because they are members of what has become known as the “peaceful” Muslim majority. They don’t have a violent bone in their bodies, and are clearly law abiding and productive members of Canadian society. But, they are also both part of a very small minority within Canada where they and their fellow Muslims have very little effect on Canadian politics or on the evolution of Canadian cultural norms. What if though, Hardi and Mubarka were part of a Muslim majority where they and their co-religionists held the power?

Both women are Muslims first and Canadians second. No matter how much respect one may have for either woman’s character, there is little doubt where either would place her loyalty if faced with chosing between the Canadian traditions of liberty for all, or Sharia. There is also little doubt that if they were part of a majority, they would acquiesce to the demands of the Muslim clerical class and choose Sharia for all Canadians.

It is therefore irrelevant in the grand scheme of things whether or not Hardi or Mubarka are “good” people; most people on the planet are, no matter their religion, race, or culture. What matters in the greater sense, is that as parts of the Muslim collective, neither woman would set aside her Muslim beliefs in order to safeguard and protect the full rights of non-Muslims to live as they choose. What’s even more disturbing, is that both women have experienced the gender freedoms afforded them in Canada, yet both have voluntarily resigned themselves to the greater Muslim collective.

As long as each woman is part of a small minority within Canada, she offers Canada much; but once she becomes part of a significant minority, or heaven forbid, a majority, she becomes dangerous. Why? Because Muslims wherever they form a majority choose Islamic norms over the broader more tolerant standards of the West. If given a chance, as has been clearly demonstrated the world over, they would unravel hundreds of years of hard fought human rights gains and replace them with the medieval practices of their faith. As such, both Hardi and Mubarka are simply bit players in a monstrous and destructive Muslim vortex that would drag civilization backwards hundreds of years.

After all, Islam is, as Islam does.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


A New Balance in Europe

America is listening to Russia’s call for new security arrangements in Europe

IN THEORY, Russian diplomats accredited to NATO are welcome friends: the reality is murkier. For more than a decade now, Russian officials have been trusted to roam the alliance’s maze-like headquarters in Brussels just like envoys from other “partner countries” such as Sweden, Finland or Malta. In practice, says a diplomat, everyone knows that “the entire Russian mission is [staffed by] spies”. This leads to cat-and-mouse games that range from the serious (in February, an Estonian official was jailed for more than 12 years for selling NATO secrets to Russia) to the comical (guards were posted at the doors of meetings reserved for full NATO members after Russian officials were found hiding their badges and sneaking inside).

Russia’s relations with the European Union are almost as ambiguous. The two sides have lots of mutual interests—the EU buys more than half of all Russian exports, and provides two-thirds of Russia’s foreign direct investment. Yet an odd mood of surly indifference surrounds Russia-EU ties. A formal summit between President Dmitry Medvedev and European Union bosses on November 18th achieved only a few technical agreements, though the two sides had much to discuss, not least gas supplies and Russia’s foot-dragging over climate change.

Part of the problem, diplomats suggest, is that the Kremlin’s interest in Europe has fallen after the “reset” of ties with America this year. Something bigger is going on, though. Since the end of the cold war, European and American policy towards Russia has been overshadowed by the process of enlargement—the expansion first of NATO and then of the EU deep into the former Soviet block. That alarmed Russia and got its attention.

In 2007 Russia’s then president, Vladimir Putin, called the expansion of NATO a “serious provocation”.

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



Austrians Mute Israeli Anthem at Fencing Tourney

(IsraelNN.com) Young female athletes from Israel’s fencing team swept top medals at a 28-nation European tournament held in Mödling, Austria last week — but faced an additional challenge when they stood on the winners’ podium to receive their medals: the organizers did not play the recording of the Israeli national anthem, and the Israeli winners had to sing the anthem on their own, a capella style. The Israeli team’s staff has no doubt that the incident was intentional.

Israel’s Dana Strelnikov, 14, won the gold medal and Alona Kamarov won the bronze at the tournament, which hosted 120 fencers aged up to 17. Both Israeli medalists hail from the northern Israeli town of Ma’alot, whose fencing club has produced many of Israel’s best young fencers. But as they stood on the podium and awaited the opening sounds of national anthem HaTikvah — they heard only silence. The girls and their trainers quickly understood what was happening and proceeded to sing the entire anthem on their own, with some scattered support from voices in the spectators’ bleachers.

The Israeli national team’s coach, Yaakov Friedman, told Arutz Sheva that the Israeli team faces constant political challenges on the international circuit. At a tournament in Göteborg, Sweden, in January this year, Israel won the silver medal and when the medalists were already on the podium the organizers informed Friedman that they do not have a recording of the Israeli anthem. The team sang the anthem without the help of the recording. It was understood by everyone, Friedman said, that the reason was Operation Cast Lead in Gaza, which had just ended.

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



Berlin Wants No Part in Potential 9/11 Execution

A legal team is going to New York to prevent the use of evidence provided by Germany in seeking a death penalty. Berlin wants to ensure that promises made by the US are kept if the suspects are found guilty.

A team of observers from the German government is going to New York to oversee the trial of five suspects accused of orchestrating the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, the news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Saturday.

The federal trial of the suspect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his four co-defendants was announced on November 13 by the US Justice Department. The government also asserted that it intends to seek the death penalty if the accused are found guilty.

Germany, which does not have a death penalty, provided evidence for the trial on the condition that it could not be used to support a death sentence. Several members of the al Qaeda cell that planned and executed the attacks of September 11 were previously based in the northern German city of Hamburg.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



EU History Will be All the History Taught in Schools

The latest initiative by our “Children’s Secretary”, Ed Balls, is to abolish what remains of fact-based teaching of history and geography in our schools. He plans to “roll them together into themed lessons on social issues such as global warming” (funny how that seems to seep into everything nowadays).

The ruthless drive of educational progressives to eliminate history-teaching from schools has been under way since the 1960s. The aim is to ensure that children know nothing about their country’s past or how the world came to be as it is, leaving their minds blankly open to whatever vacuous progressive claptrap is fed to them.

In his desire to chuck history onto what Lenin called “the scrapheap of history”, Mr Balls may have to make an exception, however. A campaign is now being mounted in the European Parliament to make it compulsory for children to be taught the history of the EU. According to Mário David, the Portuguese MEP leading the campaign and a former chief of staff to the Commission President Jose-Manuel Barroso, it Is vital to counter all the “lying, cheating and mistrust” that surrounds the EU in the minds of the peoples of Europe. Our children must therefore be indoctrinated accordingly.

A year or two back, when Richard North and I were writing a comprehensive history of “the European project”, The Great Deception, we were astonished to find just how horrendously misleading is the account of that history peddled by the EU itself on its Europa website. From laying claim to Churchill as father of the EU to consistently obscuring the nature of the key role played by Jean Monnet, they have come up with an official version of the origins of their “project” which bears virtually no relation to the facts. Doubtless this is just the sort of history which Mr Balls will be happy to allow in our schools — because “fact-based” it isn’t.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: Beware the Pygmies in Charge of Europe… They Will Grab Ever More Power for Brussels

As Europe awoke to its first day under the rule of President Herman Van Rompuy and High Representative Baroness Cathy Ashton, the EU’s 27 leaders were slapping each other heartily upon their well-fed backs. This self-appointing elite had fulfilled its dream of edging Europe closer to a federal superstate, in clear defiance of the wishes of its peoples — not least a British public denied the referendum it was so solemnly promised by Messrs Blair, Brown and Cameron. True, by opting — at a secret meeting — for two anonymous mediocrities, the EU saved Britain from the ghastly prospect of a ‘traffic stopping’ Tony Blair once again lording it over us.

But, in many ways, the propulsion of Labour crony Baroness Ashton into the hugely powerful job of EU foreign minister is an even greater insult to democracy than the appointment of ‘President Blair’, who has at least faced electors,would have been.

But then the baroness is a prime example of that modern species — the quangocrat who rises to power without ever facing voters on anything. From running a health authority to working at the National Council for One Parent Families to being a Labour life peer, to leading the Lords, she has never been elected by anybody.

Until she was made EU commissioner by Gordon Brown last year (to allow the unelected Peter Mandelson to become de-facto deputy prime minister) her main achievement was persuading the Lords to deny us a vote on the Lisbon Treaty.

How disgracefully fitting that the former CND activist’s reward for this act of treachery is a grand EU foreign policy job which the electors she betrayed did not even want to exist. Yesterday her appointment was welcomed by Hillary Clinton, who, let’s note, was subjected to a year-long election campaign before becoming U.S. Secretary of State.

But then Baroness Ashton’s selection, over fine wine and line caught bass, would never be tolerated in a genuine democracy like America. Mediocrities they may be, but we underestimate at our peril the determination of the baroness and her federalist sidekick Mr Van Rompuy. Already, Mr Van Rompuy — a Belgian who holds nationalism in contempt — wants to give the EU direct tax-raising power and abolish national symbols.

The Dalek-loving baroness yesterday displayed not a scintilla of doubt about her own abilities or agenda as she talked of using her 7,000 staff and vast budget to make the EU ‘much more powerful’. Yes, the pair may be pygmies. But you can bet they will be busy draining ever more power from Westminster to Brussels.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: Daniel Hannan: EU is a Democratic Mess

I would confine the EU’s jurisdiction to matters of a clearly cross-border nature: tariff reduction, environmental pollution, mutual product recognition. The member states would retain control of everything else: agriculture and fisheries, foreign affairs and defence, immigration and criminal justice, and social and employment policy.

The European Commission could then be reduced to a small secretariat, answering to national ministers. The European Court of Justice could be replaced by a tribunal that would arbitrate trade disputes. The European Parliament could be scrapped altogether; instead, seconded national MPs might meet for a few days every month or two to keep an eye on the bureaucracy.

You will, of course, have spotted the flaw in my plan: it would put an awful lot of Eurocrats out of work. Which, sadly, is why it won’t happen. For, whatever the motives of its founders, the EU is now chiefly a racket: a massive mechanism to redistribute money to those lucky enough to be on the inside of the system.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: European Disappointment

Today is a moment for celebration. For fifty years the European Union has divided British politics. But now there is harmony. From the most Eurosceptic to the most Europhile there is agreement. The EU has embarrassed itself. There is not a single part of the selection of the new EU President and High Representative that anyone can look back on with pride.

The process began with the decision to create a new constitution for Europe without gaining permission from voters. This involved making assurances that the Lisbon treaty was a mere tidying-up exercise. The opportunity to argue for a political president of international stature who would lead the community was lost.

The result was the creation of a post that few people wanted.. Eurosceptics did not want a president at all. Integrationists were hoping for a presidency occupied by a charismatic leader. They both got Herman Van Rompuy. The way that European leaders bounced the treaty through without popular support begins to look like a model democratic technique when compared with the way that they set about filling the vacancies the treaty created. The whole thing was done in secret.

The British Government put forward Baroness Ashton of Upholland without consulting anybody. While universally considered very pleasant and perfectly competent, she has almost no foreign policy experience and the only interest she has shown in the topic was working for CND. Never mind. David Miliband said that he wanted the jobs filled by people who could stop the traffic. At least we have found someone who might stop the diplomatic traffic.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: Half-a-Billion People Told Name of Their New Emperor President

The 500 million people of Europe have a new president, not one of them was troubled with the requirement to cast a vote. Actually that is not quite true, 27 politicians decided unanimously who to appoint. Soviet Politburos invariably came to unanimous consensus decisions, it is a characteristic of undemocratic systems that deals are struck and favours traded. Baroness Ashton, the new British High Representative has never been democratically elected to any position, ever. The perception is that she owes her rise to high office in EUGov to being married to Blair admiring, Labour leaning pollster Peter Kellner of YouGov.

With a Belgian President, plus a capital and parliament in Brussels, the EU has some of the attributes of a new Belgian empire…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: Napolitano: On Turkey Its Playing With Its Credibility

(AGI) — Ankara, 18 Nov. — Withdrawing from the decision made in 2004 to start the process of integration of Turkey into the EU “would undermine the credibility of the Union, and not only in the eyes of Turkey and its people”. The President of the Republic, Giorgio Napolitano, during a conference at the University of Ankara, was speaking about the relationship between Turkey and the Union and reaffirmed the support of Italy in the process of integration, explaining also that obviously, as the 2004 agreement states, the process is “open-ended, ‘the end cannot be guaranteed in advance’.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU: We’ll be Watching You, Mr Van Rompuy

The new ‘President of Europe’ is a Eurofanatic even by the standards of Brussels

The new “foreign minister” of Europe is British. According to Gordon Brown, that should make us proud. The reality is that Europe does not need a foreign minister, and the person chosen to fill the post, Baroness Ashton of Upholland, is a Labour peer who has never been elected to a political position in her life. As for the new “President of Europe”, the Belgian prime minister Herman Van Rompuy, he was hardly better known until he emerged as a front-runner a few weeks ago.

The phrase “a pair of nonentities” is on many lips, and it is easy to understand why. David Miliband recently called for an EU representative who could stop the traffic; she may be a decent and capable individual, but it is hard to imagine Lady Ashton, former chairman of Hertfordshire Health Authority, stopping the traffic in St Albans, let alone Washington. Until her appointment as Trade Commissioner she had no background in foreign policy. No wonder she was not the first choice to fill this post (which a back-room deal had assigned to a Briton). She was not even the second. Or the third. Mr Miliband did not want the post; neither did Lord Mandelson, while Geoff Hoon was unacceptable to Brussels. At which point Mr Brown came up with the name of Cathy Ashton. Such is the transparent process by which the “high representative” of 500 million people was chosen.

Some Eurosceptics are comforting themselves with the thought that it is better to have “minnows” in these two posts than charismatic attention-seekers. Mr Van Rompuy and Lady Ashton are, at heart, local politicians who have been dragged into the limelight. The former was reluctant to take the job of prime minister of Belgium, let alone one that makes him sound like the president of a continent. These functionaries will not exceed their job descriptions, the argument goes. Mr Van Rompuy will be a slightly harassed chairman of the European Council rather than a chief executive with delusions of grandeur; Lady Ashton will co-ordinate rather than determine European foreign policy. So, unedifying though the past few weeks have been, we have not laid the foundations of a superstate.

There are several things wrong with this argument. For one, Mr Van Rompuy, coming from a country with an exceedingly fragile concept of national identity, is a convinced federalist: he is a Eurofanatic even by the standards of Brussels. Beneath his modest exterior lurk some utterly crazy ideas, such as the Europe-wide tax on businesses to fund green initiatives that he proposed this week. One has to wonder: what nonsense will he dream up when he is in office? And, even if Mr Van Rompuy and Lady Ashton make little personal impact, their successors may prove much more ambitious. The EU is becoming more pompous by the day: European Commission offices around the world are being turned into “embassies” staffed by a network of 7,000 diplomats, and the Ruritanian trappings of the posts of president and high representative would perfectly suit a politician with a self-aggrandising federalist agenda. (We should bear in mind that Mr Van Rompuy’s term of office lasts only for two-and-a-half years, and Lady Ashton’s for five.)

One consequence of Lady Ashton’s elevation is that Britain no longer has a European commissioner with a specific portfolio. William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, has argued that what this country really needed to secure was a top economics job. How right he was; for now we face the prospect of a commissioner from France or Germany holding a new portfolio that covers banking, pensions and financial markets in Europe. This appears to be the “get London” mission — an attempt to wrest supervision of the City of London from the Financial Services Authority and impose meddlesome regulations that drive hedge funds away. Whether the money would actually flow to Europe is doubtful — but a powerful EU financial commissioner hostile to the City could certainly make it an unfriendly place for investors. And that is something that a British prime minister cannot allow to happen.

David Cameron has already promised to assert parliamentary control over the sneaky mechanisms of the Lisbon Treaty that allow further power to be ceded to the EU without a new treaty. How he will achieve this if he is elected remains to be seen: the weapons available to him include a Sovereignty Act protecting the British constitution, and the threat of a veto of the next EU Accession Act (for Croatia) unless Britain is granted exemption from damaging social and employment laws. If Mr Cameron’s critics do not believe these weapons can be used, we hope they underestimate the Tory leader’s resourcefulness. We trust that he is working now on a plan to resist any EU assault on the City of London, with support from everyone who cares about the capital’s position as one of the world’s two great financial centres.

Meanwhile, we have the prospect of two little-known politicians taking up offices that move the EU in the direction of federalism — the opposite direction to that favoured by the British electorate, who have been given no say in the matter. Defenders of the new arrangements argue that, because the president and high representative are answerable to politicians, they strengthen the hand of elected governments as opposed to that of the unelected Commission. But, given that we have just lost our veto power in many areas of legislation, we take that reassurance with a pinch of salt. We shall be watching Mr Van Rompuy and Baroness Ashton closely.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU: Why President Whatsisname and Baroness Who Could be the Death of the EU Dream

Whatever your view of the European Union, one thing is for sure: it has a genius for making life hard for its supporters. Now we are being asked to swallow the surreal farce enacted in Brussels this week, in which two faceless mediocrities unknown to the British electorate were elevated to the grand-sounding positions of President and ‘High Representative’ (ie foreign minister) of almost half a billion people.

Let us linger over their names for a moment. All we know about Herman van Rompuy is that he is Prime Minister of a country the size of Greater London, and that he is a federalist, which very few people on the continent of Europe are, and almost none in Britain. The most striking thing about him to date is his anonymity. Think of the line-up at international gatherings to come: Obama, Medvedev, Hu Jintao and — well, the other one. . .what’s his face, the EU guy.

As for the Labour peer Baroness Cathy Ashton, no one has ever had the chance to elect her to anything, since she is a Labour placewoman rewarded for her services to the party by appointment to the House of Lords, then as a commissioner in Brussels.

The truth is that she has been appointed because she is a woman, because she will threaten no one, and because her job as Trade Commissioner, where she succeeded the more substantial Lord Mandelson, will make a juicy plum for someone else.

Gordon Brown said Baroness Ashton’s appointment gave Britain a ‘powerful voice’ at the EU top table. Satire can go no further.

[…]

Alas, the entire presidential affair has been a grotesque piece of flummery and pretension and conceit. It will damage not just the interests of Britain but, in the longer term, of the EU itself. Pro-Europeans who have talked glibly about how you need a single face to represent you in the modern world will come to realise that, by appointing two nobodies as EU leaders, the Community has contrived the impossible: aiming for the stars yet shooting itself in the foot.

Our adversaries have long known something that Brussels has yet to learn: the EU is not and can never be a country. We can now rely on them to exploit the tensions and disunity that a make-believe European presidency and foreign ministry are bound to create. What an historical irony if the pressure towards federalism were to re-create the poisonous frictions between nations that Europe’s founding fathers such as Churchill were trying to banish for all time.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Germany: Former ‘Nazi’ Faces Murder Charges

Berlin, 17 Nov.(AKI) — German prosecutors have charged an alleged former member of the Nazi SS with the killing of 58 Jewish labourers. The 90-year-old man is suspected of killing his victims near the village of Deutsch Schützen in eastern Austria in 1945, a statement from a German state court said.

The court has identified the suspect only as a “retiree from Duisburg”.

“On 29 March 1945, the accused and his accomplices brought at least 57 Jewish forced labourers in several groups to a nearby forest area, where they had to give up their valuables and kneel by a grave,” the statement said.

“The accused and other SS members then cruelly shot the Jewish forced labourers from behind.”

While the accused has not been officially identified, German media reports have named him as Adolf Storms, a former member of the 5th SS Panzer Division, known as Wiking.

The victims’ remains were found in a mass grave in 1995 by the Austrian Jewish Association.

The 90-year-old German suspect is also accused of shooting another Jew who could no longer walk during a forced march on the same day or the day after, the court was told.

When German authorities raided the suspect’s home last December, they said he had invoked his right to remain silent and not to make a statement.

He was interned in a US prisoner of war camp following the war, but was released in 1946.

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



German-Born Criminal to be Deported to Turkey

A German-born Turkish man with a string of criminal convictions can be deported to Turkey, even though he has never lived there and only speaks broken Turkish, a court has ruled.

The legal fight between the city of Munich and the 22-year-old man was decided on by the Bavarian Administrative Court on Friday, which ruled he can be expelled from Germany.

The man could be expected to continue to commit crimes, the judge ruled. And although his deportation is a massive encroachment on his ‘personal, economic and social relationships’, it can be undertaken in the German public interest.

The man first came to the attention of the authorities when he was just 11, after missing school and then beating up his classmates. In April 2005 he was first jailed on two counts of grievous bodily harm and a sexual offence. Further convictions followed, of violence, making threats, theft and possession of drugs.

He was sentenced to two years and nine months in prison, where he seemed to flourish, completing his school certificate and starting a carpentry course. But when he was released in February 2007, he again went off the rails, the court heard, failing to meet his probation officer, and taking drugs. In July 2008 he was again convicted of causing grievous bodily harm and has been in prison since this April.

The court decided that the man could be deported to Turkey, with the judge noting that he spoke broken Turkish and saying he was not ‘integrated’ into society.

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



Herman Van Rompuy is the ‘Shrewd Master of the Shabby Compromise’

Devoid of patriotism and contemptuous of democracy, Herman Van Rompuy perfectly embodies the culture of the EU.

His sole political ideal is the creation of a federal superstate, destroying national identities across Europe.

As someone who has known him since the mid-1980s, I recognise Van Rompuy as a man of powerful intellect and deep cynicism.

Although diffident in manner, it would be a great mistake to underestimate this Belgian.

A shrewd manipulator, he will do all in his power to further EU integration.

Despite his modest appearance, he is not lacking in selfesteem. When he was 12, he was asked by his family what he wanted to be when he grew up. His answer was: ‘President.’

Van Rompuy is a product of the debased, corrupt political life of Belgium. Like the EU, it is an artificial construct, the result of political compromise and experiment.

It was built in 1830 by the international powers joining two separate peoples — the Dutch of Flanders in the north and the French of Wallonia in the south.

Because of this lack of real nationhood, Belgians despise their own state.

But this unpatriotic attitude is precisely the reason why Belgian politicians have been so enthusiastic about the EU, in which they see the mirror image of their own fraudulent, unprincipled country.

The tragedy of Van Rompuy’s political career is that he used to have a very different outlook. When I first met him in 1985, he was much more sceptical about European federalism.

A conservative Catholic, he had been heavily influenced by the Flemish philosopher Lode Claes, who passionately believed that without a genuine spirit of nationhood, there could be no democracy and no political morality.

Van Rompuy wrote elegantly about the importance of traditional values and the need to maintain the Christian roots of Europe.

He was so disgusted by the Belgian establishment’s rejection of these principles he told me he was thinking of leaving politics.

But his bosses the Flemish Christian-Democrat Party were appalled at the thought of losing this bright young star. So he was offered rapid advancement up the political ladder.

Van Rompuy accepted, and embarked on a series of shabby compromises which brought him high office but proved he had sold his soul.

In one telling deal, for instance, he helped push through one of Europe’s most liberal abortion bills, even though, as a Catholic, he had once written in defence of the rights of the unborn child.

He will feel very at home at the top of the EU.

Paul Belien is the author of A Throne In Brussels: Britain, the Saxe-Coburgs and the Belgianisation Of Europe, published by Imprint Academic at £14.95.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Italy: Frattini, Turkey’s Aim is EU Integration

(ANSAmed) — ISTANBUL, NOVEMBER 18 — Stressing the commitments which Turkey must still respect does not mean putting the final objective back under discussion, which is the country’s full integration into the European Union. This was the firm message sent by Italy’s Foreign Minister Franco Frattini today, at the opening of the sixth annual Italy-Turkey Forum for dialogue along with Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu in Istanbul. The visit by the Italian Foreign Minister is part of the Italy-Turkey strategic partnership, supported by what Frattini called the excellent relations, strengthened by the Italian governments strong support for Turkeys membership of the EU. Frattini once again underlined this support, saying that “I believe that Europe would benefit greatly by having Turkey as a member of the EU”. A trustworthy country, in a position to negotiate with Iran, with the Arab nations and those of the Caucasus at the same time. Italy can always explain better and more often to the European countries which have doubts, that Turkey is an added value which can help Europe to be a global player. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Minister Denies Alleged Mafia Links on TV

Rome, 17 Nov. (AKI) — An Italian minister who is facing arrest for alleged mafia collusion has denied the accusations against him and claimed he is the victim of a “barbarous and uncivil” campaign to discredit him. “These are political moves,” Nicola Cosentino told a national late-night television talk show.

The Italian parliament was due on Wednesday to consider a request by a Naples prosecutors to arrest Cosentino for alleged links with the local mafia or Camorra.

“They are doing this to me because I am the (ruling) People of Freedom Party’s coordinator in the Campania region (surrounding Naples),” he told the TV show aired on Italian public television’s premier channel Rai1.

“These political machinations are barbarous and uncivil,” Cosentino said.

He questioned why prosecutors began to formally investigate him in February while mafia turncoats had made accusations against him as long ago as the 1990s.

“I had no interest in contacting or getting votes from the Camorra. I have always been transparent and anti-mafia in my dealings,” Cosentino said.

The 50-year-old MP is accused of doing business with the infamous Casalese clan of the Camorra over the illegal disposal of rubbish in the Naples region.

Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has reportedly stood by Cosentino and said he should continue with his plan to run for the presidency of the Campania region in elections due next year.

Cosentino reiterated his intention to run for the position and accused one of the prosecutors investigating him, Giuseppe Narducci, of taking part on a pro-opposition rally in 2007 in Italy’s Molise region.

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



Italy: Knox Accused of ‘Hating’ Murder Victim

Perugia, 20 Nov. (AKI) — An American student accused of murdering her British roommate in Italy had a deep hatred for the victim and killed her in retaliation during a drug-fuelled sex game, a prosecutor said Friday. Head prosecutor Giuliano Mignini made the claim in closing arguments at Knox’s murder trial in the central Italian city of Perugia where the murder occurred.

Mignini argued that Amanda Knox, her co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito and a third man, Rudy Guede, convicted in a separate trial last year, killed Meredith Kercher under the influence of drugs and possibly alcohol, and then tried to disguise the crime by staging a burglary.

“Amanda harboured hatred for Meredith and the time had come to take revenge on that ‘smirking’ girl who rebuked her over housecleaning and was always with her English friends,” Mignini said.

“There was a discussion about money or perhaps because the English student was opposed to the presence of Rudy in the house.”

He said Knox, Sollecito and Guede, who came from the Ivory Coast, met at the apartment where Kercher was killed on 1 November 2007, shortly before the murder.

He said Kercher and Knox started arguing and then the three brutally attacked the British student.

“There had been an attempt to involve Meredith in a extreme sex game,” he said.

Kercher’s body was found in a pool of blood the next day, her throat slit.

Knox and Sollecito are charged with murder and sexual violence in the 2007 killing in the central Italian town of Perugia. They have denied any wrongdoing.

Guede was sentenced to 30 years in prison last year on the same charges in a fast-track trial he was granted at his request. He has also denied any wrongdoing and is appealing his conviction.

Prosecutors were expected to formally make their sentencing requests to the jury Saturday, while a verdict is expected to be handed down in early December.

Knox and Sollecito could both face life imprisonment, if convicted of murder.

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



Italy: Ex-Governor’s Transsexual Escort Found Dead

Piero Marrazzo, the former governor of the Lazio region, resigned from his post in late October after a video emerged showing him with a transsexual prostitute and cocaine.

Rome, 20 Nov. (AKI) — The transsexual prostitute at the centre of the sex, drugs and extortion scandal involving former governor Piero Marrazzo was on Friday found burned to death in a fire at her apartment in the Italian capital Rome.

Marrazzo’s lawyer Luca Petrucci described the death as “disturbing” in an interview with Adnkronos.

“An inquiry has to be launched to see if there is anything bigger that hasn’t come to light yet,” said Petrucci.

According to investigators quoted by Italian media, Brenda told her transsexual ‘colleagues’ late Thursday that she was afraid, telling them she had been threatened and saying she wanted to kill herself.

Brenda’s friends also said that she was sober but depressed, telling them she “couldn’t go on any more”.

The body had no signs of foul play and a bottle of whisky was found next to her, early reports said.

Some witnesses said that they had heard a conversation and a disturbance between 4.30 a.m. and 5.30 a.m. local time on Friday and a fire had broken out in Brenda’s apartment.

Reports said that packed suitcases were also found in the apartment.

Brenda’s death is the second death related to the Marrazzo scandal.

In September, an associate of the transsexual prostitutes, Gianmarino Cafasso, was found dead of a cocaine overdose in circumstances that are not yet clear.

Marrazzo, the former governor of the Lazio region, once tipped as a future leader of Italy’s centre-left, stood down from his post in late October after a video emerged that apparently showed him with a transsexual prostitute.

The video was allegedly shot by four police officers who have since been arrested for allegedly blackmailing Marrazzo for a total of 80,000 euros in exchange for keeping the video secret.

Later, reports surfaced about another, longer and allegedly more compromising video of him and cocaine use.

Brenda told prosecutors that she shot a video at a sex and drugs party she attended with Marrazzo and fellow transsexual prostitute Michelle.

She said she had destroyed the video but that her friend, Michelle, who has since moved to Paris, also had a copy.

When questioned in early November, Marrazzo, who is married with three children, admitted to several encounters with Brenda and another transsexual prostitute named Nathalie.

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi reportedly warned the centre-left governor about the existence of the sex video allegedly featuring him with transsexuals and assured him it would not be made public in any of his family-controlled publications.

In her last interview on 24 October, Brenda denied ever having any relationship with Marrazzo.

“I have never had any relations with Marrazzo. He had come around this area, but I have nothing to do with it, I do not know anything,” said Brenda.

“He was with Nathalie. He even said it.”

On 9 November, Brenda was involved in a brawl where she was robbed and beaten. In that occasion, her mobile phone was stolen.

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



Italy: Lega: “No to Parliamentary Immunity”

(AGI) — Rome, 12 Nov. — Lega Nord is strictly against parliamentary immunity proposed by a large number of PDL members. “I don’t think it’s the right time to discuss about immunity and in any case I think it’s unfeasible to go back to the old system”, said Carolina Lussana, vicepresident of the Chamber Justice Commission.(AGI) ..

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Mussolini’s ‘Brain and Blood for Sale on Internet’

The granddaughter of Italy’s fascist dictator Benito Mussolini has said that blood and parts of his brain have been stolen to sell on the internet.

Alessandra Mussolini, a former showgirl turned MP, said she immediately informed the police when she found out.

The listing, on auction site Ebay, reportedly showed images of a wooden container and ampoules of blood.

Ebay, which does not allow the sale of human matter on its site, said that the listing was removed within hours.

The initial price requested for the material was 15,000 euros ($22,000; £13,000).

“This is very serious, these are the kinds of things we have to guard against,” said Ms Mussolini, who was attending a seminar on internet crime when the listing was discovered.

Doctors’ denial

The BBC’s Mark Duff, in Milan, says that Alessandra Mussolini is a colourful character in her own right who has remained doggedly faithful to her grandfather’s political legacy.

Ms Mussolini said that the remains were stolen from Milan’s Policlinico hospital.

After Benito Mussolini was killed in 1945 his body was put on public display in a Milan square. It was then taken to the hospital for an autopsy.

However, doctors at the hospital denied any remains of the former Italian leader were kept at the premises, saying they were destroyed in the years that followed.

A spokesperson for Ebay said that the listing violated its own regulations and was promptly taken down.

“It was removed before 11am, a few hours after it was put online and before anyone had made any bids,” said spokesperson Irina Pavlova.

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



UK: Turnip Taliban: A Brilliant Way to Turn Off Tory Voters

White men are the only group left in our society about whom it is safe to be offensive. There is, however, a subset about whom it is not just safe to be rude, but whose humiliation is actively encouraged. We had a prime example this week in Sir Jeremy Bagge, 7th Bt, Old Etonian, Norfolk landowner and leader of the so-called “Turnip Taliban”. Sir Jeremy was depicted as the would-be nemesis of Liz Truss, selected for South West Norfolk despite her adultery with a Tory MP. In these guises he was ripe for savaging, to give the Tory party another fatuous chance to yell: “We’ve changed!”

[…]

This has also been another poisonous example of alienating the core vote. I don’t know Sir Jeremy Bagge, but I know people who do. He is a highly respected figure in Norfolk, of which he has been High Sheriff, and has done much charitable and voluntary work there. He is, in short, precisely the sort of person without whom this country would cease to function even so well as it does. Is it commendable for Dave’s toadies to launch a campaign of vilification against such a man, safe in the knowledge that since he is white, upper-middle-class and rich, almost everybody will think he asks for it? What sort of country do they want us to live in?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Will the Great EU Stich-Up Cost US Our £3bn Rebate?

Gordon Brown was facing a furious backlash over the ‘Great EU Stitch-Up’ last night.

He was accused of trading away vital British interests to the French to land a top job for one of his friends.

The French newspaper Le Monde reported that Mr Brown had cut a deal with President Sarkozy at this week’s Brussels summit, where Labour’s Baroness Ashton was plucked from obscurity to be the EU foreign minister.

In return for French support for her the Prime Minister is reported to have agreed to hand the key job of Internal Market Commissioner to the former French foreign minister Michel Barnier who wants to scrap Britain’s EU rebate.

Le Monde quoted one EU diplomat as saying it was a straight ‘tit for tat’ deal.

Another diplomat said the internal market job, not due to be announced for a fortnight, was ‘nailed on’ for Mr Barnier.

He is a committed federalist who has campaigned for an end to the UK rebate, worth £3billion this year, and called for taxes to be ‘harmonised’ across the EU.

His appointment to the powerful internal market job, where he would be in charge of business regulations, would alarm many in the British business community and the City.

Shadow Foreign Secretary William Hague said it was time for the Government to come clean over the negotiations that led to Lady Ashton’s surprise appointment.

He has written to Foreign Secretary David Miliband calling for clarification.

Mr Hague said: ‘As we have warned all along, the Lisbon treaty has in fact made the EU even less transparent.

‘If Gordon Brown has done a deal that would mean a French commissioner being in charge of the economic issues that affect Britain the most, then that could be a serious concern.’

Downing Street denied the claims, pointing out that a final decision on commissioners rested with Commission President Manuel Barroso.

But the appointment of the virtually unknown Baroness Ashton continued to raise eyebrows, with some critics expressing concern that a former employee of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament was now in charge of Europe’s foreign and security policy.

Lady Ashton, 53, worked for CND as an administrator in the late 1970s. It is thought that MI5 kept a file on her.

Yesterday she declared she was the ‘best person’ for the post.

But former Tory Cabinet minister John Redwood said it was unthinkable that she would have got the job if she had had to face an election.

Mr Redwood said: ‘I think her background in CND will concern many people. It is exactly the sort of thing that would have been probed during an election, but of course she did not face one.’

UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage said Lady Ashton’s background should preclude her from the sensitive role. He said: ‘She has no experience in international affairs and is only being appointed as part of a political stitch-up. The whole thing stinks.

Lady Ashton and new EU president Herman Van Rompuy have been mocked as political pygmies since they emerged as the successful candidates from the summit of 27 EU leaders in Brussels on Thursday night.

Mr Van Rompuy got the job after several countries vetoed Tony Blair because of fears his grandstanding on the world stage would overshadow their own interests.

Friends of Mr Blair last night claimed he had already decided he did not want the job, but his biographer Anthony Seldon said the former Prime Minister was deeply ‘disappointed that many of his friends in Europe, and a number of fellow countrymen, didn’t do more for his cause’.

Lady Ashton hit back at her critics yesterday, insisting she was the ‘best person’ for the job.

The former quango boss has never been elected to office and has just one year’s experience in the Cabinet as leader of the House of Lords. She was sent to Brussels as Trade Commissioner last year when Lord Mandelson returned to British politics.

Yesterday she insisted she was ready to join the foreign ministers of the world’s most powerful countries at the top table.

She said her experience included ‘28 years doing negotiations in all kinds of fora’ and added: ‘Over the next few months and years I aim to show that I am the best person for the job.

‘I think for quite a few people they would say that I am the best person for the job and I was chosen because I am, but I absolutely recognise there are a number of candidates around, all of whom would have been extremely good.’

She said she had discovered only in the past few days that she was being discussed as a candidate.

A few years ago she chaired the Hertfordshire Health Authority, but now Baroness Ashton of Upholland is one of the world’s most high-profile female politicians — and all without ever being elected to anything.

The woman who keeps a full-size Dalek in her sitting room will speak for Europe, drowning out individual foreign ministers, as she presides over a 5,000-strong Euro Foreign Office in Brussels and what is effectively a network of 120 European embassies.

She was given the job for three reasons. First, because she’s a woman. Second, because she’s socialist. And third, because she’s proved a reliable pro-European who won’t rock the boat.

While all these considerations were important, her talents and ability to do the job were not. Her career is testimony to the way Labour has used its quangocracy to promote left-wing politically-correct networkers.

Baroness Ashton, 53, was brought up in the Lancashire village of Upholland, where her father was active in Labour politics. She was also political, and after university became administrative secretary for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

In 1988, Cathy Ashton married the political commentator Peter Kellner — the man who later gave her the Dr Who prop as a 50th birthday present.

Through him she had access to all the big Labour names. She was soon appointed to her first quango roles in Hertfordshire and on the National Council of One-Parent Families.

In 1999 she was made a life peer and in 2001 a junior Education minister. Three years later she was promoted to the Department for Constitutional Affairs.

Despite this modest pedigree, Gordon Brown made her Leader of the Lords, where her first major challenge was to steer through the Lisbon Treaty.

She added a fanatical belief in Europe to her portfolio of politically-correct positions and when Peter Mandelson returned from Brussels in 2008, she replaced him as Trade Commissioner. ‘

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia: Presidential Elections, 12 Candidates in First Round

(ANSAmed) — ZAGREB, NOVEMBER 18 — There are twelve candidates for the presidency of Croatia, with elections scheduled for December 27, reported the Election Committee today. Judging by the polls, a second round will have to be held on January 10. Of the twelve candidates accepted by the commission to succeed President Stipe Mesic, seven are running as independent and five are from the largest parties in the country. The one who looks most likely to be the country’s next president, though only by a slight margin, is Ivo Josipovic, law professor and Social Democratic (SDP — currently in the opposition) candidate, with 26.4%. For second place, and therefore access to the second round, three candidates are in the running. The first is the current mayor of Zagreb, Milan Bandic, populist and until a week ago member of the SDP — from which he was expelled for having decided to run against the party’s official candidate. In the poll by the privately-owned TV broadcaster Nova TV, he received 15.7% of votes. Nadan Vidosevic, manager and chairman of the Chamber of Economy (HGK), also a dissident of his party, the Croatian Democratic Party (HDZ, centre-right) under premier Jadranka Kosor, is expected to get 14.9%, while HDZ’s official candidate, Andrija Hebrang, would rake in 11.6% (in fourth place). The poll does not take into account the votes of the Croatian diaspora, which traditionally votes in mass for the HDZ, contributing about 2-3% to the overall result. Among the candidates put forward by the conservative right there is also Miroslav Tudjman, son of the former president Franjo Tudjman and who, however is expected to get only 2%.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gallup: People Pessimistic and Corruption Victims

(by Chiara Spegni) (ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, NOVEMBER 18 — Pessimistic, victims of corruption, hit by the economic crisis and more Euro-sceptic than in the past: this is the picture of public opinion in Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Albania, Croatia, Bosnia Herzegovina and Kosovo, which emerges from the Balkan Monitor poll by Gallup Europe, which was carried out this year in partnership with the European Fund for the Balkans. According to the survey, the majority of people polled considers another war unlikely, but a general climate of pessimism reigns, except for in Albania and Kosovo. Ten years after the war in Kosovo, time has passed, but there have not been significant improvements: this has caused discouragement, remarked the former Italian prime minister, Giuliano Amato, at the presentation of the survey in Brussels. In addition, said Amato, the regions movement towards Europe has had a worse impact that the economic crisis, with a fall in foreign investment. A large part of the regions population has suffered directly from a fall in living standards and for example, has had problems paying the bills: from 36% of Bosnians to 58% of Kosovans. Young people are pessimistic about employment, while more than two-thirds of those interviewed in the region believe that corruption is rampant within the government and business. More than half of Albanians last year had to hand over a bribe in order to solve a problem, while the same was true of 8% of Croatians and 20% of Macedonians and Kosovans. Two-thirds of those interviewed in Kosovo and Bosnia Herzegovina have been affected by organised crime, while the figure in other Balkan countries ranged from 32% in Albania to 61% in Croatia. Confidence in the political class at a national level, and in European institutions is in decline. Overall, more than half of those polled in all the countries in the region support EU membership, but it is the Croatians, in poll position compared to the others, who are critical. Almost four out of ten are indifferent, while 43% would vote against entry into the EU in a referendum. This is a kind of disenchantment, which Giuliano Amato puts down to the ever stronger chains which EU rapprochement entails. Entering into the Union means being thrown into a market where competition is fiercer. Such widespread dissatisfaction does not necessarily mean people want to go elsewhere though. With the exception of Albania, where 38% of those polled would leave if they had the chance. Croatias potential migrants number only 11%, while Montenegro and Bosnia have even fewer, from 39% in 2006 to 16% in 2009 in Montenegro, and from 25% to 16% in Bosnia Herzegovina. In terms of the future, a positive factor which relieves the general climate of pessimism could be the forthcoming liberalisation of visas for the Schengen area, which will affect Montenegro, Serbia and Macedonia first, followed by Albania and Bosnia Herzegovina. The elimination of visas for the Schengen area could be a strategic step according to Ivan Krastev, president of the Centre of liberal strategies in Sofia, towards the speedy integration of the area into the European Union. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Belgrade, World’s “Party Capital”

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, NOVEMBER 18 — A survey conducted by the Lonely Planet website has dubbed Serbia’s capital city “the world’s top destination” when it comes to having a good time, reports radio B92. Montreal, Buenos Aires, Dubai, Thessaloniki, La Paz, Cape Town, Baku, Oakland and Tel Aviv also found their place on the top ten list. “Belgrade is the world”, says Deutche Welle, playing on a slogan seen during the 1990s opposition demonstrations, and Belgrade offers “varied nightlife”. With an “exuberant population and its legacy as an intellectual hangout”, night-out options in Belgrade include “electric watering holes for those in the know, modern summer clubs in barges on the Sava and Danube Rivers, or clubs in the basements of apartment buildings and faculties”. Others might opt for “busy restaurants and bars of the Skadarlija district where one can often find a ‘tour guide’ who is eager to tell anecdotes to the guests”. Those surveyed by the website also praised the city’s electronic music scene, describing it as “one of the best in Europe, if not the world”. Lonely Planet started in 1973 as a guidebook publisher, and became the worlds most successful travel information provider. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU Foreign Minister Has to Show Leadership, Pittella

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 20 — The European Council didn’t complete its appointments yesterday, because the choice for the EU foreign affairs commissioner will have to be examined and ratified by the European Parliament as well, underlined substitute of vice president of the European Parliament Gianni Pittella. Pittella made his remarks from today’s meeting in Cairo between the commissions and the presidency of EMPA, the Euro-Mediterranean Parliamentary Assembly. “There will be more steps to take, and Catherine Ashton”, he added, referring to the British commissioner chosen for the role of foreign minister, “will be heard by us as well on the important foreign politics issues she will have to deal with. And may not approve her appointment if she shows signs of hesitation and uncertainty”. Pittella’s concerns are shared by the southern Mediterranean countries, which expect, he underlined, “Europe to show leadership” in issues regarding the entire Mediterranean area and the Middle East peace process. “Had we been able to present someone like Massimo D’Alema today” he concluded, “we could have given them more reassuring answers”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt-Algeria: Soccer, 35 Injured in Clashes in Cairo

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 20 — Eleven police officers and 24 civilians were injured, 15 vehicles were destroyed and the windows of four stores were shattered; this is the partial outcome of the clashes last night in Cairo between demonstrators and police nears the Algerian embassy in Zamalek. According to a statement from the Interior Ministry, a gas station was one of the sites destroyed. Thousands of demonstrators gathered at night invading the streets of the district in an attempt to get to the Algerian embassy and protest against the Algerian governments for the fans that were injured, about twenty, in the clashes with Algerian fans after the match in Sudan when Algerian qualified for the World Cup. The police were able to keep about half a kilometre between the crown and the Algerian embassy but the protestors took out their anger throwing stones and bottles. The clashes lasted until five òclock this morning. Just yesterday, after more than a week of tension, including diplomatic tension, between Egypt and Algeria during the lead up to the qualifying soccer match, the Egyptian government decided to recall its ambassador from Algeria. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt-Algeria: Algiers Summons Egyptian Ambassador

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, NOVEMBER 20 — The Algerian Foreign Minister today summoned the Egyptian ambassador, giving him a message to send to the authorities of his country, saying that Algeria “does not understand, and is deeply concerned about “the escalation” of the Egyptian press campaign. The news was reported by the ministry and quoted by the APS agency. During the meeting, Algerian Foreign Minister Medelci reportedly said that “he hopes this campaign, which is not in the interest of both countries, will be ended at once”. Algeria, added the minister, “has done everything within its power to smooth out the situation before, during and after the two football matches, and has protected the safety of Egyptian citizens and their possessions in Algeria”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt-Algeria: Soccer, Phone Conversation Between Ministers

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 20 — Egypt’s Foreign minister, Ahmed Abul Gheit, received a phone call today from his Algerian counterpart. A spokesperson for the Cairo ministry reports that the two spoke of the “deplorable incidents” which followed the soccer match between the two nations in Sudan. The phone call follows up a decision yesterday by the Egyptian government to recall its ambassador from Algiers. The spokesperson also reports that Abul Gheit made a strongly-worded protest to Mourad Medlessi over the post-match incidents in Sudan, and the acts of aggression by Algerians which damaged Egyptian interests and institutions in Algeria. However, the Egyptian minister told his “Algerian brother”, as a note puts it, that Egypt will not allow Algerian interests, or Algerian citizens resident in Egypt to be exposed to danger or acts of aggression. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt-Algeria: Football, Harsh Words in the Egyptian Press

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, NOVEMBER 20 — In the Zamalek neighbourhood the damage is being assessed after overnight clashes between demonstrators and police, which left at least 35 people injured including both civilians and police. Harsh words against Algeria have appeared in the Egyptian press, also spoken by the government and one of the sons of President Mubarak. In pro-government newspaper Al Messa, the Minister for Legal Affairs, Mufid Shebab, said that if Algeria continues with this escalation of violence, Egypt’s reaction will be very harsh. Alaa Mubarak told various newspapers that what happened in Sudan against Egyptians after the match won by Algeria, with about 20 fans slightly injured, was an act of “terrorism” and Egypt, “tolerated it sufficiently”. It is no longer time to talk about Egypt as “a big sister” to other Arab people, continued Alaa, because these ties of brotherhood “should be respected only if others do so too”. On the front pages of state-run newspaper Al Ahram, pictures of the clashes of the “important” demonstration last night in front of the Algerian Embassy “as a sign of protest against the aggression perpetrated by Algerian fans against Egyptians in Khartoum” were portrayed. Saudi newspaper, Al Hayat, reports a “serious diplomatic escalation between Cairo and Algiers and accusations from both sides” following the decisive match to qualify for the World Cup in Sudan. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Violence Erupts Over World Cup Decider

Cairo, 20 Nov. (AKI) — Protesters threw stones and firebombs at police near the Algerian embassy in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on Friday in the continuing fallout over the countries’ World Cup qualifying match. In Algeria, 14 people were killed and 250 others were injured in victory celebrations in Algeria late Thursday.

In the Cairo protest, 11 police officers were reportedly injured and several cars were damaged in mounting anger over the decider which the Algerian team won in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, on Wednesday.

The protest began late Thursday on a street leading to the embassy, when riot police repeatedly turned back the demonstrators, who burned Algerian flags.

According to Algerian internal security officials, cited in the Arab daily, Al-Quds al-Arabi, all the victims killed or injured there were Algerian fans involved in road accidents caused by fans.

A total of 175 road accidents were registered nationwide and the deadliest incidents were reported in the Algerian capital. Algiers and the provinces of Tebessa, Warqla and Saida.

In other developments, the Egyptian government on Thursday recalled its ambassador to Algeria following complaints about violence towards football fans.

The move came hours after Algeria’s ambassador to Cairo was summoned to the Egyptian foreign ministry.

The Algerian football team beat Egypt in a decisive World Cup qualifying match in Sudan on Wednesday.

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



Egypt: Team May Quit International Matches After Riots

Cairo, 20 Nov. (AKI) — Egypt’s national football team could pull out of international competitions for two years after it complained to the football’s highest body, FIFA, over the behaviour of Algerian fans, following the team’s victory over Egypt in Sudan this week.

Egypt was eliminated from advancing to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa after Algeria’s win in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Wednesday.

“We will stop playing for two years in protest of what happened during the attack,” Egypt’s Football Federation said in a statement on Friday.

“Egyptian fans, officials and players put their lives at risk before and after the game, under threat from weapons, knives, swords and flares. We have stated most seriously in the complaint to FIFA to restore moral discipline to the world of football.”

However, FIFA is also investigating Egypt’s Football Federation after reports surfaced about Algerian players being attacked in Cairo before the first of the matches, which Egypt won 2-0, later forcing a play-off in Sudan..

Meanwhile 35 people were reported injured in fresh violence on the streets of Cairo on Friday.

According to the Dubai-based network Al-Arabiya, hundreds of people took to the streets and headed to Cairo’s upscale neighbourhood of Zamalek, where the Algerian embassy is located.

The Egyptian fans did not reach the embassy and instead damaged cars and stores in the area, but the most violent attacks took place late Thursday when thousands of people gathered 500 metres from the embassy.

A large number of Egyptian police stopped the protesters, who claimed that Algerians had attacked Egyptians after the match in Khartoum.

In other developments, the Egyptian government on Thursday recalled its ambassador to Algeria following complaints about violence towards football fans.

The move came hours after Algeria’s ambassador to Cairo was summoned to the Egyptian foreign ministry.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Clashes at the Wailing Wall

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, NOVEMBER 18 — Israeli police were called upon today to break up clashes between Orthodox and Reform Jewish women on area in front of the Wailing Wall. Reform Jews believe that women can also officiate over prayers and cloak themselves in the ‘tallit’, the traditional white shawl with black or blue stripes. Orthodox women, instead, consider this behaviour blasphemous, or at the very least deplorable. Today, when a group of female Reform Jews appeared at the Wailing Wall wearing their shawls and holding Bibles, Orthodox women intervened and forcibly stopped the prayers being said. A female Reform Jew was briefly interrogated by police and then released. “It was an act of provocation for purely political ends,” commented Wailing Wall rabbi Shmuel Rabinovic. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Press: Al Fatah Preparing for New Intifada

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, NOVEMBER 20 — Having been disappointed for the absence of a true peace process, al Fatah is planning a new intifada (people’s insurrection) in the West Bank, announced sources of the movement to Arab-Israeli newspaper, ‘Hadith Anas’, cited by Haaretz. According to the sources, the new intifada would carried out by the general population and would not make use of weapons or suicide bombers. The plan, they explained, includes a continued and systematic mobilisation of masses of Palestinian demonstrators around Jewish settlements and along the separation barrier in the West Bank. Yesterday in an interview from an Israeli jail where he is serving a life sentence, al-Fatah official, Marwan Barghuti, said: “Relying only on negotiations has never been something that we have chosen to do. I have always suggested constructive negotiations, resistance, and political, diplomatic, and activity by the general population together.” Barghuti also suggested a “people’s campaign” against the settlements, against the “imposing of the Jewish culture” in East Jerusalem and against the “separation wall”. According to Haaretz, there is a risk that if Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) were to step down as PNA President, an office that he does not intend to re-run for, another political vacuum would be created that could lead to another Palestinian intifada. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Arab World Expects More Turkish Involvement in Mideast Area

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, NOVEMBER 20 — Turkish government’s course of policy in the Israeli-Palestinian war has heightened expectations in the Arab world that Turkey should assume a more effective role in solving conflicts in the Middle East, results of a survey has shown. The survey on ‘Turkey Perception in the Middle East’ was conducted by the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation in seven Arab countries among 2006 interviewees in July. The survey — as Anatolia news agency reports — showed a growing awareness for Turkey in the Arab world after 2002 when the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party came to power as 79% of all participants and 89% of the interviewed Palestinians had said Turkey should engage in mediation efforts. Over 75% of the interviewees said they had a positive view on Turkey and 80% of them said Turkey “treated the Arab countries well.” “The elaboration of Turkey’s foreign policy toward the Middle East especially during the AK Party government has created an awareness for Turkey among the people in the region,” said Prof. Meliha Altunisik from the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. Altunisik said Turkey was perceived as “a constructive country that contributes to stability and its role in the region has been boosted in a constructive way. This is a very positive result.” The Turkish scholar said the recent lifting of visa requirement between Turkey and Syria had also contributed much to the positive perception. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Ban on Death Penalty Should be Followed by Ban on Abortion — Russian Priest

Moscow, November 19, Interfax — The famous Moscow priest has spoken in support of the Russian Constitutional Court’s decision to ban the use of the death penalty in Russia.

“It would be madness to introduce the death penalty in Russia. To me the court decision was obvious and I was calm about it,” Archpriest Dimitry Smirnov, the head of the Synodal Department for Relations with the Armed Forces and Law Enforcement Agencies, said Interfax on Thursday.

Recalling the Christian commandment “Do not kill,” the priest said a person who has committed a grave crime and is serving his sentence in prison has a chance to repent.

“I’m also against abortion. It’s when my fellow citizens are killed in their mothers’ wombs with the taxpayers’ money. It’s the death penalty for no crime at all. It would be good if the Constitutional Court also abolished the death penalty for babies,” Father Dimitry said.

It’s one and the same problem. In the first case, people are killed as a result of judicial errors, and in the first case innocent people, future Suvorovs, Kutuzov, and Mendeleyevs get killed,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Minister Accused of Major Bribery: Report

WASHINGTON — Afghanistan’s minister of mines accepted a 30-million-dollar bribe to award a huge development project to a Chinese state firm, The Washington Post reported Wednesday, citing a US official.

The revelation comes the same week the Afghan government formed a major crime unit to tackle corruption, and just one day before Hamid Karzai is sworn in as Afghan president for a second term, with the United States pressuring him to rid the war-torn country of its endemic graft and cronyism.

The Post quoted an unnamed US official familiar with military intelligence reports that there was “a high degree of certainty” that an alleged payment of roughly 30 million dollars was made to Minister Mohammad Ibrahim Adel.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



India: David Headley: Quiet American With Alleged Links to Mumbai Massacre

In almost every way, David Headley was the perfect neighbour. When the 49-year-old American citizen began renting an apartment in Mumbai last year he charmed his landlord, treated his laundry boy with respect, and befriended Bollywood figures at a local gym. He told them that he was Jewish, and running an immigration agency from a respectable part of town. “Sweet and charming,” said his landlady. “Down to earth,” said his personal trainer.

Not until the past few days did they learn of his alleged other identity — and of quite how close security figures claim India may have come to a repeat of the militant attacks on Mumbai a year ago next week. Apparently, Mr Headley’s original name was Daood Gilani. He was born in Pakistan, and is suspected of helping the terrorists who carried out last year’s Mumbai attack, and of planning another atrocity this year.

The details emerged when the FBI arrested Mr Headley in his home city of Chicago on October 3, and filed an affidavit in a US court, which has since been made public. It alleges that he worked with Harkat ul-Jihad al-Islami (Huji), a Pakistan militant group, and Lashkar e-Taiba (LeT), the Pakistan group blamed for last year’s Mumbai attacks. The document also outlines claims that he was involved in the “Mickey Mouse Project” — a plan to attack Jyllands-Posten, the Danish newspaper whose cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad in 2005 infuriated Muslims across the world. It also allegedly shows that he and an apparent accomplice visited India several times between 2006 and 2009, and appear to have discussed attacking Indian targets as recently as September this year.

Indian investigators are now examining whether Mr Headley may be the “missing link” in the Mumbai attacks, which killed more than 170 people between November 26 and 29 last year. They are also investigating claims that he may have planned attacks this year on targets including the National Defence College in Delhi, the private Doon School in Dehradun, northern India, or even a nuclear facility. In the process, they are shedding light on the evolving threat from LeT and its allies, and on India’s haphazard — but so far successful — efforts to respond. “This is yet another wake-up call for India,” said B. Raman, a former counter-terrorism chief in the Indian external intelligence service, the Research and Analysis Wing. “This shows LeT is as determined as ever to attack India, and they are now using Western territory and foreign Muslims to do it.”

The most striking aspect of the Headley case is his profile: unlike other militant suspects, he is middle-aged, speaks fluent English, and lives in Chicago. The son of a Pakistani diplomat and an American woman, he went to cadet college in Pakistan before moving to the US when he was 16. In 1997, he was jailed for 15 months for trying to smuggle heroin into the US, according to court documents. Yet by simply changing his name in 2006, he stayed under the radar on at least nine visits to India over the past three years.

The FBI says that in the alleged activities he was helped by Tahawwur Hussain Rana, a Canadian citizen of Pakistani origin who studied at the same cadet college, and was also arrested in the US last month. Mr Rana’s immigration agency, which has offices in Chicago, helped to arrange Mr Headley’s trips and provided his cover story, according to the FBI. To burnish his fake Jewish credentials, Mr Headley even carried a book called How to Pray like a Jew, the FBI says. The FBI appears to have placed him under surveillance after noticing his frequent movements between India, Pakistan, the Gulf and Europe.

It alerted Indian authorities after intercepting an e-mail in which Mr Headley’s alleged handler appears to give him a coded message suggesting an attack on India. “I need to see you for some new investment plans,” the affidavit quotes the handler as saying. When Mr Headley asks where, the handler suggests that he should “say hi to Rahul” in what the FBI says is a reference to a prominent Indian actor. The actor has since been identified as Rahul Bhatt, a minor Bollywood star, who has admitted befriending Mr Headley in Mumbai. In a telephone intercept in September, Mr Headley and Mr Rana are heard discussing five alleged targets and mentioning “Defence College”, according to the affidavit.

Mr Headley and Mr Rana have yet to respond to the affidavit. But Indian and Western officials and analysts agree that the evidence presented so far appears to underline the global reach and ambitions of Huji and LeT. It also confirms India’s long-held fears that such groups might use foreigners of Pakistani or Indian origin, forcing it to tighten visa procedures.

Western governments had already adapted to that threat, but are worried that Mr Headley and Mr Rana may have used their immigration agency to move militants around the globe. They are also increasingly aware of the threat to their own citizens in India — particularly during next year’s Commonwealth Games in Delhi. “Prior to Mumbai, LeT was largely seen as a regional threat,” said one Western diplomat. “Mumbai brought home that attacking India could directly impact Western interests, by killing their nationals, and also their indirect interests by destabilising the region.”

There is less agreement, however, on what the case says about India’s domestic security. Some say that LeT and its allies are becoming more desperate as the Pakistan Army — which once sponsored them — has become distracted by its own campaign against the Taleban. India has also taken a number of steps to improve its security apparatus. It has, for example, now established the National Investigation Agency, and it is amending legislation to give increased powers to the security services.

P. Chidambaram, the new Home Minister, has now started chairing a meeting of the heads of all the country’s important security agencies every morning.

The National Security Guard — whose commandos took eight hours to get to Mumbai from their Delhi headquarters last year during the attacks — has expanded its numbers and set up hubs in four more cities, including Mumbai.. “What about the past, almost 365, days?” said J. K. Dutt, the former NSG chief who led last year’s Mumbai operation. “There haven’t been any terrorist attacks since Mumbai. Doesn’t that also speak of the fact that there are steps the country has taken?” Critics, however, say that India had a lucky escape thanks only to the FBI. Others question whether the US should have informed India earlier that it was watching Mr Headley.

Yet the biggest concern of all is still the underfunded and short-staffed police, a force which under India’s Constitution is the responsibility of state governments. “When are we going to improve the training, consciousness and capability of local police?” asked Arun Bhagat, a former head of the Indian Intelligence Bureau. “Central agencies can only do so much.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



India: New Cathedral Unites Christians, Hindus, Muslims

BARUIPUR, India (UCAN) — A new cathedral has opened in the eastern city of Baruipur, thanks to contributions from Christians, Muslims and Hindus in the region.

“It was a sign of goodwill that helped promote harmony among various faiths,” Bishop Salvadore Lobo of Baruipur told UCA News.

Sister Mary Prema, superior general of the Missionaries of Charity, opened the Immaculate Heart of Mary Cathedral, located 40 kilometers south of Kolkata, on Nov. 12.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Indonesian Ulema Boycott the Apocalyptic “2012”: It’s Blasphemous

by Mathias Hariyadi

Dispute sparked by the story the day of reckoning: a mosque is razed to the ground and salvation is possible only in a church. In various areas of the country fundamentalists prevent the screening of the film and raid internet-points. Islamic leader: it is Christian proselytizing. Moderate Muslim: it is just a movie.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — The Indonesian Council of Ulema (MUI) have condemned for blasphemy, the apocalyptic movie “2012” by Roland Emmerich and is urging Muslims to boycott the country’s cinemas. The latest work of director and author of “Independence Day” and “The Day After Tomorrow” contains scenes which contravene the principles of Islam; Muslim leaders, in fact, feel outraged because the salvation of a family in the “doomsday” scenario hinges on their decision to “shelter in a church,” while the film shows the complete destruction of a mosque.

The resolution of the MUI has sparked deep controversy in Indonesia, three months on from the edict that branded as “illegal” smoking for women. Today Islamic leaders are railing against “2012” by Emmerich, a film inspired by an ancient Mayan prophecy that the world will end December 21, 2012. The blockbuster shows “illegal” scenes and conveys the message that “salvation is achieved only in the church”.

The controversy against the film first broke out last week in the district of Malang in East Java, where the leader of local ulema also issued an “edict” in which he called the local residents to boycott the movie in theatres. According to Kiai Hajj Mahmoud Zubaidi the film sends “confusing messages” and adds that “the D-day for Muslims is secret and only God knows when it will happen.

The Ulema’s stance is likely to unleash a bitter controversy in the country, which will see “two different sides” in opposition. Meanwhile, cinemas are being and the Muslim moderate wing is stressing that “it’s only a movie” and has “nothing to do with faith.”

In Surakarta Central Java, local MUI leaders have imposed a block on screenings in cinemas. In Stubondo district in the province of East Java, fundamentalists raided internet points to prevent the downloading of the film. “We condemn it in absolute — says Kiai Hajj Abdullah Faqih Gufron — The Movie is unlawful, because it leaves the Sitibondo population defenceless before a controversial scene.” He also called for the intervention of Tifatul Sembiring, Minister for Communications and former president of the semi-fundamentalist movement Prosperous Justice Party (PKS).

Amidhan, head of the National MUI, adds that the Indonesian agency responsible for censorship (LSF) has not taken “precautions” by approving “so sensitive” a scene. He refers to the images of “doomsday” in which we witness the destruction of a mosque, while the Christian building is perfectly intact. “Every proselytism of the faith [Christian] — he ends — must be cut.”

Another Mui leader, Ma’ruf Kiai Hajj Amin has a different opinion: “it is just fiction — he explains — a product of creativity and imagination. Nobody knows when the day of judgement will arrive. I do not see anything illegal in it and think we should let people enjoy the film”. Saifullah Yusuf, deputy governor of East Java, invites Muslim leaders to be “wiser when dealing with these topics: a film is a product of human creativity and the MUI should not disseminate unsolicited advice.”

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



Maldives: MPs Approve Bill to Outlaw Places of Worship for Non-Muslims

MPs called for lengthy jail sentences and hefty fines in a bill to outlaw places of worship for non-Muslims in the Maldives.

At today’s sitting, a bill proposed by Fares-Maathoda MP Ibrahim Muttalib on making it illegal to either build places of worship for “false religions” or practice other faiths in public was sent to committee for further review with unanimous consent.

Presenting the legislation, Muttalib said he submitted it because inquiries had been made with the government to establish places of worship and there was no law to stop it.

“The other thing we have to think about today is that the government is considering establishing wedding tourism in the country and this will indirectly set up churches in the country,” he said.

Jail terms

While the bill states that foreigners or expatriates will be allowed to worship in the privacy of their homes, involving Maldivians or encouraging them to participate will be an offence.

The bill specifies a jail term of three to five years or a fine of between Rf36,000 (US$2,800) and Rf60,000 (US$4,669) for those in violation of the law.

During the debate, opposition Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party (DRP) MPs and some independents called for harsher penalties to serve as deterrents.

“I propose that those who violate the provisions in the bill should be jailed for at least ten years,” said Thohdhoo MP Ali Waheed, adding the fine should be increased to Rf500,000 (US$38,000) or Rf1 million (US$77,821).

Waheed said the government was trying to introduce wedding tourism to build churches in the country.

He further said nobody had ever seen the president attend Friday prayers and his administration was intent on destroying the country’s Islamic culture.

Some MPs said foreigners who violated the law should be deported and not allowed back for ten years.

Redundant

Although all MPs supported the spirit of the legislation, MPs of the Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) argued the bill was redundant as article ten of the constitution states that Islam shall be the basis of all the laws of the Maldives and no laws contrary to any tenet of Islam shall be enacted.

Further, the constitution states a non-Muslim may not become a citizen of Maldives.

Some MPs argued the provision to authorise practicing religions other than Islam was unconstitutional.

Ihavandhoo MP Ahmed Abdullah said they consider the implications of enacting a law to allow foreigners to worship privately.

“Even now we are unable to check and monitor illegal activities,” he said. “So after authorising something like this, how can we make sure Maldivians aren’t involved?”

Mathiveri MP Hussein Mohamed said laws were still needed to enforce the articles in the constitution.

Gemanafushi MP Ilham Ahmed of the DRP said the constitution was not an obstacle to building places of worship. “The reality is that this constitution paves the way to build temples,” said Ilham.

Several MPs said the scope of the bill was too narrow and comprehensive legislation was needed to protect Islam.

Feydhoo MP Alhan Fahmy of the DRP, who was recently suspended from party activities for voting against the party line, said the bill was not necessary as tradition and cultural norms were more powerful than laws.

But, he added, he supported the bill to ensure that there would be no room to advocate freedom of religion in the future.

Thulhaadhoo MP Nazim Rashad, an independent, said the bill was important because human rights organisations were trying to impose freedom of religion on the country.

“These aren’t things that we can accept so easily. And they can’t make us accept it either,” he said.

Undermining Islam

Dhandhoo MP Mohamed Riyaz of the MDP said the previous government authorised a large statue of Buddha to be imported for a resort party on a Friday afternoon.

In March 2007, a birthday party for British millionaire Sir Philip Green in Ladaa Giraavaru featured an 11-metre tall statue of the Buddha and topless dancers.

Other MDP MPs referred to religious scholars being persecuted and tortured by the former government.

Maduvari MP Visam Ali of the DRP said Islam in the Maldives was facing serious challenges and the government had failed to protect it.

“I am saying this for a lot of reasons. We have seen what the government did to Kuliyya, our Islamic education institute. We have seen the government announce that it would close down women’s mosques. We have heard that money wasn’t included for mosques in the PSIP [public sector investment programme],” she said.

She added the government had turned a blind eye to religious literature translated into Dhivehi, had decided to establish diplomatic ties with Israel and had agreed to teach Maldivian school children Jewish culture.

Visam said the president spoke out against death penalty although it was a punishment in Islamic sharia.

Nolhivaram MP “Colonel” Mohamed Nasheed of the MDP argued that the Prophet Muhammed (PBUH) allowed Jews and Christians to practice their faiths in Medina.

“So the basis of Islam is, after allowing people of other religions to practice their faiths freely, going forward to ensure it doesn’t adversely affect our society,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: ‘Mastermind’ Of Mumbai Attack Preaches at Mosque in Lahore

Come Friday prayers in Lahore, it is not hard to find the alleged mastermind of the Mumbai attacks. Hafiz Mohammed Saeed is neither in hiding nor in jail. The founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba is instead delivering a sermon to thousands of devoteees at the Jamia al-Qadsia mosque — one of the biggest in the city. “God has promised to make Muslims a superpower if we follow the right path,” Mr Saeed told his followers, who listened in rapt silence. Outside, policemen with machineguns stood guard and bearded security men frisked all those entering. “Our rulers are the slave of America and have sold their conscience for a few dollars,” continued the diminutive former university teacher, his long beard dyed red with henna.

Timothy Roemer, the US Ambassador in Delhi, backed Indian calls this week for Pakistan to bring Mr Saeed and six other Mumbai suspects to justice. “We need to see actions and results from Pakistan,” he said after India handed Pakistan a seventh dossier of evidence on the Mumbai attacks.

Analysts say that the problem lies with Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence agency, which backed Mr Saeed when he founded Lashkar-e-Taiba in 1990 to fight Indian rule in the disputed region of Kashmir. Under pressure from the US, Pakistan banned the group in 2002, but it continued to operate under the banner of Jamaat-ud Dawa, which Mr Saeed also founded and calls a charity organisation.

A UN Security Council resolution last December declared Jamaat-ud Dawa a front for Lashkar-e-Taiba, forcing Pakistan to freeze its assets and jail many of its activists. Mr Saeed was put under house detention, but released after a few months when a court ruled that action against him and his group was illegal. This week a Lahore court threw out two anti-terrorism cases against him. The court also found no evidence that Jamaat-ud Dawa was involved in terrorism, and it should be allowed to operate freely. Pakistani officials say that they are serious about cracking down on militant groups, but there is not enough evidence to put Mr Saeed back on trial.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tamil, Muslim Parties Meet in Zurich

In the first of its kind, representatives of Sri Lankan Tamil and Muslim parties including the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA) are meeting in Zurich, Switzerland to take stock of ground situation, BBC Tamil service reported on Saturday..

Sri Lankan Social Welfare Minister Douglas Devananda, who heads the Eelam Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP), told BBC Tamil Service that though there was no fixed agenda the objective was to arrive at a “common ground” on issues affecting minorities and explore options of talks on safeguarding interests of minorities with the government.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]

Far East


Video: Defector Tells of Life in North Korean Army

Newsnight has spoken to two North Korean defectors about life inside the secretive Stalinist state, one of whom says that he was an anti-tank battalion commander in North Korea’s army before fleeing.

Last month, UN Special Rapporteur Vitit Muntarbhorn issued a scathing report on human rights violations in North Korea, calling the situation there “abysmal”.

Unsurprisingly, voices from inside the country are rare — dissenting voices rarer still — but the BBC’s Newsnight programme has spoken to two defectors who paint a grim picture of life inside North Korea.

One of them is Joo-il Kim, who says he was an anti-tank battalion commander in North Korea’s army for seven years until he fled the country in 2005.

The North has a vast conventional military, which correspondents say is the glue that holds the country together, but it is undermined by ageing conventional weaponry.

Missile launches

According to Mr Kim, Pyongyang’s lack of access to enough new conventional weaponry is what drives its controversial nuclear programme.

“Conventional weapon-wise, North Korea is better equipped than South Korea,” he told Newsnight reporter Mark Seddon.

“But most of the weapons are outdated and so, to make up for that weakness, the North concentrates on missiles and nuclear arms development.”

North Korea is believed to have more than 800 ballistic missiles, including long-range missiles.

In recent months it has a launched a series of missiles and conducted an underground nuclear test — increasing international tensions and drawing UN sanctions in response.

And this month the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported that North Korea had completed the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel rods to extract weapons-grade plutonium.

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



Vietnam Government Denies Blocking Networking Site

Vietnamese officials have denied they are deliberately blocking access to social networking site Facebook.

State internet service provider FPT says it has been working with foreign companies to solve a fault blocking connections to Facebook’s US servers.

But many of Vietnam’s one million users have been reporting problems accessing Facebook, which recently launched a Vietnamese-language version, for days.

And workers at many web firms say the government ordered them to block it.

The freedom of expression afforded by the internet has certainly preoccupied the authorities in recent months.

They have arrested several bloggers and online journalists, and ordered people to restrict their online writing to personal concerns.

Meanwhile, Facebook has said it would be very disappointed if users in any country were to have difficulties accessing its site.

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



Why Did Barack Obama Fail in China?

Hope for some movement on human rights and the release of political prisoners fades. Broad issues like the yuan-dollar rate, Afghanistan, Iran are part of an impossible diplomacy. US big business and the Chinese Communist Party are the big winners. The “father of democracy” in China provides an analysis of the situation.

New York (AsiaNews) — What we all have been most interested this week is US President Obama’s visit to China. That is because we all had great expectations of this US President’s visit. Chinese people at home or overseas had hoped that President Obama could do something regarding Chinese human rights. Ever since Hu Jintao came to power, the human rights situation in China has been deteriorating. Many people have been arrested, put in jail, and abused. Those who are out of jail also experience more pressure than in the past, to the degree that it is hard to breathe. The Chinese Communist regime controls the media, blocks the Internet, and tightens the room of speech. The Chinese people more than ever wondered if the US president could help them reduce some of the pressure. In the past, the pressure from a US president always had some effectiveness, because the Communist regime is most afraid of the human rights diplomacy of the USA. Now, it seems the Americans care more about the exchange rate between the US dollar and the Chinese currency RenMinBi. This is the key to reducing their trade deficit.

Yuan versus dollar

Even 10 years ago, most of Americans already knew that the unfair trade system would increase the trade deficit and thus result in unemployment. But some politicians who were bought out by the big business enterprises forced the passage of the Most Favoured Nation status (later on named Permanent Normal Trade Relationship to reduce the attention and pressure) for the Communist regime. At that time, the Americans still enjoyed a pretty good life with a trade deficit of less than 57 billion dollars, so most Americans took it. After all, we have to respect the democratic system and respect the law. But now, the US economy has deteriorated with increasing unemployment and depression in every corner. The trade deficit between the USA and China has skyrocketed to more than 268 billion dollars. Many Americans know that it is due to the fact that the Chinese government manipulated the currency exchange rate, in addition to an unfair trade system. Just as the US Senator Charles Schumer pointed out: the whole economic crisis started with the Chinese government’s manipulation of the Chinese currency. If we do not solve this root problem, other efforts are meaningless.

Yet, President Obama did not bring back anything from China. The United Kingdom’s Times article today has a title: “President Obama returns home from visit to China almost empty handed”. This result is indeed totally out of people’s expectations. When the strategic advisors in the White House designed the topics for Obama, they felt that these core issues were hopeless. So they left a lot of room to play, such as environment, troops in Afghanistan, etc., even the details of Iran’s nuclear facility. They were not even expecting any substance from the Chinese Communist regime, but simply wanted to express its attitude on these issues.

But President Obama did not even get these issues done in China. On the human rights front, he did not even get the Chinese government to release a few political prisoners just to make a show. Hu Jintao really did not give Obama anything, not even a human rights show, except to waste Obama’s trip to China. In comparison to previous not so successful presidents of the USA, Obama seems to be the least successful in dealing with China.

Not mentioning conservative news media, even news media that lean to the left such as the Washington Post published commentaries strongly criticizing Obama for not doing anything to reduce the trade deficit. It went so far as to review the Permanent Normal Trade Relationship that President Clinton signed for China, and narrated in detail how the huge increase of the trade deficit with China is the result of politicians and businesses selling out America. If we read these words in the past, we might have thought the Post was a Republican newspaper attacking the Democrats.

The US administration does not know China

Why did President Obama, who could give eloquent speeches is so popular in Europe, fail so much in China? We could name a list of reasons, but there are two root reasons. One is that he and his advisors do not know either China, or the Chinese. They thought that they are dealing with a democratic country. The diplomacy between democratic countries is the diplomacy of gentlemen. If you release a signal of kindness, then the other must return with the same. Or we could use a popular way to describe it as a “cooperative diplomacy of mutual compromises and mutual benefits.”

However, if you ever hear an American president referring to the Chinese Communists as a cooperation partner, then you know that they do not know about the Chinese Communist Party at all. Even those Western diplomats who speak good Chinese do not know that this “cooperation partner” is an error of basic concept. The logic of the Chinese Communist Party is a “philosophy of struggles” that believes “when the enemy retreats, we shall invade”. If you retreat, it will believe you are afraid of it. If they do not take a step forward, they will be teased within the Communist Party, even be attacked as a result. In dealing with the Chinese Communist Party, it is totally wrong to practice this spirit of compromise and cooperation that the Western democratic societies are accustomed to. So if we view the stand that Obama offered to China before his trip, we could tell that his visit would come to a total failure.

“Big business” defeats America

The second most important reason is the resistance of the business community. The biggest beneficiary of the trade deficit with China and unemployment in the USA is big business in both America and China. For many years, these businesses have voluntarily defended the interests of the Chinese Communist party. In these issues of unfair trade and manipulation of currency, they share the interests of the Chinese Communist Party. Just ten years ago, they were already able to manipulate both the US Congress and the US administration to the degree that they went against the desires of the majority citizen voters in the USA. Even with the prerequisite of being unable to hide from the public, they were able to pass a resolution that the majority of voters were against and thus offered free trade to the Chinese Communist Party unilaterally. Now, their benefits are already 4 or 5 times more dependent on business, so the average voters have even less power to go against them. Even President Obama has a hard time to go against the will of business . This is one of the root reasons that the US President had to put down his posture in front of the Chinese Communists.

Therefore, the US-China relation is not just an issue of the economy, or Chinese human rights. It is already testing the Western democratic system. Both Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin were unable to dissolve the Western democratic system, yet the current Chinese Communist Party is a making an effort to realize Lenin’s wish: to make the “American imperialism” be the last stage of capitalism. It seems to be successful so far. This is why this one time visit by the American president to China received so much attention from the people. People do not care only about the issues of currency exchange and unemployment. People are concerned mainly if the Western democratic system represented by the USA will be defeated by an autocratic Communist system.

* Who is Wei Jingshen?

Wei’s role in the struggle for human rights and democracy in China goes back a long way. On 5 April 1976, aged 26, Wei took part in the first anti-government action in Tiananmen Square. Two years later, the Wall of Democracy (pictured) was set up near one of the main crossroads of the capital: a corner where democracy activists could post their dàzìbào. On 5December 1978, Wei posted the text that would make him famous—”the Fifth Modernisation”—where he developed the idea that the country’s economic progress (the “four modernisations” upheld by the Communist regime) must pass through democratisation; otherwise the people would not enjoy any benefits. Wei denounced detention for political reasons, the misery endured by segments of the population, the political roots of youth crime, the sale of children on the streets of Beijing. From 1979 to 1993, he was interned in prison on the orders of Deng Xiaoping. On 13 December 1995, a year and half after his re-arrest, Wei reappeared before the People’s Court in Beijing, where he was condemned to 14 years in prison for “plotting against the government”. One 16 November 1997, following very strong pressure from the international community Chinese authorities released him. Wei was sent abroad for “treatment”; in reality he was condemned to exile. Currently, he lives in the United States and is the chairman of the Overseas Joint Committee for China Democratic Movement.

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

Australia — Pacific


Obscene Anti-Muslim Emails Put Nile on the Defensive

ABUSIVE emails written by the son of the campaign manager of the Christian Democratic Party containing anti-Muslim and homophobic comments have embarrassed the party’s president, the Reverend Fred Nile, only two weeks before the December 5 Bradfield byelection, in which the party will field nine candidates.

Mr Nile has been forced to apologise to dozens of recipients of the emails, which also attack the Reverend Gordon Moyes, the CDP-turned-Family-First MP in the NSW upper house. Their author, Douglas Darby, the son of the former Liberal identity Michael Darby, who is the CDP’s campaign manager, has been expelled from the party.

In one email Douglas Darby attacks a Muslim activist, Mal Mac Rae, as a “stupid moslem c—-” and says “muslim scum are too busy stacking ALP branches and raping Aussie chicks”.

In another, Douglas Darby suggests Muslims “who habitually engage in child molestation, incest, pack rape … obey the laws of this country or f—- off to Afghanistan where Australians are allowed to shoot you people”.

Yet another urges Mr Mac Rae to become a suicide bomber. “Please do it inside either a Sunni or Shiite mosque.”

The emails are part of a bitter exchange between Mr Darby and Mr Mac Rae that appears to have begun when Mr Mac Rae wrote questioning an aspect of Mr Nile’s military service record.

On Tuesday Mr Nile wrote to recipients “on behalf of the Christian Democratic Party to sincerely apologise for the appalling emails you have received”.

He told them that the CDP “disassociates itself completely” from the comments, “which we totally reject”, and apologised to Mr Mac Rae. “No one deserves to be subjected to such language and insult,” Mr Nile wrote.

Douglas Darby did not respond to a request for comment, and Michael Darby declined to comment.

Mr Nile said Douglas Darby had begun working for the party but was soon “upsetting people left, right and centre” and was banned from the parliamentary offices of the CDP and its headquarters a year ago.

One of the CDP’s campaign slogans for Bradfield is “Stand your ground in defence of Christian values”.

Mr Nile and the NSW upper house Liberal MP David Clarke are advertised to speak at an Australian Christian Nation Association conference today which has the theme “Australia’s Future and Global Jihad”.

Mr Mac Rae said yesterday he had accepted Mr Nile’s apology. “However, the vilification of the Islamic community in the party continues behind closed doors.”

Dr Moyes said he had asked Mr Nile for an apology, “which I haven’t received”.

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


A Navy Vessel Was Just 50ft Away as Pirates Kidnapped the British Yacht Couple. Why Didn’t Our Sailors Stop Them? Human Rights, Of Course…

One is a Singaporean flagged container vessel of 25,000 tonnes, the Kota Wajar. The other is a British military tanker, flying the blue ensign of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary Service. Neither was built for battle. Nor in normal circumstances would they be foes.

But a whiff of gunpowder is palpably in the air. Aboard the tanker, RFA Wave Knight, Royal Navy gun crews have closed up for action, their 30mm cannon and machine guns primed and ready.

A few hundred yards away on the Kota Wajar, Somali pirates, who had recently hijacked the vessel, possess a variety of small arms including rocket-propelled grenades.

These are high stakes, indeed, because both ships are on course to rendezvous with a British yacht drifting helplessly in the Indian Ocean.

Aboard this 38ft yacht, and held at gunpoint by a pirate advance party, are Paul and Rachel Chandler, a retired couple from Tunbridge Wells, Kent.

The Kota Wajar, in its new role as a pirate ‘mother ship’, is to scoop them up and carry them back to captivity and a multi-million-pound ransom in Somalia more than 200 miles to the north-west.

A burst of gunfire from the Wave Knight cuts across the bow of the hijacked container vessel in the first overtly aggressive act of the chase. Surely the Chandlers will be plucked to safety?

What happened next has been described as ‘depressing’ and ‘shameful’. And ‘hardly in the tradition of Nelson’ — which is something of an understatement.

Not that any of us would have known about it if a sailor aboard the Wave Knight had not blown the official Ministry of Defence version of events out of the water.

That original MoD briefing had deliberately created the impression that the meeting between Wave Knight and Kota Wajar never happened.

Indeed, MoD spokesmen suggested that Wave Knight had simply come across the yacht empty and adrift on the High Seas; the Chandlers had already been taken hostage and had been whisked away before British forces arrived on the scene to answer their distress signal.

This was very definitely not the case.

The Wave Knight, it seems, might even have been as close as 50ft to the Chandlers as they were taken aboard the Kota Wajar and off to Africa, under the apparently helpless gaze of 100 Royal Navy and Royal Fleet Auxiliary sailors.

The Navy’s ignominy over the incident has parallels with the infamous 2007 incident when 15 armed Royal Navy sailors and Royal Marines on small boat patrol in the Shatt al-Arab waterway near Basra were taken prisoner by Iranian seaborne forces without a shot being fired.

The personnel were kept for 12 days and paraded for the world’s media, reducing what was once the finest fighting force in the world to a laughing stock. After they were freed, one sailor confessed that he had cried himself to sleep when the Iranians took his iPod.

As more facts come to light about the capture of the Chandlers — and they do so slowly, as the MoD still refuses to confirm what really happened — awkward questions about tactics against pirates in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean have to be asked.

Military personnel in the region feel that ‘their hands are tied’ by policies that prevent them from prosecuting a more aggressive campaign against the buccaneers, because of the latter’s ‘human rights’.

As British maritime security expert and former Royal Marine David Pickard of the risk mitigation firm Drum Cussac remarks: ‘There has been quite a change in British Rules of Engagement since the time of Henry VIII.

‘In his day, the law demanded the summary execution of all pirates. Recently the Home Office has been more concerned that pirates captured off Somalia would simply claim political asylum in the UK.’

The belief is that, once in Royal Navy custody, the pirates would claim it a breach of their rights to send them back to the anarchy in Somalia.

Since 1991, the country has been a failed state and local criminals are able to use the long Somali coastline as a safe base for pirate operations, hijacking passing vessels which, along with their crews, are then held for ransom.

As the Gulf of Aden is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, the pickings are rich.

The international community had to act. United Nations resolutions were passed. But this international anti-piracy operation is fragmented and incoherent.

At various times, Royal Navy ships in the area have been under the command of Nato, the EU and a third, multi-national organisation called Combined Maritime Forces Task Force 151. Each body has its own ‘subtly different’ Rules of Engagement for dealing with pirates.

But it is understood that in all cases, British forces are not supposed to open fire on pirates unless in self-defence or when the lives of others are in immediate danger.

And so, unless pirates open fire first — as they did last year on Royal Marines from HMS Cumberland, with fatal consequences to themselves — the Navy cannot engage in battle.

Nor can pirates be arrested unless caught in the act of taking a ship. In June, units from HMS Portland intercepted two boats full of armed Somalis, obviously on a piratical mission.

But the Rules of Engagement meant that the British sailors could only throw the pirates’ weapons overboard and sink their faster boat. The Somalis were then given enough fuel to return to the mainland in the remaining boat — scot free.

And so, in the absence of any effective deterrence, the attacks continue — as the Chandlers found to their cost.

The first step that would lead to the Chandlers’ ordeal took place in the early hours of October 15, when the Kota Wajar, sailing from Shanghai to Kenya, was seized in the Gulf of Aden 150 miles off Somalia.

The 24,000-tonne container vessel and its 21 crew were taken to the notorious Somali pirate port of Haradheere.

It was just a week later, on October 22, that the Chandlers set off on their yacht from the Seychelles for Tanzania, 1,000 miles and possibly ten days sailing away.

In the early hours of October 23, while the Chandlers were sleeping, pirates from three skiffs came aboard. In a later phone conversation Mr Chandler was allowed with a TV reporter, the yachtsman said the pirates intercepted the yacht ‘in waters 60 miles from Victoria in the Seychelles…

‘Three boats came alongside — I was off watch. I was asleep and men with guns came aboard — it was at 0230 local time.’

On the day of the kidnap, Falmouth Coastguard picked up a distress signal from the yacht. This was passed on to all warships on patrol in the Gulf of Aden area.

Shortly after the yacht was reported in trouble, the hijacked Kota Wajar was seen putting out of Haradheere. Its movements were monitored closely.

Then as the light faded on October 27, a helicopter from a Spanish warship patrolling the area spotted the yacht with at least one skiff tethered to its stern.

Royal Navy units with the Nato anti-piracy force in the region were informed — and on October 28 it became clear that the Kota Wajar was heading straight towards the yacht.

Since the Royal Navy frigate HMS Cumberland was several hours’ sailing away, the Navy sent Wave Knight. The 35,000-tonne RFA Wave Knight — a supply ship for the fleet — is manned by 75 Royal Fleet Auxiliary personnel, who have the status of MoD civil servants, but are under naval discipline in operational situations.

There are 25 Royal Navy sailors aboard, whose role is to handle weapons systems and fly the ship’s helicopter. Armed with two 30mm cannon and machine guns, the Wave Knight is no warship, but has more than enough punch to take on lightly armed pirates.

Indeed, in April she had scored a notable and much trumpeted success. She had received a distress call from a merchant vessel under pirate attack. The pirate skiffs were chased by the Wave Knight to a large dhow — a traditional Arab sailing vessel — nearby.

The MoD reported that: ‘Wave Knight ordered the dhow to stop and used a Royal Navy armed force protection team as well as the ship’s own weapons team to provide cover. The pirate vessel complied.’

The 13-strong hostage crew of the dhow were released. But, ludicrously, the pirates were released because they ‘were not captured in the act of piracy’.

The Commanding Officer of Wave Knight, Captain Pilling, was reported as declaring of his ship: ‘We are fully capable of conducting anti-piracy operations in and around the Horn of Africa.’

This bullish, official assessment of the Wave Knight’s capabilities has changed in the past week.

The leaked account and more recent MoD admissions suggest that the Wave Knight intercepted the Kota Wajar some time before the pirate ship reached the yacht.

The leaked account spoke of a ‘three-hour game of cat and mouse’ while an MoD spokesman has said that the tanker fired warning shots (the Kota Wajar’s crew were still on board) which were ignored. It also manouvered around the Kota Wajar before following her.

The MoD refuses to discuss what happened next. But the leaked account suggests that the Wave Knight stood off and observed while the Chandlers were transferred from their yacht to the Kota Wajar, which then set off back to Haradheere, which it reached without mishap on October 29.

Soon afterwards the two Britons were landed ashore and taken triumphantly into the interior of the country, where they have remained captive ever since, a £4million ransom being demanded for their release.

Last night the Chandlers were seen on TV for the first time, urging the Government to negotiate. They said the pirates are losing patience and ‘will not hesitate to kill us’.

The question is: how were they allowed to be spirited away from under the noses of the Royal Navy?

The reasons seem to be a combination of strict Rules of Engagement, concern for the safety of the Chandlers and, perhaps most perplexing, the fact that the right personnel were not in place to deal with the situation.

One former Special Boat Service marine said: ‘To assault a ship at sea and overcome pirates takes training. There should have been Royal Marines aboard the Wave Knight in this deployment.

‘The rules don’t help — it is very frustrating for the guys out there to have their hands tied behind their backs.’

An MoD spokesman said that the disposition of Royal Navy assets in the area, including Marines, was a matter for the force commander.

Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, the First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Service, this week admitted that no one on board the Wave Knight was trained in hostage rescue.

‘You need special expertise to deal with hostage rescue, and we didn’t have that expertise [on board],’ he explained.

‘Sailors with pistols couldn’t do the job of ensuring the safety of the Chandlers. It was highly frustrating.

‘There were broad rules of engagement that had to be followed, and it was a fairly easy decision to make, because the security of the Chandlers was the most important thing.

‘Wave Knight is not a warship. There was only a flight [helicopter crew and engineers] on board, and as soon as they got close, the pirates threatened the hostages.

‘They did the best they could.’

That last observation has become the MoD’s official line this week. Perhaps those aboard the Wave Knight did do the best they could. Most were civilians, after all.

But their inability to act and the MoD’s subsequent cover-up hardly added to the laurels or reputation of the Royal Navy around the world.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



European Union Gives Nigeria $1bn ‘For Peace’

The European Commission has signed a $1bn (£602m) development pact with Nigeria, aimed at tackling corruption and promoting peace.

A substantial amount of the funding will be spent on resolving conflict in the oil-rich and crime-plagued Niger Delta, the EU’s development chief said.

The money will also target electoral reform and improving human rights.

But correspondents say many Nigerians will doubt the money will get to its intended targets.

The BBC’s Caroline Duffield, in Lagos, says corruption touches the lives of everyone in Nigeria and leaves the vast majority of people in poverty.

And she says many Nigerians believe the current government is losing the fight against corruption.

Almost a third of the EU money is devoted to the Niger Delta region.

For years militants have blown up pipelines and kidnapped foreign oil workers, demanding a fairer share of the wealth.

“I’m delighted that a substantial amount of this financing will go to support conflict resolution and the peace process in the Niger Delta which has been ravaged by years of unrest,” said the EU’s development commissioner Karel De Gucht .

Over the past few months, thousands of militants have given up their weapons in an amnesty deal offered by the government in return for the promise of education and jobs.

A three-month respite from the violence has brought back some oil and gas production, but sceptics fear the former fighters could resume violence if they do not quickly find work.

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



Get US Out of Here Now or the Pirates Will Kill US!

British yacht couple captured by Somali gunmen make desperate plea

With an assault rifle pointed at her head, this was the dramatic moment the British woman kidnapped by Somali pirates pleaded for her life last night.

Surrounded by their captors, Rachel Chandler warned that she and her husband Paul could be killed within days.

She said the kidnappers were ‘losing patience’ and urged the British Government to open talks on a ransom.

[…]

The video was released as questions mounted over why a Royal Navy vessel armed with cannon and machine guns just 50ft away as the couple were kidnapped did not immediately intervene to save them and why the Ministry of Defence seemingly covered up the episode.

The kidnappers had previously demanded a £4million ransom for the couple and said they would ‘burn their bones’ if there was any attempt to free them.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


British People Think Immigration is Out of Control

A STAGGERING number of Brits reckon immigration has spiralled out of control.

Yesterday we revealed that experts predict Britain’s population will spiral to 74million by 2029.

And a massive 99% of Daily Star readers voted yes in our poll asking if the UK’s immigration issue was now out of control.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Irish Government to Pay Immigrants to Go Home

Ireland is offering money to immigrants to leave the recession-crippled Republic. The Irish Department of Justice has confirmed that it is opening an EU-funded project to persuade foreign workers and asylum seekers to return to their country of origin.

A spokeswoman told the Observer this weekend that the scheme will only apply to non-EU nationals living in the Republic and would involve the department spending almost €600,000 this year to pay for immigrants and their families to return to nations outside the European Union.

“The grants will not be given to individuals but rather the scheme will operate through projects and organisations,” she added.

“They [immigrants] can apply for the fund only through organisations and community groups. It is the first time we have introduced the scheme.”

The department has made it clear it had no projected figure in mind as to the number of immigrants the government hopes will take up the repatriation grants.

Advertisements promoting the scheme were published in Irish national newspapers on Friday. Application forms will also be available for non-EU nationals in the main immigration centre on Burgh Quay, Dublin.

The voluntary repatriation programme comes at a time of rising fears about the cost of immigration into Ireland.

Last week the mayor of Limerick caused a political storm when he called for the deportation of EU nationals who were out of work for more than three months and were claiming social welfare benefits.

Kevin Kiely said: “We are borrowing €400 million per week to maintain our own residents and we can’t afford it.

“During the good times it was grand, but we can’t afford the current situation unless the EU is willing to step in and pay for non-nationals.”

However the mayor was forced to withdraw his remarks after a storm of protests. His own party, Fine Gael, distanced itself from his comments.

In a subsequent statement, Kiely said: “I still am of the opinion and so are others, who have approached me in recent days, that there is abuse of the Irish social welfare system.

“But in seeking to highlight this I inadvertently caused offence to others, which I very much regret.”

During the latter years of the Celtic Tiger boom Ireland underwent a demographic revolution in terms of its ethnic make-up. Up until the early 1990s Ireland was 95% white and Catholic.

However, according to the Republic’s central statistics office, about 18% of Ireland’s inhabitants are now non-nationals.

Most of them are from eastern Europe, China, Brazil and west Africa or are British citizens who have settled on the island.

Some academics, such as Dr Bryan Fanning of University College Dublin, estimate that the real figure is more than 20%, meaning Ireland’s “foreign” citizens make up over one fifth of the Republic’s entire population.

The majority of the immigrants who arrived during the boom years were enticed to Ireland to fill vacancies in the construction, retail and tourist sectors — the main parts of the Irish economy to be severely hit by the current recession.

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



Not at Home in Germany

Almost Half of Turkish Migrants Want to Leave

This week, results of the first study comparing opinions of Germans, Turks and Turks living in Germany were announced. There were some grounds to celebrate integration but there were also problems. Many immigrants say they feel out of place in both countries, almost half want to return home and Turkish youth are becoming more conservative than their elders.

There are almost three million Turkish people living in Germany and, according to a new study released this week, almost half of them intend to return to Turkey at some stage. And interestingly, more younger Turks want to return to Turkey than their elders.

This is despite the fact that almost two thirds of respondents to the study (61 percent altogether)— one of the first polls to compare the world views of around a thousand individuals from Turkey, Germany and the Turkish population living in Germany — had been born in Germany or had been living in the country for over 30 years. Turks are the largest ethnic minority in Germany and make up almost 4 percent of the country’s population. Yet only 21 percent of those polled feel happy to call Germany home.

In fact, over half of the Turks living in Germany (62 percent) said that when they are in the country they felt like Turks. But when they were in Turkey they felt like Germans. A significant percentage of the migrants (45 percent) felt that they were not wanted in Germany and only 54 percent believed that Turks and Germans had the same educational opportunities.

Liberal Attitudes Indicate Some Integration in Action

The study, which was conducted by Info Research, a company based in Berlin and Liljeberg Research International which is based in Antalya, Turkey, was released on Thursday and questioned interviewees on subjects like politics, morals, relationships and religion. Despite not feeling completely at home in Germany, the answers from the Turkish-German indicated that there was some integration in action. While German respondents were generally more liberal — in everything from their approval ratings on gay marriage to virgin brides to abortion rights — and the Turkish respondents were generally less liberal, the Turkish-Germans were somewhere between the two.

For example, most Germans trust their police, their schools and tertiary institutions and German justice. They trust political parties and big business least. And apart from having less trust in the German police and military than their German friends, most Turkish-Germans feel about the same.

The most dramatic differences come in questions related to family life. Only around 10 percent, or less, of Germans believe that a man and woman should not live together before marriage (8 percent), that a woman should not have sex before marriage (7 percent), that a virgin bride is important (6 percent), that bringing up children is women’s work (9 percent) and that one’s parents should have a say in whom a person marries (5 percent).

On the other hand, the Turkish-Germans and the Turkish are far closer on these matters. Almost half of Turkish-Germans (47 percent) believe that a man and woman should not live together before marriage and over half (67 percent) of Turkish think they shouldn’t. Almost half of Turkish-Germans believe a bride should be a virgin (48 percent) and over two thirds of Turks in Turkey (72 percent) agree.

The figures are similar for women being responsbile for children’s upbringing (Turkish-German: 32 percent, Turkish: 52 percent) and whether your parents can tell you whom you should be marrying (Turkish-German: 48 percent, Turkish: 68 percent). Abortions and homosexual relationships are still taboo in both of the Turkish populations and in general, the two Turkish populations were also far more religious.

Younger Turkish-Germans Becoming More Conservative

Having said that though, the Turkish-Germans came closer to their German counterparts again when it came to tolerance. For example, while only a third of Turks were happy with an unmarried couple as neighbors, over half of Turkish-Germans (57 percent) felt fine about it, as did over two thirds of Germans (76 percent).

In announcing the results of the study, Die Welt newspaper reported that research leader Holger Liljeberg noted that those traditional values seemed to be a lot stronger among younger Turkish-Germans surveyed. Those aged between 15 and 29 held more conservative opinions on everything from virginity to abortion to believing in heaven. Liljeberg felt this might be a reaction that the young Turkish people had to the pressure of trying to fit into German society. “The younger ones think: If they don’t want me here, then I would rather have a Turkish identity,” Liljeberg said on Thursday. Whereas the older immigrants were more relaxed about it, he added.

‘We Are Not a Society that Prescribes Individuals’ Views’

For Liljeberg, the answer lies in education. “The problem is that many don’t know the language perfectly,” he said at a press conference Thursday, suggesting a Turkish-language school that includes German courses in order to prepare students for the future. “One cannot get a handle on a culture and education with only 30 percent of the vocabulary.”

However, Barbara John, Berlin’s state official in charge of immigration issues who was also at the release of the study, said that the problem lay beyond language and that it was also a cultural issue. John said she didn’t see any problem in the differences in values and compared the Turkish values to earlier German social values from the 1960s, which had since changed. “Each individual decides their own moral code,” she said. “This is a small thing for those living together in a constitutional state. We are not a society that prescribes individuals’ views.”

It was also noted that the number of younger Turks living in Germany who were sampled was small. Of the 331 Turkish-German respondents, only 86 people were aged between 15 and 20. Additionally the survey’s authors cited a margin of error of 3.7 to 5.4 percentage points.

sed, with reporting by Lisa Hemmerich

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



UK: Angry ‘Unknown Warriors’ Of WWII: ‘This Isn’t the Britain We Fought For’

Curious about his grandmother’s generation and what they did in the war, he decided three years ago to send letters to local newspapers across the country asking for those who lived through the war to write to him with their experiences.

He rounded off his request with this question: ‘Are you happy with how your country has turned out? What do you think your fallen comrades would have made of life in 21st-century Britain?’

What is extraordinary about the 150 replies he received, which he has now published as a book, is their vehement insistence that those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the war would now be turning in their graves.

There is the occasional bright spot — one veteran describes Britain as ‘still the best country in the world’ — but the overall tone is one of profound disillusionment.

‘I sing no song for the once-proud country that spawned me,’ wrote a sailor who fought the Japanese in the Far East, ‘and I wonder why I ever tried.’

‘My patriotism has gone out of the window,’ said another ex-serviceman.

In the Mail this week, Gordon Brown wrote about ‘our debt of dignity to the war generation’.

But the truth that emerges from these letters is that the survivors of that war generation have nothing but contempt for his government.

They feel, in a word that leaps out time and time again, ‘betrayed’.

New Labour, said one ex-commando who took part in the disastrous Dieppe raid in which 4,000 men were lost, was ‘more of a shambles than some of the actions I was in during the war, and that’s saying something!’

He added: ‘Those comrades of mine who never made it back would be appalled if they could see the world as it is today.

‘They would wonder what happened to the Brave New World they fought so damned hard for.’

Nor can David Cameron take any comfort from the elderly.

His ‘hug a hoodie’ advice was scorned by a generation of brave men and women now too scared, they say, to leave their homes at night.

Immigration tops the list of complaints.

‘People come here, get everything they ask, for free, laughing at our expense,’ was a typical observation.

‘We old people struggle on pensions, not knowing how to make ends meet. If I had my time again, would we fight as before? Need you ask?’

Many writers are bewildered and overwhelmed by a multicultural Britain that, they say bitterly, they were never consulted about nor feel comfortable with.

‘Our country has been given away to foreigners while we, the generation who fought for freedom, are having to sell our homes for care and are being refused medical services because incomers come first.’

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Coca-Cola Leads Cheering Section for 1-World Climate Change Taxes

100 companies push ‘16 days left to seal deal’ on $10 trillion treaty

Coca-Cola is spearheading a coalition of more than 100 companies pushing a United Nations climate treaty to bind the U.S. to cap-and-trade emissions regulation, commit the world’s wealthiest nations to a potential $10 trillion in foreign aid and, possibly, form a proposed international “super-grid” for regulating and distributing electric power worldwide.

Together with the SAP and Siemens corporations, Coca-Cola launched a website called Hopenhagen, leading up to the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, which opens on Dec. 7. The website invites the citizens of the world to sign a petition demanding world leaders draft binding agreements on climate change and advertises, as of today, “16 days left to seal the deal.”

Other “friends” of Hopenhagen include media outlets Newsweek, Discovery Channel, Huffington Post, Cosmopolitan, Seventeen, The Wall Street Journal and Clear Channel, among others, Internet giants Yahoo, Google and AOL and dozens of other companies and organizations.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



GE Capital Completes First Sukuk Offering of $500m

GE Capital, the finance arm of General Electric, has completed its inaugural sukuk offering of $500 million, tailored for investors across the Middle East, Asia and Europe.

The five-year sukuk had strong demand and makes GE Capital the first US corporate issuer of an Islamic bond. Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes.

           — Hat tip: Esther [Return to headlines]



Gene Change in Cannibals Reveals Evolution in Action

It’s a snapshot of human evolution in progress. A genetic mutation protecting against kuru — a brain disease passed on by eating human brains — only emerged and spread in the last 200 years.

When members of the Fore people in Papua New Guinea died, others would eat the dead person’s brain during funeral rituals as a mark of respect. Kuru passed on in this way killed at least 2500 Fore in the 20th century until the cause was identified in the late 1950s and the practice halted.

Identification of kuru and how it was spread helped researchers identify how BSE — mad cow disease — spread through the feeding of infected cattle brains to other animals, and how this eventually led to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), which has killed 166 people so far in the UK.

Simon Mead of the British prion research centre at University College London says the discovery of an “anti-kuru” gene is the most clear-cut evidence yet of human evolution in action.

“I hope it will become a textbook example of how evolution happens,” he says. “It’s a striking and timely example, given the 150th anniversary of the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species,” he says.

Good mutations

Mead and his colleagues discovered the mutation after comparing stored DNA from 152 dead Fore victims of the disease with DNA from more than 3000 living Fore, including almost 560 who participated in the ritual eating of brains before it was banned.

In 51 survivors and their descendants, they discovered a hitherto-unknown variant of PRNP, the gene which makes prions, the proteins that spread the disease. These prions become malformed and in turn make all healthy prions they encounter malformed as well, in a chain reaction that ultimately destroys brains by turning them into a spongy mush.

The change in the gene comes at a position called codon 127. Throughout the animal kingdom, the codon contains the same amino acid, called glycine or “G”, from each parent, giving the form G127G. To their astonishment, Mead and his colleagues found a variant of the codon never seen in nature before, in which one of the glycines has been swapped for a valine amino acid, giving the new variant the name G127V.

Initially, Mead and his colleagues thought that because the variant had never been seen before, it must have damaging rather than beneficial effects. “We thought we’d found the trigger for how kuru happens, that someone ate the brain of someone with the mutation and that’s how the disease started spreading through the cannibalistic funeral feasts,” he said.

“Instead, we found the complete opposite, which is that it was protective.”

Inherited health

The mutation first arose about 200 years ago by accident in a single individual, who then passed it down to his or her descendants. “When the kuru epidemic peaked about 100 years back, there were maybe a couple of families who found that they and their children survived while all their neighbours were dying, and so on to today’s generation, who still carry the gene,” says Mead. “So it was a very sudden genetic change under intense selection pressure from the disease,” he says.

None of the 152 victims of kuru had the protective gene, suggesting that it provides almost complete resistance to the disease. But it’s not yet known whether the variant protects against other prion diseases. Mead said that experiments are already under way in mice deliberately given the new mutation, to see if they are protected against both kuru and vCJD.

Mead says that the team has evidence that the prion protein made by the new variant might prevent the abnormal version of the prion from multiplying, giving clues to how to treat or prevent vCJD with drugs.

In 2003, Mead and his colleagues discovered a much more common variant of the prion gene that provides protection against prion diseases. The variant’s position in the gene, at codon 129, is just two units away from the new one.

The protective variant at codon 129 is called “MV”, standing for the amino acids methionine and valine. All deaths except one from vCJD have so far been in people with the “MM” variant, suggesting that they are specially at risk.

Jose Ordovas, who studies genetics and nutrition at Tufts University, Boston, said the finding “really supports the concept of very rapid adaptation of humans to the environment”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Islam is Not Compatible With a Republic

When I first started writing for WorldNetDaily, almost three years ago, I wrote “Is Islam compatible with a republic?” My thesis then was to use the Constitution, reason, history and philosophy out of the Judeo-Christian traditions of intellectual thought, including Natural Law, to state authoritatively why Islam is not compatible with a republic. Why? Because Islam contains none of the essential components of what philosopher Booker T. Washington called the “fundamentals of civilization.”

What are some of the fundamentals of civilization?

  • Belief in God (the moon god, Allah, is a very different entity);
  • veneration of the intrinsic value of all life;
  • the rule of law;
  • A written constitution based on truth, equity, liberty and morality;
  • laws that don’t discriminate based on race, creed, wealth, gender or national origin;
  • Freedom of religion.

These are just a few of the fundamentals of civilization Islam under Shariah law has no conception of and utter contempt for.

Islam is not compatible with a republic.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Fjordman: A History of Geology and Planetary Science Part 3

The third and final part of Fjordman’s history of geology and planetary science has been posted at Atlas Shrugs. Part one can be read here and part two here.

Large sunspots may under certain conditions be seen by the unaided eye, but the modern study of them began around 1610 with the introduction of the telescope. Sunspots are strongly magnetic and appear darker because they are slightly cooler than the regions that surround them. Based on daily observation records between 1826 and 1843, the German amateur astronomer Heinrich Schwabe (1789-1875), a pharmacist living in the town of Dessau, in 1843 announced that sunspots vary in number in a cycle of roughly ten to eleven years. He was originally looking for a yet-unknown planet moving inside the orbit of Mercury. His article caught the eye of Alexander von Humboldt, who in 1851 published Schwabe’s table updated to 1850. After that many scientists became interested in the 11-year sunspot cycle.. It has later been established that periods with many sunspots correspond to high solar activity.

The Swiss astronomer Rudolf Wolf (1816-1893) had studied at the universities of Zürich, Vienna and Berlin, where the German astronomer Johann Franz Encke was one of his teachers. Wolf became director of the Bern Observatory in Switzerland in 1847 and in 1848 devised the “Zürich sunspot number” to gauge the number of sunspots.

A gentleman of independent means, the English amateur astronomer Richard Carrington (1826-1875), devoted himself to the study of sunspots. Carrington found by observing their motions that the Sun rotates faster at the equator than near the poles. Another early pioneer in the study of sunspot cycles was the German astronomer Gustav Spörer (1822-1895).

The Anglo-Irish geophysicist Edward Sabine (1788-1883) in 1852 found an association between the sunspot cycle and the occurrence of large magnetic storms. On September 1, 1859, Richard Carrington in England through his telescope, which projected an 11-inch-wide image of the Sun on a screen, observed what we now know was a huge solar flare, a magnetic explosion on the Sun. Only 17 hours later this event triggered a large magnetic storm on the Earth. Just before dawn the next day, auroras occurred even in Cuba and Hawaii. Spark discharges shocked telegraph operators in several regions and set telegraph paper on fire.

– – – – – – – –

Unusual solar activity can cause geomagnetic storms (disturbances in the Earth’s magnetosphere) and interrupt electromagnetic communications, for instance by affecting the ionosphere. A powerful solar flare of the strength observed by Carrington could potentially cause quite serious damage today due to our much more extensive reliance on electromagnetic equipment and communications in the twenty-first century as compared to the mid-nineteenth.

Early estimates of stellar surface temperatures made using Newton’s law of cooling gave far too high temperatures. More accurate values were obtained by using the radiation laws of the Slovenian physicist Joseph Stefan in 1879 and the German physicist Wilhelm Wien in 1896. Stefan calculated the temperature of the Sun’s surface to about 5400 °C, which was the most sensible value by date. Stefan’s Law or the Stefan-Boltzmann Law, named after Stefan and his Austrian student Ludwig Boltzmann, suggests that the amount of radiation given off by a body is proportional to the fourth power of its temperature as measured in Kelvin units.

The part of the Sun that we normally see has a temperature of more than 5500 degrees C, almost 5800 K. Temperatures in the core, where nuclear fusion occurs, reach over 15 million K. The lowest layer of the atmosphere is called the photosphere. The next zone is the chromospheres, where the temperature rises to 20,000 K. The corona, the Sun’s outer atmosphere, is remarkably hot. In the part nearest the surface the temperature is 1 million to 6 million K, but it can reach tens of millions of degrees when a flare occurs. Sunspots are cooler regions where magnetic energy builds up and is often released in solar flares and discharges of charged particles known as coronal mass ejections. These events can trigger space storms that affect the Earth. The flow of coronal gas into space is known as the solar wind. The corona is visible during total solar eclipses as a large halo of white, glowing gas, but the relative rarity of such eclipses present logistical difficulties for detailed observations.

The technical problems associated with producing an artificial eclipse to study the Sun were solved by the French solar physicist Bernard Lyot (1897-1952), an expert in optics who had studied engineering in Paris in addition to mathematics, physics and chemistry. As an astronomer, Lyot found that the lunar surface behaves like volcanic dust and that Mars has sandstorms. In 1930 he invented an instrument known as the coronagraph, a telescope equipped with an occulting disk sized in such a way as to block out the solar disk, which is more difficult than it sounds. By 1931 he was obtaining photographs of the corona. He found new spectral lines in the corona and made the first motion pictures of solar prominences.

In the 1930s, Lyot boldly inferred a coronal temperature of around 600,000 K. This claim was met with skepticism at the time. Acceptance of these very high temperatures came through the spectroscopic work of the German astrophysicist Walter Grotrian (1890-1954) and the Swedish astrophysicist Bengt Edlén (1906-1993) soon after, but an explanation for how the Sun’s upper atmosphere could be so much hotter than its surface took a long time to work out.

The Swedish physicist Hannes Alfvén (1908-1995) was one of the founders of plasma physics and magnetohydrodynamics, the study of plasmas in magnetic fields. Alfvén was born in Norrköping, Sweden. Both his parents were practicing physicians. He studied at Uppsala University and became a research physicist and professor in Stockholm. He made many discoveries in solar and space plasma physics and his work on cosmic rays led him to propose in 1937 the existence of a galactic magnetic field. The one discovery for which he is best known is the magnetohydrodynamic wave commonly called the Alfvén wave, whose existence for decades was difficult to prove. Finally in 2009, pictures taken by a team using the Swedish Solar Telescope in Spain’s Canary Islands revealed that “corkscrew” waves — Alfvén waves — were pushing heat from the Sun’s surface to its outer atmosphere, the corona.

Read the rest at Atlas Shrugs.

Terror Masters, Dope Dealers, and Foreign Aid Scammers

Several years ago, while researching the extensive and confusing data on radical Islam in Pakistan, I read a number of articles by B. Raman and other experts on Indian national security. The wealth of information they presented about Pakistan’s devious maneuvers made me realize that Pakistan is one of the three epicenters of the Great Jihad, with the other two being Iran and Saudi Arabia.

In the heat of events during the fall of 2001 — when President Bush lauded Pervez Musharraf’s Pakistan as a “friend of the United States” — it was easy to forget that the Taliban had been the creation of Pakistan’s security services, and were their preferred means of controlling Afghanistan.

Despite Pakistan’s reluctant acquiescence — we made the country an offer it couldn’t refuse — in the war to oust the Taliban from power, there is no evidence that Musharraf and his successors have ever given up their ambition to control Afghanistan through their favorite instrument.

Pundita has posted an excellent roundup and analysis of the current state of affairs between Pakistan and Afghanistan, with a particular focus on our own government’s stupid, incompetent, cynical and perhaps treasonous involvement with Pakistan’s machinations:

Pakistan-U.S. relations: Why General Stanley McChrystal is going straight to hell

On or about August 30, 2009, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates received a detailed assessment of the military situation in Afghanistan that included a request for additional U.S. troops. The report was from General Stanley A. McChrystal, Commander, Nato’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and Commander, U.S. Forces Afghanistan. But as noted on the first page the assessment was a joint effort representing input from ISAF staff and the component commands.

On the matter of Pakistan the report noted:

Afghanistan’s insurgency is clearly supported from Pakistan. Senior leaders of the major Afghan insurgent groups are based in Pakistan, are linked with al Qaeda and other violent extremist groups, and are reportedly aided by some elements of Pakistan’s ISI.

A year earlier McChrystal’s predecessor, General David D. McKiernan, delivered a franker assessment of the same situation. He stated flatly that he was certain there was a “level of ISI complicity” in the militant areas of Pakistan and within organizations like the Taliban.

McKiernan’s observation came on the heels of a secret visit by a top CIA official to Islamabad; the visit was to directly confront Pakistan’s most senior officials with new data about ties between the ISI and militants operating in Pakistan tribal areas.

– – – – – – – –

It seems the CIA met with the same stonewalling Britain’s government encountered in 2006 when they brought virtually the same charges to Pakistan because their next move echoed the one taken by Britain’s Ministry of Defense: the CIA leaked news of the trip to a major press outlet — in their case, The New York Times.

These naive attempts to embarrass a government comprised of terror-masters, dope dealers and professional beggars skilled at wheedling billions in aid out of the West came to nothing, beyond the ISI’s decision to outsource more of their oversight of terrorist attacks on NATO troops to front agencies such as the SSG.

And General McKiernan hardly needed to study a classified CIA report to know the score. Over a period of years scores of intelligence analysts and journalists from India, Pakistan, Europe and the USA, not to leave out Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai and his intelligence advisors, have spent years publishing books, churning out reports, and generally doing everything they could think of to impress on Washington that Pakistan is the biggest problem.

However, look at it from Washington’s viewpoint. You know how it is when you can’t find the keys you lost inside the house: you go outside to search because the light is better out there.

So Washington continues to search high and low for solutions in Afghanistan that don’t address the biggest problem there.

There’s much more to the story, and some of it may surprise you. Read the rest at Pundita’s place.

Coloring Outside the Lines

Our Flemish correspondent VH has translated an interview with Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter from the Dutch opinion weekly HP/de Tijd. It was published on Thursday in the printed edition of the paper:

“Wilders and I are well attuned to each other”

[From the printed edition of the Dutch weekly opinion-magazine HP/de Tijd, November 20, 2009]

Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter (47) has been active for nearly 25 years in Belgian politics, but he still is treated “like a leper” by most of his colleagues in parliament. Recently, he was threatened from the Netherlands for the first time. A conversation about the cordon sanitaire, demonization, and — of course — Geert Wilders. “Those who color outside the lines may not participate anymore.”

By Bas Paternotte

According to a comment on the Dutch website ansaar.nl your head should be cut off and you are a kaffir who must put to death.

“This is the first time I have had the disturbing privilege of being threatened from the Netherlands. These threats are fairly explicit and leave nothing to the imagination. I have written a letter to your Minister of Justice, Ernst Hirsch Ballin [CDA, Christian Democrats], with the request to make short work of it. I still have not received any answer to it. I understood, however, that there have been talks about it with the National Coordinator for Counterterrorism in the Netherlands. We will wait and see.”

Have you been threatened more often from that quarter?

“Yes certainly, that happened to me frequently before. On that Asaan website I read that a man wanted to blow himself up in my vicinity like a real suicide terrorist. The problem with such websites is that they assert that they do not have the possibility of moderating those comments in advance. Which is a bit of an easy out; I think that is nonsense. If you want to avoid such statements being made, then you step in. But that is routine for the Islamists. They want to create an atmosphere of intimidation and fear, hoping to silence us. But I will not silence myself. I have lived through worse experiences.”

Like what?

“Naturally, we have had stones thrown through the windows at home, and my car has often been vandalized. In the Netherlands you were able to see such things happening when I was a guest in the TV program “Buitenhof” [in 2000, where he was attacked both in- and outside the studio by left-wing extremists]. The worst thing I experienced was a man who showed up twice with a shotgun at our party office, and shouted that he wanted to murder me. Fortunately I was not present then. The second time they were able to collar him. He has been convicted and without doubt is stuck in a mental hospital now.”

I’ve seen that you are protected during public appearances. Those are private security guards, if I remember correctly. Is that so?

“Belgium does not have a systematic security and surveillance, as in your country [The Netherlands]. Our Prime Minister, Herman Van Rompuy, cycles through Brussels, so to speak, having perhaps one security guard around. Ministers have a driver, who must have had a security course. And that’s it. It is still a far cry here as compared to the Netherlands. This is also because we did not have had an incident like the murder of Pim Fortuyn. The Socialist André Cools [PS, Socialist Party, shot dead in 1991] was murdered in the nineties, but that was not a political assassination. The communist Julien Lahaut [KP, Communist Party] was murdered in 1950, and that indeed was because of his statements, but that is all as far as that is concerned.

“We actually are dealing in a very lax way with this. I am afraid something must happen first before the security issue is taken seriously by the politicians [EU Brussels]. Therefore I am quasi-permanently protected, as some other politicians of Vlaams Belang are as well. We pay for it ourselves. I have three daughters, 21, 18 and 15 years old. They have to cope with all this. Fortunately they are able to adapt quickly, like their father. Much is laughed away, and they of course are quite used to it by now. I always impress upon them: dogs that bark don’t bite. Fortunately these are not Wilders-like conditions that I must endure. I also think I would not want that.”

What do you mean by that?

“Geert Wilders is under permanent protection; his freedom of movement is extremely limited. This man hardly has any private life, ha cannot go anywhere. Besides, all his security guards are working indirectly for a Minister [Ministry of Justice: Ernst Hirsh Ballin, CDA] to whom they must also report. Thus there is a chance that this information then is used politically. But if I ever would end up in a situation such as that of Geert Wilders, I’m not sure if I would find the game worth the candle. On the other hand, your opponents then would have attained their end. And letting that pass does not really match my character. I will never bend to blackmail or threats.”

The cordon sanitaire around the Vlaams Belang has been put down in a resolution by Parliament, but is officially not in effect anymore since the municipal elections in 2006. Do you notice any difference?

– – – – – – – –

“Not quite, the cordon is still operative. I do notice however, that the right wing political parties in the meanwhile are willing to do business with us. They have to, for we are in most parliaments the largest opposition party. For that matter we are prepared to do business with all parties. Because, as it happens, we vote on content. But the left side is still giving us the cold shoulder. They will even not shake one’s hand, ignore us completely. As if I am a leper. This is a deliberate strategy.

“They are not only trying to push us into political, but also in a humanitarian isolation. Because everyone has the need for a pat on the shoulder or a kind word. But they ignore us completely and totally. It requires stamina and a thick skin. That cordon exemplifies exactly where Belgium ended up. It is a democratorship. Diversity is the utmost goal and the Islam should be embraced. The multi-culture is a new religion. One may not deviate from that; those who color outside the lines, may not participate anymore. Regardless of whether you win or lose the elections. Belgium is a politically correct pseudo-democracy, absurdistan. It is not easy to be a member of Vlaams Belang.”

What do you mean by that?

“My party is seen as dangerous to the state. Those who are members experience restrictions in many areas. Members are barred from staff functions within the military and the public authorities. That is some sort of en employment ban. Once I called for my dossier from State Security, that is our AIVD [Dutch Secret Service], but didn’t allow me to inspect it. They will not give it to me. I have my suspicions why. Because the party and I are under close scrutiny.”

After the European elections, the majority of the Dutch political parties stated that they in the future do not want to govern with the PVV [in a coalition government]. You are the specialist in this; is that also a “cordon”?

“Things happen in a more subtle way in your country. Dutch parties do business with the PVV, and my impression is that the etiquette is somewhat more normal. One does not yet dare to speak out too literally against the PVV. Yet I do note developments like we have also experienced. Just take that research on the PVV that was leaked recently. In your country [the Netherlands] that is called demonization, we [in Belgium] call that diabolizing, but still comes down to the same thing. For by such report Wilders is not only demonized but also criminalized. In fact, the government says: that man is a wrong one.

“Unstable characters such as Volkert van der Graaf [the murderer of Pim Fortuyn] derive a legitimacy from it for their attacks a politician. They will begin to regard themselves as a liberator of mankind. I have followed that issue with the comedian Herman van Veen and the comparison he made with the NSB [Dutch National Socialist Movement, notably as they had stated themselves in 1940: a “true Socialist” party]. I find that quite something. You then are talking of Hitler, Nazi-practices, mass murder and persecution of the Jews. I suspect that Van Veen feels supported in his views by such a report. I will now predict to you what that will mean for the near future: Wilders will continue to grow. This also has to do with the underdog effect. Some voters might feel sympathy just because the government runs him down. I would not be surprised if within due course a minister will order an investigation into the funding of the PVV [even though it is fully legal]. Purely to discredit the party. For the PVV simply has to be marginalized.”

To be clear, you now describe what happened to the Vlaams Belang?

“Roughly, yes. For instance there is a procedure underway now to take away our party financing.”

Please continue.

“The purpose of all this is to wear out the voter. Wilders soon must appear in court for his statements. This fits entirely with the attrition-battle that is in progress at the moment. If only you keep demonizing a party long enough, criminalizing and alienating, the electorate becomes nervous. After ten years long of court cases, the Vlaams Blok was finally banned [in a political process]. With much blood, sweat and tears we managed to build up the Vlaams Belang from nothing. And then we once again won the elections.

This is because the citizen ultimately is averse to such DDR-practices. That was a victory for democracy. The ballot box, that is where it should happen. Therefore I do think that Wilders will achieve a major electoral victory [at the moment he polls between 28 and 51 seats]. The established parties in the run-up to the elections will for as long as possible maintain that they are involving Wilders and the PVV in the game. But that is a democratic smokescreen. Because in the end they will keep him out of [coalition-]government formation. There will be an unholy alliance agreed among almost all parties. In terms of party politics, then, everything is possible, as long as Wilders does not attain any government responsibility. With us it went exactly the same way.”

Do you ever have contact with Geert Wilders?

“I can not comment on that. But I think we are well attuned to each other and at the same time do not stand in each other’s way. And do support each other when necessary, for example in the European Parliament. Although there are no concrete partnerships. I fully realize that Wilders already has it difficult enough without Vlaams Belang.”

Why don’t you want to say whether you have contact with Wilders?

“I have said what I said.”

What do you think about the PVV not having party members and strictly speaking consisting only of Geert Wilders?

“Vlaams Belang is indeed a party with 25,000 dues-paying members; we have 180 chapters and a Members’ Council. If a party such as the PVV has other arrangements, this does not mean that it is undemocratic. The PVV has a fraction in the Dutch Parliament and in the European Parliament, those people do not just work together for no reason. You cannot force a party organize this or that way. It the voters who has the final say. And you are familiar with the polls.”

A few years ago you said you wanted to become the mayor of Antwerp. That did not work out. You have been a politician now for almost 25 years. Do you still have ambitions?

“My only ambition is in achieving my political objectives. Belgium is in fact is the last colonial state in Europe. The Belgian authorities behave themselves, I mean the Walloons, as a colonial power against the Flemings. They rob our tax money. Thus I advocate Flemish independence. But Vlaams Belang in the meantime has achieved a lot.

The Belgian voter knows that the multicultural fairy tale has splashed apart like a soap bubble. Everyday reality proves that. Belgian politics has for years tried to mix oil and vinegar together. You can shake for an hour, for a day, for years: oil continues to be oil, vinegar remains vinegar. Yet they have tried to evolve a new liquid from it. The multicultural society has failed, has proven not to be feasible. Something we have been warning about for years. We now are being proven right. Even the Left-wing church is reluctantly moving to our side [see for instance Vander Taelen, Benno Bernard]. And that is an atonement that works very well against all vexation.”

You have experienced resistance your entire political career. Yet you still often give the impression of being in a cheerful mood. What makes that happen?

“I keep myself from turning sour with frustration, otherwise I would have to go through life being annoyed continuously. There also must be some delight in life and that is why I often keep things in perspective. That cheerfulness is necessary to be able to cope with the situation and to continue and to persevere. What cannot be said with laughter is not the truth.”