Election Postmortem in the Netherlands and Flanders

Our Flemish correspondent VH has compiled a series of reports on the results of the recent European elections, as played out in the Netherlands and Flanders. First, a report on Islamization of the Christian Democrats, who will send the first hijab-wearing MEP to Brussels:

The Christian Democrat enablers

First headscarf in the EU Parliament thanks to Christian Democrats

The case of the Dutch Christian Democratic anti-Western, anti-Israel, and pro-Islam Rena Netjes has caused quite a stir. Even though her submission to Islam and hatred of the West did not make her win a seat, she did get a lot of attention recently, and her interview has subsequently been pulled at her request.

Mahinur Özdemir, with hidden scarf


Still it seems Christian Democrats are in process of surpassing the Socialists in dhimmitude and appeasement. The Turkish Mahinur Özdemir will be the first MP to appear in the EU parliament with a headscarf, with thanks to the Walloon Christian Democrat Party (CDH). The latter has tried to cover up her fundamentalism in the campaign brochure by zooming into her picture until the headscarf fell out of the frame. An entertaining video was made out of that: “Where did that scarf go?”.

Mahinur Özdemir, with scarf revealedWhile the Christian Democrats tried to hide her headscarf from their general electorate, the Turkish citizens in Brussels knew better. Her headscarf is even the main reason to vote for her. In the Turkish promotion it did not disappear at all. In 2006 the Turks in Brussels were told: “Özgürlüğünü başörtüsüyle ifade ediyor. Belçika’nın en büyük belediyesine meclis üyesi secilen Mahinur Özdemir’in başörtülü olmasi, parti başkanınca böyle savunuluyor,” which reads approximately: Freedom of expression is under pressure. Support the headscarfed Mahinur Özdemir as member of Belgium’s largest municipal council. The party is another way to defend this [the headscarf].

The Turkish article continued: “In the municipal elections in the largest municipality in the country, the Brussels Turkish quarter called Schaerbeek has voted Mahinur Özdemir of the Christian Democratic Party onto the city council, who has always defended the headscarf, and whose chairman lets this young girl be free, free to do things her way. It is a lifestyle. This conviction. It deserves respect. Because it is a part of society. We all create society ourselves.” And this week they are excited that their Turkish headscarfed Muslim representative has been elected in the EU parliament.

Vlaams Belang wrote about this: The brand new “Christian Democratic” parliamentarian has already announced she will wear the headscarf in the EU parliament, with which she immediately will create a unique precedent in the parliamentary history of this country. Up to now it has not been permitted to wear a headscarf in the Turkish parliament, but it is in the EU. Radicals in Turkey no may point to the EU to obtain the same “right” in Turkey.

And will this new MEP for the Christian Democrats promote Western or Christian Democratic issues? No: “Özdemir want to fight in the Brussels Parliament against discrimination and for better education and social housing. She also wants that Muslims to be able to wear a headscarf in all schools.”

It looks as if Turkey and Islam will be carried into the European Parliament on the backs of the Christian Democrats.

Next, a translation from Vrij van Zegel:

The Netherlands, Flanders, and Europe

By Laurent Asselbergh

In the Netherlands, the PVV, the party of Wilders, caused quite a stir and an emerging panic among the established powers. Among (many) others, in Rotterdam it has become the largest party. This is yet another cry of the indigenous population for attention to its problems and the alienation which they have to deal with in their own cities.

However, it is important to put the election result in perspective: it is below that of Pim Fortuyn a few years ago. This is not surprising when we realize that for 2012 the Dutch Center for Research and Statistics (Nederlandse Centrum voor Onderzoek en Statistiek, COS) predicts that more than 50% of the total population of Rotterdam will be of foreign origin, and even now 62% of the population under 14 years of age are immigrants. [note: It is even worse, in that 50% has actually already been achieved this year, 2009, according official statistics: see here — VH]

– – – – – – – –

The future is thus settled for the mainly leftist parties. Hence, we will quickly proceed as usual and real measures and changes will not happen.

In Flanders a similar situation exists.

A unique opportunity for a real change through one Flemish-minded party [Vlaams Belang] has been lost. Without the emergence of the LDD [List Dedecker] a few years ago, Vlaams Belang would probably have approached the 30% level and without competition, and would have become the largest party in Flanders.

Then probably the undemocratic cordon sanitaire would have crumbled and also the Flemish party N-VA would have crossed the bridge.

But now we witness that despite the historically high score, the fragmentation in Flemish-minded parties has never been so large. Even for the N-VA of the TV celebrity Bart de Wever it may prove to be a pyrrhic victory.

This opportunity for Flanders will most likely not happen again in the future, given the demographic evolution. For this reason, after a while the traditional parties will care little about the results and proceed on the path of compromises and broken promises.

In Europe the situation is not better, on the contrary.

With a deadly precision, the disappearance of our heritage, our civilization, our culture and our people is being pre-programmed and implemented by our “leaders”.

As the French politician Philippe de Villiers put it: the Treaty of Lisbon enables — according to the principle of non-discrimination — amongst others the fundamental right to gay marriage and mass abortion.

As cream on the pudding, immigration — 80% of it made up of Muslims — will be recommended and encouraged to replace the native population until the latter no longer exists.

When one now knows, for example, that in Belgium all parties — including the so-called Flemish “nationalists”, but excluding Vlaams Belang — fully support this treaty, one must also understand that the fate of Europe has already been sealed. The planned accession of Turkey to the EU will only accelerate the process.

Only an unexpected and dramatic event may change the course of history.

Below is a translation of an interview in Angeltjes with the Flemish Nationalist Jean-Marie Dedecker of the List Dedecker (LDD), before the elections:

“Traditional parties are rotting Belgium”

By Marc Peeperkorn

They want to trample him and then dance on his body, he is convinced of that. “They” are all the other political parties in Belgium, “he” is Jean-Marie Dedecker, political leader of List Dedecker (LDD). Why? “Because I break though the status quo of power.”

Take the opinion polls, says Dedecker. “They are all manipulated by those who order them. Only recently I suddenly tumbled down in those polls, to undermine my position just at the eve of the elections. Previously, I was hyped by the same polls. With the same goal: the bigger you make someone, the harder you can finish him off.”

Although the conspiracy is omnipresent, de Dedecker (57) does not appear to suffer from it. A few days before the regional and European elections, there is a serenity in the party office in Ostend. Because what would he worry about?

The former judo coach, who in 2006 was expelled form the Center-Liberal VLD and in 2007 gained six parliamentary seats with his LDD, out of the blue, will become according to the polls the second or third party in Flanders. [As it turned out, in Antwerp for instance, he gained enough for just one seat: 5.1% of the votes; in Flanders he became number 6, in the Flemish EU elections number 7. — VH]

A matter of “being there at the right moment in history,” grins Dedecker. “Europe is moving to the right, look at Sarkozy. I’m in that flow. I speak to people who earn enough to pay tax but also pay too much for scholarships and other benefits.”

A second reason for his success is the “mess-up” by the rest. “Belgium has been unmanageable for two years now. If none of the others are making anything of it, you can jump onto that.”

Third reason: “We do not belong to the political class, we tell it like it is. Take the migrants, I am for the proletariat, but against profitariat. Everyone is welcome to study and prosper here, but not to be a parasite. A migrant must add value. Therefore, we must stop that miserable follow-up migration flow [like family reunions]. Women and children should be allowed in, but not their parents-in-law they bring over to put in the retirement homes here at our costs.”

Why your own party? Because you always getting in a quarrel?

“The VLD was in a continuing conflict. I’m still center-liberal, the VLD changed into a glorified socialist party. A bit like what Wilders and Verdonk endured in their previous party [the VVD, center liberals]. Then I was approached by the New Flemish Alliance (N-VA). They came to pull me in, I had just presented a book, Rechts voor de raap (Straight [also “Right”] forward), the best-selling political book ever in Belgium. But the N-VA was in a cartel with the Christian Democrats, so I had to get out again.

“But it was not just that. The entire political system joined together to deal with me. I am humiliated. I am from the sports world: you can beat someone, but not dance on his body. The press, the traditional parties, everyone was pleased that I was out. Well, I am also a troublemaker. I have kicked around, so I could expect such a reaction.”

Everyone is against you, don’t you put yourself on a pedestal?

“I am a dangerous duck in the pond. Vlaams Belang has been disabled by the cordon sanitaire, so that the Christian Democrats, Socialists and Liberals can divide the power amongst themselves. And then suddenly there is that newcomer who also as suddenly is successful. I break the pecking order. That is why the tried to take me out. You will see that also after these elections, the traditional parties will rub against each other as a crutch and wooden leg, in order to stay in power.”

You’re the white knight?

The pillarization [each group its own party, union, media, etc] has rotted this country and that pillarization is maintained by the traditional parties. They divide the jobs and rot to the country. You can not get a government job at any level if you are not a member of one of the three major parties. The appointments of judges are neatly spread across Catholics, liberals and socialists.

“It is shocking how the courts are infiltrated by politics. Chairman Londers, President of the Court of Cassation, is a comrade of current Prime Minister Van Rompuy, and who contributes to the derailing of former Prime Minister Leterme. Simply perverse.”

You think it was a conspiracy?

“Absolutely. I am not saying that Van Rompuy was a bad man, he just seized his chance. There are constantly accounts settled at the top.”

How bad is it in Belgium?

“Half of Belgian politics is rotten. Not a week passes without a wart cracking open. This country is at its very limit. The time of the ancien regime, including the economy, is over.”

You make it very easy for your opponents. You hired a private detective against Minister Karel De Gucht of Foreign Affairs…

“I had the real estate transactions of Prince Laurent researched by a fiscal expert: no problem. I had the back room appointments of former Minister Dewael researched by an undercover agent: no problem. But as soon as you employ a private detective, you’re suddenly a bastard. Everyone threw himself on me to kick me down. While I only wanted to verify that De Gucht was involved in a company that was into buying Belgian court buildings.”

Maybe you came too close.

“Yes, I came too close to the sun. Too close to the power and big business. Then it is extremely dangerous. I am not afraid, I never was. But I do wake up every day with the thought: who will attack me today?”

You say that the old ideologies are dead. What is yours?

“The dividing line is no longer between left and right. Each person is a classic liberal when he works during the week. Saturday in the pub he is social, and on Sunday, while strolling in the park, he is green.”

“The dividing line now runs between high- and low-skilled. I am socio-economically right-wing. Everyone should get equal opportunities. Who goes for it, deserves to be rewarded, those who don’t, should be taken on, those who cannot find work you should help.”

Are you the answer to Vlaams Belang?

“Partly. Initially, the other parties were satisfied with it. Until I took their voters. Then all the forces were gathered against me. If you survive that, you will gain. I will not become a mega party, but expect at least 10 percent of the votes.”

Soon you will be in the Flemish government. Are you able to compromise?

“There is a difference between a compromise and compromising yourself. With the first I have no problem. But I will never distance of my promises to gain power.”

Can you deal with losing?

“Very difficult. I am from the sports world, therefore I am an atypical politician. I can hardly watch the news, that is how angry it can make me. I almost never watch a political program. All that b******t, my tube is sometimes on the brink of exploding. The political debate has been milked dry. What remains is infotainment, the total leveling out for the sake of laughter, steered by political scientists and journalists. You ought to shoot them ten inches above their head, that is where their vanity lives. It is incestuous, the interrelation between politics and journalism.”

Why do the Belgian voters put up with such a rotten, incestuous arrangement?

“That is what I also ask myself. The Netherlands had Fortuyn, but he also first had to die. I saw Dutch journalism change when he received the bullet. I have been vilified in all media in recent months, taunted and degraded. But the Belgians will get revenge at the ballot box.”

And if nothing changes?

“That cannot be, this country is steering itself towards death. Flanders and Wallonia must have more autonomy. Foreign affairs, defense and the monarchy as subsidized puppet theatre will remain national then. We are at a tipping point, I feel the call to give shape to it. But if the voter does not want me, I’m out. I am not going to have my pants worn out in that parliament.”

VH adds this report:

Elsevier columnist Syp Wynia points out that Wilders also gained by virtue of the Christian vote. Many of those see Islamization as a threat and feel the CDA (Christian Democrat Party of PM Balkenende) is getting it wrong, is only making it worse, and is not up to the challenge.

Also the appeasement attitude does not quite comfort them. Therefore many CDA votes went to the PVV and made the PVV at the same time the second largest Christian party in the Netherlands.

Of the Dutch Reformed for instance, 30% voted the CDA, but 20% voted PVV, of the Catholics, 30% voted CDA and 20% PVV. This, and the landslide victory of Wilders’ PVV, which became the biggest party in many cities, is despite the fact that Wilders has up to now been severely marginalized, demonized, and ridiculed, Wynia states. “A substantial part of the Dutch electorate ignored this and did not let themselves be intimidated, which is remarkable.”

In Flanders the elections did not go too well, either for the independence of Flanders, or for the anti-jihad. Vlaams Belang has not only been confronted with political fencing, but also fiercely demonized and ridiculed by nearly all mass media and especially the Flemish TV service VRT. In addition to that, all focus was on pushing and pulling other Flemish Nationalists like List Dedecker (LDD) and Bart de Wever of the NV-A. Basically in an attempt to show the electorate that traditional parties are the only “reliable” ones in these days of financial “crisis”.

Flanders voted both in the European and national elections. In Flanders the VB is now the number three party, after the Christian Democrats and Center-liberals, and in the EU number two, after the Christian Democrats. Frank Vanhecke and Philip Claeys will be MEPs.

Filip Dewinter and Frank Vanhecke are the numbers 6 and 7 in the Flemish top ten for the Europarliament, and Filip Dewinter is 3 in the top ten of Flanders. In the Antwerp region, Vlaams Belang is with 23% still the largest party.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/12/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/12/2009There are four or five more news stories tonight about Muammar Gaddafi’s visit to Rome. Mr. Gaddafi called for the abolition of European political parties, dismissed the idea of democracy, and equated the United States with Al Qaeda. He received the kind of press attention usually reserved for Michael Jackson or Paris Hilton.

In other news, a fifteen-year-old Palestinian boy was hanged for collaborating with Israel. One of the alleged perpetrators was the boy’s father.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, Henrik, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, Islam in Action, islam o’phobe, JD, KGS, LN, Tuan Jim, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Leaders of Emerging Nations for an Alternative to the Dollar
Majority Now Cosponsors Ron Paul’s Fed Audit
 
USA
A Better-Dressed Soviet-Style Communism
Administration Speeds Overseas Detainee Relocation
Cloward-Piven Crisis Care
Darwin-Loving Museum Shooter Hates Bible, Christians
Drilling Might be Culprit Behind Texas Earthquakes
Egypt: Obama Speech Linked to F-16 Deal
Key Health Care Senators Have Industry Ties
Lying With Impunity
Miss Affirmative Action, 2009
More Scandals Haunt Sotomayor
Obama’s Deep Belief in Himself is No Match for Global Reality
Obama Nation’s Low View of Christianity
Obama: Where Have All His Records Gone?
Rabbi: Obama Breeds Climate of Hate Against Jews
Republicans: Debt Will Bring Barack Obama Down
Rev. Wright: I Meant to Say “Zionists” Are Keeping Me From Talking to President Obama — Not Jews
Tampa Mayor Declines to Honor CAIR
The Enemy Within
 
Canada
Handing Out the Vote
 
Europe and the EU
Britain Will ‘Obviously’ Join Euro Says Mandelson
Call Wilders What He is: A Racist
European Left More Dangerous for Jews Than European Right
Finland: Football Match Sparks Riots — Detainees Released by Police
French Shops Sue Saudi Princess
Gaddafi Compares USA to Bin Laden, Says Party System is “Democracy’s Abortion”
Greece: Thrace Row
Italy: Centre Right Hails Local Polls
Italy: Knox on the Witness Stand on Friday
Italy: Customs Finds $134 Billion in a Suitcase
Lario Breaks Silence on Marriage
Metternich 2 — the Lisbon Treaty
Schengen: Weapons and Women Smuggler’s Paradise
Spain: Arm Lost in Accident, Limb Thrown in Trash Bin
Sweden: Women in Custody for Beating of Far-Right Politician
Switzerland: Obama Picks Wealthy Donor as Ambassador
The German Passport is Losing Its Appeal
Tourism: Bye Bye Sun and Beaches, Spain Seeks New Model
UK: Ben Kinsella: Police Bugged Killers to Gather Crucial Evidence
UK: Classroom Assistant at Muslim Girls’ School Forced Out of Job by Parents Who Believed She Was a Man
UK: David Cameron Calls for Referendum on EU Constitution
UK: Free Speech and the Bacon and Eggs of Democracy
 
Balkans
Frattini in Belgrade: Don’t Exclude Them From EU
Kosovo: NATO Defence Ministers: Wind-Down of KFOR Begins
 
Mediterranean Union
Mediterranean Union: Low on Israeli Priorities
 
North Africa
Egypt: Furniture Imports Rise From USD 62 to 138 Million
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Barry Rubin: Israel and America: Neither Surrender Nor Confrontation
Netanyahu Speech, Premier Under Fire
Palestinian Boy ‘Hanged for Collaboration’
S. Craxi in Ramallah and Jerusalem Today
UNRWA on the Brink of Bankruptcy, Officials Say
 
Middle East
Iraq: WMD Slam Dunk Never Reported
Press: Brain Behind Madrid Attacks in Syrian Jail
Terrorism: Al-Qaeda Asks Turkish Muslims for Funds
The Age of Middle East Atonement
Turkey: Girl Tortured and Killed After Refusing Marriage
Turkey: Record in Dismissals of Unionized Workers, Report
Turkey: Pro-Kurdish Paper Silenced by Court
U.S. Sends 3 Guantanamo Detainees to Saudi Arabia
UAE-Turkey: Several Deals Are Back on the Front Burner
 
Russia
Putin ‘Turns Into Art Instructor’
 
South Asia
Bangladesh: Catholic Chef Has a “Really Rough Time in Dhaka’s Central Jail”
Indonesian Chopper Crashes
Italians Hurt in Afghan Firefight
Pakistan’s ‘Loose Nukes’
Singapore: Christians Jailed for ‘Sedition’
US Commander Vows to Cut Afghan Casualties
 
Far East
China Sub Collides With Array Towed by U.S. Ship: Report
Climate Pact in Jeopardy as China Refuses to Cut Carbon Emissions
N. Korea in Extortionate Demands for Kaesong Complex
NK Detention of S. Korean Worker Enters 74th Day
Problems for Marines in Korea
US Climate Envoy: China Seeks Top US Technology
 
Australia — Pacific
Australia: A Nation of Paupers
Chinese Muslims Trigger Public Backlash in Palau
Military ‘Meatheads’: Latham
The Suburb That Simmers
 
Immigration
America Losing Its Language and Culture Without a Whimper
Denmark: Confusion Grows Over Iraqi Repatriation
Finland: “Time Running Out on Immigrant Integration”
Finland: Qualified Immigrants to be Given Work to Match Their Educational Achievement
Greece: Focus on Immigration
Italy: Police Target Human Traffickers in 16 Cities
Netherlands: Putting ‘Import Brides’ to the Dutchness Test
Norway: Increased Number of Asylum Seekers
Southern Border: Massive Tunnel Found
Sweden’s EU Immigration Plans Facing Headwinds
 
Culture Wars
Homosexual Activists Frustrated With Obama’s Agenda
 
General
NASA Study Shows Sun Responsible for Planet Warming
Threat to Global-Warming Skeptics Retracted

Financial Crisis


Leaders of Emerging Nations for an Alternative to the Dollar

The leaders of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) will meet next week in Russia to discuss the global crisis, currencies and climate change. They aim to find a common ground to bring greater weight to September summit of the world’s 20 largest economies in the USA.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) —Next week in Yekaterinburg (Russia) leaders from Brazil, Russia, India and China (Bric) will meet to discuss the global crisis and development but also to discuss the possibility of finding an alternative to the US dollar in global currency. President Hu Jintao will represent China at the summit which the government in Beijing has already cautiously defined as being “very important”.

He Yafei, deputy foreign minister has stated that “The BRIC countries share very similar viewpoints on a lot of international issues” underlining that strengthening communication and co-operation “is beneficial towards the development of emerging markets and raising the overall voice and influence of the developing countries”. Food security, energy security, climate change and development aid will be discussed but top of the agenda will be seeking a way out of the financial crisis.

The issue of reserve currency will also be addressed. He has clarified that “the reserve currency should be relatively stable”, a characteristic of the Yuan given that Beijing blocks all uncontrolled fluctuations. Since December, China has signed currency swap agreements with at least five countries with a combined value of 650 billion Yuan” (circa 65 million Euros).

Experts maintain that the four countries aim to co-ordinate their positions for the third G20 meeting in the US in September. But they all want to promote their own currencies, and therefore it is not possible for them to agree to use the Yuan as a common reserve currency.

The 4 States represent 42% of the global population and according tot eh International Monetary Fund, in the last 2 years realised 10.7% of the global Gross Domestic Product and above all, count for a third of global economic development between 2006 and 2008.

After the summit the Russia, China and the 4 central Asian nations of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, will meet, once again in Russia.

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



Majority Now Cosponsors Ron Paul’s Fed Audit

Demand for transparency reaches ‘crucial benchmark’

Less than 24 hours after WND reported a proposal from U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, to audit the Federal Reserve was approaching majority support in the U.S. House, he is confirming the plan has reached that “crucial benchmark.”

“The tremendous grass-roots and bipartisan support in Congress for H.R. 1207 is an indicator of how mainstream America is fed up with Fed secrecy,” Paul said shortly after U.S. Rep Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, became the 218th cosponsor, giving the plan, technically, majority support in the 435-member House.

“I look forward to this issue receiving greater public exposure,” Paul said.

A spokeswoman in Paul’s office said by the end of the business day in Washington, D.C., the plan had attracted 221 cosponsors. She said hearings on the transparency of the Federal Reserve are expected over the next month as part of the Financial Services Committee’s series of hearings on regulatory reform.

WND reported only a day earlier on the list of consponsors reaching 213 for H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009.

Paul long has opposed the power held by the Federal Reserve and its ability to manipulate the nation’s economy and over the years has launched multiple proposals to get rid of the private banking powerhouse, without significant support.

But in light of the economic collapse in the United States — the government takeover of the banking industry, the government’s demands for various auto industry bankruptcies, the government’s appointment of a “pay czar” — change apparently is coming.

“To understand how unwise it is to have the Federal Reserve, one must first understand the magnitude of the privileges they have,” Paul wrote in a recent Straight Talk commentary. “They have been given the power to create money, by the trillions, and to give it to their friends, under any terms they wish, with little or no meaningful oversight or accountability.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


A Better-Dressed Soviet-Style Communism

By now many people not sold out to the Obama faction (including people carried along by deceitful media hype who voted for him) have realized its baneful intention to abandon our national heritage, our Constitutional republic, our free enterprise economy, indeed our entire way of life as a free people. People who not long ago shunned and even ridiculed people like me for clearly speaking out about this intention are now decrying the surrender to socialism and accepting descriptive terms like “neo-communist” that suggest the Obama faction’s ultimate goal: the establishment of a better-dressed, more astutely implemented version of Soviet-style communism in the United States.

The Obama faction’s agenda bankrupts the nation, while dangerously increasing the leverage China and other potentially hostile competitors can bring to bear against U.S. interests. It poses a grave threat to property rights and economic freedom, a threat that includes the mobilization of government-controlled distribution of economic goods (like the allocation of GM franchises to car dealers) to punish political opposition and enforce submission to their factional dictatorship. It undermines our military strength. It directly threatens Second Amendment rights, up to and including schemes to undermine the legitimacy and efficacy of private ownership of firearms.

On the international front, Obama’s appeasement policies encourage contempt for American resolve, while offering time for implacable enemies like Iran and North Korea to develop and produce nuclear weapons that will vastly increase the damaging potential of the terrorist infrastructure they support. At the same time, promotion of phony Middle East peace overtures, based on a consciously biased and deceitful mangling of the historical record, aim to force Israel onto a path of sure destruction while continuing to shield Arab despots from their responsibility for violence, poverty and economic stagnation in the region.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Administration Speeds Overseas Detainee Relocation

WASHINGTON — Despite fierce opposition in Congress, the White House insisted Friday it has not ruled out releasing Guantanamo Bay detainees in the United States. But with narrowing options, the administration has begun shipping newly cleared inmates abroad to regain momentum in its effort to close the Cuba-based prison camp.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said the administration has not abandoned the possibility of releasing detainees in the U.S., but he added that national security considerations would govern any moves.

“We’re not going to make any decisions about transfer or release that threatens the security of the country,” Gibbs said at the end of a week in which nine detainees were transferred under high security to foreign nations, and one to the United States to face trial.

Gibbs said the release of those detainees showed “marked progress” and other decisions were being made on a case-by-case basis. President Barack Obama said last month that the cases of 50 detainees had been reviewed — and the administration said 48 of them were waiting for release to foreign nations.

But the prospects for any transfers of Guantanamo inmates to the mainland U.S. have dimmed in recent weeks as Congress acted to block funding to pay for the moves. And foreign countries have been hesitant to take even cleared detainees who were deemed not to pose security threats.

Authorities announced late Friday that three detainees had been sent home to Saudi Arabia.

The Justice Department said the trio will be subject to judicial review in Saudi Arabia before they participate in a “rehabilitation” program administered by the Saudi government.

With the latest transfer, the U.S. has removed 10 detainees from Guantanamo in the past week, sending four to Bermuda, one to Chad, one to Iraq, and one to face trial in New York City. That leaves 229 detainees still at the U.S. military detention center in Cuba.

The three men sent to Saudi Arabia are Khalid Saad Mohammed, Abdalaziz Kareem Salim Al Noofayaee, and Ahmed Zaid Salim Zuhair.

U.S. officials said they were close to a deal with Saudi Arabia and Yemen under which Saudi Arabia would take about 100 Yemeni detainees and place them in Saudi-run terrorist rehabilitation centers.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private diplomatic contacts, would not say how many Yemenis might be transferred or when the agreement might be finalized.

Negotiations on the fate of the Yemeni inmates have been under way for months, stalled over a Saudi demand that Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh publicly endorse the proposal, the officials said. Saleh had refused to do so fearing a backlash among his people, the officials said, and, as of late last month, he preferred for Yemen to set up its own centers.

Obama has pledged to close Guantanamo by early next year, and U.S. officials have been searching for places to resettle detainees, lobbying hard with foreign governments. The pace of those efforts picked up last month after Congress said it would prevent detainees, even those cleared of wrongdoing, from being brought to the U.S.

This week alone, the administration transferred 10 detainees out of Guantanamo. Two were sent to Chad and Iraq, one was brought to New York to stand trial in civilian court, four were sent to Bermuda, and three to Saudi Arabia. And a deal in principle has been reached with the Pacific island nation of Palau to accept some others.

Besides detainees who might be freed, tried or turned over to foreign governments, there are still others — highly dangerous — who the administration says can be neither freed nor tried. These prisoners — “people who in effect remain at war with the United States,” Obama has said — include detainees who may have received extensive al-Qaida training, commanded Taliban troops or sworn allegiance to Osama bin Laden.

With clear movement this week on settling 17 Chinese Muslims, known as Uighurs, from Guantanamo, the Yemeni detainees are the largest national bloc at the Cuba-based prison.

Their transfer would put a significant dent in the facility’s population but still not set the stage for closing.

Numerous countries have balked at accepting detainees unless some are also resettled in the United States.

Despite Gibbs’ comments, a key House panel approved legislation Friday that would deny immigration benefits to any Guantanamo detainees who might be released in the U.S. after being brought here for trial.

The bill, to be voted on soon by Congress, would be in effect until the end of the budget year at the end of September. Lawmakers could then extend the ban.

Adoption of the legislation would deal another blow to the administration, which was taken aback by the vehemence of the resistance to a tentative earlier plan to resettle some of the Uighurs in Virginia.

The Uighurs were determined not to be enemy combatants by the Pentagon and ordered released by a federal judge.. But few nations have been willing to accept them, out of fear of angering China’s government, which accuses them of being terrorists and demands they be returned to China.

Intense opposition from both Republicans and Democrats forced the Obama administration to shelve the resettlement plan after a particularly embarrassing setback for Obama in which the Democratic-led Congress stripped funding to close Guantanamo.

Lawmakers of both parties denounced even the possibility of trials in the U.S. of detainees. And Republicans made clear they would use the issue as a linchpin in their opposition to other administration projects.

Determined to regain the upper hand, U.S. officials have been crisscrossing the globe in recent weeks to cajole other governments to take freed detainees.

“The White House came to the realization that it’s just too hard, that there were too many obstacles to this and is looking at other options,” said one senior official.

Earlier this week, after a visit from Obama’s special envoy for closing Guantanamo, Daniel Fried, the president of Palau, a remote island east of the Philippines, said his country was willing to accept some or all of the Uighurs.

Then on Thursday, four Uighurs were transferred from Guantanamo to the British territory of Bermuda. The move angered British officials, who have responsibility for the island’s foreign, defense and security affairs, but were not informed until shortly before it happened.

Hours later, the administration’s interest in completing those transfers was evident in the presence of Fried and White House counsel Greg Craig aboard a flight that carried four newly released Uighurs and their lawyers to Bermuda. White House officials said the officials were on the flight to ensure there were no last-minute hitches.

Officials had long believed that the Uighurs would be the easiest — and perhaps the only — Guantanamo detainees who could be released in the United States.

Now that Bermuda and Palau have stepped forward, the administration has for the time being given up on bringing any Uighurs to American soil.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Cloward-Piven Crisis Care

[Comments from JD: Understanding this tactic is important because Obama is using this tactic to foist Socialism on America.]

The president’s ability to exploit crises is reminiscent of the controversial teachings of Columbia University political scientists, Frances Fox Cloward and Richard Andrew Piven. Inspired by the Obama mentor — radical community organizer Saul Alinsky — these two sixties social revolutionaries taught that upheaval is something that should “never be wasted” and that political change can be fostered through “…orchestrated crisis.” Two skills Barack Obama proficiently exercises every chance he gets.

Cloward-Piven instructed activists that if a crisis did not exist, promote or manufacture one by exaggerating a benign or unthreatening predicament. In doing so, contrived commotion would serve as a tool to convince the masses of their urgent need for rescue. In order to achieve the ultimate goal, students were encouraged to stress the social system to the breaking point, which would quash capitalism and institute socialism through a massive infusion of government intervention

Cloward-Piven repeatedly cited Alinsky’s, Rules for Radicals, in all their work. Marxism advocates were taught by Cloward-Piven to, “Make the enemy live up to their own book of rules.” Never failing to remind their apprentices that, “…when pressed…human agencies inevitably fall short…the system’s failure to “live up” to its rule book can then is used to discredit it altogether.” The definitive goal: “… replace the capitalist “rule book” with a socialist one.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Darwin-Loving Museum Shooter Hates Bible, Christians

Suspect in death of security guard defies easy stereotyping

James von Brunn, the man who allegedly shot and killed a guard at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., was a Darwin-lover who hated the Bible and Christians, and defies media efforts to classify him as a stereotypical “right-winger,” according to report.

The Moonbattery blog revealed von Brunn advocated the socialist policies espoused by Adolf Hitler and used Darwinian theory to support his anti-Semitism.

And in statements that later were stripped from an anti-religion website, he wrote, “The Big Lie technique, employed by Paul to create the CHRISTIAN RELIGION, also was used to create the HOLOCAUST RELIGION … CHRISTIANITY AND THE HOLOCAUST are HOAXES.”

The blog had an answer to how to classify von Brunn, who remains hospitalized after being shot while attacking and shooting a guard at the museum: “If it barks like a moonbat, it’s a moonbat.”

[…]

“None of this will surprise readers of Jonah Goldberg’s bestseller ‘Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Change,’ which clearly demonstrates that ‘fascism’ of the kind advocated by the British National Party (BNP) and the likes of James W. von Brunn is just as likely to reflect ‘leftwing’ views as ‘rightwing’ ones,” Shaidle wrote.

[…]

“In short, von Brunn’s connection with conservative thought and action today — be it talk radio or ‘tea parties’ — is tenuous. Those trying to puff up such ‘connections’ are acting in bad faith, out of blind partisanship — of the sort which is as corrosive to the health of the body politic as von Brunn’s own b[l]atherings,” Shaidle wrote.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Drilling Might be Culprit Behind Texas Earthquakes

CLEBURNE, Texas — The earth moved here on June 2. It was the first recorded earthquake in this Texas town’s 140-year history — but not the last. There have been four small earthquakes since, none with a magnitude greater than 2.8. The most recent ones came Tuesday night, just as the City Council was meeting in an emergency session to discuss what to do about the ground moving.

The council’s solution was to hire a geology consultant to try to answer the question on everyone’s mind: Is natural gas drilling — which began in earnest here in 2001 and has brought great prosperity to Cleburne and other towns across North Texas — causing the quakes?

“I think John Q. Public thinks there is a correlation with drilling,” Mayor Ted Reynolds said. “We haven’t had a quake in recorded history, and all the sudden you drill and there are earthquakes.”

At issue is a drilling practice called “fracking,” in which water is injected into the ground at high pressure to fracture the layers of shale and release natural gas trapped in the rock.

There is no consensus among scientists about whether the practice is contributing to the quakes. But such seismic activity was once rare in Texas and seems to be increasing lately, lending support to the theory that drilling is having a destabilizing effect.

On May 16, three small quakes shook Bedford, a suburb of Dallas and Fort Worth. Two small earthquakes hit nearby Grand Prairie and Irving on Oct. 31, and again on Nov. 1.

The towns sit upon the Barnett Shale, a geologic formation that is perhaps the nation’s richest natural gas field. The area is estimated to have 30 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas and provides about 7 percent of the country’s supply.

The drilling’s economic impact has been significant, because gas companies pay signing bonuses and royalties to property owners for the right to drill beneath their land. Signing bonuses climbed to around $25,000 an acre at the boom’s peak.

Cleburne agreed to lease the mineral rights in the earliest stages of the frenzy, receiving a modest $55 an acre for 3,500 acres of city land. There are about 200 drilling sites in Cleburne, and it is not unusual to see cattle chewing grass in the shadow of gas pipes.

Cleburne has collected between $20 million and $25 million in royalties since 2001, about $6 million in 2008 alone, Reynolds said. Such riches have allowed the building of parks and sports complexes in the city of 30,000, about 30 miles south of Fort Worth.

“That’s a lot of libraries and police cars,” the mayor said proudly. “It’s enabled us to escape the worst part of the recession, enables us to keep tax rates low and lowered unemployment.”

Landowners are also getting theirs. Locals call it “mailbox money,” occasional royalty checks that arrive from the gas companies. The mayor, a contractor who owns three quarters of an acre, said his most recent check, for three months’ worth of royalties, was nearly $850.

“It’s better than a poke in the eye,” he said.

Although many residents never felt the quakes, those who did have described them in different ways. When the first few hit, some ran outside to see if a house had exploded. The city manager said he thought his wife was closing the garage door. Picture frames and windows rattled.

None of the quakes caused any damage or injuries, though city officials said they are keeping a close eye on the earthen dam at Lake Pat Cleburne..

There seems to be little fear around town of any catastrophic damage, but the ground shaking is unnerving nonetheless. Townspeople want to find out at least what is causing it, even if it is unclear whether anything can be done about it.

The gas is extracted through a process known as horizontal drilling. A company will drill roughly 5,000 feet to 7,000 feet down and then go horizontally for as much as 4,000 feet or so. Then the fracking begins.

A spokeswoman for Chesapeake Energy, which owns most of the mineral rights leases in the Cleburne area, said the company is “eager to get to the facts” and is working with the government and local researchers to determine whether there is a link.

“Drilling has occurred for more than a hundred years,” Julie Wilson said in an e-mail. “Tens of thousands of wells have been drilled with no nearby earthquakes at all; hundreds of earthquakes have occurred with no drilling nearby.”

Cliff Frohlich, a scientist at the University of Texas and author of “Texas Earthquakes,” said he believes more than 20 Texas earthquakes in the past 100 years are related to drilling for petroleum and gas. But he added: “I would be surprised if a seriously damaging earthquake came out of this.”

John Breyer, a petroleum geologist and professor at Texas Christian University, said drilling is absolutely not causing the earthquakes.

“It’s like the Great Wall of China,” he said. “If you pull a brick out of the wall every half-mile, you are not going to affect the stability of the structure.”

The mayor said he is open to any answer the city’s geologist brings him.

“We are going to find out what’s causing them and if it is something that we can deal with, I promise we will deal with it,” Reynolds said. “But it’s like the dog that chases the car and catches the car: I don’t know what you do then.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Obama Speech Linked to F-16 Deal

Payoff was U.S. promise of Egyptian access to weapons

Egypt’s hosting of President Barack Obama’s “mutual respect” speech to the Muslim world came at the same time the Obama administration quietly was agreeing to Egypt’s longstanding request to purchase some 24 F-16 fighters, according to a report in Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

According to informed sources, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates relayed the commitment in his May 5 meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Key Health Care Senators Have Industry Ties

WASHINGTON — Influential senators working to overhaul the nation’s health care system have investments and family ties with some of the biggest names in the industry. The wife of Sen. Chris Dodd, the lawmaker in charge of writing the Senate’s bill, sits on the boards of four health care companies.

Members of both parties have industry connections, including Democrats Jay Rockefeller and Tom Harkin, in addition to Dodd, and Republicans Tom Coburn, Judd Gregg, John Kyl and Orrin Hatch, financial reports showed Friday.

Jackie Clegg Dodd, wife of the Connecticut Democrat, is on the boards of Javelin Pharmaceuticals Inc., Cardiome Pharma Corp., Brookdale Senior Living and Pear Tree Pharmaceuticals.

Dodd is filling in for ailing Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which will soon start work on a health care bill.

Other publicly available documents show Mrs. Dodd last year was one of the most highly compensated non-employee members of the Javelin Pharmaceuticals Inc. board, on which she has served since 2004. She earned $32,000 in fees and $109,587 in stock option awards last year, according to the company’s SEC filings.

Mrs. Dodd earned $79,063 in fees from Cardiome in its last fiscal year, while Brookdale Senior Living gave her $122,231 in stock awards in 2008, their SEC filings show. She earned no income from her post as a director for Pear Tree Pharmaceuticals but holds up to $15,000 in stock in Pear Tree, which describes itself as a development-stage pharmaceutical company focused on the needs of aging women.

The annual financial disclosure reports for members of Congress are less precise. They only require that assets and liabilities be listed in ranges of values.

Dodd was granted a 90-day extension to file his report covering last year, but released it to The Associated Press.

Bryan DeAngelis, Dodd’s spokesman, said, “Jackie Clegg Dodd’s career is her own; absolutely independent of Senator Dodd, as it was when they married 10 years ago. The senator has worked to reform our health care system for decades, and nothing about his wife’s career is relevant at all to his leadership of that effort.”

DeAngelis said that Mrs. Dodd has hired a personal ethics lawyer to avoid any conflicts of interest and is not a lobbyist.

Other reports showed:

* Rockefeller, D-W.Va., reported $15,001 to $50,000 in capital gains for his wife from the sale of a stake in Athenahealth Inc., a business services company that helps medical providers with billing and clinical operations.

Rockefeller is honorary chairman of the Alliance for Health Reform, a Washington nonprofit whose board includes representatives from the UnitedHealth Group health insurance company; AFL-CIO labor union; the AARP, which sells health insurance; St. John Health, a nonprofit health system that includes seven hospitals and 125 medical facilities in southeast Michigan; CIGNA Corp., an employer-sponsored benefits company; and the United Hospital Fund of New York.

* Coburn, R-Okla., is a practicing physician. He reported slight business income, $268, from the Muskogee Allergy Clinic last year; $3,000 to $45,000 in stock in Affymetrix Inc., a biotechnology company and pioneer in genetic analysis; $1,000 to $15,000 in stock in Pfizer Inc., a pharmaceutical company; and a $1,000 to $15,000 interest in Thomas A. Coburn, MD, Inc.

Under Senate ethics rules, Coburn can’t accept money from his patients..

* Gregg, R-N.H., disclosed $250,001 to $500,000 in drug maker Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. stock and $1,000 to $15,000 each in stock in pharmaceutical companies Merck & Co. and Pfizer, the Johnson & Johnson health care products company and Agilent Technologies, which is involved in the biomedical industry.

* Kyl, R-Ariz., the Senate minority whip, reported $15,001 to $50,000 in stock in Amgen Inc., which develops medical therapeutics. Kyl’s retirement account held stakes in several health care businesses, including the Wyeth, Bristol-Myers Squibb, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer and AstraZeneca pharmaceutical companies; medical provider Tenet Healthcare Corp.; CVS Caremark prescription and health services company; Genentech, a biotherapeutics manufacturer; and insurer MetLife Inc.

* Harkin, D-Iowa, has a joint ownership stake in health-related stocks. Harkin and his wife, Ruth Raduenz, own shares of drug makers Amgen and Genentech, Inc., each stake valued at $1,001 to $15,000; Their largest health care holding, Johnson & Johnson, was valued at $50,001 to $100,000.

* Hatch, R-Utah, a member of the Finance and Health committees, reported owning between $1,001 and $15,000 worth of stock in drug maker Pfizer Inc. He spoke to two pharmaceutical industry conferences last year. Sponsors of the conferences donated $3,500 to charities instead of speaking fees, as required by Senate rules.

Like millions of Americans, several senators took a financial hit in 2008. A sampling:

_Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., lost some $100,000 in equity in his home in Springfield and $35,000 in his Chicago condominium. Durbin, who released his tax returns, reported losing $32,259 in various investments last year, including more than $10,400 in Berkshire Hathaway and $5,535 in Fidelity stock.

_Kennedy in 2007 had four trusts each valued between $5,000,001-$25 million. In 2008, only one trust was still in that category while the rest had slipped in value to $1,000,001-$5 million.

_Hatch’s investments suffered from the banking crisis. In 2007, he reported assets of between $2,002 and $30,000 in Countrywide Credit Industries Inc. stock. His 2008 financial disclosure lists the value at less than $1,000.

One of Dodd’s investments showed a vast improvement.

A new appraisal more than doubled the value of his vacation cottage in Ireland, which has been subject of a Senate ethics complaint filed by a conservative group questioning if the undervalued property was really a gift.

The property is valued at 470,000 euros, or about $660,000, on Dodd’s disclosure report.

The previous year’s report valued the seaside home, located in County Galway, at between $100,001 and $250,000.

DeAngelis, the spokesman, said Dodd and his wife decided to have the property appraised because they felt it was time to update the information.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Lying With Impunity

The presidency of George W. Bush — his popularity, approval numbers and so forth — was razed to the ground on the basis of one invalid claim: “Bush lied” (regarding his accusation that Saddam Hussein’s regime possessed weapons of mass destruction, this being the justification for invading Iraq).

Let’s assume, just for the sake of an amusing mental exercise, that President Bush’s charge was indeed a lie. If this lie was Hurricane Katrina (actually an amusing if ironic analogy in itself), it pales beside the Great Flood of omissions, rationalizations and outright fabrications to which Americans are subjected on a regular basis by President Obama.

But it just doesn’t matter.

One could enumerate the dozens of statements Obama woodenly delivered during the 2008 campaign that were assertions only a fool would believe, but could not be directly proven: His ignorance of Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s racism, unawareness of William Ayers’ terrorist past, and non-involvement with the nefarious Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN). Yet, these are trifles compared to the counterfeit oratory he’s pulled off with impunity since becoming president.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Miss Affirmative Action, 2009

Having lost the Congress in 2006 and the White House in 2008, Republicans are looking to redefine themselves for a nation that still leans conservative but is less Republican that it has been in decades.

The nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court presents just such an opportunity. For, even if the party loses the battle and Sotomayor sits on the court, it can win the war, as Ronald Reagan won the Panama Canal debate, even as Senate Republicans committed collective suicide by voting to give away the canal.

What are the grounds for rejecting Sonia Sotomayor?

No one has brought forth the slightest evidence she has the intellectual candlepower to sit on the Roberts court. By her own admission, Sotomayor is an “affirmative action baby.”

Though the Obama media have been ballyhooing her brilliance — No. 1 in high school, No. 1 at Princeton, editor of Yale Law Review — her academic career appears to have been a fraud from beginning to end, a testament to Ivy League corruption.

Two weeks ago, the New York Times reported that, to get up to speed on her English skills at Princeton, Sotomayor was advised to read children’s classics and study basic grammar books during her summers. How do you graduate first in your class at Princeton if your summer reading consists of “Chicken Little” and “The Troll Under the Bridge”?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



More Scandals Haunt Sotomayor

Bill O’Reilly has declared, “I don’t think she’s a racist,” in regard to Obama Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, even though it turns out that her comment about a Latina woman making better decisions than a white man was repeated on several occasions. O’Reilly turns a blind eye to her raw display of racism because he doesn’t want to be accused of being a racist himself. This is how cowardly the sponsor of the “No Spin Zone” has become in the face of a politically correct “debate” that has already forced former House Speaker Newt Gingrich to retract his charge of racism against her.

False accusations against white people are tolerated by the media, even the conservative media. This is why Al Sharpton is a frequent guest on the O’Reilly show, despite his participation in the Tawana Brawley hoax, whereby he falsely accused a group of white men of raping a black woman.

But accurate accusations of racism against members of minority groups who make racist statements are not tolerated. That is why Gingrich backed away from his accurate comments, and why O’Reilly said he didn’t want to have anything to do with them.

[…]

In my previous column on this nomination, I noted that Sotomayor had delivered a speech entitled, “Being the Change We Need for Our Communities.” It sounded like something delivered by a political candidate or Obama himself. We now have a copy of that speech.

[…]

She added, “What is our challenge today: Our challenge as lawyers and court related professionals and staff, as citizens of the world is to keep the spirit of the common joy we shared on November 4 alive in our everyday existence. We have to continue to work together for our common goal of bringing the promise of America’s greatness and fairness to all members of our society.”

Notice how she referred to herself as a “citizen of the world,” not as a citizen of the United States. This takes on significance in her case because she wrote a foreword to a book called The International Judge. Does she believe in American sovereignty?

Calling for more “change,” she said, “It is the message of service that President Obama is trying to trumpet and it is a clarion call we are obligated to heed. We must devote ourselves to bettering the lives of all the needy of our society and we must do it together.”

She is openly advocating using the courts to push Obama’s political agenda.

Based on these comments, which violate the Code of Conduct for United States Judges, Sotomayor should not only be forced to withdraw her nomination for the Supreme Court, she should be impeached.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Deep Belief in Himself is No Match for Global Reality

Despite his boldness, Barack Obama seems as fated to fail as were Woodrow Wilson and Jimmy Carter. And for the same reason: a belief in his own righteousness and moral superiority, and a belief that his ideals and his persona count mightily in the modern world.

[…]

As for Barack, he behaves on the world stage like some Ivy League kid ashamed of the people he came from, letting one and all on campus know that he is nothing like his benighted family with its sordid history.

In Cairo, he confessed that America had a hand in dumping over the regime in Iran in 1953. He did not mention that the United States forced the retreat of Joseph Stalin’s army from Iran in 1946.

For the 100th time, he declared, “I have unequivocally prohibited the use of torture by the United States, and I have ordered the prison at Guantanamo Bay closed by early next year.”

Is Obama unaware that Egypt, Turkey and Saudi Arabia run prisons that make Guantanamo look like The Breakers at Palm Beach?

How many Guantanamo inmates plead to be sent home to Muslim countries?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Nation’s Low View of Christianity

President Obama’s comment to French television on June 1 that the United States is “one of the largest Muslim countries in the world,” plus his Islam-praising speech in Cairo, Egypt on June 4, raise anew questions about his own faith and how he views America.

Questions can also be asked about his math. The CIA Factbook estimates America’s Muslim population at 0.6 percent, or about 1.8 million, which puts it in 58th place among nations’ total Muslim populations. Even if you take the Islamic Information Center’s high estimate of 8 million, that still puts the U.S. at 29th out of 60 nations.

In Cairo, Obama quoted from the Koran, used his middle name of Hussein, and indicated that the United States and Muslim nations have the same commitment to tolerance and freedom. To fathom the absurdity, think about the possibility of the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution springing from the pens of Islamic scholars Thomas al-Jefferson and James al-Madison.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama: Where Have All His Records Gone?

Footprints of president’s own history either vanish or remain covered up

While nearly 400,000 concerned citizens demand President Obama present his elusive “long-form” birth certificate, more than a dozen other documents remain unreleased or otherwise blocked from the public eye.

Numerous documents which have yet to be surrendered include the following.

Birth certificate Obama kindergarten records Punahou School records Occidental College records Columbia University records Columbia thesis “Soviet Nuclear Disarmament” Harvard Law School records Harvard Law Review articles University of Chicago scholarly articles Passport Medical records Other documents

* Complete files and schedules of his years as an Illinois state senator

from 1997 to 2004

* Obama’s client list from during his time in private practice with the

Chicago law firm of Davis, Miner, Barnhill and Gallard

* Illinois State Bar Association records

* Baptism records

* Obama/Dunham marriage license

* Obama/Dunham divorce documents

* Soetoro/Dunham marriage license

* Adoption records

[Comments from JD: See article for details on each of these items.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Rabbi: Obama Breeds Climate of Hate Against Jews

Our new president did not tell a virulent anti-Semite to travel to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington to kill Jews, but he is most certainly creating a climate of hate against us.

It is no coincidence that we are witnessing this level of hatred toward Jews as President Barack Obama positions America against the Jewish state.

Just days ago Obama traveled to Cairo, Egypt. It was his second trip in a short time to visit Muslim countries. He sent a clear message by not visiting Israel.

But this was code.

In Cairo, Obama said things that pose a grave danger to Jews in Israel, in America and everywhere.

And if his views are not vigorously opposed they will help create a danger as great as that posed by the Nazis to the Jewish people.

Just last week, Obama told his worldwide audience — more than 100 million people — that the killing of six million Jews during the Holocaust was the equivalent of Israel’s actions in dealing with the Palestinians.

This remark is incredible on its face, an insult to the six million Jews who died as a result of Hitler’s genocide — and it is a form of revisionism that will bode evil for Jews for years to come.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Republicans: Debt Will Bring Barack Obama Down

Republicans on Capitol Hill think they’ve finally found Barack Obama’s Achilles’ heel: rising public concern about government spending and the federal deficit.

While Obama’s overall job-approval ratings are up over the past month, a Gallup Poll out this week has a 51 percent majority of Americans disapproving of the president’s efforts to control federal spending and a slim 48 percent to 46 percent disapproving of his handling of the federal deficit.

Those are the only areas where Obama has negative approval ratings — Americans approve, by double-digit margins, the way Obama is handling his overall job, foreign affairs, terrorism, the Middle East and North Korea. But the GOP will take what it can get.

“The president is still popular, but his policies are catching up with him,” said Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander, who, as the No. 3 Republican in the Senate, is in charge of messaging for his conference. “When that happens, it helps us make our points.”

           — Hat tip: LN [Return to headlines]



Rev. Wright: I Meant to Say “Zionists” Are Keeping Me From Talking to President Obama — Not Jews

In an interview on a liberal satellite radio show, Rev. Jeremiah Wright attempted to clarify his comments to the Newport News, Virginia. Daily-Press about “them Jews” preventing him from speaking to President Obama.

“Let me say like Hillary, I misspoke,” Wright said. “Let me just say: Zionists.”

Wright said “I’m not talking about all Jews, all people of the Jewish faith, I’m talking about Zionists.”

Wright then criticized Israel, saying, “I quote Jews when I say this,” and referencing books by Jewish authors such as “Judaism Does Not Equal Israel: The Rebirth of the Jewish Prophetic” by Marc Ellis and “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine” by Ilan Pappe.

“I’m talking about facts, historical facts,” Wright said. “I’m not talking about emotionally charged words or the fact that like Jimmy Carter’s book, that because he used the word that Jews use, ‘apartheid,’ he gets labeled anti-Semitic.”

“They can jump on that one phrase if they want to,” Wright said, “but they can’t, they can’t undo history. They can’t undo the facts of Jewish historians and Jewish theologians who write about what’s going on, who write about the enormous influence that AIPAC has on our government and on United States policy and the United Nations.”

(Wright did not identify who “they” was.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Tampa Mayor Declines to Honor CAIR

Group says official ‘has succumbed to the pressure of an anti-Muslim extremist’

TAMPA — Mayor Pam Iorio has decided to halt proclamations of an annual day in Tampa for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an organization that says it seeks to defend the civil rights of Muslims in the U.S., but has been accused of terrorist links.

Iorio has proclaimed a “CAIR Day” each fall since 2005. The organization has an active chapter in Tampa.

Among other activities, the group has defended Youssef Megahed, a University of South Florida student arrested in 2007 on explosives charges along with another student who was accused of aiding terrorists. Megahed was acquitted but is now subject to deportation proceedings.

Iorio, who didn’t return calls for comment, said through a spokeswoman the mayor’s decision was based on her own research on the group. She made the decision after at least two interest groups contacted the city about the matter.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Enemy Within

The horrifying news of an American soldier gunned down at a Little Rock Army recruitment center has left many asking why. The answer may be shocking to some: The prison made me do it.

In an outline of his defense strategy for accused murderer Carlos Bledsoe, attorney Jim Hensley told reporters that his client was “radicalized” by Islamic fundamentalists in a Yemeni prison, where he spent four months last year after overstaying his visa. It is a plausible scenario. But here’s the sad truth: Thousands of inmates are radicalized by Islam every year, and it is happening in prisons right here in the United States.

Most recently, the four men arrested in an alleged plot to blow up New York synagogues and military targets were radicalized Muslims who had spent time in the U.S. prison system. In fact, at least two of them converted to Islam during stretches in prison.

While about 1 in 100 Americans claims to be Muslim, six times as many American prisoners identify as Muslim. As many as 40,000 American prison inmates convert to Islam every year.

The problem isn’t so much that prisoners are converting to Islam, it’s the particular form of Islam they are embracing: one that preaches hatred of Jews, Christians and all infidels and violence against America.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Handing Out the Vote

Toronto Mayor David Miller continues to flog his favourite bad idea: making non-citizens eligible to vote in the city’s municipal elections.

At a panel meeting held at City Hall on Wednesday, the English-born Mr. Miller played the pathos card, waxing nostalgic about the single mother who raised him — even though, according to the rules then prevailing, Mom was actually eligible to vote in Canada from the second her toe hit the tarmac. No matter. The point is, if you oppose Miller on this issue, you obviously hate immigrants. And if you hate immigrants, then darn it, David Miller has a problem with you.

Perhaps Mr. Miller has a point, though: Considering that our next prime minister may be a man for whom Canadian citizenship was no more than a totemistic afterthought for much of the last 30 years, can we reasonably object to letting non-citizens vote in Toronto elections if they do, in fact, live in Toronto?

We kid, partly, but the debate over non-citizen municipal voting may, in fact, break down along similar fault lines as does the debate over Michael Ignatieff’s felicitously timed return to Canada. Mayor Miller emphasized that newcomers who patronize city services and pay user fees and taxes should have a say in its government; and this is, in fact, a strong utilitarian argument, one which frames the city purely as a business, the mayor and council as managers and Torontonians as clients.

If, on the other hand, one takes a slightly more romanticized view — if one regards the city as more than just a business or a package of services, but a multi-generational co-operative project, and sees Torontonians as a particular, unique strain of Canadian humanity sharing a common destiny — then the argument that “non-citizens are customers too” won’t wash. Customers they may be, but it is entirely proper for us to make them wait a little while before receiving part-ownership of the enterprise and access to the attendant management privileges.

Mayor Miller made a curious argument at one point on Wednesday: “It’s my view,” he said, “that those people who have chosen to make Toronto their home and live here permanently should have the right to vote in municipal elections in exactly the same way as Canadian citizens.”

The obvious rejoinder would seem to be: What on Earth can be wrong with expecting immigrants to become citizens, precisely as a means of proving that they intend to make Canada their home and live here permanently? Isn’t that exactly what an immigrant is supposed to be signalling by applying for citizenship — “Here I am, I’m putting down roots”?

It seems to us that Mr. Miller’s real argument runs the other way: It is an appeal specifically for the benefit of Toronto residents who do not see the city as home, and may not want to live there permanently. In any city, at any moment, there are folks who are just passing through and may soon be on their way. But Mr. Miller refuses to observe any meaningful difference at all between “a person who happens to be living in Toronto” and “a Torontonian.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Britain Will ‘Obviously’ Join Euro Says Mandelson

The newly promoted First Secretary of State, speaking in Berlin, hailed the euro as a saviour that had brought stability to the European Union during financial turmoil.

“It is perfectly clear that the euro has been a great success in anchoring its eurozone members during this financial crisis,” he said.

“Imagine where all of us would have been if it hadn’t. I hope people will recognise that this represents a major vindication for the single currency.”

Asked if the British Government would consider joining the euro, Lord Mandelson replied: “Does it remain an important objective for Britain to find itself in the same currency as that single market in which it interacts? Obviously yes.”

He added: “That has to be a decision taken on the right terms in the right circumstances and conditions and therefore at a future time than we have now.”

The Conservatives accused Lord Mandelson of trying to bounce Britain into the single currency. “It is deeply disturbing that the man who now makes most of the government’s policies has declared that Britain should join the euro,” said William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary.

Mr Hague rejected the argument that the euro could have sheltered the British economy and pointed to the total loss of control over monetary policy that is required for membership. “The fact is that if we had scrapped the pound interest rates would have been lower in the boom and would now be higher. Under the euro, Gordon Brown’s boom and bust would have been even deeper,” he said.

“Lord Mandelson’s failure to learn this obvious lesson shows how bereft Labour are of fresh thinking.”

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



Call Wilders What He is: A Racist

Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom has all the hallmarks of an extreme-right party. Why then do the Dutch prefer to call it populist? asks René Danen.

By René Danen

The foreign media routinely describe Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom as an “extreme-right” party. Yet the Dutch media, including NRC, seem to be deadly afraid of calling the PVV by its name, preferring to describe it as “populist” or “anti-Islam”.

After Wilders released his [anti-Islam] film Fitna, for instance, the Dutch government was mostly worried about its effect on Dutch trade interests. UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon went much further in denouncing Fitna. He said there was “there is no justification for the hate speech or incitement to violence” in the film and that taking legal action against the film was not a violation of the principle of freedom of speech.

Dutch politicians moved on as soon as the Fitna hype died down. Luckily, the Amsterdam appeals court later ordered Wilders to be prosecuted for “incitement to hatred and discrimination”. There was good reason to do so if you look at some of Wilders’ positions.

The PVV wants to close the borders to people who belong to one particular religion, and ban the houses of worship and schools for one population group. Wilders once told De Limburger newspaper that he wants to “tear down the mosques”. He told HP/De Tijd newsweekly that “it is okay for the Netherlands to have Jewish and Christian school but not Islamic schools”. In other words: pure discrimination…

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



European Left More Dangerous for Jews Than European Right

by Soeren Kern

Jewish groups in Europe and the United States have reacted with alarm to the gains made by far-right political parties in the recent elections for European Parliament. Right-wing and nationalist parties posted significant victories in Austria, Britain, Denmark, Hungary, Romania, and the Netherlands in four days of voting that ended on June 7.

The Paris-based [1] European Jewish Congress (EJC), an umbrella organization for Jewish communities in Europe, said: “As we assess the results of this week’s elections, one disturbing trend has already crystallized; the gains made by extreme-right groups is a Europe-wide phenomenon. The success of the far-right and nationalistic parties that won seats in the elections on the basis of racist, anti-Semitic, and xenophobic platforms points to a clear erosion of tolerance and a clarion call to European officials to immediately engage in intercultural dialogue. The success of such rabid groups as The Freedom Party in the Netherlands, the Freedom Party in Austria (FPO), the Danish People’s Party, the British National Party, and Jobbik in Hungary, among others, will sadly only serve to embolden those who espouse the dangerous concepts of extreme nationalism, racism, anti-Semitism and xenophobia.”

The New York-based [2] Anti-Defamation League (ADL) said it was “deeply distressing that the blatantly anti-Semitic parties received so many votes,” and called on European leaders to “ensure that anti-Semitism, racism and bigotry never again gain a foothold in Europe. … It is imperative that European leaders do not remain silent, but speak out and reject the hateful and bigoted worldview of parties of the far-right and their supporters.”

The Geneva-based [3] World Jewish Congress (WJC) said: “Far-right parties and extremists have made gains across Europe amid protest votes and low turnout for the European Parliament (EP) elections. The elections were held in all 27 EU member states from Thursday to Sunday last week. Support for centre-Left parties and governments collapsed across the EU as fringe parties, picked up protest votes.”

Although these and other Jewish groups are not alone in their concerns about rising anti-Semitism in Europe, their fear of the far right often obscures the indisputable fact that some of the greatest threats to Jews (and Israel) in contemporary Europe stem from the left side of the political aisle. Indeed, it is [4] no big secret that all across the European continent, left-wing intellectuals are playing a crucial role in making anti-Semitism seem respectable. Of course, they are (usually) careful to promote their hatred of Jews only indirectly. Instead, modern anti-Semitism is typically disguised as [5] anti-Zionism and an obsession with Palestinian victimhood.

European Judeophobia often takes on new life forms such as anti-Semitic boycott campaigns and anti-Israel demonstrations, the growing intensity of which the European left not only [6] overlooks or obscures but often actively supports. It is transmitted by Europe’s left-leaning mass media, which not only believes that the systematic demonization of Israel promotes the postmodern and postnational ideological worldview of Europe’s governing class, but also appeases the wrath of Europe’s Muslim immigrants, lest they expose the myth of European socialist multicultural utopia…

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



Finland: Police Acknowledge That Wednesday’s Football Scuffles Got Beyond Them

With the current resources it was an impossible task to preserve order

Police in Helsinki have admitted that things got seriously out of kilter on Wednesday evening, prior to the Finland-Russia World Cup qualifying match, when processions of rival fans clashed on Mannerheimintie, with bottles, bricks, and flares being thrown and individual scuffles breaking out.

The scenes of violence were unprecedented in the Finnish experience, and Seppo Kujala of the Helsinki Police Department acknowledged that the officers did not entirely succeed in keeping the peace.

“Our objective was to prevent these clashes in advance and fend off disturbances between the rival factions. In the main we succeeded, but when highly-motivated groups looking for a rumble were involved, some fights and incidents broke out.”

According to some estimates, there were between 8,000 and 10,000 Russian fans in town for the match, together with around 25,000 Finns, and several hundred police were deployed.

Over the evening and during the match itself police arrested around thirty Russian fans and a dozen or so Finns. Nearly all were released on Thursday morning.

The reasons for the arrests included bottle-throwing or carrying illegal flares.

There were also a number of assaults reported. However, there have been few actual reports submitted to police of a crime being committed, which would suggest that the fighting was a mutual affair.

The scuffles climaxed in a clash between large groups of fans marching along Mannerheimintie.

At one point, the vanguard of the Finnish procession caught up with the rear of the Russian fans’ march.

Kujala noted that it may well have been that the biggest troublemakers on the Russian side had not set out with the others from the Senate Square, and he implied that some of the trouble had been planned in advance.

Kujala pointed out that efforts were made to keep the two groups separate in order to avoid any volatile encounters, but said that with the resources available it was an impossible task.

Matters were not helped by the fact that the police had no prior information on the route of the Russian procession.

The Finnish march had on the other hand been arranged beforehand between the organisers and the police.

Kujala stated that Wednesday’s unfortunate events were unlikely to influence the tradition of marching en masse to matches that the Finnish National Team Supporters’ Club (SMJK) has fostered.

Aside from the throwing of flares and fireworks in the enclosure for travelling Russian fans on the South Bank, there was little trouble in the stadium itself, and after the match the crowds dispersed without undue incident.

The decisive Russian victory — they crushed Finland 3-0 — possibly contributed to the ultimately peaceful end to the evening.

As for the fireworks, they could lead to sanctions for Palloliitto, the Finnish FA.

A FIFA match observer will be reporting on the game to the international body, whose disciplinary committee will consider the matter.

As hosts, the Finnish FA were responsible for security, but their Russian counterparts may also face punishment from FIFA, as they sold the tickets to the fans in the areas of the stadium where the trouble took place.

Security officials pointed out the difficulty of checking for items such as fireworks as fans came in through the turnstiles.

Many of the items are very small, and hard to spot in anything but the most rigorous and time-consuming of inspections.

Some have suggested there might have been as many as 12,000 in the stadium supporting the Russian team, and particularly after the visitors had scored twice and effectively settled the outcome, the singing and flag-waving occasionally gave the impression this was a home match for Russia.

A few local fans have grumbled that the willingness of Finnish and other entrepreneurs to sell the visitors large Russian flags only added to the sense of imbalance, but business is business.

For the most part, the rivalry in the Olympic Stadium was friendly enough, and as always in these cases, the genuine supporters denounced the troublemakers as “not real football fans”.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Finland: Football Match Sparks Riots — Detainees Released by Police

Wednesday’s World Cup qualifying football match between Finland and Russia sparked hooliganism and fights in downtown Helsinki. Police detained 35 football fans — 29 of whom were Russians.

They were all later released. Police had to take many of the hooligans into custody in the Olympic Stadium during the game itself, but some fights broke out downtown before Russia’s 3-0 victory over Finland.

The main clash occurred on the city’s main boulevard Mannerheimintie, when a parade of Finnish fans caught up to a parade of Russians marching their way to the match. According to police, both nationalities threw flares and bottles at each other.

“Both groups provoked each other, and someone always gets irate,” says Helsinki police spokesman Juha Hänninen.

Police were also targeted by the rioters. They estimate that around 4,000 people took part in the parades and that as many as 8,000 Russians may have attended the match — the largest contingent of foreign football fans ever to attend a match in Finland.

The afternoon before the match was mostly peaceful, with a busy carnival atmosphere. Russian fans hung flags out of their car windows and drove around town honking.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



French Shops Sue Saudi Princess

Luxury retailers in Paris are suing a Saudi princess who allegedly owes tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid bills, a lawyer for two shops said.

Maha al-Sudairi, the wife of the Saudi interior minister, is accused of owing the two shops 117,000 euros ($164,000).

The lawyer, Jacky Benazerah, said a court order had been obtained for bailiffs to go to the George V hotel in Paris and seize her belongings.

Ms Sudairi has diplomatic immunity because of her husband’s status.

Reports say several upmarket shops are owed money, including the clothes retailer Key Largo, a lingerie shop and jewellers.

Some bills are alleged to have remained unpaid for more than a year.

Mr Benazerah told the BBC that a bailiff, accompanied by a locksmith, would go to the George V Hotel — partly owned by Ms Sudairi’s nephew, Prince Al-Walid bin Talal — later on Friday.

He said the hotel could refuse them entry, in which case the French interior ministry and senior police officials would be consulted to authorise a police escort.

But Mr Benazerah said he was confident the princess would agree to an “amicable” settlement.

The Paris court where Mr Benazerah has filed his case has refused to comment, and Ms Sudairi has not responded to calls from the media.

This is not the first time the Saudi princess has made headlines.

In 1995, she was accused of beating a servant in Florida whom she suspected of stealing $200,000 from her. No charges were filed.

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



Gaddafi in Rome: Warns Against Illegal Immigration

(ANSAmed) — ROME — On the second day of his visit to Rome, Muammar Gaddafi made some unyielding statements to those who defend immigrants on principle, the majority of whom do not meet the requirements to be recognised as refugees, but are simply “hungry Africans who are politically unaffiliated. They do not know who the political parties are, and they are not involved in the elections.” The Libyan leader did not abandon for an instant the cliche’s that have always characterised him, as he faced every potentially delicate issue with determination. On illegal immigration, Gaddafi used a crude, yet effective image to make his point: “let the Italian government stop defending you from immigration. Let millions of people enter the country” and then “you will need a dictator to protect you”. He then added ironically: “let the human rights organisations find them jobs, treat them medically, and do everything else they need”. Irony again was not lacking when he said: “would you accept a million political refugees? If you would, it would be a great thing, I would help you, if you want a million Africans, who would then turn into two, twenty, fifty million, then I am with you”. He took a very hard stance on colonialism. In Gaddafi’s view, former colonising countries must “acknowledge that they have stolen Africa’s resources, colonised the continent, and in the past, treated its people like animals”. “Apologies must be made for this and it must never be repeated again,” added the colonel in his speech at La Sapienza University in Rome. “We will tell the G8 that resources have been stolen and now it is necessary to negotiate compensation,” he explained. In this way only “can immigration be stopped, dealing with today’s greatest challenge”. The colonel did not miss out on the chance to attack the United States, which he compared to Bin Laden, for its attack on Libya in 1986, “What is the difference between America’s attack in 1986 on our homes,” he asked, “and Bin Laden’s terrorism?”. “If Bin Laden does not have a state, he is an outlaw,” he added, “America is a state with international regulations”. Thanks to the United States, continued Gaddafi, today Iraq has become “an open arena” for al Qaeda’s terrorism. “Iraq was a fortress against terrorism,” he explained. “With Saddam Hussein, al Qaeda could not enter the country, now, thanks to the US, it is an open arena for terrorism and benefits al Qaeda.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Hits Out at U. S. in Italy

Terrorism a ‘reaction’ to colonialism, Libyan leader says

(ANSA) — Rome, June 11 — Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi on Thursday took a swipe at the United States on two separate occasions during his three-day state visit to Rome, forcing the Italian government to take its distance.

Speaking to students at La Sapienza, Gadaffi said the US wanted to “colonise the globe”, was not interested in people’s freedom and fought against anyone who “got in its way”.

“The US wanted to kill Gaddafi because he did not want to be subjugated and wanted his country to remain free,” he said, referring to the US’s 1986 airstrikes on Libya.

Addressing terrorism, Gadaffi said terrorist actions were “to be condemned”, but that “the reason (behind it) is linked to the colonialism of the Islamic world by countries who profess Christianity”.

Terrorism was a “reaction” to this, he said.

Earlier on Thursday Gaddafi attacked the US in an address to the Italian senate, likening the US retaliatory bombing of his quarters in 1986, in which an adopted infant daughter was killed, to al-Qaeda’s attacks and claiming the invasion of Iraq had turned the country into “an arena for al-Qaeda”. Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said following the session that the government “certainly didn’t agree on everything” with the Libyan leader.

Gaddafi is expected back in Italy next month to attend the Group of Eight nations summit in the quake-hit town of L’Aquila.

The Libyan leader will attend the part of the July 8-10 G8 summit devoted to Africa in his capacity as chairman of the 53-nation African Union and may meet United States President Barack Obama, diplomatic sources say.

AFRICAN MIGRANTS ‘KNOW NOTHING OF POLITICS’.

Recalling Italy’s colonial occupation of Libya — over which Italy and Libya signed a landmark $5 billion dollar friendship accord in August in a bid to address grievances — Gadaffi said Libyans had “drunk from a bitter cup, with every Libyan family affected by the consequences, with victims either deported or killed”.

“Our aim is to prevent the colonialism of the past from being repeated,” he told La Sapienza students.

Students questioned Gaddafi about immigrant rights in Libya, which has not signed the United Nations Refugee Convention, in the wake of a new Italian policy to intercept and return to the North African country migrants attempting to cross the Mediterranean, leaving Libya to deal with asylum requests.

“I agree with the need to respect rights, but we need to know who the political refugees are and how they can be recognised because a lot of information is wrong,” Gaddafi said.

“Are the millions who march from Africa towards the European Union political refugees? The Africans are starving, not political, they don’t practice politics, they don’t know about parties or elections,” he said.

Gaddafi said immigrants headed for Europe to “chase after resources that they believe have been taken away from them” by colonialist countries.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi in Rome: Terrorism, USA Like Bin Laden in ‘86

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 11 — “We are against terrorism and we condemn it” but “we must try to understand the real reasons behind this pernicious phenomenon”, said Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi during his speech to the Italian Senate. We need to “hold talks even with the devil, if that will help us understand terrorism”. “What is the difference between the US attack against our homes”, he then asked, during his speech in the Sala Zuccari at Palazzo Giustiniani, “and Bin Laden’s terror attacks?”. “While Bin Laden has no country and is an outlaw, the United States of America is a country abiding to international laws”. Due to the USA intervention, Gaddafi added, Iraq has become “an open arena” for al Qaeda terrorists. “Iraq was a fortress against terrorism”, he explained, “while Saddam Hussein was in charge, al Qaeda could not infiltrate the country. And now, thanks to the USA, Iraq is an open arena and al Qaeda can only benefit from it”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Compares USA to Bin Laden, Says Party System is “Democracy’s Abortion”

President claims United States in Libya is like Al Qaeda. Praise for Berlusconi: “Could be Libya’s premier”

ROME — Security in the capital was tight for the visit of Libyan leader Muammar Gheddafi. The Libyan leader arrived on Wednesday to a ceremonial welcome that was so heavily criticised it was decided to deny him the high-profile platform of the Senate chamber for his address. In the end, he spoke at Palazzo Giustiniani, the Senate leader’s office. In his speech, President Gheddafi attacked the United States, accusing the country of being “terrorists like Bin Laden”. The Libyan president Palazzo Giustiniani for La Sapienza university, where students from the Onda movement and other demonstrators protesting at his visit to the university chanted slogans, set off smoke bombs and waved placards, some in Arabic, as they booed his arrival. In the evening, Mr Gheddafi visited the Capitol. The Libyan president had “no objection if [his] friend Silvio Berlusconi were to put himself forward to be prime minister of the Libyan government”. “The Libyan people would certainly benefit”, added President Gheddafi, again referring to the Italian premier as his “friend” in the part of his address in which he proposed the Libyan Jamahriya as a valid alternative to the “party system”, which he called “democracy’s abortion”.

MEETING WITH SCHIFANI — President Gheddafi was greeted at Palazzo Giustiniani by the leader of the Senate, Renato Schifani, who called the meeting “historic”. He gave a lengthy speech in which he referred to Silvio Berlusconi, Giulio Andreotti, Francesco Cossiga and Lamberto Dini, calling it a meeting with “old friends”. In a reference to Italy’s colonial past, President Gheddafi said: “Today’s Italy is not the Italy of yesterday, but for many years there remained a psychological situation of frustration and pain with regard to Italy. I have worked to move forward from this state of affairs and reach a new stage in relations between the two countries”. He went on: “I have always maintained that Italy should apologise for what it did during the Fascist and pre-Fascist periods. We have always insisted on the need for compensation for the moral and material damages suffered by every family in Libya. We were not asking for anything material. But on the political level, yes. What was needed was condemnation of the past and acknowledgement of colonialism’s mistakes”. President Gheddafi said that if those wounds heal — “and they should heal, we do not want further hostilities” — then co-operation is a goal that can be reached. That, he said, is why the friendship treaty is important. President Gheddafi then referred to “God’s justice”, pointing out that Mussolini was executed in public.

DICTATORS AND TERRORISM — In an ambitious analogy with the days of the Roman empire, President Gheddafi went on to find justification for terrorism and dictatorships, launching a fierce attack on the United States. In short, he said that Saddam Hussein had been elected by the Iraqis. It was an internal matter so why had someone from outside decided to remove him from power? While claiming to firmly “condemn” terrorism, the president attempted to offer as an explanation for the phenomenon the need for “defence” against the encroachments of the western world. “They call people with guns and bombs terrorists but what can we call the powers that have intercontinental missiles? What is the difference between Bin Laden’s actions and Reagan’s attack on Libya in 1986? Wasn’t that terrorism?” This part of the speech was criticised by the Italian foreign minister, Franco Frattini: “It’s certainly a very strong statement but in any case we are not in agreement with Colonel Gheddafi about everything”. President Gheddafi continued: “If peace is desired, arrogance must be put to one side. The Earth was created by God for all humanity, not for one controlling power”. He also said that no one had given Libya credit for interrupting its nuclear programme, which justified other nations in not interrupting theirs.

BOGUS DEGREE FROM IDV — Some Italy of Values (IDV) senators with group leader Felice Belisario had been waiting for the Libyan president outside Palazzo Giustiniani with a facsimile degree certificate bearing the words “Laurea Horroris Causa”, a reference to human rights violations. Group leader Belisario and the other senators were wearing pinned to theirs jackets a photograph of the wreckage of the Pan Am aircraft that exploded over Lockerbie in Scotland with the caption “270 dead”. The six IDV senators — Stefano Pedica, Pancho Pardi, Giuliana Carlino, Giuseppe Caforio and Elio Lannutti, as well as Mr Belisario — went into Palazzo Giustiniani but were prevented from entering the Sala Zuccari with the photo and fake degree certificate.

STUDENT PROTESTS — President Gheddafi’s visit to the university in Rome was contested by students of the Onda movement, who complained among other things about the massive army presence in the university area. When the motorcade drew up outside the university, scuffles broke out between students and Carabinieri. A short distance away, about 50 Kurds staged a rousing welcome for the Libyan president, waving flags bearing portraits of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Tells Italy to Scrap Political Parties

By Stephen Brown and Philip Pullella Stephen Brown And Philip Pullella Thu Jun 11, 5:02 pm ET

ROME (Reuters) — Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, addressing Italians in a historic Rome square, embarrassed his hosts on Thursday by saying he would abolish political parties and give Italians direct power if it were up to him.

“There would be no right, left or center. The party system is the abortion of democracy,” Gaddafi said in a sunset address in the famous Campidoglio square designed by Michelangelo atop Capitoline hill.

“I would abolish political parties so as to give power to the people,” said the idiosyncratic Gaddafi, while some members of the crowd held up pictures of the Libyan leader and banners welcoming him.

His angry host, right-wing Rome mayor Gianni Alemanno — who had praised the Libyan leader an hour earlier — told reporters Gaddafi’s discourse on political parties was “unacceptable” and that “we don’t accept lessons on democracy from anyone.”

Gaddafi also praised Italy for condemning fascism after the colonial period. Alemanno, standing beside him, was once the youth leader of a neo-fascist party and sparked controversy last year by refusing to label fascism as evil.

Earlier in the day Gaddafi, making his first visit to the former colonial power, faced protests by students over his human rights record and over a bilateral agreement for Italy to send back boatloads of African migrants crossing the Mediterranean.

The students tried to stop him giving a lecture at a Rome university, hurling paint and scuffling with police.

He told the students terrorism was “the residue of colonialism.”

“Terrorism is to be condemned and most victims (of terrorism) are innocent and unarmed,” Gaddafi said. But the world community had to look at the root causes of terrorism, such as injustice, he added.

The North African nation, once a pariah accused of sponsoring terrorism, has seen a thaw in its relations with the West since Gaddafi promised to give up the quest for weapons of mass destruction. International sanctions were lifted in 2003.

Italy, which last year apologized for Italian atrocities during its 1911-1943 colonial rule, is at the forefront of the diplomatic thaw and now gets a quarter of its oil from Libya, and more recently Libyan capital injections into Italian firms.

But Gaddafi retains a defiant tone, arriving on Wednesday in Rome with a picture pinned to his uniform of Omar al-Mukhtar, a resistance hero hanged by Italian occupiers in 1931.

Italian television on Thursday screened “Lion of the Desert,” a 1981 film about al-Mukhtar which was banned in Italy until now.

Gaddafi, who as current chairman of the Africa Union will attend a G8 summit in Italy next month with U.S. President Barack Obama, also criticized the U.S-led war in Iraq during a speech earlier on Thursday to the Italian senate.

“Iraq was a fortress against terrorism, with Saddam Hussein al Qaeda could not get in, but now thanks to the United States it is an open arena and this benefits al Qaeda,” he said.

He also compared the U.S. air strike on Tripoli in 1986, in which one of his daughters was killed, to an al Qaeda attack.

“What difference is there between the American attack on our homes in 1986 and bin Laden’s terrorist actions?” he asked. “If bin Laden has no state and is an outlaw, America is a state with international rules.”

Arguing that the world should have room for “regimes of all kinds” including “revolutionary” Libya, he asked: “What’s wrong with North Korea wanting to be communist? Or Afghanistan being in the hands of the mullahs? Is not the Vatican a respectable theocratic state with embassies all over the world?”

Some senators from the opposition center-left managed to get Gaddafi blocked from speaking in the main chamber, forcing the speech to take place in a nearby annexe.

Gaddafi also complained that the world had not rewarded Libya for giving up its ambition of owning weapons of mass destruction.

“We cannot accept living in the shadow of intercontinental missiles and nuclear weapons, which is why we decided to change route,” he told the senators.

“We had hoped Libya would be an example to other countries,” Gaddafi said. “But we have not been rewarded by the world.”

On Wednesday, his host Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said Libya agreed to supply more oil to Italy and the head of Libya’s sovereign wealth fund said he was eyeing investments in Italian electricity and infrastructure companies and joint ventures with Italy in Libya.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Greece: Thrace Row

Turk PM wants muftis accepted

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday told Turkish television that the reopening of the Halki Orthodox Seminary “could be discussed” if Greece cooperated by recognizing muftis in the northern region of Thrace, which has a large Muslim population. Just over a week before his scheduled visit to Athens for the inauguration of the New Acropolis Museum, Erdogan told Turkey’s NTV channel that he had broached the issue with Greek Premier Costas Karamanlis and Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis. Bakoyannis said the two issues, that of the patriarchate and Thrace’s Muslim population, were “not comparable.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Italy: Centre Right Hails Local Polls

Provinces up from 12 to 26, rivals down from 50 to 14

(ANSA) — Rome, June 9 — The centre right led by Premier Silvio Berlusconi on Tuesday hailed local election results from the weekend where it made a much stronger showing than elections for the European Parliament.

“Berlusconi is in an excellent mood,” said Cabinet Secretary Paolo Bonaiuti after Berlusconi’s People of Freedom Party (PdL) and its ally the Northern League more than doubled their tally of provinces from 12 to 26 and the centre left saw their total plummet from 50 to 14.

The PdL and League took 15 provinces away from the centre left, which now also faces 22 run-off elections in provinces it previously governed.

“This is proof that when voters vote on things that matter to them daily, and not Europe, the Left collapses,” Bonaiuti claimed.

“It is a great result,” he said, noting that the centre left had been forced into run-offs in many parts of the central Italian ‘Red Belt’ it has ruled since WWII.

There was no immediate comment Tuesday from Dario Franceschini, leader of the largest opposition party, the Democratic Left (PD).

But PD grandee and former premier Massimo D’Alema said he was “confident” about the run-offs. The biggest prizes for the centre right were taking the provinces of Naples and Piacenza away from the centre left and forcing it into run-off votes in the provinces of Milan, Venice, Turin, Ferrara and Arezzo.

Municipal elections in provincial capitals saw the centre right take Biella, Bergamo, Verbania, Pavia, Pescara and Campobasso away from the centre left and force run-off votes in such centre-left strongholds as Florence, Bologna, Prato, Ancona and Ascoli Piceno. The only city where the incumbent centre right was forced into a run-off was Brindisi.

Franceschini had been much more vocal on Monday, as the EP results came in.

He said the PD had defied recent polls in the EP vote, sinking only to 26% from 33% in last year’s general election. The PdL meanwhile saw its support drop from 37% to 35%, far from the 45% target set by Berlusconi.

Pundits said both of the major parties had been hit by ‘friendly fire’ from smaller but feistier allies.

Graftbuster Antonio Di Pietro’s Italy of Values, the PD’s unruly ally, rose to 8% from 4.4% last year.

The League, identified by many voters as the driving force behind a crackdown on crime and illegal immigration, increased its share from 8.3% to 10.2%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Knox on the Witness Stand on Friday

Kercher murder suspect plans to reply to questions, lawyer

(ANSA) — Perugia, June 11 — American student Amanda Knox, on trial here with her ex boyfriend for the murder of British student Meredith Kercher, is prepared to talk freely when she takes the witness stand in her defence on Friday.

Knox’s lawyer Luciano Ghirga told reporters on Thursday the 21-year-old student “planned to answer any questions she’s asked” when she goes on the stand on Friday and Saturday.

Knox and her Italian former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, 25, are on trial for the murder, on charges of sexual violence as well as for simulating a crime to make it look like an intruder had broken into the house.

The American must also answer charges of falsehood for having accused Perugia-based musician Patrick Lumumba of being the murderer.

Prosecutors have have cleared Lumumba of any involvement in the case and he is suing for damages. Exchange student Kercher, 22, was found semi-naked and with her throat slit on November 2, 2007 in the house she shared in Perugia with Seattle-born Knox and two Italian women.

A third defendant, Ivory Coast national Rudy Guede, 21, was sentenced to 30 years for sexually assaulting and murdering the British exchange student at a separate trial last October.

Prosecutor Giuliano Mignini has told the court that Kercher, who was found semi-naked in her bedroom with her throat slashed on November 2, 2007 was killed when Guede, Knox and Sollecito tried to force her to participate in “a perverse group sex game”.

In Mignini’s reconstruction of events, Sollecito and Guede held Kercher’s arms while Knox slashed her throat with a kitchen knife.

The public prosecutor said Guede had also tried to rape Kercher.

But Guede’s lawyers claim that the crime was carried out by Knox and Sollecito alone.

Guede has always admitted to being in the house on the night of the murder but says he was in the bathroom when Kercher was murdered.

The defendants deny wrongdoing and their defence teams claim their clients were not in the house and that the crime was committed by a single attacker. Knox is taking the stand at the request of her lawyer and of Lumumba’s attorney, who is involved in the trial as a civil plaintiff.

As Knox prepared to take the stand, an article in the New York Times by Pulitzer-winning author Timothy Egan took issue with prosecutor Giuliano Mignini’s handling of the case, which has drawn widespread coverage here and abroad. In an article published on Thursday, An Innocent Abroad, Egan casts doubt on the strength of the case and the prosecution’s motives.

“The case against Knox has so many holes in it, and is so tied to the career of a powerful Italian prosecutor who is under indictment for professional misconduct, that any fair-minded jury would have thrown it out months ago,” says the author, who is a Seattle resident.

A number of other US and British papers have questioned the prosecutor’s case.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Customs Finds $134 Billion in a Suitcase

It is either the biggest smuggling operation in history — or a fraud of equally impressive proportions. Italian customs officials stopped two men at the Swiss border carrying bonds worth $134 billion (95.8 billion euros).

Italian customs officers on the Swiss border often stop smugglers — but not of this scale. Two Japanese citizens have been detained by Italian police in Chiasso on the Swiss-Italian border after being found with $134 billion of US bonds hidden in the base of their suitcase, according to a press statement by the Italian Guardia di Finanza.

The two men, reported to be more than 50 years old, were traveling by train from Italy to Switzerland on June 3. Financial police at a control on the border found the documents tucked inside a closed section at the bottom of their suitcase, separate from their personal items. According to their statement, the men’s luggage included 249 government bonds worth $500 million and 10 so-called Kennedy bonds, each worth a billion dollars.

But details of the case remain unclear: The Japanese embassy in Rome confirmed the arrest of the two men but the news agency Bloomberg reported on Friday that it was not yet established whether they were Japanese citizens.

It yet to be seen whether this is the biggest smuggling scandal in history — or a massive fraud. Italian officials said they were still checking the authenticity of the bonds.

But should the bonds, or at least some of them, turn out to be real, the men will face a significant penalty. In Europe it is illegal to transport more than €10,000 across borders without notifying customs.

Meanwhile, if they turn out to be authentic, Italy is set for a windfall. According to Italian law, the state could fine the men 40 percent of the seized money. Italy’s mountain of public debt, which is at 105 percent of GDP, could shrink.

And although details of the case are still murky, the Italian media is already mulling how the windfall would be best spent. Aside from shrinking the national debt, there are suggestions the funds could help rebuild the earthquake-wrecked Abruzzo region.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Lario Breaks Silence on Marriage

Truth ‘has not even been touched upon’, Mrs Berlusconi says

(ANSA) — Rome, June 11 — The wife of Premier Silvio Berlusconi, Veronica Lario, on Thursday broke her silence over their public divorce spat to say that the truth about their relationship had “not even been touched on”.

Lario, 52, asked for a divorce last month after Berlusconi attended the 18th birthday party of aspiring model Noemi Letizia, telling Italian daily La Repubblica that she “(could) not stay with a man who consorted with minors”.

In a statement issued to another daily, Corriere della Sera, and printed on its first page Thursday, Lario said she had spent the last few weeks “watching in silence, without reacting in the media, the brutal mudslinging against myself, my dignity and the history of my marriage”.

“It’s certain that the truth about the relationship between me and my husband has not even been touched upon, just like the reason why I had to turn to the press in order to communicate with him,” she said.

“Certainly, I have always loved him and I have built my life in terms of my marriage and my family”.

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 the 18-year-old because he had a long friendship with her family.

He also criticised his wife for slamming alleged plans to field pretty young women in the European Parliament elections, which Lario described as “shamelessly trashy”, saying all the women were qualified for the job.

As a direct result of the Letizia flap, the premier found himself mired further after paparazzo photographs of topless women at his villa in Sardinia emerged, and a scandal broke over allegedly improper use of publicly funded state flights to ferry guests to the villa.

Right-wing politician Daniela Santanche’ meanwhile alleged that Lario herself had a long relationship with her 47-year-old bodyguard, Alberto Orlandi.

The allegations were published by right-wing daily Libero, which labelled actress Lario the “ungrateful showgirl” and published topless photos of her from early in her career.

Lario has not commented on the allegations but friends have denied them.

DIVORCE SPAT INFLUENCED PdL ELECTION SETBACK.

Last month Berlusconi told Corriere he might file a counter-suit if Lario went ahead with plans to divorce him.

Asked if his 19-year marriage to Lario could survive, he replied: “I don’t think so, and I don’t know if I want it this time. Veronica will have to publicly apologise to me, and I don’t know if that will be enough”.

“It’s the third time she’s played a trick like this during an election campaign. It’s really too much’.

Lario’s statement Thursday came after observers fingered the divorce spat as one of the reasons Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party suffered a slight setback in the EP elections.

The PdL won 35.3% of the vote which was an improvement over the 32.4% won by its two main components — Forza Italia and the National Alliance — in the last European elections but below the 37.4% of the vote which brought it to power last year and much less than Berlusconi’s optimistic prediction of 45%.

Berlusconi fell in love with actress Lario, his second wife, when he saw her performing topless in 1980 at a theatre he owned and divorced his first wife to marry her in 1990.

The Berlusconis had another highly publicised spat two years ago when Lario demanded, and obtained, a public apology after he reportedly flirted with young women, one of whom is now his equal opportunities minister.

In the latest incident, Lario accused him of insulting womens’ dignity and making “victims” of his family.

The premier has three children by Lario, aged 20, 22 and 24.

His two children by his first wife play top roles in his business empire.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Metternich 2 — the Lisbon Treaty

One hundred and fifty years after his death, the Austrian Empire’s ambassador in chief remains politically incorrect. With the Lisbon treaty, however, the twenty-seven member states are recreating 1814’s Congress of Vienna that gave rise to modern Europe, argues Czech daily Lidové Noviny.

Do you fear that once they ratify the Lisbon Treaty, the big nations will get along well amongst themselves and discount the small ones? That under their baton Europe will be reduced to a “concert of great powers”? Today we remember Prince Metternich, the man who demonstrated the strengths and weaknesses of such a policy.

It is quite astonishing that we do not celebrate a Metternich year, although 2009 was proclaimed the Year of Darwin. We celebrate Darwin for two reasons: he was born in 1809 and published its magnum opus, On the Origin of Species, in 1859. Those two years were watersheds in Metternich’s career: he became Austria’s Foreign Minister in 1809 (de facto, executive head, and later State Chancellor), and he died on June 11, 1859. He was lain to rest in the family tomb at Plasy, in western Bohemia..

Prince Metternich is remembered as the father of the post-Napoleonic Europe that emerged from the Congress of Vienna, the inspiration behind the idea of the “Concert of Great Powers”, the founder of Realpolitik that puts the balance of interests and the stability of power above morality. Even if, when they hear the term “Realpolitik”, modern-day Europeans “stop up their noses and close their ears”, there is no denying that Metternich’s Europe worked for nearly 100 years running, from the Napoleonic Wars to World War I. And even if its author died 150 years ago, Metternich’s political thought survives to this day today and, in many cases, remains avant-garde.

Last September, when ex-Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek launched the campaign for the Czech presidency of the European Council, he drew an apt comparison: “In varietate concordia — unity in diversity. This is the motto of the European Union, but also my vision of the Czech Republic’s action in Europe. The United States has roughly the same motto: E pluribus unum — out of many, one.” This motto was also de facto that of Metternich, who rejected the centrifugal ambitions of nations for the sake of supranational balance and stability. So why not pay tribute to that inspiration, why not honour its author by name?

150 years after his death, Metternich remains the symbol of reactionary thought and obscurantism. It is true that Metternich abhorred change, revolutionaries and liberals. But we should not attribute this aversion to an unconditional attachment to all things relating to the past. Quite simply, Metternich was afraid — and history was to prove him right — that modernism would be accompanied by other “isms”: nationalism, socialism etc..

The Metternichian face of Europe held for half a century, before being overthrown by the nationalisms born of war: viz. the Crimean, Prusso-Austrian and Franco-Prussian wars. World War I gave it the coup de grâce. Seeing as Metternich fashioned the face of the Old Continent for four generations, while the Versailles system only held for one, his was no small feat in the grand scheme of things.

The opponents of the Lisbon Treaty may see themselves as reincarnating the naysayers of the Age of Metternich and its penchant for riding roughshod over the weak. In the final analysis, what counts most is how our current situation will be judged in, say, the year 2050. In other words, when we have gained sufficient perspective to weigh up the pros and cons of Realpolitik.

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



Schengen: Weapons and Women Smuggler’s Paradise

Open EU borders are a paradise for weapons and human smugglers, senior Danish police officers say.

Senior Danish police officers are complaining that the EU’s open borders under the Schengen agreement have made it simple for criminal groups to smuggle weapons and women into Denmark.

“The Schengen agreement has made it much easier to move weapons around Europe and to get them into Denmark. This is a problem as crime becomes much more serious when weapons are involved,” says Henrik Svindt of the Copenhagen Special Unit for Gang Crime and Women Traficking.

The issue of how to stop weapons and women smuggling into Denmark has risen on the Danish political agenda after the Social Democratic Party recently suggested stricter border controls. The Danish People’s Party has demanded for some time that border controls should be introduced.

DOCUMENTATION: What is the Schengen area? (External link)

Weapons Svindt is not prepared to say whether border controls should be re-introduced, but notes that the parties to the current gang warfare in Denmark are able to get hold of AK47 and Uzi automatic weapons with ease. The weapons are often smuggled to Denmark from the Balkans and Eastern Europe.

The National Commissioner’s Office has confiscated more than 170 weapons over the past two months, although it is not clear how they got into the country.

Svindt says the current situation cannot be compared to the situation before borders were opened in 2001.

“Criminals used to bash each other up. Now there is a tendency that criminals are more willing to use firearms,” Svindt says.

Woman The Head of Copenhagen Police Women’s Trafficking Unit René Hansen says human traffickers hardly need to speculate on how to get women into Denmark.

“Once the prostitutes are in the Schengen area, it’s easy to send them up here — and that is, of course, a problem,” Hansen says, adding that Denmark has many trafficked women from Eastern Europe and Africa.

ALSO SEE: Sex slaves seek freedom

“We should increase searches of buses from Eastern Europe — then we can find the girls who don’t have the necessary papers. Traffickers will always try to send women to Denmark — so we try to catch the traffickers. But in principle it would be better to try to prevent the women from coming here, rather than letting them come in and then investigating them to stop the traffic,” Hansen says.

Police decision The National Commissioner’s Office policy, however, is not to increase border controls, but rather to try to catch those behind the traffic in women and weapons.

“But if senior police officers feel that it would be an idea to increase controls buses from Eastern Europe, then they can do so. It’s their decision,” says Justice Minister Brian Mikkelsen.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Spain: Arm Lost in Accident, Limb Thrown in Trash Bin

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 11 — A non-EU immigrant lost an arm in the gears of a kneading machine and his employers, instead of taking the limb with them to seek medical care, through it into a trash bin on the way to a Valencian hospital. The horrible tale of a young Bolivian, 33, without a stay permit or a job and still under medical treatment has led to indignation and sympathy across Spain. Today, the prosecutor’s office in Valencia that investigates work related accidents asked for a report from the Guardia Civile and the intervention of a workplace inspector at the bakery in Real di Gandia (Valencia), where the incident took place on May 28. At the moment it took place, according to what was reconstructed by the authorities on the basis of what the man’s sister saw, he was pouring 40 kilos of flour into an automatic kneader when the plastic protection which he was wearing on his left arm got caught in the gears, which crushed the mans arm and ripped it off. In spite of copious haemorrhaging, the young man was loaded into a car and taken for medical treatment, but just 50 metres from the hospital, he was forced to get out of the car and go to the Emergency Room on foot, and — according to the man — his employers got rid of the arm throwing it into a trash bin. The young man, in shock, was treated in the hospital in Gandia, where doctors were unable to attempt to put the man’s arm back on, it being found some hours later in deteriorated condition. According to the report presented by the sister of the victim, the employers “cleaned the entire bakery”, so that there would be no evidence of the illegal worker. The authorities arrested the owners of the bakery last week, two brothers, for violating workers’ rights, because they employed people without any type of contract. But the charges could potentially turn criminal for manslaughter. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Women in Custody for Beating of Far-Right Politician

Two young women suspected of beating up the spokesperson of the far right Sweden Democrats and his girlfriend were remanded in custody on Wednesday by the Södertörn District Court.

Prosecutor Jens Nilsson requested the women be remanded on suspicions of aggravated assault for their attack against Martin Kinnunen.

One of the women, who is 25-years-old, was also held for her suspected role in two other assaults which took place on Folkungagatan on Södermalm in southern Stockholm in February.

During the remand hearing, the women denied the assault allegations against them.

Prosecutors believe the attack on Kinnunen and his girlfriend, who were targeted by a group of five to ten people, was politically motivated.

Police may arrest more people suspected of participating in the incident, which took place early Sunday morning when Kinnunen and his girlfriend were walking near Gullmarsplan south of Stockholm.

The couple were punched and kicked repeatedly, and forced to seek treatment at a nearby hospital for their injuries.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Obama Picks Wealthy Donor as Ambassador

Donald Beyer, the former lieutenant governor of Virginia, has been pegged to be the next United States ambassador to Switzerland and Liechtenstein. Beyer, who became wealthy as a car dealer, is one of several big money donors from the Democratic Party to receive diplomatic postings. He raised more than $500,000 (SFr541,000) for then-Senator Barack Obama’s presidential bid and contributed $4,600 of his own money to the campaign.

Beyer replaces Peter Coneway, a Texas Republican appointed by George W. Bush. He held the post for roughly two years before stepping down on December 7, 2008.

Leigh Carter, a career diplomat, will continue to act as the embassy’s chargé d’affaires in Bern until the Senate confirms Beyer’s appointment and Switzerland approves his credentials.

Making the trip across the Atlantic with Beyer will be Washington lawyer Howard Gutman, who has been dispatched to Belgium. Gutman also raised more than $500,000 for the Democratic president.

About one third of US ambassadors are non-career appointees — friends of politicians or party donors — who often receive plum assignments to places like Bern or London. Career diplomats are assigned to more sensitive posts.

Career diplomats were nominated on Thursday to be envoys to Burundi, Tunisia, the Marshall Islands, Oman and Suriname. Obama also chose retired Army General Alfonso Lenhardt to be ambassador to Tanzania.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



The German Passport is Losing Its Appeal

Fewer foreign residents of Germany chose to become naturalised German citizens last year than in any previous year since reunification in 1990.

Last year 94,500 foreigners applied for and received German citizenship, a drop of 16 percent from 2997, according to the Federal Statistics Office in Wiesbaden.

Analysts point to the entry of formerly communist eastern neighbors into the European Union in 2004 as well as a rule limiting dual nationality as likely causes for the continuing drop in naturalizations.

There was a surge in foreigners becoming Germans in 2000 when laws on becoming German were loosened, but a clause pushed through by conservative politicians makes it impossible for new Germans to keep their old citizenships.

Of those who did successfully become German last year, 24,500 were of Turkish origin; nearly 7,000 were from Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo and the former Serbia-Montenegro; and roughly 4,200 each from Poland and Iraq. Naturalizations from most countries dropped in 2008, with the exception of those from Iraq.

The drop may also have been partially caused by the implementation of a new naturalization test, for which some authorities and schools were not prepared, according to the Federal Integration Commissioner Maria Boehmer.

“I am already calculating a significant increase for 2009,” she said.

There are about two million foreigners who have lived in Germany long enough to apply for citizenship, she said.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Tourism: Bye Bye Sun and Beaches, Spain Seeks New Model

(by Paola Del Vecchio) (ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 11 — It’s not just the economic slump, but the failure of the ‘sol y playa’ model for tourism. Following a peak in 2007 with a record 59 million arrivals, Spain has witnessed a progressive decline in the number of tourist visitors to its sun-kissed beaches, with 2 million fewer heading their way in 2008 than during 2007. The trend seems to be getting worse: the downward trend was confirmed by the 12% drop in numbers in the first quarter of this year. This failure of competitiveness, says an enquiry sponsored by Pais, has led the government to hit the subsidy button, doubling the budget set aside for this sector to 778 million this year. It is a sector which, alone, makes up 11% of the country’s GDP and employment. Having been overtaken by the USA as the world’s second-favourite tourist destination, Spain is trying to repair some of the damage done by years of systemic destruction of the natural attractions of its coastline, especially in areas such as Alicante and Almeria, to try and freshen up a product which was already losing its competitive edge compared to eastern destinations or the eastern Mediterranean, such as Istanbul or Egypt. The big sector operators, in a meeting of the Exceltur association, have decided on “a paradigm shift”, capable of offering “a tailor-made experience for each visitor”, as tourism lobby spokesperson, José Luis Zoreda, put it. The new package is not based on tourist numbers but on their average disbursements pro capita. Having plumped for “intensive brickwork”, says Josep Oliver, professor at Barcelona University, “implies that one single generation has used up a resource that could have lasted centuries or millennia”. A paradigm shift is an objective which entails not aiming at the lower to medium tourist market, such as those of eastern Europe, but of aiming “to compete with some of the regions of southern Italy or of France”. Positive examples of a change in this direction are the transformation of the Costa Brava, where for years now licences for tourist operators have only been granted to the highest quality organisations, or the virtuous development undertaken in the sector in Bilbao, with its construction of the Guggenheim museum. There has also been significant progress made over the past years in business and cultural tourism. To save Palma de Majorca a plan has been presented “for a complete renovation of the area, capable of boosting a new round of innovation and sustainability for the future,” Zoreda explains. This is a public-private initiative, promoted by the Spanish government and that of the Balearics, for the renovation of 1,000 hectares, with 40,000 tourist posts and for 1.5 million visitors per year, in order to revitalise a destination which appears in terminal decline. The project entails the demolition of half of accommodation for 40,000 tourists, two-thirds of which consists of hotels of fewer than three stars. The estimated cost is between 2 and 3 billion euros, 70% of which will come from the private sector; even though only 8 million euros have so far arrived from the Industry Ministry for works to be offered for tender in the course of next week. In the medium term, the government is aiming at providing incentives for investment by businesses in the sector, above all by SMEs, through its Renew Tourism Plan, which has one billion euros in funding. A large amount of the financing will be dedicated to renovating hotels. But the outlook for the future remains hazy, under the black clouds of the economic recession. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Ben Kinsella: Police Bugged Killers to Gather Crucial Evidence

Handcuffed in the back of the police van, Ben Kinsella’s killers wasted no time in plotting ways to avoid being convicted.

Speaking in hushed tones and using the language of the street to try to conceal their intentions, the men set about targeting witnesses and getting their stories straight. Jade Braithwaite, Michael Alleyne and Juress Kika were unaware, however, that detectives had obtained a licence secretly to record their every word during the journey.

While police in the early stages of the investigation had obtained other intelligence that the defendants were Ben’s attackers, they lacked vital proof. The hunt for the knife or knives that had delivered the fatal blows had also been fruitless.

As officers waited for blood and DNA results to be processed, engineers fitted the van with bugging equipment. The recordings, made as they travelled to Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court and then an identity parade, give a rare insight into the mindset of three young men involved in street drug crime, immersed in American rap music and believing that the slightest loss of face should provoke revenge of the utmost severity.

In one tape the men can be heard gloating about how little evidence the police had. In another, sometimes laughing and joking, they compared notes about the investigation.

In one excerpt Kika appears to recall the moment that he attacked Ben. Referring to it as “the madness”, he said: “See when it happened, yeah. Like boom, it was like a kinda quick ting. Like boom. Went down the road, come back up. Boom, boom. Finished. Boom. Ghost. You get what I’m saying?”

He then added that he believed that the only witnesses to the attack could have been “the people from the houses that were watching on the road. Know what I’m saying?”

They then try to identify the “snitch” (informant) from their “endz” (neighbourhood) who had named them as the killers. Meanwhile Kika claimed that “someone should sort out” a man who ran the council’s CCTV cameras that filmed them running from the murder scene.

Braithwaite, who used the nickname J-Man, later told Kika that if he took all the blame for the stabbing he would receive “Gs” — thousands of pounds.

At one point Kika pondered whether it was possible that they were being secretly recorded: “Blood, they sure these tings ain’t got no f***ing recording s*** cuz?” Alleyne, who used the nickname Tigger, replied confidently: “Suck your recording.”

It was those recordings, though, that led to the defendants’ initial confidence collapsing into a desperate clamour to accuse each other of delivering the fatal blow. Detective Chief Inspector John Macdonald, who led the investigation, said the type of language the men used was often peculiar to a small group of friends. When Braithwaite gave evidence he dropped the “street” tones and was well spoken. “He said he was speaking that way in the police van to keep face with the other defendants.”

Approval of bugging — what the Home Office calls “intrusive surveillance” — is given by an independent surveillance commissioner. It must also then be approved by the Home Secretary, who must believe that the surveillance is either in the interest of national security, for the purpose of preventing or detecting serious crime, or for safeguarding the UK economy.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



UK: Ben Kinsella’s Murderers ‘Face Retribution’ During Life Jail Term

Three men who stabbed the schoolboy Ben Kinsella to death were jailed for life today after being warned that they face retribution in prison for the murder.

Jade Braithwaite, 20, Juress Kika, 19, and Michael Alleyne, 18, have all received letters from prison authorities alerting them that they are marked men.

Each will spend at least 19 years in jail for the murder of the 16-year-old brother of the former EastEnders actress Brooke Kinsella.

Applause erupted from the public gallery of the Old Bailey as the killers were led down to the cells in handcuffs. Police had to intervene as friends of the defendants clashed with friends of Ben as they shouted out “Bye” and “Enjoy your porridge”.

Miss Kinsella, who played Kelly Taylor in the BBC soap, clapped once but otherwise kept silent with the rest of her family in the well of court.

Speaking outside court after the hearing she said of the 19-year minimum tariff: “It’s just little more than Ben lived, so it really is not good enough.”

Sentencing the killers, Brian Barker QC, the Common Serjeant of London, said: “Ben Kinsella was 16 when he died. Your blind and heartless anger that night defies belief. He had in front of him a lifetime of promise. You have taken all that away from him in a brutal, cowardly and totally unjustified attack.”

“It reflects yet again the futility of carrying and use of knives by some people. Crimes like these generate outrage in all like minded people.”

Earlier, lawyers for the three killers confirmed that they had received letters warning them they may be under threat from members of a notorious crime family.

Nerida Harford-Bell, for Braithwaite, said: “Jade understands he is a marked man. His mother, grandmother and aunt are in process of moving from their addresses to an entirely different area.”

Sallie Bennett-Jenkins, for Alleyne, said: “He has received a letter that will have an impact for more than many years. It is an unusual step but one he is going to take very, very seriously.”

James Nichol, solicitor advocate for Kika, said of his letter: “It is being taken seriously.”

Ben, who wanted to become a graphic designer, was stabbed 11 times after becoming the innocent victim of an argument. He had been celebrating the end of his exams at Shillibeers bar in Holloway, north London, when he was attacked in the early hours of June 29 last year.

After a mass brawl that had not involved Ben, Braithwaite recruited Kika and Alleyne to get revenge for being “disrespected”. They chased the rival group of youths down the street and picked on Ben when he failed to run away.

The straight-A student was kicked to the floor and stabbed eleven times in five seconds as he pleaded: “I’ve not done anything wrong.”

He was the 17th teenager to be murdered in London last year.

Kika was wanted by police for a stabbing and robbery in Islington days earlier but was only tracked down when he was arrested for the murder on June 30.

Alleyne was on licence after being released from an 18 month prison sentence for drug dealing. Braithwaite had served a 12-month sentence for attempted robbery in 2006. He later blamed Alleyne and Kika for the stabbing, sparking ugly scenes in court as the defendants turned on each other.

Kika and Alleyne, both from Holloway, north London, and Braithwaite from Bow, east London, all denied murder.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



UK: Classroom Assistant at Muslim Girls’ School Forced Out of Job by Parents Who Believed She Was a Man

A classroom assistant has quit her job at a strict Muslim girls’ school after parents launched an email campaign claiming she was a man. Shifa Patel, who dressed traditionally in a hijab and full-length robe while at work, had to submit herself to a humiliating medical examination after the petition demanded she prove her gender. The headteacher at Al-Islah Muslim Girls’ School in Blackburn, Lancashire, even sent a letter to parents reassuring them that Ms Patel was female in an attempt to quash the growing discontent.

But police had to be called in when an angry mob of parents gathered at the school gates demanding that she be sacked. The assistant then took the decision to save the school and herself from any more grief and tendered her resignation.

The hate campaign is believed to have begun when photographs of Ms Patel with short hair and wearing a shirt and trousers were copied from internet site Facebook. These were then circulated by email. A distraught Ms Patel, whose age is not known, said: ‘I have irrefutable medical evidence that I’m a woman. ‘The people who have done this to me have hurt me so badly. I will never forgive those who did this to me and spread these lies.’ In some of the photographs circulated, Ms Patel is pictured next to acting head teacher Fatima Patel.

Fatima Patel said: ‘When some parents approached me I told them I will take the Quran in my hand and swear to tell the truth. But they were more concerned about obtaining a GP’s certificate for Shifa.’ She added: ‘What does that say about some people? Some of the parents have been very supportive.’ The school’s governing body also backed Ms Patel, saying her ‘unquestionable work ethic and professionalism had never been in doubt.’ Sgt John Rigby, of Lancashire Constabulary’s minority team, said: ‘This is an entirely internal school matter and police attended simply to calm the situation down.’

Al-Islah Muslim Girls’ School is privately-run and has nearly 200 students. It occupies the first floor of a red-brick mosque in Blackburn. While it is a girls’ school it takes a handful of boys at primary level each year. All students must adhere to a strict uniform code. Music is viewed as un-Islamic and girls studying for the GCSEs are taught Islamic studies rather than religious education and Arabic and Urdu instead of modern European languages.

[Comment from Tuan Jim: Sounds like a first-rate way to achieve integration!]

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



UK: David Cameron Calls for Referendum on EU Constitution

David Cameron, the Tory leader, has called for a referendum on the European constitution to restore trust in the political system following the MPs’ expenses scandal.

Mr Cameron warned that voting for the minor parties would be “letting the Government off the hook” over the issue of a referendum on the European constitution.

“In terms of rebuilding trust, I think this issue of when you make a promise, sticking to that promise, like the promise we have all made about having a referendum on the constitution, is as important as anything else,” he told GMTV.

He said he was publishing a Bill today which would allow for a referendum to be passed through Parliament with a vote on the same day in the autumn as the Irish.

The Conservative Bill would require the support of substantial numbers of Labour rebels to get through the House of Commons, and is thought extremely unlikely to succeed.

But Mr Cameron said that Thursday’s elections to the European Parliament gave voters a chance to put pressure on Prime Minister Gordon Brown to grant a referendum by voting Conservative.

Britain ratified the Treaty by a parliamentary vote in June last year, but it cannot come into force until all 27 member states have ratified. As well as the hurdle of the Irish referendum this autumn, the Treaty must also gain the assent of the Czech President and Poland must deposit its documents confirming ratification.

Mr Cameron has promised a referendum in the UK if the ratification process has not been completed across the Union by the time a Conservative administration comes to power, but today he declined to say what he would do if ratification is complete and the Treaty is in effect by that time.

The Tory leader has said that he “would not let matters rest” in that case, leading Labour to claim that he would attempt to renegotiate the agreement in the face of opposition from all the other EU states, potentially miring Britain in years of constitutional wrangling.

Speaking to the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Mr Cameron resisted several requests to spell out exactly what his plans were, but indicated that he may seek to use a forthcoming renegotiation of the EU’s budget to seek reforms to bring powers back from Brussels to Westminster.

“I don’t want to go into every last detail of what happens if a series of things happen — if there isn’t an early election, if the Irish vote yes in a second referendum, if the Poles decide to ratify this treaty, if the Czechs decide to ratify,” said Mr Cameron.

“I know that, of course, my opponents would love me to focus on what happens if all these things happen, but I am not going to do that. I am going to focus on the here and now, because on Thursday people can go into these voting booths, vote Conservative and pile pressure on Gordon Brown to hold a referendum. I don’t want to let him off the hook.”

He added: “Every treaty is an effective renegotiation and if we had a Conservative government we would be going into that renegotiation with a list of powers we want returned to the UK, because we believe in being members of the EU but we want it to be more about trade and co-operation rather than this endless process of building a superstate…

“There’s an important negotiation coming up on the future funding of the EU and I don’t want to see us increasing the funding at all, but it gives us enormous leverage in terms of making sure we get a good deal for Britain and we build the sort of EU that not just the Conservatives but other parties in Europe want to see.”

Mr Cameron said he could not foresee circumstances in which he would want to call a referendum on Britain remaining in the EU, adding: “If I thought that being a member of the EU was against the national interest, I would argue for us to come out, but I don’t.”

           — Hat tip: Henrik [Return to headlines]



UK: Free Speech and the Bacon and Eggs of Democracy

So, do you believe in democracy? Or do you prefer, instead of engaging in the political process, to walk around shouting ‘no free speech for fascists’ like some mantra for morons whenever someone says something you disagree with?

That’s about the extent of subtlety you can expect from the Irish Left these days, as their contempt for democracy becomes even stronger.

We have seen this manifest itself in near riots outside a university campus when Israeli ambassador Zion Evrony tried to speak; the disgraceful cancellation of a debate featuring discredited historian David Irving; and on one rather amusing occasion the mantra for morons was directed towards your humble columnist by some mad people.

We also see this disdain for democracy in the Shell To Sea campaign where spokesweirdo Maura Harrington is quite open in her contempt for mere mortals.

She blithely admits that she doesn’t care if the majority of the Irish people are opposed to her actions, she is going to do what she is going to do, tough.

The very fact that someone as obviously unhinged as Harrington can come to the fore of any campaign and actually be seen, as some sort of heroic martyr as opposed to just being a crank with too much time on her hands, is indicative of the current Irish situation.

The inherent self-contradiction in the phrase ‘no free speech for fascists’ shows the blatant, bovine stupidity of the mobs who like to chant it with orgasmic glee at anyone they don’t like.

After all, free speech has always been in rather short supply in fascist countries and the fact that these blathering morons can’t appreciate the irony in using fascist tactics to suppress people they regard as fascists is quite delightful.

The best example this week came with the treatment of the odious BNP leader, Nick Griffin.

Now, a quick perusal of the policies of the British National Party will show you that while some make perfect sense — an end to untrammelled immigration, the restoration of British culture at the heart of civic society and putting a stop to multiculturalism, a further look will show that it is also a party of utterly racist nutters, Holocaust-deniers and the kind of sad bastard whose biggest worry in life is inter-racial marriage.

But while he may be many things, Nick Griffin is no nutter, and he is particularly hated by the Left because he routinely trounces them in debates.

In fact, New Labour made the BNP and now the far Left are propping them up.

This is because the debate on immigration and assimilation has been stifled and hijacked to the extent where anyone who questions the wisdom of untrammelled immigration is automatically branded a racist.

And so, the average working class Brit, whose family would have voted Labour for generations, turns to a party that he would have traditionally despised.

After all, when you have a situation where someone like Yasmin Alibhai Brown, a Ugandan Muslim immigrant who was given asylum in Britain, can blithely condemn the white working class with statements such as: “Criticise them and, they who detest PC, bring down the wrath of Alf Garnett on your head. Their culture is proud; they are noble; what they believe — however stupid or vicious — must be awesome.”

If you said that about any other ethnic group, the fascists of liberalism would have you up in front of the beak in a minute for incitement to racial hatred.

And could you imagine her saying that to the face of the “stupid or vicious” white working class, who volunteered for the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War, or their counterparts in east London who took to the streets of the East End and fought hand-to-hand with Moseley’s fascist Blackshirts in the famous Battle Of Cable Street?

So, how did the grandchildren of the veterans of Cable Street end up turning to the inheritors of Moseley’s beliefs?

Well, it’s actually quite simple.

People are simply pissed off being treated like third-class citizens in their own country.

One of the most pernicious aspects of multiculturalism is the fact that the only culture it won’t respect is indigenous British culture, which it condemns as imperialist, colonial and racist.

Which is why London has a giant Paddy’s Day parade and festival but no celebration of their own patron saint, George, because that would be “offensive” to other cultures.

One of the particularly nauseating aspects of the egg-throwing incident is the fact that the police simply stood by and did nothing while a baying mob did their best to get at him.

Compare that to the police reaction to the recent anti-military march in Luton.

On that occasion, a bunch of Muslims turned up to greet the returning Royal Anglian Regiment from Basra.

As they held placards with such charming sentiments as “Anglian soldiers go to hell” and “UK you will pay”, nine people were arrested.

None of them was Muslim, of course.

They were locals who were outraged at the insults and threats hurled at British soldiers who had risked their lives.

And, despite the fact that the protest was organised by Muslim extremists like Anjem Choudhry, Gordon Brown spoke about “a tiny minority” — as if extremists had somehow infiltrated an extremist protest.

It was a typical example of the kind of appeasement which has driven ordinary people, who can clearly see the reality and not the politically approved myth, into the arms of the BNP.

One of the men was arrested in Luton because he threw a packet of rashers into the protest. Yet Nick Griffin was pelted with eggs and nobody is apprehended.

So, it’s okay to throw eggs. But not bacon.

And are there any lessons to be learned?

Yes there are.

Namely — that was a waste of a good breakfast.

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

Balkans


Frattini in Belgrade: Don’t Exclude Them From EU

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, JUNE 9 — It is not possible to keep the Western Balkans out of Europe. The day after the European elections, Italy’s Foreign Minister Franco Frattini flew to Sofia and Belgrade on a mission sending a clear message to all parties after having met with the highest authorities from the two countries. “We must fight for more Europe and not less Europe,” the Foreign Minister said, observing that “all European political families” should be “worried” about the amount of Euro-scepticism that emerged from the recent elections. For the vision of a stronger union and a larger and more stable regional landscape, Italy will continue to support closer relations between Serbia in the first place, but also other countries like Bosnia and Montenegro, and the EU. “A Balkan and not a European enclave,” reflected the Italian Foreign Minister, “would not be in the interest of Europe.” It is an objective that is entirely “political” and not simply “technical”, Frattini stated, because “it still makes sense to talk about enlargement and there is just as much to gain for Europe as for the Balkans.” On the issue of closer relations to Belgrade, two issues must necessarily be left out of the process, as was highlighted by the statement released after the trilateral meeting between Frattini and his Serbian and Romanian counterparts, Vuk Jeremic and Cristian Diaconescu, in Belgrade. On one hand the position Belgrade holds on the status of Kosovo “cannot be connected to prospects for the adhesion to the EU.” On the other, there is the issue of the collaboration of Serbia with the International Criminal Court at the Hague for the arrest of the war criminals still at large like the ex-general Ratko Mladic. Some European countries, like the Netherlands, consider it to be insufficient. Frattini however made it clear, as well as the historic Serbian radio station B92 which broadcast the comments immediately, that Serbia fully collaborates with the International Criminal Court. At this point there are two immediate objectives for the Italian Foreign Minister: resolve the issue of visas by year’s end — Serbia considers this step particularly important, as President Boris Tadic and Foreign Minister Jeremic noted — and to give the go-ahead for the ratification of ASA, the partnership agreement between Serbia and the EU by the end of June. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Kosovo: NATO Defence Ministers: Wind-Down of KFOR Begins

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 10 — The defence ministries of NATO-member countries have agreed on a gradual reduction of KFOR troops in Kosovo, 10 years on from their deployment, report sources within the alliance at the end of the first session of its Defence Council. The reduction of the force should happen in stages, with three successive phases, while keeping an eye on developments on the ground. The first stage envisages a reduction by 10 thousand troops (of the theoretical current total of 15 thousand), then down to 5,700 and finally down to 2,300 soldiers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Mediterranean Union: Low on Israeli Priorities

(by Luciana Borsatti) (ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV/ROME, JUNE 10 — The Union for the Mediterranean? It still is not a priority for the Israeli government. This notion has been confirmed by Eran Lerman, Israel’s Deputy for Policy to the National Security Advisor. Questioned by ANSAmed on the issue, Lerman explained that “The troubling truth is that the new Israeli government, overburdened as it is by huge issues (the peace process and Obama; the Iranian challenge; the economy; Israeli Arabs) has hardly been free to give this issue a proper thought”. Lerman, a former military intelligence analyst and director of the American Jewish Committee for the Middle East, added that “Hopefully, as the ‘regional dimension of the peace process takes hold, there will also be a revival of interest. In my own capacity I will do my best to push this forward”. But in any case there will be the weight thrown around by “an influential politician, sidelined by Netanyahu but still with some clout within the party — former FM Silvan Shalom — who is now the Minister for regional cooperation, and may find the Med an important area for activity”. But one of Israel’s most pressing challenges is the one posed by Iran, which has stolen the limelight of Middle Eastern politics. In a recent meeting with Mediterranean journalists, Lerman pointed out that “By now the region is divided between Iran and its allies on one side, and the rest of the area on the other”. Speaking of Iran’s allies, he explicitly pointed to Hezbollah, the Shiite ‘party of God’, as an “occupying force” in Lebanon that “acts with Syrian approval”. He added that Syrian president Bashar al Assad nonetheless “does not control Hezbollah, which is instead led by Iran”. However, Iran does not fully control Hamas, which is simply its “client and ally”. He emphasised that “if Iran is the problem, Syria is part of it and Israel is part of the solution”. Because if Iran acquires a nuclear capability, for which “the true bottleneck is the availability of fissile material”, Turkey and Algeria will acquire it as well. In his opinion, the fact that the threat posed by Teheran is Israel’s top priority derives from the fact that “even if the Palestinians gain their own State, Iran is the one that does not recognise Israel”. He concludes that since this is the danger, it is a mistake to look to Iran (as Italy is doing by inviting Teheran to the G8 meeting) as a potential partner in the stabilisation of Afghanistan. Lerman emphasised that “Whatever tactical advantages they can gain, these would be crushed by the damage done through their treating Teheran as a legitimate partner”. But other issues apart from Iran were distracting Israel’s attention from the Euro-Mediterranean process that was initiated in Barcelona and then revived last year by Sarkozy. Another major hurdle is given by the Palestinian issue which (as pointed out by a source within Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs which asked to remain anonymous) lead to ‘politicisation’ and a ‘deadlock’ of the still desirable inter-Mediterranean cooperation processes. In other words, the Union for the Mediterranean is not viewed as the framework within which to find a solution to the conflict between Israel and Palestine, nor (as confirmed by the same sources) something to which “Israel can sacrifice its political interests”. In short, as far as Israel is concerned the Mediterranean can wait. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Furniture Imports Rise From USD 62 to 138 Million

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 10 — Figures from the Egyptian national statistics institute, reported by the Italian foreign trade commission (ICE), show that furniture imports have undergone a notable increase in the last year, moving from USD 62 million in 2007 to USD 138 million in 2008. Import volumes have also increased. Chair imports were up by more than 38%, with 35% of those coming from Italy. Other wooden furniture items saw an import increase of roughly 50%, of which 40% came from Italy. EU countries (above all Italy and Germany) and Asian countries (particularly China) are the biggest furniture suppliers to the Egyptian market, followed by the USA and Turkey. Italy is the fourth-biggest supplier country in the sector, with a total export value of around USD 8 million. China, however, exports USD 44 million worth of furniture, and Italy also trails Germany (19 million) and the USA (9 million). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Barry Rubin: Israel and America: Neither Surrender Nor Confrontation

The United States demands that Israel stop construction on settlements. If this doesn’t happen, it hints at dire retaliation.

If Israel agrees to this step, President Barack Obama promises great things. First, he claims this will bring dramatic progress toward Israel-Palestinian peace.

That’s rubbish. We know that yielding would be followed by Palestinian Authority (PA) demands for more unilateral Israeli concessions. PA leaders openly say their strategy is to let the West force Israel to give them everything they want without any change by them. We know the current PA leadership is both disinterested and incapable of making real peace.

In addition, the U.S. initiative is absurdly one-sided, without hint of reciprocity by the other side. Equally, the administration’s brutal-style rhetoric denies previous U.S. commitments to Israel have been made on this issue. This approach seems almost designed to convince Israelis that further unilateral concessions will continue to be unrewarded and Western commitments continue to be forgotten.

Second, we are promised that if Israel gives in, Arab states will change their policies, becoming more conciliatory toward Israel and more helpful on pressing Iran.

This, too, is rubbish. Arab regimes have their own interests. They need the conflict; they view its solution to be an American problem. They’ve already make it clear that the United States will get nothing from them for pressuring Israel into concessions except demands to press Israel for more concessions.

Third, we’re promised that if Israel stops construction on settlements, the West can act more effectively on Iran. But they’ve already chosen a policy of engagement and concessions to Iran. There’s no will or ability to increase sanctions, not to mention continuing opposition by Russia and China.

So this, equally, is rubbish. Iran will make no deal, is stall for time, and correctly assess Western willpower as low. Of course, Iran wants to be regional hegemon. It sees having nuclear weapons as a plus whose political and economic costs are low.

Most disgusting of all are honeyed claims by American and European officials—be they cynical or foolish—that such concessions are good for Israel, as it will help it make peace and greater security. In truth, they want Israel to make concessions for their own selfish interests. They believe it will make the radical Islamist threat go away at Israel’s expense.

What then is the reality? If Israel ceases construction on settlements it will get nothing. Arab states, the PA, and West won’t change policies. Iran will go merrily on toward nuclear weapons.

Nevertheless, there’s still a strong case for Israel making a gesture to the U.S. administration for several reasons…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Netanyahu Speech, Premier Under Fire

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JUNE 11 — Benyamin Netanyahu is under siege. On Sunday at the University of Bar Ilan (Tel Aviv) he will make a highly anticipated speech in response to American President Barack Obama’s speech in Cairo on the new Middle East. Lately in the press, reports of varying credibility on Netanyahu’s position have been circulating. Haaretz reports that he will confirm Israel’s support of the Peace Treaty (published by the Quartet in 2003) and that he will push for a “demilitarised Palestinian state”, if Palestinians acknowledge the Jewish state. In the Likud party, there are growing fears that the Prime Minister may yield on certain points due to pressure by the US, EU, and Israeli head of state Shimon Peres. In recent weeks, meeting with Obama and Mitchell, and today in a meeting with Solana, Peres has taken a stance that may not be compatible with that of the government. Yesterday a Likud ideologist (Benny Begin, the son of Premier Menachem Begin) warned that a Palestinian state would be a threat to Israel. Similar fears were confirmed today by Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin (Likud). Some right-wing parties have already voiced their displeasure about Peres’ meddling, who “has perhaps forgotten that his role is only symbolic”. From Ramallah, Mahmoud Abbas’ (Abu Mazen) advisor has already clarified that Palestinians are not interested in a makeshift state. Netanyahu is currently not making any statements and has limited himself to consulting his party members. “He has clear political stances, a well-rooted vision,” assured Rivlin today during a visit to two settlements in the West Bank. To the settlers who were worried after Sunday’s speech, Rivlin responded: “Stay calm. I’ll come back and visit in 20 years.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Palestinian Boy ‘Hanged for Collaboration’

Palestinian police say a 15-year-old boy has been found hanged near the town of Qalqilya in the West Bank.

They said several family members had confessed to involvement in the killing, accusing the boy of collaborating with the Israeli army.

Collaboration is viewed as a serious offence in Palestinian society. Suspects are often summarily killed.

However, police said it was unlikely that such a young boy would have been recruited as an informer.

He has been named in the Palestinian press as Raed Sawalha.

Palestinian police spokesman Adnan Damiri said those responsible for the boy’s death would be brought to justice.

He said the boy’s father, uncle and cousin confessed to the killing, but that police were also investigating other motives for the killing, the Associated Press reported.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



S. Craxi in Ramallah and Jerusalem Today

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, JUNE 10 — Italian Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs Stefania Craxi, who last night arrived in the Middle East, will be visiting Ramallah (the West Bank) this morning to take part in the opening of the business conference on “economic opportunities in Palestine and the Gaza Strip”, together with around 40 Italian entrepreneurs. Craxi will have a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the conference with Palestinian Economy Minister Basem Khoury. After that, the undersecretary will meet Foreign Minster Riad al Malki and Palestinian National Authority prime minister Salam Fayyad. This afternoon Craxi will be in Jerusalem, where she is to meet with the Israeli deputy minister of Foreign Affairs, Daniel Ayalon. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UNRWA on the Brink of Bankruptcy, Officials Say

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, JUNE 11 — Officials from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA warned today that the 6-decades-old relief organization is on the verge of banckrupsy as funds expected to dry up before year end amid dwindling aid from international donors. The agency, created after the 1948 war with Israel to provide shelter, food and medical assistance to millions of Palestinian refugees who fled t neighbouring countries, has been suffering from a sever financial crisis since last year. During a meeting in Amman with donors from Arab and foreign countries, officials from UNRW said the budget deficit is close to the $32 million. This cash is needed to pay salaries of staff, let alone operational costs, they said. If the agency does not receive urgent help, thousands of employees will be left without pay in its five areas of operation: Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, said UNRWA commissioner Karin Abu Zaid, during a meeting with representatives of donor countries. Figures from UNRWA show that there is at least, a $100 million deficit is forecast for the agency’s 2010 budget. Nearly 4.7 million Palestinian refugees receive some sort of aid from UNRWA including residents of refugee camps. The USA, one of the biggest donors to the group, announced a contribution of USD 55.3 million to the UNRWA general fund, bringing its total contribution in 2009 to $154.5 million. Meanwhile, UNRWA staff in Jordan are threatening an open ended work stoppage if the agency does not offer them pay hike. The general strike is expected to take place next September with the start of school year, when 124.000 refugee students are expected to start a new year. But AbuZayd said ruled out any salary increases this year due to financial difficulties. “It is good that staff unions decided to postpone planned strikes till September,” she noted, indicating that this move would allow more time for discussions. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iraq: WMD Slam Dunk Never Reported

I may have linked to the following article before and have simply forgotten, but it summarizes the true story behind Saddam’s WMD program and how it was hidden from U.S. inspectors.

This is old news, but I remain incredibly frustrated by it. It is worth reviewing today if only as a defiant stick in the eye to remind the Left that we weren’t all fooled.

With the complicity of allies in the bureaucracy, the mass media/Leftist/Democrat alliance relentlessly promoted the myth that no weapons of mass destruction (nuclear, biological or chemical) existed in Iraq to justify invasion, to the point where today it is accepted as fact.

But it is a patent fraud made all the more infuriating because these same people who promoted it knew the truth. Indeed many of them publicly demanded Saddam divest himself of WMD right up to the moment we invaded, and had we not done so, would have certainly accused Bush and the Republicans of weakness.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Press: Brain Behind Madrid Attacks in Syrian Jail

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JUNE 11 — Wanted in Spain for having taken part in the 2004 terrorist attacks on Madrid, Abu Mussab as Suri (a.k.a. the Syrian), a suspected member of Al-Qaeda and notorious as ideologue of the “electronic Jihad”, is now in a Syrian prison, the pan-Arab daily Asharq al Awsat reports. The London-based newspaper, edited by Clive Stafford Smith, the British lawyer who defended As Suri and other detainees in the US Guantanamo prison writes: “Mustafa Nassar, also known as Abu Mussab as Suri, is under arrested in Syria, his country of birth’. Nassar is known as one of the “main strategic minds behind Al-Qaeda”: with the publication of around 1,600 web pages attributed to him, such as “attacking the enemies of Islam”. Already arrested in Pakistan in 2005, he is currently wanted by the Spanish authorities for the attacks in Madrid in 2004. Resident for many years in the United Kingdom, Nassar has double Syrian and Spanish citizenship, the latter obtained through marriage to a Spanish woman who converted to Islam. According to his defence lawyer, Nassar may have already been in prisons in Syria “for many years now”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Terrorism: Al-Qaeda Asks Turkish Muslims for Funds

Kabul, 11 June (AKI) — Al-Qaeda has appealed for financial donations, particularly from Muslims in Turkey, to fund its military operations in Afghanistan. The terror network made its appeal in a new audio message posted on jihadi Internet forums on Thursday.

The message is entitled ‘Our advice to the Turkish population’ and made by Al-Qaeda spokesman, Mustafa Abu al-Yazid.

“There are no differences between Arab Muslims and Muslims in other countries because Islam has taught us to support each other and our brotherhood,” he said.

Abu al-Yazid discussed several speeches by Al-Qaeda leaders, Osama Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri, and said those who were not directly involved in jihad, or holy war, could contribute to the cause of Al-Qaeda.

“You all know that jihad needs a lot of money,” he said. “Without money, the mujahadeen cannot buy food and weapons, so how can we accomplish jihad?

“Many verses of the Koran discuss the obligation to fund the jihad. We are in Afghanistan and we need money for our operations. Unfortunately, we are being forced to cut back our operations and attacks because of inadequate funds.”

“There are many brothers who cannot participate in jihad because they do not have enough money and many aspiring suicide attackers, who would like to sacrifice themselves on the way to god, cannot be recruited because of the lack of funds.”

Abu Al-Yazid spoke generally about Al-Qaeda victories against NATO troops in Afghanistan in the audio message. It is believed, however, that the message was recorded several months ago because former president George W. Bush is still referred to as the president of the United States.

Several days ago the Arab news channel, Al-Jazeera, aired an interview with Abu al-Yazid, carried out by a correspondent in Afghanistan.

The militant proclaimed that Al-Qaeda would defeat NATO troops in Afghanistan by the end of 2010.

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



The Age of Middle East Atonement

by Victor Davis Hanson

Therapeutic efforts to disguise the truth never really work.

President Obama made an earnest effort — as is his way in matters of discord — to split the difference with the Islamic world. His speech essentially amounted to: “We did that, you did this, tit-for-tat, now we’re even, and can’t we all just get along?” He should be congratulated for expressing a desire for peace and for gently reminding the Muslim world of the way to reform, even if he did so while inflating Western sins.

But the problem with such moral equivalence is that it equates things that are, well, not equal — and therefore ends up not being moral at all.

[Comment from Tuan Jim: Shades of Chesterton!]

To pull it off, one must distort both the past and the present for the presumed higher good of getting along. In the 1930s, British intellectuals performed feats of intellectual gymnastics in trying to contextualize Hitler’s complaints against the Versailles Treaty, assignment of guilt for the First World War, and French bellicosity — straining to overlook the intrinsic dangers of National Socialism for the higher good of avoiding another Somme. Over the short term, such revisionism worked; over the longer term, it ensured a highly destructive war.

Whatever a well-meaning President Obama thinks, occasional American outbursts against Muslims are not analogous with the terrorism directed at Westerners or the hostility toward Christianity shown in most of the Muslim world. Try flying into Saudi Arabia with a Bible, as compared to traveling to San Francisco with a Koran. One can easily forsake Christianity; one can never safely leave Islam. European worries about headscarves are not the equivalent of the Gulf states’ harassment of practicing Christians. Sorry, they’re just not.

Pace Obama, Arab learning in the Middle Ages, while impressive, did not really fuel either the Renaissance or the Enlightenment. If anything, the arrival in Europe of the learned of Byzantium fleeing Islam over two centuries was a far stronger catalyst for rediscovery of classical values, while enlightened European sympathy for Balkan peoples enslaved by the Ottomans rekindled romantic interest in Hellenism in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Colonialism and the Cold War — both of which have now been over for decades — do not account for present Arab pathologies. The far more pernicious Baathism, Nasserism, Pan-Arabism, and Islamism were all efforts, in varying degrees, to graft ideas of European socialism and Communism onto indigenous Arab and Muslim roots.

Today, Russia and China are much harder on Muslims than is the West. (Consider Russia’s actions in Chechnya and China’s treatment of the Uighurs.) Neither country pays any attention to Muslims’ grievances, and therefore Muslims respect and fear Russia and China far more than they do the United States.

There are no Arab coffeehouse discussions today about the nearly 1 million Muslims killed over two decades by the Soviets in Afghanistan and the Russian government in Chechnya, yet there is constant haranguing over Abu Ghraib, where not a single inmate was killed by rogue American guards. In short, neither logic nor morality is in abundance on the Arab Street, and conjuring up American felonies will not change that.

“On the one hand, on the other hand” — what Greek rhetoricians knew as men/de — when delivered in mellifluous tones, can suggest a path to reconciliation. But denial of fundamental differences leads nowhere. Our problems with the Middle East will dissipate, as have to varying degrees our problems with Japan, Southeast Asia, South Korea, and South America, when the region adopts, in part or in toto, open markets, consensual government, and human rights. Until then, we are in an uneasy and dangerous waiting period.

Conflating Western misdemeanors with Middle Eastern felonies is classical conflict-resolution theory, and laudably magnanimous. But privately the world knows that Muslims are treated better in the West than Christians are in Muslim countries. That Muslims migrate to the lands of Westerners, and not vice versa. That disputes over a border between Palestinians and Israelis do not explain the unhappiness of the Arab masses, suffering from state-caused poverty and wretchedness. That American military assistance to Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Kuwait, and Somalia, direct aid to Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinians, and moral condemnation of Chinese, Russian, and Balkan treatment of Muslims, coupled with a generous U.S. immigration policy, are not really cause for apology or atonement.

In short, few Arab leaders wish to give a “speech to the West.” They would have to take responsibility, directly or indirectly, for either fostering or appeasing radical Islam, while denying their culpability for its decades of mass murdering. They would also have to lament the global economic havoc caused in part by oil cartels and energy price-fixing.

President Obama’s intent is noble, but therapeutic efforts to disguise the truth never really work. We will see how the short-term good created by his therapeutic speechmaking compares to the long-term harm caused by telling the Muslim world, once again, that its problems were largely created by us — and, therefore, that we are largely responsible for providing the remedies.

Neither is true.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Girl Tortured and Killed After Refusing Marriage

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 11 — In Turkey a young woman who had refused to marry a man was kidnapped by members of his family — who then tortured her, broke her arms and legs and killed her with blows to the head. The tragic incident occurred in Afyon in central Anatolia, around a 3-hour drive from Ankara. The victim, 19-year-old Nimet Gurbunar, was “guilty” of turning down the marriage proposal of 24-year-old Tayfun Sahin. His sister Fadime and one of his brothers, Sayfi, kidnapped the girl to convince her to accept the wedding. They started torturing her and, when the girl still refused, they started breaking her limbs one by one. Despite the injuries the girl had already sustained — a newspaper writes — her suitor wanted to rape her as final act, but only abandoned the idea when he saw her bloodstained legs. Then, several blows to the head, probably with a bat, smashed the victim’s skull. The woman and her brothers have been arrested. A survey carried out in 35 provinces in the country showed that in Turkey, one out of every three women are the victim of domestic violence. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Record in Dismissals of Unionized Workers, Report

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 11 — Turkey has the worst record for the dismissal of workers involved in trade union activity among 68 countries, daily Hurriyet reported, quoting a report released by an international trade union group. The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) reported 7,500 cases of the dismissal of workers involved in trade union activity in 68 countries around the world. “The country with the worst record of dismissals was Turkey, where more than 2,000 cases were documented”, the report said. The next to come are Indonesia, Malawi, Pakistan, Tanzania and Argentina. The report also highlighted that the recession has led some governments to crack down on workers demanding higher wages to cope with the recession and high food prices. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Pro-Kurdish Paper Silenced by Court

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 11 — The pro-Kurdish daily Gunluk was slapped with a publishing ban by an Istanbul court, which issued two rulings on teh same day pertaining to the newspaper, Hurriet reports today. The editors-in-chief of Gunluk, Ayhan Bilgen and Filiz Kocali, said one of the rulings was in regard to the paper’s June 1 edition that had focused on a banner unfurled during a party rally. They said the court ruled that in a photo used in that edition to show members of the Democratic Society Party, or DTP, attending a concert in the southeastern city of Diyarbakir, a banner portraying a picture of Abdullah Ocalan, the jailed leader of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, was visible in the corner of the frame and that the paper had “focused” on the Ocalan banner. Bilgen and Kacali said the second ruling was in regard to two opinion columns the paper ran in its June 2 edition, which the court judged the two columns as “engaging in terrorist propaganda”. They reiterated that similar columns had appeared in other publications. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



U.S. Sends 3 Guantanamo Detainees to Saudi Arabia

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — Three detainees from Guantanamo Bay were transferred to Saudi Arabia “under appropriate security measures,” the U.S. Justice Department said on Friday, in another step toward President Barack Obama’s goal of closing the prison for terrorism suspects.

“All individuals transferred to Saudi Arabia are subject to judicial review in Saudi Arabia before they undergo a rehabilitation program,” the Justice Department said in announcing the transfer of Khalid Saad Mohammed, Abdalaziz Kareem Salim Al Noofayaee and Ahmed Zaid Salim Zuhair.

All three men are from Saudi Arabia.

Last month, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said during a visit to Riyadh he was impressed with the Saudi program to rehabilitate militants and the United States had raised the idea of also sending Yemeni detainees to the kingdom.

The Saudi transfers followed the transfer of six other detainees this week — four Chinese members of the Uighur ethnic group were released in Bermuda, and one detainee from Iraq and another from Chad were sent to their home countries.

Obama has ordered the closing of the prison on a U.S. naval base in Cuba, which now holds 229 detainees, by the end of January.

Guantanamo Bay, opened under former President George W. Bush after the September 11, 2001 attacks, drew international criticism for holding prisoners indefinitely, many without charges.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UAE-Turkey: Several Deals Are Back on the Front Burner

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — Deals involving heavy investment between Turkey and the UAE are once again being reviewed with several of them beginning to materialise, said a senior executive of Turkish firm Ata Invest, an investment banking and capital market advisory group as reported by local press. “A lot of deals were put on hold due to the global financial crisis; not because they were bad opportunities but because people were expecting the worst. We are seeing that changing now. People are thinking they may be reaching towards the end of the crisis,” said Ata Invest Dubai Chairman Hakan Ferhatoglu. “So we are seeing a lot of deals, especially from Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, being more seriously examined again. More transactions have started to take place,” said Ferhatoglu, who is also the Finance Committee Chairman of Turkey’s Foreign Economic Relations Board and an Executive Committee Member of the UAE-Turkey Business Council. Turkey-UAE trade has increased to about USD 9 billion (Dh33bn) while it was much lower in the past five years or so. “On trade side, it has already picked up, while on investment side, it is picking up and is estimated to be between $1.5bn and $3bn. Turkey has expressed its interest to invest about $40bn in the UAE in next five years.” Sectors such as food, healthcare, agriculture, energy and logistics have been attracting high interest from UAE investors. Among the sectors in Turkey where UAE investors can seek opportunities include energy, retail, food and logistics. He said with a large proportion of young population and skilled human resource, Turkey presented attractive opportunities in terms of investment. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Putin ‘Turns Into Art Instructor’

Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has been raising eyebrows by telling one of the country’s most famous artists how to paint better.

Visiting 79-year-old artist Ilya Glazunov, Mr Putin stopped in front of a large painting of a medieval knight.

“The sword is too short,” he is reputed to have said. “It’s only good enough for cutting sausage.”

Not wishing to displease his powerful guest, Mr Glazunov immediately agreed to correct his mistake.

Oligarch humiliated

In North Korea, they call it “on the spot guidance”.

It is when an all powerful-ruler drops by to give soldiers, scientists, farmers even artists advice on how to do their jobs properly.

However, it is not only artists that have been getting a tongue-lashing from Mr Putin.

Last week, he humiliated one of Russia’s richest men on live television. He forced the billionaire businessman Oleg Deripaska to reopen an aluminium plant after protests by laid-off workers.

As the cameras rolled, Mr Putin threw his pen on the table and ordered Mr Deripaska to sign the paperwork.

It was a brilliant piece of political theatre, which went down extremely well with Russia’s public who were delighted to see Mr Putin bringing the hated oligarch to heel..

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

South Asia


Bangladesh: Catholic Chef Has a “Really Rough Time in Dhaka’s Central Jail”

Now out on bail, the chef at the Castel Inn was initially arrested for allegedly possessing illegal alcoholic beverages. He spend two weeks in prison in a cell built for 20 inmates but housing around 240. Now local Catholics are waiting for the trial, demanding justice.

Dhaka (AsiaNews) — Sapon D Costa, a hotel chef arrested during the night of 25 May for allegedly possessing illegal alcoholic beverages, was recently released on bail to wait for trial. For two weeks the Catholic man was imprisoned in Dhaka, locked up in a cell originally built for 20 inmates but currently holding about 240 men. In this short period of time he got sick because of poor hygiene and inadequate food, “not even sufficient for a child.”

“I had a really rough time in the central jail,” Costa said, “locked up with 240 people in a cell built for 20. I got a skin disease that covered by whole body and whatever food we got it was not even sufficient for a child. It is really inhumane in Dhaka’s central jail.”

Fortunately for him Sapon D Costa was released on bail last Saturday. As soon as he got out he and his entire family went to church to attend Mass and thank God.

His wife Onima Corraya said that she “prayed to Our Lady”, grateful to the priests and the Catholic community who showed solidarity and support. She said she hoped her husband can go back to work.

After Sapon D Costa’s arrest a number of Christian associations and human rights activists mobilised on his behalf, calling for a fair trial and an impartial investigation.

Fr Edmond Cruze, a local Holy Cross priest, said that Costa’s release was not enough; instead, “we want justice.”

Indeed for days the Catholic chef was locked up in his crowded cell not knowing what charges had been brought against him.

The initial warrant said that he was in possession of banned alcoholic beverages that had been served at a party held on the evening of 24 May at the Castel Inn, the luxury resort where Costa works.

“A bunch of young men and women were released after paying the agents. I am poor and could give them nothing,” Costa said.

Eventually he found about the charges against him after a few days in prison.

“Customers brought alcoholic drinks in from the outside. Only those who were at the party and the hotel manager could have known about the bottles’ content,” he explained.

The manager perhaps tried to get him into a compromising situation in order to get him fired and have his relatives and friends hired instead.

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



Indonesian Chopper Crashes

JAKARTA — TWO military personnel were killed and five others seriously injured on Friday in the second crash of an Indonesian military aircraft this week, the air force spokesman said. The Puma helicopter went down at a military base in Bogor, West Java, at around 2pm (0700 GMT, 3pm Singapore time) during a test flight, spokesman Bambang Sulistio said.

‘The helicopter had just undergone repairs and was being tested to see if it was fit to fly. Seven personnel were in it and two were killed in the crash,’ he added.

It was not immediately known what caused the crash. The dead servicemen were technicians from the air force.

‘Planes and helicopters must be checked before they are allowed to fly,’ Defence Minister Juwono Sudarsono said.

Two special forces troops were killed Monday when an army helicopter crashed in South Cianjur, West Java.

An Indonesian military Hercules transport plane crashed last month as it prepared to land at a base in East Java, killing 101 people.

In April, 24 military personnel were killed when their training aircraft slammed into a hangar at an air base in West Java. — AFP

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Italians Hurt in Afghan Firefight

Three soldiers wounded, one seriously

(ANSA) — Rome, June 11 — Three Italian soldiers were wounded, one seriously, in a firefight Thursday in western Afghanistan, defense ministry sources said.

Defense Minister Ignazio La Russa said the soldier in the most serious condition had suffered wounds to the arm pit and shoulder, areas not fully protected by bullet-proof vests, but was not in any mortal danger. The clash with Taliban insurgents took place in the province of Farah, located in the southern part of the western region where international ISAF forces are under Italian command.

According to La Russa, Farah “is an area which has always been marred by violence and thus is one of the most dangerous for our forces”.

The firefight followed a nighttime attack on an Italian patrol, which returned fire and did not suffer any injuries.

These latest in a series of attacks, the defense minister said, will not have any effect on Italy’s mission in Afghanistan.

“Neither this government nor the previous one ever hid the fact that this mission is not just one focused on reconstruction but entails the use of force, when necessary,” La Russa said. The use of force, he added, “is part of our soldiers’ mission there. They know this and are well aware of the risks involved”. “Our men are doing their job with their usual dedication and professionalism. They are there to reconstruct but they also know that dangers exist and that, if necessary, they may have to use force, in accordance with the rules of engagement,” the defense minister said.

Violence has been increasing in Afghanistan ahead of this summer’s presidential elections there and Italy has sent in additional troops to deal with the situation.

On Wednesday, Italian and Afghan government forces killed two local Taliban leaders in the western Afghanistan province of Baghdis in an operation in which two Italian helicopters suffered minor damage.

An Italian military patrol came under attack during the night between Monday and Tuesday in the Mushai Valley, some 30km from the Afghan capital Kabul.

Paratroopers from the Folgore Brigade were said to have returned fire and “neutralised the threat” without suffering casualties or injuries. Insurgents were said to have used light weapons and rocket-propelled grenades in their attack on the Italian patrol. Last week Italian helicopters were employed in a joint Italian-Afghan military operation to destroy a number of Taliban positions in western Afghanistan.

The action took place in the area of Bala Morgab, where a week before a joint Italian-Afghan patrol engaged in a firefight which left 25 insurgents and three Afghan soldiers dead, while four Italian paratroopers from the Folgore Brigade suffered minor injuries. The clash came not far from where an Italian military helicopter, carrying General Rosario Castellano, the commander of allied forces in western Afghanistan, came under machine-gun fire the day before.

Because of the expected surge in pre-election violence, Italy this year boosted its troop strength in Afghanistan from 2,270 to 2,800, with most of the additional forces sent to reinforce its contingent deployed in the turbulent province of Farah.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Pakistan’s ‘Loose Nukes’

Every now and then in this business someone in a position to know some enthralling secret passes information on to you, but you have no means of backing it up from other sources.

A few years ago, I was told about extraordinary US contingency plans to recover Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, in the event of a collapse of law and order or an extremist coup in that country.

My informant gave me considerable detail. A super-secret agreement had been put in place early this decade following confrontations between India and Pakistan, two nuclear armed nations, over the disputed Kashmir region.

In order to stabilise an otherwise potentially highly volatile situation, Pakistan would tell the US where its nuclear weapons were.

India had been promised, that in the event of some Pakistani national cataclysm, the Americans would move in to remove the nuclear weapons.

The “loose nukes” nightmare would thus be avoided, and India would not be tempted into a first strike on Pakistan’s atomic arsenal.

Sometimes stories, even from people who have held senior positions in Western governments, are a little too good to be true.

This one seemed to smack of Tom Clancy. Nobody would ever confirm it, and indeed some of those I checked it out with were openly sceptical. So I never ran the story.

Perhaps, after all, my original informant had been trying to plant it.

Now that the Obama administration is openly voicing its concern about the threat to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons from rising militancy in that country, some aspects of that original tip off have come back into sharp focus.

In April, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told a US senate committee, that the US spent a lot of time worrying about Iran getting nuclear weapons, but that Pakistan already had them, and that, “they’ve adopted a policy of dispersing their nuclear weapons and facilities”.

In this phrase, “adopted a policy” I detected a possible inference that Pakistan had moved away from an earlier procedure of keeping their bombs in a small number of locations.

My further inquiries suggested this inference was deliberate.

So here at last was a measure of confirmation for something I had heard years earlier.

As to what exactly Pakistan had told the US in the time of president (and former army chief) Pervez Musharraf, we are once again in hazier territory.

We do know however that Mr Musharraf knew far more about the country’s nuclear complex than any civilian leader has ever been allowed to learn.

We also know that in the first years after 9/11, there was intimate strategic co-operation with the US.

Of course any suggestion that the US might, in the past, have had plans to sweep up these weapons is politically sensitive in Pakistan.

The country revels in the status that its arsenal has given it. Any suggestion that there were plans to “secure” the bombs, even in a state of anarchy, would strike many Pakistanis as a US plot to emasculate an Islamic nuclear power.

Some feel the nuclear danger is being exaggerated in Washington in order to build support for the Obama administration’s Af-Pak policy.

There may be something in this, given that the chance of Taliban storming some nuclear weapon storage point is remote.

But the real danger at present lies in subversion.

Pakistan’s nuclear establishment produced the unhappy example of AQ Khan, who sold nuclear weapons technology to Libya, North Korea and Iran.

He is said to have acted from a combination of ideological and financial motives.

The chance currently is less of a complete collapse of order, the kind of circumstance under which possible secret plans of yesteryear would have come into play, but of one or more individuals working inside the system providing Islamic militants with nuclear materials or, sum of all nightmares, an entire atomic weapon.

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



Singapore: Christians Jailed for ‘Sedition’

Singapore, 10 June (AKI) — A Christian couple were jailed for eight weeks in Singapore on Wednesday for distributing evangelical publications considered “seditious”. A district court judge earlier had found Ong Kian Cheong, 50, and Dorothy Chan, 46, guilty of sedition for “distributing seditious or objectionable publications”.

In sentencing them, district judge Roy Neighbour said the couple’s offences affected the foundation of Singaporean society and public policy required the court to apply the principle of deterrence in punishing them, according to local daily, The Straits Times.

But the prison terms the couple received were at the lower end of what the prosecution had urged the court to impose.

It had sought a sentence of between two and six months.

The couple were found guilty on four charges late last month in the first full trial under the Sedition Act to be heard in Singapore.

Neighbour noted that Ong, a technical officer and Chan, an associate director with financial firm UBS, said that neither had realised they were doing anything wrong.

“They have the capacity to undermine and erode the delicate fabric of racial and religious harmony in Singapore,” said Neighbour, cited in The Straits Times.

He added that as Singaporeans, the husband and wife cannot claim to be ignorant of the sensitivity of race and religion in Singapore’s multi-racial and religious society.

“Common sense dictates that religious fervour to spread the faith, in our society, must be constrained by sensitivity, tolerance and mutual respect for another’s faith and religious beliefs,” said the judge.

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



US Commander Vows to Cut Afghan Casualties

LONDON — The commander of U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan has said he will review military strategy in an effort to reduce civilian casualties.

U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal said in an interview broadcast Friday that troops had a duty to protect Afghan civilians.

He told the BBC that he would review troops’ rules of engagement and instructions, “with the emphasis that we are fighting for the population, and that involves protecting them both from the enemy and from unintended consequences of our operation.”

“Because we know that although an operation may be conducted for the right reason, if it has negative effects it can have a negative outcome for everyone,” he said.

“Sometimes there’s winning a tactical fight and losing a strategic event.”

Civilian deaths, particularly in U.S. airstrikes, have angered many Afghans and undermined support for foreign intervention in the country. The U..S. is currently investigating airstrikes in western Afghanistan’s Farah province that killed at least 30 civilians last month.

There are about 70,000 U.S. and allied troops in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama is sending 21,000 more American troops there to fight a resurgent Taliban, and has shaken up the U.S. military command in a bid to break the stalemate there.

McChrystal, a former special forces officer, was confirmed by the U.S. Senate this week as commander of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan. He replaces Gen. David McKiernan, who was forced out by U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

Taliban insurgents are ramping up attacks on foreign forces. On Thursday, the head of U.S. Central Command, David Petraeus, said the number of insurgent attacks had hit the highest level since the December 2001 fall of the Taliban.

McChrystal said U.S. troops would be in Afghanistan for a long time to come.

“I think it will go on until we achieve the kind of progress we want to achieve,” he said. “It won’t be short.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Sub Collides With Array Towed by U.S. Ship: Report

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — A Chinese submarine accidentally collided with an underwater sonar array being towed by a U.S. military ship, CNN reported on Friday, quoting an unnamed military official.

The incident occurred on Thursday near Subic Bay off the coast of the Philippines, according to the CNN report.

The destroyer USS John S. McCain was towing the array, deployed to track underwater sounds.

“The John S. McCain did have a problem with its towed array sonar. It was damaged” on Thursday in Subic Bay, a Pentagon spokesman told Reuters in a telephone interview.

The spokesman, who asked not to be identified, would not confirm other details of the CNN report, including whether the array collided with a Chinese submarine. He said the U.S. destroyer was not damaged and was not hit by another vessel.

The U.S. Navy does not view the incident as a deliberate move by Beijing to harass military ships operating in the region, CNN reported.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Climate Pact in Jeopardy as China Refuses to Cut Carbon Emissions

China will not make a binding commitment to reduce carbon emissions, putting in jeopardy the prospects for a global pact on climate change.

Officials from Beijing told a UN conference in Bonn yesterday that China would increase its emissions to develop its economy rather than sign up to mandatory cuts.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



N. Korea in Extortionate Demands for Kaesong Complex

North Korea wants South Korea to quadruple wages for North Korean workers and pay 31 times the rent at the joint Kaesong Industrial Complex. The North made the new demand in a second round of inter-Korean talks at the industrial park Thursday. That dims prospects for the project even further, but the two Koreas agreed to meet again on June 19 to continue talks.

The Unification Ministry said North Korea demanded that workers’ wages are raised from the current US$75, including social insurance, to $300 per month. Most of the wages already go to the regime, not the workers.

It also demanded $500 million in rent for 3.3 million sq. m land put aside for the first phase of the industrial park, for which Hyundai Asan and the Korea Land Corporation in 2004 already paid in $16 million for a 50-year lease. In addition, the North wants another $10 per 3.3 sq. m for 1.98 million sq. m land currently allotted to the industrial park a year from 2010.

An intelligence officer said, “If we pay $500 million in rent and increase the per capita wage to $300 per month, North Korea will earn $600 million to $700 million in cash this year alone. That’s nearly 70 percent of North Korea’s annual export volume of $900 million” as of 2007.

The South Korean side called on Pyongyang to release a Hyundai Asan staffer identified as Yu who has been held incommunicado in Kaesong for some 70 days. It wants the two sides establish a committee on travel between the two Koreas, which will serve as a forum to discuss the safety of South Koreans traveling to the North. Seoul also urged Pyongyang to stop conducting nuclear tests and creating military tension, resume inter-Korean talks and return to the six-party nuclear talks.

Prof. Nam Ju-hong of Kyonggi University commented, “North Korea may want to close the Kaesong industrial park unilaterally, but it also has to be mindful of Chinese and other foreign investors who have money in the North. It is apparently attempting to choke off South Korean firms to make them leave of their own accord.”

But some feel there still is room for negotiations with the North. Prof. Kim Yong-hyun of Dongguk University said, “If it had decided to close down the industrial park, the North would have unilaterally told Seoul that it would do so, without setting a date for the next round of talks. It seems that Pyongyang is trying to see how Seoul would respond to a maximum demand.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



NK Detention of S. Korean Worker Enters 74th Day

South Korea yesterday made no progress in the release of a Hyundai Asan Corp. employee detained by North Korea for the 74th day.

Both Koreas spoke on the detainee in working-level talks at the inter-Korean business park in Kaesong, but the North just listened to the complaints raised by the South.

North Korean officials simply repeated, “This does not fall under our jurisdiction.”

Seoul failed to determine where he is being held, and Pyongyang denied him his basic human rights.

On April 24, the 39th day of their detention, the North announced its prosecution of two American journalists arrested March 17 near the border between North Korea and China near the Duman River. On June 4, the 80th day of their detention, it began the trial of the journalists and announced their sentence four days later.

Pyongyang, however, has said nothing about the South Korean detainee except a statement May 1, the 33rd day of his detention, that it would conduct an in-depth investigation. If he is put on trial, the North is required to consult with the South under a 2004 bilateral agreement, but has said nothing yet.

Moreover, North Korea is apparently taking advantage of the case to raise its offensive against South Korea despite failing to state the charges against him or present evidence.

The North said March 30, “He tried to corrupt and deviate [sic] a female worker at the Kaesong industrial park and encouraged her to flee our country,” but released no details on evidence or circumstances.

It said May 1, “He criticized our regime with malicious intent, infringed on our republic’s sovereignty, and committed a serious violation of related law.”

The North also aroused suspicion by saying May 15 that he wore a Hyundai Asan cap.

The two detained Americans have been allowed to meet the Swedish ambassador to Pyongyang three times, and write letters and phone their families in the United States. The Hyundai Asan employee, however, has had no chance to meet South Korean officials, not to mention his family.

North Korean officials said in the middle of last month that he was doing well. South Korea sent underwear to him and the North often sent back the clothes he wore, but this was stopped May 15.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Problems for Marines in Korea

WASHINGTON — THE United States would be hard pressed to launch an amphibious landing in Korea if called to do so, US Marine Corps commandant said on Thursday, warning against a decline in the military’s capability to fight from the sea.

In discussing tensions with North Korea over its nuclear test last month, General James Conway told reporters that only between 10 to 15 per cent of US Marine forces are trained in the type of amphibious warfare that could be required.

‘It concerns me greatly that there is always the possibility that we could be asked to do something like that that we’re not trained to do,’ he said at the National Press Club.

‘Today we have the capacity to put two Marine expeditionary brigades to sea. That’s two regiments across the beach. That’s not a lot of people when you’re talking about invading another nation,’ he added.

A Marine expeditionary brigade amounts to about 15,000 men, according to the Defence Department. By contrast, Pyongyang’s highly militarised regime has a one million man army at its disposal.

The Marine Corps last major amphibious invasion was during the 1950-53 Korean war when the 1st Marine Division landed at Inchon in 1950 to spearhead a counter-offensive against a North Korean invasion of South Korea.

Gen Conway warned against the Pentagon’s budget cuts — which has focused on reducing its conventional weaponry — slashing Marine training in this arena, noting the United States ‘could lose its amphibious capability.’ — AFP

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



US Climate Envoy: China Seeks Top US Technology

BONN, Germany — China wants the United States to deliver top of the line technology as part of a new global warming agreement, the chief U.S. climate negotiator said Thursday.

Jonathan Pershing, who was part of a U.S. delegation that returned this week from Beijing, said the Chinese are looking to the U.S. for ideas and technology to retool its high-carbon industry.

“They want from us technology, and we want from them action,” Pershing said on the sidelines of U.N. climate talks. “There’s room for agreement there.”

But the Chinese “don’t want any technology. They want some of the advanced technologies which are part of our own intellectual capital,” Pershing told Public Radio International’s Living on Earth program.

The mission to Beijing by Pershing and Todd Stern, President Barack Obama’s climate envoy, underscored the paramount role of quiet diplomacy in reaching critical political deals — outside the conference halls of the 192-nation U.N. negotiations, where delegations tend to repeat entrenched positions.

An understanding between the U.S. and China, the world’s two largest polluters, is essential for the talks to succeed in crafting a successor to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. That agreement, which expires in 2012, calls on 37 industrial countries to cut emissions by a total of 5 percent from 1990 levels but made no demands on developing countries.

The U.S. has made it clear that China must be part of a new climate package, and that without China there’s no deal.

But Stern was quoted as saying in Beijing on Thursday the U.S. was not demanding that China accept mandatory emissions targets. “We don’t expect China to take a national cap at this stage,” Stern was quoted as telling the China Daily.

China, India and other developing countries say targets would constrain their economic growth, and their first priority is to fight poverty.

“We have 400 million people who don’t have access to electricity,” said Shyam Saran, the chief delegate from India, which is another key player. India’s population is about 1.2 billion.

At a rare news conference in Bonn, Saran held fast to India’s insistence that industrialized countries deepen their emissions cuts to a total of 40 percent below 1990 levels within the next decade, while at the same time rejecting emissions targets for developing countries.

Saran said developing countries would consider measures to curb the growth of emissions, but only in exchange for technology and funding from the rich countries. Funding could reach $250 billion a year, he said.

Delegations in Bonn have been working on a draft text of an agreement, due to be completed in December at a major conference in the Danish capital of Copenhagen.

The draft, which began with 53 pages, has ballooned to some 200 pages as delegations inserted language to be negotiated later. The second draft was expected to be whittled down to a more manageable size at the next round of talks in August.

Saran said the U.N. talks were mandated only to build on existing agreements, not negotiate a new treaty. “The Kyoto Protocol remains a valid legal document,” he said. India and the developing countries face no obligations under the Kyoto pact as it stands.

Veteran India watchers said Saran’s line, virtually unchanged from last year, appeared to be a negotiating tactic.

“India is holding the line,” said Richie Ahuja, the India Policy Coordinator for the Washington-based Environmental Defense Fund.

But in the end India will likely have to sign on to a new climate deal because it would translate into a flow of funds from the rich countries and the chance to take part in a lucrative new carbon market.

Environmentalists said they saw little movement on major issues from any of the negotiators, and that the gap between rich and poor countries was increasing.

“It’s clear they are building up their fortresses,” said Tasneem Essop of the World Wildlife Fund for Nature.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Australia: A Nation of Paupers

IT’S no great surprise that the ACTU congress last week called on the Rudd government to back a wealth tax on high-income earners.

The common orthodoxy, even among a large section of the economic commentariat, is that the wealthy should be the last to get tax cuts in good times and the first to be hit with tax rises in bad times.

Take Geoffrey Barker, writing in The Australian Financial Review after the May budget. He complained Wayne Swan’s budget was “plainly flawed in moral terms” because it did not slug the rich enough. “An ethical budget should … seek impartiality to make benefits granted and sacrifices demanded commensurate with the needs and abilities of citizens.” There was no attempt to claw back revenue by progressively increasing the taxes paid by the wealthiest citizens, Barker complained.

When pundits start framing tax reform in moral terms, you know something’s awry. Their belief in taxing the wealthy has become an article of faith, not a matter for rational analysis. Just as with climate change, those who treat tax as the greatest moral issue of our time will necessarily regard arguments for any limits as immoral. Thus, if you regard progressive tax as a moral imperative, then you can never hit the rich hard enough with higher taxes because every hike makes the system more progressive and, therefore, more morally right. On the flipside, any tax cut or tax break for the rich must necessarily be derided as immoral.

And the sorts of flat tax rates apparently suggested by economist Henry Ergas in his review for the Liberal Party represent the ultimate in moral turpitude. Never mind that flat taxes have helped former communist countries such as Russia and the Baltic states stage a Lazarus-like economic recovery.

Laurie Oakes boarded the same moral indignation train when Malcolm Turnbull committed the political sin of appearing on BRW’s rich list a few weeks back. Oakes thought he had found the ultimate “gotcha” moment when he asked the Opposition Leader how he could possibly support maintaining the private health insurance rebate for high-income earners when he was so rich. In other words, the rich never deserve tax breaks of any kind.

To be sure, it must be politically tempting to run this line. After all, how many votes are you going to lose by soaking the rich? Hence, governments weighed down by deficits and debts are doing just that. Gordon Brown’s Labour government in Britain has raised its top tax rate, overturning Labour Party policy not to raise taxes. In the US, the Obama administration may do the same, following a swath of US states that have raised income taxes on the rich in recent years.

However, clothing these arguments in moral terms is designed to give some respectability to what is in truth little more than an infantile cri de coeur, a barely disguised envy yelp. Rational analysis requires consideration of two questions. First, who pays what proportion of tax? And, second, if you raise the taxes of the wealthy, at what point will they start to change their behaviour, depleting tax revenues?

As to who pays the most, a report commissioned by the Howard government in 2006 cited Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development figures that revealed Australia had the most progressive tax system after Ireland. In other words, the relative tax burden falls more heavily on those with the highest incomes. Many will say that, too, is as it should be. Indeed, the Barkers of this world will say the wealthy should bear higher taxes, as sacrifices must be commensurate with means. It’s a nice pollyanna kind of idea.

Alas, in the brutish real world, you cannot avoid the second issue. If you raise the taxes of the wealthy, you can expect tax revenues to fall as the wealthy change their behaviour. It is hardly novel to point out that raising the tax on a packet of cigarettes will change behaviour. That’s why governments tax cigarettes. People may smoke less or even give up. Same with taxes on alcohol. Why, then, doesn’t the same logic apply to raising income taxes? In other words, the disincentives from paying higher taxes may mean that those we rely on most to fill up the tax coffers may stop doing so.

Evidence of that abounds. In the 1960s, Britain’s 95 per cent top tax rate turned the Rolling Stones into tax exiles and contributed to the devastation of the British economy, reversed ultimately by Margaret Thatcher. The Beatles song Taxman and the title of the Stones album Exile on Main Street should stand as a potent reminder that progressive taxation has its devastating limits.

For more detail on that, take a look at a recent study for the American Legislative Exchange Council by Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore. They found that from 1998 to 2007, every day more than 1100 people hightailed it out of the nine highest income tax states in the US, such as California, New Jersey, New York and Ohio, and relocated mostly to the nine tax-haven states with no income tax, such as Nevada, New Hampshire and Texas.

They also found that during “these same years, the no-income tax states created 89 per cent more jobs and had 32 per cent faster personal income growth than their high tax counterparts”. Laffer and Moore, authors of Rich States, Poor States, found that because people, investment capital and businesses were mobile, there was no coincidence that the two highest tax-rate states — California and New York — also were those in the deepest fiscal hole. In other words, if you soak the rich, you end up sinking the rest.

There are logical reasons hitting the rich, while satisfying the envy gene, does nothing for the economy. The wealthy can, and do, migrate. Those who stay may be more determined to avoid tax (including by working less). And remember, too, that you won’t find rich people locating to a high-taxing country.

This is as true in Australia as anywhere else. As the Rudd government confronts the question of how to pay off decades of debt, inevitably there are calls for tax rises for the rich. That would be a grave mistake. Arguing against tax rises for the rich is not about defending the rich. They can look after themselves. This is about looking after the rest. The smarter approach is to aim for that level of progressivity that maximises the overall tax take, including from the rich. I don’t pretend to know precisely where that point is, but I do know that going beyond that point — although politically tempting — would revive the Beatles’ cry: “Yeah, I’m the taxman. And you’re working for no one but me.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Chinese Muslims Trigger Public Backlash in Palau

KOROR, Palau (AP) — The tiny Pacific nation of Palau’s decision to allow 13 Chinese Muslims from the Guantanamo Bay prison camp to resettle there has sparked anger among islanders who fear for the safety of the tranquil tourist haven.

The U.S. government determined last year that the Chinese Muslims, or Uighurs, were not enemy combatants and should be released from the U.S. military prison in Cuba. China has objected to their resettlement, calling the men “terrorist suspects” and demanding they be sent home.

The U.S. has said it fears the men would be executed if they were returned to China.

Palau President Johnson Toribiong explained his decision to grant the Uighurs entry as traditional hospitality, but public opinion has appeared overwhelmingly negative. Some complained Friday that the government failed to consult the people.

“I totally disagree” with allowing the Uighurs onto Palau, Natalia Baulis, a 30-year-old mother of two, told The Associated Press by telephone.

“It’s good to be humanitarian and all, but still these people … to me are scary,” she said.

The Uighurs (pronounced WEE’-gurs) have been in custody since they were captured in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2001.

Fermin Nariang, editor of the Palau newspaper Island Times, said he had been stopped in the streets of the capital, Koror, by residents venting their anger.

“This is a very small country … and some are saying if the whole world doesn’t want these folks, why are we taking them?” Nariang said.

The newspaper quoted islander Debedebk Mongami as saying, “I’m also afraid this news is going to scare the tourists who plan to come to Palau.”

The Palau Chamber of Commerce, which represents the country’s multimillion dollar hotel industry, did not return calls seeking comment Friday.

Toribiong has denied the move was influenced by any massive aid package from Washington, saying instead that the Uighurs had become “international vagabonds” who deserved a fresh start.

“Palau’s people are always on the side of the U.S. government,” Toribiong said.

He said Palau would send a delegation to Guantanamo to assess the Uighur detainees. It was unclear when this would happen or when the Uighurs would arrive in the island nation.

Four other Uighurs left Guantanamo Bay for a new home in Bermuda on Thursday. Some residents of the North Atlantic island were also unhappy, with dozens unleashing their anger on the Facebook page of a local newspaper, The Royal Gazette.

Even Britain, which handles Bermuda’s defense, security and foreign affairs, expressed displeasure at the deal.

The British Foreign Office complained that Bermuda’s leaders failed to consult “whether this falls within their competence or is a security issue for which the Bermuda government do not have delegated responsibility.”

Although the Pentagon said the 17 Uighurs were not enemy combatants, the Obama administration has faced fierce congressional opposition to allowing them into the U.S. as free men. China says no other country should take them.

On Thursday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a news conference that the U.S. should “stop handing over terrorist suspects to any third country, so as to expatriate them to China at an early date.” He did not say if China would take any action in response.

Toribiong said Palau did not consider China’s reaction when it accepted the U.S. request to temporarily resettle the detainees.

Palau has eight main islands and more than 250 islets, and is a former U.S. trust territory that has retained close ties with the United States since independence in 1994.

Some 20,000 people live in Palau, a predominantly Christian nation.

           — Hat tip: Islam in Action [Return to headlines]



Military ‘Meatheads’: Latham

DEPUTY Prime Minister Julia Gillard has defended the members of the Australian Defence Force after former Labor leader Mark Latham called them “meatheads”.

Ms Gillard says the men and women of the ADF do a first-class job.

Mr Latham accused the nation’s soldiers of having “limited intelligence and primeval interests in life”, in a column in today’s edition of The Australian Financial Review.

He said former defence minister Joel Fitzgibbon was better off out of the portfolio, with even the most tedious of public duties “better than knocking around with the meatheads of the Australian Defence Force”.

When asked about the comments, Ms Gillard said in Sydney that Australian soldiers were respected around the world.

“I, as Deputy Prime Minister, deal with many men and women in our defence forces and as Deputy Prime Minister I’d certainly want to say that the men and women of the Australian Defence Force do a first-class job, a fantastic job,” she said.

“Their skills and abilities are recognised around the world.

“Our soldiers, our defence personnel, join with those in other nations for operations around the world, and around the world they are known as highly trained, highly professional, highly skilled personnel who get on with doing dangerous work in the interests of this country.”

In a wide-ranging assault Mr Latham wrote that when he worked for Gough Whitlam the iconic Labor leader had told him the one of the purposes of his office as an ex-prime minister was “to milk the system” and take full advantage of publicly funded entitlements.

“Regrettably, milking the system has become a regular part of Labor’s culture,” Mr Latham wrote.

Mr Latham contrasted the frugality of former Labor leaders John Curtin and Ben Chifley with the modern ALP breed.

“Labor talks a lot about working families but most of its Mps are working hard for the high life,” Mr Latham wrote.

“Their favoured form of infrastructure is the gravy train.”

He said Labor has “jettisoned its traditional values” and ALP figures viewed power as an “entree card to the social establishment rather than a forum for radically attacking elites and social inequality.”

“Labor’s ministers have been duchessed in the establishment, crippling the credibility of their social democratic beliefs.”

Mr Latham wrote Mr Fitzgibbon should be relieved to be out of the Rudd ministry because he privately had held the Prime Minister in contempt and could now regain pride and self-respect.

“For most of his time in opposition Fitzgibbon despised Rudd, remorselessly ridiculing every detail of the man’s existence, form his gawky ways and peculiar hairstyle to his wife’s less-than-glamourous-looks.”

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



The Suburb That Simmers

Newcomer students pursue an education, intent on gaining permanent residency. Erik Jensen, Jonathan Pearlman and Hamish McDonald report on the explosive result when the students clash with their neighbours in an ethnic hothouse.

Three weeks ago a crude Molotov cocktail smashed through the front window of a house in Harris Park, near Parramatta. The five men inside were young Indians here on a combination of student and bridging visas. Rajesh Kumar, 25, a hospitality graduate, suffered burns to a third of his body.

This was not the first violence against Indians in the suburb. There had been robberies — as many as 100 in the past year, according to some community leaders. But this was the first serious attack to come without theft as a motive.

Kumar remains in a critical condition and has had multiple skin grafts.. His flatmates cannot think of a motive. Nor can police. There is no gang connection. Chander Mohan, who was inside at the time of the attack, says Kumar had no enemies.

“We don’t know why.”

On Monday night Indian leaders met to discuss the attack at Billu’s Indian Eatery and Sweet House, three blocks from the firebombed house, still boarded up with police crime-scene tape. Outside the restaurant, as leaders discussed getting money to the victim’s family, the assault of two more Indian men ignited a fire that would burn for three nights.

A rumour circulated that the perpetrators were Lebanese. Police later confirmed this. A group of 150 Indian men, mainly students, gathered in Harris Park. They later beat up three Middle Eastern men with bars and hockey sticks. About 2am a group of the protesters marched on Parramatta police station to complain of police inaction.

“Our people don’t say nothing until water goes up over the top,” said Jindi Singh, a Harris Park taxi driver who joined the protest when it regrouped on Tuesday night. “Police won’t do anything but we’ve got to do something. I’m not saying all of them are bad, but most of them. The police know. The Government knows. The Government in India knows. If nothing’s going to happen, then it comes into our own hands.”

The flare-up in Harris Park, matched by similar attacks and protests in Melbourne, have turned what seemed a success story — the huge growth in the number of Indian students coming to Australia — into a diplomatic crisis..

For the past three weeks the second-biggest news story on the 120million television sets of the world’s second-most populous country has been Australia — and the pictures have not been pretty. Virtually every night Indian television has played clips, mainly captured by Australian television channels, of student victims, claims of racism and the subsequent community protests. Only India’s own recent elections gained greater prominence in the media of the world’s biggest democracy.

The result, for Australia, has been a highly damaging airing of claims — frequently exaggerated — of racially motivated violence towards Indians. Australia’s high commissioner to India, John McCarthy, has been doing dozens of damage-control interviews, including appearances on popular panel debate shows such as The Big Fight and We The People.

“Clearly the television coverage has altered some people’s perceptions of Australia,” he says. “I think the relationship is repairable, but it has been a rough patch … There was a huge reaction here. I don’t think we can kid ourselves that perceptions of Australia have not been affected..”

It all seems a long way from the vision of foreign students pursuing higher degrees, working in lecture halls and laboratories, spending quiet hours over books, taking their leisure on the sports fields or in noisy cafes, eventually returning to their home countries with valuable qualifications and fond memories.

Instead, it reflects a milieu where study is secondary to the main purpose — getting migrant status in Australia. Study is mostly irrelevant to the cause of making money; long hours of work at petrol stations, convenience stores and the car-wash for below-award pay are tough but essential.

Until 2004 higher education was the main aim of Indian students here. They made up 8 per cent of total university enrolments that year, and fewer than 4000 Indians were enrolled in the sort of vocational courses — cooking, hairdressing and so on — that now dominate.

Vocational courses now account for about 52,000 Indians and English language schools for 16,000 — a twelvefold increase in five years.

Under immigration changes in 2001 applications for permanent residency can be made within Australia, with specified university degrees enhancing chances. The first great wave of Indian students came four years later, when trades courses joined the process and could be completed in a fraction of the time taken doing a university degree.

Between 2005-08 the enrolment of overseas students in trade courses trebled to 173,432. Indians are the biggest group in this category.

It gave Australia a crucial advantage over rivals such as Britain and the US in the foreign student market, adding to advantages of cheapness and perceived safety.

Yadu Singh, a Sydney cardiologist who has been leading Indian community efforts to resolve student safety and other concerns, says: “Australia has been very smart in marketing itself as the place for education, and has one extra advantage: if we have degrees from here it is easier to get immigration also.”

The expanding Indian middle class was quick to seize on the opportunity.

“They are willing to [mortgage their homes] to send their children here,” Singh says.

Catering for the demand are a proliferation of private schools spreading out from the longstanding student quarters such as Kingsford to the raw suburbia of Australia’s battlers and newcomers.

In 1991 there were five times more Lebanese-born residents in Harris Park than there were Indian-born. At the last census, in 2006, Indians were Harris Park’s largest ethnic group, outnumbering the Lebanese two to one. Half of Harris Park’s residents are students.

In 1978 Our Lady of Lebanon opened on the hill above Harris Park’s main street: the largest Maronite church in Sydney, a huge structure whose lit roof cast shadows over this week’s violence. The names involved in the church’s formation were uniformly Lebanese: Ziade began the project; Saad owned the land; Abood, Samia and Wehbe negotiated the sale. There were 1800 seats, full every week. They will be full again this weekend, but the congregation comes from further west — from Liverpool and Granville, where Harris Park’s Lebanese community moved.

Indian restaurants have opened in steady numbers. Seven years ago the suburb’s’s mixed business was owned by a Lebanese family. Now the owners are Bangladeshi. There are Indian sweets near the counter, where roasted nuts used to be.

Mustafa Karim, a Bangladeshi migrant who bought the shop from his uncle three years ago, says: “Indian people, Bangladeshi, subcontinent people, we know how to behave but [the students] don’t absorb. After six months there is still a culture gap.”

Hitesh Jotani moved to Harris Park a year ago to begin a masters of civil engineering course at the University of Technology, Sydney. His parents are well-off — they own a diamond polishing business in Gujarat — but he is living with five men in a three-bedroom apartment. He works odd shifts for an employment agency, often taking the train home after midnight.

Jotani says he was robbed two months ago but did not report the attack.. Many do not. He says the robbers — four men in a car — were Lebanese. “They are doing this because I am Indian. This happened because I am Indian, because I am a student. I didn’t want to call the police because they don’t do anything. That might affect my PR.”

PR is a much used abbreviation in Harris Park, binding and isolating the community of Indian students there. It stands for permanent residency, the great goal of a migrant middle class, the reason many are studying here, and the reason they choose certain courses that are favoured for skilled migration. It is because of those ambitions that many students do not report crimes — they fear that in doing so they will prejudice their applications, a police clearance being needed before permanent residency is granted.

“If you bash me up and I go to the police, what prevents you from saying it was the Indian who hit first?” says the cardiologist Singh.

Indian students turn to a familiar way of public protest. Most learned about Gandhi’s non-violent protests, says Robin Jeffrey of the Australian National University.

“These people come from a tradition where you go to the streets if things appear to be intolerable.”

Police steadfastly denied the clashes of the past week were race-linked. Commander Robert Redfern, who oversaw policing for the Cronulla riots and is now superintendent at Parramatta, sticks to a single line: “I don’t think there’s any suggestion that they are racially motivated.”

That may have been true, initially. Attacks such as the fire bombing and Monday night’s assault had no clear motive. Others seemed opportunist, as police were keen to point out: students with money, walking alone, made vulnerable by the shifts they work. It was coincidence, perhaps, that the perpetrators seemed often to be Lebanese. There is a large Lebanese community here.

“The Cronulla riots were not racially motivated,” says Sean Comello, of the Global Organisation of People of Indian Origin’s Parramatta chapter.

“It became racially motivated because of who got involved.”

As the week’s protest divided on ethnic lines, as carloads of Lebanese men from Merrylands and Dundas arrived, the issue took on a racial dimension — a particularly nuanced one that does not pit a single culture against another, but in which a thin band of young men in each culture is present, a group of supposed victims pitted against what seemed to be their attackers.

On Tuesday, when news trickled through of another violent robbery — an Indian cleaner, beaten unconscious by Middle Eastern men near Warwick Farm station — the belief seemed to be confirmed. “It is racially motivated,” said Jay Singh, a friend of the cleaner.

Each night the rally gathered in front of a Lebanese market that has operated in Harris Park for 30 years, but the business was not attacked. On Wednesday police directed the Lebanese coffee house across the street to close early, though the older Lebanese men drinking there were ignored by the crowd.

On Tuesday night a carload of young Middle Eastern men tore up Marion Street, chased by a hundred young Indians. “F—-ing Lebs,” the group’s apparent leader yelled. “You want to kill me, kill me. You are f—-ing racist.”

Later, a text message told the crowd there was a car of Lebanese men on neighbouring Weston Street. Twenty protesters broke away from the police cordon and ran up the street into a wall of white tracksuits. Two were beaten with poles, one was hit by a car. “Maybe tonight someone will be killed,” an Indian hospitality student said. “What will police do?”

What Australian governments do is more the question.

The ANU’s Jeffrey sees rising student numbers as a chance to broaden contacts with India. “These students have the potential to give us a real flesh and blood link with India. A good bilateral relationship, like that with the US or UK or Canada, involves a flow of people back and forth.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


America Losing Its Language and Culture Without a Whimper

Twenty years ago, Americans enjoyed walking into their supermarkets, banks, recreation halls and hardware stores with confidence knowing that cashiers, clerks and managers spoke English—America’s national language for 233 years.

Every immigrant that attained citizenship learned to speak English. But today, millions of illegal criminal aliens along with legal immigrants drive America’s language and culture into a fragmented polyglot pile of mush.

Without the ability to speak to ourselves, we fracture at the core of our national foundation. Without a common language, we cannot and do not communicate. You may witness other countries fracturing today because they let their immigrants displace their languages and cultures. Unhappy and unhealthy examples abound: France, United Kingdom, Holland, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Germany, Quebec, Malaysia, Lebanon and Belgium. Cyprus and Pakistan split. They all face major upheavals. You wonder why the leaders of those countries allowed the degradation of their own cultures and languages.

The great scholar Seymour Lipset said, “The histories of bilingual and bicultural societies that do not assimilate are histories of turmoil, tension and tragedy.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Confusion Grows Over Iraqi Repatriation

The Danish government says its agreement with its Iraqi counterpart allows the forced repatriation of Iraqi citizens, but now Iraq says it doesn’t want anyone forced home

A new statement from the Iraqi government regarding the forced repatriation of its citizens has thrown doubt on the future of 282 failed asylum seekers currently in Denmark.

The asylum seekers’ applications were rejected, but they remained in Denmark as it was judged too dangerous to return them home to their country.

However, two months ago the Danish government signed an agreement with the Iraqi authorities that allowed them to forcibly repatriate the failed asylum seekers — some of whom have lived in Denmark for up to 12 years. A statement on the Iraqi Foreign Ministry website said that the government wished to address the rumours that its citizens living abroad would be forced to return home.

‘The Republic of Iraq has signed number of Memorandums of understanding with friendly countries to regulate the presence of Iraqis outside and facilitate their return to their country voluntarily and not forced to return to,’ read the statement, adding that the agreements include ‘appropriate insurance for human rights and not to interfere in personal freedoms’.

The Foreign Ministry continued by saying, ‘Memorandums of understanding stated that whether citizens leave or return to their country is a basic human right and the state will assist the voluntarily , dignified , safe and regular return for the Iraqis living outside Iraq.’

The statement, written in broken English, repeatedly refers to voluntary repatriation, which has left some in doubt about the Danish government’s plans.

The Danish Integration Ministry said they were aware of the Iraqi statement, but stated that the new interpretation of the agreement had not yet been sent to the Danish authorities on an official level.

‘We are relying on the repatriation agreement we made with Iraq…that says there is the possibility to use force as a last resort. That’s why we made the agreement, if it hadn’t said force we would have had no reason to make such an agreement because they could have just returned home voluntarily,’ said Integration Minister Birthe Rønn Hornbech to Politiken newspaper.

News of the Iraqi statement has also reached the 60 rejected asylum seekers who have taken refuge in Brorsons Church in Copenhagen to highlight their plight.

‘There were parts of the agreement I didn’t really understand and now I don’t know who’s telling the truth. If Iraq is incorrect then Denmark has made an agreement with a country that deceives people,’ said Hazhar Jaaf who is currently living in the church.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Finland: “Time Running Out on Immigrant Integration”

Heads of Security Police and Immigration Service warn that failure of assimilation into Finnish society lays the groundwork for radicalisation of immigrants

In Finland several ethnic minority groups are growing rapidly. In 2008, 4,035 people sought asylum or other protection in Finland. This is 2,500 more than in the previous year. The growth has continued this year, and the Finnish Immigration Service estimates that by the end of December there will have been about 6,000 applicants.

As a result, the number of immigrants coming into Finland will increase many times over on the basis of family unification. This especially applies to asylum-seekers from Iraq and Somalia. They are being driven to Finland especially by the tighter immigration policies of our neighbouring countries, and by the good level of Finnish social welfare.

From the point of view of security officials, there are risks inherent to a strong increase in immigration, which could lead to serious problems for security.

Risk factors include increases in crime, gang formation, violence, and disturbances of the peace.

Such events have been seen in Europe — in Sweden and France, for instance.

To prevent the risks from coming to pass, the integration of immigrants requires significantly more input from Finland.

According to the prevailing opinion of European security officials, another danger in immigration is the infiltration of terrorists into the flows of immigrants.

This threat ties down a significant amount of resources of security services.

An additional challenge stems from the fact that asylum-seekers who constitute a threat cannot always be sent back to their countries of origin; their security situations can be so bad that sending them back is impossible for humanitarian reasons.

In certain suburbs of Helsinki and Turku, the proportion of foreigners in the population has risen as high as 30 per cent. According to some studies, such a large concentration of immigrants can lead to uncontrolled ethnic isolation of the communities.

To prevent such problems there have even been proposals of enacting a partial curfew, which would be truly exceptional in the Nordic countries. These suggestions underscore the seriousness of the problem. The unrest caused by an atmosphere of marginalisation, rootlessness and anger are compounded, and spread to other similar suburbs.

The risk of radicalisation of immigrants is increased by the rootlessness that they experience in their new home countries. This, in turn, is fed by the problems of integration. Second-generation immigrants often find it hard to identify with their parents’ culture and home country. They lack the kinds of anchor points of life that normally create security and balance.

Failures in integration establish a foundation for radicalisation, and in extreme cases, for terrorism. At the same time, concern increases over confrontations between the native population and immigrants, and over the disappearance of the values that are a part of democracy.

This can result in increased racism, and an increase in the number of mutually hostile groups. For that reason, the importance of the ability of officials to react quickly is underscored.

The Security Police (SUPO) is not currently aware of any individuals in Finland who would be actively involved in terrorist activities. On the other hand, there are strong indications that groups and networks involved in conflicts in Muslim countries get support from Finland.

Practical responsibility for integration efforts is with local authorities. Contrary to what is claimed on the basis of isolated cases, local authorities have succeeded well in their task so far.

The illiteracy, ignorance of Finnish society, and large families of many immigrants pose challenges to local authorities.

Language skills and adapting to Finnish society and its rules are central factors in successful integration. Only in that way can immigrants eventually get work.

The challenges of integration will increase in the coming years as numbers of immigrants grow. For that reason, language teaching for immigrants should be increased significantly. If immigrants are to have a realistic and correct image of Finland, assimilation should start already in the country of origin, by coaching them in advance on the rules and mores of Finnish society.

Increasing the efficiency of assimilation requires considerably more personnel in the social affairs and health sector, in interpreter services, and in education, especially in language teaching. The availability of rental housing also needs to be increased significantly.

There are also positive sides to the increase in immigration. Work-based immigration is an important additional resource for Finland and its future.

Finland also has to take care of its international humanitarian obligations, and to offer protection for the persecuted.

If integration is successful, the native Finnish majority of our population will accept a growing foreign minority.

However, there is no time to wait in increasing the efficiency of how immigrants can become “new Finns”: the window of opportunity will only remain open for a few years.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Finland: Qualified Immigrants to be Given Work to Match Their Educational Achievement

Outdated Act on the Integration of Immigrants is to be amended in order to improve employment

It has been suggested that immigrants should be given work to match their skills and their educational achievement, as a majority of immigrants have been forced to change their profession in order to get work.

As professional degrees from other countries are not necessarily recognised here, many university-qualified immigrants in Finland are forced into low-paid jobs, as supplementary training is not available in all sectors.

The main reason for the problem is the Finnish Act on the Integration of Immigrants that came into force in May 1999.

“It has become outdated”, says Mervi Virtanen, the director of the immigration policy department of the MInistry of the Interior.

Now the act is finally being amended. A report on the act will be debated by Parliament in its plenary session on Thursday. The actual bill for an amendment to the legislation is to be brought before Parliament next spring.

Mervi Virtanen and Annika Forsander, the manager of immigration affairs at the City of Helsinki, believe that an amendment to legislation would improve the integration and employment of immigrants.

“It is imperative that the Act on the Integration of Immigrants be amended”, Forsander notes.

Helsingin Sanomat reported on June 8th that in spite of education, immigrants are not easily employed.

In 2008, only one in six immigrants participating in integration training found a job in the general labour market in the Helsinki capital region.

A total of 15,611 immigrants participated in the training.

In general, immigrants study the Finnish language as well as working-life skills.

According to Forsander, for example language training has to be improved, while immigrants should also gain access to training faster.

“The goals are high and the schedule is tight”, Virtanen admits.

Those immigrants who have been granted asylum have obtained training even under the current Act. However, they form just a fraction of all immigrants.

“Those who have arrived in Finland for some other reasons, for example in search for work or as members of a family, will be left outside the integration programme and without training. The scope of application of the act will have to be enlarged”, Virtanen continues.

In order to be admitted to the integration programme, foreigners will have to register as jobseekers at the nearest employment office.

“The number of paths offering supplementary training is not adequate, which is why we will have to invest more in this kind of education”, Virtanen notes.

“For example foreign physicians can take part in certain adaptation training in order to achieve the qualifications required before they can practice their profession in Finland. However, such training programmes do not exist in certain other fields, for example in the humanities and social sciences”, Forsander reports.

When it comes to the employment of immigrants, time is the decisive factor. As the integration process takes several years, the newcomers should have an access to the right training sooner than happens today.

According to the current law, immigrants are entitled to training for a period of three years. In certain cases it can be prolonged to five years.

“This period is not long enough”, comments Forsander.

Language training and cooperation between authorities should also be improved. Today’s bidding contests are bound to make the problem worse.

“The integration of immigrants has already long been regarded as a short-term project”, Forsander notes.

“For example language training often consists of short periods, which is why the teachers will not be able to develop their activities. While it is true that a large number of quite good and competent players are involved, the fact is that passing from one place to another is not acceptable”, Forsander argues.

In 2008, the total number of foreigners living in Finland was 142,256, with half of them resident in the Greater Helsinki area.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Greece: Focus on Immigration

Government heralds heavy terms for smugglers, seeks EU help with repatriations

Responding to growing pressure to tackle a burgeoning problem with illegal immigration, Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos yesterday heralded the imposition of tougher sentences to discourage human smugglers and the creation of reception centers where undocumented migrants would be held for up to 12 months until their fate is decided.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis sent a letter to Jan Fischer, his counterpart in the Czech Republic, which currently holds the European Union’s rotating presidency, asking for the union’s full support in curbing the migration flows that have hit countries like Greece, Italy and Spain particularly hard.

“The big issue that Greece and other EU countries face is the uncontrolled entry of illegal immigrants at Europe’s borders, mainly through people smugglers,” Pavlopoulos said after yesterday’s Cabinet meeting, noting that traffickers would face felony rather than misdemeanor charges which carry heavy jail terms.

The minister added that he would press EU officials at a summit next week for the signing of repatriation agreements with migrants’ countries of origin and urge Turkey to honor a bilateral pact with Greece for migrants’ repatriation.

Pavlopoulos added that the government would push ahead with stalled plans to build a mosque for the capital’s Muslims in the central Votanikos area and a Muslim cemetery in Schisto, western Attica.

The government’s proposals attracted strong opposition criticism. George Papandreou, the leader of Socialist PASOK, described the measures as “sketchy and inadequate” and proposed instead an eight-point plan foreseeing the boosting of border controls and a drive to upgrade parts of the capital that have turned into ghettos for migrants. The Communist Party accused the government of seeking to imprison migrants in “concentration camps.”

Speaking to reporters after the Cabinet meeting, Pavlopoulos insisted that the new measures were not a reaction to the government’s losses in last Sunday’s European Parliament elections and to the gains made by the far-right Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS).

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Target Human Traffickers in 16 Cities

Rome, 9 June (AKI) — Italian police conducted nationwide raids on Tuesday in a major operation targeting an international human trafficking network alleged to have brought thousands of illegal immigrants to Europe. The police operation called ‘Ticket to Ride’ targeted traffickers and their colleagues in 16 Italian cities and seven European countries.

Dozens of people were arrested by police in Venice and other cities in relation to the network which police believe has brought thousands of illegal immigrants to Europe in the past three years.

Police claim an international criminal organisation based in Iraqi Kurdistan is behind the trafficking network. It has alleged links in Turkey, Greece and in Italy.

According to police investigations, more than 2,500 people, mainly of Iraqi-Kurdish origin, were transported on 180 trips.

Police also estimated that between December 2006 and May 2009 the organisation earned millions of dollars from several other voyages.

The organisation was structured around operative ‘cells’ everywhere it operated.

In Rome there were allegedly three cells — the ‘Erbil group’, the ‘Chamchamali group’ and the ‘Badini group’ — that managed prospective immigrants from Iraqi cities including, Erbil, Kirkuk, Mosul and Dohuk.

The other main ‘cells’ police identified in Italy were located in the northern cities of Milan and Como as well as the cities of Rimini and Ancona on the Adriatic coast.

The immigrants began their journey overland from Iraq and when the immigrants reached Turkey, they were moved by vans, ships or on foot to Greece, police said.

From Greece they travelled by sea to Italian ports on the Adriatic Sea — Venice, Ancona, Bari and Brindisi.

Police also had evidence that other immigrants landed on the Calabrian coast.

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



Netherlands: Putting ‘Import Brides’ to the Dutchness Test

More women are coming to the Netherlands as ‘import brides’. Helping them pass the Dutch integration exam has become a business.

Sander Bons looks at Marina Yeranosyan and says in Dutch: “Pretty blouse.” Yeranosyan (29) looks nonplussed and asks: “Pretty blouse?” Bons points to her garment and says: “Pretty blouse.” Yeranosyan looks down at the blouse and relaxes. “Pretty blouse,” she says and smiles.

Yeranosyan is one of six women present in Bons’ class on the first floor of a town house in Utrecht. They all want to marry their lovers in the Netherlands. But that isn’t as easy as it used to be.

Integration test

Since the Integration law was adopted in 2006 potential immigrants are required to take an integration test in their country of origin. Already in 2004, the financial and age criteria were tightened: the Dutch partner has to make at least 120 percent of minimum wage and be over 21-years old. Every month some 650 integration test are taken across the world. Immigrants from European countries, the US, New Zealand, Australia, Canada, South Korea and Japan are exempt.

One reason for the integration law was to better prepare so-called ‘import brides’ for their new lives in the Netherlands. Turkish-Dutch and Moroccan-Dutch men often choose a bride in the country of origin. Without a good knowledge of the Dutch language these women could jeopardise their children’s education, was the thinking.

After the rules were tightened in 2004 family-related immigration dropped by more than a third. The introduction of the integration exam led to a further decline. Until last year. This week integration minister Eberhard Van der Laan told parliament that the number of applications for family-related immigration went up from 11,000 in 2007 to 15,330 in 2008. Seventy percent of the applicants in 2008 were women.

The statistics don’t distinguish between new families or family reunification, but Van der Laan admitted that many of the women are ‘import brides’. He worried about the arrival of more uneducated marriage partners, not just from Morocco and Turkey but more and more from places like Afghanistan, Somalia and Iraq.

The integration exam tests the knowledge of Dutch society in thirty questions. Which country is bigger: the Netherlands or Morocco? Where is princess Máxima from? Or the student will be shown a Rembrandt painting and asked who painted it.

The second part is a language exam consisting of sentences spoken by a computer voice which the applicant has to repeat, as well as simple questions. Which is more: 15 or 20 euros? Is a ball for eating or playing? Is a bench for sitting or driving?

With or without topless pictures

The applicant is supposed to prepare for the exam in the country of origin. There is an integration package which the partner in the Netherlands can mail. The cultural questions are in a booklet and on a DVD. There is a censored version (without the topless sunbathing pictures) and an uncensored one. The Dutch government organises classes in some countries, like Morocco and Turkey, but in most countries the applicants are on their own.

The women in Utrecht have chosen a different approach. They came to the Netherlands on a tourist visa to take an integration course with Sander Bons. Sixty hours of classes cost 840 euros. Afterwards, they will fly back to their countries of origin — Colombia, Armenia, Venezuela, Sudan, Indonesia and Brazil — where they will take the exam at the Dutch consulate, or over the phone with the Netherlands. Once they pass the test, they can apply for the necessary paperwork and fly back to the Netherlands. Business is good for Bons, and he is not the only one who saw there was a profit to be made with the integration exams.

“My boyfriend is paying for the course and the trip,” says 29-year-old Margarita Ariza. She is slim and her long black hair falls on the scarf around her neck. Summers are too cold in the Netherlands, she says, but other than that she thinks it’s a wonderful country. “You can have everything here: a job, a good salary. You can even buy a house.” In Colombia she works as a secretary; she lives with her mother in Baranquilla. She doesn’t make enough money to rent her own apartment.

But not everybody has the luxury of hiring Bons’ services. A 45-year-old man from Iraq sits in the Lelystad office of Vluchtelingenwerk, an aid group for asylum seekers. He doesn’t want to see his name in print. He fled from Iraq to the Netherlands thirteen years ago, leaving his wife and three-month-old daughter behind. After years of red tape he finally got his residence permit in the 2007 regularisation. He wants to bring his wife and children to the Netherlands, but first his wife has to pass the integration exam.

Learning Dutch in Iraq

How do you study Dutch abroad without the help of someone who speaks the language? His wife has no computer or internet. Her husband bought a bunch of phone cards and, in his broken Dutch, shouted the sentences to his wife over the phone.

Taking the exam proved almost impossible. There is no Dutch embassy or consulate in Iraq. The wife had to travel to Turkey where she stayed in a hostel as she waited to take the exam. Just applying for the paperwork costs several hundred euros. The husband, who lives on disabled benefits, is having trouble keeping up with all the costs, which run in the thousands of euros. But in the end it paid off: his wife passed the exam.

Vluchtelingenwerk wants people like the Iraqi couple to be exempt from the integration exam. Family reunification makes up only five percent of all family-related applications; the remaining 95 percent are mostly import brides. It is reasonable to make demands of these new partners, says Erna Lensink. “If a man looks for a partner in the country of origin, he know there are rules you have to abide to in the Netherlands,” says Lensink.

But family reunification often applies to people from countries like Afghanistan, Somalia or Iraq. Lensink: “These are places where it is extremely difficult to prepare for the exam, especially if the wife is illiterate. But we’re talking about reunifying families that have been separated for years.”

Marina Yeranosyan, who is a photographer in Armenia, thinks she can teach the Dutch women a thing or two. “Some of them will wear an orange blouse with a pink shirt,” she whispers. Marina is always in high heels and make-up. “You have to show that you’re a woman. Dutch men like that.”

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Norway: Increased Number of Asylum Seekers

The number of asylum seekers arriving in Norway is again on the increase. In the first five months of this year 6595 persons applied for asylum, compared with 4324 in the same period last year. In May alone, 1490 applications for asylum were registered, according to the Immigration Directorate. This compares with 996 applications in May last year.

The largest group of asylum seekers in May this year (30 per cent) came from Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]



Southern Border: Massive Tunnel Found

We got tipped off late Wednesday evening and within a few hours we were on a plane and then on the road arriving in Nogales just as the sun peaked over the Sonoran Desert. Our contacts had told us of an elaborate tunnel, one of the best they’ve ever found, running 45 feet or so on the Mexican side of the border, then extending another 38 feet into the United States.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Sweden’s EU Immigration Plans Facing Headwinds

The renewal of the EU’s justice and home affairs priorities will be a key challenge for the forthcoming Swedish EU Presidency. But despite the country’s legislative credentials, Sweden’s ‘Stockholm Programme’ is likely to fall short of its ambitions, sources told EurActiv.

Sweden has one of Europe’s most liberal asylum policies, and intends to push for a comprehensive Common Asylum System when it takes the EU’s helm on 1 July (EurActiv 10/06/09).

The Swedish government has outlined its progressive ambitions on immigration, arguing for a “humane refugee policy,” and emphasising that “the current trend in Europe to close more borders must be opposed”.

However, the government is also issuing a clear warning to its EU partners, stating that “if Sweden has to shoulder a disproportionate share of the responsibility for refugee situations […] this will eventually raise questions about the sustainability of our asylum system”.

[Comment from Tuan Jim: No…Really? Color me shocked!]

The solution, argues Sweden, is obvious: “All EU member states must share the responsibility for offering protection for refugees.” This, says the presidency, is why common rules for EU countries will be its goal.

Sweden has considerable “moral authority” on this issue, according to Bjarte Vandvik, secretary-general of the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE), an NGO. Speaking to EurActiv, Vandvik noted that “if you look at numbers, Sweden takes the same number of asylum seekers per capita as Malta, or even more”.

Indeed, the European Commission yesterday called for a JHA programme which moves “towards a common asylum system” and insists on “burden-sharing and solidarity between member states”.

Political will not there, say experts

However, while the Swedish Presidency has lofty ambitions, there is very little chance of these targets being met, according to an immigration expert contacted by EurActiv.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the source said that the Stockholm Programme “encapsulates all the good intentions” about harmonising and working together on protection issues for refugees, migration, and so on.

“At the same time, however, we know that there is no real political will, let alone consensus, in the Council to make this happen,” they added.

All previous efforts to harmonise EU immigration and asylum systems have failed and are reflected in “the fact that the Commission is currently so eager to show off” the new European Asylum Support Office (EASO), the source continued.

“This is actually a red herring, basically giving the message that ‘well, we didn’t succeed in actually getting where we wanted with the Common Asylum System, but look at this wonderful office we created instead’.”

Bjarte Vandvik agrees. “With the best of intentions for the Swedes, I think they’re in a difficult position. They have a brand new Parliament which has yet to grasp the importance of these issues in a procedural way. And this Parliament is far more right-wing and conservative, and is likely to be more sceptical on these questions of harmonisation,” the ECRE boss told EurActiv.

He did, however, think that “something manageable like the question of resettlement — taking refugees out of camps, for instance, or deciding on the size of quotas for refugees — that has a chance to succeed”.

A right-wing Europe

The current political reality in the EU may also be a constraint for Sweden’s ambitions. The centre-right currently leads 20 of 27 member states, and won a majority in last week’s European Parliament elections (EurActiv 08/06/09).

Traditionally, the centre-right has been more hardline on immigration and asylum issues, and a number of EU countries are likely to be vehemently opposed to the Swedish plans.

“My greatest worry,” said Bjarte Vandvik, is that the EU “will continue with this policy of just shutting the borders, as has been the case so far”.

“Making border controls efficient, making security measures efficient, and then not taking any steps on the other issues” would be a mistake, he argues.

“I think a truly harmonised Common European Asylum System will not happen. It’s still a pipe dream,” Vandvik concluded.

Positions: The Swedish EU Presidency “will take its share of the responsibility for the international protection of refugees, but if Sweden has to shoulder a disproportionate share of the responsibility for refugee situations around the world in relation to comparable countries, this will eventually raise questions about the sustainability of our asylum system,” according to the presidency website.

“All EU member states must share the responsibility for offering protection for refugees. This is why common rules for the countries in the EU are one of the government’s main objectives in the area of migration,” the statement concludes.

European Commission President José Manuel Barroso said that “in future, EU action must aim above all at delivering the best possible service to the citizen in an area of freedom, security and justice more tangible for the citizens”.

“We want to promote citizens’ rights, make their daily lives easier and provide protection, and this calls for effective and responsible European action in these areas. In this context, I consider immigration policy particularly important. This is the vision the Commission is presenting to the Council and Parliament for debate, with a view to the adoption of the new Stockholm Programme by the European Council in December 2009,” he said.

Bjarte Vandvik, ECRE (European Council on Refugees and Exiles) secretary-general, told EurActiv that “the old JHA divide between the north and south of Europe is less evident today than in previous years. If you look at numbers, Sweden takes the same number of asylum seekers per capita as Malta, or even more”.

He added that “the smaller states in the south, certainly, are calling for greater support from their wealthier neighbours”.

           — Hat tip: Tuan Jim [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Homosexual Activists Frustrated With Obama’s Agenda

Impatient homosexual activists say Barack Obama should be moving more quickly to enact their social agenda, but he’s running into a political reality that they want him to ignore.

President Obama — in his proclamation declaring June as “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month” — reaffirmed his support for enhancing “hate crimes” laws, homosexual civil unions, the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, homosexual adoption, and the repeal of the military’s ban on openly homosexual service-members.

However, in the proclamation he did not repeat his campaign promise to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA. In fact, his call for the repeal of DOMA has also been stripped from the White House website.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


NASA Study Shows Sun Responsible for Planet Warming

From DailyTech, we have still more evidence that any warming occurring on planet earth is coming from natural sources and is cyclic in nature—NOT from the evil capitalism that Al Gore, the UN politicians at the IPCC and other socialists love to blame.

From the article:

Now, a new research report from a surprising source may help to lay this skepticism to rest. A study from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland looking at climate data over the past century has concluded that solar variation has made a significant impact on the Earth’s climate. The report concludes that evidence for climate changes based on solar radiation can be traced back as far as the Industrial Revolution.

Past research has shown that the sun goes through eleven year cycles. At the cycle’s peak, solar activity occurring near sunspots is particularly intense, basking the Earth in solar heat. According to Robert Cahalan, a climatologist at the Goddard Space Flight Center, “Right now, we are in between major ice ages, in a period that has been called the Holocene.”

If our media, culture and a large portion of the “scientific” community were really honest, it would be the worshippers of the religion of anthropogenic global warming who are called “skeptics,” wouldn’t it?

Because it is those pushing this silly theory that our puny SUVs and power plants are causing earth to warm up when the most obvious source of heat hangs over their head every single day.

AGW simply doesn’t pass the smell test. Nor does it line up with the objective data…

[Return to headlines]



Threat to Global-Warming Skeptics Retracted

Editor’s Note: The author of the subject article on TalkingPointsMemo.com has formally retracted the article and apologizes for what he describes as his “extremist global warming” blog post. “The whole post was ill-conceived, poorly written — and not representative of who I am,” the author says. “But I did write it, and I take full responsibility for it. My intention was not to wish imprisonment or execution of global warming skeptics.” (Full retraction is available at TalkingPointsMemo.com)

Original story:

A popular left-leaning website recently published some harsh rhetoric concerning deniers of alleged global warming.

According to Marc Morano of ClimateDepot.com, the left-leaning website TalkingPointsMemo.com recently published an article that issued this public appeal: “At what point do we jail or execute global warming deniers?” The article accused “right-wingers” of blocking fixes to the problem of supposed “climate change” and stated that when “end of the world”-type events start to take place, “how will we punish those responsible?”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Critique of the Culture of Kevin MacDonald

The reader response to “Road Rage” prompted Takuan Seiyo to send the following guest-post on a similar topic.

Further update: I think the problem is now fixed, and this post is open for comments.



Critique of the Culture of Kevin MacDonald
by Takuan Seiyo

“The first time I became aware of leftist Jews was when, as a reporter for The Daily Cardinal, the student newspaper, at the University of Wisconsin, I was assigned to cover a meeting of the Committee Against the War in Vietnam. This was around 1965” — reminisced the evolutionary psychologist Kevin MacDonald in “Memories Of Madison — My Life In The New Left”.

Professor MacDonald has won fame and a following on the far right for having “explained the Jews,” particularly in his book The Culture of Critique (pdf). And one has to respect him for the courage and sheer data doggedness with which he has taken on in depth an important and shunned subject — the leftist tilt of the Jewish ethny and its negative effect on Gentile societies.

Anyone who in the pursuit of truth chooses to become a prime target of lefto-lunatic money scammers like Southern Poverty Law Center has my respect. But I am dismayed that MacDonald, an academic who ought to know better, has constructed a revealing if partisan typology and then treated it as though it’s an explanatory taxonomy.

The first time I became aware of leftist Jews was when, in 1956, I looked up from my lead soldiers’ formation on the kitchen floor and saw my Jewish father’s 2nd (and only surviving) cousin enter our assigned apartment in commie Warsaw, pushing a wicker pram.

“Do you want these?” he asked. Under the baby blanket, the deep cart was filled to the brim with the combined works of Marx, Engels and Lenin in Polish, Russian and German. Nikita Khrushchev had just made a speech denouncing Stalin and shattering the utopian castle that my “uncle” and millions like him in the European intelligentsia had built in their heads, none more so than the Jews.

Since then, born Catholic and happily acculturated in Slav society but half-Jew of the wandering kind myself, I have come to know perhaps 300 Jews in ten countries over half a century well enough to have talked life or politics. To this, I’d have to add personal observations of Jewish strangers and analysis of media content created by Jews, the analysis of media content being briefly my academic specialty and its creation becoming, eventually, my profession.

In the fourteen years I spent at three universities in the 60s/70s I acquired a store of memories that resembles Kevin MacDonald’s, if at a greater distance from the radical Jewish milieu. I too perceived the radical politics, feelings of separateness and alienation, attitude of moral and intellectual superiority, hostility to Western cultural institutions, ethnic paranoia and bunker mentality, disdain for capitalism, generic tendency to impute and then combat perceived racism and fascism, disputatiousness and intellectual sophistry, negative attitudes toward Christianity, positive attitudes toward psychoanalysis and Marxism. I too had charismatic Jewish professors with a leftist view of European and American history.

Despite my long exercise in personal ethnography among Jews, including the long period among their — in my eyes — preponderantly disgusting stratum in the American social sciences academia, I have not met a single Jew who was motivated by the ethno-biological red-of-tooth-and-claw impulses it has become Dr. MacDonald’s life mission to ascribe to the Jews as a whole. Moreover, except for perhaps one-third of those in academia, mass media and the law, none of the Jews I have met had any of the corrosive leftist rancor described in “Madison,” while still being almost uniformly liberal.

In “Memories Of Madison — My Life In The New Left” MacDonald continues his grand project of assembling true facts or experiences, and then illuminating them with a jaundiced light. To start, he repeatedly takes universal phenomena or traits common to all people, or to a social or occupational class, and ascribes them to Jews, as Jews. He writes, for instance, of the “tendency for Jewish intellectual movements to become centered around highly charismatic Jewish figures,” as if there were non-Jewish intellectual movements not so centered, whoever the charismatic figure.

MacDonald’s description of the Jewish mental baggage at Madison includes “talking about movies a lot, especially European movies by directors like Ingmar Bergman and Francois Truffaut,” and about historically important (and) Jewish leftists. Also, disdain for “Christian” prudishness and obsession with “intellectually intricate and subversive theories like “ Marcuse’s synthesis of Marx and Freud.”

Why, one could think that MacDonald describes the University of Bologna or a student café in Dusseldorf or Helsinki — in the 1960s or now. Hardly any Jews there. MacDonald’s Jew screamers are Bernardo Bertolluci’s gentile dreamers in an eponymous film about French students in the 60s. Not a single Jew behind or in front of the camera in that film.

When he mentions important Jewish leftists like Leon Trotsky, Rosa Luxemburg and Herbert Marcuse, MacDonald fails to mention that these are not the heroes of Jews, or even just of Jewish radicals, but of the entire continental European intelligentsia.

Red Rosa, for instance, has bronze statues and a large square in Berlin named after her. The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, with funding from the Federal Republic of Germany is “instigating, promoting and supporting” socialist political education worldwide, creating “International Neoliberal Networks,” organizing 2,000 “educational” events per year with 50,000 participants in Germany alone, publishing in several languages, and operating socialist action centers in 11 cities worldwide.

MacDonald evokes the “ingroup bunker mentality” as “a fundamental characteristic of Jewish society.” So it was, and perhaps still is among many older Jews. But to fail to limn why it’s so for exogenous and millennia-long reasons, and how it parallels the same mentality in other middleman minorities, can only be seen as a telling omission. This is even more bizarre when Thomas Sowell has already done the intellectual heavy lifting, e.g. here.
– – – – – – – –
Prof. MacDonald is correct in linking the rise of multiculturalism and massive non-white immigration to the activism of organized Jewry. Reading demographic dissolutionist Jewish statements like HIAS’s Progress by Pesach — and there is something in that category every week from ADL, AJC, HIAS and from crypto-Jewish organizations like ACLU and SLPC — is a revolting experience.

Moreover, MacDonald performs a valuable service here and elsewhere in exposing the long-standing pattern of Jewish activism on behalf of non-white immigration, and even more aggressive activism on behalf of resident and not necessarily deserving non-whites. The latter pattern is richly veined and old — from W. E. B. DuBois as the only black man on the executive board of Arthur Springarn’s NAACP, to Martin Luther King’s consiglieri, Stanley Levinson, to Barack Obama’s troika of consigliere, dead (Saul Alinsky) and alive (David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel).

But MacDonald spoils whatever salutary effects such showing might have by turning it into a Jew-baiting campaign, as though his PhD, along with David Duke’s, were from Interregional Academy of Personnel Management rather than from a reputable American university.

The explanation of Jewish radicalism one is treated to — and I am still staying with “Madison” — is that “Jews emerged from the ghetto with hostility toward the culture around them” and “Jewish hostility toward the culture of non-Jews has been a constant threat throughout Jewish history.” Has this hostility arisen by immaculate conception?

From the time the Jews arrived in chains and en masse in Rome, the one constant in Jewish history has been persecution, much of it of the cruelest and most murderous kind, a short review of which may be found here. The gradual genocide has brought down the European Jewish population from an estimated 4 million in the 1st century to less than 100,000 by the 16th. Such a genocidal constriction of the Jews’ gene pool takes its biological toll to this day, e.g. in the various Jewish genetic illnesses.

But MacDonald’s task is not merely to falsely highlight the unwarranted nature of Jewish hostility. “It’s about displacement and domination.” And the proof he adduces is how former denizens of Russo-Ukrainian shtetls became a part of the dominant Bolshevik elite — able to actually carry out in the USSR the fantasies [of] the New Left Jewish radicals in the US — i.e., the “humiliation, dispossession, imprisonment or execution of the oppressors.”

In “Stalin’s Willing Executioners” that MacDonald’ links in the preceding quote, he recounts truthfully many of the blood-chilling actions of the Jewish Bolshevik nomenklatura. But then he illuminates them in a deliberately evil light by omitting any reference to what Jews had suffered under the tsars, for how long and how frequently.

A mention of just 50 years of Russian history prior to 1917 would have to include at the least the tremendous, fascist-style oppression under Alexander II, Alexander III and Nicholas II and the royals’ rabid anti-Semitism, the many state-sanctioned mass murders (i.e. “pogroms”) of Jews, arbitrary deportations and destructions of Jewish communities, the Okhrana and the Black Hundred, the blood-libel Beilis trial and the forgery of the Protocol of the Elders of Zion, the super anti-Semitic and tsar-sponsored Union of the Russian People, the prominent roles of Jew-haters like Konstantin Pobedonostsev [read Wikipedia entry here], restrictions on habitation, education and access to the professions, and a prevailing atmosphere of hatred and disdain for Jews in all institutions of tsarist Russia except only the nascent communist conspiracy.

But mentioning that, though it would not excuse the Jewish Bolsheviks’ retaliatory atrocities, would put a dent in the MacDonald theory of the self-propelled evil evolutionary Jew. Hence no mention.

To put it succinctly, a half-truth told by a professional interpreter of facts is a purposeful lie. And so MacDonald (in “Madison”) carries on about the Jewish “machinery of mass murder and oppression” in the USSR, with the parallel of the New Jew Left bent on a “similar displacement of white elites” in America. But the latter is as much anti-Semitic libel as the former is based on a telling omission.

Lawrence Auster had this to say about Prof. MacDonald’s curious interpretation of Russian history:

It is essential to distinguish between anti-Semitic attacks on Jews and legitimate, rational criticisms of Jews. [snip] To portray Jews as the source of all ills [snip] is anti-Semitism. For example, to say that Jews as Jews are “hostile” to our culture and have organized themselves in a campaign to destroy it, is anti-Semitism. What’s wrong with anti-Semitism is, first, that it’s false, and, second, that the flaw can’t be corrected. If Jews, who have been a part of European civilization since before the time of Christ, are the source of all evil in our civilization, there is nothing for them to do but die.

MacDonald’s animus spills over onto the subject of Israel, as is often the case with people who dislike American Jews for valid reasons, Israel for invalid reasons, and who have a larger anti-Semitic gestalt underlying both. Mac Donald goads a Jewish lefto-lunatic like Mark Rudd to oppose “Zionism and its influence in the US,” equates Zionism with racism and evokes “the racial Zionist movement that dominates the politics of Israel today.” But then he challenges Rudd to become active in “the cause of reversing the effects of four decades of non-white immigration” to the United States.

So, pining for a white racial groundswell in the United States, MacDonald condemns “Jewish ethnic chauvinism in Israel” while imputing to Jews — correctly — the same hypocrisy he has, except in reverse. Geert Wilders said this relative to white “defenders of the West” who simultaneously vituperate Israel and Zionism: “It is not that the West has a stake in Israel. It is Israel.”

And pace MacDonald, it’s leftist Israeli and Anglophonic Jews, and ultra-religious Jews who are nowadays the most pernicious foes of Zionism.

Having far less interest in Jewish apologetics than Prof. MacDonald has in Jewish philippics, I have read only his shorter pieces and visited his website occasionally, but have not read his books. The former pretty much precludes the latter. I find MacDonald’s Moses-meet-Shylock-meet-Darwin hypothesis to be an expression of his own anti-Semitism and therefore unhelpful either for understanding the phenomenon of Jewish leftism or for countering it properly.

A critic I find consistently perceptive and honest, John Derbyshire, has delved deeper into the MacDonald oeuvre and has come up with rather similar conclusions. Lawrence Auster, another thinker of honest opinions and frequent critic of Jewish liberalism has commented on MacDonald too.

To see the levels of malice and brain-dead stupidity that Dr. MacDonald’s intellectual crocheting leads to, one could peruse the many neo-Nazi websites whose chatrooms throb with epiphanic exclamations of the final light of truth shed on Jew perfidy by the Jewgroup evolutionary theorist from Long Beach.

I will skip over the more moronic ones like Vanguard News Network whose official motto is “No Jews. Just Right” or Storm Front whose unofficial motto is “Hitler was right.” The higher-hanging fruit is the Jew-is-an-evolutionary-parasite website Majorityrights.com, where disquisitions like this go on for yards of scrolling, replete with Der Stürmer-type cartoons and Sturmführer-type perorations on the hyena nature of the Jew.

But before one dismisses Kevin MacDonald and his spawn, the eye hits a comment like this by, uhm, Jews Hate Whites [ibid.] “Jew Robert Reich calls for discrimination against white males in the coming economic stimulus even though white males are the majority of the workforce”

Jews Hate Whites may be an idiot, but his anger is justifiable. And when one contemplates the political imprint of America’s Jews in the last 100 years, from Max Shachtman to Noam Chomsky, from the Jewish Socialist League of America in the 30’s to the Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action in the 90s, from Saul Alinsky to the Rosenbergs, from Abbie Hoffman to George Soros, from Ruth Bader Ginsburg to Ramona Ripston to the current crop of Jewish politicians in Congress and machers in the White House, one begins to worry less about the veracity of the MacDonald hypothesis and more because of the veracity of his facts.

There is hardly any doubt that Jews have so enriched the European civilization and its American outpost, and in so many ways, that an analysis that dwells only on the debit column of the ledger, as MacDonald’s does, is skewed. Moreover, when this analysis ascribes a truly diabolical motive to that debit, and ignores other viable explanations, it’s not just a troubling bias but a deplorable falsification.

Nevertheless, it seems to me that for the last 50 years, the American Jewish community, particularly through its organized expression, has been drawing down its credit through massive entries on the debit side, just as American blacks have since the 60s. I no longer care how many Jewish doctors save lives, Jewish scientists discover new particles and Jewish violinists provide transporting experiences, when Jews are at the spearhead of every corrosive movement turning the United States into a slipshod third world Babel of the equally ignorant yahoos brimming with self-esteem but disdaining whitey, his Constitution and his Shakespeare.

Alas, careful observation might point to a Jewish pathology stranger even than the MacDonald biological reductionist theory, if without the malignancy MacDonald attributes. Actually, it could be labeled as “much too much of a good thing” or, in the Oriental view of things, “yin toxicity,” or maybe “slow-motion hara kiri.”

The “good thing” stems from what Thomas Cahill described in The Gifts of the Jews: How a Tribe of Desert Nomads Changed the Way Everyone Thinks and Feels. It’s the momentous and singular Biblical ideas of the equality and dignity of each individual, universal moral obligations, and great value placed on peace and justice. This, coupled with the Jewish arch-tradition of tikun olam, repairing the world.

Extreme Jewish leftism in the past had partial motivations of resentment and vengeance toward the social classes that had harmed and despised Jews. It represented as well class interests, as most Jews were poor and deprived of opportunity. But since the 1950s, it’s a different story.

Liberalism, which is the true religion of most Jews, is the antithesis of an evolutionary mechanism for survival and dominance. Rather, it’s the application of various political and economic means to establish “peace, social justice and universal brotherhood” on earth, fueled by the best intentions and by the worst disregard for how reality works. Contrary to MacDonald, the Jewish project is not to evolutionize the Israelite but to immanentize the eschaton.

Reality never fails to punish those who snub her, including whole societies built on liberal delusions. The Jewish weight applied on the side of open borders and amnesty, affirmative action and endless coddling of undeserving minorities, legal activism, pacifism and world government, punitive taxation and income redistribution, is harmful, first and foremost, to the Jews themselves, though the rest of us will succumb after the coal mine canaries.

It’s Jews whose influence will wane in direct proportion to the ratio of non-whites and Muslims in the American population and political elite. It’s Israel that will lose out the more American politicians distance themselves from Israel for the sake of the colored plurality’s votes. It’s Jewish money that’s being confiscated through high taxes and redistributed to people who don’t like Jews. It’s Jewish university applicants who are rejected for the sake of admitting black and brown applicants with two-thirds the IQ and two-thirtieths the future potential. It’s Jewish lives and property that are increasingly in jeopardy due to the Jewish-endorsed influx of criminal illegal aliens, Jewish “anti-racist” judicial activism, and the Jews’ antipathy to the Second Amendment and to freedom over equality.

Chandra Levy, murdered by an illegal alien from El Salvador in 2001, was Jewish. Adrienne Levine, aka Adrienne Shelly, the actress who was murdered by an illegal alien from Ecuador in 2006, was Jewish. David Rosenbaum, a veteran journalist who was beaten with a metal pipe by black robbers in 2006 and died from his injuries due to the incompetence of Washington’s minority-stuffed public services, was Jewish. Alan Senitt, who had his throat slashed and his companion sexually assaulted by black recidivist criminals in 2006, was Jewish. Jewish liberal activist too.

It was an Egyptian immigrant who shot up the El-Al Airlines terminal in Los Angeles in 2002. It was a Pakistani immigrant who shot up the Seattle Jewish Federation in 2006. It was an Arab neighbor who cut the throat of and mutilated Sébastien Selam, a 23-year old Jewish DJ in Paris, in 2003. It was a gang of African immigrants who kidnapped, tortured and killed the 23-year-old and Jewish Ilan Halimi in a Paris suburb, in 2006. It was the British-born son of Pakistani immigrants, Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, who decapitated Daniel Pearl in 2002.

Yet the Jewish love affair with Babel through unrestricted immigration continues, in the US just as in Europe. And by misinterpreting as evolutionary clawing the grand and suicidal delusion, the lunacy that lies beneath the harmful political activism of Jews, MacDonald misses its connection to the harmful political activism of Christians as well.

The American Roman Catholic Church engages in a Hispanization scheme on a scale undreamed of by the most committed apparatchiks of the Hispanic section of ADL — ostensibly an organization existing to combat anti-Semitic defamation. The scale of the subversion in just one diocese, Cardinal Mahony’s Los Angeles, may be glimpsed here and here. It’s no different in any other American city, e.g. Chicago or Washington. And the activism is not just on immigration issues, what with Catholic phenomena such as Dorothy Day’s Catholic Worker Movement or Father Pfleger’s antics in Chicago.

To walk into a random Protestant church in an American city — an exercise I have performed a hundred times — is to walk into a branch office of the Swedish Social Democratic Party — a name that serves as a garnish of parsley on top of a thick Socialist slab slathered with a cultural-Marxist sauce. The notices on the bulletin board, the literature on display, the sermons — I am not aware of anything in Eastern Europe during the height of communist rule that was so suicidally nation-dissolving, white-ethny demonizing, and Western heritage destroying

And it’s not only at the base of the pyramid, or on its left side. To read George W. Bush’s (or John McCain’s) paeans to the Hispanization of the United States, his homilies to Hispanic family values, his speeches on the merits of immigration amnesty and the related home downpayment amnesty, is to experience nausea. It’s not coincidental that Bush is himself a committed Christian, and his Big Government Proposition-Nation ideology was poured into templates prepared by equally deluded Christian hands like Michael Gerson.

It’s useful and legitimate to isolate Jewish leftism and cultural Marxism, to assemble relevant facts and discuss their characteristics and harmful consequences. But it can’t be done reliably by people who testify for the defense in Holocaust deniers’ trials (pdf), and then deny the denial. It cannot be done by people who ascribe a collective malignancy to others, but are themselves so tainted by a malignancy that they view all of Western history with shades fashioned to block all light frequencies but the narrow band of cherchez le juif.

And this cannot be mitigated by the recognition that Prof. MacDonald’s chief enemies, the ADL, SPLC et al. are themselves deluded, defamatory, meretricious and repulsive.

America is in a situation so dire, in so many ways, that it can no longer afford the lying leatherette upholstery on its aging hemicuda bought with money borrowed or printed wantonly. It’s time, among others, to give the finger of derision to the R-taboo, to stop the evasive noise about “divisiveness” and to highlight that “toleration” is very far in meaning from “celebration.”

As far as the Jewish community is concerned, this means that the price of utopian social lunacy is already so great, and the trajectory visible from now to the conceivable future so disastrous, that the most-humming of all the motors driving the country to the ruins of dystopia cannot but become the object of wide antipathy.

There isn’t a day that I don’t hear someone I know as cultivated and reasonable, Gentile and Jew alike, express bitter frustration with the Jewish community because of its leftist-multicultural thrust and the damage it’s doing to America. If the Jewish community won’t wake up to criticism from friendly parties, it will eventually face criticism from the growing number of unfriendly parties.

It’s not gratuitous to mention that America is now treading the same economic path where Weimar Republic once trod. Jews were the most prominent in the left’s leadership in Weimar too, with sorry consequences. Maybe a beacon of truth shined on all that can do some good both for America and for its Jews.

Among the growing number of genuinely conservative and race-honest Jewish-Americans whose voices are worth listening to are names like Mark Levin, Michael Levin, Paul Gottfried, Michael Hart, Lawrence Auster, Dan Stein, Ilana Mercer, Julia Gorin, Nicholas Stix and others. Perhaps from them and others like them will come the impetus that can turn the left-tilting rudder of the multiculti ship of America’s Jewry.

Imported Imbeciles

Yorkshire Miner has translated this article from the Dutch PvdA (Labour Party) website:

Aboutaleb shocked at Young Criminals’ IQ

Rotterdam is going to work together with Minister van der Laan (Integration) to look at what the State can do about the development level, especially in relation to Antilles and Moroccan youths.

Burgemeester Ahmed Aboutaleb is very shocked by what he has heard from police circles, he said yesterday during the presentation of the Safety Index 2009. “The IQ and the mental ability of arrested youths is so low that you can’t do much with them. When they are on there own they are great, but when there are two they do the most crazy things.” What’s more, with Moroccans there is often a severe form of schizophrenia present.

– – – – – – – –

Aboutaleb will also ask that the GGZ and the Ministry for Health Welfare and Sport be involved in discussions to see what can be done. “We must do everything that will help and not hinder, such as tackling leaving school early.”

This article appeared in the Metro 16 April 2009.

The Labour Party Chairman Peter van Heemst is happy that Burgermeester Aboutaleb and Minister Van der Laan are taking the problem seriously. Van Heemst asked in May 2008 for an inquiry into the background and mental abilities of young criminals.

Let’s Party!

For a change of pace, here’s an account of a modern politically correct social occasion as translated by our expatriate Dutch correspondent, H. Numan. He says that there was originally an online article at www.gelderlander.nl describing this party in question, but it has since been removed.



Let’s party!

I love to see happy people around me, so once in a while I organize a party in my house. To be polite, I also invite my neighbors. Not really sociable people, but one has to be polite. They never say hello, never talk, unless it’s to complain. They are strict vegans and non smokers, and very vocal about it.

Now, my neighbors may possibly consider my invitation. But on several conditions. There is to be no smoking. Not in my house, not in my garden. No smoking at all. Period.

They abhor alcohol. So no alcoholic beverages may be served. Not just to them, but to anyone on the party. Alcohol is very offensive for them.

Lemonade with something bubbly looks like alcohol, to them, and is not to be served.

Since they are very strict vegans, they will not want to see, much less eat, anything containing meat, pork, chicken, horse, camel, goat or whatever.

That’s not all. They will not eat anything that has been touched by animal products. One doesn’t simply present them with a veggie salad. The bowl may have been contaminated with animal products. That is utterly unacceptable.

Therefore, they will cook everything in my kitchen. That way, they can also check if, by accident or intentional, alcohol is used in preparing the dishes.
– – – – – – – –
Only on those conditions they would be willing, under duress so it seems, to accept my invitation.

Now, last year I did the same. They were new neighbors, so I accepted their demands.

After the party was over, I had to spend a week cleaning and rebuilding my kitchen. So when my neighbors stated these unconditional demands, I told them: ‘Never mind. I’m sure you’ll have a great party somewhere else. But not in my house.’

Surprisingly, my neighbors didn’t accept this. They are actually furious. ‘Last year we asked for the same, and that wasn’t a problem.’ (Nope, it wasn’t. But we didn’t know you then. It was also before I had to buy half my kitchen equipment which mysteriously disappeared after you cooked there.) I am not reasonable enough. I don’t show any respect for other people. I just want to have it all my way.

Know that kind of neighbor, too?

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/11/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/11/2009I was out most of the day; that’s why posting has been light.

Muammar Gaddafi got a “rock star’s welcome” in Rome. There are four articles about the occasion below.

Also notable: after first attempting to resettle the Uighur Guantanamo detainees in Australia, the USA managed to persuade the tiny Pacific nation of Palau to take them in. China, needless to say, is not happy.

Thanks to ACT for America, Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, islam o’phobe, Nilk, PatriotUSA, Steen, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Union Confederation Supports Hungarian Army Demonstration
 
USA
DMN’s Slater Lumps Tea Party Protesters With Holocaust Museum, Tiller Shootings
Miranda Rights for Terrorists
 
Europe and the EU
Berlin Mosque Invites Homophobic Imam
Berlusconi: Possible Vote of Confidence Over Wiretaps
EU Court Voids Asset Freeze of UK Terror Suspect
EU Members Fear Lisbon Guarantees May Reopen Whole Debate
EU Security Proposals Are ‘Dangerously Authoritarian’
Gaddafi in Rome: America Wants to Colonise the Globe
Italian Police Conduct Anti-Terror Operation
Italy: Premier Urges No Vote on Referendum
Spain: Andalusia Gov. Approves Law for Dignified Death
Spain: Town Hall, Referendum on Catalonia’s Independence
UK: Fined £50… for Dropping a Tenner
UK: Home Educators Made to Register
UK: Prison Magazine Withdrawn Because Satirical Swine-Flu Article Offends Muslim Inmates
 
Balkans
Kosovo: Still Impunity for Missing Persons, Now Up to EU
 
North Africa
Algeria: Like Morocco, Berber Surnames Blacklisted
Algeria: Rise in Child Sex Abuse Causes Alarm
Algeria: Al-Qaeda Had ‘Contacts’ With Militants in Italy
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Israel: Gay Pride in Tel Aviv Planned by University Students
Israel: Ministers’ Opposing Views on Palestinian State
Meshaal Welcomes Obama’s ‘New Language’
 
Middle East
Analysis: Obama: An Innocent Abroad
Defence: Turkey and Iraq Sign Military Cooperation Accord
EU Elections: Turkey Worried Over Results
John Bolton: What if Israel Strikes Iran?
Middle East: US Envoy Insists on ‘Two-State’ Route to Peace
Stakelbeck: A Dissident’s Escape From Iran (Plus Moshe Ya’alon
Terrorism: Turkey; Life Sentences for Six Al Qaeda Members
Turkey: Journalist Faces 28-Year Prison Sentence for Book
Turkey: 54 Turkish Mayors to be Tried for Supporting PKK
 
Russia
In Russia, a Recession-Plagued Town Revolts
Russia Agrees to Take Nuclear Waste From Serbia
Why it is Hard to Sack a Person… by Vladimir Putin
 
South Asia
Afghanistan: Italian Soldiers Injured in Clashes in West
Thailand, Fresh Violence in the South. Victims From the Mosque Attack Now 12
 
Far East
China: Almost Heroine Status for Young Woman Who Killed Official Who Tried to Rape Her
China Demands US Return Uighurs
N. Korea Demands 4-Fold Raise in Wages From South
Vietnam: Catholic Teacher Fired for Encouraging Students to Get Information on the Web
 
Australia — Pacific
Palau to Take Guantanamo Uighurs
Tale of Broken, Battered Kids Shows System on Brink
 
Latin America
Air France Chief Questions Sensor Role in Crash
Mexican State Bans Cops From Carrying Cell Phones
Was Terrorism Behind Air France Crash?
 
Immigration
Hungary: Not Enough for Lynching
UNHCR Awards Turkish Ship for Saving 142 People
 
General
Oil Price Leaps to Year’s High
Typhoons Trigger Slow Earthquakes

Financial Crisis


Union Confederation Supports Hungarian Army Demonstration

Budapest, June 10 (MTI) — The LIGA trade union confederation supports the demonstration members of the Hungarian armed forces are planning on June 22 to protest against the government’s austerity measures, the union told MTI in a statement on Wednesday.

The 12,000-strong army union called the protest in front of Parliament to demand the reinstatement of the 13th month salary for public employees that the amendment of an austerity bill.

Liga already protested against the measures when they were first announced in April, the union said.

“Placing further burdens onto public administration workers, pensioners, families, young people and the poor, or employees in general, is not an unacceptable way to manage the economic crisis,” the union wrote.

Liga has 82 members representing all major professions across the country.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


DMN’s Slater Lumps Tea Party Protesters With Holocaust Museum, Tiller Shootings

Dallas Morning News’s Wayne Slater become one of the first pundits after the shootings at the Holocaust Museum on Wednesday to hint that there was a connection to mainstream conservative activists. On CNN Newsroom, about two hours after the story broke, Slater linked this incident and the murder of abortionist George Tiller with “anti-tax secessionists in Texas,” his label for Tea Party protesters.

Anchor Rick Sanchez moderated a panel discussion on the Holocaust Museum shootings after the bottom of the 3 pm Eastern hour of the CNN program, in which Slater participated. Sanchez asked the Dallas Morning News political writer if criminals like this suspect are “motivated or do they need to be motivated?” He replied, not including the shooting of Tiller, but reaching back to include the Oklahoma City bombing perpetuated by Timothy McVeigh:

SLATER: They absolutely need to be motivated and are being motivated. Each of these episodes in recent weeks- whether it’s [the] killing of an abortion doctor- whether it was this Holocaust denier today, or whether it was others- whether you’re talking about Tim McVeigh or anti-tax secessionists in Texas- the interesting thing is they’re all separate, but they’re all hearing portions of the same echo chamber, a kind of dialogue- a toxic dialogue that’s subterranean in large parts. Remember, the man who was accused- who is accused of the most recent shooting of the abortion doctor, according to his ex-wife, had connections with the Montana Freemen, a kind of wild radical secessionist group. You hear not only these conversations about blacks and Jews, but about the government and about other hate-filled issues. It is- although they are separate- they are connected by a kind of dialogue of toxic ideology.

           — Hat tip: PatriotUSA [Return to headlines]



Miranda Rights for Terrorists

When 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammad was captured on March 1, 2003, he was not cooperative. “I’ll talk to you guys after I get to New York and see my lawyer,” he said, according to former CIA Director George Tenet.

Of course, KSM did not get a lawyer until months later, after his interrogation was completed, and Tenet says that the information the CIA obtained from him disrupted plots and saved lives. “I believe none of these successes would have happened if we had had to treat KSM like a white-collar criminal — read him his Miranda rights and get him a lawyer who surely would have insisted that his client simply shut up,” Tenet wrote in his memoirs.

If Tenet is right, it’s a good thing KSM was captured before Barack Obama became president. For, the Obama Justice Department has quietly ordered FBI agents to read Miranda rights to high value detainees captured and held at U.S. detention facilities in Afghanistan, according a senior Republican on the House Intelligence Committee. “The administration has decided to change the focus to law enforcement. Here’s the problem. You have foreign fighters who are targeting US troops today — foreign fighters who go to another country to kill Americans. We capture them…and they’re reading them their rights — Mirandizing these foreign fighters,” says Representative Mike Rogers, who recently met with military, intelligence and law enforcement officials on a fact-finding trip to Afghanistan.

Rogers, a former FBI special agent and U.S. Army officer, says the Obama administration has not briefed Congress on the new policy. “I was a little surprised to find it taking place when I showed up because we hadn’t been briefed on it, I didn’t know about it. We’re still trying to get to the bottom of it, but it is clearly a part of this new global justice initiative.”

That effort, which elevates the FBI and other law enforcement agencies and diminishes the role of intelligence and military officials, was described in a May 28 Los Angeles Times article.

The FBI and Justice Department plan to significantly expand their role in global counter-terrorism operations, part of a U.S. policy shift that will replace a CIA-dominated system of clandestine detentions and interrogations with one built around transparent investigations and prosecutions.

Under the “global justice” initiative, which has been in the works for several months, FBI agents will have a central role in overseas counter-terrorism cases. They will expand their questioning of suspects and evidence-gathering to try to ensure that criminal prosecutions are an option, officials familiar with the effort said.

Thanks in part to the popularity of law and order television shows and movies, many Americans are familiar with the Miranda warning — so named because of the landmark 1966 Supreme Court case Miranda vs. Arizona that required police officers and other law enforcement officials to advise suspected criminals of their rights.

You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to speak to an attorney, and to have an attorney present during any questioning. If you cannot afford a lawyer, one will be provided for you at government expense.

A lawyer who has worked on detainee issues for the U.S. government offers this rationale for the Obama administration’s approach. “If the US is mirandizing certain suspects in Afghanistan, they’re likely doing it to ensure that the treatment of the suspect and the collection of information is done in a manner that will ensure the suspect can be prosecuted in a US court at some point in the future.”

But Republicans on Capitol Hill are not happy. “When they mirandize a suspect, the first thing they do is warn them that they have the ‘right to remain silent,’“ says Representative Pete Hoekstra, the ranking Republican on the House Intelligence Committee. “It would seem the last thing we want is Khalid Sheikh Mohammed or any other al-Qaeda terrorist to remain silent. Our focus should be on preventing the next attack, not giving radical jihadists a new tactic to resist interrogation—lawyering up.”…

           — Hat tip: ACT for America [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Berlin Mosque Invites Homophobic Imam

An Islamic cleric who has called for the death penalty for homosexuals has been invited to speak at a mosque in the Berlin neighbourhood of Neukölln, the daily Tagesspiegel reported Thursday.

Imam Bilal Phillips, a Canadian of Jamaican descent, will speak Saturday on the topic “Islam, the misunderstood religion.” He will be joined by Pierre Vogel, a prominent German convert to Islam. Phillips is well-known on the internet for videos in which he explains homosexuality is a “very normal mortal sin” because it endangers the family structure.

Phillips was invited to speak by the Al-Nur mosque in Neukölln, which is under surveillance by Germany’s domestic intelligence service for its associations with radical preachers, the newspaper reported. Saturday’s lecture is part of an apparent nation-wide tour by Phillips and Vogel.

In a letter to Berlin’s interior minister, Ehrhart Körting, the Gay and Lesbian Association of Berlin (LSVD) demanded that the city’s government take all legal measures to prevent radical imams preaching hate.

“So far as we see it, this man’s statements fulfill the legal criteria for racial incitement,” a crime under German law, LSVD spokesman Alexander Zinn told the Tagesspiegel.

On the mosque’s web site, the event invitation says: “The picture average people have of Islam is influenced by terror, forced headscarf wearing and honour murders. In a country where freedom of the press is synonymous with a license to lie, this fact can’t really be surprising.”

Calls to the Al-Nur mosque by The Local for comment were not returned.

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



Berlusconi: Possible Vote of Confidence Over Wiretaps

(AGI) — Rome, 4 June — Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi does not rule out a vote of confidence on the wiretap bill.

Speaking to SkyTg24 he stated that “It would be better not to have a vote of confidence, but if we run into the slightest opposition we will immediately call a vote of confidence”.

Berlusconi pointed out that wiretaps cost the State 400 million euro every year, and that “the right to privacy is fundamental”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Court Voids Asset Freeze of UK Terror Suspect

LUXEMBOURG — An EU court on Thursday voided a 2001 European Union decision to freeze the assets of a suspected Jordanian terrorist held in Britain, saying the case lacked a proper judicial review.

The freeze was imposed in accordance with a U.N. Security Council decision to seize money and other assets of terrorist suspects.

The EU Court of First Instance ruled Thursday the seizure was illegal in the case of Omar Mohammed Othman saying the lack of judicial review amounted to a violation of his fundamental rights.

It gave the EU two months to appeal and make a specific case against Othman.

Also known as Abu Qatada, Othman is an extremist Muslim preacher from Jordan who has been described in Spanish and British courts as a leading al-Qaida figure in Europe.

He has lived in Britain since 1993, has been arrested several times there under anti-terrorist legislation and now faces deportation to Jordan.

Othman is challenging that deportation in the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.

Thursday’s ruling mirrored one issued by the EU high court last September, which also voided a 2001 EU decision to freeze the assets of a Saudi businessman and a Sweden-based charity suspected of funding al-Qaida terror groups. That ruling was reversed on appeal.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



EU Members Fear Lisbon Guarantees May Reopen Whole Debate

THE GOVERNMENT faces opposition to its demand for legally binding guarantees on the Lisbon Treaty because some EU states fear it will reopen the treaty debate in their own countries.

EU states have also raised concerns about the implications of the Irish guarantee on the right to life, education and family and a separate declaration on workers’ rights.

A meeting of EU ambassadors to discuss the text of the guarantees was scheduled for today but it was cancelled last night because of problems that emerged at bilateral meetings between Irish officials and their EU counterparts. Britain, Poland, the Netherlands, Austria and Sweden have all raised concerns about the text, which is due to be agreed at an EU leaders’ summit next week.

“What kind of concrete form that legally binding document could have is something that is subject to discussion. Some parts of the concrete texts are also still under discussion,” said Czech Europe minister Stefan Fule, who is chairing the delicate negotiations on behalf of the rotating EU presidency.

He said EU states had agreed to give guarantees on the specific areas of family, right to life, religion, neutrality and taxation. But he said there was also a consensus that there is a “red line that cannot be crossed”, which is that member states do not want to have to ratify the treaty again.

Taoiseach Brian Cowen made clear at last December’s EU summit he wanted the guarantees to be enshrined in the EU treaties at the earliest possible opportunity to provide a cast iron assurance to Irish voters. When the guarantees are written into the EU treaties they become primary law, which gives them extra validity in the eyes of the European Court of Justice.

Mr Cowen’s request was seemingly granted when French president Nicolas Sarkozy told the media an Irish protocol with the guarantees could be ratified by all states with the next EU accession treaty, probably Croatia.

But it is understood Britain, in particular, is very nervous about reopening a national debate on Lisbon by agreeing to ratify an Irish protocol through the House of Commons. The Conservatives made the Lisbon Treaty a key issue in their European election campaign, which saw Labour beaten into third place by the Eurosceptic UK Independence Party.

“There are huge sensitivities around Lisbon for the British government,” said one EU source.

Britain is not alone in fearing that agreeing to ratify a protocol through national parliaments could cause complications. Several states are worried that agreeing to the Irish demand could provoke the Eurosceptic Czech president Vaclav Klaus to refuse to sign the Lisbon Treaty to prevent its ratification even if the Irish public votes yes in a second referendum.

One alternative that member states may offer the Government is a legal decision on the guarantees issued by the European Council. This would have legal standing but would enshrine the guarantees in the EU treaties.

Several EU states such as Poland, the Netherlands and Sweden are also concerned about the implications of the Irish guarantee on ethical issues. Warsaw secured its own opt-out from the charter of fundamental rights on ethical issues. More liberal EU states such as Netherlands and Sweden want to ensure that the Irish guarantee on ethical issues does not override existing EU rights that Ireland has signed up to such as the freedom to work or travel abroad in EU states.

“The guarantees should not give primacy to the Irish Constitution over existing EU rules that Ireland has already signed up to,” said one diplomat.

Several states are also concerned about a declaration the Government is seeking on workers’ rights, a hugely sensitive issue at EU level. EU states have already agreed to Ireland’s demand that every member state should retain a commissioner. But a final agreement on the legal guarantees will have to be found at next week’s summit to enable a referendum to be held in the autumn.

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



EU Security Proposals Are ‘Dangerously Authoritarian’

Civil liberties groups say the proposals would create an EU ID card register, internet surveillance systems, satellite surveillance, automated exit-entry border systems operated by machines reading biometrics and risk profiling systems.

Europe’s justice ministers will hold talks on the “domestic security policy” and surveillance network proposals, known in Brussels circles as the “Stockholm programme”, on July 15 with the aim of finishing work on the EU’s first ever internal security policy by the end of 2009.

Jacques Barrot, the European justice and security commissioner, yesterday publicly declared that the aim was to “develop a domestic security strategy for the EU”, once regarded as a strictly national “home affairs” area of policy.

“National frontiers should no longer restrict our activities,” he said.

Mark Francois, Conservative spokesman on Europe, has demanded “immediate clarity on where the government stands on this”.

“These are potentially dangerous proposals which could interfere in Britain’s internal security,” he said.

“The chaos and division in Gordon Brown’s government is crippling Britain’s ability to make its voice heard in Europe.”

Critics of the plans have claimed that moves to create a new “information system architecture” of Europe-wide police and security databases will create a “surveillance state”.

Tony Bunyan, of the European Civil Liberties Network (ECLN), has warned that EU security officials are seeking to harness a “digital tsunami” of new information technology without asking “political and moral questions first”.

“An increasingly sophisticated internal and external security apparatus is developing under the auspices of the EU,” he said.

Mr Bunyan has suggested that existing and new proposals will create an EU ID card register, internet surveillance systems, satellite surveillance, automated exit-entry border systems operated by machines reading biometrics and risk profiling systems.

“In five or 10 years time when we have the surveillance and database state people will look back and ask, ‘what were you doing in 2009 to stop this happening?’,” he said.

Civil liberties groups are particularly concerned over “convergence” proposals to herald standardise European police surveillance techniques and to create “tool-pools” of common data gathering systems to be operated at the EU level.

Under the plans the scope of information available to law enforcement agencies and “public security organisations” would be extended from the sharing of existing DNA and fingerprint databases, kept and stored for new digital generation ID cards, to include CCTV video footage and material gathered from internet surveillance.

The Lisbon Treaty, currently stalled after Ireland’s referendum rejection last year, creates a secretive new Standing Committee for Internal Security, known as COSI, to co-ordinate policy between national forces and EU organisations such as Europol, the Frontex borders agency, the European Gendarmerie Force and the Brussels intelligence sharing Joint Situation Centre or Sitcen.

EU officials have told The Daily Telegraph that the radical plans will be controversial and will need powers contained within the Lisbon Treaty, currently awaiting a second Irish vote this autumn.

“The British and some others will not like it as it moves policy to the EU,” said an official. “Some of things we want to do will only be realistic with the Lisbon Treaty in place, so we need that too.”

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



Gaddafi in Rome: Only Fulfilling Agreements, Muslim Blogger

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 10 — “The Colonel has been accused of everything and more, in a vile diplomatic slogging match, just because he’s keeping to agreements made with all the powers within the Italian government itself” said Sherif El Sebaie, a blogger and representative of the Islamic community in Italy. He was addressing what he calls “the mass of insults aimed at President Gaddafi on his first visit to Italy. Isn’t it perhaps the Italian navy who escorts poor migrants onto boats, telling them that they will be taken to Italy?” asks El Sebaie. “The opposition is losing its support, including that of immigrants, because it does not do its job where and when it should”. Instead of getting angry “with the Arab president who signed the agreement, let them get angry with the person who wanted it”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi ‘Rockstar Welcome’ Slammed

Libyan leader’s human rights record ‘forgotten’, critics say

(See related story.) (ANSA) — Rome, June 10 — Politicians across the divide on Wednesday slammed the Italian government’s “rockstar welcome” of Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi in light of his human rights record.

Contravening city laws, a huge tent has been pitched in a Rome park for Gaddafi to stay in during his three-day state visit, during which he is being ferried around in a white limousine.

On Thursday the Libyan leader will address the Senate in his role as the rotating chairman of the African Union — a privilege that was refused to the Dalai Lama and has enraged critics.

Centrist UDC party leader Pier Ferdinando Casini described the government’s treatment of Gaddafi as “humiliating” for Italy.

“There are ways of reinforcing diplomatic links with a country without overstepping the limits of decency and good taste and without forgetting years of repeated violations of human rights,” Casini said.

Democratic Party (PD) senator Roberto della Seta slammed as “indecent” the “rockstar welcome” and the privileges being extended to “a despot who for 40 years has kept his country under a ferocious personal dictatorship”.

“He should naturally be treated like a head of state, but without going overboard,” he added.

Criticism came from across the political divide, with right-wing La Destra President Teodoro Buontempo saying it was “unacceptable” for Italy to “genuflect in front of a Libyan despot known above all for his lack of respect for human rights”.

“Gaddafi was met at the airport with a guard of honour and the government has opened all its doors for him, forgetting that the colonel came to power 40 years ago in a coup,” he said.

Marco Pannella of the Radical Party hit out at government figures for failing to make “the smallest reference” to Libya’s human rights record, despite the fact that Italy will be paying out five billion euros over the next 20 years to Libya as part of a landmark friendship accord.

Angelo Bonelli of the Green Party described the pitching of the Libyan leader’s tent as an “act of arrogance”.

DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST GADDAFI PLANNED.

Human rights groups including Amnesty International were set to lead a demonstration against Gaddafi on Wednesday evening as he met with Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi.

Left-wing students have also vowed to stage protests on Thursday, when Gaddafi is set to take part in a debate with students at Rome’s La Sapienza University.

Other protests, including one in reaction to the decision by Sardinia’s University of Sassari to give the Libyan leader an honorary degree, are planned elsewhere in the capital.

PD senators meanwhile announced they would boycott Gaddafi’s address to parliament’s upper house on Thursday.

Italy of Values Senate whip Felice Belisario asked on Wednesday why a “dictator” (Gaddafi) was allowed to address the Senate, which he defined as a “temple of democracy”, and not the Dalai Lama. Reference to the Tibetan leader was also made by a government People of Freedom (PdL) MP, Benedetto Della Vedova, who recalled that “two years ago, despite a request by over 100 MPs, the Dalai Lama was not allowed to address the lower house because of protocol”. “Given this precedent, the appearance of the Libyan leader in the Senate appears both unjustified and inopportune,” he added. “It makes no sense to honor Gaddafi for what he is not nor appears ready to become: a democratic leader worthy of speaking in the house of Italian democracy, which is the parliament,” the PdL MP said. The only other foreign dignitaries who have addressed the Senate are former UN secretary general Kofi Annan and Spain’s King Juan Carlos. Radical Party leader Emma Bonino, who was elected to the Senate with the PD, expressed her hope that the address would be cancelled.

By allowing Gaddafi to address the Senate, the former European Union commissioner for human rights said, “we are sending a disturbing message to those in the world who are fighting for democracy and human rights. And that message is that we welcome dictators even into our most democratic institutions”.

However, former foreign minister Massimo D’Alema of the PD said he found “nothing scandalous” about Gaddafi addressing the Senate, in both his roles as the leader of a former Italian colony in Rome for the first time and as current African Union president.

Gaddafi’s address was not an official Senate sitting, so those “who want to come can come, those who don’t, don’t have to,” he added.

The leader of government ally the Northern League, Umberto Bossi, also spoke out against the critics.

“Gaddafi is helping Italy, he’s stopping immigration a bit,” said Bossi, referring to a recent agreement with Libya whereby illegal immigrants trying to cross the Mediterranean are intercepted and returned to the North African country.

“He’s come all the way to Rome: he can’t be stopped from speaking”.

Photo: Gaddafi (second left) arriving at the Quirinale.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Speaks in Senate

Libyan leader slams migrant policy critics, Iraq invasion

(ANSA) — Rome, June 11 — Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi spoke in the Italian Senate Thursday in his first keynote address on an historic visit to cement stronger ties between the North African country and its former colonial ruler.

Gaddafi did not address the chamber of the Senate because of protests led by opposition Senators, but spoke in an adjacent hall.

However, only one opposition party, Italy of Values, boycotted the address.

The Libyan leader devoted much of his speech to immigration, a hot topic since Libya agreed to take back migrants rescued by Italy at sea under the terms of a $5 million deal on colonial reparations. Addressing humanitarian critics of the controversial new policy, he said: “Let the Italian government stop defending you from immigration, let millions of people in, and then you’ll need a dictator to protect you”.

Human rights organisations have criticised Libya for not providing adequate facilities to process pleas from asylum seekers fleeing conflicts in Africa.

But Gaddafi countered: “Leave it up to the human rights organisations to find a job, medical treatment and the other needs of the immigrants that could swamp your country”. He also said that Libya needs much more money from the European Union to help curb immigration from Africa.

“Many billions of euros are needed to stem the flows of immigrants into the Mediterranean,” Gaddafi told the Senators.

He described the one billion euros the EU currently gives Libya to contain immigration as “insufficient”.

Echoing Italian officials, Gaddafi said the two countries “could not tackle this problem alone”.

He said the EU should do more because “the problem concerns the whole of Europe”.

Gaddafi said immigration should be given greater attention by all international bodies including the United Nations and the African Union of which Libya is currently president.

US INVASION TURNED IRAQ INTO ‘ARENA FOR AL-QEDA’.

In other remarks, Gaddafi condemned terrorism but stressed that “the true reasons for this pernicious phenomenon should be understood” and said that the United States invasion of Iraq had turned the country into “an arena for al-Qaeda”.

He also likened the US retaliatory bombing of his quarters in 1986, in which an adopted infant daughter was killed, to al-Qaeda’s attacks.

“What is the difference between the American attack on our dwellings in 1986 and the terrorist actions of Bin Laden?,” he asked.

“Bin Laden is an outlaw while America is a state with international rules”. After his speech, Gaddafi headed off for Rome’s La Sapienza University where riot police were out in force to control angry students.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi in Rome: America Wants to Colonise the Globe

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 11 — America does not want people to be free, they want to colonise the entire world and they turn against anyone who “prevents this”, said Muammar Gaddafi at La Sapienza University in Rome, stressing that the US wanted to kill him “because he did not want to submit to them and wanted his country to remain free”. “Our objective is to prevent the colonialism of the past from repeating itself,” added Gaddafi, referring to Italy’s colonial period in Libya. The colonel returned to the issue of terrorism: “terrorist actions against innocent, unarmed victims are reprehensible, but the reason for them is tied to colonialism of the Islamic world by Christian states. Christ is innocent, he is a prophet of peace. The problem is that in addition to the aggression of the states promoting Christianity, they also tried to made the colonised states dependent on them. They fought those who opposed them”. Gaddafi cited the case of Nasser, who “tried to free himself because he wanted his people to be free and he gave the Suez Canal back to Egypt, taking it away from France”. Terrorism, he concluded, “is a reaction”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italian Police Conduct Anti-Terror Operation

ROME — Italian police say they are carrying out arrests in Rome, Milan and other cities as part of an investigation into the activities of suspected radical leftist terrorists.

Police in Rome did not give details of its anti-terror operation Thursday, saying it was under way.

Italian news agency ANSA said the group had been planning an attack in La Maddalena, an island off Sardinia that had originally been selected to host the Group of Eight summit next month. The summit has been moved to L’Aquila in central Italy.

ANSA said five people were arrested and one placed under house arrest. Among them is a man who had been close to the Red Brigades, the leftist group that plagued Italy with attacks in the 1970s and 1980s.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Italy: Premier Urges No Vote on Referendum

Berlusconi under fire after accord with Northern League

(See related election coverage). (ANSA) — Rome, June 9 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi urged his People of Freedom (PdL) party supporters on Tuesday not to vote in favour of a referendum to change Italy’s electoral law, drawing accusations he was paying political ransom to his Northern League allies. The referendum, which coincides with local run-off elections taking place on June 21, is staunchly opposed by the League but was previously supported by the premier.

A brief statement issued by Berlusconi’s office said voting to approve changes to the current electoral system “does not appear opportune at present”.

The premier’s stance came in the wake of a meeting late Monday with Northern League leader Umberto Bossi whose party was mulling the idea of urging its supporters to shun run-offs not involving League candidates. PdL candidates will be waging a number of tough battles with centre-left candidates in the municipal and provincial run-offs and Bossi has agreed to back them. Monday’s meeting, held after European parliamentary elections which signaled a slight setback for the PdL but saw the League rise to 10.2 percent from 5 percent in 2004, focused on strategy for the run-offs, PdL sources said.

Italian political pundits said Monday’s meeting had cemented an agreement for the League to back PdL candidates in the run-offs in exchange for Berlusconi’s explicit call to PdL supporters to vote against the referendum changes.

Referendum supporters want Italians to approve three changes to the current electoral system, which was pushed through parliament in late 2005 by the then centre-right government led by Berlusconi.

The first two changes would award an extra packet of parliamentary seats to whichever party won the most votes. At present this packet goes to the winning coalition.

The referendum campaigners believe that this change will encourage small parties to merge into bigger ones, alleviating the perennial fragmentation of the Italian political scene.

The third question aims to stop the current practice of high-profile candidates standing in more than one constituency, using their visibility to attract more votes.

The Bossi-Berlusconi agreement came under immediate fire from the centre-left opposition which accused the premier of being “Bossi’s hostage” and backtracking from an earlier pledge to vote for the referendum changes.

“It’s obvious that after the (EP) election results he (Berlusconi) has to favour his ally Bossi, of whom he is increasingly the hostage, to secure a commitment for the run-offs,” said Democratic Party Senator Giorgio Tonini and one of the key promoters of the referendum.

Tonini said the current law had been “tailor-made for the centre right and for the PdL-League alliance”. Centrist UDC party leader Pierferdinando Casini scoffed at Berlusconi’s turnabout, saying “politically, the League is in charge and Berlusconi is forced to bow”.

Referendum organisers urged Italians to support their cause, saying the current electoral law was “a mess”.

The changes will guarantee a bipartisan system, they said, stressing that the two main political parties — PD and PdL — were now “being blackmailed” by their smaller allies.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Andalusia Gov. Approves Law for Dignified Death

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 9 — The regional government of Andalucía has today formally approved their plan to allow people the right to a dignified death, a pioneering initiative in Spain announced several months ago. The “Law of Rights and Guarantees of the Dignity of Dying People” limits futile care and allows the patient to decide on the removal of life support must now be definitively approved by the regional parliament. As he outlined the law in a press conference, regional councillor for health Maria Jesus Montero explained that it develops one of the rights in the Statute of Regional Autonomy regarding terminal palliative sedation and the determination of brain death. The text does not regulate euthanasia, nor assisted suicide, which form part of the penal code and cannot be altered by a regional government. The spokesperson for PP in the Andalucían parliament, Esperanza Oña, has noted that the law approved today with the consensus of the PSOE, IU and PE, is part of the mandate of the Autonomy Statute and recognises that ‘all people have the right to a dignified death”. Oña said that such a right was being “recognised by the PP group” through the new legislation which essentially ‘regulates normal medical practices”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Town Hall, Referendum on Catalonia’s Independence

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 10 — “Do you agree that Catalonia is an independent, democratic and social state with the right to exist, and is part of the European Union?”, is the question that the residents of the town of Arenys de Munt, near Barcelona, will answer in the September 13 referendum. The referendum was agreed upon by the political parties in the town council, with the exception of the Socialists’ Party of Catalonia (PSC) and the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC), in a recent town council meeting on a proposal by the Popular Unity Candidates (CUP). CUP councilman Josep Manuel Ximenis, quoted today by Publico, explained that the objective of the referendum — an initiative of the Areynec movement for self-determination — is to open up a debate to exert pressure on the regional parliament to call a referendum by 2010, also insisted upon by the Catalunuya Estas Lliure’s (Catalonia Free State) platform. Among the parties in the local government of Renys that are opposed to the referendum (in addition to the PSC) are the Esquerra Repubblicana de Catalunya (ERC), republican independence supporters and members of the socialist three-party coalition in power in the regional government. CUP presented a motion requesting the regional assembly to call for a referendum on Catalonia’s independence in October 2008 during a referendum announced by Basque President Ibarretxe. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Fined £50… for Dropping a Tenner

A SHOPPER who dropped a £10 note in the street by accident has been fined — for littering.

Arthritis sufferer Stewart Smith was leaving a charity shop when the banknote fell from his hand, without him realising.

Stewart, 36, at first expressed his gratitude to the two officers who approached him to point out that the note had fallen to the ground.

But moments later, after recovering the note, he was stunned to be accused of littering and slapped with a £50 fixed-penalty notice.

Mr Smith, who was forced to give up work because of his illness, receives just £98 a fortnight in benefits. But the former warehouse worker has just 14 days to pay up or could face further action.

It is thought the police were implementing a zero-tolerance approach to littering as part of a concerted effort to clean up their local area in Ayr.

But law and order campaigners last night slammed the move, describing it as petty and a waste of police resources.

Mr Smith, who is single, had popped into his local charity shop to look for a bargain.

He bought a £3 T-shirt and had been struggling with his shopping and a handful of change when the banknote slipped from his grasp along with a receipt.

He said: “I came out of the shop, with my T-shirt under my arm. I put £7 in coins into my front pocket, as I was going to buy some juice. I thought I was putting a £10 note and the receipt in my back pocket.

“But my shirt was hanging over the pocket, and the £10 note, along with the receipt, fell onto the street.”

Two officers stood nearby called out to him, pointing to the cash and the receipt on the ground.

He gratefully retrieved the money, but could not believe it when the officers approached him and accused him of littering.

Insisting it was an honest mistake, Mr Smith tried to explain but was told he was being fined £50 for littering. He has now sought legal advice and is hoping to have the fine overturned.

Mr Smith, from Dalrymple, Ayrshire, said his faith in the police had been shattered.

His solicitor Peter Lockhart said: “I will be taking up this matter on his behalf. This is a scandalous use of police resources.”

Scottish Tory justice spokesman Bill Aitken called on Strathclyde Police to explain the actions of its officers towards Mr Smith.

He said: “Clearly no-one is going to throw away a £10 note. From what he says it would seem fairly clear that he dropped both items by mistake.”

Matthew Elliott, Chief Executive at the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said the action was a waste of police time and resources.

He said: “It’s bizarre that the police officers saw fit to fine a man for dropping money. It was clearly a mistake and they should show understanding.”

Conservative MP Philip Davies said: “This seems on the face of it to be a very petty action. This sounds like a case where common sense has been ignored.”

Strathclyde Police last night insisted Mr Smith had dropped several papers and ignored a warning to pick them up.

But the fixed-penalty notice reads: “You did drop a price ticket”, appearing to contradict the force’s version of events.

A force spokeswoman said: “An individual was seen throwing papers on the street. When he was approached and spoken to about it, he recovered the money he had thrown away but repeated his actions with the papers. He was therefore ticketed.”

[Return to headlines]



UK: Home Educators Made to Register

Home educating families in England are going to have to register annually, as the government has accepted the recommendations of a review.

The review also says local authorities should have the right to visit any child taught at home.

The government commissioned a review to find out whether local councils were monitoring home educated children, or offering parents enough support.

It has also been concerned that home education could be a cover for abuse.

The review, conducted by former director of education for Kent, Graham Badman, says that parents who home educate should have to register annually on a scheme administered by local councils.

A parent’s right to home educate will not be challenged, ministers have said.

But parents will have to submit a statement of their intended approach to the child’s education.

Support

Local authorities currently have no statutory duty to monitor children educated at home.

But they must ensure that all children are receiving a suitable education, either in school or otherwise.

The government was concerned that current legislation was not allowing them to do this effectively, and it wants local authorities to provide better support to home educating parents.

Children’s Secretary Ed Balls said: “We will ask local authorities to provide easier access to extra support for those home-educated children who need it — particularly the relatively high proportion of home-educated children who have special educational needs and others who need or want to access services that would otherwise be provided through their school.”

He said asking home educators to register would bring England into line with other European countries.

Scotland differs slightly from the rest of the UK in that local authorities are encouraged to inspect home educating families at least once a year.

‘Outdated’

But home educators say authorities should stop treating them with suspicion and concentrate on giving them support.

It’s a shame that some children do not get to have the interaction of the classroom and other children of their same age Helen, Leicester

Ann Newstead, spokeswoman for home education group Education Otherwise, said: “If one thing could come out of this review which would mean it was not a complete waste of public money, it would be that the decision to home educate is treated with respect and as a positive choice.”

The review has not found any evidence that home education was being used specifically to conceal trafficked children, or forced marriages.

Children’s charities had urged the government to tighten up rules regarding home education.

NSPCC head of policy and public affairs, Diana Sutton, said current legislation was “outdated” and a system was needed to deal with cases where local authorities had concerns.

Estimates of how many children are home educated vary from between 20,000 and 80,000 children.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Prison Magazine Withdrawn Because Satirical Swine-Flu Article Offends Muslim Inmates

The Jailhouselawyer’s Blog carries news that Inside Time, a monthly magazine distributed free to prisoners in the UK, has recalled 50,000 copies of its latest issue because of fears that a humorous article on swine flu and an accompanying cartoon could be offensive to Muslim inmates.

The column by Andy Thackwray, a prisoner at HMP Hull, was entitled “Porky’s Revenge”. It hypothesised that swine flu was the result of a failed plot by Osama Bin Laden “eradicate every pig in Christendom”:

Yes, not too long ago in a cave somewhere in deepest Afghanistan, our bearded foe created his halal flu virus to totally wipe out the pigs of the Western world, and hopefully see the end of pork as we know it. Only trouble was, the young terrorist Bin Laden hand-picked to fly across the Atlantic to carry out the wicked deed was not only a goat short of a full flock, he’d also never ventured out of his village before. So, with geography not being one of his strong points, coupled with his poor command of the English language, it’s not surprising that he got off the plane one stop early thinking he was in Kansas, America when really he was in Cancun, Mexico. There, he set the Bin Laden flu virus free on a Mexican pig farm instead of on an American one as planned — what a knob!

The article was accompanied by a cartoon of a bearded, turbanned pig standing on its hind legs and sneezing.

John Roberts, Operations Director and Company Secretary at Inside Time, was contacted by Diversity at Wormwood Scrubs and informed that the article and cartoon “might be offensive to Muslims”. Consequently, all 50,000 copies of the magazine have been withdrawn and will be reprinted without the offending pieces. Apparently this will cost the charity which runs Inside Time £15-20,000.

The Jailhouselawer also reports that the Mr Thackwray has been charged with a Disciplinary Offence, put in the Segregation Unit, and will be transferred out of HMP Hull.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Still Impunity for Missing Persons, Now Up to EU

(by Chiara Spegni) (ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 8 — Ten years after the end of the war in Kosovo, thousands of victims are still missing without trace. EULEX, the European Union Rule of Law Mission in Kosovo active since December 2008, plays a vital role in the uncovering of the serious violation of human rights in the country. Amnesty International has asked EU member states to intervene, urging their cooperation in its new report presented today in Brussels: “Burying the past: 10 years of impunity for missing persons and kidnappings in Kosovo”. “Around 1,900 families in Kosovo and Serbia have no information on the remains of their missing relatives” explained Sian Jones, researcher and Kosovo expert of Amnesty International. More than 3 thousand Albanians, according to Amnesty, have disappeared, taken away by Serbian police and military forces. The organisation estimates that around 800 Serbs, Rom and members of other ethnic minority groups have been kidnapped, by the KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) according to eye witnesses. Most people disappeared after the end of the conflict in June 1999, “under the eyes of NATO peacekeeping forces in Kosovo”. Why have these war crimes escaped justice so far? Amnesty mentions serious institutional barriers and the power of some people who would like to see the truth “buried”, like former KLA leaders and Serbian police officials, as the main reasons. Bringing people to justice is made even more difficult by the fact that many Serb officials and policemen of 1999 “are still working in the Interior Ministry and therefore the police are unable to investigate the issue independently” explained the Amnesty expert. In Kosovo “Amnesty had asked the UNMIK (United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo) for adequate witness protection” added Jones “but this has not been done. UNMIK has carried out few investigations, with around 46 trials for war crimes”. The reports of the UNMIK investigations, “today handed over to the EULEX mission, are a complete chaos” explained Jones, “and The Hague’s International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (TPI) has not supplied all information on the graves”. Meanwhile families are waiting for news on their loved ones. Amnesty, which approves the start of the EULEX mission, has turned to the EU member states to introduce a witness protection programme. The organisation has asked for sufficient resources for EULEX, as well as the possibility to form an independent police force to assist the attorney. Amnesty has also asked the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia to make official statements to get a real change started, in the interest of the future EU membership of the two countries. Political and not only financial support by the EU, according to the expert of Amnesty, could be the right solution, for example in Serbia. “We have seen in the case of Croatia” Jones concluded “how much European pressure has contributed to increase the number of trials for war crimes”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Like Morocco, Berber Surnames Blacklisted

(by Laura De Santi) (ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 10 — Syphax, MassTyass and Massiles are just some of the names rejected in recent months by the registry offices of several cities in Algeria because they do not appear in the State’s official list. All of these names are Berber in origin and a petition has been launched today by Berber intellectuals to call for a halt “to the surname nomenclature and to reclaim the right and freedom to name our children as we wish”. A list of banned Berber names has been in force in Morocco since February, as they violate law number 99-37 which allows only the use of Arab-Moroccan names. In Algeria, while there is no explicit law which forbids the names, there is a list of approved names which is supposed to be updated periodically taking account of new trends. This decision, however, often rests with officials at the registry offices of births and deaths. “At a time in which the Amazigh (Berbers from Cabilia, ed.) are paying dearly in their fight to be recognised by their detractors, (a national language in 2002, but not official, as is Arabic, ed), and while the head of state says that he is an authentic Berber…the State continues to reject Berber-origin and Berber-sounding names”, says the petition for “the recognition of all of Amazigh names”. The latest rejection came a few days ago from the registrar’s office of El Harrach, a suburb of the capital, where they did not want to register a new-born named Syphax, the name of a King of western Numidia (now western Algeria) who lived between 250 and 202 BC. “I was asked to present an application to the public prosecutor’s office” explained the baby’s father. “I have to provide proof of the existence of this name”. One of the most unexpected rejections was made by the registry in Tizi Ouzou, the district capital of Cabilia with a Berber majority, and a stronghold of the struggle for the identity of the region to be recognised. Several parents were denied the possibility of calling their sons MassTyass, the name of a prince of the Giugurta family, or Massiles, a variation of the name of the Massinissa tribe, the historic king of Numidia (238-148 BC). While the Berber names are defined as ‘foreign’, radical-Islamic names which have nothing to do with Algeria, such as Seif El Islam, or clearly subversive names like Oussama Bin Laden, are accepted, writes daily newspaper la Depeche de Kabilye. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Rise in Child Sex Abuse Causes Alarm

Algiers, 10 June (AKI) — There is growing concern in Algeria about the incidence of sexual violence against children. The director of the National Office for Algerian Children, Khayra Masuda, says there have been 805 alleged cases of sexual abuse against children since the beginning of 2009.

Masuda, who is also a police officer, said these children were among the 1677 minors picked up by police from the side of the road suffering from extreme poverty.

“There is not one day that passes in this country that we don’t register a case of sexual violence against children,” Musada explained to the local paper El Khabar.

“Unfortunately, we are registering an increasing amount of these specific crimes.”

Despite cultural perceptions that the children are school dropouts, police revealed that 90 percent of the children regularly attend school.

However, police said the incidence of criminal offences has increased in school and in particular drug trafficking.

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



Algeria: Al-Qaeda Had ‘Contacts’ With Militants in Italy

Algiers, 9 June (AKI) — Algerian police have said that Al-Qaeda militants in the capital Algiers are in contact with members who live in Italy and Germany. According to the Algerian daily el-Khabar, members of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb include young people in their 30’s who are living abroad.

The Algerian daily does not specify the number of members in the group, but it mentions Nasim, also known as Abu Sayyaf, who currently lives in Germany and was recently in Algeria to make contact with AQIM leaders.

Police said inquiries revealed a link between the AQIM cell in Algiers and some Algerian citizens recently arrested in Italy.

Last week, Italian police issued arrest warrants for five North Africans accused of plotting terror attacks in the northern cities of Milan and Bologna in early 2006. It is not known whether the arrests were linked to the cell in Algiers.

The five were alleged to have planned attacks against the subway system in Milan and the San Petronio cathedral in Bologna which dates back to 1390.

Police claimed the five were part of an international group which is active in Algeria, Morocco and Syria.

The Al-Qaeda Organisation in the Islamic Maghreb evolved from the Salafite Group for Preaching and Combat, initially formed to create an Islamic state in Algeria, but is now believed to have more widespread goals.

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

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel: Gay Pride in Tel Aviv Planned by University Students

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 10 — Tel Aviv is increasingly gay-friendly: “iPRiDE: Israel’s GLBT (gay, lesbian, bisexual and transsexual) culture” is the name of the event due to be held in Tel Aviv up to June 14, and which will climax on June 12 with its eleventh Gay Pride parade. The event was organised by StandWithUs, a student association of Tel Aviv’s university which aims to turn Israeli students into “well-informed and active future leaders”. StandWithUs project manager, Noa Meir, stated that “We chose this project because it is a great opportunity to show a relatively unknown aspect of Israel and to show Israel for what it is away from the conflict between Israel and Palestine: a democratic, pluralistic and multicultural society. iPRiDE aims to raise international awareness about the cultural diversity of Israel’s society, focusing attention on the gay community an on its challenges. We expect to see thousands of people fly in from all over the world”. A statement reads that the event, which was also sponsored by the local authorities in Tel Aviv and Jaffa as well as by Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, will be attended by “journalists, academics, students and activists” from various Countries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Israel: Ministers’ Opposing Views on Palestinian State

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JUNE 10 — Two of the most authoritative ministers in Israeli premier Benyamin Netanyahu’s government have diametrically opposed views on a future Palestinian state and the efforts of US president Barack Obama’s administration in this direction. Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak, Labour Party leader (minority in the government), is confident that he can get the government to accept these efforts, while Minister for Strategic Affairs and Likud member, Moshe Yaalon, dismissed them as unrealistic. “If we don’t accept the two-state solution (which Netanyahu hasn’t accepted yet, editor’s note), then we will be confined to political apartheid” on the international stage, said Barak in an interview published today in Haaretz. On the day after meeting with Obama’s Middle East envoy George Mitchell, Barak is confident that he will be able to convince the premier as well: “This government,” he said ,”will surprise people”. According to Yaalon, like Barak a general and former chief of staff, the peace plan the press attributes to Obama — to create a Palestinian state in two years — is hasty, to say the least. “Instant peace is bound to fail,” he said from Washington, claiming that trying to impose peace in a short time would mean creating the conditions for “the birth of an Hamas enclave in the West Bank”, as well as in Gaza. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Meshaal Welcomes Obama’s ‘New Language’

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, JUNE 10 — Khaled Meshaal, leader of the fundamentalist Palestinian movement Hamas — still considered a “terrorist group” by the United States — said yesterday in a Cairo press conference that he appreciated “the new language used by US president Barack Obama”, in the latter’s June 4 speech to the Muslim world. “But a change of language is not enough,” he stressed. The White House’s Middle East “policies must also change”. Meshaal added that “certain generally accepted ways of doing things in the West Bank” — which criminalise the resistance — are the result of “commitments to Israel”, and they must be changed for inter-Palestinian dialogue to be successful. The Hamas leader harshly criticised Israel, the governments which criminalise his movement and the Palestinians of Al Fatah. But at the same time he praised Obama’s speech, following other Hamas leaders in Gaza who had already expressed their approval. For the first time in months, Meshaal left his place of exile in Damascus to visit Cairo for talks with Egyptian leaders — in particular with the very active secret services chief Omar Suleiman — on a possible reconciliation with his Palestinian rivals after his movement forcibly took power in the Gaza Strip in July 2007. In the Arab League headquarters, after his meeting with secretary-general Amr Mussa, Meshaal said: “the resistance (mukauama, in Arabic ) is an application of the road map’s security aspect, since Israel has never kept its promises. Not only is the resistance persecuted, but also uprooted on an organisational and political level. This obstacle for reconciliation must be eliminated”. “We have nothing against starting talks,” with the US administration. There have been “unofficial” talks, he underlined, “with Americans like former President Jimmy Carter”. “But no actor in the region or of the international community,” he concluded ,”will be able to make progress on the Arab-Israeli conflict without negotiating with Hamas”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Analysis: Obama: An Innocent Abroad

by Jonathan Spyer

The London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Quds al-Arabi has published what it claims are key details of the new Middle East peace plan to be presented by President Obama in his speech in Cairo on June 4. Details of the plan made the front page of two leading Israeli newspapers.

If the revelations prove accurate, they reveal a US administration as yet unacquainted with several basic facts of life concerning politics and strategy in the Middle East.

There were those in Israel who suspected Obama of being a kind of wolf in sheep’s clothing, preparing with a friendly smile to offer up Israel as a sacrifice to its regional enemies.

The picture emerging from the alleged details of his plan suggest a different, though not necessarily more comforting characterization: When it comes to the Middle East, Obama is an innocent abroad.

Observe: We are told that the new plan represents a revised version of the 2002 Arab peace plan and is to offer the following: a demilitarized Palestinian state approximating the armistice lines of June 5, 1967. Territorial exchanges may take place on the West Bank. This state will be established within four years of the commencement of negotiations.

On Palestinian refugees: The refugees and their descendants will be naturalized in their countries of current residence, or will have the right to move to the new Palestinian state. In parallel to the negotiations with the Palestinians, separate negotiating tracks with the Syrians and Lebanese will be established.

If the Obama plan does indeed include these elements, its failure is a certainty, because it has been formulated without reference to regional realities…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Defence: Turkey and Iraq Sign Military Cooperation Accord

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — Turkey and Iraq have signed a memorandum of understanding for military cooperation, Anatolia news agency reports today. Turkish General Staff announced on Wednesday that the MoU for technical, training and scientific cooperation between the two countries were signed by Deputy Chief of Turkish General Staff Gen. Hasan Igsiz and his Iraqi counterpart Gen. Nasier Abadi. An information note published on General Staff’s website said proceedings for the MoU had been going for over a year. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Elections: Turkey Worried Over Results

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 9 — One day after the creation of the new Strasbourg Parliament Turkey has found itself a long way from EU membership. The victory of the centre-right parties, which won 263 seats, has confirmed the primacy of the populists and a defeat of the socialists — who passed from 217 to 163 representatives and would seem to forshadow difficult times for Turkey’s negotiations for membership in the European Union. Still, that which seems to bear heaviest on public opinion in Turkey is the heavy presence of far right parties, who will be capable of forming a coalition for the first time in Strasbourg. The country’s secular paper Vatan published a front page headline reading, “All We Needed was More Racists”. The ataturkist paper Cumhuriyet wote, “Europe forms a blockade”, while the secular Hurriyet writes “European dreams shattered”. Turkey has seemed to express a widespread fear of a Europe which may become colder in its attitude toward its eastern neighbour. The country’s Foreign Ministry has voiced its “dismay” regarding xenophobic campaigns run in many European countries. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



John Bolton: What if Israel Strikes Iran?

The mullahs would retaliate. But things would be much worse if they had the bomb.

Whatever the outcome of Iran’s presidential election tomorrow, negotiations will not soon — if ever — put an end to its nuclear threat. And given Iran’s determination to achieve deliverable nuclear weapons, speculation about a possible Israeli attack on its nuclear program will not only persist but grow.

So what would such an attack look like? Obviously, Israel would need to consider many factors — such as its timing and scope, Iran’s increasing air defenses, the dispersion and hardening of its nuclear facilities, the potential international political costs, and Iran’s “unpredictability.” While not as menacingly irrational as North Korea, Iran’s politico-military logic hardly compares to our NATO allies. Central to any Israeli decision is Iran’s possible response.

Israel’s alternative is that Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs reach fruition, leaving its very existence at the whim of its staunchest adversary. Israel has not previously accepted such risks. It destroyed Iraq’s Osirak reactor in 1981 and a Syrian reactor being built by North Koreans in 2007. One major new element in Israel’s calculus is the Obama administration’s growing distance (especially in contrast to its predecessor).

Consider the most-often mentioned Iranian responses to a possible Israeli strike:

1) Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz. Often cited as Tehran’s knee-jerk answer — along with projections of astronomic oil-price spikes because of the disruption of supplies from Persian Gulf producers — this option is neither feasible nor advisable for Iran. The U.S. would quickly overwhelm any effort to close the Strait, and Iran would be risking U.S. attacks on its land-based military. Direct military conflict with Washington would turn a bad situation for Iran — disruption of its nuclear program — into a potential catastrophe for the regime. Prudent hedging by oil traders and consuming countries (though not their strong suit, historically) would minimize any price spike..

2) Iran cuts its o wn oil exports to raise world prices. An Iranian embargo of its own oil exports would complete the ruin of Iran’s domestic economy by depriving the country of hard currency. This is roughly equivalent to Thomas Jefferson’s 1807 embargo on American exports to protect U.S. shipping from British and French interference. That harmed the U.S. far more than the Europeans. Even Iran’s mullahs can see that. Another gambit with no legs.

3) Iran attacks U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Some Tehran hard-liners might advocate this approach, or even attacks on U.S. bases or Arab targets in the Gulf — but doing so would risk direct U..S. retaliation against Iran, as many U.S. commanders in Iraq earlier recommended. Increased violence in Iraq or Afghanistan might actually prolong the U.S. military presence in Iraq, despite President Barack Obama’s current plans for withdrawal. Moreover, taking on the U.S. military, even in an initially limited way, carries enormous risks for Iran. Tehran may believe the Obama administration’s generally apologetic international posture will protect it from U.S. escalation, but it would be highly dangerous for Iran to gamble on more weakness in the face of increased U.S. casualties in Iraq or Afghanistan.

4) Iran increases support for global terrorism. This Iranian option, especially stepping up world-wide attacks against U..S. targets, is always open. Assuming, however, that Mr. Obama does not further degrade our intelligence capabilities and that our watchfulness remains high, the terrorism option outside of the Middle East is extremely risky for Iran. If Washington uncovered evidence of direct or indirect Iranian terrorist activities in America, for example, even the Obama administration would have to consider direct retaliation inside Iran. While Iran enjoys rhetorical conflict with the U.S., operationally it prefers picking on targets its own size or smaller.

5) Iran launches missile attacks on Israel.. Because all the foregoing options risk more direct U.S. involvement, Tehran will most likely decide to retaliate against the actual attacker, Israel. Using its missile and perhaps air force capabilities, Iran could do substantial damage in Israel, especially to civilian targets. Of course, one can only imagine what Iran might do once it has nuclear weapons, and this is part of the cost-benefit analysis Israel must make before launching attacks in the first place. Direct Iranian military action against Israel, however, would provoke an even broader Israeli counterstrike, which at some point might well involve Israel’s own nuclear capability. Accordingly, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards would have to think long and hard before unleashing its own capabilities against Israel.

6) Iran unleashes Hamas and Hezbollah against Israel. By process of elimination, but also because of strategic logic, Iran’s most likely option is retaliating through Hamas and Hezbollah. Increased terrorist attacks inside Israel, military incursions by Hezbollah across the Blue Line, and, most significantly, salvoes of missiles from both Lebanon and the Gaza Strip are all possibilities. In plain violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, Iran has not only completely re-equipped Hezbollah since the 2006 war with Israel, but the longer reach of Hezbollah’s rockets now endangers Israel’s entire civilian population. Moreover, Hamas’s rocket capabilities could easily be substantially enhanced to provide greater range and payload to strike throughout Israel, creating a two-front challenge.

Risks to its civilian population will weigh heavily in any Israeli decision to use force, and might well argue for simultaneous, pre-emptive attacks on Hezbollah and Hamas in conjunction with a strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities. Obviously, Israel will have to measure the current risks to its safety and survival against the longer-term threat to its very existence once Iran acquires nuclear weapons.

This brief survey demonstrates why Israel’s military option against Iran’s nuclear program is so unattractive, but also why failing to act is even worse. All these scenarios become infinitely more dangerous once Iran has deliverable nuclear weapons. So does daily life in Israel, elsewhere in the region and globally.

Many argue that Israeli military action will cause Iranians to rally in support of the mullahs’ regime and plunge the region into political chaos. To the contrary, a strike accompanied by effective public diplomacy could well turn Iran’s diverse population against an oppressive regime. Most of the Arab world’s leaders would welcome Israel solving the Iran nuclear problem, although they certainly won’t say so publicly and will rhetorically embrace Iran if Israel strikes. But rhetoric from its Arab neighbors is the only quantum of solace Iran will get.

On the other hand, the Obama administration’s increased pressure on Israel concerning the “two-state solution” and West Bank settlements demonstrates Israel’s growing distance from Washington. Although there is no profit now in complaining that Israel should have struck during the Bush years, the missed opportunity is palpable. For the remainder of Mr. Obama’s term, uncertainty about his administration’s support for Israel will continue to dog Israeli governments and complicate their calculations. Iran will see that as well, and play it for all it’s worth. This is yet another reason why Israel’s risks and dilemmas, difficult as they are, only increase with time.

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



Middle East: US Envoy Insists on ‘Two-State’ Route to Peace

(ANSAmed) — RAMALLAH, JUNE 10 — Barack Obama’s administration is firmly convinced that the ‘two-state’ solution — the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel — is “the only one possible” for the peace process in the Middle East. The White House’s special envoy, George Mitchell, repeated this when he met the president of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) today in Ramallah (West Bank), following talks with Israeli political leaders in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem yesterday. “The President and the Secretary of State have laid out our policy clearly: the only possible solution to the conflict (Israeli-Palestinian) is the realisation of ambitions both sides nurture for their own states” said Mitchell. The envoy was also clear in reminding the “Israelis and Palestinians of their responsibility to respect the obligations laid out in the Road Map” (the peace process outlined at the time by international mediators from the Quartet): which means, for Israel in particular, ending the expansion of Jewish settlements into Palestinian territory and, for the PNA, tackling terrorism. Mahmoud Abbas — who is currently grappling with renewed internal tension with Hamas separatists, as well as with attempts to mediate between the various factions within Fatah, the moderate party of which he is head — confirmed that he welcomed what appears to Ramallah to be a change in the American stance. Abbas reaffirmed that the PNA is committed to building on security, but that without an immediate stop to settlements, negotiations could not begin again. In his meeting yesterday with Israel’s Prime Minister, Benyamin Netanyahu, Mitchell confirmed that the USA’s alliance with Israel was firm, without giving an inch however, neither over the two-state objective nor over the total freezing of settlements: including construction projects which the current Israeli government justified as “natural growth” in the population of the settlements. Over the coming days, Obama’s envoy will make surprise visits to Lebanon and Syria (a country which the current US administration is trying to get back on good terms with after a long period of frost), with the aim of enlarging negotiations to include a wider number of Arab states. This is in line with the provisions of a draft peace plan which sets itself the objective of creating conditions for two parallel agreements in the Middle East — bilateral and multilateral — within two years. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck: A Dissident’s Escape From Iran (Plus Moshe Ya’alon

With Iran’s elections coming tomorrow and the Obama administration committed to direct dialogue with the Islamic Republic, now is a perfect time to take a closer look at how the Iranian regime operates.

My latest piece for CBN describes the journey of Ahmad Batebi, a young Iranian dissident who spent nine years being tortured in an Iranian prison before escaping to the U.S. last year.

Batebi’s story provides a much-needed glimpse into the brutality of the Iranian regime.

You can watch it at the above link.

[Return to headlines]



Terrorism: Turkey; Life Sentences for Six Al Qaeda Members

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — A Turkish appeals court upheld today a verdict sentencing six al Qaeda militants to life in prison for the deadly 2003 bombings in Istanbul, daily Hurriyet’s website reports. The court in Ankara said it approved the life sentences for the six of the 74 suspects for their involvement in the attacks on 15 and 20 November 2003. Those bombings killed 63 people and targeted two synagogues, the British consulate and the London-based bank Hsbc).The six included Syrian Loai Mohammad Haj Bakr al-Saqa who was charged with masterminding the bombings. The court has sentenced 33 other suspects to between three years and nine months in prison to 18 years. It acquitted 15 of them, citing lack of evidence, while ordering a retrial for 20, requesting further investigation. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Journalist Faces 28-Year Prison Sentence for Book

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — Milliyet daily newspaper gives today front-page coverage to a suit filed against Turkish journalist Nedim Sener who published a book on the killing of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink. Sener faces 28-year prison sentence for writing a book, while the murderer of Hrant Dink faces a 20-year prison sentence, Milliyet notes. Sener’s book dwells on negligence and mistakes of the police and the intelligence organizations in the process that led to the killing of Dink. The trial of Sener starts today in Istanbul. Sener is accused of revealing secret information in his book and of attempting to influence the judiciary. The indictment demands 20 years in prison for Sener who is charged with obtaining and revealing secret information and making security officials a target. Prosecutor demands additional eight-year prison sentence for violating the privacy of communication and attempting to influence the judiciary. In addition, Sener is charged with insulting the state and an investigation I carried out in connection with this accusation. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: 54 Turkish Mayors to be Tried for Supporting PKK

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — Fifty-four mayors from the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party (DTP) who released a joint statement in 2007 arguing that jailed outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) leader, Abdullah Ocalan, was being poisoned in prison will be tried before a high criminal court, Anatolia news agency reported. The mayors face charges of “praising a criminal and crime”. The 2nd Court of Peace in Diyarbakir had earlier ruled the case was out of its jurisdiction and sent the dossier to the 5th Criminal Court which has special authority. In its reasoned opinion, the Diyarbakir court ruled that Diyarbakir Mayor Osman Baydemir, who made the statement on behalf of 54 DTP mayors, referred to the PKK as the “Kurdish opposition”. The prosecution claims that the defendants act in line with the goals of the PKK and spread its propaganda. A jail term of up to three years has been demanded for the 54 mayors. In March 2007 the DTP brought forward allegations that Ocalan, who is serving a life sentence on the Island of Imrali in the Sea of Marmara, was being slowly poisoned; the allegations were denied by Turkish authorities. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


In Russia, a Recession-Plagued Town Revolts

After waiting half an hour in a line of 20 people at the dusty ATM, Eduard Markov finally walks away with his old leather wallet bulging with rubles. Like thousands of others in the northern Russian industrial town of Pikalyovo, the 44-year-old clay quarry worker had not been paid in three months. But now he at least has enough to buy the basics — meat, vodka, noodles, oil and fruit — from shops that just a few days ago were empty of customers.

For three months, Pikalyovo’s citizens had been living in crippling poverty after the town’s recession-hit cement and brick factories started closing down. Thousands of workers were laid off and almost overnight nearly 25% of Pikalyovo’s 20,000 residents were unemployed. After making several pleas to their employers for back pay — at one point crashing a meeting at the mayor’s office to demand their jobs back — the workers turned to desperate measures. On June 2, they staged a strike along a major highway linking the city of Vologda to St. Petersburg, blocking the route for hours. Finally Moscow took notice and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin flew in by helicopter to force local politicians and factory owners to pay the town’s workers the money owed to them. Now Pikalyovo’s shops, cafes and banks are doing good business again, but as the recession sweeps across Russia, small single-industry towns all over the country are just one factory closure away from suffering the same plight. (See 10 things to do in Moscow.)

“You wouldn’t have seen anything like this — people were fed up and angry,” says Alexander Plush, 41, another former factory worker standing in line at the ATM. Plush had worked for 17 years at one of the Pikalyovo’s cement factories until it closed a few months ago. “Before we got paid, people were living on bread and water and the food they could grow in their gardens this early in the year,” he says.

The situation was so bleak that, according to Russian media, people in Pikalyovo were forced to eat wild plants, while the city’s hot water was shut off after residents couldn’t pay their bills. When Putin came in to save the day, he saw PR potential in Pikalyovo’s distress. During a nationally televised meeting in the town, the prime minister scolded local officials and factory owners, including billionaire tycoon Oleg Deripaska, a onetime Kremlin favorite whose investment company Basic Element owns the town’s BaselCement factory. “You have made thousands of people hostage to your ambitions, your lack of professionalism — or maybe simply your trivial greed,” Putin said. (Watch a video about a Russian roadtrip.)

Yet even Putin’s harsh words and the disbursal of pay have not put an end to the feeling here that the crisis will continue. “It’s unlikely the situation will change. Receiving our pay was a small gesture, a short-term solution,” says Denis Yershov, a former employee at the local electricity plant who helped block the road last week. “I’ll be happy when we have work again. I’ll be happy when we have stability and I’m able to feed my family.”

Yershov’s sentiments — and those of nearly everyone else TIME spoke to in Pikaylovo — are playing out at checkout counters in shops all over town. “People are only buying the cheapest brands. It’s like they don’t believe the change will last,” says Oksana Gavrilova, a staunch Putin supporter who had worked at the EuroCement factory for eight years before she was laid off. Leaning down into a nearly empty cooler to grab a kielbasa, she says, “Without the factories, Pikalyovo is nothing.”

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



Russia Agrees to Take Nuclear Waste From Serbia

BELGRADE, Serbia — Russia agreed Wednesday to take 3 metric tons of spent fuel from a closed Serbian nuclear reactor to ensure the radioactive waste does not end up in terrorist hands, officials said.

Thousands of fuel rods are now stored in poorly guarded storage areas just east of Belgrade. The rods contain radioactive material that could potentially be used in a bomb.

The Vinca Nuclear Institute’s reactor was built with Russian technology in 1959 and shut down in 2002.

“If some 3 tons of nuclear waste would end up in terrorist hands, the consequences would be very serious,” said Sergei Kiriyenko, head of Russia’s state nuclear agency..

Kiriyenko signed the US$54 million (euro38 million) transfer agreement Wednesday in Belgrade, but officials did not say how the funds were being provided or when the fuel rods would be moved.

Serbia’s Deputy Prime Minister Bozidar Djelic, who also signed the deal, said the transfer would abolish fears that Serbia could be a potential target for terrorists seeking nuclear material.

The International Atomic Energy Agency has been working to make the Vinca Nuclear Institute less attractive to thieves. Officials from the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency, based in Vienna, said after their last inspection that the facility was “almost like a candy store” for would-be terrorists.

Serbia sent about 48 kilograms (100 pounds) of weapons-grade fuel to Russia in 2002 when Washington, Moscow and Belgrade mounted a joint operation to remove it. The fuel — enough to make at least two simple nuclear warheads — was transferred by truck under tight security from Vinca to Belgrade airport, and then was flown to a Russian government plant about 470 miles (760 kilometers) east of Moscow.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Why it is Hard to Sack a Person… by Vladimir Putin

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin reveals his sensitive side in an article on management techniques that hit Moscow newsstands last Friday.

Although the billionaire former KGB officer is often thought of as a kind of Machiavelli without the sense of humour, in his first ever Russian-language article, which is entitled “Why it is hard to sack a person”, Putin advises “managers of all levels” that he is always ready to forgive officials who have made mistakes, even if they have “snivelled” or “burst into tears”.. He adds that wishing an underling “happy birthday, when he is surrounded by his family, means leaving a trace in his soul. That’s just my style.”

The editor of glossy lifestyle magazine Russky Pioner, Andrei Kolesnikov, who is also a Kremlin correspondent for Russian daily Kommersant, first suggested that Putin contribute an article to his recently launched publication after noticing “his seeming inability to fire people”, adding that “I don’t know how I pulled this off: any editor dreams of publishing such a columnist on his pages at least once in a lifetime.”

Not only is he a caring boss, he is a model employee too, as he had reportedly filed his copy within days. The PM also reveals his approach to situations when he is finally forced to wield the axe: “To fire a person is a very serious thing

“If you have to fire someone, you have to be civil about it. I usually call the person into the office and look him right in the eye,” he writes. “In contrast to former, Soviet leaders (note the operative comma) I always do it myself, I usually call a person into my office and tell them directly. If you think it’s wrong… please argue it, defend yourself.”

Held government together

Managing a large team is no easy task, even for one the world’s toughest leaders, and Putin acknowledges that “conflicts within a team, especially a big team, always arise, every minute, every second. Simply because there are always clashes of interest between people.” The article also strongly hints at the rumoured titanic power struggles that he skilfully kept from public view during his eight years as president: “I can say honestly that while I was president, if I hadn’t intervened in certain situations, there would long ago have ceased to be a government in Russia,” the steely eyed politician claims tantalisingly.

In a section straight out of How to Win Friends and Influence People, Putin advises readers that “you should never bad-mouth someone behind their back, and it is not permissible to fire somebody and throw them aside just because somebody has told you something bad about them.”

Surprise, surprise again

Putin, who is already considered a Renaissance man in his homeland, has now added writer to a CV that already included painter — his work has sold at very respectable prices in Moscow auctions — singer, fisherman, and fighter pilot. Last year he also released the DVD Let’s Learn Judo with Vladimir Putin. It remains unclear, however, if Putin will be a regular columnist for the magazine, or whether we can expect a self-help book in the vein of The Management Secrets of Genghis Khan.

As Russian history textbooks were recently amended to state that former Soviet leader Josef Stalin, who killed 20 million of his own people, was an “effective manager”, perhaps we should only expect the 56-year old to deliver the unexpected, as he has once again succeeded in doing.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Italian Soldiers Injured in Clashes in West

Farah, 11 June (AKI) — Three Italian soldiers were injured, one of them seriously, in clashes with militants in the western Afghan province of Farah on Thursday. Military sources told Adnkronos that one of the soldiers was injured in the foot, another in the hand and the third under his arm while they were conducting a joint patrol with Afghan soldiers.

“The action of the insurgents seems to have been meticulously prepared, to hit our troops at the end of a search, in an area known for the presence of hostile militias,” the ministry of defence said in a statement.

“The Afghan military and paratroopers of the 187th Thunderbolt regiment…immediately responded to the fire and positioned the troops against our enemy.”

The ministry said it was unclear how many militants were killed in the exchange.

Italy has 2,350 troops in Afghanistan, the fifth largest deployment after the United States, Britain, Canada and Germany.

There are currently some 58,000 international troops from 42 nations stationed in Afghanistan that make up NATO’s International Security Assistance Force (ISAF).

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



Thailand, Fresh Violence in the South. Victims From the Mosque Attack Now 12

Rebels have attacked diverse areas on Yala province. Police officials denounce attempts to “spark conflict between the Buddhist and Muslim communities”. Thailand and Malaysia ready to cooperate to resolve the issue of Islamic separatism.

Bangkok (AsiaNews) — Bomb attacks, bins set on fire and streets barricaded, entire areas under attack: voice and unrest in the south of Thailand continue and this morning erupted in the province of Yala. Yesterday an armed command raided a mosque in Jawairong district of Narathiwat province, killing 12 people including the imam; 17 were injured, 11 of whom are in a serious condition.

This morning at 8 am local time a bomb exploded at an oil depot near the Yala transport company terminal in Muang district; two people were wounded in the attack. Three schools in the district of Raman —Yala — were closed down for security reasons. In many areas throughout the province the insurgents have started fires and blocked traffic.

Yesterday evening in Jawairong, Narathiwat province, an armed gang of six men raided a mosque during evening prayer, and laid waste to worshippers. The gang opened fire killing 12 of the 100 people who were gathered in prayer at the moment of the attack. Among the death was Imam Waelau Woowaekama head of the Ipayae community. Major Gen Therachia Nakawanich, described the incident as “outrageous”; “We believe the criminals are aiming to create conflict between the Thai-Buddhist and Thai-Muslim communities within the area”.

Thai premier Abhisit Vejjajiva, on a state visit to Malaysia, has announced “a special 3-year economic program to develop the area”. Abdul Razak, Prime Minister of Malaysia, says they “are ready to cooperate” with the Thai government “to resolve the issue”. Under discussion is a project sponsored by Malaysia to provide “additional professional training to Muslims so they return to their homeland with to earn their living and contribute to the local economy”.

3400 people have died in years of attacks and unrest in the southern provinces of Yala, Narathiwat and Pattani, all majority Muslim in a Majority Buddhist nation. Islamists want autonomy from Bangkok. The rebellion is also a result of former Premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s harsh policies enacted in the south to quash the insurgents. Emergency rule favoured army and police abuse of power, while the government, to date, has failed to find a peaceful solution to the crisis.

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

Far East


China: Almost Heroine Status for Young Woman Who Killed Official Who Tried to Rape Her

Deng Yujiao, 21, killed an important official after he assaulted her for rejecting his sexual advances. Internet is swamped by messages of solidarity for the humble woman who reacted to the violence of a public official.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Deng Yujiao, a 21-year-old pedicurist from Badong (Hubei), killed a Deng Guida, a major town official in Badong county on 10 May, wounding another. The young woman said she was asked to perform special (sexual) favours and tried to defend herself against rape after she refused to comply. For many in China she has almost acquired heroine status, the symbol of a population that has grown tired of widespread corruption in government.

Deng Yujiao’s predicament began when she tried to defend herself against an official who wanted sexual favours and who pushed her onto a sofa when she refused. In fighting back she grabbed a fruit knife and fatally stabbed Deng Guida.

Her arrest on murder charges sparked a public outcry because many saw her as acting in self-defence against officials who were abusing their privileges.

Last week police in fact dropped murder charges, saying she had acted in self-defence, albeit with “excessive force”.

Now she is in a psychiatric hospital but those who have visited her say she is doing well.

A group of women human rights activists went to Badong to determine what happened, but they were followed by police throughout as if there was something sinister about their trip.

The case has generated a wave of sympathy across the country and the web has been swamped by messages of solidarity and sympathy for the “daughter of the people” who fought back against an important official.

Women’s groups, human rights organisations and lawyers have also come out in her favour.

Newspapers initially covered the incident but fell silent once the government decided otherwise out of embarrassment for another scandal involving public officials.

For years Chinese leaders have pledged zero tolerance against corruption. Arrests have been made and trials involving people in high places.

But for experts the war against corruption in China can only be won if citizens’ rights are protected against the frequent abuses by corrupt officials.

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



China Objects to Palau Resettling Guantanamo Men

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Palau’s president said Thursday that his tiny Pacific nation’s tradition of hospitality prompted the decision to take in 13 Chinese Muslims in limbo at Guantanamo Bay, but China called them “terrorist suspects” and demanded they be sent home.

The other four Chinese Muslims, or Uighurs, left U.S. detention for a new home in Bermuda on Thursday.

Palau President Johnson Toribiong denied his government’s move was influenced by any massive aid package from Washington, saying that the Uighurs have become “international vagabonds” who deserve a fresh start. China said it opposes any country taking them.

It’s the first time since 2006 that the U.S. has successfully resettled any of Guantanamo’s Uighurs. The U.S. government had determined they weren’t enemy combatants and should be released. But China objected, and it had been unclear where they would go free.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a news conference the United States should “stop handing over terrorist suspects to any third country, so as to expatriate them to China at an early date.” He did not say if China would take any action in response.

Palau, a former U.S. trust territory in the Pacific, is one of a handful of countries that does not recognize China, instead recognizing Taiwan.

Toribiong said Palau did not consider China’s reaction when it accepted the U.S. request to temporarily resettle the detainees, who were captured in Afghanistan and Pakistan in 2001.

The Pentagon later decided they were not enemy combatants. Even so, the Obama administration faced fierce congressional opposition to allowing the Uighurs on U.S. soil as free men and so it sought alternatives abroad.

The Justice Department on Friday issued a statement thanking the government of Bermuda for helping resettle four of the detainees. Ilshat Hassan, vice president of the Washington-based Uighur American Association, confirmed that four of the Uighurs arrived Thursday morning in Bermuda.

The U.S. has said it feared the men would be executed if they were returned to China.

Palau had agreed to take all 17 remaining Uighurs in Guantanamo, but the resettlement of the four in Bermuda leaves only 13 left.

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



China Demands US Return Uighurs

China has demanded the return of 17 Chinese Muslim Uighur detainees held by the United States at Guantanamo Bay.

America should “stop handing over terrorist suspects to any third country,” foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said.

Palau, a former US Pacific territory which does not recognise China, has agreed to accept the ethnic Uighurs.

US President Barack Obama has ordered the Guantanamo detention centre closed by early next year.

Some 22 Uighurs were captured by United States forces during their invasion of Afghanistan and taken to the detention base in Cuba but were found not to be enemy combatants four years ago.

Albania re-settled five of them in 2006 but, correspondents say, fear of Chinese retaliation has prevented Tirana from further cooperation.

CHINA’S UIGHURS

Ethnically Turkic Muslims, mainly in Xinjiang Made bid for independent state in 1940s Sporadic violence in Xinjiang since 1991 Uighurs worried about Chinese immigration and erosion of traditional culture

The US has been reluctant to send the Uighurs back to China for fear they will be tortured or executed.

There are more than eight million Uighurs living in the Chinese province of Xinjiang, a vast area of western China that borders Central Asia.

Correspondents say many members of the mainly Muslim community say they suffer Chinese political and religious persecution.

Beijing says Uighur insurgents are leading an Islamic separatist movement.

China says the 17 due to be sent from Guantanamo to Palau are members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, which is on the United Nations list of terrorist groups.

“China urges the US to implement the UN Security Council’s relevant resolutions and its international obligations on counter-terrorism,” Mr Qin said.

‘Humanitarian’

US officials asked Palau President Johnson Toribiong on 4 June to accept some or all of the remaining 17 Uighur detainees due to strong US congressional opposition to releasing them on US soil.

Mr Toribiong said his government had “agreed to accommodate the United States of America’s request to temporarily resettle in Palau up to 17 ethnic Uighur detainees … subject to periodic review.”

In a statement, he said his tiny country is “honoured and proud” to resettle the detainees, who have been found not to be “enemy combatants”.

He said the agreement was a “humanitarian gesture”, which had nothing to do with the upcoming review of the Compact of Free Association, under which the US gives large sums to Palau.

Palau, with a population of about 20,000, is an archipelago of eight main islands plus more than 250 islets located some 800 km (500 miles) east of the Philippines in the Pacific Ocean.

Palau has retained close ties with the United States since independence in 1994 when it signed the Free Compact of Association with the US. It relies heavily on the US for aid and defence.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



N. Korea Demands 4-Fold Raise in Wages From South

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea demanded Thursday a four-fold increase in wages for its workers employed by South Korean-owned companies at an industrial park at the center of a major dispute roiling their relations, an official said. It also demanded a 31-times increase in the rent for the site.

The unexpectedly large demand is likely to set back reconciliation moves between the two countries, which have been slowed down enormously by North Korea’s recent nuclear and missile tests and the detention of a South Korean worker at the industrial park.

A total of 106 South Korean companies have factories in the park in Kaesong, a North Korean border town, employing some 40,000 North Koreans. They are paid about $70 a month on average.

The increased wage demand was made during a 90-minute meeting between civilian officials from the two sides at Kaesong — only the second such meeting in more than a year, a reflection of their deeply frayed relations.

Pyongyang demanded that South Korea raise the monthly wages of the workers at the complex to $300 in the first year, Unification Ministry spokeswoman Lee Jong-joo said..

She said North Korea also wanted a 10 to 20 percent wage increase in subsequent years and a rent of $500 million for the 35 million-square- feet (3.3 million-square-meter) site. Under an agreement between the two countries, North Korea has already received $16 million as rent for 50 years.

Although it was expected that North Korea would ask for higher salaries during the talks, an increase of more than four times was a surprise and is unlikely to be accepted by the South Koreans who pay about $170 a month to Chinese laborers in their factories in China.

“That’s nonsense!” Park Jung-ho, a former official of a shoe factory operating in Kaesong, said of the North’s wage demand. “We have to look at the productivity of North Korean workers. If South Korean workers produce, say, 100, North Koreans only produce 30.”

The corporate council of the South Korean companies in Kaesong said it has no immediate comment on the North’s demand.

When it was set up in 2004, the Kaesong Industrial Complex was seen as the most potent symbol of reconciliation between the two nations on the divided peninsula. It combined the South’s capital and technology with the North’s cheap labor. But today, the only remaining reconciliation project appears to be on its last legs.

North Korea blames the situation on the hard-line attitude of a pro-U.S., conservative government that took office in Seoul last year, advocating a tougher policy on the North. In retaliation, the reclusive regime cut off ties, halted all major joint projects except the Kaesong complex and significantly restricted border traffic.

Thursday’s demand came as Western powers agreed with North Korea’s allies on a proposal to punish it for its latest nuclear test on May 25. The new sanctions would put tough restrictions on Pyongyang’s exports and financial dealings, and allow inspections of suspect cargo in ports and on the high seas.

The agreement awaits approval by the U.N. Security Council.

During Thursday’s talks, South Korean officials demanded the release of a compatriot detained at the Kaesong Industrial Complex since late March for allegedly denouncing the North’s political system, South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman Chun Hae-sung said.

The communist regime has rejected South Korea’s repeated requests for his release, and details of his status remained unclear.

The South Korean government says it was committed to developing the Kaesong complex despite the problems between the two countries.

But some companies appear to be losing patience. Earlier this week, a South Korean fur-garment manufacturer announced that it was pulling out of Kaesong, citing security concern for its employees.

Experts said Thursday’s meeting would not achieve much as the North will likely use the case to show how badly relations between the two sides have frayed because of Seoul’s hard-line policy on Pyongyang.

“I think the North is trying to show that it cannot free Yu unless the South drops its hostile policy and turns back toward a reconciliation and cooperation policy,” said Paik Hak-soon, a senior analyst at the Sejong Institute, a South Korean think tank.

Some experts say the North’s recent actions are largely aimed at mustering support for the country’s absolute leader Kim Jong Il as he reportedly prepares to announce his successor — his third and youngest son Jong Un.

Kim, 67, is said to have suffered a stroke, and underwent brain surgery last summer.

Little is known about the workings of the insular nation, and most of the information comes out through occasional defectors, South Korea’s spy agency and South Korean media sources in the North.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Vietnam: Catholic Teacher Fired for Encouraging Students to Get Information on the Web

Literature teacher is accused of spreading “anti-revolutionary” ideas and promoting anti-Communist websites. In reality she encouraged her students to read stories and poems written before the advent of the Communist regime. In fact Vietnamese authorities are tightening the screws around Internet. A group like Reporters without Borders considers Vietnam one of the main “enemies” of internet, whilst Amnesty International has reported the arrest of people for their online activities

Hanoi (AsiaNews) — A Catholic teacher has been fired from her school for encouraging her students to visit “politically sensitive internet sites,” and might even face criminal charges for her action.

The People’s Public Security Newspaper, which is published by Vietnam’s police force, accused Nguyen Thi Bich Hanh (pictured), 28, of “taking advantages of her teaching position to disseminate counter-revolution thoughts, speaking ill of Communist leaders and distorting their images in the heart of children, seriously offending state policy on education, and advertising for anti-communist Web sites which spread slanders against the government.”

The newspaper also reported that Hanh, a literature teacher at Nguyen Binh Khiem Special High school for Gifted Students in Tam Ky, Quang Nam, a province in central Vietnam, was harassed after her students started looking for information on websites deemed “anti-revolutionary” by Vietnamese authorities.

Speaking to Radio Free Asia, Hanh said she did nothing wrong and that she was sacked due in good part to her Catholic background.

In her version of the facts, she just wanted to discuss with her students the benefits and pitfalls of the internet as more and more young people in Vietnam go online to play games, download music, write blogs, send e-mail or use instant messaging services to chat on a daily basis.

As a teacher, she felt duty-bound to educate her young students on how to use the internet in a constructive way, and how to search for, gather and analyse useful and correct information found online.

Inspired by her own experience, Hanh encouraged her students to look for stories, poems, and other writings published prior to the Communist era when Vietnamese authors were free to express their thoughts and emotions. With her students she shared the belief that freedom is the essential condition for artists’ creative work. Many of the writings in question are not available in Vietnam, but can be accessed online.

Internet is indeed going through an exponential growth in Vietnam. Last November, a report from the Vietnam Internet Network Information Center reported almost 21 million internet users in the country (24 per cent of the population).

Another report said that Vietnam government is planning to increase the country’s internet penetration to 35 per cent by 2010.

Along with the plans to increase internet users, Vietnamese authorities are also planning to enforce strict online political censorship. The extensive regulation of internet access using both legal and technical means has filtered out sites that contain sensitive materials that might undermine the Communist Party’s hold on power.

While Reporters without Borders considers Vietnam one of 15 “internet enemies”, Amnesty International reported many instances of internet activists being arrested for their online activities.

Most websites run by overseas Vietnamese, and most Western Catholic media outlets, have been blocked by the government. However, the sites Hanh introduced to her students can still be accessed in Vietnam.

“The local authority had accused me of having such a different mentality as a result of being a Catholic, with a questionable background,” she said.

She also said that her father had been sent to a Communist re-education camp for his apostolic activities and Catholic faith.

A gifted Mathematician Hanh’s father, Nguyen Quoc Anh, wrote articles relating to linear differential equations, which were so thought-provoking that he was invited to speak at Hanoi University. Never the less, his thesis has never been publicly acknowledged by the Education Ministry for the same political charged reason.

Having outstandingly completed a postgraduate degree in Vietnamese Literature at Dalat University, Hanh was hired by the Provincial Education Department of Quang Nam—Da Nang under a special policy of talented people recruitment in 2002.

Even though she was regarded as one of the most respected teachers at her school, she did not receive any recognition or promotion because she was an active catechist in her parish.

For many Catholics in Vietnam incident is a sign of the tough road they must face, evidence of the difficulty and hardship Catholics must face when they work in the public sector.

Under normal circumstances the firing of a high school teacher would not make the headlines. However, the fact that the People’s Public Security Newspaper and other state media outlets reported the news of her termination is the Vietnamese government’s way to send a threatening message to all teachers with ties to religions.

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

Australia — Pacific


Palau to Take Guantanamo Uighurs

The tiny Pacific island nation of Palau has agreed to a US request to temporarily resettle 17 Chinese Muslim ethnic Uighurs held at the Guantanamo Bay detention centre for more than seven years.

In a statement on Wednesday Johnson Toribiong, the country’s president, said he had agreed to resettle the Uighur detainees “subject to periodic review”.

The 17 were cleared for release from Guantanamo four years ago after US officials ruled there was no evidence to hold them as “enemy combatants”.

Last year a US federal judge ordered the men released into the US, but an appeals court halted the order, and they have been in legal limbo ever since.

The US state department has said the Uighurs cannot be returned to China, despite requests from Beijing that they be handed over, because of fears they will face persecution and possible execution.

Instead US officials have been trying to find a third country willing to take them in, but in the meantime they have been kept in Guantanamo, spending up to 22 hours a day locked in their cells.

‘Injustice’

In 2006 Albania agreed to accept five Uighur detainees from Guantanamo, but has said it will not take others due to fears of possible diplomatic repercussions from China, one of its main trading partners and investors.

Germany had been considered a possible destination as it has a large Uighur community, but no agreement was reached.

Last month two US congressmen called for the Uighur men to be allowed to resettle within the Uighur community in the US, saying that their continued detention without trial and after being cleared of any wrongdoing was an injustice.

However, that call was met with fierce opposition from other members of congress.

Earlier this month Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, formally asked Palau to accept some or all of the detainees.

In a statement on Wednesday Toribiong, the Palau president, said his country was “honoured and proud that the United States has asked Palau to assist with such a critical task”.

“Palau’s accommodation to accept the temporary resettlement of these detainees is a humanitarian gesture intended to help them be freed of any further unnecessary incarceration and to restart their lives in as normal a fashion as possible,” he said.

Toribiong said Palau officials would travel to review the situation at Guantanamo Bay, which Barack Obama, the US president, has said he intends to close.

Palau, with a population estimated at about 21,000 is one of the world’s smallest and youngest countries having gained its independence in October 1994.

Trusteeship

Prior to that date it was governed as a United Nations trusteeship administered by the US, which remains responsible for Palau’s defence and the country’s principal source of aid.

The country, made up of eight main islands and dozens of smaller islets, is located 800km east of the Philippines and 3,200km south of Tokyo.

Palau is one of a handful of countries that does not recognise China and maintains diplomatic relations with Taiwan.

The Uighur detainees were captured by US forces mainly in Pakistan and Afghanistan during the war in Afghanistan following the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Uighurs are mostly Turkic-speaking and Muslim, and many say they have long been repressed by the Chinese government.

China says Uighur nationalists are leading a separatist movement in the country’s western Xinjiang region and are responsible for a series of terrorist attacks.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Tale of Broken, Battered Kids Shows System on Brink

THEY were eight children living in a three-bedroom house with mice and rubbish in every room.

Four had disabilities: some couldn’t hear properly; some couldn’t walk properly; all were malnourished and had head lice. Several had broken bones, and none could use a knife and fork.

Their mother, a young Sunni Muslim woman, veiled from head to toe, found caring for the children impossible, especially as the older ones grew wilder, and then violent. Her husband, an Iraqi, is believed to have at least two other women he refers to as his “wives” and they, too, have children.

He moves between their different houses. None had paid work.

The NSW Department of Community Services has known of the situation for years; and has surely also known that it was a disaster waiting to happen.

Last October — that is, more than eight months ago — the crisis came.

One of the youngest children, a boy, was taken to Westmead Hospital with broken bones. He came out with a cast from chest to knee, so heavy that it took two people to carry him.

What has happened next provides perhaps the most graphic example of the child welfare system in NSW which, despite the billions spent and the reports written, the speeches given and the promises made, teeters on the edge of collapse.

None of the eight children — the bruised, broken and, in one case, burnt children — were sent to a safe haven. Instead, they all had their heads shaved to remove the lice, and they were then farmed out.

Seven of the eight at first went to next-door neighbours, a Muslim couple who have five children of their own — meaning that there were, at one point, 12 kids in the house, five of them disabled.

The little boy with the broken bones and the body cast went to that carer’s mother, a 55-year-old woman who couldn’t at first lift the boy, so heavy was the plaster.

Three of the children — including a baby that had at some point been burnt with petrol, possibly at the hands of his developmentally delayed brother, and two other toddlers — later went to a friend of the first neighbour.

None of these people had been trained as foster carers; none had a police check done; none were registered as carers, as is required by law. All have put their hearts and souls into the mess, but at least one is now at breaking point.

The story came to The Australian’s attention via the Foster Care Association — a body defunded by DOCS last year, after raising a great ruckus about the state of foster care in NSW — which took an anguished call from that carer. We can’t name her, or any of the children, so let’s call her Nareeda.

Like the children, she is a Muslim (not Sunni, but Shi’ite. She does not wear the veil and has removed the veil from the girls now in her care). Nareeda said she had been living next door to the children’s mother for about a decade, before “it became too much and I had to act”.

“If you could see the state of the house where they lived, you wouldn’t believe it, there were holes in every wall,” she said. “The screaming never stopped. So many of the kids had problems. I couldn’t work out what was going on there.”

Finally, one day last October, one of the boys from next door told her that he had deliberately broken his brother’s leg. “It didn’t surprise me,” she said. “Look at them — they’ve all had a broken nose, a broken arm. The children beat each other.”

Nareeda called the police, and the DOCS 24-hour hotline. The boy with the broken bones was taken to the Children’s Hospital at Westmead. Nareeda then took six of the other seven children into her own home.

“I said, ‘I can’t leave them there any more’,” she said.

“And their father thanked me. Their mother kissed my feet.”

Nareeda says DOCS workers dropped by her home soon afterwards and gave her $150 for food, and told her that the eight children would never return to their mother.

“But they said: ‘We don’t know where we are going to put them’.”

It is departmental policy to place Muslim children with Muslim carers where possible, and there are very few Muslim foster carers.

It is also departmental policy to keep siblings together where possible, so the search was on for Muslim foster parents who could take eight children, four of whom had disabilities, including Fragile X syndrome, who needed to go to special schools.

“You would not believe how those children were when they came to me,” Nareeda says. “They could not dress themselves. They could not feed themselves, shower themselves. I had to wash them. They go to the toilet on themselves. They were wild.

“I said: ‘Who will take them?’. And they said: ‘Do you know anyone?’.”

Nareeda says she agreed to call a friend and her husband, who agreed to take the three youngest children — the baby, and two toddlers — into their home. The Australian understands that they are now thriving, and this couple would be pleased to keep those children with them. Nareeda’s mother, who is 55, agreed to take the boy with the broken leg. They have bonded, and she wants to keep him.

That left four of the eight children, including the two with the most serious disabilities, with nowhere to go, so Nareeda took them in, to live alongside her own five kids. Given that neither she, nor the people she found to take the other children were actually registered as foster carers, the department had to move quickly, to get them on the books.

“They said, ‘Here, we’ll make you a foster carer’,” Nareeda says. “They got me to sign this form, and then started paying me some money.”

Since the start of December, she’s been receiving $1770 a fortnight or about $220 a week per child, the base rate in NSW. “They didn’t want to pay more because they said it’s not permanent,” she said.

But weeks went by, and then months, and the children are still with her. In that time, she has grown to love them, but says four are too many. She says she has made at least 30 calls to the DOCS hotline, begging them to remove the boy, saying he was violent and abusive.

“He hits my kids and he took my gold rings and buried them somewhere,” she said. “He says to my daughter: ‘You have big boobs’. I told them he can’t stay here.

“I want the other three but he can’t stay here. He needs special help. I have five other children. He needs to be with somebody who can take the time.”

She said the department’s response was to threaten to remove all the children from her care, and remove the boy with the broken bones from the care of her mother.

“That is actually cruel because he wants to stay with her. He clings to her,” Nareeda says. “But they have come to me now saying, ‘There are problems here. You’re not coping. You are not a proper foster parent. Your mother is too old.’

“I told them, ‘I can keep the three. I cannot keep the boy but I can keep the three. Don’t take them.’

“I told them, ‘I saved these children’. But now they are saying, after 10 months, ‘No, we are coming for them’.”

When The Australian contacted DOCS head office yesterday, it seemed not to know where the children were living. In a statement, it said it believed the children were with “extended family members”.

Told that The Australian had visited Nareeda’s home, where eight children were sitting around a rug eating rice and green beans with their fingers, they said they’d have to check it out. Nareeda said neither she, nor any of the other carers, are in any way related to any of the children.

DOCS would not comment on the long-term plan for the children, because “the matter is currently before the Children’s Court”.

The president of the Foster Care Association, Denise Crisp, says the case highlights “just how appalling the situation is for children in NSW.”

Opposition spokeswoman Pru Goward said she fielded calls daily about the department and the plight of children in its care.

“You have a situation where children are being farmed out to whoever in the street might take them.

“The department says: ‘We’ve got no carers’. Do they ever ask why? Is it because the system has collapsed?”

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Air France Chief Questions Sensor Role in Crash

PARIS (Reuters) — Air France is not yet convinced that faulty speed sensors were to blame for the loss of one of its planes over the Atlantic, but it is replacing old sensors as a precaution, the airline’s chief executive said on Thursday.

Pierre-Henri Gourgeon told reporters that Air France was in a state of shock over the worst disaster in its 75 year history and expected more information about what happened within a week.

An Air France Airbus 330 crashed into the sea on June 1 enroute from Brazil to Paris, killing all 228 aboard.

Air accident investigators have said the Airbus registered inconsistent speed readings just before contact was lost, raising speculation that the pilots might inadvertently have flown at the wrong speed and precipitated the disaster.

Air France subsequently reported that it had noticed temporary loss of air speed data on previous Airbus flights due to ice collecting in the sensors, known as pitot tubes, and said it was speeding up a pre-planned replacement program.

“As circumstances would have it, the first replacements arrived practically on the eve of the accident, on the Friday,” Gourgeon told a news briefing, adding, “I am not convinced that speed sensors were the cause of crash.”

The French air accident agency has said it is too early to pinpoint any possible cause for the crash, saying there were only two certainties — that the plane had hit stormy weather before the crash and that the speed readings were incoherent.

Airbus denied a French newspaper report that it was considering grounding its fleet of A330 and A340 planes in the wake of the disaster, saying they were safe to fly.

AIRBUS REASSURANCES

Gourgeon said the planemaker had reassured clients that all three types of speed sensors available for its jets were safe, including the one used on the downed A330.

Industry sources said the planemaker had also ruled out for the time being that there was an electrical power failure or loss of cockpit instrument display on the Air France jet.

Air France said at the weekend it had noticed the icing problems on the speed sensors in May 2008, although Gourgeon said these “incidents” had not been deemed catastrophic.

The airline said tests had later convinced it that probes developed for another model would be more efficient and that it had decided to go ahead and start fitting them from April 27 without waiting for further testing proposed by Airbus.

The speed sensors on the Air France A330 were supplied by France’s Thales, which has produced two versions of the pitot tube for the Airbus aircraft. A third model made by U.S. firm Goodrich have not been called into question.

The crashed plane had an earlier Thales model, which is being replaced by a more recent probe.

Brazilian and French search teams have recovered 41 bodies and debris from the Atlantic some 1,000 km (620 miles) from Brazil’s northern coast. A nuclear-powered French submarine is leading the search for the plane’s sunken flight recorders.

Gourgeon said more information about the crash would be available once autopsies had revealed the exact cause of death and after experts had scrutinized the debris.

“I think we will have a little bit more information in a week,” he said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Mexican State Bans Cops From Carrying Cell Phones

MEXICO CITY — First local police in Monterrey lost their assault rifles after an armed confrontation with federal agents while protesting the arrest of cops for alleged gang ties. Now officers in Mexico’s third-largest city will be stripped of cell phones.

The legislature in Nuevo Leon state, where Monterrey is located, unanimously approved a bill banning city and state police from carrying personal cell phones while on duty in an effort to prevent corrupt officers from communicating with drug gangs.

Lawmakers approved the measure late Tuesday, a day after municipal police in Monterrey pulled guns on masked federal agents during a standoff that sent motorists scrambling for cover — and underscored tensions over a crackdown on drug corruption among lawmen.

Earlier this month, federal forces raided police stations in 18 towns in Nuevo Leon, which borders Texas, and detained 78 officers suspected of working with drug smugglers. The operation came after soldiers found lists of police names in the possession of suspected drug traffickers in May.

State lawmaker Mirthala Castillo said the cell phone ban would take effect later this month. City police spokeswoman Sidlayin Robles said it was not clear how the ban would be enforced.

Officers in Monterrey complained that they are finding themselves unable to do their jobs.

“We patrol certain areas and we have a cell phone so the neighbors can call us if there is trouble,” said one officer, who declined to give his name. “If they take away our cell phones, they’ll have to call the station first and it will take more time to get there.”

He argued that any officers who have taken payoffs from Mexico’s brutal drug gangs have no choice: They either have to turn a blind eye to trafficking or be killed.

Federal forces have been conducting sweeps across Mexico to round up local officers and politicians accused of collaborating with drug cartels. Among those were 10 mayors in Michoacan, the home state of President Felipe Calderon. Many retired army officers have been called on to run local police forces.

Many city police are furious at seeing colleagues disarmed and dragged away in handcuffs. The friction boiled over Monday evening in Monterrey when local officers protesting the arrest of a police woman who authorities say is a high-ranking member of the Gulf drug cartel blocked streets and then aimed pistols and assault rifles at federal agents who tried to disperse them.

Nuevo Leon’s state public safety secretary, Aldo Fasci Zuazua, said state officials stripped municipal police of their automatic rifles because of the incident. He said such weapons would be given out to city officers only with special permission.

Mexico’s drug violence has claimed more than 10,800 lives since 2006, when Calderon launched his anti-drug campaign. About 45,000 soldiers have been deployed to drug-plagued areas.

On Wednesday, federal police coordinator Gen. Rodolfo Cruz said a shootout in Durango state killed one federal officer and three gunmen. Federal forces detained three alleged members of the Sinaloa cartel after the confrontation late Tuesday in the city of Durango, the state capital..

Cruz said one of the gunmen killed was the top man for the Sinaloa cartel in Durango.

Also Wednesday, federal authorities said they have arrested nine state police officers in the state of Morelos, just outside Mexico City, for their alleged ties to the Beltran Leyva drug cartel.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Was Terrorism Behind Air France Crash?

By Annie Jacobsen

On Wednesday morning, news emerged out of Paris that two Muslim men aboard Air France Flight 447, which crashed into the Atlantic Ocean on June 1, were Islamic radicals listed on France’s terrorist watch list.

French foreign intelligence agents from the DGSE (Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure) released this information to the Paris weekly L’Express. Immediately, the story became headline news around the globe. And then, just hours later, those same French terrorism investigators recanted.

“No Terrorists in AF447,” read the second L’Express headline posted on Wednesday evening at 5:35 p.m. local time. Translated from the French, the flip-flop was explained as follows:

Failing to have the date of birth of passengers, it was impossible [for DGSE agents] to know if they were real terrorists or homonyms. Refining their “screening,” the investigators said, raised doubts. The theory of the accident, which killed 228 people, remains privileged.

Why did DGSE agents release potentially “doubtful” information ten days into an investigation when they could have waited only a few more hours to verify facts? Before this information was released, terrorism as a cause for the crash was at the bottom of most experts’ guess lists. Investigators had been focusing on mechanical failure, namely faulty speed sensors, as well as lighting strikes. Satellite photographs suggest that the aircraft flew into a violent storm. At first there was no crash site, which only enhanced the mystery. Then the site was found. Headway was being made. Why bring terrorism into the mix so late in the game, only to say excusez-moi, our mistake…

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Hungary: Not Enough for Lynching

Jobbik’s Krisztina Morvai told a press conference in Budapest last Thursday that she intends to file a complaint to the authorities over the Olaszliszka court case, as dozens of Roma were involved in the lynching, but only eight people had faced charges.

In a sentence passed in the Olaszliszka murder case a week earlier by a Mikolc court, one man was sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the lynching of a teacher who was pulled from his car and murdered in the north eastern village of Olaszliszka in October, 2006.

Szögi Lajos, a 44-year-old teacher from a nearby town, was beaten to death in front of his two children by a mob of enraged villagers after he had bumped into the convicted man’s 12-year-old daughter as he drove through the village. The girl fell into a roadside ditch but suffered no significant injuries, and a subsequent forensic examination of the teacher’s car found no evidence of impact. Described by the judge as “a menace to society with a string of previous convictions”, the girl’s father will spend a minimum of 30 years in jail. Seven other defendants in the case were also sentenced for joining or abetting the attack. Five of them, including the girl’s mother and older brother, were given 15-year prison sentences, while two others who were minors at the time of the murder were sentenced to ten years in a juvenile detention centre.

The Borsod county prosecutor’s office last week said it would appeal, demanding that four of the five who received 15-year terms get life sentences.

Passing sentence, the leading judge in the trial, Attila Czibrik, described how the victim had been systematically beaten for 10 to 15 minutes before he died, as reported by the news agency MTI. “The victim was subjected to a prolonged, extraordinarily brutal beating, entirely devoid of humanity,” Czibrik said.

The case caused shockwaves across the country and, as the attackers were Roma, led to a dramatic increase in racial tensions between Hungary’s majority population and its ethnic Roma minority, and has been used by the extreme right to drum up support for its anti-Roma stance. The controversial far-right paramilitary group, the Hungarian Guard, even staged an anti-Roma demonstration in Olaszliszka as part of a self-styled crusade against what it calls “gypsy crime”. In the past 18 months there have been over a dozen armed attacks against Roma homes across Hungary, and since November five Roma have been killed in three separate attacks in which guns and petrol bombs were used. Similarities of method suggest the cases are linked, and the murders are thought to have been racially motivated.

The father of the murdered man, along with his granddaughter, who witnessed her father being killed, were in court. The man’s father said he was satisfied that the court had imposed the maximum possible penalty, but added that he would like to see the death penalty reinstated, as imprisonment “cannot be compared” to how his son suffered. The verdict is subject to appeal.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UNHCR Awards Turkish Ship for Saving 142 People

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 10 — The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Turkey has awarded the Turkish cargo ship “Pinar E” captain Asik Tuygun and owner Baris Erdogdu with the “Hope Refugee Award” for saving 142 migrants off the coast of Malta when the refugees were about to die in the sea, Anatolia news agency reports. Tuygun and Erdogdu are the first recipients of the “Hope Refugee Award” in Turkey. “The award is given to those individuals who help refugees in difficult conditions and make their lives easier. We hope that the behaviour of captain Asik and owner Erdogdu will be a good role model”, Michel Gaude, UNHCR’s Turkey representative, said. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


Oil Price Leaps to Year’s High

Predictions of $250 a barrel on fears for oil reserves, hopes of economic recovery and hedging against weak dollar

Oil will last for decades, according to BP, but advocates of ‘peak oil’ believe reserves are dwindling Photograph: David McNew/Getty Images

The price of oil burst through the $71 a barrel mark today amid revelations that proven reserves had fallen for the first time in 10 years and predictions that the price could eventually hit $250.

The latest high — from lows of $30 only four months ago — came on the New York Mercantile Exchange, where the cost of July deliveries rose by $1.35 to $71.36.

This comes on top of a $2 rise the day before as investors rushed into the market on the back of lower stockpile figures, higher demand estimates and speculation against further falls in the dollar.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re testing $80 in a week or two,” said one analyst, while BP’s chief executive, Tony Hayward, questioned whether $90 could be the “right” value.

Kuwait’s oil minister, Sheikh Ahmad al-Abdullah al-Sabah, put some of the rise down to signs of recovery in Asia but warned that overall demand was still weaker than last year. Opec would not raise supply at current oil prices but did not rule it out “if it reached $100”, he said.

Alexei Miller, chairman of the Russian energy group Gazprom, raised the stakes further when he reiterated last year’s estimates of $250 a barrel. “This forecast has not become reality yet, given that the [credit] crisis gained momentum and exerted a powerful impact on the global energy market. But does this mean that our forecast was unrealistic? Not at all.”

The latest surge has also raised fears that higher energy costs could snuff out the nascent economic recovery. Shares on Wall Street’s Nasdaq index fell 1%.

The febrile atmosphere in oil markets was fed by the publication of BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy, which showed that the world’s proven crude reserves had fallen by 3bn barrels to 1.258tn by 2008 from a revised 1.261tn in 2007.

Declines in important producers such as Russia and Norway offset rises in new areas such as Vietnam, India and Egypt. The figures did not include Canada’s tar sands, which are put at 150bn barrels..

The drop is partly attributed to a drop in exploration drilling due to the precipitous fall in oil prices last year but also to the end of “easy” oil. Conflict this week in the Amazon and speculation about Arctic drilling underlined how oil companies are pushing into environmentally sensitive places to find new reserves.

Tony Hayward, BP’s chief executive, insisted there was enough crude to last 42 years at current consumption levels, roughly the same as last year. Adherents of “peak oil” — the theory that the maximum rate of oil production has been reached — believe supplies will run out much sooner because of growing demand.

The BP boss said: “Our data confirms that the world has enough proved reserves of oil, natural gas and coal to meet the world’s energy needs for decades to come.” Higher prices allowed companies to invest in finding further reserves while not choking off demand, he said.

“There is a rational argument to say that somewhere between $60 to $90 a barrel is the right sort of level,” he said.

Global oil consumption fell 0.6% to 81.8m barrels a day in 2008, the first decline since 1993 and the largest drop for 27 years. North Sea output dropped 6.3% to its lowest level for three decades..

By contrast, gas use rose by 2.5% globally and 16% in China. The use of coal, the heaviest emitter of climate-changing carbon, rose 3.1%, with Chinese demand up 6.8%, leaving it with a market share of 43% despite more high-profile announcements about its commitment to renewables.

BP says it is difficult to compare “primary” carbon fuels with renewable sources of electricity. BP notes that globally solar capacity rose nearly 70% and wind by 30% year on year but says renewables only generated 1.5% of global electricity and therefore began at a low base.But it notes these sources are playing an increasingly important role in some countries with wind power providing 20% of total electricity generation in Denmark, 11% in Spain and 7% in Germany.

Despite the 2008 rise in coal consumption, the BP data showed growth in the use of the fuel continued to decline compared with 2007 when it rose 5% and five years ago when it went up by 8%.

But the coal figures will alarm environmentalists and increase the calls for companies and governments to speed up trials on “clean coal” technology and the use of carbon capture and storage.

China has promised to increase its use of renewables: Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice-chairman of the China’s national development and reform commission, says the country may produce as much as 20% of its energy from wind and solar by 2020.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Typhoons Trigger Slow Earthquakes

Typhoons can trigger imperceptible, slow earthquakes, researchers say.

Scientists report in the journal Nature that, in a seismically active zone in Taiwan, pressure changes caused by typhoons “unclamp” the fault.

This gentle release causes an earthquake that dissipates its energy over several hours rather than a few potentially devastating seconds.

The researchers believe this could explain why there are relatively few large earthquakes in this region.

Alan Linde from the Carnegie Institution for Science in the US and colleagues monitored movement of two colliding tectonic plates in eastern Taiwan.

They used three borehole “strainmeters” — highly sensitive instruments deep below the ground.

“These detect otherwise imperceptible movements and distortions of rock,” explained co-author Selwyn Sacks, also from the Carnegie Institution.

Gentle relief

The instruments picked up 20 “slow earthquakes”, each lasting from several hours to more than a day. Of these, 11 co-incided exactly with typhoons.

The authors described the possibility that this coincident timing was by chance as “vanishingly small”.

For the typhoon to be a trigger, the fault must be precariously close to failure

Alan Linde Carnegie Institution for Science

“It’s rare that you see something so definitive, especially when it’s something new,” Dr Linde told BBC News.

Their findings could provide clues about why there are relatively few large earthquakes in this region.

Here, the colliding plates move so rapidly that they build mountains at a rate of almost 4mm per year. Dr Linde said that in geological terms that was almost like “growing mushrooms”.

“It’s surprising that this area of the globe has had no great earthquakes and relatively few large earthquakes,” Dr Linde commented.

“By comparison, the Nankai Trough in southwestern Japan has a plate convergence rate of about 4cm per year, and this causes a magnitude 8 earthquake every 100 to 150 years.

“The activity in southern Taiwan comes from the convergence of the same two plates, and there the Philippine Sea Plate pushes against the Eurasian Plate at twice that rate.

“This fault experiences more or less constant strain and stress build-up.”

He described how the fault “dipped steeply” westward from near the east coast so that it is under the land area. So the landward side is under constant strain to move upward.

When a typhoon passes over the land, the air pressure on the land is lowered. That slight change in force “unclamps” the fault and allows it to move.

“But this change is quite small,” said Dr Linde. “So for the typhoon to be a trigger, the fault must be precariously close to failure.”

The frequent, slow earthquakes this causes are “totally imperceptible” from the ground. And Dr Linde thinks it is sensible to assume that they may reduce the frequency of larger, more damaging earthquakes.

But this is extremely hard to show because, as he puts it, “how do you prove something that doesn’t happen?”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Reaching the Hearts of European Muslims

Omar Al-RawiOmar Al-Rawi is, in effect, the spokesman for Austrian Muslims. If his reaction to Barack Obama’s speech in Cairo is any indication, the golden haze of adulation that surrounds Obama in America (or at least in the American media) has been successfully transplanted to Europe.

Our Austrian correspondent ESW has translated an op-ed by Dr. Al-Rawi from yesterday’s Die Presse:

Perhaps the speech of the century
Commentary by Omar Al-Rawi

What can Europe and Austria learn from Obama’s speech in Cairo last week?

Seldom has a political speech touched, fascinated, excited and filled me with such great hope. It was indeed a historical turnaround in the relationship between the US and the Muslim world. But we in Europe should not remain onlookers, but also gain some insight.

The speech was an object lesson in how a dialogue between cultures and civilizations must work: full of respect and honesty, never haughty or even insulting, by focusing on the common grounds without concealing the differences, on equal footing and always on par. He also addressed all areas of tension, without finger-pointing. Firm, but never chumming up. There was also self-criticism, which was never edifying. This approach should make those working with euro-centrist minorities stop and think about whether they really know it all. I would suggest rereading the passage in the speech where Obama points out Islam’s great contribution to civilization as well as the Muslims’ role in pioneering the European Renaissance and the Enlightenment.

– – – – – – – –

He also clarified that one cannot enter into a relationship with prejudice, by stereotyping, and by using clichés. This applies to both sides. Obama even considers it his obligation as president of the United States to counter negative stereotyping of Islam wherever it appears. If one considers the hostility against Islam that has been the Right’s political program for the last years and the persistent silence of the other politicians to name this phenomenon, then this approach is an interesting one. In Austria, we merely speak of xenophobia, and even a party like the Greens cannot pronounce the words “hostility against Islam”. They confuse this form of cultural racism with the defense of Islam, thinking that hostility against Islam is equal to criticizing religions.

The assessment that freedom in the United States is inseparable from freedom of religious practice is also valid for Europe. Obama proudly added that there is a mosque in every state and 1,200 mosques all over the country. This is perhaps an encouragement for our politicians (male and female) to rise up against all the anti-mosque initiatives (from Switzerland to Cologne, Telfs, Bad Vöslau, Dammstrasse in the 20th district in Vienna). It is minority rights that need protection. This certainly applies not only to Muslims in Europe, but also to Christians in the Muslim world to have the right to build churches and prayer rooms.

Obama’s statement that “our women can contribute just as much to society as our men”, unequivocally made clear that the equality is considered a universal right in the US as well as in Europe. It was important to note that women who decide for a traditional role in the family do this of their own free will and that no one should be allowed to force them into this role. Equal rights and the emancipation of Muslim women can, however, never be successful without education and a job. Every attempt to discriminate against them [the women — translator] will lead to the opposite. Obama made clear the US government went to court to protect the rights of those women and girls wanting to wear the hijab and to punish those who denied them [the hijab]. This is an important approach for those thinking loudly or not so loudly about banning headscarves for those in the public sector, in schools and universities as well as the public sphere.

It was a speech that surely reached the hearts of Muslims worldwide and which will definitely have an impact. If actions follow these words, then this speech can be called the speech of the century.

Does Dr. Al-Rawi really believe that President Obama spoke without “stereotyping and… using clichés”? If so, then he has bought into the OIC propaganda line so thoroughly that he is living in a delusion.

From inventing science and mathematics, through engineering the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, to being a tolerant source of equal rights and peace for everyone: these are the standard clichés about Islam that have been recycled and retailed by our first Muslim president. The same clichés now give new urgency to the Islamic agenda in Europe and throughout the rest of the West.

Barack Hussein Obama has made much mischief. Dr. Al-Rawi and his colleagues are not done with us yet, and we can expect European Muslims to use The Speech to leverage additional demands on the dhimmicrats of the EU.

But the situation is changing. The recent EU elections indicate that we have entered a new political phase, one that is unique in my lifetime: much of Europe has actually moved to the right of the United States of America.

Honoring Ronald Reagan in London

Our Flemish correspondent VH writes:

Only a few days after the D-Day WWII memorials, concerning which the Dutch blog GeenStijl paid tribute to American soldiers with an impressive photo-series, it has been made public that there will be a President Ronald Reagan memorial in London as tribute to freedom and the victory of the Cold War: a statue, a plaque, and a piece of the Berlin Wall.

From The Young Conservative:

Westminster Council approves Reagan statue

London is to have its memorial to freedom after Westminster council granted full planning permission for a statue of Ronald Reagan outside the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square. The monument will, appropriately, feature a section of the Berlin Wall. At a meeting of the council the planning request met with unanimous approval, and the council waived its ‘minimum 10 years after death rule’ to grant permission.

Ronald Reagan statueSteve Summers, chairman of Westminster City Council’s planning applications sub committee, said: “Regardless of politics, nobody can dispute that President Reagan was a true ally of this country.

“During his presidency the term ‘special relationship’ reflected not just the close working partnership of our respective governments, but helped reinforce Britain’s unquestionable cultural and historic ties with the United States. “Subsequent presidencies have continued that unique bond between our countries so it is only right and proper we exempt President Reagan, as a former head of state, from the usual rules on statues.”

The memorial to Reagan will also feature a section of the Berlin wall, reflecting his decisive leadership which brought the Cold War to a bloodless end and dismantled Communism in Europe.

Mr Summers added: “Those who witnessed the fall of the Berlin wall in 1989 described the feeling in the air that night as electric, as if some great force had been let loose and it is fitting we should pay tribute to Reagan’s contribution to bringing down this barrier between east and west, and subsequently changing the world.

– – – – – – – –

“The site which houses the US embassy is a fitting place to acknowledge this great man.”

We understand that the Council’s decision is a victory for the Conservative Way Forward group who have been pushing for the erection of the memorial for several years. The application was formally made on behalf of “The President Reagan Memorial Fund”, by Mrs Jennie Elias, a CWF Executive member.

American Chas Fagan, who also crafted a statue of Reagan for the US Capitol, will sculpt the 10ft high bronze statue, which will stand on a circular 6ft Portland stone plinth; perhaps a fitting synthesis of British and American. Architects drawings and mock-ups of the statue can be viewed at Westminster Council’s website.

TYC’s Verdict: We look forward to the unveiling ceremony, and to London having a rallying point for freedom-lovers.

An afterword from VH:

The first comment underneath the GeenStijl article is [translated] “Can they please liberate us one more time?” and another: “Respect for the soldiers who fought and died there.” and “Very impressive, should never be forgotten, Respect, serious…” and “Thanks soldiers, for one of the best operations executed ever” and “Heroes” and “A big thanks to these men…” and “The biggest respect to these men (still boys then) as far as I am concerned this may be commemorated long after” and “These men are heroes, period!” and “Nothing but respect, for them. Thank you.” and many, many more comments like this.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/10/2009

Gates of Vienna News Feed 6/10/2009Russia announced that it may swap U.S. Treasury securities for some of its IMF debt, and thereby drove down the value of the dollar. Meanwhile, President Medvedev has established a commission whose job is making sure that history is not “falsified” in a way that discredits Russia.

In other news, Muammar Gaddafi is visiting Rome, and Goldman Sachs has been hired to help The New York Times sell off The Boston Globe.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, Diana West, heroyalwhyness, Insubria, JD, JL, KGS, Paul Green, Steen, Vlad Tepes, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Audit the Federal Reserve
Russia May Swap Some U.S. Treasuries for IMF Debt
UK: Govt Fights EU Pressure on Financial Supervision
 
USA
Debate Erupts Over Muslim School in Virginia
Diana West: Is Petraeus an Islamic Tool?
Gunman, Guards Exchange Fire in DC Holocaust Museum
Jimmy Carter’s Moral Turpitude
New York Times Hires Goldman to Sell Globe: Report
Obama’s Islam: Now He Tells US
Radioactive Cheese Grater Found in Flint
Sotomayor is an Anti-Constitutionalist
Swordless Sailors
The Muslim in the Oval Office?
 
Canada
Canadian Hunger Striker Being Force Fed in U.S. Prison
Canada’s Obamacare Precedent
 
Europe and the EU
Berlusconi: I’ll Sue El Pais and Repubblica
Brown Plan to Reform UK Politics
France and Italy Renege on Pledges to Aid Africa
Gaddafi in Rome
Italy: Black Woman Elected Mayor in North
Romanian Judges Bar Populist MEP
Saramago vs Silvio: Nobel Laureate Rails After Italian Publishers Axe Book
Suspects in German Terror Plan to Confess
UK: Law Lords Ban Use of Secret Evidence
UK: NHS ‘Faces Huge Budget Shortfall’
 
North Africa
Algeria: Death Sentence for Former Anti-Islamic Leader
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Barry Rubin: Stopping Settlement Construction Won’t Build Peace
Business: ICE Mission to Gaza to Promote Collaboration
Nazi Salutes Cause Row at Hebrew U.
Obama Confronting Israel to Appease Arab World?
PNA Captures Female Hamas Bomb Suspects in West Bank
S. Craxi in West Bank With 40 Italian Businesses
 
Middle East
EU Human Rights Court Rules Against Turkey in Abuse Case
Reports: Russia Says Bank Problems Delay Bushehr
Third of Turkish Women Report Abuse
Turkey: Support for Premier Erdogan’s Party in Decline, Poll
Turkey Must Speed Up Reforms to Keep EU Bid Alive, Rehn
Turkey: Governments Urged to Protect Press Freedom
Turkey: 20 Years for Murder, 28 Years for Murder Book
 
Russia
Alarm in Baltic as Kremlin Seizes Control of Soviet Past
Russia Drops Unilateral WTO Bid for Ex-Soviet Pact
 
South Asia
Thailand: Muslim Militants Blamed for Deadly Mosque Attack
 
Far East
China’s Computers at Hacking Risk
 
Australia — Pacific
When Police Look the Other Way
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
Beijing and New Delhi at Loggerheads Over the Sale of Fake Chinese Drugs in Africa
Kidnapped Alberta Reporter Fears Dying in Captivity
Somalia: Italy Offers Aid to Improve Coastal Security
 
Immigration
EC Lists Improved Immigration Policy Among Priorities
Spain: Contracts Fall in Immigrants’ Home Countries
 
Culture Wars
‘Gay’ Family Kids 7 Times More Likely to be Homosexual
‘Hate Crimes’ Strategy? Slip Through as Amendment
School Board Breaking Federal Law With ‘Gay’ Day?
 
General
UN’s Marxist Plan for Global Government

Financial Crisis


Audit the Federal Reserve

Most Americans believe the Federal Reserve is part of the federal government. It is not.

If you ask who creates our money, most answer “the government” or “the treasury.” Neither is true. Today that responsibility falls to Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

America’s founding fathers were very specific about the creation of money. Article I, Section 8 of our Constitution charges the Congress with “the power to coin money and regulate the value thereof.” Many argue it violates the Constitution to turn these powers over to a non-governmental, privately-owned, highly-profitable, outside third party like the Federal Reserve — structured very much like any world cartel — OPEC is a good example. Though it is defined by some as “a government entity with private components,” its structure and lack of transparency make it appear more like OPEC than any government agency.

The Federal Reserve is a cartel of bankers and investment bankers who coordinate the production, pricing and marketing of money in the United States. This particular cartel also utilizes the police power of the federal government to enforce its agreements.

Thomas Jefferson once said that a private central bank (like the Federal Reserve) which issues the public currency was “a greater menace to the liberties of the people than a standing army.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Russia May Swap Some U.S. Treasuries for IMF Debt

June 10 (Bloomberg) — Russia may switch some of its reserves from U.S.. Treasuries to International Monetary Fund bonds, the central bank said today. The comment drove Treasuries and the dollar lower.

Alexei Ulyukayev, first deputy chairman of Russia’s central bank, said some reserves may be moved from Treasuries into IMF debt, reiterating comments made last month by Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin. Ulyukayev’s remarks were confirmed by a Bank Rossii official who declined to be named, citing bank policy.

Treasuries fell, pushing 10-year yields toward the highest level in seven months, in response to Ulyukayev’s statement. The dollar fell against the euro on speculation that Russia will reduce its holdings of U.S. debt.

About 30 percent of Russia’s international reserves, which stood at $401.1 billion on May 29, are currently held in Treasuries, Ulyukayev said. Kudrin said on May 26 that Russia planned to buy $10 billion of IMF bonds using money from its foreign reserves.

The IMF securities would give countries a different way to contribute to the fund and are unlike traditional bonds because they pay an interest rate pegged to the IMF’s basket of currencies, known as Special Drawing Rights.

China is expected to buy as much as $50 billion of the bonds, IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said yesterday.

The IMF, which has rescued economies from Pakistan to Iceland in the past year, has never issued bonds before and is seeking more cash to finance loans and aid to member countries during the worst economic slump in the fund’s 64-year history.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Govt Fights EU Pressure on Financial Supervision

LUXEMBOURG (AFP) — The government said it had fought off European pressure on Tuesday to yield some of London’s powers for overseeing its vast financial services sector to EU authorities.

The European Commission last month proposed to set up new EU authorities to oversee banks, insurers and other financial groups, which would have powers to overrule national regulators.

However, London, which is home to the biggest financial sector in the world, fears the new authorities would be able to order governments to carry out costly bailouts of financial groups with taxpayer cash.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said he had convinced his EU counterparts at a meeting in Luxembourg, to revise the proposals to ensure the new authorities could not impose such decisions on governments.

“What we can’t have is an extreme situation where somebody outside a member state is telling a particular government that it’s got to take some fiscal action,” Darling told journalists after the meeting in Luxembourg.

Britain, which does not use the euro, also has qualms about a commission proposal for a new “European Systemic Risk Board” to be chaired by the president of the European Central Bank. Darling also managed to get that issue left open.

However, EU Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia voiced confidence that Britain’s opposition to the ECB chairing the new risk watchdog could be overcome.

“The ECB is not only the central bank of the 16 countries of the euro area,” he said. “The ECB is the head of the European system of central banks that includes the 27 member states.”

Despite the government ‘s concerns about EU intrusion in regulating its financial sector, Darling insisted that London was otherwise broadly in favour of greater cooperation among supervisors at all levels.

“We’re very clear that we must have greater cooperation between European regulators and we must make sure that we plug the gaps that have become apparent in recent years,” he said.

Britain found support from Slovenia, Slovakia, Romania and to a certain extent Finland for London’s reservations towards the commission’s proposals, which are supposed to be implemented over the course of 2010 after Brussels revises them later this year.

Although the financial crisis is rooted in the US housing market, European banks have suffered dearly from the turmoil, especially since many had liabilities supported by less capital than some of their US counterparts.

As a result, many European countries rushed to bail out banks and guarantee lending between them in the midst of a crisis of confidence in the sector last year.

However, EU governments have struggled to coordinate their support for struggling banks, with no pan-European authority really in charge of overseeing the sector.

Ahead of the meeting, the International Monetary Fund threw its weight behind the shake-up of the financial sector.

“The crisis has indicated beyond doubt the need for new financial stability arrangements in Europe,” the head of the IMF’s European department Marek Belka told eurozone finance ministers on Monday.

“The considerable momentum that has been built in recent weeks to make historic changes to these arrangements should be fully seized.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


Debate Erupts Over Muslim School in Virginia

FAIRFAX, Va. — For years, children’s voices rang out from the playground at the Islamic Saudi Academy in this heavily wooded community about 20 miles west of Washington. But for the last year the campus has been silent as academy officials seek county permission to erect a new classroom building and move hundreds of students from a sister campus on the other end of Fairfax County.

The proposal from the academy, which a school spokeswoman said was the only school financed by the Saudi government in the United States, has ignited a noisy debate and exposed anew the school’s uneasy relationship with its neighbors.

Many residents living near the 34-acre campus along Popes Head Road, a narrow byway connecting two busy thoroughfares, say they oppose it because they fear it will bring more cars, school buses and flooding of land that would be paved over for parking lots.

But others object to the academy’s curriculum, saying it espouses a fundamentalist interpretation of Islam known as Wahhabism. A leaflet slipped into mailboxes in early spring called the school “a hate training academy.”

James Lafferty, chairman of a loose coalition of individuals and groups opposed to the school, said that its teachings sow intolerance, and that it should not be allowed to exist, let alone expand.

“We feel that it is in reality a madrassa, a training place for young impressionable Muslim students in some of the most extreme and most fanatical teachings of Islam,” Mr. Lafferty said. “That concerns us greatly.”

School officials and parents say they are bewildered and frustrated by such claims. The academy is no different from other religious schools, they say, and educates model students who go on to top schools, teaches Arabic to American soldiers, and no longer uses texts that drew criticism after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

Kamal S. Suliman, 46, a state traffic engineer with three daughters at the academy, called the accusations “fear tactics and stereotyping.”

“Ideological issues do not belong in this matter,” Mr. Suliman said. “I’m hoping that cooler heads will prevail,” and that a decision about the expansion “will be made based on facts.”

The Fairfax County Planning Commission is to vote Thursday on the school’s request for a zoning exemption to allow construction of the classroom building. Regardless of the outcome, the request is voted on by the county Board of Supervisors.

Hazel Rathbun, who has lived near the Fairfax campus since 1971, said she worries about traffic safety and flooding on her winding road, and called criticism of the school’s Muslim focus “hate filled” and irrelevant. “It’s detracting from what we see as a very real issue for us,” Ms. Rathbun said.

The Saudi government bought the property, formerly the site of a Christian academy, in 1984. It also rents a county school building in Alexandria.

In the 1990s, the academy bought property in Loudoun County, about 25 miles northwest of Fairfax. Over the protest of local residents, they planned a campus for 3,500 students through grade 12, but they scrapped the plan in 2004. They decided to build instead on the Popes Head Road site, where classes were held for youngsters from pre-kindergarten through first grade.

In 2007, the academy notified the county of its building plans, and last year, transferred the young pupils to the rented building in Alexandria. Academy officials hope to consolidate both campuses into a “state-of-the-art” school in Fairfax, said Abdulrahman R. Alghofaili, the school’s director general.

Until Sept. 11, 2001, the academy drew minimal attention, but shortly after the terrorist attacks, Israel turned away two graduates over suspicions they were suicide bombers. One was charged with lying on his passport application, and received a four-month prison sentence.

In 2003, the academy’s 1999 valedictorian, Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, was arrested in Saudi Arabia, where he had gone to study, and two years later was convicted in Federal District Court in Alexandria of conspiracy to commit terrorism, including a plot to assassinate President George W. Bush. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Mr. Abu Ali’s family called the accusations “lies,” and his lawyers say he was tortured when he was held in Saudi Arabia.

Besides, academy officials and parents contend, an entire school should not be condemned for the actions of one or two students. They point out that no one laid the blame for the massacre at Virginia Tech on the high school alma mater of the gunman, Seung-Hui Cho.

Last year, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, an independent, bipartisan federal agency charged with promoting religious freedom in United States foreign policy, concluded that texts used at the school contained “exhortations to violence” and intolerance.

School officials rejected those findings, saying the commission misinterpreted and mistranslated outdated materials. The school now prints its own materials and no longer uses official Saudi curriculum, said Rahima Abdullah, the academy’s education director.

“We have hundreds of students and hundreds of parents who send their students to this place to get ideal education,” said Mr. Alghofaili, the director general. “It doesn’t make sense that their parents would send their kids to a place to learn how to hate or to kill others.”

The Fairfax Planning Commission chairman, Peter Murphy, said questions about religion, politics and diplomacy were “distractions” that did not belong in deliberations about whether the academy should be allowed to expand.

“Whatever happens, some people are going to be happy and some people are not going to be happy” with Thursday’s vote, Mr. Murphy said. “I’m not basing this on happiness. I’m basing it on land-use issues.”

           — Hat tip: JL [Return to headlines]



Diana West: Is Petraeus an Islamic Tool?

I’ve never been a huge fan of Gen. David Petraeus due to 1) his elevation as an advisor of David “Accidental Guerilla” Kilcullen (whose Islam-free war analysis blinds the US to this day), 2) his PC reliance on “hearts and minds” (at one point in Iraq, he ordered posters hung in every barracks asking, “What Have You Done To Win Iraqi Hearts and Minds Today?”), and, not least, 3) his abject failure to force the belligerency of Iran into the national debate over US strategy in Iraq. Talk about Vietnam Redux: Ignoring Iranian (and Syrian) safe havens for anti-American fighters has led to I don’t even want to think of how many US casualties. Meanwile, I still don’t see “the surge” as more than stolid police work — as in, put more men on the streets, crime goes down — assisted by throwing $$ at Sunni mercenaries. It strikes me as more stopgap measure than genius strategy, as Iraq’s ever-parlous state as a non-ally bears out.

So churlish me wasn’t all that surprised by Petraeus’s recently revealed MoveOn-ish take on Guantanamo Bay (aptly skewered and dubbed “vapid” by Andy McCarthy). But now there’s more…

           — Hat tip: Diana West [Return to headlines]



Gunman, Guards Exchange Fire in DC Holocaust Museum

WASHINGTON — A gunman exchanged fire with security guards inside the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum on Wednesday.

U.S. Park Police Sgt. David Schlosser said the gunman walked into the museum with what he described as a “long gun.” The gunman and a security guard were shot. Both were taken to the hospital, but the extent of their injuries wasn’t immediately known.

U.S. Park Police initially gave slightly different information, saying three people had been shot. Fire department spokesman Alan Etter told CNN a third person was hurt after being cut by broken glass. Several witnesses said they saw the security guard on the floor and bleeding.

The museum normally has a heavy security presence with guards positioned both inside and outside. All visitors are required to pass through metal detectors at the entrance, and bags are screened.

Schlosser said park police SWAT teams were doing a secondary sweep of the building, but they didn’t believe there was another gunman.

The museum, located just off the National Mall near the Washington Monument, is a popular tourist attraction. It draws about 1.7 million visitors each year.

Roads surrounding the museum have been closed and blocked off with yellow tape. Several police cars and officers on horses surround the area.

Mark Lippert of Lasalle, Ill., said he was at the museum when he heard several loud pops and saw several schoolchildren running toward him, three with horrified looks on their faces.

He said when he saw the kid’s faces, he knew someone had been shot.

Sandy Perkins of Massachusetts said her daughter, Abigail, called her shortly after the shooting. The teen was on a school trip to the museum and told her mother students heard several shots before they were told to leave the building.

Abigail said some of her friends from Holton Richmond Middle School in Danvers, Mass., were very shaken, but all were otherwise fine, Sandy Perkins said.

The teens did not see where the shots were coming from.

Linda Elston, who is visiting the museum from Nevada City, Calif., said she was on the lower level of the museum watching a film when she and others were told to evacuate.

“It was totally full of people,” Elston said. “It took us a while to get out.”

She said she didn’t hear any shots and didn’t immediately know why there was an evacuation. The experience left her feeling “a little anxious,” she said.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Jimmy Carter’s Moral Turpitude

Jimmy Carter is climbing back into the moral sewer this week, where he loves spending most of his time.

He’s back in the Middle East, continuing his love affair with Islamo-fascists.

This time around, having just monitored Lebanon’s elections, he’s on his way to visit his pals in Syria, the West Bank and Gaza. Don’t expect him to be giving anyone in those places a hard time about stopping hate and terror against Israelis. But do expect his contempt for Israel to come full surface when he visits the Jewish state — which is also on his itinerary. It will be no surprise when Carter’s reprimands for Israel will begin, seeing that this sole democracy in the Middle East is the country for which Carter holds particular disdain and, therefore, has called an “apartheid state” — an “apartheid state,” mind you, where Arabs are treated better than in any other country in the Middle East.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



New York Times Hires Goldman to Sell Globe: Report

NEW YORK (Reuters) — The New York Times Co has hired Goldman Sachs to manage the possible sale of The Boston Globe, and plans to request bids in the next couple of weeks, The Boston Globe reported on Wednesday.

The report comes after the Globe’s largest union, the Boston Newspaper Guild, rejected a $10 million package of concessions aimed at cutting costs at the city’s largest daily newspaper.

On Tuesday, the Guild petitioned the U.S. government’s National Labor Relations Board to block the Times Co’s plan to slash union members’ pay by 23 percent to get the savings the newspaper publisher says it needs.

Media industry watchers have been expecting the Times Co to put the 137-year-old Globe up for sale, saying the cost-cuts were designed to streamline the newspaper and attract bidders. The Times has said the Globe is on track to post an $85 million operating loss this year.

The Globe’s Wednesday story quoted an unidentified potential buyer as saying the Times was willing to entertain bids on “any and all” of its New England properties, including the Globe and the Worcester Telegram and Gazette.

According to the report, another potential buyer said the process may take time, with the Times Co exploring options over the summer. Two other people involved in potential bids did not expect submissions until the Guild situation is resolved.

The newspaper guild said it wants to meet with any potential buyers of the paper to discuss its contract and the future of the paper, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

“We recognize that we are all facing difficult economic times and understand that any future owner of the Globe would require changes to our contact,” Guild President Dan Totten said.

“We would like to explore with any potential new owner the possibility of an equity stake for the newspaper for its guild employees and would work with any ownership group to be positive dynamic in any sale process,” he said.

Most U.S. newspaper publishers are reeling from sharp drops in advertising revenue, as the weak economy added to pressures caused by competition from Internet news sites and other new media outlets.

The guild in its statement said it likes the idea of union members getting a stake and board representation along with the paper’s owners.

It pointed to a similar situation at the Portland Press Herald in Maine, which the Blethen family is selling to a group of investors. The Portland Newspaper Guild is getting a limited ownership stake in the Press Herald.

The Times is trying to pay off hundreds of millions of dollars in debt, and is looking for someone to buy its 17.5 percent stake in the company that owns the Boston Red Sox baseball team, the Fenway Park ball field and other properties in Boston.

Investment bank Goldman Sachs is fielding offers on New England Sports Ventures, the Red Sox’s parent company. It also is working on the Globe process, the paper reported.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Islam: Now He Tells US

If anyone thinks that Barack Obama is a Muslim now, there is no one to blame but Barack Obama. In his speech in Cairo, Obama said that he had “known Islam on three continents before coming to the region where it was first revealed..” Obama didn’t say that he had come to the region where “Muslims believe that Islam was first revealed,” or where Islam “began,” or was “founded.” Revealed.

Obama referred to “the sweeping change brought by modernity and globalization [that] led many Muslims to view the West as hostile to the traditions of Islam.” Yes, the West is hostile to misogyny, honor killings, racism and Jew-hatred. Obama also preached about religious freedom — speaking in a country where there is none. Yet he did find time to mention “civilization’s debt to Islam.” The president said that Islam “carried the light of learning through so many centuries, paving the way for Europe’s Renaissance and Enlightenment,” and praised “innovation in Muslim communities that developed the order of algebra; our magnetic compass and tools of navigation; our mastery of pens and printing; our understanding of how disease spreads and how it can be healed.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Radioactive Cheese Grater Found in Flint

Last year a Chinese-made EKCO brand cheese grater set off radiation alarms at a Flint scrap yard — it was emitting the equivalent of a chest X-ray every 36 hours.

A new investigative piece published by the Scripps Howard News Service explores official responses to the discovery of the radioactive cheese grater and finds that there is no government agency in charge of tracking radioactive consumer products.

According to the report, the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality has no authority to force the seller of the cheese grater — World Kitchen — to cooperate with an investigation. The Nuclear Regulatory Agency only regulates nuclear facilities that it licenses, the Department of Homeland Security only tracks radioactive materials at the borders, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is not tracking radioactive consumer products.

[Return to headlines]



Sotomayor is an Anti-Constitutionalist

Even a cursory examination of the public statements, speeches and judicial opinions of Judge Sotomayor based on the little information we already have characterizes her as a shameless, anti-constitutionalist judge.

Why did Obama nominate her over all the other great judges and legal minds in the nation?

Obama is many things, but above all he is an irredeemable narcissist and a fascist. Like his predecessor Bill Clinton, Obama subsumes everything and everybody for his own self-aggrandizement. So it is with his nominee, Sonia Sotomayor. This woman is merely Obama in a skirt, Obama with a Spanish accent. Sotomayor possesses the perverse socialist worldview he has in constitutional law and political philosophy. She is a macabre reflection of Obama’s alter ego; his fascist conception of the Constitution where “redistributive change” and overcoming of the Constitution’s “negative rights” (Obama-speak for his utter contempt of the Constitution’s framers) will be obeyed to the letter by Sotomayor, especially on the abortion question.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Swordless Sailors

Graduating midshipmen of the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis are being told in writing to leave at home or in their vehicles all “ceremonial swords” and anything else “that might be considered a weapon or a threat by screeners” for Friday’s outdoor commencement ceremonies featuring an address by President Barack Obama.

Inside the Beltway has obtained the academy’s list of prohibited items for this year’s graduation exercises, which, besides ceremonial swords, includes umbrellas.

Yes, cell phones and texting are still allowed.

           — Hat tip: Paul Green [Return to headlines]



The Muslim in the Oval Office?

There is an old saying, “if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, you can figure it’s a duck.”

During the 2008 presidential campaign, rumors circulated that Also Known As (AKA) Obama was a Muslim; that he had studied Islam extensively while an Indonesian citizen attending school in Jakarta, Indonesia.

In response to these rumors, AKA’s website fightthesmears posted the following:

“Barack Obama is a committed Christian. He was sworn into the Senate on his family Bible. He has regularly attended church with his wife and daughters for years. But shameful, shadowy attackers have been lying about Barack’s religion, claiming he is a Muslim instead of a committed Christian. When people fabricate stories about someone’s faith to denigrate them politically, that’s an attack on people of all faiths. Make sure everyone you know is aware of this deception.”

Unfortunately, it seems, fightthesmears is the one “fabricat[ing] stories.” The more the American people watch AKA perform, the more convinced they are that AKA is a closet Muslim. A few of the incidents that give indication…

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Canadian Hunger Striker Being Force Fed in U.S. Prison

A Canadian serving a life sentence in the United States for terrorism is being force-fed through the nose after going on a hunger strike, his lawyer said on Tuesday.

Mohammed Mansour Jabarah has refused to eat since mid-April and prison officials are allegedly pumping food into his stomach using a tube inserted in his nose.

The convicted al-Qaeda terrorist is protesting restrictions on his mail, his lawyer said, but his father said Jabarah and other Muslim inmates also want to pray together.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons declined to comment for privacy reasons. Prison officials can intervene when a hunger striker’s life is at risk but the force-feeding of inmates is controversial.

“They shove a tube up your nose down into your throat,” said Kenneth Paul, the lawyer who represented Jabarah at his trial in New York. “It’s like torture.”

He said the prison officials begin force-feeding once an inmate has lost a certain percentage of body weight. The feeding is done by a physician or a physicians’ aide, he said.

Jabarah, 27, immigrated to Canada from Kuwait as a boy. After graduating from high school in St. Catharines, Ont., in 2000, he travelled to Afghanistan, where he trained at Osama bin Laden’s camps.

He was one of a small core of dedicated terrorists who formally joined al-Qaeda by swearing an oath to bin Laden. In 2001, Bin Laden sent Jabarah to Khalid Sheikh Mohamed, the architect of the 9/11 attacks, who gave him additional training in Pakistan and tasked him to bomb the American and Israeli embassies in Singapore.

Before the attack could be executed, Jabarah was arrested in Oman and brought back to Ontario by Canadian Security Intelligence Service officers. He later surrendered voluntarily to U.S. officials and pleaded guilty to charges in New York.

In 2007, the Security Intelligence Review Committee scolded CSIS for violating Jabarah’s rights by arbitrarily detaining him and helping transfer him into U.S. custody without consulting a defence lawyer.

U.S. prosecutors argued he was irredeemably devoted to the cause of bin Laden. As proof they cited a letter in which he wrote, “And if they release me, then I will kill until I am killed.”

A sentencing memorandum claimed that while feigning cooperation with investigators, Jabarah had plotted to kill the FBI agents and prosecutors working on his case, stashing away steak knives and nylon rope as well as bomb plans.

He was sentenced to life imprisonment last January. His appeal was dismissed. He is serving his sentence at one of the country’s most secure prisons, 145 kilometres south of Denver.

Last March, Jabarah filed a complained against U.S. justice and prison officials, blaming them for his depression and other health problems. In the complaint, he accused officials of withholding family mail, including a Koran, for up to 41 months.

“I know that he was objecting to mail restrictions,” Mr. Paul said. “He was not getting his mail, his mail was not going out, it would take forever to get mail that was mailed to him many, many, many months earlier.

“I think that that’s the basis for the hunger strike and I don’t know if it’s limited to just mail. I think there are several issues that are being violated by the Bureau of Prisons,” he said. Canadian consular officials are aware of the hunger strike, he added.

His father Mansour Jabarah, who now lives in Kuwait City, said in an e-mail that his son wanted to be able to phone his family and attend group prayers. “He and the other Muslims in his section would like to be able to pray together, especially Friday prayer

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Canada’s Obamacare Precedent

Governments always ration care by making you wait. That can be deadly.

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.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Berlusconi: I’ll Sue El Pais and Repubblica

(AGI) — Rome, 5 Jun. — “I am going to proceed with legal action and a civil damages case against El Pais and Repubblica,” which “used trickery to publish the pictures” in the Spanish newspaper. Pictures that “constitute a criminal offence”, announced Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to Matrrix.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Brown Plan to Reform UK Politics

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has set out wide-ranging proposals to “clean up” and modernise British politics in an effort to reassert his authority.

He promised a consultation on changing the voting system — but he said there were “no plans” for a referendum on this issue before the next election.

He also pledged tougher sanctions for MPs guilty of misconduct, including the power for constituents to recall MPs.

Tory leader David Cameron said the “real change” needed was an election.

And he accused Mr Brown of trying to “fix” the electoral system in his party’s favour by scrapping the current first-past-the-post system, which allowed voters to get rid of “weak, divided and incompetent governments and that is what we should be doing now”.

He said proportional representation was a “recipe for weak coalition governments” and Mr Brown had only started talking about it “because he fears he is going to lose”.

Expenses scandal

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg — whose party has long argued for electoral reform — welcomed Mr Brown’s “deathbed conversion” to the cause “from the man who has blocked change at every opportunity for the last 12 years”.

The SNP and Plaid Cymru are to hold a debate on calling a general election now, backed by the Tories and Lib Dems.

KEY PROPOSALS

MP code of conduct Independent regulation Electoral reform Complete Lords reform Recall bad MPs Written constitution Lower voting age Extend freedom of information

But Justice Secretary Jack Straw said the scandal about MP expenses has increased the public’s appetite for further constitutional change.

He told the BBC News channel: “The responsibility of this House of Commons, of the people in the House of Commons, is to sort out the expenses scandal first.

“It’s completely disingenuous of David Cameron to say have a general election — that will sort it out. It won’t sort it out at all. It’s a precondition of having a general election to sort it out.”

Mr Brown made his statement to MPs on constitutional reform as he seeks to regain the political initiative after a week of turmoil.

‘Seize the moment’

In his statement, Mr Brown confirmed plans for a new independent Parliamentary standards authority and a new bill to be introduced before MPs break up for the summer recess setting out a legally binding code of conduct for MPs.

This would set out what the public could expect from their MPs and make it easier to expel those who misbehaved.

He also pledged a crackdown on misconduct in the House of Lords and vowed to press ahead with democratic reform of the Upper Chamber and he promised to give urgent consideration to lowering the voting age.

He said Labour MP Tony Wright, chair of the public administration committee, would work with a cross-party Parliamentary commission to discuss constitutional reform.

This will look at other reforms such as making select committees “more democratic” and a mechanism to allow the subjects of petitions handed in to Downing Street to be debated in the House.

He also pledged to consult on extending Freedom of Information laws to bodies spending public money that were not currently covered by it and said official papers would be published after 20 rather than the current 30 years — excluding Cabinet papers and material relating to the Royal Family.

‘Stand together’

A review headed by Daily Mail editor Paul Dacre recommended lifting the veil of secrecy after 15 years.

In the midst of all the rancour and recrimination, let us seize the moment to lift our politics to a higher standard

Prime Minister Gordon Brown

Mr Brown repeated his commitment to consult on a written constitution — something he said he personally supported — and House of Lords reform.

He told MPs: “In the midst of all the rancour and recrimination, let us seize the moment to lift our politics to a higher standard.

“In the midst of doubt, let us revive confidence. Let us stand together because on this at least I think we all agree: that Britain deserves a political system equal to the hopes and character of our people.

“Let us differ on policy; that is inevitable. But let us stand together for integrity and democracy; that is now more essential than ever.”

Tory leader David Cameron said he supported some of the proposed measures such as a Parliamentary standards authority and more power for local government.

But he repeated his call for unelected regional quangos to be scrapped and the number of MPs to be cut.

‘Prepared to do it’

He said Mr Brown had promised constitutional change before and “nothing ever happens” and his current enthusiasm for it was merely a “relaunch distraction strategy” designed to get Mr Brown out of trouble.

Mr Cameron said a Tory government would introduce true reforms such as referendums on council tax increases and the “right of initiative” — allowing voters to propose new laws.

He also called on the PM to back select committee elections to end the power of prime ministerial “patronage”, adding: “I am prepared to do it, is he prepared to do it?”.

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg said he welcomed many of the changes proposed by Mr Brown but said they had to be put in place before the next general election rather to put out to yet more committees.

Anything else would be a “betrayal of the British people who are angry and demanding that we change the rotten way we do politics for good,” added the Lib Dem leader.

On electoral reform, Mr Brown said he did not favour proportional representation for Westminster elections as he did not want to break the link between MPs and constituencies.

But he said a debate on whether the vote system should change.

Ministers are thought to have discussed an “alternative vote” system to replace the current first-past-the-post method.

Campaign group Unlock Democracy said they welcomed Mr Brown’s “rhetoric” on constitutional reform but it was no substitute for action.

Unlock Democracy director Alexandra Runswick said: “This afternoon, Gordon Brown was reduced to performing the role of a bingo caller, listing a whole series of potential reforms yet offering almost nothing of substance

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



France and Italy Renege on Pledges to Aid Africa

Britain praised, but only a third of G8 Gleneagles money has been paid out

The rich world is failing to deliver on its side of an historic pact to improve the living conditions of millions of people in Africa, according to an assessment released today.

Only a third of the aid promised by the G8 group of industrialised nations has made its way to sub-Saharan Africa. This year’s Data report describes the collective G8 assessment as “grim”, blaming “exceptionally poor progress” by France and Italy, which were singled out as being responsible for 80 per cent of the funding shortfalls.

Almost a decade since they were set, the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, designed to eradicate extreme poverty by 2010, remain out of reach and rich nations are in danger of “defaulting” on their commitments..

The G8’s self-imposed deadline is 18 months away but only $7bn (£4.3bn) of the $21.5bn in aid that was promised at the Gleneagles summit in 2005 has been delivered, according to One, the authors of the Data report.

The auditors are scathing in their assessment of France under President Nicolas Sarkozy and Italy under Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. “Certain members of the G8 are meeting and even beating the targets they set for themselves”, says the report, which praises Germany and Britain, but “France’s delivery is disappointing, and Italy’s performance is an utter failure”.

Foreign investment and trade has fallen as a result of the financial crisis. But the Africa Progress Panel, whose members include Kofi Annan and Graça Machel, argues in a separate report that the crisis has increased the importance of assisting those most in need.

Mr Annan, a former UN secretary general, says that poor Africans are hit by the costs of globalisation but “decoupled” from its benefits. After two years in which food and fuel crises dominated concerns on Africa, the US-led slump has hit African exports. In words that echo the effects of climate change, Mr Annan states: “Those who have contributed least to the crises have been affected most.” African growth, which was forecast at 6.7 per cent for 2009, has been slashed to 1.7 per cent.

The reports, deliberately released back to back, also highlight the irony that aid flows have been curtailed just as real progress was being made..

Successes included extending Aids treatment to nearly three million people, reducing deaths from malaria, and ensuring 34 million more children attend school. For the first time in nearly 50 years, the economies of sub-Saharan Africa grew in 2008 by more than 5 per cent for a second consecutive year.

Germany, which has now surpassed France in terms of aid to Africa, is praised for expanding its assistance. Britain is singled out “as the first G8 country to meet the UN goal of spending 0.7 per cent of national income in overseas development assistance”.

The reviews mention the need for good governance but do not seriously address concerns over the impact of aid flows into corrupt African regimes.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi in Rome

Visit caps rapprochement with former colonial rulers

(ANSA) — Rome, June 10 — Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi arrived in Rome for a historic three-day visit Wednesday capping a rapprochement between the north African country and its former colonial rulers.

Ringed by his all-female bodyguards, Gaddafi was greeted at Ciampino Airport by Premier Silvio Berlusconi who said: “a long and painful chapter in our history is closed”.

The Libyan leader hailed “this generation of Italians, who have resolved the questions of the past with extreme courage”.

Gaddafi arrived with a photo pinned to his breast of the Libyan resistance leader who fought Italians during the Fascist occupation of the country.

The large black-and-white photo of ‘Lion of the Desert’ Omar Mukhtar sat among Gaddafi’s array of medals.

Libya was first invaded by Italy in 1911 and occupied by Mussolini’s Fascists from 1930 until 1943.

Mukhtar was hanged at the peak of the so-called ‘Reign of Terror’ in 1931.

A frail and elderly man who followed Gaddafi down the airplane steps was identified as Mukhtar’s descendant Mohamed Omar Mukhtar.

Despite this gesture, Gaddafi hailed last year’s cooperation and friendship accord which has led to Libya taking back rescued immigrants in a policy criticised by human rights organisations.

Under the accord, Italy will pay Libya $200 million over 25 years to fund various projects including the Italian construction of a coastal highway linking it with Egypt and Tunisia. Rome will also clear Libya of landmines left from the colonial period. The claims of 20,000 Italians expelled by Gaddafi from Libya in 1970 are also addressed in the accord. The treaty also opened to the door to more investments in Italy by the oil-rich North African country. As is customary, Gaddafi will stay in a giant Beduin tent, which has been set up in Rome’s vast Villa Doria Pamphli park, where the Libyan leader is expected to receive visitors. After talks with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, Gaddafi was set to confer with Berlusconi late Wednesday afternoon.

Leftwing Italian Senators were the first to protest the visit, saying they would boycott an address to the upper house Thursday.

A range of other protests against Gaddafis human rights record are planned and security is tight in the Italian capital.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi in Rome: Democrats Will Not Attend Speech to Senate

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 10 — Senators belonging to Italy’s Democratic Party (PD) will not be present tomorrow at around 11am, when the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, will speak in his role as president of the African Union. The decision came out of the meeting of the group of PD senators. It is understood that the group’s president Anna Finocchiaro is to write a letter to the Speaker of the Senate, Renato Schifani, explaining the reasons for the decisision. In particular, it is understood that Finocchiaro will point out that the conference of party whips has always been unanimous when particularly important decisions need to be made, such as the case of Gaddafi’s speech to the Senate. In fact, during the conference of party whips yesterday, the PD group, represented by vice president Nicola Latorre, voted in favour of Gaddafi’s speech to the Senate. The only member to vote against was president of the Senators belonging to the Italia dei Valori party, Felice Belisario. Today, People of Freedom (PdL) party representative Benedetto Della Vedova also expressed his opposition to the speech. “Two years ago, despite requests by hundreds of members of parliament, the Dalai Lama, who was visiting Italy, was not allowed to speak in the House, because protocol, precedent and the sense of political appropriateness advised against a step of this kind”. Magdi Cristiano Allam, a convert from Islam and a Union of the Centre (UDC) member of the European Parliament expressed his opposition to the speech in the Senate, and to the permission for Gaddafi to pitch a tent in Villa Pamphili. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Black Woman Elected Mayor in North

Milan, 9 June (AKI) — A black woman backed by the anti-immigrant Northern League has been elected mayor of the small Italian town of Viggiu close to the Swiss border. Sandy Cane, elected in local elections held across Italy at the weekend, won by a slim margin of only 38 votes.

The 48-year-old mayor will govern the town and surrounding district of Valceresio, on the border of Varesotto and the Swiss canton of Ticino.

The daughter of an American soldier and a woman from Viggiu who emigrated to northern France, Cane was born in Springfield in the US state of Massachusetts.

She told Adnkronos that the Northern League had “welcomed her warmly” and that she “was in love with Viggiu”.

“In Italy I have been insulted for the colour of my skin only once, by a drunk guy in a nightclub,” she said.

Cane was backed by the Northern League and prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom coalition, elected with 28.2 percent of the vote.

“I am very happy to have been elected, even though it has been a tough fight — I won by 38 votes,” she said.

“I became a candidate because I love Viggiu, for me it is fantastic, it is my city.”

Cane spent the first ten years of her life in the United States and moved to Viggiu in 1971 after her parents divorced.

“As a child it was fantastic because I could go everywhere, not like Springfield,” she said. “I always lived in Viggiu until about five or six years ago when I had to move for work reasons.”

Now she said the town which she described as “the pearl of the Varesotto” province was dirty and did not attract any visitors any more.

“I want to bring it back to life,” Cane said. “The first thing I want to do is clean the town and then little by little create shows and tours to rediscover Viggiu.”

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



Romanian Judges Bar Populist MEP

One of Romania’s most flamboyant politicians has been barred from taking his seat in the European Parliament because he is facing a police inquiry.

Gigi Becali, a former shepherd who made a fortune in land deals, is accused of attacking thieves who stole his car.

Judges upheld a travel ban imposed on him while the case is investigated.

He says he intends to travel to Brussels to begin his five-year term anyway, and has challenged the Romanian authorities to arrest him there.

Public sympathy

Mr Becali — a devout Christian who owns Romania’s biggest football club Steaua Bucharest — got into trouble with the police earlier this year when a group thieves stole his car and demanded a ransom for its return.

He initially paid the ransom, but the thieves claim they were then trapped, roughed up and dumped outside Bucharest by Mr Becali’s men.

The thieves took their complaint to the police, and Mr Becali was arrested.

He announced his candidacy for the European Parliament from his prison cell — though he has since been freed.

Mr Becali — who is sometimes described as a Robin Hood figure in Romania — said he would travel to Brussels regardless of the judge’s ruling.

The BBC’s Eastern and Central Europe correspondent, Nick Thorpe, says many Romanians see him as a victim of crime rather than a perpetrator.

Sympathy about the case undoubtedly helped him to win a seat in Brussels for the nationalist Greater Romania Party, our correspondent says.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Saramago vs Silvio: Nobel Laureate Rails After Italian Publishers Axe Book

By Elizabeth Nash in Madrid

Jose Saramago has launched a blistering assault on Silvio Berlusconi, whose publishing house has dropped the Portuguese Nobel laureate’s latest offering because it describes the Italian prime minister as a “delinquent”.

The Einaudi publishing house, which is part of Mr Berlusconi’s Mondadori empire, has published all Saramago’s works in Italian for 20 years. But it declined to publish El Cuaderno (The Notebook), a compilation of Mr Saramago’s blog entries, because it contained “accusations that would be condemned in any court”.

The offending passage reads: “In the land of the Mafia and the Camorra, how important is the proven fact that the prime minister is a delinquent?”

Mr Saramago, who won the Nobel literature prize in 1998, said yesterday he was relieved to be no longer contributing to Mr Berlusconi’s fortune.

The 86-year-old then let rip: “I find it strange that a man like that who uses the worst methods and wins millions of votes hasn’t produced a social movement of revulsion in protest at the simple fact that he’s ruined the prestige of his country,” he told El Pais. “How much longer must we put up with him?”

Mr Saramago, long a scourge of the establishment, moved to Spain in 1991, after Portuguese authorities tried to censor his work.

El Cuaderno, which has already appeared in Portuguese and Spanish, lashes out against George W Bush, Tony Blair, the Pope, Israel and Wall Street.

Another Italian publisher has already snapped up the work

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Suspects in German Terror Plan to Confess

DUESSELDORF, Germany — Four men accused of belonging to a radical Islamic terror cell that plotted to attack U.S. targets in Germany announced during their trial on Tuesday that they are prepared to confess to some or all of the charges against them.

Adem Yilmaz, an alleged member of the group, was the first to announce during the 15th day of the trial that he wanted to confer with his three co-defendants and then offer a confession. Yilmaz said through his defense attorney, Ricarda Lang, that he wanted to “explain comprehensively.” Lang said the lengthy trial had influenced his change of mind: “He’s bored.”

Judge Ottmar Breidling allowed a recess, while the defendants conferred under the watch of federal police.

Fritz Gelowicz, the alleged ringleader of the group that allegedly was planning bombings for the fall of 2007, said he also wanted to confess and would then submit to questioning. “There will be surprises,” said his defense attorney, Dirk Uden.

But it could be two weeks before such confessions are given, since the trial is not set to resume until June 23.

Gelowicz, 29, and co-defendant Daniel Martin Schneider, 22, are German converts to Islam. They and Adem Yilmaz, 29, a Turk living in Germany, and Attila Selek, a 23-year-old German national, are suspected of operating as a German cell of the radical Islamic Jihad Union — a group the U.S.. State Department says was responsible for coordinated bombings outside the U.S. and Israeli embassies in Uzbekistan in July 2004.

Prosecutors allege that they were plotting bombing attacks in Germany against American citizens and facilities.

Prosecutors said the group was considering attacks in many cities, including Frankfurt, Dortmund, Duesseldorf, Cologne, Stuttgart, Munich and Ramstein — home of a large U.S. Air Force base — which were to be carried out before Germany’s parliament voted in October, 2007, to extend the country’s commitment of troops to Afghanistan.

Gelowicz, Schneider and Yilmaz all were arrested in Germany on Sept. 4, 2007, and have been held in custody ever since. Selek was arrested a month later in Turkey. They face charges of membership in a terrorist organization, preparing bombing attacks and conspiracy to commit murder and a bombing attack — which together carry a 10-year maximum sentence.

Schneider faces an additional charge of attempted murder, which carries a possible life sentence, because he is alleged to have fired a police officer’s gun in a tussle during his arrest. No one was injured.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Law Lords Ban Use of Secret Evidence

Blow to anti-terror control orders as lords rule process breaches human rights

The controversial use of control orders to limit the freedom of terrorist suspects without a trial has been dealt a serious legal blow after law lords ruled the use of secret evidence breached human rights legislation.

In a unanimous decision, a panel of nine law lords found in favour of three Libyan men, who argued that the Government’s refusal to give any details of the evidence against them made a fair hearing impossible. The men have not been named for legal reasons.

While the control orders against the men have not been quashed, their cases will have to be heard again. But the Government now faces having to lift orders granted using secret evidence. Suspects can be banned from meeting certain people, stopped from using mobile phones or computers, or even forced to adhere to a strict 16-hour home curfew under the orders.

They were introduced in 2005 after the law lords ruled that the previous practice of locking up foreign terrorist suspects who had not been charged with an offence breached their human rights. There are 17 terrorist suspects who are currently subjected to control orders, six of whom are British citizens.

Lord Philips of Worth Matravers, the senior law lord, said: “A trial procedure can never be considered fair if a party to it is kept in ignorance of the case against him.” Alan Johnson, the newly installed Home Secretary, called the ruling “extremely disappointing”, adding that it would make it more difficult to protect the public from terrorism.

“All control orders will remain in force for the time being and we will continue to seek to uphold them in the courts. In the meantime, we will consider this judgment and our options carefully,” he said.

The control orders have had a troubled existence since being introduced in 2005. An original power to impose an 18-hour home curfew on suspects was ruled to breach the Human Rights Act by the law lords in 2007. Human rights campaigners said yesterday’s ruling was a major victory. Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, called for an end to the orders. “I can think of no better way for the Prime Minister to make a fresh start for his Government than to abandon the cruel and counter-productive punishments without trial instituted by his predecessor,” she said.

The ruling has also increased the pressure on the Government to allow the use of intercept evidence, including information obtained by monitoring phone calls and email accounts, in British courts.

“It is now a matter of extreme urgency that the British Government makes it possible to use intercept evidence in terrorism cases,” said David Davis, the former shadow home secretary. “This will allow conventional British courts to lock up those people who are real terrorists on the basis of real evidence after a proper trial, rather than continue with a system that has failed both legally and practically.”

Chris Huhne, the home affairs spokesman for the Liberal Democrats, also called for intercept evidence to be made permissible, calling the use of control orders a “fundamental infringement of human rights”.

But Mr Johnson said: “We have put strong measures in place to try to ensure that our reliance on sensitive material does not prejudice the right of individuals subject to control orders to a fair trial.”

How does a control order restrict a suspect’s life?

Q. What are control orders, and what are they designed to do?

A. They allow the imposition of restrictions on any person suspected of involvement in any terrorism-related activity.

Q. How do the restrictions work, and what do they stop people doing?

A. House curfews for up to 16 hours a day; control of internet and telephone access; electronic tagging; bans on foreign travel; daily reporting to police; bans on associating with certain people.

Q. When were control orders brought in?

A. In March 2005 after a House of Lords ruling that holding terror suspects without charge or trial was in breach of their human rights. The Lords ruled against a provision of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 — introduced following 9/11 — which allowed foreign terror suspects to be detained indefinitely. Ministers had claimed that such detainees could not be prosecuted because a trial would put secret intelligence at risk, so control orders were introduced to restrict their movements.

Q. Do all control orders work in the same way?

A. No, there are two types. Non-derogating control orders do not require the Government to opt out of article five of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects the right to liberty. These last for 12 months and can be renewed each year. Derogating orders infringe the right to liberty and require an opt-out. They have never been used.

Q. How many people are under control orders?

A. At least 35 people have been made the subject of non-derogating control orders.

Q. What do critics of the orders say about them?

A. Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, says: “Control orders constitute permanent punishment without trial and one of the worst legacies of the ‘war on terror’. The innocent can be placed under permanent house arrest on the basis of secret intelligence, possibly flowing from torture — the guilty may easily remove their plastic tags, disappear and do their worst.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: NHS ‘Faces Huge Budget Shortfall’

The health service will face the most severe and sustained financial shortfall in its history after 2011, a report by NHS managers warns.

The NHS Confederation report says the health service in England will not survive unchanged, the BBC has learned.

Managers at its conference will be told they face an “extremely challenging” financial outlook.

Health Secretary Andy Burnham said NHS funding had tripled since 1997, putting it on a strong financial footing.

The report, to be published on Wednesday, warns any modest cash increases could be outstripped by rising costs within the health service.

This would leave the NHS in England facing a real-terms reduction of between £8bn and 10bn over the three years after 2011.

‘Urgent action’

The cost of new treatments and the ageing population are two of the factors causing the inflation in the health service, the report says.

The shortfall means a cut in staff numbers is unavoidable and it may be time for a cap on the budget for new drugs to be considered, it adds.

The confederation says urgent action needs to be taken to find innovative ways of making the service more efficient before the financial pressure increases.

Unions representing NHS staff are warning that short term cuts and increased use of private companies is not the answer.

The head of policy at the NHS Confederation, Nigel Edwards, said: “Having had seven years of plenty it now looks like seven years of famine from 2011 onwards.

“We are really going to have to think very deeply and carefully about everything we do and subject it to very rigorous scrutiny — and enlist all of our doctors, our front line clinical staff in rethinking the way we do things.

“This is a situation affecting health systems all across Europe as governments experience a mismatch of income tax and expenditure budgets.

“The NHS in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland face the same issues this report outlines for England and the whole system must make sure it is adequately prepared to keep providing a high quality of care to patients.”

The confederation warns against previous strategies such as “slash and burn” indiscriminate savings, letting waiting lists grow or allowing health service pay to fall out of line with the rest of the economy.

“Pull more funding from the NHS and we will be doing surgery in camping tents with pen-knives and vodka for anaesthetic”

Dr Rufus Herring, Exeter

But it says it may be time to look again at the idea of putting a financial limit on what NICE can recommend to the NHS.

It says if the health service can not find solutions it could open the way to more challenging debates, such as the idea of limiting NHS care to a basic package that might exclude care such as IVF, homeopathy and elements of dentistry.

The budget for the NHS in England in 2010-11 is forecast to be just under £110bn, so the predicted shortfall between rising costs and the budget is substantial.

‘Maximise efficiency’

The chief executive for the health service in England, David Nicholson, has warned the service that closing the gap could, in practice, translate into a need for efficiency savings of up to £15bn in the three years after 2011.

Health Secretary Andy Burnham admitted that the health service would face a “challenge” over the next five to 10 years — but said raising concerns of closures or job cuts was “completely premature”.

He said: “The NHS is well-placed to deal with the tough economic times ahead. I will make it my priority to focus the NHS on prevention, quality and innovation.

“That way it will be best placed to get the most out of every pound the public puts in and better placed to maximise efficiency.”

Shadow Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: “We are committed to real terms increases in spending on the NHS because as our population ages demand will increase.

“But if we are going to improve the quality of healthcare in this country we will need to make substantial improvements using current resources. The idea of getting more for less must apply in the NHS just as in any other public service.”

Health service unions are concerned about what they believe will be a financially challenging period ahead for the NHS.

After years of significant expansion the NHS is unlikely to be able to simply grow to meet demand, raising the prospect of more difficult decisions ahead.

Both Unison and the BMA have expressed concern that a drive for greater efficiency could lead to greater use of private sector companies to provide NHS care.

BMA chairman Dr Hamish Meldrum, said: “The imminent funding crisis could be very dangerous for the NHS, and has the potential to seriously threaten patient services. We agree with the NHS Confederation that difficult choices will have to be made.”

In Scotland any reduction in the NHS budget in England would be reflected by a reduction in the overall government budget under the Barnett funding formula. It will then be for ministers to decide whether that cut should be applied to the health service.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Death Sentence for Former Anti-Islamic Leader

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 9 — Mohamed Gharbi, former head of the ‘Patriots’, civil self-defence groups which took up arms in the ‘90s in order to defend themselves from Islamic militias, has been sentenced to death by the Court of Guelma for the assassination of the ex-emir of the armed wing of the FIS, the Islamic Salvation Front, Ali Merad. “It is a demonstration,” writes the El Watan newspaper, “of the degree of power which lies in the hands of ex-terrorists who wanted to provide an exemplary punishment to this ex-head of the ‘patriots’, who had long fought against them”. Gharbi, now 72 years old, led the self-defence group in the eastern Algerian region of Souk Ahras from 1994. Gharbi killed Merad in 2001, but was released from prison due to amnesty granted by the Civil Concord. The ‘patriot’, continues El Watan, was unable to accept the continuous provocations of the emir — a freed assassin who had returned home with “all honour” and had threatened Gharbi’s life on multiple occasions. After having notified the police several times, Gharbi killed him in front of his own house. Yesterday’s verdict, received by cheers of joy by the numerous ‘penitents’ present in the court-room, follows the previously allotted sentences of 20 years, and life imprisonment. The death penalty is normally ruled with the defendant in absentia, almost never in his/her presence, as was the case with Gharbi. The country’s last execution was held in 1993, when seven terrorists accused of attempting an attack on the Algiers airport were killed by a firing squad. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Barry Rubin: Stopping Settlement Construction Won’t Build Peace

Although somewhat quieted by the successful Netanyahu-Obama meeting, a predominant theme in current talk about U.S. Middle East policy is that there will soon be a U.S.-Israel confrontation. This is so expected that there are daily misinterpretations or fabrications of events implying some anti-Israel step by the Obama administration.

Such things might well-almost inevitably will-happen at some point. But by the end of May 2009, there had still been no material action hostile to Israel undertaken by the administration.

What is curious, and counterproductive for the administration, is the one area which might be the scene of direct confrontation: the settlement issue.

Israel does not start new settlements. The issue is a narrower one: adding a building or even rooms or floors onto buildings in existing settlements. A second potential issue is over construction in the east Jerusalem area.

So far, there is a consensus in Israel that the same policy as has been held since 1993 should continue: no new settlements but construction on existing settlements.

From the administration’s standpoint, making this the big push doesn’t make sense and is likely to lead to looking foolish in the future no matter how it comes out.

First, if Israel refuses, is the United States going to apply disproportionate diplomatic force on the issue? Will huge threats or actions be deployed to make a small change?

Second, there is no implication of an enforced reciprocity. That is, Israel is not being offered anything for making such a concession on a policy held by the last six prime ministers. The United States, for example, urged the Palestinian Authority (PA) to stop incitement for murdering Israelis in its media and other institutions but there was no statement that this was a high priority or that the United States would punish the PA for not doing so.

How, then, will the United States get Israel to take steps of much greater importance it will want in future if a lot of political capital is used up on this one?…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



Business: ICE Mission to Gaza to Promote Collaboration

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 4 — Promoting direct collaboration between Italian and Palestinian companies in the sectors of logistics and transport, food and construction through projects financed by international organisations. This is the objective, from June 9 to June 12, of the Italian Trade Commission (ICE) designed trade mission in the Gaza Strip, for the visit of the Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs, Stefania Craxi. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Nazi Salutes Cause Row at Hebrew U.

A student organization that promotes Zionism on campus is fuming after its members were given the Nazi salute by left-wing students during student elections at the Hebrew University’s Mount Scopus campus last week.

Members of the Im Tirtzu (If You Will It) group said that as they made their rounds on last Tuesday, singing songs and waving the national flag, a member of another student organization — Campus L’kulanu (Campus For All) — approached them and made the stiff-arm Nazi salute as they passed.

“We were walking by, singing songs like “Am Yisrael Hai” and “Yerushalaim Shel Zahav,” and she stood nearby making the salute,” said Amit Barak, the deputy director of Im Tirtzu, who sent a letter concerning the incident to the university’s President Menachem Magidor and a number of Knesset members.

“Later in the day, another member of their group did the same thing,” Barak said. “He approached us and made the salute — it was shocking, and a lot of other students, who aren’t members of either organization, were looking on in horror.”

“Later on, other members of their group also tried to block our path as we were walking,” he continued. “It was all very provocative, and I could tell they were trying to provoke a violent reaction.”

Campus L’kulanu, which is made up of students who support the Meretz and Hadash political parties, among others, did not offer an explanation on Tuesday. One member declined comment, saying he had not been on campus during the incident, while phone calls from The Jerusalem Post to members who were on campus that day were not returned.

In a written response, however, a Hebrew University spokeswoman said that one of the students involved had come to the Dean’s Office to apologize for the incident.

“After receiving the complaint from the Im Tirtzu organization, the student approached the Dean’s Office on his own initiative, and asked to apologize. The student claimed that his actions were done as an individual, and he realized it had been a mistake.”

Barak said neither he nor his organization had been informed of the apology, and rejected the idea that the saluting student was “acting alone.”

“I remember both of them,” he said. “It was a girl first and then the guy who’s apparently apologized. She was wearing a Campus L’kulanu shirt while she gave the Nazi salute, I can’t remember if he was or not. But it doesn’t matter, they obviously weren’t acting alone.”

In his letter to Magidor, Barak also said that regardless of any political point the students may have been trying to make, “the use of Nazi symbols in a place like Israel, where the Holocaust is still a very sensitive issue, offends the feelings of many people and is extremely intolerable.”

Barak also cited a bill that was proposed in the Knesset in 2007, which would have prohibited the use of Nazi symbols except for educational, historical or other informational purposes, or to protest against the racist nature of Nazism itself. That bill, which was sponsored by then-Labor MK Colette Avital, wasn’t approved, but Barak wrote in his letter that to the Campus L’kulanu students, it would make little difference if it had.

“I am sure, regardless of the bill or any other bill like it, these students would continue to act in an offensive way that expresses such a lack of values,” he wrote.

The Hebrew University itself has come under fire in recent days, as its annual Board of Governors meeting has drawn increased criticism from right-wing groups saying professors at the institution are increasingly anti-Israel.

An ad sponsored by the group Isracampus that appeared in Monday’s Post called on the board of Governors to become aware of “what is really taking place inside the Hebrew University.”

The ad goes on to say that professors and lecturers at the university “endorse terrorist attacks against Jews, call for international boycotts against Israel, collaborate with anti-Semites and openly call for Israel’s destruction,” among other allegations.

Isracampus did not return e-mails from the Post on Tuesday, but the university addressed the issue in an e-mail.

“The university will not respond to baseless claims made by organizations or individuals via paid advertisements that are published in the press,” it read. “If the university happens to receive any legitimate complaints, it will handle these accordingly.

“The university is very proud to allow freedom of speech on campus — which includes the voicing of opinions from across the political spectrum — as long as it is in accordance with Israeli law.”

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Obama Confronting Israel to Appease Arab World?

‘Part of larger strategy of putting the screws on to build relations with Muslims’

President Obama’s administration has been “putting the screws” on Israel as part of a larger strategy of enhancing U.S. ties with the Arab world, according to an assessment from a senior aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“Generating this controversy and pressure on Israel regarding settlements right before his address last week to the Muslim world was a way for Obama to spruce up his credentials with the Arabs,” said the aide, who spoke to WND on condition of anonymity.

“This seems to be part of a larger and even long-term strategy of putting the screws on Israel to help endear the U.S. to the Arab world,” the aide said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



PNA Captures Female Hamas Bomb Suspects in West Bank

(ANSAmed) — RAMALLAH, JUNE 9 — Three women believed to have ties to the armed wing of Hamas and suspected of wanting to carry out suicide bombings against Palestinian National Authority (PNA) police have been arrested in the West Bank in the last few hours by PNA police. The news was announced by a spokesperson in Ramallah, who said that the suspected kamikaze bombings were already being planned. The episode forms part of a state of renewed tension between the PNA (which controls the West Bank under moderate President Mahmoud Abbas, a.k.a Abu Mazen) and the hard-line Muslims of Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip. Indeed, groups of Hamas militiamen in the West Bank have been hit by Abbas’s forces over the last few days in a number of raids leading to bloody fire fights. Hamas has called the PNA’s actions as proof of their rival’s alleged “complicity” with the “Zionist enemy”, casting further shadow on the tortuous process of Palestinian reconciliation being mediated by the Egyptian government. Also today in the West Bank, an Israeli military raid ended with the arrest of 12 Palestinians including two presumed Hamas activists from whom were confiscated weapons and ammo near Hebron. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



S. Craxi in West Bank With 40 Italian Businesses

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 9 — Italy’s Foreign Ministry Undersecretary, Stefania Craxi, is set to undertake an economic mission to the Middle East, but one which also has “a political significance, because political peace and economic peace must go together”. Craxi and around 40 Italian businesses will set off for the trip around Israel and the West Bank on 11 June. The aim of the trip is to facilitate contact between Italian small and medium-sized businesses who intend to invest in the region (particularly in the Jenin industrial area) and Palestinian and Israeli businesspeople operating in sectors from textiles to agriculture, mining, infrastructure and transport. Italy, convinced that commitment to the peace process must go hand-in-hand with the economic development of the future Palestinian state, thereby intends to “show the way” for the ‘Marshall Plan for Palestine”, which Italy will also re-launch at the G8, said Craxi. Tomorrow in Ramallah, Craxi and the president of the Italian trade commission (ICE), Umberto Vattani, and the president of Simest, Giancarlo Lanna, will take part in a seminar on the “Economic Opportunities in Palestine and the Gaza Strip”. The following day in Jenin, Craxi will address a business convention being held as part of the EuroMidBridge initiative — a logistical corridor running between northern Europe and the Middle East, and for which Italy is financing a feasibility study. Alongside such business-orientated meetings, Craxi will also hold political talks in Ramallah with the President of the PNA, Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) and Prime Minister Salam Fayyad, whilst in Jersulem the undersecretary will meet with her Israeli counterpart, Daniel Ayalon. Craxi’s visit to the Territories will also provide the chance to launch — with PNA Health Minister Abu Moghli — an oncology centre in Beit Jalia (West Bank), which has been partly financed by Italy. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


EU Human Rights Court Rules Against Turkey in Abuse Case

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 9 — The European Court of Human Rights, or ECHR, ruled Turkey had denied a citizen her “right to life” by failing to prevent her murder by her son-in-law and ordered it to pay damages. It was the first time the court ruled against a state for failing to protect a citizen against domestic violence, Turkish broadcasters reported. Turkey was also found to have violated the convention on human rights which prohibits torture, inhumane treatment and discrimination in Opuz vs. Turkey. It was ordered to pay 36,500 euros ($50,670) to the applicant, whose ex-husband killed her mother, according to a ruling on the ECHR’s website. “The general and discriminatory judicial passivity in Turkey created a climate that was conducive to domestic violence,” the court said in the statement. As many as half of Turkish women face violence in the home, Amnesty International has said, and dozens of women are killed in so-called “honor killings” each year. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Reports: Russia Says Bank Problems Delay Bushehr

MOSCOW — The head of the Russian company building Iran’s first nuclear power plant said Wednesday that it is unclear when the reactor will be switched on, Russian news agencies reported, potentially casting doubt on Iranian hopes for a startup before the end of the year.

The nearly finished plant near the city of Bushehr is part of a nuclear program Iran says is purely peaceful but the U.S. and Israel claim is meant to develop atomic weapons. Russia has close ties with Iran but also says the country must not acquire nuclear arms.

The refusal of some Russian banks to work with Iran has slowed the project by complicating financing, Interfax and state-run RIA-Novosti quoted the head of Atomstroiexport, the Russian state-run company building the plant, as saying.

“This causes delays … and this is certainly not Iran’s fault,” Interfax quoted Atomstroiexport chief Dan Belenky as saying. He did not name the banks or discuss details of the problem.

Atomstroiexport officials could not be immediately reached for comment, but company spokeswoman Olga Tsyleva said some Russian banks choose not to do business with Iran because of political risks, RIA-Novosti reported.

Belenky suggested the problem was not severe, although it has forced Atomstroiexport to seek alternative ways of handling financing for the project. But he also said sluggish supplies of equipment from other countries, which company officials have mentioned before, were still a problem.

“I think it is too early to talk about specific dates for the startup. But we have quite tight deadlines,” Interfax quoted Belenky as saying.

Iran has said it aims to operate the reactor by the end of the year, and cast a test run in February as a major step toward starting it up.

The opening of the 1,000-megawatt light-water reactor, under construction for 14 years, has repeatedly been delayed by construction, supply and payment glitches that Russian officials insist have been purely technical.

But the delays have prompted speculation that Russia has used project as a lever to prod Iran into less recalcitrance in the face of international demands that it halt separate nuclear activity, such as uranium enrichment, that could lead to weapons development, .

The United States for years urged Russia to abandon the $1 billion deal to build Bushehr, citing concerns the cooperation could help Iran develop nuclear weapons. But American opposition to the plant eased when Iran agreed in 2005 to return spent fuel to Russia to ensure it can’t be reprocessed into plutonium

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Third of Turkish Women Report Abuse

ISTANBUL — A total of 34 percent of married women participating in a survey said they were victims of domestic violence while 88.6 percent of married male respondents said they had never engaged in physical violence with their spouse.

The study conducted by respected pollster Adil Gür’s A&G polling company showed the contradiction in the responses between men and women when it comes to domestic violence.

A&G spoke to 2,466 people face-to-face on Dec. 20-23 last year in 35 provinces around the country.

When asked about whether there was any domestic violence in their marriage, 88.6 percent of men and 63.6 percent of women said never. Among women, 25.1 percent said sometimes and 9.3 percent said always. When it came to men, 10.8 percent said sometimes and 0.7 percent said always.

According to the survey, there is a general trend when it comes to age and education, with the highest percentage of those facing or engaging in domestic violence being among those over the age of 44. 33 percent of elementary school graduates said there was domestic violence at home, with the figure dropping to 21 percent for high school graduates and 14.5 percent for university graduates.

Regionally, 40.1 percent in the Southeast said there was violence at home while 9.9 percent of those in the western Aegean region said the same.

When asked what they saw as a reason for divorce, 78.6 percent said cheating, 49.6 percent said domestic violence, 36 percent said failure to adhere to spousal responsibilities, 16.1 percent said pressure from in-laws, 11.2 percent said economic difficulties and 6.1 percent said health problems and the necessity of constant care.

When it came to cheating, 61.7 percent said their response would be a divorce, while 14.5 percent said they would kill their spouse. About 13 percent said they would give their spouse another chance, while 8.6 percent said they would be very upset but would put up with it. Among those married, those who would give their spouse another chance was higher than average while among singles, divorce and murder were above the norm.

Financial independence

Professor Nilüfer Narlı, the head of the Istanbul BahçeÅŸehir University Faculty of Sociology, said that when hypothetically asked whether violence could be a reason for divorce, most say yes but once married and facing the reality, violence drops as a cause for separation because of women’s lack of financial independence.

When it came to special anniversaries, Turkish women tend to be a little less punctual than men, with 32.1 percent of men saying they always remembered the special anniversaries while the figure was 27.9 percent for women.

On average, 29.8 percent said they always remembered special anniversaries, while 35.4 percent said they never did while 34.8 percent said they sometimes marked them. As the ages dropped and education level increased, the portion of those marking such days increased. When asked about their opinions on polygamy, 85.7 percent of the respondents said they were against it, while 7.3 percent said they were partially in support of it and 7 percent said they were fully for it.

Polygamy found more supporters in rural Anatolia and especially in the Southeast, where 70 percent said they were in support of it.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Support for Premier Erdogan’s Party in Decline, Poll

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 8 — In Turkey, support for the Premier Tayyip Erdogan’s pro-Islamic Justice and Development Party (AKP) is in decline. According to a poll conducted by secular newspaper Milliyet, support for the AKP (in power since 2002) has fallen to 36.9%. Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul’s party has lost two points since the local elections on March and ten points since political elections held two years ago, though support for Erdogan is still strong. The Premier is still the most popular politician in Turkey with 36% backing, followed by President Gul with 9.7% and Democratic Left Party (DSP) leader Mustafa Sarigul with 8.3%. The fourth most popular politician for readers of Milliyet is Deniz Baykal, the head of the major opposition party, the Republican People’s Party (CHP, secular, Ataturkist and social democratic). Among the reasons for AKP’s slide is mainly the management of the economic crisis by the government and a slowing of the reform process that should promote Turkey’s EU membership. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Must Speed Up Reforms to Keep EU Bid Alive, Rehn

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 5 — Turkey must speed up long-delayed reforms to keep its bid to join the European Union on track amid fatigue over expanding membership of the 27-nation bloc, the EU’s enlargement Commissioner, Olli Rehn said late Thursday, according to Turkish media reports. EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said there was “plenty of work” for Turkey to do on issues such as freedom of expression and the media, as well as trade union rights, if it wanted entry into the bloc. “Turkey needs to seriously resume reforms enhancing fundamental freedoms,” Rehn said in Washington, where he was meeting U.S. State Department and World Bank officials to discuss a range of issues, including Turkey. He said Turkey must adopt a law on trade unions respecting the standards of international labor organizations — a demand made for the past three years. “It was last promised in January and then by April and we have not seen it. Therefore we cannot open a chapter (negotiations) on social policy in employment as there is no agreement,” Rehn said. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Governments Urged to Protect Press Freedom

ISTANBUL — Forty-eight journalists from 19 countries, including Turkey, sign a charter on the role of governments in ensuring and protecting freedom of the press and the ability of journalists to perform their jobs without obstruction. The charter on press freedoms has been created over a period of two years and has been applauded by EU officials.

A charter has been created by some Europe-based journalists on the role of governments in ensuring and protecting freedom of the press and has received the backing of European Union officials.

The charter, the idea of which emerged in 2007, was signed on May 25 by 48 journalists from 19 countries, including some from Turkey. The charter formulates the main values that authorities should respect when dealing with journalists and is said to be the first European charter of its kind.

“We are very grateful to Viviane Reding [EU commissioner for Information Society and Media] for supporting unreservedly from the outset the idea of a European charter on freedom of the press. We therefore assume that the commission will itself comply with this charter and will contribute actively to ensuring its recognition throughout Europe. At the same time, we expect recognition of the charter to be made a condition for candidate countries in future accession negotiations. The charter’s main concern is at last to unify Europe journalistically and to enable all our colleagues to invoke its principles if press freedom is violated,” said Hans-Ulrich JÃrges, editor-in-chief of the German magazine Stern and initiator of the charter.

10 articles

The charter’s 10 articles outline basic principles that governments must respect when dealing with journalists.

The articles are as follows:

1. Freedom of the press is essential to a democratic society. All governments should uphold, protect and respect the diversity of journalistic media in all its forms and its political, social and cultural missions.

2. Censorship must be absolutely prohibited. There must be a guarantee that independent journalism in all media is free of persecution, repression and of political or regulatory interference by government. Press and online media should not be subject to state licensing.

3. The right of journalists and media to gather and disseminate information and opinions must not be threatened, restricted or be made subject to punishment.

4. The protection of journalistic sources shall be strictly upheld. Searches of newsrooms and other premises of journalists and the surveillance or interception of journalists’ communications with the aim of identifying sources of information or infringing on editorial confidentiality are unacceptable.

5. All states must ensure that the media enjoys the full protection of an independent judiciary system and the authorities while carrying out their role. This applies in particular to defending journalists and their staff from physical attack and harassment. Violations of these rights and any threats to violate these rights must be carefully investigated and punished by the judiciary.

6. The economic livelihood and independence of the media must not be endangered by the state, by state-controlled institutions or other organizations. The threat of economic sanctions is unacceptable. Private enterprise has to respect the independence of the media and refrain from exercising pressure and from trying to blur the lines between advertising and editorial content.

7. The state and state-controlled institutions shall not hinder the freedom of access of journalists and the media to information. They are obliged to support them in their mandate to provide information.

8. Media and journalists have a right to unimpeded access to all news and information sources, including those from abroad. For their reporting, foreign journalists must be provided with visas, accreditation and other required documents without delay.

9. The public of any state shall be granted free access to all national and foreign media and sources of information.

10. The state shall not restrict entry into the profession of journalism.

The European Charter on Freedom of the Press and the list of its signatories can be accessed at www.pressfreedom.eu

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Turkey: 20 Years for Murder, 28 Years for Murder Book

ISTANBUL — More than two years after Agos editor Hrant Dink was shot dead, a reporter stands trial for writing about the circumstances surrounding the murder. For his alleged crimes, he faces 28 years in prison, eight years more than what the murder suspect would serve if convicted.

A reporter who wrote a book about the intelligence failures before and after the murder of Hrant Dink, the editor-in-chief of Armenian weekly Agos, is facing a prison term of 28 years if found guilty. The chief murder suspect in the case could serve a maximum of 20 years if convicted.

Milliyet daily reporter Nedim Åžener’s book “Dink Murder and Intelligence Lies” focused on the intelligence deficiencies by security agencies before and after Dink was shot dead, leading to a police officer and three senior Police Department intelligence chiefs filing complaints against him.

Dink, who was prosecuted for insulting Turkishness, was killed in front of Agos’s office. The chief suspect, a teenage nationalist, is currently on trial along with several alleged accomplices who are accused of influencing the culprit.

Milliyet daily reported that the complaints have led the Istanbul Prosecutor’s Office to charge Åžener with publication of secret information and turning anti-terrorism officials into targets. The reporter faces a maximum prison term of 28 years if found guilty.

Åžener, speaking to Anatolia news agency on his way to the opening hearing yesterday, said he is facing a total of 28 years in prison if convicted in two cases on charges of obtaining classified documents and insulting government officials.

Åžener has two trials pending as a result of the complaints. Yesterday’s trial at the Istanbul Second Court was on violating official secrets. Åžener, who faces up to eight years in jail on this charge, defended himself by saying that the information in his book was from phone conversations that were made public on televisions and newspapers months before his book was printed. “These conversations are also on the Internet and can be found when one searches Google,” he said.

Åžener said the trial aimed at preventing the public from learning the facts about Dink’s murder and press freedom. He asked the court to find him not guilty. The judge decided to postpone the trial to another date for the defendant’s lawyers to prepare for the prosecutor’s case.

Milliyet Editor-in-Chief Sedat Ergin told Anatolia news agency his presence at court was to support not only Åžener but also press freedom in Turkey. “We are showing this solidarity in order to ensure press freedom in respected,” he said. The Turkish Journalists’ Association, or TGC, released a statement on the case, seeing it as “worrying” and a problem for democracy.

It said it was necessary to reassess a law that prosecuted a journalist for trying to uncover the facts behind Dink’s murder, reported Milliyet. “Expert journalists like Nedim Åžener uncovering crimes and making the facts public is a service to address the public’s anger about such crimes,” said the TGC. On the issue, Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review’s Editor-in-Chief David Judson said: “Institutions of free expression and individuals expressing themselves freely have collectively made great strides in recent years. That some institutions of the state lag behind in understanding the nature of these important democratic concepts in unfortunate. But we are confident at the Daily News that they will mature along with the rest of society.”

After the book’s release in January of this year, Muhittin Zenit, a police officer working at the intelligence division at Trabzon at the time Dink was assassinated, filed a criminal complaint about Åžener for “targeting personnel in service of fighting terrorism, obtaining secret documents, disclosing secret documents, violating the secrecy of communication and attempting to influence fair trial” through his book.

Case for three other accusations

After the investigation’s end, Prosecutor Selim Berna Altay charged Åžener with “making targets of the personnel in service of fighting terrorism, and obtaining and declaring secret information that is forbidden to be declared,” asking for a prison term of 20 years. Since they do not fall under his authority, Altay sent the dossier on “violation of the secrecy of communication” and “attempting to influence fair trial” to the Istanbul Second Court. In the meantime, it was also claimed the book contained the offense of “insulting governmental institutions,” and that too was added to the second investigation. Prosecutor Ä°smail Onaran handled this investigation and filed a second case against Åžener asking for his imprisonment for three to eight years.

There is another case ongoing in a Trabzon court against eight personnel from the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command who are accused neglecting their duties regarding Dink’s death. The accused are facing up to two years in prison if found guilty.

“Some of the security personnel that sued me are under investigation for neglecting their duty for Dink’s murder. They want to punish the journalist writing about the responsibilities of those people,” said Åžener.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Russia


Alarm in Baltic as Kremlin Seizes Control of Soviet Past

Medvedev bans the ‘falsification of history to the detriment of Russia’

In Russia it is not only the future that is unpredictable; often the past is equally in doubt. One minute Leon Trotsky was a hero of the Revolution, the father of the Red Army and a strong contender to succeed Lenin; the next minute he never existed. Until the late 1980s, the 1917 Revolution was the pinnacle of human achievement; suddenly in the 1990s it was seen as an utter failure.

And today again history in the region is turning into an ideological battlefield. When the Red Army poured into the Baltic states at the end of the Second World War, it liberated them from Nazi tyranny — but from the perspective of the subsequent decades of Soviet domination, was it liberation or merely another invasion?

The Russians, of course, have no doubt on the matter: for them it was an heroic national achievement. But for the states which less than two decades ago managed to crawl out from under the Soviet boot, things are not so simple. The Museum of the Occupation of Latvia, an imposing black box of a building in the heart of Riga, tells the story of Latvia’s time inside the Soviet Union. The Soviet soldiers, glorified as heroes in Moscow, are portrayed as criminals and occupiers, no better than the Germans they defeated.

But now, slamming shut a stable door through which its former subject states long ago bolted, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has ordered the creation of a body with the Orwellian title of the Commission to Counteract the Falsification of History to the Detriment of Russian Interests. A linked law is also likely to be passed that will outlaw the “rehabilitation of Nazism” on the territory of former Soviet republics.

Pressure to stop their much smaller neighbours telling recent history the way they see it has been building for some time. When authorities in Estonia removed a monument to Soviet soldiers from the centre of Tallinn two years ago, riots between police and ethnic Russian citizens of Estonia ensued, and the Kremlin made furious noises. With its new commission and law, Moscow is upping the stakes. Russia accuses the governments of Estonia and Latvia of glorifying partisan regiments which fought on the side of the Nazis.

In recent years, relations between Latvia and Russia have normalised in many spheres, but the Second World War is still a thorny issue. “The one issue which divides us is our interpretation of history,” says Ojars Kalnins, director of the Latvian Institute, a think-tank linked to Latvia’s Foreign Ministry. “Russia could demonstrate a lot to the world if it did what Germany did, and apologised for the actions of previous governments.”

Apologising, however, is the last thing the Kremlin plans to do, and the new commission and law suggest that Russia is moving in the opposite direction, seeking to glorify the Soviet past and silence critics of Soviet communism.

The commission, say critics inside Russia, smacks of a Soviet attitude to history, and the most worrying aspect to be inferred from its bizarre title is that falsifying history in Russia’s interests is quite acceptable.

Last week, a scandal erupted over an article written by a Russian military historian that was posted on the website of the Russian Defence Ministry, blaming Poland for starting the Second World War. The article absolved the Soviet Union from any role in contributing to the start of war, and instead blamed Poland for not acceding to “reasonable” demands from Nazi Germany. The paper was removed after an official complaint from Poland.

A key pillar of Vladimir Putin’s eight-year presidency involved exhorting Russians to feel proud of their history, and he once said that foreign countries should never be able to make Russia feel guilty for its Soviet past. The public appears to agree. A recent survey by a leading Russian polling agency showed that 77 per cent of Russians consider the Red Army to have liberated eastern European countries and given them the chance to develop, while only 11 per cent felt that there was an occupation.

“Those trying to turn everything upside down and portray the Nazi liberator states as invaders have to suffer punishment,” said Valery Ryazansky, a member of the pro-Kremlin United Russia party and one of the law’s sponsors. The Russians remain determined to stem the tide of what they see as anti-Russian propaganda. “Such attempts are becoming more hostile, more evil, and more aggressive,” said Mr Medvedev in his online video blog last month.. “We must fight for the historical truth.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Russia Drops Unilateral WTO Bid for Ex-Soviet Pact

MOSCOW (Reuters) — Russia threw its 16-year bid to join the World Trade Organization into jeopardy on Tuesday when Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Moscow would only join the trade body in partnership with two former Soviet republics.

Putin, announcing plans to form a customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan, blamed tortuous WTO accession talks for blocking integration with its ex-Soviet neighbors, only days after the European Union said the Kremlin’s wait could be over this year.

The surprise move by Russia, the largest country outside the 153-member WTO, implies talks will start afresh on the basis of a new agreement between the three former Soviet states, which intend to form the customs union from January 1, 2010.

Russia has previously accused the United States and the European Union of hindering its WTO bid for political reasons.

Putin, speaking at a joint news conference with the Kazakh and Belarussian prime ministers, Karim Masimov and Sergei Sidorsky, said the three countries would notify the WTO that their separate negotiations will be stopped.

“It’s a sign of frustration on the Russian side, but it’s also recognition that WTO membership is no longer such a priority,” said Roland Nash, chief strategist at investment bank Renaissance Capital.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned this month that Russia’s bid to join the WTO was losing momentum.

Five days ago, EU Trade Commissioner Catherine Ashton said she had agreed with Russian Economy Minister Elvira Nabiullina that Moscow’s WTO accession should be completed by year-end, saying the two sides had a “common understanding.

But the creation of a customs union with countries whose WTO negotiations are less advanced may force the EU to think again.

“This could create a new situation, which we would first need to carefully analyze to determine the potential impact on Russia’s WTO negotiations,” said Lutz Guellner, spokesman for Ashton.

The decision is also a slap in face for U.S. President Barack Obama ahead of his visit in Russia next month. Obama and Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev agreed in April to instruct their governments to work on finalizing Russia’s accession.

Brazil, Russia, India and China, known as BRIC, will also hold their first summit in Yekaterinburg next week and officials have said the four were willing to look into trade initiatives outside the WTO framework.

Kazakhstan started WTO talks in 1996 but has continuously put off the accession deadline. Russia, still running the world’s third-largest gold and forex reserves, has used the economic crisis to increase influence in the post-Soviet space.

“Our priority remains WTO entry, we confirm this, but already as a united customs union and not as separate countries,” Putin said. He said trade talks with the European Union would also be held within the framework of the new deal.

PUZZLING MOVE

Russian negotiators had been expected in Geneva next week for a new round of bilateral accession talks. Masimov said the three countries would now create a new group of negotiators.

Trade experts said the timing of the move was puzzling. No group of countries has ever joined the WTO as a single customs union, and the proposal is likely to delay the accession of the former Soviet states even more.

Although Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin flagged the move at the International Monetary Fund conference in April, his statement was not taken seriously at the time. On Monday, Kudrin said new accession talks will start in 2010.

Internal disputes within the proposed customs union could also complicate matters. Russia on Tuesday expanded its ban on dairy products from Belarus, which earns billions of dollars from its milk exports and had a 4 percent share of the Russian market last year.

“The Russian desire to form a customs union with the CIS — and obviously to become the dominant partner — is a more important objective in the short term,” said Nash.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Thailand: Muslim Militants Blamed for Deadly Mosque Attack

Bangkok, 9 June (AKI) — At least 10 people were killed and 12 others injured when gunmen opened fire on a mosque in southern Thailand during evening prayers on Monday. Several gunmen armed with assault rifles entered the mosque in the Cho-ai-rong district of restive Narathiwat province and fired on worshippers, police said.

“They opened fire indiscriminately at about 50 worshippers inside the mosque,” a police official said on condition of anonymity. The dead included the local imam, he said.

The attack in the Muslim-majority south comes amid a recent spate of violence in a five-year insurgency that has left at least 3,400 people dead.

Police said at least five gunmen carried out the attack, one of the deadliest incidents since an Islamic separatist insurgency was launched in Thailand’s three southernmost provinces in early 2004.

Last week two teachers, one eight months pregnant, were killed in the same province in an attack blamed on insurgents.

Thailand annexed the three southern provinces — Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani — in 1902, but the vast majority of people there are Muslim and speak a Malay dialect, in contrast to the Buddhist Thai speakers in the rest of the country.

Southern Muslims have long complained of discrimination, especially in education and job opportunities.

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

Far East


China’s Computers at Hacking Risk

The first independent tests of screening software that will be installed on all Chinese computers finds it opens users to serious security risks.

Every PC in China could be at risk of being taken over by malicious hackers because of flaws in compulsory government software.

The potential faults were brought to light by Chinese computer experts who said the flaw could lead to a “large-scale disaster”.

The Chinese government has mandated that all computers in the country must have the screening software installed.

It is intended to filter out offensive material from the net.

The Chinese government said that the Green Dam Youth Escort software, as it is known, was intended to push forward the “healthy development of the internet” and “effectively manage harmful material for the public and prevent it from being spread.”

“We found a series of software flaws,” explained Isaac Mao, a blogger and social entrepreneur in China, as well as a research fellow at Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

For example, he said, tests had shown that communications between the software and the servers at the company that developed the program were unencrypted.

Mr Mao told BBC News that this could allow hackers to “steal people’s private information” or “place malicious script” on computers in the network to “affect [a] large scale disaster.”

For example, a hacker could use malicious code to take control of PCs using the software.

“Then you have every computer in China potentially as part of a botnet,” Colin Maclay, also of Harvard, told BBC News.

A botnet is the name given to a network of hijacked computers that can then be used to pump out spam or launch concerted attacks on commercial or government websites.

No one from Jinhui Computer System Engineering, the company that developed Green Dam, was available for comment.

‘Naked pig’

The software has also caused a backlash amongst privacy experts, academics and some Chinese citizens. It has also raised the scorn of the blogosphere inside the country who feel the system is no match for tech-savvy teenagers.

One blogger posted a screenshot of the software purportedly blocking an attempt to visit a porn site using Microsoft’s Internet Explorer.

But, he said, there was no problem accessing the site using the Firefox web browser.

Others have reported that the system only runs on Microsoft Windows, allowing Mac and Linux users to bypass the software.

It is thought that at least 3m computer users have already downloaded the software, opening them up to potential security problems.

Another formal study by the Open Network Initiative into the risks posed by the software is expected soon. However, many people in China who have been forced to use the software are already reporting other problems.

For example, the system reportedly blocks legitimate as well as banned content. For example, it designed to identify the proportion of skin colour in a picture to determine whether it is pornography.

But comments on a bulletin board run by the software company that designed the system, suggest the system does not work perfectly.

“Once you’ve got government-mandated software installed on each machine, the software has the keys to the kingdom”

Professor Jonathan Zittrain

“I went on the internet to check out some animal photos. A lovely little naked pig was sent onto the black list. Pitiful little pig!,” read one comment.

“I was curious, so I looked up some photos of naked African women. Oh, they were not censored!”

Another message read: “We were ordered to install the software. So I have to come to this website and curse. After we installed the software, many normal websites are banned.”

The forum was taken down after it was seemingly flooded with complaints. A message on the site said says it is being “upgraded”.

Mr Mao told BBC News that they believed there was a new guideline from the country’s central propaganda department “to comb all media and online forums to block critics and discussion over the issue.”

Firewall flaw

The government may be keen to shut down discussion to quell rumours that the system could be used to monitor its citizens.

“Once you’ve got government-mandated software installed on each machine, the software has the keys to the kingdom — anything can be logged or affected,” said Professor Jonathan Zittrain, also of Harvard’s Berkman Center.

“While the justification may be pitched as protecting children and mostly concerning pornography, once the architecture is set up it can be used for broader purposes, such as the filtering of political ideas.”

In particular, the system could be used to report citizens’ web habits..

“It creates log file of all of the pages that the users tries to access,” Mr Maclay told BBC News.

“At the moment it’s unclear whether that is reported back, but it could be.”

A twitter user in China claims that the software transmits reports to Jinhui — the maker of the software — when the user tries to access blacklisted websites.

However, Zhang Chenmin, general manager of the developer of Green Dam, told the China Daily newspaper last year: “Our software is simply not capable of spying on internet users, it is only a filter.”

Although many countries around the world routinely block and filter net content, China’s regime is regarded as particularly severe.

“There is no transparency about what they are blocking,” said Mr Maclay.

Free speech campaigners are concerned that the list could be tweaked to suits the government’s aims.

Recently, there has been a web black out across China in advance of the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Website such as Twitter and the photo-sharing site Flickr were blocked in an attempt by the government to prevent online discussion on the subject.

However, some users were able to bypass the filters to distribute pictures and commentary including links to photos of plain-clothes policemen blocking the lenses of foreign journalists with their umbrellas.

The country is able to take action like this because it already has a sophisticated censorship regime, including the so-called Great Firewall of China. However, it is known to have some flaws.

A 2007 study by US researchers showed that the system was much more porous than previously thought.

It found that the technology often failed to block content banned by the Chinese government, allowing web users to browse unencumbered at least some of the time.

Filtering and blocking was “particularly erratic”, they said, when large numbers of people were online in China.

Despite the failures, the researchers said, the idea of the firewall was more effective than the technology at discouraging talk about banned subjects.

This kind of social pressure was also key to another tactic used by the Chinese government to make sure its citizens only use sanitised portions of the web.

In 2007, the government introduced virtual policemen that pop-up onscreen when web surfers visit many of China’s popular website to remind them to stay away from illicit content.

In addition, the government expects internet service providers in China to actively monitor and censor published content, such as blogs.

Experiments have suggested that this approach is hit-and-miss, with some organisations more proactive than others.

However, these systems, combined with the new software, will allow the Chinese government to sanitise the web for most of the 300m of China’s population of 1.3bn have access to the net.

“I think this is intended as a sort of belt-and-braces approach, said Professor Zittrain.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


When Police Look the Other Way

It’s a rich irony that the Prime Minister and police commanders in Sydney and Melbourne are now admonishing Indian students who have decided to take responsibility for their own security instead of continuing to be passive victims of violent crime.

Sound familiar?

Assistant Police Commissioner Dave Owens warned Indian students protesting at Harris Park not to be “vigilantes” and “leave the detection of offenders and their arrest to us”.

In Victoria, a police spokeswoman said Indian students doing their own security patrols at crime-ridden western suburbs railway stations should “leave and let police do their jobs”.

Well, if the police had done their jobs in the first place Indian students wouldn’t feel like they have to escort each other home from railway stations late at night. Nor would 1000 Indian students have gathered on Sunday at Town Hall and this week in Harris Park to protest about the lax policing.

But now that Australia’s not-so-secret suburban law and order problem has become an international scandal, it’s remarkable how vigilant the police can be.

The Victorian commissioner, Simon Overland, was this week boasting about a “major crackdown” on crime, with uniformed police, rail transit officers, the dog squad, mounted police and the air wing to patrol the stations where Indian students have been mugged with impunity for years. In Harris Park, Sydney’s new Little India, police were out in force this week as young Indians gathered to protest about the latest harassment by what they described as a gang of “Middle Eastern men”.

Regardless of whether the attacks on Indian students are racially motivated, or whether the violence is being committed by Middle Eastern, Caucasian or any other ethnic group, the fact is our governments and police forces have been turning a blind eye to it.

It seems that allowing our cities to become no-go zones at night is easier than enforcing the law.

Indian students in Sydney and Melbourne have simply decided they have had enough.

Saurabh, who has just completed a masters at the University of Western Sydney, has been aware of attacks on his fellow Indian students since at least 2004. In an email in response to my column last week, he described a bus trip from the city to western Sydney late one night when “a group of five teenage guys were troubling this lone nightshift Indian worker who was sitting in the front … He didn’t resist and just ignored them … Right when they left the bus they spat on the Indian guy and ran away laughing.”

He says that in Harris Park, “muggings are a common occurrence”.

“I see the police as very vigilant only during protests like the G20 and the recent one by the Indian students … Also, the traffic police are very vigilant in giving tickets. But the normal police are not in giving public protection.”

It’s not just Indian students complaining about police inaction. It’s young Chinese as well.

Yuening, for instance, a student from China studying at the University of NSW: “I can tell you that every international student studying in Australia is worrying about safety every day. I think more than one-third of us would have the unpleasant experience.” Recently, he says, two friends were robbed on campus, on the main road. But he claims police “tolerate modest robbery”.

Murtaza, an Indian student, was mugged 18 months ago on a Saturday night about 8.30 in the heart of Melbourne’s CBD. “They broke my nose and ran away and as I called the police little did I know that my complaint will be just going to deaf ears and blind eyes,” he said.

He went to the police station the next day but was told the offenders had not been found. “I went to the police station two more times in the same week to get my complaint in, not because I expected the police to actually nab those guys, but just wanted a recognition by the law that such an incident had occurred. But every time I went there, I was greeted by a different officer who told me that they were too busy.

“It’s funny how the police seem to be so busy, considering that such incidents keep occurring in various parts of the city, with the lawbreakers getting away on most of the occasions.”

Another Indian student, Ajay Kumar, who was at the Harris Park protest this week, says he is so afraid of being assaulted on his way home from work at night, he doesn’t go home.

“If I finish my work, I stay there,” he told the ABC. “Why? Because I know if I come back, someone will smash me, someone will take my money. I know. Because I’m not safe here. Because Australian police is shit, fully shit.”

In a strange twist of fate, Superintendent Robert Redfern, the Parramatta local area commander who was hard at work at the Harris Park protests at midnight on Tuesday, was also police commander at Cronulla during the 2005 race riots. We saw then the dangers of vigilantism.

Back then, Cronulla locals had been complaining for months that police were playing down assaults and menacing behaviour by what they described as “Middle Eastern” youths from south-western Sydney. There was a protest, which turned into an ugly riot with racist violence against anyone who looked Middle Eastern, followed by revenge attacks as young men from the south-west drove to Cronulla damaging property and assaulting people, with police nowhere to be seen.

In Harris Park, the script is familiar. Police play down crime problems, victims lose faith in the authorities to protect them, start to protest, take matters into their own hands, attack innocent passers-by. So far there have been no revenge attacks but it’s unlikely police can guarantee they won’t occur.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Beijing and New Delhi at Loggerheads Over the Sale of Fake Chinese Drugs in Africa

Nigerian authorities slam the sale of fake generic anti-malarial drugs labelled ‘Made in India’ which are, in fact, made in China. New Delhi complains that this is not an isolated incident and that “there is no reason for Nigeria to be the only country to be receiving such consignments.”

New Delhi (AsiaNews/Agencies) — China is selling counterfeit drugs in Africa with the ‘Made in India’ label. Nigeria’s National Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) issued a warning about a large consignment of fake generic anti-malarial pharmaceuticals that have a ‘Made in India’ label when in fact they are made in China. New Delhi has registered a “strong protest” with the Chinese mission and China’s Foreign Trade Ministry.

“While this is a case of a Chinese company exporting fake ‘Made in India’ labelled medicines which has been accidentally exposed, it is unlikely to be an isolated incident,” India’s High Commissioner in the Nigerian capital of Abuja, Mahesh Sachdev wrote in a letter to his country’s Commerce Secretary GSK Pillai. “Indeed there is no reason for Nigeria to be the only country to be receiving such consignments,” he said.

“Fake foreign-made generics carrying ‘Made in India’ label can do tremendous harm to our interests. It not only dents our image and takes our legitimate market share, it also erodes the distinction between generic and fake medicines that we have been campaigning for at WHO and WTO,” the high commissioner’s letter said.

India and China have been accused of exporting drugs to Africa that fail to meet international safety standards or those set by the main patent holders. The main markets involved are Ghana, South Africa, Ivory Coast and West Africa.

Such accusations have usually come from multinational drug companies. But both Asian nations have rejected the latter’s claims, arguing that their drugs are safe. Indeed India has been trying hard to get the WHO and WTO seals of approval. Instead Beijing and New Delhi have complained that criticism of their products is due to their lower prices which cut into the monopolies multinationals have in developing markets.

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



Kidnapped Alberta Reporter Fears Dying in Captivity

[includes video]

A woman claiming to be Amanda Lindhout, a freelance Canadian journalist being held hostage in Somalia, called CTV’s National newsroom Wednesday afternoon, appearing to be reading from a statement in which she says she fears dying in captivity and pleads with the Canadian government to help bring her home.

“I’ve been held hostage by gunmen in Somalia for nearly 10 months. I’m in a desperate situation, I’m being kept in a dark, windowless room in chains, without any clean drinking water and little or no food. I’ve been very sick for months without any medicine,” she told CTV News.

She said she’s in need of “immediate aid” and begs the Canadian government to help her family to pay her ransom. “Without it, I will die here,” she said.

“I also tell them that they must deal directly with these people, (for) my life depends on it.”

Lindhout is a freelance print and television journalist from Sylvan Lake, Alta.

She travelled to Somalia on Aug. 20 to cover the famine and violence in Sudan for a French television station.

Three days after arriving in the capital city of Mogadishu, she and a group, including photographer Nigel Brennan of Australia, left a hotel to visit a refugee camp about 30 kilometers to the south. They were stopped on the road and abducted.

The kidnappers have been identified as a group called the Mujahedeen of Somalia, They originally demanded $2.5 million but have lowered their ransom price to $1 million.

According to reports, it’s believed the pair’s captors are moving them from location to location — and that negotiations for their release have broken down a number of times.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Somalia: Italy Offers Aid to Improve Coastal Security

Rome, 9 June (AKI) — The Italian government has offered to help Somalia fight piracy and improve its coastal security by providing support for a police force and a local coast guard. The initiative was announced by foreign minister Franco Frattini after meeting Somali prime minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke at the foreign affairs ministry in Rome on Tuesday.

“We have offered Italy’s willingness to create a Somali police and coast guard, and to also improve the capacity for prevention and reaction in Italy,” Frattini said.

Referring to the African country, Frattini said there was a problem that “is not only humanitarian, but above all about politics and security”.

“We have to support this government and this president whom we appreciate and we help,” he said.

The minister opened the 15th summit of the International Contact Group on Somalia which was meeting in Rome on Tuesday to discuss the growing incidence of piracy and other security issues.

“Italy will carry a political message to all of Europe, promoting help and also finance,” he said.

“The government of Somalia is fighting against a serious criminal phenomenon, but surveillance is not enough because we have to fight the problem at its roots,” he said.

The minister said that piracy is linked to phenomena like the “criminality and infiltration of extreme elements easily recruited also by Al-Qaeda”.

“Piracy is only the tip of the iceberg,” Frattini said. “We are convinced that piracy is related to the political and socioeconomic crisis on land, not on the sea.

He said piracy and terrorism, illegal immigration, human trafficking are “ a threat not only to Somalia but to the entire international community”.

US president Barack Obama has said that Somali piracy must be brought under control.

Piracy in the Gulf of Aden and western Indian Ocean is just a sample of a complex web of challenges inside Somalia, — a former Italian colony from the late 19th century until 1936 — which is one of the poorest, most violent and least stable countries anywhere on earth.

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

Immigration


EC Lists Improved Immigration Policy Among Priorities

The EC said that it planned to mprove the evaluation of European judicial policies and support the efforts of member states to improve the quality of their judicial systems.

It would “ensure a flexible immigration policy that is in line with the needs of the job market while at the same time support the integration of immigrants and tackle illegal immigration” and would enhance solidarity between member states for hosting refugees and asylum-seekers. [..]

“It must establish a flexible migration policy enabling it to respond to its employment needs and make use of the opportunities provided by foreign labour. It must also uphold its humanitarian tradition by offering its protection generously to those who need it.”

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Spain: Contracts Fall in Immigrants’ Home Countries

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, 9 JUNE — In the first quarter of 2009 Spain granted 6,946 stay and work permits for immigrants who were granted contracts in their countries of origin, the lowest figure in 10 years. EFE press agency reported that Secretary of State for Immigration Consuelo Rumi made the statement during today’s presentation in Madrid of the ‘2009 Immigration and work market’ report put together by sociologist Miguel Pajares for the Permanent observatory on immigration. In 2007 a total of 178,340 stay permits were issued to immigrants, but in 2008 the number dropped to 136,604 (-38.8%). Q1 figures do not however include seasonal workers. Rumi emphasised that despite the crisis “there is still demand for foreign labour”, even though to a lesser degree, and for unskilled labour. The demand is greatest for watchmen, warehousemen, caretakers and doormen, home workers, staff for geriatric clinics, electricians, electronics workers, IT workers, and renewable energy workers. Pajares made reference to Q4 2008 unemployment figures which were processed according to the active population survey carried out by the national statistics agency, which recorded 900,000 Spaniards and 400,000 foreigners that joined the ranks of the unemployed in Q4 of 2008. But the sociologist complained about the lack of ‘reliable statistics’ to trace the number of immigrants who returned to their county of origin. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


‘Gay’ Family Kids 7 Times More Likely to be Homosexual

But report shows researchers concealing information

A licensed psychologist with both clinical and forensic practice outreaches is warning that it appears children of homosexual couples are seven times more likely to develop “non-heterosexual preferences” than other children, but lawmakers establishing policy often don’t know that because the researchers have concealed their discoveries.

“Research … although not definitive, suggests that children reared by openly homosexual parents are far more likely to engage in homosexual behavior than children raised by others,” said the online report by Trayce L. Hansen.

Studies she reviewed suggest children raised by homosexual or bisexual parents “are approximately seven times more likely than the general population to develop a non-heterosexual sexual preference.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



‘Hate Crimes’ Strategy? Slip Through as Amendment

‘Gay’ publication cites plan to avoid hearings

The strategy to push the so-called “hate crimes” plan — dubbed the “Pedophile Protection Act” by critics — through the U.S. Senate is to attach it as an amendment to another proposal, according to a homosexual publication.

The Washington Blade has quoted the Human Rights Campaign explaining the plan for the legislation condemned by many as a “thought crimes” proposal.

According to the Blade, HRC official Trevor Thomas said, “We understand that Senate leadership does not believe a hearing or mark up on the bill is necessary and plans to bring it directly to the floor as an amendment to another moving vehicle.”

That is what Senate leaders believe is “the most efficient way” to advance the issue to President Obama, who has expressed strong support, the report said. The Blade cited a Democratic aide who spoke on condition on anonymity saying that has been the plan for some time, specifically to prevent amendments from being attached to the “hate crimes” plan.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



School Board Breaking Federal Law With ‘Gay’ Day?

Homosexual curriculum pushed on students without letting parents opt-out

A California school district is being accused of violating federal law after it approved a mandatory homosexual curriculum for children as young as 5 — without allowing parents to opt-out of the lessons.

As WND reported, the mandatory program, officially titled “LGBT Lesson #9,” was approved May 26 by the Alameda County Board of Education by a vote of 3-2. Students from kindergarten through fifth grade are scheduled to learn about “tolerance” for the homosexual lifestyle beginning next school year.

Parents will not be given an opportunity to opt-out of lessons that go against their religious beliefs.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


UN’s Marxist Plan for Global Government

United Nations General Assembly President Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann intends to leave his mark on the United Nations and the global economic-political picture before his one-year term ends in September. D’Escoto, a longtime top official in the communist Sandinista government of Nicaragua, has chosen as his primary vehicle for making this mark the UN Conference on the World’s Financial and Economic Crisis to be held June 24-26 at the UN headquarters in New York.

The D’Escoto-UN plan, which has received scant media coverage, is nothing short of s full-blown call for world government administered through the UN. The Draft Outcome Document issued by D’Escoto on May 8, 2009 on behalf of the “G-192” (the representatives of the 192 Member States of the UN), decries the evils of “a profit centered economy” and the current “prevailing socio-economic system” and declares: “The anti-values of greed, individualism, and exclusion should be replaced by solidarity, common good and inclusion.”

How do D’Escoto and his UN comrades propose to accomplish this? The 19-page document lays out a Sandinista-style Marxist-Leninist program for the entire planet that involves global government, with a huge new global bureaucracy exercising vast powers over all human activity.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

More on Al Qaeda in Brazil

My earlier post on Air France 447 reminded Rocha, a reader from Brazil, about the Al Qaeda terrorist in Brazil who was arrested and then released several weeks ago.

Rocha has kindly translated a May 26 post from the blog of Reinaldo Azevedo, who also writes for Veja, the main weekly Brazilian magazine:

Believe it! An Al Qaeda boss is already among us, free as a bird

Read what’s below. The post continues.

A high-level member of the terrorist organization Al Qaeda was imprisoned in Brazil about two months ago, according to informers in the Justice Ministry. He is already free.

The imprisonment of the terrorist was revealed in Janio de Freitas’ column, published in Folha’s Thursday edition.

According to Polícia Federal [the Brazilian FBI], he was arrested for promulgating racist material. His name wasn’t published. The imprisonment occurred in São Paulo in an international operation.

Sources in the Justice Ministry said that the Al Qaeda member is already free, and that he should not be extradited. Among the alleged motives for permitting him to stay in Brazil, according to ministry sources, was proof of his stability in the country — as indicated by his marriage to a Brazilian woman.

Action in Brazil

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The MP Raul Jungmann (PPS-PE), president of the parliamentary commission for public safety, said that he will make an information inquiry to Polícia Federal, GSI (Institutional Security Bureau) and ABIN (Brazilian Intelligence Agency) so that the commission will be informed about the imprisonment of the Al Qaeda member.

The MP is afraid that Brazil has become a kind of “host country” for terrorist organizations, as there is no specific legislation to fight the problem. “We now have an aggressive diplomacy to bring us closer to the Arab world. The problem is the country is turning into a host for terrorist organizations. I know that, before his arrest, he was being followed here. We have a clear lack of leadership on the terrorist question,” said the MP.

Terrorist Suspects Were Aboard Air France 447

This may be a coincidence, but coincidences always make me suspicious.

Remember the Air France flight that disappeared over the Atlantic after leaving Rio de Janeiro? Everyone has heard that the plane went down into the ocean, and that everyone on board was killed. Pieces of wreckage have been found, and there is still a slight chance that the “black boxes” can be recovered.

At first there were reports that no explosion could have occurred, and then there were reports that an explosion had occurred. Then the likelihood of an explosion was played down. Terrorism was ruled out, and then it was not ruled out, and then it was ruled out again.

So what really happened?

Today comes some interesting news: two Islamic terrorists who were known to French intelligence were on board Air France 447. According to The Evening Standard:

Terrorist suspects were on doomed Air France plane

Two passengers with names linked to Islamic terrorism were on board the Air France flight which crashed and killed 228, it emerged today.

French secret service staff established the connection while working through the list of those who boarded the Airbus 330-200 in Rio de Janeiro on 31 May.

Flight AF447 crashed in the mid-Atlantic en route to Paris during a storm. While it is certain there were computer malfunctions, terrorism has not been ruled out.

Soon after news of the crash, agents from the Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure, the French equivalent of MI6, were sent to Brazil.

They established that the two passengers were on highly-classified French documents listing radical Muslims considered to be a threat.

A security service source said the link was “highly significant”.

What’s suspicious about all this is that it took ten days for the news about the two dangerous passengers to be made public.
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During those ten days, the authorities consistently downplayed any possibility of terrorism as the cause of the crash. It wasn’t ruled out entirely, but the emphasis was on equipment failure, flying too slowly for the altitude, and other non-terrorist possibilities.

Why?

This is not an isolated instance. Throughout the West, whenever a lethal event (often involving Muslims) occurs, public officials are at pains to discount any connection with “terrorism”. If the slaughter is not on the level of Madrid or 7/7, then terrorism is automatically disavowed. In the United States, whenever Sudden Jihad Syndrome strikes and a lone Muslim shoots a few people, a DHS spokesman is on TV before the smell of cordite has faded, reassuring the public that “there is no connection with terrorism”.

It has become a government mantra.

Even with the passenger list revealed, the possibility of terrorism is still being downplayed:

Investigators today refused to rule out terrorism, but an Air France spokesman said “all the indications” were that the plane suffered some kind of catastrophic equipment failure.

So what’s going on? Why this insistence that terrorism is unlikely when terrorists were in fact on that plane?

Disinformation or coincidence?

You decide.



Hat tip: Tuan Jim.

Nazi of the Week

Thanks to the vigilance of our Swedish correspondent LN, a new hotbed of neo-fascist extremism has been unmasked.

I refer, of course, to the feline community. Who would have thought that Felix domesticus, the common house cat, could harbor such blatant Nazi tendencies?

But it seems that under the smarmy purring veneer of the beloved household tabby lies a heart of fascist steel. Check out the irrefutable photographic evidence below:
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Hitler cat