Low-Water Marks Over Europe

Our Swedish correspondent LN has compiled a report on the state of the journalistic art in today’s Sweden, with special attention given to the journalistic endeavors of Andreas Malm.



Low-water marks over Europe
by LN

Do you think something is skewed in Europe? With the state of Greece? With the states of Portugal and Spain? With the Baltic states?

The self-made Greek economic difficulties are by now of worldwide fame. Greece has even been referred to as behaving like a “banana-republic/monarchy”. The economies of the other states mentioned are not very much better.

Swedish stampBut that is not enough! Other states of the European Union are also — but from other points of view — skewed or even, using a qualifying Shakespearean word, rotten. For example, the banana-monarchy of Sweden. Probably there is no other Western state where journalism has reached, in both the direct and the figurative sense of the word, such an extreme state of baseness.

In Sweden the majority of journalists suffer from an insurmountable fear of reporting the political truth to their readers. Swedish journalists despise their readers, who are neither supposed to be able to, nor should be allowed to form an opinion of their own. If not deprived of the truth, Swedish readers must be educated, and, like toddlers, told what to think and how to behave. The job of Swedish journalists of the predominant Politically Correct, cultural Marxist, Islam-apologist species is not to report truthfully, but to interpret and to propagate the authoritative truths of the proper socio-liberal/communistic political opinion — and to conceal from the public anything awkwardly Politically un-Correct.

The people’s republics of eastern Europe, not forgetting the German Democratic Republic (DDR), were physically closed down in 1989. However the left-wing radical body of Swedish journalists — in their hearts, consciously or unconsciously, great fans of the DDR ‘Socialist Unity Party’ and the Stasi — decided to carry on the proud commie tradition. (By the way — the chairman of the Swedish Journalists’ Club [Publicistklubben] is a former KGB spy.)

According to the Association of Swedish Journalists (Svenska Journalistförbundet), 70% of the members give their votes to the Social Democrats, whose leader is Mona Sahlin, or the Left party, whose leader, Lars Ohly, is a pronounced crypto-communist.

Nor are the broadcasting or so-called “public service media” — Swedish Radio and Swedish Television — very interested in forwarding any awkward and uncomfortable truths, only the Politically Correct versions. Journalists of the true stamp also work there, of course. And management superintends them, so that the self-censoring conformist codex is faithfully followed.

A not atypical representative of the Swedish body of journalists is Andreas Malm, born in 1977.

Since 2005 he has belonged to the editorial staff of Dagens Nyheter Kultur. He does not seem to like very much the fact that (the major) part of his readership does not wholly agree with him. To him, having different views automatically makes one an Islamophobe or a Nazi.

During the 2006 Lebanon War, Andreas Malm declared himself a big friend of Hezbollah and Hamas, and, as you will see, he has detected a widespread and undeserved Islamophobia to be found in Europe, and this is also gaining acceptance in Sweden. He wrote a book on this theme in 2009.

He has temporarily left his career as a journalist to begin studying for a doctorate in climatology at the University of Lund. He is of the sound but anti-Arab opinion that humanity totally must wipe out any dependence of fossil fuels.

The Gates of Vienna reference to the German translation of Fjordman’s book Defeating Eurabia gave topical interest to the following (now quite famous) “journalistic” piece by Andreas Malm, which was published in Dagens Nyheter (The New York Times of Sweden) on February 11th, 2008:

Reveille for the fearful

A growing number of books argue that Europe is turning into an Islamic terror empire. The worst inferno is reported to be found in Sweden. Andreas Malm here introduces the literature of Eurabia.

Andreas Malm, journalistThe Muslims are here to take over. Soon they will be in the majority. Their migration to Europe was never an escape from misery, but a “deliberately planned act of subversion”: they have come to “establish a Caliphate where Sharia laws will apply.” Within a few generations “converts out of Islam will be executed, thieves will have their arms amputated” and “adulterous women will be stoned to death”. Muslims are not content with anything less than that you “give them all the power and let them oppress you”.

WHAT is this? The latest pamphlet from the Sweden Democrats? No. This is a best-seller from the world’s largest publisher of English literature, Random House. The book While Europe Slept was nominated in 2007 for the prestigious American literature prize, the “National Book Critics’ Circle Award”.

The author, Bruce Bawer, an American liberal, with a strong inclination towards the conservative side, a cultural critic, an essayist at newspapers such as The New York Review of Books and Christian Science Monitor, and the author of acclaimed books about Christian fundamentalism and gay rights.

– – – – – – – –

Now he wants to tell us the truth about Europe. The worst is the inferno in Sweden. Sweden is Europe’s “ground zero”. In Stockholm, Muslim youths are drifting about “chasing non-Muslims out of swimming halls.” They “are terrorizing schools”, “are attacking firefighters and ambulances.” The most popular t-shirt among them displays the words “2030: then we will take over”.

THE ARCHITECT of this hell is the Swedish political establishment. From Johan Norberg — one of the Swedish debaters who Bruce Bawer indicates as one of his sources of knowledge, along with Dilsa Demirbag-Sten and Mauricio Rojas — he has learned that Sweden, although not a ‘one-party state’, is definitely a “single-idea-state”, where obsequiousness to Islam reigns. Thus the Swedes are suffering now under a growing Muslim population, who are “disproportionately inclined to violence”, which have made the frequency of murders “twice as high in Sweden as in the United States”, and which are most deranged in the town of Malmö: where the “rape rate is five or six times higher than in Copenhagen and child rape has doubled in ten years”.

So it continues.

AT all this, one could smile. You could laugh and put it aside, as a curious postcard from a hallucinating fool. Unfortunately, that is not possible. This conception of the world that Bruce Bawer conveys is about to settle down in the brain of the Western world. One of many examples is precisely the stream of books, in which Bawer’s is included, which in the past two years have been written on a single, very familiar theme: Western civilization, with its enlightened, advanced, liberal values, is threatened by Islam.

The basic text of the genre is a study by the British amateur historian Bat Ye’or, now a celebrated guest on an academic tour from Yale to the Hebrew University. In the book Eurabia from the year 2005, she made a sensational disclosure about contemporary history.

IN 1973, the Arabs suspended their sale of oil to Europe. Thus they obtained a stranglehold on the continent. To reopen the oil taps the Arabs demanded harsh conditions, and the then EC immediately prepared itself to surrender.

With this in view, the EC formed, under the dictates of the Arab League, the body ‘Euro-Arab Dialogue’, or EAD. Never heard of EAD? That’s right: since 1973, EAD has ruled Europe, has thrown its network over companies, universities, and the media, and made it so that “a foreign lobby has infiltrated the parliamentary systems”, and yet the whole time succeeded in remaining “totally unknown to Europeans, even though its occult machinery has carried out Europe’s irreversible transformation “.

EUROPE is no more. European civilization has, after plans by EAD, dissolved itself in favor of a hybrid between Europe and Arabia: you may not know it, but you live in Eurabia.

In Eurabia, the Arabs reign, which group is synonymous with Muslims. In Eurabia, Europe has become “an appendix to the Arab-Muslim world” and the native Europeans have been reduced to dhimmis, the status that Islam throughout history has forced upon conquered peoples. This means that Europeans must humbly put up with Muslim laws and rules. Like all dhimmi peoples, they must “walk to the left side of Muslims, in the gutter, and accept violations and infringements so as not to anger their Muslim masters”.

IN THIS VEIN it continues for more than 400 pages. One might think that Bat Ye’or’s theory should be ‘deported’ to the most soiled booksellers. Instead, her concept has stuck in the Western discourse on Islam. In 2005, Fox News sent a series of reports from Europe, in which Malmö was depicted as a Mogadishu controlled by Muslim warrior-gangs roaming about: the vignette of the series was “Eurabia”. Francis Fukuyama, a prominent intellectual, to say the least, says in the liberal Slate Magazine that “ There is no question that what has come to be called “Eurabia” constitutes a major problem for democracy [in Europe]”.

Prominent British historians like Niall Ferguson have praised Bat Ye’or: “Future historians will one day regard ‘Eurabia’, the term she has coined, as prophetic”, this man writes on the book’s cover.

However, not everybody in the genre is as bushy as she is. One of the most recent contributions, The Last Days of Europe, by the respected historian Walter Laqueur, is a more low-key variation of the same diagnosis: “Europe today is like Rome just before the Fall”.

WITHIN A FEW generations Europe will be a museum, tacked into the streets among all the mosques, the swarthy beards and the burkas, where tourists can view the relics from “the highly developed civilization that once led the world, gave us Shakespeare and Beethoven”. Since Islam is a very violence-prone culture, the Muslim ghetto inhabitants in the middle of the heart of Europe will have established an anti-society, whose constitution is the love of “violence for violence’s own sake” and “the urge to destroy everything around”. Laqueur argues that these Muslims must be called by their real name. They are “barbarians”.

When The Wall Street Journal reads Laqueur’s book it is “one of the most compelling in the long series of volumes by authors on both sides of the Atlantic depicting Europe’s decay”. One work with the opposite temperament is America Alone by the rabid right-radical Mark Steyn, but the thesis is the same: “our world is about to perish, because Muslims are multiplying, and start wars against everybody else”.

Like his peers, Steyn is endlessly obsessed with demographics, which in this discourse has the same role as eugenics in anti-Semitism; “the deepest reason for September 11”, he explains, “is that in the 1970s and ‘80s the Muslims produced children, while Westerners abandoned that habit”.

AND WHAT reception has this bestseller received? Christopher Hitchens, one of the most prominent Templars in the Liberal neo-secularism brotherhood, in the New York magazine City Journal praised Mark Steyn’s new book as “extremely persuasive”, a warning that we must “recognize the extraordinary threat and the possible need for extraordinary responses”. Meanwhile, as Europe was turned into a Eurabia under Muslim terror, the Europeans have thus slept sweetly. But behold: now, finally an awakening is occurring.

In the Eurabia literature it is spelled: Pia Kjærsgaard, Pim Fortuyn, Jean-Marie Le Pen, Filip Dewinter, our own Jimmie Åkesson [leader of Sverigedemokraterna]. Bruce Bawer is shouting with joy as he reads about how the public’s hostility towards Muslims is rising, and a growing number of politicians in Europe “are arguing that Islam cannot be reconciled with European values”. A drowsy Europe is now starting to suspect “the harsh choices: total surrender or mass expulsion”.

BUT THERE ARE alternatives to mass expulsion. Mark Steyn has another solution. It was tested in Srebrenica, Prijedor, Sarajevo. He writes in a passage that has attracted a certain attention after Christopher Hitchens recounted it in his complimentary review: “Why did Bosnia descend into the worst slaughter in Europe since World War II?”.

“Thirty years before the collapse, the Serbs’ share of the Bosnian population had fallen from 43 to 31 percent, while the Muslims had increased from 26 to 44 percent. In a democratic age, you can not overcome demography — except through civil war. The Serbs knew that, just as other Europeans will understand it in the near future: if you can not propagate faster than the others, what remains but to shoot them?”

— Andreas Malm

Published 2008-02-11 15:45



Additional notes from LN:

Searching “Eurabien” on Google gives 40,400 hits. Searching “Eurabia” gives 1,310,000 hits — ERGO: “Eurabien/Eurabia must be some insignificant triviality”.

The Euro-Arab Dialogue

The Euro-Arab Dialogue as a forum shared by the European Community and the League of Arab States arose out of a French initiative and was launched at the European Council in Copenhagen in December 1973, shortly after the “October War” and the oil embargo. As the Europeans saw it, it was to be a forum to discuss economic affairs, whereas the Arab side saw it rather as one to discuss political affairs.

Francis Fukuyama: Europe vs. Radical Islam — Alarmist Americans have mostly bad advice for Europeans

Christopher Hitchens: “Facing the Islamist Menace” by Mark Steyn

Andreas Malm: Därför ska vi stödja Hizbollah (That is why we should endorse Hizbollah), Expressen, 2006

Andreas Malm: Hata muslimer nya folksporten (Hating Muslims is the new popular sport), Expressen, 23 mars 2009.

Cavatus has written informatively about the journalistic situation in Sweden here.

Note: some of the quotes in Mr. Malm’s article that appeared originally in English have been translated into Swedish and then back into English. Therefore it is quite possible that they are not rendered here verbatim.

Then and Now: Part Four

Allah, the Netherlands, and the House of Orange

The fourth video in this series brings us forward to January of this year. The same month that Geert Wilders went on trial in Amsterdam for inciting hatred and discrimination, a variety of religious luminaries met in Utrecht to declare their support for an official multi-religious Dutch state that includes Islam.

In the presence of Queen Beatrix, twenty-three religious organizations — of which thirteen were Islamic — signed a declaration confirming tolerance, respect and equality for all people. In his speech, Christian Democrat Minister of Justice Hirsh Ballin hailed the golden era of Al-Andalus and pleaded for a closer alliance of Church and State.

Many condemned this gross violation of the separation of Church and State and considered the hypocrisy a “slap in the face of the many victims of Islam”.

In the video below, the Jewish-Christian Pastor Ben Kok questions Muslims who signed the declaration. Many thanks to our Flemish correspondent VH for the translation and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:



A full transcript is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –

00:03   00:07   We are at the Academy building near the cathedral in Utrecht; the Queen has just gone inside.
00:07   00:15   And inside some six religions are together: Jewish, Christian, Buddhist. Hindu, and not to forget, Islam.
00:15   00:21   And that is exactly why we are here, to proclaim that our Judeo-Christian identity …
00:25   00:29   …that the Jewish-Christian identity will be retained in this country and not undermined by Islamization…
00:29   00:33   …which this afternoon is poured over us with this meeting.
00:33   00:40   For it is too crazy for words, but almost all Dutch churches, via the Council of Churches and the Evangelical Alliance…
00:40   00:46   …plus politics, Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Ballin and the Queen, and Jorritsma on behalf of Dutch municipalities,
00:46   00:54   politics and clergy, are together here to proclaim that Islam is equivalent of Judeo-Christian values.
00:54   00:00   And we know that this not so in Islam, because it divides people into two categories, Muslims and non-Muslims.
01:00   01:05   And you can see in the sources, the Koran and the hadith, and the life of the Prophet Muhammad…
01:05   01:10   that there is a big difference: non-Muslims are indeed apes, pigs, dhimmis, fuel for hell…
01:10   01:16   …and should be suppressed and destroyed, and the Muslims are the better nation, and thus must conquer.
01:16   01:22   Yet inside here, all these people together, notably in the presence of the Queen…
01:22   01:27   …clearly state that Islam is equivalent to all the Judeo-Christian values in our country. And that is a disgraceful lie.
01:29   01:34   Islam divides people in two compartments, Muslims, the good nation, and non-Muslims…
01:34   01:40   …as is literally stated in the texts: monkeys, pigs, dhimmis, fuel for hell. What do you think?
01:40   01:46   “Yes, I think … well, I actually do not know much of it, but, well…”
01:46   01:50   Have you ever read the Koran? [“Yes”] So you did, because it is in there.
01:50   01:57   “The presence of the Queen did us good, we were happy to be here.”
01:57   02:02   Yes, I can imagine that. Today a declaration has been read out which states…
02:02   02:06   … that all religions present here are based on the equality of all people.
02:06   02:13   “Yes, you must observe peace together, and freedom, we must all be one, not two, or three or four.”
02:13   02:19   [Well said.] “We are for all religions together, we simply are the Netherlands”
02:19   02:23   The Quran is the most sacred book for you, and also in the hadith we read what I just said…
02:23   02:27   …that non-Muslims are not at all regarded as equal…
02:27   02:31   …because Muslims themselves are the good nation as the Koran states…
02:31   02:35   and non-Muslims belong to the monkeys, pigs, dhimmis…
02:35   02:39   …worthless fellows, fuel for hell; that is not equivalent. How do view that?
02:39   02:44   “To be honest I do not have an answer to that” [No answer?] “No answer to that.”
02:44   02:48   “This is a beautiful day, there are Muslim spiritual leaders…”
02:48   02:53   “…ask them, they will have a very nice answer to your question, which is wrong anyway.”
02:53   02:59   “The men, the clergy of Islam are inside, you will have all the opportunity.”
02:59   03:06   [We will wait for them] “Okay, Good luck with your mission.” [Thank you!]
03:06   03:14   “Sorry, I only speak Arabic.” [Only speaks Arabic, okay, but…. Muslim?] “Yes I am Muslim, alhamdullilah”
03:14   03:17   Mister Mayor (PvdA, Socialist) may we ask a short question? You are wearing a nice official chain with it.
03:18   03:22   Thank you for taking time, we are very curious, what did you think of this afternoon?
03:22   03:26   “I found it a very special and beautiful afternoon”.
03:26   03:30   Now we have the statement of the six faiths present here…
03:30   03:34   …that from their sources they all take the view of the equality of man, is that right?
03:34   03:38   “Yes, you can hardly say that more nicely, and I found it so beautiful that they all are so uh…”
03:38   03:42   “… positively oriented, not like we are better or different or something…”
03:43   03:48   But based on the sources, that fits nowhere, because the Quran divides mankind into two compartments…
03:48   03:52   …Muslims and non-Muslims, Muslims are good people, as clearly sated…
03:52   03:57   …and non-Muslims are monkeys, pigs, dhimmis, fuel for hell. That’s is what is stated in the sources.
03:57   04:01   “As fact I think that everyone sees it from his own perspective, I think is true…”
04:01   04:07   “…I myself grew up in Protestant circles, well about Catholics it was talked about in not very positive terms…”
04:07   04:12   “…and conversely ditto; and that wears with the years, but you must rely on your own power.”
04:12   04:16   No, I understand, I agree with you in the personal level, but the declaration states that…
04:16   04:23   …from the sources, that Islam also takes the view of the equality of all people, and you know that is not true, as I just explained you.
04:23   04:27   “Yes, but think it in fact is correct, however. Every religion, every belief…”
04:27   04:32   “…bases itself of its own convictions, of one’s own good.”
04:33   04:36   But mayor, that simply is not so in the Koran, you do know that, don’t you?
04:36   04:40   “I have never read the Quran from cover to cover”
04:40   04:45   Well I did and have five editions at home, and I can assure you, in various translations and also in the hadith…
04:45   04:49   …and in the life of Muhammad we expressly see the great distinction between Muslims and non-Muslims.
04:49   04:53   Muslims are seen as the good people, non-Muslims are as the sources specifically name:
04:53   04:57   dhimmis, monkeys, pigs, . If that is stated as such, and it is…
04:57   05:01   …we can not possibly state in a declaration as this afternoon…
05:01   05:05   …that all sources start from a basis of equality, for that is not true.
05:05   05:13   “Maybe on a nice day like this you should not try to find the differences, but the similarities…”
05:13   05:19   “…the people inside have done that, and we must do that outside too, we should be an example of that … You and me.”
05:19   05:24   May I ask a few questions about the meeting this afternoon, because you are the Army-Imam, are you?
05:24   05:28   “I am Army-Imam, and I wish you success and an enjoyable day, well organized, good day.”
05:28   05:32   But just do come here for a chat, we would appreciate that.
05:32   05:36  
05:36   05:40   “I thought it was a very nice conversation, it’s fun and good to see…”
05:40   05:44   “…that one has different ideas, and you still can meet together and share that.”
05:44   05:48   Which Muslim group are you from?
05:48   05:54   “I am from the WIM, World Islamic Mission, and CMO, Muslim and Government Contact Body…”
05:56   06:00   “… so of the Hindustani, Surinam, Pakistani, and Indian community.”
06:00   06:04   What we now are very curious about, is the following:
06:04   06:10   The declaration, as lays the basis for this meeting, says that to the six religions that were together…
06:10   06:15   …for convenience we’ll also call Humanism a religion, the equality of all people is a central factor…
06:15   06:21   …that it also says so in the sources of the six religions, the equality of all people.
06:21   06:25   “Yes, in fact it is of course, every man is equal…”
06:25   06:30   “…but yes, uh, yes, a look here, that is indeed always asked…”
06:30   06:34   In Islam, there is no equality of all people…
06:34   06:38   …but a division of the world population into good and very bad.
06:38   06:43   “Yes, I know the Koran too little for that, but again …”
06:43   06:47   Did you read the Koran? [“No”]
06:47   06:51   Then you will certainly know if you know of the history of Hindu India,…
06:51   06:56   …that 40 to 80 millions Hindus have been massacred in the Jihad, when Muslims occupied India.
06:56   07:00   “I do not know that”
07:00   07:04   You do not know that, but those are historical facts. And we, right away…
07:04   07:08   …we are in the middle of the discussion, for here is a declaration signed…
07:08   07:14   …stating that all religions here, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Humanism, and Islam, are based in the equality of man.
07:14   07:18   “Certainly, we endorse that, that is why we are here today.”
07:18   07:22   But the declaration says, based on ‘the sources’, and the sources are different…
07:22   07:26   …because in Islam, humanity is divided in two parts, Muslims and non-Muslims.
07:26   07:32   And then the Muslim are the good nation, and non-Muslims are monkeys, pigs, dhimmis.
07:32   07:36   “No, no, no. Who said that? That’s not in the Koran, that is, that is…”
07:36   07:40   Is it not in the Quran, that non-Muslims are dhimmis, apes and pigs?
07:40   07:44   “No, no, no. I want this discussion further to… ehh.”
07:44   07:48  
07:48   07:52   “I do not want you to make pictures this way.”
07:52   07:56   Okay, but it would have been nice if you could correct that here, because if it is not in the sources,
07:56   08:00   then it is okay, but it is in the sources, that is the problem. [“No, it does say so.”]
08:00   08:04   It is in the sources, precisely as you say.
08:04   08:08   “No, no, not what I say, what you say”
08:08   08:12   In the Quran it says so, I can let you read it, unfortunately I don’t have it with me…
08:08   08:12   …but well, that is just too bad.
08:16   08:20   We see there was no Muslim country than, and now there are sixty…
08:20   08:24   …with hundreds of millions deaths from the Jihad wars. And that all happened as a result of Jihad texts from the Koran.
08:27   08:31   So from that you see that Islam is not based on the equality of all people…
08:31   08:35   …but only once people have agreed to become Muslim.
08:35   08:39   “No, the war is…”
08:39   08:43   Come join in the conversation here.
08:43   08:48   “There is a very serious confusion between political issues and the texts…”
08:48   08:52   “…in your reference, a hate text…”
08:52   08:52   “…I find it, eh, no offense… disrespectful when we talk about the Koran and profile it as being hateful.”
09:03   09:08   What I the would like is that you compare the sources, so we have the Bible here and the Koran there…
09:08   09:13   …and we read together and you may ask me questions about the Bible, fine, I can answer that,
09:13   09:18   and I ask questions about the Koran and expect you to answer that as Muslim. That is what I ask you.
09:18   09:22   “That is a respectable expectation, I have no problems with that.”
09:22   09:29   From this speaker the very same evening we received an email asking us “in no way to use any images and audio material of me or publish it”
09:27   09:31   Muslims who want to tell more are welcome at www.tora-yeshua.nl.
09: 31   09:39   Her Majesty leaves. The press called the meeting “successful” and “very beautiful”.

Then and Now: Part Three

Pim Fortuyn: “This country has had enough of it! C’est ça!”

A number of statements — such as a call to put a hold on the immigration of Muslims — brought Pim Fortuyn into conflict with the board of the newly-founded party he was asked to lead. This video shows a part of that conflict, and is taken from “The Night of Fortuyn”.

“I will not reject my viewpoints, but, people: it is five to twelve! Not in the Netherlands, but in Europe! And you want that? I stand for this country! For what has been built here in the last five, six centuries.”

“Damn it, what we have here simply is a fifth col—… well let me say it all now: a fifth column! Of people who want to help bring down the country! But I will not go for that.”

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



After this meeting, Mr. Fortuyn decided to found his own party, LPF (List Pim Fortuyn) and, after a long campaign of demonization, was assassinated on May 6, 2002 by a left-wing activist who considered him “a danger to society”, particularly for “vulnerable groups such as asylum-seekers and Muslims”.

A complete transcript of the video is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –

00:00   00:06   I will not go for that, and I say, “you can stay here, but you must adapt.”
00:06   00:12   I must hear “Allah is great”, that I am a “dirty pig” … you are a “Christian dog”…
00:12   00:16   THAT is what they say, and you think that is okay…
00:16   00:22   And I have so far been very reserved. I have never repeated that…
00:22   00:24   … but you accept being walked over, and I will not let that happen anymore.
00:24   00:29   And that’s where I get all those seats from (in the polls).
00:29   00:32   Because this country is FED UP! … C’est ÇA!
00:32   00:37   That is what I stand for. And if I must express that otherwise, well, fine…
00:37   00:41   … but it is about YOUR children, YOUR grandchildren. For what else is this about?
00:41   00:46   Must I explain more here? I can not do it any other way, and will not do it any other way.
00:46   00:52   Then I would rather be finished off. Okay, fine …
00:52   00:56   … but the problem sir, will remain. That will remain.
00:56   01:00   People have had more than enough of it.
01:00   01:05   Damn it, in my city, Moroccan boys, Turkish boys…
01:05   01:11   …who do not rob the Turks, the Moroccans, but rob you and me and little old ladies.
01:11   01:15   And the police? What they do? Damn it … nothing.
01:15   01:19   They tell you: “If you say that, you discriminate”.
01:19   01:24   And THAT is what I express from the Dutch people. And I stand for it, I STAND for it.
01:24   01:31   Is that not allowed? Okay, I respect that. C’est ça [That’s all].

The Islamization of the Russian Military

Based on this Interfax report, Russia’s ability to combat Islamist separatism within its borders — not to mention in the “Near Abroad” — may be hampered by demographic trends within its own military forces:

Volga-Urals Military District Has More Muslims Than Orthodox

Yekaterinburg/Moscow, February 9, Interfax — Most believers in the troops of the Volga-Urals Military District are Muslims, a source in the military district headquarters told Interfax on Tuesday, citing recent polls.

“A survey indicates that about 50% of those in the military district’s troops are Muslims, 40% Orthodox and 10% Protestants. The Muslims’ preeminence over the Orthodox in the military district troops has never been reported before,” the source said.

– – – – – – – –

No religious conflicts have been reported in the Volga-Urals Military District, or instances when servicemen would refuse to take the military oath or to dodge service on religious grounds.

Deputy Defense Minister Pavel Pankov earlier said that most believers in the armed force are Orthodox Christians, about 13% Muslims, some 3% Buddhists and 4% profess other religions, according to polls.

“The situation in the Volga-Urals Military District indicates that the exterritorial principle is being fully observed when troops are being formed, ex-head of the Defense Ministry’s Personnel Department Yevgeny Vysotsky told Interfax.



Hat tip: Fjordman.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/15/2010

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/15/2010Severe winter storms and record low temperatures continue to afflict Europe. Rome received its first significant snowfall in many years, and other parts of Italy experienced blizzard conditions. Spain has had to endure temperatures far below freezing, and there have been snowstorms across the Iberian peninsula and in the Canary Islands.

In other news, in retaliation for the blacklisting of some of its citizens by the Swiss government, Libya has blocked entry visas for most European countries. Col. Ghadafi — perhaps influenced by the release of the Lockerbie bomber? — has made an exception for Britain.

Thanks to Barry Rubin, C. Cantoni, CSP, ESW, Gaia, heroyalwhyness, ICLA, Insubria, JD, KGS, REP, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
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Financial Crisis
A Media Plot Against Madrid?
Concern Grows in US Cities as Government Plans to End Housing Aid
Congress Refuses to Bring Home Millions of Jobs
Europe’s Debt Crisis
Obama’s Radicalism is Killing the Dow
What Bankrupted Greece? It Was the Olympics!
 
USA
100 Lawmakers Reject Big Brother Health-Care Takeover
Chuck Norris: Ready for Feds in Your Kitchen?
Frank Gaffney: Why Not the Best?
McCain to FDA: Regulate Joe the Plumber
Obama Making Plans to Use Executive Power
Put Washington D.C. On a Diet
Retired Admiral-Senator Sees ‘Death of U.S.’
 
Canada
Canada Looks to China to Exploit Oil Sands Rejected by US
 
Europe and the EU
At Least 20 Killed in Belgian Train Crash: Report
Czech Republic: Schools for Special Needs Say Roma Kids’ Placement is Justified
France: GDF Suez to Build Photovoltaic Plant by 2011
Hitler’s Mufti: Video: Part2
Hitler’s Mufti: Video: Part1
Italian Finds Retardation Link
Italy: Snow in Rome
Italy: 2009 GDP -4.9% on 2008
Italy: Sicily Bridge ‘To Open to the Public in 2017’
Italy: Bible of Jailed Mafia Boss Appears on Internet
Italy: Pope Meets Irish Bishops on Abuse Scandal
Italy: Drop in 2009 Exports Worst Since 1970
Italy-France: Frattini to Kouchner, Focus on Iran and Balkans
Italy: Pilgrims Flood Padua for Brief Display of Saint’s Remains
Muslims Took Over British Underworld the Day Twin Towers Fell … Other Gangs Are Terrified We’re Al-Qaeda
Weather: Spain Hit by Cold Snap and Snow Again
 
Balkans
Berisha Defends Berlusconi’s Quip on Pretty Girls
EU-Croatia: European Parliament, Talks to End in 2010
Italy Strengthens Relations With Eastern Neighbours
Serbia: NATO: Tadic Meets Head of European Forces, Stavridis
Serbia: Greek Business Delegation Visits Raska Region
 
North Africa
Algeria: Foundation for Remembrance of Algerian War Soon
Libya: Sentence Reduced for Swiss Businessman
Libya Suspends Issuing Visas to Europeans
Libya: Europeans Banned From Entry
Morocco: French Loans for Trams and Phosphates
Nuclear: Algeria, First French Atomic Bomb 50 Years Ago
Swiss-Libya Spat Sees Schengen Visas Blocked
Tunisia: Citrus Exports Do Well
 
Israel and the Palestinians
Bil’in: ‘Wall Tourism’ Between Photos and Teargas
Hamas Detains British Journalist in Gaza Strip Over ‘Security Crimes’
Settlement Freeze Ignored in Dozens of Settlements
 
Middle East
Africans Working in Iraq See Opportunity and Exploitation
Bahrain: Visa Restrictions for Foreigners in GCC
Cars: Turkey’s Ford Reports 2009 Profit of €181 Mln
Dear Veneziani: This is Why Boycotting Teheran is Right
Hamas Leader Murder, 11 Suspects European
Hit Squad Carrying British Passports Killed Senior Hamas Leader, Claims Dubai Police Chief
Lebanon: Commemorating Rafik Hariri’s Death, Demanding Answers From March 14 Leaders
Media: Winner of Kassir Award, Lebanon Lacks Transparency
Nuclear: Turkey; Minister, First Power Plant Ready by 2017
Qatar: Clinton Warns of Iranian ‘Military Dictatorship’
The U.S. Military Looks at the Bows to the White House But Knows Its Mission Too
UAE Government Releases Workers’ Rights Booklet
Valentine’s Day Around the Muslim World
 
South Asia
The King of Bhutan Claims to be “Father of the Christians,” But Does Not Build Churches
 
Immigration
Italy: Maroni Says New Model for Integration Needed, Not Police Round-Ups
 
Culture Wars
Is This Former Stay-at-Home Mom Our Greatest Security Threat?
 
General
IPCC Corruption Included Ignoring Facts and Science

Financial Crisis


A Media Plot Against Madrid?

Spanish Intelligence Reportedly Probing ‘Attacks’ on Economy

Madrid is rushing to calm concerns that Spain could be the next Greece. Now, there are reports that the country’s intelligence agency is looking into whether the Anglo-Saxon media has sought to undermine confidence in the Spanish economy.

With Spain suffering the highest unemployment in the European Union and its economy expected to remain in recession for a least another year, things are looking bleak for Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero. Now it seems the government in Madrid has found a convenient scapegoat for its travails: the Anglo-Saxon media allied with nefarious speculators looking to undermine the euro.

On Sunday the center-left El Pais newspaper reported that the Spanish intelligence agency was looking into “speculative attacks” on Spain following the Greek debt crisis. Citing unnamed sources, El Pais said the National Intelligence Center (CNI) was investigating “whether investors’ attacks and the aggressiveness of some Anglo-Saxon media are driven by market forces and challenges facing the Spanish economy, or whether there is something more behind this campaign.”

KEY FACTS: SPAIN

Debt ratio: 54.3 percent of GDP

Budget deficit: 11.2 percent of GDP (2009)

GDP growth: -3.7 percent (2009 forecast)

Share of the euro zone’s GDP: 11.8 percent (2008)

Source: European Commission

Europe’s fifth largest economy may have avoided the huge public debt incurred by Greece, and its banks are fairly solid, but Spain’s over-reliance on the construction industry during the boom has left its economy floundering in the recession, with a near 19 percent unemployment rate, and its difficulties in slashing public spending are causing concerns in Europe.

Investors have voiced growing anxiety over rising debt levels in the single currency area, the euro zone, and over the ability of some governments to manage public finances, giving a quintet of shaky economies, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain, the unflattering moniker PIIGS.

Stressing Spain’s ‘Solidity’

Economists have questioned assertions by the government in Madrid that the economy will grow by some 3 percent by 2012. Spain’s deficit has soared to 11.4 percent of its gross domestic product, well ahead of the euro zone 3 percent limit. There are doubts that the country will manage to stick to its pledge of slashing €50 million ($70 million) off public spending, particularly because in a heavily decentralized Spain, powerful regional governments control a big slice of the budgets.

Zapatero’s Socialist government has bristled at comparisons with Greece, which saw its pubic debt burden rise to 113 percent of GDP. Last Tuesday the Spanish prime minister urged calm and stressed his country’s “solvency and solidity.” He told a meeting of Socialist lawmakers in Madrid that “there are movements that have brought a great deal of concern … on the stock market. It seems there are speculative movements.”

Infrastructure Minister Jose Blanco raised eyebrows last week when he alluded to shadowy forces ganging up on the country. “Spain is the victim of an international conspiracy to destroy the country’s economic status, and then, the euro,” he said. “Nothing that is happening, including the apocalyptical editorials in foreign media, is just chance.”

British business daily The Financial Times and the market-friendly weekly The Economist, have been particularly critical of Zapatero’s handling of the economy. On Friday The Economist rejected the accusations of an Anglo-Saxon plot as “piffle,” writing “the best retort is: grow up.”

Yet, if the El Pais report is correct, it would seem the Spanish government is taking the matter very seriously indeed. Officials at the Spanish Defense Ministry and the CNI have, however, neither confirmed not denied the report so far.

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



Concern Grows in US Cities as Government Plans to End Housing Aid

Over the next six months, the U.S. government plans to wind down many of its emergency programs for housing. Then it will become clear whether the market can function on its own.

People in Elkhart are pretty sure the answer will be no.

President Barack Obama has traveled twice to this beleaguered manufacturing city to spotlight the U.S. government’s economic stimulus program, which helped stabilize a housing market whose fall had rippled around the globe.

The employment picture here has indeed begun to improve over the past nine months.

But Elkhart also symbolizes the failure of government efforts to turn around the housing slump at the heart of the economic crisis. Housing in this community has become almost entirely dependent on a string of government support programs, which are nonetheless failing to prevent a decline in prices and a rise in mortgage delinquencies.

More than one in 10 mortgage holders in Elkhart are seriously behind on payments.

The median sales price has plunged to the level of a decade ago.

Many homeowners owe more than their home is worth, freezing them in place for years. Foreclosures recently hit a record level.

To the extent that the real estate market is functioning at all, people here say, it is doing so only because of the emergency programs, which have pushed down interest rates on mortgages and offered buyers a substantial tax credit.

Equally important is an expanded mortgage insurance program run by the Federal Housing Administration, which encourages private lenders to accept borrowers with small down payments.

The government takes the risk of default.

A few years ago, only one in 10 buyers in Elkhart used the housing agency program.

Now about half do. Across the United States, the agency has greatly expanded its reach: It now insures six million mortgages.

‘‘There has been all kinds of help for housing. I’m not unappreciative,’’ said Barb Swartley, president of the Elkhart County Board of Realtors. ‘‘But you can’t turn real estate into a government- sponsored operation forever.’’ Many inWashington agree. With worries about the deficit intensifying, the government is eager to start withdrawing some of its support programs.

The first step could happen as early as next month, when the Federal Reserve has said it will end its trillion-dollar program to buy mortgage securities. That program has driven mortgage interest rates to lows not seen since the 1950s.

Yet it is uncertain whether the government can really pull back without sending housing markets into another tailspin. ‘‘A rise in rates would kill us all by itself,’’ Ms. Swartley said.

The Obama administration has offered few ideas about reforming the housing market. Proposals for the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage holding companies taken over by the government at the height of the crisis, were supposed to be introduced with the president’s budget this month. They were not.

The government programs, however crucial, are distorting the market. The tax credit produced sales last autumn, but some lenders in Elkhart say it has troubling implications.

‘‘People are buying to get that tax credit, to get some reserve money.

They’re saying, ‘If something happens, I will have a little bit of money to fall back on,’’’ said Denny Davis of Horizon Bank in Elkhart. ‘‘That’s not healthy.’’ The programs favor first-time buyers, who have the fewest resources to bring to a deal. Heather Stevens, a 23-year-old nurse in the city, is closing soon on a three-bedroom house. Since her loan was insured by the Federal Housing Administration, she had to put down only 3.5 percent of the $74,900 purchase price.

‘‘It was a breeze to get approved,’’ she said.

The sellers are covering her closing costs, which agents say is often the case in Elkhart. That meant Ms.. Stevens had to come up with only the $2,600 down payment, which still took all her savings.

But the best part is the $7,500 tax credit.

She will use that to remodel the kitchen.

‘‘If itwasn’t for the credit,wewould have waited to buy,’’ said Ms. Stevens, who is getting married this year.

Buying houses with no money down was a feature of the latter stages of the housing bubble. It gave prices a final push into the stratosphere. But buyers with no equity were the first to abandon their properties as the market fell.

With housing prices stagnant, bolstering the market by again letting people buy with hardly any money down is viewed in some quarters as a bad bet.

Neil M. Barofsky, the special inspector general for the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, wrote in his most recent report to Congress that ‘‘the federal government’s concerted efforts to support’’ housing prices ‘‘risk reinflating’’ the bubble.

He noted one difference from the last bubble: Taxpayers, rather than banks, are now directly at risk in these new mortgages.

In Elkhart, the worries are less about the risks of doing too much and more about the perils of doing too little. If the Federal Reserve really ends its $1.25 trillion program of buying mortgagebacked securities, economists say, mortgage rates could rise as much as one percentage point. In recent weeks, rates on 30-year fixed mortgages have drifted below 5 percent.

The tax credit requires home buyers to make a deal by April 30, the middle of the prime spring selling season.

For now, the F.H.A. is modestly tightening the requirements on some of its programs, trying to strike a balance between stabilizing the market with qualified buyers and overwhelming it with unqualified borrowers.

John A. Katalinich, chief lending officer at the Inova Federal Credit Union in Elkhart, says there is danger in letting buyers get into properties with so little at stake, but those risks are minimal compared with the alternative.

‘‘If the government were not to continue the same level of support, it would be very detrimental, like cutting the legs off a wobbling child and expecting it to run a marathon,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s very possible we’ll still be at this level of need five years from now.’’ Elkhart, in the northeast corner of Indiana, became a symbol of distress in America after Mr. Obama chose it as the place to introduce his stimulus plan last February. The region is a hub of recreational- vehicle manufacturing, one of the first industries to falter in the recession.

In less than a year, the unemployment rate tripled, peaking at 18.9 percent last March.

Mr. Obama returned in August to promote the effectiveness of the stimulus program and of government grants for the manufacture of battery-powered electric vehicles. Several companies have announced they are hiring. Unemployment in December was down to 14.8 percent.

No such improvement is visible with housing. In the past 18 months, the F.H.A. increased its loans in Elkhart by 40 percent even as its defaults rose 174 percent.

As these troubled loans become foreclosures, the government takes over the property and tries to sell it. On Saturday, Gina Martin, an administrative assistant, examined a three-bedroom government house for sale southeast of Elkhart.

In late 2003, the house sold for $115,000, but in these depressed times the government was willing to let it go for $75,000.

Ms. Martin’s agent, Dean Slabach, thought the government would eventually have to take a much lower bid, substantially increasing its loss. Most of the F.H.A. properties on the market in Elkhart carry notations like ‘‘significant price reduction’’ and ‘‘all reasonable offers considered.’’ ‘‘They’ll end up selling this for $60,000 or less,’’ Mr. Slabach said.

But Ms. Martin, a 47-year-old renter who has approval for an F.H.A. loan, said she was not tempted at any price.

‘‘We’ll see what else is out there,’’ she said.

           — Hat tip: REP [Return to headlines]



Congress Refuses to Bring Home Millions of Jobs

“He, therefore, who is now against domestic manufacture, must be for reducing us either to dependence on that foreign nation, or to be clothed in skins, and to live like wild beasts in dens and caverns. I am not one of these; experience has taught me that manufactures are now as necessary to our independence as to our comfort; and if those who quote me as of a different opinion, will keep pace with me in purchasing nothing foreign where an equivalent of domestic fabric can be obtained, without regard to difference of price, it will not be our fault if we do not soon have a supply at home equal to our demand, and wrest that weapon of distress from the hand which has wielded it.” The Letters of Thomas Jefferson: 1743-1826. To Benjamin Austin Monticello, January 9, 1816

I was in Denver recently. As I refuse to fly commercial, I drive. From Big Spring, Texas, where I live, to Denver and back, the number one subject of discussion is jobs. People are very afraid; you can see it in their eyes and hear it in their voice as they say, “I thought we were in a recovery.”

It is not the job of the federal government to create jobs, yet the thieves in the Outlaw Congress right now are bickering over another con job called a “jobs bill”. This is just more of the same: increasing the debt, weaning more Americans into government jobs and possibly another extension of unemployment benefits:…

[…]

Folks have been sending me their candidate of choice for Congress in the coming November elections. The only problem is — why are none of the candidates (that I’ve seen so far) addressing real solutions instead of just more pap and warmed over political rhetoric? John Dennis is running against Marxist Nancy Pelosi. He is a great constitutional candidate, except I don’t see him stepping forward with the taking the first step in bringing home MILLIONS of good paying jobs: “As a country we should welcome trade with all countries, resolve our outstanding disputes with countries considered unfriendly and have diplomatic relations with all.”

Well said, but, like so many of the other candidates for Congress, where is your pledge to introduce and fight to get passed, bills that will get America out of three unconstitutional treaties: NAFTA, CAFTA and GATT?

[…]

Agriculture, manufacturing and industrial — all crippled and dying a slow death because of destructive trade treaties signed by Bill Clinton (NAFTA & GATT) and George Bush, Jr. (CAFTA) to keep a “one world trading system” operating. George Bush, Sr., spearheaded the NAFTA treaty with Canada and Mexico; Billy was selected to continue the destruction. Obama is to cement the final stakes through the heart of this republic.

[…]

Did we have trade with other nations prior to NAFTA, CAFTA and GATT? Of course we did and we had tariffs. Fair trade is good. Free trade is financial suicide for any nation.

[…]

Those millions “displaced” by those toxic treaties began to buy “cheap” junk from China and other countries. American manufacturers struggle to compete with products coming from China — a communist country that murders their people at will. They monitor women’s menstrual cycles to force abortions on them if they get pregnant twice. A country that condones the skinning of dogs and cats alive so the fur can be illegally sold in parkas, doll clothes and sweaters sold in the US. I’d rather wear rags.

Back in 1994, a lame duck Congress voted on the hideous “free” trade treaty, GATT, whereby the United States of America totally and completely abrogated it’s sovereignty to a foreign body — the WTO. At the time of the vote, Bob Dole said, “Any way you cut it, we’re the big beneficiary.” Counterfeit U.S. Senator Ernest Hollings had just the opposite prediction, “…described the vote as ‘the gravest mistake the U.S. has ever made on economic policy.’“

Hollings’ statement turned out to be right; Dole walked from the Senate a millionaire. Our nation has been plundered as a result of GATT and We, the People, our businesses, our commerce, and our livelihoods, have been under attack ever since, losing virtually every single challenge made by some foreign country. On September 26, 2002, counterfeit U.S. Senator Max Baucus said he was deeply troubled by the WTO dispute settlement process: “Things are looking more and more… like a kangaroo court against U.S. trade laws.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Europe’s Debt Crisis

Five Threats to the Common Currency

By Stefan Schultz

Italy: Overlooking the Debt Mountain

The risk premium on Italian government bonds has increased significantly in recent weeks. Its 10-year bond stands a good one percentage point higher than its German equivalent — and at first glance, that is not surprising. After all, Italy’s total public debt is sky high: According to government estimates, it stands at more than 100 percent of GDP.

That, though, has been the case since 2006, long before the outbreak of the crisis. Economists are giving Italy the all-clear for now, saying it does not face the same short-term risk as Greece and others. Nor does Italy have the same crisis symptoms as the more economically fragile European countries.

Unlike Spain, Italy’s economy has not been shaken to its foundations by the bursting of a housing bubble. Unlike Greece, its government does not tinker with its own budget deficit figures. Unlike Ireland, its financial sector has not been badly affected by the crisis: The Italian banking oversight system has long been relatively strict, even before the Lehman Brothers crash.

In addition, it is seen as unlikely that Italian public spending will significantly increase in the foreseeable future. On the contrary, the government pushed an austerity package through parliament in July 2008. Nevertheless, a national debt of more than 100 percent of GDP remains a huge risk factor. And Italy’s current budget deficit of 5.3 percent of GDP may be well below that of other crisis-struck countries, but it still lies well above the stability pact limit of 3 percent. “Government spending continues to gallop,” criticized the Milan economist Tito Boeri last week. And the Italian government shows no sign of trying to change the situation any time soon.

The rating agency Fitch recently criticized Italy, saying it has indefinitely postponed almost all its measures to slim down its debt. As a result, it is no big surprise that capital markets are lumping Italy together with high-risk euro zone countries such as Greece and Portugal.

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



Obama’s Radicalism is Killing the Dow

By Michael J. Boskin

It’s hard not to see the continued sell-off on Wall Street and the growing fear on Main Street as a product, at least in part, of the realization that our new president’s policies are designed to radically re-engineer the market-based U.S. economy, not just mitigate the recession and financial crisis.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



What Bankrupted Greece? It Was the Olympics!

Here’s an angle on the Greek financial crisis I hadn’t considered: Victor Matheson, a member of the Sports Economist group blog, argues that one reason the Greeks wound up in such deep financial trouble is that they went deep in hock to pay for the Olympics:

Greece’s federal government had historically been a profligate spender, but in order to join the euro currency

zone, the government was forced to adopt austerity measures that reduced deficits from just over 9% of GDP in 1994 to just 3.1% of GDP in 1999, the year before Greece joined the euro.

But the Olympics broke the bank. Government deficits rose every year after 1999, peaking at 7.5% of GDP in 2004, the year of the Olympics, thanks in large part to the 9 billion euro price tag for the Games. For a relatively small country like Greece, the cost of hosting the Games equaled roughly 5% of the annual GDP of the country.

Of course, the Olympics didn’t usher in an economic boom. Indeed, in 2005 Greece suffered an Olympic-sized hangover with GDP growth falling to its lowest level in a decade.

That would certainly follow the pattern of crazy civic development projects in which stadiums and museums are supposed to somehow substitute for everything that is missing in the local economy. But the governments in question don’t usually end up in receivership.

Fun Olympic factoid of the day: the television news yesterday reported that the Whistler ski complex had essentially been developed in the hopes of the area someday scoring a winter Olympics. I have no idea if this is true, but it seems both plausible and deeply troubling.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]

USA


100 Lawmakers Reject Big Brother Health-Care Takeover

‘American people repudiated what Obama, Democrats have put forward’

Nearly 100 lawmakers have signed a formal Declaration of Health Care Independence to reject an unconstitutional Washington takeover of American health care — and now one representative is challenging Americans to deliver it to Congress and the White House to hold them accountable to the people.

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., drafted and formally unveiled the Declaration of Health Care Independence Jan. 27. The declaration is a commitment to protect the rights of the American people to make their own health decisions, reduce bureaucratic red-tape, decrease intergenerational debt and implement 10 common-sense principles for future health-care reform.

“We’ve come to somewhat of an impasse,” Bachmann told WND. “Now with Sen. Scott Brown’s election, that seems to have been able to stop the ball from rolling in the Senate. But we know the president still plans to base his plans on the health-care bill.

[Comments from JD: Take a look at the graph of of the US debt.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Chuck Norris: Ready for Feds in Your Kitchen?

And sure enough, incorporated in the first lady’s health initiative is the reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Act: “The Administration is requesting an historic investment of an additional $10 billion over 10 years starting in 2011 to improve the quality of the National School Lunch and Breakfast program …”

At first glance, it sounds like a no-brainer. Who doesn’t want to care for kids, especially the poor ones? But the Child Nutrition Act goes so much further than providing their meals. It has now become another cover for increasing big government and union power, with the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, being one of the biggest beneficiaries.

If the Obama administration has its way, the Child Nutrition Act will become one more tentacle of an over-reaching federal government and nanny state that now wants to control the kitchens of America. The government already controls what your children learn (and don’t learn) in public schools — why not give them more control over what they eat? (That is one more reason why my wife, Gena, and I are advocates for private education and homeschooling, where the academics and kitchens are free from government tyranny.)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: Why Not the Best?

For years, presidents of both parties have pledged to ensure that America fields a military second to none. A successful test last week of a truly transformative technology affords Barack Obama an opportunity to help make that pledge a reality. Unless Mr. Obama swiftly orders the Pentagon to change course on the remarkable Airborne Laser Test Bed (ALTB) program, however, his legacy on defense preparedness will be one of empty rhetoric and increased danger for our country.

The Airborne Laser program is a direct descendent of Ronald Reagan’s visionary Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), with its exploration of various means of intercepting and destroying ballistic missiles — including lasers and other “directed energy” techniques. Given the state of the art at the time, critics scoffed at the idea that these exotic, speed-of-light weapons could ever be made to work. The late Sen. Edward Kennedy exemplified this view when he dismissively dubbed the SDI program “Star Wars.”

Today, however, it is the critics who look ridiculously shortsighted. Thanks to two decades of intensive research and development and an investment of roughly $5 billion, America’s aerospace industry has achieved an extraordinary feat of science and engineering. They have successfully married a Boeing 747 airframe with three chemical lasers: a low-power system used for tracking a missile early in its flight; a second, low-energy laser that measures and calculates adjustments needed to compensate for atmospheric conditions; and a third, megawatt-class high energy laser that uses the others’ data to destroy the missile by using its heat to induce structural failure…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



McCain to FDA: Regulate Joe the Plumber

If you had any doubt about whether John McCain is a limited government conservative, you may put that doubt to rest—he is not. On February 3, 2010, John McCain introduced to the United States Senate the Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010. Reflecting upon this poorly written bill, I am struck by the fact that John McCain apparently sees little difference between fissile material and dietary supplements. He is intent on regulating supplements as if they were radioactive enriched uranium rather than bioactive vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and botanicals that more often than not help people.

The Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010 enjoys support from the most liberal members of Congress. It is an invitation for the FDA to assume broad new powers and replicate here the system now operating in Europe over dietary supplements where dietary ingredients are presumed adulterated and unlawful to sell unless pre-approved by the government. In short, good bye free enterprise, good bye limited government, and hello more heavy handed, arbitrary and punitive FDA bias against the beleaguered dietary supplement industry. Yes, this is the same John McCain who unsuccessfully tried to rally Reagan Republicans on the notion that he was the true Reagan clone. If you believed that rhetoric, let me assure you, John McCain is no Ronald Reagan. He is very wide of the mark of that great man.

[…]

Consider the provisions of the Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010. Under it, every year every person or entity that manufactures, packages, holds, distributes, labels, or licenses a dietary supplement has to register with FDA and identify who they are and all of the products they sell or become a federal felon. Remember McCain’s rather pedestrian “Joe the Plumber” example during the campaign? Well I would not be surprised if Joe the Plumber keeps his large family above the poverty line during these hard economic times by selling vitamins from his house as a multi-level marketer. Well, Joe, the same McCain who promised you regulatory and tax relief is now offering you the chance to comply with a whole host of new federal regulations and, if you don’t, to learn what it is like to have three square meals given you year after year in a prison cell at the federal penitentiary.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Making Plans to Use Executive Power

By Peter Baker

With much of his legislative agenda stalled in Congress, President Obama and his team are preparing an array of actions using his executive power to advance energy, environmental, fiscal and other domestic policy priorities.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Put Washington D.C. On a Diet

With great fanfare, Michelle Obama kicked off a national anti-obesity campaign, which if it goes half as well as her toxic vegetable garden, will be forgotten in a week or two. But the problem is that we do need an anti-obesity campaign, just not against people who enjoy an extra hamburger during lunch, but against the politicians in Washington D.C. who have shown no ability to control the rate at which they consume public funds.

Anyone who tripled their weight within one year, would probably be a target of Michelle Obama’s finger wagging — but what about her hubby, who tripled the national deficit in only one year? Someone who eats more than average is only consuming his own food, by contrast Barry Hussein has thrown a party for himself and all his backers, and they’ve gorged themselves like mad on the United States Treasury.

[…]

Look at the economic chaos in the European Union, where most of the budget simply vanishes without any available explanation, and you can see what kind of bureaucratic nightmare is being modeled by Obama’s people.

Here’s a small taste. The EU budget is essentially meant to take money from member governments and then redistribute the money back. It has gone from 4 billion in 1970 to over a 140 billion today. Yet the majority of the EU budget cannot be accounted for. For a decade and a half, the European Court of Auditors, whose role is to audit the EU, has refused to sign off on the EU budget. This is the model that many Democrats would have us embrace.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Retired Admiral-Senator Sees ‘Death of U.S.’

Author Jeremiah Denton speaks at Marine Corps Museum

QUANTICO, Va. — Retired Admiral and former U.S. Sen. Jeremiah Denton had some tough words in the mess hall of the National Museum of the Marine Corps, packed with fellow servicemen, including some who spent time with him as a prisoner of war in the Hanoi Hilton.

In an emotional speech last night about his newly updated classic work, “When Hell Was in Session,” Denton said he feared the imminent death of the United States of America due to immorality, lack of patriotism and lack of appreciation for the unique form of government bestowed by the country’s founders.

“When Hell Was in Session” was first released in 1976 after Denton’s return from Vietnam where he was held as a prisoner of war for seven years and seven months — much of that time in solitary confinement and enduring torture. The book was re-released in 2009 — updated with Denton’s recollections of what happened upon his return to America, his election to the U.S. Senate and the role he played with Ronald Reagan in ending the Cold War.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Canada


Canada Looks to China to Exploit Oil Sands Rejected by US

Canada courts Chinese investment in Alberta oil projects as US firms boycott tar sands fuel

Canada, faced with growing political pressure over the extraction of oil from its highly polluting tar sands, has begun courting China and other Asian countries to exploit the resource.

The move comes as American firms are turning away from tar sands because of its heavy carbon footprint and damage to the landscape.

Whole Foods, the high-end organic grocery chain, and retailer Bed Bath & Beyond last week both signed up to a campaign by ForestEthics to stop US firms using oil from Canadian tar sands. The Pentagon is also scaling down its use of tar sands oil to meet a 2007 law requiring the US government to source fuels with lower greenhouse gas emissions.

Major oil companies such as Shell are also coming under shareholder pressure to pull out of the Canadian projects. Earlier this year, Shell announced it was scaling back its expansion plans for the tar sands after a revolt by shareholders. Producing oil from the Alberta tar sands causes up to five times more greenhouse gas emissions than conventional crude oil, according to the campaign group Greenpeace.

In the most significant deal to date, the Canadian government recently approved a C$1.9bn (£1.5bn) investment giving the Chinese state-owned oil company Petro­China a majority share in two projects. Prime minister Stephen Harper said: “Expect more Chinese investment in the resource and energy sectors … there will definitely be more.” China’s growing investment in the tar sands is seen in Canada as a useful counter to waning demand for tar sands oil from the US, its biggest customer. The moves, which have largely gone unnoticed outside north America, could add further tension to efforts to try to reach a global action plan on climate change.

The state department envoy, Todd Stern, on Tuesday accused China of being “a bit ambiguous” in its commitments to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Efforts to impose national carbon limits in the US have stalled in Congress, but a number of leading US firms are moving to reduce their carbon footprint by moving away from abandoning tar sands oil.

Canada is the biggest source of US oil imports, with 65% of tar sands production going to refineries in the midwest. “Companies have been hitting the pause button on projects,” said Simon Dyer, of the Pembina Institute oil sands watch project.

But not China. PetroChina has taken a 60% stake in two new tar sands projects due to get under way in the MacKay River and Dover areas next year, with plans to produce up to 35,000 barrels a day by 2014, and eventually up to 500,000 a day.

China made its first investment in the tar sands in 2005, with state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation spending C$150m for a 17% stake in a startup MEG Energy Corp. Another Chinese state-owned firm, Sinopec, last year increased its interest in the Northern Lights oil project to 50%. China’s National Petroleum Corp has also bought oil sands leases that it has not yet developed.

The projects, which will begin coming on line over the next decade, are seen as crucial to a long term strategy of finding new sources of energy as China’s economy continues to expand. “Right now I would characterise it as a token toehold,” said Peter Tertzakian, chief energy economist at ARC Financial Corporation, an energy-focused private equity firm in Calgary, Alberta.

But he said the move by China could also represent the beginnings of a major shift in control of the tar sands. “Hitherto we were very accustomed to have western countries coming here, particularly American companies or companies from the UK, taking an interest in oil and gas companies and we were OK with that,” he said. “From a continental energy security perspective of course, there is a little more hesitation when emerging powers come here, but the Canadian government has over the last year indicated more willingness to do business with China.”

Japanese and South Korean companies have also begun moving in, opening up potential new markets for Canada at a time when forecasts show a fall in global demand for oil. India’s Reliance Industries is also reportedly bidding on a project. The move by China has also crystalised increased concerns among conservationists and First Nation groups about a proposed 1,200 kilometre pipeline that would carry tar sands oil from northern Alberta, across British Columbia to oil tankers off the Pacific coast.

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


At Least 20 Killed in Belgian Train Crash: Report

BRUSSELS, Feb. 15 (AP) — (Kyodo)—Two commuter trains collided head-on in a Brussels suburb on Monday morning, killing at least 20 people, the Associated Press reported Monday.

The trains collided in snowy conditions just outside of the station at Buizingen during the rush hour, the AP quoted Belgian officials as saying.

There was no immediate word on the cause of the crash that occurred in light snowfall.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Czech Republic: Schools for Special Needs Say Roma Kids’ Placement is Justified

Prague, Feb 12 (CTK) — Czech elementary schools for children with learning disorders, formerly called “special” and now “practical” schools, have rejected the view that Romany children are placed in them without proper reasons.

Some Czech NGOs say surveys show that Romany children are placed in practical schools automatically.

Practical schools are primarily for children with light mental disorders. Pupils should not be placed in them due to behavioural and learning problems or insufficient knowledge of the teaching tongue.

Representatives of practical schools from the Plzen region argue that some Romany children lack basic social or hygienic habits and need special care because they have not acquired them at home, the teachers write in a letter addressed to Education Minister Miroslava Kopicova.

Teachers need to have reserve exercise books and pencils for Romany pupils because they often do not bring them to school. The pupils also tell the teachers that they will apply for unemployment benefits after ending school.

They also write that children with special learning needs may face scorn and misunderstanding in regular schools.

Jan Stejskal, from a NGO coalition promoting integration of Romany children into regular schools, said practical schools must reject any child who is without a light mental disorder.

But Romany parents often demand that their child attend practical schools because they are not aware of the consequences for the child’s future and because they fear discrimination at regular schools.

Learning guidance offices then decide whether a child should be placed in a practical school. These offices often operate at practical schools and serve as their recruitment centres, however, Stejskal pointed out.

The Education Ministry wants to employ assistants to teachers who would help socially disadvantaged children succeed in regular schools, using EU money to cover the costs.

According to the ministry’s data, two in 100 non-Romany pupils attend practical schools in the Czech Republic, while the proportion is 30 to 100 for Romany children.

Some 2 percent of children have light mental disorders.

In 2007 the European Human Rights Court called on the Czech Republic to adopt measures to prevent discrimination against Romany children in education.

The Amnesty International organisation recently called on Czech authorities to prevent admitting first-year pupils to practical schools and to try to place children from problematic families in regular schools.

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



France: GDF Suez to Build Photovoltaic Plant by 2011

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, FEBRUARY 11 — By 2011, the largest photovoltaic plant in France will be built in the city of Curbans, in Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur region (south). The energy group GDF Suez will be building the plant, which is expected to save about 120,000 tonnes of CO2. With an overall 33MW and 145,000 photovoltaic panels, the plant will be able to produce 43.5 million KW/h every year, thereby meeting the energy requirements of 14,500 families, according to GDF Suez. In order to carry out the project, the French company set up a company — with two credit institutes as its partners — which for 20 years will be managing the use and maintenance of the plant. The project is part of GDF Suez’s strategy to bring in diversified plants in France able to produce 10,000 MW by 2013. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hitler’s Mufti: Video: Part2

Clip #2: The Worldview of the Grand Mufti Amin Al Husseini and Hitler Lives on Through Radical Islam

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hitler’s Mufti: Video: Part1

Clip #1: The Muslim Hitler That Political Correctness Will Not Talk About. The Grand Mufti Worked with Hitler and Recruited 30,000 Muslims to Fight for Hitler.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Italian Finds Retardation Link

New gene mutation uncovered by Milan researcher

(ANSA) — Rome, February 11 — An Italian expert has discovered a new gene mutation linked to mental retardation, according to a new study. The research, headed by Patrizia D’Adamo of the San Raffaele Foundation del Monte Tabor Foundation in Milan, looked at forms of mental retardation specifically associated with the X chromosome, known as X-linked retardation.

Mental retardation in general is the commonest form of developmental disability among children and young people, and in 25-50% of cases, is caused by a defect in a gene or chromosome. X-linked retardation is considered a particularly complex disability to study because there are more than 200 known defects likely to cause retardation, stemming from problems with over 80 different genes.

The Italian study, set to be published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, analyzed the DNA of various males affected by mental retardation. They then studied the DNA of the men’s relatives and discovered that, in two cases, the defect arose from a missing gene that normally contains information for a protein specific to the nerve cells, RAB39B. The absence of this protein reduced contact between the nerve cells, or synapses. RAB39B is thought to play an important role in forming and maintaining the correct number of synapses, which transmit information between neurons. As a result, neuron communications in people affected by this genetic mutation experience are diminished, thereby reducing their cognitive and linguistic capacities and creating difficulties with social interactions. The researchers also discovered that the seriousness of retardation, which was aggravated by autism and epilepsy, appeared to increase through the generations, although they are as yet unable to explain why. The protein identified by D’Adamo’s group is part of a family of over 60 proteins involved in transporting information inside the cell but it is the only one discovered so far that is specific to nerve cells. According to D’Adamo, the next step will be more detailed research into the molecular mechanisms that alter the number of synapses and inter-neuron communications, in order to try identify potential treatments.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Snow in Rome

Capital gets biggest sprinkling in 24 years

(ANSA) — Rome, February 12 — Romans on Friday morning were treated to the first significant snowfall in many years and while this was to the delight of children and wonder of tourists, it did create traffic problems and airport delays.

The snow began around 8am but initially did not stick in the center of the capital. However, around 10.30 the snow intensified and soon accumulated on the Colosseum, the Roman Forum, Trevi Fountain and other monuments and tourist attractions.

“Rome looks like Vienna,” remarked one tourist at the Spanish Steps.

After suffering delays because of the snow, flights in and out of Rome’s second airport, Ciampino, were temporarily suspended due to poor visibility.

The civil protection department issued a warning to drivers, especially motorcyclists, to use caution.

The snow stopped around 11.30 and began to melt.

Mayor Gianni Alemanno said the snow did not create any major difficulties in the capital, except for some traffic jams and minor accidents.

The mayor himself had some problems getting to city hall and his car needed help getting up the Capitoline Hill. According to experts at the National Research Council (CNR), snow is very rare in Rome and usually does not last long.

“The fact that this is the first real snowfall in 24 years shows how rare it is and also how this is a particularly severe winter,” a CNR expert observed.

The problem over the next 36 to 48 hours, the expert added, will be ice if temperatures remain low. Although it did snow in January 2005, 2004 and February 1999, the last major snowfall in the capital was on February 11, 1986, when Rome awoke under several centimeters of snow.

Snowfall was heavier outside the city and even the seaside town of Ostia received a blanket of snow. All of Italy is in the grips of a major storm system which has brought snow to both north and south while Sardinia was particularly hit hard, with Cagliari seeing its first snowfall since 1993.

Blizzard-like conditions were reported in parts of Calabria, while in other parts of the southern region heavy rain caused flooding and landslides.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: 2009 GDP -4.9% on 2008

(ANSAmed) — ROME, FEBRUARY 12 — The gross domestic product in Italy suffered in 2009 a drop of 4.9% compared to 2008, according to data processed by the Italian National Statistics Institute (ISTAT). As regards the GDP in the fourth quarter, it fell by 0.2%, when according to analysts from the Bloomberg agency, it should have shown a +0.1%. The negative figure, according to ISTAT, “is the result of a reduction in the value added of industry, a substantial stationariness of the value added of services and an increase in the value added of agriculture”. In a joint note from Federconsumatori and Adusbef consumer associations, the data on the trend of the Italian economy were described as “dramatic” and they stated that “if the government does not decide to intervene, growth in 2010 will be zero”. The presidents of the two associations, Rosario Trefiletti and Elio Lannuti, say that “if intervention is not carried out as soon as possible, 2010 will also be a black year which will register further repercussions not only on the wellbeing of families but also on industrial output, which will increasingly feel the effects of the collapse of consumption. It is essential that action be taken urgently with structural measures’“. On the one hand on investments for research and technological innovation, and on the other hand on the front of market demand, with a tax reduction that cannot be postponed on fixed income, from work and from pensions, for at least 1,200 euros per year. Federconsumatori and Adusbef are also requesting the blocking of tariffs. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Sicily Bridge ‘To Open to the Public in 2017’

(AKI) — The suspension bridge connecting Italy’s southern island of Sicily to the mainland will open to the public in 2017, infrastructure minister Altero Matteoli announced on Friday. Work on the bridge will begin “as soon as possible,” Matteoli stated.

“The bridge must open to the public on 1 January, 2017,” he said in the Sicilian capital, Palermo.

“We should start work on the Strait of Messina Bridge as soon as possible — this year,” Matteoli said.

The bridge connecting Sicily and the southern Italian region of Reggio Calabria is slated to cost around 6 billion euros and should help kick start Italy’s sluggish economy.

However, many residents fear the money will benefit construction companies with mafia links and that the bridge will be pointless because of the lack of good road links nearby.

If and when it is completed, the bridge will be the longest suspension bridge in the world, at over 3.3 kilometres in length.

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi said last October that construction of the long-heralded bridge would begin between December 2009 and January 2010.

He described the bridge as “a fundamental piece of infrastructure for Sicily.”

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



Italy: Bible of Jailed Mafia Boss Appears on Internet

Palermo, 11 feb (AKI) — Pages from the bible seized from jailed mafia ‘boss of bosses’ Bernardo Provenzano, complete with his coded hand-written notes, have been posted on the Internet. Police found the bible in the remote Sicilian farmhouse where Provenzano was arrested in April 2006 after 40 years on the run.

The 20 bible pages published on the Internet include passages from Genesis and other Old Testament books marked in yellow and blue highlighter pen. A series of arrows and notes flag various passages.

Various letters, symbols and numbers are written in the margins of the bible pages.

Investigators said these were similar to the famous hand-written notes on small scraps of paper or ‘pizzini’ which Provenzano used to communicate with other mafia members during his decades in hiding.

Provenzano underlined from the book of Numbers: “May God bless you and protect you”, a phrase he is said to have used to sign every one of his hand-written messages sent to his associates.

“I found one upright man among a thousand, but not one upright woman among them all,” is copied in capital letters in the margin above a passage from Ecclesiastes, showing an apparent mysogynist streak.

Sicilian investigative journalist and author Salvo Palazzolo posted the pages on his blog. He wrote the book ‘The missing pieces — a journey into the mysteries of the mafia’.

Top police investigators from Italy and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation have examined Provenzano’s bible.

Prosecutors in the Sicilian capital, Palermo, have also sought help from a theologian, a mathematician and a information technology expert to help them decipher the annotations.

Palazzolo invites his readers to lend investigators a hand.

“This is a small but positive attempt to re-focus attention on the tricky fight against the mafia, “ he says, explaining why he has posted the pages to his blog.

“It cannot fall to the prosecutors alone to establish the truth. The whole of civil society needs to lend a hand.”

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



Italy: Pope Meets Irish Bishops on Abuse Scandal

Benedict to issue pastoral letter after two reports

(ANSA) — Rome, February 15 — Pope Benedict XVI on Monday began two days of talks with Irish bishops on two child sex reports which have rocked the Irish Church.

The pope and 30 Irish bishops will discuss a formal response to the reports, which have traumatised the faithful in the traditionally Catholic country.

A pastoral letter to the Irish faithful will be at the centre of the talks.

It was widely expected to be made public on Ash Wednesday but sources close to the talks said Monday it “might not be published immediately”.

There will be no statement out of the talks Monday but a communique on the decisions may be issued on Tuesday afternoon.

Ahead of the discussions, the head of communications for the Irish Bishops Conference, Msgr Joseph Duffy, said the meeting would not be a “cosmetic exercise”.

“I admit in all sincerity what everyone knows,” he said, acknowledging that the Ryan and Murphy reports — which detailed some 300 cases over three decades — had inflicted “deep wounds” which put the Irish Catholic Church in “a very serious situation”.

On Monday morning, at a mass in the Vatican, Vatican No.2 Tarcisio Bertone told the bishops that Irish churchmen had committed “execrable” acts.

“Your communities are going through a great trial which has seen certain churchmen involved in particularly execrable acts,” Secretary of State Bertone told the bishops.

Four out of five Dublin bishops mentioned in November’s Murphy report have resigned.

Benedict met with the head of the Irish Church, Cardinal Sean Brady, in December.

He said the report detailed “abominable crimes” and vowed to make sure they could never happen again.

Secretary of State Bertone warned the reports risked leading more worshippers to desert the Irish Church, once a dominant institution in Ireland but undermined by a string of scandals.

“That is the more dangerous storm: the one that touches the heart of the faithful, shaking their belief,” he told Cardinal Brady and the other bishops.

“Yes, storms are frightening, (they) shake the boat of the Church because of the sins of its members,” Bertone went on. “But out of these storms can come the grace of conversion and a greater faith”.

“Trials that come from within the Church are naturally harder and more humiliating…but any sort of test may become a cause for purification…as long as the sinner recognises his guilt”. After his talks with the bishops, Benedict will meet with the heads of the Vatican doctrinal watchdog on Tuesday.

RYAN, MURPHY REPORTS.

In May the Ryan report into the abuse of children in Catholic-run industrial schools and orphanages denounced cover-ups over some 50 years.

The Murphy report, released November 26, found that four bishops failed to report child sex abuse to the police from the 1960s to the 1980s.

After his meeting with Brady on December 11, the pope noted that the the leaders of the Irish church, “(bore) the ultimate responsibility for the pastoral care of children”.

He said he was “shocked and anguished” and vowed “to find the best way to develop effective and sure strategies to prevent (such events) from recurring”.

In the wake of the report, the head of the Irish Survivors of Child Abuse group urged Benedict to go to Ireland and apologise for his clergy’s behaviour.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Drop in 2009 Exports Worst Since 1970

Significant improvement recorded in December

(ANSA) — Rome, February 15 — Italian exports fell by 20.7% in 2009, the worst drop since records began in 1970, but rose in December over the previous month, national statistics bureau Istat reported on Monday.

Imports last year tumbled by a record 22% over 2008.

Despite the record drop in trade, Italy reduced its trade deficit in 2009 to 4.109 billion euros, compared to a deficit of 11.478 billion euros in 2008.

The decline, however, was for the most part due to lower crude oil and natural gas prices after record highs in 2008.

Excluding these imports, Italy in 2009 would have had a trade surplus of 36.7 billion euros, down from 49.9 billion euros in 2008 Compared to December 2008, exports fell 1.9% and imports sank 3% resulting in a trade deficit of 123 million euros as opposed to 415 million euros in December 2008 However, exports climbed 4.4% over November and imports rose 1.9%, allowing exports for the last three months of the year to decline by only 0.2% while imports rose 2.4% from the previous quarter.

According to Foreign Trade Undersecretary Junior Minister Adolfo Urso, the improvement in December was evidence that “a recovery has begun and we could see exports climb by 4% in 2010”.

The record drop in exports last year, Urso added, was to blame on the global economic downturn. This was evident, he pointed out, from the drop in exports recorded last year in Germany and France, 19.4% and 22.2% respectively.

“I think we can say that the crisis in exports has bottomed out and a recovery will consolidate this year, even for our exports towards the European Union,” the junior minister observed.

Exports to the EU last year fell by 22.5% and imports slipped by 17.8%, the worst declines since 1993.

However, in December exports to the EU rose for the first time in 14 months, by 1.4% and imports jumped 9.1% over the same month in 2008.

Compared to November exports were up 3.3% and imports by 3%, while for the last three month fo 2009 exports rose 0.3% and imports climbed 3% over the previous quarter.

Italy posted a trade deficit towards the EU in 2009 of 1.791 billion euros, compared to a surplus of 9.942 billion euros in 2008.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy-France: Frattini to Kouchner, Focus on Iran and Balkans

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, FEBRUARY 15 — Iran, Afghanistan, the integration of the Balkans into the European Union, as well as bilateral relations in strategic sectors such as nuclear energy. These are the basic themes which will be discussed during tomorrow0’s bilateral meeting in Paris between Foreign Minister Franco Frattini and his French counterpart Bernard Kouchner. The visit will also tackle the response which the international community must give to Iran, said spokesman at the Quai d’Orsay, Bernard Valero, who added that Italy is hoping for a firm response from the international community on the nuclear dossier. Italy and Frances Foreign Ministers will also talk about the process of integrating the western Balkans into the EU. “Above all we want to reflect on the future role of the EU in Bosnia-Herzegovina”, said Valero. The meeting will also be a chance to focus on Italian-French cooperation ahead of the next bilateral summit in April. “Italy is France’s second-largest economic partner, pointed out Valro. We have major cooperations in the nuclear energy sector, where Italy is currently relaunching its programme, in terms of transportation (the Lyon-Turin railway line), as well as the aerospace and nautical sectors”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Pilgrims Flood Padua for Brief Display of Saint’s Remains

(ANSA) — Padua, February 15 — Thousands of pilgrims gathered in this northern Italian city before dawn on Monday, hoping for a rare glimpse of the bones of Padua’s hugely popular patron, Saint Anthony. The remains of Anthony, the unofficial saint of lost causes, have gone on show for the first time in 29 years, generating a frenzy of excitement among the Catholic faithful. By the time dawn broke, over 2,000 people were already waiting outside the Basilica of St Anthony, with coaches, trains and cars ferrying hundreds more to the city throughout the day. By late morning, the initial rush had settled down to a steady flow of around 1,000 visitors each hour, said church authorities. More than 100,000 pilgrims are forecast to visit the city during the six days the saint’s bones remain on display. Padua Deputy Mayor Ivo Rossi was among those outside the beautiful 13th-century church when it opened its doors at 8am. “Padua is celebrating this event and is ready to welcome the faithful with great joy,” he said.

Rossi explained that the city had been preparing for weeks, with special traffic schemes, parking plans and additional shuttle buses laid on to cope with the influx. “We expect the peak of arrivals to be on Saturday, and kindly ask Paduans and pilgrims to use public transport wherever possible on that day,” he added.

The streets around the site were lined with police and civil protection officers, while volunteers from the Red Cross and religious organizations provided visitors with directions and information. The display of the saint’s bones, last shown in 1981, has been timed to coincide with their transfer from one side of the basilica to the other. The remains, encased in a crystal display case, have been temporarily housed in the San Giacomo Chapel during a restoration but are now returning to their permanent home in the Cappella dell’Arca. St Anthony, who died in 1231, was a Franciscan preacher credited with the power to perform miracles.

He is known as the “quickest” saint in the history of the Catholic Church because he was canonized less than a year after his death and he remains one of the most popular saints worldwide today. Officially the saint of lost and stolen things, over the centuries he has also become the unofficial patron of ‘lost causes’, making him the focus of thousands of desperate prayers.

According to Catholic tradition, people who have prayed to St Anthony for miraculous cures to their ailments and had their wishes granted thank him for the service by taking votive offerings to his tomb.

These are usually made in tin or silver and represent the part of the body healed. Padua monks have been collecting and cataloguing these tokens since 1466.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslims Took Over British Underworld the Day Twin Towers Fell … Other Gangs Are Terrified We’re Al-Qaeda

IN traditional Islamic headgear, Asian ex-gang member Amir poses with his sword and issues the stark warning: “Britain’s underworld belongs to the Muslims.”

The 21-year-old, whose organisation turned over thousands of pounds a day from drug-dealing and credit card scams, claims a post-9/11 fear of terrorism has allowed Muslims to develop a stranglehold on our criminal community.

Through Islam, he says, they have numbers which cannot be matched, and rival gangs are being forced out by ruthless Islamic criminals who only deal with each other.

They recruit black and white members in Britain’s jails, tempting them to convert to Islam in exchange for a cushier life inside.

Once released, the converted cons have access to an entirely new network of Muslim criminal contacts — and are trusted because they pray to Allah.

Amir claims that Britain’s underworld will soon be completely dominated by Islamic gangs — and he says the West’s paranoia over terrorism is to blame. “People don’t f*** with us because they think we’re all in al-Qaeda,” he explains.

“Our status in the criminal hierarchy changed literally the day the Twin Towers went down.

“From then, Asians have been associated with terrorism. People, including other criminals, think if you’re Asian you’ll blow up a Tube train or bomb an aeroplane.

“In the past 20 years we’ve capitalised on that. If we’re going to be thought of as extremists, why not use that fear?

“The reality is that Asian gangs don’t give much of toss about religion, but with Islam comes fear, and with fear comes power.

Strangehold … Amir poses with sword as he tells of power of Asian gangs on British underworld

“Religion is important to us only as a way of defining who we can trust and who we can work with.”

Amir adds: “Young Muslim gangs aren’t worried about what Allah makes of their criminal ways — they don’t believe in it to that extent.

“Through religion we speak the same language, live in the same areas, go to the same schools and can even use mosques as a safe place away from the police or other gangs. If you f*** with a Muslim gang you’d better be able to run fast or hide well, because they will come back at you in numbers.”

You do not have to look far to find an example of this.

In 2007 white schoolboy Henry Webster was beaten with a hammer by a huge gang of Asian pupils calling themselves the Asian Invasion. The 15-year-old pupil at the Ridgeway School in Wroughton, Wilts, was left brain-damaged.

Since then, it has been said in court that the school was the scene of numerous violent incidents involving Asian youths who were “radicalised and hostile” since the 2005 London bombings.

And in March last year, Judge Giles Forrester warned that London’s streets are becoming “increasingly dangerous places” as he jailed an Asian gang for stabbing to death rival black gang member Jevon Henry, 18, in north London.

Jevon Henry and a pal had been trying to extort money from drug dealer Muhid Abdul, 25.

The pair were ambushed on the Lisson Green estate by Abdul and four accomplices. Abdul stabbed Henry, while pal Toufajul Miah, 19, hit him with a hammer.

Amir claims another motive for his own choice of weapon. He says: “We carry swords for protection. I’ve had to use mine more than once.

“Problem is, these days nobody fights on their own. You’ll get attacked by a whole gang, so you have to have something like this to stop people messing.

“Some people do carry guns, but very rarely. The police constantly stop and search young Asians in London and I’d rather get caught with this than a gun because the punishment is less.”

The Sun discovered that most of Britain’s prisons are dominated by Muslim gangs.

We spoke to a former prisoner we will refer to only as Steven, who was repeatedly approached by prison imams — Muslim priests — and asked to convert. Steven, who is British-born and white, rejected the approaches.

He says: “When I went inside the Muslims offered me help from top lawyers on the outside who would fight to get my sentence changed, if I joined them.

“I always resisted, but you have to understand how tempting it is to convert. First, you have their protection. You’re totally alone in prison when you get there, and if you can’t look after yourself life is hell. You’re beaten, robbed and bullied.

“Second, every Friday Muslims are allowed prayer meetings. This is free time away from the guards, so they can plot, make new contacts and often discuss anti-West ideology.

“Muslims also get better food. They have money sent in for their kitchens from the Muslim community outside, and they get special Halal dishes stipulated by Islam.

“Then, when a converted prisoner finishes his time, he leaves as an even bigger criminal with an entirely new contact book of Muslim criminals to do business with.”

‘To avoid a life of hell you join a gang’ … Amir says recruitment to Asian criminal groups starts early

Steven, who has spent time in eight prisons, adds: “Where the Muslim gangs come into their own is shifting drugs. If a white gang from London buys a kilo of coke, they then have to sell it.

“You can only sell your gear if you have contacts. The white gang will only know a few people in their area and won’t trust or be trusted by other gangs. They won’t deal with Eastern European, black or Asian gangs.

“But the Muslim network is vast and stretches up and down the UK, so they can shift drugs extremely quickly. That makes the money-making potential of a Muslim gang a hundred times that of a British or European gang.”

Drug-dealing and credit card fraud are the areas in which London-based Asian gangs are most active. In fact, some dealers get so busy that even their mobile phone SIM cards become a commodity.

Steven says: “A drug gang’s number can be worth hundreds of thousands. Say they have 100 punters phoning that number every day asking for a fix — that means thousands of pounds of business.

“The SIM card of that phone can be sold to another gang because the junkies who phone don’t give a s**t who is dropping off their crack or smack, they’ll just keep calling.

“I’ve heard of SIM cards selling for up to £250,000.”

According to Amir, Asian gangs start early. He says: “If you go to school in an ethnic area you either join a gang or end up bullied, in some cases to the point of being killed.

“So to avoid a life of hell a kid joins a gang. Once you’re in, life is easy — no more beatings, people to talk to, stuff to do.

“After school you graduate into more serious gang activity. You’ve got no qualifications because you’ve spent your school years resisting authority, and suddenly you need to make money.

“A boss can make up to £8,000 a day running a gang of 40 workers drug-dealing or scamming credit cards, and a worker can make £1,000.

“With the police getting more intelligent and busting people more, money is getting harder to make.

“Ten years ago, Asian gangs would go to war with Yardies and white gangs. But now, we’ve got London all sewn up, so the only people we end up warring with is each other.

“We have no one to compete with other than our own people, so Muslim gangs are starting to fight.

“Muslims have this country under control. Nobody can touch us.”

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



Weather: Spain Hit by Cold Snap and Snow Again

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, FEBRUARY 15 — Spain has been hit again by a cold snap and snowstorms, with temperatures in some regions at -10 degrees Celsius and heavy snowfall throughout almost the entire peninsula, including the Canary Islands. The state weather agency has issued an “orange” alert for an “important risk” in the Navarra and Aragon Pyrenees, Castilla La Mancha, and in Castilla and Leon, where in numerous provinces snowfall has already exceeded 20 centimetres as well as in the communities of Valencia, Estremadura and Madrid (snow was seen this morning on the rooftops in the capital). Due to snow, rain and wind gusts of up to 100km/h, the civil protection agency has issued a “yellow” alert, which represents a medium level of risk in the other Spanish regions and provinces, including the extreme south of Andalusia and the area of the Gibraltar Strait. Snowfall in the north is taking place between 100 and 600 metres of elevation, while in the central regions snow is falling between 400 and 700 metres. The new cold front is creating problems, although currently travel has not been interrupted on any of the major roads. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Berisha Defends Berlusconi’s Quip on Pretty Girls

(AGI) — Tirana, 15 Feb. — Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha has defended Silvio Berlusconi, criticised by the Albanian media for a “misunderstood” on the boats transporting illegal immigrants and on ‘beautiful Albanaian girls.” “There were three very pretty Albanian journalists present”, he said, “and if Berlusconi paid them a compliment it is because the audience was male and no one can say they had not noticed them.” ..

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU-Croatia: European Parliament, Talks to End in 2010

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, FEBRUARY 10 — Croatia believes that completing the EU accession negotiations in 2010 is possible. The government will need to continue its battle against corruption and organised crime to reach this target, and has to “fully” cooperate with the Hague’s International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and close an agreement on its border dispute with Slovenia. This is the message of the resolution that was approved today by the European Parliament, with 582 against 24 votes and 37 abstentions. Regarding the country’s collaboration with the ICTY, sponsor of the resolution Hannes Swoboda, Vice President of the Social Democrats, stressed the need to give the Tribunal access to the required court documents. “We don’t know if these documents are still there or if they have been destroyed” said Swoboda. “I hope the question will be tackled soon”. One of the speakers in today’s debate, Luigi Berlinguer (S&D), asked for more incisive measures to reform the justice system. “The independence of the magistrates, that is, the absence of conditioning of judges by the government, has become crucial” he said. Mario Mauro (PPE) made a more specific appeal to the Croatian authorities ahead of their accession: “the nationalised goods of Italian citizens at the end of the Second World War, still owned by local institutions or municipalities, must be given back to their legitimate owners”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Strengthens Relations With Eastern Neighbours

(ANSAmed) — VERONA — The Balkans have called and Italy has answered: first and foremost with around 50 thousand companies from small to medium-sized, spread from Romania, which hosts 30 thousand of them alone, and Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Moldavia, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovenia and Kosovo. And the second answer has come with an organisation capable of monitoring the trade transfers with the great area of the Western Balkans. This machine came into service today, at Veron’s trade fair, Veronafiere, where two days of “Italy & South Eastern Europe Investment” has got underway: a forum dedicated to relationships between Italy and the Balkan countries, promoted by Italy’s Ministry of Economic Development alongside Customs Agencies, Finest, the Italian Foreign Trade Commission and Verona’s trade fair management. The meeting was opened by Minister Claudio Scajola, who noted how Italy can look optimistically in the direction of the Balkan area. “We are divided by the straits of the Adriatic, but we are close to them culturally and exercise a great ‘appeal’ over these countries, who look to us with admiration. Which is why there is a natural empathy between us. We have developed significant trade relations with these states and our volume of trade is almost the same as that with Germany”. In the view of the minister, who was flanked in Verona by Albania’s Premier, Sali Berisha, the Balkan Plan, launched in September 2008 “has been of crucial importance for Italy’s internationalisation policy. The Balkan’s were our first taste of growth of Italy abroad and the results are there to be seen”. Having kicked off in 2009 with decreases of between 20% and 15% in trade with the Balkans, Italy is hoping that this year will see a 20% comeback to pass the 10-billion-euro mark. The meeting in Verona may help this to happen, as there are around 500 enterprises taking part, offering their projects to countries such as Albania, which are prepared to cut the barriers of red tape to let in fresh economic impetus. As Scajola pointed out, Italy has a further objective in the Mediterranean area: “We are aiming to become a hub in the energy sector are working to make our country an ‘energy-lab’. Links with the Balkans help them, because without power there is no development and they help to keep our electricity bills down”. The meeting in Verona may turn out to be the first in a long series: “We are planning to set up an annual meeting to monitor development in partnerships in the key sectors of the economy: from infrastructure to logistics, from energy to transport and collaboration in trade fairs”. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: NATO: Tadic Meets Head of European Forces, Stavridis

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, FEBRUARY 11 — Talks between Serb President Boris Tadic and the Commander in Chief of NATO Forces Europe, James Stavidris in Belgrade today have centred on Serbia’s activities as part of the Partnership for Peace programme and cooperation with Kfor, targeted at maintaining peace and security in Kosovo. According to a report by Tanjug, Tadic pointed out how Kosovo Serbs are still the population most at risk across the whole of Europe, which is why Kfor has to continue to protect them, their monasteries and churches, independently of any decision to cut back on troop strengths. At the same time, the Serb president criticised the plan for the North of Kosovo drawn up by the international representative, Pieter Feith and the Pristina government. Tadic stated that it would constitute a threat to the stability of the entire region. This plan envisages the integration of the north of Kosovo, which has a Serb majority population, into the institutional framework of the rest of the country, dismantling the parallel governmental structures created by the Serb population with political and financial backing from Belgrade. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: Greek Business Delegation Visits Raska Region

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, FEBRUARY 11 — The Greek delegation expressed great interest in the economic potentials of Novi Pazar and of Raska, Tutin and Sjenica municipalities, the mayor’s information advisor Ivana Milic said, reports Emportal. The talks also focused on tourism potentials of the region and on prospects for economic cooperation and privatization, she said. The Ambassador of Greece to Belgrade Dimostenis Stoidis expressed hope that Serbia might join the European Union by 2014 if it meets the necessary conditions. After meeting Novi Pazar Mayor Meho Mahmutovic, Stoidis commended the economic potentials of Novi Pazar and of Raska, Tutin and Sjenica municipalities. He was visiting Novi Pazar with a delegation of the Hellenic Business Association in order to foster Greek investments and Greek-Serbian economic cooperation. Pointing to great Greek-Serbian friendship, Mahmutovic said that now is an ideal opportunity for Greek investments in Serbia. He told the press that he offered to Vero supermarket Manager Vassilios Kakagiotis to include products made in Novi Pazar in its range.(ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Foundation for Remembrance of Algerian War Soon

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, FEBRUARY 11 — A Foundation for the remembrance of the Algerian War and the fighting in Morocco and Tunisia should be established in June, said Defence and Veterans Secretary of State Hubert Falco, indicating that the statutes, approved by the president of the council, must still be validated by the Interior Ministry and then by the Council of State. Paris hopes that the creation of a Foundation will serve to smooth its troubled relations with Algiers, which have deteriorated recently after 125 Algerian MPs signed a draft law criminalising the French colonial period (1830-1962). Algiers continues to call for Paris to officially acknowledge the horrors of the war and colonisation. According to Falco, the presidency could be given to former Axa President Claude Bebear, who fought in the Algerian War. Desired by Jacques Chirac, the idea for the Foundation was brought back by Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007, with hopes that it can assist in the reconciliation of historical memory, former combatants, repatriations, harkis (Northern Africans who fought for the French), Algerians and historians. The Foundation, with state funding of 7.2 million euros, will be headquartered in Les Invalides. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Sentence Reduced for Swiss Businessman

(ANSAmed) — TRIPOLI, FEBRUARY 11 — Swiss businessman, Max Goeldi, who has been found guilty of breaking immigration regulations by a Libyan court, has been granted a reduction of his sentence from 16 to four months in prison. The sentence is to be served out before the man is allowed to settle his affairs in the country. The news of the reduction in sentence was broken today by Libyan court and the Swiss man’s lawyer, Salah Zahaf. Accused of having broken trade laws, the man closed this case against him by agreeing to pay a fine of around 500 euros on Saturday. But today’s sentence would seem to have lengthened the time that Goeldi has to wait before being able to return to Switzerland, while his fellow Swiss, Rashid Hamdani, who was found guilty in the first-instance on November 30, may, according to the lawyer “consider himself free to leave the country”. However, it is still unclear today whether or not his passport has been returned. The lawyer Zahaf has also stated that Goeldi may appeal to Libya’s High Court against today’s sentence. The two Swiss businessmen were arrested on July 19 2008 soon after the arrest in Switzerland of the son of the Libyan leader, Hannibal Gaddafi, who was accused of mistreating two of his domestic servants. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya Suspends Issuing Visas to Europeans

By Ali Shuaib

TRIPOLI, Feb 15 (Reuters) — Libya has stopped issuing entry visas to citizens of most European countries, officials said on Monday, in an apparent escalation of its diplomatic row with Switzerland.

The visa suspension emerged a day after a Libyan newspaper reported that the North African country would take “severe measures” in response to Switzerland drawing up a visa blacklist that included Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and members of his family.

A notice on France’s foreign ministry website said Libya had suspended visas for the Schengen area — 25 European countries, including some which, like Switzerland, are not in the European Union. EU members Britain, Ireland, Romania, Bulgaria and Cyprus are not in Schengen.

Italy’s Foreign Ministry also confirmed that Libya, which has Africa’s largest proven oil reserves, had suspended visas. “Contacts are under way between the countries of the zone to coordinate over this measure,” a ministry spokesman said.

The visa suspension risks damaging Libya’s reputation as a reliable business partner. Foreign investment has grown since United Nations sanctions were lifted in 2003, but some investors say arbitrary decisions by officials hinder business.

Asked by Reuters to confirm reports of the suspension, an official at Libya’s main international airport, who did not want to be identified, said: “This is right. This decision has been taken. No visas for Europeans, except Britain.”

No explanation was given for the suspension, and there was no official confirmation from the Libyan government. The French ministry said the measure took effect on Sunday without warning.

HOTEL ARREST

Libya has been locked for months in a row with Switzerland over the brief 2008 arrest of one of Gaddafi’s sons in Geneva, and the subsequent prosecution of two Swiss businessmen who had been working in Libya.

Libya’s Oea newspaper reported on Sunday that Libya would retaliate against what it said was Switzerland’s decision to deny entry visas to a list of 188 Libyans, including Gaddafi, members of his family and other senior officials

“Severe measures, based on the principle of reciprocity, will be taken if it (Switzerland) does not renounce its decision before it is too late,” the newspaper cited an unnamed senior Libyan official as saying.

In July 2008, Swiss police arrested Gaddafi’s son Hannibal at a luxury lakeside hotel in Geneva on charges — which were later dropped — of mistreating two domestic employees.

After the arrest, Libya halted oil exports to Switzerland and withdrew more than $5 billion assets from Swiss banks.

Tripoli also barred two Libya-based Swiss businessmen, Max Goeldi and Rachid Hamdani, from leaving the country and later charged them with visa violations and other offences. Libyan officials say their case is not linked to the Geneva arrest.

Switzerland has not publicly acknowledged the existence of a visa black-list for Libyan officials, but Swiss media has said the list is designed to target Muammar Gaddafi’s inner circle.

Swiss officials have said that other states in the Schengen zone have backed Switzerland’s line on issuing visas to Libyans.

According to media reports, Libyan officials last year complained that since the dispute with Switzerland broke out, some Libyans have experienced difficulty receiving entry visas from several other Schengen zone countries.

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



Libya: Europeans Banned From Entry

Tripoli, 15 Feb.(AKI) — Libya on Monday started to turn away Europeans who arrive in the country as retaliation for a recent decision by Switzerland to publish a blacklist of 180 Libyans banned from entering the country.

The North African country led by Muammar Gaddafi has suspended the issuing of entry visas to European citizens apart from British nationals, an official at the country’s main international airport was reported as saying.

“The decision by the Libyan authorities doesn’t help improve what is already a delicate relationship with Europe,” said Francesco Tempestini, a member of the Italian foreign affairs parliamentary committee.

Libya’s Oea newspaper, which has close ties to one of Gaddafi’s sons, on Sunday reported that Libya would stop issuing visas to citizens of countries in the Schengen area, which includes non-EU member Switzerland.

The Schengen agreement provides for the removal of systematic border controls between the participating countries in the European Union, as well as other European countries like Switzerland.

The Italian foreign ministry confirmed the measure and said it was in retaliation for Switzerland’s recent decision to publish the blacklist of 180 Libyans banned from entering the country. The ministry said the issue will be discussed when the EU foreign affairs committee meets on 22 February.

Libya for months has been engaged in a diplomatic dispute with Switzerland over the prosecution of two Swiss businessmen who had been working in the North African country.

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



Morocco: French Loans for Trams and Phosphates

(ANSAmed) — PARIS — Today in Rabat French Secretary of State for Foreign Trade Anne-Marie Idrac signed two accords related to two loans for a total of 585 million euros, granted by France to Morocco for the future tram-line of Casablanca, and a project for the development of phosphates. The first loan of 225 million euro concerns the acquisition of rolling stock for the tram line in Casablanca, and is clearly related to a contract won in November by French group Alstom to supply 37 convoys of 65 meters each, as well as maintenance for 15 years: the contract is worth 225 million euros. Construction work on the first line began in May and the consignment of the first convoy is expected by November 2011, while service is expected to begin in December 2012. The 30km-long tram line will connect the main neighbourhoods in Casablanca and will include 49 stations. The second loan of 360 million, guaranteed by the French state, was granted by Credit Agricole for the realization of a project to be carried out by the Moroccan office of phosphates. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Nuclear: Algeria, First French Atomic Bomb 50 Years Ago

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, FEBRUARY 12 — At 7:04AM of February 13, 1960, France joined the club of atomic powers by detonating its first atomic bomb in Algeria. In the Reggane oasis “that day many men cried without even understanding that that earthquake which would forever change that area of the Sahara, 1000 km south of Algiers. Sid Ammar El Hammel, a citizen of Reggane and president of the association ‘13 February 1960’, told ANSA that 50 years later nothing has changed in the region. The radioactive remains are everywhere. There are people who built their homes with pieces of iron collected in ground zero. Our plants are born different, our animals keep on dying and the people keep on falling ill”. After ‘Gerboise Bleu’ (Blue Gerboa), the first test with a 70 kiloton explosion (four times greater than that of Hiroshima), in under a year Paris carried out another three tests in the atmosphere (white, red and green Gerboa). Another 13 tests were instead carried out up to 1966 in underground tunnels in In Ekker, 150 km from Tamanrasset, mostly after Algerias independence (1962). Certain secret clauses of the Evian Agreements allegedly allowed the colonial power to keep secret bases in the Sahara for another five years to carry out nuclear, chemical and ballistic tests. Some claim that the chemical experiments continued up to 1978. The man who works in the school of Reggane and still collects witness accounts from survivors pressed on calling it “A crime, a massacre. The colonist is responsible for the victims and the environmental disaster he provoked. No research has ever been carried out to asses the consequences of the French experiments and it is impossible to have a precise number of contaminated people. Some 16 to 20 thousand people lived in the region, without counting the nomad tribes. Today Sid Ammar wants to hear nothing of the damage payment provided by the French law dated December 22, 2009. “What can we do with a little money. We want experts, we request the decontamination of the area and a centre specialised in the treatment of this type of diseases”. There is no oncological centre in the area and the closest hospital is located some 200km away in Adrar. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swiss-Libya Spat Sees Schengen Visas Blocked

Libya has stopped issuing visas to citizens of Schengen zone states, a day after claims emerged that Switzerland wants to bar entry to 188 top Libyans.

An unnamed official at Tripoli international airport told Reuters news agency on Monday: “This is right. This decision has been taken. No visas for Europeans, except Britain.”

Reuters said no explanation was given for the suspension, and there was no immediate confirmation from the Libyan government.

A spokesman for the Council of the European Union told swissinfo.ch that ambassadors in Tripoli had been informed of the development and the Spanish EU presidency was carrying out consultations on the issue and was expected to be in touch with the Libyan authorities.

He said it was “premature to forecast any further development”.

The Italian foreign ministry described the decision as a reprisal against an alleged Swiss visa blacklist of high-ranking Libyan officials.

“The Libyan response to the Swiss decision affects all countries in the Schengen zone,” a ministry spokesman told Reuters. “Contacts are underway between the countries in the Schengen zone to bring out a coordinated response to this measure.”

Oea, a Libyan newspaper with links to the Gaddafi family, reported on Sunday that Switzerland had drawn up a list of officials who would be barred from the country. Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi and his family, along with members of government, parliamentarians and military and security chiefs are said to feature on the alleged list.

According to Oea, a senior Libyan source threatened reciprocal action against Switzerland if an alleged decision to establish a blacklist was not reversed. Bern refused to comment on the newspaper report but the Swiss foreign ministry did say that a continuing restrictive visa policy was in place against Libya and not Libyans in general.

“Swiss solidarity”

It is the latest development in an ongoing diplomatic row between the two countries that was sparked in July 2008 after the detention in Geneva of one of Gaddafi’s sons and his wife over allegedly assaulting two of their domestic staff.

Last November Bern asked members of the Schengen zone to implement a restricted visa policy for applications from Libya. This followed Tripoli’s refusal to allow two Swiss businessmen to leave the country following the arrest of Gaddafi’s son.

That month Schengen visas were refused to the Libyan prime minister and other top officials. Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaïm denounced a “systematic and programmed solidarity with Switzerland”.

Holders of a Schengen visa in principle have the right to travel freely between member countries. However individual members can bar entry to specific people, as Switzerland has done in the case of Libya.

Member states also have a right of consultation and veto over the allocation of Schengen visas, and therefore certain Libyans can be prevented from travelling anywhere in the Schengen area, which covers 25 countries in mainland Europe.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Citrus Exports Do Well

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, FEBRUARY 12 — 7,453 tonnes of citrus fruits were exported from Tunisia between the start of January and February 2. France was the main customer, importing 84% of Maltese oranges; the remaining 16% went to various markets, including Libya. The export potential of the sector is estimated at 25,000 tonnes, with 23,000 made up of highly-valued Maltese oranges. Tunisia has activated a series of programmes over the last decade aimed at developing its agricultural production. In particular plantations of Maltese oranges have increased considerably (from 40 to 60,000 new plants every year). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Bil’in: ‘Wall Tourism’ Between Photos and Teargas

(report by Alessandro Logroscino and Laura Conti) (ANSAmed) — BIL’IN (WEST BANK), FEBRUARY 15 — The “occupation tourists” take pictures of the demonstrators who have come together at the barrier that separates the Palestinian West Bank from Israel. The protesters are dressed up as Nàvi, the blue protagonists from the blockbuster movie “Avatar”. Occupation tourists, somewhat more adventurous than the average tourist and motivated by political solidarity, curiosity and a need to be there where things are happening, have become a regular sight at the weekly “anti-barrier” protest on Friday. They come from all over the world to take pictures, to be photographed and to make videos. There are real tourists and people who want to gather information about the controversial barrier, tens of kilometers of fencing and reinforced concrete wall. The former Ariel Sharon government took the initiative for the wall, in an attempt to stop suicide attacks on Israel. Israel justifies the construction of the barrier by pointing at the fact that the number of terrorist attacks on the country has decreased. The United Nations international tribunal on the other hand has called the wall ‘illegal’, and the Palestinians see it as an unacceptable form of collective punishment, or even a “symbol of apartheid”. To get an idea of the barrier, most Western tourists choose to visit the West Bank villages of Nabi Selech, Naalin, al-Maasara and most of all Bil’in: a village that has been cut in two by the wall. On February 19, the village will ‘celebrate’ its 5th anniversary of protests. These protests are the result of the “peaceful resistance” of thousands of Palestinians and Israeli and international pacifists, according to the organisation of local people’s committees. These committees claim to support a non-violent approach. However, there have been frequent clashes in Bil’in in recent years, with people getting injured and even killed. Protesters throw stones, Israeli security forces use rubber bullets and teargas. But still the visitors keep coming. The Israeli troops also seem to be more cautious when there are many foreigners among the protesters. The man who invented the ‘anti-colonial Avatar protest’, Mohammad al-Khatib, has been arrested and released several times by the Israeli military. He describes his initiative as a “creative” effort to ask the world for attention. And to reach that goal, he told ANSA, every little bit helps, including the ‘marketing strategies’ that draw reporters, activists, tourists and even pilgrims to the Friday protests in Bil’in. According to Khatib, International participation is important to tell the world about the fate of the farmers who have lost their land and work due to the barrier. The recent verdict of Israel’s High Court in favour of a group of Palestinians might change this situation for some people. The authorities have announced that the route the barrier will follow through Bil’in will be partially changed. Despite this verdict, the situation of many others remains difficult and without prospect. Despite the incidents, more and more visitors come to the area. Samer Kokali of the non-profit travel agency Alternative Tourism Group Bethlehem, which has organised stays in the West Bank since 1996, told ANSA that these are people who are “tired of the usual travels”. This unique travel agency organises visits to religious and artistic sites, organises meetings with Palestinian and Israeli politicians or with settlers, but also lessons in the Arabic language, culture and kitchen. The agency also helps those who want to visit the ‘hot spots’. Wére not interested in business, said Kokali, we want “the people to come here and see the situation with their own eyes”, beyond the usual thrill-seeking.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Detains British Journalist in Gaza Strip Over ‘Security Crimes’

A British journalist arrested by Hamas police in Gaza over suspected security offences could be held for up to 15 days, a spokesman for the Islamic group said today.

Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, announced that freelance journalist Paul Martin had been arrested on Sunday, saying it had received ‘confessions’ about security crimes.

A spokesman for the Hamas-run Interior Ministry said Martin was being held under a 15-day detention order issued by the attorney general. It gave no details about the allegations.

‘He may be released or the 15 days may be extended, pending the results of the investigation,’ spokesman Ehab al-Ghsain said.

A spokesman for the British consul general in Jerusalem, who oversees affairs in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, said British diplomats were helping Mr Martin in Gaza and were in touch with his family.

She said: ‘We are very concerned about the situation.’

Mr al-Ghsain said that a Palestinian acting on behalf of the British consulate visited the journalist yesterday and he chose a Palestinian lawyer to represent him.

Britain has long rejected official dealings with Hamas over the Islamic group’s refusal to recognise Israel and renounce violence.

London does not recognise the government Hamas established in Gaza in 2007 after it broke violently with the Palestinian Authority of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, based in the West Bank.

But Western diplomats are regular visitors to the Gaza Strip, where much of the 1.5 million population is dependent on aid from the UN and other bodies.

Journalists accredited by the Israeli government are among the few foreigners allowed to enter Gaza. Britain, like other Western nations, advises citizens not to go there.

Human rights groups have criticised both Hamas and Mr Abbas’s Palestinian Authority for detaining journalists and placing other curbs on media freedoms.

           — Hat tip: ICLA [Return to headlines]



Settlement Freeze Ignored in Dozens of Settlements

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, FEBRUARY 15 — Dozens of Jewish settlement in the West Bank have ignored the settlement freeze announced three months ago by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, admitted Defense Vice Minister Matan Vilnay to the Knesset (parliament). Vilnay stated that in at least 29 settlements (roughly a quarter of the total) construction work contrary to the government’s provisions had been discovered. Punitive measures are to be taken against those held responsible. The settlement freeze was decided by Netanyahu in an attempt — so far in vain — to revive peace negotiations with the Palestinian National Authority. The organisation Peace Now asserted that the statistics released by Vilnay are misleading. In order to circumvent the freeze of construction work, claim Peace Now, settlers also work by night and ignore the Sabbatical rest. A leader of the colonist movement, Dany Dayan, countered by claiming that Peace Now’s criticisms are unworthy of comment, “also because it is an organisation financed from abroad”. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Africans Working in Iraq See Opportunity and Exploitation

Approximately 15,000 Ugandans have been deployed to Iraq since the US led invasion. Some call it lucrative work. Others call it slavery.

Rich Twinamatsiko looked contently at his herd of 15 cows grazing on the rolling highlands of south-western Uganda. Twinamatsiko (29) bought the cows with money he made working as a security guard in Iraq. He also purchased a plot of land where he cultivates corn, grain and matooke, a green banana that is the cornerstone of Ugandan diet. “I sell the food on the market,” Twinamatsiko said. Currently, he still lived on his parents’ farm — but not for long now. “I am using the profits to build my own house.”

An estimated 15,000 Ugandans have been deployed to Iraq by private security and recruitment agencies. The Ugandans protect military bases, airports and oil drills there. Ask any Ugandan: chances are he will have a family member, a friend or an acquaintance serving in Iraq.

War is business

The driving force behind the massive recruitment of Ugandans is the creeping privatisation of war. A trend catalysed by the British-American invasion of Iraq in 2003. The incessant search for affordable cleaners, mechanics and security guards has led the Americans to Africa, which has a surplus of labour and a weak job market. Here, Ugandans are scrambling to get jobs in Iraq, even though the salaries are constantly being reduced and the work environment is anything but pleasant, some claim.

“I earned 800 US dollars [555 euros] a month working in Iraq,” Twinamatsiko said. “Far more than most Ugandans do.” Twinamatsiko did his first tour in 2007, working for Dreshak, the company that has deployed the most Ugandans to Iraq so far, 8,000 in all. This time, he will be earning only 500 dollars a month. “Which is still a lot of money in Uganda,” Twinamatsiko said. Shortly after the interview, Twinamatsiko left for Baghdad to do a third tour as a contract worker there.

Twinamatsiko used to be a soldier in his own country. Uganda is home to many veterans from the 20 year conflict with the sectarian, militant Christian group Lord’s Resistance Army and the ‘African World War’ waged in the Congo between 1998 and 2003. Widespread military experience makes Uganda all the more suitable as a recruitment area. Moreover, many inhabitants of the former British colony speak decent English and Uganda is a military ally of the US.

The life of a king

In Ntungamo, a village near his farm, Twinamatsiko is a celebrated man. His baggy jeans, baseball cap and Manchester United football club necklace make him look like an American hip hop star compared to his peers. Most here earn only dollars a day driving around on the Ugandan version of the motorised rickshaw, known locally as the boda boda. Anybody who has been on kyeyo, an Ugandan term for leaving the country to earn money abroad, enjoys respect here.

Twinamatsiko may be doing fine, but not all Ugandans deployed to Iraq are. Some former security guards have accused their past employers of taking advantage of young Ugandan men.

“Ugandans are exploited in Iraq. This is modern day slavery,” said Gideon Tusigye (40), himself deployed to Iraq in 2006 and 2007 as an army physician. Like Twinamatsiko, he was under contract with Dreshak.

Deplorable conditions

Speaking in a union office in the Ugandan capital Kampala, Tusigye deplored the working conditions his compatriots were exposed to in Iraq. “Ugandans have to purchase their own equipment in Baghdad. They stand guard for ten hours straight in the burning sun and are packed into tents like sardines in a can,” he said

Sam Lyomoki, a member of parliament who has long been a champion of employees’ rights, called for an inquiry into the maltreatment of Ugandans in Iraq in April of 2008. His motion has yet to make it to the parliament floor.

Dreshak’s managing director, the Pakistani Zain Ul Arfin Ahmed, said his company was only responsible for recruitment in Uganda. “We are not responsible for what happens in Iraq,” he added.

The Ugandan contract workers shouldn’t count on the Ugandan government for support. The ministry of employment has approved numerous pay cuts by recruitment agencies. The average salary has decreased from 1,200 dollars in 2005 to less than 500 dollars today. The ministry has said it hopes to prevent the Americans from seeking workers elsewhere in Africa.

“They lie,” said Lyomoki. “These companies, which are often politically connected, are looking to turn a profit at the expense of Ugandans.” Mwesigwa Rukutana, who was minister of employment until last year, owned a company that recruited Ugandans for work in Iraq himself. Rukutana is now minister of higher education.

Askar Security Services, which has deployed 5,000 soldiers, is run by the sister-in-law of general Salim Saleh, who is the brother and military advisor of the Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni. Critics have accused Askar of tribal nepotism. The company recruits many of its workers from the ranks of the Banyankole people who live in the Museveni region. A spokesperson defending the policy, said employees “tend to feel at home with people from their own region” .

Recruitment agencies currently have their eye on Afghanistan, which they hope will provide them with new business once Americans withdraw from Iraq.

“Dear Lord, we pray to thee for Rich’s healthy return,” a local Anglican preacher said, as he led Twinamatsiko and his family into prayer after dinner at their home. Below the weak glow of a single light bulb, a laptop screened a slideshow of pictures of his last deployment to Baghdad. The laptop drew power from a small generator. Electricity on an African hill, sponsored by the Iraq war.

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



Bahrain: Visa Restrictions for Foreigners in GCC

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, FEBRUARY 11 — Bahrain has announced further visa restrictions for foreigners in the other member countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The new system provides for foreign professionals from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait and Oman to retain the privilege of being granted a visa on their entrance to the small oil-rich emirate, while other categories of workers will have to request visas from Bahraini embassies in their countries of residence. The measure affects engineers, doctors, bankers, entrepreneurs and trade representatives from 36 countries including Italy and the Vatican City.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Cars: Turkey’s Ford Reports 2009 Profit of €181 Mln

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, FEBRUARY 15 — Turkey’s carmaker Ford Otosan announced today that its net profit in 2009 was 375.6 million TL (181 million euro). In a statement, as reported by Anatolia news agency, Ford Otosan said its net sales revenues stood at 5.61 billion TL (2.7 billion euro). Ford Otosan, Turkey’s leading commercial vehicle manufacturer and exporter, is a joint venture of Turkish conglomerate Koc Holding and Ford.Company’s net profit in 2008 was 436 million TL (210 million euro). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Dear Veneziani: This is Why Boycotting Teheran is Right

Opposing Teheran’s candidature to host the next World Philosophy Day does not mean inflicting “philosophical sanctions” on Iran, nor does it mean “boycotting” a UNESCO initiative in the name of an assumed “priority of democracy over philosophy.” Marcello Veneziani is mistaken when in Il Giornale he attributes such ideas to those who, like Giuliano Amato and the members of Resedoc’s scientific committe, emphasise it would be grotesque to make a place “in which one can risk one’s life in the name of one’s ideas” the capital of doubt and critical debate. Veneziani is wrong, because if it is true that philosophy is exalted wherever humankind needs saving, it is equally true that it is certainly not the executioner who concedes a philosopher’s right to citizenship. What is at stake is understanding who or what could guarantee a free exchange of ideas between participants, should they meet in November 2010 in the capital of Ahmedinejad’s regime. Veneziani himself perhaps?

This article was originally published on February 3rd by Farefuturo webmagazine

Opposing Teheran’s candidature for the next World Philosophy Day does not mean inflicting “philosophical sanctions” on Iran, nor does it mean “boycotting” UNESCO’s initiative in the name of an assumed “priority of democracy over philosophy.” Marcello Veneziani is wrong in attributing such concepts in Il Giornale to those like Giuliano Amato and the members of Resetdoc’s scientific committee, who emphasise that it would be grotesque to make a place in which “one can risk one’s life for one’s ideas” the world capital of doubt and critical reflection. He is wrong because if it is true that philosophy is exalted wherever humankind needs saving, it is equally true that it is certainly not the executioner who concedes a philosopher’s right to citizenship. In other words, it is not very helpful to mention that philosophers are also persecuted in democracies, also quoting Florenskij to remind one of how philosophy blossomed under the totalitarianisms of Stalin and Hitler. Acute and shareable observations, but not relevant ones.

What is at stake is understanding who or what could guarantee a free exchange of ideas between participants should they in November meet in the capital of Ahmedinejad’s regime…

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hamas Leader Murder, 11 Suspects European

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, FEBRUARY 15 — Eleven European passport-holders, including one woman, have been implicated in the murder of Mahmud Al Mabhuh, the Hamas supporter killed on January 20 in Dubai, said Chief of Police of the Emirate, Dahi Khalfan Tamim, who added that warrants for their arrest will shortly be sent to Interpol. During a press conference, Tamim today said that involvement by Israel has not been excluded. Israel has meanwhile denied any involvement. Six of the eleven suspects hold British passports; three, including the woman, are Irish — as already announced in recent days — one French and one German. Mahmud Al Mabhuh, the founder of the Ezzedin al Qassam brigade, the armed wing of the Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement, was found dead in a hotel room in Dubai, just hours after his arrival, in circumstances which led investigators to make comparisons with killings carried out in the past by Mossad, the Israeli secret service. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hit Squad Carrying British Passports Killed Senior Hamas Leader, Claims Dubai Police Chief

An 11-member hit squad carrying European passports was responsible for killing a Hamas commander in his hotel room last month in a slaying that has brought vows of revenge from the Palestinian militant group, Dubai’s police chief has said.

The details given by Lt Gen Dhahi Khalfan Tamim are the most comprehensive accusations by Dubai authorities since the body of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh was found on January 20 in his luxury hotel room near Dubai’s international airport.

Tamim told reporters the alleged assassination team was made up of six British passport holders, three Irish and one each from France and Germany.

But he did not directly implicate Israel — as Hamas has done. The group has accused Israel’s Mossad secret service of carrying out the killing and has pledged to strike back.

Tamim said it was possible that ‘leaders of certain countries gave orders to their intelligence agents to kill’ al-Mabhouh, one of the founders of Hamas’ military wing. Israeli officials have accused him of helping smuggle rockets into Gaza.

He said forensic tests indicate al-Mabhouh died of suffocation, but lab analyses are still under way to pinpoint possible other factors in his death.

Top Hamas figures have denied reports that al-Mabhouh was en route to Iran, which is a major Hamas backer. But the group has not given clear reasons for his presence in Dubai.

Tamim sketched out a highly organized operation in the hours before the killing.

He showed a news conference surveillance video of the alleged assassination team arriving on separate flights to Dubai the day before al-Mabhouh was found dead. The suspects checked into separate hotels.

They paid for all expenses in cash and used different mobile phone cards to avoid traces, he added.

At least two suspected members of the hit squad watched al-Mabhouh check in at his hotel and later booked a room across from the Hamas commander, Tamim said.

He added that there was ‘serious penetration into al-Mabhouh’s security prior to his arrival’ in Dubai, but that it appeared al-Mabhouh was travelling alone.

‘Hamas did not tell us who he was. He was walking around alone,’ said Tamim. ‘If he was such an important leader, why didn’t he have people escorting him?’

Tamim said there was at least one unsuccessful attempt to break into al-Mabhouh’s hotel room. It was unclear whether he opened the door to his killers or if the room was forcibly entered.

The killing took place about five hours after al-Mabhouh arrived at the hotel and all 11 suspects were out of the United Arab Emirates within 19 hours of their arrivals, he added.

Tamim said the suspects left some evidence, but he declined to elaborate. He urged the countries linked to the alleged killers to co- operate with the investigation.

Earlier this month, Hamas said it launched floating explosives into the Mediterranean Sea to drift toward Israeli beaches to avenge al-Mabhouh’s death.

Israeli authorities discovered at least two explosives-rigged barrels and carried out an intensive search for other bombs, closing miles of beaches and deploying robotic bomb squads.

A Hamas statement last month acknowledged al-Mabhouh was involved in the kidnapping and killing of two Israeli soldiers in 1989 and said he was still playing a ‘continuous role in supporting his brothers in the resistance inside the occupied homeland’ at the time of his death.

More than 2,000 mourners attended al-Mabhouh’s funeral and burial at the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk, near Damascus, Syria.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Commemorating Rafik Hariri’s Death, Demanding Answers From March 14 Leaders

More than 100,000 people gather to commemorate the death of former PM Hariri. Speaking to the crowds, leaders reiterate in measured tones the alliance’s goals. However, banners appear, asking, “What have you with my vote?”

Beirut (AsiaNews) — Each year since 2006, the ‘March 14 alliance’ commemorates the terrorist that killed former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. This way, it can assert its presence in a show of force designed to counterbalance the huge power Hizbollah and its armed militias wield in Lebanese politics.

This was achieved as more than 100,000 demonstrations gathered in Martyrs Square. However, the success of the rally did not stop many in the alliance from feeling letdown, disappointed by the impression that their recent electoral victory was snatched away by the imposition of a national unity government at the Doha summit, which gave Hizbollah and its Christian ally, General Michel Aoun, the power to impose their will.

Likewise, the large crowds that came to the rally could not hide the absence of some political leaders, most notably those of the Druze community.

Indeed, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt is playing the neutrality card. Even as he grooms his son Taymour to succeed him, he is jockeying for positions, trying to re-establish ties with Syria “for reasons that are internal to the community”, whilst remaining loyal to Saad Hariri as he was to his slain father. In fact, Jumblatt did visit Rafik Hariri’s tomb to pay his respect but did not attend the public rally that commemorated the attack in which the former prime minister was killed.

The rally saw nevertheless, four of Lebanon’s major leaders address the crowds, namely former President Amin Gemayel, former Prime Minister and Future Party leader Fuad Siniora, Lebanese Forces (Kataeb) leader Samir Geagea, and Saad Hariri himself.

In all four’s speeches, realism and continuity prevailed in both content and tone. Having accepted a national unity government, Hariri and his allies could not do otherwise, but stick to their decision. At the same time, they had to reassert their own fundamental options. In the end, they took a measured approach, reiterating their “Lebanon first” orientation, as Saad Hariri put it repeatedly.

Hariri signalled his support for the new regional balance, which is marked by a rapprochement between Syria and Saudi Arabia. However, the latter is pursuing a (dangerous) strategy designed to separate Syria from Iran. Yet, Tehran’s influence in Lebanon is best exemplified by the current national unity government.

For the alliance, Hizbollah’s weapons remain a thorny issue, but it is no longer demanding its total disarmament; instead, it wants to see them placed under Lebanese, not Islamist command.

As for Hizbollah, it continues to align itself to the current Iranian regime as the public statements by its leaders on regional issues indicate.

Invariably, Syria remains the other major factor in Lebanon’s political life. The Syrian regime continues to interfere in its neighbour’s domestic politics through local proxies, clearly bent on swaying which ways it goes.

But will ‘March 14 alliance’ supporters continue to support the movement’s leaders? When the attack took place in 2005, they had spontaneously taken to the streets in a mass demonstration. Today they still claim ownership to movement. But are they still willing to follow? Nothing is less sure.

Some of the banners seen at yesterday’s ceremony read: “What have you done with my vote?” The message was loud and clear and was meant for the alliance, not the opposition. It is a clarion call for the March 14 leaders to explain themselves, to say what they have done to the Cedar Revolution.

The Syrian army might have left Lebanon, Beirut and Damascus might have established formal diplomatic relations, a new parliament might be in place, but many people are still waiting for Lebanon’s institutions to work from within and not play to the tune of outside forces.

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



Media: Winner of Kassir Award, Lebanon Lacks Transparency

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, FEBRUARY 11 — To enter the brothels of Beirut without being either a client or a prostitute was not easy for Carole Kerbage, a very young Lebanese freelance journalist, winner of the latest edition of the ‘Samir Kassir’ award for the freedom of press, sponsored by the European Union, for her reportage dedicated to the underground world of sex for money in Lebanon. “After having been refused by bouncers, also because I dressed in a way that is too simple, I changed strategy and wore high heels and pretended to be a wealthy film director in search of locations for a television advertisement,” recounts 23-year-old Kerbage, speaking to ANSAmed just a few steps away from the Saint-Joseph Jesuit University of Beirut, where she is attending the second year of a masters course in Political Sciences. “Once I got in,” she continued, “if I managed to get served a drink, I’d made it: because then I could be calm and look around and watch.” During one of those nights she spent in the Beirut of exploitation — her family keft in the dark about it — (“I come from a conservative family”), Kerbage managed to get close to a brothel-keeper, a so-called “mummy”, and to witness scenes that she however decided not include in her long article. The result of three years of work and published last year by the supplement for young people in the Lebanese daily newspaper, An Nahar, Kerbage’s article was chosen by the Samir Kassir award jury, named after the journalist and intellectual from Beirut who was assassinated in 2005, ahead of numerous other articles written by Arab journalists on human rights issues. “With the prize money (12,500 euros), I have improved my life. I’ve become more independent economically and I have gained more confidence in my abilities,” says Kerbage, who, after finishing her masters degree in Beirut, plans to attend another masters course in London which is dedicated to investigative journalism, or to do the exclusive and expensive training course offered by the pan-Arab satellite broadcaster, Al Jazeera, in Qatar. “In both cases I will be moving country and I will have to spend a great deal of money. I will use part of the prize money to continue to study and to educate myself in an independent way,” the young freelance journalist says with pride. Without a fixed contract, she cannot obtain any press accreditation from the Ministry of Information of her own country. Job insecurity and the “humiliating” conditions to which TV, radio and newspaper contributors are subject in Lebanon is for Kerbage one of the main obstacles to the independence of local journalism. “For reporting,” she says, “the daily newspapers mainly use freelancers, whilst anyone with a fixed contract is forced to stay behind their desk all day long, without ever having the time to examine things closely.” (ANSAMED). According to her brief but already rich experience, added to these difficulties is “the absence of transparency from the institutions and the self-censorship imposed by the chief editors, who must also answer to their publishers”. Carole Kerbage is not however giving up and she has already prepared an investigation on immigrants, for the most part Egyptian, who are working in exploitation at petrol stations in Lebanon: “I’ve finished the piece. Now I just have to find someone who will publish it.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Nuclear: Turkey; Minister, First Power Plant Ready by 2017

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, FEBRUARY 11 — Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yildiz has stated that talks between Russia and Turkey are continuing regarding the construction of Turkey’s first nuclear power plant, which he hopes will produce electricity for consumer use by 2017. Speaking on Channel 24, Yildiz stated that Turkey and Russia were still working together to hammer out the technical details of the power plant. Even though the call for a tender was cancelled in 2008 and a bid from a consortium comprising Russian companies Atomstroyexport and Inter RAO UES and the Ciner Group’s Park Teknik was rejected, Yildiz said that a memorandum of understanding had been signed between the two nations to cooperate on the technical research needed to accomplish the project. “We will be meeting this month in Istanbul, and if a consensus with reasonable conditions is reached, then we hope to produce another intergovernmental agreement with Russia in line with Turkey’s laws. Before Parliament takes its winter recess we want to present a possible nuclear power plant project to them. It takes approximately seven years to build a nuclear power plant, so we hope to be close to consuming the electricity produced by the plant in 2017,” Yildiz said. In addition, Yildiz revealed that a German firm had committed itself to 625 megawatts of energy investment in Turkey, adding that Germany is one of the most important investors in Turkeys energy sector.(ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Qatar: Clinton Warns of Iranian ‘Military Dictatorship’

Doha, 15 Feb.(AKI) — US secretary of state Hillary Clinton on Monday said that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards had gained so much power they were turning Iran into a “military dictatorship.” “Iran is moving toward a military dictatorship,” she told students at Qatar University on a tour of the region. “That is our view.”

The US Treasury department last week announced it would freeze the assets of a Revolutionary Guard general, held in the US as well as four subsidiaries of a construction firm he runs because of their alleged involvement in producing and weapons of mass destruction.

Clinton was in the Qatari capital of Doha, across the Persian Gulf from Iran’s southern coast, for a conference on relations between the US and the Islamic world.

“We see that the government of Iran, the supreme leader, the president, the parliament, is being supplanted and that Iran is moving toward a military dictatorship. That is our view,” Clinton said.

She also said the US would “not stand idly by” and allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon.

The US and its allies oppose Iran’s nuclear ambitions, which Tehran insists are meant solely for civilian use.

The Revolutionary Guards were established shortly after the 1979 Iranian revolution to defend the country’s Islamic system and to provide a counterweight to the regular armed forces.

They have since become a major military, political and economic force in Iran, with close ties to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, himself a former member.

The Guard is active in military, social and economic affairs of state, including in the oil-rich country’s fossil fuel industry.

It has also absorbed the paramilitary Basij in its command structure, giving the militia greater funding and a stronger presence in Iran’s internal politics.

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



The U.S. Military Looks at the Bows to the White House But Knows Its Mission Too

by Barry Rubin

The Department of Defense has just released its new Quadrennial Defense Review Report for 2010. What does it say about the Middle East? Far less than you’d expect in terms of space but still some extremely important points about what might involve the United States in future wars there.

Aside from some scattered references on the need for more civilian nation-building experts, funding the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and energy conservation efforts (that’s an area, no doubt, where money could be saved), that region takes up less than two pages, about two percent, of the 97-page report.

In comparison, about one-quarter of the four-page note from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, attached to the report, spends 25 percent on the region and sounds far more sensible.

I read this gap as suggesting that the uniformed military (which prepared the admiral’s note) is concerned about Iran and terrorist groups but that the text’s main body, by the secretary of defense and designed to please the White House, puts more emphasis on climate change, green energy, and the use of the military as a community-organizing type force to make civilians in places like Afghanistan more friendly to the United States.

But there are significant points of interests in both sections. Let’s start with the report itself which basically makes three points…

           — Hat tip: Barry Rubin [Return to headlines]



UAE Government Releases Workers’ Rights Booklet

Titled ‘The Worker: Rights and Duties’, the booklet is available in six languages. This is first time that the UAE recognises rights for foreign workers, at least if they are legal residents of the country.

Dubai (AsiaNews/Agencies) — The Office of the Deputy Prime Minister and the Minister of Interior of the United Arab Emirates have issued a booklet titled ‘The Worker: Rights and Duties’, available in Arabic, English, Filipino (Tagalog), Persian, Chinese and Urdu, to be distributed in all federal government departments, concerned NGOs, labour accommodations, and media outlets.

It explains the rights and responsibilities of workers based on the principles of justice and freedom. It will make UAE nationals and foreign workers aware of their rights and duties as well as explain how they can get legal redress in case of abuse, harassment and mistreatment.

First and foremost, the booklet seeks to foster and enhance a culture of respect for the law and public order, describing the rights and duties workers have in conformity with the UAE constitution.

Approximately 17 million expatriate workers live in the Gulf region. In Dubai alone, they constitute 80 per cent of the resident population.

Human Rights Watch has regularly documented abuses, including physical violence, harassment, unpaid wages and human rights violations at the expense of migrant workers.

“I think it’s nice to have things clear and written down,” said Abdulla, professor of political science at the United Arab Emirates University. Outlining “the rights and responsibilities of both parties, the workers and the companies, is a step forward,” he said.

Inspired by articles 20 and 34 of the UAE constitution, the booklet states that “Society shall esteem work” and “endeavour to ensure that employment is available [. . .]. Legislation must uphold the rights of workers and employers consistent with advanced international standards. [. . .] No person may be subjected to forced labour except in exceptional circumstances provided by the law and in return for compensation.”

The Office of Culture of Respect for Law said that to “enjoy all rights enshrined in international legislations and conventions on human rights in general and labour rights in particular,” workers must be legal residents in the country.

Equally, it noted that workers have the right to profess their faith (Islam and other monotheistic religions) and the right to an interpreter during legal disputes.

In return, workers must respect “the traditions, customs and heritage” of the UAE. Therefore, they shall “not consume drugs, intoxicating drinks or any other unknown substances”, which are illegal.

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



Valentine’s Day Around the Muslim World

As Rome police seized 2,000 heart-shaped Ecstasy tablets designed for Valentine’s Day lovers and Nigerian churches announced that they could connect would-be lovers for $13 dollars, the Muslim world took a more conservative approach to the holiday, sometimes embracing it and sometimes banning it.

Iraq, Lebanon and Syria

In Baghdad Valentines is a welcome respite from the city’s frequent bomb attacks. On Sunday, Iraqis shopped for heart shaped gifts and cuddly toys with joy.

“I love all Iraqis,” Ali Tariq told a reporter.

The holiday was also welcomed in Lebanon and Syria where couples took romantic strolls, bought roses from street vendors and gave each other teddy bears.

Iran

Love is all around in the streets of Tehran on Valentine’s Day this year with young men and women openly holding hands and exchanging red roses, and shops decked with red ribbons, candles and heart-shaped red balloons.

Forget political turmoil, violent protests, the nuclear row with the West and soaring prices. Today romance rules.

“I am fed up with politics. This year I asked my girlfriend to celebrate Valentine’s Day more gloriously than any year before,” said 28-year-old Shahrokh Sedaghati, an architect, looking for a perfume as a gift in a central Tehran shop.

Valentine’s Day is not officially banned in the Islamic state, but hardliners have repeatedly warned about a Western cultural invasion and under Iran’s Islamic Shariah law, unmarried couples are banned from mingling.

Saudi Arabia

In Saudi Arabia warnings were directed at individuals by the Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice against celebrating the holiday of love. Flower and gift shops are not allowed to sell any items related to Valentine’s Day and restaurants and cafes are banned from showing any signs of celebration.

This society is haunted by the fear of anything new and untraditional, Saudi writer Yusuf al-Muhaimed told Al Arabiya.

“Now we are even afraid of love,” he said.

However, the day never goes by unnoticed. Young people still buy flowers a couple of days before the 14th. More than 50% of Saudis celebrate Valentine’s in their houses, especially in big cities like Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam.

Pakistan

Hip young romantics in Pakistan’s most dangerous city are splashing out on text messages and teddy bears, defying Taliban bombers and conservative parents to find love this Valentine’s Day.

It’s taken four years and the prospect of never seeing her again, for Mohammad Asif to pluck up the courage to approach the object of his affections, a fellow engineering student in northwest city Peshawar.

Destined to graduate and look for a job in a city where bomb attacks have closed businesses and emptied markets, Asif realises it’s now or never.

“After four years of studies, my classmates are dispersing and I finally want to express my love for a girl I’ve liked for the past four years, but never said anything,” gushes the 21-year-old.

“I’ve bought a card and chocolates to give her, so she knows that I love her. This is the day to disclose your hidden feelings,” he said.

Peshawar is a conservative Muslim city, where many disapprove of Valentine’s Day as a Western import. Women are veiled and few girls go out alone.

Valentine’s Day is the preserve of the young, educated and wealthy. Secret trysts are a dream, even more difficult on Sundays, when schools are closed.

“There will be a lot of problems and difficulties for boys to take girls out as it will be a holiday… so please celebrate Valentine’s Day on Monday,” said the “Love Guru” in a text message pinged through Peshawar and other cities.

Indonesia

Muslim leaders in Indonesia on Friday told the faithful not to celebrate Valentine’s Day because it is sinful and leads to “free sex.”

“We forbid Muslims to celebrate Valentine’s Day,” said Abdullah Cholil, an East Java leader of Nahdlatul Ulama, the mainly Muslim country’s biggest Islamic organisation.

“The day is often celebrated by young, unmarried people. They celebrate Valentine’s Day by holding hands or having free sex, which they are not supposed to be doing,” he said.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]

South Asia


The King of Bhutan Claims to be “Father of the Christians,” But Does Not Build Churches

These days the Christian organization Open Doors has classified the small Himalayan kingdom 12th out of 50 countries where religious freedom is violated. Despite the marriage of the king’s sister with the nephew of a Jesuit priest and the guarantee of religious freedom around 6 thousand Christians are still forbidden to pray in public. Former member of the government: “There is still a fear that Christianity will divide society and create tension.”

Timphu (AsiaNews) — The king of Bhutan Jigme Khesar author of democratic reform in the country for years has claimed to be the “father of Christians.” In 2005 he married his fifth sister with the nephew of Fr Kinley, a Canadian Jesuit who helped the government to realign the education system. Nevertheless the construction of religious buildings other than Buddhists ones is still prohibited in the country remains. Recently the Christian organization Open Doors has in fact classified Bhutan 12th in a list of 50 countries in the world where religious freedom is violated.

Karma Dupto exiled leader of the Druk National Congress, speaking from India said: “In Bhutan, the transition to democracy has been done on paper and the constitution guarantees freedom of religion. According to the Religious organizations Acts of 2007, no one can force a person to change their faith. “ But the leader stresses that authorities and the population have not yet learned the meaning of democracy. That is why religions and cultures other than Buddhism are still looked upon with suspicion.

The monarchy of Bhutan is a small one, 680 thousand people caught between the two giants India and China. Until 2006 it was ruled by a theocratic regime of Buddhist religion. In 1979 the then King Jigme Singye Wangchuck forbade the practice of religions other than Buddhism and Hinduism. This prevented the 6 thousand Christians living in the country, mostly Protestant, from building churches and worship, leading to the creation of an underground community. In 2008, the ascent to the throne of 28-year old King Jigme Khesar brought new hopes of opening in the country, with the creation of a new constitution providing for freedom of faith for all Bhutanese, after reporting to authorities. But proselytism, the publication of Bibles, the building of Christian schools and the entrance of religious remain prohibited. To date, the Jesuit Father Kinley is the only resident priest in the country.

“There’s a reason why Christians are not tolerated in the country — says a former member of the government — there is indeed a fear that Christianity will divide society and create tension.” Thus, while the country opens up to modern building, pubs and discos, it still hampers the building of churches.

The former politician cites two cases of forced conversions which occurred in 2009, but were condemned by representatives of the local Christian community. “This — he adds — has led to various misunderstandings and people think that Christians attract the faithful with money and the government always looks with suspicion on those who convert.”

According to the pastor of an underground community, most of the Bhutanese faithful have no access to education and live in desperate economic conditions. “ Christians — he says — are only allowed to pray in case of illness and only in their homes. This mutual mistrust between Buddhists and Christians, derives from lack of religious freedom. “

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

Immigration


Italy: Maroni Says New Model for Integration Needed, Not Police Round-Ups

Interior minister rejects ethnic concentrations in the same district

MILAN — “No I don’t see any banlieue-style risk in Via Padova”, says Italy’s interior minister, Roberto Maroni. The outburst of violence on Saturday evening in the multi-ethnic district of Milan may not have been avoidable, or even predictable. An argument on the bus, a knifing and a retaliatory attack are crimes, not national emergencies. But there is a warning to society in the incident that triggered disturbances involving immigrants from different ethnic groups and paralysed part of the city for five hours. Fears have been expressed that the violence could spread to other parts of Milan, Turin, Bologna, Naples, Palermo or other cities with districts where social tensions, anger and apprehension run high as mushrooming immigration moves in without ever integrating fully. Politics is in ferment as the opposition accuses the Centre-right of doing nothing while the government attacks the Left’s goody-goody liberalism. Strong words such as “round-ups” and “deportation” are being bandied about Milan but Mr Maroni avoids adding fuel to the flames. “We have to cool things down in Via Padova, not trigger a civil war”. Some, particularly in the minister’s own Northern League, have called for immediate action, with enforced clear-outs and bulldozers, but Mr Maroni has other ideas. “What we have in Via Padova is an illegal travellers’ camp. There’s no need for force and I don’t even want to hear the word round-up. It’s a social issue that has to be managed. My job is to be minister of the interior and I want to set to one side extreme suggestions born in the heat of the moment”.

Minister, when they were overturning cars in the street on Saturday evening and the police were out in riot gear, did you think about Rosarno, a rebellion out of control?

“We took action straight away to get the situation under control. I spoke to the prefect. I am well aware of Via Padova and its problems, and of Milan’s immense ability to integrate non-Italians. Saturday’s incidents had trivial origins and degenerated into collective violence. But it wasn’t a revolt against the state. I noticed some Rosarno-type symptoms two years ago in the same area, when the murder of a coloured youth by Italians brought thousands of immigrants out onto the streets. On that occasion, I really did think about the French banlieues”.

Aren’t you worried it could happen again?

“That concern is very real and could prompt us to shift gear regarding immigrant reception and integration policies. I say that illegals should be deported but you don’t solve a problem like Via Padova with raids and police vans. A police state is not the solution”.

Is it a case of keeping excessive concentrations of immigrants in the same district under control?

“The tinderbox in Via Padova was created over the years by a social model that refused to confront an ethnic settlement cluster. It’s important to stop any zone of the city becoming alien to the people who live there, a sort of separate territory or law-free area. In future, we have to prevent ethnic concentrations in the same neighbourhood”.

Is that a proposal or a plan?

“It’s a new integration plan. Now we have to manage, implement policies to bring people together again and maintain the unity of the city. And intervene when necessary. I prefer to talk about restructuring but without repressive actions. There’s no point in inflaming people in the street”.

Is there anything concrete yet? Is there a response from residents in Via Padova and other parts of the city where residents feel strangers in their own home?

“I’ll be asking Rome right away to set up a meeting with the welfare ministry, the regions, the municipalities and voluntary associations to discuss the issue of how to ensure legislation-driven integration in the cities. We have to stop these outlying areas from becoming sources of violence but to do that, we also need to modify the reception model that has been used up to now”.

What’s the new model?

“We have to create it and define the conditions that will enable a legal non-EU immigrant to integrate properly. On Saturday evening, there were large numbers of legal immigrants. In Milan, many of them have got their own businesses yet still live in a state of alienation. We need to see to it that they have the other conditions, which are lacking today, for their integration to be successful, not just residence permits, jobs and accommodation”.

What about the anti-illegal measures and the absence of officers in the streets that people who live in at-risk areas complain about?

“We’ll be beefing up the police presence in Milan, partly in connection with the new police station at Monza. Funds have been allocated in the Budget. We’ll bring forward the assignment of officers to Milan, 170 in all, to prevent incidents like the one last night. Let me make it clear that this is not militarisation”.

You are talking about prevention, actions to stop second-generation immigrants from ending up in gangs, and to promote specific reception policies with support from public authorities to prevent urban decay. Does this signal a change of direction?

“What’s needed is a change of pace. The model of society isn’t working and needs to be reconstructed. We’re working with the Catholic University to create a permanent urban monitoring network to draft improved intervention policies. One of these is in fact prudent management of territorial immigrant settlement clusters.”

But in some case, this is coming a little too late.

“This is the situation we’re facing today. The prefect of Milan has pointed out that in 1980 there were 3,000 foreigners and now there are 400,000. That’s quite a difference. The parish priest in Via Padova says that the area has been overwhelmed by the uncontrolled inflow. Saturday’s lesson is that you have to programme and manage intervention without criminalising anyone”.

Is that an invitation to municipal administrators to shoulder their responsibilities?

“We all have to work together, striving to prevent concentrations of ethnic groups in the same area, which could turn into ghettos. But we also have to find new integration opportunities for legal immigrants”.

Many mayors feel alone and abandoned by the state when they are faced with emergencies like these.

“That must not happen. I am very much aware that mayors are in the front line, the way the mayor of Padua, Zaninato, has been for years. I’m talking about a man who is light years away from me politically but has done his duty well. When he had to, he moved 270 non-Italian families into another district to break up a concentration of ethnic groups that could have become dangerous”.

The Democratic Party (PD) secretary Pierluigi Bersani claims that the Centre-right’s policy is bankrupt. You’re in charge of everything but there are no results to show for it.

“It would be easy to reply to Bersani that 7,000 people landed on Lampedusa in 2008 and we reduced that to 3,000 in 2009. I could also repeat what the education minister, Mariastella Gelmini. said: ‘We got into that state because of the anything-goes, feel-good liberalism of the Left’. But I don’t want to play ping-pong blame games. Politicians shouldn’t be using these issues for squalid electoral ends”.

Giangiacomo Schiavi

15 febbraio 2010

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Is This Former Stay-at-Home Mom Our Greatest Security Threat?

The Department of Homeland Security has a clear, if difficult, mission. It includes securing 7,500 miles of border and 9,500 miles of shoreline, and protecting 300 million Americans from the threats posed by a bold and determined jihadist enemy.

But its greatest menace is a former stay at home mother of 11 and grandmother of eight from Brookfield, Wisconsin. Or so it would seem.

Peggy Hamill, state director of Pro-Life Wisconsin, is among a group of pro-life activists upon whom a DHS “threat assessment” was performed last year. The assessment targeted the free speech rights of peaceful pro-life activists in Madison, Wisconsin, who oppose the state university’s plans to force medical professionals to perform late-term abortions

But don’t expect to hear any apologies from DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano, whose agency worked with local police to collect intelligence that it now steadfastly refuses to release. The “threat assessment” reflects the views of an administration that regards those willing to stand up for the constitutional right to life as a national security threat. News of the assessment also likely has many Americans wondering whether this administration knows who the real enemy is.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


IPCC Corruption Included Ignoring Facts and Science

Phil Jones, disgraced and dismissed Director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), granted BBC reporter Roger Harrabin an interview. Why Harrabin? His reporting has shown bias on all the IPCC and CRU activities. Leaked emails showed the CRU gang used friends in the BBC and that apparently continues. Prevarication, evasion, half-truths continue in Phil Jones’ answers. Despite this there are stunning admissions from Jones. “There is a tendency in the IPCC reports to leave out inconvenient findings, especially in the part(s) most likely to be read by policy makers.”

It’s a deliberate strategy not just a tendency and not only in the Summary for Policymakers (SPM).

[…]

Key to understanding IPCC claims are what they leave out. Leaked emails talk about the selective process they employed. For example, until recently all textbooks showed the Earth’s orbit around the Sun as a fixed ellipse. Actually we have known for over 150 years that the orbit is constantly changing from almost circular as it is now to more extreme ellipse as it was 22,000 years ago. (Figure1)

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Then and Now: Part Two

The Demonization of Geert Wilders, the PVV, and the Electorate

The demonization of Pim Fortuyn in 2001 and 2002 eventually resulted in the Dutch politician’s assassination. The same process is underway today with respect to Geert Wilders, who is routinely declared to be “evil” and compared to Hitler in the state media and by public officials.

The second video in the series is a snippet of the ongoing demonization campaign in the MSM against Geert Wilders. On November 10, 2009, the “TV personality” Maarten van Rossum joined the crowd.

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



A complete transcript is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –

00:00   00:04   Maarten van Rossum gathers in a crowd as list-pusher of the PvdA (Socialists) in Utrecht…
00:04   00:11   …against the ‘running wilders’ of the Netherlands, or the success of the populism of Geert Wilders.
00:11   00:17   Like most populists he causes more problems than he solves, or ever could solve.
00:17   00:21   They are problem-causers, and not problem-solvers.
00:21   00:26   Wilders is the talk of the day. In the district Kanaleneiand of Utrecht we gauge the opinions.
00:26   00:33   I think Mr. Wilders is nothing. He just has a big mouth. And he offers no solutions.
00:33   00:37   What I would like to see from him is how he will solve our problems.
00:37   00:41   Look, I’m not in favor of Wilders, but as far as I’m concerned he may give his opinion
00:41   00:47   as long as he does it in a civilized way, and also does not hurt others, for that happens too often.
00:47   00:51   The latest polls show many people agree with Geert Wilders.
00:51   00:55   Van Rossum has voted PvdA (Socialists) all his life. He remains in solidarity with his party…
00:55   00:59   …and warns people who want to vote for the PVV.
00:59   01:04   In the end there isn’t a single excuse for voting Wilders.
01:04   01:09   I want to pardon those who are poorly informed; there are usually quite a lot of them…
01:09   01:13   …but those who are informed, who know what he actually said,
01:13   01:17   and still vote for him, are also in the wrong.
01:17   01:23   Wilders identifies the problems in the big cities. But does he actually have a solution?
01:23   01:27   Of course there are problem areas in the Netherlands…
01:27   01:31   …there are indeed “groups” that cause more problems than others in the Netherlands.
01:31   01:36   I think you should look into it, but I think it is nonsense to point only at Islam.
01:36   01:41   The other day my son was beaten up by a Moroccan. So I am also troubled by it.
01:41   01:45   Moroccan people are also troubled by it. The Dutch are troubled by it. Everybody is troubled by it.
01:45   01:50   However, it must be dealt with in a different way. Like, “here is the door” gets you nowhere.
01:50   01:55   Van Rossum is concerned about the Wilders’ tone of incitement.
01:55   02:00   He is not alone: Herman van Veen compared the PVV with the NSB [Nazi’s].
02:00   02:04   Whether I agree 100% now with Van Veen or not, is not that important…
02:04   02:08   …but his concern is absolutely justified.
02:08   02:16   And that is because Geert Wilders is an immoral politician, and that is really very distressing.

The Third Reich Lives on in Bosnia

As we all know, any group that opposes indiscriminate immigration, seeks to defend traditional Western culture, and resists Islamization is routinely branded “racist”, “fascist”, and “neo-Nazi”. Geert Wilders, Filip Dewinter, Sverigedemokraterna, Pro-Köln, the Swiss People’s Party, the tea partiers — the list goes on and on. All of them share the goal of defending their nations from the encroachment of Islam under the guise of Multiculturalism, and all are called “Nazis”.

Let’s take a deep breath and remember who the real Nazis are.

During World War Two, The Third Reich recruited an entire SS division of Bosnian Muslims to fight for the Germans and help out with the Holocaust. Denazification cleared Germany of the National Socialist ideology, but it lives on in Bosnia, among the Muslim descendants of Hitler’s enthusiastic helpers.

And now comes news that an unabashed Nazi organization has formed among the Bosniaks.

The principal enemies of the Bosniaks are the Bosnian Serbs, and Serbian nationalists are routinely demonized in the Western press as “fascists”. Any journalist who continues to retail the Serbs-are-Nazis meme without questioning its accuracy is therefore contributing to one of the greatest injustices visited on any ethnic group since the end of the Cold War.

Here’s the story from Serbianna:

Nazi Bosnian Pride Movement Formed

Bosnian NazisBosnian neo-nazi organization was birthed today that insists that Bosnia belongs to the Bosniaks, an invented nationality with which Bosnian Muslims identify in order to avoid their religious background when talking to the Western press.

The new Nazi Bosnian Pride Movement (Bosanski pokret nacionalnog ponosa) believes that Serbs and Croats have no right to the state and that the state belongs exclusively to Bosnian Muslims, aka Bosniaks. The Pride’s insignia is pictured on the left.

The Nazi Bosnian Pride Movement has expanded its enemy list from their WWII predecessors, the Handzar Division and the Young Muslims.

– – – – – – – –

As their enemies, Nazi Bosnian Pride Movement includes the usual ones they were exterminating in WWII — Jews, Gypsies and Serbs — but have expand the list to include Chetniks, Tito, communists, homosexuals, blacks and Croatian separatists.

The group plans to spread nazi leaflets very soon in the cities of Sarajevo, Zenica, Bihac, Tuzla and Mostar, all cities with substantial Muslim and Croat population that will find the message appealing.

The group’s a notoriously slow to load web site, bosnacenter.com, serves up a blank page but with little googling their moderated chat room appears with postings on Zionism, Serb Republic, Truth and 5 questions for prospective members.

One can also sport some of their multimedia courtesy of the YouTube.



Hat tip: C. Cantoni.

Then and Now: Part One

The Demonization of Pim Fortuyn

This is the first of a series of four videos about Pim Fortuyn, Geert Wilders, and the current state of official Multiculturalism in the Netherlands. The cases of Pim Fortuyn and Geert Wilders are very similar, with the main difference being that Mr. Wilders’ party, the PVV, is much more popular and firmly established than the List Pym Fortuyn ever was.

It is obvious that the official Dutch establishment has marked Geert Wilders for the same fate that befell Pym Fortuyn. For all practical purposes Mr. Wilders has been outlawed, and offered up as a fair target for anyone who can get past his bodyguards and take him out.

In the video below, from March 22, 2002, the late Pim Fortuyn speaks about the consequences of his demonization. Many thanks to our Flemish correspondent VH for the translation and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:



Pim Fortuyn was assassinated six weeks later, on May 6, 2002, by a left-wing activist.

A full transcript is below the jump.
– – – – – – – –

00:00   00:04   If you could see what I sometimes get in the mailbox,
00:04   00:08   … threats and so on, they would not make you cheerful.
00:08   00:12   And the Dutch government — and I think it’s a bloody shame — …
00:12   00:17   …helps to create a climate of demonization of my person.
00:17   00:21   And IF something should happen to me —I am glad you give me the opportunity —…
00:21   00:26   …IF something happens to me, then THEY share responsibility.
00:26   00:30   They cannot throw their hands up about it and say…
00:30   00:34   …”Well, I did not commit that assault”. You DID help create the climate.
00:34   00:45   And that must stop.
00:45   00:49   More cake? Come on with it!

Fjordman: Did Lactose Tolerance Trigger the Indo-European Expansion?

Fjordman’s latest essay has been published at HonestThinking. Some excerpts are below:

Did Lactose Tolerance Trigger the Indo-European Expansion?

Following the rapid advances in our understanding of genetics in recent years a new branch of biological history or biohistory has emerged, where human history is seen through the prism of genetic changes and the theory of evolution. For my long essay Why Did Europeans Create the Modern World? I included biohistory as one of the aspects explaining different levels of accomplishment, informed especially by the book Understanding Human History by the American astrophysicist Michael H. Hart, which is available online as a pdf file. Another recent title is The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution by Gregory Cochran and Henry Harpending from the University of Utah in the United States.

Evolution proceeds by changing the frequency of genetic variants known as “alleles.” An allele is one of two or more versions of the same gene. The advent of agriculture vastly increased the total amount of food available, as humans didn’t merely have to rely on food readily available in nature but could grow their own in addition to this. The larger and more permanent settlements associated with agriculture gave birth to new infectious diseases, as a critical mass of humans lived in close contact with each other and with domesticated animals and their germs. Food production allowed for the accumulation of wealth, trade specialization and the rise of nonproductive elites, who ruled others simply because they could.

Agriculture allowed those who practiced it to greatly expand their numbers, but it is distinctly possible that the nutritional quality of the food of early farmers was initially worse than that which had traditionally been available to hunter-gatherers. Consequently, the health of each individual was not necessarily better in the Neolithic period than it had been in the Paleolithic era. The bodies of those who practiced agriculture had to adapt to a new diet consisting of foods that had either not been eaten before or had previously been of only minor importance.

According to The 10,000 Year Explosion, “For example, we see changes in genes affecting transport of vitamins into cells. Similarly, vitamin D shortages in the new diet may have driven the evolution of light skin in Europe and northern Asia. Vitamin D is produced by ultraviolet radiation from the sun acting on our skin — an odd, plantlike way of going about things. Less is therefore produced in areas far from the equator, where UV flux is low. Since there is plenty of vitamin D in fresh meat, hunter-gatherers in Europe may not have suffered from vitamin D shortages and thus may have been able to get by with fairly dark skin. In fact, this must have been the case, since several of the major mutations causing light skin color appear to have originated after the birth of agriculture. Vitamin D was not abundant in the new cereal-based diet, and any resulting shortages would have been serious, since they could lead to bone malformations (rickets), decreased resistance to infectious diseases, and even cancer. This may be why natural selection favored mutations causing light skin, which allowed for adequate vitamin D synthesis in regions with little ultraviolet radiation.”

– – – – – – – –

Alcoholic drinks, which became important with the rise of agriculture, have plenty of bad side effects, yet essentially all agricultural peoples enjoyed some form of alcoholic brew. The consumption of fermented beverages containing modest amounts of alcohol could be beneficial to your health as drinking wine or beer provided some protection against waterborne pathogens. For this reason, alleles that reduced the risk of alcoholism prevailed among agricultural populations in Eurasia. Many of those who did not have extensive food production before the modern era, such as Australian Aborigines, Eskimos or Native Americans in North America, are particularly vulnerable to alcoholism and have special health problems more frequently than others when exposed to a Western diet.

Before the rise of agriculture no one past infancy, the first years of our lives when we drink human breast milk, could digest milk sugar, or lactose. Lactase is the name of the enzyme that allows us to digest the complex milk sugar. After cattle were domesticated, cow’s milk became a nutritious addition to the diet. Several different populations, all raising cattle or camels in Europe, East Africa and the Middle East, independently evolved the ability to digest milk for life. Genetic evidence indicates that such a mutation probably first occurred in central Europe, perhaps before 5000 BC. Pioneer farmers in northern Europe used crops from the Near East that were not necessarily ideally suited for a cooler, northern environment, and cow’s milk may have become an increasingly important staple for survival in these regions.

Read the rest at HonestThinking.

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/14/2010

Gates of Vienna News Feed 2/14/2010A crowd of 150 angry Muslims in the village of Curug Mekar in West Java has prevented Protestant Christians from building a church in the village. The fury of the crowd persuaded the local authorities to discover “irregularities” in the congregation’s application for a building permit.

In other news, Egyptians in Milan staged a riot after one of their number was killed. In an unusual twist, the Egyptian immigrant was allegedly murdered by immigrants from South America.

Thanks to C. Cantoni, Gaia, Insubria, JD, KGS, Sean O’Brian, TB, and all the other tipsters who sent these in. Headlines and articles are below the fold.
– – – – – – – –

Financial Crisis
Germans Say Euro Zone May Have to Expel Greece: Poll
Spain: Unions Take to Streets Against Rise in Pension Age
 
USA
ACORN and Other Leftist Groups Eligible to Get Nearly $4 Billion in Obama’s Fiscal 2011 Budget
Ala. Prof Held in 3 Killings Shot Mass. Kin
Harvard-Educated Professor Who ‘Shot Dead University Colleagues Also Killed Her Brother’
Obama Names Envoy to Muslim World Body OIC
Obama Names New US Envoy to Global Islamic Body
Regulators Hired by Toyota Helped Halt Investigations
 
Europe and the EU
Dresden Forms Human Chain to Thwart Neo-Nazis
Human Rights Ignored at UK Prisons, Austrian Lobbyist Claims
Italy: Berlusconi Vows to Treat Kids Fairly in Divorce Accord
Italy: Govt Moves to Curb Mafia Witnesses
Italy: Florence Magistrates’ File on “Jelly-Like System” For Major Events
Italy: Archaeology: Largest Necropolis in Med Safe From Construction
Netherlands: Amsterdam Prostitutes Mainly Foreign
Portugal: Law Legalising Weddings Approved
Spain: First Detainee to Undergo “Chemical Castration”
Spain: Catalan Requirement for New University Professors
UK: ‘My Hell at the Hands of Ali Dizaei’: Victim of Corrupt Met Commander Tells of Campaign of Intimidation
UK: 10p Charge to Call Police on Revived 101 Number
UK: BNP Votes to Drop Whites-Only Rule
UK: Israeli Politicians May Provoke Arrest to Force Law Change in Britain
UK: Single Mother of Six Finds £2m Mansion on the Net… And Then Gets You to Pay £7,000 a Month Rent
Vatican Tempests. The Academy for Life Puts Its Neck on the Line
 
Middle East
Archaeology: Stolen Items From Iraq Intercepted in Dubai
Foreign Direct Investments, Weak Performance in MENA Area
How Do You Judge a Camel Beauty Contest?
Iran Protest Image Wins Top News Photo Award
Roman Statue to be on Display in Istanbul
Saudi Call for Boycott Against Men Selling Lingerie
 
South Asia
France and Germany Increase Investment in Bangladesh
Indonesia: West Java, A Crowd of 150 Muslims Block Construction of Protestant Church
 
Far East
Declining U.S. Navy Facing Chinese Challenge
Spain: 200,000 Chinese-Made Shoes Taken Off the Market
 
Immigration
Crowded Malta Struggles to Cope With Illegal Immigration
Egypt: Italy Focussing on Training, Development
EU: Most Remittances Sent Home From Med Area
Greece: Papandreou, TV a Threat, Not Foreigners
Hammarberg Approves of Greece’s Receptiveness
Immigrants Riot in Milan After Egyptian Killed (2)
Immigrants Riot in Milan After Egyptian Killed (1)
Immigrants to be Taught the Fine British Art of How to Queue
UK: A Plan to Alter the Nation’s Soul
 
General
Climategate U-Turn as Scientist at Centre of Row Admits: There Has Been No Global Warming Since 1995
U.S. City Considers Surrender to ‘Green Police’

Financial Crisis


Germans Say Euro Zone May Have to Expel Greece: Poll

BERLIN (Reuters) — A majority of Germans want debt-ridden Greece to be thrown out of the euro zone if necessary and more than two-thirds oppose handing Athens billions of euros in credit, a poll published on Sunday showed.

Vocal opposition to aid for Greece from members of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition also grew at the weekend with several senior politicians expressing skepticism, especially as Germany’s own recovery is fragile.

The Emnid poll for Bild am Sonntag newspaper showed 53 percent of Germans asked said the European Union should, if necessary, expel Greece from the euro zone.

Athens has struggled to convince investors it is tackling its debt crisis and markets are nervous about a default.

EU leaders discussed the issue last week and offered words of support but failed to outline concrete steps, further unsettling markets. Euro zone finance ministers are expected to discuss Greece again on Monday and Tuesday.

Merkel has adopted a cautious stance on support, saying while Greece will not be left on its own, it is up to Athens to sort out its own problems.

The poll also showed 67 percent of Germans did not want Germany and other EU states to give billions of euros in credit to Greece.

“If we start now, where do we stop?” Michael Fuchs, deputy head of Merkel’s conservatives in parliament, told Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

“I can’t explain to people on unemployment benefit that they won’t get a cent more but Greeks can draw a pension at 63.”

In her first term, Merkel raised Germany’s retirement age to 67 from 65 in an effort to rein in the deficit to meet EU goals.

RESISTANCE GROWING?

Merkel’s coalition partners, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) are even more resistant to helping Greece.

“Solving this problem cannot be about aid for Greece,” FDP budget expert Otto Fricke told Welt am Sonntag. “If anything, it’s about keeping any damage away from German tax payers.”

Germany suffered its sharpest post-war recession last year and the upturn in Europe’s biggest economy stalled in the fourth quarter, data showed on Friday.

Such data fuels economists’ warnings about helping Greece.

Former European Central Bank chief economist Otmar Issing, who has played a leading role in advising Berlin during the credit crisis, said financial support for Greece from euro zone countries would be misguided.

“That is the way to the whole building subsiding,” Issing told Welt am Sonntag, adding Greece had to take further steps itself, pointing in particular to the generous pension system.

Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff even warned Germany could face similar problems to Greece.

“Germany’s public finances are not on a sustainable path,” Rogoff told Welt am Sonntag. “There will come a time when Germany will have its own Greece problem … it won’t be as bad as in Greece, but it will be painful,” said Rogoff.

Germany’s budget deficit is forecast to grow to 5.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and Merkel has vowed to consolidate the deficit as soon as the recovery allows.

However Rogoff, a former International Monetary Fund chief economist, said helping Greece was unavoidable.

“As long as Germany isn’t ready to kick Greece out of the euro zone, it must help,” said Rogoff who also said an option would be for the Greek government to secure bridging credit.

[Return to headlines]



Spain: Unions Take to Streets Against Rise in Pension Age

(ANSAmed) — Madrid, February 12 — Spain’s main union organisations, Ugt and Ccoo, have today called a nationwide protest on February 23 to protest against the government’s proposed plans to raise the age of pension eligibility from 65 to 67. The protest, which intends to say a clear No to the administration’s intentions — according to a statement given by the Secretary of the Ugt, Candido Mendez — is to take place in Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia as well as a further 67 municipalities. The two union organisations are criticising the government headed by José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero for having focussed his anti-recession measures at cuts in spending and is calling on the executive to make an effort to raise fiscal pressure, which in Spain is 30.4% GDP against a industrialised-nation average ten points higher. They are appealing to the premier to step up the fight against tax evasion and the black economy and to increase fiscal pressure on high incomes and capital earnings. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


ACORN and Other Leftist Groups Eligible to Get Nearly $4 Billion in Obama’s Fiscal 2011 Budget

To add to the list of outrageous earmarks in Obama’s fiscal 2011 budget, it appears left-wing activist groups including ACORN, the embezzlement-prone, voter-registration-fraud-plagued community organizing group, are eligible to receive up to $3.99 billion in taxpayer-backed slush money.

The funds would come indirectly from the Community Development Block Grant, one of the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s longest-running programs. The grant money goes to state and local governments. ACORN and other groups can apply for part of it directly from a local municipality in which an arm of their group is active.

“In that sense, ACORN gets lots of money from the CDBG program — but it is nearly impossible to track it because HUD doesn’t track all the money” after it has gone to local and state governments, said Matthew Vadum, a senior editor at Capital Research Center. “Nobody knows how much ACORN, which has hundreds of different affiliates, has actually received over the years in CDBG funding.”

[…]

Though the largely Democratic House Appropriations Committee voted against the block last December, it is a Bill Clinton-appointee, U.S. District Court Judge Nina Gershon, who has truly aided the corrupt ACORN cause. Also in December, Gershon issued a temporary injunction against the Congressional funding ban, crying that it ran afoul of the Constitution because under it, ACORN was “singled out by Congress for punishment that directly and immediately affects their ability to continue to obtain federal funding, in the absence of any judicial, or even administrative, process adjudicating guilt.”

In essence, Gershon has said ACORN can’t be punished now because the Obama administration failed to punish it earlier — through a long-overdue, much-needed criminal investigation into the group. But this is absurd, because ACORN is not entitled to such funding; it is a gift, not a right. Congress has the right to cancel contracts whenever it feels like it.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Ala. Prof Held in 3 Killings Shot Mass. Kin

BRAINTREE, Mass. — A University of Alabama professor accused of fatally shooting three colleagues at a faculty meeting this week shot her younger brother dead at their home in the Boston suburbs more than 20 years ago, but records of it are missing, police said Saturday.

Amy Bishop shot her brother in the chest in 1986, Braintree police Chief Paul Frazier said at a news conference. She fired at least three shots, hitting her brother once and hitting her bedroom wall, before police took her into custody at gunpoint, he said.

Before Bishop could be booked, the police chief back then told officers to release her to her mother, Frazier said.

The shooting of the brother, Seth Bishop, was logged as an accident, but detailed records of the shooting have disappeared, he said.

“The report’s gone, removed from the files,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Harvard-Educated Professor Who ‘Shot Dead University Colleagues Also Killed Her Brother’

Harvard-educated neurobiologist, inventor and mother Amy Bishop — who is said to have pulled out a gun when she was told she would not be getting tenure in the science department — shot her brother at their home in Massachusetts in 1986.

The incident was, at the time, logged as an accident. However, US authorities revealed yesterday that the record of this shooting had disappeared.

According to Paul Frazier, police chief in Braintree, Massachusetts, her brother — an 18-year-old accomplished violinist — was shot in the chest.

Bishop had just months left teaching at the University of Alabama in the United States when police said she opened fire with a handgun Friday in a room filled with a dozen of her colleagues from the school’s biology department.

The lecturer was charged with one court of capital murder which means she could face the death penalty. Three were killed and at least three others were critically injured, said police.

The neuro-scientist’s husband opened the door for his wife before she started shooting, according to local reports.

In all, ten people — all staff from the maths and science department — were said to have been wounded.

Bishop, 42, was taken Friday night in handcuffs from a police precinct to the county jail and could be heard saying, ‘It didn’t happen. There’s no way …. they are still alive.’

Police said they were also interviewing a man as ‘a person of interest,’ believed to be Dr Bishops husband.

Student Erin Johnson said she heard screams coming from the meeting at about 4pm.

The shooting happened at the Huntsville, Alabama, university’s Shelby Centre. University police secured the maths and science building and students were evacuated.

The three killed were Gopi K. Podila, the chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences, and two other faculty members, Maria Ragland Davis and Adriel Johnson.

The wounded were still recovering in hospitals early Saturday. Luis Cruz-Vera was in fair condition; Joseph Leahy in critical condition; and staffer Stephanie Monticciolo also was in critical condition.

Descriptions of Bishop from students and colleagues were mixed. Some saw a strange woman who had difficulty relating to her students, while others described a witty, intelligent teacher.

Students and colleagues described Bishop as intelligent, but someone who often had difficulty explaining difficult concepts.

There are about 7,500 students at the university. The shooting was the latest of a string of school and university shootings in the US in recent years, but the first involving a woman.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Obama Names Envoy to Muslim World Body OIC

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Saturday he was naming a special envoy to a top Islamic body to further Washington’s cooperation with the Muslim world.

Obama told a U.S.-Islamic World Forum in the Qatari capital Doha in a recorded video message that he was naming White House official Rashad Hussain as special envoy to the 56-member Organization of the Islamic Conference.

“As an accomplished lawyer and a close and trusted member of my White House staff, Rashad has played a key role in developing the partnerships I called for in Cairo,” Obama said.

In a speech in Cairo last June, Obama called for a “new beginning” in ties between the United States and Muslims, many of whom felt targeted by the “war on terror” launched by President George W. Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, and by the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“Since then, my administration has made a sustained effort to listen. We’ve held thousands of events and town halls …in the United States and around the world … And I look forward to continuing the dialogue during my visit to Indonesia next month,” Obama said.

Obama told Muslims in his June 4 speech in Cairo that violent extremists had exploited tensions between Muslims and the West and that Islam was not part of the problem.

His speech was welcomed by many Muslims, though some said they wanted him to spell out specific actions to resolve long-running problems like the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

“And as a hafiz of the Quran, (Hussain) is a respected member of the American Muslim community, and I thank him for carrying forward this important work,” Obama said in his message to the Doha meeting, using the term for someone who has mastered and memorized the Muslim holy book.

Hussain was named deputy associate counsel to Obama in January 2009. He has served as a trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice and as assistant on the House Judiciary Committee, where he reviewed legislation such as the USA Patriot Act.

Hussain, who has a master’s degree in public administration and in Arabic and Islamic studies from Harvard University, graduated from Yale Law School, where he served as an editor of the Yale Law Journal.

Committed to two-state solution

Obama, who has made the elusive search for Middle East peace a top priority of his administration, also renewed his commitment to seeking a two-state solution for the Palestinians.

“We remain unyielding in pursuit of a two-state solution that recognizes the rights and security of Israelis and Palestinians,” he vowed.

But he acknowledged that the path ahead would not be easy, admitting that “the United States and Muslims around the world have often slipped into a cycle of misunderstanding and mistrust that can lead to conflict rather than cooperation.

“Fully realizing the new beginning we envision will take a long-term commitment. But we have begun,” Obama said.

“Now, it falls to us all, governments and individuals, to do the hard work that must be done turning words into deeds and Writing the Next Chapter in the ties between us, with faith in each other, on the basis of mutual respect.”

A year into his administration, Obama has yet to achieve any significant momentum on stalled peace talks between the Palestinians and the Israelis, and Muslim audiences are now less receptive to his promise of a “new beginning” with the Muslim world.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Obama Names New US Envoy to Global Islamic Body

US President Barack Obama has named a new special envoy to the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Mr Obama said Rashad Hussain, a deputy associate counsel at the White House, had played a key role in developing partnerships with the Muslim world.

The OIC represents more than 50 states and promotes Muslim solidarity in economic, social and political affairs.

In June, Mr Obama said extremists had exploited tensions between the West and Muslims and called for a new beginning.

“Since then, my administration has made a sustained effort to listen,” Mr Obama told the US-Islamic World Forum in Qatar in a video message, in which he announced Mr Hussain’s appointment.

“We’ve held thousands of events and town halls… in the United States and around the world… And I look forward to continuing the dialogue during my visit to Indonesia next month,” he added.

Mr Obama said the new envoy had completely memorised the Koran and was “a respected member of the American Muslim community”.

Mr Hussein told the Reuters news agency that there was now an “unprecedented opportunity… for a comprehensive agreement with the Muslim world”.

In 2008, former President George W Bush named Sada Cumber, a Texan businessman, as the first US envoy to the OIC.

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



Regulators Hired by Toyota Helped Halt Investigations

Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — Former regulators hired by Toyota Motor Corp. helped end at least four U.S. investigations of unintended acceleration by company vehicles in the last decade, warding off possible recalls, court and government records show.

Christopher Tinto, vice president of regulatory affairs in Toyota’s Washington office, and Christopher Santucci, who works for Tinto, helped persuade the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to end probes including those of 2002-2003 Toyota Camrys and Solaras, court documents show. Both men joined Toyota directly from NHTSA, Tinto in 1994 and Santucci in 2003.

While all automakers have employees who handle NHTSA issues, Toyota may be alone among the major companies in employing former agency staffers to do so. Spokesmen for General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Group LLC and Honda Motor Co. all say their companies have no ex-NHTSA people who deal with the agency on defects.

Possible links between Toyota and NHTSA may fuel mounting criticism of their handling of defects in Toyota and Lexus models tied to 19 deaths between 2004 and 2009. Three congressional committees have scheduled hearings on the recalls.

“Toyota bamboozled NHTSA or NHTSA was bamboozled by itself,” said Joan Claybrook, an auto safety advocate and former NHTSA administrator in the Jimmy Carter administration. “I think there is going to be a lot of heat on NHTSA over this.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Dresden Forms Human Chain to Thwart Neo-Nazis

As many as 15,000 anti-Nazi demonstrators formed a human chain through Dresden Saturday afternoon to block right-wing extremists gathered to commemorate the 65th anniversary of the allied bombing of the city.

They forced the 6,400 neo-Nazis who gathered at Neustadt train station to abandon their plans to hold a “funereal march” through the city.

“We have for the first time succeeded in preventing the biggest neo-Nazi march in Europe,” said Lena Roth of the “Dresden without Nazis” alliance of politicians, artists and unionists.

Police, who deployed nearly 5,700 men, said late Saturday that clashes broke out on several occasions resulting in “at least 27 injured, including 15 policemen” as stones and bottles were thrown.

But they said the neo-Nazis were not able to stage the march as their opponents blocked highways, crossroads and railway lines.

About 30 people were arrested during the day from the two camps, police

said.

A brawl erupted at a road stop near the Saxon town of Plauen between about 150 left-wing and 50 right-wing extremists, all of whom were on their way to respective demonstrations. Three neo-Nazis — one aged 16, the others both 24 — were injured in the brawl, a police spokesman said.

Police also had to deploy water cannon after they were attacked, a spokesman said, though he was unable to give details.

Neo-Nazis have for years marked the bombing of Dresden to show that Germans were the victims as well as the instigators of brutality during World War II. The 1945 bombing, which killed 25,000 people and destroyed most of the city, is widely considered to have been militarily unnecessary.

On Saturday, the left-wing demonstrators had blocked streets right through the old town, including the road between the main train station and the Neustädt station.

Dresden Mayor Helma Orosz, who took part in the human chain, told the crowd: “We stand against the attempt by old and young Nazis, to abuse this day of mourning.”

The memorial day was for Dresden traditionally a “quiet day of mourning,” she said. But it had to be remembered, she said, “who had started that accursed war.”

By forming the human chain, the city had “become a fortress against intolerance and stupidity,” she said.

Saxony Premier Stanislaw Tillich also took part in the chain. As the two ends linked to form a ring, the bells of the old city’s churches rang.

About 200 people — among them neo-Nazis including representatives of the far-right National Democratic Party — gathered in the Heidefriedhof cemetery to lay wreaths.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Human Rights Ignored at UK Prisons, Austrian Lobbyist Claims

An Austrian lobbyist who spent seven days in custody in London has accused UK officials of ignoring human rights.

Alfons Mensdorff-Pouilly — who returned to Austria last Sunday after Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) dropped bribery and arrangement of corruption charges — said: “Custody in Austria happens in correct ways — if it’s possible to find positive attributes for such a measure. Things were at least correct there — unlike in London were human rights are not exactly respected.”

The Burgenland-based owner of several real estate properties, who spent five weeks in Viennese custody last year, claimed speaking to magazine News that officers took all medication he carried with him and only returned all drugs he needed on the last day of his arrest.

“I wasn’t given fitting underwear despite asking for it several times. And they didn’t give me a comb,” the 56-year-old said, adding: “I successfully asked for vaccination against Hepatitis B after I discovered the stubble in the used disposable razor I was given.”

Mensdorff-Pouilly is the husband of former Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP) Health Minister Maria Rauch-Kallat.

The SFO was investigating allegations that he had made illegal payments of around 12 million Euros in return for contracts to deliver Gripen fighter jets produced by British defence company BAE systems to Central and Eastern European countries.

According to the allegations, between 2002 and 2008 he had actively lobbied for the sales.

Mensdorff-Pouilly walked free after BAE Systems struck a deal with UK and US authorities over alleged bribery and corruption. The firm agreed to pay an overall 320 million Euros to authorities after admitting to criminal charges in response to long-standing corruption allegations in both countries.

The agreement was branded a “sale of indulgence” by Austrian Social Democratic (SPÖ) Defence Minister Norbert Darabos.

Mensdorff-Pouilly told News he was “just a ball in game” of officials to increase the pressure on BAE Systems. “They [the SFO] had got nothing on BAE but wanted to indicate they had by showing ‘We now even start to arrest people.’“

He also attacked Austrian politicians for commenting on the case as SPÖ and opposition party bosses appealed to Viennese prosecutors to carefully check whether there was a chance to re-launch investigations against the lobbyist which had started more than one and a half years ago.

Mensdorff-Pouilly claimed politicians had been making use of the fact “that I’m not very popular in public.”

He stressed his plan was now to cooperate with Austrian justice authorities to convince them that he had done nothing wrong. “I’m not guilty, and I’ll prove that,” he told News.

Darabos meanwhile attacked coalition partner the ÖVP.

“The ÖVP is apparently trying to protect Mensdorff-Pouilly. I feel affected by this as a citizen,” the minister said.

ÖVP Justice Minister Claudia Bandion-Ortner reacted saying: “It’s not the role of the justice ministry to comment or even to decide on future dealings in crime cases — and it certainly isn’t the role of the defence ministry.”

Austrian criminal law expert Helmut Fuchs said the exact wording of SFO’s decision had to be checked to find out whether an investigation could continue in Austria or whether Viennese prosecutors had to drop all charges.

Fuchs said paragraph 54 of the Schengen Agreement says someone investigated for the same crime by two European Union (EU) member states could only be sentenced or acquitted once.

Vienna state prosecution spokesman Gerhard Jarosch said the SFO had not yet sent the files.

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



Italy: Berlusconi Vows to Treat Kids Fairly in Divorce Accord

Milan, 10 Feb. (AKI) — Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has told the children of his second wife that they will not be penalised in a his forthcoming multi-million dollar divorce settlement. Four of the billionaire’s children — all apart from his youngest son Luigi — had lunch with their father at his luxury villa Arcore outside the northern city of Milan on Tuesday, Italian media reports said.

“I do not want to harm anyone,” Berlusconi said, cited by Italian daily La Repubblica. “No one will be short-changed or discriminated against.”

Berlusconi has two children from his first marriage to Carla Dall’Oglio — Marina, 43, and Pier Silvio, 40 — and another three from his second marriage to Veronica Lario — Barbara, 25, Eleonora, 23, and Luigi, 21.

Marina is the president of Berlusconi’s Fininvest investment group and his publishing house Mondadori, while Pier Silvio is vice-president of his vast television empire, Mediaset.

Lario filed for divorce last May after revelations that the media tycoon had attended the 18th birthday party of an aspiring model who said she called him “Daddy”.

The move provoked a bitter dispute among his offspring with the children of his second marriage expressing concern that they would not get an equal share of his fortune, estimated to be around nine billion euros.

Berlusconi in late January met his estranged wife face to face for the first time since she demanded a divorce over his alleged relationships with showgirls and “escorts”.

Lario, a former actress, is reportedly demanding 43 million euros a year in maintenance, or just over 3.5 million euros a month.

Berlusconi’s lawyers have argued that this is too high and have proposed a maximum of 300,000 a month.

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



Italy: Govt Moves to Curb Mafia Witnesses

Rome, 11 Feb. (AKI) — The Italian government has announced measures to limit the admissibility of evidence given by witnesses in mafia trials. Under a bill tabled by a key senator from Italy’s ruling People of Freedom (PdL) party, evidence given by witnesses at mafia trials may not be admitted as evidence in court.

“We don’t want to stop people cooperating with the law, and these witnesses often make important contributions,” said the PdL chief whip in the Senate, Maurizio Gasparri.

“But we need to independently verify their statements,” Gaspari told the Berluconi-owned television Channel 5 on Thursday.

The bill, tabled by the PdL Senator Giuseppe Valentino, follows a series of sensational allegations made by witnesses in mafia trials, which have linked Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and other members of the party to organised crime.

Berlusconi and other PdL politicians have vehemently denied the accusations made against them, claiming they are slander.

“You can’t have people like Spatuzza making outrageous accusations against the premier, which are then denied by other witnesses,” Gasparri said.

He was referring to mafia turncoat Gaspare Spatuzza (photo), who last year testified to prosecutors that jailed Sicilian mafia boss Giuseppe Graviano told him in 1994 that Berlusconi was helping the mafia.

In his testimony, Spatuzza also made accusations about Berlusconi’s close political associate and PdL senator Marcello Dell’Utri.

“The person from whom we obtained everything was Berlusconi and also one of our countrymen, Dell’Utri,” said Spatuzza, who was Graviano’s assistant.

Dell’Utri, a native of the Sicilian capital, Palermo, was in 2004 convicted of mafia association and given a nine-year jail term, but plea-bargained a much lighter sentence of 2 years and three months for tax fraud.

The Berlusconi government had passed “tougher laws” against the mafia and carried out more arrests and expropriation of its assets than any of its predecessors, Gasparri said.

“Now we have Ciancimino, who on one day re-writes Italy’s history and on the next recants, adding ifs and buts,” he stated.

“We can’t admit testimony made in a court during the course of a morning that makes headline news and damages the reputation of people for years.”

Massimo Ciancimino testified this month that the party founded in the early 1990s by Berlusconi and Dell’Utri, Forza Italia, resulted from negotiations between the Italian state and the Sicilian mafia.

Ciancimino also claimed Dell’Utri was involved in secret negotiations with the Sicilian mafia after it murdered a top anti-mafia judge in 1992.

He is the son of late mafia member and mayor of Palermo, Vito Ciancimino, the first Italian politician convicted for being a member of the mafia.

His allegations are based on information he says he received from his father, who died in 2002.

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



Italy: Florence Magistrates’ File on “Jelly-Like System” For Major Events

Priest thought to have handed over 50,000 euros. Suspects obtained jobs and luxury cars

ROME — The “jelly-like system” set up to manage major events is the focus of the charges brought by Florence magistrates against the head of the civil protection agency, Guido Bertolaso. Benefits the influential junior minister is alleged to have obtained for awarding contracts to Diego Anemone’s group include “cash and sexual services”. Over two years, businessman Anemone, 39, managed to secure “the fourth, fifth and sixth lots of the G8 tender at La Maddalena”, work at the Foro Italico for the world swimming championships and a contract for Perugia airport in the run-up to celebrations for the anniversary of the unification of Italy. Angelo Balducci, nominated to manage major events, is alleged to have favoured Mr Anemone by providing jobs for his son and daughter-in-law, mobile phones, luxury cars, building work on flats and even domestic staff for the country house that the businessman had put at his disposal.

The priest’s money

The magistrates write: “It has emerged from telephone surveillance that Guido Bertolaso met Diego Anemone on a very frequent basis. At least one of these meetings was preceded by agitated telephone conversations from Anemone which were clearly intended to rapidly secure a substantial sum of money. On several occasions, Mr Anemone also took the trouble to inform Angelo Balducci and Mauro Della Giovampaola about these meetings in advance. He contacted them at the end of the meetings to provide cryptic reports of the outcome. This confirms their relation to the illicit shared interests that the Anemone group cultivates with the public officers”. The episode dates from 21 September 2008. Mr Anemone was due to meet Mr Bertolaso at 10.30 am. An hour earlier, Mr Anemone phoned Fr Evaldo, a priest for whom he was doing some building work.

Anemone: Sorry to bother you, Fr Evaldo, but I’ve got to see someone this morning at 10.30-11.00. How are you set?

Fr Evaldo: For money? Here in Albano I’ve only got ten. I could give it to you down in Rome. Then I’ve got to take it to Africa… let’s see, on Wednesday…

Investigators maintain that “the two agree for the next day”.

Anemone: But we can’t we manage today? Tomorrow, tomorrow morning I could pop round”.

Magistrates point out that in a phone call two days later, “Anemone appears to identify 50,000 euros as the sum requested and obtained from Fr Evaldo”. The magistrates’ report makes this comment on the episode: “Guido Bertolaso has direct relations with the businessman Diego Anemone, whom he often meets in person. In anticipation of these meetings, Mr Anemone made efforts to obtain cash. In consequence, investigators maintain that there is a certain basis for believing that the meetings may have had the purpose of handing sums of money to Mr Bertolaso”.

Women and relaxation

Phone taps reveal that Mr Anemone took trouble to provide gratification for Mr Bertolaso’s free moments…

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

Article in Italian: Fiorenza Sarzanini

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Archaeology: Largest Necropolis in Med Safe From Construction

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, FEBRUARY 8 — The largest Punic-Phoenician necropolis in the Mediterranean will not be covered by concrete. The Council of State, reported L’Unità newspaper today, has repealed a concession granted by the City of Cagliari’s that would have authorised construction company Nuova Initiativa Coimpresa to build about 150,00 cubic metres of buildings, roads and squares on the archaeological site of Tuvixeddu, in the hills of the city. Blocking the initiative was the local Cultural Heritage Office, which disputed the legality of the 2000 agreement between the regional government and the company, based on authorisation granted by the City to build on the site. Chosen by the Carthaginians between the 3rd and 4th century B.C. to bury their dead, the Tuvixeddu hill, which also is the site of a Roman necropolis, has suffered numerous abuses over the years: it was used as a cement quarry by Italcementi, an air-raid shelter in WWII, and after the war, sheltered those who lost their homes in the bombings. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Amsterdam Prostitutes Mainly Foreign

Fewer than 100 of the 1,100 prostitutes identified by Amsterdam city council health workers are Dutch nationals, the Parool reported on Thursday.

And some 60% of women working in the city’s red light district brothels and clubs come from Eastern Europe, the report by the prostitute’s health centre said. The centre claims to reach about 30% of the city’s prostitutes.

The report also shows that some prostitutes are working over 100 hours a week behind the windows and in clubs.

‘This is irresponsible,’ city council executive Marijke Vos said. Vos plans involve prostitutes, brothel owners and health workers in making sure there are better sex industry guidelines on working hours and conditions.

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



Portugal: Law Legalising Weddings Approved

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, FEBRUARY 12 — Yesterday Portuguese Parliament approved a law that legalises same-sex marriages, but does not recognise the right to adoption. The regulation must now be ratified by the President, Anibal Cavaco Silva. In favour of the approval of the law, according to reports today in the press, were the Socialist Party (PS), Portuguese Communist Party (PCP), the Bloque de Izquierda (BE) and the Green Party; while centre-right parties voted against the new law, although six MPs of the conservative Social Democrata party (PSD) abstained and two independent PS representatives were opposed. The law eliminates the expression “different sex” from the Civil Code, which until now was associated with the definition of marriage, which is now defined as a “contract between two individuals who want to build a family through a full union of their lives”. To become effective, the law must be ratified by President Cavaco Silva, who has always said that he is against gay marriage, and therefore a veto has not been ruled out. The modifications introduced to the Civil Code rule out the right for same-sex couples to adopt children. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: First Detainee to Undergo “Chemical Castration”

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, FEBRUARY 5 — An inmate of a prison in Catalonia, serving sentence for sexual assault, will become the first detainee in Spain voluntarily to undergo “chemical castration”. The announcement was made by the regional Councillor for Justice, Montserrat Tura, to the media today. As Ms Tura explained, the detainee agreed to starting the drug treatment aimed at inhibiting sexual urges and reducing the production of testosterone. In this way, Catalonia, which has recently been empowered to run its own prison system, is a jump ahead of the announced reform of the Criminal Code, which is due to include voluntary chemical castration. Re-offending paedophiles, people found guilty of crimes of sexual sadism and detainees suffering sadistic personality disturbances, all of whom have more than one sentence for the same offence, may apply for the treatment. The drug treatment programme is applied three years ahead of the completion of three-quarters of the sentence and includes psychological treatment of the detainee ahead of the drug programme, which begins shortly before release. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Catalan Requirement for New University Professors

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, FEBRUARY 8 — A medium to high-level knowledge of Catalan will be a requirement for new professors at the University of Catalonia, with contracts of over two years, according to the draft of a decree being examined by the Generalitat, which has resulted in a debate in Catalonia’s universities, according to reports today in El Pais. Only professors that already hold a teaching post, emeritus professors, visiting professors and those that only hold an honorary role will be not be required to have a medium to high-level knowledge of the co-official language (a so-called ‘C-level’). Already in 2008, an agreement was signed on a C-level requirement of the Catalan language in the inter-university council of Catalonia, which includes the vice-chancellors and the regional government, but this is the first time that a knowledge of the co-official language will be acknowledged by a decree. An initiative that has led to controversy among university professors from outside of the region. According to some, making Catalan compulsory could make sense in required schooling, so that the students can socialise, but not at the university level, where part of the institution’s purpose is internationalisation and an exchange of teachers and researchers. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘My Hell at the Hands of Ali Dizaei’: Victim of Corrupt Met Commander Tells of Campaign of Intimidation

Long before they were introduced, Waad Al Baghdadi had the measure of Commander Ali Dizaei. They frequented the same Persian restaurant in West London and Mr Al Baghdadi, then a 20-year-old website designer, was able to observe the officer’s behaviour at close hand.

He thought him bloated with self-importance. There was his swagger, his constant boasting, his habit of braying into his phone.

[…]

There was much about Dizaei that reminded Mr Al Baghdadi of the corrupt police chiefs in Tehran where the policeman was born. This, he acknowledges, should have served as a warning two years later when they met to strike a business deal.

[…]

Many might assume, then, that the guilty verdict gave Mr Al Baghdadi cause for celebration, that at the very least it drew a line under his ordeal and allowed him to resume his life. Yet as he reveals, he lives in fear and is planning to move abroad.

For what has never been disclosed until now is the extraordinary campaign of intimidation Mr Al Baghdadi says he endured after making his complaint against Dizaei. He firmly believes it was designed to scare and discredit him.

‘I am still being told by people in the Iranian community that I will pay for what I did for standing up to him,’ he said.

Most startlingly of all, a few months before Mr Al Baghdadi was due to give evidence against the officer, an Iranian man walked into the cafe he now runs and offered him £150,000 to change his evidence. He refused.

[Comments from JD: This harrowing account of intimidation is a must read.]

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: 10p Charge to Call Police on Revived 101 Number

The Government is planning to resurrect an alternative number to 999 that will charge members of the public 10p to report anti-social behaviour and non-emergency crimes to police.

The 101 number was introduced in 2006 to take pressure off the emergency line but was abandoned after pilot schemes showed it failed to significantly reduce the volume of 999 calls.

It also caused controversy at the time after it was revealed the Government had planned to include ‘people drug dealing’ as a non-emergency crime which the service could deal with.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: BNP Votes to Drop Whites-Only Rule

LONDON — The far-right British National Party voted on Sunday to drop its whites-only membership policy, following a threat of legal action.

Party leader Nick Griffin said he expected a “trickle, rather than a flood” of applications after race relations laws forced the party to amend its constitution to allow black and British Asian people to join.

“Anyone can be a member of this party. We are happy to accept anyone as a member providing they agree with us that this country should remain fundamentally British,” he told Sky News television.

The leader said he expected to welcome the party’s first non-white member, a Sikh called Rajinder Singh, soon.

“I will be absolutely delighted to shake his hand and give him his membership card,” said Griffin.

A London court had ordered the party to amend its constitution to comply with race relations legislation.

The court warned the BNP that it would face legal action from the Equality and Human Rights Commission, an independent body set up by the government, if it failed to change its membership policy.

The commission said Sunday it had not yet seen the new constitution but added that it hoped “that the BNP’s revised membership policy is no longer discriminatory.”

It will receive the new constitution on Tuesday, and will have a week to respond before both parties head to court next month.

The rules in place before the vote said: “Membership of the BNP is strictly defined within the terms of, and our members also self-define themselves within, the legal ambit of a defined ‘racial group’, this being ‘indigenous Caucasian’ and defined ‘ethnic groups’ emanating from that race.”

The decision to change the rules was taken at an extraordinary general meeting just outside London, and the event was marred by the ejection of a journalist from the Times newspaper.

Explaining why the reporter was thrown out, Griffin said: “Because he is from The Times, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch, and it lies and it lies and it lies about this party.”

The BNP, which has no lawmakers sitting in the British parliament, warns that “the indigenous British people” face becoming an ethnic minority in their own country if current levels of immigration continue.

It also predicts the “overwhelming and extinguishing of Britain and British identity under a tsunami of immigration,” in comments on its website.

Griffin and fellow party member Andrew Brons were elected to the European Parliament in June, the first time the BNP had been voted into a legislature.

[Return to headlines]



UK: Israeli Politicians May Provoke Arrest to Force Law Change in Britain

A swift change to the law promised by ministers to prevent Israeli politicians and generals being arrested when they visit Britain is in doubt.

A Cabinet split over timing threatens to postpone any alteration of the rules until after the election, The Times has learnt, even though ministers assured Israel that it was a priority. Such a delay would leave visiting Israelis at risk and could worsen an already sour dispute with Jerusalem.

Tzipi Livni, the Israeli opposition leader whose threatened arrest sparked the dispute, indicated last night that she was prepared to travel to Britain and “take the bullet” if that was the only way to shame the Government into action. “Britain has obligated itself to me personally that this subject will be taken care of and fixed,” she said. “Now is the time.”

Ministers promised to act after a magistrate in London issued a warrant for the arrest of Ms Livni last year, for alleged war crimes in Gaza when she was Foreign Minister. The warrant was withdrawn after she cancelled her planned trip.

The issue embarrassed the Government, and David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, said that ministers were looking urgently at changing the law so that Israeli leaders felt free to visit the UK.

It would mean rewriting the principle of universal jurisdiction, under which private citizens can secure arrest warrants for offences such as war crimes committed abroad. Under one proposal, the Attorney-General, rather than just a magistrate, would have to authorise such a warrant.

Baroness Scotland of Asthal, the Attorney-General, went to Israel to reassure political and military leaders that the Government was taking the issue seriously. But it has now become snarled up in the end of the parliamentary session.

Jack Straw, the Justice Secretary, is privately warning against remaking the law over such a fundamental issue in haste. He believes that it ought to be explored by a body such as the Justice Select Committee. That would delay any new law until the next Parliament.

Parliamentary counsel have drafted clauses that could be attached to the Crime and Security Bill currently before Parliament, for its Commons committee stage on February 25 or its report stage in March. But there are fears that it may fall victim to horse-trading at the end of the parliamentary session, which would be even more embarrassing to the Government in its relations with Israel.

A further complication is that 119 MPs, most Labour, have signed a Commons motion against any change, and some Labour strategists do not want to be dealing with a rebellion as the election campaign starts. Mr Miliband wants the issue to be resolved before the election, and officials insisted last night that much work was being done to that end.

Yigal Palmor, the Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman, said: “If Israeli dignitaries cannot travel unhindered to Britain, than they will not travel. Automatically the political dialogue between the two countries will be reduced. This is not something that London or Jerusalem wants.”

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



UK: Single Mother of Six Finds £2m Mansion on the Net… And Then Gets You to Pay £7,000 a Month Rent

A single mother of six is getting more than £80,000 a year from the taxpayer to live in a £2million mansion in an exclusive London suburb.

Essma Marjam, 34, is given almost £7,000 a month in housing benefits to pay the rent on the five-bedroom villa just yards from Sir Paul McCartney’s house and Lord’s cricket ground.

She also receives an estimated £15,000 a year in other payouts, such as child benefit, to help look after her children, aged from five months to 14.

The four-storey house in Maida Vale has five bedrooms, two bathrooms, a double living room, large fitted kitchen-diner with French doors on to the landscaped garden and a state-of-the art buzzer entry system.

Astonishingly, it is understood Miss Marjam found the house on the internet through a private letting agency, rather than waiting for Westminster council to give her a vacant property on their books.

She then applied to the council for the £1,600-a-week benefit — the maximum amount the council allows.

Miss Marjam said: ‘I moved here at the beginning of the month as I’m entitled to a five-bedroom house.

‘I was in a three-bedroom council house but I needed a bigger place once my new baby came along. So the council agreed to pay the £1,600 a week to a private landlord as they didn’t have any houses big enough.

‘I’m separated from my husband. He’s a solicitor in Derby, but I don’t know if he’s working at the moment. He doesn’t pay anything towards the kids. Things are quite difficult between us.

‘The house is lovely and very big, but I don’t have enough furniture to fill it.’

She does, however, have two large flat-screen televisions and several leather sofas, plus a large amount of children’s toys scattered over the wooden floorboards.

During the week, vans from Argos and other home stores dropped off large purchases.

Miss Marjam does not work, as she spends all day looking after her children — Zekia, 14, Abdulhakim, 13, Jihad, 11, Hamza, ten, Ayman, two, and five-month-old Nasir.

The four eldest have the surname Benjamin, while the two youngest have the surname Khan.

Labour’s controversial Local Housing Allowance enables council tenants to receive such high benefits to pay private landlords.

The maximum that can be claimed is set by central government and the allowances can be huge, leaving the taxpayer to foot the bill.

The Daily Mail has highlighted other outrageous examples, such as the single mother of eight receiving £90,000 a year to live in a £2.6million Notting Hill mansion.

Taxpayers are also picking up the £6,400-a-month bill to house Nasra Warsame, her seven children and her elderly mother in central London, with Westminster council also providing Mrs Warsame’s husband and their eighth child with a two-bedroom flat nearby.

In total, 16 families are living in million-pound-plus London properties funded by the Local Housing Allowance.

Phillipa Roe, a Westminster councillor, said: ‘We would like to see the entire system changed as the current rules are wrong and do not offer taxpayers value for money.

‘We want to have more control to limit the amount of money which is paid out. Local councils are far better placed to determine benefit levels than ministers in Whitehall who won’t know the facts on the ground.

‘The Government has repeatedly pledged to reform housing benefit but failed to do so. The whole system needs a radical review and ministers should stop dragging their heels and get on and do it.’

A Department for Work and Pensions spokesman said: ‘It is not right that in London high rents have been able to distort the system, resulting in a small number of people getting excessively high payments.

‘We took immediate action and capped the Local Housing Allowance in April. The plans we published in December go even further and will exclude high rents from LHA rate calculations.

‘Only a very small minority of people receive such high rates of housing benefit. The average payment is £81 a week.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Vatican Tempests. The Academy for Life Puts Its Neck on the Line

Its president, Archbishop Fisichella, no longer has the trust of some of its members. All because of one of his articles published in “L’Osservatore Romano,” approved by the secretariat of state. The scholar Michel Schooyans’ broadside against the false “compassion” that justifies everything

by Sandro Magister

ROME, February 8, 2010 — In a few days, from February 11 to 13, a meeting will be held at the Vatican of the pontifical academy for life, the president of which is Archbishop Salvatore Fisichella (in the photo).

The meeting promises to be a stormy one. Some of the members of the academy are openly questioning whether Fisichella is fit to be president. Foremost among them is Monsignor Michel Schooyans, Belgian, professor emeritus of the Catholic University of Louvain, a respected specialist in anthropology, political philosophy, bioethics. He is a member of three pontifical academies: for social sciences, of Saint Thomas Aquinas, and — most relevant here — for life. Pope Joseph Ratzinger knows and admires him. In 1997, as cardinal prefect of the congregation for the doctrine of the faith, he wrote a preface to one of his books: “L’Évangile face au désordre mondial.”

In view of the meeting, Schooyans has written a scathing critique of the “trap” into which he believes also Fisichella has fallen: the deceptive use of the concept of “compassion.”

The critique is reproduced in its entirety further below. Fisichella’s name doesn’t appear in it. But there are detailed references to an article on abortion that he wrote for “L’Osservatore Romano,” which provoked a genuine uproar when it was published, and ultimately required the Vatican congregation for the doctrine of the faith to release a “Clarification.”

*

Fisichella’s article came out on March 15, 2009. And it concerned the case of an extremely young Brazilian child-mother in Recife, who was forced to abort the twins she was carrying.

In the days before the article was published, the girl’s situation had ignited bitter debate, not only in Brazil, but also in other countries, especially in France.

The French newspapers had lashed out against the Church’s “fanaticism” and “hardness of heart,” particularly that of the archbishop of Olinda and Recife, José Cardoso Sobrinho, who had condemned the double abortion, and had made a united front in defense of the girl and of those who had “saved” her by making her have an abortion.

The accusations that the Church had no “compassion” were extremely harsh, and were also aimed at Pope Benedict XVI himself, who had just weathered furious attacks over the Williamson case of a few weeks before.

Lucetta Scaraffia, a leading commentator for “L’Osservatore Romano,” was in Paris at the time, and alerted the director of the Vatican newspaper, Giovanni Maria Vian.

In agreement with his editor, secretary of state Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, Vian gave Archbishop Fisichella the job of writing an article that would quiet the attacks on the Church and the pope.

Fisichella wrote it. Bertone examined it, and approved it word for word, without having it checked by the congregation for the doctrine of the faith, as is usually done at the Vatican for position statements that touch on doctrine.

On the afternoon of March 14, the article was published on the front page of “L’Osservatore Romano,” bearing the date of the following day.

In it, Fisichella wrote that the case of the Brazilian girl “made the pages of the newspapers only because the archbishop of Olinda and Recife was quick to declare the excommunication of the doctors who helped her to interrupt the pregnancy.” Instead, “before thinking of excommunication,” the girl “should first of all have been defended, embraced, comforted” with that “humanity of which we churchmen should be expert proclaimers and teachers.” But “that’s not what happened.”

And he continued:…

__________

English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

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

Middle East


Archaeology: Stolen Items From Iraq Intercepted in Dubai

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, FEBRUARY 10 — Various pieces of Iraqi artwork, including three bronze statues and ancient coins, were intercepted and seized by the customs authority of Dubai, while they were being smuggled towards the international airport in the emirate. Among the objects seized were also vases and plates from the Hellenistic and Sassanian Ages -explained a statement released today by the customs authority- which were hidden in the stuffing of several chairs, which were travelling in a furniture container. Examined by an archaeologist, the items were identified as precious Iraqi artefacts that were stolen from the Mesopotamian country after the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime. In 2008, border police in the emirate had already seized 128 Iraqi archaeological artefacts hidden in the hold of a ship that was attempting to enter the emirate. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Foreign Direct Investments, Weak Performance in MENA Area

(ANSAmed) — ROMA, 10 FEB — Over 70% of the investment promotion intermediaries (IPI) in the world may be missing foreign investment projects because they do not respond to investors in an appropriate way. This is the main outcome of the Global Investment Promotion Benchmarking report published by the World Bank Group. According to the World Bank Group’s investment promotion specialists of Investment Climate Advisory Services (ICAS), the Middle East and North Africa region (MENA), is one of the weakest performing regions in the world and is in danger of falling further behind. “In spite of the private sector’s growing role in regional economies, the rate of private investment in MENA countries is only about half that of many other countries that were able to achieve sustained high levels of growth,’ considers Mahmoud Mohieldin, Minister of Investment in Egypt, a press release reports. Most MENA governments are eager to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) to diversify their economies, but a bureaucratic approach to investment facilitation too often stifles interaction with potential investors. Opportunities do exist as the MENA region is starting to benefit from a global recovery with GDP growth expected to accelerate to 3.7 percent in 2010 (from 2.9 percent in 2009). A recent Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) report suggests that global multinational enterprises maintain a positive FDI outlook with almost 40% intending to increase foreign investment over the next year and to shift their investments from developed to developing countries. The topic has been address during a seminar started yesterday in Cairo, entitled: “The makings of a good Investment Facilitator: lessons to be learnt from top performers”. Co-organised by the World Bank Group and ANIMA Investment Network in the framework of the EU Invest in Med programme, the seminar is hosted by Egypt’s General Authority for Investment and Free Zones (GAFI), which recently took over the presidency of the ANIMA network. As for the most recent trends of FDI in the area, according to ANIMA observatory the decline has been relatively strong: 541 FDI projects in 2009 vs. 863 in 2008 (- 37%); 56 billion euros in gross volumes, against 66 billion in 2008 (- 15%); 29 billion euros in net volumes (amounts corrected for the multi-stage projects), vs. 42 billion in 2008 (- 31%) The ANIMA data are on line with those of UNCTAD (decrease of 39% in global FDI flows in 2009). There are however strong signs of recovery: 10 projects ranging between 1 and 2 billion euros; 4 mega-projects higher than 2 billion euros (e.g. Barwa Real Estate in Egypt et al Maabar in Jordan). In terms of annoucements, the 4th quarter of 2009 by far is the best of the year: 182 FDI projects or one third of the annual total. The seminar will conclude tomorrow with a large conference titled ‘Mediterranean Investment Facilitators: New challenges ahead’. Mohieldin, who will be addressing the conference audience and making the closing remarks. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



How Do You Judge a Camel Beauty Contest?

They’re tall, they’re blonde, they’re elegant, and at the height of their careers they can command millions of dollars. Supermodels? No, camels.

In the remote Western Region of the United Arab Emirates, 28,000 of the humped beasts gathered at the end of January for what was billed as the biggest camel beauty contest ever.

Normally, there’s nothing there but sand, but the al-Dhafra Festival filled the arid desert with breeders and their herds, some of which had been driven from as far as Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

The pens bustled with activity. Thousands of people from around The Gulf watched the action from the stands. A handful of judges sifted through the camel pens picking out the top talent.

“The head is the most important thing and this is what we look at first,” Mohammed Abdullah al-Mehairi, the head judge, told the BBC.

“We are looking for camels with big heads, firm ears, broad cheeks and big whiskers. There is no single important thing — the neck and body should be long, the hump and the back should be big, and we also look at the colour and posture of the camel.”

Bedouin tradition

Camels of different ages and types competed in 48 different categories — winning a total of $10m — during the 10-day festival, which ended on Monday.

“The most important competition is the al-Bayraq lap where breeders put forward their best 50 camels and parade them around the track,” Mr al-Mehairi explained.

“Most of the competitors are female because… females look better.”

Hamad Rashed al-Marri took a month to bring his camels from Saudi Arabia on foot.

His father was a camel breeder, as was his father’s father, and this has become the biggest event in the camel calendar for him. Fifty members of his family travelled with him.

[…]

“For the beauty camels I’m looking at the camel’s head and height,” says Hamad.

“For racing camels they should be thin with strong legs.”

Camel trader Khalaf Sari Al Mazrouei said he had sold one camel for $2.7m.

“The market this year is better because there are more people from the Gulf. The more there are, the more buying and selling there is. Today I bought a camel for $7,000 and I can sell it tomorrow for $10,000 or $14,000.

[…]

“I cannot lie to you. People want to be number one, everyone wants to be number one,” says Hamad.

“Why? Because you get the media coverage and you get the money and you get the satisfaction. It’s the best thing. People buy the camels, raise the camels, and spend money on the camels just to be number one.”

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



Iran Protest Image Wins Top News Photo Award

An image of women shouting from the rooftops in protest at Iran’s presidential election last June won the top World Press Photo prize for news photography on Friday.

The photo is part of a series that Italian Pietro Masturzo shot on Tehran’s rooftops at night, when people were shouting their dissent over the election results as protests raged on the streets during

The black and white image by Masturzo, a freelance photographer, was used to illustrate a story on how Iranians shouted their dissent from rooftops and balconies in the days after the June 12 election last year.

Iran’s opposition has said the result was fixed to give President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad victory.

award.

“The photo has a powerful sense of atmosphere, tension, fear — but also of quietness and calm, and in this sense was a challenge as a choice,” said Kate Edwards, a member of the jury.

“We were looking for an image that drew you in, took you deeper, made you think more — not just about showing what we already know, but something that asks more of us.”

Masturzo, 29, won one of the most prestigious international image awards after less than three years as a professional photographer. He will receive his €10,000 ($13,700) prize in Amsterdam on May 2.

The jury also gave a special mention to an image taken from a film put on the Youtube video sharing website which showed 26-year-old student Neda Agha-Soltan, who was shot dead during the Iran protests on June 20.

AFP photographers Astrada, Laban-Mattei and Abed won their awards in the Spot News section for trouble-zone reporting.

Astrada won first prize for a series of pictures of unrest in Madagascar in February 2009 during an uprising against President Marc Ravalomanana. Last year he won the award for picture of election violence in Kenya in 2008.

Laban-Mattei won second prize for his images from the stormy Iran protests.

Abed was selected for his reporting from the Israeli offensive against Gaza in January 2009.

Sixty-three photographers from 23 nationalities won prizes in 10 categories in the annual awards. The 5,847 photographers who took part entered 101,960 photos.

           — Hat tip: TB [Return to headlines]



Roman Statue to be on Display in Istanbul

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA — A well-known Roman statue will be displayed in the Turkish city of Istanbul in February. The “Discus-thrower” (Discobolus) of Myron statue, one of the best known symbols of the Roman era which is a part of the collection of The British Museum, will be displayed at the Istanbul Archeology Museums as of February 12, as Anatolia news agency reports. Turkey’s Directorate General for Cultural Heritage and Museums, Istanbul Archeology Museums and The British Museum are jointly organizing the exhibition, sponsored by the Association of Turkish Travel Agencies (TURSAB). The statue will be on display at the Istanbul Archeology Museums till April 4. A statue of the 5th century BC from Hadrian’s Villa in Tivoli, Lazio, Italy, “Discus-thrower” is one of the most famous images from the ancient world. This marble statue is one of several copies of a lost bronze original of the fifth century BC which was attributed to the sculptor Myron (flourished about 470-440 BC). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Saudi Call for Boycott Against Men Selling Lingerie

Campaigners in Saudi Arabia have urged women there to begin a two-week boycott of lingerie shops with male staff.

They say it is a contradiction that in such a conservative, Islamic country, women have to give their underwear sizes to men they do not know.

Reem Asaad, an economics professor from Jeddah, organised the boycott through her Facebook page, as public protests are illegal in Saudi Arabia.

Islamic scholars have given their backing to the campaign.

“I am calling for salesmen to be replaced with saleswomen”, Ms Asaad was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.

“I just hope that many respond and boycott,” she said.

Ms Asaad has been calling on officials to allow saleswomen in shops open to both male and female clients since 2008.

Religious police in the country have said they are not against women working in shops as long as they are in women-only malls.

Saudi Arabia’s Labour Ministry has previously said it would require that women were employed in lingerie shops, but the law has not been enforced.

Ms Asaad says the law is deliberately ambiguous and allows religious clerics to effectively uphold a ban on saleswomen.

The Wahhabi strain of Islam, which dominates the country, requires absolute separation of unrelated members of the opposite sex.

Parts of Saudi society are still very traditional and do not like the idea of women working — even if they are just selling underwear to each other.

Because of the strict segregation laws barring physical contact between the sexes, women also cannot be properly measured for their underwear.

The boycott campaign comes days before a visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who will hold a town hall meeting at Ms Asaad’s Dar al-Hekma College.

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

South Asia


France and Germany Increase Investment in Bangladesh

With 2.1 billion dollars invested and an export growth of 17.4% in 2009, Germany is the second economic partner of Bangladesh after the United States. More than 200 million euros spent by France in projects against pollution. The textile industry remains the main industry of Bangladesh.

Dhaka (AsiaNews) — 2009 saw increased investments by Germany and France in Bangladesh. A study by the German Federal Bureau of Statistics published last February 4, notes that Germany is now the second market for the Bangladeshi goods after the U.S. In 2009, German investment in the Asian country was 2.1 billion euros, growing by 17.4%. Instead, France is investing in technical innovation in the textile sector at a cost of over 200 million.

“I welcome the increase in trade between the two states — states Holger Michael, the German Ambassador in Bangladesh — the current traffic of goods amounts to about 1.6 billion euros, and I hope that relations between Germany and Bangladesh continue to grow”.

To date, over 90% of Bangladeshi products exported to Germany come from the clothing industry. This is confirmed as the main industry of the country, thanks to the low cost of labour. But in 2009 the trade relations also involved the shipping sector, with the start of construction of 30 vessels worth 250 million euros. Other exported products are: jute, leather, fish and seafood.

Besides the exploitation of cheap labour, the 2009 has also seen investments to improve the quality of products. France has in fact spent over $ 200 million in projects to limit the use of harmful and polluting materials in the realization of clothes. “We are friends of Bangladesh — says the French ambassador Laurent Estrade — France wants to assist the country in reducing pollution, particularly by limiting the use of arsenic in the industry.”

Despite the global crisis, the quantity of products exported by Bangladesh is growing. Between 2007 and 2009, total exports grew by 4.8%, while the projected increase for 2010 is 6.3%. In addition to Germany, France and the U.S., other trading partners are Great Britain, Italy, Japan and Holland.

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



Indonesia: West Java, A Crowd of 150 Muslims Block Construction of Protestant Church

Demonstration of extremists prompts authorities to revoke the building permits. Local official: the signatures collected are “irregular”. The final decision of waiting for today. The Conference of Bishops makes a formal protest in Parliament.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — A crowd of over 150 Muslims in the village of Curug Mekar, in the sub district of West Bogor (West Java province), staged a protest against the building permit (IMB) of a Protestant church. The event has prompted local authorities to revoke the authorization, justifying the decision by alleged “irregularities” in the collection of signatures needed for the building of the place of Christian worship.

At the center of the controversy is the Protestant Church of Yasmin in the village of Curug Mekar. Yesterday Bambang Gunawan, executive secretary of local government, assured the protesters that “we need to review the process that led to the issuance of the building permit.” The issue will be discussed today before the mayor, who will decide whether to definitively confirm or withdraw the permit. The words uttered by the Executive Secretary unleashed demonstrators’ joy.

The document issued by the Indonesian authorities for the construction of buildings (IMB) requires a structured process, which is further complicated in the case of Christian places of worship. Governmental permits, must be approved “without prejudice” by collecting signatures of residents of the area affected by the project. It may take up to 10 years to get all the needed documents in order.

Bambang Gunawan said that the earlier granted permission has no legal status because “the signatures of the residents are irregular and some were falsified”. A statement welcomed by Muslims, who say they are “happy because the aim was reached.” The church, in fact, is currently locked and no one knows if it will be opened in the future. Imam Ahmad Hajj, a chief of the Indonesian Muslim Communication Forum (Forkami) in Bogor, is “sure” that “the IMB will be withdrawn.”

The Indonesian Bishops’ Conference has also intervened against the repeated and sudden revocation of building permits, making a formal protest in Parliament. A crowd of Muslims blocked the building of the Catholic church of Saint Mary at Purwakarta in West Java province. The faithful had obtained all permits, denounce the bishops, but the realization of the place of worship is still pending and the local authorities fail to protect the legitimate rights of minorities.

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

Far East


Declining U.S. Navy Facing Chinese Challenge

Fleet’s status creates door of vulnerability to other powers, terrorists

A growing Chinese fleet could keep the declining U.S. Navy out of the Western Pacific, according to an expert cited in a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

The U.S. also could be faced with new military challenges around the globe because of the projection of power a growing Chinese navy would present.

Yet, the U.S. Navy has cut back the number and type of ships to the level it was prior to the Reagan administration. Indeed, the Navy hasn’t been as small since the administration of William Howard Taft, according to naval expert Seth Cropsey.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Spain: 200,000 Chinese-Made Shoes Taken Off the Market

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, FEBRUARY 12 — About 200,000 pairs of shoes made in China containing dimethyl fumarate, a toxic substance that causes serious allergic reactions, prohibited by Spanish and European regulations, were taken off the Spanish market in 2009, according to data issued by the national institute of consumption, cited today in the press. Of the shoes taken off the market, 114,173 pairs have been destroyed, while 87,876 were rejected by customs. The national institute of consumption ordered a precautionary ban in 2008 on selling items containing dimethyl fumarate, while in March of 2009, the European Commission ordered items to be pulled off the market. According to the association, there were about 300 cases of injuries, some serious, provoked by dimethyl fumarate, suffered by individuals who purchased shoes and couches containing the irritant, which acts on the skin and eyes and which, even in very small concentrations, can result in allergic reactions. About 2,000 “contaminated” couches were confiscated in Spain in 2009. In 2008, the EU made 2,875 warnings on potentially contaminated items, 15% more than in 2008, according to data from the EU rapid alert system for dangerous consumer products (RAPEX). (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Crowded Malta Struggles to Cope With Illegal Immigration

Malta has difficulty coping with illegal immigrants from Africa. DW spoke with H.E. Dr. John Paul Grech, the Ambassador of Malta to Germany, on the issue, the role of the EU and the European Asylum Support Office.

DW: How has Malta coped with illegal immigration from Africa?

John Paul Grech: Malta has throughout the years received immigrants in a way that reflects its international obligations. It has done its best in order to adhere to its international obligations.

Given its limited resources, Malta refers this problem to the European Union and has been very active to put the question of illegal immigration on the agenda of the European Union. We have succeeded in that, and part of that work has been also the establishment of the pact for immigration and asylum within the European Union.

How can the EU help Malta tackle illegal immigration from Africa?

Malta has been working towards establishing the principle of burden-sharing. Malta considers this to be a phenomenon, which is of interest to Europe. Therefore, it has approached the issue from a two-pronged viewpoint. On the one hand, it is very much in favor of adhering to our international obligations and promoting legal migration; and on the other hand, it is very much aware that the European Union has to embrace its responsibilities in assisting Malta in the context of burden-sharing.

The EU has chosen Malta to host the European Asylum Support Office (EASO). What is the reaction in Malta?

We are extremely pleased that Malta has been chosen to host the EASO, which is an office meant to address the problem of illegal immigration, tackle the administrative side of it, and also work within the European Union in order to address this issue in a more constructive manner.

It is a point of satisfaction that Malta has been chosen because it reflects that the European Union sees Malta as being at the heart of the problem. It is receiving an enormous amount of immigrants, and therefore its experience and hands-on knowledge of what this is all about probably has been the reason why the European Union chose Malta to host the EASO.

Since 2004, Amnesty International has repeatedly condemned immigrant detention centers for being “overcrowded and characterized by poor hygiene and inadequate healthcare.” What is being done to improve the conditions?

Well, Malta has been very transparent. We have had several international authorities coming over to visit us to see the context of the problem as it is affecting Malta. We have always maintained that help was needed given our limitations.

In the context of international cooperation and assistance from the European Union, we have been doing our very best to improve conditions. We can safely say that we can address this issue even better if our pleas to the international community, in particular the European Union, are heard and the assistance is forthcoming.

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



Egypt: Italy Focussing on Training, Development

(ANSAmed) — ROME, FEBRUARY 12 — Guaranteeing Italian entrepreneurs truly qualified foreign workers, certifying their expertise with European standards, and acting so that bank remittances by immigrants contribute to the development process in their countries of origin, and do not just feed consumption. In Egypt, Italian Cooperation and the Italian Labour and Social Policies Ministry are working along these lines in collaboration with two projects of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) of Cairo. The first case involves the second phase of the Integrated System of Information for Migration (IMIS) project, which aims to update the database of Egyptian labourers that are ready to immigrate to Italy. In the last 10 years about 100,000 names have been entered into the IMIS database. These profiles are now being looked at to identify their actual abilities one by one, in collaboration with the European Training Foundation. The project, which will end in July, aims to guarantee business owners the possibility of finding the exact type of labour they need online. The IMIS instrument — at www.emigration.gov.ed — intends to offer support, in collaboration with the Immigration Ministry in Cairo, to Egyptians abroad as well. “A instrument that is completely free of charge to allow supply and demand to meet,” said Luigi Carta of the IOM, “and which assumes particular importance before the projects of the 2015 Expo in Milan begin, for which a requirement of 70,000 workers has been calculated for the construction sector.” It has been estimatedthat there are currently about 110,000 Egyptians in Italy, 70,000 of whom are legal residents. Many are also ready to immigrate to Italy. Italy, which receives about 11% of Egyptian migrants, is the third destination for Egyptian immigrants, after the U.S. (about 40%) and Canada (13%). In the Bossi-Fini decree on migrant flows (which has actually been suspended since 2008) Egyptian migrants were given a quota of 8,000: 5,000 more than initially also thanks to the fact that Egypt is one of the countries that signed an agreement with Rome allowing illegal immigrants to be readmitted to their country. However, Italy is looking to Egypt also with the objective of training labourers both with the needs of Italian businesses and with possible projects for local development in mind. The informational campaign in defence of minors in the Fayoum Governorate works along these lines, aiming on one hand to warn against the risks of illegal immigration, and on the other to raise awareness on the need for language and professional training, which will be provided by a new school based on the model of the Don Bosco institutes. A campaign that sees a joint effort from the IOM, the Egyptian Family Ministry and the Italian Ministry of Labour and Social Policies, which has earmarked 2 million euros for the project. Training as an instrument to realise a life project in one’s home country. However, if migration must exist, observed Piera Francesca Solinas of the OIM, it should also be a motor for development. “Bank remittances by immigrants,” she specified, “are, after tourism, one of Egypt’s major sources of revenue. In the 2008-2009 fiscal year, the country confirmed its position as the top country in the Middle East for the total value of bank remittances, which amounted to 7 billion dollars. It is necessary to act so that this money will be reinvested locally, and so that immigrants are able to transmit the technical knowledge that they acquired abroad in their countries of origin. In Mexico, for example — she concluded — for every dollar invested by an immigrant in their home country, another two are added by the government and the IOM. Italy and Egypt are also working along these lines in order to connect migration with development.” (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU: Most Remittances Sent Home From Med Area

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — In the European Union, most of the immigrants remittances (whether they are from within the EU or not), which were sent to their countries of origin in 2008, left from the Mediterranean area. Out of the total of 32 billion euros, the highest figures are for those transferred from Spain (7.8 billion, 25% of the total), Italy (6.4 billion, 20% of the total), France (3.4 billion, 11% of the total) and then Germany (3.1 billion, 10%). The figures were released by Eurostat, the European office of statistics, which has counted the funds that emigrant workers send home. The savings coming from immigrants in Italy went primarily to China, the Philippines and Romania, whilst those from Spain were destined for Columbia, Ecuador and Bolivia. Remittances from France primarily involved Portugal and Morocco, whilst those from Germany were sent prevalently to Turkey and Italy. From Greece, immigrants savings travelled in particular to Albania and Israel. Overall the flow towards countries outside the EU was 22.5 billion, whilst the flow within the EU was 9.3 billion. In Spain the money sent outside the EU in 2008 hit 6.35 billion euros, in Italy 5.1 billion and in France 2.17 billion euros. (ANSAmed)

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Papandreou, TV a Threat, Not Foreigners

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, FEBRUARY 9 — Greek premier Giorgio Papandreou strenuously defended in Parliament the law that will grant citizenship to second generation immigrants, claiming that the inflow of foreigners is not what affected Greek culture and lifestyle, which suffer because of the 4 to 5 hours which “we and our children spend in front of the television”. The bill presented by the government, which has already been amended in part to account for criticism raised by the opposition, provides that the sons of immigrants may gain citizenship if they studied in the Country for at least six years. Their fathers who worked legally for five years in Greece will have the option of naturalisation. While speaking last night during a parliamentary debate requested by far right-wing party Laos, Papandreou pointed out that today in Greece there live some 550,000 legally recognised foreigners. He warned that “We cannot deny their participation in our society”, under the penalty of “inequality and corruption”. In answer to fears according to which the growing flow of foreigners is diluting the roots of Greek civilisation and culture, the socialist premier asked himself: “What does it mean to be Greek? Democracy, equality, humanity”. And he continued: “We believe so little in our strength, in the power of Hellenism? Our culture suffers more for the 4 to 5 hours which we and our children spend in front of the television” rather than the growing number of immigrants. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Hammarberg Approves of Greece’s Receptiveness

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, FEBRUARY 11 — At the end of his three-day visit to Greece, Thomas Hammarberg, the Human Rights Commissioner for the Council of Europe, said that he approved of the willingness demonstrated by the Greek government to deal with the structural problems long associated with refugee policies and the poor conduct by police. If the planned changes are seriously implemented in a systematic manner and in conformity with international standards, Greece will be able to deal with their serious human rights challenges, said Hammarberg. The Commissioner expressed satisfaction about the decision by Greek authorities to establish an independent agency for asylum-seekers, which still, underlined Hamarberg, continue to face enormous difficulties in their attempts to access the procedures to have their refugee status recognised. The Commissioner also approved of the current reform whose purpose is to facilitate the acquisition of Greek citizenship for children born in Greece whose parents are not Greek and the introduction of the right to vote for long-term residents. In this way, Greece is moving towards a greater conformity with European standards, said Hammarberg. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Immigrants Riot in Milan After Egyptian Killed (2)

MILAN, Feb 14 (Reuters) — Dozens of immigrants from North Africa rioted during the night in a multi-ethnic district of Milan, smashing shop windows and overturning cars to protest at the knifing death of an Egyptian, Italian police said on Sunday.

It was the second episode of violence involving immigrants this year, after clashes in southern Italy in January brought about the worst racial violence in the country since World War Two and reignited a long-running debate on immigration.

The rioting began on Saturday evening after a 19-year-old Egyptian man, indentified by police as Hamed Mamoud El Fayed Adou, was killed, apparently by a group of immigrants from South America.

Police said the North Africans, most of them Egyptians, went on a rampage and some clashed with police in the northeastern neighbourhood where some 70 percent of shops are owned by immigrants.

Milan’s deputy mayor, Riccardo De Corato, called the area a “Wild West between north African and South American gangs.”

Police said they had identified more than 30 people involved, most of them Egyptian. Ten Egyptians did not have regular residence permits, and four have been detained.

They were still searching for the South Americans believed to have been responsible for the killing, which they said took place after an argument on a city bus.

The Northern League, an anti-immigrant party in Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right coalition, called for the immigrants responsible for the violence to be expelled.

CALL FOR EXPULSIONS

One Northern League member called for stiff controls and “expulsions house by house, floor by floor”.

Milan, Italy’s financial capital, is run by a centre-right regional government and the opposition said that such riots showed that the government’s immigration policy was in tatters.

“They (the centre-right) govern the country, the (Lombardy) region and the city,” said Pierluigi Bersani, head of the largest opposition party, the Democratic Party. “They should accept the fact that their policy on integration and security has failed.”

Italy’s government last year approved tough legislation making it a felony to be an illegal immigrant or to help one. Immigrants without regular papers risk expulsion to their country of origin.

In early January, riots broke out in the Calabrian town of Rosarno when immigrants burned cars and broke store windows to protest against an attack on African farm workers by a gang of local white youths.

At least 53 people, including 18 policemen, were injured in the unrest in the town, located in Italy’s southern toe.

Authorities moved hundreds of people, mostly illegal temporary workers from sub-Saharan Africa, to immigrant centres in Italy for their protection.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Immigrants Riot in Milan After Egyptian Killed (1)

Dozens of immigrants from North Africa rioted during the night in a multi-ethnic neighborhood in Milan, smashing shop windows, overturning cars to protest the knifing death of an Egyptian, Italian police said on Sunday.

The rioting began in the early evening after a 19-year-old Egyptian man, indentified by police as Hamed Mamoud El Fayed Adou, was killed, apparently by a group of immigrants from South America.

Police said the North Africans, most of them Egyptians, went on a rampage and some clashed with police in the neighborhood where some 70 percent of shops are owned by immigrants.

A number of Egyptians were detained for questioning and police were still searching for the South Americans believed to have been responsible for the killing.

Police said most of the immigrants were in Italy legally. Nonetheless, the Northern League, an anti-immigrant party in Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right coalition, called for the immigrants responsible for the violence to be expelled.

It was the second episode of violence involving immigrants this year.

In early January, riots broke out in southern Italy when immigrants burned cars and broke store windows to protest against an attack on African farm workers by a gang of local white youths.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Immigrants to be Taught the Fine British Art of How to Queue

Immigrants are to be educated in one of Britain’s most important etiquettes — how to queue properly.

Foreigners applying to settle in the UK will have to learn about the revered British practice of forming an orderly line for everything from buses to sandwiches.

Ministers even want the art of queuing to be included in citizenship tests, which immigrants must pass before settling in the country.

They believe that queue-jumping is damaging social cohesion as the majority of Brits find such behaviour unacceptable.

Immigration minister Phil Woolas has claimed that a lot of tension in communities is caused by foreigners not understanding that they must wait in line for services rather than barging to the front.

Many foreigner cultures believe the only way to get access to necessities, is to jostle their way to the front, rather than form an orderly line.

But surveys have found that 91 per cent of British people strongly object to queue jumping.

Mr Woolas confirmed that he was pushing the idea as part of moves to ensure immigrants integrate properly.

He said: ‘The simple act of taking one’s turn is one of the things that holds our country together. It is very important that newcomers take their place in queues whether it is for a bus or a cup of tea.

‘It is central to the British sense of fair play and it is also better for everyone. Huge resentment is caused when people push in.

‘Most immigrants in my experience want to play fair.’

Jo Bryant, editor of Debrett’s, the publisher and leading authority on proper behaviour, said that patience was they key to well-mannered queuing.

She said: ‘Be patient. Remember that everyone’s in the same boat, so avoid displays of exasperation or aggression.

‘Be aware of other people’s personal space and don’t stand too close to the person in front of you. Even in the most disorganised of queues, there will still be an unspoken order.’

A recent survey found that after pushing in, the most objectionable behaviour in queues is pressurising the people in front followed by children behaving badly.

Two thirds of people say they get annoyed when people are not ready to pay when it is their turn or leave the checkout to get more shopping.

Other irritating behaviour in queues includes having too many items in a ‘10 items or less aisle’, chatting to check-out staff and talking on mobile phones.

Since 2005, foreign nationals applying for UK citizenship — which confers the right to a British passport — have been required to sit a written test at one of 90 centres across the country before taking part in a formal citizenship ceremony.

The 45-minute tests include questions on various aspects of the British way of life from politics to pop music.

The answers are all to be found in a 150-page book, Life in the UK, which applicants must study before sitting the exam. Topics covered veer from complicated matters of government procedure and welfare entitlement to the apparently banal.

The Home Office’s own Life in the UK handbook says: ‘Public houses or pubs, as they are known, are an important part of local life in many parts of Britain.

‘Groups of friends normally buy ‘rounds’ of drinks, where the person whose turn it is will buy drinks for all the members of the group. If you spill a stranger’s drink by accident, it is good manners (and prudent) to offer to buy another.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: A Plan to Alter the Nation’s Soul

The government’s policy of mass immigration was intended to remodel the social fabric of the nation, says Janet Daley

So now we know what Labour’s immigration policy was really about. The “open door” was not simply held ajar in order to admit a fresh workforce that would help to fill gaps in the growing economy. Nor was it just a gesture of hospitality and goodwill to those who were fleeing from repressive or inhospitable regimes in order to seek a better life. Both of those aims would have been credible — if controversial and not thought-through in all their consequences. And so would the longer-term view that dynamic, cosmopolitan societies are generally healthier and more productive than in-bred, isolated ones, or that immigrants who tend to be ambitious for themselves and their families could help to counter the passivity and defeatism that tend to be endemic in the British class system.

But as it turns out, the policy was motivated by something far more radical and fundamental than any of this. The full text of the draft policy paper composed in 2000 by a Home Office research unit — the gist of which had already been made public by a former Labour adviser — was released last week under Freedom of Information rules. Properly understood, it is political dynamite. What it states quite unequivocally was that mass immigration was being encouraged at least as much for “social objectives” as for economic ones. Migration was intended specifically to alter the demographic and cultural pattern of the country: to produce by force majeure the changes in attitude that the Labour government saw itself as representing.

Tony Blair’s “forces of conservatism” speech; his improbable presentation of Britain as a “young country”; the advocacy of a multicultural society which would have to reassess its own history, replacing traditional pride with inherited guilt: all of this could be facilitated by a large influx of migrants whose presence in the population would require the wholesale deconstruction of the country’s sense of its own identity.

This may all sound rather far-fetched now, but try to recall just how much hubris the New Labour tide brought with it in the beginning: the contempt for history and the Year Zero arrogance with which they set about “modernising” the nation’s institutions. It was, in this respect, a prime example of the new direction which Left-wing parties were forced to take in the wake of Marxism’s collapse. Having lost the great economic argument of the 20th century, the Left had to switch its focus to society itself: if humanity could not be transformed through the redistribution of wealth and the socialist command economy, then it would have to be transfigured by altering social relations.

The object of the exercise was still to produce, in the words of an old Left-wing protest song, a “new world” based on a “new man”. But now the new man (sorry, “person”) would be formed not by changes in the power of capital or the ownership of the means of production, but in cultural attitudes and behaviour. The revolution now had to be confined to what went on in people’s heads: to their values, their assumptions and their reactions to each other.

The phrase “altering consciousness”, which had once meant awakening the proletariat to its own economic enslavement, now referred to raising awareness of social injustices, such as intolerance of cultural differences, social inequality, or discrimination against minorities. But the subtext was always self-examination and personal guilt: the indigenous Briton must be trained (literally, by the education system) always to question the acceptability of his own attitudes, to cast doubt on his own motives, to condemn his own national identity and history, to accept the blame even for the misbehaviour of new migrants — whose conduct could only be a reflection of the unfortunate way they were treated by the host population.

Included in this programme for the newly constituted British psyche was a whole package of subliminal assumptions, which were adapted from the Old Left stable: international solidarity rather than national sovereignty, collective values rather than personal conscience, and “social equality” rather than individual achievement. It was a peculiarity of New Labour’s vanity that it actually tried to persuade the country that, under the miraculous Blair dispensation, it could have both sides of these dualities at the same time. But the full consequences of the new country that it envisaged, and the role that immigration was to play in the creation of it, broke the most basic rule of the democratic process: the electorate was never told it was voting for that.

The goal was a social revolution abetted by the influx of a huge variety of diverse cultures, which would provide both the need and the pretext for reshaping British life. It may have been relatively new (at least in Britain) as a specific political policy, but it was much of a piece with the conventional objective of Left-wing political movements, which is to transform human nature.

When you decide whether to give your support to a party of the Left or of the Right, you are actually making a judgment about what you think politics is for. If you believe that it is the function of government to alter or determine people’s perceptions and responses — their innermost feelings about themselves and others — then you will probably opt for the Left. If you take the view that the state should concern itself only with behaviour — with what people do, especially insofar as it affects other people, rather than what they think or feel — then you will be more likely to veer to the Right. So this is really a question of whether you want politics to be concerned with what goes on in people’s heads as much as with events in the objective world.

But of course, at least since the 1960s, when “raising consciousness” became the refrain of every group that sought change in any sphere, almost all parties have had to talk this way to some extent. It has become part of the politician’s acknowledged brief to suggest ways in which the internal lives and attitudes of voters can be influenced or directed. There is scarcely a party leader now who would dare to say that these matters are none of his (or any government’s) business.

Almost no one seems prepared to discuss the obvious danger: that if politics becomes a replacement for religion by taking upon itself the responsibility for transfiguring human nature then politicians, of all people, become the prophets and the priests. Just at the moment, I can’t think of a more absurd idea.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

General


Climategate U-Turn as Scientist at Centre of Row Admits: There Has Been No Global Warming Since 1995

The academic at the centre of the ‘Climategate’ affair, whose raw data is crucial to the theory of climate change, has admitted that he has trouble ‘keeping track’ of the information.

Colleagues say that the reason Professor Phil Jones has refused Freedom of Information requests is that he may have actually lost the relevant papers.

Professor Jones told the BBC yesterday there was truth in the observations of colleagues that he lacked organisational skills, that his office was swamped with piles of paper and that his record keeping is ‘not as good as it should be’.

The data is crucial to the famous ‘hockey stick graph’ used by climate change advocates to support the theory.

Professor Jones also conceded the possibility that the world was warmer in medieval times than now — suggesting global warming may not be a man-made phenomenon.

And he said that for the past 15 years there has been no ‘statistically significant’ warming.

The admissions will be seized on by sceptics as fresh evidence that there are serious flaws at the heart of the science of climate change and the orthodoxy that recent rises in temperature are largely man-made.

Professor Jones has been in the spotlight since he stepped down as director of the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit after the leaking of emails that sceptics claim show scientists were manipulating data.

The raw data, collected from hundreds of weather stations around the world and analysed by his unit, has been used for years to bolster efforts by the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to press governments to cut carbon dioxide emissions.

Following the leak of the emails, Professor Jones has been accused of ‘scientific fraud’ for allegedly deliberately suppressing information and refusing to share vital data with critics.

Discussing the interview, the BBC’s environmental analyst Roger Harrabin said he had spoken to colleagues of Professor Jones who had told him that his strengths included integrity and doggedness but not record-keeping and office tidying.

Mr Harrabin, who conducted the interview for the BBC’s website, said the professor had been collating tens of thousands of pieces of data from around the world to produce a coherent record of temperature change.

That material has been used to produce the ‘hockey stick graph’ which is relatively flat for centuries before rising steeply in recent decades.

According to Mr Harrabin, colleagues of Professor Jones said ‘his office is piled high with paper, fragments from over the years, tens of thousands of pieces of paper, and they suspect what happened was he took in the raw data to a central database and then let the pieces of paper go because he never realised that 20 years later he would be held to account over them’.

Asked by Mr Harrabin about these issues, Professor Jones admitted the lack of organisation in the system had contributed to his reluctance to share data with critics, which he regretted.

But he denied he had cheated over the data or unfairly influenced the scientific process, and said he still believed recent temperature rises were predominantly man-made.

Asked about whether he lost track of data, Professor Jones said: ‘There is some truth in that. We do have a trail of where the weather stations have come from but it’s probably not as good as it should be.

‘There’s a continual updating of the dataset. Keeping track of everything is difficult. Some countries will do lots of checking on their data then issue improved data, so it can be very difficult. We have improved but we have to improve more.’

He also agreed that there had been two periods which experienced similar warming, from 1910 to 1940 and from 1975 to 1998, but said these could be explained by natural phenomena whereas more recent warming could not.

He further admitted that in the last 15 years there had been no ‘statistically significant’ warming, although he argued this was a blip rather than the long-term trend.

And he said that the debate over whether the world could have been even warmer than now during the medieval period, when there is evidence of high temperatures in northern countries, was far from settled.

Sceptics believe there is strong evidence that the world was warmer between about 800 and 1300 AD than now because of evidence of high temperatures in northern countries.

But climate change advocates have dismissed this as false or only applying to the northern part of the world.

Professor Jones departed from this consensus when he said: ‘There is much debate over whether the Medieval Warm Period was global in extent or not. The MWP is most clearly expressed in parts of North America, the North Atlantic and Europe and parts of Asia.

‘For it to be global in extent, the MWP would need to be seen clearly in more records from the tropical regions and the Southern hemisphere. There are very few palaeoclimatic records for these latter two regions.

‘Of course, if the MWP was shown to be global in extent and as warm or warmer than today, then obviously the late 20th Century warmth would not be unprecedented. On the other hand, if the MWP was global, but was less warm than today, then the current warmth would be unprecedented.’

Sceptics said this was the first time a senior scientist working with the IPCC had admitted to the possibility that the Medieval Warming Period could have been global, and therefore the world could have been hotter then than now.

Professor Jones criticised those who complained he had not shared his data with them, saying they could always collate their own from publicly available material in the US. And he said the climate had not cooled ‘until recently — and then barely at all. The trend is a warming trend’.

Mr Harrabin told Radio 4’s Today programme that, despite the controversies, there still appeared to be no fundamental flaws in the majority scientific view that climate change was largely man-made.

But Dr Benny Pieser, director of the sceptical Global Warming Policy Foundation, said Professor Jones’s ‘excuses’ for his failure to share data were hollow as he had shared it with colleagues and ‘mates’.

He said that until all the data was released, sceptics could not test it to see if it supported the conclusions claimed by climate change advocates.

He added that the professor’s concessions over medieval warming were ‘significant’ because they were his first public admission that the science was not settled.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



U.S. City Considers Surrender to ‘Green Police’

Mayor’s panel pushes carbon taxes, subsidies, ‘meatless Mondays’

What would life in an American city look like if it required its residents go green to combat climate change? Would it be all trees and gardens and bicycles, or would it look more like oppression under Big Brother’s green thumb?

Cambridge, Mass., home of Harvard University, may be giving the country a glimpse of the answer.

Last May, the city officially adopted an order recognizing that there is a climate emergency; but after nearly a year, officials discovered the city’s carbon footprint was nonetheless growing worse.

Cambridge Mayor Denise Simmons, therefore, brought together nearly 100 activists and concerned citizens under the endorsement of the city council to convene a “Climate Congress” to make recommendations on how Cambridge can meet its green goals.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Chasing Our Tails

LTC Allen West really gets it about “radical” Islam: “This is not a ‘perversion’.”

You’ll also notice that in his comments he — ahem — mentions this blog:



Thank God this man is running for Congress! As Diana West says:
– – – – – – – –

LTC Allen West (ret.) is a man who isn’t afraid of enemy fire or speaking the truth, and voters in Florida’s District 22, from Jupiter to Ft. Lauderdale, are lucky pups to be able to vote him into Congress this November. When they do — and they better not blow it — the rest of the United States will finally have his leadership where we need it… in Washington, DC.

Many thanks to Vlad Tepes for clarifying and synchronizing the sound in this video.

When Ethnic Thinking is Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Think Ethnic

Back in 1963 — in the pre-Texas Schoolbook Depository portion of 1963 — the Smothers Brothers put out a comedy album entitled Think Ethnic!.

Smothers Brothers: Think Ethnic!The photo on the album cover is a reminder that those were indeed different times. Back in those days the Smothers Brothers were as edgy and avant-garde as you could get and still be a middle-class white suburbanite. And they were often gut-wrenchingly funny, back before they became overtly political.

In 1963 the word “ethnic” carried somewhat connotations than it does now. It entered the lexicon via the folk music craze, and it referred to such things as Ecuadorian folk dances, African tribal masks, and Thai cuisine. Nowadays, however, in the United States “ethnic” is a code word for “African American”, or in certain contexts, “Mexican”.

The European definition of the word is more amorphous, but one thing is for certain: any European who refers to ethnicity except to promote “cultural diversity” will be classified as a “racist”. There is only one acceptable use of the word “ethnic”, and that is to describe people whose culture is different (and presumably superior) to that of the natives, and whose presence can only enhance and enrich the nations of the continent formerly known as Europe.

Speaking ill of alien ethnicities is not only vulgar and impolite, it is also illegal in some jurisdictions. The cases of Geert Wilders, Lionheart, Ezra Levant, Tomashot, and Charlie Hebdo are examples of what can happen to people who stray from the prescribed multicultural path in any public discussion of Third-World immigrants.

Hells AngelsWhen defending one’s own ethnic group is illegal, it’s no surprise that some of the most prominent dissenters against politically correct orthodoxy are those who never concerned themselves overmuch with legality in the first place. Denmark, as usual, sets the trend, with the Hells Angels motorcycle club taking the lead in defending their ethnic fellows. (See Fighting Fire with Fire, The Jackal Manifesto, and What if Hells Angels Are Right?). The Danish Hells Angels have recently been recruiting new members at a record rate, and many of the new recruits are signing on for the express purpose of defending their own kind.

A parallel has developed in Britain with the English Defence League. The original roots of the EDL lay in the English working class, whose members are the biggest losers in the deliberate multicultural revolution staged by the Labour party in the UK. To be white, English, and proletarian is to be the lowest of the low, the last in every queue, and the object of disdain for everyone else, immigrants and snobby natives alike.

Many of those who were willing to engage in active resistance came from a base of soccer fans, including the “football hooligans” who are notorious for their violent tendencies in public spaces. The EDL has since become much more than that, but there’s no denying the organizational energy that came from a group of people who stood at least partially outside the law. Like the Hells Angels, they had nothing to lose by acting against the dominant paradigm.

In recent weeks a new wrinkle has been added to the Hells Angels story, this time in Germany as well as Denmark.
– – – – – – – –
The biggest rival to HA in both countries is another international outlaw biker group known as the Bandidos. Unlike the Hells Angels, the Bandidos have proved willing to ally with immigrant gangs and take in immigrants as members. This did not sit well with some of the older and more traditional Bandidos, but they were outvoted by younger members. In response, a significant number of them — including some of the more prominent leaders — have defected to the Hells Angels. For these bikers, solidarity with their own people comes before their loyalty to a particular motorcycle club.

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


The events described above represent a tendency that does not sit well with the average law-abiding Western citizen. To most of us, motorcycle gangs and football hooligans do not represent the best of our kind. Theft, drug-running, extortion, and grievous bodily harm — these are activities that we prefer not to associate ourselves with.

This presents the ethnic nationalist with a terrible dilemma: when dissent against transnational multicultural orthodoxy is outlawed, who but outlaws will defend our traditional national cultures?

As the economic crisis deepens, the trend towards violent confrontation can only accelerate, since unemployment and the collapse of the currency will greatly enlarge the pool of those who have nothing to lose. When the carrot-and-stick extortion of the welfare state — the promise of benefits and the threat of their withdrawal — no longer has its intended effect, the main barrier to active resistance will have been removed.

Well-meaning law-abiding people can (and do) deplore the idea of regarding the Hells Angels as our ethnic protectors. To deplore is our privilege; we can deplore all we want, and keep deploring right up until our nations adopt full sharia. Deploring is about all we can do, since we have been politically castrated over the past five or six decades.

So what is the alternative?

None of us wants to have anything to do with Jønke, but who else is willing to oppose the vicious and violent behavior of feral immigrant “youths” in the working-class neighborhoods of European cities? And — given the weakness and fecklessness of our law enforcement and judicial apparatus — who else is vicious and violent enough to get the job done?

Unfortunately, at the moment it looks like the only choice we will get is between hooligans and sharia, between Jønke and people like Mullah Krekar. If you had to make the choice — if there were no other alternatives — whom would you choose?

Actually, there is a possible third alternative, namely anarchy and chaos, the War of All Against All. But in the end we will encounter the same dilemma: if the existing system breaks down — which seems a distinct possibility — either the Hells Angels or Mullah Krekar will end up running the show in the ruins of what used to be Western Civilization.

This is not a choice that any of us wants to face. But, if the current suicidal behavior of our political and cultural leaders continues, it may be the only choice we are given.

How Long Before Malmö is Judenrein?



At Gates of Vienna we’ve been watching the Jews leave Malmö for quite a while now. I have no way to find the statistics on how many Jewish people have deserted all of Scandinavia, but an essay (dating from 2001) by Dr. Henrik Bachner at Lund University dates the rise of Sweden’s openly anti-Semitic public opinion to 1982. The Year of the War Against Lebanon.

Here is part of his conclusion:

… in mainstream political culture the public debate on Israel is a major forum for anti-Semitism. There appear to be several reasons for this. Two factors, however, are of fundamental importance.

First, as the prime Jewish actor in the global political arena Israel is a focal point for latent anti-Semitism. The Jewish state – in some cases its sheer existence, but more often its policies and actions – serves as a stimulus for anti-Jewish sentiments and prejudice to become manifest. Israeli policies…are interpreted by parts of the public through a filter of pre-existing, probably often unconscious, negative stereotypes and beliefs. As was demonstrated during the Lebanon War, Israel, to a substantial number of people, was not a state like other states and did not go to war for motives similar to those of other states. Israel’s war became in the eyes of many a “Jewish” war, pursued for specifically “Jewish” motives.

And you know the motives, right? Greed, the desire to dominate the Middle East (before going on to take over the whole world and then colonizing the moon). In other words, the usual ‘logic’ trotted out in this ‘discussion’.

Second, the debate on Israel has been a major forum for anti-Semitism within mainstream political culture because it constitutes the only public arena where negative attitudes toward Jews can be legitimately articulated…

Reactions to the Lebanon War, moreover, indicated that the strong anti-Israel mood was accompanied not only by a more visible anti-Semitism, but also a greater tolerance toward anti-Jewish expressions within the mainstream media. Although anti-Semitism lacked legitimacy within the democratic political culture, a large number of respected newspapers and periodicals published material that was quite openly anti-Semitic, and which, under “normal” circumstances, would not have been included.

The Swedish debate on Israel’s Lebanon War demonstrates the persistence of traditional Christian and secular anti-Jewish myths and stereotypes. Although largely absent from the public discourse for decades, historically- and culturally-rooted images were easily reawakened and formed the kernel of the antisemitically tinged argumentation. But the discussion that emerged also demonstrates the adaptability and flexibility of anti-Semitism as well as the propensity for its renewal.

And now, with the influx of large groups of rabidly anti-Jewish immigrants from various areas of the Middle East, there is a handy cover for what was at least a social problem before the Muslims showed up.

As I said at the start, I have no statistics for how many Jews have fled Scandinavia. But take a guess at the size of the current Jewish population in Malmö…
– – – – – – – –
Seven hundred.

That’s the total number of Jews in Malmö – against how many natives and immigrants who don’t care for their company? I’ve read lots of comment threads on this subject of emigration. The usual consensus turns out to be “the Jews ought to stay and fight. They shouldn’t take this,” etc. But why in the world would anyone want to do that given the odds and the systemic hatred? And why stay when you can go to a democracy where the sun shines on Jews (even if their neighbors don’t)? Seems like a no-brainer to me. On the other hand, one has to weigh the Iranians against the existential threats in Sweden. That’s a tough call.

From Israel National News, this report:

Violent anti-Semitism has become increasingly commonplace in Sweden’s southern city of Malmö, leading many Jewish residents to leave out of fear for their safety. “Threats against Jews have increased steadily in Malmö in recent years and many young Jewish families are choosing to leave the city,” said Fredrik Sieradzki of the Jewish Community of Malmö.

Last year [2009], 79 crimes against Jewish residents were reported to the Malmö police, roughly double the number reported in 2008. In addition, Jewish cemeteries and synagogues have been repeatedly defaced with anti-Semitic graffiti, and a chapel at another Jewish burial site in Malmö was firebombed last January during Operation Cast Lead in Gaza. Many Jewish residents of Malmö feel that local anti-Jewish sentiment is linked with negative attitudes towards Israel.

In addition to its small community of roughly 700 Jews, Malmö is home to a growing Muslim population. However, local Jews insist that the majority of anti-Jewish sentiment, although certainly existent in the Muslim community, is coming from local Swedes.

Sieradzki says that the attitudes of Malmö politicians, especially Social Democrat city council chair Ilmar Reepalu, have allowed anti-Semitism to fester. “He’s demonstrated extreme ignorance when it comes to our problems,” Sieradzki explained. “It’s shameful and regrettable that such a powerful politician could be so ignorant about the threats we face.

“If you read between the lines, he seems to be suggesting that the violence directed toward us is our own fault simply because we didn’t speak out against Israel. We’re a non-political, cultural and religious organization, and there are all kinds of Jews in Malmö.”

“All kinds of Jews in Malmö”? That’s a passing truth, unfortunately. Given that the city is down to seven hundred Jewish souls now, how long do you think it will be until Malmö is judenrein?



Hat tip: Kitman