Their Very Own Envoy

President Barack Hussein Obama has made a big deal of his outreach to the “Muslim world”. His speech in Cairo was a major example of this ongoing effort, and he has repeatedly emphasized his respect and solicitude for the world’s 7.9 septillion Muslims.

Mr. Obama’s latest outreach to Islam has taken the form of appointing an envoy to Muslims. According to Al Arabiya:

Obama Admin Appoints Envoy to Muslim World

The United States State Department announced Friday the appointment of a Muslim woman from Indian origin as a new envoy to deal with the Muslim world, following a previous appointment of an Egyptian-born advisor in April.

“I am pleased to announce the appointment of Farah Pandith to serve as Special Representative to Muslim Communities,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who appointed the 41-year-old to interat [sic] with Muslims across the globe, said in the statement.

[…]

Pandith, who immigrated to the U.S. as a child from Indian Kashmir’s summer capital, Srinagar, will “be responsible for executing the administration’s efforts to engage with Muslims around the world on a people-to-people and organizational level,” the department said in a statement.

Notice what’s going on here: the world’s Muslims are considered to be a single entity.

We don’t give that kind of treatment to Jews and Hindus. The former aren’t that numerous, and the geographic concentration of the latter — even though there are hundreds of millions of them — may make a special envoy unnecessary. But what about Buddhists? They’re scattered all over the place.

And what about Christians? President Obama recently said that the United States shouldn’t be considered a Christian country. Well, where’s our envoy to the “Christian World”?

Needless to say, no such office will ever be created. Christianity has been fragmented almost since its inception, and there’s no unitary entity to which an envoy could be assigned.

Muslims, however, are unitary. There is a single organization, the OIC (Organization of the Islamic Conference), representing 57 Muslim countries. The leaders of those countries consider their nations Muslim nations. Is there a single leader of a majority Christian nation who considers his country to be a Christian nation?

Outside of Vatican City, that is.

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One interesting thing about Ms. Pandith, according to Al Arabiya, is that she may not even be a Muslim:
– – – – – – – –

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly confirmed Thursday that Pandith had been appointed, and promised a statement later.

Asked why the State Department had not formally announced Pandith’s appointment, Kelly noted it had been disclosed in an internal memo.

Kelly said he could not say whether Pandith was a Muslim, although two U.S. officials said privately that they believed she was. Pandith was not immediately available for comment.

So she might be a Muslim, and she’s going to be the U.S. envoy to the Muslim world. My guess is that she knows how to say the shahada, and will go veiled when she meets the Saudis or the delegates to the OIC. She’ll be at least as Muslim as her boss is.

And what about the Organization of the Christian Conference? Is there going to be an OCC?

My advice is: Don’t hold your breath for that one.



Hat tip: TB.

Today’s Cultural Enrichment News

Cultural Enrichment News


Both these stories are from today’s Danish MSM, and were translated by our Danish correspondent TB.

Denmark is notable among Western countries in that it still publishes descriptions of criminal suspects that identify their ethnic appearance. In stories like these, almost anywhere else in Europe the word “Arab” would have been left out. In Sweden the perpetrators’ height, weight, hair color, and apparent age would be included, but readers would be left to guess from subtle contextual hints that the criminals were immigrants practicing their cultural enrichment.

The first article is from Jyllands-Posten:

Mentally ill man shot in the face by group of youngsters

Soft gunA 65-year-old mentally ill man was surrounded by a group of 7 or 8 youngsters while he was on his way from his residency on a nursing home to the Q8 gas station in Hundige Main Street.

One of the youngsters pointed a soft gun directly against the head of the aging man and shot him at least 12 times in the face with hard plastic bullets.

“He has been taken to the hospital for treatment for the gun wounds and we are now using every resource we have to find the group of youngsters, who are of an ethnic origin other than Danish — possibly Arab,” spokesman Jan Lauritzen from the police states.

Pure evil

The badly upset and mentally ill man was not robbed during the assault.

“It is not a robbery and I will not describe it as just boyish prank. It looks more like pure evil,” Jan Lauritzen states.

The assault happened yesterday around 9 pm, and the police would like to hear from citizens who might have information about the group of youngsters who are all described as being around 15 years old.

A witness who saw the boy who fired the gun describes the perpetrator as being around 15 years old, of Arab origin and wearing a cap. He is strongly built and “walked around like he was carrying two loaves of bread under his arms”.

And from Ekstra Bladet:
– – – – – – – –

Jabbed a screwdriver into the thigh of victim

29-year-old dragged into staircase and robbed

A 29-year-old man was assaulted yesterday and exposed to a very brutal robbery, the police report.

The man was walking down Rantzausgade in Copenhagen when he passed a group of youngsters who are described as being of foreign origin.

Suddenly several of the youngsters grabbed the 29 year old and dragged him up the stairs in a stairwell. Here he was beaten in the face until his lip split while they demanded his money.

The victim had no money, however, and it ended with the group cutting the shoulder straps of his rucksack and jabbing a screwdriver twice into the back of his thigh, policeman Henrik Vedel says to eb.dk.

Bleeding, the victim staggered down the stairs and got help from bystanders, who called an ambulance.

Now the police are searching for witnesses. The 29-year-old was attacked near Rantzausgade 30, but they have not yet found the actual staircase into which the victim was dragged. The assault happened around 01:40.

Please contact the Copenhagen police if you have any information.

Converting Manna to Gall

And that this place may thoroughly be thought
True paradise, I have the serpent brought.

                — John Donne, “Twickenham Garden”

In the last few years it has become obvious that we are living in the twilight of the Western democracies.

As I write this, the U.S. House of Representatives has just passed the “American Clean Energy And Security Act of 2009”, a.k.a. “Waxman-Markey”, a.k.a. “Cap-and-Trade” — and which also might as well be known as the “Economic Destruction of America Act”.

This bill is not popular with the American people. Its alleged long-term benefits are far outweighed by the massive economic damage it will do to our country within the next few years. In the short term it will benefit no one except the already bloated federal government and its parasitic private entities. No major business stands to make a killing from it. No congressman who voted for it enhanced his chances of re-election by doing so.

The Ranting ManSo why in the world was such a monstrosity ever passed? Why would democratically elected representatives come out so strongly against our national well-being, our commercial interests, and public opinion?

Cap-and-Trade is hardly an isolated instance. Politicians all across the West are jostling one another to see who can be first to leap over the nearest available precipice, whether the issue is political correctness, mass immigration, capitulation to Islam, ruinous levels of taxation, or environmental orthodoxy.

Rather than examine the particular debacle that was just passed by the House of Representatives, I’d like to examine a more general question:

Does democracy carry within it a poison pill that guarantees its own eventual destruction?

The modern democratic state — be it a constitutional republic, parliamentary democracy, or constitutional monarchy — has only been in existence for about 320 years, dating from the Glorious Revolution of 1688 when King James II of England was deposed and the power of the monarchy constitutionally limited. Or, if the Dutch Republic is taken as the benchmark, another century can be added to democracy’s pedigree.

The Althing in Iceland has governed continuously for more than a thousand years, but the Icelandic model is somewhat different from the rest of the European democracies, and is not the ancestor of any of the others. So, for our purposes, the Age of Democracy covers the last four hundred years — and may well be drawing rapidly to a close.

The fact that all modern Western democratic states are exhibiting varying degrees of the same morbid symptoms compels one to suspect that the disease is inherent in democracy itself, and not its particular forms, or the quality of its political leaders, or which countries it holds sway in.

Since I’m more familiar with the American system than any of the others, I’ll use it as my primary example. However, the same symptoms are well advanced in virtually every other democracy in Europe and the European diaspora.

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The United States began in 1787 as a constitutional republic, with the powers of the federal state carefully circumscribed and insulated from the possibility of easy tampering by demagogues and would-be tyrants.

However, the passage of time wore down the safeguards put in place by the Founders, and after the Civil War our system gradually morphed into a direct democracy, and then after 1945 into government by television poll. At the moment we seem to sliding rapidly through a brief phase of Social Democracy on our way to becoming a full-blown Union of North American Socialist Republics.
– – – – – – – –
James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, and the other architects of the Republic did their best to forestall the dystopian fate that now awaits us. The strict enumeration of federal powers, the Bill of Rights, the three separate branches of government — all of these were intended to check the unbridled power of the majority and so prevent a democratically-elected tyranny.

But, in the end, they failed.

For the last seventy-five years or so we have been governed extra-constitutionally. The instances of blatant usurpation of the sovereign power of the States and the people have increased dramatically in recent years. Virtually every important bill passed by Congress would be struck down by a conscientious president or a dutiful Supreme Court, if the system still functioned as designed.

Yet all these changes occurred within the rule of law, enacted by democratically-elected representatives of the people, and with at least the passive acquiescence of the electorate. No tanks rolled down Constitution Avenue to install a Pelosi junta. Barack Obama did not seize power through assassination or coup d’état.

The United States is racing past Europe in its haste to remove the last vestiges of accountability and popular sovereignty, but there is no sign that voters are ready to roll back what they have tacitly allowed for the last three generations.

Why?

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The rule of law and civil society are the crowning political achievements of European civilization. They existed before representative government, and were a necessary prerequisite for it. First came the King’s peace and a stable law-based state, then democracy was grafted on top of it.

MinutemanPeople who have just shaken off the yoke of violent tyranny tend to be vigilant about the rule of law when they finally live under it. That’s why formerly communist states like the Czech Republic are resisting the EU’s slide into post-democratic dictatorship — they’ve been there and done that, and they’re not ready to go back just yet.

A peaceful and prosperous civil society is a rare gift. Those who have only recently attained it are more likely to understand how precious it is, to safeguard it and be ready to defend it.

But peace and prosperity induce somnolence and amnesia. The current state of affairs comes to seem natural and normal. It is taken for granted, instead of being known for the fortunate anomaly that it actually is. We are living in a brief golden interlude of history: the normal state of human affairs is one of brutality, bloodshed, and barbarism. It will be all too easy to return to the old patterns as our vigilance wanes.

The democratic state begins with liberty as its ideal, the base on which all the other social and political structures grow. Peace and prosperity are the natural consequences of success in this endeavor, yet their accustomed presence induces a desire for security and a lack of conflict.

Eventually the warm cocoon of the omnipotent and omnipresent State becomes preferable to liberty itself.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *


The current political degradation of the United States could not have occurred fifty or sixty years ago. Back then children were still required to take civics classes and study the Constitution with a close attention to detail. The common responsibilities of a citizen of the Republic were better understood by the average citizen.

But the decline of education and the atomization and degradation of popular culture have eroded the average person’s ability to understand the nature of self-government. The idea of the federal government as a parental protector and bountiful source of life’s treasures is too entrenched to remove.

“Aha!” you say, “I know the reason for that — it’s a result of the rise of Socialism and the success of the Frankfurt School, which has entrenched itself throughout the major institutions of the West.”

And indeed this is true. Without the pernicious siren lure of Socialism, the body politic would not have been so easily and thoroughly corrupted.

But Socialism is not something extraneous to democracy. It isn’t an opportunistic virus from the outside that invaded the West and overcame its defenses.

Where do you think Socialism came from?

Africa? China? Mars?

Socialism was born in European democracy and gained its momentum by extending the democratic ideal to accomplish new goals. Socialism played on the principles of democracy by elaborating them into a metastasized fantasy of what human beings are or could become.

Socialism is inherent in the democratic impulse. If Karl Marx had not existed, it would have been necessary to invent him.

The proponents of Liberty said, “All men are created equal.”

The Socialists asked, “Why then are all men not equally wealthy?”

The proponents of Liberty said, “Everyone has a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

The Socialists asked, “What about all the other rights, such as the right to a job, the right to an adequate income, the right to a good education, and the right to the best health care?”

The proponents of Liberty said, “Freedom is the highest aspiration of mankind.”

The Socialists retorted, “No one can be truly free unless all are equally well-off.”

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All Western democracies are now Socialist states in varying degrees. In just under a century, the overweening State has assumed most of the responsibilities that had hitherto been undertaken by the people themselves. The State guarantees your income, treats you when you are ill, takes care of you when you are old, and “educates” your children — assuming that you bother to have any.

The State determines what will make you safe and healthy, and then forces you to engage in those activities. The State decides how your house will be constructed and what sort of vehicle you must drive. The State requires you to sort your garbage. The State decides what terminology you must use when describing people of a different race or sex.

The State takes care of you from cradle to grave — or, as Willard Scott put it, from Pampers to Depends. The State is that big warm fuzzy friendly cookie monster who envelops us in its strong arms and forces us to brush our teeth and take our castor oil.

The all-pervading State is a consequence of the feminization of democratic society. The requirement that society be safe, all-inclusive, and free of conflict is a quintessentially feminine notion. Liberty — a quintessentially masculine notion — takes a back seat when women start to drive the democracy bus.

But, once again, feminization is the natural and inevitable result of sustained peace and prosperity. It is inherent in the democratic process. When violence and brutality resume their time-honored course, the feminized superstructure of our culture will be discarded quickly enough. Until then, everybody has to drink their milk, play nice, and share their toys.

Or else!

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Above all else, the State extracts wealth from its compliant subjects.

The democratic process leads inexorably to the modern welfare state, and the smothering blanket of social welfare requires ever-increasing amounts of money to redistribute to its clients.

Human nature being what it is, the more the State gives out in “free” benefits, the more outstretched hands there are eager to grab the goodies.

Without the need of children to take care of them in their old age, people have fewer kids.

Without the need to hold a job to prevent starvation, fewer people work.

A decrease in the productive portion of the population requires higher and higher taxes.

Sometime in the next quarter-century the promises made to retired people, the disabled, the unemployed, and other beneficiaries of the State will have to be broken. Taxes could rise to 100%, and the revenue would still not be enough to pay for all the Social Security, universal health care, and social welfare programs for the non-productive half of the population.

The current system cannot sustain itself. It will break. It has to break.

Socialized America will fail.

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We’re facing the unavoidable endgame of democracy. It’s not a pretty sight.

But the demise of democracy does not necessarily mean the demise of Western civilization. Nations have formed and flourished without democracy in the past, and not all of them were brutal tyrannies. In fact, some of them offered more freedom and opportunity than citizens of Western Europe and the United States enjoy today.

Western culture is about to be transmuted into something else, something new, but not entirely different from what we know. The process of transformation may become unpleasant and deadly. Our task, as Fjordman has often pointed out, is to preserve what is good and valuable and true about the civilization we have inherited, and to leave something worthwhile for those who come after us.

You will know changes soon.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/26/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/26/2009The G8 group is busy once again, lamenting corruption in Afghanistan, condemning North Korea, and telling Israel to put a stop to settlements in the West Bank.

In other news, former Prime Minister Agim Ceku of Kosovo was released again, after being arrested in Bulgaria on a Serbian war crimes warrant.

Thanks to C. Cantoni, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, JD, Steen, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
California, Here We Come!
China Decision to Buy $80 Billion of Gold, The Dragon’s Hoard
Italy: Fini, No Salary Restrictions But Contract Freedom
Obama’s Mistakes
U.S. Stocks Drop as Savings Rate Hits 15-Year High, Oil Falls
 
USA
AP Sources: Obama Eyeing Order for Gitmo Detainees
Homeland Security and US Army Plan Invasion of States
House Passes Bill to Address Threat of Climate Change
House Passes Major Energy-Climate Bill
Obama Gets Billions for ‘Pandemic’ Swine Flu
Obama Wants to Let Those Pesky Geezers Die
Proposed Federal Law Would be a Hate Crime Against America
The NSA’s New Data-Mining Facility is One Component of a Growing Local Surveillance Industry
 
Europe and the EU
All the Denarii of Peter: Vices and Virtues of the Vatican Bank
Concentration Camp Bordellos
Danish Police Chief: Stop Supporting Rejected Iraqis
Denmark: Terrorism Conviction Upheld
Dutch State Plans Further 2.5 Bln Euros for Abn Amro
EU: We Want US Climate Bill to Succeed
Germany Seeks to Build Bridges With Muslim Community
Greenland: China Snubs Climate Minister After Lama Meeting
Hells Angels Win Another Dutch Legal Battle
Holocaust Assets Conference Opens in Prague
Italy to Up Women’s Retirement Age
Italy: Premier Unfazed by Media Storm
Italy: PM to ‘Respond’ To Sex Scandal Claims
Netherlands: CDA Wants to Put Teen Gangs in Camps Collectively
Netherlands: Sharp Increase in Armed Robberies
Netherlands: Go to Church, Minister Tells Wilders
Protesters Break Into Iranian Embassy in Sweden
Spanish Lawmakers Vote to Clip Judges’ Wings
The Genocide Britain Hushed Up
Too Much Time Online Strains Irish Marriages
United Arab Emirates to Open Embassy in Budapest
 
Balkans
Kosovo Ex-Prime Minister Released From Detention
Serbia Charges Kosovo Ex-Rebels for War Crimes
 
North Africa
Algeria: Kabylie Remembers Matoub the ‘Rebel’
Algeria Wins Battle Over Golden Boy Khalifa Extradition
 
Israel and the Palestinians
G-8 to Israel: End Settlements, Open Borders
Israel: Tough Prison Terms for Two Ex-Ministers
Shalit: Rome Awards Honorary Citizenship
The Late Great State of Israel: How Enemies Without and Within Threaten the Jewish Nation’s Survival
 
Middle East
Ahmadinejad Promises to Shake the Planet
G8 to Iran: End Violence, Reflect Will of People
Iran: Cleric Calls for ‘Savage’ Punishment for Protesters
Lebanon: Berri, The Irremovable President of Parliament
Lebanon: ‘Silicon’ Tourism Boom in the Summer
Tariq Ramadan: “We Cannot Accept a Dogmatic Interpretation of Islam”
Terror Group: ‘No Shame in Being Poor’
Turkey May Block Iraqi Kurds’ Participation in Nabucco
Turkey to Buy Weapons From US to Fight PKK
Turkey: Verdict on Mor Gabriel Monastery Land Expected
Turkey: PM Erdogan Tries to Revitalize EU Bid
Turkey: ‘Keep Your Hands Off the Military’
Turkey: Police Report on Dink Toned Down
 
Russia
Russia Won’t Participate in Jewish Documents Suit
 
South Asia
Danes Support Afghanistan Ops
G8 Foreign Ministers Lament Afghan Corruption
Orissa: Nun Raped by Hindu Extremists Recognizes One of Her Assailants
Thailand: Separatist Fighters Recruited in Islamic Schools
 
Far East
Britain Considered Japan Chemical Attack: Records
G8 Countries Condemn North Korea’s Missile Tests
 
Latin America
Brazil Calls Off Search for Air France Victims
US Safety Board Probing a-330 Cockpit Malfunctions
 
Immigration
1 in 5 UK Births is to a Mum From Abroad
47 Arrests as Calais Riot Fears Build Up
Obama’s Immigration Plot to Create More Illegal Immigration & One Party
 
General
Animal Fats Pancreas Cancer Link
For UN and Its Leader, Climate Deal Stakes High
Journalist Files Charges Against WHO and UN for Bioterrorism and Intent to Commit Mass Murder

Financial Crisis


California, Here We Come!

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — In just a few weeks time, California hits the wall.

And Americans should take a good, long look at the fiscal and social wreck of the Golden Land, because California is at a place to which all of America is heading.

In May, when five fund-raising proposals were put on the ballot, Gov. Schwarzenegger pleaded with the overtaxed Californians not to make their state “the poster child for dysfunction.”

As The Economist writes, “On May 18th, they did exactly that.”

Arnold went to the White House for U.S. loan guarantees for new state bonds. But with the president’s approval rating wilting because of a belief he is spending too much, the Obama-ites slammed the door.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



China Decision to Buy $80 Billion of Gold, The Dragon’s Hoard

“We’ve got a situation where Geithner is smiling and has no choice but to stress the credibility and stability of the US financial and economic system, while the creditors [such as the Chinese] smile back and say they believe him, while at the same time giving hand signals to their reserve managers to get rid of these things [U.S. Treasuries].” — Neil Mellor, Bank of New York-Mellon

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fini, No Salary Restrictions But Contract Freedom

(AGI) — Rome, 3 June — No to the old salary restrictions, yes to “more freedom on a regional and business level” based on productivity and employment. Speaker of the House Gianfranco Fini has opened the congress on Enterprise and Labour in the Constitution, in the presence of Confindustria president Emma Marcegaglia. He called for the need to reform the economic system. In this context Fini called a “renewed climate of collaboration between capital and labour”, “crucial”.

Regarding salaries, the Speaker of the House claimed: “personally I don’t believe that a return to the past of geographic diversification of salaries would have a positive impact on the country. It would separate the weaker regions of our country”. “We need more contractual freedom on a regional and business level, allowing all players to link salaries to productivity and the availability of manpower, wherever the company is located”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Mistakes

Chancellor Merkel Visits the Debt President

The occupant of the White House may have changed recently. But the amount of ill-advised ideology coming from Washington has remained constant. Obama’s list of economic errors is long — and continues to grow.

The president may have changed, but the excesses of American politics have remained. Barack Obama and George W. Bush, it has become clear, are more similar than they might seem at first glance.

DPA

US President Barack Obama has not been shy about public spending.

Ex-President Bush was nothing if not zealous in his worldwide campaign against terror, transgressing human rights and breaking international law along the way. Now, Obama is displaying the same zeal in his own war against the financial crisis — and his weapon of choice is the money-printing machine. The rules the new American president is breaking are those which govern the economy. Nobody is being killed. But the strategy comes at a price — and that price might be America’s position as a global power.

In his fight against terrorism, Bush had the ideologue Dick Cheney at his side. “We must take the battle to the enemy,” he said — and sent out the bomber squadrons toward Iraq on the basis of mere suspicion. The result of the offensive is well known.

Obama’s Cheney

Obama’s Cheney is named Larry Summers. He is Obama’s senior-most economic advisor, and like the former vice president, he is a man of conviction. The financial crisis may be large, but Summers’ self-confidence is even larger. More importantly, President Barack Obama follows him like a dog does its master.

The crisis, Summers intoned last week at a conference of Deutsche Bank’s Alfred Herrhausen Society in Washington, was caused by too much confidence, too much credit and too many debts. It was hard not to nod along in agreement.

But then Summers added that the way to bring about an end to the crisis was — more confidence, more credit and more debt. And the nodding stopped. Experts and non-experts alike were perplexed. Even in an interview following the presentation, Summers was unable to supply an adequate explanation for how a crisis caused by frivolous lending was going to be solved through yet more frivolity.

Summers has no misgivings, and doesn’t recognize those held by others. The fact that German Chancellor Angela Merkel recently gave a speech in which she was critical of the US economic stimulus program did not impress Summers. In our conversation, he said he thought Merkel’s position was a tactical one. “She only says that out of domestic concerns,” he said and rolled his eyes in disapproval. The battle must be taken to the enemy.

Just as the US public initially rallied behind the war President Bush — even to the point of re-electing him — Americans have now thrown their support behind the debt president Obama. The mistakes of the Bush administration are now widely accepted. The mistakes of the Obama administration are still not recognized as such. They are seen as the truth.

The Obama Administration’s Five Errors

Mistake number one: It’s not as bad as it seems. The US amassed much more debt during World War II, it is often said. That, though, is not true. According to conservative forecasts, Obama’s policies could end up being three times as expensive as US expenditures during World War II. If one calculates using today’s prices, America spent $3 trillion for the war. Obama’s budgetary calculations for the decade between 2010 and 2020 assume additional debt of $9 trillion.

Second: It is generally assumed that the money is part of an effort to resuscitate the crisis-plagued economy and is thus serving a good purpose. The truth of the matter is that the bulk of the borrowed money will be used to finance the normal US budget. American borrowing in 2009 comprises about half of Obama’s budget. The country is living beyond its means — and it still would have been even if it weren’t for the economic crisis.

The third error: Many believe that when the crisis ends, borrowing will automatically fall. The truth is that it could climb afterwards. The graying of American society creates a new fiscal policy challenge for the country that so far hasn’t been reflected in any budget plan. According to calculations by the International Monetary Fund, Washington would need to spend several times more than it is now just to service current pension entitlements and the free, state-funded medical care provided to senior citizens. In addition, Obama has promised to introduce healthcare coverage for America’s close to 46 million uninsured. That would be like adding a country the size of Spain to the US.

Lost Trust

Fourth: The world believes that the US is borrowing money from capital markets. It is often said that the Chinese and the Japanese will buy government bonds. But the truth of the matter is that trust in the gravitas and reliability of the United States has suffered to such a great degree that fewer and fewer foreigners are purchasing its government bonds. That’s why the Federal Reserve is now buying securities that it has printed itself. The Fed’s balance sheet has more than doubled since 2007, making the US central bank one of the world’s fastest-growing companies. The purpose of this company, though, is to create money out of thin air.

Fallacy No. 5: The additional money is harmless because the economy is starting to pull together again and there is no threat of inflation. The truth is that the quiet on the inflation front is deceptive. The hot money is accumulating in people’s savings accounts and in the balance sheets of banks that aren’t keen to lend money at the moment. The supply of money has increased by 45 percent in the last three years and there has not been a corresponding rise in hard assets or production. That imbalance will eventually make itself felt in the form of inflation.

The dollar, which has already lost 40 percent of its value against the euro since 2000, would then devaluate and its reputation would be further diminished. The world’s reserve currency could be pushed through the floor by the shockwaves. At that point, those waves would also wash over the rest of the world. Then people would have to look back and say that the means the US used to fight the economic crisis in fact paved the way for a currency crisis.

The German response to the excesses of the Bush era was refusal and obstinacy. Gerhard Schröder refused to go to war in Iraq with America and he organized a European resistance front the reached from Moscow to Paris.

Germany still hasn’t provided its response to the Obama administration’s fiscal policy excesses. Perhaps its time for Merkel to take her cue from Schröder.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



U.S. Stocks Drop as Savings Rate Hits 15-Year High, Oil Falls

June 26 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell and were poised for the first two-week decline since March after the highest American savings rate in 15 years spurred concern that consumer spending will slow and oil retreated. The dollar dropped after China’s central bank reiterated a call for a worldwide currency.

Exxon Mobil Corp. and Tesoro Corp. dropped as crude oil futures lost 1.3 percent to $69.32 a barrel. Eli Lilly & Co. led declines by health-care companies as Senator Max Baucus said an industry overhaul may be affordable for Congress. The dollar slumped 0.8 percent against the currencies of six trading partners as China sought to replace it.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index decreased 0.4 percent to 916.46 at 2:30 p.m. in New York. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 55.32 points, or 0.7 percent, to 8,417.08. The Russell 2000 Index of small companies dropped 0.2 percent. Russell indexes will undergo their annual rebalancing after the close of trading today to reflect changes in market value over the past year.

“The magnitude of that savings rate may have gotten some folks by surprise,” said Philip Orlando, who helps manage $409 billion as chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors Inc. in New York. Economic and earnings growth is “potentially not going to be as robust as some were thinking. That’s weighing on stocks.”

While the stock market has rebounded since March on optimism the deterioration in the global economy will slow, U.S. business activity is probably contracting for a fourth consecutive quarter, according to economists’ estimates. The S&P 500, which advanced 36 percent in 3 1/2 months through yesterday, has fallen 0.5 percent since June 19.

$1.95 Trillion

The Dollar Index fell 0.8 percent to 79.84. The restatement of Governor Zhou Xiaochuan’s proposal in March added to speculation that China will diversify its currency reserves, the world’s largest at more than $1.95 trillion. Chinese investors, the biggest foreign owners of U.S. Treasuries, reduced holdings by $4.4 billion in April to $763.5 billion after Premier Wen Jiabao expressed concern about the value of dollar assets.

“Long-term concern about the dollar is something globally we’re all worried about,” said Eric Teal, who oversees $5 billion as chief investment officer at First Citizens Bank in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Energy companies in the S&P 500 declined 0.8 percent as a group, the most among 10 industries. Exxon slumped 1 percent to $69.15. Tesoro decreased 2.2 percent to $12.74. Crude oil dropped after the Commerce Department said the savings rate among Americans rose to a 15-year high of 6.9 percent.

‘Deflationary Bias’

The income and spending data “reflects a deflationary bias in the economy,” said Kevin Caron, a Florham Park, New Jersey- based money manager at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. “Why pay 18 times earnings for an economy with a deflationary burden on its shoulders?”

The 40 percent rally in the S&P 500 from March 9 through June 12 pushed its valuation to almost 17 times its companies’ estimated operating earnings over the coming year, the highest since the index peaked in October 2007. The valuation fell to under 10 times estimated profit in November 2008.

Quarterly profits at the 495 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported results since April 7 dropped 32 percent on average, according to Bloomberg data. Analysts expect annual earnings in the measure to decline 15 percent before rebounding 22 percent in 2010, estimates compiled by Bloomberg show.

Protests From Lawmakers

Health-care companies in the S&P 500 slumped 0.5 percent as a group. Baucus, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said the cost of health-care options being weighed by his panel can be cut to $1 trillion over 10 years and won’t add to the deficit, citing the Congressional Budget Office.

The non-partisan budget office last week delivered an informal cost estimate of $1.6 trillion for the legislation to overhaul the health-care system, sparking protests from both Republicans and Democrats and prompting Baucus to say his panel may delay consideration of a bill until next month.

Eli Lilly lost 0.9 percent to $35. King Pharmaceuticals Inc. dropped 1.1 percent to $9.72. Pfizer Inc. slumped 1.5 percent to $15.10.

KB Home fell the most in the S&P 500, sliding 9.6 percent to $13.35. The Los Angeles-based homebuilder that targets first- time buyers reported a second-quarter net loss that was 53 percent bigger than the average analyst estimate, according to Bloomberg data.

Chip Glut

Micron Technology Inc. dropped 3.8 percent to $5.10. The biggest U.S. maker of computer-memory chips said its third- quarter net loss widened as slowing electronics demand and an industry glut kept prices below the cost of production.

UBS AG fell 6 percent to $12.19. The European bank with the biggest losses from the credit crisis raised about 3.8 billion Swiss francs ($3.5 billion) by selling shares and said it expects a second-quarter loss.

Led by financial companies seeking to rebuild balance sheets eroded by rising delinquency rates on mortgage-backed and other forms of debt, U.S. companies are creating new equity at the fastest pace on record, causing future earnings to be divided among a larger number of shares. During the second quarter, 195 public companies have raised $91.9 billion by selling additional shares.

Declines in U.S. banks were limited as a key lending rate fell below 0.6 percent for the first time as central banks increased lending to financial institutions and signaled official rates will stay at record lows.

The cost of borrowing dollars for three months in London, called the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, declined to 0.598 percent from 0.601 percent, extending its decline this year to 0.83 point. The rate, a benchmark for about $360 trillion of financial products around the world, peaked at 4.82 percent on Oct. 10 following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on Sept. 15.

Palm Inc. surged 17 percent to $16.38. The maker of the new Pre phone reported a smaller fourth-quarter loss than analysts estimated after sales fell less than predicted.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


AP Sources: Obama Eyeing Order for Gitmo Detainees

WASHINGTON — Stymied by Congress so far, the White House is considering issuing an executive order to indefinitely imprison a small number of Guantanamo Bay detainees considered too dangerous to prosecute or release, two administration officials said Friday.

No final decisions have been made about the order, which would be the third major mandate by President Barack Obama to deal with how the United States treats and prosecutes terror suspects and foreign fighters.

One of the officials said the order, if issued, would not take effect until after the Oct. 1 start of the upcoming 2010 fiscal year. Already, Congress has blocked the administration from spending any money this year to imprison the detainees in the United States — which in turn could slow or even halt Obama’s pledge to close the Navy prison in Cuba by Jan. 21.

The administration also is considering asking Congress to pass new laws that would allow the indefinite detentions, the official said.

Both of the officials spoke Friday on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the still-tentative issue publicly. The possibility of an executive order was first reported by ProPublica and The Washington Post.

“A number of options are being considered,” said one of the officials.

Asked if the detainees would be indefinitely held overseas or in the United States, the official said: “There’s not really a lot of options overseas.”

Christopher Anders, senior legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union Washington office, says the organization strongly opposes any plans for indefinite detention of prisoners.

“We’re saying it shouldn’t be done at all,” he said Friday.

The Senate Armed Services Committee just completed work on its FY-2010 defense authorization bill. It was silent on the matter of indefinite detentions, according to a Senate aide familiar with the bill.

Without legislative backing, an executive order is the only route Obama has to get the needed authority.

The order also would only apply to current detainees at Guantanamo — and not ones caught and held in future counterinsurgent battles.

There are 229 detainees currently being held at Guantanamo. At least 11 are expected to be tried in military tribunals, and several others have been transferred to United States for prosecution by civilian federal courts.

Still others, including four Chinese Muslims known as Uighurs who were transferred to Bermuda earlier this month, have been sent to foreign nations. The Obama administration is trying to relocate as many as 100 Yemeni detainees to Saudi Arabia for rehabilitation.

Obama said last month he was looking at continued imprisonment for a small number of Guantanamo detainees whom he described as too dangerous to release. He called it “the toughest issue we will face.”

“I am not going to release individuals who endanger the American people,” Obama said during a May 21 speech at the National Archives. “Al-Qaida terrorists and their affiliates are at war with the United States, and those that we capture — like other prisoners of war — must be prevented from attacking us again.”

It’s not clear how many detainees could fall into that category. Defense and Justice Department officials have privately said at least some could be freed at trial because prosecutors would be reluctant to expose classified evidence against the detainees. Some of that evidence also might be thrown out because of how it was obtained — potentially by cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

A Pentagon task force is currently reviewing every case to see which are eligible for transfer or release; which could face trial in civilian U.S. courts; which are best suited to some version of a military commission; and which are believed too dangerous to free.

Underscoring the difficulty of where to send the detainees before Guantanamo closes, a senior Defense official said some detainees who were picked up as enemy combatants cannot be charged with war crimes or terrorism even though they are believed to pose a threat. If no country volunteers to take them, traditional law of war authority allows the United States government to hold them till the end of hostilities, said the official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

Civil rights advocates and constitutional scholars accused Obama of parroting the detention policies they used to lambaste former Republican President George W. Bush.

“Prolonged imprisonment without trial is exactly the Guantanamo system that the president promised to shut down,” Shayana Kadidal, a senior attorney for the Center for Constitutional Rights, said in a statement Friday.

She added: “If the last eight years have taught us anything, it’s that executive overreach, left to continue unchecked for many years, has a tendency to harden into precedent.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Homeland Security and US Army Plan Invasion of States

The Pentagon and Department of Homeland Security recently hosted a teleconference for law enforcement agencies and associations such as the National Association of Chiefs of Police to discuss the Obama Administration’s interest in using the military during “emergencies.”

[…]

However, many law enforcement executives and organizations went on the record saying they did not appreciate the prospect of federal troops usurping the authority of local and state law enforcement agencies or the role of the National Guard unit currently under the control of governors.

“My initial reaction is: why are we allowing federal troops to basically invade the sovereignty of individual states when each state has its own law enforcement agencies and each state possesses an armed and trained National Guard and, in the case of some states such as New York, a trained militia?” according to New York police officer Edna Aquino.

“We have not used armed federal troops in New York since the Civil War when Union troops and Navy battleships attacked dissenters who opposed conscription by the Union Army,” she added.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



House Passes Bill to Address Threat of Climate Change

WASHINGTON — Overcoming deep divisions within its Democratic majority, the House passed legislation on Friday intended to address the threat of global warming and transform the way the United States produces and uses energy.

The vote was the first time either house of Congress had approved a bill intended to curb the heat-trapping gases scientists have linked to climate change, and its provisions could lead to sweeping changes in many sectors of the American economy, including electric power generation, agriculture, manufacturing and construction. The House vote also establishes a marker for the United States when international negotiations on a new global climate change treaty begin later this year.

“This legislation will break our dependence on foreign oil, make our nation a leader in clean energy jobs and cut global warming pollution,” said Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, a co-sponsor of the bill, adding that Friday’s vote was a “decisive and historic action” that would position the United States as a leader in energy efficiency and technology.

The bill’s provisions forcing reductions in the use of fossil fuel while increasing production of alternative energy sources would produce millions of new jobs, Mr. Waxman said.

But the legislation, a patchwork of compromises, falls far short of what many European governments and environmentalists have said is needed to avert the worst impacts of global warming. And it has pitted liberal Democrats from both coasts against more conservative Democrats from areas dependent on coal for electricity and heavy manufacturing for jobs.

Friday’s vote illustrated that rift: The bill passed by a seven-vote margin, with 44 Democrats voting against it.

As difficult as passage in the House proved, it is just the beginning of the energy and climate debate in Congress, since the issue now moves to the Senate, where political divisions and regional differences are even starker.

At the heart of the legislation is a cap-and-trade system that sets an overall limit on emissions of heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide while allowing utilities, manufacturers and other emitters to trade pollution permits, or allowances, among themselves. The cap grows increasingly tighter over the years, pushing up the price of emissions and presumably driving industry to find cleaner ways of producing energy.

While some environmental groups supported the legislation, others — Greenpeace, for example — vigorously opposed it. Business groups were also split. Republican leaders called the bill a national energy tax and predicted that those who voted for the measure would pay a heavy price at the polls next year.

“No matter how you doctor it or tailor it,” said Representative Joe Pitts, Republican of Pennsylvania, “it is a tax.”

Only eight Republicans voted for the bill, which runs to more than 1,300 pages.

Apart from its domestic implications, the bill is a show of resolve that American officials can point to when negotiating the new global climate change treaty, after years of American objections to binding limits on carbon dioxide emissions…

[Return to headlines]



House Passes Major Energy-Climate Bill

WASHINGTON — In a triumph for President Barack Obama, the Democratic-controlled House narrowly passed sweeping legislation Friday that calls for the nation’s first limits on pollution linked to global warming and aims to usher in a new era of cleaner, yet more costly energy.

The vote was 219-212, capping months of negotiations and days of intense bargaining among Democrats. Republicans were overwhelmingly against the measure, arguing it would destroy jobs in the midst of a recession while burdening consumers with a new tax in the form of higher energy costs.

At the White House, Obama said the bill would create jobs, and added that with its vote, the House had put America on a path toward leading the way toward “creating a 21st century global economy.”

The House’s action fulfilled Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s vow to clear major energy legislation before July 4. It also sent the measure to a highly uncertain fate in the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid said he was “hopeful that the Senate will be able to debate and pass bipartisan and comprehensive clean energy and climate legislation this fall.”

Obama lobbied recalcitrant Democrats by phone from the White House as the House debate unfolded across several hours, and Al Gore posted a statement on his Web site saying the measure represents “an essential first step towards solving the climate crisis.” The former vice president won a Nobel Peace Prize for his work drawing attention to the destructive potential of global warming.

On the House floor, Democrats hailed the legislation as historic, while Republicans said it would damage the economy without solving the nation’s energy woes.

It is “the most important energy and environmental legislation in the history of our country,” said Rep. Ed Markey of Massachusetts. “It sets a new course for our country, one that steers us away from foreign oil and towards a path of clean American energy.”

But Rep. John Boehner, the House Republican leader, used an extraordinary one-hour speech shortly before the final vote to warn of unintended consequences in what he said was a “defining bill.” He called it a “bureaucratic nightmare” that would cost jobs, depress real estate prices and put the government into parts of the economy where it now has no role.

The legislation would require the U.S. to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 and by about 80 percent by mid-century. That was slightly more aggressive than Obama originally wanted, 14 percent by 2020 and the same 80 percent by mid-century.

U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels are rising at about 1 percent a year and are predicted to continue increasing without mandatory limits.

Under the bill, the government would limit heat-trapping pollution from factories, refineries and power plants and issue allowances for polluters. Most of the allowances would be given away, but about 15 percent would be auctioned by bid and the proceeds used to defray higher energy costs for lower-income individuals and families.

“Some would like to do more. Some would like to do less,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., said in advance of the final vote. “But we have reached a compromise … and it is a compromise that can pass this House, pass that Senate, be signed by the president and become law and make progress.”

That seemed unlikely, judging from Reid’s cautiously worded statement. “The bill is not perfect,” it said, but rather “a good product” for the Senate to begin working on.

And there was plenty to work on in a House-passed measure that pointed toward higher electricity bills for the middle class, particularly in the Midwest and South, as well as steps to ease the way for construction of new nuclear reactors, the first to be built since the accident at Three Mile Island in 1979.

The bill’s controversy was on display in the House, where only eight Republicans joined 211 Democrats in favor, while 44 Democrats joined 168 Republicans in opposition. And within an hour of the vote, both party campaign committees had begun attacking lawmakers for their votes.

One of the biggest compromises involved the near total elimination of an administration plan to sell pollution permits and raise more than $600 billion over a decade — money to finance continuation of a middle class tax cut. About 85 percent of the permits are to be given away rather than sold, a concession to energy companies and their allies in the House — and even that is uncertain to survive in the Senate.

The final bill also contained concessions to satisfy farm-state lawmakers, ethanol producers, hydroelectric advocates, the nuclear industry and others, some of them so late that they were not made public until 3 a.m. on Friday.

Supporters and opponents agreed the bill’s result would be higher energy costs but disagreed vigorously on the impact on consumers. Democrats pointed to two reports — one from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and the other from the Environmental Protection Agency — that suggested average increases would be limited after tax credits and rebates were taken into account. The CBO estimated the bill would cost an average household $175 a year, the EPA $80 to $110 a year.

Republicans questioned the validity of the CBO study and noted that even that analysis showed actual energy production costs increasing $770 per household. Industry groups have cited other studies showing much higher costs to the economy and to individuals.

The White House and congressional Democrats argued the bill would create millions of “green jobs” as the nation shifts to greater reliance on renewable energy sources such as wind and solar and development of more fuel-efficient vehicles — and away from use of fossil fuels such as oil, gas and coal.

It will “make our nation the world leader on clean energy jobs and technology,” declared Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., who negotiated deals with dozens of lawmakers in recent weeks to broaden the bill’s support.

Pelosi, D-Calif., took an intense personal interest in the measure, sitting through hours of meetings with members of the rank and file and nurturing fragile compromises.

At its heart, the bill was a trade-off, less than the White House initially sought though it was more than Republicans said was acceptable. Some of the dealmaking had a distinct political feel. Rep. Alan Grayson, a first-term Democrat, won a pledge of support that $50 million from the proceeds of pollution permit sales in the bill would go to a proposed new hurricane research facility in his district in Orlando, Fla.

In the run-up to the vote, Democrats left little to chance.

Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Calif., confirmed by the Senate on Thursday to an administration post, put off her resignation from Congress until after the final vote on the climate change bill. And Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., who has been undergoing treatment at an undisclosed facility, returned to the Capitol to support the legislation. He has said he struggles with depression, alcoholism and addiction, but has not specified the cause for his most recent absence.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Obama Gets Billions for ‘Pandemic’ Swine Flu

In the United States, the Obama Administration has strong-armed the US Congress to appropriate 300% more money for Swine Flu ‘preparedness’ than Congress planned. Responding to lobbying by the Obama administration, the US Congress has approved an eye-popping $7.65 billion for the non-proven pandemic influenza.

Curiously enough, the money was included in a $106 billion supplemental appropriation bill for funding the military wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The war on pig flu now seems to rank alongside the Ware on Terror the war on Iraqis and Afghanis as US policy priority.

Most of the pandemic money is for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), but the bill includes $350 million to increase state and local capacity for responding to H1N1. The bill provides $1.5 billion in fiscal year 2009 money and $5.8 billion in “contingent emergency appropriations” for HHS and the CDC.

The funds are to be used for expanding surveillance, increasing federal stockpiles of drugs and medical supplies, and developing, buying, and administering vaccines.

[…]

Even the CDC and WHO admit that symptoms of swine flu are mild. But we are being bombarded with propaganda from WHO, CDC and now Robert Koch Institute telling us that this Swine Flu H1N1 ‘could evolve’ into something more aggressive.

Germany has a reported 275 ‘confirmed’ cases of H1N1. Yet there exists no test that confirms presence of H1N1 virus as even the WHO and CDC admit, so one might wonder how they have been confirmed for what? To her credit, at least to date Chancellor Merkel has chosen not to go berserk as has the Obama Administration to prepare billions of taxpayer dollars for a virus which to date has not even been confirmed as the sole cause of a single human death and whose effects otherwise are comparable to a bad cold and disappear within normally five days. Are we being taken for absolute idiots?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Wants to Let Those Pesky Geezers Die

In a rare moment of candor, President Obama explained to an audience how government-run healthcare would work in America.

According to the Los Angeles Times:

“President Obama suggested at a town hall event Wednesday night that one way to shave medical costs is to stop expensive and ultimately futile procedures performed on people who are about to die and don’t stand to gain from the extra care.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Proposed Federal Law Would be a Hate Crime Against America

“We’re not going to win this case, but that’s okay. Once we get ‘hate crime’ laws on the books, we’re going to go after the Scouts and all the other bigots.”

This was a remark made in the gallery by the Clinton White House liaison for “gay” issues during U.S. Supreme Court hearings on the Boy Scouts case in 2000. She had whispered it to the Rev. Rob Schenck, whom she mistakenly thought was one of those liberal clerics who think God is still making up His mind about sexual morality.

The point is that the proposed federal “hate crime” law before the Senate is less about righting wrongs than it is about elevating sexual preferences — all of them — to civil rights status so they can be used as a battering ram against people with traditional values.

[…]

Here’s how the law would work in practice: It would add penalties on top of those levied for criminal convictions, based on the perpetrators’ perceived beliefs or the victims’ group identification. In order to prove that the defendant holds particular beliefs, his or her speech, writing, reading materials and organizational memberships would become key evidence. “Have you now, or have you ever been involved with a homophobic organization (like, say, Catholic Charities)?”

Two paragraphs were inserted to mollify such concerns:

(3) CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS- Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit any constitutionally protected speech, expressive conduct or activities (regardless of whether compelled by, or central to, a system of religious belief), including the exercise of religion protected by the First Amendment and peaceful picketing or demonstration. The Constitution does not protect speech, conduct or activities consisting of planning for, conspiring to commit, or committing an act of violence.

(4) “FREE EXPRESSION- Nothing in this Act shall be construed to allow prosecution based solely upon an individual’s expression of racial, religious, political, or other beliefs or solely upon an individual’s membership in a group advocating or espousing such beliefs.”

But American Civil Rights Union (ACRU) attorney John Armor notes, “This is a head fake for citizens who don’t understand freedom of speech protections.”

Ken Klukowski, an ACRU senior legal analyst, explains, “Paragraph (3) is only a statement of the obvious, so it has no legal effect. No statute can abridge constitutionally-protected speech. If any speech is burdened, and the speaker files suit, then the process and the result is the same regardless of whether there is any paragraph such as (3). The court then looks to the speech in question, the nature of the burden on that speech, and what protection the First Amendment extends to that particular speech. The court does not look to language such as (3) in deciding the case. If the burden in the specific case is unconstitutional, then it’s impermissible whether the statute acknowledges the fact or not. So (3) is just there to help pass the bill by giving people a talking point to say ‘this law does nothing to violate anyone’s free speech rights.’ It makes no difference in court whatsoever.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The NSA’s New Data-Mining Facility is One Component of a Growing Local Surveillance Industry

[Comment from JD: old article, but still interesting.]

Surrounded by barbwire fencing, the anonymous yet massive building on West Military Drive near San Antonio’s Loop 410 freeway looms mysteriously with no identifying signs of any kind. Surveillance is tight, with security cameras surrounding the under-construction building. Readers are advised not to take any photos unless you care to be detained for at least a 45-minute interrogation by the National Security Agency, as this reporter was.

There’s a strangely blurry line during such an interrogation. After viewing the five photos I’d taken of the NSA’s new Texas Cryptology Center, the NSA officer asked if I would delete them. When I asked if he was ordering me to do so, he said no; he was asking as a personal favor. I declined and was eventually released.

America’s top spy agency has taken over the former Sony microchip plant and is transforming it into a new data-mining headquarters — oddly positioned directly across the street from a 24-hour Walmart — where billions of electronic communications will be sifted in the agency’s mission to identify terrorist threats.

“No longer able to store all the intercepted phone calls and e-mail in its secret city, the agency has now built a new data warehouse in San Antonio, Texas,” writes author James Bamford in the Shadow Factory, his third book about the NSA. “Costing, with renovations, upwards of $130 million, the 470,000-square-foot facility will be almost the size of the Alamodome. Considering how much data can now be squeezed onto a small flash drive, the new NSA building may eventually be able to hold all the information in the world.”

[…]

So just what will be going on inside the NSA’s new San Antonio facility? Bamford describes former NSA Director Mike Hayden’s goals for the data-mining center as knowing “exactly what Americans were doing day by day, hour by hour, and second by second. He wanted to know where they shopped, what they bought, what movies they saw, what books they read, the toll booths they went through, the plane tickets they purchased, the hotels they stayed in… In other words, Total Information Awareness, the same Orwellian concept that John Poindexter had tried to develop while working for the Pentagon’s [Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency].”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


All the Denarii of Peter: Vices and Virtues of the Vatican Bank

Two hundred million dollars for the “pope’s charity.” Where does it come from? Where does it go? New revelations on the malfeasance of the Institute for Works of Religion. And on the obstacles posed to its rehabilitation

by Sandro Magister

ROME, June 15, 2009 — In early July, the Vatican will publish its financial report for 2008, as it does every year, in two chapters plus an appendix.

The first chapter will list the income and expenditures of the Amministrazione del Patrimonio della Sede Apostolica, APSA, which manages the fixed and current assets owned by itself, the curia, the diplomatic corps, the publishing house, the radio and television stations.

The second chapter will list the income and expenditures of the “governorate” of Vatican City State: land, services, museums, stamps, coins.

The appendix will present the total of the Peter’s Pence, the collection for the pope taken all over the world every year on June 29, the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, plus the donations made directly to the pope over the course of the year.

In 2007, for example, the collection and donations totaled 94.1 million dollars, 14.3 million of which came from a single donor who wanted to remain anonymous.

This is what is published each year.

Nothing else. Not a line about the other income, apart from the Peter’s Pence, that feeds into the “pope’s charity.” And not a line about how this sum is used.

There is an office in the secretariat of state that deals with precisely this matter. It was directed for many years by Monsignor Gianfranco Piovano, who was replaced a few months ago by Monsignor Alberto Perlasca. Both men are career diplomats. In addition to the Peter’s Pence, its funding is provided by the contributions that the dioceses all over the world are required to make to the successor of Peter, according to canon 1271 of the code of canon law. Money is also sent by the religious congregations and foundations. In 2007, according to a confidential report that the Vatican sent to the dioceses, these contributions amounted to 29.5 million dollars, which together with the Peter’s Pence total 123.6 million dollars.

This money is earmarked for the “pope’s charity.” In a lecture to diplomats from various countries in the Middle East and North Africa, given in Rome at the Pontifical Gregorian University in May of 2007, the banker Angelo Caloia, president of the Istituto per le Opere di Religione, IOR, the “Vatican bank,” described the use of this money:

“It is directed above all to the material needs of poor dioceses, to religious institutes and communities in grave difficulty: the poor, children, the elderly, the marginalized, victims of wars and natural disasters, refugees, etcetera.”

In that same lecture, moreover, Caloia referred to another funding source of the “pope’s charity”: the profits of the IOR. In March of every year, in fact, the IOR makes entirely available to the pope the difference between its income and expenditures during the previous year. This total is kept secret, but it is believed to be close to that of the Peter’s Pence. At least this was the case in the four years for which figures were leaked. It came to 60.7 billion Italian lire in 1992, 72.5 billion in 1993, 75 billion in 1994, and 78.3 billion in 1995. During those same years, the Peter’s Pence was just slightly above these amounts.

Given this state of affairs, 2007 should have brought Benedict XVI, for his “charity,” a sum total of about two hundred million dollars.

During that same year, the ledgers showed a deficit of 9.1 million euros for APSA, and a surplus of 6.7 million euros for the “governorate”. Chopped liver, by comparison.

***

Caloia said little about the IOR in his lecture to the diplomats. He emphasized that this “does not have a functional relationship” with the Holy See. And he stated that the only authorized depositors are “individuals or persons juridically endowed with canonical legitimacy: cardinals, bishops, priests, sisters, brothers, religious congregations, dioceses, chapters, parishes, foundations, etcetera.”

But the reality has not always corresponded to this description. When Caloia became head of the Vatican bank in 1990, it had just emerged from a terrible deficit connected to the name of Caloia’s predecessor, Archbishop Paul Marcinkus, and to the reckless operations he undertook with the financiers Michele Sindona and Roberto Calvi, both of whom later died violent deaths under mysterious circumstances.

Cardinal Agostino Casaroli, the secretary of state at the time, had resolved the dispute by ordering that the creditors be paid 242 million dollars as a “voluntary contribution.” In an agreement with the Italian government, Casaroli appointed two specialists in finance and administrative law, Pellegrino Capaldo and Agostino Gambino, to investigate the operations of the Vatican bank, together with a prelate in the curia with his absolute trust, Monsignor Renato Dardozzi. Dardozzi was born in 1922 and became a priest at the age of 51. He received degrees in engineering, mathematics, philosophy, and theology, and was a telecommunications manager before finally becoming director and chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences.

From that time until a few years before his death in 2003, Dardozzi continued to oversee the operations of the IOR on behalf of the Vatican secretariat of state, with Casaroli and his successor, Cardinal Angelo Sodano.

Dardozzi documented his work of oversight. And this documentation has now been made public in a book recently released in Italy, written by Gianluigi Nuzzi and published by Chiarelettere.

The documents cited and reproduced in the book are absolutely reliable. They demonstrate that the removal of Marcinkus and his replacement by Caloia in 1990 was not enough to purge the IOR of malfeasance right away.

In fact, Monsignor Donato De Bonis stayed in the key role of “prelate” of the Vatican bank until 1993. And during those years, he launched a sort of parallel shadow bank, under his exclusive command, that again risked plunging the IOR into deficit.

It was in the spring of 1992 that Caloia began to suspect that there were irregularities. He ordered a thorough investigation, and verified that in effect De Bonis controlled accounts attributed to fictitious foundations, which in reality concealed illegal financial operations, for tens of billions of lire.

In August, a detailed report on these fake accounts came to the desk of the secretary of John Paul II, Monsignor Stanislaw Dziwisz.

De Bonis was removed from the IOR in March of 1993. No one replaced him in the post of the bank’s “prelate,” which remained vacant. De Bonis was consecrated bishop and appointed military chaplain of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, a role that enjoys diplomatic protections.

But even after his departure from the IOR, De Bonis continued to operate through officials connected to him. Alarmed by this, at the end of July Caloia wrote to cardinal secretary of state Sodano:

“… It is increasingly clear that criminal activity is being conducted deliberately by those who, according to their chosen way of life and the role they fulfill, should instead have provided a strict critical conscience. It is becoming more and more difficult to understand the continuation of a situation such that the person in question [De Bonis] continues, from a no less privileged position, to manage indirectly the activities of the IOR…”.

The risk was all the more severe in that, precisely during those months, the Italian judiciary was investigating a colossal “bribe” paid illegally by the company Enimont to the politicians who had favored it. And the investigations also led to the IOR, as a concealed intermediary for these payments through the fake accounts operated by De Bonis.

In the autumn of 1993, the magistrates in Milan asked the Vatican, by rogatory, to provide information on the disputed transactions. The Vatican complied by providing the minimum required, less than what it had discovered in its own investigations. Some officials were replaced, the fake accounts were blocked, and De Bonis did not recover so much as a lira of the funds deposited in them.

Along with De Bonis, the cardinal in the Vatican who had been his biggest support also left the scene, José Rosalio Castillo Lara, president of both the APSA and the “governorate”.

In 1995 Caloia was confirmed for another five-year term as president of the IOR. And again in 2000. And yet again in 2006, after a year’s extension “ad interim” amid insistent demands that he be replaced immediately. In the summer of 2006, before leaving the secretariat of state to his successor, Tarcisio Bertone, Cardinal Sodano nonetheless restored the post of “prelate” of the IOR, assigning it to one of his own secretaries, Monsignor Piero Pioppo.

There are still occasional calls for a change at the head of the IOR. But Caloia, 69, with an English wife and four children, is holding an appointment that lasts until March 14, 2011.

Without a doubt, thanks to him the IOR is getting closer — more so than ever before — to the image of the virtuous bank described in the lecture two years ago to the diplomats from the Middle East and North Africa.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Concentration Camp Bordellos

‘The Main Thing Was to Survive at All’

Concentration camp brothels remain a hushed-up chapter of the Nazi-era horrors. Now a German researcher has probed the dark subject — and has revealed the meticulous cruelty of the so-called “special buildings.”

Kicking them with his boots, the SS soldier drove Margarete W. and the other women prisoners out of the train and onto a truck. “Move the tarpaulin, put the flap down. Everyone get in,” he yelled. Through the plastic window in the truck’s canvas side, she watched as they drove into a men’s camp and stopped in front of a barracks with a wooden fence.

The women were taken into a furnished room. The barracks were different from the ones Margarete W., then 25, knew from her time at the Ravensbrück women’s concentration camp. There were tables, chairs, benches, windows, and even curtains. The female overseer informed the new arrivals that they were “now in a prisoners’ brothel.” They would live well there, the woman said, with good food and drink, and if they did as they were told, nothing would happen to them. Then each woman was assigned a room. Margarete W. moved into No. 13.

The prisoners’ brothel at the Buchenwald concentration camp opened on July 11, 1943. It was the fourth of a total of 10 so-called “special buildings” erected in concentration camps between 1942 and 1945, according to the instructions of Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS. He implemented a rewards scheme in the camps, whereby prisoners’ “particular achievements” earned them smaller workloads, extra food or monetary bonuses.

Himmler also considered it beneficial to “provide the hard-working prisoners with women in brothels,” as he wrote on March 23, 1942, to Oswald Pohl, the SS officer in charge of the concentration camps. Himmler’s cynical vision saw brothel visits increasing the forced laborers’ productivity in the quarries and munitions factories.

“Especially Perfidious”

It remains one of the lesser known aspects of Nazi terror that Sachsenhausen, Dachau and even Auschwitz included brothels, and that female concentration camp prisoners were forced into prostitution. Berlin-based cultural studies scholar Robert Sommer, 34, has scoured archives and concentration camp memorial sites around the world and carried out numerous interviews with historical witnesses over the past nine years. His study, which will be published this month, provides the first comprehensive, scientific survey of this “especially perfidious form of violence in the concentration camps.” His research has largely informed a traveling exhibition “Camp brothels — forced sex work in Nazi concentration camps,” which will tour several memorial sites next year.

Sommer delivers plenty of evidence to counter the legend that the Nazis forbade or resolutely fought prostitution. In fact, the regime enforced total surveillance of prostitution, both in Germany and its occupied territories — especially after war broke out. A comprehensive network of state-controlled brothels covered half of Europe during that period, which Sommer says consisted of “civil and military brothels, as well as those for forced laborers, and at the same time they were even part of the concentration camps.”

Austrian resistance fighter Antonia Bruha, who survived the Ravensbrück camp, reported years ago that, “the most beautiful women went to the SS brothel, the less beautiful ones to the soldiers’ brothel.”

And the rest ended up in the concentration camp brothel. In the Mauthausen camp in Austria, in the 10 small rooms of “Barrack 1,” the very first camp brothel began operation behind barred windows in June 1942. At that point there were around 5,500 prisoners in the Mauthausen work camp, hammering out stone in granite quarries for Nazi buildings. By the end of 1944, over 70,000 forced laborers lived in the entire camp complex.

The SS had recruited 10 women for Mauthausen, following the government security agency’s guidelines for erecting brothels in forced labor camps. This meant between 300 and 500 men per prostitute.

Altogether some 200 women shared the fate of the Mauthausen prisoners in the camp brothels. In particular healthy and good-looking women prisoners between the ages of 17 and 35 caught the eye of SS recruiters. More than 60 percent of them were of German nationality, but Polish women, those from the Soviet Union and one Dutch woman were transferred into the “special task forces.” The Nazis didn’t allow Jewish women for “racial hygiene” reasons. First the women were sent to the camp hospital, where they were given calcium injections, disinfection baths, better food and a stint under a sunlamp.

Between 300 and 500 Men Per Prostitute

Just under 70 percent of the female forced laborers who were coerced into prostitution had originally been imprisoned for being “antisocial.” In the camps, the women were labeled with a black triangle symbol. They included former prostitutes, whose presence was supposed to guarantee the “professional” running of the camp brothels, especially at the start. It was very easy for a woman to be judged as “antisocial,” for example if she failed to comply with instructions at work.

To what extent the women knowingly volunteered for these “special task forces” is debated. Robert Sommer cites Spanish resistance fighter Lola Casadell, who was brought to Ravensbrück in 1944. She said the head of her female barracks threatened: “Whoever wants to go to a brothel should come by my room. And I warn you, if there are no volunteers, we’ll fetch you with force.”

Historical witness Antonia Bruha, who was made to work in the hospital area of the concentration camp, remembers women “who came in voluntarily, because they’d been told they would be set free afterwards.” That promise was rejected out of hand by Himmler, who complained that “some lunatic in the women’s concentration camp, while selecting prostitutes for the camp brothels, told the female prisoners that whoever volunteered would be released after half a year.”

The Last Hope of Survival

But for many of the women living under the threat of death, serving in a brothel was their last hope of survival. “The main thing was that at least we had escaped the hell of Bergen-Belsen and Ravensbrück,” said Lieselotte B., who was a prisoner at the Mittelbau-Dora camp. “The main thing was to survive at all.” Whatever made them go along with the regime, the suggestion that they did so “voluntarily” is one reason “why the former brothel women are still stigmatized today,” explained Insa Eschebach, head of the memorial site at Ravensbrück.

In keeping with the Nazi’s racist hierarchy in the camps, first it was only Germans were allowed to visit the brothel, then foreigners as well. Jews were strictly forbidden. It was predominantly foremen, heads of barracks and other prominent camp occupants who were given this “bonus.” And they would first have to have the money for a ticket which cost two Reichsmarks. Twenty cigarettes in the canteen, meanwhile, cost three Reichsmarks.

Brothel visits were regulated by the SS, as were the opening hours. In Buchenwald, for example, the brothel was open from 7 to 10 p.m. They remained closed at times of water or electricity shortages, air raid warnings or during the transmission of Hitler’s speeches. Edgar Kupfer-Koberwitz, a prisoner at Dachau, described the system in his concentration camp journal: “You wait in the hall. An officer records the prisoner’s name and number. Then a number is called, and the name of the prisoner in question. Then you run to the room with that number. Each visit it’s a different number. You have 15 minutes, exactly 15 minutes.”

Privacy was a foreign concept in the concentration camps — and the brothels. The doors had spyholes and an SS soldier patrolled the hall. The prisoners had to take off their shoes and were to speak no more than absolutely necessary. Only the missionary position was allowed.

Often it didn’t even get as far as intercourse. Some men were no longer physically strong enough, and according to Sommer, “some had a greater need to talk with a woman again, or to feel her presence.”

The SS was very afraid of the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. The men were given disinfectant ointments in the hospital barracks before and after each brothel visit, and doctors took smear samples from the women to test for gonorrhea, and tested their blood for syphilis.

Contraception, on the other hand, was one aspect that the SS left up to the women. But pregnancies rarely occurred since many women had been forcibly sterilized before their arrest and others had been rendered infertile through their suffering in the camps. In the event of an “occupational accident,” the SS would simply replace the woman and send her to have an abortion.

Those who withstood the hardship of brothel life did have more chance of escaping death in the camps, according to Sommer’s research. Almost all the women in forced prostitution survived the Nazis’ terror regime. It is largely unknown what became of them or whether they were ever able to recover from their traumatic experience. Most of them remained silent about their fate for the rest of their lives.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Danish Police Chief: Stop Supporting Rejected Iraqis

Activists, politicians and organisations are escalating the situation by supporting asylum-seekers, says deputy chief of police.

Giving support to rejected Iraqi asylum-seekers gives them false hopes and makes them hostages, according to Deputy Chief of Police Hans-Viggo Jensen who is calling for politicians, organisations and civilians who support the Iraqis, to stop their campaigns.

“I actually think they should stop it and refrain from making the rejected asylum-seekers believe that they have a future in Denmark. They are selling a product they cannot deliver and are thus contributing to an escalation of the situation,” says Hans-Viggo Jensen who is responsible for the repatriation of 244 Iraqis whose asylum requests have been rejected.

Support

The first six Iraqis were flown quietly out of the country on Thursday of this week. Among them was 35-year old Mufsal al-Alji whose father, mother and siblings have residence permits and live in the city of Vejle.

Sixty other rejected Iraqis have sought refuge in Brorson’s Church in Copenhagen, with help flooding in to them from well-meaning Danes offering all kinds of assistance from dental care and massage to psychological support. But the Danes should be careful, says Hans-Viggo Jensen. The support makes repatriation more unpleasant for the individual refugee.

“When you fight the decision, you take away their opportunity to help prepare their repatriation. Instead of knowing their departure date and packing their cases, everything will now be taking place on police terms,” says the deputy police chief adding that “a political majority in Parliament” supports the repatriations.

Politics

Jensen’s warning has caused organisations and politicians to accuse police management of choosing sides.

Save the Children Secretary-General Mimi Jacobsen says police interference in the debate is “a new variety of democracy”.

“I can say for sure that the deputy chief of police cannot gag us. It is great that he cares about these people, but if the NGOs did not raise their voices when Denmark is doing something wrong, then I don’t know what we are here for,” she says.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Terrorism Conviction Upheld

One of the two men who had appealed a conviction for a planning a terrorist attack will serve an extra year in jail The Eastern High Court upheld the sentence of two men convicted last year of planning terror attacks…

The Eastern High Court upheld the sentence of two men convicted last year of planning terror attacks and increased the sentence of one man by a year.

Hammad Khürshid and Abdoulghani Tokhi were arrested in 2007 after domestic intelligence agency PET learned that one of the two had attended an al-Qaeda training camp.

Khürshid, of Pakistani background and Tokhi, of Afghan background, were sentenced in October to 12 and seven years respectively. Tokhi’s sentence was increased to eight years today.

The court also upheld Tokhi’s deportation to Afghanistan, ruling that that the seriousness of his crime outweighed his weak ties to his native country. He will be expelled from Denmark after serving his sentence.

The two are convicted of making explosives to be used in a terror attack. The men had admitted to making triacetone triperoxide, or TATP, which is commonly used in terrorist bombs, but claimed that the explosive was to be used for fireworks.

Video evidence obtained by PET showed Khürshid sitting on the floor of his Glasvej Street apartment in the city’s Nordvest district, allegedly mixing chemicals and singing songs about martyrdom.

Police had also recovered deleted photographs from a mobile phone, which showed him in the company of people holding automatic weapons, mortars and missiles.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Dutch State Plans Further 2.5 Bln Euros for Abn Amro

THE HAGUE (AFP) — The Dutch government proposed a further 2.5-billion-euro (3.5-billion-dollar) financial boost Friday for ABN Amro bank, in which it is a major shareholder.

The money was “to cover the immediate demand for 2.5 billion in capital,” the finance ministry said in a statement.

For 1.7 billion euros of the total, the government would take over the credit risk of ABN Amro’s Dutch mortgage portfolio, while the other 800 million would be in the form of a loan, a ministry spokeswoman explained.

Finance Minister Wouter Bos asked parliament to approve the proposal in a letter submitted on Friday.

The Dutch government nationalised the Netherlands-based activities of erstwhile Belgo-Dutch banking and insurance group Fortis for 16.8 billion euros in October last year, including its stake in ABN Amro.

ABN Amro had been jointly acquired by Fortis, the Royal Bank of Scotland and Spanish Banco Santander a year earlier under the joint mantle of RFS Holdings.

In December 2008, the Dutch state bought Fortis Netherlands’ share in RFS Holdings.

ABN Amro executive director Gerrit Zalm said in an interview published last month the bank was in dire need of a fresh capital injection from the government.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



EU: We Want US Climate Bill to Succeed

BRUSSELS — The Europe Union wants a U.S. climate change bill to succeed so the United States can move swiftly to curb greenhouse gas emissions, EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Friday.

Barroso said Europe was closely watching U.S. lawmakers as they discuss the Waxman-Markey bill that would set up a cap-and-trade program to limit how much carbon dioxide power plants and other major polluters could release.

“We want the U.S. to go as far and as fast as they can on climate change,” Barroso said. “We want Waxman-Markey to succeed. … Rarely, perhaps, has U.S. domestic legislation been so carefully monitored internationally.”

“President Obama’s personal commitment … has amounted to nothing less than a sea-change in the U.S. position. His leadership means that the United States is now back at the table (at international climate change talks),” Barroso said.

U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from the burning of fossil fuels have been increasing at about 1 percent a year and are expected to continue to go up if no mandatory reductions are required.

EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said that the heads of the G8 group of developed countries had “a great opportunity” at a July 8-10 meeting in L’Aquila, Italy, to agree on deeper reductions in carbon dioxide emissions for a new global pact later this year.

“We need a breakthrough right now,” he said.

Neither the U.S., Japan nor the EU has so far committed to making cuts of between 25 percent and 40 percent by 2020 that U.N. scientists say are needed to avoid a catastrophic rise in sea levels, harsher storms and droughts and climate disruptions.

Developing countries are calling on industrialized nations to promise major emission reductions when they discuss a new global climate change pact in Copenhagen in December.

The U.S. has not laid out any target so far but this week ruled out a 40 percent cut below 1990 levels.

The Waxman-Markey bill — proposed by Representatives Henry Waxman and Ed Markey — would launch a major U.S. effort to confront global warming and begin a shift away from fossil fuels to cleaner sources of energy.

It would require the U.S. to reduce carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 and about 80 percent by the next century.

It would potentially add costs to electricity generation and heavy industry because they would have to buy extra permits to pollute more than a certain amount. This aims to give them a financial incentive to use cleaner technology to reduce emissions.

A similar cap-and-trade program has been up and running in the EU since 2005 but failed initially to trigger major emissions cuts because too many permits were handed out. Tighter limits were set for the second phase of the program from 2008 to 2012.

The EU says it will reduce emissions by 20 percent — but step that up to 30 percent if other regions do the same. Japan has promised a 15 percent cut of its own emissions and pay for carbon offsets in developing countries to represent another 5 percent.

Australia — which is not part of the G8 group — says it will make a 25 percent cut, a major turnaround. Australia and the U.S. were the only two major industrialized nations not to agree greenhouse gas reductions at the last global climate deal struck in Kyoto in 1997.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Germany Seeks to Build Bridges With Muslim Community

Berlin — Germany took an historic step this week to find pragmatic answers to conflicts between its strict Muslims and the secular school system, over issues such as whether devout girls should wear headscarves.

Some public schools have tried to ban scarves in Germany, where teachers often believe their task is to keep religion out of school and shape children for modern life.

With Muslim women and girls sometimes deliberately adopting the scarf as a badge of identity, friction has grown.

Teachers have also largely rebuffed misgivings among conservative Muslim parents about explicit sex education or forcing girls to wear swimwear while boys watch.

The parents have not won much sympathy from the German media, which depicts observant families as a minority within a minority. But this week, an official document suggested a case-by-case exit from the conflicts.

In 2006, Berlin began three years of consultations, the ‘German-Islam Conference,’ with figures the government chose itself from the splintered Muslim community.

Many of them were liberal or lapsed Muslims who were not expected to support more devout views.

That makes the final, joint document issued this week all the more surprising. In the dry officialese of legal advisers, it sets out recommendations on accommodating Muslim parents while upholding secular policies.

The recommendations have not been adopted yet: they must be debated this autumn by state education ministers.

But a compromise is taking shape on issues that have bedevilled other European nations with large immigrant communities, particularly France, whose government has taken a confrontational approach.

Scarves covering the hair are banned in French schools as illegitimate religious symbols.

The German joint document suggests the state’s interest in educating the generation of tomorrow and the parents’ rights to shape their children’s religious values are of equal weight.

Where they come into conflict, schools and parents have to negotiate to find the ‘least painful’ outcome.

The document says face-covering veils ought to be banned, since they are obstacles to communication in the classroom.

But there was no legal basis for schools to ban scarves covering the hair, though schools could forbid pins, which could wound other children during games, or flammable fabrics, which could catch fire in chemistry class.

Berlin officials noted this week that when dealing with Muslims from 49 nations, ranging from Sunni Muslims to Shiites and Alawites, there was no united Muslim voice.

But schooling issues have resonated powerfully through the community of 4 million German Muslims.

At the conference, even liberal Muslims who regard faith practices as old-fashioned allowed the concerns of highly observant Muslims to rise up the agenda.

Yasemin Karakasoglu, a professor of education at the University of Bremen and leading researcher on integration, said two months ago the conference developed in ways the government never foresaw.

By giving Muslims a voice, it let a ‘genie out of the bottle,’ she said.

Many proposals in the document directly contradict long-standing policy in Germany’s co-educational schools.

Conservative Muslim parents also object to children taking part in school excursions where they might sleep in mixed dormitories, eat pork or be exposed to the alcohol abuse that is rife on school trips by older children.

A survey shows 10 per cent of Muslim schoolgirls in Germany use excuses to skip trips because of those issues.

The agreed document said children should have a right to exemption from these compulsory trips.

The document, negotiated with officials in Chancellor Angel Merkel’s government over many months, is not legally binding, but is described as a circular to the nations’ schools.

Mixed school swimming classes are another hot-button issue in Germany, with teacher unions and education authorities adamant that girls and boys must be cured of any embarrassment at seeing one another in swimsuits.

Conservative Muslims on the other hand object to their daughters revealing themselves to boys, and demand segregated lessons where girls can learn to swim.

The conference document appeals to schools to backtrack. It says that from the age of about 10, the religious rights of the girls themselves prevail over the school’s right to dictate any form of instruction.

It adds girls have a legal claim to be exempted from swimming lessons, but this is a ‘second-best solution.’

Schools could better fulfil their purpose by pragmatically organizing girls-only classes in the pool for all age groups if parents insist, the document said.

It also asks schools not to plan examinations during major feasts such as Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha and routinely let Muslim children have those days off. Currently, not all of Germany’s 16 states allow this.

The give-and-take of the conference, in which government officials also demanded some trade-offs from the Muslims, is evident in other points where the document suggests it is up to Muslims to adapt.

It says for example that compulsory sex education in schools, including a demonstration of contraception, is not negotiable, but teachers should use language and movies that do not offend religious sensitivities.

Referring to the ordeal of Ramadan fasting, it appeals to schools to be considerate, but adds that there is no justification for younger children fasting.

It instead appeals to the parents to ensure during the fasting month that older children obtain adequate sleep.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Greenland: China Snubs Climate Minister After Lama Meeting

Meeting with the Dalai Lama may have been more problematic than first thought as China pull out of climate meeting in Greenland

China has declined to take part in an informal climate meeting in Greenland next week due to the prime minister’s decision to meet with the Dalai Lama, according to several experts in Chinese politics.

Both PM Lars Løkke Rasmussen and Foreign Minister Per Stig Møller met with the exiled Tibetan leader last month, despite protests from the Chinese government.

Next week’s meeting in Greenland has been organised by Climate Minister Connie Hedegaard as a precursor to the UN Climate Change Conference due to take place in Copenhagen this December.

Hedegaard believed that China’s participation in the Greenland meeting could have been an important step towards laying the foundations for the country’s agreement to considerable greenhouse gas reductions at the December summit.

But on 29 May the Chinese government indicated that Rasmussen and Møller’s meeting with the Dalai Lama had ‘destroyed the friendly and co-operative atmosphere between China and Denmark’. Experts now say China’s refusal to go to Greenland is the first repercussion from that meeting.

‘It isn’t costing the Chinese anything to not attend the Greenland meeting because they’ll just continue their bilateral negotiations with the US and the UN,’ Verner Worm, professor at Copenhagen Business School’s Asia Research Center, told Berlingske Tidende newspaper.’But for Denmark, as host of the UN climate conference, it’s a heavy blow.’

Clemens Stubbe Østergaard, China expert at Aarhus University, agreed.

‘It’s nerve-racking for us as the host that our relationship with the Chinese has been damaged so close to the conference,’ he said. ‘But they take the climate issue very seriously, so I don’t think this means they won’t fight for a good agreement in Copenhagen.’

Neither Hedegaard nor Rasmussen have commented on China’s declining to take part in the Greenland meeting.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Hells Angels Win Another Dutch Legal Battle

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The Dutch Supreme Court refused Friday to outlaw a local branch of the Hells Angles in the motorcycle club’s latest legal victory.

The country’s highest judicial panel said prosecutors failed to prove their claim that the Harlingen Hells Angels chapter in the northern Netherlands is a threat to public order and should be disbanded.

The Supreme Court’s ruling upheld two lower courts’ decisions.

It said the club may be involved in undesirable and possibly criminal activities, but they are not serious enough to merit a total ban.

A ban “is a serious infringement of the freedom to gather that is at the foundation of a democratic state,” the court said in its written ruling.

The court also rejected prosecutors’ attempts to link the Harlingen chapter to alleged criminal activity of Hells Angels elsewhere in the Netherlands and the rest of the world, saying links between the local chapter and other groups were not close enough.

Dutch Hells Angels have won a string of cases against prosecutors trying to ban them, but Friday’s was the first in the country’s highest court.

A parliamentary inquiry in 1995 found the Hells Angels was a criminal organization involved in the drug trade and smuggling women for prostitution, but no action was taken to ban the group.

The Harlingen chapter’s club house was raided in 2005 as part of a large-scale investigation into allegations of extortion, intimidation, weapons and drugs trafficking.

That investigation followed the murder of three members of the gang in the south of the Netherlands in 2004, allegedly by fellow bikers.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Holocaust Assets Conference Opens in Prague

PRAGUE — Holocaust survivors, Jewish groups and experts gathered in Prague on Friday to assess efforts to return property and possessions stolen by the Nazis to their rightful owners or heirs.

The five-day conference, which brings together delegates from 49 countries, is a follow-up to a 1998 meeting in Washington that led to agreements on recovering art looted by the Nazis.

Stuart Eizenstat, head of the U.S. delegation, called it the most ambitious international meeting ever on the recovery of such stolen possessions or compensation for their loss.

One goal is to produce international guidelines on this, but they would not be compulsory for the governments involved.

“There’s no political will to have a binding treaty,” Eizenstat acknowledged.

But he said the voluntary principles that were approved in Washington are having an impact. “We have hundreds of pieces of art that have been returned,” he said.

During the Holocaust, Adolf Hitler and his followers killed 6 million Jews and seized billions of dollars of gold, art and private and communal property across Europe. But while countries such as Austria have stepped up restitution in recent years, critics claim some Central and Eastern European states still have a long way to go.

“Many governments in Central and Eastern Europe have not found a way to implement a process to resolve outstanding real property issues that is both consistent with national law and incorporates basic principles such as nondiscriminatory treatment of non-citizens and a simple, expeditious claims and restitution process,” said conference delegate Christian Kennedy, the U.S. Special Envoy for Holocaust Issues.

Kennedy said the U.S. wants the meeting “to provide an impetus for an expansion in social welfare benefits to survivors and lay the framework for further real property compensation.”

The Czech Republic, host of this week’s meeting, and other countries, have come under fire for legal hurdles and a lack of political will that critics claim make property restitution in some cases practically impossible.

For example, attempts by Maria Altmann of California to reclaim a castle north of Prague that once belonged to her uncle, Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, proved futile since she is not a Czech citizen.

“As far as I know, there is no legal method for obtaining any recovery there at this time,” Altmann’s lawyer, Randol Schoenberg, said in an e-mail. Altmann had waged — and won — a seven-year legal battle in neighboring Austria for the return of five paintings by Gustav Klimt.

Efforts by the daughter of wealthy Jewish banker Jiri Popper to recover a building he once owned in Prague also have stalled.

Czechoslovak President Edvard Benes gave the building, which currently houses the Russian Embassy, to the Soviet Union in 1945. Last year, Popper’s daughter filed lawsuits against both the Czech Republic and Russia demanding restitution, but no trial date has been set because Czech authorities said they have failed so far to formally inform Moscow about it, said Irena Benesova, the family’s lawyer.

While the Justice Ministry declined to comment on the matter, Russian Embassy spokesman Alexandr Pismenny said Moscow was the “honest owner.”

Both Schoenberg and Benesova wanted to make their case at the conference but were turned away by organizers who said they did not want discussion of individual cases. The Holocaust Survivors’ Foundation claims that others also have not been allowed to have their say in setting the agenda for the conference.

In a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton dated June 19, the group expressed concern about “the lack of survivor involvement on the planning, priority setting and policy making roles in the conference.”

Still, the Czech Republic does appear to be taking some steps in the right direction.

A government fund created nine years ago with 300 million koruna (US$15.9 million) has paid out 100 million koruna (US$5.3 million) to 516 out of 1,256 requests from 27 countries. The requests came from people whose restitution claims did not meet the criteria set by law.

The country also has set up the Documentation Center of Property Transfers of Cultural Assets of WWII Victims, an institution that identifies artwork and other items in Czech collections and museums that were seized from Jews during the Nazi occupation.

According to Director Helena Krejcova, some 7,000 paintings and other works of art that originally belonged to Czech Jews have been found, and another more than 1,000 stolen pieces are believed to be abroad.

“There’s still a lot of work ahead of us,” Krejcova said, adding that sometimes efforts to restitute items are stymied by a lack of cooperation from other states and a change to that is nowhere in sight.

Case in point: Czech authorities have been waiting five years for a reply from Russia after Krejcova’s team traced a valuable collection of 500 porcelain pieces once owned by Holocaust victim Hans Meyer to St. Petersburg.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Italy to Up Women’s Retirement Age

Public- sector move to comply with EC gender parity norm

(ANSA) — Rome, June 25 — Italy plans to raise the pension age for women in the public sector from 60 to 65 in compliance with a European Union directive on gender parity, Civil Service Minister Renato Brunetta said on Thursday.

Responding to a European Commission move to start proceedings on the issue, Brunetta said women’s pension age would be gradually raised over a ten-year period to become the same as that of men.

He said the measure might be included in a financial decree to be examined by the cabinet on Friday.

Plans were already in place to bring the retirement ages into line, he said, and the EC had provided “further stimulus”. Earlier in Brussels the EC said it had opened proceedings against Italy for not complying with a recent sentence on making public-sector pension ages the same for men and women.

It said it would send a letter which Italy would have six months to reply to before action was taken.

EU Social Affairs Commissioner Vladimir Spidla will discuss the matter with Labour Minister Maurizio Sacconi in Rome Friday on the sidelines of a meeting to frame social policy debate at next month’s Group of Eight summit in l’Aquila.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Premier Unfazed by Media Storm

Berlusconi exchanges quips with workers while in L’Aquila

(ANSA) — Rome, June 25 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi appeared unruffled and confident on Thursday, taking time out from his schedule to exchange quips with workers over an ongoing media storm over his private life.

Speaking as he toured a construction site to build new homes for the quake-stricken residents of L’Aquila, the premier told workers: “Where are the girls? I don’t see any. In that case, I’ll have to bring them next time I come”.

The premier appeared visibly satisfied that work was proceeding according to the government’s announced timetable that before the end of the year all those living in tents will be given homes.

“Well boys, if all goes well, I’ll really bring the showgirls. Otherwise, we’ll all come across as gays,” said the premier. Berlusconi later told a news conference that the time-out with the workers was his way “of reacting to all the rubbish and falsehoods that are directed” against him. Berlusconi,72, has been at the centre of a media storm since a public divorce spat with his wife Veronica Lario, who accused him of “consorting with minors” after he attended the 18th birthday party of Noemi Letizia, an aspiring showgirl.

The media tycoon-turned politician has categorically denied any “steamy or more than steamy” involvement with teenagers, explaining there was nothing “spicy” about his attendance at Letizia’s party because he had a long friendship with her family.

He is now fending off flak over a new uproar over allegations that female escorts were paid to attend parties at his homes in Rome and Sardinia.

One of the escorts claims she spent the night at Berlusconi’s Rome home last November 4 but the premier has denied ever paying for sex, saying that press reports are “just rubbish”.

POPULARITY STILL HIGH, PREMIER SAYS. The premier was also upbeat during his address to an assembly of pharmaceuticals firms association Farmindustria in L’Aquila, telling the businessmen the media storm on his private life was having a negligible effect on his popularity with Italians.

“Despite everything that has been written and has been said (about me) over the last few days, I’ve just been informed that my personal popularity rating stands at 61%,” the premier said.

The media tycoon-turned politician did not say who provided the figure but, in the past, he has said that he commissions his own public opinion polls.

Speaking on a state-run Rai television talk show at the start of the month to explain the divorce, Berlusconi said his popularity was not waning and stood at 73%.

The premier has accused the left-leaning press of fomenting a smear campaign and on Wednesday repeated that he was in the grips of a “campaign, fed by hatred and personal jealousy, that certainly isn’t doing any good for the country”.

The scandals have shocked the foreign press and snatched considerable coverage in Italian newspapers, prompting the influential Catholic weekly Famiglia Cristiana to say that the premier had “overstepped the bounds of decency” with his “indefensible” behaviour.

Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party fared well in European and local elections earlier this month, though less well than expected.

Berlusconi has dismissed talk of resignation, saying he plans to complete the remaining four years of his term as premier and stressing that he had strong support from his Northern League party allies and within the PdL.

Referring to the escorts probe involving southern businessman Giampaolo Tarantini, Berlusconi said he “unfortunately invited the wrong guest” (Tarantini) who had in turn “invited the wrong guest’s guest”.

“But unfortunately these are things that happen with the hundreds of people I have around my table,” said Berlusconi, who described himself as “a great show-stealer and entertainer”.

Reacting to photographs taken by two of the women in bedrooms and bathrooms of his home, Berlusconi said: “I have never dreamed of asking a guest to give up their phone and everything that happens in my presence is nothing less than moral and normal”.

On Thursday, the left-leaning weekly L’Espresso said Berlusconi said Tarantini and Berlusconi had exchanged dozens to talk about women.

In an anticipation of a report which will be published Friday, L’Espresso, did not, however, provide details or a source.

The story of the friendship between Berlusconi and Tarantini broke last week when the Milan daily Corriere della Sera said Bari prosecutors investigating a kick-back scandal had wiretappings of a suspect who claimed to know the premier talking about the parties and paid escorts. According to L’Espresso, Tarantini, 34, “exchanged dozens of calls (with Berlusconi) at all hours of the day and night”.

The weekly said the premier allegedly “had no secrets or embarrassments” when talking to Tarantini, “ so much so as to describe in detail- from hair colour to the measure of their curves — the sort of women he wanted sent to Palazzo Grazioli (in Rome) or Villa Certosa (in Sardinia)”.

Judicial sources in Bari said last week that prosecutors had locked away audio tapes made by the woman who alleges she was paid to spend the night at the Berlusconi’s Rome home.

The sources said prosecutors had not given the tapes to experts — who are routinely tasked with clearing up any background noise and transcribing contents — in a bid to prevent transcripts from being leaked to the press.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: PM to ‘Respond’ To Sex Scandal Claims

Rome, 19 June (AKI) — Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has promised to respond to allegations that women were paid to attend his private parties as further questions were raised about his personal behaviour on Friday.

“If they want war, let’s have it. I will respond blow by blow,” Berlusconi reportedly told his supporters privately.

Magistrates in Rome and the southern city of Bari on Thursday were reported to be examining airline tickets and hotel bookings in Rome where four women claim they stayed.

On Friday the Italian daily La Repubblica said that the magistrates’ inquiry had widened to include the use of cocaine and named the three other women who allege they were paid to attend parties hosted by Berlusconi.

Former model and escort girl, Patrizia D’Addario, has claimed that she and other women were paid to attend Berlusconi’s parties and that she had pictures showing her with the prime minister in his bedroom at Palazzo Grazioli in Rome.

D’Addario has given prosecutors audio tapes but also secretly recorded video footage of her encounters in the prime minister’s Rome residence.

The three other women allegedly involved in the scandal are Angela Sozio, a former Big Brother contestant; Italian MP for Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party Elvira Savino; and actress Sabina Began.

Sozio was photographed sitting in the prime minister’s lap at his Sardinian residence Villa Certosa in 2007.

Bari magistrates are conducting a probe into alleged corruption related to local hospital contracts in the Bari area by Tecnohospital, owned by brothers, Gianpaolo and Claudio Tarantini. The brothers are suspected of kickbacks in the health sector

The implication of the women reportedly emerged from tapped telephone conversations in which Gianpaolo Tarantini allegedly referred to payments for women at parties given by associates including Berlusconi.

Berlusconi’s spokesman, undersecretary Paolo Bonaiuti fiercely rejected the allegations against the prime minister as as “falsehoods”.

“It is scandalous that several newspapers continue to attribute to the prime minister things that in reality he never said,” Bonaiuti said.

“This is a campaign of falsehoods from the daily newspapers.”

Reports said Tarantini owned a villa at Porto Rotondo on the exclusive Costa Smeralda in Sardinia, close to Berlusconi’s seaside estate of Villa Certosa, and had known him “for some years”.

D’Addario claims she received 1,500 euros to attend a party in October 2003 at Berlusconi’s private residence in central Rome, Palazzo Grazioli, and to have stayed there overnight.

She also claimed to have received an offer to stand as a candidate for Berlusconi’s conservative People of Freedom party in municipal elections in Bari and assured of help in getting planning permission to develop a plot of land belonging to her family.

Berlusconi has dismissed the reports as “aggression” and “complete rubbish and falsehoods,” vowing he will continue to “serve the country”.

The personal life of the media magnate turned politician has been under public scrutiny since late April when a newspaper report revealed he had attended the 18th birthday party of an aspiring model, Noemi Letizia.

Earlier this week, Rome prosecutors shelved a probe into allegations that Berlusconi had abused the use of government aircraft to transport guests to Villa Certosa.

The probe stemmed from pictures snapped by a Sardinian photographer of Berlusconi and his guests at the villa including a naked man and several topless women.

The publication of photographer Antonello Zappadu’s pictures of some of the guests was blocked after Berlusconi’s lawyers appealed successfully to the courts.

The Spanish daily El Pais published some of the photos and Zappadu said last week he had another 5,000 photos that he had taken.

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



Netherlands: CDA Wants to Put Teen Gangs in Camps Collectively

THE HAGUE, 26/06/09 — The Christian democrats (CDA) want to incarcerate immigrant youth gangs as a group in re-education camps. The biggest government party wants the cabinet to launch trial projects in a number of cities.

CDA made the proposal in the Lower House yesterday afternoon, but had already leaked it to De Telegraaf in the morning. “Putting a stop to this street culture by just tackling individuals does not work,” said CDA MP Van Toorenburg in the newspaper. She urged half a year of therapy to “break their violent group behaviour right down to the ground.”

Van Toorenburg’s intention is to apply the group pressure that reins in gangs positively via a system whereby the other members benefit from the good behaviour of their buddies. “Only by turning around the group pressure and purely rewarding the youngsters for good behaviour do you get results.”

CDA has come up with the plan in consultation with Hoenderloo Groep, a specialist in behavioural disturbances. “While we on the one hand tackle the perpetrators, on the other hand, such a district eventually gets a bit of peace,” says Van Toorenburg.

The youngsters, aged from 12 to 18 or 21, should go to De Sprint institute in Wezep, where they have developed special methods. Toorenburg is focusing on immigrant youngsters because more attention for culture-related problems will then be possible. “But it can also work for white or mixed youth groups.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Sharp Increase in Armed Robberies

THE HAGUE, 26/06/09 — The number of armed robberies in the Netherlands surged by nearly one-quarter in the period from January through April from the same period last year, Nederlands Dagblad newspaper reported yesterday based on as yet unpublished figures from the Council of Chief Commissioners.

In 2008, police figures show the number of robberies had already grown by 11 percent from 2007. The first four months of the current year saw a further increase of 23 percent to 1,056 cases. No figures have yet been released for May, but the newspaper was able to report that the police “are also heading for a record for that month.”

Thieves increasingly force their way into houses with threats with a weapon. The number of robberies in residential homes rose from 178 in the first four months of 2008 to 260 in the same period this year. The number of robberies of petrol stations also rose “explosively.”

The Council of Chief Commissioners is worried. “The impact is great,” said a spokesman to the newspaper. “Perpetrators primarily pick on older people as victims. That is absolutely traumatising.”

Conservative (VVD) MP Fred Teeven said in the newspaper he would ask Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin for an explanation. “I consider that this cabinet is simply allowing the plague of robberies to continue and leaving victimised citizens and businesses out in the cold. Meanwhile, Justice has coolly announced that eight prisons will be closed because serious crime is declining. These figures show the opposite.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Go to Church, Minister Tells Wilders

Social affairs minister Piet Hein Donner has become the latest prominent politician to launch a verbal attack on anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders, without mentioning Wilders by name.

In a speech on Wednesday night, Donner said he found it disturbing that ‘Judo-Christian values’ were being used to justify excluding others and the use of violence.

Those who wanted to protect those values ‘should begin with going to church on Sunday where he will learn something else’, Donner said.

Wilders has said repeatedly that the Netherlands Judo-Christian values are under threat from Islam.

Housing minister Eberhard van der Laan has also recently challenged Wilders to a face to face debate.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Protesters Break Into Iranian Embassy in Sweden

STOCKHOLM — Angry demonstrators broke into the Iranian Embassy outside Stockholm on Friday, climbing in through shattered windows and injuring one embassy worker, police said.

More than 150 people had gathered outside the embassy to protest against the Iranian regime, when some of them attacked the building with rocks and tore down a fence to enter the embassy grounds, police spokesman Ulf Hoglund said.

“A few managed to climb through broken windows into the building,” Hoglund said. He said one member of the embassy staff was injured inside the building, but didn’t know how seriously.

Fifty police officers and an ambulance were dispatched to the scene. Hoglund said police had evicted the demonstrators from the building and arrested one person.

Organizers of the demonstration said a few of the protesters were injured in clashes with the embassy’s security officers.

“We want a regime change,” said Firouzeh Ghaffrpour, one of the organizers. “The Islamic system is not wanted by the people of Iran.”

The protesters, mostly Iranians, also demanded the embassy be closed.

Police said the situation was under control later Friday, but demonstrators continued to block the entrance, preventing embassy personnel from leaving.

The protest followed several peaceful demonstrations in Sweden after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected in a June 12 vote that the opposition claims was marred by massive fraud.

[related videos @ ibloga.blogspot.com/2009/06/stockholm-sweden-violence-erupts-as.html]

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Spanish Lawmakers Vote to Clip Judges’ Wings

MADRID — Spanish legislators voted Thursday to change a law that let judges indict Osama bin Laden and Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, narrowing its scope to cases with a clear link to this country and yielding to criticism that Spain should not act like a global cop.

The reform will not be retroactive, so the dozen or so cases now being investigated at the National Court will continue, the Justice Ministry said. These include investigations of alleged Chinese abuses in Tibet, an Israeli air force bombing in Gaza that killed 14 civilians, and alleged torture at the U.S. prison for terror suspects in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Spain’s two main parties, which are at each other’s throats on just about everything else, joined forces to amend the law in a rare show of unity. The vote in the Congress of Deputies, or lower house of Parliament, was 341 in favor, two against and three abstentions.

The measure now goes to the Senate, where passage is expected because of the bipartisan support.

Under the so-called doctrine of universal justice, grievous crimes such as torture, terrorism and genocide could be prosecuted in Spain, even if they were alleged to have been committed in other countries and had no connection with Spain or its people.

Judges have used it to pursue alleged crimes with no connection to Spain. And countries such as Israel and China complained angrily, prompting the government to push for reform.

Under the new law, Spanish judges will only be able to pursue universal justice cases if the crimes involve Spanish victims or the alleged perpetrators are in Spain.

New York-based Human Rights Watch criticized the vote, saying Spain had been a model in this field of law and now “many victims of serious human rights violations will lose one of the few places they could turn in search of redress.”

“It is deplorable for the Spanish government to capitulate to diplomatic pressure,” said its spokesman, Reed Brody.

The International Criminal Court is the only global war crimes tribunal, but it can only prosecute crimes committed after its founding treaty, known as the Rome Statute, came into force in 2002 — which means it could not prosecute bin Laden or Pinochet. But even the ICC’s reach is limited. It can only launch investigations in countries that have ratified the Rome Statute or where it is ordered to by the Security Council. The United States has not ratified the statute.

The court has indicted Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for atrocities in Darfur, but he does not recognize its jurisdiction and has traveled to several countries without being arrested.

Baltasar Garzon, Spain’s most prominent judge, grabbed world headlines in 1998 when he used the existing Spanish law to indict Pinochet on charges of genocide and torture during his rule and had him arrested during a visit to London. Britain ultimately refused to extradite Pinochet to Spain grounds he was too ill to stand trial.

Garzon also indicted bin Laden in 2003 over the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks in the United States, although in that case, besides terrorism, there was also a link to Spain: the judge argued that Spain had been used as a staging ground for the suicide airliner attacks against the Twin Towers and the Pentagon.

Among other cases, Spanish judges also have launched a probe of alleged reprisal killings in Rwanda after the genocide of 1994.

The practical effect of the doctrine has been negligible because extraditions have been extremely rare, and there has only been one conviction, that of an Argentine dirty war suspect in 2005.

Momentum for change started to gather in January after a Spanish judge started probing an Israeli air force bombing in 2002 that killed a Hamas militant in Gaza City but also killed 14 civilians, some of them children.

Israel protested and has called the Spanish proceedings “ridiculous.” Spain’s Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos responded by saying the government would amend the law.

When a Spanish judge started investigating six Bush administration officials in March for allegedly giving legal cover to torture at Guantanamo Bay and other U.S. detention facilities, Spain’s attorney general, Candido Conde-Pumpido, said such an investigation should be carried out by the United States, if at all.

The chief justice of the Spanish Supreme Court, Carlos Divar, said last month “we cannot become the world’s judicial gendarme.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



The Genocide Britain Hushed Up

A new film tells the terrible story of Stalin’s own Final Solution — and Churchill’s shameful complicity

The whole world knew that a large group of Polish officers had mysteriously disappeared soon after the Soviet annexation of eastern Poland on September 17, 1939.

The invasion came after the infamous Molotov-Ribbentrop pact which allowed Germany and the Soviet Union to carve up Poland between them. But the fate of the officers remained unknown until the bodies were discovered after the German invasion of the Soviet Union.

Even as the Nazis were liquidating Jews in the Warsaw ghetto, Goebbels’s propaganda machine trumpeted the atrocity as evidence of Bolshevik brutality. Stalin counterinsisted that the mass murders had been committed by the Nazis.

Churchill knew the brutal truth, but it made sense to keep quiet. Stalin was our ally in the epic fight against Nazism, and his nose was not to be put out of joint. British silence remains one of the worst stains on our country’s war record.

Even by the grisly standards of the 20th century, the Katyn Massacre was a crime of appalling enormity: a concerted attempt to wipe out an entire stratum of a great European nation. Behind the slaughter was a grisly piece of forward planning.

Stalin’s long-term intention was for Poland to become a friendly neighbour under the Soviet sphere of influence. The fewer bourgeois enemies of Communism to oppose him, the better. So he started liquidating those Polish officers who, in long, punitive interrogations, could not be coaxed into taking a pro-Soviet stance.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Too Much Time Online Strains Irish Marriages

Too much time spent on the Internet is causing increasing friction between couples in Ireland, a marriage counselling service said Friday.

Some seven percent of couples seen by ACCORD, the Catholic Church’s marriage care service, say too much time spent in cyberspace by one partner is their main problem, according to figures for the first half of this year.

John Farrelly, its director of counselling, said the problem had come virtually out of nowhere in the last three years.

The key areas causing conflict “are Internet gambling, infidelity and one partner spending too much time online rather than with their spouse and family,” he said.

The statistics also highlight the increasing pressure of financial difficulties on couples in recession-hit Ireland…

[Return to headlines]



United Arab Emirates to Open Embassy in Budapest

Plans by the United Arab Emirates to open an embassy in Budapest and potential areas of cooperation were discussed by Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Balazs and his UAE counterpart Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan at a meeting on Thursday.

Balazs said there were great potentials for cooperation especially in energy, mutual investment, tourism and culture. He added that the UAE is Hungary’s largest trading partner in the Arab world. He said he had asked his counterpart to simplify visa regulations affecting Hungarians and he was promised that the visa requirement would be lifted for holders of official and diplomatic passports.

Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed told MTI that he had discussed with Balazs measures to prevent dual taxation, protect investment and a planned agreement on cultural cooperation.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo Ex-Prime Minister Released From Detention

SOFIA, Bulgaria — A Bulgarian court released Kosovo’s former prime minister Thursday, two days after he was detained on an international arrest warrant issued by Serbia for alleged war crimes.

The district court in the western city of Kyustendil decided to release Agim Ceku from custody. The ruling can be appealed within three days and, pending completion of the legal process, Ceku must remain available to Bulgarian authorities.

Upon his release, Ceku told reporters that Serbia’s arrest warrant lacked grounds and said Serbia has no jurisdiction over Kosovo and its institutions.

“The international institutions have probed the situation, must have examined Serbia’s claims against me and no charges have ever been pressed against me,” he said.

Ceku, a former rebel commander who was prime minister of Kosovo between 2006 and 2008, is wanted in Serbia for allegedly committing war crimes during the 1998-1999 fighting in Kosovo between ethnic Albanian rebels and Serb government forces. He was taken into custody while entering Bulgaria from Macedonia late Tuesday.

Serbian Justice Minister Snezana Malovic said Wednesday that Serbia has filed an extradition request for Ceku with the Bulgarian authorities.

Ceku was traveling to Bulgaria at the invitation of the Atlantic Club, a non-governmental organization, to lobby for NATO membership, the club’s honorary president and Bulgaria’s former Foreign Minister Solomon Pasi said.

The Interpol warrant was suspended when Ceku gained immunity after being named prime minister in 2006, but was renewed by Serbia after Ceku took part in a conference on the demobilization of guerrilla movements in Colombia earlier this year.

He was held overnight in prisons in Slovenia in 2003 and Hungary in 2004 after his name appeared on lists of wanted persons.

Kosovo declared independence last year and was recognized by the United States and most European Union nations — including Bulgaria.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Serbia Charges Kosovo Ex-Rebels for War Crimes

BELGRADE, Serbia — Serbian prosecutors filed war crimes charges on Friday against 17 former Kosovo guerrillas for the alleged murder, rape and torture of Serb civilians.

The indictment said the suspects are charged in connection with the kidnapping of 159 Serbs and the deaths of at least 51 of them in the eastern Kosovo town of Gnjilane in the wake of Kosovo’s 1998-99 war.

They are charged with “murder, rape, detention, mutilation, torture and looting,” the indictment said. The charges carry up to 20 years in jail.

Nine of the 17 men were arrested in December in a predominantly Albanian-populated region of Serbia bordering Kosovo. Eight of the suspects are at large and were charged in absentia.

Defense lawyers for the suspects were expected to be appointed after the charges were filed. The families of those arrested have said they are innocent.

The war in Kosovo — then a province of Serbia — began with an ethnic Albanian separatist rebellion against the Serbian rule, and ended after a 78-day NATO bombing campaign which forced Serbia’s army and police to pull out of Kosovo.

After the war ended, the suspects allegedly launched retaliatory attacks against the Serb minority in Kosovo, where 90 percent of the population of 2 million is ethnic Albanian.

Kosovo’s independence has been recognized by 60 countries including the U.S. and most EU countries — but not Serbia.

In a related development, Serbian officials said Friday the release of Kosovo’s former prime minister Agim Ceku from detention in Bulgaria will jeopardize relations between the Balkan neighbors.

A Bulgarian court on Thursday released Ceku from custody, two days after he was detained on an international arrest warrant requested by Serbia for alleged war crimes.

Serbian Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic said the release of Ceku “represents a serious blow for international justice.”

Ceku, who was prime minister of Kosovo between 2006 and 2008, is wanted in Belgrade for war crimes allegedly committed by the Kosovo rebels during the 1998-1999 fighting in Kosovo. He was taken into custody while entering Bulgaria from Macedonia late Tuesday.

Serbia had asked Bulgaria to extradite him.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Kabylie Remembers Matoub the ‘Rebel’

(by Laura De Santi) (ANSAmed) — ALGIERS — Taourirt Moussa, a small group of houses gathered in the mountains of the Kabylie region, has now become one of the places that symbolise the history of the Berber region, one of the many villages in Algeria scarred by armed Islamist group violence. This morning, thousands of people gathered in the shade of the cherry tree where 11 years ago Matoub Lounes, the ‘rebel singer’ was buried after his assassination by an armed group on January 25, 1998. Responsibility for the murder was shortly after claimed by the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) which was responsible for numerous attacks and massacres during the 1990s. The attacks were aimed not only at civilians, but also at journalists, intellectuals and artists. Even today, however, there are many unanswered questions on the murder of the inconvenient poet, defender of democracy and the Berber cause “until the last breath which proved his commitment against the dictatorship and any other form of servitude that the theocrats and conservatives were preparing.” This is how the Berber paper, Depeche de Kabilye, paid tribute to the man, but also all the other Algerian papers, or at least most of them. There was also the emblematic cartoon published today by Liberte’, by the famous Algerian cartoonist, Ali Dilem, in which a general and an Islamist embrace a target between them saying “we adored his last album.” The legal proceedings against the presumed assassins of the singer, the members of AIG Malik Madjnoun and Chenoui Mehieddine, who have been in custody since 1999, have been obscured over the last 10 years, postponed in 2000, 2001, then again last December. Matoub was killed when he was 42. His car was riddled with bullets in broad daylight in Tala Bounane, not far from his home village. His wife, Nadia, and his two sisters were wounded in the attack. Even if the AIG had been threatening to kidnap the singer since 1994, his family and the majority of Berbers continue to press for the opening of a new independent investigation and accuse the authorities for being behind his death. On that June 25, 11 years ago, violent clashes occurred all over the region in which some young people were killed. “I am of the warriors’ race, they can kill me, but they will never keep me silent,” Matoub sang and today by the thousands they paid tribute to him, not only in Kabylie, but in many Algerian cities, as well as Paris, where in January a street was dedicated to him, in Marseille and in Canada. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria Wins Battle Over Golden Boy Khalifa Extradition

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 25 — The long legal battle started by Algeria for the extradition of ‘golden boy’ Rafik Khalifa, who escaped to London in 2003 when his empire — more than 1 billion dollars turnover per year — collapsed, seems to be coming to a conclusion. The court in Westminster, in the British capital, today approved his extradition but few people believe that the young Algerian will really return to Algeria. In a few years he has built up a new empire out of nothing: first Khalifa Bank, then a television network, an airline and tens of companies in many sectors. The London judge said he is convinced that “the diplomatic guarantees” made by Algeria regarding human rights are “reliable and sincere”. Khalifa’s defence, which has always claimed the existence of a political plot by Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, has announced he will fight a fierce battle with an appeal to the British High Court. Khalifa, son of a former head of the secret services and minister in the government of president Ahmed Ben Bella, has already been given a life sentence by default by the court of Blida (50 km west of Algiers) for criminal association and fraudulent bankruptcy in a trial with hundreds of witnesses and defendants, including ministers and former ministers, businessmen and bank managers. The empire built between 1998 and 2002 by the 42-year-old ‘friend of the stars’ — his parties with guests like Gerard Depardieu and Catherine Deneuve are famous — which seemed the incarnation of the country’s revival after the dark years of Islamic terrorism, started to show cracks in 2002. Not much later three of his assistants were arrested at the airport of Algiers with a suitcase containing two million euros. Khalifa, currently held in the UK after an arrest warrant was issued by France, has often threatened to reveal secrets which could embarrass the Algerian authorities. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


G-8 to Israel: End Settlements, Open Borders

TRIESTE, Italy — A broad international coalition urged Israel on Friday to freeze all settlement activity in the West Bank and lift its blockade of the Gaza Strip, backing U.S. President Barack Obama’s Mideast policy.

The Quartet of Mideast negotiators and foreign ministers of the Group of Eight industrialized nations took advantage of what the U.N. chief said was a “historic” opportunity with the new Obama administration in issuing nearly identical calls for the resumption of direct peace talks, an end to violence, and economic reconstruction for war-battered Gaza.

“We are now trying very hard to seize the very favorably created political atmosphere,” of Obama’s election to push the peace process forward, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told a news conference.

Israel has rejected demands that it halt all settlement building, saying it must accommodate “natural growth” in the Israeli enclaves.

However both the G-8 and the Quartet — the United States, Russia, European Union and United Nations — urged Israel to freeze all settlement activity, including natural growth, with the quartet also urging it to dismantle settlement outposts erected since March 2001.

It was the first Quartet meeting since Obama came to office, held on the sidelines of a meeting of the G-8 foreign ministers in this picturesque Adriatic port on Italy’s northeastern coast. At the G-8 meeting, ministers also said they deplored the postelection violence in Iran and urged the Tehran authorities to ensure the will of the Iranian people is reflected in the electoral outcome.

The G-8 meeting was to tackle the Afghanistan situation later Friday and Saturday.

Originally, Iran had been invited to attend the Afghan sessions, part of host Italy’s aim to involve all regional players in discussions. But Rome rescinded its invitation following the crackdown on protesters, and the focus of the G-8 summit Friday shifted to criticizing the crackdown and pressing forward with Mideast peace.

The G-8 and Quartet called for an immediate and “sustained reopening” of Gaza’s crossing points to ensure a regular flow of people, as well as humanitarian and commercial goods into the isolated territory. While recognizing Israel’s “legitimate security concerns,” the Quartet said enabling movement of and access for Palestinians was “critical.”

Gaza’s borders were closed by Israel and Egypt after the takeover two years ago of the territory by Hamas, considered a terrorist organization by the West. Hamas has repeatedly fired rockets from Gaza on Israeli border towns, setting off a three-week war by Israel on Gaza’s Hamas leaders in the winter.

Israel has allowed some humanitarian aid and food supplies into Gaza, but the reconstruction of Gaza’s war damage, including thousands of damaged or destroyed homes, is on hold because Israel won’t allow in cement or other building materials.

The call of both the Quartet and the G-8 for a settlement freeze signaled broad international support for Obama’s Mideast policy.

The Bush administration had accepted the need for some settlement growth, something the Palestinians long rejected.

But just last week, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton reiterated that the United States wanted a halt to settlement activity in the West Bank, saying no informal agreement that Israel may have reached with the Bush administration was valid. Clinton was speaking after a meeting with Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, who said he wanted the Bush administration understandings to remain.

The United States and Israel have at least publicly given no ground in their opposing views, though Israeli officials say they are trying to find a formula agreeable to Washington that would allow at least limited construction.

The U.S. special Mideast peace envoy, George Mitchell, denied the United States and Israel were heading in opposite directions under Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“The United States and Israel are close friends and allies,” Mitchell said Friday.

In discussions with Israeli officials as well as the Palestinians and Arab leaders, “there may be some difference of opinions, but we discuss them not as a controversy among adversaries but as a discussion among friends,” he said at a news conference after the Quartet meeting.

The settlement issue is a major obstacle both to the resumption of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations and to an eventual peace deal. Nearly 300,000 Israelis live in West Bank settlements, along with 180,000 Israelis in Jewish neighborhoods of east Jerusalem. The Palestinians seek both areas, captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war, as parts of a future state.

Earlier this month, Netanyahu grudgingly yielded to Obama’s demand that Israel endorse the idea of a Palestinian state, albeit with a host of conditions the Palestinians reject.

But he rejected U.S. pressure for a settlement freeze.

The Quartet’s special representative, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, said the political push for a two-state solution had to be accompanied by changes on the ground, including an end to settlements and economic reconstruction for Gaza.

“The best way to ensure that Gaza is part of the solution and does not remain the problem is that we help the people,” Blair said. “You can never separate the politics and the security and the economics. They go together.”

In the statement, the Quartet welcomed plans by Israel to promote Palestinian economic development and called for “robust and sustained” financial support of the Palestinian Authority. It demanded the Palestinians commit themselves to nonviolence and recognize Israel.

Ban, the U.N. chief, said there was a “historic” opportunity for Mideast peace, praising Obama’s “powerful, visionary” speech delivered in Cairo earlier this month. Obama called for a new beginning between the United States and Muslims to confront violent extremism and to advance Mideast peace.

The European commissioner for foreign relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, concurred.

“With the new Obama administration … there is a new possibility of engagement. That has to be used. That is the way forward,” she said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Israel: Tough Prison Terms for Two Ex-Ministers

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JUNE 24 — Former Israeli Finance Minister, Avraham Hirschson, one of the leaders of Kadima party, has been convicted on charges of theft and fraud and sentenced to five years and five months in prison by the District Tribunal of Tel Aviv. Meanwhile, the Jerusalem Supreme Court has today convicted Shlomo Benizri, a rabbi and former minister of social welfare and health and a leader of the orthodox Jewish Shas party, on corruption charges, sentencing him to a 4-year prison term. Hirschson admitted stealing more than USD 500,000 from the union that he headed before being appointed Finance Minister by Ehud Olmert. His lawyer noted that he may appeal within one month. The three judges who signed the conviction of Benizri (Edmond Levy, Senan Meltzer and Yoram Danziger) said they had decided to issue an exemplary sentence “because corruption is spreading in Israel.” Judge Levy said that Benizri, “committed as he was to spreading religious teachings, was also willing to be take bribes.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Shalit: Rome Awards Honorary Citizenship

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 25 — The city council of Rome yesterday approved a motion in which Israeli corporal Gilad Shalit, kidnapped by Hamas on June 25 2006, is given honorary citizenship. After the vote, the mayor of Rome, Gianni Alemanno, accompanied by the president of the Jewish community of Rome, Riccardo Pacifici, rolled out a poster of Shalit with the words “Rome wants its citizen Ghilad Shalit free” written on it. Alemanno said that “today’s decision is important. It was taken unanimously though the opposition refused to vote, an incomprehensible act of political obstructionism, even though it agrees with the motion”. Alemanno explained that “this is not the first step the Municipality takes in support of Shalit, but we are now part of all official requests made for his release”. “This man” he continued” has been in captivity for three years now, despite all the international negotiations. This is a strong condemnation of all forms of fundamentalism and intolerance”. On July 1 the soldier’s family will be in Rome, Alemanno concluded. “On that occasion we will be honoured to officially confer the honorary citizenship by handing over the parchment”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Late Great State of Israel: How Enemies Without and Within Threaten the Jewish Nation’s Survival

In his latest book entitled, The Late Great State of Israel, Aaron Klein, intrepid investigative journalist and Jerusalem bureau chief of WorldNetDaily.com presents an ominous portent of the future of Israel. This meticulously researched exegesis of the imbroglio that has come to define the state of affairs of Middle East politics graphically depicts the pernicious agenda of those forces conspiring to eradicate the Jewish state. As we know, the motto of the New York Times is, “All the News that’s Fit to Print” and this book is a thoroughly documented repository of “All the News That’s Fit to Print, that the New York Times Wouldn’t”, or any branch of the mainstream media for that matter.

In this eye-opening account of the global machinations that are predicated on the vilification of Israel and surreptitious actions leading to its potential demise, we recoil in horror to learn that in addition to the list of “usual suspects”, i.e. Iran, Syria and their proxies known as Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, etc., we find that other such players in the Middle East cacophony are also busy striking their own chords. Despite their declarations of support for the Israeli-Palestinian peace process and the ultimate two-state solution, the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and other western governmental agencies, Klein informs us, have constructed their own end game as it concerns the viable future of Israel. What is most disheartening is the fact that Mr. Klein explores and spotlights in nuanced detail the sheer masochism of the powers that be in the government of Israel and the fact that it is they who are largely culpable for undermining Israel’s survival as a Jewish state.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ahmadinejad Promises to Shake the Planet

In this video, Ahmadinejad promises his mentor and spiritual adviser “a great shake on the planet”. The video has been recorded in a secret meeting between several hardliners and the only one that speaks is Ahmadinejad.

From Wind Rose Hotel:

In his Facebook page French philosopher and writer Bernard-Henri Lévy has a video, which was clandestinely shot and brought out of Iran, showing “president-non-elect” Mahmoud Ahmadinejad—as Lévy himselfcalls the Iranian despot—while announcing to his most loyal followers and in the presence of his mentor and spiritual adviser, ayatollah Mesbah-Yazdi, “un grand bouleversement sur la planète” (a great bouleversement on the planet). The speech was delivered on June 13, 2009. This is what BHL himself says about the video (in French):

VIDEO BELOW

[…]

Via Liberation

We’re going to need a translation on this. I’ll ask my friend Stogie to help.

Video: clandestine sortie d’Iran: Ahmadinedjad sans masques dailymotion.virgilio.it/video/x9ojqd_video-clandestine-sortie-diran-ahma_news

Translation:

I thank the Almighty for granting me the opportunity to be present in this dear and QOM holy mausoleum Massoumeh that god bless and your holy presence in the company of other friends here but also enjoy to say: Essentially, you rightly said aves the Islamic revolution can not be reduced to a place or a particular time or a defined space-time and if our efforts are used in the service of God and the movement in the orbit of the creation they persist and lead to all the dreams and hopes.

The fight against vice and the application of justice is joy. But the real joy will be there the day or the true desire to realize. And all of us, we must turn towards the realization of that desire essential. I think the revolution is finding its way. A new revolution has begun. Hard work has just ended a difficult period just ended, but a tougher period begins. Hard work has just ended, a period I hope that this difficult stage we finally leads to what we all expect.

A huge energy, also inside and outside the country, is being released is quickly

and she wants to meltre to serve the Islamic republic. The opportunity to realise what we said and wanted is within reach today.

This movement just needs a strong theoretical support and practical support strong.

And the best place, initially to support our movement is precisely here in Qom, in the midst of these ladies who live, breathe, studying for the realization of an Islamic government. They have put their lives in the service of the realization of an Islamic government. I think that right now the conditions are favorable, and myself I seek your help and am at your service as an individual whom, perhaps, has no importance in this movement.

The key is movement, a huge movement. This is a movement, as you pointed out, which is itself a grace, special attention Insh’Allah, these are the beginnings of a major upheaval on the planet.

As an individual who is a medium simiple in this case but on the shoulders which pese responsibility, I seek your help. We must mobilize all potentials and intellectuals executifs behind this movement for the realization of Islamic law, of Islamic justice and the establishment of a model Islamic society in our beloved homeland of Iran. It seems to me that this is possible.

Had that not been possible, we would not impose this task. It is understood and expected that the low-[a Teheran], an organization is ready. And here too, if your honor and friends come together to form a group responsible and follow the case using all potential and parallel to the university, the same task is proposed.

We can then go toward the operational points of view, and spread the Islamic culture. You know better than me, the light sentence of his holiness [the Imam Khomeini] is a reality, is a truth. Today the world is thirsty for the pure culture mahometaine.

We have seen examples OME in this incident, all these young people and their prayers and their hopes, these youths are not expected absolutely not the world is thirsty for that.

I see scenes, because I was in Teheran I voageais but also and moreover it was such. Some individuals who do not have the long view may think that other people have no light in them. But when you meet them closely, we see that it is not. It is true love. If we present it as it should, everyone will come. Everyone wants the vast majority of the people. The people as a whole is not mechant. But there is less light in those with pretentions of analysis and there is light, it is frankly not attractive.

The background of the people is good. They are in love. Last year we had a discussion with a religious as you all know. The discussion focused on how to respond to young people in the streets. I had an appointment and I wanted to have his opinion on a action I intended to conduct, he asked what I thought me meme.

I told him that this is a bad action. We have nothing gives youth. They never had a pure blast. Many have not heard such words in their family. A school or in the media either did not hear anything to understand the subject. But everywhere or breathing pure a blow on the people-in the Islamic Republic. the community has been educated to at least ca — he responded positively.

The people want to reach this pure culture [mahometaine] and I think the timing of the broadcast and is more conducive to a larger scope at this time, and [for that] I am at your service.

Esperons an organization will also follow through all the potential. We have little time. I had a critical interpretation of the movement of creation and two or three occasions, this happened is that my interpretation was proven correct.

I spoke with one of our grans teachers, he agreed with me. In general, those who do believe that the appearance for an event, all parameters should be ready beforehand.

Remember after the victory of the revolution, some said it was premature. We did not have sound. We did not have the necessary armed forces. We had no projects. Las Those are the parameters for the man who can only count on themselves.

The common logic does not apply to movements based on the divine will and divine mercy. When the human being reaches the threshold of this potential, it can support the weight and movement follows. Our revolution was. The Imam was “said the reason that led to the revolution has also preserved”.

The potential is there. I hope that what we believe and we believe that changes will come as soon as possible. The potential is offered by God, and I am at your service. Just as God protects us, the rest will come with extensive and spirituality.

For myself, as a Muslim Iranian, I benefited enormously from this wave of spirituality in our country that gives me your holiness coming directly from the scene of the event and the leader.

I thank the Taliban here, these ladies that do that for God and who lead this vast movement of truth. I know how much they pay themselves a Qom and elsewhere, 10:35 I know they have borrowed money, they put their lives in this service. Other bears have other difficulties.

I thank you even if you thank that everything is God. Today is the most joyous of days for believers and our beloved supreme guide. And forgive me, it’s all in my power.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



G8 to Iran: End Violence, Reflect Will of People

TRIESTE, Italy — Group of Eight foreign ministers criticized Iran’s postelection violence, and urged its ruling clergy on Friday to ensure the outcome of the disputed ballot reflects the will of the Iranian people.

A statement by the ministers from the industrialized countries also said the door must remain open to dialogue on Iran’s nuclear program but expressed “deep concern” over the proliferation risk.

The statement from the meeting in the northeastern Italian city of Trieste was the result of negotiations between countries such as Italy and France, which wanted to send a tough message to Iran to halt the postelection crackdown, and Russia, which has said it backs the results that returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.

The statement, issued on the second day of the three-day meeting, said the G-8 ministers deplored the violence that followed Iran’s June 12 presidential vote. At least 17 people have been killed during protests, in addition to eight members of the Basij militiamen, and hundreds of people have been detained in a clampdown on the opposition.

“We express our solidarity with those who have suffered repression while peacefully demonstrating and urge Iran to respect human rights, including freedom of expression,” the G8 ministers said, and they urged Iran “to guarantee that the will of the Iranian people is reflected in the electoral process.”

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said this appeal was a key part of the G-8 message but stopped short of demanding a recount in the election because outsiders would have no way of confirming it was legitimate.

“If today I were to say with great clarity who the victor of the elections is, I couldn’t, because I don’t have the elements in my hands that the Iranian government has,” Frattini said at a news conference, with other G-8 officials by his side. “On this, the G-8 agrees.”

Frattini pointed to “worrying elements” such as the fact that in some voting districts the number of ballots cast and counted was higher than the number of registered voters. “We aren’t in a position to control what happened,” he said. “The message is that the game as of today isn’t considered over.”

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said, “Whether the election results as announced are correct is highly doubtful.” He called Iran’s crackdown “intolerable” and “brutal.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow wanted to express its “most serious concern” over the use of force by Iran and the death of peaceful protesters.

“At the same time, we will not interfere in Iran’s internal affairs. Our position is that all issues that have emerged in the context of the elections will be sorted out in line with democratic procedures,” he said.

Officials sought to balance the need to criticize Iran’s handling of the election with the effort to prevent it from slipping into further isolation, particularly regarding its nuclear program. Iran is enriching uranium that it says it wants only as nuclear fuel. The U.S. and other nations fear it could be used in nuclear weapons.

The statement recognized Iran’s right to a civilian nuclear program but urged it “to restore confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of its nuclear activities” and to seize the opportunity to “give diplomacy a chance to find a negotiated solution.”

The G-8 talks at the 19th-century Palazzo in Trieste also are to focus on Afghanistan and Pakistan, and peace in the Mideast.

Italy originally invited Iran to attend the three-day gathering as a special guest, arguing that it could play an important role in talks on Afghan stabilization. But Rome retracted the invitation after Iran failed to respond.

The G-8 statement said the Iran crisis “should be settled soon through democratic dialogue and peaceful means.”

President Barack Obama has condemned the violence against protesters and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations the hardline victory was a fraud. But the United States has been careful not to become a scapegoat for Iran’s cleric-led government.

“It is clear that there is a significant percentage of Iranians who have significant concerns about the fairness and legitimacy of the elections,” said William Burns, the U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs.

“The United States is deeply troubled by the use of violence against innocent people,” said Burns, who replaced the injured Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as head of the U.S. delegation.

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband, whose government expelled two Iranian diplomats earlier this week after Iran did the same to two British envoys, said Iran’s claim that the protests were mobilized by Western powers is “completely without foundation.”

“I think now there are big questions being asked within Iran,” said Miliband. “We deplore violence, but we remain committed to engagement as a means to an end.”

Friday’s talks on regional security in Afghanistan and Pakistan were being attended by their foreign ministers and by U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke.

Also meeting Friday on the sidelines of the summit is the Mideast Quartet — the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations — to try to help move the Israeli-Palestinian peace process forward. The participants included the U.S. Mideast envoy, former Sen. George Mitchell, and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

A range of Arab League nations will join in a follow-on session Friday afternoon. The Quartet decided not to invite Israel, Italy’s Foreign Ministry said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran: Cleric Calls for ‘Savage’ Punishment for Protesters

Tehran, 26 June (AKI) — One of the most powerful clerics in Iran, Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, has called for “ruthless and savage” punishment — implying the death penalty — for leaders of the protests that have erupted since the presidential election on 12 June. Khatami is very close to the re-elected president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

At a sermon broadcast nationally on Friday at Tehran University, Khatami said, “I want the judiciary to…punish leading rioters firmly and without showing any mercy to teach everyone a lesson.

“Based on Islamic law, whoever confronts the Islamic state… should be convicted as a ‘mohareb’ [one who wages war against god]…They should be punished ruthlessly and savagely.”

Under Iran’s Islamic law, punishment for people convicted of being a ‘mohareb’ is execution.

Khatami considers Ahmadinejad the official winner of the disputed presidential election on 12 June.

Official election results gave a landslide victory to Ahmadinejad but supporters of the defeated candidates including Mir Hossein Mousavi have disputed the result and taken to the streets of Tehran and other cities in the thousands.

It is the most dramatic upheaval seen in the country in more than 30 years since the Islamic revolution in 1979.

The two reformist candidates demanded an annulment of the election.

But Iran’s top legislative body or Guardian Council said on Friday there would be no annulment of the election results because they found no evidence of fraud.

“After ten days of examination, we did not see any major irregularities,” Abbasali Kadkhodai, a council spokesman, told Iran’s official news agency IRNA.

“We have had no fraud in any presidential election and this one was the cleanest election we have had. I can say with certainty that there was no fraud in this election.”

The Guardian Council made the announcement as the White House exchanged insults with Ahmadinejad and accused him of trying to blame the US for unrest following Iran’s disputed election.

At least 17 people have reportedly been killed or injured in the nationwide protests following the presidential elections.

However, the figures are impossible to verify as the Iranian government has imposed severe restrictions on foreign media coverage.

In his sermon, Khatami said that protesters were responsible for the death of Neda Agha-Soltani, the iconic young woman killed during the clashes.

“By watching the film, any wise person can understand that rioters killed her,” he said, accusing them of murdering her for “propaganda” purposes.

He then turned his attention to United Nations’ secretary general, Ban-Ki Moon, who has expressed concern about the recent violence in Iran.

“You talk about human rights in Iran. What about those 400 innocent Palestinian children killed in Gaza, what about those killed every day by American forces in Afghanistan and Iraq, what about those human rights (violations)?” he said.

The religious leader also proposed the formation of a new world organisation, to rival the UN, while suggesting that the UN is an assembly of “imperialistic powers”.

Khatami criticised Britain, France, and Germany for their “interference” in Iran and asked Iranians to add the slogan “death to England” to their usual “death to USA” and “death to Israel”.

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



Lebanon: Berri, The Irremovable President of Parliament

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JUNE 25 — Nabih Berri, Lebanon’s irremovable House Speaker, was re-elected today for the fifth consecutive four-year term despite that the Hezbollah-led political alliance of which he is a pillar lost the elections last June 7. Five people were wounded by stray bullets after Berri’s followers fired their machineguns in the air from rooftops in Beirut to celebrate their leader’s much anticipated re-election. Berri, 71, got 90 votes of the 128-seat assembly (64 Moslems, 64 Christians) as a “consensus” candidate to the post which Lebanon’s confessional political system allocates to a Shiite. For the victorious “March 14” majority, picking another Speaker would have been a “declaration of war” on the Shiites, whom Berri’s Amal movement and Hezbollah represent best. “March 14” leader Saad Hariri said that voting for Berri was to “preserve civil peace,” -a remark which barely veils concerns that angry Hezbollah and Amal might take their militiamen into Beirut streets, the way they did in May 2008 following a fallout with the government of Premier Fuad Siniora. Witty, sharp-tongued with a sense of humour accentuated by his southern Lebanese Shiite accent, Berri took the lead of then Amal militia in 1980 -at the height of the 1975-90 civil war. Amal — acronym in Arabic of Lebanese Resistance Battalions which also means “hope” — fought in the mid 1980s Palestinian guerrillas entrenched in Sabra and Shatila refugee camps in Beirut and, later, battled Hezbollah in southern Lebanon. As Hezbollah grew more powerful and popular thanks to Iranian military and financial backing, the pro-Syrian Berri closed ranks with the “Party of God” which, in return, “rewarded” him with the post of Speaker of Parliament — an institution Berri turned into a rubber stamp under the Syrian hegemony that ended in 2005. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: ‘Silicon’ Tourism Boom in the Summer

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JUNE 22 — The summer holiday season in Lebanon is all sold out…not only in hotels, but also in cosmetic surgery clinics. Indeed, thousands of foreigners — and it is increasingly foreigners — from Europe, the Americas and the Gulf are set to spend their summer holidays having a few ‘re-touches’ done. “We have the best specialists in the world, who have come back to Lebanon after time abroad in Europe and the United States”, boasts Dr.Imad Kaddura, the famous Beirut surgeon who considers cosmetic surgery a real art. “Unfortunately there aren’t that many Picassos around”, he said: “that’s why you see all those ski-jump noses around”. Nose-jobs and boob-jobs are the most sought-after operation, continued Kaddura, adding that the number of male patients is getting closer to the number of women after a little nip and tuck. “They’re the best clients”, continued the surgeon, “because they come with clear ideas. Often they ask us for penis extensions — an operation I don’t really love doing… but it’s necessary to help these lads satisfy their partners!”, added the surgeon smugly. The success of Beirut as Middle Eastern capital of cosmetic surgery (16th place in the world rankings, with more than 14,000 operations in 2008, according to calculations by the International Society for Aesthetic and Plastic Surgery) is also due to the bargains on offer. The website of Dr. Nizar Chehab, vice-president of the Miss Lebanon judging committee, provides a complete price list: 1,800 dollars for a ‘nose job’, 3,000 for a boob job, 10,000 for a “complete treatment” including operations to the face and body. “If they ask us, we also provide hotel accommodation”, Dr. Chehab told ANSA; he was keen to point out however that half of his clients are Lebanese anyway, adding that his compatriots are increasingly keen on the small, turned-up, French-style nose — which is becoming ever more easy to get, even for the less well-off, due to ad-hoc loans from the First National Bank (FNB) in Beirut, which since 2007 has been issuing reduced rate ‘mortgages’ for cosmetic surgery. “The average age of patients looking for this French profile is from 18 upwards, and sometimes even younger”, said Chehab, noting that most Lebanese people get the operations in Spring to be able to get ready for the summer’s ‘costume try-on’. So, are there any ‘enhanced’ girls among the aspiring Miss Lebanons? “Of course,” says the surgeon nonchalantly, “girls with a few touch-ups here and there are in the competition — as long as they don’t change all their characteristics”. And whilst on the beaches of Lebanon it is increasingly difficult to come across Arab profiles and ‘below C-cup’ busts, there are some people that have renamed the seafront of the country “the new Silicon Valley”…though definitely not for the technology!. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tariq Ramadan: “We Cannot Accept a Dogmatic Interpretation of Islam”

During the Resetdoc Istanbul Seminars (May 30th — June 4th) prominent Muslim intellectual Tariq Ramadan reacted positively to Giuliano Amato’s call to support the women demonstrating against the Shia Family Law in Afghanistan. Tariq Ramadan has been emphasising the issue of self-criticism for Muslim scholars and has been himself critical of a literal implementation of Shar’ia: “Giuliano Amato is right. We Muslims need to take a stand — he added in an exclusive video-interview with Resetdoc on June 2nd — I have been doing this for the last twenty years stating that we cannot accept the literal implementation and a dogmatic interpretation of Islam. Self-criticism is not only important for Muslims, it is important for all of us and we need a sense of humility within dialogue. Now that Obama is going to talk to Muslims (this interview took place just before Obama’s speech in Cairo, Editor’s Note), what we expect to hear is a degree of self-criticism in order to be heard and trusted by Muslims. The first step towards a debate includes opening up, being able to talk to scholars from different trends in Islam, even if there are conflicting views. The next step is to open this internal debate to the public, so they can listen and understand. We have to look forward and get more people as well as civil society involved in this critical discussion. This is important not only for Turkey and Muslim majority countries but also for the future of Europe.”

“In 2005 I called for a moratorium against corporal punishments, stoning and the death penalty in the Muslim world — he added at the Resetdoc Istanbul Seminars — When I say that we should open a discussion on this I mean that we need to stop this now, stop corporal punishments everywhere. I have never stopped criticizing literalist and violent interpretations of Islam, which do not respect human rights. Any country that does not respect human rights should be equally criticized. The fundamental right of choice, for example, should be respected everywhere, while at the moment this right concerning the veil is not respected in Iran but neither in France.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Terror Group: ‘No Shame in Being Poor’

Top jihadist responds to WND report that Iran has stopped support

JERUSALEM — There is no shame in being poor, Ziad Al Nakhala, the deputy secretary general of the Islamic Jihad terrorist group declared in an official statement yesterday.

Nakhala, based in Syria, was directly responding to a WND exclusive report from earlier this week stating the Iranian government, distracted with the country’s escalating protests, had failed to send regular payments to Islamic Jihad, causing a major financial crisis for the terrorist organization.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey May Block Iraqi Kurds’ Participation in Nabucco

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 25 — Turkey does not want Iraqi Kurds to participate in the Nabucco natural gas project because of political concerns, daily Hurriyet reports quoting Newsweek magazine. The magazine suggests that since the inception of the project there have been doubts that Caspian countries will provide enough gas to the pipeline and to remedy this shortfall a consortium of gas companies from Austria, Hungary and the United Arab Emirates recently struck a USD 8 bln deal with Iraqi Kurds to source gas from northern Iraq. Earlier this month the Iraqi government vetoed the Kurds’ Nabucco agreement, according to Newsweek. Turkey has too expressed its discontent with the deal, the magazine reports. Turkey does not want Iraq’s Kurds to enrich themselves with gas money and it believes Azerbaijan will be able to supply enough gas for the pipeline, according to Newsweek. Just this morning energy minister Taner Yildiz reiterated that the intergovernmental agreement for Nabucco might be signed in half July the latest. Apparently the Turkish government and other parties have not reached an agreement over Turkey’s demand for a 15% of Nabucco natural gas at a discounted price yet. The Nabucco pipeline will transfer natural gas from the Central Asia and Middle East to Europe via Turkey, which will host the major part of the some 3,200 km long pipeline. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey to Buy Weapons From US to Fight PKK

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 24 — Turkey hopes the United States will agree to sell gunships and armed drones that the military would use to fight the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), daily Hurriyet reports. The two systems are the AH-1W Super Cobra attack helicopters and the sophisticated Reaper drones. Turkey hopes to receive a green light from the United States at the end of the year to buy the two critical weapons systems. The AH-1W gunships, made by Bell Helicopter Textron, are not currently being produced and the U.S. Navy command has some 170 of them. Turkey wants to buy a small number of these choppers presently in the U.S. Marines’ inventory and officials from both countries said they were looking for a solution. U.S. Ambassador to Ankara, James Jeffrey, said that if the United States found a way to transfer some of the Super Cobras to the Turkish military without hurting the front-line firepower capabilities of the Marines, it would. The other systems Turkey wants to acquire are the MQ-9 Reapers, an armed drone manufactured by General Atomics. Turkish officials are impressed by the performance of these unmanned aerial vehicles which the United States military has used in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Verdict on Mor Gabriel Monastery Land Expected

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 24 — A Midyat court will deliver its verdict today about a land dispute between a 1,600-year-old monastery and locals of a southeastern Anatolian town home to around 3,000 Syriacs, daily Hurriyet reports. The ruling is expected to be the final phase of a long-running court process. “The monastery is not a property for sale and branding Syriacs as invaders is a disgrace for Turkey”, Yilmaz Kerimo, a Swedish deputy of Syriac origin who has attended the hearings as an observer, said, hoping that “the court will recognize Mor Gabriel monastery’s boundaries”. Local officials of three nearby villages who contest the borders of the monastery argue that the monastery is bigger than any place of worship in the world. Concerned by the redrawn borders following land surveying proceedings in the area, officials from the monastery foundation appealed to the court and said they were not occupiers, as they had paid tax on the land since 1938. The court case is being closely followed by the European Union which is urging the government to provide its ethnic and religious groups with equal rights and freedoms. “Such cases are tarnishing Turkey’s image in Europe. I hope the court will deliver a fair verdict and the Syriacs, together with Arabs, Kurds and Circassians, will live peacefully and side-by-side”, Kerimo said. Syrians are not officially recognized as a minority in Turkey under the Lausanne Treaty. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: PM Erdogan Tries to Revitalize EU Bid

ISTANBUL — The Turkish prime minister sought Friday to revitalize Turkey’s EU membership bid, which has bogged down amid opposition from Paris and Berlin, along with historical differences over Cyprus.

“No other candidate nation has been subjected to this kind of treatment,” said Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who traveled to Brussels with two senior colleagues for talks with European Union officials. “This situation has to change,” he added, according to a report by Agence France-Presse.

“Some countries have adopted a political attitude in the negotiation process, and their efforts to slow things down upset us,” he told reporters. Erdogan dismissed proposals by Paris and Berlin to grant Turkey a “privileged partnership” that would offer it enhanced trade and other ties instead of full membership. “We cannot accept the positions France and Germany have taken,” Erdogan said. “There is no such type of [privileged] partnership. Our goal is full membership.”

French leader Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, along with their Austrian colleagues, favor some kind of special relationship with Turkey that falls short of full membership. The issue got a thorough airing during the campaign for the EU parliamentary polls, and reluctance to embrace Turkey as an EU member garnered support from certain quarters at the vote. Erdogan criticized some candidates’ use of Turkey as a poll card, calling such tactics “populist and wrong.”

Also on Friday, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu reaffirmed Turkey’s commitment to becoming an EU member, saying speeding up the negotiations serves the strategic interests of the country. “Recent busy diplomatic traffic between Turkey and the EU shows Turkey’s increasing motivation about the country’s membership bid,” the Anatolia news agency quoted Davutoglu as telling a joint press conference after a meeting with EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn.

Long to-do list

Rehn made clear, however, that Turkey has to work harder. “In particular, there is a pressing need to reform the legal and constitutional framework governing the closure of political parties,” he said. “We simply cannot afford yet another unnecessary constitutional crisis stemming from outdated rules not in line with European standards.”

Ankara formally opened its EU talks in October 2005. Since then, it has managed to open up 10 of the 35 policy chapters, which all candidate nations must negotiate successfully prior to accession. EU and Turkish officials said that an 11th chapter, on taxation, would be opened in Brussels next Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Turkey: ‘Keep Your Hands Off the Military’

ANKARA — The political skirmish continues as Chief of General Staff Gen. Basbug returns fire for previous combative comments by Prime Minister Erdogan that supposedly second-guessed the sincerity of the military’s internal investigation into the source of alleged plans to dismantle the ruling party. Basbug says anti-AKP plan is just ‘a piece of paper’

The disagreement between the military and the government over an alleged plan that outlines ways to overthrow the ruling party is deepening as both sides issue contradictory statements.

While Chief of General Staff Gen. Ilker Basbug described the plan “as a piece of paper” that has no legality and is part of another psychological smear campaign against the military, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan repeated his dissatisfaction with the military’s findings, saying “the civilian court will continue to handle the case.”

“Keep your hands off the military. Give up trying to politically identify yourselves through the Turkish Armed Forces [or TSK],” Basbug said at a press conference held at military headquarters with the participation of all force commanders and top military personnel. “Put an end to running such asymmetric psychological operations against the TSK through the media.”

Basbug’s press conference came two days after the military prosecutor ruled that there was no cause for the prosecution of Navy Col. Dursun Çiçek, as there was no evidence proving that he had prepared the plan at headquarters. It also came a day after Erdogan showed his dissatisfaction over the ruling.

The plan, which was first published two weeks ago by daily Taraf, details ways to break popular support for the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, and its influential supporter, the Muslim cleric Fethullah Gülen, the leader of the religious Gülen movement.

“As a result of the investigation, it has been revealed that there is no document, but just a piece of paper,” Basbug said. “Discussing such a paper for two weeks at a moment when there are so many regional global developments that concern us is really odd.”

Responding to Basbug’s remarks during a meeting in Brussels on Friday, Erdogan said the military prosecutor might have approached the document issue differently. “The process from now on belongs to the civilian prosecutor. The military judiciary decided that the document is not related to the military. The civilian judiciary will continue to investigate the matter,” the prime minister said. “We cannot permit the fraying of the rule of law, which is based on democratic, secular and social structure.”

Basbug’s words made it clear, however, that the military is not requesting a civilian prosecution that would determine whether the plan is real or fake. “Crimes allegedly conducted by military personnel in a military zone can only be prosecuted by the military prosecutor,” he said. “Therefore, what we ask from the civilian prosecutor is not to investigate whether the plan is real or fake, but [who are] its perpetrators. You may like or dislike the ruling of the military judiciary. But you cannot disrespect and underestimate it.”

Çiçek invited for testimony

Though the military judiciary ruled Col. Çiçek had nothing to do with the document, civilian Istanbul prosecutor Zekeriya Öz reportedly invited him to give testimony on Tuesday under the Ergenekon case, an alleged organization set to dismantle the government. It was not sure whether Col. Çiçek will accept the invitation or not when the Daily News went to print late Friday. The move of the Ergenekon prosecutors is seen as that the civilian judiciary does not share the same view of their colleagues at the military headquarters.

Emphasizing that the decision of the military prosecutor was not a final one and that the investigation could be re-opened if new evidence is found, Basbug said that the investigation would stay in the hands of the military prosecutor unless a civilian dimension of the plan was found.

Repeating several times that there was a constant, organized attempt to tarnish the military through the media and that “the army will no longer tolerate such campaigns,” Basbug called on the intelligence institutions and the civilian justice system to uncover the perpetrators and said he would bring the issue to the agenda of the bimonthly meeting of the national Security Council, or MGK, the state’s top security board, on Tuesday. “We believe these sort of acts will not harm the integrity of the Armed Forces, but also the existence of the country,” Basbug said. “It is very important for all of us.” Repeating his April statement that “the TSK will not harbor any of its personnel who have been engaged in anti-democratic movements,” Basbug ruled out engaging in a “witch hunt” within the army. “We have no any intention of sweeping these allegations under the carpet.”

Right after the plan was published in the media, the AKP filed a criminal complaint to the court, criticizing the content of the document as if it was real. Erdogan spoke harshly last week at a party meeting in the southeastern Anatolian town of Sanliurfa, indirectly slamming the army for intending to overthrow his government. When asked whether he felt ashamed when he heard Erdogan’s statement, Basbug said there was no cause for him to feel that way, but that he had expressed his opinions and thoughts on it to Erdogan. Without a direct reference to Basbug’s comment, Erdogan said Friday that he could not remain silent about such a plot.

Basbug also criticized the leaks of some documents to the media during the investigation process. “A criminal report prepared by the Gendarmerie and sent to the Police Department in Istanbul via a special courier June 17 was published by the media June 19 and 20. Another report was again leaked to the media a few days later,” he said. “How does it happen? Who leaks them? What is the purpose? Isn’t it our right to ask about it? We have filed complaints about these leaks.” Basbug also said though the alleged plan had no date on it, some media were reporting that it was prepared in April. “How can we find out the truth if you dynamite the legal process?” he asked.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Police Report on Dink Toned Down

ISTANBUL — A report on the threat to Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink’s life was tampered with and toned down before being sent to Istanbul. The sentence ‘Yasin Hayal will murder Hrant Dink whatever the cost’ was changed to ‘Hayal is planning to take action toward Dink’.

An intelligence report on the threat to the life of murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was toned down before being sent to Istanbul, it has been reported.

The sentence “Yasin Hayal will murder Hrant Dink whatever the cost” was changed to “Hayal is planning to take action toward Dink.”

Dink, the former editor-in-chief of daily Agos, was gunned down Jan. 19, 2007 in front of his office in central Istanbul and the instigator is suspected to be Yasin Hayal.

The mentioned intelligence report, written by the staff of the Trabzon Police Department on Feb. 16, 2006 and sent to the Istanbul Police Department two days later, carries the signature of Ramazan Akyürek who was Trabzon’s chief of police at the time.

Akyürek is being blamed for “neglecting duty” in a report prepared by the Prime Ministry Inspection Board, which was approved by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Other records obtained

The daily Milliyet also obtained reports of meetings that show the statements made to justify the removal from duty of Erhan Tuncel, a former informant for the Trabzon Intelligence Unit. Tuncel was a source providing intelligence on Hayal. The report clearly indicates that Hayal was going to murder Dink, not “take action toward” him.

Ali Fuat Yilmazer, another security officer who is being blamed for “neglecting duty” in the same report, was the head of the C section of Trabzon’s Intelligence Unit at the time. Yilmazer’s office had received the report Feb. 17, 2006, and the Istanbul Intelligence Unit also received a memo on the same day. However, the memo is slightly different from the report as plans of murder were toned down to read “taking action.” “Hayal is planning to take action toward Dink and he will stay with his brother Osman Hayal” reads the altered memo.

The report signed by Akyürek includes intelligence provided by Tuncel. Tuncel says an accomplice of Hayal told him that Dink and the daily Agos were blackening the image of Turks and the Turkish Republic and for that reason they were planning to take action against him. However, Tuncel’s statements continued as such: “While I was convinced Hayal would do what he wanted to do for sure, I advised him not to do so. He told me that he would kill this person no matter the cost.”

The report also features the comments of two intelligence agents from the police department in its evaluation section. The agents pointed to former knowledge of Hayal speaking around of taking action and indicated that he was capable of doing such a thing.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Russia


Russia Won’t Participate in Jewish Documents Suit

WASHINGTON (AP) — Russia told a U.S. court on Friday that judges have no authority to tell the country how to handle sacred Jewish documents held in its state library that were seized by the Nazi and Soviet armies.

The documents are at the center of a lawsuit brought by members of Chabad-Lubavitch, which follows the teachings of Eastern European rabbis and emphasizes the study of the Torah. The group is suing Russia in U.S. court to recover thousands of manuscripts, prayers, lectures and philosophical discourses by leading rabbis dating back to the 18th century.

The case is being handled by the chief judge of the U.S. District Court in Washington, Royce Lamberth, who in January ordered Russia to preserve the documents over Chabad’s fears they are not being properly cared for and could be sold on the black market.

But Russia said in its filing Friday that even though it respects the U.S. court, it would not participate in the litigation to protect its sovereignty. Russia said the United States should use diplomatic channels to address any concerns it has about the collection and that Chabad can pursue claims in Russian courts.

“This court has no authority to enter orders with respect to the property owned by the Russian Federation and in its possession, and the Russian Federation will not consider any such orders to be binding on it,” said the Russian filing.

Lamberth agreed to take the case in U.S. court because he said both the Nazi seizure and the Russian government’s appropriation of the collection, which Chabad says totals 12,000 books and 50,000 rare documents, violated international law.

The collection was formerly held by Rabbi Joseph Isaac Schneersohn, a leader of Chabad-Lubavitch who was born in Russia but forced by the Soviets to leave in 1927. He took the documents to Latvia and later Poland, but left them behind when the Nazis invaded and he fled to the U.S. The collection was seized and taken to Germany, then recovered by the Soviet Army in 1945.

Attorneys representing Chabad at the law firm Bingham McCutchen said after five years of litigation, Russia “is now acting like a child who has lost the game and wants to start all over on its home court.”

“Obviously, Russia cannot justify why it has refused to return Jewish manuscripts which were stolen by the Nazis and then looted by the Soviet Army during the Second World War,” the attorneys said in a statement. “The plundering of religious texts during war is contrary to the Hague convention and the norms of any civilized society.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Danes Support Afghanistan Ops

Despite attacks against and losses among Danish soldiers in Afghanistan, the Danes support operations in Afghanistan.

Despite the fact that three Danish soldiers have been killed and five wounded in Afghanistan in the past 10 days, Danes are positive towards operations in the country, according to a Megafon poll for Politiken and TV2 News.

The poll says that 50 percent of those asked want Danish soldiers to continue their presence in Afghanistan’s Helmand Province, while only 39 percent want their forces home.

In comparison, only 24 percent of Britons want to keep forces in Afghanistan with a full 68 percent wanting a withdrawal. Danish troops are fighting alongside British troops in Afghanistan’s unruly Helmand Province.

Megafon also asked whether killed or wounded soldiers would have an effect on demands for withdrawal. Forty-two percent said this would only have a marginal effect.

Gender differences were apparent in the poll. Forty-five percent of women wanted troops home, while 40 percent supported operations. Among men, 32 percent wanted withdrawal while 60 percent wanted to keep troops in Afghanistan.

The only group to oppose Denmark’s operations in Afghanistan was the 50-59 age group of which 45 percent wanted to withdraw troops and while 40 percent wanted Danish troops to continue.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



G8 Foreign Ministers Lament Afghan Corruption

TRIESTE, Italy — Foreign ministers from the Group of Eight countries meeting in Italy lamented corruption and the lack of basic services such as health and water in Afghanistan, saying Friday that better cooperation among countries in the region was needed to promote stability.

The foreign ministers from the world’s industrialized nations endorsed Pakistan’s battle against Taliban insurgents and promised to work more with the country’s government “in the face of terrorism, extremism and militancy.” They called for better regional cooperation in fighting terrorism and drug trafficking in the region.

Improving security in the troubled region is a focus of the three-day meeting in this northeastern Italian city.

Italy, the host of the meeting, sought to broaden participation in the talks, arguing that Afghanistan is a problem that needs to be addressed regionally. As a result, the foreign ministers of Pakistan and Afghanistan participated in Friday’s session, and a joint statement was issued.

In the statement, the ministers said that, despite some efforts by the Afghan government, “insecurity, widespread corruption and capacity shortfalls continue to complicate the delivery of basic services at the local level, including health, education and water.”

President Hamid Karzai has been criticized both at home and abroad for corruption in his administration but he is the favorite in the Aug. 20 vote in Afghanistan. The administration of President Barack Obama in its early days called Karzai’s government inefficient and corrupt, but U.S. officials have toned down criticism of a leader who may win a second five-year term.

The statement said the G-8 countries “acknowledge that the pursuit of peace, stability and development in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the region are linked.”

“The G-8 remains committed to working with the Pakistani government as it endeavors to strengthen functioning democratic institutions, and its civil society in the face of terrorism, extremism and militancy,” it said.

The statement also looked at drug trafficking and the opium trade, which help fund extremists, saying that it was urgent to find alternative sources of income.

Italy had also invited Iran to attend the talks, arguing that it could play an important role in talks on Afghan stabilization. But Rome retracted the invitation after Iran failed to respond, and amid concerns over Iran’s violent crackdown on protesters.

Talks Friday were devoted to cultural cooperation, border management and illicit trafficking. On Saturday, the delegates will look at economic development, refugees and migrations, and food security, with other international players joining the discussions.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Orissa: Nun Raped by Hindu Extremists Recognizes One of Her Assailants

It is the third person recognized by the religious sister, among the first victims of the anti-Christian pogrom last August. Fr. Chellan who accompanied the nun to Choudwar prison in Cuttack, says: “The change in the political situation seems to have had a positive impact on how investigations are conducted.”

Bhubaneshwar (AsiaNews) — Sr. Meena Barware, the religious sister raped by group of radical Hindus last August 25, has recognized another of her assailants.

Yesterday, accompanied by Fr Thomas Chellan to the prison in Choudwar, Cuttack, the 29 yar old was subjected to another Test Identification Parade (TIP), the second after that of January 5 last year where she identified two of the ring leaders of the violence.

Arriving at the prison at 13:30, for an hour or so she had to go through seventy people. Among them Sr. Meena indicated Sitaram Patra. Reached by AsiaNews, Fr Chellan says that he is “not the main culprit accused of the rape” which occurred in the pastoral center at Divyajyoti in K Nuagaon, in the district of Kandhamal (Orissa).

The priest, a witness and victim of assault in the centre he directed, had accompanied the sister to the first TIP. Fr. Chellan has not participated in the identification, but says that this time “the whole procedure was conducted in a dignified manner, with due attention to the sensitivity of the case.” At the beginning of the judicial investigation, Sr. Meena had refused to cooperate in the case because of lack of confidence in the police. Fr. Chellan says that “the change of political situation in the State, with the defeat of the Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party,” seems to have had a positive impact on how to conduct investigations. “

The priest of the diocese of Cuttack-Bhubaneshwar believes that “since the case of Sr. Meena has assumed international importance, the authorities have been taking the investigation more seriously.” He added “now seems to be the political will to bring the perpetrators to justice, at least in this case. If the intention is sincere, then the authorities should arrest the main culprits in addition to the 17 already arrested on charges of being involved. “

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



Thailand: Separatist Fighters Recruited in Islamic Schools

The militants play on Malay nationalism and the sense of belonging to the old sultanate on the border between Thailand and Malaysia. The fighters do not have links with international fundamentalist groups, instead operating on a local level. Yesterday a command targeted a Buddhist temple in Narathiwat province, injuring eight people.

Bangkok (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Muslim separatists in the south of the country recruit new fighters in the Islamic schools, in efforts to raise the level of confrontation with the Thai government and the army. The alarm was raised by a report published yesterday on studies carried out by the NGO International Crisis Group (ICG) that states that recent attacks in the provinces of Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani are part of a separatist struggle and are not linked to other Islamic terrorist groups on a regional or international level.

Yesterday, an armed commando opened fire in a Buddhist temple in the province of Narathiwat in southern Thailand, injuring eight people. A government officer reports that the prompt response of security guards prevented more injuries or deaths. The attack on the temple, which was also used as a small camp by the military, is the latest in a long series of violence that in five years has caused the death of about 3700 people. Until the last century, the region on the border between Thailand and Malaysia was an independent Malay Muslim sultanate. The annexation of the ‘land of the elephant’ has given birth to a separatist struggle.

According to the study prepared by ICG experts the Muslim separatists are seeking guerrillas and playing on Malay nationalism and the sense of belonging to the old sultanate. “They tell the students of the [Muslim] schools that it is the duty of every Muslim to reclaim their land from Buddhist infidels” refers Rungrawee Chalermsripinyorat, ICG analyst for Thailand. The report defines the classes as “the first collection point” for fighters, who invite young Muslims to follow extra-curricular courses of indoctrination in the mosques.

The Thai government in recent weeks has focused attention on schools in the South, promoting better education and more opportunities for professional employment. The Thai premier Abhisit Vejjajiva considers education a “key weapon” in the fight against Muslim separatism.

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

Far East


Britain Considered Japan Chemical Attack: Records

LONDON (AFP) — Britain considered attacking Tokyo with chemical weapons almost a year before the US bombardments that ended World War II in Asia, declassified records revealed on Friday.

The records at the National Archives, which have remained hidden from public view for 65 years, revealed clear proposals to use gas on civilians in 1944.

Although the plan was never put into operation, a detailed memorandum laid out measures to ensure any attack would have the most devastating impact possible.

A Chemical Board note marked “secret” and signed by E.E. Haddon, Secretary, stated: “In his report on his discussions in America… Major General Goldnoy suggested that it might be worthwhile attempting to assess the probable effects of a C.W. (chemical weapons) bombing attack on Tokyo.

“Particulars of the population and layout and photographs of typical buildings and areas in Tokyo were kindly provided by the Director of Military Intelligence, War Office and those have now been studied by Professor Brunt.”

Blunt, in a memorandum attached to the document, suggested the initial bombardments should take place in areas of densely packed buildings, using incendiaries “sufficient to set the large areas involved on fire.”

Once the inflammable buildings of the Japanese capital have been destroyed, he suggested, a gas attack on the “more modern type of streets” could begin.

However, Blunt warned the military planners that the city’s layout could present obstacles to chemical warfare.

“In the densely built areas of Japanese-type buildings, where the streets are narrow, the flow of a gas cloud would be hindered by the narrowness of the streets,” he wrote.

The memorandum recommended attacking during the summer season because it said a cold winter could reduce the impact of mustard gas, although heavy rainfall was also highlighted as possibly leading to decontamination.

The memorandum concluded: “Persistent danger from mustard would only be achievable in the intervals between the summer rains.”

The document also said “very large numbers of small bombs” would be necessary in densely populated parts of the city.

Phosgene, mustard and incendiaries are all put forward as possible options.

“If mustard were used and it produced the effect of driving the population away from the densely built areas, attack with incendiaries should follow a few days later,” it said.

Mark Dunton, Contemporary History Specialist at the National Archives, said: “What is interesting about this file is that it shows we could have been ahead of America in our thinking.

“It seems shocking to modern eyes that the attempt to assess the effect of a chemical gas attack on civilians is described in such an objective way — the pressures of war brought their own terrible logic.”

The United States dropped nuclear bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9, 1945, killing more than 210,000 people.

Less than a week after the Nagasaki attack, Japan surrendered, ending World War II.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



G8 Countries Condemn North Korea’s Missile Tests

TRIESTE, Italy — Foreign ministers from Group of Eight countries on Friday condemned North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests and urged the country to return to the negotiating table.

After its nuclear explosion last month, the United Nations slapped sanctions on Pyongyang.

“We condemn in the strongest terms the nuclear tests” in May, and the April launch using ballistic missile technology, “which constitute a threat to regional peace and stability,” the G-8 foreign ministers said in a statement during their meeting in Italy.

They welcomed the U.N. Security Council resolution calling on all 192 U.N. members to inspect North Korean vessels on the high seas, “if they have information that provides reasonable grounds to believe that the cargo” contains banned weapons or material to make them, and if approval is given by the country whose flag the ship sails under.

The foreign ministers urged Pyongyang to abide by U.N. resolutions and “abandon all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs as well as ballistic missile programs.”

The ministers called on North Korea “not to conduct further destabilizing actions” and to return to six-nation disarmament talks.

Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone said during a news conference that the tests conducted in April and May are “a challenge to the peace and the stability of the international community, and this is something that we cannot abide by.”

In Washington, officials said the White House will dispatch a career diplomat to Beijing and other capitals in coming days to coordinate implementation of the new U.N. sanctions on North Korea.

Philip S. Goldberg, who has served as U.S. ambassador to Bolivia and other countries, will lead a delegation representing other key U.S. departments, including Treasury, Defense and State. He also will be the administration’s full-time North Korea sanctions coordinator, according to two senior administration officials who discussed the plan on condition of anonymity because it has not been publicly announced.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil Calls Off Search for Air France Victims

SAO PAULO (Reuters) — Brazil’s Air Force and Navy on Friday called off the search for additional victims and wreckage from Air France Flight 447, which crashed over the Atlantic on June 1 carrying 228 people.

French officials have given no indication they are ending their own search efforts. To date, authorities have recovered 51 bodies as well as 600 pieces of wreckage from the Airbus A330-200 jetliner.

Brazilian Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Henry Munhoz said the military was unlikely to find additional bodies and wreckage in the search area so many days after the crash.

“It’s already been nine days without seeing any bodies,” Munhoz said in a televised news conference.

Brazilian Navy Captain Giucemar Tabosa said French navy ships will remain in the area looking for beacon signals from the plane’s voice and flight data recorders, the so-called black boxes.

The cause of the crash is unknown, and there is still no sign of the black boxes, which could give vital information about why the plane went down.

Weather and distance from the coast have complicated search efforts from the outset, and officials have said it will be difficult to find the black boxes.

(Reporting Pedro Fonseca; Writing by Reese Ewing; Editing by Will Dunham)

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



US Safety Board Probing a-330 Cockpit Malfunctions

WASHINGTON (AFP) — US transport safety experts said they are looking into reports of key instrument malfunctions in the cockpits of the same type of aircraft as the Air France flight that crashed this month off the coast of Brazil.

Both incidents involved the airspeed indicator and altimeter on Airbus A-330s, the US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said in a statement.

“The first incident occurred May 21, 2009 when TAM Airlines flight 8091 flying from Miami, Florida to Sao Paulo, Brazil, experienced a loss of primary speed and altitude information while in cruise flight,” it said.

“Initial reports indicate that the flight crew noted an abrupt drop in indicated outside air temperature, followed by the loss of the Air Data Reference System and disconnections of the autopilot and autothrust, along with the loss of speed and altitude information.”

The flight crew switched to backup instruments and was able to safely land in Sao Paulo.

The NTSB is still gathering flight recorder data, information about weather conditions and statements from the crew of the other report of “a possibly similar incident” involving a Northwest Airlines A-330 flying between Hong Kong and Tokyo on Tuesday.

That flight was able to land safely in Tokyo.

No one was injured in either incident, and the aircraft sustained no damage, the NTSB said.

Investigators are still trying to work out what caused the Air France flight to plunge into the Atlantic Ocean around 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) off Brazil’s northeast coast on June 1, as it was flying from Rio de Janeiro to Paris with 228 people on board.

France’s Investigation and Analysis Bureau (BEA), which is leading the technical inquiry into the crash, said Thursday it will release an initial report on July 2 into what caused the disaster, the worst in Air France’s history.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


1 in 5 UK Births is to a Mum From Abroad

THE number of babies born in the UK to immigrant mothers shot up by almost two thirds between 2001 and 2007, according to official figures.

More than one in five of children born in Britain in 2007 had a mother born overseas — a total of 160,300 compared with 529,700 for British-born mothers.

In the London boroughs of Newham and Brent, 74..8 per cent and 72 per cent of all births were to foreign-born women.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



47 Arrests as Calais Riot Fears Build Up

FRENCH riot cops made 47 arrests yesterday following clashes with anarchists plotting to help asylum seekers smash their way into Britain.

Trouble flared in Calais when more than 100 migrants joined protesters at a makeshift camp.

Machetes, metal poles and a mace were seized and 17 people were held.

The rest were arrested after chaining themselves to a detention centre for UK-bound foreigners.

Several hundred people are massing for a “No Borders” march tomorrow.

Cops have intercepted protesters’ emails pledging to destroy wire fences and other security measures around the Channel Tunnel and ferry port.

Anarchist groups have also vowed to torch government offices.

A police spokesman said: “All vulnerable targets are being guarded. We can take no chances.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Immigration Plot to Create More Illegal Immigration & One Party

ALIPAC is rallying Americans against Obama’s Comprehensive Immigration Reform Amnesty plans that are being discussed with Congressional leaders in the White House today because a path to citizenship for millions of illegals would bring more illegal immigration to America and create a one party political system, both of which are opposed by a large majority of Americans.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Animal Fats Pancreas Cancer Link

Eating a diet high in red meat and dairy products is linked to an increased risk of pancreatic cancer, a US study has suggested.

Researchers followed 500,000 people who had completed a food diary for an average of six years.

The Journal of the National Cancer Institute paper found those who had the most animal fats in their diet had a higher risk of developing the cancer.

UK experts said cutting down on the fats was a way of reducing risk.

There has previously been confusion over whether there was a link between animal fats and pancreatic cancer, with different studies reaching opposite conclusions.

About 7,000 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in the UK each year, with smoking being the biggest risk factor.

The prognosis is poor — the time between diagnosis and death is usually about six months.

‘Welcome addition’

This latest research was carried out by the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, which felt earlier studies had been too small to give reliable results.

The participants were being followed to see if they developed a range of diseases.

Of the half a million studied, 1,337 developed pancreatic cancer.

Men who consumed the highest amount of total fats had a 53% higher relative rate of pancreatic cancer compared with men who ate the least.

In women, there was a 23% higher rate of the disease in those eating the most fat compared with those who ate the least.

Overall, people who consumed high amounts of saturated fats had 36% higher relative rates of pancreatic cancer compared with those who consumed low amounts.

Writing in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, the researchers led by Dr Rachel Stolzenberg-Solomon, said: “We observed positive associations between pancreatic cancer and intakes of total, saturated, and monounsaturated fat overall, particularly from red meat and dairy food sources.

“We did not observe any consistent association with polyunsaturated or fat from plant food sources.

“Altogether, these results suggest a role for animal fat in pancreatic carcinogenesis.”

In an editorial in the journal, Dr Brian Wolpin, of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, and Dr Meir Stampfer, of the Harvard School of Public Health, said the study was a “welcome addition to the understanding of a disease that is in great need of new insights”.

Josephine Querido, senior science information officer for Cancer Research UK, said: “This large study adds to the evidence that pancreatic cancer is more common in people who eat too much fat, particularly saturated fat.

“Understanding ways of reducing the risk of pancreatic cancer is very important because it can be very difficult to treat.

“Apart from stopping smoking, the best way to reduce your risk of cancer is to eat plenty of fruit vegetables and fibre, and to cut down on fatty foods, red and processed meat and limit your intake of alcohol.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



For UN and Its Leader, Climate Deal Stakes High

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — For Ban Ki-moon, bringing about a new U.N. climate treaty by the end of this year is a must.

Ban decided from the moment he became U.N. secretary-general in January 2007 that “climate change should be the most important top-priority issue for the United Nations, for the entire world,” he said in an Associated Press interview this week.

Since then Ban says he has put “all my efforts and energy” into persuading nations to cut a new climate deal in Copenhagen, Denmark, in December, replacing the Kyoto Protocol for reducing greenhouse gases that expires in 2012.

“From day one, I have been trying to visit all the places around the world, wherever and whenever I was able to see the consequences of climate change,” he said. “Now, the United Nations is leading this campaign, in close coordination with the … major players.”

That he’s the leader, or figurehead, for a campaign he’s personally and hugely invested in, isn’t in dispute. What’s harder to assess is his effectiveness. Ban isn’t exactly a household name, and some believe whatever happens is largely beyond his control.

“It will be decided by heads of states, not by ministers,” said Brice Lalonde, France’s chief climate negotiator. “We don’t have the Nelson Mandela of climate change — that’s a real problem.”

The U.N. General Assembly, which acts as a world forum for debate and sets the U.N. budget, agreed at its 3-day financial summit that ended Friday that the worst global financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s “must not delay the necessary global response to climate change and environmental degradation.”

Its members said they “acknowledge that the response to the crisis presents an opportunity to promote green economy initiatives” and also agreed to “encourage the utilization of national stimulus packages, for those countries in a position to do so” that include environmental and poverty-reduction measures.

Ban also says gaining commitments from rich nations to provide money and new pollution-control technology to developing countries is key.

“Otherwise, it will be very difficult,” he said. “We don’t have much time to lose. We have to seal the deal in Copenhagen. That’s my firm commitment.”

Much of the world is waiting to see what the biggest greenhouse gas polluters, the U.S. and China, can agree on.

In Washington, the House of Representatives has been debating whether to cut carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent from 2005 levels by 2020 and by about 80 percent by the next century. Both the Obama administration and Democrats want the bill passed by the end of the year, when negotiations at Copenhagen get under way. Senate approval of a climate bill, however, is considered a long shot.

In May, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi met with top Chinese officials and government advisers seeking a consensus on positions to take to the Copenhagen conference, but the outlook was unclear at best.

China says global warming is largely the responsibility of rich nations that should provide funds and technologies to developing countries to cut carbon emissions.

Copenhagen’s hosts have begun to worry.

Connie Hedegaard, Denmark’s climate and energy minister, said after talks this month in Bonn, Germany, that “there is no doubt that things are moving too slow” — even backsliding.

But she called it “encouraging that more countries are presenting national climate efforts, latest Mexico, which I hope will inspire others to move as well. Now.”

Indeed, Western climate negotiators such as Lalonde say a consensus is emerging around new proposals put forth by Mexico and Norway.

Mexico proposes creating a global $10 billion “green fund” to which all but the very poorest countries would contribute that would provide funding for clean energy and environmental projects in developing countries. Norway suggests a fund financed by proceeds from auctioning emission permits.

Ban says one of his biggest accomplishments is that as recently as two years ago only “a handful of leaders” were truly interested in climate change, but now “more than 100 leaders” plan to attend a one-day climate summit he’s sponsoring on September 22.

“We will use this, the first and the largest, and also almost the last occasion at the summit-level, to prepare almost the final groundwork” for Copenhagen, Ban promises. “I really sent out a strong message to the world.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Journalist Files Charges Against WHO and UN for Bioterrorism and Intent to Commit Mass Murder

(NaturalNews) As the anticipated July release date for Baxter’s A/H1N1 flu pandemic vaccine approaches, an Austrian investigative journalist is warning the world that the greatest crime in the history of humanity is underway. Jane Burgermeister has recently filed criminal charges with the FBI against the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations (UN), and several of the highest ranking government and corporate officials concerning bioterrorism and attempts to commit mass murder. She has also prepared an injunction against forced vaccination which is being filed in America. These actions follow her charges filed in April against Baxter AG and Avir Green Hills Biotechnology of Austria for producing contaminated bird flu vaccine, alleging this was a deliberate act to cause and profit from a pandemic.

[…]

In the U.S. since 2008, Burgermeister charges that those named in her allegations have implemented new and/or accelerated the implementation of laws and regulations designed to strip the citizens of the U.S. of their lawful constitutional rights to refuse an injection. These people have created or allowed provisions to remain in place that make it a criminal act to refuse to take an injection against pandemic viruses. They have imposed other excessive and cruel penalties such as imprisonment and/or quarantine in FEMA camps while barring the citizens of the U.S. from claiming compensation from injury or death from the forced injections. This is in violation of the laws governing federal corruption and the abuse of office as well as of the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Through these actions, the named defendants have laid the groundwork for mass genocide.

[…]

She further charges that the complex of pharmaceutical companies consisting of Baxter, Novartis and Sanofi Aventis are part of a foreign-based dual purpose bioweapons program, financed by this international criminal syndicate and designed to implement mass murder to reduce the world’s population by more than 5 billion people in the next ten years. Their plan is to spread terror to justify forcing people to give up their rights, and to force mass quarantine in FEMA camps. The houses, companies and farms and lands of those who are killed will be up for grabs by this syndicate.

By eliminating the population of North America, the international elite gain access to the region’s natural resources such as water and undeveloped oil lands. And by eliminating the U.S. and its democratic constitution by subsuming it under a North American Union, the international crime group will have total control over North America.

[…]

The complete dossier of the June 10th action is a 69 page document presenting evidence to substantiate all charges. This includes:

Factual background that delineates time lines and facts that establish probable cause, UN and WHO definitions and roles, and history and incidents from the April, 2009 “swine flu” outbreak.

Evidence the “swine flu” vaccines are defined as bioweapons as delineates in government agencies and regulations classifying and restricting vaccines, and the fear of foreign countries that “swine flu” vaccines will be used for biological warfare.

Scientific evidence the “swine flu” virus is an artificial (genetic) virus.

Scientific evidence the “swine flu” was bioengineered to resemble the Spanish flu virus of 1918 including quotes from Swine Flu 2009 is Weaponized 1918 Spanish Flu by A. True Ott, Ph.D., N.D., and a Science Magazine report from Dr. Jeffrey Taubenberger et.al.

The genome sequence of the “swine flu”

Evidence of the deliberate release of the “swine flu” in Mexico.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Congress to America: “Eat Dirt and Die”

That’s the essential message from the 111th Congress to you and me: “eat dirt and die, peons”.

The cap and trade bill passed in the House, 219- 212. More than forty Democrats voted against it, but a half dozen or so Republicans crossed over, enough to give them a majority.

Here’s where you can read the roll call results to find out how your Congressman voted. Those suckers passed on it “unread”.

If you’re not sure what district you’re in, here’s the page which permits you to type in your zip code+4. Don’t worry about those last four digits if you don’t know them. Make one up (we’re so small that the extra four digits are ludicruous). This will give you your Congressman’s email page. That worked for me, but if you’re from a large city or town, you probably need the real numbers.

They passed this shameful fraud because they wanted to get out of town for the July 4th holiday. The rest of us get July 4th off. They get a week or more. In fact, who knows when they’ll return from this recess. Will it be to push through another huge, unread bill, this time on health care? We’re two for two now: the Stimulus Attack and the Energy Fraud.

By the way, one of the features of Cap and Trade is that your local agency for building codes will be by-passed. They’re going to set up a building code bureaucracy in Washington and fill it full of time-servers. Which means you can wait till hell freezes over to get an approval or inspection.

Does this mean your local agency will shut down? Heavens, no! They’ll just be the go-between. You’ll have more hoops to jump through, is all. The Imperial Congress strikes again! Practice your hoop-jumping; it’s a non-productive skill you’ll need to survive in this brave new world.

Here’s the letter I wrote to my Congressman at his contact page:
– – – – – – – –

This message needs no response.

Congressman Perriello: Your “yea” vote on the cap and trade bill is a betrayal of the people in our district.

I have never gotten involved in election campaigns before, but 2010 will be different. I will devote my energy towards your defeat.

You do not represent me, you impoverish me and the others in this district who are not going to profit from this.

For shame on the committee for producing a gargantuan bill and then moving sideways with that 300 page addendum.

For shame on all 219 of you who voted without reading this mess.

NO ONE could have read and researched that thing. Your vote was irresponsible at best.

I hope the Senate kills this travesty.

Whether or not they do, we have established that you cannot be trusted to vote for our welfare.

See you at election time, Congressman.

Believe me, I’ll be out there with big signs for whomever is running against this guy. We need someone who cares what it’s going to cost us when he votes.

Again, from the Heritage Foundation (the numbers lead to footnotes which you can find at the site):

Heritage is not alone in its assessment. The National Black Chamber of Commerce[2] and the Brookings Institution[3] also project huge job losses. Proponents of a national energy tax will quickly point to a recent Congressional Budget Office memo[4] and Environmental Protection Agency[5] analysis suggesting low per family costs. Those estimates are grossly inaccurate, as both the CBO memo and the EPA’s analysis contain flaws too serious for use as measures of the economic impact of the Waxman-Markey bill.

While national numbers are startling, many Members of Congress may be tempted to assume that their congressional districts will not be affected because they “cut a deal” or they have an incomplete view of how the American economy functions. Thus, it is crucially important that the Members making decisions, and the people affected by those decisions, understand how their congressional districts will be impacted by Waxman-Markey, or any type of national energy tax.

They have a table in Appendix One which permits you to see the breakdown of the costs by Congressional District. See “How the Waxman-Markey Climate Change Bill Would Affect the States, by Congressional District”.

To see our losses, just scroll down to Virginia, District Five, Congressman Tom Perriello. We suffer less than some of the other districts in our state, but the cap on our trade is still pretty stiff.

We’ll have to wait and see what the Senate does when they get the full blow-back from concerned citizens. With any luck, this monster will die there.

If not, there is always the vote in 2010. That is, if ACORN isn’t here stuffing the ballot boxes.

Staying Away From Tehran’s Drama

We haven’t had much to say about Tehran. We’ve been staying away from the drama, as sad as that might be, and avoiding pointing out the inevitable truth regarding the fight over regime change in Iran.

Today, Diana West took the lid off and let the facts fly. She says it much more succinctly than we could.

…it becomes unavoidably clear the post-election conflict isn’t a struggle between tyranny and freedom — the epic narrative we’ve been hearing in absolute, non-contestable terms. The worst thing that could happen next, at least for the absolute, non-contestable pundit-ocracy, is that it becomes clear we’re looking at an intra-Islamic power struggle that has nothing to do with liberty and justice for anybody.

She’s exactly right. This is a “theocratic power struggle between rival mullahs”. The sock puppets are Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Mir Hossein Mousavi, but the real deal is the battle between their bosses. Ahmadinejad answers to Ali Khamenei; Mousavi to Rafsanjani.

Ms. West says this reality ought to be enough to chill the enthusiasms of those who think this has anything to do with freedom or democracy. It is about another Islamicist regime change:

Amazingly, the thought that there might not be a pro-West horse to ride here doesn’t enter the collective media mind, from Left to Right. Such unbraked credulity reflects the media failure to deal competently with any non-Western aspect of Islamic society. They instantly project their Western selves onto everything every time.

But that’s what we do every time. It’s always about us; perhaps a reflection of us, lost in the fantasy of gazing too long into Narcissus’ pool. Instead, Ms. West has some advice to commentators and enthusiasts:
– – – – – – – –

It would seem advisable to feel one’s way into this story, particularly after picking up on the mullah-versus-mullah action, along with a few choice highlights of “opposition” candidate Mousavi’s resume. Mousavi (who defended the seizure of American hostages taken from the U.S. embassy there in 1979) served as the Ayatollah Khomeini’s prime minister (and is believed to have had a connection to the 1983 attack on the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut), reportedly initiated contact with Pakistan’s A.Q. Khan to launch Iran’s nuclear program, and, as John Bolton recently pointed out, “is fully committed to Iranian terrorism.” (So much for the Wall Street Journal’s uncontested mention of Mousavi’s “mercy Islam.”) In a recent Al Jazeera interview, Mousavi revealed his opinion of Ahmadinejad’s genocidal intention to “wipe Israel off the map.” Mousavi said: “From the beginning, I objected to that phrase.”

She has much more information. In fact, that’s the point of her essay. She did her homework on Mousavi and found what was under the rocks, something that other commentators don’t seem to have been willing to do.

Tehran isn’t changing anything, except perhaps for the worst. Read the rest of her essay. She exposes Mousavi’s “vision”.

Anyone remember 1979?

Which Koran?

The founding document of Islam is the group of writings collected in the Koran. A devout Muslim believes the Koran to be the perfect, immutable, and eternal word of Allah as dictated to the prophet Mohammed and memorized or written down by the companions of the Prophet. The book is complete, every word in it is true, and nothing in it has been altered since it was first transcribed 1400 years ago.

That’s the traditional view of the core Islamic scriptures, and woe betide any Muslim who questions it. Scholars who attempted to research the origins of the Koran and examine its historical variants have been driven out of Pakistan, Egypt, and other Muslim countries, and have been forced to seek refuge in the academic cloisters of the infidel West.

Koran, 9th century AD


In the early 1970s, during the renovation of the Great Mosque of Sana’a in Yemen, a trove of ancient manuscripts was discovered. Among them were fragments of early versions of the Koran and related writings. The German scholar Gerd-R. Puin (who has published lengthy analyses of the earliest accounts of the Islamic religion) obtained access to the documents, and was allowed to study them for many years. Recognizing the sensitivity of the find, he published very little about the manuscripts until they had been completely microfilmed and a permanent record of them safely established outside of Yemen.

In a communication to Christopher Heger on March 13, 1999, Dr. Puin wrote:

I have been lucky — and still I am — to study many of the oldest Yemeni Koran manuscripts written in the most archaic “Hijazi” style.

In these I found variants and peculiarities which are not recorded in the traditional Arabic books on qira’at (variant readings), or in the books on rasm al- masahif (orthography of the Koran[s]) nor in those on the ti’dad al-ayat (counting [systems] of verses).

[…]

If I had not had access to Yamani Koran fragments preserved in the Dar al-Makhtutat al-Yamaniyyah, San’a’, I could have possibly found similar variants and peculiarities in Hijazi fragments of the Koran kept outside the Yemen in many libraries or museums, e.g. in France, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, or Kuwait. A most spectacular (complete??) Hijazi Koran can be admired in the Islamic Museum of Cairo, only a few meters from the entrance, in a special vitrine to the right of the main route; this treasure is in Egypt since 1300 years or so, but I know of no investigation, of no publication on its peculiarities!

There is, on the Muslims’ side, no interest in textual research on the Koran since 900 years! Except from some western semitists who, from time to time, detect the etymology of one Koranic expression or another, most of the Arabists feel reluctant to make up their minds on the genesis of the Koran. The reason for this kind of negligence is quite clear: Both the Muslims and most of the Arabists conceive any early deviation from the Koranic scripture (as is represented by the Cairo print edition) for a lapsus calami, a mere scribal error.

Also in 1999, a summary of Dr. Puin’s findings was published in The Atlantic Monthly. Even back then, before 9-11 had fully alerted Westerners to the… ahem… sensitivities of Muslims, the potentially explosive nature of the Sana’a manuscripts was generally recognized.

Christianity and Judaism have long been subjected to rigorous textual and historical analysis. Now, at last, it appears to be Islam’s turn:

Puin is not alone in his enthusiasm. “The impact of the Yemeni manuscripts is still to be felt,” says Andrew Rippin, a professor of religious studies at the University of Calgary, who is at the forefront of Koranic studies today. “Their variant readings and verse orders are all very significant. Everybody agrees on that. These manuscripts say that the early history of the Koranic text is much more of an open question than many have suspected: the text was less stable, and therefore had less authority, than has always been claimed.”

– – – – – – – –

[…]

By the standards of contemporary biblical scholarship, most of the questions being posed by scholars like Puin and Rippin are rather modest; outside an Islamic context, proposing that the Koran has a history and suggesting that it can be interpreted metaphorically are not radical steps. But the Islamic context — and Muslim sensibilities — cannot be ignored. “To historicize the Koran would in effect delegitimize the whole historical experience of the Muslim community,” says R. Stephen Humphreys, a professor of Islamic studies at the University of California at Santa Barbara. “The Koran is the charter for the community, the document that called it into existence. And ideally — though obviously not always in reality — Islamic history has been the effort to pursue and work out the commandments of the Koran in human life. If the Koran is a historical document, then the whole Islamic struggle of fourteen centuries is effectively meaningless.”

Muslim clerics often assert that the Koran cannot be understood except in the original classical Arabic, but Dr. Puin maintains that much of the book is unclear, even to Arabic scholars:

“The Koran claims for itself that it is ‘mubeen,’ or ‘clear,’“ [Puin] says. “But if you look at it, you will notice that every fifth sentence or so simply doesn’t make sense. Many Muslims — and Orientalists — will tell you otherwise, of course, but the fact is that a fifth of the Koranic text is just incomprehensible. This is what has caused the traditional anxiety regarding translation. If the Koran is not comprehensible — if it can’t even be understood in Arabic — then it’s not translatable. People fear that. And since the Koran claims repeatedly to be clear but obviously is not — as even speakers of Arabic will tell you — there is a contradiction. Something else must be going on.”

Trying to figure out that “something else” really began only in this century. “Until quite recently,” Patricia Crone, the historian of early Islam, says, “everyone took it for granted that everything the Muslims claim to remember about the origin and meaning of the Koran is correct. If you drop that assumption, you have to start afresh.” This is no mean feat, of course; the Koran has come down to us tightly swathed in a historical tradition that is extremely resistant to criticism and analysis.

This is an understatement. In the context of 21st-century Salafist fundamentalism, criticism and analysis of the Koran can cost a scholar his life. The example of Salman Rushdie — who was, after all, only an amateur critic of Islamic scripture — did not go unnoticed.

R. Stephen Humphreys, writing in Islamic History: A Framework for Inquiry (1988), concisely summed up the issue that historians confront in studying early Islam.

If our goal is to comprehend the way in which Muslims of the late 2nd/8th and 3rd/9th centuries [Islamic calendar / Christian calendar] understood the origins of their society, then we are very well off indeed. But if our aim is to find out “what really happened,” in terms of reliably documented answers to modern questions about the earliest decades of Islamic society, then we are in trouble.

The fact that “trouble” can easily turn deadly has stunted the growth of textual scholarship on the Koran. But, thanks to the quiet work of Dr. Puin and other experts, a new picture of Koranic history is emerging.

In 2002, Alexander Stille wrote in The New York Times:

To Muslims the Koran is the very word of God, who spoke through the Angel Gabriel to Muhammad: “This book is not to be doubted,” the Koran declares unequivocally at its beginning. Scholars and writers in Islamic countries who have ignored that warning have sometimes found themselves the target of death threats and violence, sending a chill through universities around the world.

Yet despite the fear, a handful of experts have been quietly investigating the origins of the Koran, offering radically new theories about the text’s meaning and the rise of Islam.

Christoph Luxenberg, a scholar of ancient Semitic languages in Germany, argues that the Koran has been misread and mistranslated for centuries. His work, based on the earliest copies of the Koran, maintains that parts of Islam’s holy book are derived from pre-existing Christian Aramaic texts that were misinterpreted by later Islamic scholars who prepared the editions of the Koran commonly read today.

[…]

Christoph Luxenberg, however, is a pseudonym, and his scholarly tome ““The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran” had trouble finding a publisher, although it is considered a major new work by several leading scholars in the field. Verlag Das Arabische Buch in Berlin ultimately published the book.

[…]

The reverberations have affected non-Muslim scholars in Western countries. “Between fear and political correctness, it’s not possible to say anything other than sugary nonsense about Islam,” said one scholar at an American university who asked not to be named, referring to the threatened violence as well as the widespread reluctance on United States college campuses to criticize other cultures.

While scriptural interpretation may seem like a remote and innocuous activity, close textual study of Jewish and Christian scripture played no small role in loosening the Church’s domination on the intellectual and cultural life of Europe, and paving the way for unfettered secular thought. “The Muslims have the benefit of hindsight of the European experience, and they know very well that once you start questioning the holy scriptures, you don’t know where it will stop,” the scholar explained.

The questions haven’t stopped yet, and Dr. Puin is still at the forefront of Koran scholarship.

If the Arab expansion came first, and the Koran arose later, what religion or religions powered the Arab conquests? According to the most recent analysis, Islam may have developed out of a form of Christianity, which assumed a number of variant forms on the Arabian Peninsula during the 7th century.

The quote below is taken from a synopsis of a new book, The Hidden Origins of Islam: New Research into Its Early History, edited by Karl-Heinz Ohlig and Gerd-R. Puin:

The standard histories of Muhammad and the early development of Islam are based on Islamic literature that dates to the ninth and tenth centuries-some two centuries or more after the death of Muhammad in 632. Islamic literary sources do not exist for the seventh and eighth centuries, when, according to tradition, Muhammad and his immediate followers lived. All that is preserved from this time period are a few commemorative building inscriptions and assorted coins.

Based on the premise that reliable history can only be written on the basis of sources that are contemporary with the events described, the contributors to this in-depth investigation present research that reveals the obscure origins of Islam in a completely new light. As the authors meticulously show, the name “Muhammad” first appears on coins in Syria bearing Christian iconography. In this context the name is used as an honorific meaning “revered” or “praiseworthy” and can only refer to Jesus Christ, as Christianity was the predominant religion of the area at this time. This same reference exists in the building inscription of the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, built by the caliph ‘Abd al-Malik.

The implication of these and other findings here presented is that the early Arab rulers adhered to a sect of Christianity. Indeed, evidence from the Koran, finalized at a much later time, shows that its central theological tenets were influenced by a pre-Nicean, Syrian Christianity. Linguistic analysis also indicates that Aramaic, the common language throughout the Near East for many centuries and the language of Syrian Christianity, significantly influenced the Arabic script and vocabulary used in the Koran. Finally, it was not until the end of the eighth and ninth centuries that Islam formed as a separate religion, and the Koran underwent a period of historical development of at least 200 years.

These findings are indeed explosive. If Western academia ever wakes up from its PC-induced slumber, a new scholarship of the Koran based on the Sana’a manuscripts and other artifacts will become possible. The holy book of Islam will join the Hebrew and Christian scriptures as a historical document, one that has been subject to revisions, redactions, and variations, just as any other historical document has been.

Or Islam could rise up against such a possibility. A full rigorous examination of the Koran would inevitably change the nature of Islam, and no one expects the existing Muslim clerical establishment to yield easily to modernity.

Islam may feel compelled to attempt a modern repetition of the burning of the library at Alexandria. This time, however, the task of eradicating all the infidel documents will be a much, much larger one.



I owe a great debt of thanks to our Swedish correspondent LN, who tracked down and collected the material used in this post.

For a German-language review of another book by Gerd-R. Puin, see Perlentaucher.de.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/25/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/25/2009The state of Maine has declared that a mailing by the Christian Action Network about its documentary Homegrown Jihad (concerning Jamaat ul-Fuqra) constitutes hate speech against Muslims. CAN has been fined $4,000 by the state’s Department of Professional and Financial Regulation, but Martin Mawyer, the president of CAN, has vowed to fight the charge. For more information, see the Pajamas Media report by Patrick Poole in the USA section below.

In other news, a former prime minister of Kosovo was arrested in Bulgaria on war crimes charges.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, islam o’phobe, JD, KGS, LN, Steen, TB, ZZMike, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Economy Dips at Slightly Lower Pace in 1st Quarter
Iran — It’s the Global Economy, Stupid
Obama’s Approach — ‘Welfare-Spending Madness’
 
USA
8 NYC Children Burned in Homemade Acid-Bomb Attack
Barack Obama — Narcissist or Merely Narcissistic?
Blacks in Survey Say Race Relations No Better With Obama
EPA’s Own Research Expert ‘Shut Up’ On Climate Change
Maine Fines Group for ‘Inflammatory Anti-Muslim Message’
Obama-Odinga Friendship Affecting Iran?
Rick Warren to Speak at Islamic Society Convention
The Government Has a Database for Most Everything.
Top 20 Events Which Prove Obama is a Marxist Communist
Top 7 Marxist Communist Policies Being Implemented by Obama Today
 
Canada
Canada’s Obamacare Precedent
 
Europe and the EU
Denmark: Defence Forces Get Multi-Billion Kroner Boost
German Neo-Nazis Praise Reelection of Iran’s Ahmadinejad
Italy: Moro Case-Sechi: Craxi Thought Pecchioli Was KGB Spy
Italy: Espresso Group to Sue Berlusconi
Italy: Car of Berlusconi Party Girl Set on Fire
Sweden: Man Raped in Stockholm Suburb
Sweden: Second Man Targeted by Suspected Rapist
Sweden: Animal Rights Activists Force Restaurant Closure
UK Looks to Young Geeks to Secure Cyberspace
UK: Four in Ten Under-20s in London Aren’t White
UK: Jewish School Admissions Unlawful
UK: Muslim Policeman Sues Force After ‘Boss Said He Looked Like Bin Laden’
Where Does the EU Get Its Power From?
 
Balkans
Kosovo: War Crimes, Former Premier Ceku Arrested in Bulgaria
 
Mediterranean Union
EU-Africa: Wade; If You Favour Med Union We Turn to China
 
North Africa
Islam: Niqab Debate Risks Politicisation, Egyptian Minister
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Berlusconi Agrees With Palestinian Demilitarisation
Hamas Says Has No Knowledge of Shalit’s Life
Israel Releases Hamas Speaker
Netanyahu in Rome: Berlusconi, Invited to Speak at Knesset
US Actor in Israel Tells Youth to “Imagine” Peace
 
Middle East
70 Iranian Professors Reportedly Detained
Barry Rubin: Iran’s Crisis and All Quiet on the Western Front
Homosexuals in Turkey: Istanbul Week for Gay Rights
Human Rights: Turkey; Police Brutality Increasing, Report
Iran’s Mousavi Defies Crackdown
Iran: Son’s Death Has Iranian Family Asking Why
Turkey: Semneby, Tactical Step Backward on Armenia Thaw
U.S. Rescinds July 4 Invites for Iran Diplomats
Where’s the U.N. On Iran?
 
Russia
Politkovskaya Murder Acquittal Overturned
 
Caucasus
Four Killed in Clashes in Russia’s Ingushetia Region-Official
 
South Asia
Afghan Girl Burned by White Phosphorus Heads Home
Brit Details Claim of Torture in Bangadesh
Maoist Insurgency Can Hurt Industry in India — Experts
Pakistan: Planned Attack on Hungarian Embassy Said Foiled
Pakistan: Embassy Attacks Prevented
Pakistan Taliban Chief Baitullah Escapes US Strike
US General Says Troops Need New View of Aghan War
Video: Pakistan Police Battle Taliban
 
Far East
N. Koreans Mass at Rally in Capital to Denounce US
 
Australia — Pacific
Stoned Wallabies Make Crop Circles
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
Call for Life Sentence for Rwandan Generals
Ethiopia: Holy Ark Announcement Due on Friday
Islamic Court Postpones Amputations of Four Men as ‘Hot Weather Means They Might Bleed to Death’
Somalia: Al-Qaeda Linked Militants ‘Out of Control’
Somalis Watch Double Amputations
U.S. Warns of Threats Against Sudan Government, West
Will Somalia Become the Afghanistan of East Africa?
 
Latin America
Venezuela Accuses “Imperial Hand” of Iran Unrest
 
Immigration
Holidays: Spain Ready for Exodus of North African People
Migrant Stowaways at Calais Triple in Five Years
 
Culture Wars
Census and Sensibility
Get Back in the Closet
 
General
Ihsanoglu Calls for Presenting the True Image of Islam
Iran Expected to Dominate G8 Meeting in Italy
Their God is Not Our God
US, Israel, Russia Absent at Cluster Bomb Talks

Financial Crisis


Economy Dips at Slightly Lower Pace in 1st Quarter

WASHINGTON — The economy tumbled at a 5.5 percent pace in the first quarter, but appears to be doing better now, even though heavy layoffs persist.

The revised reading on gross domestic product, released Thursday by the Commerce Department, showed the economy from January through March didn’t fall as deeply as the 5.7 percent annualized decline reported a month ago. Economists expected the government would stick with its previous estimate.

A separate government report found new jobless claims jumped unexpectedly last week, while continuing claims for unemployment benefits rose more than expected. The data show jobs remain scarce even as the economy shows some signs of recovering from the longest recession since World War II.

The main forces behind the small upgrade in first-quarter GDP had nothing to do with an improving job market: businesses didn’t cut stockpiles of goods as much and imports dropped more sharply than previously estimated.

Meanwhile, the rebound in consumer spending was a little less energetic.

Consumers boosted their spending at a 1.4 percent, down from a 1.5 percent growth rate estimated last month. Still, it marked the strongest showing in nearly two years and a huge improvement from the fourth quarter when skittish consumers slashed spending by the most in nearly three decades.

All told, the report showed the economic damage inflicted by the recession, the longest since World War II. The worst financial crisis since the 1930s, a housing bust and hard-to-get credit have eaten into businesses’ sales and profits, forcing them to cut back production and jobs. In the final quarter of last year, the economy plunged at a 6.3 percent annualized pace, the most in a quarter-century.

Many analysts believe the economy isn’t sinking nearly as much now as the recession eases it grip on the country.

For the current April-June quarter, economists predict GDP is sinking at a pace of between 1 and 3 percent. But that’s not nearly as much as it had in the prior six months, the worst performance in 50 years. The government will release second-quarter results at the end of next month.

GDP measures the value of all goods and services produced within the United States and is the best barometer of the country’s economic health.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke predicts the recession, now the longest since World War II, will end later this year. President Barack Obama’s stimulus of tax cuts and increased government spending should provide some help, along with aggressive revival efforts by the Fed, including cutting a key bank lending rate to a record low near zero.

Many economists predict the economy will start growing again as soon as the third quarter, although the pace is likely to be plodding as economic recoveries after financial crises tend to be slow. That means unemployment will keep rising.

The nation’s unemployment rate hit a quarter-century peak of 9.4 percent last month and is likely to reach 10 percent by the year-end. The jobless rate could rise as high as 11 percent by the summer of 2010 before making a gradual descent, economists say. The highest rate since World War II was 10.8 percent at the end of 1982.

The Labor Department on Thursday said initial claims for jobless benefits rose last week by 15,000 to a seasonally adjusted 627,000. Economists expected a drop to 600,000, according to Thomson Reuters. Several states reported more claims than expected from teachers, cafeteria workers and other school employees, a department analyst said.

The number of people continuing to receive unemployment insurance rose by 29,000 to 6.74 million, slightly above analysts’ estimates of 6.7 million. The four-week average of claims, which smooths out fluctuations, was largely unchanged, at 616,750.

Economists expect the number of initial unemployment insurance claims, which reflects the level of layoffs, to slowly decline over the coming months as the economy bottoms out.

The outlook for a shaky job market, which is likely to hinder wage growth, translates into a cautious consumer, another reason any recovery will be subdued.

And other risks abound. Skyrocketing foreclosures, rising interest rates and a worse-than-expected credit and financial conditions could send the economy into another tailspin. Economists don’t think that is the most likely scenario, but it can’t be ruled out.

In the GDP report, businesses’ cuts to inventories ended up shaving off 2.20 percentage points from economic activity. That was less than the 2.34 percentage-point reduction previously reported and factored into the upward revision to first-quarter GDP.

Another helper: imports fell at an annualized pace of 36.4 percent, deeper than the 34.1 percent rate of decline previously estimated. That translated into a bigger boost to first-quarter GDP from trade. U.S. exports fell sharply but not as much as imports.

The government makes three estimates of the economy’s performance for any given quarter. Each estimate of gross domestic product, which measures the value of all goods and services produced within the U.S., is based on more complete information. The third one came Thursday.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran — It’s the Global Economy, Stupid

Much has been said, and justifiably so, about the role the poor Iranianeconomy plays in the current Iranian election crisis. Much less attention has been played to the role the global economic recession has already played in the rage sweeping the country and the role it is bound to play in its aftermath. Emad Gad, an Egyptian expert in international affairs, suggests that “Ahmadinejad will concentrate in the economic field to improve living conditions for his population after this crisis.”

The partial recovery of oil prices indubitably aids the Mullahs. But current investor caution coupled with already ongoing foreign and domestic capitalflight is bound to limit the regime ability to revive the economy and the rising global unemployment may just reduce the ability of the regime to export its troublesome youth in the manner it has been doing during the global boom years. Jobs are much more difficult to come by in the West.

Over and over again the mantra is repeated. Iran is a young country. Most of its inhabitants are under 30 years old. Less repeated is the question Mousavi asks in reference toAhmadinejad’s mismanagement of the economy: “Why do all our young want to leave this country?”

The answer is self evident to all Iranians. Their country is unable toprovide jobs for its young people. Azadeh Kian, professor of sociology at the University of Paris VII, reports that youth unemployment is estimated to be between 30% and 50% and no “jobs are being created for the 800,00 young people who enter the Iranian job market everyyear”.

Wikipedia has a special entry for Iran’s brain drain. It begins thus…

[Return to headlines]



Obama’s Approach — ‘Welfare-Spending Madness’

A leading expert on welfare reform says President Obama’s massive increases in every form of welfare spending are designed to be a “foot in the door” for a permanent policy to “spread the wealth and tax future generations to provide larger welfare today.”

A Wall Street Journal survey finds that welfare caseloads have increased from last year in 23 of the 30 largest states, which account for more than 88 percent of the nation’s total population. The article notes that the biggest increases are occurring in states with some of the worst jobless rates — Oregon (up 27% from last year), South Carolina (up 23%), and California (up 10%). “As more people run out of unemployment compensation, many are turning to welfare as a stopgap,” states WSJ.

[…]

Rector notes the Obama administration has increased welfare spending for the poor — which includes cash, food, housing, and medical services — by over $300 billion this year and next year combined. That is six times the rate of increase that has ever occurred in any previous recession.

“We are in the midst of a kind of welfare-spending madness in which total welfare spending will approach $10 trillion over the next decade,” says the welfare expert. “We’ve never done anything like that as a nation, and we really can’t afford it.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


8 NYC Children Burned in Homemade Acid-Bomb Attack

2 Williamsburg Kids Hospitalized After Suffering Severe Burns To Their Eyes; Neighbors Cite Tension Between 2 Buildings

Yaakov Frankel, 10, suffered serious burns to his eyes after someone threw a Drano-bomb at him while playing in a courtyard in Williamsburg.

Two children suffered serious burns and six others were injured after someone threw a bottle containing dangerous chemicals at them while they played outside over the weekend in Brooklyn.

The incident happened about 8 p.m. on Sunday at S. 8th Street in the Williamsburg section of the borough. One of the victims, 10-year-old Yaakov Frankel, along with several witnesses told police that someone ran out of a building across the street from the courtyard where children were playing and tossed the homemade device at them. An explosion that released some sort of Drano-type mix got into the eyes of Frankel and a 12-year-old girl, causing them to be hospitalized. Six other children suffered burns and were treated at the scene.

“They were playing and all of a sudden a bottle came in with liquid, and it spins around and exploded into their eyes and [onto] the clothes of the kids,” said Hindy Frankel, Yaakov’s mother. “Everybody ran!”

The two injured children were kept in Bellevue overnight as their eyes were flushed out. What has residents even more upset is that they believe police had a chance to prevent the incident from happening when they called about rocks being thrown at them from the same building.

“They came in, they looked into it and [said], ‘OK, we can’t do anything. We don’t see anybody,’“ said Yaakov’s father, Pincus Frankel.

Members of the predominantly orthodox Jewish community who live on the side of S. 8th Street where the incident happened are clear about who they think was behind the attack.

“From this building over here, #176, there were a few people who came out and were just being very wild,” said Abraham Shaya. “Neighbors over here are suffering very much from this building over here. Very wild, making noise at 12 o’clock in the middle of the night.”

Police say, however, this was not a bias incident. Over on the other side of South 8th, which is heavily Latino, a neighbor was quick to say there were no tense feelings between the two communities and that she hadn’t heard any loud noise.

Meanwhile, one of the mothers from the building where the children got hurt said a year ago, there was a fire in that other building. She told CBS 2’s Pablo Guzman, “OK, look: maybe our children don’t play together; but, we came across the street to help them with blankets, with shoes, with socks. When there’s time of need, we come together,” she said. “So why fight?”

Doctors told the parents it could be at least five days before the children’s eyes are somewhat “normal” again. In the meantime, they are still experiencing a lot of burning and irritation.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Barack Obama — Narcissist or Merely Narcissistic?

By Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.

Barack Obama appears to be a narcissist. Granted, only a qualified mental health diagnostician can determine whether someone suffers from Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) and this, following lengthy tests and personal interviews. But, in the absence of access to Barack Obama, one has to rely on his overt performance and on testimonies by his closest, nearest and dearest.

Narcissistic leaders are nefarious and their effects pernicious. They are subtle, refined, socially-adept, manipulative, possessed of thespian skills, and convincing. Both types equally lack empathy and are ruthless and relentless or driven.

Perhaps it is time to require each candidate to high office in the USA to submit to a rigorous physical and mental checkup with the results made public.

I. Upbringing and Childhood

Obama’s early life was decidedly chaotic and replete with traumatic and mentally bruising dislocations. Mixed-race marriages were even less common then. His parents went through a divorce when he was an infant (two years old). Obama saw his father only once again, before he died in a car accident. Then, his mother re-married and Obama had to relocate to Indonesia: a foreign land with a radically foreign culture, to be raised by a step-father. At the age of ten, he was whisked off to live with his maternal (white) grandparents. He saw his mother only intermittently in the following few years and then she vanished from his life in 1979. She died of cancer in 1995.

Pathological narcissism is a reaction to prolonged abuse and trauma in early childhood or early adolescence. The source of the abuse or trauma is immaterial: the perpetrators could be dysfunctional or absent parents, teachers, other adults, or peers.

II. Behavior Patterns

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



Blacks in Survey Say Race Relations No Better With Obama

(CNN) — African-Americans really like President Obama, but more and more feel that race relations have not gotten better since he took office, a new national poll found.

Ninety-six percent of African-Americans approve of how Obama is handling his presidency, according to a CNN/Essence Magazine/Opinion Research Corp. poll released Thursday.

During the 2008 election, 38 percent of blacks surveyed thought racial discrimination was a serious problem. In the new survey, 55 percent of blacks surveyed believed it was a serious problem, which is about the same level as it was in 2000.

The poll was conducted May 16-18, in telephone interviews with 505 African-Americans and 501 whites.

Blacks and whites had differing opinions of Obama’s performance. More than 60 percent of blacks felt that Obama met their expectations, while 46 percent of whites did.

Thirty percent of blacks said Obama exceeded their expectations, compared with 16 percent of whites. Six percent of blacks said Obama did not meet expectations, compared with 35 percent of whites.

Both blacks and whites gave similar answers to a survey question about whether race relations will always be a problem in the United States. advertisement

Forty-five percent of blacks answered yes, while 42 percent of whites said yes. Fifty percent of blacks said no, while 56 percent of whites said no.

The poll had a sampling error on these questions of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.

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



EPA’s Own Research Expert ‘Shut Up’ On Climate Change

Government analyst silenced after he critiques CO2 findings

Environmental Protection Agency officials have silenced one of their own senior researchers after the 38-year employee issued an internal critique of the EPA’s climate change position.

Alan Carlin, senior operations research analyst at the EPA’s National Center for Environmental Economics, or NCEE, submitted his research on the agency’s greenhouse gases endangerment findings and offered a fundamental critique on the EPA’s approach to combating CO2 emissions. But officials refused to share his conclusion in an open internal discussion, claiming his research would have “a very negative impact on our office.”

His study was barred from circulation within the EPA and was never disclosed to the public for political reasons, according to the Competitive Enterprise Institute, or CEI, a group that has accessed four internal e-mails on the subject.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Maine Fines Group for ‘Inflammatory Anti-Muslim Message’

The Christian Action Network runs afoul of bureaucratic political correctness.

An organization in the national spotlight recently for producing a documentary identifying several dozen potential terrorist training compounds in the U.S. has offended the sensibilities of Maine bureaucrats, who have fined the organization $4,000, alleging among other things that the group sent out mailings containing an “inflammatory anti-Muslim message.”

The group in question, the Christian Action Network (CAN), received notice of the fines and the fundraising ban in a May 6 letter from Elaine Thibodeau of the State of Maine’s Department of Professional and Financial Regulation. Enclosed in the letter was a prepared consent agreement for CAN to sign agreeing to all of the state’s allegations, waiving all rights to appeal, and agreeing to pay the $4,000 fine. As part of the consent agreement, CAN is required to agree to all of the state’s allegations, including their assertion that their mailing amounted to hate speech.

“These bogus charges and fines the State of Maine has imposed are nothing but an attempt to stifle our free speech and silence our organization from speaking out about the steady creep of radical Islam in America,” CAN president Martin Mawyer told Pajamas Media. “We fully intend to appeal the state’s penalties because if they successfully silence us here, we will quickly find that we won’t be able to speak out anywhere.”

CAN was in the news earlier this year following the release of their documentary, Homegrown Jihad, which details dozens of compounds across the U.S. operated by Pakistani Sheikh Mubarak Gilani, who has previously been identified in State Department reports as a terrorist leader, and his group, Jamaat al-Fuqra. The documentary looks into the past terrorist acts of the group in the U.S., including the assassination of two moderate Muslim leaders, the firebombing of non-Muslim religious facilities, and an investigation by Colorado authorities that led to convictions and lengthy prison sentences. These activities have been covered in several FBI domestic terrorism reports and a more recent assessment by the Center for Policing Terrorism. Other prominent convicted terrorists, including “shoe-bomber” Richard Reid, D.C. Beltway sniper John Allen Muhammad, and NYC landmarks bomb plotter Clement Rodney Hampton-El, have been identified as former members.

But what has Maine bureaucrats roiling is a fundraising mailing sent by CAN (a copy of which was provided to Pajamas Media) regarding a public school curriculum used in California requiring students to pray to Allah, dress up as Muslims, adopt Muslim names, and learn the five pillars of Islam. Since Christians and Jews are not given similar accommodations, CAN encouraged their supporters to send a petition to Maine Gov. John Baldacci asking him to prevent such instruction in Maine public schools.

Among the stated allegations in Thibodeau’s letter and the consent agreement is that this amounted to hate speech, claiming:

5. The correspondence contained an inflammatory anti-Muslim message.

In two separate rounds of correspondence with Thibodeau, I inquired what basis the state used to determine that the mailing was “inflammatory,” but she refused to address that question on both occasions…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Obama-Odinga Friendship Affecting Iran?

If Obama intends to pursue direct negotiations with the Ahmadinejad government should the post-election violence fail to produce a new election, the administration may well be advised to contemplate how as series of photographs of Obama-supporting Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga and President Ahmadinejad together might impact freedom fighters in Iran as well as the American public.

To explore this question, WND has taken a close look at Kenya.

Examining the extent to which Odinga and Obama have been willing to pursue direct negotiations with Ahmadinejad, WND continues to see a commonality in the foreign policies of both leaders, despite the Iranian regime’s determination to suppress key freedoms within Iran, including the right to a free election.

Even as post-election protests against the re-election of Ahmadinejad continue in Iran, Kenya’s Odinga, a fellow Luo tribe member, who continues to receive the strong support of President Obama, moves closer to Iran.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Rick Warren to Speak at Islamic Society Convention

Warren will be in some very dubious company in Washington. Another speaker at the conference will be Dr. Dr. Muzammil Husain Siddiqi, the Director of the Islamic Society of Orange County (California), and former Director of Islamic Affairs for the Muslim World League Office in New York.

You have probably seen Dr. Siddiqi before since he was chosen to address the world during the National Day of Prayer and Remembrance service held at the National Cathedral in Washington, DC just three days after the 9/11 attacks on Sept. 14, 2001.

As our nation mourned that day, he began with the standard Muslim greeting “May the peace of Allah be upon America.” What most American’s didn’t know then and still don’t know now is that in Islamic beliefs every person is either a member of the “house of peace” (Muslim) or a member of the “house of war” (non-Muslim). In Muslim-speak this means, “you will only be at peace when you convert to Islam — otherwise you are the enemy”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Government Has a Database for Most Everything.

Since January, Congress has introduced bills that call for the creation of nearly 40 new databases and registries, by POLITICO’s count. One of the most recent, the Knee and Hip Replacement Act introduced by Reps. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.) and Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas), calls for the establishment of a national registry to track poorly performing prostheses. Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) has called for states to create a Putative Father Registry, collecting data about men who may be the fathers of children in the adoption process. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) wants a boxing registry of medical records, denials and suspensions for licensed boxers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Top 20 Events Which Prove Obama is a Marxist Communist

In several Hubs, including How Obama’s Undeniably Marxist Communist Policies Threaten America and How To Nationalize GM, Ripoff Investors, Gift It To The Unions & Deny It’s Communism, I have been challenged by commenters on my classification of Barack Hussein Obama as a socialist, communist, and Marxist. Here are the top twenty points to prove my thesis (all readily verifiable), and please note that I am not including in this list any of the President’s policies such as the socialist nationalization of GM and Chrysler which at the stroke of a pen deprived private investors of billions of dollars of their legitimate property and turned it over to the state and the unions (the proletariat in Marxist parlance).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Top 7 Marxist Communist Policies Being Implemented by Obama Today

Throughout history Communist leaders have seized power by promoting themselves as populists, and often completely hiding their own ideology. Indeed in a poll taken after Communist Hugo Chavez’ first election victory in Venezuela, only 3% of the electors believed Chavez to be a Socialist, let alone a Communist. Currently 32% of Americans believe Obama to be a Socialist.

The initial stages of Communization of a country invariably begin with seven basic steps:

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Canada’s Obamacare Precedent

[Comments from JD: This article is from June 9th 2009, but still pertinent.]

Congressional Democrats will soon put forward their legislative proposals for reforming health care. Should they succeed, tens of millions of Americans will potentially be joining a new public insurance program and the federal government will increasingly be involved in treatment decisions.

Not long ago, I would have applauded this type of government expansion. Born and raised in Canada, I once believed that government health care is compassionate and equitable. It is neither.

My views changed in medical school. Yes, everyone in Canada is covered by a “single payer” — the government. But Canadians wait for practically any procedure or diagnostic test or specialist consultation in the public system.

The problems were brought home when a relative had difficulty walking. He was in chronic pain. His doctor suggested a referral to a neurologist; an MRI would need to be done, then possibly a referral to another specialist. The wait would have stretched to roughly a year. If surgery was needed, the wait would be months more. Not wanting to stay confined to his house, he had the surgery done in the U.S., at the Mayo Clinic, and paid for it himself.

Such stories are common. For example, Sylvia de Vries, an Ontario woman, had a 40-pound fluid-filled tumor removed from her abdomen by an American surgeon in 2006. Her Michigan doctor estimated that she was within weeks of dying, but she was still on a wait list for a Canadian specialist.

Indeed, Canada’s provincial governments themselves rely on American medicine. Between 2006 and 2008, Ontario sent more than 160 patients to New York and Michigan for emergency neurosurgery — described by the Globe and Mail newspaper as “broken necks, burst aneurysms and other types of bleeding in or around the brain.”

Only half of ER patients are treated in a timely manner by national and international standards, according to a government study. The physician shortage is so severe that some towns hold lotteries, with the winners gaining access to the local doc.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Denmark: Defence Forces Get Multi-Billion Kroner Boost

Agreement has been reached on the defence budget for the next five years that will see extra funding provided to those serving abroad

After almost three months of negotiations a historic political majority was reached last night to secure extra funds for the defence budget.

For the first time ever, the Socialist People’s Party joined with other opposition parties and the government in agreeing a defence budget that will see an extra 3.5 billion kroner provided to the armed forces between 2010 and 2014. Only the Red Green Alliance opposed the defence plan.

‘We have many soldiers serving abroad and it will mean a lot for them and their relatives that there is broad majority behind the defence forces,’ said Defence Minister Søren Gade.

The Defence Commission report, published in March, called for increased funding but also highlighted the need for savings within the armed forces.

As a result, politicians have decided to enact a range of initiatives designed to save a total of 700 million kroner, including reducing the number of combat vehicles from 57 to 34 and the number of F16 jets from 48 to 30.

The jet reduction is meaningful as it gives an indication of how many new aircraft will be purchased when the decision is finally made on which manufacturer will be awarded the new air force jets contract.

The issue of conscription was also discussed as part of the defence budget negotiations and parliament will further examine if all 18-year-old women should be forced to attend the military’s draft board reviews in the same way as their male peers.

Currently all men aged 18 must attend the so-called Defence Day where they are examined for their suitability before a lottery system selects conscription candidates to take part in basic military training.

The extra 3.5 billion kroner will be in addition to the annual budget of 20.48 billion kroner. Of the additional funds, 500 million kroner is a one off payment for the security funding pool, which will allow for emergency purchases by the forces serving internationally.

The news was welcomed by Battalion Commander Frank Lissner, who heads the Danish forces in Afghanistan.

‘In the long term it’s clear it will have significance for us. Put it this way, if more funds weren’t given as part of this defence budget, there would have been consequences for soldiers in Afghanistan. For example, we’ve already lost three medical armoured vehicles which were totally destroyed by mines and the army is already stretched to its limit,’ said Col. Lissner.

There are currently around 700 Danish soldiers serving in Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force. Denmark’s participation in the coalition effort in Afghanistan has seen 26 soldiers lose their lives since 2002.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



German Neo-Nazis Praise Reelection of Iran’s Ahmadinejad

Neo-Nazis in Germany are applauding the repression of protests in Iran and publishing statements supporting the reelection of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his hard-line government.

Two extremist parties, the NPD and DVU, have managed to contort their racist thinking to embrace the Iranian leader because Ahmadinejad openly advocates the elimination of Israel — and presumably has no plans to move to Germany.

The NPD website defended Ahmadinejad against what it called a “media attack on the Iranian people’s spirit,” referring to widespread doubts being expressed about the president’s reelection and described him as the “true leader of his people,” according to public broadcaster ARD.

The DVU website carried the message: “Congratulations on your reelection Mr President.”

Censorship in Iran, which makes listening to music a risky business, and outlaws dancing in public, is praised by the NPD, which says the music could be considered decadent and subversive.

The contradiction between this opinion and the complaints the NPD makes when neo-Nazi music containing illegally racist lyrics are banned by the German government does not seem to have occurred to the party’s members.

Germany’s fascists first took to Ahmadinejad when he said he wanted to destroy Israel, and then in 2006 organised a conference for Holocaust deniers.

Meanwhile, the Islam Conference taking place this week in Berlin condemned the violence and abuse of human rights in Iran, with a statement signed by all associations taking part aside from the Central Council of Muslims in Germany.

The council said it had a policy of not making statements about events in other countries, but called for both sides in Iran to come to an agreement and allow freedom of opinion.

“Chain-of-light” demonstrations are planned in cities across Europe on Thursday night to show solidarity with the Iranian people and commemorate those who have been killed recently during demonstrations.

Organisers in Berlin have taken the title, “A light to show hope. Thousands of lights show themselves” for the demonstration which will take place for an hour from 9:30 pm in front of the Gedächtniskirche in the centre of the city. Similar demonstrations are set for Hamburg, Cologne, Frankfurt, Paris, London and Rome.

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



Italy: Moro Case-Sechi: Craxi Thought Pecchioli Was KGB Spy

(AGI) — Rome, 11 May. — In the winter of 1993 Craxi asked Spadolini and Napolitano, then Presidents of the Italian Senate and Lower House respectively, to obtain the resignation of Pecchioli, the President of the Parliamentary Committee in charge of the secret service and civil and military security.

Craxi thought he was a Soviet agent, a KGB spy. Was he wrong? Perhaps Giorgio Napolitano and Giuliano Amato, who were in charge of prevention, intelligence and repression as Ministers of the Interior could shed some light on the question. Two letters from Craxi to Spadolini and Napolitano have been published in ‘Le vene aperte del delitto Moro’, a book by Salvatore Sechi, professor of Modern History at Ferrara University, written as part of the ‘Radici del Presente’ series to mark the 31st anniversary of the murder of Moro, former leader of the Christian Democrat Party by the Red Brigades.

Franco Mazzola, former undersecretary to the Council of Ministers along with Craxi and Cossiga, judge Luigi Carli, who sentenced the Genovese branch of the Red Brigades; two experts on the Red Brigades, Marco Clementi and Vladimiro Satta, an expert on Western European history, Fernando Orlandi, historian Richard Drake and two terrorism experts, Gabriele Paradisi and Roberto Bartalli all contributed to the book.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Espresso Group to Sue Berlusconi

Premier asked businessmen to boycott advertising, it claims

(ANSA) — Milan, June 24 — Italy’s Espresso editorial group said Wednesday it would begin legal proceedings against Premier Silvio Berlusconi, claiming he had urged businesspeople to boycott advertising in certain newspapers.

The Espresso group, which owns the left-leaning newspaper La Repubblica and the weekly L’Espresso, said it had decided to sue given the “criminal and civil relevance” of Berlusconi’s remarks, adding that the premier had accused La Repubblica of a “subversive attack” against him.

The premier was addressing a conference of young members of employers’ group Confindustria on June 13 when he said he was the victim of the alleged plot following media coverage of a string of scandals including his relationship with 18-year-old aspiring model Noemi Letizia.

He invited the entrepreneurs “not to give publicity” to those that “every day sing songs of pessimism”.

Berlusconi explained later that he was talking about the centre-left opposition leader Dario Franceschini and those who supported his “defeatist attitude”.

Berlusconi on Wednesday repeated that he was in the grips of a “campaign, fed by hatred and personal jealousy, that certainly isn’t doing any good for the country”. Every day since the middle of May, La Repubblica has been printing a list of ten questions it wants the premier to answer about his relationship with Letizia.

Berlusconi has been at the centre of the media storm since a public divorce spat with his wife Veronica Lario, who accused him of “consorting with minors” after he attended Letizia’s 18th birthday party.

Berlusconi, 72, has categorically denied any “steamy or more than steamy” involvement with teenagers, explaining there was nothing “spicy” about his attendance at the birthday party of 18-year-old Letizia because he had a long friendship with her family.

The premier’s attack on the press on June 13 came shortly before a new uproar over allegations that female escorts were paid to attend parties at his homes in Rome and Sardinia.

Italy’s leading newspaper, Corriere della Sera, got the scoop on the claims last week.

Berlusconi has dismissed the allegations as “rubbish”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Car of Berlusconi Party Girl Set on Fire

Bari, 25 June (AKI) — The car of a young woman who allegedly attended controversial parties at the home of Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was set on fire early on Thursday.

Twenty-four year old Italian model Barbara Montereale is one of a numbr of women who gave testimony to prosecutors in connection with parties allegedly held at the prime minister’s residences in Rome and on the island of Sardinia.

She has denied she is a high-class prostitute or escort who was paid to spend time with Berlusconi.

Her car was set on fire in the town of Modugno, near the southern Italian city of Bari where an investigation is being carried out into alleged kickbacks in the local health sector involving an acquaintance of the prime minister, Gianpaolo Tarantini, and his brother.

Authorities said the torching of the car was a criminal act rather than an accident.

Italian police said someone tried to force open the passenger side door of Montereale’s Honda Jazz and then poured flammable liquid inside the car and set it alight.

Montereale (photo) was one of several women including Patrizia D’Addario who attended a party at Berlusconi’s Rome residence Palazzo Grazioli on 4 November last year.

That night, D’Addario said she stayed the night with the prime minister and has supplied prosecutors with audio and video tapes and photos from the visit which she says back up her claims.

Montereale said that D’Addario told her she had had sex with Berlusconi.

D’Addario, in an interview with Italian daily La Repubblica published on Thursday, said her apartment was targeted in a break-in last month.

“It was a very strange robbery. It happened in May, a few days after I told a friend of mine that I was in possession of the recordings of my encounters with the president (Berlusconi),” said D’Addario.

She claims the dress she used during the parties in Palazzo Grazioli were stolen, among other things.

“Computers, music CDs, all my lingerie, my Versace dresses including the one I used in Rome. I became very frightened and I began to understand,” she said.

Berlusconi, 72, has strenuously denied the allegations made by a number of young women who claim they were paid to attend parties he threw at his private residences in Rome and on the island of Sardinia.

Montereale has denied ever having worked as an escort or asked for money to visit Palazzo Grazioli or Berlusconi’s Villa Certosa.

She told the British daily The Times, that Berlusconi gave her 10,000 euros “as a present” after attending one of his parties at the premier’s luxury villa in Sardinia in January.

She also told the daily that she received an attendance fee of 1,000 euros which was paid by Berlusconi’s alleged fixer Giampaolo Tarantini, a Bari businessman.

The sex scandals came to light by chance during a three-month investigation by prosecutors into alleged corruption by Tarantini and his brother Claudio to obtain contracts from the national health service to supply hospital equipment.

In tapped phone conversations Tarantini was overheard referring to fees paid to women to attend the prime minister’s parties at his homes in Rome and Sardinia.

Prosecutors are reported to have recordings of “jokey and convivial” phonecalls between Tarantini and Berlusconi in which they discuss arrangements for various parties, dinners and holidays.

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



Sweden: Man Raped in Stockholm Suburb

A man was raped near a metro station in southern Stockholm in the early hours of Sunday morning.

The man, who is 19-years-old, was on his way home from Skärmarbrink metro station at 4am on Sunday morning when he was attacked and raped at knife point by an unknown assailant.

“It has occurred outside. It has occurred at knife point. We have a vague description, but the victim is in shock and has not yet been capable of a thorough interview,” said Hans Wiksten at Stockholm police on Sunday morning.

After the attack the man was taken into the care of South Stockholm General Hospital’s rape unit.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Second Man Targeted by Suspected Rapist

A man who raped another man at knifepoint early Sunday morning may have struck again, according to Stockholm police.

Police received a report from another man who was threatened by a knife-wielding man around 10pm on Wednesday night.

The victim was on his way home from the Skärmarbrink subway station in southern Stockholm when he met a man holding a knife.

When the man with the knife grabbed hold of the victim’s arm, he struck back at the attacker’s head and was able to escape unharmed, according to the report filed with police in Stockholm’s southern district.

The victim of the attack called police, who brought in dogs to help search for the man with the knife throughout Wednesday night into early Thursday morning, but without result.

The course of events and description of the attacker are similar to those given by a 20-year-old man who was raped at knifepoint on Sunday near the same subway station.

Because the victim of the latest attack got a better look at the assailant, police now have a better description of the attacker to aid in their surveillance efforts.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Animal Rights Activists Force Restaurant Closure

Threats and vandalism allegedly carried out by animal rights activists have forced restaurant in Umeå in northern Sweden to close its doors.

In the two years since Michael Hansen opened his Garaget restaurant, which specializes in Texas-style barbecue, his establishment has been targeted by animal rights groups on numerous occasions, the Västerbottens-Kuriren newspaper reports.

In addition to confessing to breaking windows at Garaget, the Swedish chapter of the Animal Liberation Front (Djurens befrielsefront) admitted in December to spraying glue in the locks of the restaurant’s doors.

Nevertheless, Hansen continued to persevere, doing his best to “create a meeting place” where “everyone can slip in and get a well-prepared meal made from quality ingredients”, according to the restaurant’s website.

But after an incident in mid-May which threatened his family, Hansen has finally decided to call it quits.

“When actions include statements about my family’s safety being threatened, I have no choice,” he told the newspaper.

His comments came following an incident which took place on the morning of May 14th outside of Hansen’s home.

As he approached his doorway, Hansen discovered a bottle filled with a clear liquid and stuffed with a rag.

Near the bottle was a message reading, “Close down Garaget otherwise this bottle will come through your bedroom window.”

Shaken by the Molotov cocktail threat, Hansen reported the matter to police, but no arrests have yet been made.

“Obviously I have to take such threats seriously and I can’t just turn a blind eye to it,” Hansen told Västerbottens-Kuriren.

Police have classified the incident as a case of making aggravated illegal threats and are awaiting the results of a forensic examination of the contents of the bottle.

Hansen is frustrated about having to close down after enduring the earlier vandalism.

“It’s obviously disappointing that those who victimized us with all this are going to win,” he said.

“But everything has a price and now things have gone too far. I’ve already sacrificed way too much time and money which I’m never going to get back.”

Hansen plans to keep Garaget open through the summer before handing the restaurant over to a new owner on September 1st.

The decision to close has prompted an outpouring of support from residents and local politicians who were saddened to hear of Garaget’s closing.

Many are calling on police to step up efforts to find those behind the threats and vandalism

“What’s happened is shameful for Umeå,” said local Moderate Party politician Andres Ågren, who encouraged citizens to help police in their investigation.

“There are people out there who know who is behind these attacks. They must come forward and tell — even if they do so anonymously. We can’t accept these kinds of anti-democratic groups.”

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



UK Looks to Young Geeks to Secure Cyberspace

LONDON — Britain is hiring former computer hackers to join a new security unit aimed at protecting cyberspace from foreign spies, thieves and terrorists, the country’s terrorism minister said.

Alan West said the technology-savvy staff will join efforts to trace the source of — and prevent — cyber attacks on Britain’s government, businesses and individuals. The country also will develop its capability to wage cyber warfare against the country’s foes, he said.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced the creation of the unit Thursday as he published an updated national security strategy, detailing Britain’s response to global terrorism and emerging threats.

“Just as in the 19th century we had to secure the seas for our national safety and prosperity, and in the 20th century we had to secure the air, in the 21st century we also have to secure our position in cyberspace,” Brown said.

West said British government systems had probably come under cyber attack but that he did not know of any specific cases where sensitive data had been lost. British telecom BT Group PLC, one of the world’s largest telecommunications providers, estimates it has about 1,000 attempted cyber attacks per day on its systems, West said.

Jonathan Evans, the head of Britain’s domestic spy agency MI5, has previously warned that both China and Russia are using new technology to spy on Britain. Russia is accused of mounting large-scale attacks on Estonia’s computer systems in 2007.

British officials are concerned that some terrorist groups, including those linked to al-Qaida, are likely to soon develop the capability to use cyber warfare to attempt attacks on Western targets. “So far, the terrorists have not been the biggest threat in that area, but they are learning quickly,” West said.

Britain estimates about 52 billion pounds ($86 billion) is lost to the world economy each year as a result of malicious attacks on computer systems. Britons spend about 50 billion ($82.6 billion) online per year.

West said the British government was looking to young computer geeks — including those previously involved in hacking or low-level cyber crime — to help overhaul the country’s defenses.

“You need youngsters who are actually deep into this stuff — and they really get into it. If they’ve been slightly naughty, very often they really enjoying stopping others,” said West, a former head of Britain’s defense intelligence staff.

Hackers often use computer programing skills to test for weaknesses in the security systems of computer networks, steal or delete files, or install malicious programs — sometimes called trojan horses — that can be activated at a later date. Criminal hackers commonly steal banking data such as credit card details.

West said the new cyber security operations unit will be based at Britain’s vast Government Communications Headquarters, a major eavesdropping center in Cheltenham, western England.

He said some staff would likely have colorful backgrounds, but within limits. “I think we have to be a bit careful, we wouldn’t have ultra, ultra criminals who’ve made millions, I’m not saying that,” he said.

But Eugene Spafford, a professor of computer science at Purdue University, in Indiana, said it won’t be easy for all former hackers to become cyberspace police. “Knowing how to break a window is different from knowing how to fix it or to install it,” he said. “They may find flaws, but that doesn’t know they know how to fix the system.”

West also confirmed that — like the U.S. military — Britain has the ability to carry out its own cyber operations. “It would be silly to say that we don’t have any capability to do offensive work from Cheltenham,” West said.

The U.S. National Security Agency has said the United States is developing plans for a new cyber command at a Maryland army facility.

In a report released last month, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said the number of cyber threats or incidents reported by federal agencies rose from about 5,500 in 2006 to more than 16,800 last year. Military officials in the U.S. say the Pentagon spent more than $100 million in the past six months responding to, and repairing damage from, cyber attacks and other computer network problems.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Four in Ten Under-20s in London Aren’t White

Four out of ten young people in London are members of ethnic minorities, it was revealed yesterday.

A government report found that more than 700,000 children and teenagers are classed as non-white, around 40 per cent of the age group in the capital.

At present, just over a third of Londoners of all ages are reckoned to be non-white — but the new figures indicate that this share will grow substantially in the future.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Jewish School Admissions Unlawful

Jewish schools may have to change admissions rules after the Appeal Court held that ethnic tests of Jewishness amount to racial discrimination.

A London school, the JFS, rejected a boy whose mother’s conversion to Judaism it did not recognise.

Faith schools may discriminate on religious grounds but the Court of Appeal held that this involved a test of ethnicity — which is unlawful.

The United Synagogue says this will have “a very serious effect”.

In future schools would need to adopt a test of religious practice and guidance would be issued on this — pending a successful appeal or change in the law.

Range of pupils

The state-funded JFS, formerly the Jews’ Free School, is heavily over-subscribed.

It gives preference to applicants whose “Jewish status” is confirmed by the United Synagogue — which requires that the mother be Jewish.

It has pupils from a wide range of religious and cultural backgrounds including from atheist, Catholic or Muslim families — but whose mothers are, in its terms, Jewish.

The boy — named in court only as M — has a Jewish father. His mother converted to the Jewish faith before he was born but had been a Roman Catholic.

But the conversion was not recognised because it was conducted in a Progressive not an Orthodox synagogue.

Motive

The three judges — Lords Justice Sedley and Rimer, and Lady Justice Smith — said it was clear that Jews constituted a racial group defined principally by ethnic origin and additionally by conversion.

To discriminate against a person on the ground that they were or were not Jewish was therefore to discriminate on racial grounds.

“The motive for the discrimination, whether benign or malign, theological or supremacist, makes it no less and no more unlawful.”

They said: “The refusal of JFS to admit M was accordingly, in our judgment, less favourable treatment of him on racial grounds.

“This does not mean … that no Jewish faith school can ever give preference to Jewish children. It means that, as one would expect, eligibility must depend on faith, however defined, and not on ethnicity.”

Appeal

The United Synagogue said the decision affected any branch of Judaism that defines who is a Jew on the basis of descent (whether matrilineal or patrilineal).

It said Jewish schools of any sort — Reform, Liberal, Masorti, Charedi, Orthodox, Federation and so on — would be prohibited from giving priority to applicants who were a member of the Jewish faith.

It added: “In future, all Jewish schools (whether state or independent) will need to adopt a religious practice test, until such time as the Court of Appeal’s ruling is successfully overturned or a legislative amendment is made.”

“Unless the Court of Appeal decision is overturned on appeal it will have a very serious effect on all Jewish schools and on many of our communal organisations.”

So it strongly supported the decision of the governors of JFS to seek leave to appeal and was consulting its own advisers on what else might be done.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Policeman Sues Force After ‘Boss Said He Looked Like Bin Laden’

A Muslim police officer was told by his boss he looked like Osama Bin Laden because of his long beard, an employment tribunal heard.

Pc Tariq Dost has accused West Midlands Police and the police authority of racial and religious discrimination and victimisation following the remarks made to him from 2007.

Dost, from Small Heath, Birmingham, was working as a recruitment officer for the force when his manager Darren Yates is alleged to have made several discriminatory comments to him based on his race, beliefs and religion.

Giving evidence, Dost told the tribunal how Yates, who runs the recruitment office at the force HQ in Birmingham, pointed at him when looking at a picture of terrorist Bin Laden in a newspaper.

The tribunal also heard how Yates made remarks about the length of his beard on several occasions and also questioned why he tucked his trousers into his boots.

Giving evidence Dost said: ‘I believe he felt uncomfortable with me because of my appearance.

‘I found them (his comments) to be discriminatory and ignorant and embarrassing.’

Dost, 42, also claimed Yates referred to Muslim prayer as ‘shouting and wailing’ when he asked to go to afternoon prayer during a recruitment fair.

Yates is alleged to have laughed at him as he turned up to the fair in Islamic clothing and robes as he was off duty.

‘I found it to be highly offensive and demeaning and discriminatory towards myself and Muslims as a whole,’ Dost said.

‘His actions were racist and Islamaphobic.’

Dost complained to his superiors about the incidents and Yates was later disciplined and found guilty of making inappropriate and offensive comments.

He was given a final written warning for his conduct.

Dost also had disciplinary proceedings brought against him for making comments about Yates’ sexual performance. He denied the claims and said they were ‘preposterous’.

He was found guilty by a disciplinary panel and fined 13 days pay amounting to nearly £3000.

But Dost claimed he was treated differently to his boss during the investigation because his was not ‘white’ or a ‘Christian’ and argued that a pay deduction was a heftier penalty than being given a final written warning.

He added: ‘The manner in which I have been treated by Darren Yates has shocked me. It has left me feeling devalued.

‘I have lost a lot of trust because of his behaviour. It has caused me tremendous hurt and pain and left me feeling very angry and resentful to those involved.

‘I feel that I have been betrayed by the force. Instead of treating me as a victim they have treated me as an offender.

‘They have discriminated against me for no other reason than that I am an Asian and a Muslim. I am ashamed to be associated with West Midlands Police.’

Dost claimed he was moved from his position to Solihull Police Station in 2008 as a result of the investigation, while Yates was reinstated in his original position with all his responsibilities.

The tribunal continues.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Where Does the EU Get Its Power From?

I promised to give some replies to comments on the EU and Jury postings. As usual, there isn’t really room to do justice to either of these vast subjects.

But let me begin with the EU, I’ll concentrate on the contribution from John Davies, which lies outside the usual ‘yes it is’, and ‘no it isn’t’ bit of the debate. He says, rather surprisingly, that the EU is not in fact powerful at all. To justify this, he suggests that the power of the EU can be measured by such things as the size of its budget.

You might as well measure it by the number of people it directly employs, which is (like the budget) comparatively tiny. Much more significant is the number of people who actually abide by and enforce its decrees, and the quantities of national budgets which are devoted to its ends. The EU depends greatly, at this stage in its development, on keeping up the appearance that nations still have their own governments.

This is specially important here [in Britain], where national independence is a treasured possession stretching back for unbroken centuries, and in Ireland where it is a hard-won prize. It is startlingly less important in France, invaded and subjugated twice in the past 150 years, in Germany, which learned that it must follow its national interests in more subtle ways after two attempts to impose them by force, and in Italy which only came into existence as a nation very recently and had (like Germany) a bad experience when it sought to assert itself. As I’ve said elsewhere, Britain is the only virgin in a continent of rape victims. As I haven’t said elsewhere, that is why she needs to be drugged by deceit into acquiescence in the current process. But every so often she half wakes up, like poor Mia Farrow in Rosemary’s Baby, to cry out ‘This isn’t a dream. This is really happening!’ And so it is.

The EU’s power is at heart an agreement by the central member states that certain directions will be followed. There is no need for coercion, though an underlying fear of larger neighbours, well-taught during the 20th century, certainly motivates many of the smaller nations. The two key members, France and Germany, formalised their very curious alliance at the Elysee Treaty of January 1963. The smaller and poorer original members, Benelux and Italy, were either economically, militarily or diplomatically overshadowed by the Franco-German partnership, which continues to be the heart of the project. The origin of the EU’s power lies in the joint recognition of France and Germany, and their establishments, that they cannot manage without each other, that Germany can have power if it exercises it through the EU but not if it does so openly, and that France can have standing, prestige (and considerable economic benefits) if it accepts an unstated but actual German political primacy.

This relationship became more one-sided after German reunification, but has survived remarkably well considering the strains it could have imposed. The certainty, among France’s elite, that conflict with Germany in future is futile, over-rode traditional French fears of a united Germany. (Arthur Koestler wrote interestingly about the doomed relationship of the two countries, one a land of bread and wine, the other a land of coal and iron, and their unequal populations, in the opening pages of his extraordinary book Scum of the Earth, which I thoroughly recommend to anyone interested in the darker corners of European history).

The absorption of Britain was almost certainly a mistake on the EU’s terms. They were attracted by the access to British markets it offered, by the possibilities of absorbing our military capability into an all-Europe one, by the fishing grounds, by the large net contributions which we were bound to make. Above all, they wanted to end what they regard as annoying British attempts to prevent a single power dominating the continent, the principle of London’s foreign policy since the days of the first Queen Elizabeth. What they didn’t anticipate was the depth and strength of the incompatibility between the Continental approach to law, government and regulation, and British traditions.

It was undoubtedly a mistake on British terms. We gained nothing economically or politically by it, losing what remained of our special Commonwealth trading links, losing our territorial waters, our foreign policy independence and our ability to make our own arrangements for regulating and subsidising our industry and agriculture. We also lost our political independence, and control over our own borders. I could make a longer list if I thought it would help the argument, but most readers will get my point. British establishment enthusiasm for the European idea was rooted in chagrin, and in mistrust of the USA, following our defeat at Suez.

It was in a way a sort of British Vichy mentality, defeatist and self-denigratory. It became clear during the 1980s that we were quite able to recover from the economic and political sickness of the Eden-Macmillan-Home-Wilson-Callaghan era, and were also able to conduct ourselves effectively as a medium sized diplomatic and military power. It was also increasingly clear that the ever-closer union promised in the Treaty of Rome was becoming irksome because of its growing interference with British laws at home and with our freedom of action abroad. Meanwhile, the endless promises of greater access to markets in Europe never seemed to be fulfilled.

It is perfectly true that the EU has no power of any kind to force us to remain within it, and in fact the Lisbon Treaty for the first time codifies the procedure for a country which wishes to leave the EU. We could leave tomorrow, without damage, if we so wished. But the leaderships of all political parties refuse to countenance this. Why? Mr Davies is perfectly correct in saying that the British government and civil service gold-plate EU laws and regulations, because they like them so much and see them as opportunities to do what they wanted to do before. Also on occasion ministers like to claim that the EU is forcing them to do things they wish to do anyway (a very important reason why British politicians, unwilling to reveal or take responsibility for their own real aims, support EU membership so strongly. The Strasbourg Human Rights Court, a non-EU body, often performs the same function, ‘forcing’ British governments to do things they wanted to do anyway, but couldn’t get past the voters. The Strasbourg Court has no power in Britain, except the power the British government wants to give it). But British politicians are not so keen to acknowledge their impotence over such things as Post Office closures, the wrecking of our fisheries, or the current rubbish collection mess, as they don’t like admitting how much power they’ve handed over in return for the general irresponsibility the EU provides.

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

Balkans


Kosovo: War Crimes, Former Premier Ceku Arrested in Bulgaria

(ANSAmed) — SOFIA, JUNE 24 — The former premier of Kosovo, Agim Ceku, wanted by Interpol for war crimes, was arrested yesterday in Bulgaria at the Macedonian border. The news was announced by a Bulgarian Interior Ministry spokesman. Ceku was entering Bulgaria for high-level talks when arrested. Serbia accuses him of crimes committed in Croatia in the 1991/’95 conflict and in Kosovo in the war of 1998/’99, when he commanded the Albanian guerrilla forces. He was premier of Kosovo from April 2006 to November 2007, shortly before Pristina proclaimed its independence from Serbia. It is not the first time Ceku has been arrested on a Serbian warrant: Colombia expelled him early May and in 2004 he was briefly interrogated in Hungary. A spokesman of his Social-Democrat party in Pristina said that talks on a diplomatic level concerning his release have been in progress “since early this morning”. The Bulgarian solicitor, Nikolai Kokinov, announced that he is considering the extradition request presented by the Serbian authorities, due to which Ceku’s arrest has been prolonged. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EU-Africa: Wade; If You Favour Med Union We Turn to China

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 24 — Africa could turn its attention towards China, India and Brazil for its own development, if Europe does not increase its commitment towards the African continent, President of Senegal Abdoulaye Wade said today. Wade was giving a press conference in Brussels, in which he attacked Europe for favouring Mediterranean Africa over black Africa, and creating new divisions within the continent. ‘Our biggest concern is that the creation of the Mediterranean Union will isolate Africa”, said Wade. ‘We will not fail to react to this form of isolation” for black Africa, which could react by turning to Latin America, India, China and Brazil ‘to favour a south-south cooperation which will allow us to develop”. Wade, who presented an announcement along with president of the EU Commission Antonio Tajani to reinforce cooperation in transport matters between the EU and Africa, said that ‘Europe is becoming less and less competitive with regard to Africa. I tell you this frankly, I tell you sincerely in friendship, in the hope that it makes you reflect”, he warned, adding: ‘We are very attached to cooperation with Europe and we do not want to throw away 3/4 centuries of cooperation”. (ANSAmed).

2009-06-24 17:07

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Islam: Niqab Debate Risks Politicisation, Egyptian Minister

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 24 — “What I fear is that the debate over the niqab will become politicised and will produce the same effect as that of the hijab, with further pressures on women to make them wear it”, Moushina Khattab, Egyptian Family and Social Affairs Minister, has said. Khattab was commenting on the re-opening of the debate on the veil in France, on the sidelines of an ISAIO conference on the Arab Woman in the 21st Century, currently underway in Rome. “The issue of education for women is the important thing”, added the minister, noting that without this they cannot even gain the right to vote and that only education gives women the tools to react to the pressures heaped upon them. The veil, continued Khattab, implies that a woman “is not a human being, but a seductive creature”, a concept which equally reduces man to “a being incapable of respect in its presence”. Further, the use of the niqab blocks true human interaction, which is also expressed through body language. This has particularly negative consequences, rounded off the Egyptian minister, in the education of children at school and in forming their concept of woman which will be carried into adulthood. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Berlusconi Agrees With Palestinian Demilitarisation

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 23 — “I expressed my appreciation for the possibility of a demilitarisation of the Palestinian state, which we believe is a duty, and also for the fact that the State of Israel must be recognised”, said Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi in a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in Palazzo Chigi, referring to the speech given by the Israeli leader a few days ago. He added that “we discussed the present situation in the Middle East and we have confirmed our support to renew Israeli- Palestinian negotiations and to promote peace in the Middle East”. Berlusconi stated that these two principles — the demilitarisation of the Palestinian State and the recognition of the Israeli State by the other side — are not pre-conditions to starting negotiations, but must be included in future negotiations. The Prime Minister also expressed “appreciation” for the speech given by the Israeli Prime Minister in October, during which he opened up, for the first time, to the possibility of a Palestinian State, on the condition of it being demilitarised and with prior recognition of the State of Israel by the Palestinian side. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Says Has No Knowledge of Shalit’s Life

GAZA, June 25 (Xinhua) — The Islamic Hamas movement on Thursday said it cannot confirm or deny if the captive Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit is still alive.

“The crazy war on the Gaza Strip wiped out everything so we don’t know if Shalit is still alive or if he has died,” Osama al-Muzini, a Hamas official authorized to speak on this issue, told Xinhua, referring to a 22-day Israeli offensive against the Hamas-controlled territory in January.

Al-Muzini, however, said Israel has to go ahead with talks to exchange Shalit for a number of Arab prisoners “whether the soldier was dead or alive.”

“The Zionist enemy has to pursue negotiations without any signal confirming or denying this argument,” al-Muzini added.

Thursday marks the third anniversary of Shalit’s capture by Hamas-led Gaza militants in a cross-border raid at his military base near the Gaza Strip.

The Islamic Hamas movement wants Israel to free hundreds of Palestinian and Arab prisoners, including all youngsters, women and the elder, in return for the captive.

Moreover, al-Muzini denied reports that Egypt, which mediates between Hamas and Israel, has made some progress in bridging the gaps between Hamas and Israel.

“The issue is still marking time and the contacts are weak, there are no new proposals,” he said, adding that the reports were “trial balloons the Zionist enemy releases.”

He reiterated that Israel has to accept the captors’ demands as the only possible solution to Shalit’s case.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Israel Releases Hamas Speaker

Israel has released the Hamas speaker of the Palestinian parliament after three years in prison.

Abdel Aziz Dweik was among dozens of Hamas politicians arrested after Palestinian militants abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in 2006.

Israel detained Mr Dweik, 60, and dozens of other Hamas politicians in the occupied West Bank in 2006 shortly after gunmen from the faction and other militants abducted Sergeant Shalit on the Gaza Strip border.

But Hamas and Israel denied a Palestinian news agency report that Sergeant Shalit’s release was also imminent.

Mr Dweik’s reception at the PLC highlighted the continuing enmity between Hamas and the US-backed Fatah faction of President Mahmoud Abbas, which favours a peace deal with Israel.

The Islamists, shunned by the West for refusing to coexist with the Jewish state, seized control of Gaza in 2007, driving Fatah forces out and prompting Mr Abbas to dissolve the Hamas-led coalition government that was sworn in after a surprise Hamas victory in a 2006 election.

Talks to reconcile the two have yielded no results since Egypt began mediation late last year.

Mr Dweik has been touted by Hamas as a possible replacement for Mr Abbas.

During his imprisonment, he was taken several times to a hospital in Israel, suffering from blood pressure problems and diabetes. It was unclear if his poor health contributed to his release.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Netanyahu in Rome: Berlusconi, Invited to Speak at Knesset

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 23 — Each year there will be a bilateral meeting held between Italy and Israel, the first of which will be held in Israel, where Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi will speak at the Knesset, Israel’s parliament. The information was announced by Silvio Berlusconi during a press conference held alongside Benjamin Netanyahu. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



US Actor in Israel Tells Youth to “Imagine” Peace

Seinfeld star in Jerusalem meets “Imagine 2018” participants

American Jewish actor Jason Alexander, from the hugely successful television comedy series Seinfeld, was in Jerusalem on Wednesday to attend a OneVoice meeting where he spoke about a project in which Palestinian and Israeli youth “imagine” what would happen if a peace treaty had been signed in 2008.

Alexander was in the American Colony hotel in east Jerusalem to meet with participants of the “Imagine 2018” project, started by the OneVoice international peace movement.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Middle East


70 Iranian Professors Reportedly Detained

According To Mousavi’s Web Site, Professors Taken By Regime Forces After Meeting Opposition Candidate

Seventy university professors were detained in Iran in a widening government crackdown on protesters, according to a Web site affiliated with Iran’s key opposition figure, Mir Hossein Mousavi, who says he was robbed of victory in a rigged presidential election.

The professors were detained on Wednesday, immediately after meeting with Mousavi, said the Kalemeh site, which is affiliated with the opposition leader. The report said it is not clear where the detainees were taken.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Iranian authorities have barred journalists for international news organizations from reporting on the streets and ordered them to stay in their offices. This report is based on the accounts of witnesses reached in Iran and official statements carried on Iranian media.

Hundreds protesters and activists are believed to have been taken into custody since the June 12 vote, in which Iran’s ruling clerics declared hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad the winner by a landslide. The government has also set up a special court to deal with the cases of people arrested in more than a week of unrest and threatened harsh sentences.

Widespread protests erupted after the election, amid allegations of massive fraud. Since then, at least 17 people have been killed as authorities gradually intensified their crackdown.

The state-owned newspaper, Iran, reported Thursday that in addition to the 17, seven members of the pro-government Basij militia were killed in post-election clashes, and dozens more injured by weapons and knives. The report could not be independently verified.

The professors detained Wednesday were believed to be among a group that has been pushing for a more liberal form of government. The detentions signal that the authorities are increasingly targeting members of Iran’s elite.

A flood of security forces using tear gas and clubs quickly overwhelmed a small group of rock-throwing protesters near Iran’s parliament Wednesday, and the country’s supreme leader said the outcome of the disputed presidential election would stand — signs of the government’s growing confidence in quelling unrest on the streets.

As the election showdown has shifted, demonstrators are finding themselves increasingly scattered and struggling under a blanket crackdown. In Wednesday’s clashes, thousands of police crushed hundreds of Mousavi’s supporters.

With no western television cameras left in Iran, shaky cell phone video provides the only images of the protest. And although the pictures show confrontations and casualties, it’s impossible to verify when and where they were filmed, reported CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer.

The regime seems determined to head off further violence before it starts by flooding areas favored by the protestors with riot police and paramilitaries.

Mousavi hasn’t been heard from in almost a week, Palmer reported. But Wednesday, his wife — who rocketed to stardom during the election campaign — posted a message online reminding protestors they have a legal right to demonstrate and blasting the government for acting as if it had imposed martial law, reports Palmer.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Barry Rubin: Iran’s Crisis and All Quiet on the Western Front

The Iranian crisis is being fought out on three fronts.

The first, and the one properly receiving the most attention, is inside Iran itself. Commentators have now found the perfect phrase for describing the outcome there: As a result of the stolen election, demonstrations, and repression, Iran will be changed forever.

OK. But changed how? If the regime puts down the demonstrations, it will be ruling lots of deeply dissatisfied citizens. Yet overall, not much will change within the country. Presumably, there will periodically other such upheavals until the day the regime is overthrown altogether. But how long will that take? None can say.

More can be said about the other two fronts. The one changing the least is the regional aspect. Events in Iran will not change minds in the Middle East.

On one side are the radical Islamists. These include pro-Iranian forces—Hamas and Hizballah; the Syrian regime, and many in Iraq—won’t have their minds changed by the post-election upheaval. They will go on being radical Islamists and believe that these demonstrations are creations of American intelligence (whether President Obama praises them or not will have no effect) and that the marches represent only a tiny minority of malcontents.

The same conclusion, however, will be reached by the anti-Iran Islamists, especially the Muslim Brotherhood, and the much smaller base of al-Qaida. They and their supporters will go on seeking Islamist regimes in their countries, notably Egypt, Jordan, Algeria, and Saudi Arabia. They won’t be affected either.

But there is another factor regarding the Islamist side…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Homosexuals in Turkey: Istanbul Week for Gay Rights

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 24 — Eleven have been killed in ‘hate crimes’ against homosexuals in the last six months in Turkey, and so the seventeenth LGBTT (Lesbians, Gay, Bi-Sexuals, Transsexuals and Transgender) Pride Week has kicked off in Istanbul in a climate of sadness and rage. The event was organised by the LambdaIstanbul association, which in January risked being shut down due to accusations of offense to “public morality”. There have been many assemblies, round table discussions and cultural events with a large number of participants — including the Turkish writer Elif Shakaf — to prepare for Gay Pride, the event which on Sunday will start at Taksim Square and end on the banks of the Bosporus via Beyoglu, long known as the centre of Istanbul night life — which many transsexuals have recently been forced to leave after raids carried out by the forces of order. Defending one’s rights in a demonstration has become necessary, Ismail Alacaoglu, one of the leaders of the LGBT Kaos GL association, told ANSA: “violence targeting us is on the rise because our visibility has increased. We were expecting this and are afraid that it will continue, but the time has come for us to take to the streets, since we no longer want to hide.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Human Rights: Turkey; Police Brutality Increasing, Report

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 19 — Instances involving police brutality have increased in the past two years in Turkey after the law regulating the duties and reponsibilities of the police was altered to give them more leeway while using force, daily Radikal’s web site reports quoting a survey released by the Turkey Human Rights Foundation (TIHV). Thirteen people have died in police custody, 53 people were injured by police-fired weapons and there were 416 instances of torture and mistreatment in the two years since police authority was expanded. Regulations in line with European Union norms were introduced in 2005 as part of the new Civil Code but the regulations affecting the police were changed in 2007 after police complained they could not carry out their duties effectively. Since the change in the law regarding police responsibilities and duties, 40 people have been killed and 53 injured in situations when commands to stop were disobeyed, during demonstrations and when weapons were used during house raids. The TIHV said according to international norms, security forces could resort to the use of weapons only in instances when their life or another’s person’s life was in immediate danger. But due to the changes in the law regarding police responsibilities and duties, weapons have been used in instances when there was no threat to anyone’s life. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Iran’s Mousavi Defies Crackdown

Iran protest leader Mir Hossein Mousavi says he holds those behind alleged “rigged” elections responsible for bloodshed during recent protests.

In a defiant statement on his website, he called for future protests to be in a way which would not “create tension.”

He complained of “complete” restrictions on his access to people and a crackdown on his media group.

A BBC correspondent in Tehran says the statement is a direct challenge to Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei.

In another development on Thursday, Iranian state media said that eight members of the pro-government Basij militia had been killed and dozens more wounded in the protests.

The eight deaths were in addition to 17 other people whose deaths have already been reported.

The figures cannot be verified due to severe reporting restrictions inside Iran.

“I won’t refrain from securing the rights of the Iranian people… because of personal interests and the fear of threats,” Mr Mousavi said on the website of his newspaper, Kalameh.

Those who violated the election process “stood beside the main instigators of the recent riots and shed people’s blood on the ground”, Mr Mousavi said, pledging to show how they were involved.

Mr Mousavi, a former prime minister, spoke of the “recent pressures on me” that are “aimed at making me change my position regarding the annulment of the election”.

He described the clampdowns he and his staff were facing.

“My access to people is completely restricted. Our two websites have many problems and Kalameh Sabz newspaper has been closed down and its editorial members have been arrested,” said Mr Mousavi, who has not been seen in public for days.

“These by no means contribute to improving the national atmosphere and will lead us towards a more violent atmosphere,” he added.

Day of mourning

Opposition leaders had called for a day of mourning on Thursday, but some reports say it has been cancelled.

Separately, nearly two thirds of MPs appear to have stayed away from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s election victory party.

All 290 MPs were invited to attend the party, Iran’s press reports, but only 105 turned up. An earlier BBC report wrongly reported that 105 did not attend.

One of those who reportedly failed to turn up was Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, a high-profile figure who shares some of Mr Ahmadinejad’s hardline views but has been critical of some aspects of the government’s handling of the protests.

About 50 MPs are reformist and would not have been expected to attend the victory party.

But the high number of MPs who stayed away is another indication that the disputed election has split the nation, says the BBC’s Jeremy Bowen in Tehran.

President Ahmadinejad on Thursday criticised US President Barack Obama for his condemnation earlier this week of the violence in Iran.

“Our question is why he fell into this trap and said things that previously [former US President George W] Bush used to say,” he was quoted by the semi-official Fars news agency as saying.

The Guardian Council, which supervises elections, has already said it will not re-run the election.

Ayatollah Khamenei reiterated on Wednesday that he would “not yield” over the election result.

Arrests

Hundreds of opposition protesters and activists are believed to have been taken into custody and at least 17 protesters have died in the unrest since the election.

The Iranian government has set up special courts to deal with those arrested and has threatened harsh sentences.

Mr Mousavi’s website reported on Thursday that 70 academics who visited the opposition leader on Wednesday had been arrested. It was not clear where they had been taken.

Wednesday’s street protest was smaller than on previous days, as an increasingly heavy security presence took effect.

But there were reports of riot police firing tear gas, shooting in the air and beating demonstrators with batons.

Severe reporting restrictions imposed on foreign media in Iran mean the BBC cannot verify the reports.

Tehran has blamed foreign governments for inspiring the protests, but some Western countries are continuing to criticise its handling of the crisis.

“We stand beside you,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, referring to “all in Iran who seek to demonstrate peacefully”.

UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband told the BBC there is a “crisis of credibility between the Iranian government and their own people”.

The Italian government said it hoped Thursday’s meeting of Group of Eight foreign ministers would send a “tough” message to Tehran.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Iran: Son’s Death Has Iranian Family Asking Why

The details of his death remain unclear. He had been alone. Neighbors and relatives think that he got trapped in the crossfire. He wasn’t politically active and hadn’t taken part in the turmoil that has rocked Iran for over a week, they said.

“He was a very polite, shy young man,” said Mohamad, a neighbor who has known him since childhood.

When Mr. Alipour didn’t return home that night, his parents began to worry. All day, they had heard gunshots ringing in the distance. His father, Yousef, first called his fiancée and friends. No one had heard from him.

At the crack of dawn, his father began searching at police stations, then hospitals and then the morgue.

Upon learning of his son’s death, the elder Mr. Alipour was told the family had to pay an equivalent of $3,000 as a “bullet fee”—a fee for the bullet used by security forces—before taking the body back, relatives said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Semneby, Tactical Step Backward on Armenia Thaw

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 18 — “A step back was taken by the Turkish side, but this is not a U-turn”, EU South Caucasus envoy Peter Semneby said about “road map” deal Turkey and Armenia agreed to start last April. “We expect the conversations will continue”, Hurriyet daily news quoted him as saying. Ankara and Yerevan started talks that could lead to the normalizing of ties and the opening of their border, which Turkey closed in a show of support to Azerbaijan in 1993 after Armenian occupation of Azeri territories in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. “The normalization (with Armenia) became the subject of quite widespread and heated discussion in Turkey”, Semneby told. “It seems to me, this discussion became more heated than was expected”, he added. “Fundamentally, the new foreign policy that has been pursued by the Erdogan government, I don’t see that this policy is changing”, EU envoy said. The policy he refers to is the strategy called “zero problems with neighbourhoods” created by new Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu. Turkish officials, however, have said Turkey will not open its border with Armenia before the neighbouring country ends its occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



U.S. Rescinds July 4 Invites for Iran Diplomats

‘Circumstances have changed,’ Clinton says in a statement

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has rescinded an offer for Iranian envoys to attend U.S. embassy Fourth of July parties as the violent crackdown in Tehran continues.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Wednesday notified diplomats and other department employees overseas that her earlier invitations had been withdrawn.

“Unfortunately, circumstances have changed and participation by Iranian diplomats would not be appropriate in light of the unjust actions that the president and I have condemned,” she said in her message sent overseas. “For invitations which have been extended, posts should make clear that Iranian participation is no longer appropriate in the current circumstances. For invitations which have not been extended, no further action is needed.”

Clinton had authorized U.S. envoys abroad some weeks ago to invite Iranian diplomats to attend the annual celebration. Her authorization was required because Washington has no formal diplomatic relations with Iran, department spokesman Ian Kelly said.

Invites hadn’t been accepted

Presidential spokesman Robert Gibbs noted earlier in the day that the invitations were withdrawn.

“Given the events of the past many days, those invitations will no longer be extended,” Gibbs said.

Postelection protests and violence have rocked Iran since the contested re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The past 10 days in Iran have posed the strongest challenge to that nation’s clerical rule since the system was established in the 1979 Islamic revolution.

President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters Tuesday and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations the hardline victory was a fraud.

No Iranian diplomat had accepted an invitation from U.S. diplomatic posts abroad to attend embassy Fourth of July parties, according to the State Department.

           — Hat tip: ZZMike [Return to headlines]



Where’s the U.N. On Iran?

People are being killed in Iran. Where is the U.N.? What institution could be better positioned to relieve President Obama of his worries about America standing up unilaterally for freedom in Iran? The U.N. is the self-styled overlord of the international community, committed in its charter to promote peace, freedom and “reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights.”

Iran’s regime is already in gross violation of a series of U.N. sanctions over a nuclear program the U.N. Security Council deems a threat to international peace. The same regime has now loosed its security apparatus of trained thugs and snipers on Iranians who have been, in huge numbers, demanding their basic rights. Surely top U.N. officials such as Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon should be leading the charge for liberty and justice, with the strongest possible criticism and measures against the Iranian regime.

But that’s not happening. While Iranian protesters have been risking their necks to try to rid their country of a malignant despotism, the U.N. has hardly even qualified as voting “present.”

During the upheaval following the disputed results of Iran’s June 12 presidential election, Ban confined himself to a grand total of three public utterances on the matter. In the first, on June 15, with pictures of bloodied Iranian protesters already flooding the Internet, Ban told reporters in New York that he was “closely following the situation.” In words so ritually obtuse that they could have been scripted for him by Iran’s supreme tyrant, Ali Khamenei, Ban added that he had “taken note of the instruction by the religious leaders that there should be an investigation into this issue.”

The next day, June 16, when asked again about Iran, Ban came up with pretty much the same anodyne answer: “taken note … very closely following … just seeing how the situation will develop.” Other than that, for the next six days, Ban had lots to say—but not about Iran. He sent a message to a meeting in Yekaterinburg, Russia, of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was attending as an observer, having briefly decamped from the upheaval that his own Ayatollah-blessed, irregularity-fraught “re-election” had sparked in Iran.

To this gathering in Russia, where Ahmadinejad posed for the cameras among a lineup of heads of state, Ban dispatched a message full of buzzwords about poverty, climate change and “combined commitment to a peaceful and prosperous common future.” He made no mention of the “situation” in Iran.

Ban also found time for such activities as addressing a seminar on “cyber-hate.” He paid tribute to Gabon’s late President Omar Bongo Ondimba. He fretted about the effects of desertification on migration patterns by the year 2050. This past weekend, as the world played and replayed the footage of Iranian protester Neda Agha-Soltan bleeding to death on a street in Tehran, Ban was in Birmingham, England, apparently absorbed in accepting an award at a Rotary International Convention.

Not until June 22 did Ban finally return to the subject of Iran. And even then, Ban did not step forth before the cameras himself. At the regular noon press briefing, Ban’s spokeswoman, Michele Montas, delivered a long list of announcements, replete with notices of assorted public service awards, and of the demise of a man who served from 1976 to 1981 as the spokesman for former U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim. There was nothing on Iran..

When the announcements finally ended, the first question she got was about the Secretary General’s reaction to the latest news on election oddities and murdered protesters in Iran. She replied only that a statement from Ban was in the works, which she hoped would be ready “in a few minutes.” To a second question on Iran, she said that time was up, and the briefing was over.

Hours later, Ban’s office finally issued the promised response on Iran: a one-paragraph statement, “attributable to the Secretary General.” It turned out that while Iran’s security forces had been spending day after day beating, shooting and arresting demonstrators, Ban had progressed from keeping an eye on Iran to following the situation with “growing concern,” and had become “dismayed” by the violence.

As U.N. diplomat lingo goes, this is phrasing so tepid it could double as old dishwater. Compare it, for instance, to Ban’s statement the next day about the rape of some 20 women at Goma’s central prison in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This was a horrible event, but was it more horrible, or of greater import, than Iran’s government assaulting and slaughtering its own people? In the Congo case—keep your eye on the nuances—Ban was not merely “dismayed.” He was “deeply distressed.”

Or contrast Ban’s lukewarm angle on Iran with his “around-the-clock efforts with world leaders”—as his spokeswoman described it—to produce an immediate ceasefire when Israeli forces went into terrorist-run Gaza last December to try to stop Iranian-backed Hamas from launching rockets into Israel. In that case, Ban declared himself “deeply dismayed,” “deeply alarmed,” and having demanded, urged and condemned, he finally traveled to Gaza.

There, Ban did not wait for any considered inquiry and analysis to unfold. He let fly, condemning Israel for “excessive” use of force, and pronouncing himself incensed that U.N. buildings had been hit—never mind why. He rolled out for the press such phrases as “outrageous, shocking and alarming,” demanded a full investigation and pronounced himself too “appalled” to be able to describe his full feelings.

No such vocabulary or demand has been emanating from Ban’s office over the carnage that Iran’s government, in order to maintain its monstrously repressive grip, has been inflicting on its own people.

To be fair to Ban, in his statement Monday on Iran, he did spell out that his dismay extends particularly to “the use of force against civilians.” But he didn’t mention anything about this force being “excessive.” Perhaps by U.N. lights, the Iranian Basij and rooftop snipers have hit on some eminently proportionate use of force—dismaying to Ban, lethal to an untold number of Iranians, but not worth a denouncement as “outrageous, shocking and alarming.”

Ban, in the second half of his one-paragraph statement on Iran, went on to urge “a stop to the arrests, threats and use of force,” calling on “the government and the opposition to resolve peacefully their differences through dialogue and legal means.” That might be a reasonable notion, were Iran a free society operating with a genuinely democratic system and set of laws. But Iran under the mullahs is a place where they jail women who take off their veils, and hang homosexuals.

Whether disingenuous or simply clueless, Ban, with his morally neutral U.N. mantra, is ignoring the problem that Iran’s regime, since its inception 30 years ago, has been grounded not in democratic rule of law, but in rule by diktat and terror. The arrests, threats and force are part of the government’s “dialogue.”

Beyond Ban, where is the rest of the U.N. on the showdown and brutal crackdown in Iran? Well, last Friday, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, according to the U.N. News Service, “expressed concern” (though apparently not deep concern). With fastidious attention to the small print, Pillay noted that “the legal basis of the arrests that have been taking place, especially those of human rights defenders and political activists, is not clear.” She may be right; the details right now are not clear.. But the big picture certainly is.

What of the 15-member Security Council, which over the past three years has imposed sanctions on Iran, meant to stop its “proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities.” You might suppose that with Iran’s government brazenly violating these sanctions, the Security Council would take an interest in the recent tumult within the Islamic Republic. Perhaps the U.S. would be pushing the issue?

Nope. According to a Western diplomat connected with the Security Council, “Iran is not being discussed at the council right now.”

Nor is the General Assembly exactly seized of the matter (as they like to say at the U.N.). The current president of the Assembly is Nicaragua’s Miguel D’Escoto Brockman, a former Sandinista and current pal of the Tehran regime. In March D’Escoto made a five-day pit stop in Iran, his visit apparently bankrolled by the Iranian regime. This week he’s making use of the U..N.’s headquarters in New York to host a conference on remodeling the global financial system.

What of the U.N. agencies? They have a substantial presence inside Iran, and Iran has a substantial presence inside them. As I’ve written previously in these columns, Iran sits on the governing boards of an array of U.N. agencies, and is currently chairing the 36-member executive board of the U..N.’s flagship agency, the U.N. Development Program—which as part of its brief serves as coordinator for other U.N. operations in the field. In that capacity, as a UNDP official assures me, Iran does not deal with day-to-day management of the UNDP, but merely exercises “oversight.” On the current “situation” in Iran, the UNDP top official, Administrator Helen Clark, has remained silent.

So, as protesters die in Iran while calling for freedom, where is the U.N.? With Ban Ki-Moon and the crew above manning the mother ship of global diplomacy, the best rejoinder I can come up with is, the further away, the better.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Russia


Politkovskaya Murder Acquittal Overturned

MOSCOW — Russia’s Supreme Court on Thursday overturned the acquittal of three men charged with the murder of Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist whose reporting directly challenged the country’s most powerful leaders.

A Moscow jury acquitted the defendants — two Chechen brothers and a former policeman — in February after a trial that Politkovskaya’s supporters said was undermined by prosecution errors and omissions.

The acquittal was an embarrassment for the Russian government, which has appeared eager to fend off charges that journalists and Kremlin critics can be murdered with impunity.

The prosecutors appealed the verdict, accusing the judge of making numerous procedural violations.

The Supreme Court agreed there had been a violation of procedural rules, court spokesman Pavel Odintsov said. The court ordered a new jury trial.

Not guilty verdicts are often reversed by Russia’s higher courts.

All three defendants were accused of playing minor roles in Politkovskaya’s shooting death in 2006. Prosecutors never explained who might have ordered the suspected contract killing, and the suspected gunman remains at large.

Politkovskaya was a ferocious critic of former president and current Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, in particular his conduct of the war against Chechen separatists. She angered officials with her persistent reporting of human rights abuses and corruption in Chechnya under the leadership of Kremlin favorite Ramzan Kadyrov.

One of Politkovskaya’s editors at the newspaper Novaya Gazeta said the main problem with the trial was that it was “just about these extras,” referring to the three defendants.

“We’re more interested in the mastermind and the killer,” deputy editor Sergei Sokolov said on Ekho Moskvy radio. “It’s completely obvious that today’s ruling was based on a political decision, not a procedural one. For the authorities, the most important thing was just to make sure someone went to prison.”

At least 16 journalists have died in contract-style slayings or under suspicious circumstances in Russia since 2000. Many more have been assaulted or threatened. Few of the crimes have been solved.

Svetlana Gannushkina, a rights lawyer, criticized the Supreme Court’s decision, which she said was based on the argument that a defense lawyer had been allowed to put undue pressure on the jury.

“That’s his job if the lawyer is doing a good job,” Gannushkina said on the radio broadcast. She said the defense showed “that the prosecution’s charges were built on sand.”

Karinna Moskalenko, a prominent lawyer who represents Politkovskaya’s family, said the investigators needed to do a better job making their case the second time around.

“We have hope,” she said. “What they did before was unsatisfactory. The children still have hope.”

Defense lawyer Murad Musayev said he had expected Thursday’s decision.

“I’m convinced that if a new court is able to look at the case objectively and properly then our arguments will again be upheld,” he said.

The defendants are former Moscow police officer Sergei Khadzhikurbanov and two brothers, Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makhmudov. A third brother is suspected of shooting Politkovskaya five times in the elevator of her Moscow apartment building on Oct. 7, 2006. He has not been found.

Dzhabrail Makhmudov said Thursday that he was ready to defend himself and his brother in court a second time.

“We’ve never run in our lives and we’re not going to run from this now,” he said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

Prosecutors had accused Dzhabrail Makhmudov of driving the gunman to Politkovskaya’s apartment building the day of the crime, while Ibragim was charged with calling to warn his brothers that Politkovskaya was on her way home.

Khadzhikurbanov allegedly planned details of the attack, recruited the Makhmudov brothers and acquired a pistol with a silencer for the shooting.

___

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


Four Killed in Clashes in Russia’s Ingushetia Region-Official

MOSCOW (AFP)—Four people were killed in clashes in Russia’s southern Ingushetia region, investigators said Thursday, just days after a roadside bombing nearly killed the region’s Kremlin-appointed leader.

The four people, including an officer from an elite police unit, died Wednesday in two separate incidents in the predominantly Muslim region, Russia’s investigative committee said in a statement.

The officer, from a special unit of the Ingush interior ministry, died after an unidentified assailant opened fire with an automatic weapon in the town of Karabulak, the statement said.

The other three were killed in the village of Ekazhevo, outside the region’s largest city of Nazran, in a shootout with security forces. The statement identified one of the dead as a traffic policeman, Zurab Tiboyev.

The three men “put up armed resistance” to the security forces as they were searching the area, the statement said. “In the return fire, Tiboyev and two unidentified [people] received wounds from which they died.”

Ingushetia has become more violent in recent years as government forces have clashed regularly with Islamist militants.

The region’s leader, Ingush president Yunus-Bek Yevkurov, was nearly killed Monday in what authorities said was a suicide bombing. President Dmitry Medvedev appointed Yevkurov to lead the region last October in a bid to bring stability.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghan Girl Burned by White Phosphorus Heads Home

BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan — A nurse fixed a black wig on Razia’s scarred and disfigured scalp before the 8-year-old took off around the emergency room to bid farewell to the staff who cared for her after white phosphorous scorched her head, face, neck and hands.

When Razia came to the U.S. military hospital four months ago, Capt. Christine Collins didn’t think she would make it out alive. On Wednesday, the little Afghan girl left this military hospital for an arduous journey to her village, a 50-mile (80-kilometer) drive from Bagram Air Base.

“I am fine, I want to go home,” Razia quietly told Collins and a group of other hospital staff who had come to see her off.

Wearing a pair of blue jeans and a pink-striped shirt, Razia was eager to see her mother — who awaited her at a cousin’s house deep in the countryside still rife with insurgents. The two have not seen each other since shells ripped through their home on March 14 just after breakfast, killing two of Razia’s sisters.

It’s unclear where the white phosphorus came from that disfigured Razia for life — burning her face, now marked with permanent scars. Razia’s father, Abdul Aziz, blames international forces since U.S., French and Afghan troops gathered outside his home just before the shells were fired. U.S and NATO troops use white phosphorus to illuminate targets, create smoke screens and destroy old bunkers, but say they don’t use it as a weapon.

A U.S. military spokeswoman with NATO’s security force said military officials can’t be certain whether it was their own round or an enemy round that hit Razia’s house. In Paris, military spokesman Christophe Prazuck said French troops don’t have white phosphorus bombs, and he couldn’t say whether rounds used to create smoke screens or illuminate targets were employed in the March 14 battle.

White phosphorus burns until it’s gone. And with burns over 40 to 45 percent of her body, few thought Razia would survive when she was first airlifted to the U.S. hospital.

“This is kind of dream come true for everybody, for her to be able to go home,” Collins said, while choking back her tears.

“It was a long journey for both her and I. She is like my fourth daughter,” she said.

Collins, a military nurse from Miami, Arizona, and a mother of three girls back in the U.S., was the first to care for Razia, and she slowly coaxed a smile and then a step and finally a recovery from her — over four months and 15 surgeries.

She will be coming back again for treatment at the hospital in Bagram after a couple of weeks, and then also continue with therapy at a hospital in Kabul.

But the scars are there for all too see and the hospital staff quietly worries that Razia may never have a normal life in Afghanistan, where women in the countryside are mostly defined by the marriage they enter.

“I will always wonder and think about her for the rest of my life,” Collins said

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Brit Details Claim of Torture in Bangadesh

LONDON (AFP) — A Brit who claims to have been tortured in Bangladesh with the complicity of MI5 agents said Thursday he was accused of organising the 2005 London suicide bombings, and threatened with rape.

Jamil Rahman, who says he faced repeated beatings by Bangladeshi agents over more than two years, claimed Bangladesh agents tried to force him to say he was an Al-Qaeda militant behind the July 7 attacks.

“They stripped me naked and said that if I didn’t say what they wanted me to say, they would rape me and my wife and burn her and other family members,” he told the BBC.

“They told me to say I was al Qaeda and the organiser of the 7/7 bombings” which killed 56, added Rahman, who is taking legal action against Britain’s Home Office over the alleged abuse.

Rahman says he was arrested in 2005 by police in Bangladesh, where he had settled after marrying a Bangladeshi woman. Over three weeks of interrogation, he agreed to make taped confessions to terrorist offences.

After his release, he was frequently summoned for fresh interrogations by security service MI5 and Bangladeshi officials over the next two years, he told the Guardian newspaper last month.

In the new BBC interview, Rahman said MI5 appeared to be the driving force behind his mistreatment in Bangladesh.

“It was all to do with the British. Even the Bengali intelligence officer told me that they didn’t know anything about me, that they were only doing this for the British,” he told the broadcaster.

The Home Office denied the allegations. “We firmly reject any suggestion that we torture people or ask others to do so on our behalf. Mr Rahman has made a lot of unsubstantiated allegations.

“They have not been evidenced in any court of law,” said a spokesman.

The claims come after British police said in March they would investigate claims that MI5 was complicit in the torture of former Guantanamo Bay detainee Binyam Mohamed in Pakistan.

Mohamed became the first prisoner to be released from the US-run Guantanamo Bay detention camp under President Barack Obama in February and has kept a low profile since returning to Britain.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Maoist Insurgency Can Hurt Industry in India — Experts

NEW DELHI (Reuters) — The growing Maoist insurgency in India over large swathes of the mineral-rich countryside could soon hurt some industrial investment plans just as the country suffers an economic slowdown.

The government banned the Communist Party of India (Maoist) on Monday, bracketing it with Islamist militant groups, but experts said the ban would have little impact in the battle against the rebels.

On the ground, police fight Maoist insurgents with outdated weapons and are often outnumbered by rebels, who are skilled in jungle warfare and are well-equipped with rocket launchers, automatic rifles and explosives.

Last week, hundreds of Maoists declared the town of Lalgarh about 170 km (100 miles) from Kolkata, capital of West Bengal, as a “liberated zone”, sparking unease among investors.

While the economic impact may be small compared with India’s trillion dollar economy, the insurgency and the sense that it is worsening signals that India does not fully control its own territory and adds to risks for companies mulling investments.

The Lalgarh incident worried the country’s third-largest steel producer, JSW Steel, which is setting up a $7-billion, 10-million tonne steel plant near Lalgarh.

“We are waiting and watching, so are the others,” Biswadip Gupta, chief executive officer of the company’s West Bengal operations, told Reuters on Tuesday.

“On top of the economic woes, you have the problem of Maoists now. It is very jittery,” Gupta said by telephone from Kolkata.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described Maoists as the biggest internal security threat since independence, and this year more than 300 people, mostly police, have been killed.

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The Maoists started their armed struggle in West Bengal’s Naxalbari town in the late 1967, and have expanded their support among villagers by tapping into resentment at the government’s recent pro-industry push.

The rebels, estimated to have 22,000 fighters, operate in large parts of the eastern, central and southern countryside, and officials say they are now spreading to cities and bigger towns.

The Maoists, who are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and the disenfranchised, regularly attack railway lines and factories, aiming to cripple economic activity.

“It is still a law and order problem, but it has not been taken seriously and can have serious consequences if not dealt with properly,” said Anjan Roy, analyst at the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, referring to growth of industry.

The effect of the Maoist insurgency has already taken its toll on business.

In mineral-rich Orissa, bauxite production at state-run National Aluminium Co Ltd (NALCO) has fallen by 20 percent since an April attack by Maoists in one of their mines.

The company has now reduced the storage of explosives at its mines, fearing attacks from the rebels.

“We are more vulnerable and we have to remain alert,” said P.K. Mahapatra, the alumina company’s executive director of mines and refinery.

A strike by Maoists in east and central India, against police action in Lalgarh, has hit supplies of iron ore and coal, a senior railway official said.

“Exports have also been hit and if supplies get cut off in this manner, at least three steel plants in the region will be greatly affected soon,” Soumitra Majumdar, spokesman for the South Eastern Railways, said from Kolkata.

Rebels sided with farmers during violent protests by farmers, which forced the scrapping of a Tata Motors’ Nano car plant and a $3 billion chemicals hub complex in West Bengal.

“Existing industry may survive, but new money will not come in very easily and investors will be very scared unless the state does something quickly to control the Maoists,” said Ajai Sahni of the Institute of Conflict Management, a New Delhi-based think-tank.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Planned Attack on Hungarian Embassy Said Foiled

Pakistani authorities have foiled planned attacks on several embassies, including the Hungarian office, in Islamabad. According to diplomatic sources, bomb attacks were formulated against the Swedish, Norwegian, Czech, Italian and South African embassies.

The Hungarian Foreign Ministry confirmed the report, adding that, as the ministry and the Hungarian embassy in Islamabad had already tightened security measures in light of the situation in Pakistan, no further measures were necessary.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Embassy Attacks Prevented

A man with two tons of explosives in his posession has been arrested in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad. According to reports the man had planned to blow up the Norwegian and Swedish embassies in the city.

In addition, the Hungarian, Czech and South African embassies were also among the targets for the man’s terrorist attacks, the Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet reports.

The newspaper quotes a central source as saying that the Swedish military presence in Afghanistan was the reason for the planned attack.

Also Norway is participating in the ISAF forces in Afghanistan. The Norwegian Foreign Office has declined to comment on the reports, but security at the Norwegian embassy has been stepped up.

One year ago the Danish embassy in Islamabad was attacked, and six people were killed.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Taliban Chief Baitullah Escapes US Strike

Washington, June 25 (IANS) A US drone strike on a funeral in Pakistan’s tribal areas narrowly missed Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, an American media report said Thursday.

Mehsud was not at the spot at the time of Tuesday’s attack, but had gone to pay his respects to a Taliban commander killed in another American drone strike earlier the same day, a Pakistani security official told the New York Times.

Though the strike on the funeral appeared to have included only two midlevel Taliban leaders among the scores killed, it presented a clear blow to Mehsud’s operation, showing the deadly proximity of the drone attacks to his areas and even the possibility that he was a target, the Times said in a report from Islamabad Thursday.

Pakistani forces have stepped up its operations against Mehsud and his followers in South Waziristan, mostly with airstrikes of its own.

A Pakistani police official said the American drone attack could have been coordinated with Pakistani officials, but could not confirm it. A Pakistani intelligence official, however, said that Islamabad had been coordinating drone attacks with the Americans for several months.

Most drone attacks till recently focused around South Waziristan capital Wana, and were directed at targets that posed an immediate threat to the US, including foreign members of Al Qaeda or Taliban commanders who helped coordinate cross-border attacks on American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, the report said.

But the drones now have seemed to home in on Mehsud and his men, who pose a growing threat to the security in Pakistan through scores of suicide attacks in the country, it said.

The drones, operated remotely from the US, carried out two strikes in Mehsud’s area in South Waziristan Tuesday.

The first strike hit a compound in Ladha, a village in the mountains of western Pakistan that is Mehsud’s sanctuary, and killed four people including Khwazh Wali, a Taliban leader and close aide to Mehsud.

Later that day, Wali’s body was taken for burial to the village of Zangara, east of Makeen, where people, apparently including Mehsud, went to pay tribute to the Taliban fighter.

The second drone sent three missile to the village when Mehsud was away to the funeral.

There were differing reports on the number of people killed in the second strike. A security official said 80 people had been killed, a resident of a nearby town said the number was closer to 50, and Pakistani television reported that more than 100 had been killed.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



US General Says Troops Need New View of Aghan War

CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan — U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal said that U.S. and other NATO troops must make a “cultural shift” away from being a force designed for high intensity combat and instead make protecting Afghan civilians their first priority.

The newly arrived four-star commander said Wednesday he hopes to install a new military mindset by drilling into troops the need to reduce the number of Afghan civilians killed in combat.

McChrystal is expected to formally announce new combat rules within days that will order troops to break away from fights — if they can do so safely — if militants are firing from civilian homes. One effect of the new order will be that troops may have to wait out insurgents instead of using force to oust them, he said.

“Traditionally American forces are designed for conventional, high-intensity combat,” McChrystal said during a visit to Camp Leatherneck, a new U.S. Marine base housing thousands of newly deployed Marines in southern Helmand province. “In my mind what we’ve really got to do is make a cultural shift.”

Because the military is such a big organization, the new message will take “constant repetition,” he said.

President Hamid Karzai has pleaded with U.S. and NATO forces for years to reduce the number of Afghan villagers killed in combat. Karzai has long said that such deaths turn civilians away from the government and international forces and toward the Taliban, a point McChrystal underscored.

“When you do anything that harms the people you just have a huge chance of alienating the population,” he said. “And so even with the best of intentions, if our operation causes them to lose property or loved ones, there is almost no way somebody cannot be impacted in how they view the government and us, the coalition forces.”

Thousands of Marines this spring have poured into Helmand — the country’s most violent province and the world’s largest producer of opium poppies. Southern Afghanistan is the center of the Taliban-led insurgency, which has made a violent comeback in the last three years.

McChrystal, who took command of all U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan last week, is making his first visits to regional commanders to outline the new combat rules.

He said later that U.S. troops may have been overconfident in the early years of the Afghan conflict after the Taliban regime fell so easily. He said the U.S. may have “oversimplified” the Afghan challenge as a result.

Brig. Gen. Larry Nicholson, the Marine commander at Camp Leatherneck, said his forces were already following McChrystal’s new commands.

“Our focus from the very beginning has not been Taliban. It’s been civilians,” he said. “We’ve paid a lot of attention to avoiding civilian casualties. … We have a lot of combat vets, a lot of Iraq vets. And I think we learned early on the importance of trust and support of the locals.”

He added: “There will be plenty of opportunities to kill Taliban, and we’re pretty good at that. Bur the focus here, the reason we’re here, is the people, not the Taliban.”

The Pentagon has asked McChrystal for a 60-day review of the Afghan war, a review that could result in a recommendation to shift troops to new locations in Afghanistan. McChrystal said he didn’t yet know if he would request more troops.

The Pentagon abruptly pulled McChrystal’s predecessor — Gen. David McKiernan — out of Afghanistan one year into a two-year assignment. McChrystal said his deployment did not have a timetable to it, and that he would stay in Afghanistan as long as the Pentagon wanted him there.

He refused to give even an estimate of how long that might be, saying: “My wife would kill me if she read something too long. I do think continuity is key, though.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Video: Pakistan Police Battle Taliban

Police in Pakistan are cracking down on the Taliban in the country’s most populous province, Punjab.

A number of Taliban cells have been broken up, and key figures have been arrested — including a self-confessed bomb-maker, and a would-be suicide bomber.

Orla Guerin reports from Lahore.

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

Far East


N. Koreans Mass at Rally in Capital to Denounce US

SEOUL, South Korea — Tens of thousands of North Koreans shouted slogans to denounce international sanctions at a rally in central Pyongyang on Thursday, as the communist country vowed to enlarge its atomic arsenal and warned of a “fire shower of nuclear retaliation” in the event of a U.S. attack.

The rally marked the 1950 outbreak of the Korean War, which about 5,000 people — mostly American and South Korean veterans and war widows — also commemorated at a ceremony in Seoul.

The anniversary came a day after President Barack Obama extended U.S. economic sanctions against North Korea, saying its arsenal and the risk of proliferation “continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat” to the United States, according to the White House Web site.

The U.S. measures are on top of U.N. sanctions imposed on the North over its nuclear test in May. The U.N. sanctions bar member states from buying weapons from or selling them to North Korea. They also ban the sale of luxury goods to the isolated country and financial transactions.

In Pyongyang, an estimated 100,000 packed the main square, shouting “Let’s smash!” in unison while punching clenched fists in the air, footage from APTN in North Korea showed. A placard showed hands crushing a missile with “U.S.” written on it.

The isolated, totalitarian regime often organizes such massive rallies at times of tension with the outside world.

North Korea’s “armed forces will deal an annihilating blow that is unpredictable and unavoidable, to any ‘sanctions’ or provocations by the US,” Pak Pyong Jong, first vice chairman of the Pyongyang City People’s Committee, told the crowd.

State-run newspapers ran lengthy editorials accusing the U.S. of invading the country in 1950 and of looking for an opportunity to attack again. The editorials said those actions justified North Korea’s development of atomic bombs to defend itself.

The North “will never give up its nuclear deterrent … and will further strengthen it” as long as Washington remains hostile, Pyongyang’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said.

At the rally in Seoul, Minister of Patriots and Veterans Affairs Kim Yang called for North Korea to “abandon all programs related to nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.”

The new U.N. resolution — passed to punish Pyongyang after its May 25 nuclear test — seeks to clamp down on North Korea’s trading of banned arms and weapons-related material by requiring U.N. member states to request inspections of ships carrying suspicious cargo.

North Korea has said it would consider any interception of its ships a declaration of war.

The U.S. Navy is currently following a North Korean ship suspected of carrying weapons in violation of the resolution, but Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell said Wednesday that the U.S. and its allies have not decided whether to contact and request an inspection of the ship.

The Kang Nam left the North Korean port of Nampo a week ago and is believed bound for Myanmar, South Korean and U.S. officials have said. A senior U.S. defense official said Wednesday that the ship had already cleared the Taiwan Strait.

Another U.S. defense official said he tended to doubt reports that the Kang Nam was carrying nuclear-related equipment, saying the information officials had received seemed to indicate the cargo was conventional munitions.

The U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing intelligence.

Adding to the tensions, anticipation is mounting that the North might test-fire short- or mid-range missiles in the coming days. The North has designated a no-sail zone off its east coast from June 25 to July 10 for military drills.

A senior South Korean government official said the ban is believed connected to North Korean plans to fire short- or mid-range missiles. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing department policy.

The North has also been holding two U.S. journalists since March. The reporters, Laura Ling and Euna Lee, were sentenced to 12 years of hard labor for illegal border crossing and hostile acts earlier this month.

Ling’s husband, Iain Clayton, said Wednesday that his wife called him on Sunday night and she sounded scared. He also said Ling’s medical condition has deteriorated and Lee has developed a medical problem. Ling reportedly suffers from an ulcer.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Stoned Wallabies Make Crop Circles

SYDNEY (Reuters) — The mystery of crop circles in poppy fields in Australia’s southern island state of Tasmania has been solved — stoned wallabies are eating the poppy heads and hopping around in circles.

“We have a problem with wallabies entering poppy fields, getting as high as a kite and going around in circles,” the state’s top lawmaker Lara Giddings told local media on Thursday.

“Then they crash. We see crop circles in the poppy industry from wallabies that are high,” she said.

Many people believe crop circles that mysteriously appear in fields around the world are created by aliens.

Poppy producer Tasmanian Alkaloids said livestock which ate the poppies were known to “act weird” — including deer and sheep in the state’s highlands.

“There have been many stories about sheep that have eaten some of the poppies after harvesting and they all walk around in circles,” said field operations manager Rick Rockliff.

Australia produces about 50 percent of the world’s raw material for morphine and related opiates.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Call for Life Sentence for Rwandan Generals

ARUSHA, Tanzania (AFP) — Prosecutors at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) on Wednesday demanded life terms for the former heads of the army and gendermarie for their role in the 1994 genocide.

“For their historic and indelible failure, justice will be done if you condemn them to life in prison,” prosecutor Alphonse Van told the judges at the Arusha, Tanzania-based court in his summing up.

Former army chief Augustin Bizimungu and the former head of the paramilitary police, General Augustin Ndindiliyimana, as well as two other senior officers are charged with genocide and conspiracy to commit genocide.

“In 1994, the Rwandan armed forces failed in their duty. They turned against the people, turning their back on the enemy…,” said Van.

“We will never know how many victims there were… What is sure is that a genocide took place quite simply because the Rwandan armed forces wanted it to,” he said.

Van also called for life sentences to be imposed on the other two army officers, Major Francois-Xavier Nzuwonemeye and Captain Innocent Sagahutu.

Defence lawyers will make their summing up on Thursday and Friday.

The trial began in September 2004.

The UN-backed ICTR was formed in late 1994 and is tasked with trying the masterminds of Rwanda’s genocide in which some 800,000 people, mostly Tutsis and moderate Hutus, were killed in the space of 100 days.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Ethiopia: Holy Ark Announcement Due on Friday

(IsraelNN.com) Ethiopian church leader says Friday, June 26, marks the right time to unveil the Biblical Ark of the Covenant, which he says has been hidden in his church for centuries.

Abuna Pauolos, Patriarch of The Ethiopian Orthodox Church, was in Rome this week to meet with Pope Benedict XVI. While there, he told reporters that the time had come to reveal before the world the Holy Ark. He said that the holy container has been in the custody of his church for hundreds of years.

Paulous said he would make the full announcement this Friday, June 26, 2 PM local time (3 PM Israel time, 8 AM New York time) at a press conference in Rome.

The claim that the Biblical Holy Ark has been kept at the Church, in the city of Axum, is an old one, but this is the first time that the Church plans to actually reveal the actual container, or news of it. It is not known whether the Church claims that the actual Tablets of the Law are inside it.

Copies of the alleged Ark are kept in many other churches in Ethiopia.

The news of the impending announcement was first reported by the Italian news agency Adnkronos. Pauolos told the news outlet, “Soon the world will be able to admire the Ark of the Covenant described in the Bible as the container of the tablets of the law that G-d delivered to Moses, and the center of searches and studies for centuries.”

Pauolos said “The Ark of the Covenant has been in Ethiopia for many centuries. As Patriarch, I have seen it with my own eyes, and only a few, highly-qualified persons could do the same — until now.”

Back to Earth

Stuart Munro-Hay, author of “Quest for the Ark of the Covenant: The True History of the Tablets of Moses,” concluded that the object in question is definitely not the original Holy Ark.

The building of the Ark of the Covenant — also known as the Ark of Testimony and the Ark of G-d’s Covenant — in accordance with Divine instructions is recounted in the Book of Exodus. The Ark held the Tablets of the Law, and traveled with the People of Israel, leading the way into the Promised Land. It was placed first in the Tabernacle in Shilo, and centuries later in the Holy Temple built by King Solomon. Since then, its whereabouts have been unknown, though one popular legend says it was brought to Ethiopia. Alternatively, it could be under the Temple Mount, in a cave at Mt. Nevo in Jordan, in the Vatican, a hideaway in Utah, or elsewhere.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Islamic Court Postpones Amputations of Four Men as ‘Hot Weather Means They Might Bleed to Death’

An Islamic court in Somalia that sentenced four men to have a hand and a leg cut off postponed the punishment today, saying the sweltering weather could cause them to bleed to death.

The court sentenced the men yesterday in the capital, Mogadishu, after accusing them of stealing mobile phones and guns.

The court is run by al-Shabab, a powerful insurgent group that is trying to topple the U.N.-backed government and install a strict form of Islam.

‘The sentence will be carried out later,’ an al-Shabab official said, requesting anonymity because he was not allowed to speak publicly.

‘It was postponed because of the hot weather and fears that the victims will bleed to death.’

No date was set for the punishments to be carried out.

Amnesty International has appealed to al-Shabab not to carry out the ‘cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments.’

The U.S. considers al-Shabab a terrorist group with links to al-Qaida, which al-Shabab denies. The group, which controls much of Somalia, is boosted by hundreds of foreign fighters.

Somalis traditionally observe Sufi Islam, a relatively moderate form of worship. But in recent years, insurgents have begun to follow austere Wahabi Islam — rooted in Saudi Arabia and practiced by Osama bin Laden and the Taliban.

Somalia has not had an effective government since 1991 when the overthrow of a dictatorship plunged the country into chaos. A surge in violence in recent weeks, which diplomats said is a major push by the insurgents to force the government out of its Mogadishu strongholds, has killed about 225 people.

Last week, the national security minister and Mogadishu’s police chief were among those killed.

The country’s lawlessness has spread security fears round the region and raised concerns that al-Qaida is trying to gain a foothold in the Horn of Africa.

Somali lawmakers pleaded this weekend for immediate international military intervention from countries including Kenya, Ethiopia and Djibouti to help quash the insurgency. But there was no indication reinforcements would be forthcoming.

Nearly 126,000 people have fled their homes since May 7, according to the U.N. refugee agency. The United Nations says an estimated 3.2 million Somalis — almost half the country’s population — need food and other humanitarian aid.

Two years ago, Ethiopia deployed troops to support Somalia’s fragile, Western-backed government, but they were widely unpopular and finally withdrawn in January.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Somalia: Al-Qaeda Linked Militants ‘Out of Control’

Mogadishu, 25 June(AKI) — Somalia is having difficulty controlling a growing number of Al-Qaeda-linked militants inside the country, a source close to Somalian president Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed has told Adnkronos International (AKI). The source said that militants aligned with the hardline Islamist Al-Shabab militia, or the Young Mujahadeen, were too much for the government to handle.

“I believe that the Somalian government will be able to do something and not be defeated, but the problem is that the Al-Shabab are too many for us,” he said.

The source spoke to AKI as news broke on Thursday that Al-Shabab performed double amputations on four men who reportedly admitted to several robberies.

After their conviction by an Islamic Sharia law court in the capital early this week, each man had one hand and one foot cut off with machetes as punishment for their crime before a crowd of several hundred people.

The government source said the militants were recruiting many volunteers from abroad.

“They have many volunteers from other countries,” said the source.

He said the militants are responsible for many small clashes that take place throughout the day on the outskirts of the capital, Mogadishu.

“Now the Young Mujahadeen and members of the Islamic party have a strong alliance even though most Al-Shabab are not happy to be commanded by Sheikh Hasan Dahir Aweys, who is willing to do anything to become the next leader of the Islamic state.”

The source said there had been a mass influx of foreign volunteers invited by Al-Qaeda to the Horn of Africa to fight with the Young Mujahadeen.

“In reality there are tonnes of them, probably even too many for us and this is the real problem,” he said.

“Young people from Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and many Westerners are with them, we even know that there are British and Americans with them. We do not know if there are any Italians, but at this point we cannot exclude anything.”

Despite an announcement that Ethiopia and Dijbouti would not provide troops, the fragile Somalian government still hopes it will be able to defeat the Islamic militants.

“It is not true when the Al-Shabab claim to be two kilometres away from Villa Somalia, the presidential palace,” he said. “For weeks, they’ve been on the perifery, in the area past the football stadium, and have not been able to make any further advance.”

Al-Shabab is an Islamic militant group, which the United States has included on the list of foreign terrorist organisations in 2008.

President Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, took office in January 2009 and introduced Sharia law to the Muslim country, but the move has failed to satisfy the hardline militants in the area.

Al-Shabab and allies have been fighting with pro-government forces since 7 May 2009.

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



Somalis Watch Double Amputations

Hardline Islamists in Somalia have carried out double amputations on four men for stealing phones and guns.

They have each had a hand and foot cut off after being convicted by a Sharia court in the capital earlier this week.

More then 300 people, mainly women and children, watched as masked men cut off their limbs with machetes.

The four men reportedly admitted to the robberies, but were not represented by a lawyer and were not allowed to appeal against their sentence.

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

The amputations were carried out in the open in front of an al-Shabab military camp in the north-east of Mogadishu.

A local resident said the four men cried out during and after the amputations. Each man had his right hand and left foot cut off.

“‘Help, help, help!’ one of them shouted,” Mohamed Abdi told the BBC.

Eyewitnesses estimate the age of the four men — Aden Mohamud, Ismail Khalif , Jeylani Mohamed, and Abdulkadir Adow — to be between 18 and 25.

Mr Abdi said the whole process took about an hour to complete.

‘Torture’

Human rights lobby group Amnesty International has condemned the amputations.

“These punishments amount to torture,” said Tawanda Hondora, Amnesty’s Africa deputy director.

The group says that committing torture could amount to a war crime.

After the four were sentenced to double amputations on Monday, mosques in the area announced through their loud speakers that the amputations would take place at 0800 local time on Thursday.

Al-Shabab spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage told journalists that the amputations were a warning to all thieves.

“If they are caught red-handed in similar circumstances, they will face amputation,” he said.

He also said al-Shabab would look after the welfare of the amputees.

On Monday, the court had said it was too hot for the sentence to be carried out on that day as an amputation in such conditions could lead the accused to bleed to death.

The punishments carried out in Kismayo have shocked many Somalis, who traditionally practise a more tolerant form of Islam than al-Shabab’s strict Wahabi interpretation.

Onlookers at the amputation in Mogadishu on Thursday declined to comment when asked for their reaction.

President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, a moderate Islamist, took office in January but even his introduction of Sharia law to the strongly Muslim country has not appeased the hardliners.

The government has not carried out any amputations under its version of Sharia.

Since 7 May, al-Shabab and its allies have been locked in ferocious battles with pro-government forces.

The president has declared a state of emergency and has appealed to Somalia’s neighbours to send troops to help.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



U.S. Warns of Threats Against Sudan Government, West

KHARTOUM (Reuters) — Islamic militants have threatened violence against Sudan’s government and could target Western interests following the death of a suspected militant, the U.S. embassy in Khartoum said on Wednesday.

The U.S. embassy, which urged its citizens to keep a low profile and restrict their travel, did not give details of the “jihadist website” it said had published the threats or the suspected militant that had been killed.

The warning comes at a time of already heightened tension in the capital, where a judge was due on Wednesday to issue a verdict in the case of five men accused of murdering a U.S. aid worker and his driver.

Sudan, which hosted al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden in the 1990s before expelling him, has been on a U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism since 1993.

The U.S. embassy’s warden message said: “Statements threatening violent action against the government of Sudan have been posted on a jihadist website, following the death of a suspected Islamic extremist.”

It said calls to attack government targets “and/or Western interests” might be repeated during Friday prayers, and warned citizens not to travel inside the capital from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. on that day.

Sudanese state media last week reported a university professor, wanted on charges related to extremism, had died after a police chase.

A police spokesman was quoted as saying someone threw a stone at the suspect while he was trying to get away from officers on a motorcycle on Wednesday last week, thinking he was a thief, and he died later in hospital of head injuries.

U.S. officials have acknowledged Sudan has been cooperative in sharing intelligence on militant groups since the September 11 attacks in 2001. But Western embassies have continued to warn that militants remain active in Sudan.

Al Qaeda’s second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahri in 2007 criticised President Omar Hassan al-Bashir for letting international peacekeepers into the country’s Darfur region and accused him of abandoning Islam to appease the United States.

In August 2007, Sudanese security services said they had broken up a plot to attack the French, British, U.S. and U.N. diplomatic missions in Khartoum.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Will Somalia Become the Afghanistan of East Africa?

Analysts are warning that Somalia could soon become the Afghanistan of East Africa. Increasing numbers of Taliban fighters are entering the country, bringing with them tactics such as suicide bombings that hadn’t been seen before in Somalia. The security situation is rapidly worsening.

“One has to regretfully conclude this”, says Dutch Horn of Africa expert Jan Abbink. In the capital Mogadishu, Islamist insurgent groups are intensifying their attacks on the weakened UN-backed transitional government, with increasing support by foreign combatants known as Al-Muhajiroun (the emigrants).

Members of the Taliban are said to be pouring into the region from Afghanistan and Pakistan where they are no longer welcome, along with volunteers from the Middle East.

“There are even Ugandans, converted Europeans and Americans there. The foreign combatants have their own chain of command and are allied to the main Somali Al- Shabab militant group. They are gaining in influence,” says Jan Abbink, a researcher at the African Studies Centre in Leiden, the Netherlands. He estimates that there are “several dozen” Al-Muhajiroun on the ground.

Al-Shabab has admitted having a close relationship with Al-Qaeda. The foreign combatants or Jihadists coming to fight a holy war, see Somalia as their new front, similar to the one they formed in Asia. They are bringing in money, arms, contacts, and training camps for new tactics such as suicide bombings that were once unheard of in Somalia.

Internal Divisions

Due to internal divisions, however, the insurgent groups have been unable to take advantage of the increasing external support and the weakness of the transitional government. This keeps them from gaining the upper hand in Mogadishu, explains Mahad Mussa, the coordinator of Nedsom, a Somali diaspora foundation in the Netherlands.

The insurgency is deeply divided among clans that control certain neighbourhoods in the capital. What does unite them now is their desire to overthrow the UN backed government, Mahad says.

According to Jan Abbink, the clans are also strongly united in Islam and their desire to establish a theocratic regime in the country, and this, he believes, even supersedes inter-clan rivalries.

“There is an emerging Islamic agenda in Somalia that was not there before, and we should not underestimate that. They will not immediately fall apart once they’re in power. That’s an easy conclusion by people who don’t understand the depth of the transformation in Somalia.”

Mr. Mahad disagrees. If the Islamic insurgents manage to conquer the capital, he predicts that “the clan factor” will prevail as they try to extend their control to the rest of the country.

“And then we will get what we had for the last 18 years: many factions within the country and more violence as each group tries to take over another group.”

The mounting unrest could increasingly affect Somalia’s neighbours in the Horn of Africa. Countries such as Kenya and Ethiopia, which withdrew its troops from Somalia in January, will be tempted to intervene. This will confirm the “Afghanistan scenario”, believes Jan Abbink:

“We will have a major source of instability in East Africa which will affect the entire region and require all kinds of extra military and humanitarian support from the international community.”

Prompt action

Both Professor Abbink and Mahad Mussa feel that the worst can still be avoided if the international community acts promptly, preferably ‘within a month’ for Mr. Mahad.

Despite calls from Western countries and the African Union (AU) to increase international support for the federal government and to reinforce AMISOM, the AU contingent in the country, concrete measures have yet to be announced. The government has complained that it has only received part of 200 million US dollars pledged at a donor conference in Brussels in April.

Meanwhile, civilians continue to bear the brunt of the fighting: almost 160,000 people have fled the capital in the past two weeks, according to the UN refugee organisation UNHCR.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Venezuela Accuses “Imperial Hand” of Iran Unrest

Hugo Chavez says Ahmadinejad won election legally

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez threw his support behind Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and said he believed America’s spy agency, the CIA, was behind clashes that have rocked the Islamic Republic for almost two weeks.

Although ties between Venezuela and the United States seemed to be warming as they planned to reinstate their ambassadors almost nine months after Chavez expelled the U.S. envoy Patrick Duddy, Chavez, however, still blamed the U.S. and the “imperial hand” for the worst unrest in Iran since the 1979 revolution that ousted the U.S.-backed Shah.

“People are in the streets, some are dead, they have snipers, and behind this is the CIA, the imperial hand of European countries and the United States,” he said at a gathering of Latin American leftist leaders.

He said he suspected the U.S. and European central agencies for having a role in the post-elections clashes as he said their “imperial hand” was behind the protests that have left at least 17 people dead.

The Venezuelan president also announced his support for Ahmadinejad and said the Iranian premier “won the elections legally, we are absolutely sure we know quite a lot about Iranian politics.”

Iran has also accused Western powers, including the CIA, of having a hand in the protests and the nation’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has refused to calls for a vote recount.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Holidays: Spain Ready for Exodus of North African People

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 15 — Today marks the official start of operation OPE, an initiative designed to cope with the return home of north African immigrants who work and reside in Europe. The national coordination board issued a statement saying that, up to September 20, an expected 2.7 million passengers and 700,000 vehicles will be heading from the Spanish ports of Algeciras, Tarifa, Almeria, Alicante and Malaga to those in Morocco and Ceuta, the Spanish enclave in North Africa. The operation set up by Spanish authorities expects to see most traffic pass through the port of Algeciras (Cadiz) since last year more than 1 million passengers and 264,000 vehicles passed through there. The operation will require checks and assistance from 2,000 personnel comprising doctors, French and Arabic translators, social workers, Red Cross and Civil Defence workers, police officers and, for the first time ever, men from the emergency military unit who will act in case of disaster. The first wave of north Africans heading home for the holidays is expected towards the end of June, with peak transit expected from August 13 to 15 and 20 to 22. Experts believe that the peak days for people returning will be from August 27 to 30. The return wave is expected to end by September 20, which this year coincides with the end of the month of Ramadan. Some 25,000 square metres of cover are being set up in Algeciras to offer some shade from the sun, along with 57 drinking water fountains, 38 modular baths and showers, video screens to keep people updated on traffic conditions, two areas for children, and a mosque. Local shipping companies will provide a fleet capable of transporting approximately 10,000 vehicles and 40 crossings per day on the Algeciras/Tangiers and Tarifa/Tangiers routes. A further 4,00 vehicles and 30 crossings will be provided on the Algeciras/Ceuta route. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Migrant Stowaways at Calais Triple in Five Years

The number of migrants trying to sneak into Britain via Calais has almost tripled in just five years.

The revelation that more than 50 a day are being caught follows the re-emergence of refugee camps at Sangatte, close to where lorries board ferries to cross the Channel.

In 2004, after the closure of the original Sangatte camp, border officials detected 7,540 stowaways. Last year, the total was 19,399.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Census and Sensibility

In another wink to homosexual activists, the Obama administration is taking an extraordinary measure to show its commitment to their agenda. Last week, the Justice Department notified a same-sex couple that they could change their passports to feature their “married” names, a major policy change that has yet to register in the press. The decision, which took effect this month, is yet another sign that the President intends on eroding the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) one small step at a time.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Get Back in the Closet

Dear UNC-Wilmington Students: It’s getting close to time to start another semester. That means that it’s time to lay down the rules for all of my classes. I’m going to continue to use all the rules I’ve used before, which can be found in my syllabus. But, starting this semester, I’m adding three more rules. Gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, and transgendered students (GILBERTS) need to pay especially close attention.

First of all, GILBERTS will not be allowed to mention their status as gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, or trans-gendered. A few semesters ago, a gay student in one of my classes said — right in the middle of class, mind you — “I’m gay.” It offended me when he said that. That is why I am banning such statements for the duration of the semester. The simple awareness of the presence of gays in my classes offends me. No other reason need be offered. Just shut up and comply with the rule.

[…]

Hopefully, by now, most of you realize you are reading political satire. But that crucial fact — and the larger point of the satire — was lost on countless GILBERTS across the nation. After reading only two paragraphs of this letter, which was posted in its entirety on DrAdams.org, they began to fire off letters to the UNC-Wilmington administration demanding that I be fired.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Ihsanoglu Calls for Presenting the True Image of Islam

OIC Secretary General, Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, stated that the Islamic World is invited today, more than any time before, to conduct further study and research in order to avoid the threats faced by the Islamic Ummah through fighting negative propaganda and presenting the true image of Islam as a religion of peace, love and freedom.

This was conveyed in a message of the Secretary General read by the High Commissioner in charge of Da’wa Affairs at the Organization of the Islamic Conference, Ambassador Selem Ajili El-Houni, opening the works of the Sixteenth Session of the Committee for the Coordination of Joint Islamic Action in the field of Da’wa taking place in the Libyan capital, Tripoli. The Secretary General maintained in his message that the major question of interest to the Organization of the Islamic Conference and to people in charge of da’wa is the phenomenon of Islamophobia which has become a source of real concern and preoccupation to the peoples of the Islamic Ummah. He insisted that combating Islamophobia requires institutional work to which all Islamic players should contribute, including States, Governmental and popular organizations and civil society institutions.

The Secretary General pointed to the necessity to put in place coordination mechanisms such as a network gathering all the said organizations and institutions, which shall be governed by the committee for the coordination of Joint Islamic Action in the field of Da’wa, to participate in fighting Islamophobia through permanent cooperation and coordination with the Islamic Observatory at the OIC General Secretariat.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Iran Expected to Dominate G8 Meeting in Italy

ROME — Italy hopes foreign ministers of the industrialized Group of Eight meeting Thursday will send Iran a “tough” message over its violent crackdown on protesters, the foreign minister said.

Italy had originally invited Iran to attend the three-day gathering of industrialized nations in Trieste, northern Italy, as a special guest, arguing that Tehran could have an important role to play in stabilizing Afghanistan — a key focus of the meeting.

But Rome retracted the invitation after Tehran failed to respond and after days of violent clashes with demonstrators protesting Iran’s disputed June 12 elections.

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said he hopes delegates from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada, Japan and Russia will condemn the crackdown and urge a recount.

“We will adopt a particularly tough and clear position before the world,” Frattini said Thursday. He added that Russia “won’t have difficulties in supporting a common position” — even though Moscow has previously said it backs the results that returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.

Though several of the G8’s European members have expressed concern about the postelection violence and urged a recount, it was unclear how strong a condemnation would emerge from the three-day meeting in Trieste.

President Barack Obama condemned the violence against protesters Tuesday and lent his strongest support yet to their accusations the hardline victory was a fraud. But the United States does not want to become a scapegoat for Iran’s cleric-led government.

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday that Moscow, which hosted Ahmadinejad at a regional summit a few days after the election, so far had seen no legal violations in Iran’s crackdown.

“At the same, we are calling not to take any actions … that would allow violence and jeopardize people’s lives,” Lavrov told a news conference in Bern, Switzerland, after meeting with his Swiss counterpart, according to Interfax, ITAR-Tass and RIA Novosti news agencies.

The Trieste meeting begins late Thursday with a working dinner at which a host of thematic, global issues are to be discussed, from counterterrorism to organized crime and piracy.

On piracy, Italy hopes the G8 will “launch a strong signal of commitment for capacity building” for countries like Somalia to help them better patrol their territorial waters while improving their ability to prosecute pirates, said Sandro De Bernardin, the Foreign Ministry’s political director.

The Afghan conflict will take central stage Friday and Saturday, with U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke and key regional players — including the foreign ministers of Afghanistan and Pakistan — joining in the discussions on five major points of discussion: border management, drug trafficking, economic development, refugees, and food security.

In all, some 44 delegations will participate in the meeting of the eight industrial powers, including representatives from the Islamic Development Bank, the International Organization for Migration and the World Food Program.

On the sidelines of the summit will be a meeting of the Mideast Quartet — the United States, Russia, European Union and United Nations — to try to help move the Israeli-Palestinian peace process forward. The new U.S. Mideast envoy, former Sen. George Mitchell, is to attend, as will a range of Arab League nations which will join in a follow-on session Friday afternoon. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is grounded in Washington with a broken elbow.

Israel was not invited; the Foreign Ministry said that decision was taken by the Quartet, not Italy.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Their God is Not Our God

A Biblical and Historical Rebuttal to “Loving God and Neighbor Together: A Christian Response to a Common Word Between us and You.”

This document is in response and protest to the “Loving God and Neighbor Together: A Christian Response to a Common Word Between us and You.” a document produced by Yale Center for Faith and Culture in November, 2007 and signed by a large number of Christian leaders.

The Yale document is in response to “A Common Word Between Us and You” produced by over a hundred Muslim clerics and intellectuals. It is a call for dialog between the two religions.

At the very beginning of “A Common Word Between Us and You” truth and history give way to the oft-used Muslim talking point that their God is actually our God. This is simply and absolutely not so. I will substantiate this below. A survey of history, Islam, Judaism and Christianity all disprove this, the very basis of the Muslim letter.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US, Israel, Russia Absent at Cluster Bomb Talks

BERLIN (AFP) — Delegates from over 80 countries pledging to destroy their cluster bombs started a two-day conference in Berlin to assess progress since a 2008 agreement banning the weapons.

Absent however were the United States, Israel, Russia and Georgia — countries which have used cluster bombs in recent years and which refuse to sign up the agreement. China, India and Pakistan also stayed away.

A cluster bomb is a weapon fired by artillery or dropped by aircraft that splits open and scatters multiple — often hundreds — of smaller submunitions, or bomblets, over a large area.

Often many of these bomblets fail to explode immediately and can lie dormant for many years, killing and maiming civilians — many of them children — long after the original conflict is over.

First employed by the German Luftwaffe on the English town of Grimsby in 1943 and by the Red Army the same year, their use really took off in the US bombing of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos in the 1960s and 1970s.

Most recently they were deployed by both sides in Georgia’s war with Russia in 2008, and in Israel’s bombardment of southern Lebanon in 2006, rights groups say, and by the United States and allies in Iraq in 2003 and in Afghanistan in 2001-02.

They were also put to deadly effect by NATO in Serbia in 1999, by the British in the Falkland Islands in 1982, during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s, by Ethiopia and Eritrea, by Morocco and by Sudan, these groups say.

According to a 2006 report by Handicap International, there have been at least 11,000 recorded and confirmed post-conflict casualties and that the actual number — levels of reporting being low — may be as high as 100,000.

Around 98 percent of these are civilians, Handicap International says. A quarter of these are children, who often tragically mistake the bomblets for a toy.

Last year around 100 countries, including Britain, France, Germany, Australia and Japan, agreed to ban their use, development, production, transfer and stockpiling, creating the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM).

Ten countries have since ratified the CCM. Once 30 have done so — as campaigners hope they will by the end of 2009 — the treaty comes into force, giving the 98 signatories eight years to destroy their stockpiles.

It also requires clearing areas of unexploded submunitions within 10 years, and establishes a framework for assistance to victims.

But the United States, which has as many as one billion cluster munition bomblets, rights groups say, has not signed up. And nor have China and Russia, both of which are thought to have around the same amount.

The US has argued that destroying its stockpiles would put the lives of its soldiers and those of its coalition partners at risk, and that cluster bombs often result in less collateral damage than bigger bombs or larger artillery.

Other notable non-signatories include Israel, India, Pakistan, South Korea and North Korea, as well as Turkey, Georgia, Iran, Libya, Syria, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Nigeria, Sudan and Sri Lanka.

Thomas Nash from the Cluster Munition Coalition, a coalition of non-governmental organisations, said he hoped the Berlin conference would encourage some to drop their opposition.

“Our main focus is to get as many countries to ratify as soon as possible, get more countries to sign on so that we remove the stigma from the treaty,” Nash told AFP.

“And that means telling the US, telling other allies that haven’t signed the treaty, that they need to get rid of it, that this weapon is a thing of the past. It is no longer a legitimate or morally appropriate weapon to have in your arsenal.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

The Disgrace of “Cap and Trade” — Bumped

***BUMPED***

Here we are again, with more on the Crap and Debt bill, as our commenter, PatriotUSA, put it.

House Bill 2454, traveling under the name “American Clean Energy And Security Act of 2009”, has crawled out of committee and is currently being debated. Grand Poobah Pelosi wants a vote by Friday.

This sucker weighs in at 1,292 pages. Do you think your representative has read it all or did he pass it to one of his many minions to summarize for him in a page or two? You can look it over at the link provided; it takes a minute for all the pages to load. Read ‘em and weep that any elected official in America would propose these regulations. Babs’ proposal in the comments, about moving to another country, begins to appear a reasonable response to what we will be facing if this becomes law.

ACES is also known as the Waxman-Markey bill, since they are the only sponsors of this tragedy (and I don’t know the political implications of having only two co-sponsors. Did no one else sign on, or were their colleagues told not to sign? If anyone understands the subtext, please enlighten us).

Here is our president, promising higher energy bills:



Yeah, he can afford to be sanguine about it. Obama doesn’t have to pay for keeping the Oval Office thermostat set at 70° [Fahrenheit]. He doesn’t pay monetarily or politically for this hypocrisy, but rest assured he will pay politically if this bill passes. Of course, that won’t keep you warm…or maybe it will, if he is shut out of office the second time around.

Several commenters have asked if I’m a Global Warming Denier. I’m not sure of the precise tenets of this faith, but here’s my own particular creed: the climate is changing, as the climate always does. Is it getting warmer or cooler? Who knows? The scientific information is conflicting.

Is this change caused by human behavior? Sure. The Chinese have finally learned to control sunspot activity so it’s their doing.

On a site devoted to statistics and surveys, there is a page that breaks down the beliefs of some meteorologists and others regarding global warming theories. They say:

Overall, only 5% [of those surveyed – D] describe the study of global climate change as a “fully mature” science, but 51% describe it as “fairly mature,” while 40% see it as still an “emerging” science. However, over two out of three (69%) believe there is at least a 50-50 chance that the debate over the role of human activity in global warming will be settled in the next 10 to 20 years.

Only 29% express a “great deal of confidence” that scientists understand the size and extent of anthropogenic [human] sources of greenhouse gases,” and only 32% are confident about our understanding of the archeological climate evidence.

Despite the lack of “maturity” of the science of global climate change, these folks believe what they read, proving that if something is repeated often enough, it becomes the “truth”. Notice the cognitive dissonance these people manage to cobble together when you put their beliefs in the accuracy of this science together with their faith in global warming:

Ninety-seven percent of the climate scientists surveyed believe “global average temperatures have increased” during the past century.

Eighty-four percent say they personally believe human-induced warming is occurring, and 74% agree that “currently available scientific evidence” substantiates its occurrence. Only 5% believe that that human activity does not contribute to greenhouse warming; the rest are unsure.

A slight majority (54%) believe the warming measured over the last 100 years is not “within the range of natural temperature fluctuation.”

A slight majority (56%) see at least a 50-50 chance that global temperatures will rise two degrees Celsius or more during the next 50 to 100 years…

I wonder if any of these “scientists” (sorry, too many of them are merely meteorologists. They study weather, not climate) have noticed that their belief system has serious contradictions? That’s okay; it’s just an indication that this is a belief system, not a scientific conclusion founded on a working hypothesis using scientific methodology to prove their contentions. This is not science, it is “best guess” weather predicitons.

I’m a skeptic. We simply don’t know enough to make accurate predictions. Nor do we take into account changes in our observations. When the USSR fragmented and broke, much of the climate study and the weather stations were simply abandoned. So the sudden loss of data from such a huge land mass was simply ignored. This side-step permitted a skewed measure.

Just as the study of the human brain is primitive, so is the study of the earth’s climate. Which is not to say there’s not plenty of money to be made in both fields, predicting patterns. The accumulation of knowledge in both fields will be long term, so these prognosticators will be dead and gone before they’re proven right or wrong.

After the Club of Rome debacle, I’ve adopted the creed of wait-and-see. As John Sununu says: [with my emphases – D]

[There is]…the current international “rush to judgment” and the calls for implementation of drastic policies to deal with this rashly proclaimed “crisis.” My message today is to make sure we recognize that no matter how effectively we deal with exposing the errors and games behind that agenda, we need to know the battle will never end, because it’s not really about global warming.

The global warming crisis is just the latest surrogate for an over-arching agenda of anti-growth and anti-development. This agenda grew and gathered support in the years following World War II.

One of the first issues to be celebrated as a crisis by these reformers was over-population. That fad peaked in the ‘60s and early ‘70s. The bible of that cult, “The Population Bomb,” argued that “… the battle to feed all of humanity is over” and claimed we had lost the battle, claiming “ … in the 1970s and 1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death.”

This clearly phony crisis was followed by warnings about global climate change: Global cooling was going to lead to a new ice age.

But the best parallel to the current crusade, the real precursor to the current “panic du jour,” was the computer model-based alarmism of the “Club of Rome.” The Club of Rome’s claim that global economic collapse was imminent because the world would soon “run out” of some critical resources was a very appropriate precursor to the current dire warnings. It too based its alarms not on any scientific analysis of specific issues, but on a computer model. And like the current call to action, their model was pre-destined to give the result they wanted.

The criticism of the “Club of Rome” models by Resources For the Future clearly applies to the Global Climate Models’ predictions of doom. RFF pointed out that parameters with a negative impact were programmed to grow non-linearly (exponentially in fact) and parameters that mitigated negative effects were programmed to grow, if at all, “only in discrete increments.”

In each of these false alarms, nature and technology spiked their prophecies. The natural cooling period of the ‘50s and ‘60s turned into the warming period of the ‘80s and ‘90s, and with the help of increased C02, a plant nutrient, instead of mass starvation, we had no problem growing enough food for the rapidly increasing world population, and we continue to find and make more efficient use of our other critical resources.

But the anti-growth, anti-development crowd are a hardy bunch. They won’t give up. As nature switched from global cooling to global warming, so did they.

It is quite easy to link virtually all of the principal proponents of this overall agenda through a two- or three-generation mentor-apprentice-mentor professional family tree. I don’t want to go through a specific list of names. That has all been well researched and reported by many of you here. But it is important to understand that without this process of resonating self-acclamation, such bad science and ludicrous predictions would long ago have relegated them all to obscurity.

Make no mistake, their cast of characters may have expanded a bit, but at the core, there is an unbroken lineage back to those unbelievably wrong, unscientific prognosticators.

Their basic method of attack may be the same, but they have certainly refilled their operations. They learned from the “Club of Rome” episode. Since basic hard science is more difficult to bias, they would resort again to modeling. And since critics will take the time to examine their assumptions, they make the models big, obscure, and full of complex feedback structures much too abstract to debate in a public forum.

That all brings us to what has happened in the last 20 years, and where we are today. It is worthwhile reviewing what has gone on over the past two decades to give perspective and context to what is taking place today.

Some Basic Facts

Let’s begin by summarizing what we did know then and what we do know now. In fact, we don’t know as much as the media and the public have been led to think we know.

Here is what we could include in an absolute fact base:

  • Over long periods of time climate changes
  • Over short periods of time weather changes
  • There have been relatively long periods of time when the world has been colder than it is now
  • There have been relatively long periods of time when the world has been warmer than it is now
  • C02 is a trace gas whose presence in the atmosphere can contribute to an increase in the absorption of thermal radiation
  • The increased use of carbon-based fuels has produced significant increases in the amount of C02 released to the atmosphere, though still dwarfed by natural sources.

Also, there have been a number of identifiable periods of temperature variability over the past century:

Cooling in the ‘20s
Heating in the ‘30s and ‘40s
Cooling in the ‘50s and ‘60s and ‘70s
Warming in the ‘80s and ‘90s
and cooling for the past decade

It was the warming period of the late ‘80s and ‘90s that provided the context and the opportunity for the alarmists to argue that once again we faced a serious calamity.

[…]

Over the years, the anti-growth lobby has used the global warming issue very effectively. They have received even more significant levels of funding. One estimate puts the U.S. contribution to climate research today at $10 billion per year and climbing.

Unfortunately, the alarmists have effectively captured the funding allocation process.

An important question to ask now is: What have we gotten for that investment? In my opinion, surprisingly little. Of course, the computing capacity has been increased, and the models have become bigger and more complex, and they have been able to include better detail in some of the air-ocean interactions, but they still are a long way from modeling detailed phenomena very well. And of course, many of the most critical phenomena are still represented in the computer models by an assumed interaction or feedback process. And thus, the models are still susceptible to the same predestination of results as was the “Club of Rome” model….

He has much more to say. As the text of his brief CV that follows the end of this speech shows, his background and education speak to his knowledge of this subject – i.e., the politics of global climate change theories.

He was commissioned chief of staff to the president of the United States on January 21, 1989 and served in the White House until March 1, 1992. He became New Hampshire’s 75th chief executive on January 6, 1983 and served three consecutive terms prior to joining the White House staff. In 2004 he co-chaired the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board, Nuclear Energy Task Force. He has taught at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and Tufts University; served Tufts as associate dean of the College of Engineering; served on the Advisory Board of the Technology and Policy Program at MIT; co-hosted CNN’s nightly “Crossfire” program; and helped establish and served as chief engineer for Astro Dynamics Inc. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering

A commenter, “Watchful”has a link in the comments to the BBC’s documentary, The Great Global Warming Swindle. It’s over an hour long; we can’t watch the whole thing without causing problems with our connections. If you don’t have limits with your connectivity, watching the whole thing would be preferable. However, this shorter précis is available:


the.great.global.warming.swindle


House Bill 2454 is a philosophy based on fear and scarcity. This philosophy has driven the engine of government in our country for a long while. We could trace it back in concrete terms to 1913, and the deals done then with federal income tax and the creation of the Federal Reserve of the United States. Will either institution be cut back or simplified? One can hope. But it is Henny-Penneys who tend to get elected to government office. They run on the basis of fear and scarcity and they win. The exception was President Reagan, whose philosophy of abundance wrought some small changes, though he, too, grew government.

We need leadership that understands innovation, creativity, and what it means to be an entrepreneur. We need people who understand foreign policy beyond the bromides they tediously provide. We especially need leaders who believe in our country’s potential and who understand at least some of the horrific consequences, often unintended.

However, as President Obama showed in the first video, some of our problems will be deliberately induced. If this man were a doctor, he’d be using leeches to cure disease. That’s all this bill is: giant leeches designed to suck the blood out of the body politic.

Where are those who believe in abundance, who realize that the earth redeems and heals itself without our help or interference? Unfortunately, the Puritan thinking that ran through the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony has prevailed once again. The world centers around humanity’s evil rather than the abundance that surrounds us.

Eric at Red State, where I got the Obama video, has also provided a link that permits you to call your congress representative. Put in your zip code to be provided with your rep’s phone number. I prefer emails, but this late in the game, phone calls will be effective.

Whatever you do, stand and fight now. With this Congress and this President, it will be only one of many struggles. We have been burdened with the Stimulus Attack. Let us resist this new onslaught by the House.
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Call it “cut and run” because that’s what our Imperial Congress is about to do.

This week, the House of Representatives is expected to vote on that scurrilous piece of legislation known as “cap and trade”. Named after its two sponsors, Waxman and Markey, this bill spells doom for the American economy, both in the short term and longer down the line.

Here’s a good duel that exposes some of the problems:



The Heritage Foundation has been keeping up with the progression of this robbery in the name of Greenspeak. A unilateral pullback like the demented members of Congress who plan to vote yea for this bill means that we hand over the reins of our economy to whichever countries either (a) sign on to this kind of nonsense and proceed to ignore it, or (b) those, like China, who will simply ignore it because to do so is in their own best interest.

But our political class no longer serves America’s best interests. It is too short-sighted, too caught in the nets of political correctness about the environment, and beholden to too many people to do what they were hired to do: watch out for America’s interests.

Here’s the Heritage Foundation’s latest take, as of 16 June. They title their essay “Son of Waxman-Markey: More Politics Makes for a More Costly Bill”:

Representatives Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Ed Markey (D-MA) modified their global warming proposal from the draft version published on March 31. For the most part, the changes focused on the distribution of the allowance revenue–the equivalent of tax revenue.

There was also a slight easing of targeted emissions reductions for 2020, which resulted in a marginally lower economic impact. However, the new distribution of allowances created a less efficient pattern of government expenditures and more than offset the gain from the lower cap for 2020.

The economic impact of the new draft varies from that of the original draft in several major ways:

  • Compared to no cap and trade, real GDP losses increase an additional $2 trillion, from $7.4 trillion under the original draft to $9.4 trillion under the new draft;
  • Compared to no cap and trade, average unemployment increases an additional 261,000 jobs, from 844,000 lost jobs under the original draft to 1,145,000 lost jobs under the new draft; and
  • Peak-year unemployment losses rise by 500,000 jobs, from 2 million under the original draft to 2.5 million under the new draft.

Though the proposed legislation would have little impact on world temperatures, it is a massive energy tax in disguise that promises job losses, income cuts, and a sharp left turn toward big government.[my emphases – D]

Isn’t that the point? The sharp left turn into Big Government’s waiting arms? We will have no recourse if this bill is passed. Talk about trapped!

Ultimately, this bill would result in government-set caps on energy use that damage the economy and hobble growth–the very growth that supports investment and innovation. Analysis of the economic impact of Waxman-Markey projects that by 2035 the bill would:

  • Reduce aggregate gross domestic product (GDP) by $9.4 trillion;
  • Destroy 1,145,000 jobs on average, with peak years seeing unemployment rise by over 2,479,000 jobs;
  • Raise electricity rates 90 percent after adjusting for inflation;
  • Raise inflation-adjusted gasoline prices by 58 percent;
  • Raise residential natural gas prices by 55 percent;
  • Raise an average family’s annual energy bill by $1,241; and
  • Result in an increase of $28,728 in additional federal debt per person, again after adjusting for inflation

And they’re going to do this in a severe economic contraction with rising unemployment. Are these people on drugs? On the take?

Stock up on long underwear and stocking caps for our coming cold spell. You won’t be able to afford much in the way of heat when Waxman and Markey are done with us.

Waxman-Markey Basics

The bill discloses a basic two-pronged approach to cutting greenhouse gas emissions:

1.The first prong is a set of mandates forcing efficiencies independent of any cost-benefit calculations on the part of industry or consumers. These mandates include a requirement for low-carbon motor fuels and a tenfold increase in the production of electricity from renewable sources.

Notice that the second mandate of Prong One is a TENfold increase in the production of electricity from renewable sources. We received a notice from our rural electric co-operative that they have locked in a contract that runs until 2012. After that, all bets are off because “renewable” energy is hugely expensive and the co-op is saying frankly that they don’t know where it’s going to come from.

What no proponent of this bill will admit is that some of these “renewables” are even more polluting than coal. But Obama has decided coal is evil. Thus, it’s not really about emissions or clean air. It’s about destruction of an industry that the political class deems evil.

2.The second prong is cap and trade. With cap and trade, absolute limits on total emissions of greenhouse gases are established. Before those in a covered sector can emit a greenhouse gas, they need to have the ration coupons (also known as pollution permits or allowances) for each ton emitted. Because the ration coupons will have a value, and therefore a cost, cap and trade becomes a tax on fossil fuels and the energy they generate.

This is part of Obama’s promise to “kill the coal companies”. As if West Virginia weren’t poor enough already.

The intent of cap and trade is to impose a cost on CO2 and allow businesses and consumers to adapt as well as they can to this new cost. The mandates of the first parts of Waxman-Markey are counterproductive because they force choices on the economy that might not be the most efficient and inexpensive ways to cut CO2. That said, this paper’s analysis looks at only the cost of a simple cap-and-trade approach. Consequently, the economic impact estimates reported here will likely be lower than the economic cost of cap and trade hobbled further by mandates.

Renewable Energy Goals

The renewable energy targets already established by current laws will be challenging to meet. This paper assumes no additional renewable energy beyond these significant baseline increases of 36 billion gallons of renewable motor fuels and the existing state-level renewable electricity requirements. The current baseline projects 18.3 gigawatts of increased nuclear power capacity. The history of nuclear construction in the 1960s through the 1980s shows that a much more aggressive nuclear build-out is technologically possible, but political and other factors make the likelihood of a “nuclear renaissance” highly uncertain. Therefore, this study assumes no additional nuclear capacity beyond the baseline increase.

Results of The Heritage Foundation’s Analysis

It is no surprise that the economy responds to cap and trade as it would to an energy crisis.

This is a crucial point. Remember Jimmy Carter’s long lines for gasoline? You can expect them to return, along with the malaise this enormous mistake will induce.

The price on carbon emissions forces energy cuts across the economy, since non-carbon energy sources cannot replace fossil fuels quickly enough. Energy prices rise; income and employment drop.

The current recession diminishes near-term projections for aggregate economic activity. As this activity drops, so does energy use. Though a recession is bad news, it has the effect of moving the economy closer to the energy cuts needed to meet the emissions targets. Nevertheless, the income (GDP) losses are nearly $200 billion out of the gate and average over $380 billion per year. As the economy recovers and the caps tighten, the detrimental effect of cap and trade gets more and more severe. In the worst years, GDP losses exceed $700 billion per year.

If you want to see this illustrated, the graphs are at the Heritage website. They are impressive and dismal.

This Congress and this administration are not friends of the United States. They are in thrall to some supra-nationalist religion of environmentalism, nihilism, and the establishment of poverty that makes us all beholden to the government for what little good remains.

Yes, they will continue to drive gas hogs, eat on our dime at their Congressional and Senate dining rooms, and fly their corporate jets from Washington to home at our expense.

Their draconian laws will not affect them and they know it. But go ahead and email or call your representative anyway. Let him or her know you’ll be watching the vote. The one thing we can hold over them – some of ’em – is the threat of loss of incumbency.

Meet you at the ballot box.

Ecclesiastes, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Iran

Below is a guest-essay by Dr. Richard Jansen of Colorado State University. Dr. Jansen posted in this space last year about the Balkans and the history of Islamic jihad.



Ecclesiastes, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Iran

by Dr. Richard Jansen

“To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven: A time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted; a time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up; a time to weep, and a time to laugh, a time to mourn, and a time to dance;

A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing; A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast away; A time to read, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to speak; A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time to peace.”

               — Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8

This is ancient wisdom that has expressed truth through the ages, and is truth and wisdom that can help us in understanding our time as well. Three world historical events occurring in our time may be cited to make this point.

The first is the “surge” of troops in Iraq that is generally — if not universally — accepted as contributing substantially to winning the war in 2008. It has been argued that President Bush erred grievously in not sending in many more troops at least two years earlier if not sooner. We will never know.

I argue that a “time and season” had to arrive in which the Iraqi people came to realize that they had suffered enough death and destruction and the hands of al Qaeda and Sunni and Shia hardliners before a relatively small infusion of troops combined with the counter-insurgency strategy of General Petraeus and Odierno could have the dramatic result it did. The change in “season” became most manifest with the Anbar awakening of September 2006, which started in spring and summer of that year, clearly antedating the surge. Similar “awakenings” occurred in other regions of Iraq as well.

A second example is what is happening right now in Pakistan. Here also President Bush was widely criticized for ignoring the rising Taliban in Afghanistan by fighting a losing war in Iraq, even though it was widely known that the insurgency in Afghanistan was coming from Pakistan, a Muslin country with nuclear weapons, an unstable government, and a population with considerable sympathy for al Qaeda.

Here also it was charged that our policy was deeply flawed. Again, maybe so. However, it now appears that the “time and season” for the government and people in Pakistan to understand more completely the existential threat al Qaeda poses to Pakistan itself has come, and Pakistan is now taking much stronger military action against Islamic militants in the border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan. This is hopeful.

My third example is, of course, Iran.
– – – – – – – –
Iran has been governed by a theocratic dictatorship since the Islamic revolution in 1979. The Iranian government since that time has referred to the United States and Israel as the Great Satan and the Little Satan respectively, while calling for the destruction of both. It has been apparent to a number of observers that many in Iran, especially youth, are tired of this theocracy and have called for and demonstrated for change on a number of occasions without success. Iran has ambitions to become a nuclear power and has been unmoved by UN sanctions. The current President of Iran has publicly made clear his plan to wipe Israel off the face of the map. To ignore this is akin — but worse than — what ignoring Mein Kampf was in the 1930’s.

As I write this, the “time and season” has arrived for the people in Iran to throw off the dictatorship they have been living under for thirty years. This is apparently occurring from circumstances entirely within Iran. The government is attempting, brutally, to put down this revolution. The outcome at this time is unclear. What is very clear is that President Obama and the government of the United States should stand firmly with the forces within Iran that are bravely trying to unseat the Mullahs and their enablers who have been oppressing the people for so long. The Congress of the United States has responded to the challenge, condemned the government and expressed support for those opposing the government.

Other than making several weak equivocal statements President Obama has not. His failure to do so is not just unfortunate, it is tragic in the true sense of the word.

A final point I make is that we as a people have been too impatient and lack the wisdom of Ecclesiastes. When things don’t go our way quickly enough, too may give up and look for scapegoats. Islam has been at war with the West off and on for 1400 years. The World Islamic Front in 1998 declared war in writing on Zionists and Crusaders. This means primarily Israel and the United States.

It will be and is a long war. We need to understand that. Our jihadi enemies do, and have a longer time frame. They still speak of recovering al-Andalus, which was lost by Islam over 500 years ago, and emphasize that it took them 200 years to expel the Crusader kingdoms from the Holy Lands.

Flying High With Al Qaeda

One of the problems with Pakistan is that radical Islamic ideology is fully intertwined with the government and the armed forces at all levels. When Western governments attempt to pick winners and losers among the factions vying for power in Pakistan, there is no real way to avoid the extremists and terrorists. Whether it is made up of elected civilians or military officers, most governments in Pakistan seem to be riddled with terrorist connections. A government that is relatively free of such connections — such as the current one under President Asif Al Zardari — will tend to be ineffective, due to a lack of accord with public opinion, much of which has sympathies with fundamentalist Islam.

Now comes the court martial of officers in the Pakistani air force for their connections with Islamic terror. I wonder how large a proportion of the officer corps is represented by these 50+ suspects, and how well they reflect the opinions of those lower in the hierarchy.

According to AKI:

Pakistan: Dozens of Airforce Officials ‘Court-Martialled’

Islamabad, 24 June (AKI) — A total 26 Pakistan Air Force officials have been court martialled after being found guilty of links with terrorists. Six of the group have been sentenced to death.

The men were among over 50 PAF officials arrested on charges of having links with terrorist organisations, unnamed sources told Pakistan’s Geo News.

The six PAF officials sentenced to death include two senior technicians named as Karamdin and Khalid Mehmood; a carpool technician named as Nawazish; and three junior technicians named as Niaz, Nasrullah and Adnan, sources said.

– – – – – – – –

The men were among as many as 57 officials arrested in the Pakistani cities of Lahore, Kamra, Sargodha, Mianwali and Karachi, according to the sources.

Of 57 officials also included 26 officials who were court-martialled and sentenced to between three and half and 17 years in jail.

According to the sources, investigations of some of the PAF officials and their suspected terrorist links began under former president Pervez Musharraf.

An unnamed high-ranking PAF official and a carpool technician named as Amir who are also wanted for suspected terrorist links remain at large.

Given the extensive enthusiasm for Islamic terror found throughout Pakistani society, how qualified do you think the State Department is to pick out “moderates” to help install in power?



Hat tip: C. Cantoni.

Nazi of the Week

The resurgent neo-Nazi ideology is becoming ever more widespread.

Many of our readers will be surprised and shocked to learn that neo-fascism has penetrated even the hitherto sacred precincts of the Democratic Party. And the new ideologues are not just ordinary ward-heelers. This isn’t any common block warden or bagman — this is a high-ranking leader of the national party!

Who would have thought that this particular leader would ever succumb to the siren lure of Nazi ideas? But here it is, incontrovertible photographic evidence of not just one, but at least five separate occasions when the vile fascist salute was used to rally the faithful at party meetings and campaign events:
– – – – – – – –

Nazi Hillary


Yes, it is she: Obersturmbannführer Hillary Rodham Clinton, saluting the adoring throngs of Hillarenvolk at several recent party events.

It’s obvious by now that neo-fascists can emerge anywhere and everywhere. It is our duty to expose them wherever they may be found.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/24/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/24/2009The Anglican Province of North America has been legally constituted as a challenge to the Episcopal Church of the USA (ECUSA). For those of us who loathe the current incarnation of the Episcopal Church, but aren’t yet ready to become Catholics, this is welcome news indeed.

In other news, Sheikh Mohammad Tantawi of al-Azhar University says that the burkha and other face-covering garments for women are not compulsory under Islamic law. Also, despite the recent unpleasantness, the Obama administration says that Iranian diplomats are still welcome to attend hot dog parties at US embassies on the Fourth of July.

Thanks to Abu Elvis, Brutally Honest, C. Cantoni, CSP, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, islam o’phobe, JD, Paul Green, Steen, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Eurozone Banks Swarm to Record ECB Loan Offer
Fed Says Recession Easing, Inflation is Tame
States: GM Using Court to Ditch Dealers
The Milk Split by the Milk War
The U.S. and the U.K. Will Both Default on Their Debt by the End of Summer
U.N. to Emerge as Global IRS
 
USA
American Jews Fund Anti-Israel Organizations
DC Metro Crash: Investigators Look at ‘Anomalies’ in Track Circuit
DC Metro ‘Warned’ Before Deadly Crash
Diplomacy From Our Knees
Episcopal Defectors Approve Constitution for New Church
Flag-Burning Man Sues City
Foul! — Senate Hate Bill Hearing Rigged!
Jack Engelhard: Obama’s ‘Jewish Experts’
Muslims Distancing From CAIR
Myths, Lies and Stupidity About Health Care
Obama and the Military’s Moral Dilemma
Obama’s Attack on Our Christian Heritage
Obama Leaves Door Open to Tax on Health Benefits
O’s Health Care Reform in Critical Condition
US Nixes 40 Percent Cuts at Climate Change Talks
Virginians Oppose ‘Terrorist’ School Expansion
 
Europe and the EU
Britain Expels Iranian Diplomats in Tit-for-Tat With Tehran
Italy: Obama to Get G8 Hoops
Italy: Premier Says Escorts Case Cooked Up
Klaus Pledges to be Last to Sign the Lisbon Treaty
Netherlands: Banks Abandon ‘Difficult’ Neighbourhoods
Northern Ireland: Hindu Priest Moving After Attack
OIC to Open Office in Brussels to Fight Islamophobia
Sweden: Migration Agency Used Anti-Muslim Lawyer
Swedish Cops Bare All for Undercover Operation
Swiss Order More Evidence Destroyed in Nuke Probe
UK: 1 Million Are Using Cocaine
UK: Burkha ‘Doesn’t Belong in 21st Century Britain’
UK: National Library of Scotland Boss Bans Saltire Over ‘Racist’ Fears
UK: Queen to Miss First Armed Forces Day
UK: Wildcat Strikes Spread at Power Plants
 
Balkans
EU Cancels Croatia Accession Talks as Slovenia Border Row Simmers
Kosovo Ex-Prime Minister Arrested in Bulgaria
 
North Africa
Fear of Massacre Grips Christian Village in Egypt; Crops Destroyed
Muslim Imams Say Burka Not Obligatory in Islam
Terrorism: Algeria; 5 Policemen Killed in Ambush
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Bajnai Visits Israel, Calls it “One of Hungary’s Closest Friends” in Region
Shalit: Israel to Release Hamas Leader in West Bank
 
Middle East
67 Men Charged for Dressing as Women in Saudi Arabia
Bars Boom as Iraqis Dance the Night Away
David Yerushalmi: Sovereign Immunity or Cover-Up?
Iran May Downgrade Ties With Britain
Netanyahu: Iranian Regime Oppresses Its People
Turkey: Court Verdict on Church Land Expected
US Says Hot Dog Diplomacy Still on With Iran
US to Send Ambassador to Damascus
 
Russia
Kyrgyzstan Agreed U.S. Base Deal With Russia — Source
Russia Defends Idea of New Security Plan for Europe
U.S., EU Reject Russian Accusations Over WTO Bid
 
Caucasus
6 Killed, 5 Wounded in Russia’s North Caucasus
Chechen President Vows to Fight Ingushetia Rebels
Chechnya: Kadyrov Pledges ‘Cruel Revenge’
 
South Asia
Orissa: Death Threats Against Christian Witnesses in Murder Case Against BJP Politician
 
Far East
China Says North Korea a “Serious Concern”
China Arrests Leading Democracy Advocate
US, China Pledge Effort to Avoid Sea Confrontations
 
Australia — Pacific
Get Out More: Aussie Muslims to Sarkozy
 
Latin America
Brazil: Unfair to Single Out Emerging Countries in Doha
Cuba’s Spy Program Deeply Rooted in U.S.
US, Venezuela to Restore Envoys
Venezuela, US Restoring Ambassadors: Venezuelan FM
 
Immigration
Conference in Tunis: 1,200 Dead at Sea in 2008
Italy: Immigrants Push Population to 60 Mn
Study Finds an Extra Million Muslims Living in Germany
UK: £1m Repatriation Plan Sees Just One Family Go
UK: One New Household Every 2 Minutes in Migrant Boom
UK: Victory for the People as New Gypsy Site is Blocked
 
General
Google’s $1,500 Coffee Makers
Microsoft Offers Free Anti-Virus

Financial Crisis


Eurozone Banks Swarm to Record ECB Loan Offer

The European Central Bank said Wednesday it lent a record 442.24 billion euros (622.67 billion dollars) at 1.0 percent in one-year funds to commercial banks.

The previous record for the central bank’s refinancing operations was 348.6 billion euros in two-week funds on December 18, 2007 as crisis-hit commercial banks scrambled to bolster their balance sheets during the crunch year-end period.

Analysts at UniCredit markets expected the ECB operation to result in lower rates paid by commercial banks for longer-term borrowing in general and to reduce demand for short-term funds as well.

If that is the outcome, then interest rates overall would be expected to remain low, a key issue as the eurozone grapples with what is likely to be slow recovery from the worst global recession in more than 60 years.

The ECB has resisted the so-called ‘quantitative easing’ practiced by the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England — essentially printing money to buy government and private debt to boost recession-hit economies.

The ECB, however, has generated a flood of cash through loans that will now extend to 371 days, or 12 months, from one week to six months in the past.

Analysts had expected banks to leap at the chance to get an unlimited one-year loan at the ECB’s lowest rate ever.

The central bank has said that in subsequent one-year operations — the next is scheduled for September 29 — the rate could be higher depending on market conditions.

Prominent ECB director Axel Weber, who is also head of the German central bank, said Tuesday during a speech in Munich: “I think there will be strong demand.”

By providing huge amounts of cash to commercial banks, the ECB aims to lower the cost of borrowing by companies and individuals, and spur economic activity.

Money markets influenced by central bank operations determine the flow of credit for vast numbers of people around the globe, from managers trying to fund their businesses to families and students seeking mortgages and personal loans.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Fed Says Recession Easing, Inflation is Tame

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve sought Wednesday to defuse fears that the trillions it’s spending to revive the economy could spark inflation later on. But Wall Street didn’t seem to buy it.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues said that despite an easing of the recession, the economy remains frail enough to keep inflation at bay.

Fed policymakers held a key bank lending rate at a record low of between zero and 0.25 percent and pledged to keep it there for “an extended period” to help brace the economy. The Fed made no new commitment to expand its purchases of government bonds and mortgage securities, to try to drive down rates on consumer debt. That rattled bond investors who fear the prospect of higher interest rates.

But Wall Street zeroed in on the Fed’s new observations about the risks of deflation and inflation.

Fed policymakers dropped language they had used in the statement at their last meeting in April that the weak economy could trigger deflation — a destabilizing and prolonged bout of falling prices and wages. This also spooked bond investors, who took the Fed’s decision not to mention deflation to mean inflation might arise later.

The Fed acknowledged that energy and other commodity prices have risen recently. But policymakers predicted that idle factories and the weak employment market would make it hard for companies to ratchet up prices. The Fed said it expects inflation will “remain subdued for some time.”

The mere mention of higher prices, though, hit the Treasury market because the value of returns on fixed-income investments can erode quickly if inflation occurs. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 3.69 percent from 3.63 percent Tuesday.

Stocks also lost ground after the Fed’s announcement. The Dow Jones, which had been up, closed down 23.05 points.

T.J. Marta, market strategist and founder of Marta on the Markets, a financial research firm, said the Fed’s words “disappoints (inflation) hawks and “angers bond vigilantes.”

Overall, though, Fed policymakers delivered a slightly more encouraging assessment of the economy.

“The Fed is sending the message that the economy is making progress toward a path of recovery, that the credit markets appear to be healing and inflation is not going to be a problem,” said economist Lynn Reaser, vice president of the National Association for Business Economics. “The bogeyman of deflation also was removed from the Fed’s primary risk list.”

The Fed in March launched a $1.2 trillion effort to drive down interest rates to try to revive lending and get Americans to spend more freely again. It said it would spend up to $300 billion to buy long-term government bonds over six months and boost its purchases of mortgage securities. So far, the Fed has bought about $177.5 billion in Treasury bonds.

The Fed is on track to buy up to $1.25 trillion worth of securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac by the end of this year. Nearly $456 billion worth of those securities have been purchased.

With signs economic and financial conditions are stabilizing, the Fed is wise to keep a steady-as-she goes course, said Sung Won Sohn, economist at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University, Channel Islands. The Fed’s actions are “bearing fruit,” he said.

Fed policymakers noted that the “pace of economic contraction is slowing” and that conditions in financial markets have “generally improved in recent months.” Those observations about the recession and financial conditions were stronger than after the Fed’s last meeting in April.

Economists predict the economy is sinking in the April-June quarter but not nearly as much as it had in the prior six months, which marked the worst performance in 50 years. The economy is contracting at a pace of between 1 and 3 percent, according to various projections.

Fed policymakers said its forceful actions, along with President Barack Obama’s stimulus of tax cuts and increased government spending will contribution to a “gradual “return to economic growth.

Bernanke has predicted the recession will end later this year. Some analysts say the economy will start growing again as soon as the July-September quarter.

Fed policymakers noted that consumer spending — the lifeblood of the economy — has shown signs of stabilizing but remains constrained by ongoing job losses, falling home values and hard-to-get credit.

Economists predict the Fed will hold its key banking rates at a record low through this year and into part of next year to spur lending and boost spending Americans. If so, that means commercial banks’ prime lending rate, used to peg rates on home equity loans, certain credit cards and other consumer loans, will stay around 3.25 percent, the lowest in decades.

Even after the recession ends, the recovery is likely to be tepid, which will push unemployment higher.

The nation’s unemployment rate — now at 9.4 percent — is expected to keep climbing into 2010. Acknowledging that the jobless rate is going to climb over 10 percent, President Barack Obama said Tuesday he’s not satisfied with the progress his administration has made on the economy. He defended his recovery package but said the aid must get out faster.

Some analysts say the rate could rise as high as 11 percent by the next summer before it starts to decline. The highest rate since World War II was 10.8 percent at the end of 1982.

The weak economy has put a damper on inflation.

Consumer prices inched up 0.1 percent in May, but are down 1.3 percent over the last 12 months, the weakest annual showing since the 1950s. The Fed suggested companies won’t be in any position to jack up prices given cautious consumers, big production cuts at factories and the weak

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



States: GM Using Court to Ditch Dealers

General Motors came under attack Monday from another quarter when 37 states, including Maryland and Virginia, filed an objection in the automaker’s bankruptcy proceedings.

The objection, filed by Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning on behalf of the other states, argues that the company should not be able to use bankruptcy court to skirt state laws, including franchise laws protecting dealers’ relationship with the automaker.

The states find fault not just with GM’s 1,350 dealer terminations, but with the terms it is forcing continuing dealers to accept.

[…]

Mr. Bruning said there are examples of GM dealer closings in his state that put the fairness of the process in doubt.

“One dealer bought his dealership for $2 million four years ago. He has tripled his sales, and they are shutting him down and giving him $70,000,” he said. “They relocate the franchise in the same town, and the new dealer doesn’t have to pay anything.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Milk Split by the Milk War

Russia wants to remove Alyaksandr Lukashenka as Belarus’s president.

Belarus had been through numerous economic wars with Russia before, but once the Kremlin sent its Chief Health Inspectorate into battle, it became clear that the stakes would higher than ever. Moscow, it seems, wants the head of Belarusian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka and will do whatever it can to prevent Belarus turning westward.

The Belarus-Russia ‘milk war’, which lasted for over a week in early June, began in the most unusual manner. In the past, the reason for conflicts was Kremlin’s refusal to satisfy Lukashenka’s insatiable appetite for loans or economic subsidies. This time, though, it was Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin who visited Minsk on 28 May and offered a stabilisation loan worth $500 million (€356m), with just one string attached — that the loan be delivered in Russian roubles. Minsk took this as a sign that Russia wanted to cement Belarus’s economic dependence on Moscow and did what had been unheard of: it refused to take money..

Russian officials were furious. Putin’s deputy, Alexey Kudrin, declared that Belarus might be insolvent by the end of the year, and that independence could be too much of a burden for Russia’s brother-country. At that point, the International Monetary Fund stepped in, almost on the spot adding €1 billion to the stabilisation loan that it had approved for Belarus before the New Year.

That Belarus is now the object of geopolitical competition had become undeniable.

Nor was that the only slight for Russia. During Putin’s visit, Russia also expressed interest in the privatisation of some of Belarus’s major milk producers. The Belarusian government’s response was almost immediately to begin talks with the EU on certification of Belarusian milk standards according to EU norms.

Russia’s response was to send along its health inspectors, headed by the notorious Gennady Onishchenko, a man responsible in the past for banning Polish meat, Moldovan wine, Latvian canned fish and Georgian mineral water. True to form, Onishchenko advised Moscow to ban all imports of Belarusian dairy products, saying they lacked properly certification, and Russian broadcasters appeared on air claiming that Belarusian dairy products could be hazardous for health.

A curious observer might wonder why Russia had tolerated such a hazard for so long and whether the same health inspectors should therefore be prosecuted for endangering the health of Russians. But, when a compromise deal was achieved on 15 June, no one really remembered concerns such as certification and health. Moscow seemed to be satisfied when Belarus agreed to significantly reduce its dairy exports to Russia (per capita, Belarus produces three times more milk than Russia does, and half of its dairy products are exported to Russia).

This may not be the last product war. Already, Russia has begun a de facto embargo on the sale of fish processed in Belarus, and in the Russian media there is already talk of a new ‘gas war’ to follow the four-day war in January 2007. Gazprom has already found a debt of some $200 million that Belarus must now pay almost on the spot.

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



The U.S. and the U.K. Will Both Default on Their Debt by the End of Summer

[…]

LEAP/E2020 believes that,

(5) instead of green shoots (those which international media, experts and the politicians who listen to them kept perceiving in every statistical chart in the past two months),

(6) what will appear on the horizon is a group of three destructive waves of the social and economic fabric expected to converge in the course of summer 2009, illustrating the aggravation of the crisis and entailing major changes by the end of summer 2009… more specifically, debt default events in the US and UK, both countries at the centre of the global system in crisis. These waves appear as follows:

1. Wave of massive unemployment: Three different dates of impact according to the countries in America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and Africa

2. Wave of serial corporate bankruptcies: companies, banks, housing, states, counties, towns

3. Wave of terminal crisis for the US Dollar, US T-Bond and GBP, and the return of inflation

In fact, these three waves do not appear in quick succession like the sisters rogue waves. They are even more dangerous because they are simultaneous, asynchronous and non-parallel. Hence their impact on the global system accentuates the risks because they hit at various angles, at different speeds and with varying strength. The only certain thing at this stage is that the international system has never been so weak and powerless to face such a situation. The IMF and global governance institutions’ reforms announced by the London G20 are at a standstill…

[Return to headlines]



U.N. to Emerge as Global IRS

The Conference on the World Financial and Economic Crisis and its Impact on Development that begins on Wednesday will consider adoption of a document calling for “new voluntary and innovative sources of financing initiatives to provide additional stable sources of development finance…” This is U.N.-speak for global taxes. They are anything but “voluntary” for the people forced to pay them. [Read Cliff’s book: “Global Bondage: The UN Plan to Rule The World”]

The most “popular” proposals, which could generate tens of billions of dollars in revenue for global purposes, involve taxes on greenhouse gas emissions and financial transactions such as stock trades.

The document was agreed to at an informal meeting of expert “facilitators” and was made available on Monday afternoon at 3 p.m. It is doubtful that any changes will be made to it.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


American Jews Fund Anti-Israel Organizations

Groups work with Palestinian Authority, promote Iran nukes

A U.S. organization has been receiving money from perhaps unsuspecting Jewish donors to support blatantly anti-Israel groups.

American Jews wishing to donate money to Israeli causes routinely utilize local city Jewish federations as a middleman. Hundreds of millions of dollars per year are sent to Jewish federations across the country with the expectation contributions will be used to aid worthy causes in Israel.

Many U.S. Jewish federations as well as individual Jewish donors give to the New Israel Fund, or NIF, a Washington, D.C.-based foundation dedicated to fostering social change and progressive causes in Israel.

The NIF budget comes from a combination of donors. These include the Ford Foundation, grant organizations such as the Jacob and Hilda Blaustein Foundation and the Andrea and Charles Bronfman Philanthropies, as well as various Jewish communal federations such as the Jewish Federation in New York, the Durham-Chapel Hill Federation and the Jewish Federation of Grand Rapids.

However, while many of the programs run by the NIF are considered laudable in the pro-Israel community, such as work the group does with economically disadvantaged Ethiopian immigrants, the flagship grantees of the NIF are Israeli-Arab nongovernmental organizations that openly and unabashedly dedicate themselves to removing the Jewish character of the state of Israel..

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



DC Metro Crash: Investigators Look at ‘Anomalies’ in Track Circuit

WASHINGTON — Investigators are looking more closely at a stretch of track near the site of a deadly commuter train crash after finding abnormalities Wednesday in equipment that senses trains and transmits speed commands.

Equipment along a 740-foot stretch of track failed to recognize a device that simulates the presence of a train during the tests, said Debbie Hersman of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation into the crash that killed nine people. Five other stretches of track, or circuits, near the Maryland state line showed no problems.

“Whether trains are operated in automatic or manual, these circuits are vital,” she said. “We’re particularly interested in the speed commands that might be sent from that circuit when there’s a train standing on that circuit.”

Hersman wouldn’t elaborate on what she called “anomalies” found in the circuit, saying more tests were needed. Investigators planned to test the track with a six-car train Wednesday night.

The deadliest accident in Metrorail’s 33-year history occurred Monday when a train plowed into another train that was stopped. The moving train was controlled primarily by computer at the time of the crash, but there is evidence the operator tried to slow it down.

Hersman said Wednesday that inspectors found 300 to 400 feet of markings on the rails, indicating some emergency braking took place before the crash. Hersman also has said the emergency brake control on the moving train was found pushed down, though it’s not clear how or when that happened. The operator of the oncoming train was among the dead.

Hersman said investigators hoped to interview the operator of the other train on Thursday, a day after his release from the hospital.

NTSB officials say their investigations can take more than a year.

The cars destroyed in Monday’s crash included some of the oldest in Metro’s fleet. Federal officials wanted them phased out because of their tendency to compact in a crash, but Metro officials said the agency has lacked the money for replacements.

A union representing Metro transit workers also demanded changes in safety procedures. Jackie Jeter, the union’s president, said cars from the aging series involved in the crash should be placed in the middle of trains, rather than at the front or back because they are less stable.

The union also asked that operators be allowed to choose whether to use automatic mode, which is typically employed during rush hour. Jeter demanded that Metro officials not mandate speeds at which trains should travel, saying operators were being pushed to move too fast.

Metro spokesman Steven Taubenkibel said the agency was looking into the union’s demands.

The union isn’t the only one to raise concerns about running trains in automatic mode.

In Chicago’s ‘L’ train system, operators never use an automatic system, said Robert Kelly, president of the city’s transit workers union.

“If it were left to me, I would never have a train operate in automatic mode or autopilot,” said Kelly, a former train operator.

“The problem with this job is complacency,” he said, noting the risk of problems increases when operators aren’t forced to stay alert.

Robert Jones, who retired from Metro after 18 years as a train operator and then came back in 2007 to work part-time, disagreed.

Operators have to keep an eye on hundreds of people at each train station platform during rush hours and prepare to stop for any safety concerns. They also open and close the doors, which requires them to look back from a window to make sure no one gets caught in the doors.

“You have to be aware all of the time,” Jones said. “It’s a job that requires your full attention.”

Metro has said it needs $12 billion over the next 10 years to maintain services and replace aging equipment such as the older railcars. The agency has long argued the federal government should contribute because its trains serve the capital, and many riders are federal workers.

Last year, Congress approved $1.5 billion in funds over 10 years, but with a condition that the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia match the amount. Now that all three jurisdictions served by Metro have agreed, Congress can move forward, officials said.

The region’s congressional delegation introduced a measure Wednesday that would finalize plans to provide the funds.

“The safety of our citizens is our highest priority,” said House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, who represents Maryland.

Even with an infusion of cash to order new cars, Metro officials caution that it would still take about five years to get the equipment.

“It’s not an off the shelf product,” Metro spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said. “It’s something that’s custom made.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



DC Metro ‘Warned’ Before Deadly Crash

WASHINGTON — Safety watchdogs warned Washington’s metro operators three years ago about weaknesses in aging subway cars like the one involved in a collision that killed nine people Monday, investigators said.

National Transportation Safety Board member Debbie Hersman said on Tuesday the U.S. capital’s subway system was told in 2006 that the carriage in its 1000-series trains was likely to crumple in the event of an impact.

The possible effects of that danger were seen in the mangled wreckage of two commuter trains, which crashed during the city’s busy Monday evening rush hour killing nine and injuring some 80 others.

“We made recommendations in 2006 about the crash-worthiness of the 1000-series cars,” Hersman told reporters. “We recommended… to either retrofit those cars or phase them out of the fleet.” Hersman said that did not happen. The 2006 report said the 1000-series was “vulnerable to catastrophic telescoping damage and complete loss of occupant survival space.”

The NTSB scoured the wreckage on Wednesday, hunting for clues to the worst subway accident in the history of the system, which carries 800,000 people daily through Washington and nearby suburbs. Metro officials said they still had no clue as to why one train plowed into the back of a stationary one on an above-ground section of the system’s Red Line.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Diplomacy From Our Knees

I am convinced the more I observe our president that Obama and his fascist legions are actually pleased with the mounting chaos destabilizing the civilized world. The simmering revolution in Iran is just the most recent incarnation. It’s all Chaos Theory, baby! — and the more chaos the better, because it gives Obama the pretext to “do something” to “fix” the problems. In the meantime, Obama’s remedies only exacerbate existential domestic and geopolitical problems, which only starts the Chaos Theory cycle anew.

Peace through strength, or diplomacy from our knees? To any rational observer of politics it is obvious that Obama made the latter choice, and America is paying exceedingly for his treachery. The galling irony of it all is that in defense of the inevitable rocket attacks by North Korea upon American soil, what are we hastily moving to the coasts of Hawaii? That’s right, a missile defense system (SDI). The same Quislings and Neville Chamberlains of the Democrat Party who for years lambasted Reagan as a “warmonger,” “stupid” and “naïve” now cower behind his legacy of SDI. This is the same SDI program that a few weeks ago Obama bragged that he wanted to dismantle because in his perverted worldview, protecting America means destabilizing the world and antagonizing Russia and China.

The communist regime of Kim Jong-il has made it explicitly clear to America: If we board his ship, North Korea will consider that provocation an act of war. Let us hope that Obama will find the courage to be a man rather than a man-child when dealing with rogue nations like North Korea and Iran.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Episcopal Defectors Approve Constitution for New Church

Several hundred former Episcopalians, meeting in a school gym near the Dallas-Fort Worth airport, ratified a constitution Monday for the fledgling Anglican Church in North America as a direct challenge to the Episcopal Church USA and the Anglican Church of Canada.

About 800 people jumped to their feet and sang the Doxology, a hymn of praise, after the ACNA’s new leader, Archbishop-designate Robert Duncan, told the group that it had “done the work.”

“The Anglican Province of North America has been constituted,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Flag-Burning Man Sues City

A Hondo man who was cited for burning the Mexican flag in front of the Alamo is suing the city of San Antonio, park rangers and The Daughters of the Republic of Texas over the matter.

David Bohmfalk, 48, claims he burned the flag on May 17, 2007, to protest a Senate bill that would have given amnesty to millions of unauthorized immigrants. The measure did not become law.

His lawsuit, moved Friday to federal court from state court, alleges rangers with the Alamo and the city violated his First Amendment right to free speech.

The suit alleges false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. It seeks unspecified compensatory and exemplary damages.

The officers, the suit said, detained Bohmfalk more than an hour and called him a terrorist before deciding to cite him with illegal burning without a permit, a misdemeanor.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Foul! — Senate Hate Bill Hearing Rigged!

Senate Judiciary Democrats have stacked Thursday’s hate bill hearing with pro-hate bill witnesses, apparently by a ratio as high as 5 to 1!

At the same time, Christian/conservative groups, attempting to submit their own lists of witnesses against S. 909, are being turned away!

[Return to headlines]



Jack Engelhard: Obama’s ‘Jewish Experts’

Where have we heard this before?

This is getting uncomfortable.

A few days ago, George Mitchell once again expressed his position, and opposition, even to “natural growth” in

Judea and Samaria. Both Mitchell and Hillary Clinton speak for themselves and for President Barack Obama, who’s made this — Jewish life in the “settlements” — his priority above all other international disputes.

Even the language is disturbing. Mitchell — top Middle East envoy along with Clinton — explained that the controversy centered on “the number of Jewish births.” Where have we heard this before? To my mind, as someone who was born under similar conditions, in France under Vichy, where Jews were kept within “restricted zones,” this sounds too much like Verboten!…

           — Hat tip: Abu Elvis [Return to headlines]



Muslims Distancing From CAIR

Mosque asks group’s leaders to pray somewhere else

As a result of the government naming the Council on American-Islamic Relations an unindicted co-conspirator in a major terrorism case, the Muslim community is withholding contributions and distancing itself from the group, a new report reveals.

Washington-based CAIR, which claims to be the largest Muslim advocacy group in the nation, has been identified by the Justice Department as a participant in an ongoing criminal conspiracy to support Hamas, a designated terrorist organization — “a conspiracy from which CAIR never withdrew,” federal prosecutors charge.

The blacklisting has scared off many of CAIR’s contributors and hurt the organization’s recruiting efforts and overall operations. What’s more, some Muslims have avoided events organized by CAIR and asked the group to remove their name from its mailing list.

The president of CAIR’s Dallas-Fort Worth chapter, for example, complains that his office has suffered a drop in contributions since the naming of CAIR as an unindicted co-conspirator.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Myths, Lies and Stupidity About Health Care

Here’s something we should worry about: Who are the current uninsured for whom all of us are supposed to sacrifice our current health care plans? And should the other 300 million of us turn to government care just to help those 46 million?

Here’s a quick profile of those who are uninsured. Ten million of the uninsured are illegal immigrants — which, by the way, doesn’t mean they don’t get health care. Walk into virtually any emergency room in California and illegal immigrants are the bulk of the population. Education costs and health care costs for illegal immigrants compose between 16.4 percent and 20.5 percent of California’s budget deficit.

Liberal commentators are already urging that Obama’s nationalized health care plan cover illegal immigrants. Ezra Klein of the Washington Post suggests that a failure to include illegal immigrants in the new health care redesign would create unemployment among U.S. citizens; businesses would not be forced to pick up the health care tabs for illegal immigrants and would therefore hire them at greater rates. This is undoubtedly true. But the solution is to prosecute businesses that hire illegal immigrants — or, better yet, not to require employers to cover employees. Only liberals would use employer malfeasance as an excuse to sacrifice workers’ current insurance plans.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama and the Military’s Moral Dilemma

There is now reasonable doubt that Mr. Obama meets the U.S. Constitution’s requirement of “natural born” citizenship. This means that there is also reasonable doubt that he is qualified to be President of the United Sates and commander in chief.

[…]

Until proof of U.S. citizenship is presented beyond a reasonable doubt, it is reasonable to say that Mr. Obama is probably a usurper to the office of President. Yet, for many Americans, this is irrelevant. They believe that holding the office is proof that one is qualified for the office.

Even if the Supreme Court declared upon the examination of the evidence that Obama does not meet the Constitution’s qualifications to be President, what can be done? The chief justice of the court is not going to the Oval Office with a broom and sweep it clean.

The same can be said for many other American institutions. The people have voted. The man is popular. What Constitution? We prefer the thrill up our leg. These are some of the arguments put forward to support the current regime.

The Military and the Constitution

There is one American institution, however, that has a moral responsibility to support the U.S. Constitution. That institution is the U.S. military. The Constitution is the bedrock upon which military order and discipline is founded.

Colonel Anthony E. Hartle claims in his book “Moral Issues in Military Decision Making,” that “When military members pledge to the support and defense of the Constitution, they commit themselves, by logical extension, to the principles and values that form the basis of its provisions.”

In their paper, “Divided Loyalties: Civil-Military Relations at Risk,” DiSilverio and Laushine write: “The commissioning of military officers is another source of legal support for the Constitution as the primary legitimate authority.”

“The commission from the Commander-in-Chief states, ‘this officer is to observe and follow such orders and directions, from time to time, as may be given by me, or by the future President of the United States of America.’“

DiSilverio and Laushine continue: “The requirement to follow orders also applies to those officers appointed over the subject officer. As Anthony Hartle contends, the fundamental law of the United States is the Constitution, and the commission confirms the supremacy of the Constitution…”

“Hartle goes on to say that if a President were to issue an unlawful order, military officers would be obligated to disobey it, and that this obligation derives its moral basis in the commissioning oath.” This same obligation to disobey also holds against an order issued by an unlawful or usurper President.

[…]

Duty, Honor, Country

The motto of the U.S. Military Academy is “Duty, Honor, Country.” These words are imbedded in the academy’s coat of arms. It is the duty of an officer to be a moral agent and to support the Constitution. Honor and country mean nothing if duty is ignored.

The crisis in military discipline and order created by the doubts that swirl around Barack Obama’s status as a natural born citizen can be easily resolved. A simple birth certificate showing birth in Hawaii, along with college and passport documents released to the public, is all it takes.

Up to now, Obama has done little to dispel once and for all the reasonable doubts about his status. He has created, instead, the greatest “moral issue in military decision making” in the country’s history.

Given doubts about Obama’s natural born citizen status, the Joint Chiefs of Staff have a moral duty to investigate Obama’s qualifications to be President. They must then report their findings to those under their command and the American people.

Anything less looks like a violation of their oath and a disregard for the Constitution they swore to defend. If we expect a soldier to die for the Constitution, then he must expect his officers to live by the Constitution.

This is not an issue of legitimate succession to office of Commander-in-Chief, but an issue of usurpation. The moral duty here for military officers is clear: Demand proof, or serve without honor, or resign..

Citizens and servicemen alike should be mindful that once the Constitution is made void, the United States disappears. Who wants to fight and die for nothing? Ensign Rohan did not die for nothing.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Attack on Our Christian Heritage

[T]oday our Christian heritage is under attack as never before. In April 2009, the president of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama, while admitting that America has “a very large Christian population,” told the Turkish press that “we do not consider ourselves a Christian nation. …” Two months later in an interview with a French reporter, Obama had the audacity to state that “if you actually took the number of Muslim Americans, we’d be one of the largest Muslim countries in the world.” Finally, on June 4, in a speech in Cairo, Egypt, Obama said that he felt it his duty and “part of my responsibility as president of the United States to fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear.”

Not only has the president of the United States denied our Christian heritage and identity, but he went so far as to claim that America was one of the largest Muslim countries in the world. In fact, in 2008 Christians made up 76 percent of the population (173 million), religious Jews 1.2 percent (2.6 million), and Muslims only 0.6 percent (1.3 million).

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Leaves Door Open to Tax on Health Benefits

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama left the door open to a new tax on health care benefits Wednesday, and officials said top lawmakers and the White House were seeking $150 billion in concessions from the nation’s hospitals as they sought support for legislation struggling to emerge in Congress.

“I don’t want to prejudge what they’re doing,” the president said, referring to proposals in the Senate to tax workers who get expensive insurance policies. Obama, who campaigned against the tax when he ran for president, drew a quick rebuff from one union president.

The chief executive also met with governors and arranged a prime-time, town hall at the White House, the latest in a string of events designed to bend public opinion toward his top domestic initiative to reduce health care costs while making insurance available to the nearly 50 million Americans who lack it.

The flurry of activity extended to the Capitol, where the administration and its allies hoped for a prominent display of progress in the Senate before Congress begins a weeklong vacation on Friday.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., labored in a daylong series of meetings to produce at least an outline of legislation that could command bipartisan support. Of the five House and Senate committees working on health care, Finance is the only one that appears to have a chance at such an agreement.

For their part, key Republicans pressed the White House for assurances that any concessions made now would not merely lead to additional demands at a later date. “We want to know the president is working in good faith along the way as we are,” said Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, after meeting with Nancy-Ann DeParle, the top White House official on the issue.

Baucus appeared especially eager to show progress before the exodus from the Capitol began.

To that end, several officials said he was negotiating with representatives of the nation’s hospitals, hoping to conclude an agreement that would build on an $80 billion weekend deal with the pharmaceutical industry.

Hospitals were being asked to accept a reduction of roughly $155 billion over the next decade in fees they are promised under government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, according to numerous officials.

Officials at the American Hospital Association and the Federation of American Hospitals said they could not comment on any discussions.

Baucus is seeking similar concessions from nursing homes, insurance companies, medical device makers and possibly others, noting that any legislation would create a huge new pool of customers for industry providers.

At its heart, any legislation is expected to require insurance companies to offer coverage to any applicant, without exclusions or higher premiums for pre-existing medical conditions.

Overall, Baucus has said he hopes to hold the size of any legislation to $1 trillion or less, and in private negotiations, there were discussions about further scaling back eligibility for insurance subsidies from the government.

Additionally, Baucus was still searching for ways to cover the cost of his emerging legislation, and numerous officials said he appeared roughly $200 billion shy of achieving that goal. They added that a proposal to make it harder for taxpayers to itemize their medical expenses was drawing renewed interest among key senators as one way to raise revenue.

Current law allows those expenses to be itemized when they exceed 7.5 percent of adjusted gross income. The proposal under review would raise that to 10 percent, officials said.

At the White House, Obama sidestepped when asked if he was open to taxing health care benefits — a proposal he opposed vigorously in the campaign for the White House.

“I have identified the ways that I think we should finance this. I think Congress should adopt them. I’m going to wait and see what ideas ultimately they come up with,” he said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

“I don’t want to prejudge what they’re doing. We’ve put forward what we think is best.”

Organized labor weighed in quickly.

Gerald W. McEntee, president of the 1.6 million-member American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said in an interview that union leaders believe Obama is “a person of his word.” He was referring to Obama’s opposition to taxing those benefits during last year’s campaign.

“They’re not going to take it,” McEntee said of workers’ views of that proposal. “They’re not going to tolerate that.”

It was the latest in a series of signs of presidential flexibility. On Tuesday, he left open the possibility that he could sign legislation that does not contain an option for a government-run insurance plan. And he has said recently he could accept a requirement for individuals to buy insurance, a position he opposed in the campaign.

Baucus and many Republicans support taxing health care benefits, and officials have said discussions center on imposing the tax in cases in which premium costs exceed $17,000 combined in payments by the employer and worker. Democrats want to exempt union members covered by contracts, but Republicans are resisting.

The officials who provided specifics on the negotiations in the Senate did so on condition of anonymity, saying they were not authorized to disclose private talks.

Despite months of efforts, Obama said in the ABC interview, “I think that we’re still early in the process. All these issues are getting worked through.”

At the same time, some of the Democrats’ initial deadlines have slipped under the weight of higher-than-expected cost estimates from the Congressional Budget Office, internal disagreements and other difficulties.

Many Democrats insist on having an option for government-run insurance in the legislation so consumers can have a choice other than a plan from private insurers. Republicans are vehemently opposed, and compromise efforts have centered on a proposal for a nonprofit co-operative that initially would be funded by the federal government. Baucus said new approaches were discussed in meetings Wednesday, and he described them as “variations, but on the same themes that have been discussed quite a bit — more robust, beefed-up co-op approach.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce said Wednesday that the government-run option would “gut the private market.”

ABC News was the lone network broadcasting Obama’s town hall — drawing criticism from Republicans who wanted equal time.

In defense, ABC News President David Westin said the show would “include a variety of perspectives coming from private individuals asking the president questions and taking issue with him, as they see fit.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



O’s Health Care Reform in Critical Condition

Barack Obama’s high-speed train to socialism was knocked off track by a surprising source: the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). Just as the Senate HELP Committee (Health, Education, Labor and Pensions) was about to begin voting on Chairman Ted Kennedy’s, D-Mass., health care plan (which Obama had let be known was his favorite), CBO released a report that this plan would cost at least a trillion dollars and still leave 36 million people uninsured through 2017.

Obama had promised that people with private health insurance would not be harmed by his health care reform, but the CBO says this would not be true about the Kennedy bill. The CBO report says that the number of people with coverage through their employer would decline by about 15 million and coverage from other sources would fall by about 8 million.

The Senate committee decided to pause and ponder this sticker shock over the Fourth of July recess. While somewhat distancing himself from the Kennedy plan, Obama plowed ahead, saying, “The cost of inaction is greater,” and accusing his critics of “fear tactics” about “socialized medicine.”

[…]

Look out for the words “comparative effectiveness research,” which mean rationing care by telling you that you are not sick enough or not the right age to get the tests and care you know you need.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



US Nixes 40 Percent Cuts at Climate Change Talks

MEXICO CITY — President Barack Obama’s climate envoy dismissed recommendations that the United States and other developed countries reduce their emissions of greenhouse gases 40 percent by 2020.

“The 40 percent below 1990 (levels) is something which in our judgment is not necessary, and not feasible given where we’re starting from, so it’s not in the cards,” Todd Stern said Tuesday at a conference on global warming.

Stern spoke at the end of the two-day meeting of the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, a gathering of 19 nations and the European Union that together produce 80 percent of the world’s greenhouse gases. The group, called together by Obama, is trying to build a replacement climate change treaty for the expiring Kyoto Protocol.

A panel of U.N. scientists has recommended that industrial countries cut carbon emissions by 25 percent to 40 percent by 2020 to avoid a catastrophic rise in sea levels, harsher storms and droughts and climate disruptions. Some poorer and island countries are pushing for reductions of as much as 45 percent.

After rejecting that idea, Stern pointed to progress on legislation before the U.S. Congress that would require lesser reductions. He said the Waxman-Markey bill is expected to move to the floor of the U.S. House this week for debate, which he said is “quite good news.”

The bill calls for a 17 percent cut in U.S. emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by 2020 from 2005 levels, and an 83 percent reduction by mid-century. Carbon dioxide, produced by burning coal and other fossil fuels, is the leading manmade greenhouse gas that scientists have linked to global warming.

“That’s a very important piece of the overall picture for the United States,” Stern said. “The proposal that is reflected in the Waxman-Markey bill is an enormously ambitious proposal for the United States.”

Such measures may not be enough to bring agreement on a climate change accord, which the United Nations hopes will be agreed on at a conference in Copenhagen next December.

Stern said that “there are still significant differences between the parties” on emissions levels at the talks that were held just south of Mexico City.

“There’s not final agreement on anything yet, but I think we’ve made some progress,” he said. “I do think we’ll have a successful agreement in Copenhagen.”

But the final document from the Mexico talks indicated only that “many leaders’ representatives expressed support for agreeing to a long-term goal by 2050,” indicating there wasn’t even complete agreement on the idea of emission caps by that late date.

Somewhat more progress was made on financing for emissions reduction, technology and adaptation to climate change.

Mexico’s proposal for a “green fund” to which all but the very poorest countries would contribute — and then receive funding for clean energy and environmental projects — appeared to be gaining traction.

Stern voiced support for the proposal, adding that “there are a number of countries that sat around the table that also think it’s an interesting idea.”

Unlike the current, largely private carbon credit market in which polluting companies pay to offset their emissions, the new, $10 billion fund would be financed through government contributions and run by a multilateral agency, possibly the World Bank.

Mexico’s government said Tuesday that it was open to including carbon credits in the framework of the proposed fund, to make more money available to poor countries to develop cleaner technologies and prepare for climate change phenomena like floods and droughts.

“Mexico’s proposals for the ‘Green Fund’ could be compatible with a link to the carbon credits market, which would allow a significant increase in the amount of funds available,” said Adrian Fernandez, head of Mexico’s National Ecology Institute.

Environmental activists said that while Mexico’s proposal lacks compliance mechanisms to ensure that wealthy countries contribute, it is preferable to the current carbon credits market.

“If the market is what is regulating which activities should be funded, our forests and Antarctic would disappear,” said Gustavo Ampugnani of Greenpeace International.

Stern agreed there will be a need for “some sort of mechanism for a more regular provision and a more dependable provision of funding to poor countries.”

Norway has suggested a fund financed by proceeds from auctioning emission permits, but Stern said that proposal was “more amenable to some countries than others,” without offering any specifics.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Virginians Oppose ‘Terrorist’ School Expansion

Foes file complaint after county sponsors dinner for Saudi academy

A coalition opposing the expansion of the radical Islamic Saudi Academy in Fairfax County, Va., has filed a conflict-of-interest complaint with the Virginia state attorney general over the county government’s role in distributing invitations to an Islamic dinner.

[…]

“No church or synagogue ever got such preferential treatment from the county government,” Lafferty argued.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Britain Expels Iranian Diplomats in Tit-for-Tat With Tehran

LONDON (AFP) — Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced Tuesday that Britain was expelling two Iranian diplomats in a tit-for-tat action after Tehran ordered two British diplomats to leave.

In the latest escalation of tensions between Iran and the West following disputed presidential elections, Brown denounced the “unjustified” step by the Islamic republic.

“It is… with regret that I should inform the House (of Commons) that Iran yesterday took the unjustified step of expelling two British diplomats over allegations that are absolutely without foundation,” he told lawmakers.

“In response to that action we informed the Iranian ambassador earlier today that we would expel two Iranian diplomats from their embassy in London,” he added.

And he said: “I am disappointed that Iran has placed us in this position but we will continue to seek good relations with Iran and to call for the regime to respect the human rights and democratic freedoms of the Iranian people.”

Briefing reporters after Brown’s remarks, a Downing Street spokesman said that Iran’s ambassador to London had been summoned to its foreign office around lunchtime to be informed of the decision to expel two Iranian diplomats.

It was understood that the Iranians had ordered the two Britons to leave Tehran for “activities inconsistent with their diplomatic status” — traditionally, code for spying.

The Foreign Office dismissed this suggestion. “We believe the Iranian decision to expel two members of staff from the British embassy is baseless,” said a spokeswoman.

“We think the government of Iran is seeking to blame the UK and other outsiders for what is an Iranian reaction to an Iranian issue.

“This has a potential impact on our staff safety and is unacceptable. We have taken the decision to reciprocate.”

The surprise announcement came after an Iranian foreign ministry source earlier denied that the country’s ambassador to London had been recalled, amid mounting tensions between Tehran and London.

Iran has accused Britain, and other Western governments, of meddling over the election that returned Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power and manipulating the subsequent unrest.

Iranian student unions called off a planned demonstration outside the British embassy in Tehran on Tuesday to protest at London’s “interference” after it was banned by the Iranian authorities.

Centuries-old mistrust of British interest in Iran welled up once more as Iranian leaders alleged that London played a key role in fomenting the unrest that has swept the Islamic republic since the June 12 presidential polls.

Iranian authorities have fired off a number of accusations against the British government, prompting London to warn its nationals against travel to Iran and to pull out the families of embassy staff.

Amid the heightened tension, Britain’s foreign office warned its nationals Monday against “all but essential travel to Iran” following “large-scale demonstrations” and “violent clashes.”

It also said it is withdrawing the families of embassy staff “until the situation improves.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Italy: Obama to Get G8 Hoops

‘Basketball court at summit lodgings’

(ANSA) — Rome, June 23 — Italy is planning to build a basketball court for United States President Barack Obama to use during next month’s Group of Eight (G8) summit in the quake-stricken city of L’Aquila.

“We’ve prepared a beautiful room for Obama and we’re also thinking of building him a small basketball court, as a little surprise, because we know he’s passionate about the sport,” Civil Defence chief Guido Bertolaso said Tuesday.

New beds being installed in a converted police barracks for the July 8-10 summit will later be given to survivors of the April 6 earthquake that devastated the Abruzzo capital, Bertolaso added. Local residents will also get the new furniture and decorations currently being put into the barracks. The G8 facilities will be quake-proof, Bertolaso said.

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi last month moved the summit venue from a Sardinian island to L’Aquila to help boost local morale and revive the Abruzzo economy.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Premier Says Escorts Case Cooked Up

Berlusconi says woman was given ‘detailed orders’

(ANSA) — Rome, June 23 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi, fending off flak over reports he allegedly hosted paid escorts at his home, said on Tuesday he has never had to pay a woman to keep him company.

“I’ve never paid a woman. I don’t understand what satisfaction there is unless it’s linked to the happiness of winning someone over” the premier said in an interview with the weekly Chi to be published on Wednesday.

Berlusconi also accused Patrizia D’Addario — the escort who alleges to have been paid to spend the night with the premier last November 4 — of being involved in a cooked-up case to foment a scandal.

“Behind the (investigators’) probe in (the southern city of) Bari there’s someone who gave Ms D’Addario very detailed and very well paid orders,” the premier told the weekly’s editor-in-chief Alfonso Signorini.

Asked by Signorini if he had not suspected that D’Addario was “a call girl who was setting a trap for you”, the premier said: “If I suspected someone of being like that, I’d leap a thousand miles away”.

The premier has been at the centre of a media storm since a public divorce spat with his wife Veronica Lario and allegations of links with a teenage girl — Noemi Letizia — which surfaced after his wife accused him of “consorting with minors”.

Berlusconi, 72, has categorically denied any “steamy or more than steamy” involvement with teenagers, explaining there was nothing “spicy” about his attendance at the birthday party of 18-year-old Letizia because he had a long friendship with her family.

He told Signorini that the rift with Lario has been “very painful” and he did not know “whether time could heal” the wound.

“What I do know is that ours was a great love story and real love stories can’t be wiped out… I’m sad but serene,” said the premier.

CATHOLIC WEEKLY URGES CHURCH NOT TO ‘IGNORE MORAL EMERGENCY’. The excerpts from the premier’s interview was released minutes before the influential Catholic weekly Famiglia Cristiana weighed in on the issue, urging the Church “not to ignore the moral emergency”.

Editor-in-chief Antonio Sciortino said Berlusconi had “overstepped the bounds of decency” with his “indefensible” behaviour. “One cannot make believe that nothing is happening or ignore the unease of growing portions of the population and Christians in particular,” said Sciortino. Meanwhile, prosecutors investigating the businessman who allegedly paid escorts to attend parties at the premier’s homes were reportedly questioning other witnesses on Tuesday.

Giuseppe Scelsi, the prosecutor in the southern city of Bari who is leading the investigations, was seen entering the station where police have been interrogating and collecting documentation from women who claim to have attended the parties.

News of the probe broke last week when the Milan daily Corriere della Sera said prosecutors investigating a kick-back scandal in the health sector had wiretappings of Berlusconi’s acquaintance — Giampaolo Tarantini — talking about the parties and the paid escorts.

Tarantini, 34, who owns a hospital supplies firm, has denied that the premier knew that the girls he took or sent to parties at Berlusconi’s Rome home or at his villa in Sardinia were in fact being paid.

Tarantini is being probed for abetting prostitution because prosecutors believe he paid the women to “ingratiate himself” with powerful people, including the deputy president of the Puglia region of the opposition Democratic Party, to help his business activities.

Barbara Montereale, a model who has already been questioned, has told the press that D’Addario confided that she had spent the night in Berlusconi’s home on November 4.

Montereale has given the press photographs she alleges to have taken in Berlusconi’s bathroom and has said that a large number of women attended these parties. Judicial sources say that prosecutors have expressed “concern” over the security issue at the premier’s homes, saying that access to them was not “controlled”.

D’Addario told Corriere in an interview last week she decided to talk to magistrates because Berlusconi had reneged on a promise to help her untangle bureaucracy linked to her construction activities in Bari.

‘BLACKMAIL’ CLAIM REJECTED.

The centre right has cashed in on D’Addario’s accusations to brush off the opposition’s fears that the premier might be subject to blackmail over his private life, claiming that Berlusconi would have helped the woman if that were the case.

However, sources close to Tarantini say that D’Addario had asked him for money, threatening otherwise to tell the press she had spent the night with Berlusconi.

The premier has slammed the press’s coverage of the escorts probe as “just rubbish, just trash” and friends in his People of Freedom (PdL) party and in the Northern League claim that the “gossip” will not affect the government.

They have also accused the opposition and the left-leaning press of fomenting scandals in a bid to damage Berlusconi’s image ahead of the Group of Eight summit which Italy, as G8 president this year, will host in L’Aquila from July 8-10.

House Speaker Gianfranco Fini, a PdL heavyweight, has joined the chorus of those who have brushed off talk of a government crisis.

But he has voiced concern over “a risk that citizens could lose faith in politics and the institutions” if the scandals continue.

Former premier and PD heavyweight Massimo D’Alema told reporters on Tuesday that the government’s “credibility” had been “weakened” by the scandals but had “not influenced” the results of local election run-offs.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Klaus Pledges to be Last to Sign the Lisbon Treaty

Czech President Vaclav Klaus has pledged to be the last in the EU to sign the Lisbon Treaty, raising fears about the future of the document which has been several painful years in the making.

The Czech parliament has approved the treaty, but the president’s signature is needed to complete the process, a fact that the eurosceptic Mr Vaclav has dangled over the rest of the member states on several occasions.

“I will certainly not rush,” Mr Klaus told Czech Radio, reports DPA. “I will certainly wait until after all those things about which I have talked about, which include a constitutional complaint by our senators … happen.”

“The Irish have not voted again. Poland has not signed the Lisbon Treaty, and Germany has not signed the Lisbon Treaty. So I am not the last Mohican who is fighting against all,” he said.

He has always said he would wait until the after the Irish have voted in a second referendum on the treaty, expected in Ireland in the autumn, before signing off. But in recent days, he has increased his anti-treaty rhetoric.

The latest opinion polls show that the Irish are likely to vote Yes this time round, with the approval of all 27 member states needed to put the treaty into force.

However, the treaty is currently being examined by Germany’s constitutional court (a verdict is due at the end of June), the Polish president, also a critic of the document, has not signed it, and it is facing a court ruling in the Czech Republic.

The British question

Mr Klaus’ tactics could result in the treaty never being put into action as the longer it takes for the treaty to be fully ratified across the EU, the greater the chances of a conservative government coming into power in Britain.

A general election must be held in Britain by June 2010, and the Conservatives, widely expected to win over the governing but damaged Labour Party, has pledged to put the treaty to a referendum if it is not in already in force.

Conservative leader David Cameron clashed with Prime Minister Gordon Brown in parliament on Tuesday (23 June) over the treaty, and particularly the guarantees on how it should be interpreted in three areas — tax, neutrality and social issues — secured by Ireland at last week’s EU summit.

The guarantees, to be formally enshrined into EU law after the treaty is in force, were part of a general package designed to encourage Irish voters say Yes in the autumn poll.

Mr Cameron took Mr Brown to task for not having a debate on Ireland’s guarantees in parliament now. He also asked why Irish citizens were “being forced to give their views twice” while British voters had had no referendum themselves.

For his part, Irish leader Brian Cowen, fresh from securing war support from Mr Brown at the summit for making the protocols legally binding, has said believes Ireland will vote Yes this time round.

“I believe the people will say ‘yes’ on this occasion. I am just not prepared to contemplate defeat, “ he told Irish radio earlier in the week.

However, the exact date for the referendum remains unclear, although Mr Cowen has hinted it will take place on 2 October.

He expected to name the day in two week’s time when legislation to allow the referendum to take place goes through parliament, reports the Irish Times.

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



Netherlands: Banks Abandon ‘Difficult’ Neighbourhoods

Banks have all but stopped extending mortgages in problem neighbourhoods of Rotterdam and The Hague, the Volkskrant reports on Wednesday, quoting estate agents and notaries.

A number of run-down areas in both cities have been singled out for extra investment in term of housing, employment and quality of life. The government has made stimulating home ownership a central part of its urban renewal efforts, but this is now under threat, the paper says.

‘The lack of financing is threatening to paralyse these neighbourhoods,’ Rotterdam notary Vic van Heeswijk, who organises compulsory house sales, told the paper.

Mortgages

‘Banks only want to give safe mortgages. Difficult areas and difficult buyers are out of favour. It doesn’t say anywhere in black and white that urban renewal areas are no-go zones for mortgages but that is what is happening in practise,’ he said.

Rob Wassenaar, chairman of the Rotterdam NVM estate agents, said house prices were falling in these areas faster than elsewhere. ‘We are seeing bigger price drops in neighbourhoods where finance is more difficult,’ he said.

Mortgage market leader Rabobank denies it rejected mortgages on the basis of postcodes, as do other banks, the paper says.

Housing minister Eberhard van der Laan told Nos tv on Wednesday that he would look into the Volkskrant’s claims.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Northern Ireland: Hindu Priest Moving After Attack

A Hindu priest and his family who live at the Indian Community Centre in north Belfast have said they are planning to move out.

It follows an attack on the Clifton Street property last week, which they believe was racially motivated.

A gang of youths tried to break down the door of the centre while the priest’s wife was alone inside.

Stones were also thrown at the building and the gang tried to take grills off the windows to get inside.

The family said they were too afraid to speak publicly about the incident at the time.

According to Bidit Dey, who works at the centre, police did not make any contact with the priest’s wife after the attack.

“They did not actually stop by or call in to see her. This would have reassured them,” he said.

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



OIC to Open Office in Brussels to Fight Islamophobia

The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) will open a representative office and appoint an ambassador to Brussels to fight more effectively against Islamophobia in Europe.

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“This office will provide the West and Islam the opportunity to work coherently,” said Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, the Turkish secretary-general of the organization, to Today’s Zaman. The office will cooperate with the European Parliament and the European Council to develop the initiatives for interfaith and intercultural dialogue and institute contacts with nongovernmental organizations. The office will also be effective in efforts aimed at preventing discrimination against Muslims and fighting anti-Islam propaganda. “Of course fighting anti-Islam propaganda is one of the main aims of the office. Intercultural and interfaith dialogue constitute the priorities of the office in Brussels,” Ihsanoglu said.

Ihsanoglu, who had talks in Washington this week, will meet with the Belgian minister of foreign affairs in Brussels in the coming days. An agreement regarding the establishment of the OIC office in Brussels will be signed at the meeting.

OIC officials are concerned that most of the actions considered by the public as Islamophobic took place in European countries; thus, the OIC believes better contact with official European institutions and the public is vital.

A cartoon crisis that stemmed from the publishing of cartoons in Denmark insulting the Prophet Muhammad in September 2005 strained relations between Islam and the West. The idea of opening an office in Brussels was explained by Ihsanoglu to European politicians with whom Ihsanoglu negotiated during the cartoon crisis.

The OIC already has offices in New York and Geneva. The new office in Brussels will advance relations between Europe and the Muslim world. “With this office, we can create close institutional cooperation with the member countries of the European Union,” Ihsanoglu said.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Migration Agency Used Anti-Muslim Lawyer

A lawyer contracted by the Swedish Migration Board (Migrationsverket) to represent asylum seekers has a personal blog in which he espouses racist and anti-immigrant views, referring to Islam as a “psychosocial disease”.

Hans-Ola Mårtensson is a lawyer based in southwest Sweden whose services were sought by the Migration Board on seven different occasions, most recently in January 2009, the Sydsvenskan newspaper reports.

His job was to represent the interests of asylum seekers during the judicial review of their applications for refugee status.

In his free time, however, Mårtensson publishes a blog featuring a number of anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim postings.

“Muslims are multiplying like rabbits and want to take over Europe,” he wrote in one post.

“Tear down Rosengård, Hammarkullen and Tensta and send those living there to Norrland and Lappland [in Sweden’s far north]. There they can be integrated, learn Swedish, be de-Islamified, and be happy,” reads another post, referring to areas in Malmö and Stockholm with high concentrations of immigrants.

Mårtensson also takes aim at homosexuals, feminists, Social Democrats, and host of other targets, including recent Nobel Prize winning author Doris Lessing, who he calls a “communist witch”.

He adds, however, that giving the prize to Lessing was “still better than earlier choices of Arabs and Negroes.”

A Migration Board representative charged with reviewing the suitability of lawyers asked to serve as legal representatives in asylum cases had a hard time believing migration authorities would hire someone with Mårtensson’s views.

“I can’t believe that this is a person we’d want to use. It doesn’t sound like he’s appropriate,” the Migration Board’s Stefan Råhlander told Sydsvenskan.

“Racist views can definitely be seen as a reason to be found inappropriate.”

The local chapter of the Moderate political party was concerned enough about the views espoused on Mårtensson’s blog to force him to quit the party two years ago.

“There were plenty of values and statements of opinion which aren’t compatible with the Moderates’ basic views,” Moderate local council chair Thomas Håkansson told the newspaper.

Mårtensson defended his blog as a personal pursuit that didn’t affect his professional work.

“I differentiate between by job responsibilities and my private opinions,” he told Sydsvenskan.

“I have many friends who are Muslims.”

Nevertheless, Mårtensson didn’t hide his negative sentiments toward Islam.

“I’m hostile toward Islam, not those who practice it as a religion,” he said.

Following the publishing of select contents from the blog in Sydsvenskan on Wednesday, Mårtensson promptly took the blog offline.

Attempts by the newspaper to reach him for comment were unsuccessful.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Swedish Cops Bare All for Undercover Operation

Two Swedish police officers stripped down naked and were offered “extra” treatment on recent visits to massage parlors.

By going above and beyond the call of duty, however, the two undercover officers were able to expose a prostitution ring stretching from Stockholm north to Gävle in eastern Sweden, the Metro newspaper reports.

A 60-year-old Stockholm resident has been charged on suspicions of running brothels in five massage parlors.

The brothels were discovered after two male police officers working undercover visited two separate massage parlors and agreed to take their clothes off.

After stripping, each officer was offered “extra” genital treatment.

“An unusual, but legal method of investigation,” said one of the officers.

In addition to the 60-year-old, a 27-year-old woman and a 32-year-old man were also charged for the extensive pimping operation.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Swiss Order More Evidence Destroyed in Nuke Probe

GENEVA — The Swiss government on Wednesday ordered the quick destruction of about 100 pages of evidence linked to an investigation of three Swiss engineers suspected of smuggling nuclear weapons technology.

The Cabinet said the documents were “the most explosive” material in a file of more than 1,000 pages related to the case against the Tinner family, which is suspected of links to the nuclear smuggling network of Abdul Qadeer Khan — the creator of Pakistan’s atomic bomb.

The documents are copies of files destroyed in 2007 under a previous order that led to protests from lawmakers and legal experts, who said the government undermined the prosecution in the smuggling case. The copies were found in prosecutors’ archives last December.

Citing security concerns and its legal obligations under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, the Cabinet, or Federal Council, said that about 100 pages dealing with atomic weapons designs would be shredded shortly to keep them out of “the wrong hands.” It didn’t give a date for the destruction..

Less sensitive documents, such as those dealing with uranium enrichment, will be kept under high security at the Federal Justice Department, the government said. It added that investigators, prosecutors, courts and the Tinner family’s lawyers can view them under tight restrictions, but they will be destroyed at the end of legal proceedings.

Urs Tinner, his brother Marco and their father Freidrich are suspected of supplying Khan’s black market nuclear network with the technical know-how and equipment used to make gas centrifuges. Khan sold the centrifuges for secret nuclear weapons programs in countries that included Libya and Iran before his operation was disrupted in 2003.

Andreas Mueller, the magistrate who has been working for years to bring a case against the Tinners, welcomed the government’s decision to make most of the copies available to investigators.

He said the shredding of files had complicated an already complex case and made it harder to piece together a complete picture of the Tinners’ involvement in the Khan ring. Meanwhile, Switzerland’s highest criminal court criticized the government for opting to destroy further evidence, and said it was disappointed not to be informed earlier.

Complicating the case further are claims by Urs Tinner, 43, that he supplied the CIA with information that led to the breakup of Khan’s network. In a recent documentary, Tinner told Swiss TV he tipped off U.S. intelligence about a delivery of centrifuge parts meant for Libya.

The shipment was seized at the Italian port of Taranto in 2003, forcing Libya to admit and eventually renounce its efforts to acquire nuclear weapons.

Former Swiss Justice Minister Christoph Blocher said the government decided to destroy the original documents after he refused in 2007 an American request to hand over thousands of the files.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: 1 Million Are Using Cocaine

THE UK is now the cocaine centre of Europe with a million regular users, according to the UN.

There are believed to be 860,000 cocaine users in England and Wales and around 140,000 in Northern Ireland and Scotland combined.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime report also revealed that the quality of cocaine sold has declined dramatically in recent years.

A crackdown on traffickers has pushed prices up and led to dealers mixing the drug to the point where in some seizures substances being passed off as cocaine were only 5 per cent pure.

Data given to the UN by the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency shows wholesale prices have risen to record levels.

The cost of a kilogram of cocaine has increased by 50 per cent from £30,000 to £45,000 since 2007.

The report revealed a concentration of “problem drug users” in London, with around one person in 100 having drug difficulties.

Most cocaine is smuggled via the Caribbean or Africa.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Burkha ‘Doesn’t Belong in 21st Century Britain’

THE furious split over whether or not Britain should ban the burkha deepened yesterday, with a Euro MP wading into the row.

Liberal Democrat Chris Davies, MEP in the North-West of England, attacked burkha wearing, saying “it does not belong in 21st century Britain”.

The controversial garment covers a woman from head to toe and only leaves the eyes visible.

It is worn by about 100,000 of the 2.4 million people who follow Islam here.

The question of whether or not they should be worn was ignited earlier this week when French President Nicolas Sarkozy said France was considering banning burkhas.

The debate instantly flared in Britain where it has split both Muslims and non-Muslims.

A spokesman for the anti-extremist think-tank Quilliam said: “In Britain, we pride ourselves on having a liberal and secular society which welcomes people from all walks of life. In such a society we should not legislate on how people should dress and indeed we don’t.

“However, the burkha is not an Islamic requirement and more of an identity statement that limits social interaction. Whilst women should reserve the right to dress however they like, they should remain cognisant of the social impact of their appearance.”

Yesterday, Mr Davies said that people should have the legal right to wear whatever they wish but that politeness should not prevent disapproval being expressed.

He said: “There is no mention in the Koran of the burkha and it is a style of dress used principally in those countries where women are treated as mere chattels of men.

“I believe that it does not belong in 21st century Britain. I have a passionate belief that women and men are equals, and both sexes should be free to express their identity through the dress they wear.

“If there are men who want to use the burkha to impose their own will upon women in their family they should feel the full force of society’s disapproval.”

Mr Davies’s stance drew criticism and he found himself attacked by the Lancashire Council of Mosques which said more education is needed to understand why women choose to wear burkhas. Salim Mulla, vice-chairman of the council, said: “It is absolute nonsense to say men force their partners, wives or daughters to wear the burkhas.

“He probably needs to talk to people like myself and the Council of Mosques to educate himself about the issue. It is up to individuals if they want to wear the burkha.”

The issue flared previously in Britain when Justice Secretary Jack Straw said Muslim women should not wear veils to cover their faces.

France has also been split by the issue since Monday when President Sarkozy controversially declared that the burkha was no longer welcome, branding the face-covering gown a symbol of subservience that suppresses women’s identities and turns them into “prisoners behind a screen.” He claimed the garment was “a sign of debasement”. France has Europe’s largest Muslim population.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: National Library of Scotland Boss Bans Saltire Over ‘Racist’ Fears

THE National Library of Scotland banned workers from displaying Saltires in the office — claiming they could be racist.

Bosses said the flags could “intimidate non-Scottish colleagues” — and also banned the Lion Rampant and tartan seat covers.

The move — believed to have been prompted by one worker bedecking his desk in flags -sparked fury last night.

SNP Msp Christine Grahame accused library chiefs of an “unforgivable slur on the reputation of Scotland’s national flag”.

She demanded an apology after securing evidence of the policy through the Freedom of Information Act.

In emails , director of customer services Alexandra Miller told NLS staff that the display of the Saltire and tartan would not be tolerated.

Miller even went round offices herself removing Saltires and other material she deemed “offensive”.

She wrote: “I believe it could even impinge on respect at work issues where such nationalistic displays may intimidate non-Scottish colleagues.

“I am very disappointed to see (staff ) continue to have inappropriate material bedecking their workstation. This includes several Saltires and a Lion Rampant and the personalisation of a chair with red tartan.”

Miller then implied displaying of the Saltire may be deemed “racist” by other staff and visitors.

When it was pointed out to Miller that one member of staff, ex-soldier John Gibson, was very attached to his flags, she replied: “As for John’s ‘attachment’ to the items, he is perfectly free to adorn his home with them.

“This is a workplace, not a home from home.”

Last night, MSP Grahame branded the actions “deplorable” and hit out: “This is a completely unacceptable slur on Scotland’s national flag.

“I would have thought that in the National Library of Scotland of all places, they would have understood the place the Saltire has in Scottish hearts as one of the oldest national symbols in existence.

“Instead, it appears that senior management have embarked on a deliberate assault on the flag of Scotland, trying to purge it completely.

“The National Library of Scotland should issue a complete and unreserved apology and ensure the Saltire is not attacked in this crude manner.”

Last night, national librarian Martyn Wade tried to defuse the row, claiming: “The Library did not, and would not, ‘ban’ staff from displaying the Saltire.

“We merely asked a single individual to remove what we considered to be an excessive display of large flags from a desk in a shared, professional work area and we would have done so regardless of what the flag was or indeed any other adornment.

“We proudly fly the Saltire from our main building.”

Scots Tory Leader Annabel Goldie last night blamed First Minister Alex Salmond for the library flag row.

She said: “Alex Salmond has politicised the Saltire. I warned him a year ago that the Saltire was our national flag, not his nationalist symbol.

“Scotland should be proud of the Saltire — not nervous about it because Alex Salmond has abused it for his own ends.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Queen to Miss First Armed Forces Day

The first Armed Forces Day will go ahead this weekend without the presence of the Queen or the Prince of Wales.

In what is seen by some servicemen’s families as a rebuff to veterans and serving troops, no senior royals will attend any of the main ceremonies marking what used to be known as Veterans Day.

The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester will take the royal salute on Saturday at the Historic Dockyard in Chatham, Kent. The Duke is 19th in line to the throne and patron of the Normandy Veterans Association.

Armed Forces Day was set up after a recommendation from a study by the Conservative MP Quentin Davies for Gordon Brown, who wanted to find a way to raise public understanding and appreciation of the armed services. Claims that the Queen and the Prince were both invited to Saturday’s event were denied by both royal sources and the Ministry of Defence.

An MoD spokesman said that the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester were already going to be invited when the event was Veterans Day.

The Queen will be in Edinburgh where she will present campaign medals to the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards. The Prince of Wales will spend the weekend at Highgrove.

Phil Cooper, the father of Britain’s youngest soldier to be wounded in Iraq, Jamie Cooper, told the Daily Mail: “When you sign up, you take an oath to serve the Queen and country, laying down your life for the monarchy if necessary. Surely it’s not too much to ask for a senior royal to be bothered to turn up and take the salute.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Wildcat Strikes Spread at Power Plants

NORTH KILLINGHOLME (AFP) — Wildcat strikes affecting oil refineries and power plants are expected to spread across the country on Wednesday, after hundreds of workers were sacked, media reports and company officials said.

Thousands of workers demonstrated outside the Lindsey terminal in Lincolnshire Tuesday, where almost 650 contract workers were sacked by French oil giant Total last week.

“As far as we are concerned, they are victimised and locked-out people, and it is an official dispute from the moment those notices arrived,” said Paul Kenny, head of the GMB union.

In a statement, Total called for unions to resume talks over the sacking of 647 workers.

“Total is actively encouraging talks to be opened between its contractors and the unions about how to facilitate the return to work of its contracting companies? former workforces,” the French company said.

But protests spread elsewhere.

Workers from the Coryton oil refinery in Essex, also rallied in support of the protestors at Lindsey, which was at the centre of a bitter dispute over the use of foreign labour in January.

Unofficial protest action was also reported at the Longannet power station in Scotland, the Sellafield nuclear site in Cumbria, and the Didcot power station in Oxfordshire.

At the Aberthaw power station in South Wales, some 300 contract workers walked out — but a spokeswoman for the plant’s owners RWE npower stressed that none of its employees were involved.

“We understand that around 300 contract workers, who work on either construction or maintenance projects at Aberthaw Power Station, have downed tools today in support of workers at the Lindsey Oil Refinery,” she said.

“No RWE npower staff are involved and the situation is not affecting operations at Aberthaw Power Station.”

The latest dispute — which comes amid the worst recession since World War II — started when about 1,200 contract workers called a strike to protest the sacking of 51 people working on a construction project at the plant.

The Lindsey workers claimed an agreement not to cut jobs had been broken, but Total disputed this. On Monday many of the sacked Lindsey workers burned their letters of dismissal, in protest

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Balkans


EU Cancels Croatia Accession Talks as Slovenia Border Row Simmers

BRUSSELS — The European Union announced Wednesday that it has cancelled indefinitely the next round of EU membership talks with Croatia as a border row with its neighbor Slovenia undermines progress.

“The Czech EU presidency has decided to cancel the intergovernmental accession conference with Croatia planned for June 26,” a statement said. No new date was given.

The 18-year-old border dispute has blocked Croatia’s EU membership talks since December, and Slovenia insists it be resolved before the accession negotiations resume.

The row involves a small piece of land and sea and dates back to 1991, when the two proclaimed independence from the former Yugoslavia.

Slovenia joined the EU in 2004 and Croatia hopes to become the EU’s 28th member by 2011, but that timetable might now be under threat.

The EU’s executive body, the European Commission, has been trying to broker an accord, and proposed in April to set up a tribunal to arbitrate, but little headway has been made, with talks last Thursday breaking up in acrimony.

“Despite substantial efforts to facilitate a solution to the country’s border dispute with Slovenia, Croatia’s accession talks remain blocked and no new chapters can be formally opened or closed,” the statement said.

“The (EU) presidency deeply regrets the fact that despite numerous attempts by the presidency and the European Commission to help find a way forward the negotiations have not progressed,” it said.

Slovenia has viewed EU mediation as a way to resolve the row, but Croatia considers it simply a stepping stone to a resolution before the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

A key point for Slovenia is securing free access to international shipping waters by getting a corridor that would cross Piran Bay, which is currently controlled by Croatia.

On Monday, Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, whose country takes over the EU presidency on July 1, called for “a period of reflection in both countries”, and said Sweden would not propose any initiatives until the sides were ready.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Kosovo Ex-Prime Minister Arrested in Bulgaria

SOFIA, Bulgaria — Bulgarian authorities have detained a former Kosovo prime minister on an international arrest warrant issued by Interpol, and Serbia sought his extradition on Wednesday.

Agim Ceku, the prime minister of Kosovo between 2006 and 2008, was taken into custody at Serbia’s request at the Gyueshevo border checkpoint while entering Bulgaria from Macedonia late Tuesday, police said.

Ceku, 48, is wanted for war crimes allegedly committed during the 1998-1999 fighting in Kosovo, when he was military chief of the chief of the Kosovo Liberation Army, made up of ethnic Albanian guerrillas.

Ceku’s arrest comes despite repeated requests from U.N. officials in Pristina that the Belgrade-issued arrest warrant be disregarded.

Serbian Justice Minister Snezana Malovic said Wednesday that Serbia has filed an extradition request for Ceku with the Bulgarian authorities. She said she hopes Bulgaria will hand over Ceku as soon as possible based on a 1960 legal agreement between Belgrade and Sofia.

Bulgarian Prosecutor General Boris Velchev said his office will decide within the next three days whether to petition for the extradition or the release of Ceku before the district court in the western city of Kyustendil, where he was being held in custody.

Ceku was traveling to Bulgaria at the invitation of the Atlantic Club, a non-governmental organization, to lobby for NATO membership, former Bulgarian Foreign Minister Solomon Pasi told reporters.

“I am in constant contact and we exchange regular visits with Agim Ceku,” said Pasi, who is honorary president of the club. He added that the international warrant for Ceku’s arrest was “politically outdated, reflecting realities from a decade ago.”

In Pristina, Kosovo authorities said they were trying to negotiate Ceku’s release.

“We are in contact with Bulgaria’s Foreign Ministry officials as well as representatives here to arrange for Ceku’s swift release and we are hopeful that will be soon,” Albana Beqiri, the spokesperson for Kosovo’s Foreign Ministry told The Associated Press.

The Interpol warrant was suspended when Ceku gained immunity after being named prime minister in 2006, but was renewed by Serbia after Ceku took part in a conference on the demobilization of guerrilla movements in Colombia earlier this year.

Before that he was held overnight in prisons in Slovenia in 2003 and Hungary in 2004 after his name appeared on lists of wanted persons.

Kosovo proclaimed independence last year and was recognized by the United States and most European Union nations — including Bulgaria.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Fear of Massacre Grips Christian Village in Egypt; Crops Destroyed

By Mary Abdelmassih

AINA) — Fears of an impending massacre has gripped the Christian Copts in the village of Ezbet Boshra, El Fashn, which was scene to Muslim mob attacks on Copts on Sunday (AINA 6-22-2009).

Egyptian State Security has placed only Coptic villagers under curfew since the Muslim assaults on Sunday. According to correspondent Mary Bassit of Copts United, The terrified villagers fear that being confined to their homes, while Muslims are free, might encourage Muslim fanatics to massacre them, especially with the bias of the security forces.

Lawyer Makkar Watany, who was detained with the 19 other Copts after Sunday’s events, told Coptic News Bulletin on 6/23/09 that they were mistreated during police detention, with several Copts suffering broken limbs and wounds. “I was singled out as the police knew that I am a Coptic activist and have connections with the NGOs in Cairo. I was beaten by a junior office, in spite of being a lawyer.” he said. “The other Coptic detainees told the police that they ‘are ready to die as they have nothing more to lose.’“

Watany also expressed his fear of a massacre saying that the village presently finds itself in an uncanny situation. “There are approximately 1500 security policemen in a small village with 500 inhabitants, among which there are only 200 poor Coptic villagers. I refrain from even looking out of the window for fear of getting shot.”

Human rights organizations and the media are prevented by security to enter Ezbet Boshra village; telephone and Internet lines are disconnected; cell phones are working sporadically.

On the popular El Mehwar’ TV, the Governor of Beni Suef, Dr. Ezzat Abdulla bluntly said that “Christians need a permit before being allowed to pray to avoid friction.” He stated in the interview that he is ready to give them (the Copts) another place far away to use for prayer. “The problem is that it starts with a place, then it is turned into a church; we have a role in the selection of a praying place which will not cause friction,” he said. It is worth noting that the disputed Coptic Diocese building is near a mosque. The interviewer, Motaz El Demerdash, asked the Governor why Copts have to request permission to pray while Muslims do not; the governor did not answer. Mr. Demerdash commented that the only way to stop this escalating sectarian tension is by the enactment of a unified law for building places of worship.

Less than 24 hours after the Governor’s TV interview, the director of the local council, overturned the aired Governor’s promise of finding the Copts a nearby suitable praying place, not further than 800 meters from the previous one. He declared that there is no place available and that the Copts will have to pray in the nearby village’s church. Watany said “This is completely unacceptable; it will have to be over our dead bodies.” According to a previous interview with the village priest, Reverend Isaac Castor “the neighboring village’s church is 3 miles away and extremely small, hardly accommodating its own congregation. We cannot pray in the street.”

“What is heartbreaking is that the moment the local council director statement was announced, all Muslims were ecstatic and went out in the streets, dancing and chanting ‘Come to Jihad’ and the ‘Cross is the enemy of God,” said Watany who lives in the village, “with the security forces chanting along with them! The terrified Copts are confined to their homes, while Muslims are celebrating outside,” he said.

Watany went on to say “After the sit-in of Bishop Estephanos of Beba El Fashn Diocese, clergy, NGOs and youth in St. Mary’s Cathedral in El-Fashn on 6/22/09, a compromise was reached, between Bishop Estephanos and the State Security in Beni Suef, according to which, the 19 detained Copts would be released on condition of giving up praying in the disputed Church building, and Copts can find another faraway place instead to pray in. Banking on this agreement, we found a house belonging to a Coptic woman, and we acquired another nearby home, totaling 200 sq. meters. It was agreed with Bishop Estephanos during his meeting in Beni Suef that he would contact the State Security to arrange for the start of the conversion of the place we found. But now with the statement of the Director of the local council, nothing will materialize.”

Although the prosecution dropped its charges against the village priest, Reverend Isaac Castor, he has been confined to his home with his toddlers and ten young children since Sunday, without any telephone or outside communication.

Free Copts reported that crops belonging to Copts were destroyed by the security on three consecutive days. “The crops used to be destroyed at night, now with the presence of the security forces, it is done in broad daylight,” said Watany to Coptic news.

Today ‘Sunshine’ Organization of Human Rights said that State Security soldiers still continue with their assaults and intimidations against the Copts of Ezbet Boshra village, and that security destroyed on Tuesday 06/23/09 crops owned by Copts who are still under curfew. When asked by a Copt why they were doing this, one member of the security forces, said “We just feel like it, and we will take you one house at a time,” according to Sunshine, which has been following the situation since its development. A complete file on the incidents with interviews accusing the State Security of complicity has been published by Copts United.

The Egyptian Union Human Rights Organization EUHRO issued today a press release demanding the intervention of the Minister of Interior, accuses him of failing to protect the Copts and their property. The Press Release went on to say that the Egyptian Government assumes full responsibility for the recent events by failing to enact the long overdue unified law for building places of worship and the present inequality between Muslims and Copts in the provision of places of worship. Dr. Naguib Gobraeel, President of EUHRO asked: If this is not Coptic persecution then what is?”

[Return to headlines]



Muslim Imams Say Burka Not Obligatory in Islam

Tantawi says French president is free to ban burka

Days after President Nicolas Sarkozy slammed the burka, or face veil, as “not welcome” in France, Islamic scholars said the burka was not obligatory in Islam and said every state had a right to ban the face veil.

The burka debate has been raging for a while in Europe with countries like the Netherlands banning it in universities and the British press reporting that Muslims and non-Muslims alike are calling for a ban on the face covering attire.

As for the Islamic reaction Egypt’s Grand Imam, Sheikh Mohammad Tantawi, said the face veil was not compulsory in Islam and said every head of state had the right to accept or prohibit it.

“I have nothing to do with the French president’s decision. Every country has its own rules,” Tantawi who heads al-Azhar University, the world’s leading Sunni Islam institution, told Al Arabiya.

Tantawi added that women who wear the burka have to abide by the rules of the country they live in, especially because it is not an obligation in Islam.

“The traditional headscarf [hijab] is what is obligatory. This means covering the entire body except the face and hands and wearing clothes that are neither tight nor transparent,” he said.

In a parliament session, Sarkozy supported French lawmakers’ request that an inquiry be held to determine if the face veil undermines French secularism or women rights.

“We cannot accept to have in our country women who are prisoners behind netting, cut off from all social life, deprived of identity,” he said. “That is not the idea that the French republic has of women’s dignity.”

However, Sarkozy made it clear that Islam, like other religions, was respected in France, home to the biggest Muslim community in Europe.

Headscarf is enough

Meanwhile Egypt’s deputy minister of Religious Endowments for Preaching agreed with Tantawi’s statements that the niqab was not obligatory and said a Muslim woman is only required to wear the headscarf.

Deputy Minister of Religious Endowments for Preaching, agreed with Tantawi’s statements. Abdel-Galil was assigned by Minister of Religious Endowments Mahmoud Hamqi Zaqzouq to give lectures to explain to the ministry’s face-veiled female employees that niqab is not an obligation in Islam and that the head scarf is enough.

“A woman’s outfit is personal freedom and no country has the right to interfere with it,” Dr. Salem Abdel-Galil told AlArabiya. “However, if a woman who wears the face veil is asked to take it off to, for example, have her identity verified, she has to do so.”

“ Sarkozy’s decision is in harmony with the secularism of the French republic “

Imam of the Paris Grand Mosque

Abdel-Galil said he believed Sarkozy had taken such a tough stance on the burka because of an incident where a woman refused to remove her face veil while giving a testimony in a French court.

“Sarkozy’s decision is in harmony with the secularism of the French republic,” Dalil Boubakeur, Imam of the Paris Grand Mosque, told Al Arabiya.

In contrast, Ahmed Gaballah, head of the European Institute of Human Sciences and member of European Council for Fatwa and Research, expressed his surprise at the timing of the decision.

“I believe this is a way of distracting people from the internal problems the society is suffering from,” he told Al Arabiya. “The number of face-veiled women in France is very minimal and cannot by any means be considered a phenomenon.”

Gaballah added that Sarkozy’s statements would have made more sense had they been founded on legal rather than religious basis.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Terrorism: Algeria; 5 Policemen Killed in Ambush

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 23 — Five local policemen were killed yesterday in Algeria in an attack carried out by an armed Islamic group in the Khenchela region, 450 km south-east of Algiers. The news, carried today by the Algerian press, has not yet been confirmed by the authorities. Other sources say that a sixth policeman has been kidnapped. A few days ago 18 policemen and a civilian were killed in an attack in the Bordj Bou Arreridj region, 230 km south-east of the capital. Al-Qaeda for the Islamic Maghreb (the former Salafite Group for Preaching and Combat) has claimed responsibility for the attack. The terrorist organization continues to hit the north of Algeria, as well as the Sahara area along the border with Mali and Niger. Early in June, the north African wing of Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the killing of a British hostage who was kidnapped in January in the north of Mali. A Swiss tourist, Werner Greiner, is still being held prisoner in the region. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Bajnai Visits Israel, Calls it “One of Hungary’s Closest Friends” in Region

Hungary’s Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai started a two-day official visit to Israel on Tuesday, marking the 20th anniversary of re-establishing diplomatic ties between the two countries.

Bajnai met Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and discussed with him topical issues including the global crisis and further possibilities for bilateral cooperation, the Hungarian government spokesman told MTI. The talks also touched upon the Hungarian radical nationalist Jobbik party, Domokos Szollar said, adding that Bajnai had distanced himself — and the government — from the ideology of that party. Jobbik has raised questions but the answers it provides are “unacceptable, extremist, aggressive and anti-democratic,” Szollar quoted Bajnai as saying.

Israel is “one of Hungary’s closest friends” in the region, Bajnai said at a meeting with President Shimon Peres. Hungary watches the situation in Iran with concern, Bajnai added.

The prime minister visited the Yad Vashem museum and commemorated the Hungarian Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

“We should learn from the past so that it should never repeat itself. The Hungarian government is highly committed to this,” he said.

He noted that the government was supporting the idea of enacting a law on banning Holocaust denial and sought to join force with all democratic parties to quarantine extremist views.

On Wednesday, Bajnai will visit Ramallah to meet leaders of the Palestinian Authority.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Shalit: Israel to Release Hamas Leader in West Bank

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, JUNE 23 — According to Radio Jerusalem, Abdel Aziz Dweik, the president of the Palestinian Legislative Council in Ramallah and one of Hamas’s political leaders in the West Bank, will be released today. The radio report specified that Dweik will leave the prison of Hadarim (north of Tel Aviv) in the coming hours to return to his home city of Hebron in the West Bank. Dweik was arrested in August 2006, together with dozens of Palestinian MPs, suspected of “supporting terrorism”. In the weeks prior to Dweik’s arrest, the armed wing of Hamas had claimed responsibility for the kidnap of Israeli soldier Ghilad Shalit, who is still being held prisoner in Gaza. Radio Jerusalem added that Dweik’s release could be a move to relieve tensions with Hamas, in the hope that it will contribute to an exchange of prisoners in which Shalit will also be freed. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


67 Men Charged for Dressing as Women in Saudi Arabia

US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) called on Saudi authorities on Wednesday to drop charges against 67 Filipino men facing charges for dressing in women’s clothes and alcohol violations.

“If the police in Saudi Arabia can arrest people simply because they don’t like their clothes, no one is safe,” Rasha Moumneh, a researcher for the rights group, said in a statement.

The 67 Filipinos along with a Yemeni were arrested at a private party and drag show in a resort villa near Riyadh on June 13.

According to Philippines embassy vice consul Roussel Reyes, the men face possible lashes and jail time for both cross-dressing charges and violating Saudi Arabia’s strict ban on alcohol.

HRW criticised Saudi Arabia’s Islamic sharia-based legal system as uncodified and undefined, with laws arising from clerics’ interpretations of the Koran and other Islamic texts.

“No written and accessible legal standards exist that criminalise the wearing of women’s clothing by men,” HRW said.

“Nevertheless, Saudi judges have in the past imposed sentences ranging from imprisonment to flogging on men accused of behaving like women.”

The men were all released to their employers following the arrests while formal charges are drawn up.

Some one million Filipinos work in Saudi Arabia.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Bars Boom as Iraqis Dance the Night Away

Sectarian tension disappears as the alcohol flows

There may be sectarian tension on the streets of Iraq but in the country’s newly reopened nightclubs the tension dies as people gather to drink and dance the night away and mend ties with shout outs to different ethnic groups.

For one of Baghdad’s elegant bars the fun kicks off at midnight when Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish youth flock to a night of fun, which until recently was banned by Saddam Hussein’s government.

Club-goer, Sayyed Ali, moves between the tables to reach the stage where he throws money at the singer before he whispers something in her ear, the woman responds by shouting out a salute from the people of Nasiriyah to the people of Anbar.

Another person stands up and hails the Awakening Council, a coalition of tribes that maintain security in different parts of Iraq. As a third man salutes the people of the south, it becomes clear that this is the place where sectarian tension comes to die.

A favorite pastime

For the females dotted around the bar venturing out after midnight is in itself unusual but now they dance and freely mingle without a worry in the world.

“Senior police and army officers protect night clubs that were previously shut down under pressure from Islamists,” one of the females clubbers said. “Looks like the sons of the new officials are not different from their predecessors in the way like to spend their nights in Baghdad.”

Under Hussein’s government all bars and nightclubs were shut down as part of what was called the “Faith Campaign,” said the bar owner, who also used to run a similar one in the 1980s.

“Our customers have always been sons of officers and officials,” he said. “We give them a special welcome since they guarantee the safety of our investments as well as the rest of our customers.”

He added that the sons of officers and officials, together with Hussein’s son Odai, were also the first to violate the Faith Campaign in the 1990s.

“However, officials feared for their sons and had to give in to pressure. Many of those sons settled later in neighboring countries in search of night life.”

US funding

The bar owner vehemently denied that the United States gave him the funds that put him back in business and stressed that businessmen only need security to be encouraged to invest in bars and night clubs because everyone knows Iraqis like night life.

There are some, however, who are unhappy with the booming Baghdad night life as hardliners, preachers and Islamist MPs call for a ban on the import and sale of alcohol and seek to shut down all bars and clubs.

But for now clubbers are allowed to go about their business. “If a cop meets one of them and asks him where he’s coming from, the customer replies, ‘I was at a night club’ the cop would then smile and say ‘hope you had a good time,’“ Sayyed Ali said.

The frequent club-goer dismissed Islamists’ attempts to shut down the country’s hot spots.

“No one can turn back time. Extremism and sectarianism are fading away.”

“We are all brothers”

A 17-year-old boy surrounded by girls gives money to the singer and asks her to send a shout out to the students of Baghdad University.

“He is the son of a senior official,” said the club owner. “But he is not a trouble maker. Those girls are university students who come with him every now and then.”

The club regularly features famous young singers from Syria, the U.A.E and Jordan. They have all come to welcome the return of Baghdad nights, the owner said.

As dawn approached, signaling the end of another night of clubbing, everyone was on the dance floor. Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds all held hands and started dancing the Iraqi Dabka, a traditional Arab dance.

“Here is national unity. We are all brothers,” shouted one of them.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



David Yerushalmi: Sovereign Immunity or Cover-Up?

Full disclosure: I have a pony in this race. I am an American and, as an attorney, I am an officer of the court. I make this disclosure in the light of an amicus curiae brief recently filed with the U.S. Supreme Court by the Obama-Holder Department of Justice. The brief pertains to the mammoth case that came to the Supreme Court via the Second Circuit Court of Appeals (New York) called In re Terrorist Attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. The Supreme Court is currently pondering whether the case merits its review.

In its friend-of-the-court brief, the Justice Department has argued, almost unimaginably, that the Supreme Court should not review the Second Circuit’s ruling that the victims of 9/11 and their families may not sue the Saudi government or, more importantly, the individual Saudi princes who personally (not as government actors) gave money to Muslim charities they knew would be funding al-Qaeda’s jihad against America…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Iran May Downgrade Ties With Britain

TEHRAN (AFP) — Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Wednesday that Iran may downgrade ties with Britain, accusing London of meddling in the post-election tumult gripping the Islamic republic.

“We are examining it,” he was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying, in the wake of repeated charges by Tehran that Britain and the United States are trying to destabilise the Islamic republic.

His announcment came a day after Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced the expulsion of two Iranian diplomats in a tit-for-tat move after Tehran ordered two British diplomats to leave.

Downing Street said Britain wants “constructive” ties with Iran but renewed criticism of Tehran’s response to the hotly disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

“We have always been clear that we seek a constructive bilateral relationship with Iran based on mutual respect,” a spokesman said after Mottaki’s comments.

“Iran’s decision to try to turn what are clearly internal matters for Iran into a conflict with the UK and others is deeply regrettable and without foundation.”

Intelligence Minister Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei said on Wednesday that some people with British passports “had a role in the riots”

Mohseni-Ejei was quoted by the Fars news agency as saying members of “known counter-revolutionary groups” who entered the country in the run-up to the vote had been arrested.

“One of the detainees collected information needed by the enemies under the guise of a reporter,” he said. “Britain was one of the countries which fuelled the situation by strong propaganda and some undiplomatic measures..”

The Foreign Office has criticised Tehran for trying to “blame the UK and other outsiders for what is an Iranian reaction to an Iranian issue.”

Britain is not the only target blamed by Iranian leaders for the unrest that has engulfed the country since the June 12 election, with Interior Minister Sadeq Mahsouli saying on Wednesday that rioters were funded by the CIA and exiled opposition group the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran.

Many other countries have also expressed concern about the crackdown on protesters and UN urged “an immediate stop to the arrests, threats and use of force.”

But Britain has been in the spotlight in Iran since last Friday, when supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei denounced it as the “most evil” of enemies.

Earlier this week, Iran ordered the BBC’s permanent correspondent in Tehran to leave the country, accusing him of supporting the rioters.

It alleged the British broadcaster as well as Voice of America were Israeli agents whose aim was to to “weaken the national solidarity, threaten territoral integrity and disintegrate Iran.”

These are the latest snags in decades of often prickly relations that have their roots in 19th century British imperialism.

The standoff is the most serious between the countries since Iran seized 15 British navy personnel at gunpoint and paraded them in front of TV cameras in 2007 before eventually releasing them.

The roots of the mutual distrust date back to the 1800s when Iran — then known as Persia — was trapped in the colonial rivalry between Russia and Britain.

In 1953, nationalist prime minister Mohammad Mossadegh was overthrown in a CIA-organised coup after he nationalised the Anglo-Iranian oil company, the forerunner to British Petroleum.

Diplomatic relations were severed when the British mission in Tehran was closed in 1980 after British special forces stormed the Iranian embassy in London to end a hostage siege.

A 1989 fatwa by Khomeini against British writer Salman Rushdie sparked a new rupture in ties that were only restored in 1999.

Britain is also among the strongest opponents of Iran’s nuclear programme, which London and Washington insist is aimed at developing atomic weapons, a claim rejected by Tehran.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Netanyahu: Iranian Regime Oppresses Its People

(AGI) — Rome, 23 Jun. — “The Iranian regime oppresses is own people. I am not formulating any hypotheses regarding Obama’s position on the matter. In these days we are seeing the true nature of the regime. I am certain that Washington is taking a second look at the current situation”. The quote is from Israeli Premier, Benjamin Netanyahu, referring to Iran and US/Iran relations. Netanyahu added: “Forces that threaten peace must be dealt with: for example, the violent and aggressive attitude displayed by Iran”. The Israeli premier linked Iran with Hezbollah and Hamas. Referring to the Iranian demonstrations, Netanyahu added: “The Iranian peoples’ courage in their search for liberty is something that deserves notice from free men”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Court Verdict on Church Land Expected

ANKARA -A Midyat court will deliver its verdict today about a land dispute between a 1,600-year-old monastery and locals of a southeastern Anatolian town home to around 3,000 Syriacs.

The ruling is expected to be the final phase of a long-running court process. Yilmaz Kerimo, a Swedish deputy of Syriac origin who has attended the hearings as an observer, hoped that the court would recognize Mor Gabriel monastery’s boundaries.

“The monastery is not a property for sale and branding Syriacs as invaders is a disgrace for Turkey,” Kerimo told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review.

Local officials of three nearby villages who contest the borders of the monastery argue that the monastery is bigger than any place of worship in the world. Concerned by the redrawn borders following land surveying proceedings in the area, officials from the monastery foundation appealed to the court, and said they were not occupiers, as they had paid tax on the land since 1938.

The court case is being closely followed by the European Union, which is urging the government to provide its ethnic and religious groups with equal rights and freedoms. European politicians occasionally attended the hearings throughout the year and visited Mor Gabriel monastery.

“Such cases are tarnishing Turkey’s image in Europe. I hope the court will deliver a fair verdict and the Syriacs, together with Arabs, Kurds and Circassians, will live peacefully and side-by-side,” said Kerimo.

Syrians are not officially recognized as a minority in Turkey under the Lausanne Treaty. Midyat’s deputy mayor, Metin Kutlu, said the dispute was politically charged, claiming that the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, was siding with locals, while the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party, or DTP, was supporting the Syriac thesis.

“There is no gold, silver or oil in the area but lots of oak trees which the villagers want to utilize,” he told the Daily News. “I believe the case will be concluded in favor of the Syriacs, who are the owners of the land,” he said. AKP Mardin deputy Süleyman Çelebi said: “We are the justified owners of the monastery and the Syriacs are under the protection of the Republic.”

Çelebi was accused of supporting the villagers’ cause and the statements he made about Syriac migration to Europe sparked controversy. He once claimed Syriacs moved to Europe in the 1980s under their own will, while the Syriacs claimed the court cases aimed to drive them out from Turkey.

The AKP deputy denied the claims he was defending the villagers’ rights. “They don’t consult with me. Nothing is like it used to be. Villagers are aware of their own rights,” he said. Speaking about the Europeans’ attention to this case, Çelebi, in a critical tone, said: “Which liberties have we ever constrained? They are enjoying equal rights.” He declined to comment on the court verdict, saying that all would respect the decision.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



US Says Hot Dog Diplomacy Still on With Iran

The United States said Monday its invitations were still standing for Iranian diplomats to attend July 4 celebrations at US embassies despite the crackdown on opposition supporters.

President Barack Obama’s administration said earlier this month it would invite Iran to US embassy barbecues for the national holiday for the first time since the two nations severed relations following the 1979 Islamic revolution.

“There’s no thought to rescinding the invitations to Iranian diplomats,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.

“We have made a strategic decision to engage on a number of fronts with Iran,” Kelly said. “We tried many years of isolation, and we’re pursuing a different path now.”

But he said it was not clear if Iranian diplomats had accepted the invitations.

           — Hat tip: Brutally Honest [Return to headlines]



US to Send Ambassador to Damascus

Washington has confirmed it is to send an ambassador to Damascus, ending a four-year diplomatic absence in Syria.

The apparent move is being seen as part of President Barack Obama’s attempts to increase engagement with the region.

The US Middle East envoy, George Mitchell, recently visited Syria and said Damascus had an “integral role” in finding peace in the region.

The US envoy in Syria was withdrawn in 2005, following after the assassination of Lebanon’s former PM Rafiq Hariri.

There is widespread suspicion inside and outside Lebanon that Syria was involved in Mr Hariri’s death, but Damascus strongly denies this.

High-level talks

A US official told the BBC that “a decision in principle had been taken” to send a US ambassador to Damascus, but added that the process would take time.

Any ambassador would have to be confirmed by the Senate, and no names have been discussed yet, the BBC’s Kim Ghattas in Washington says.

Mitchell: “Syria has an integral role to play”

Washington said it had already informed Syria of its move.

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said the decision reflected Syria’s important role in the region, adding that Washington hoped it would be a constructive one.

Another state department official said the decision was in line with President Obama’s decision to engage diplomatically to resolve a number of issues of concern to the US.

Peace with Israel, Syria’s support for militant groups like Hezbollah and Hamas, as well the influx of foreign fighters from Syria into Iraq are all on the agenda, our correspondent says.

Four delegations of high-level US officials visited Damascus over the last few months, including a military delegation.

As the US starts its draw down of troops from Iraq, it is trying to ensure the situation there does not unravel, our correspondent adds.

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

Russia


Kyrgyzstan Agreed U.S. Base Deal With Russia — Source

CAIRO (Reuters) — A Kyrgyzstan deal with the United States to keep open a U.S. air base in Central Asia was agreed with Russia, a Kremlin source said on Thursday, but a newspaper report said Moscow had been thrown off balance by the move.

The United States has agreed to pay $180 million to Kyrgyzstan to keep open the last remaining U.S. air base in Central Asia, a key refueling point for U.S. aircraft in NATO operations against Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan.

Washington had been haggling to keep the base open since February, when the former Soviet republic announced its closure after securing pledges of $2 billion in aid and credit from Russia.

When asked about the deal, a Kremlin official accompanying Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in Egypt told Reuters that Kyrgyzstan had agreed its decision with Moscow.

“Kyrgyzstan agreed its decision (on the base) with Russia,” the source said. “We support all steps aimed at stabilizing the situation in Afghanistan.”

But Russia’s Kommersant newspaper quoted an unidentified Russian diplomat as saying that Moscow felt it had been tricked by Kyrgyzstan over the base and that Russia would make an “adequate response” to the deal.

“The news about keeping the base was a very unpleasant surprise for us — we did not expect such a trick,” the diplomat was quoted as saying by Kommersant.

“The real character of the U.S. military presence in Central Asia has not changed, which goes against Russian interests and our agreement with the Kyrgyz leadership,” the Russian diplomat was quoted as saying.

Kyrgyzstan’s ruling party said on Wednesday it had approved the agreement with the United States to keep the Manas air base open.

“Kyrgyzstan can not step aside from fighting terrorism,” said Kabai Karabekov, a member of Ak Zhol party led by President Kurmanbek Bakiyev. Karabekov said the deal would probably be approved by parliament on Thursday.

The surprise decision to close the base — announced by Bakiyev in Moscow alongside Kremlin chief Medvedev — provoked speculation that Russia was trying to use the issue as a bargaining chip in U.S. relations.

The Kremlin says it is ready for cooperation with Washington on fighting the Taliban and Afghanistan is likely to be on the agenda when U.S. President Barack Obama visits Moscow in July.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Russia Defends Idea of New Security Plan for Europe

VIENNA (Reuters) — Russia on Tuesday defended its proposal for a new security structure in Europe and said it was not aimed at undercutting the U.S.-led NATO alliance, but rather at banishing division on the continent.

The United States and NATO reacted coolly last year to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s call for a new “security architecture” in Europe, arguing that Cold War-era institutions like NATO cannot defuse tensions in a multipolar world.

Many NATO allies appear willing to discuss the proposal but say it cannot work unless Russia gives up what they regard as an old “sphere of influence” approach to security.

“We’re not attempting to undermine NATO or any other organization active in the security field,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told a conference at the Vienna-based Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

“Quite the contrary, we are in favor of coordination and synergies between existing international structures to ensure that no single government (or) organization in the Euro-Atlantic area work against each other,” he said through a translator.

“We’re not attempting to force anything on anyone. We’re only inviting you to negotiations and talks.”

OSCE foreign ministers will meet on Corfu, a Greek island, this weekend to weigh this and other European security issues.

NATO EXPANSION CRITICISED

Lavrov said the OSCE should be given greater powers to deal with security problems and criticized Western powers for expanding NATO instead.

Some Western diplomats say Russia is partly responsible for hampering the consensus-based OSCE, whose permanent council comprises 56 countries.

Russia has been hostile to OSCE election monitoring and refused to renew the group’s observer mission in Georgia after recognizing as independent states the pro-Russian separatist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Lavrov told a news conference that some countries had taken an “absolutely unfair” position by saying Russia must withdraw the recognition before further talks on the security proposal.

He said Medvedev mooted the treaty idea in June last year, two months before the brief war in which Russian forces repelled a Georgian attempt to wrest back South Ossetia.

Lavrov said the issue was the main stumbling block for progress on the security treaty talks.

Russia’s actions in the region, he said, were to protect citizens and were compatible with Medvedev’s proposal, which Moscow says would ensure the security interests of one country do not jeopardize those of others.

The OSCE, Europe’s biggest security and human rights group, is struggling to strike a deal with Moscow to maintain its broader Georgian monitoring mission, whose original mandate expired at the end of 2008.

A follow-up mandate which allowed for just 20 military observers is due to expire on June 30.

(Editing by Jon Boyle)

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



U.S., EU Reject Russian Accusations Over WTO Bid

PARIS (Reuters) — The United States and the European Union rejected on Wednesday Russian accusations that Washington and Brussels were to blame for the collapse of Moscow’s unilateral bid to join the World Trade Organization.

“Let’s be clear on this — this is a Russia-created crisis and one they have to resolve,” U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told Reuters.

Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said in an interview on Tuesday that the EU and the United States were responsible for Moscow’s decision to ditch unilateral talks for a joint WTO bid with Kazakhstan and Belarus.

“We reject this claim. We have been facilitating this process. We have been helpful and very supportive of Russia’s bid,” Lutz Guellner, spokesman for EU Trade Commissioner Catherine Ashton, said.

Russia, the biggest economy outside the 153-member global trade watchdog, is now negotiating entry with its former Soviet neighbors as part of a proposed new customs union.

The move, announced by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, came just days after Russian officials had held talks with U.S. and EU trade representatives. It has left the WTO secretariat in confusion.

“This is as creative a response from Russia as the one they gave after what were very constructive and positive talks in St. Petersburg,” Kirk said, referring to Shuvalov’s Tuesday comments and Russia’s changed bid for WTO entry.

“We thought we had taken positive steps and made progress,” he said.

BILATERAL TALKS

Kirk and Ashton will hold bilateral talks with Russian Economy Minister Elvira Nabiullina on the sidelines of an OECD meeting on Thursday in Paris.

“We were surprised by Russia’s new approach … we still need to better understand what this means for Russia’s WTO accession process and what exactly Russia’s intentions are,” Guellner said.

“Commissioner Ashton will be seeking detailed clarification at her meeting in Paris.”

Russia has been negotiating to join the WTO for 16 years but Moscow says the United States and European Union have made unreasonable demands for entry.

Shuvalov said the leaders of Belarus and Kazakhstan were more active in pursuing the customs union with Russia than WTO negotiating partners had been in pursuing Russia’s accession to the trade body.

Moscow’s accession stalled after Washington put the issue on ice over its opposition to Russia’s war with Georgia in 2008.

A trade spat between Moscow and Washington over a Russian ban on some U.S. meat imports, on health concerns related to the recent outbreak of the H1N1 virus — otherwise known as swine flu — has also hampered Russia’s WTO bid.

Moves by Moscow to place duties on imports of timber and cars from the EU, and threats of further tariffs on other goods ranging from shoes to furniture, have also hurt the WTO talks.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Caucasus


6 Killed, 5 Wounded in Russia’s North Caucasus

MAGAS, Russia — Roadside bombs and gunfire killed six people and wounded five in Russia’s North Caucasus region, officials said Wednesday, as a provincial leader remained in critical condition from an earlier suicide attack.

The president of the province of Ingushetia, Yunus Bek Yevkurov, has been kept on an artificial respirator in a Moscow clinic since he was wounded in a suicide bombing Monday, but his life was not in immediate danger, said his spokesman, Kaloi Akhilgov.

Chechnya and Ingushetia share a border in Russia’s volatile North Caucasus region, where a separatist Islamic insurgency mounts daily attacks on police and other officials — an aftermath of two separatist wars in Chechnya over the last 15 years.

Chechnya’s branch of the Russian Interior Ministry said a roadside bomb destroyed a car late Tuesday and killed two civilians it was carrying. Early Wednesday, five police were wounded by a bomb hidden amid roadside garbage, it said.

In Ingushetia, a police officer was shot dead Wednesday by unidentified assailants in a drive-by shooting, local prosecutor’s office said. In a separate clash later, several gunmen riding in a vehicle opened fire at police who tried to check their identity papers. Police killed all three militants, the regional Interior Ministry’s branch said.

Officials have blamed Islamic militants for the attack on Yevkurov, but no arrests have been made. Ingushetia’s acting leader on Wednesday announced a 5-million ruble (about $160,000 or euro114,000) reward to those who would provide information to help capture those who staged the attack on Yevkurov.

Yevkurov was seen as uncompromising on the militant insurgency and corruption that have plagued Ingushetia and other provinces in North Caucasus region, and his hospitalization raised questions about who will keep up the pressure on insurgents and criminal elements.

Immediately after Monday’s attack on Yevkurov, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev summoned Chechnya’s regional president, Ramzan Kadyrov, and urged “a direct and tough response.”

Kadyrov on Wednesday met with the temporary leader of Ingushetia and pledged that insurgent leaders would be “destroyed in the near future.” “We have all the means and necessary operative information for this,” Kadyrov said.

Some analysts say Kadyrov favors a merger of Chechnya and Ingushetia, which were part of one province during the Soviet era. Chechen and Ingush are one and the same ethnicity.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Chechen President Vows to Fight Ingushetia Rebels

MOSCOW (Reuters) — Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov said he had been ordered by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to fight insurgents in the neighboring region of Ingushetia after its leader was gravely wounded in a bomb attack.

Kadyrov’s harsh tactics have brought relative stability to Chechnya since he was elected in 2007 after more than a decade of war. But fellow Kremlin appointees have failed to stem spikes in violence in neighboring Dagestan and Ingushetia.

With Ingush President Yunus-Bek Yevkurov fighting for his life in hospital, Kadyrov said he had been ordered by Medvedev to run cross-border operations.

“He told me to intensify actions … including in Ingushetia,” Kadyrov said in an interview with Reuters. “I will personally control the operations … and I am sure in the near future there will be good results.”

Yevkurov was appointed in October to replace Murat Zyazikov, who was accused of fanning the insurgency with heavy-handed measures. But the situation has deteriorated, with a series of high-profile attacks over the past three weeks.

Yevkurov was badly wounded on Monday when a suicide bomber by the roadside destroyed his armored Mercedes car. Russia’s Vesti-24 channel said investigators believed it was a female suicide bomber whose name had been established.

Medvedev visited Moscow’s Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery where Yevkurov, 45, was being treated late on Monday.

“He has received serious injuries and as a result, a whole host of organs are damaged, above all the skull. The rib cage and liver are also damaged,” Vladimir Fyodorov, the institute’s director, told Medvedev. “His condition remains grave … he is on artificial respiration.”

‘THERE WILL BE BLOOD’

Analysts say Kadyrov’s past as a rebel has helped him. But human rights groups say he has achieved relative calm by pushing violence underground, kidnapping and torturing suspected rebels and burning the houses of their families.

“If they used torture and detentions (in Ingushetia) there wouldn’t be any Wahhabism, terrorism,” Kadyrov told Reuters. “It is the lack of action of certain leaders,” that is to blame.

He said cross-border operations with Yevkurov had achieved considerable success, killing over 30 rebels in recent months.

Accompanied by an entourage of 20 in the lobby of Moscow’s President Hotel, Kadyrov rejected the criticism of his heavy-handed tactics as naive.

The rebels “don’t have any humanity,” he said. “We will take no captives, we will destroy them. As long as they exist there will be blood.”

Kadyrov, whose father was killed in a rebel bomb attack in 2004, said he had no sympathy for families of rebels who refuse to give up their relatives.

“We are sick of protecting them … They are accessories in Wahhabism, terrorism,” he said, tapping the table with his fist.

Kadyrov accused Western rights groups of caring more about the fate of terrorists than the innocent people of Chechnya.

“When they kill me, when they kill my father, when they kill thousands of my people, everyone stays quiet, but if a ‘devil’ is beaten while being detained, straight away there is an outcry.”

Analysts have linked the growing unrest in the North Caucasus with a fall in resources from the Kremlin to buy off local leaders, and have suggested Chechnya’s recent stability could be threatened by a cut in hand-outs from Moscow.

“Nothing has changed,” Kadyrov said. “On the contrary, we have strengthened our position in 2009, the federal center is helping us more.”

Kadyrov also rejected accusations he had created a cult of personality in Chechnya, where almost every street is decorated by vast posters of Kadyrov and his father.

“Kadyrov has created constitutional order and straight away they start talking about a cult of personality,” he said.

“I am a servant of the people. Ask anyone ‘who is Kadyrov?’ in the remotest regions, in the mountains, if they don’t cry with gratitude for what we have done for them, I will sign my resignation in front of you.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Chechnya: Kadyrov Pledges ‘Cruel Revenge’

Chechnya’s President Ramzan Kadyrov has vowed a “cruel” revenge on those who tried to kill the leader of Ingushetia, during a visit to the republic.

President Yunus-Bek Yevkurov was wounded in an apparent assassination attempt on Monday.

Mr Kadyrov said on Tuesday he had been authorised by Moscow to take charge of security in Ingushetia — a prospect that alarmed some politicians there.

Mr Yevkurov remains in critical condition in hospital.

He received head and body injuries after a car packed with explosives ploughed into his convoy in the Ingush city of Nazran, in the North Caucasus.

“ I think adding additional neighbouring forces would further entangle the situation “

Ruslan Aushev Former leader of Ingushetia

“The federal prosecutors and interior ministry will hold their investigation,” Mr Kadyrov said in Ingushetia, on a visit that took some local officials by surprise on Wednesday.

“But we will have an investigation according to mountain traditions and the revenge for Yunus-Bek Yevkurov will be cruel,” he said.

“I warn that the terrorists, the inhuman ones, the devils who badly wounded Yevkurov will soon regret it,” he said.

Mr Kadyrov, whose own father Akhmad was killed by a bomb in 2004, has brought relative calm to Chechnya, but human rights groups accuse his militias of widespread abuses.

He has been accused of involvement in abduction and torture and a number of apparently political killings, but has always denied it.

Merger rumours

On Tuesday Mr Kadyrov said he had been ordered by Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev to run operations in both countries.

He told Reuters: “He told me to intensify actions… including in Ingushetia. I will personally control the operations… and I am sure in the near future there will be good results.”

But Ingush officials insisted they remained in charge of security, and dismissed rumours that the two republics would be merged, as they were in Soviet times.

“All moves to ensure stability in Ingushetia will be co-ordinated by the operation headquarters of Ingushetia,” Mr Yevkurov’s spokesman said.

And Ruslan Aushev, who ruled Ingushetia from 1992-2001, said: “I think adding additional neighbouring forces would further entangle the situation there. If they want to complicate the situation then this is what to do.”

Mr Aushev said he would be willing to take charge of Ingushetia while Mr Yevkurov recovered.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Orissa: Death Threats Against Christian Witnesses in Murder Case Against BJP Politician

Witnesses are being intimidated in order to force them not to testify against Manoj Pradhan, who has been charged in seven murder cases. In the village of Neelungia, Christians are told to pay 4,000 rupees if they want to get back to their homes, whilst Hindus demand they withdraw accusations against those who carried out the pogrom.

Bhubaneshwar (AsiaNews) — Nine witnesses from the village of Raikia (Kandhamal District) have received death threats. They were going to testify against Manoj Pradhan, a member of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) who was recently elected to the Orissa State Assembly. He is charged on 14 counts of violence, including seven murders, against Christians.

Human rights activist Ajaya Kumar Singh told AsiaNews that “three people, probably Pradhan supporters or relatives threatened the nine Christians. They told them that if they testified against the BJP politician they would be killed.”

“The situation is still unstable in many areas where there are no Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) agents,” said Sajan, K George, president of the Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC).

“In the village of Neelungia, near Udayagiri, the predominantly Hindu community has set two conditions to let Christians come back to clear the rubble of their homes. First they want 5,000 rupees (around US$ 100) for the puja or submission ceremony. Secondly, they want Christians to withdraw their complaint (First Information Report) against villagers who took part in the anti-Christian violence.”

Refugee camps in Neelungia village were shut down and Christians now live in tents on the margins of the village.

“The Hindu community is not letting them to go back to their homes,” said Sajan George. “And in spite of complaints about continuous threats by extremists police is doing nothing.”

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

Far East


China Says North Korea a “Serious Concern”

BEIJING (Reuters) — China shares the region’s “serious concerns” about a nuclear North Korea and urged all parties to keep negotiating, a senior Chinese military officer said Wednesday after talks with Pentagon officials.

Lieutenant-General Ma Xiaotian did not announce any new measures against Pyongyang, but said Beijing was concerned about North Korea, which staged a second nuclear test on May 25, prompting new U.N. sanctions.

“For the regional security of northeast Asia, the North Korean nuclear issue is not only a serious concern for the United States and neighboring South Korea and Japan, but is also for China,” Ma told a news conference after talks with a U.S. delegation led by Under Secretary of Defense Michele Flournoy.

But Ma also repeated China’s position that the dispute with North Korea must be defused through negotiations.

“We hope and encourage the relevant parties to take positive steps and more stabilizing measures to control developments on the Korean Peninsula, to address the issues through diplomatic negotiations, consultations and dialogue.”

The United States has ratcheted up the pressure on North Korea, tracking its ships in a bid to deter arms shipments banned under the recent U.N. resolution.

Ma told reporters that the talks did not cover the issue of those North Korean ships.

Ma also said the United States and China had agreed to hold special consultations in July to address the issue of preventing sea confrontations.

“The two sides agreed to work together to avoid such incidents recurring,” Ma said, referring to recent skirmishes between Chinese and U.S. vessels off China.

In recent months, Chinese vessels have become involved in several brief, non-fatal confrontations with U.S. surveillance vessels in seas off the Chinese coast that Beijing claims are in its exclusive economic zone.

The Pentagon has objected, saying the U.S. ships involved were operating within international law.

Ma gave an upbeat view of prospects for improving relations between the two military powers.

“The two sides agreed to work together to strive for improvement,” he said.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Ken Wills and Jeremy Laurence)

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



China Arrests Leading Democracy Advocate

BEIJING (AFP) — Prominent Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, a leading force behind a petition calling for democratic reforms, has been formally arrested for subversive activities, state media said Wednesday.

Activist groups immediately condemned the move, calling the arrest of the internationally known dissident writer a blow for human rights and political freedom in China.

Liu, who has been detained since December, was arrested Tuesday for “alleged agitation activities aimed at subversion of the government and overthrowing the socialist system,” Xinhua news agency said, citing Beijing police.

The 53-year-old writer, who was involved in the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy movement that was crushed by the army, has long campaigned through his writings for human rights and democracy in China.

He was taken into custody last year after signing Charter 08, a widely circulated manifesto calling for fundamental political and legal reforms to China’s Communist Party-dominated system and respect for human rights.

The document was signed by about 300 Chinese scholars, lawyers and officials.

“Liu has been engaged in agitation activities, such as spreading of rumours and defaming of the government, aimed at subversion of the state and overthrowing the socialist system in recent years,” Xinhua quoted a police statement as saying.

Liu had confessed to the charge, the statement added.

His lawyer, Mo Shaoping, said he was not informed of the arrest, but that police were still in the process of investigating the case. If formally charged Liu could get up to 15 years in prison, Mo said.

Beijing police declined to comment to AFP.

The arrest comes amid tightened controls in China amid a series of sensitive political anniversaries this year.

China earlier this month passed the 20th anniversary of the crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests with stifling security and next faces October’s 60th anniversary of the founding of communist China.

Mo said police had told Liu’s wife, Liu Xia, that he might not be able to work as Liu’s defence lawyer. Mo said this may be because he also had signed Charter 08.

Liu Xia could not immediately be reached for comment.

Liu has been under a form of house arrest in an undisclosed location away from his home since December.

Nicholas Bequelin, a Hong Kong-based researcher with Human Rights Watch, said the arrest meant Liu would almost certainly go to prison, calling it “a pre-determined result.”

“We believe that Liu Xiaobo has done nothing but exercise his right to freedom of expression and in no circumstances should he have been arrested,” Bequelin told AFP.

Amnesty International also condemned Liu’s arrest.

“This use of state security charges to punish activists for merely expressing their views must stop,” it said in an emailed statement.

Bequelin said Chinese authorities had long tolerated Liu’s dissident writings.

But he said Liu’s arrest made clear that hardline elements in the government blamed for a tightening of political controls since before last year’s Beijing Olympics had gained the upper hand.

“The Ministry of Public Security has seen its power considerably enhanced and they are more aggressive. The room for dissent is shrinking,” he said.

Liu was jailed for nearly two years for his role in the 1989 Tiananmen protests and then again in the mid-1990s.

His case is the highest-profile dissident arrest since rights activist Hu Jia was arrested in December 2007 and sentenced four months later to three and a half years in prison for sedition.

It has drawn intense international criticism, with the European Union and the United States demanding his quick release.

Novelists such as Britain’s Salman Rushdie and Italy’s Umberto Eco, as well as Nobel literature laureates including Irish poet Seamus Heaney, have also campaigned for Liu’s release.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



US, China Pledge Effort to Avoid Sea Confrontations

BEIJING — (AP) — Top U.S. and Chinese military officials said Wednesday the countries will work together to avoid confrontations at sea that have sparked worries of a crisis in overall relations.

The issue was at the center of their first high-level military talks in 18 months after a series of recent naval encounters — including a collision of a Chinese submarine and a U.S. sonar device — that have raised concerns about poor communication between the two sides.

The military officials also discussed North Korea, which has threatened war with the U.S. and its allies in response to new U.N. sanctions imposed over its recent nuclear test blast.

On the U.S.-China naval encounters, People’s Liberation Army deputy chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Ma Xiaotian, said China had reiterated its opposition to U.S. surveillance patrols in the South China Sea, during the two days of talks with the U.S. delegation led by Defense Undersecretary Michele Flournoy.

“Our two sides agreed to work together to avoid such incidents from happening again since such incidents will surely have a negative impact on our bilateral relations in general,” Ma told a news conference at the end of the U.S.-China Defense Consultative Talks in Beijing.

Flournoy said specific incidents were not discussed, but added the sides had agreed in principle to hold a bilateral forum next month to discuss how to avoid future altercations.

“I think there is a strong desire on both sides to reduce the number of incidents as much as possible and when they do occur resolve them as carefully as possible,” she told reporters separately.

Run-ins between the two militaries are becoming more frequent as the Chinese navy, after years of expansion, undertakes more missions, encountering a U.S. Navy used to maneuvering unchallenged. As its power grows, China is also pressing claims to the entire South China Sea and coastal waters and asserting that surveillance by the U.S. military there is illegal.

The U.S. doesn’t take a position on sovereignty claims to the sea — subject to dispute among various Asian nations — but insists on the U.S. Navy’s right to transit the area and collect surveillance data..

In the latest confrontation at sea between China and the U.S., a Chinese submarine earlier this month damaged a sonar array being towed by a U.S. destroyer. China called that an accident. The U.S. has confirmed only that there was damage.

Pentagon officials have said there were four incidents earlier this year where Chinese-flagged fishing vessels maneuvered close to unarmed U.S. ships crewed by civilians and used by the Pentagon to do underwater surveillance and submarine hunting missions.

The defense discussions were last held in December 2007. They had been suspended by Beijing in anger over U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, the self-governing island China claims as its own territory.

Ma said that China had pressed the U.S. delegation on the issue of the arms sales, calling them a “central topic of the discussions.”

“We told the American side that the issue of Taiwan arms sales is a major reason for the constant stop-start course of China-U.S. military relations,” he said.

Flournoy said the Obama administration had not made any decisions on future arms sales to Taiwan.

The sides also discussed North Korea, which counts China as its closest ally, but no specifics of what was said were released. China had hosted now-stalled six-nation talks aimed at pressing Pyongyang to halt its nuclear programs in return for financial aid and diplomatic inducements.

“There is very much a shared objective in seeking to get North Korea to change course and return to a path of verifiable denuclearization,” Flournoy said.

Flournoy was due to travel on to South Korea for talks on Friday. A U.S. destroyer is currently tracking a North Korean ship suspected of carrying illicit weapons to Myanmar — the first test of the new U.N. sanctions.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Get Out More: Aussie Muslims to Sarkozy

Australian Islamic leaders are dismayed at French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s criticism of the burqa as a threat to “the equality and dignity of the female”, saying his comments do not reflect the reality about the status of women in Islam.

Ikebal Patel, president of Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, said the French President’s comments were also tainted by hypocrisy, as his own track-record on gender issues left a lot to be desired.

Mr Sarkozy expressed support for a ban on wearing the burqa in public during a “state of the nation” style speech to the first joint sitting of both houses of parliament in 136 years.

“The burqa is not welcome on the French Republic’s territory. It is not what the French Republic wants for the dignity of women … we cannot accept in our country that women be prisoners behind a screen, cut off from society and all identity,” Mr Sarkozy said.

Mr Patel said the burqa reflected freedom of choice, not oppression.

“Nicolas Sarkozy predicated his whole opinion on the view that Muslim women who wear the burqa are wearing it because they are being oppressed and forced to do so by their husbands — that’s a far cry from reality,” he said.

“Islam does not particularly say everyone has to wear the burqa or niqab, it talks about modest clothing.

“That does not in anyway belittle the status of women; it is purely out of their own choice, so for him to say those words denigrates the religion and the concept of freedom of choice.”

Jamila Hussain, a lecturer in Islamic Law at the University of Technology Sydney, said she believed the burqa and niqab were “inappropriate” in Western countries, but defended the decision of women who chose to wear them..

“I think Nicolas Sarkozy should get out a bit more and go and talk to ladies in minority communities, particularly those that wear the burqa, and ask them if they’ve been oppressed and forced to wear it,” she said.

“It’s a cultural assumption that’s very common in Western countries, but for women who wear it in Western countries it’s largely a matter of choice.”

Mr Patel said Mr Sarkozy should take a leaf out of Barack Obama’s book, after the US President recently urged Western countries to stop “dictating what clothes a Muslim women should wear” and disguising “hostility towards any religion behind the pretense of liberalism”.

“Sarkozy on the other hand is the last person to be talking about the denigration of women given some of the things he’s done in his own life,” Mr Patel said.

He pointed to the French President’s demotion of female minister Rachida Dati earlier this year, weeks after she became a single mother.

Mr Patel said he was confident no Australian leader would ever make similar comments, saying the country had greater respect for freedom of religion and the idea of a “fair go”.

He believed French leaders were too keen to “pander to political pressures” — such as strong far-right political groups — citing previous moves to ban headscarves in schools.

Ms Hussain said while calls to ban forms of Islamic dress from public places had previously been made by politicians such as the Reverend Fred Nile, she did not believe similar feelings were widely held by Australians.

Mr Sarkozy’s comments — which reportedly elicited widespread populist support — were criticised by his political opponents as an attention-grabbing strategy.

In Australia, only a small number of Muslim women wore the burqa, in which only the eyes are visible, with more preferring the hijab, which covers the hair and not the face, Ms Hussain said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil: Unfair to Single Out Emerging Countries in Doha

PARIS (Reuters) — Singling out emerging countries like Brazil, China and India to make more concessions in the World Trade Organisation’s Doha round talks is totally unfair, Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said on Wednesday.

Amorim was commenting at a news conference on U.S. calls for the big emerging countries to open up their markets further to help bring about a deal. But he said Brazil remained open to dialogue with the United States on the Doha talks even though it does not want the negotiations reopened from scratch.

Amorim also said that from what he had “heard so far”, there was not enough on the table for next month’s G8+5 summit of rich and emerging economies in Italy to make substantial progress on the Doha talks.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Cuba’s Spy Program Deeply Rooted in U.S.

By Carlos Montaner

Chris Simmons, a former lieutenant colonel in U.S. counterintelligence, insists that there are dozens of spies in the service of Cuba within the government of the United States and in the nation’s universities.

He made that assertion in connection with the recent arrest of Walter Kendall Myers, a former high-ranking State Department official, and his wife, Gwendolyn. Myers spied for Cuba for three decades, and his motivation (like his wife’s) was of an ideological nature. He sympathized with the Cuban dictatorship and felt an enormous contempt for his country’s economic system and political conduct.

Finest spy services

Simmons’ observations must be taken into account. He is the most knowledgeable expert there is about the activities of Cuban intelligence in the United States. He often states that Cuba has one of the world’s finest espionage and counterespionage services and deserves credibility.

There is not a single important U.S. institution that has not somehow been infiltrated, directly or indirectly, by the Cuban G-2. It was Simmons who dug up “mole” Ana Belén Montes, a high-ranking Pentagon official who later was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment for spying for Havana.

The interesting thing about the Myers case is not that he was a spy for Cuba recruited in the State Department but that the Cubans “planted” him in that agency.

Three decades ago, they asked him to return to State, from which he had separated, for the purpose of passing to Cuba secret information about any topic that might have strategic value and could be utilized by, sold to or swapped with countries such as the Soviet Union or Iran.

What the Cubans did at the State Department and the Pentagon they have no doubt replicated or attempted to replicate at the CIA, the FBI, the Army, the Department of Justice or any other administrative, political or media organization where it is convenient to have a good ear capable of collecting sensitive information or lips capable of subtly defending the interests of the Castro brothers’ government.

Moreover, I do not doubt — and surely Simmons doesn’t, either — that the Cuban services, directly or indirectly, have made efforts to “plant” or “cultivate” someone like Myers inside the legislative branch of the U.S. government.

Why not? To facilitate the election of an American congressman and to keep him on Capitol Hill is not a very complicated task. It’s just a question of finding the right candidate and providing — discreetly — the resources. Penetrating the top levels at the Pentagon was a lot harder, yet the Cubans managed it.

The United States is not the only objective of the Cuban G-2. In the 1990s, the Cuban services “turned around” the then-chief of Spanish intelligence for Latin America, a pleasant lieutenant colonel in the army. He was found out and separated discreetly from his agency.

Then the Cubans scored an even more valuable coup. They wooed a Spanish deputy to the European Community, a socialist, and turned him into a docile and efficient agent of influence, utilizing the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples, one of the most effective branches of Cuban intelligence.

Not even the Catholic Church has escaped the skill of the Cuban spies. In the 1960s, they dropped into it the Rev. Manolo Ortega, an educated and charismatic man in whom “the apparatus” saw a future bishop “and, who knows, maybe a pope,” as the agents fantasized when they spoke of the priest they had implanted in the bosom of the religious organization.

Ortega may not have been the only robed “plant” but he seemed to have a good future ahead, until a crisis of conscience led him to quit his task of infiltration and retire discreetly after a trip abroad. The sad story became known when his former lover revealed it, for who-knows-what mysterious reasons. She also was a member of the Cuban services.

Trained by KGB

After the inevitable disappearance of the communist dictatorship in Cuba, when the intelligence archives are opened, we shall see how the Ministry of the Interior — trained by the KGB and the Stasi but with a lot more imagination, with its thousands of agents and collaborators, its dozens of satellite organizations and its huge resources devoted to collecting information, releasing disinformation, disseminating propaganda — or even killing, if necessary — achieved such amazing successes.

Of course, the Interior Ministry will be unable to prevent the end of the system, because it is much too unproductive and contra natura, but the future generations at least will understand how and why that absurd and cruel way to enslave a society was sustained in the face of the indifference of half the planet and the applause of the other half. Everything will come to light.

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



US, Venezuela to Restore Envoys

The United States and Venezuela are to reinstate ambassadors to each other’s capitals following tit-for-tat expulsions last year.

Officials in Caracas and Washington confirmed the decision, which follows an easing of tension since President Barack Obama came to office.

President Hugo Chavez ordered out the US ambassador last September.

The move followed allegations that Washington was plotting a coup d’etat in Bolivia.

Venezuela’s foreign minister Nicolas Maduro told reporters on Wednesday that diplomatic movement would “take place in the coming days, and as soon as the ambassadors have resumed their functions we will move forward to a more fluid communication”.

“Both ambassadors will return immediately to their work — our ambassador, Bernardo Alvarez, in Washington, and US ambassador Patrick Duddy in Caracas. That is the plan,” he said.

Fierce critic

President Chavez said in April, at a summit of the Americas where he met President Obama for the first time, that he hoped to send an ambassador back to Washington.

Mr Chavez was a fierce critic of the US under former President George W Bush, accusing Washington of plotting to assassinate him.

Analysts say Mr Chavez has toned down his criticism of US foreign policy since Mr Obama took office in January.

In a sign of warming ties, Mr Obama shook hands with Mr Chavez at the summit, and accepted a book from the Venezuelan leader.

The BBC’s James Coomarasamy in Washington says Mr Obama’s policy of re-engaging with countries which have had troubled relationships with the US appears to be moving up a gear.

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



Venezuela, US Restoring Ambassadors: Venezuelan FM

MARACAY, Venezuela (AFP) — Venezuela and the United States are restoring their ambassadors withdrawn amid a diplomatic spat in September, Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro said Wednesday.

The normalization of diplomatic ties “will take place in the coming days, and as soon as the ambassadors have resumed their functions we will move forward to a more fluid communication,” Maduro told reporters.

He was speaking on the sidelines of a summit here of the regional trade group ALBA led by leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

During a Summit of the Americas in Trinidad in April, Chavez expressed his wish to return his country’s ambassador to the United States.

In September, Chavez expelled Patrick Duddy, the top US envoy in Caracas in solidarity with Bolivia, after Bolivian President Evo Morales accused the US ambassador of plotting against his government.

Venezuela’s move then led Washington to expel the Venezuelan ambassador to the US, Bernardo Alvarez.

Chavez, who met US President Barack Obama for the first time at the Trinidad summit in April, said he then hoped to begin a “new era” in relations between the two countries, which have often feuded over Washington’s role in Latin America.

The news of the restoration of Venezuela-US ties came as a US official confirmed that Washington planned to reappoint an ambassador to Damascus after a four-year absence.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Conference in Tunis: 1,200 Dead at Sea in 2008

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS — Last year more than 1,200 Africans who were trying to illegally reach the south of Europe drowned in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea, said Tunisian sociologist Mehdi Mabrouk during the conference ‘Illegal migration: reality and solutions’ in Tunis. Referring to Tunisian migrants in particular, Mabrouk claimed that European financial support has not been effective in “slowing down illegal migration to Europe”. This is also due to the “strict procedures” adopted in granting visas to Europe and the “frustration” of young people in the country. The sociologist said that the border region between Tunisia and Libya is “the most active centre” for illegal migration, with 1,196 migrants being arrested by Libyan police last year. Mabrouk added that most migrants enter Libya via Tataouine, a city in the south of Tunisia bordering on the desert. Many people who leave the country come from the Gafsa mining region in the south-west of Tunisia. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Immigrants Push Population to 60 Mn

Percentage of foreigners up from 5. 8% to 6. 5%

(ANSA) — Rome, June 23 — Italy’s population edged over 60 million last year thanks to a hefty increase in immigrant numbers, statistics bureau Istat said Tuesday.

Istat put the 2008 resident population at 60,045,068, a 0.7% rise.

The proportion of resident immigrants rose from 5.8% to 6.5%, again a rise of 0.7%.

Immigrants accounted for 9% of the population in the north-east, 8.6% in the north-west and 8.3% in the centre — but only 2.4% in the south.

Immigrants were also responsible for the highest rise in births in 16 years, national statistics bureau Istat said. There were 12,726 more births in 2008 than the previous year. The percentage of births in 2008 to immigrant mothers climbed to 12.7% or over 70,000 out of a total of 576,659 births. In 1995 there were just over 9,000 foreign children born in Italy, or 1.9% of the total. The percentage of births in 2008 to immigrant mothers was highest in northern Italy, where they represented 19% of the total, or almost one in five. Despite the increase in the number of births last year, deaths in Italy still outnumbered births by 9,467.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Study Finds an Extra Million Muslims Living in Germany

There are around a million more Muslims living in Germany than had previously been thought, according to a new survey.

The Nuremberg Ministry for Migration and Refugees found that there are between 3.8 million and 4.3 million Muslims living in Germany, making up about five percent of the entire German population. It was previously estimated that there were between 3 million and 3.5 million Muslims living here.

More than half of Muslims in Germany originate from Turkey.. As many as 2.7 million Turkish people are living here, making up more than three percent of the population. Another 600,000 Muslim people come from Southeastern Europe and the Middle East.

Just under half, or 45 percent, of Muslim migrants are foreign-born but now hold a German passport. Yet when it comes to integration, the survey still found deep defecits.

Concerning education, Muslims were found to be particularly conservative, making integration of children difficult. Ten percent of Muslim girls are kept home from school trips, another seven percent are withdrawn from swimming lessons and 15 percent are exempt from sexual education classes for religious reasons. However, more than three-quarters of those surveyed would welcome Islamic religion courses in the schools.

The researchers found that integration in schools improved significantly with second generation Muslims, or those born in Germany.

The majority of Muslims in Germany attend Mosque services “rarely to never”, while only a third go regularly. Only 30 percent of Muslims here wear the politically-disputed head scarf, and usually pass the tradition down to their children.

The study questioned 6,004 people from 49 Muslim states living in Germany about everything from origin to religion to integration — for themselves and their families, bringing the total number of people covered by the study to 17,000. Almost all Muslims in Germany — 98 percent — live in the former western states and eastern parts of Berlin.

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



UK: £1m Repatriation Plan Sees Just One Family Go

By Alison Little A £1 MILLION project to persuade failed asylum seekers to go home has led to only one family leaving the UK — saving taxpayers just £22,000 a year.

Critics say it shows again how the Government’s asylum system is “shambolic and failed” because of Labour “mismanaging it from start to finish”.

Tory immigration spokesman Damian Green said: “This piece of incompetence by the Government has managed to combine being unfair to the British taxpayer with being inhumane to children.

“The Home Office spent a lot of our money on this project and didn’t only waste that money but wasted the opportunity.

“Finding alternatives to detention so you’re not locking up children for weeks on end is a good idea. They just messed it up.” The scheme was a response to criticism of the Government for locking up some 2,000 children a year with their families in detention centres before their forcible removal from the UK.

It relied on a “softly softly” approach of sending families to an open unit, where they could come and go and their children would attend local schools while they got help from a charity to organise a voluntary return home.

Some 240 families who had exhausted the appeals process were expected to go through the centre, a former old people’s home in Ashford, Kent, but it housed just 13 and only one family left.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: One New Household Every 2 Minutes in Migrant Boom

LABOUR’S immigration policies were denounced as “madness” yesterday after an official report highlighted how Britain’s population is expected to soar..

One new household will be formed every two minutes until 2021, almost half of it driven by immigration, according to projections which have been steadily revised upwards in recent years.

Around 70 per cent of the population increase up to 2031 will be due to immigration, according to the Government. By 2021, newcomers will account for nearly four in 10 of the four million new households formed in England and Wales.

Labour MP Frank Field and Conservative Sir Nicholas Soames, chairmen of Parliament’s cross-party Group on Balanced Migration, said: “As we face severe cuts in public spending, it is the politics of madness to continue with immigration policies that will mean us having to provide thousands of new homes for newcomers.

“Not to mention the necessary roads, schools and hospitals on this unprecedented scale, when our own citizens, both black and white, cannot get homes.”

The figures were spelt out in the Office for National Statistics’ latest Regional Trends report.

It showed that the projected number of households in England and Wales will rise by nearly four million over 15 years, from 21.52 million in 2006 to 25.44 million in 2021.

Of these, more than a million will be in London and the South-east. By 2031, experts forecast there will be a further 2.5 million households in England — a total of 27.82 million.

The Group on Balanced Migration said the Government now envisaged there would be nearly 1.5 million more households in 2021 than it was forecasting just three years ago. In 2006, the Government estimated there would be 24 million households in 2021.

Last year it revised the projection to 24.97 million. Now it believes there will be 25.44 million.

Sir Andrew Green, chairman of thinktank Migrationwatch, said: “For years the Government have been in denial about the massive impact of immigration on housing.

“They cannot any longer deny we will have to build a new home every five minutes for the next 15 years just for new immigrants.

“Given the financial crisis that the Government faces, this is absolutely crazy. Where is all the money going to come from to build not only houses but also schools, hospitals and roads that will be needed?”

Tory immigration spokesman Damain Green said: “This is why we propose to establish an annual limit on the number of work permits issued, along the lines of the Australian and American systems.

“This is the best way to bring some control over our immigration numbers.” Immigration has spiralled upwards under Labour since 1997. It jumped massively after the Government decided that citizens of 10 eastern and central European countries, which joined the EU in 2004, should be allowed to work in Britain as well as travel here.

This week it emerged that the number of immigrants granted British citizenship had increased by more than half in a year.

A total of 54,615 applications were approved in the first three months of 2009 — 57 per cent more than in the same period last year. If the trend continues, the total this year is likely to reach 220,000, dwarfing the record of 164,540 in 2007.

This year’s surge has been blamed on people trying to get passports before the Government introduces a new tougher system of earned citizenship next year.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Victory for the People as New Gypsy Site is Blocked

PLACARD-waving protesters hailed a victory for “people power” yesterday after plans for a travellers’ site at a seaside resort were dropped.

Officials had wanted to place the permanent encampment in a built-up area of Bournemouth, Dorset.

Dismayed residents feared the thriving town — rated as the one of the best resorts in Britain — would be overrun with crime, unsightly rubbish and anti-social behaviour if the travellers had been allowed to move in.

But 100 protesters celebrated outside Bournemouth town hall yesterday after councillors buckled under pressure from the local community to scrap plans for the site.

Campaigner Pauline Courtney, 60, declared: “People power is still alive. When I arrived here this morning I did not expect this result.

“This encampent has been a great worry for the town’s residents but people power won through in the end and we received unanimous support from the council cabinet.

“It shows that we do actually live in a democracy and not a dictatorship. I couldn’t be happier.”

Max Clarke, who led the campaign against the site, received rapturous applause as he left the council chamber.

He had presented members of the cabinet with a petition signed by 2,000 people and described the “uproar” the plans had created among residents.

In a five-minute speech he branded the proposals as unacceptable.

He told councillors: “You have a duty to do what is right for Bournemouth. It is your responsibility to listen to the people that put you where you are today.”

The site, which had been described by councillors as the “least bad” option, would have seen pitches for 36 caravans within a few hundred yards of Bournemouth’s designer shops, ornamental gardens, pier and seven-mile sandy beach.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

General


Google’s $1,500 Coffee Makers

Google states that its multimillion-dollar solar array has generated sufficient electricity over the past two years to run 5,158 coffee makers for one hour each day. Google does not mention, however, that this solar array supplies insufficient electricity to run Google’s search engine computers for even one minute per day and that the coffee makers, if supplied with solar panels to operate them, would cost approximately $1,500 each.

[…]

Google brags that the average 24-hour output of its solar array is sufficient to operate 5,158 coffee makers for one hour — based on its daily reports. It does not, however, reveal the cost of this solar equipment. If we assume that the installations at Google and Nellis are similarly cost effective — they are both 2007 technology and our assumption allows for technical differences in the installations (Nellis has solar-tracking arrays), then Google’s installation cost an estimated $7.5 million. With current electricity and maintenance costs, this solar installation will not even pay for itself in more than 40 years, so it produces nothing of net value.

Without considering depreciation, maintenance such as cleaning the panels, and employees to oversee the equipment, this $7.5 million works out to $1,454 per coffee maker. So, if the coffee maker is priced at $46 and delivered with a share in the Google solar array sufficient to operate it for an average of one hour each day, the price is $1,500 per coffee maker.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Microsoft Offers Free Anti-Virus

A trial version of Microsoft’s free anti-virus software has been launched in the US, China, Brazil, and Israel.

Microsoft Security Essentials (MSE) promises to provide people with basic protection against viruses, trojans, rootkits and spyware.

The software giant has been criticised in the past for failing to include free security software with Windows.

Its first security package, Windows Live OneCare, failed to attract many customers and will be discontinued.

Microsoft is hoping that MSE, available as a free download from its site, will prove more popular. It has said it will automatically update it for users.

However, rival security vendors have questioned whether Microsoft can compete with more established anti-virus players.

Family doctor

“Early reviews of the beta are showing that it under-performs when compared to existing freeware products, and well below paid solutions,” said security firm Symantec in a statement.

“Referring to Microsoft’s basic anti-virus and anti-spyware product as an essential security solution is misleading. Consumers need firewall protection, web protection, anti-spam and identity safeguards,” it said.

J.R Smith, chief executive of security firm AVG, said Microsoft’s entry into the security market could “further confuse consumers about the inherent security of their computer”.

“It’s important to recognise that Microsoft’s role in the internet security realm is much like your relationship with your trusted family doctor. They can help diagnose the problems. In addition, they treat many general ailments. In the end, though, they are not a replacement for a specialist when you need one,” he said.

Initially 75,000 trial versions of MSE, codenamed Morro, will be available in the US, Brazil, China and Israel.

The software will be rolled out in other countries later this year.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]