News Feed 20120116

Financial Crisis
» Austria: Downgrading ‘Is Politically Motivated’
» Banks’ Deposits at ECB Hit Another Record
» Credit Rating Reduction ‘Will Cost Austria Dear’
» Dutch Leftwing Parties: Higher Tax for Rich
» ECB’s Draghi Says Crisis ‘Very Grave’
» EU Commission: ‘We Know Better Than Ratings Agencies’
» Euro to Stay Despite Crisis, Downgrades: Barnier
» Europe’s $39 Trillion Pension Risk Grows as Economy Falters
» Fitch Cuts Russia Outlook on Anti-Putin Protests
» Fitch Revises South Africa’s Outlook to Negative
» France Urges Europe to Battle ‘Unprecedented’ Crisis
» German Finance Minister Rules Out Euro Bailout Fund Hikes
» Germany Mulls Faster Payment Into New EU Bailout Pot
» Greece Faces a New Crucial Week
» IMF Executive Warns of Eurozone ‘Spiral’
» Japan Frets Over EU Downgrades
» Monti to Meet Van Rompuy Today, Then Merkel-Sarkozy
» Netherlands: Rutte: 2012 Will be Harder Than 2011
» Ratings Agencies Put Eurozone in ‘Downward Spiral’: Belgium
» Romanian Anti-Government Protests Turn Violent
» S&P Action Turns Up the Heat on EU Leaders
» Spiegel Interview With Linde CEO: ‘I Don’t Believe the Euro Should be Rescued at All Costs’
» Swiss to be Big Winners From Future Tobin Tax
» UN Food and Agricultural Chief: ‘Speculation is an Important Cause of High Prices’
» Why ECB’s Tricks Won’t Solve the Crisis
 
USA
» Amanda Hocking, The Writer Who Made Millions by Self-Publishing Online
» Funding Drought Jeopardizes Future NASA Astronomy Missions
» Huntsman Leaves Presidential Race With Plea for Party Unity
» Little Mogadishu
» New Brain Scan Studies Offer Hope for Mental Illness, Disorders
 
Europe and the EU
» Austria: Acupuncture That Could Cure Dentist Phobia
» Belgium: “Violence on the Railways Underestimated”
» Bulgarian Police Bust Crime Group Involved in Metal Theft
» Bulgarian Archaeologist Discovers Ancient Thracian Relief
» Denmark: Sunny But Cold for Queen’s 40th Anniversary
» Dutch Lab En Route to Antarctica
» European Malls Track Shopping Patterns Via Mobile Phone
» European Probe Finishes Mapping Big Bang’s Echo
» Flanders: “Imams Hardly in Touch With Their Local Community”
» Forced Labour on the Rise in Sweden: Report
» France: Woman Set on Fire by Masked Intruders
» Germany: Merkel Calls for More Minority Public Servants
» Germany-France-Italy Summit Postponed
» German Left-Winger to Lead EU Parliament After Re-Shuffle
» Germany: Stasi Chief’s Office Reopened in New Exhibition
» Greece: 91% Are Unhappy With Coalition Government, Poll
» In Europe, Free Speech Ends Where Islam Begins
» Italy: Cruise Captain ‘Committed Errors’, Say Ship’s Owners
» Italy: Rescue Workers Search Desperately for Survivors
» Italy: Cruise Ship Owners Accuse Captain of ‘Inexplicable’ Error
» ‘Mein Kampf’ Extracts to be Sold in Germany
» Netherlands: Geert Wilders Says There’s No Such Thing as Moderate Islam
» Norway: Thought Control on Islam
» Norway Oil Production to Shrink in 2012
» Poll: National Front Leader Marine Le Pen Shows Surprising Strength
» Radical Muslims Plan Biggest Swiss Mosque
» Romanian Premier Appeals for Dialogue After Clashes
» Scotland: Potential Medieval Village Among Western Isles ‘Finds’
» Sweden: Expert: Kill More Seals in Stockholm’s Waters
» Swedish Military Wants Nordic Cooperation
» Switzerland: Muslim Group Seeks Mosque Funding in Gulf
» Switzerland: Radical Muslims Plan Biggest Swiss Mosque
» Switzerland: Parliamentary Group Defends Hamas Invite
» The Spy Who Drove Me: 50 Years of Bond Cars on Show in UK
» UK: ‘I Was Doing My Duty as a Muslim, ‘ Says Father Who Handed Out Leaflets Saying Gay People Should be Hanged
» UK: Craven Arms Mosque Extension Plans
» UK: David Cameron to Meet Alex Salmond for Referendum Talks
» UK: Growing Use of Sharia by UK Muslims
» UK: Henry Assumang Denies Infecting Hampshire Women With HIV
» UK: Met Gun Crime Unit Overhauled to Focus on Gangs
» UK: Roman Villa ‘Rare and Important for Peterborough’ Says Archaeologist
 
Balkans
» Dozens Arrested in Kosovo After Border Clashes
» Police and Protesters Clash on Kosovo-Serbia Border
 
North Africa
» Opinion: Female Body Under Siege in Post-Revolution Egypt
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» 67 Percent of Murder Cases in 2011 Involved Israeli Arabs
» El Al and Tel Aviv Stock Exchange Sites Hacked
» Israel Fury as Hamas Attends Global Parliamentary Forum
 
Middle East
» Iran Makes Arrests in Scientist’s Death
» Yemen: UN in Contact With Kidnapped Norwegian
 
Russia
» Ukraine: Imprisoned Tymoshenko Fears for Her Life, Says Daughter
 
South Asia
» Danish Afghan Cost: DKK 13 Billion
» India: Muslim Bodies Shun Cong’s Quota Carrot
» Sri Lanka Fences in Humans to Protect Its Elephants
» Suspected Terror Swede Charged in Thailand
» Thai Police Find Large Cache of Bomb-Making Materials
» Thailand: Stockpile of Explosive Materials Found
» Totally Drug-Resistant TB Emerges in India
 
Far East
» AP Opens North Korea’s First Western News Bureau
» China Looks to Establish London as Center for Yuan
 
Australia — Pacific
» Islamic Museum Wants Home in Zone
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Kenyan Islamic Group Announces Alliance With Al Shabab in Climate of Nairobi Terror Warnings
» South Africa: Counselling for Fire Boy
» South Africa: Bishop Kills Girl to Increase Church Flock
» Surfer Bitten to Death by a Shark at South African Beach Dubbed ‘The World’s Deadliest’
 
Latin America
» Brazil Celebrates as US Opens Markets for Ethanol
 
Immigration
» Pakistan: Sayeeda Warsi: Baroness of the Punjab
» Tunisia: Boat Travelling to Italy Stopped
 
Culture Wars
» Church of England Faces Court Battle by Gay Clergyman Who Claims He Was Blocked From Becoming a Bishop
» Norway: Music Prize Show Ended in Scandal
» Race Row Mars Norwegian Music Awards
» UK: Dawkins Resists ‘Muslim-Led Censorship’
 
General
» Inequality in Wealthy States Rises, Diseases Decline: WHO
» Milky Way’s Color is White as a Morning’s Snow
» Saturn’s Moon Titan May be More Earth-Like Than Thought

Financial Crisis


Austria: Downgrading ‘Is Politically Motivated’

Austrian National Bank (OeNB) Governor Ewald Nowotny has branded the decision to downgrade Austria’s solvency as “politically motivated”. Nowotny said on Friday evening the move by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) was “barely comprehensible”. He expressed concerns that the move may “disturb the positive developments in Europe which started a few weeks ago”. The OeNB boss also said that S&P’s reacted “aggressively and politically motivated” in his opinion. Nowotny said: “The markets usually reacted significantly if two rating agencies lower their estimations.”

People’s Party (ÖVP) Finance Minister Maria Fekter said news that S&P downgraded Austria’s rating to AA+ reasserted her in getting the federal budget under control. Asked whether where the state could make savings, the minister said in a TV discussion yesterday evening (Sun): “Our options are obvious — the health sector, pension age breaches and ÖBB (Federal Railways).”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Banks’ Deposits at ECB Hit Another Record

(FRANKFURT) — Banks’ deposits with the European Central Bank have hit yet another record, data showed Monday, suggesting ongoing tension in the financial system despite unprecedented liquidity injections. Banks in the eurozone put 493.3 billion euros ($623.7 billion) on deposit for 24 hours at the ECB overnight Sunday, topping the record set Friday of 489 billion euros.

Since December new records for deposits have regularly been set, seen by some as a possible sign of market tensions since the money deposited earns interest of 0.25 percent, much less than the rate available on the interbank market. Thus, heavy use of the facility suggests banks favour parking the money at low interest with the Frankfurt-based ECB rather than take the risk of lending it to each other.

The phenomenon appears particularly significant because it comes after eurozone banks borrowed nearly half a trillion euros from the ECB last month in a brand-new three-year lending facility. Concerns have been raised that instead of lending the money on to businesses, the banks have preferred to park the cash at the ECB instead for fear of possible default.

ECB chief Mario Draghi last week insisted that the central bank’s liquidity measures were proving effective in tackling the debt crisis and had so far helped to avert a credit crunch.bStandard and Poor’s, which Friday downgraded the debt of nine of the bloc’s nations, praised the ECB action for avoiding a collapse in market confidence and relieving the pressure on banks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Credit Rating Reduction ‘Will Cost Austria Dear’

The downgrade from AAA to AA+ will cost Austria “a lot of money”, an economist has warned.

Bernhard Felderer — who heads the State Debt Commission — said on Saturday that the decision increased the costs of Austria’s soaring debt. He stressed that the step by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) would also lead to higher costs for banks and companies. Felderer concluded that the downgrading “will cost us lots of money.”

S&P lowered Austria’s credit rating and the country’s economic outlook on Friday evening. It also downgraded the ratings of eight other European Union (EU) members. The US American credit rating agency said Austria’s economic growth was at risk due to the country’s close ties with Italy and the intense level of operations of Austrian banks in neighbouring Hungary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Leftwing Parties: Higher Tax for Rich

Labour, the Socialist Party and the Green Left Party have launched a joint call for a higher tax rate on high incomes as part of a plan for “clever, solidary, green investments.” The party leaders launched their plea in Dutch daily de Volkskrant but did not indicate how much they wanted to raise the highest tack bracket, which currently stands at 52 percent. Recent calculations suggest an increase of just one percent could see the state coffers swell by 400 million euros.

The leftwing parties accuse the centre-right government of sitting by idly when concrete action is urgently needed. The leftwing plan also calls for the introduction of part-time unemployment, a stimulus package for the construction of low-energy homes and increased reliance on renewable energy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



ECB’s Draghi Says Crisis ‘Very Grave’

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi said Monday the eurozone crisis had got worse in recent months, characterising the situation as “very grave”. “We are in a very grave state of affairs and we must not shy away from this fact,” said Draghi, speaking in his capacity as head of the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) to the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

“When my predecessor Jean-Claude Trichet addressed this committee last October, he characterised the current crisis as one that had reached systemic dimensions. Since then, the situation has worsened further,” added Draghi.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Commission: ‘We Know Better Than Ratings Agencies’

BRUSSELS — The European Commission has claimed it has secret information about the positive state of EU countries’ finances, following a shock downgrade of core member states.

Commission spokesman Olivier Bailly made the statement at a regular press briefing in Brussels on Monday (16 January), two days after US-based agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P) downgraded nine EU countries, including France.

“We have more information than the ratings agencies and we think there are elements missing in their analysis … We have monthly updates from member states. We share this information on a confidential basis. The ratings agencies do not have this information,” he said.

When challenged on why Brussels does not make the good news public, he answered it would take too much time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro to Stay Despite Crisis, Downgrades: Barnier

(HONG KONG) — The euro is here to stay as a global currency and the eurozone will bounce back from its debt crisis, European Union Commissioner for the Internal Market Michel Barnier said Monday. Barnier repeated his surprise at ratings agency Standard & Poor’s decision last week to downgrade nine eurozone states, saying the currency bloc’s 17 members had taken “giant steps” toward restoring confidence.

“Let there be no mistake: this is not a crisis of the euro as a currency,” he told delegates to the Asian Financial Forum, a gathering of regional banking and finance chiefs in Hong Kong. “The euro is here to stay. In the last 10 years the euro has proven itself as a true world currency… And despite the difficulties, it remains strong.

“The real crisis the eurozone faces right now is a crisis of confidence. Our political unity and our determination and our ability to rectify what is wrong … are being tested.”

Standard & Poor’s downgraded nine eurozone states Friday, including France and Austria, on concerns about high government debt levels and funding costs. The US-based agency said European policymakers’ response to the crisis, including the outcome of a summit last month, “may be insufficient to fully address ongoing systemic stresses in the eurozone”.

But Barnier said ratings agencies needed to “take better account of the unprecedented efforts being made by governments” to overcome the crisis. He said he was “surprised time and time again by the timing agencies choose to make such announcements”, and called for greater transparency in how they reached their decisions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Europe’s $39 Trillion Pension Risk Grows as Economy Falters

Even before the euro crisis, people were worried about Europe’s pension bomb.

State-funded pension obligations in 19 of the European Union nations were about five times higher than their combined gross debt, according to a study commissioned by the European Central Bank. The countries in the report compiled by the Research Center for Generational Contracts at Freiburg University in 2009 had almost 30 trillion euros ($39.3 trillion) of projected obligations to their existing populations.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Fitch Cuts Russia Outlook on Anti-Putin Protests

Fitch on Monday cut the outlook on Russia’s debt due to uncertainty over protests against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s rule which has intensified the risk of a sustained capital flight. “Political uncertainty in Russia has risen and the global economic outlook has worsened since Fitch last affirmed the rating in September 2011,” Fitch sovereign group director Charles Seville said.

The agency affirmed its BBB rating on Russia’s long-term debt but lowered the outlook to ‘Stable’ from ‘Positive’ as it noted “the limitations and risks associated with Russia’s political model.” Russia’s largest protests in nearly two decades followed allegations of fraud in the December 4 election to the State Duma (lower house of parliament) in which the ruling party clung on to a narrow majority.

But their focus has increasingly turned to criticism of Putin himself as he campaigns for an historic third term as president in March 4 elections. Fitch said there seemed little doubt that Putin — a known quantity to the markets who served two presidential terms between 2000 and 2008 — would still win the vote. It noted however that he appeared to have been caught off guard by the unrest and therefore the outlook was more unpredictable.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fitch Revises South Africa’s Outlook to Negative

Ratings agency Fitch on Friday revised South Africa’s outlook from stable to negative, citing the country’s failure to create enough jobs and to speed up economic growth. “Not least of the problems that require urgent attention is the economy’s inability to create sufficient jobs for its labour force,” said Purvi Harlalka, director in Fitch’s Sovereigns group.

“This inability has not only constrained growth and kept the tax base narrow but has also caused public finances to become increasingly redistributive in an effort to address the lack of social mobility,” she said. “The resultant narrowing of fiscal space undermines a key support to South Africa’s creditworthiness.”

South Africa’s unemployment rate is mired around 25 percent, while its economic growth has averaged 2.7 percent over the last five years — lower than the average in similar economies, Fitch said.

“High unemployment already fosters widespread criminal violence and deters foreign investment,” Fitch said in a statememt. “Over time it could also threaten social and political stability, damaging the investment climate further.”

But Fitch said that South Africa’s BBB+ foreign credit rating was still supported by the strength of its courts, regulators and government authorities, which has fostered a solid corporate and financial sector.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Urges Europe to Battle ‘Unprecedented’ Crisis

Europe faces an “unprecedented” crisis and must rediscover growth, French President Nicolas Sarkozy warned Monday, even as markets shrugged off a credit-rating blow to much of the region. Sarkozy, the first foreign leader to meet with Spain’s new conservative Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, said the eurozone must improve competitiveness to boost growth as well as simply slashing spending.

“We are confronted by an unprecedented crisis that forces us to cut spending, lower our deficits but also to find the path to new growth by resolving our competitiveness problems,” Sarkozy said.

The French leader warned against panic after Standard & Poor’s Friday cut the credit rating of nine nations, stripping France of its top-notch AAA rating, slicing Spain’s and Italy’s ratings by two notches, but sparing Germany. Moody’s Investors Service soothed some of the pain Monday, confirming France’s AAA rating while reviewing its “stable” outlook.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Finance Minister Rules Out Euro Bailout Fund Hikes

(BERLIN) — Germany’s finance minister Monday ruled out a hike in bailout fund guarantees by eurozone members following the ratings downgrade of nine countries by Standard and Poor’s. “The guarantees for the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) are largely enough for what it has to do in the coming months,” Wolfgang Schaeuble told Deutschlandfunk public radio.

Germany, Europe’s top economy, is already the EFSF’s main guarantor, which began with 440 billion euros ($556 billion) but has 250 billion euros left following rescues of Portugal and Ireland. Schaeuble again called for the influence of ratings agencies to be reduced to return “their role to what it really is.” The EU was working on transparency rules for ratings agencies to avoid possible conflicts of interest, he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Mulls Faster Payment Into New EU Bailout Pot

Germany is considering paying in its share to the future EU bailout fund in one lump sum, two top officials indicated on Monday, as Europe seeks to boost market confidence. Asked if Berlin would pay its contribution of some 21 billion euros ($27 billion) in one go, Michael Meister, an ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel, said: “We are ready to do anything, as long as our European partners are as well.” Martin Kotthaus, a spokesman for Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, said Germany wanted to “put capital as quickly as possible” into the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) to give “a signal” to the markets.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Faces a New Crucial Week

Germany expresses support ahead of talks with troika

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JANUARY 16 — There were encouraging words for Greece from Germany Sunday ahead of a challenging week of negotiations with representatives of the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund on a possible new bailout as well as banking representatives over a haircut for holders of Greek debt. Following talks with Prime Minister Lucas Papademos in Athens, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle expressed confidence that the negotiations with Greek bondholders, also known as PSI, would reach a positive conclusion despite no deal being reached last week.

“Discussions are difficult but with good faith they will reach a good result,” said Westerwelle, who also met his counterpart Stavros Dimas and New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras as reported by daily Kathimerini. Earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said spending cuts alone were not enough for Greece and that structural reforms were needed although they would take time to bear fruit. Germany’s backing comes as Greece enters a crucial week of talks. The technical team of the EC, ECB and IMF, or troika, is due to arrive in Athens on Monday. Top troika officials are expected to come later in the week but this will depend on the assessment of their colleagues. A number of thorny issues remain open, including possible cuts to private sector wages and supplementary pensions. The government will also have to show how it will make up a shortfall of some 1.3 billion euros in revenues from 2011. Talks with Charles Dallara, the head of the Institute of International Finance, a global banking body representing private bondholders, are expected to resume on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



IMF Executive Warns of Eurozone ‘Spiral’

A senior International Monetary Fund executive warned on Monday that Europe required bold action to avert a “downward spiral” that could drag the world economy into “catastrophe”.

IMF First Deputy Managing Director David Lipton, in his first major speech since his appointment late last year, told a meeting of Asian finance and banking chiefs in Hong Kong that the world economy was in trouble.

“At the global level, the pace of economic activity is weakening, and the risks for Europe and the world are high,” he told the Asian Financial Forum.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Japan Frets Over EU Downgrades

Japanese Finance Minister Jun Azumi on Sunday expressed worries over his nation’s own sovereign debt rating after Standard and Poor’s downgraded nine debt-laden EU countries, including France.

“Unless Japan shows that we are swiftly securing stable financial conditions and rebuilding fiscal policies… it will be us next time,” Azumi told reporters.

His comments came after Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda also voiced concerns.

“The crisis in Europe is not a fire on the other side of a river,” he said during a TV programme on Saturday.

“Even France’s rating was lowered. If Japan continues its current fiscal policy, we will find ourselves under the spotlight. We must tackle this issue with a great sense of urgency.”

Japan’s debt stands at around 200 percent of GDP after years of pump-priming measures by governments trying in vain to arrest the economy’s long decline.

Noda’s government and the ruling Democratic Party of Japan have mapped out a plan to double the current five percent sales tax, but the premier faces a tough battle to drive through the unpopular plan.

Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has downgraded nine EU countries, stripping France and Austria of their top triple-A rating.

Only Germany escaped unscathed, as all other eurozone members were either downgraded — some by two notches — or else warned their current ratings were being re-examined.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Monti to Meet Van Rompuy Today, Then Merkel-Sarkozy

Crucial week for the future of the EU and the euro

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS — Today Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti will be meeting with Permanent European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, while on Wednesday he will be going to London to speak with British Prime Minister David Cameron and to regain the City’s confidence in Italy. Friday will instead see Monti meeting with French President Nicholas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in a three-way summit in Rome.

The Italian prime minister looks to have a packed schedule in a week focused on the EU, with Italy once again playing a central role. Monti’s EU schedule is part of an intense series of contacts between the leaders and sherpas of EU chancelleries, which will culminate in the special summit of EU-27 heads of state and government on January 30 in Brussels. The main items on the agenda for the talks are the impact on markets and the EFSF “save-states” fund of Standard & Poor’s downgrade of half of Europe, the launching of the Budget Pact, the Greek crisis and a recipe to relaunch growth. All of the issues are of crucial importance for the future of the EU and the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Rutte: 2012 Will be Harder Than 2011

This year is going to be harder than 2011, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said in a television interview on Sunday. Unemployment will rise, the European economy will stagnate and the public debt will grow, the prime minister said. “All of us are really going to feel the crisis this year. I fear this year will be worse,” he added.

On the other hand, the prime minister argued that the Netherlands is a strong country, with a good educational system. “That means we can emerge from the crisis in good shape. But that also means we should make no mistakes this year.” Mr Rutte, however, rejected calls for Europe’s northern countries to ease their austerity measures in order to stimulate the economy. Mr Rutte said that was not possible because of the rising public debt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ratings Agencies Put Eurozone in ‘Downward Spiral’: Belgium

Ratings agencies are leading the eurozone into a “downward spiral”, Belgium’s prime minister said Sunday, two days after Standard & Poor’s downgraded the debt of nine of the bloc’s nations. “Ratings agencies are playing their roles, but in a strange manner because they have a tendency to lead us towards a downward spiral with their behaviour, their timing,” Elio Di Rupo told RTL-TVI television.

“What’s important is for our country to get out of the crisis, that our citizens, after the efforts that we will undertake, can live better,” he said, referring to 11.3 billion euros in planned cuts to reduce the public deficit.

While Di Rupo joined other European officials in criticising the ratings agency, Belgium was not among the countries that were downgraded on Friday. S&P and another major agency, Moody’s, already cut Belgium’s credit rating late last year over concerns about its debt, which represents nearly 100 percent of gross domestic product.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Romanian Anti-Government Protests Turn Violent

BRUSSELS — More than 30 people were injured over the weekend in the most violent clashes in Romania since the 1989 revolution, as protesters vented anger at austerity measures.

Cars were set on fire, shops were looted and police used water canons and tear gas against demonstrators in Bucharest on Sunday night (15 December) — the fourth day of thousands-strong anti-government rallies. According to the ambulance service, 33 people have so far been injured. Fifteen needed emergency treatment, including three policemen. A TV journalist was beaten up by protesters while broadcasting live on Sunday. Police also arrested some 30 people — mostly football fans who joined the crowds with bats and smoke bombs.

The protests began as a peaceful show of support for Raed Arafat — a highly esteemed official who resigned on Tuesday from the ministry of health in a dispute over privatisation. Tens of thousands of demonstrators in some 20 cities called for early elections and for Arafat to run for power. The opposition Social-Liberal Union (USL) also cried out for a snap vote, describing Romania as “a non-governed country.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



S&P Action Turns Up the Heat on EU Leaders

(BRUSSELS) — Two weeks before a new summit, European leaders are under pressure to deliver a credible solution to the debt crisis after Standard & Poor’s punished their policies with stinging credit downgrades. Eurozone governments face an uphill battle as they scramble to avoid a messy debt default in Greece, boost a bailout fund considered too small to save bigger countries and seal a fiscal pact aimed at tightening budget discipline.

After a relatively calm start to the year, the crisis returned with a vengeance on Friday the 13th as negotiations between Greece and bank creditors on a huge debt writedown hit a snag and Standard and Poor’s downgraded nine eurozone nations. The credit ratings agency justified its action saying that EU policies in recent weeks “may be insufficient to fully address ongoing systemic stresses in the eurozone.”

And with recession looming, Standard and Poor’s warned that the focus on all-out austerity could backfire against the economy. More than two years into the crisis, bailouts of Greece, Portugal and Ireland, the creation of an emergency fund and a slew of continent-wide austerity measures have once again failed to calm fears of a eurozone breakup.

“This is more a downgrade of the eurozone’s management of the crisis,” said Sony Kapoor, head of Re-Define economic think tank.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spiegel Interview With Linde CEO: ‘I Don’t Believe the Euro Should be Rescued at All Costs’

In a SPIEGEL interview, top German industrialist Wolfgang Reitzle argues that Germany should withdraw from the currency union if Europe’s crisis-ridden countries fail to push through reforms. But whatever happens, Greece will have to leave the euro zone, he warns.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss to be Big Winners From Future Tobin Tax

As debate over a financial transaction tax, a so-called Tobin tax, swirls around Europe, Swiss experts agree that to work it must be adopted globally. If the European Commission proposal to tax stock, bond and derivatives trades is introduced, Switzerland would also benefit hugely, they add. The levy may raise billions of dollars in badly needed revenue. But the concept has drawn fierce criticism.

Forty years ago American Nobel laureate James Tobin proposed a tax on currency transactions to discourage speculation. His idea was largely ignored until recently.

In the run-up to presidential elections this year in France and German elections in 2013, and amid widespread mistrust of banks after the financial crisis, the debate over a new tax on financial transactions has gathered momentum. But introducing a tax on trading faces numerous hurdles. Britain in particular has pledged to block any such tax across the European Union.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UN Food and Agricultural Chief: ‘Speculation is an Important Cause of High Prices’

In a SPIEGEL interview, José Graziano da Silva, 62, the new head of the United Nations aid organization FAO, discusses his plans to combat hunger as well as his efforts to limit speculation and the impact it has on dramatically fluctuating food prices.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Why ECB’s Tricks Won’t Solve the Crisis

Ever since the European Central Bank began flooding the markets with cheap money, European banks have rediscovered their taste for sovereign bonds. But the crisis is far from over, as Standard and Poor’s recent raft of downgrades showed. Some bankers are saying it’s just a matter of time before yields on peripheral bonds shoot up again.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Amanda Hocking, The Writer Who Made Millions by Self-Publishing Online

A couple of years ago, Amanda Hocking needed to raise a few hundred dollars so, in desperation, made her unpublished novel available on the Kindle. She has since sold over 1.5m books and, in the process, changed publishing forever.

When historians come to write about the digital transformation currently engulfing the book-publishing world, they will almost certainly refer to Amanda Hocking, writer of paranormal fiction who in the past 18 months has emerged from obscurity to bestselling status entirely under her own self-published steam.

Over the past 20 months Hocking has sold 1.5m books and made $2.5m. All by her lonesome self. Not a single book agent or publishing house or sales force or marketing manager or bookshop anywhere in sight.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Funding Drought Jeopardizes Future NASA Astronomy Missions

With NASA operating on an increasingly tight budget, the agency’s ability to launch future large astronomy missions is at risk, scientists said. And this quandary has no simple solution.

Astronomy missions that fall under NASA’s flagship program are big, expensive endeavors that aim to answer sophisticated questions about the solar system, galaxy and universe we live in. Flagship missions currently operating include the Hubble Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and NASA’s next big space telescope — the $8.8 billion James Webb Space Telescope launching in 2018 — narrowly avoided escaped losing funding last year. But, with funding becoming increasingly scarce, the ability to do these types of missions is severely hindered, said Chris Martin, an astronomer at the California Institute of Technology.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Huntsman Leaves Presidential Race With Plea for Party Unity

Former Gov. Jon M. Huntsman Jr. of Utah formally ended his once promising Republican presidential run with a call for party unity, asking the five candidates he leaves on the field to end their negative ads, and chastising President Obama for engaging in “class warfare.”

[Return to headlines]



Little Mogadishu

Washington is the 13th most populated state in the country, but the 8th highest receiver of refugees. Refugees come to Washington from all over the world, but the largest groups are from Burma, Iraq, Bhutan and Somalia. Today we kick off a four-part series called “Refugees In Puget Sound.” Our series will explore the lives of local refugees and the challenges that they face as they settle in to their new community. King County is home to one of the country’s largest populations of Somalis. They’ve been fleeing Somalia since the central government collapsed in 1991. Reporter Jessica Partnow recently visited a Somali community concentrated around the Tukwila light-rail station. It is in a neighborhood known by many as Little Mogadishu.

TRANSCRIPT

At the Bakara Mall in SeaTac, Mohamed Ibrahim says he can sell you a cell phone for half the cost of retail. Ibrahim: “We specialize in fixing phones. We sell used and new phones here.” Ibrahim is 25. He and his brother opened this shop a year and a half ago. Ibrahim: “We first started off just selling phones out on the streets and stuff like that, and we wanted a place where people can come to us and get a face-to-face reaction and stuff like that.” He’s got a full-time job too, working as an instructional assistant for Seattle Public Schools. He tutors immigrant and refugee kids who are learning English. Ibrahim is from Somalia, but he’s been in the US since he was 10.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



New Brain Scan Studies Offer Hope for Mental Illness, Disorders

Researchers in the US are seeing for the first time “and in stunning detail-how neural fibers crisscross the brain and connect its regions”, according Protomag, published Friday 13 January. The new images show the connecting tissue, or white matter, of the brain and offer hope for tracking the fibers’ multiple pathways, which could in turn provide strong clues about the sources of mental illness and brain disorders.

Two major projects at Massachusetts General Hospital, the Superstruct Project and the Human Connectome Project with the University of California, Los Angeles, are collecting these images from thousands of people. “Their goal is to understand what makes the human brain different from the brains of other animals and why some people are at risk for mental illness. “Neuroscientists believe that diseases such as schizophrenia, bipolar disease and autism may be caused by subtle disruptions to the brain’s wiring. In compiling and comparing brain images of so many healthy and mentally ill people, scientists hope to see how connections go awry in disease so that they can develop early interventions and therapy targets.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Austria: Acupuncture That Could Cure Dentist Phobia

Acupuncture may well be the new cure for patients who are scared of going to the dentist. A new study carried out by experts at the Medical University of Vienna, Austria has revealed significant evidence that traditional Chinese medicine could help to relax nervous patients prior to dental treatment.

“The aim of the study was to analyse whether acupuncture in the outer ear could reduce fear of dental treatment,” wrote Andrea Michalek-Sauberer and her co-author from the clinical department for special anaesthetic and pain therapy at the AKH (Allgemeines Krankenhaus) in Vienna.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium: “Violence on the Railways Underestimated”

Last week’s attack on a train conductor put aggression on the railways back in the spotlight. Criminologist Iris Steenhout believes that railway company figures underestimate the scale of the problem because many conductors fail to report incidents.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bulgarian Police Bust Crime Group Involved in Metal Theft

Police have busted an organized crime group involved in metal theft in Bulgaria’s southern city of Kardzhali. According to unconfirmed reports of the BGNES news agency, the raid had been carried out at the Lead and Zinc Complex (OTZK) in the city. An emergency inspection of the warehouse stocks at the Kardzhali-based smelter is underway.

Local police arrested a fifth participant in the group on Monday after four arrests on the case made on Sunday. On Sunday, criminologists found 39 bags of silver distillate during an inspection of a VW car owned by a 46-year-old citizen. Police officers arrested the driver and three others and seized the bags. The mastermind of the criminal scheme is still at large. The authorities have seized a total of 600 kg of silver distillate which is used to recover precious metals.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bulgarian Archaeologist Discovers Ancient Thracian Relief

A ceramic relief of an Ancient Thracian horseman, a major ancient deity, has been found at the holy rock city of Perperikon by Bulgarian archaeologist Nikolay Ovcharov. Prof. Nikolay Ovcharov, also known as the Bulgarian Indian Jones, presented his find before the media on Thursday. In his words, the relief dates back to the end of the 4th century BC and the start of the third century BC, the Hellenistic Age of Ancient Thrace.

It is said to be an extremely valuable find from the time when the Thracian started to hold in reverence the so called “Thracian Horseman” as a deity, also known as the (Thracian) Heros. The relief is part of an urn; it depicts a horseman with reins in his right hand, and a sword-like object in his left hand. Ovcharov explained that the earliest similar finds date back to the 5th century BC, and consist of reliefs encrusted in gold or silver.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Sunny But Cold for Queen’s 40th Anniversary

Danes and royalists can look forward to dry and sunny weather on Saturday as Queen Margrethe II’s horse-drawn carriage carries the monarch from Amalienborg Palace to Copenhagen Town Hall to celebrate the 40th anniversary of her reign. “It will be lovely weather, clear and not very much wind,” says Met Office Duty Officer Michael Christensen, adding, however it will be cold.

“It may be frosty on Saturday morning, but it will warm up during the day to between two and five degrees,” Christensen adds. Princess Margrethe was proclaimed Queen Margrethe II on January 14th, 1972 on the death of her father King Frederik IX. She thus celebrates the 40th year of her reign this Saturday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Lab En Route to Antarctica

A planned Dutch research facility in Antarctica is one step closer to completion. Three mobile labs have been loaded on lorries and are en route to the UK port of Southampton from where they will travel to Antarctica by ship. A fourth lab is to be shipped at a later date. The three labs will form part of a Dutch research station, the first such facility in Antarctica ever.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Malls Track Shopping Patterns Via Mobile Phone

Path Intelligence, a UK firm, has its services at more than ten malls in Britain and around Europe. But its success has raised privacy concerns as well. Most of us know that when we surf or shop online, the pages we visit can be recorded and tracked. That’s how websites like Google and Facebook are able to sell us ads ostensibly targeted to our interests.

But while tracking online movements and how that translate into sales is relatively easy online, this level of monitoring is much harder to do offline. Britain’s brick-and-mortar shops are having a rough time — as well-known national chains like Woolworths have gone bust, thousands of other stores have closed, and total sales have stagnated in recent years.

Online it’s a different story: this Christmas the number of people shopping online was nearly thirty percent higher than last year, with overall Internet sales tripling in three years. Enter Path Intelligence, a British company based in Portsmouth in southern England, and its new shopping monitoring product. Footpath is in operation in at least ten malls in the UK, and has been sold to seven countries, mainly in Europe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Probe Finishes Mapping Big Bang’s Echo

A European space observatory that’s surveying the light left over from the birth of the universe has wrapped up a big part of its mission. The High Frequency Instrument (HFI), one of two sensors aboard the European Space Agency’s Planck spacecraft, ran out of its vital coolant as planned Saturday (Jan. 14), ESA officials announced. Without the coolant, the instrument can’t detect the faint cosmic microwave background (CMB) — the remnant radiation left over from the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.

The instrument did its job, researchers said, completing five full-sky surveys of the CMB since the spacecraft’s May 2009 launch. Planck’s mission called for a minimum of two such surveys, researchers said. “Planck has been a wonderful mission; spacecraft and instruments have been performing outstandingly well, creating a treasure trove of scientific data for us to work with,” said Jan Tauber, ESA’s Planck project scientist, in a statement.

The CMB is an “echo” of the Big Bang, the dramatic event that gave birth to our universe. This radiation is a remnant of the first light emitted after the universe had cooled enough to allow light to travel freely. By studying patterns imprinted in the CMB today, scientists hope to better understand the Big Bang and the very early universe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Flanders: “Imams Hardly in Touch With Their Local Community”

Research commissioned by the Equal Opportunities Support Unit shows that many of the imams who are working in Flanders hardly speak any Dutch, the language of their local community. In addition, they are hardly in touch with the local community. An imam is the leader of congregational prayer in a mosque.

The research shows that most of the imams active in Flanders didn’t grow up here and never learnt French or Dutch. They have little understanding of Belgian or Flemish affairs. As a result contacts with Belgian youngsters are strained. In consequence many young Muslim Belgians go in search of information about Islam via other channels increasing the chance of radicalisation.

Flemish equal Opportunities Minister Geert Bourgeois (Flemish nationalist) has asked the managements of Flemish mosques to adopt a Dutch name in order to improve general perception as well as contacts with young Muslims.

The minister feels that mosques today face a change in generation: “Work undertaken by the first generation that has become older forms a sound basis to continue to construct mosques that are in step with their time, that are in touch with their local community and communicate with broader society.” The research also shows that a youngster generation now stands ready to take over the torch.

Flemish Education Minister Pascal Smet (socialist) is considering the organisation of courses for imams. “This could resolve the problem” said Mr Bourgeois.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Forced Labour on the Rise in Sweden: Report

Organized begging, forced labour and forced participation in thefts have bypassed human trafficking for sexual purposes, shows a recent report from the National Police Board (Rikspolisstyrelsen — RPS), charting the development of human trafficking in Sweden during 2010.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Woman Set on Fire by Masked Intruders

A 50-year-old woman was attacked by two men posing as police officers and then set on fire early on Sunday morning. Le Parisien newspaper reported that the well-maintained apartment block in the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis has been the scene of four different fires in the last week.

The attack happened after the woman opened her door to the men thinking they were alerting her about a new fire. She was taken by helicopter to hospital after suffering third degree burns on around 40 percent of her body. Neighbours reported hearing screams at around 3am on Sunday morning.

“I woke up at about 3 to feed my baby,” said one neighbour. “Suddenly I heard someone shouting for help. At first I thought I was dreaming but the shouts continued. I went out and saw the smoke. My neighbour came out with a bucket of water. He went upstairs and threw it over the woman. Then he called the police.”

In the last week a pushchair on a landing was set on fire, followed by a shopping trolley. Then pieces of material were set on fire and thrown threw the letterboxes of two apartments. “This is a calm area that doesn’t have these types of problem,” said a spokeswoman for the local council. “We hope that the police can quickly catch the culprits before this gets worse.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Merkel Calls for More Minority Public Servants

Chancellor Angela Merkel has called for more police officers, fire fighters and teachers in Germany with foreign roots, saying integration works in two directions, in comments roundly criticised by opposition parties. Merkel’s speech about increasing the number of minorities in public service was slammed as nothing but hot air by the Green party.

Speaking in a video podcast on Saturday, Merkel had pointed out that nearly a fifth of people living in Germany had their roots in a different country, and said that integration was a task of national importance. “It is a long process and it is important that migrants do their part, just like those who have lived here a long time,” she said.

But Renate Künast, head of the Green parliamentary party said Merkel’s comments were, “almost cynical.” She said children of migrants were leaving Germany because they were not getting a fair chance. “No podcast and no further integration conference at which it is just talking, can help there,” said Künast.

She said Germany needed to encourage people to become citizens, to accept multiple citizenships, and to get rid of the rule which forced young people born in Germany to foreign parents to choose between nationalities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany-France-Italy Summit Postponed

A meeting between the leaders of Germany, France and Italy, scheduled for 20 January, has been postponed until the end of next month, reports Reuters, citing an email written by the German embassy in Rome. “It should be rescheduled to around end-February,” said the email.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Left-Winger to Lead EU Parliament After Re-Shuffle

BRUSSELS — Members of the European Parliament will elect a new president on Tuesday (17 January), but in time-honoured fashion the result of the vote is to reflect a back-room deal made in advance.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Stasi Chief’s Office Reopened in New Exhibition

Until 1989, it was the Stasi’s job to spy on East German citizens. The office of Erich Mielke, who led the secret police for more than 30 years, has been restored for a new exhibition on the body’s dark past.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: 91% Are Unhappy With Coalition Government, Poll

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JANUARY 16 — The survey by pollster Public Issue for Sunday’s Kathimerini newspaper showed that 91% of respondents were dissatisfied with the government, up from 80% in an early December poll. The three-party coalition government was formed in November to push a bailout deal and take the overborrowed country to elections, now tentatively set for April. Papademos’s approval rating remained higher than his government’s, though it dropped slightly to 55% from 60% registered in the December poll. Also, 50% of respondents said they did not see a need for immediate elections. The poll, conducted on January 5-10 on a nationwide sample of 1,018 Greeks, showed the conservative New Democracy (ND) party maintaining its lead over the Pasok socialists but unable to secure an absolute majority if elections were held today. New Democracy would win 30.5% of the vote versus 14% for the socialist Pasok party and 12.5% for the communist party, which is not part of the coalition government. “The political landscape remains fluid. New Democracy leads but without outright majority,” Kathimerini said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



In Europe, Free Speech Ends Where Islam Begins

by Clifford D. May

It’s funny in an Orwellian way that in Europe there are now militant groups with such cutesy names as Sharia4Belgium and Sharia4Holland. Less funny, but perhaps more Orwellian: Last month, the European Foundation for Democracy (EFD) held an event in Amsterdam featuring two speakers who favor liberalizing Islam. More than 20 members of the pro-Sharia groups pushed their way in shouting “Allahu Akhbar!” They demanded the event be stopped, called the speakers apostates, spat on them, threw eggs at them and threatened to kill them. Now here’s the least funny and most Orwellian part: few Europeans ¨D few journalists, politicians, members of the self-proclaimed Human Rights community, Muslim organizations claiming to be moderate ¨D have expressed outrage over this boot-stomping suppression of free speech in a city, country and continent that claim to value freedom and tolerance.

Roberta Bonazzi, EFD’s executive director, vowed not to be silenced. “We are united and will continue to support inspirational Muslim reformers across Europe,” she said. Her speakers also kept a stiff upper lip. Canadian author Irshad Manji said that she and Dutch Parliamentarian Tofik Dibi had “refused to leave, even when police asked. We wouldn’t play on jihadi terms.” Dibi, of the Green-Left party, said “the disruption shows that even in the Netherlands it is necessary to continue the debate on reforming Islam.” Necessary, yes; safe, no. In Europe, increasingly, free speech ends where Islam, Islamism and even Islamic terrorism begin. Two months ago, the Paris offices of the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo were firebombed and its staff targeted with death threats after publication of an issue “edited” by the Prophet Mohammad.

In 2005, the Danish newspaper Jyllands Posten published a dozen cartoons satirizing terrorism in the name of Islam. That led to protests, riots, death threats, an assassination plot and the bombing of the Danish embassy in Pakistan. All this continues a trend begun in 1989, when Iranian revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ordered any Muslim willing and able to murder British author Salman Rushdie whose novel, “The Satanic Verses,” Khomeini deemed blasphemous. Rushdie has required bodyguards ever since.

In any of the more than 50 states that hold membership in the Saudi-based Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC _ formerly the Organization of the Islamic Conference) that probably would not have saved him. Last year, Salmaan Taseer, the governor of Pakistan’s Punjab province, defended a Christian woman sentenced to death for having said something some Muslims found offensive. One of Taseer’s bodyguards shot him 27 times.

There is not a single OIC member state that seriously guarantees freedom of speech. Nevertheless, in association with the OIC, the U.S. State Department last month hosted, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attended, a three-day, closed-door i nternational conference in Washington on combating religious “intolerance, negative stereotyping and stigmatization.” The conference reinforced the OIC tenet that all religions are equal ¨D though one is more equal than others. OIC members are concerned only about the “defamation” of Islam and, evidently, they do not view militant Muslims attacking reformist Muslims as defaming their faith…

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italy: Cruise Captain ‘Committed Errors’, Say Ship’s Owners

The company operating a cruise ship that capsized after hitting rocks off western Italy, killing six, says the captain may have “committed errors”. He appears to have sailed too close to land and not to have followed the company’s emergency procedures, Costa Crociere said in a statement. Capt Francesco Schettino is suspected of manslaughter, but denies wrongdoing. Italy’s environment minister said the risk from a potential spill of ship’s fuel was extremely high. Six people are confirmed to have died but about 15 remain unaccounted for. Divers are trying to find more survivors.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rescue Workers Search Desperately for Survivors

The death toll in the Costa Concordia disaster has risen to six after a body was found early on Monday. Sixteen people are still missing. Rescue workers described the treacherous conditions aboard the ship, which is lying on its side off the Italian island of Giglio.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Cruise Ship Owners Accuse Captain of ‘Inexplicable’ Error

Owners of a capsized cruise ship off the Italian coast have suggested Captain Francesco Schettino may be responsible for the deadly accident, while rough seas and weather forced rescue workers to suspend their efforts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Mein Kampf’ Extracts to be Sold in Germany

A British publisher plans to sell excerpts from Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” in Germany, claiming he wants to demystify the infamous book. But the controversial move could provoke a legal dispute with the Bavarian government, which owns the copyright and refuses reprint permission.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Geert Wilders Says There’s No Such Thing as Moderate Islam

Can’t Someone Tell Geert Wilders to Stop His Anti-Muslim Diatribes Before Somebody Gets Hurt?

A couple of years ago, a billboard appeared outside Columbia, S.C., looming above Interstate 26. Beady eyes stared out from a black balaclava emblazoned with an inscription from the Quran — clearly the eyes were meant to be those of a terrorist — and next to them were these words: “ISLAM RISING … BE WARNED.” Erected by the Virginia-based Christian Action Network, the sign advertised the group’s documentary about a charismatic Dutch politician with dyed-blond hair, a mysterious past, and a platform of paranoid hate. South Carolina seemed to offer a ready audience for Geert Wilders’s dire warnings against the Muslim religion. Today, with the Republican road show encamped in the state for the Jan. 21 presidential primary, the 48-year-old Dutchman is more than ever a man who needs to be watched and listened to carefully. At home in the Netherlands, his explosive theme of unrelenting hostility to Islam has built his xenophobic Party for Freedom, founded in 2005, into the count ry’s third-largest political party; across the Atlantic his message packs serious resonance in an American heartland still shaken by the 9/11 attacks. Wilders’s name and message have been invoked repeatedly in South Carolina and at least a dozen other state legislatures as they debate measures to ban an imagined threat: Islamic law.

So does he worry about the violence his rants could inspire? Wilders is a master at capitalizing on real fears and conjuring false ones — and then dodging responsibility if people’s lives are ruined or lost. “I am responsible for my own actions and for nobody else’s actions,” he says. In a wide-ranging interview at the offices of the Dutch Parliament in The Hague, Wilders complained to Newsweek that the “naive” Obama administration wasn’t doing nearly enough to combat what Wilders regards as the Islamic threat. Expanding on his claims that the Quran should be banned, just as Mein Kampf has been in some countries, he said the United States should be “getting rid of Islamic symbols — no more mosques — and closing down Islamic schools.”

[…]

[JP note: Christopher Dickey joins the legions of dhimmis ready to sell their freedom for a quiet life. They might end up without a life at all.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway: Thought Control on Islam

January 10, 2012 was a big day for terrorist Anders Breivik, the diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic (but now being reevaluated), who on July 22, 2011, bombed the Norwegian Prime Minister’s office and, soon after on that same day, gunned down seventy-seven Norwegian teenagers at a political camp near Oslo. The Norwegian justice system will now permit him to receive visitors, ending almost six months of isolation. This will allow Breivik to give interviews to the media to expound his wild theories justifying his murderous actions, and even entertain adoring supporters. Undoubtedly, the resulting attention, stories and interviews will create outrage among the still grieving Norwegian population. And undoubtedly, the leftist, politically correct Norwegian elite will use this public outrage to continue their campaign to restrict, or even shut down, all speech they perceive as “Islamophobic.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norway Oil Production to Shrink in 2012

Oil output in Norway, one of the world’s leading exporters of the black gold, is expected to fall further this year following a 5.6-percent drop in 2011, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate said on Monday. The Scandinavian country should produce around 1.6 million barrels of oil per day (mb/d) this year, compared with 1.7 mb/d in 2011 and 1.8 mb/d in 2010.

Natural gas, which accounts for a growing share of Norway’s energy production, also saw output slip last year by 5.0 percent to 101.3 billion cubic metres, but the Petroleum Directorate said the decline was largely market-driven. “Gas sales are expected to rise in the next few years,” it pointed out in a statement.

Since its peak in 2001, Norwegian oil production has gradually shrunk as new discoveries have failed to replenish dwindling reserves, and it now stands at less than half the level of output seen a decade ago. Natural gas is expected to account for 50 percent of Norway’s total petroleum-based production by 2016, up from 46 percent last year, according to the Petroleum Directorate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Poll: National Front Leader Marine Le Pen Shows Surprising Strength

Almost one-third of French voters agree with the ideas of the far-right National Front, according to a poll published Thursday in the latest sign of growing support for the party ahead of April’s presidential election.

The figures reflect the impact of the National Front’s charismatic leader Marine Le Pen, who took over from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, as the head of the party a year ago.

She has campaigned hard against free trade and the European Union, and has pushed the party’s traditional tough line on crime and immigration.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Radical Muslims Plan Biggest Swiss Mosque

The Islamic Central Council of Switzerland (ICCS) is trying to raise enough funds in the Gulf states to enable the construction of a 20-million franc ($21 million) prayer centre in the capital Bern. With three storeys, the planned mosque would be the biggest in the country. In addition to a prayer room for 270 men and 174 women, plans show that the building would have conference and training rooms, shops, underground parking and a garden.

The president of the Council, Nicolas Blancho, confirmed his fundraising activities in Kuwait and Qatar to newspapers SonntagsZeitung and Le Matin Dimanche on Sunday, although he said the organisation has not received any donations yet. “For the time being, we’re just building relationships of trust with potential sponsors,” said Blancho, adding that searching for donors is a long process.

Last year, the president of ICCS visited Kuwait and Qatar several times where he met with “businessmen and high level statesmen”, not just to talk about money, “but also to have intellectual exchanges,” explained the 28-year-old Swiss. Blancho said he also presented to his interlocutors the council’s idea of launching a popular initiative to counter the ban on the construction of minarets that was approved in a referendum in November 2009.

Aside from the massive mosque, the ICCS also has other smaller projects, such as founding an Islamic school in Switzerland, and setting up a travel agency for pilgrimages to Mecca and Medina. According to the Swiss convert, his contacts in Gulf countries are financially clean and any donations would be made within a legal framework. However, ICCS has never previously made its financial resources public, says the SonntagsZeitung.

ICCS mainly represents orthodox Sunni Muslims. It was founded two and a half years ago by a small group of young Swiss converts to Islam in the light of the referendum to ban the construction of minarets.

ICCS has about 2,000 members, and has organized several controversial rallies in Bern. At its latest demonstration in October, the organisation chose a symbol reminiscent of the Jewish Star of David to draw parallels between the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany and Muslims in the Alpine country of today. The move infuriated the Jewish community.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Romanian Premier Appeals for Dialogue After Clashes

Romania’s prime minister has called for calm after violence between police and demonstrators over austerity measures. The government has withdrawn controversial health reforms and called for dialogue.

Romanian Prime Minister Emil Boc appealed for calm on Monday after clashes between anti-austerity protesters and riot police at the weekend left more than 50 people injured.

“Freedom of speech is guaranteed in Romania, and peaceful demonstrations are legitimate, but street violence is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated,” said Boc after a meeting of the ruling coalition.

The premier called for dialogue and said he sympathized with the “suffering and the difficulties” of citizens. “Street violence will only impair our chance of creating prosperity more rapidly and put at risk Romania’s situation on an international level,” Boc warned.

Several hundred demonstrators had gathered in Bucharest on Saturday and Sunday to voice opposition to health reforms that led to the resignation of popular Health Minister Raed Arafat. Some 4,000 people took part nationwide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Scotland: Potential Medieval Village Among Western Isles ‘Finds’

Members of the public were asked if they knew about any possible ancient sites along the shorelines of Scotland’s Western Isles. Archaeologists are now working on confirming and dating previously unrecorded Neolithic pottery, a complex of fish traps, and a possible medieval fishing village. “We’re relying on the knowledge of people who live and work on or near the sea, and who might have noticed something out of the ordinary,” said Jonathan Benjamin of WA Coastal and Marine.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Expert: Kill More Seals in Stockholm’s Waters

A leading fisheries consultant has warned that killing more seals and cormorants is the only way to reverse the trend of ever diminishing fish stocks in the Stockholm archipelago. Sverker Lovén, chairman of Fiskefrämjandet, a fish-promotion association, has carried out a detailed investigation into the disappearance of several breeds of fish in the waters outside the capital, most noticeably perch and pike. He has come to the conclusion that if something is not done about the number of seals preying on the fish, there is a good chance they will eventually die out altogether.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Military Wants Nordic Cooperation

At a time when military budgets are increasingly being cut across Europe, Sweden’s Supreme Commander Gen. Sverker Göranson is calling for more cooperation between the Nordic countries in monitoring each other’s air space and maritime sovereignty. “We must be ready to dare to share responsibility. Then our politicians must choose the right way to go,” Göranson says, adding in particular that incident responsibility — monitoring each other’s territorial sovereignty — should be shared.

Göranson says that the Nordic countries have the necessary faith in each other, and the technical ability to develop their cooperation. The five countries already carry out joint exercises and take part in the same international operations. Denmark and Sweden both currently have forces in Afghanistan and share information.

Göranson says that the greatest challenge for the Nordic countries is to find common rules of engagement so that there is agreement, for example, on what Danish or Swedish soldiers and pilots can do in each other’s territories.

The Nordic countries have differing military affiliations and conditions. Denmark, Norway and Iceland are members of NATO; Sweden and Finland are not, although both the latter are members of NATO’s Partnership for Peace. Iceland has no standing military but has a bilateral Defence Agreement with the United States and contributes financially and with civilian personnel to NATO operations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Muslim Group Seeks Mosque Funding in Gulf

A controversial Muslim group is trying to raise funds in the Gulf states for a 20 million franc mosque in Bern. The Islamic Central Council of Switzerland says it is also seeking financial support to launch an initiative to repeal the ban on the construction of minarets which was approved by voters in 2009. Council President, Nicolas Blancho, has confirmed Sunday newspaper reports about his fundraising talks in Kuwait and Qatar, but said he had not received any donations so far.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Radical Muslims Plan Biggest Swiss Mosque

The Islamic Central Council of Switzerland (ICCS) is trying to raise enough funds in the Gulf states to enable the construction of a 20-million franc ($21 million) prayer centre in the capital Bern.

With three storeys, the planned mosque would be the biggest in the country. In addition to a prayer room for 270 men and 174 women, plans show that the building would have conference and training rooms, shops, underground parking and a garden. The president of the Council, Nicolas Blancho, confirmed his fundraising activities in Kuwait and Qatar to newspapers SonntagsZeitung and Le Matin Dimanche on Sunday, although he said the organisation has not received any donations yet. “For the time being, we’re just building relationships of trust with potential sponsors,” said Blancho, adding that searching for donors is a long process.

Last year, the president of ICCS visited Kuwait and Qatar several times where he met with “businessmen and high level statesmen”, not just to talk about money, “but also to have intellectual exchanges,” explained the 28-year-old Swiss. Blancho said he also presented to his interlocutors the council’s idea of launching a popular initiative to counter the ban on the construction of minarets that was approved in a referendum in November 2009. Aside from the massive mosque, the ICCS also has other smaller projects, such as founding an Islamic school in Switzerland, and setting up a travel agency for pilgrimages to Mecca and Medina. According to the Swiss convert, his contacts in Gulf countries are financially clean and any donations would be made within a legal framework. However, ICCS has never previously made its financial resources public, says the SonntagsZeitung.

ICCS mainly represents orthodox Sunni Muslims. It was founded two and a half years ago by a small group of young Swiss converts to Islam in the light of the referendum to ban the construction of minarets. ICCS has about 2,000 members, and has organized several controversial rallies in Bern. At its latest demonstration in October, the organisation chose a symbol reminiscent of the Jewish Star of David to draw parallels between the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany and Muslims in the Alpine country of today. The move infuriated the Jewish community.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Parliamentary Group Defends Hamas Invite

The Swiss-based Inter-Parliamentary Union on Monday defended its hosting of members of the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas at a meeting in Geneva.

Secretary-general Anders Johnsson told AFP that the delegation attended a hearing on Saturday of the IPU’s Committee on Human Rights of Parliamentarians which examines alleged rights abuses against lawmakers.

“Our invitation has been misunderstood,” said Johnsson.

“The IPU doesn’t deal with Hamas, but the IPU committee deals with the rights of members of parliament, whoever they are.”

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman had earlier on Monday slammed the IPU invite, describing it as “an example of international hypocrisy.”

Johnsson said the Swiss trip had come about after the committee invited a Gaza-based NGO to give evidence and the group had put forward Hamas MPs Mushir al-Masri and Khamis al-Najjar.

“The IPU doesn’t have relations with Hamas, we deal with the Palestinian parliament,” he said.

The IPU encourages dialogue between MPs from parliaments around the world in a bid to promote “peace and cooperation among peoples” and “the firm establishment of representative democracy.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Spy Who Drove Me: 50 Years of Bond Cars on Show in UK

The largest collection of James Bond vehicles in the world opens to the public on Tuesday in Britain featuring classics such as the Aston Martin DBS from “Quantum of Solace.” From earlier Bond films, the Phantom III Rolls-Royce from “Goldfinger” and the Lotus Esprit S1, which takes a trip into the sea with Roger Moore at the wheel in “The Spy Who Loved Me”, are also among the 50 vehicles on show.

The “Bond in Motion” show at the National Motor Museum in Beaulieu, southeast England, marks half a century of 007 films. Also featured are the vintage 1962 Rolls-Royce from “A View To A Kill” which was pushed into a lake by Bond’s foes Zorrin and May Day, played by singer Grace Jones, with Bond still inside.

The premiere of the exhibition on Sunday was attended by Bond stars such as Britt Ekland who played Bond’s bumbling accomplice Holly Goodnight in “The Man With The Golden Gun.” The exhibition also showcases boats, motorbikes, sledges, jets and parachutes used in Bond films.

Sarah Wright, a spokeswoman for the National Motor Museum, said: “We anticipate many people coming through our doors to come and see one of the most unique exhibitions in the world.” The exhibition will run until December 31.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘I Was Doing My Duty as a Muslim, ‘ Says Father Who Handed Out Leaflets Saying Gay People Should be Hanged

A father has told a court he was only doing his duty as a Muslim by handing out leaflets calling for gay people to be executed.

Kabir Ahmed, 28, said he handed a leaflet called Death Penalty? to a policeman and stuffed them through letterboxes across Derby because he was spreading the word of God as taught by Islam.

He said: ‘My intention was to do my duty as a Muslim, to inform people of Godâ€(tm)s word and to give the message on what God says about homosexuality.’

Married Ahmed, who has a nine-month-old daughter, is on trial with four other men at Derby Crown Court charged with inciting hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation, the first prosecution of its kind since legislation came into force in March 2010.

At the opening of the trial last week jurors were shown the Death Penalty? leaflet, which shows an image of a mannequin hanging from a noose and says that homosexuality is punishable by the death penalty under Islam.

The leaflet states: ‘The death sentence is the only way this immoral crime can be erased from corrupting society and act as a deterrent for any other ill person who is remotely inclined in this bent way.’

It goes on: ‘The only dispute amongst the classical authorities was the method employed in carrying out the penal code,’ and then goes on to offer burning, being flung from a high point such as a mountain or building, or being stoned to death as suitable methods.

Giving evidence today Ahmed, wearing a pair of grey trousers and a black shirt, said he had handed one of the Death Penalty? leaflets to PC Stephen Gregory on July 2 2010 as he was passing by the area of the Jamia Mosque in Rosehill Street following Friday prayers.

He told the court he felt it was his duty as a Muslim to inform and advise people wherever they may be committing sins, he would be failing if he did not.

‘My duty is not just to better myself but to try and better the society I live in,’ he said.

‘We believe we canâ€(tm)t just stand by and watch somebody commit a sin, we must try and advise them and urge them to stay away from sin.’

Ahmed said he had studied the texts of many religions including the Bible and the Torah and used ideas from each to compare with what Islam says about things such as drugs, alcohol, prostitution and relationships.

Ahmedâ€(tm)s barrister Zacharias Miah asked him if PC Gregory had told him he was doing something wrong would he have handed over the bag of leaflets he was carrying and Ahmed replied: ‘Of course, without a shadow of a doubt.’

Prosecutor Bobbie Cheema told the court the Death Penalty? leaflet was not educational or informative but was simply ‘threatening, offensive, frightening and nasty.’

Four other Derby men — Ihjaz Ali, 42, Mehboob Hussain, 45, Umar Javed, 38, and his brother Razwan Javed, 28, of Wilfred Street — are also charged with the same offence.

All five men deny the charges.

The trial continues.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Craven Arms Mosque Extension Plans

Plans have been drawn up to extend a small mosque in south Shropshire.

The terraced house in Craven Arms currently accommodates about 25 people in its main prayer room. The town’s Muslim community hopes to extend the building in order to build a library, computer room, creche and meeting room, which could all be used by the wider community. Imam Sohayb Peerbhai said they wanted to show the mosque was open to everyone. “We hope to have a meeting room for inter-faith dialogue groups, for the local police… and also for other community events that are nothing to do with Muslims, but we hope that they also can he held here so we can play our part in the Craven Arms community. It’s very important that Muslims embrace the non-Muslim community in a way where people don’t feel afraid of Muslims. We have decided not to have a minaret or a dome so it doesn’t look like the mosque is trying to take over the skyline.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: David Cameron to Meet Alex Salmond for Referendum Talks

David Cameron is to meet Alex Salmond to discuss plans for a referendum on Scottish independence, it was announced yesterday.

Downing Street said arrangements for the meeting between the Prime Minister and Scotland’s First Minister would be made “in the coming days”. Michael Moore, the Scottish Secretary, has also asked Mr Salmond for a meeting in Edinburgh this Thursday. A No10 spokesman said: “The Prime Minister has made it clear he is happy to meet Alex Salmond and arrangements for that will be made in the coming days. However, he also believes the First Minister should accept the invitation to meet the Secretary of State for Scotland on Thursday to discuss his views on the consultation process.”

A spokesman for Mr Salmond said: “This is a very welcome development, and represents real progress. We look forward to these meetings being arranged soon.” But the First Minister’s spokesman said no talks would go ahead until the publication of a consultation document on his proposals for a referendum, which is due to be published on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Growing Use of Sharia by UK Muslims

The use of Sharia, or Islamic religious law, is growing in Britain, with thousands of Muslims using it to settle disputes each year, but women’s groups and some others are objecting.

“You must speak the truth, sister. Because Allah is listening to your every word, you can lie to us but not to Him.” The bearded sheikh is instructing his first client of the day to explain why she is unhappy in her marriage. Sitting behind a small desk in the back room of a converted terrace house, Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad is a representative of the Islamic Sharia Council, the largest Sharia body in the UK, based in Leyton, east London. The woman has come to the council for an Islamic divorce because her husband refuses to give her one.

“I’m not happy. He’s never at home and I’ve seen messages from other women on his phone. He doesn’t even give money to help support the kids,” the woman tells the sheikh.

It is easier for a Muslim man to end a marriage in Islam, but a wife must persuade the judges to grant her a dissolution if her husband is opposed to divorce. The case is typical of those case dealt with by Sharia councils, as thousands of Muslims are turning to them to help resolve family, financial and commercial problems in accordance with Sharia principles.

An estimated 85 Sharia councils could be operating in Britain, according to a 2009 report by the think tank Civitas. Several bodies like the Islamic Sharia Council have seen a large increase in their cases in the past five years. “Our cases have easily more than tripled over the past three to five years,” says Sheikh al-Haddad. “On average, every month we can deal with anything from 200 to 300 cases. A few years ago it was just a small fraction of that. ‘Muslims are becoming more aligned with their faith and more aware of what we are offering them,” he explained. The principles of Sharia govern all aspects of a Muslim’s life. It is derived from a combination of sources including the Koran, the Hadith, which is based on the example of the prophet Muhammad, and fatwas, which are rulings of Islamic scholars.

Sharia has been operating in the UK, managed by locally-appointed councils, in parallel to the British legal system since 1982. But the informal councils have no legal powers and they cannot impose any penalties. They deal with civil cases alone, but many Muslims are choosing to voluntarily accept rulings made by the scholars. Omar Hannan, 28, from Solihull, turned to Sharia instead of the British courts after an ownership dispute broke out between the British Muslim partners at his industrial cleaning company. “It fulfilled my Islamic spiritual principles which was the main reason I went to a Muslim tribunal. ‘But it was also very quick. We resolved it in three to four months,” he said. “It only cost a couple of hundred pounds, and you can imagine how much it would have cost through the English legal system,” he added.

As a demand for Sharia thrives, a number of British law firms are starting to tap into the booming market. Muslim Lawyer Aina Khan has launched one of the first Sharia departments at her London-based law firm. She offers clients advice that is in keeping with both English and Islamic law. “I am surprised that the majority of people that I am dealing with are under the age of 50. They are British Muslims who want to satisfy their British identity as well as their Muslim one. ‘So I give them solutions to their problems that satisfy both legal systems all under one place.”

Despite the growing demand for Sharia law in Britain, there is also increasing opposition by some groups who argue that the practice discriminates against women. The Iranian and Kurdish Women’s Rights Organisation (IKWRO) is campaigning to bring an end to the practice. “We have spoken to many women and all of them tell us the same story; Sharia law is not providing them with the justice they seek. The councils are dominated by men, who are making judgements in favour of men,” said Diana Nammi. Concerns such as these have led crossbench peer Baroness Cox to introduce a bill before the House of Lords, aimed at introducing regulation of Sharia organisations in the UK. The bill has received its first reading and is expected to get a second reading later this year. But for groups like IKWRO the bill does not go far enough. “We think there shouldn’t be any religious law practising in Britain — all Sharia bodies should be banned. That is the only way we can ensure equality of jus tice for all women,” argues Diana Nammi. But while a demand for Sharia continues in Britain, Sheikh Haitham al-Haddad says the practice cannot be banned. “We are not forcing people to walk through our doors. They are voluntarily coming to us,” he said. “If you ban us, then British Muslims will find somewhere else to go. ‘Many will go to Muslim countries abroad, where there will be no way to protect them.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Henry Assumang Denies Infecting Hampshire Women With HIV

A man pleaded not guilty today to infecting two women with the HIV virus.

Henry Assumang, 33, denied two counts of inflicting grievous bodily harm on the pair, who cannot be named for legal reasons, when he appeared at Winchester Crown Court.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Met Gun Crime Unit Overhauled to Focus on Gangs

The Metropolitan police unit tasked with tackling gun crime in black communities is to be overhauled to focus on targeting teenage gangs.

The sharp rise in youth violence on the capital’s streets has prompted a radical shift in tactics, with officers from Operation Trident to be given responsibility for a new strategy against gangs. Specialist teams from Trident will lead a joint task force that incorporates all of Scotland Yard’s units battling gangs, under the plans being finalised by senior officers.

Bernard Hogan-Howe, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, is expected to announce the new initiative as he sets out his vision for the future of policing in a speech tonight. However, the decision to place Trident at the helm of the force’s gangs campaign is likely to prove controversial as it was officers from the unit who ran the operation which saw Mark Duggan fatally shot last August.

Duggan’s shooting, by officers of the Met’s armed unit CO19, sparked riots in Tottenham which led to a wave of looting and violence across Britain. In the aftermath of the riots David Cameron said gangs were to blame.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Roman Villa ‘Rare and Important for Peterborough’ Says Archaeologist

A second-century Roman villa built around a cobbled courtyard has been unearthed in eastern England. “It became clear that this was a very grand villa and every day we were finding more,” said Rebecca Casa Hatton, Peterborough’s city council archaeologist.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Dozens Arrested in Kosovo After Border Clashes

More than 40 people have been arrested in Kosovo after attempting to block the border with neighboring Serbia. Police have used tear gas and water cannons to disperse hundreds of Kosovo Albanian protesters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Police and Protesters Clash on Kosovo-Serbia Border

Police and protesters in Kosovo clashed violently on Saturday after hardline opposition members tried to block traffic coming in from Serbia, the BBC reports. The opposition group, Self-Determination, is opposed to contact with Serbia, which does not recognise its former province as an independent state.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Opinion: Female Body Under Siege in Post-Revolution Egypt

Egyptian writer Mansoura Ez Eldin sketches a bleak picture of post-revolutionary social conditions in her homeland, where she says women face political marginalization and are being robbed of their basic rights.

While soldiers on Qasr al-Aini Street in Cairo set about roughing up female Egyptian protesters last month, the Salafists in Suez were holding spirited celebrations to mark their victory in the second round of elections. They struck up religious hymns and chanted slogans like “the military and the people are one,” “the Muslim Brotherhood and the Al Nour Party are one” and, above all, “God and the people are one.” Women did not participate at all.

The “people” they are referring to are, of course, something different from the demonstrators. As far as the Salafists are concerned, “the people” refers exclusively to their own supporters.

As the Salafists rejoiced in song at their unity with the military, members of this very same army were beating, kicking and dragging around a defenseless woman on the ground out on the street and — as if that weren’t enough — tearing off her clothes as well.

Neither this episode nor other sad examples of the abuse and killing of demonstrators while the protests were being broken up in front of the Council of Ministers’ headquarters provoked the anger of the Islamists or other religious zealots, who invoke their own good morals day and night. Instead, they condemned the victim for leaving the house to demonstrate in the first place.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


67 Percent of Murder Cases in 2011 Involved Israeli Arabs

In 2011, Israeli Arabs were in involved in 67 percent of Israel’s murder cases, even though the Arab sector comprises only 20% of Israel’s population.

Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch (Yisrael Beitenu) was to present this statistic to the Cabinet on Sunday as part of a long-term strategy — a joint effort by the police and Public Security Ministry — aimed mainly at improving individual and communal safety in the non-Jewish sector.

The plan, which was presented to the prime minister a few days ago, was to be shown to the rest of the Cabinet on Sunday. Aharonovitch was also to present the recent efforts made on the civilian front as well as by law enforcement agencies to minimize the phenomenon.

Within the framework of the plan, special units were created and stationed in the predominantly Arab towns of Taybeh and Nazareth, while an effort was made to reinforce and strengthen local and municipal police forces.

Israeli Arab MK Jamal Zahalka (Balad) told Israel Hayom, “I lament the fact that the Cabinet has chosen to focus on the police issue, though it is one of the most pressing issues [facing the Israeli-Arab sector]. The issue of crime cannot be resolved without a comprehensive program involving education, employment, sport, welfare etc.”

“The police issue is the most pressing because the Israel Police are neglecting the problem of crime in the Arab sector. There is discrimination: a murder in [the Arab village of] Umm al-Fahm is not treated the same as a murder in Tel Aviv. The situation is dire and constantly deteriorating. Specific and rapid action is required. Just as the police were able to eradicate the crime in [the Jewish city of] Netanya, they can also eradicate it in Israeli-Arab communities,” he added.

“A political decision must be made, and for that reason this issue is on [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu’s agenda, for him to make a decision. I hope that he will decide that the current situation is unbearable,” he continued.

“If the Cabinet makes a decision, the Arab leadership will be there to support it, but if we’re talking about nothing more than more deception, we won’t be there. Israel’s Arab society is entrenched in deep crisis due to the widespread crime. The tools we [Israeli-Arab politicians] possess to combat this problem are few and weak. All the effective tools are in the government’s hands. They need to give the tools, in the form of jurisdiction and budgets, to the local authorities. There are ways to combat crime in the Arab sector, and it is time to do it,” he concluded.

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



El Al and Tel Aviv Stock Exchange Sites Hacked

‘New form of resistance’, says Hamas

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV — The Israeli websites of the airline El Al and the Tel Aviv stock exchange have been hacked, and though not blocking them entirely the attack has made contact difficult. Over the night the attack had been pre-announced by a Saudi hacker, who calls himself “OxOmar”.

Last week the same hacker had put online a large copious documentation on credit cards, identity documents and email addresses held by Israeli nationals. Sector experts say that for a number of days Israeli web sites have been subjected to severe attacks. A Hamas leader, Sami Abu Zuhri, has praised the attacks and called them “a new and positive form of resistance” against Israel. Meanwhile, Israeli hackers have in turn released the credit card details of Saudi citizens. However, the latter’s efforts to neutralise the activities of “OxOmar” have failed thus far.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Israel Fury as Hamas Attends Global Parliamentary Forum

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman on Monday slammed the decision of the Swiss-based Inter-Parliamentary Union to invite the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas to attend its 2012 session. “This is just another example of international hypocrisy,” Lieberman told Israeli public radio. “In all international organisations, the 57 Muslim countries and the many non-aligned nations have the majority and consistently take anti-Israel positions,” he charged.

A three-member delegation of MPs from Hamas’s Change and Reform party left Gaza on Thursday for the meeting in Geneva, marking the first time parliamentarians from the Islamist movement will attend a session of the IPU.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran Makes Arrests in Scientist’s Death

Iran has made arrests over last week’s assassination of a scientist, which it blamed on Israel and the United States. Parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani on Monday vowed to avenge the death.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Yemen: UN in Contact With Kidnapped Norwegian

The United Nations is in contact with a Norwegian UN worker kidnapped in Yemen and is negotiating his release with the tribe responsible for his abduction, a UN spokesman said Sunday. The expert for the UN Development Programme (UNDP), who has not been named, was seized in the capital Sanaa late Saturday “as part of a tribal dispute,” deputy UN spokesman Eduardo del Buey told AFP.

“The tribe has made assurances regarding the safety of the staff member who reportedly remains in good health,” the spokesman added. The UN in Yemen is working with the government in a bid to end the hostage-taking. The UN “remains in contact with the staff member and representatives of the tribe,” Del Buey said.

In Yemen, a tribal source told AFP that tribesmen were behind the kidnapping and that the man had been taken to the eastern province of Marib. The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the tribe wants “one of their tribesmen to be released from prison.

“The kidnapping comes two months after the release of a French aid worker and her Yemeni driver and translator who were abducted in the country’s restive southern region on November 22nd. All three were released unharmed two days later. Tribes in Yemen often kidnap foreigners to put pressure on the authorities. More than 200 foreigners have been abducted over the past 15 years, with almost all later freed unharmed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Ukraine: Imprisoned Tymoshenko Fears for Her Life, Says Daughter

Ukrainian opposition figure Yulia Tymoshenko, jailed on corruption charges, allegedly fell unconscious after taking medicine from prison doctors. Her daughter told DW the regime is trying to physically break Tymoshenko.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Danish Afghan Cost: DKK 13 Billion

A professor says the results haven’t warranted the costs

The latest figures from the Foreign and Defence ministries show that Denmark has spent some DKK 13 billion on operations in Afghanistan since 2001, according to Jyllands-Posten. But Professor Mikkel Vedby Rasmussen of the Centre for Military Studies at Copenhagen University suggests the costs are greater than the results.

“The bill is too big compared to the poor results. That is one of the reasons that Denmark, the United States and Great Britain are withdrawing from Afghanistan,” Vedby Rasmussen says. “We haven’t achieved the democracy that was wanted. If we are lucky we will get a negotiated settlement with the Taleban. “The worst case scenario is that we simply withdraw and the Taleban takes over,” he tells Jyllands-Posten.

Development Aid Minister Christian Friis Bach (SocLib) admits the situation is uncertain, but says that there is some progress — for example that life expectancy in the country has risen from 44 to 64.

While the Liberals believe that the effort in Afghanistan is “is the least poor of the alternatives”, the Red Greens say that the almost DKK 10 billion that military operations have cost, have been wasted. Since 2001, Denmark has provided DKK 3.3 billion in development aid to Afghanistan.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India: Muslim Bodies Shun Cong’s Quota Carrot

In its mad rush to woo the Muslims with its appeasement efforts, the Congress has only ended up in scoring two self goals and in turn, earning the increased wrath of the minority community, which is clearly seeing through its “deceitful election gimmick”.

Congress disowning Law Minister Salman Khurshid’s promise of nine per cent reservation for minorities and its general secretary Digvijay Singh’s remarks about the Batla House encounter being “fake” has not gone down well with Muslims in poll-bound UP. The Congress has supported the Government’s stance that the Batla House encounter was “genuine”.

“Muslims are well aware of such tactics by the Congress. They have now seen it once more before the elections. There cannot be a better example of deceiving the community. There will be repercussions against the party,” said Imam, Aishbagh Eidgah, Maulana Khalid Rasheed Farangi Mahli.

An expert on Muslim issues and Executive Committee (EC) member of All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) Zafaryab Jilani opined that the recent developments have further deepened the rift between Congress and Muslims. “We have been saying from day one that statements of Congress leaders cannot be trusted. The assurances by the party cannot be relied upon. It is there for everyone to see, But Muslims will gain from the developments as they are already cautious. The Congress will lose badly,” he remarked. In fact, the All India Ulema Mashaikh Board (AIUMB), an organisation of sufi Muslims in the country, has even decided to challenge the Congress where it stands the tallest — in Rai Bareli and Sultanpur.

“Congress is just flaring passions. They are supporting the hardliners within the Muslim community and wedging a divide between Hindus and Muslims. It is all drama and we understand it,” said spokesperson, AIUMB, Babar Ashraf. He asserted that AIUMB will corner Congress in Assembly segments falling under Congress president Sonia Gandhi and scion Rahul Gandhi’s Parliamentary constituencies. Another dominant cleric Maulana Tauqeer Raza Khan of Bareilly, who enjoys considerable following among Bareillvi sect, openly decried the Congress too. “There is nothing new in this Congress game. We are witness to it for the past 65 years. They are never serious about the uplift of Muslims. The issues are being used as an election gimmick. It will boomerang as Muslims are now well aware and know the party’s real intentions,” said Raza. For this, Raza has even decided to take on Congress directly. In the Rohilkhand belt, he has fielded candidates from his outfit-Ittehad-e-Millat Counc il. “We will ensure that Congress is defeated in the area. They have a union minister from the region but we have votes,” claimed Raza.

Already, at ground level in Azamgarh, the developments have done much harm than benefitting the party. “Muslims in Azamgarh cannot forget the Batla House encounter which has given a tag of terror hub to our city.” Congress leader Digvijay Singh announced it is fake, but the party disowned his statement. It seems they want to exploit the sentiments of Muslims for political gains,” said Mudassir Javed, a local Muslim youth, who participated in the protests against Rahul’s visit to Azamgarh. Hundreds of Muslim youths had joined the protests mainly from Veer Bahadur Singh Poorvanchal Chatra Sangthan, Abu Bakr Islamic Centre, Students Islamic Organisation, Study Circle and even Rashtriya Ulema Council (RUC). “We cannot forgive Congress. They offer only lip service to Muslims. These two announcements which were later disowned by them from Delhi are clear indicators that their intentions are doubtful,” said Maulana Tahir Madani, RUC’s national general secretary. Madani is also conte sting the election from Nizamabad in Azamgarh.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sri Lanka Fences in Humans to Protect Its Elephants

Elephants and humans have fought for the limited land in Sri Lanka for decades. A clever solution gives each their space by putting the people in reserves rather than the elephants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Suspected Terror Swede Charged in Thailand

A man carrying a Swedish passport who was arrested on terror suspicions in Thailand last week was indicted on Monday after leading police to a massive stash of bomb-making materials. The Swedish foreign ministry is still working to ascertain the identity of the man.

According to reports in the Swedish and international press, the man is 47-year-old Hussein Atris, a former Lebanese-born barber who lived for many years in western Sweden before moving back to Lebanon seven years ago. Atris took Swedish citizenship after marrying a Swedish woman in 1996, Israeli news site Ynet reported.

Atris , who has alleged ties to Hezbollah, was arrested in Thailand last week following a warning from United States about a threat against tourists in the kingdom. According to the Swedish foreign ministry, he is the holder of a Swedish passport.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Thai Police Find Large Cache of Bomb-Making Materials

Thai police have detained a suspect with alleged links to Hezbollah.

Police in Thailand say they have found a large supply of materials for making bombs, following the detention of a suspect with alleged links to Hezbollah

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Thailand: Stockpile of Explosive Materials Found

Police have found more than 4,300 kilogrammes of urea based fertiliser and other materials used for making explosives in a building in Samut Sakhon’s Muang district after the arrest of a middle-east terrorist suspect, national police chief Priewpan Damapong said Monday.

More than 200 police raided a three-storey commercial building in Mahachai area after Atris Hussein, a Lebanese man carrying a Swedish passport who has suspected links to the Hezbollah militant group was arrested at Suvarnabhumi airport on Friday evening. He confessed that explosive ingredients were hidden there, Pol Gen Priewpan said.

He said 4,380 kilogrammes of urea based fertiliser, 260 litres of ammonium nitrate and 400 electric fans were found on the second floor of the building. The police also discovered many pairs of slippers, A4 paper and 400 table fans on the ground floor.

The terror suspect told investigators that the terrorist group had not been planning attacks in Thailand. It just wanted to hide the components in Thailand. They were then to be concealed inside table fan boxes and shipped to other countries, according to the suspect, Pol Gen Priewpan said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Totally Drug-Resistant TB Emerges in India

Discovery of a deadly form of TB highlights crisis of ‘mismanagement’.

Physicians in India have identified a form of incurable tuberculosis there, raising further concerns over increasing drug resistance to the disease. Although reports call this latest form a “new entity”, researchers suggest that it is instead another development in a long-standing problem. The discovery makes India the third country in which a completely drug-resistant form of the disease has emerged, following cases documented in Italy in 2007 and Iran in 2009.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


AP Opens North Korea’s First Western News Bureau

US news agency the Associated Press has opened a bureau in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang. AP becomes the first Western news organization to open a full-time office in the reclusive North.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



China Looks to Establish London as Center for Yuan

The reach of the Chinese currency, the yuan, looks set to extend further abroad after the UK announced it has reached a deal with Hong Kong to establish London as a new hub for the yuan.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Islamic Museum Wants Home in Zone

AN ISLAMIC group has sought land in the capital to build a Museum of Islamic Art and History. The Australian Federation of Islamic Councils last April requested a plot from the National Capital Authority to found an institution showcasing Islam’s contributions to building the nation. Documents obtained by the Sunday Canberra Times through freedom of information show the representative body hopes to exhibit Islamic art, culture and history at the proposed museum. In correspondence with the National Capital Authority, Muslims Australia president Ikebal Patel said the proposed institution would be a valuable addition to the capital’s landscape, educating the nation on the legacy of Islam here, an association that started before white settlement. The letter said Muslim Australians represented about 1 per cent of the population, drawn from dozens of distinct ethnic groups. Mr Patel said the dedication of a museum would help strengthen ties with Is lamic countries, including two of our closest neighbours, Malaysia and Indonesia, as well as the Muslim market — worth billions to the Australian economy each year through education, the halal meat trade and tourism.

The Parliamentary Zone already houses the Centre for Christianity and Culture and Mr Patel said the proposed museum would become a valuable resource in promoting inter-faith cooperation in Australia. “Muslims’ contribution to developing Australia is part of the heritage of all Australians and not showcasing such an important part of a country’s culture and beginning in an appropriate manner is to be redressed in a positive and enlightening manner,” the application said. “The representation of Islamic art and culture and its contribution to science and to society is enormous and showcasing this remarkable achievement in Canberra will be magnificent. “We therefore … formally [apply] for a suitable piece of land in an appropriate location in Canberra under the control of the [NCA].” But the documents appear to show the NCA was unable to allocate land at the time.

According to documents, Mr Patel met with NCA boss Gary Rake and chief planner Andrew Smith in May last year where he was informed that applications for new national institutions should be made to government. “Accordingly, they would need to start discussions with members of Parliament,” the documents said. “We also advised that there may be options to display some of their curatorial material within existing cultural institutions and offered to facilitate introductions to the heads of those institutions.” When contacted by the Sunday Canberra Times, Mr Patel said he was working with government and other stakeholders on the project. Mr Patel hoped funding for an Islamic museum would be sourced from a mix of private and public donations. If successful, the museum would become the second of its kind in Australia after the Islamic Museum of Australia in the Melbourne suburb of Thornbury was given the nod last year. Construction on the Victorian project begins next month.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Kenyan Islamic Group Announces Alliance With Al Shabab in Climate of Nairobi Terror Warnings

NAIROBI, Kenya — An increasingly vocal Islamist group says its leader has been appointed to represent an al-Qaida-linked Somali militia in Kenya, a development that underscores the dangers Kenya faces from Somalia’s insurgency. The statement by the Kenya-based Muslim Youth Center came amid a flurry of warnings from embassies about planned terror attacks in Kenya. The Somali militant group al-Shabab has promised to attack Kenya for its decision to send troops to Somalia in October. The Muslim Youth Center was named in a United Nations report last year for recruiting, fundraising, and running training and orientation events for al-Shabab. An official al-Shabab spokesman did not answer questions about whether the center now represents al-Shabab in Kenya, but a statement published on the center’s blog on Wednesday was unequivocal. “There can be no doubt that Amiir Ahmad Iman Ali’s elevation to become the supreme Amiir of Kenya for al Shabaab is recognition from our Somali br others who have fought tirelessly against the kuffar on the importance of the Kenyan mujahideen in Somalia,” the statement said. The word kuffar appears to be an alternative spelling of kafir, an Arabic word meaning “unbeliever.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



South Africa: Counselling for Fire Boy

The seven year old boy who witnessed his elderly father and his partner being burnt to death in Lindelani, north of Durban, was last week returned to his biological mother.

The boy is undergoing counselling to help him deal with the trauma. He is lucky to be alive after he was rescued by a tenant from raging flames.

The boy’s father, Rafael Zulu, 66, and partner Elsie Dubazane, 62, perished in the fire. The couple was accused of witchcraft and using muti to shield their adult son who ­community members accused of beating to death his 15-year-old daughter on Christmas Day.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



South Africa: Bishop Kills Girl to Increase Church Flock

Johannesburg — The trial of a church bishop, his wife and two others accused of mutilating a 9-year-old girl for muti was postponed by the Alberton Magistrate’s Court on Monday.

Mofokeng allegedly told them to get human body parts that he would mix with muti to help bring people back to the church.

Skweyiya was kidnapped in Katlehong while walking to the shops to meet her mother.

Her body was found in an open veld nearby.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Surfer Bitten to Death by a Shark at South African Beach Dubbed ‘The World’s Deadliest’

Sixth fatal attack at Eastern Cape beach in five years

A surfer has been killed by a shark at a South African beach dubbed the world’s deadliest following a string of attacks. Ngidi Msungubana, 25, died yesterday after being repeatedly bitten as he rode the waves off Second Beach in Port St Johns. Witnesses said he had wrestled with the shark for five minutes as the water turned red around him.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil Celebrates as US Opens Markets for Ethanol

For decades, Brazil had urged the United States to lift its tariffs on imported ethanol. Now, the tariff has expired and Brazilian producers are pleased — even though their capacities to increase exports are limited.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Pakistan: Sayeeda Warsi: Baroness of the Punjab

by Peter Oborne

She may be Conservative Party chairman, but Sayeeda Warsi has never forgotten her roots. Peter Oborne joined the mill worker’s daughter on her mission to help preserve democracy in Pakistan

As the traumatic events of the weekend show all too vividly, Pakistan is one of the most turbulent and unstable countries in the world, and a diplomatic nightmare. But Britain has a secret weapon — Sayeeda Warsi. With her Punjabi heritage, local languages and easy manner, the Conservative Party chairman can reach parts of the Pakistan political system that other government ministers cannot. As I witnessed at first hand last week, David Cameron has licensed Baroness Warsi to operate as Britain’s unofficial envoy. The Tory chairman flew into a first-rate crisis set off by the potentially deadly stand-off between government and military. The defence secretary had just been fired. Within hours she was at the Pakistan foreign office for a meeting lasting well over an hour with Pakistan’s newly promoted — and extremely beautiful — foreign secretary, Hinna Rabbani Khar. Just 34 years old, the University of Massachusetts-educated Khar is the latest st ar phenomenon to hit the Islamabad scene and is suddenly being tipped as a potential successor to Asif Ali Zardari, should the government fall this week.

For the rest of the day, Baroness Warsi spoke by telephone to most of the main players in the Pakistan impasse — her mission being to help defuse the crisis and preserve a tottering democracy. Pakistan has lurched between military dictatorship and democracy since independence 60 years ago. A succession of military coups has meant that never once has power changed hands democratically in all that time — and it is possible that next year’s elections, too, may end up being cancelled. The background to this turbulence is the cold war between the United States and Pakistan, following a series of deadly incursions by the US into Pakistani territory. As a close ally of the United States, Britain’s standing in Pakistan is being diminished — polls show that 82 per cent of Pakistanis regard Britain unfavourably. This was the troubled background to Baroness Warsi’s conversations with President Zardari, his prime minister Yousuf Gilani, and a range of ot her politicians including Imran Khan, the former cricketer turned politician whose Movement for Justice enjoys huge popularity after a surge in recent months. At the end of the day, Baroness Warsi briefed William Hague over a secure phone. “I told him there would not be a coup d’¨¦tat,” she said to me afterwards. “I just hope that I am not proved wrong.”

In between the calls, she gave an interview on Pakistan state television with presenter Moeed Pizada. Baroness Warsi used this media opportunity ruthlessly to reach out beyond Pakistan’s notoriously thin political elite to PTV’s mass rural audience. Elegant in her shalwar khameez, Baroness Warsi lapsed into Urdu, the local language, as she dealt with viewers’ questions. These reflected the concerns of ordinary Pakistanis about Britain’s super-tight visa and immigration controls. Pizada asked her whether, as the daughter of an immigrant herself, she was not betraying her heritage by supporting anti-immigrant policies. She replied that times had changed since her family arrived in Britain in the 1950s, and that it was important to protect jobs for British workers.

Later I asked Pizada about the effect Baroness Warsi had had on her Pakistani audience. He said she was seen as the voice of a new, multicultural Britain and that the interest of viewers had risen sharply after she switched to Urdu, with hundreds of questions coming in. But he added that he was disappointed with the shallowness of her answer when she was asked why Britain did not do more to defend Pakistan’s interests against the United States, which is widely hated in Pakistan. This is sensitive territory for Baroness Warsi because of the British relationship with the US. When I raise the sensitive subject of US drone attacks in Pakistan’s tribal areas, she says: “It’s not for us to answer that. What we have said is that the sovereignty of a nation has to be respected. “Pakistan and ISAF [the International Security Assistance Force] are fighting the same enemy. People who want to destabilise Pakistan are the same people who want to destabilise us.”

Baroness Warsi may be a British minister, but she is also a first-generation Pakistani migrant. Her father, Safdar Hussein, arrived in Britain in 1971 from Bewal, a tiny Punjab vil lage, as a mill worker. Throughout Pakistan she is held up as an astonishing success story for the Pakistani immigrant community and an inspiration for millions. When she wore a shalwar khameez for her first meeting of the David Cameron cabinet in May 2010 the picture was a sensation in Pakistan and across much of the Muslim world. It is this background that gives her the power and authenticity to push the British government message to a hostile audience. She is heard in a different way, even though she sticks to the official line. This gives her the ability to spell out hard truths about religion and tolerance.

After Islamabad we flew to Karachi, where Baroness Warsi headed to the Jesus and Mary Convent, a Catholic school. She told the girls about her background: “My father came from a very poor family. They couldn’t afford shoes. Sometimes when the ground was very hard his brothers gave him a piggy back to get to the fields.” She told the children that the ir aspirations should be unlimited: “Anything is possible. Perhaps a future prime minister is standing among us today.” Upstairs, at breakfast with the Irish nuns who ran the convent school, she heard about the increasing danger on the Karachi streets, the threat of kidnappings and the risk of terrorist attack. “Twenty years ago I used to be able to walk along the beach,” says one nun. “I couldn’t do that now.” Then Baroness Warsi travels to St Patrick’s Cathedral for a meeting with Evarist Pinto, Archbishop of Karachi, who faces a hard job combating a rising tide of hostility to Christianity across Pakistan. He notes she is not carrying a handbag. “My father was a mill worker and I like to stay connected with my roots,” she says. The archbishop talks of the growing persecution of Christians, revealing that church property has been seized in the Punjab.

The baroness offers to ring Shahbazz Shariff, Punjab’s chief minister. “What is the point of bein g in a position of influence if you don’t influence anybody?” she asks. “I should be raising these difficult issues because otherwise I am not committed to faith.” She tells the archbishop she believes in fighting for minorities — whether Christians in Pakistan or Muslims in the UK (a stance for which she has sometimes been criticised by Conservatives in Britain). Baroness Warsi broke down in tears at her next destination — the headquarters of the famous sage Abdul Sattar Edhi, whose private charitable foundation is the nearest thing Pakistan has to a functioning welfare state. He now runs the second largest ambulance service in the world, while his orphanages have rescued countless children. Young women, rescued from the streets, are being taught arts and crafts. Baroness Warsi was cradling five-year-old Zainal — whose father is dead and whose mother is in psychiatric care — when she was overcome by emotion and had to leave the room to dry her tears. Northern, worki ng-class and Muslim, Sayeeda Warsi has evolved a language of diplomacy that is all her own. She takes people with her, rather than dictates. She represents modern multicultural Britain in all its complexity, and she’s a Conservative. She is on her way to inventing a new type of politics for the looming age of authenticity.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Boat Travelling to Italy Stopped

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JANUARY 13 — The Coastguard of Monastir (located on the central coast of Tunisia) foiled an attempt at illegal migration to Italy by stopping a boat with 43 people aboard (including a woman) near the island of Dimas. Migrants, whose age range from 15 to 30 years, come from Tunis, Bizerte, Monastir, Sayada, Mahdia and Metlaoui. Last year, the Monastir Coastguard foiled 24 attempts at illegal migration by boat, stopping 647 people.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Church of England Faces Court Battle by Gay Clergyman Who Claims He Was Blocked From Becoming a Bishop

A gay senior clergyman who claims he was blocked from becoming a bishop has threatened to take the Church of England to court.

Church sources say the Very Rev Jeffrey John, Dean of St Albans, believes he could sue officials under the Equality Act 2010, which bans discrimination on the grounds of sexuality.

He has instructed a leading employment lawyer after being rejected for the role of Bishop of Southwark in 2010.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Music Prize Show Ended in Scandal

Norway’s annual music industry awards show called Spellemannsprisen started off with complaints from top classical artists like pianist Leif Ove Andsnes, and ended in scandal over the weekend, after one winning pop band made a racial slur against their prize presenters. Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK) held a crisis meeting on Monday over whether the slur would have consequences for their production of Melodi Grand Prix, Norway’s run-up to the Eurovision Song Contest.

Local media and online debates were full of coverage and comments on the behaviour of Lars Erik Blokkhus, lead singer in the band Plumbo, which won the Spellemann’s (Artist’s) prize for the hit song of the year, called Møkkamann. “Møkk” in Norwegian means dirt, rubbish or manure, depending on how it’s used, and a “møkkamann” can literally be a “dirty man.”

The band, from the town of Sande in Vestfold County, southwest of Oslo, bounded up on the stage at the prize awards ceremony Saturday night that was broadcast live by NRK from a theater in Oslo, where they were handed their prize by the popular Norwegian hip-hop duo, Madcon, made up of Yosef Wolde-Mariam and Tshawe Baqwa.

And that’s when the trouble began. Blokkhus, speaking for the group, immediately turned to the Madcon men and said (roughly translated) “You know what? When I look at you two, I feel I can call you Møkkamann (the dirty man),” clearly referring to the Madcon duo’s skin color.

Baqwa and Wolde-Mariam initially appeared to go along with what Blokkhus later claimed was his attempt at a joke, but their facial expressions quickly changed, and members of the audience started booing. Madcon walked off the stage in disgust, and the damage was done.

See video of the incident onstage at the Spellemannspris show here (external link, mostly in Norwegian).

Blokkhus, who would likely be dubbed “blockhead” in some circles, seemed to realize his blunder and admitted that “I’m not good and making speeches.” But he went on to read some prepared remarks, accompanied by a band member on the accordion, before the band left the stage themselves in disgrace.

Blokkhus later apologized profusely for his racial slur, but not before another musician from the band Kaizers Orchestra dumped a glass of champagne over him. Blokkhus also seemed to make it worse when he told website VG Nett that “we’re just a band from a small town that’s not used to being here in such a big arena.” That made several commentators wonder what the citizens of Sande thought about being unwittingly included in the blame for Blokkhus’ blunder.

He spent most of Sunday apologizing, and Madcon eventually said they simply wanted to bury the issue and try to forget it. They apologized as well, after Baqwa had slung out an obscenity of his own directed at Blokkhus. Both Baqwa and Wolde-Mariam claimed they’d gotten over the incident “15 minutes after it happened.”

No consequences

NRK, which also broadcasts the annual and upcoming Melodi Grand Prix music competition, nonetheless discussed the issue Monday after what NRK officials “quite strong reactions from both the public, the press and those involved.” Some were speculating that Plumbo may be banned from Melodi Grand Prix, others thought that would be an extreme reaction itself.

NRK ultimately decided to let Plumbo take part in the Melodi Grand Prix show due to be broadcast from Larvik in two weeks. “We decided they had laid themselves flat and their apologies are so credible that all parties have reconciled,” said NRK’s director of entertainment Charlo Halvorsen. “There will be no consequences.” Halvorsen, incidentally, is married to Kristin Halvorsen, the government minister and head of the Socialist Left party (SV), which takes a strong line against racism and discrimination and currently controls the ministry in charge of equality issues.

“We’re really happy,” Blokkhus told NRK. “We’re all putting this behind us and looking ahead.” He added, though, that it had been a rough weekend and that “I’ll think twice” if ever called on to make an acceptance speech again.

Meanwhile, the top prizes at the Spellemann show went to veteran rock musician Jan Eggum, who just celebrated his 60th birthday and won the equivalent of a lifetime achievement award. The Årets Spellemann (Artist of the Year) award went to singer Jarle Bernhoft, who also won the prize for best male artist. Ane Brun won the prize for best female artist.

Around two dozen awards are handed out when Norwegian musicians celebrate themselves, and among them was internationally renowned pianist Leif Ove Andsnes, who won the award for the best classical album of the year. His competitors were other well-known classical artists including Truls Mørk, Henning Kraggerud and Vilde Frang.

But their prize was awarded on a morning radio show on NRK, while some others in the “open class” and hip-hop categories were awarded on other NRK channels. Andsnes and several fellow artists felt that undermined the value of their prizes, and, in Andsnes’ words, “contributed to making the Spellemann prizes irrelevant.” NRK defended its decision to spin off awards presentations, to cut down the televised length of the show.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Race Row Mars Norwegian Music Awards

Norwegian singer Lars Erik Blokkhus angered audience members and TV viewers on Saturday night with an ill-judged remark he made while picking up an award from two black artists at the national music awards. Blokkhus and his band, Plumbo, took to the stage to accept the Hit of the Year award for their hit song Møkkamann, or ‘dirty man’, at Saturday night’s Spellemann awards.

Receiving the prize from hip-hop duo Madcon, Blokkhus said, “When I look at you two, the song suddenly gets a new name: Mokkamann (mocha man).” The clear reference to Tshawe Baqwa and Yosef Wolde-Mariam’s skin colour first caused the pair to laugh, before the joke seemed to sink in and they walked off stage in disgust. The ill-advised one-liner prompted a furious reaction.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Dawkins Resists ‘Muslim-Led Censorship’

I’ve been asked why Islamophobia Watch hasn’t covered the “Jesus and Mo” row at University College London. The reason, frankly, is that I had better things to do with my time than address this concocted controversy. However, on reflection, it’s worth a short post because of the role played by celebrity atheist and anti-Islam bigot Richard Dawkins, which is what attracted coverage of the issue in the national press last week. For those who haven’t followed this, what happened was that the UCL student union’s Atheist, Secularist and Humanist society (ASH) advertised a social event with a cartoon featuring Jesus Christ and the prophet Mohammed sharing a drink at the bar. This was doubly offensive to Muslims, not only because they oppose pictorial representation of the prophet but also because the cartoon compounded the offence by portraying him as drinking alcohol. You can only conclude that ASH are a pathetic bunch of prats who think it’s big and clever to gratuitously insult adherents of a beleaguered minority faith which is already under concerted attack from the racist right.

A number of Muslim students complained about the cartoon and the UCL Union Council asked ASH to remove it. ASH refused, claiming that the principle of free speech was under attack, and launched an online petition condemning the Union Council’s request as a “gross infringement” of the “right to freedom of expression”. A blogger named Alex Gabriel posted a report of the dispute under the title “Atheists face Muslim-led censorship from UCL Union” and this was reproduced by Richard Dawkins on his we bsite. Dawkins opined that the cartoon “could offend only those actively seeking to be offended — which says it all”. In reality, there was no “Muslim-led censorship”, only a request from the Union Council that ASH should remove the cartoon. As a member of UCLU Ahmadiyya Muslim Students Association pointed out: “Of the thirty Union Council members, four are Muslims and none of them were among those who complained to the Union. That some Muslims who are not union council members voiced their offense to the Union cannot be said to be a ‘Muslim-led censorship from UCL Union‘. The only purpose such a title could serve is to further aggravate the situation and raise the hackles of those both for and against the stance taken by UCLU ASH.”

The right-wing Christian Cranmer blog then weighed into the dispute with a piece backing Dawkins that was headed “UCL students forcibly sensitised to sharia”! You might think that Dawkins would find it embarrassin g to find support in such quarters, but not so. Last year he was openly considering the possibility of an alliance with right-wing evangelical Christianity in order to stem the spread of Islam. The most mature response to this attempt to whip up controversy over “Muslim censorship” came from a spokesperson for the Federation of Student Islamic Societies, who told the Guardian: “This is silly — we will not let such crass, insensitive actions get in the way of the important unifying activities happening across campuses nationwide.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Inequality in Wealthy States Rises, Diseases Decline: WHO

Social inequality in wealthy nations is increasing while in parts of the developing world many diseases are on the wane, Margaret Chan, head of the World Health Organization said Monday. “In some wealthy countries, the difference in the quality of life between the older generation and todays youth is the greatest ever recorded,” said the WHO director general, speaking at the opening of the body’s board meeting.

“Last year was a time when many countries realised they were losing their middle classes, the very foundation of democracy and economic productivity,” she said, urging that a commitment to public health must be sustained. In a text version of her speech Chan cited a recent Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development report showing income inequality in wealthy nations has reached the worst levels in nearly 25 years.

“That report further concluded that societies with the least inequality had the best health outcomes, regardless of the levels of spending on health,” Chan said, noting, “money alone does not buy better health.”

She stated: “Those who suffer or who benefit least deserve help from those who benefit most,” but this is not what happened last year, particularly in well-off nations, according to numerous reports. In large parts of the developing world vast inequalities in access to health care also exist, she explained.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Milky Way’s Color is White as a Morning’s Snow

Our galaxy is aptly named the Milky Way — it looks white, the color of fresh spring snow in the early morning, scientists now reveal.

Color is a key detail of galaxies, shedding light on its history of star formation. Unfortunately, since we are located well within our galaxy, clouds of gas and dust obscure all but the closest regions of the galaxy from view, keeping us from directly seeing what color our galaxy is as a whole. “We can really only see 1,000 to 2,000 light-years in any direction — the Milky Way is 100,000 light-years across,” said study co-author Jeffrey Newman at the University of Pittsburgh.

The scientists relied on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which measured the detailed properties of nearly a million galaxies, collecting color images of about a quarter of the sky. They focused on the hundreds of galaxies that were similar to the Milky Way in terms of their total amount of stars and the rate at which they are creating new stars, both related to the brightness and color of a galaxy.

They found on average, the best match for the Milky Way’s color was “fine-grained new spring snow seen in the early morning light, about an hour after dawn,” Newman told SPACE.com. “If you were outside the Milky Way, it’d look white to you. The Milky Way has a very appropriate name.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saturn’s Moon Titan May be More Earth-Like Than Thought

Saturn’s moon Titan may be more similar to an Earth-like world than previously thought, possessing a layered atmosphere just like our planet, researchers said.

Titan is Saturn’s largest moon, and is the only moon known to have a dense atmosphere. A better understanding of how its hazy, soupy atmosphere works could shed light on similar ones scientists might find on alien planets and moons. However, conflicting details about how Titan’s atmosphere is structured have emerged over the years.

The lowest layer of any atmosphere, known as its boundary layer, is most influenced by a planet or moon’s surface. It in turn most influences the surface with clouds and winds, as well as by sculpting dunes. “This layer is very important for the climate and weather — we live in the terrestrial boundary layer,” said study lead author Benjamin Charnay, a planetary scientist at France’s National Center of Scientific Research.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120115

USA
» Jon M. Huntsman Jr. Says He is Quitting G.O.P. Race
» What if Humans Were Twice as Intelligent?
 
Europe and the EU
» Anti-White Assault-Robbery — African Gang in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
» Brussels: Muslim Majority by 2030
» Germany: Five Siblings Suspected of Killing Kurdish Woman
» UK Faces EU Re-Negotiation Over Scottish Independence Fight
» UK: Driver Gets £110 ($168) Parking Fine as He Helps Give First Aid to Motorbike Crash Victim
» UK: Sandra is Kicked Off Her Course After Race Comments
 
North Africa
» Out of Options in Egypt
 
Middle East
» Any Conflict on Iran is a Direct Threat to Russia’s Security — Rogozin
» Keeping the Straits of Hormuz Open: New Weapons System to Counter Swarm Attacks
 
Russia
» Failed Russian Mars Probe Crashes Into Pacific Ocean: Reports
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» South Africa: Two Held for Suspected Muti-Murder
 
Immigration
» France Expels Record Number of Illegal Immigrants
» Tunisian Asylum Seekers Terrorise Swiss Town
 
Culture Wars
» EU Threatens to Withhold Financial Support From Hungary Over Definition of Marriage: Report
» Socialist Political Party in the Spanish City of Merida Has Asked the Government to Prohibit a Pro-Life Play
» Why Gay Parents May be the Best Parents

USA


Jon M. Huntsman Jr. Says He is Quitting G.O.P. Race

Jon M. Huntsman Jr. informed his advisers on Sunday that he intends to drop out of the Republican presidential race, ending his candidacy a week before he had hoped to revive his campaign in the South Carolina primary.

Mr. Huntsman, who had struggled to live up to the soaring expectations of his candidacy, made plans to make an announcement as early as Monday. He had been set to participate in an evening debate in Myrtle Beach.

[Return to headlines]



What if Humans Were Twice as Intelligent?

You might someday be much, much smarter than you are now. That’s the hope of neuroscientists focused on understanding the basis of intelligence. They have discovered that the brains of people with high IQs tend to be highly integrated, with neural paths connecting distant brain regions, while less intelligent people’s brains build simpler, shorter routes. But no one knows why some brains construct much longer-range connections than others.

“When the brain mechanisms that underlie intelligence are understood, it is theoretically possible that those mechanisms can be tweaked to increase IQ,” said Richard Haier, a neuroscientist and professor emeritus at the University of California, Irvine, who studies intelligence. For the first time in human history, he said, “the concept that intelligence can be increased is reasonable.”

It’s a titillating thought but, considering the aphorism “ignorance is bliss,” one might wonder: Would it really be better to be brainier? What would life and society be like if we all suddenly became, say, twice as intelligent?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Anti-White Assault-Robbery — African Gang in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg

Public asked to help catch four youngsters seen violently assaulting a passenger on a Luxembourg train

Police have posted footage from a train surveillance camera showing a group of youngsters savagely attack a lone passenger. The horrific incident took place on December 14th 2011 between 22:15h and 23:00h on a train between Luxembourg City and Rodange.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Brussels: Muslim Majority by 2030

On 13 November 2010, the association “La Pensée et les Hommes” organised at the Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB) the conference entitled “A Muslim majority in Brussels in 2030: how best to prepare the ‘vivre ensemble’“?.

Why?

“The demographic explosion expected in Brussels in the next 10-20 years (note: + 170,000 residents by 2018) is a subject of preoccupation, not to say panic, explained Chemsi Cheref-Khan at the time, administrator of “La Pensée et les Hommes”. Although there was unanimity in underlining the urgency and the scope of the measure to be taken to cope with the new requirements in schools, nurseries and skills training, etc., there is also a strange conspiracy of silence with regards to the question of knowing who the new residents of the capital will be.”

For Cheref-Khan, indeed, “very few specialists emphasise the fact that the great majority of the demographic growth in Brussels comes from residents of Muslim faith or culture”.. In the end, this poses questions of “vivre ensemble”.

Source: La Libre Via: Fdesouche.com

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Germany: Five Siblings Suspected of Killing Kurdish Woman

Police in northern Germany think they have found the body of an 18-year-old Kurdish woman who had gone missing in November. The police suspect that the woman’s family abducted her because they disapproved of her relationship.

The young woman, whose body was found in scrubland by the employee of a nearby golf course, had been the victim of a violent assault.

Arzu Ö. had been missing since November of last year and police had already suspected that her five siblings forcibly abducted from her boyfriend’s apartment and possibly killed her. Her four brothers and a sister have been held in custody for months, but refuse to cooperate with the authorities.

Her family, who are of the Yazidi faith, disapproved of her relationship with a young apprentice baker because he was from another faith. German police had recently asked authorities in Turkey, where her family originally come from, for assistance in finding her.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK Faces EU Re-Negotiation Over Scottish Independence Fight

(BRUSSELS) — Britain would have to re-negotiate its EU membership if Scotland voted for independence, senior EU sources told AFP as Scotland and England fight a high-stakes referendum battle. The possible break-up of the United Kingdom made international headlines this week when Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond and British Prime Minister David Cameron clashed on a vote now set for 2014.

Issues include whether Scotland would have to “exit and re-apply” for European Union membership, raising questions about whether it would then have to adopt the crisis-hit euro, unlike London. But lawyers for the EU said an independent Scotland could be treated as one of two successor states, and that a separate seat for Edinburgh would require only a majority vote among member states.

At the European Council, where leaders stage decisive summits, a deal could be “done by the Council, using qualified majority voting and with the required say-so of the European Parliament,” said one of those lawyers. Cameron last month opted out of a re-negotiation of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty on which this guidance is based.

Standard procedure for external accession candidates such as Croatia, which enters in 2013, involves the unanimous backing of all EU governments. There is no doubt within the EU, however, that if Salmond secures a ‘yes’ vote, complex three-way negotiations between London, Edinburgh and Brussels will be triggered — altering Britain’s voting clout and financial relations with the EU.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Driver Gets £110 ($168) Parking Fine as He Helps Give First Aid to Motorbike Crash Victim

A driver was given a £110 ($168) parking ticket as he battled to save the life of a motorcyclist who had crashed.

Anthony Mottram, 51, found the biker unconscious in the middle of the road at a busy junction. He was bleeding and appeared to have a broken ankle.

As Mr Mottram gave the victim first-aid, traffic wardens put a ticket on his Peugeot 806, which was parked on the pavement 20ft away.

Mr Mottram said: ‘I thought the man was going to die and my priority was to save his life. I cannot believe traffic wardens ignored what was happening in the road next to him and chose instead to book me.’

The accident happened last Tuesday night near Mr Mottram’s home in Wandsworth, South-West London. To avoid blocking the road he parked on the pavement.

He said: ‘I saw the rider trapped beneath the motorbike, unconscious and in desperate need of assistance. I rushed to assist him.’

Two ambulances arrived at the scene and the victim, in his 50s, was taken to the major trauma unit at St George’s Hospital in Tooting, South London.

He had recovered consciousness at the scene but his condition now is not known.

Mr Mottram, a prison officer and father of four, said: ‘As soon as it became apparent my assistance was no longer required, I left the scene and returned to my vehicle to find two traffic wardens taking photographs and issuing a parking ticket.

‘I asked them to stop and explained I’d been helping to keep the injured man alive following the accident.

‘They were offhand with me until a policeman came over and explained that I had been helping. They then apologised and said the ticket had already been issued and I should call the council the next morning and they would cancel it.

‘My vehicle was parked out of the way of other traffic using the junction and in the circumstances it was the safest and most reasonable thing I could do given I was first on the scene of the accident.’

He added: ‘There was no way that the wardens could not have noticed the crash. There was an ambulance and police car with flashing lights parked next to mine. It was obvious I was something to do with it as my doors were unlocked and my windows were wound down.’

He contacted Wandsworth Council to cancel the ticket immediately but officials said his appeal would be considered and they would make a decision on February 8. However, after being contacted by The Mail on Sunday on Friday, the council cancelled the ticket.

A spokesman said: ‘It would be totally wrong if this Good Samaritan was penalised in any way for what was clearly a highly commendable act of public- spiritedness.’

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



UK: Sandra is Kicked Off Her Course After Race Comments

A VOLUNTEER was kicked off a training course for using racially-sensitive language.

Sandra Plitt, 59, of Alport Avenue, Colchester, has apologised for using the terms “coloured boy” and “built-in suntan” when referring to black men.

Mrs Plitt apologised for making the comments and causing offence while training to be a volunteer on a youth offender panel.

Mrs Plitt said: “I was not thinking. My black stepfather brought me up and I have a black brother. I have never been called a racist before and I am absolutely not racist.

“I am very sorry if I upset other people and, when they called me, it went right to my gut. I want to apologise, but I don’t feel like I should have been treated like this.

“In the Sixties when I was a teenager, you were told to say coloured and not black.”

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Out of Options in Egypt

Given democracy the Palestinian Arabs chose Hamas. Given democracy the Tunisians chose the Islamist Ennahda thugs. Given democracy the Egyptians chose the Salafists and the Brotherhood

Back during the early days of the Tahrir Square protests I wrote, “59 percent of Egyptian Muslims want democracy and 95 percent want Islam to play a large part in politics. 84 percent believe apostates should face the death penalty. That is what Egyptian democracy will look like. A unanimous majority that wants an Islamic state and a bare majority that wants democracy. Which one do you think will win out? A democratic majority of the country supports murdering people in the name of Islam. Mubarak’s government does not execute apostates or adulterers. But a democratic Egypt will. Why? Because it’s the will of the people.”

Here we are almost a year later and we have gotten the democratic Egypt that anyone who understood the realities of the region should have expected. An Egyptian parliament divided between the Salafists and the Muslim Brotherhood, which is a country divided between the Islamists who want to chop off heads now and the Islamists who think that it’s wiser to consolidate their power before chopping off heads.

The purpose of this article is not to berate the leftists and leftover neo-conservatives who supported the overthrow of Mubarak in the name of democracy. It’s a waste of breath and time. Ideologues who are committed to an ideology that explains the world in a way that seems moral and right do not stop what they are doing just because the consequences are disastrous.

Now they want us to intervene in Syria. Who else wants us to intervene in Syria? The Emir of Qatar, better known as the man behind Al Jazeera, which pushed the whole Arab Spring lie into an international myth to overthrow non-Islamist regimes across the region. The Emir is tipping his hand a little transparently by calling for troops to invade Syria instead of sitting back and letting his Al-Jazeera propagandists do the hard work of selling the West on an independent democracy movement, but the pro-democracy crowd isn’t paying attention.

[Return to headlines]

Middle East


Any Conflict on Iran is a Direct Threat to Russia’s Security — Rogozin

“Iran is our close neighbor, just south of the Caucasus. Should anything happen to Iran, should Iran get drawn into any political or military hardships, this will be a direct threat to our national security,” stressed Rogozin. Dmitry Rogozin, who served as Russia’s special envoy to NATO in 2008-2011, was appointed deputy prime minister by Vladimir Putin

As for Syria, if NATO persists in interfering in its affairs, a catastrophe will be hard to avoid, said Rogozin, talking to journalists on the premises of the Russian mission to the alliance.

“The example of Libya should have cooled everybody down in matters dealing with foreign civil wars,” he said, stressing that this is his personal point of view.

“Syria must be left alone and the sides to the conflict must be assisted in breaking the stand-off and starting negotiations. No one must interfere with Syria. This is dangerous,” added Rogozin.

The West’s attempts to improve democracy in the Middle East and North Africa have resulted in Islamists coming to power. It is now up to the West to decide how comfortable they feel with neighbors who determine their politics with Sharia law, says Rogozin.

“If we add the escalating tensions around Iran to the situation in Syria and the consequences of the Libyan war, then the upcoming ‘scorching’ Arab Summer, which is following the Arab Spring, will hardly be to anyone’s taste.”

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Keeping the Straits of Hormuz Open: New Weapons System to Counter Swarm Attacks

Juliet Marine Systems, Inc., (JMS), a privately funded company, today announced plans to select a weapons integrator for its revolutionary new product, GHOST. GHOST is a high-speed attack craft specifically designed to protect vital waterways like the Straits of Hormuz and to counter threats such as piracy, which is increasing in many areas of the world. GHOST has been compared to an attack helicopter on the water. It uses supercavitation technology and high-performance jet engines to achieve hull friction reduction and high speed. Its large fuel capacity allows for long duration missions and its heavy weapons payload capacity ensures it can be weaponized to meet any threat.

JMS continues to focus on fleet security and has been studying the problem of how to counter swarm attacks for several years. Research indicates future conflicts will happen in strategic littoral waters, requiring naval forces to operate close to shore. Most navies operating in these regions have deployed large ships that are not weaponized or agile enough to protect against swarms of high-speed boats. The GHOST’s unique combination of speed, maneuverability, endurance and payload provide the key ingredients for an outer layer of fleet defense that would engage potential swarming adversaries before they reach their effective attack range.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Failed Russian Mars Probe Crashes Into Pacific Ocean: Reports

A failed Russian Mars probe came crashing back to Earth Sunday (Jan. 15) in a death plunge over the Pacific Ocean, according to Russian news reports.

After languishing in Earth orbit for more than two months, the 14.5-ton Phobos-Grunt spacecraft fell at around 12:45 p.m. EST (1745 GMT) Sunday, apparently slamming into the atmosphere over a stretch of the southern Pacific off the coast of Chile, Russian officials told the Ria Novosti news agency.

“Phobos-Grunt fragments have crashed down in the Pacific Ocean,” Alexei Zolotukhin, an official with Russia’s Defense Ministry, was quoted by Ria Novosti as saying. Zolotukhin said that the spacecraft crashed about 776 miles (1,250 kilometers) west of the island of Wellington, the news agency reported.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


South Africa: Two Held for Suspected Muti-Murder

A traditional healer and his patient have been arrested for the murder of a man whose mutilated body was found in his house in Freedom Park near Soweto, Gauteng police said on Friday

“The nose was cut off and one eye was missing from the body,” Tsinyane said.

“The motive for the murder is still not clear, but community members suspected it to be muti-related.”

Tsinyane said the healer, 39, and his patient, 21, were the last people to be seen with the murdered man.

They were expected to face murder charges in the Protea Magistrate’s Court soon

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


France Expels Record Number of Illegal Immigrants

President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government has made a play for the anti-immigrant voters who may determine whether he wins a second term, saying Tuesday that France had booted out more illegal migrants in the past year than ever before.

Sarkozy’s interior minister added that he wants thousands more expelled this year, along with fewer foreigners legally living in France. Anyone who wants to stay, he added, must shed the traditions that contradict French values.

Interior Minister Claude Gueant lauded the government’s record, saying French authorities expelled 32,912 illegal immigrants in 2011, up 17.5 percent from 2010.

“This result is 5,000 higher than the initial objective decided upon at the start of the year. It is the highest result ever achieved,” he said. The government wants the figure to rise to 35,000 this year, he added.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Tunisian Asylum Seekers Terrorise Swiss Town

It’s been one year since the Tunisian revolution. But Europeans are still suffering from its fruits.

There are only a few of them. [a tiny minority?] But they’re making life difficult for the inhabitants of Chiasso. Chiasso already asked the federal government for help months ago. Tunisian asylum seekers steal, fight, drink on the streets.

…”Since the summer we have had 30 per cent more call-outs. There were 400 incidents involving asylum seekers. Half of them were violent acts,~” says Nicolas Poncini (50), the local police chief. “They no longer just fight among themselves, they also attack the population. They are extremely aggressive. Among themselves too. We have also seen very bloody self-wounds.”

…”I’m afraid that the confrontation between the asylum seekers and the population is getting out of control,” says the local police chief. “In the last few days things have been getting really wild here,” says the director of the reception centre, Antonio Simona (59). The North Africans come home drunk; they fight with the staff. “On Tuesday we had to get the police. Suddenly there were six, seven North Africans standing in front of us and they wanted to attack the officials.”

“It’s only a small group that’s taking us to our limits. Very young men with lots of energy and without employment. They drink, become aggressive,” continues Simona. “I’ve been in the centre since 1998, have seen people from all possible countries come and go, but I have never seen people who disturb the public peace like these Tunisians.”

Source: Blick.ch

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


EU Threatens to Withhold Financial Support From Hungary Over Definition of Marriage: Report

BUDAPEST, January 12, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) — European Union officials are making their disapproval of Hungary’s recent constitutional changes felt by threatening to withhold financial support if it does not remove its new amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman, according to one Hungarian source.

The so-called “Easter constitution” adopted in the post-Communist country last May was a major shakeup for Hungarian politics and an outrage to progressive EU ideology: the document not only supported marriage but declared that the unborn child deserves protection from the moment of conception, and even made special mention of Christianity as lying at the heart of the country’s identity. The document’s discussion of human rights also does not mention sexual orientation, another break from EU priorities.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Socialist Political Party in the Spanish City of Merida Has Asked the Government to Prohibit a Pro-Life Play

“Vidiana: Abortion Clinic,” tells the story of seven pregnant women who plan to have abortions, but change their minds after an eighth pregnant woman convinces them to keep their children. It is scheduled to be shown in the city government’s Alcazaba Cultural Center.

The play’s director, Isidro Leyva, notes that it is “very descriptive, with difficult moments in which it is explained, for example, how abortions are done.”

Representatives of Merdia’s United Left want the government to remove the play from its municipal theater, claiming that it constitutes a “stigmatization of the women who find themselves obligated to carry out this kind of intervention (abortion), which results in the deterioration in the social image of women who submit to an absolutely legal procedure.”

They also complain that the hosting of the work by the city constitutes “the establishment of a series of moral judgments that do not at all correspond to public administration.”

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Why Gay Parents May be the Best Parents

Gay marriage, and especially gay parenting, has been in the cross hairs in recent days. On Jan. 6, Republican presidential hopeful Rick Santorum told a New Hampshire audience that children are better off with a father in prison than being raised in a home with lesbian parents and no father at all. And last Monday (Jan. 9), Pope Benedict called gay marriage a threat “to the future of humanity itself,” citing the need for children to have heterosexual homes.

But research on families headed by gays and lesbians doesn’t back up these dire assertions. In fact, in some ways, gay parents may bring talents to the table that straight parents don’t. Gay parents “tend to be more motivated, more committed than heterosexual parents on average, because they chose to be parents,” said Abbie Goldberg, a psychologist at Clark University in Massachusetts who researches gay and lesbian parenting.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120114

USA
» Allen West on the Marines Incident: ‘Shut Your Mouth, War is Hell’
» Emerson: Obama Pass on Radical Islam Hurts
» Interpol: ‘Butt Slasher’ Suspect Arrested in Peru
» Obama Czar Proposed Ban on “Conpiracy Theorizing”
» Scientists: UN Soldiers Brought Deadly Superbug to Americas
» SOPA: What if Google, Facebook and Twitter Went Offline in Protest?
 
Europe and the EU
» Italy: Cruise Ship Costa Concordia: Search for Missing
» Redefining Islam for the 21st Century
» UK: ‘I Think I’ve Blown My Acting Career’: First Black Heathcliff Facing Prison After Racially Abused Pregnant Lover
» UK: A Teacher’s Leg Was Shattered and Her Kneecap Broken in a Classroom Attack by a 10-Year-Old Pupil.
» UK: Hundreds Protest Plan for New Sunderland Mosque
» UK: Harry’s Place Supports Terrorism
» UK: MCB Newsletter — Issue 9
» UK: Man Jailed With Friends for Starting Mosque Fire
» UK: Man Injured in London EDL Disturbance
» UK: New Accrington Police Station Could be Built by Proposed Mosque
» UK: Predator In Sex Case Jailed
 
Balkans
» Kosovo Turns Blind Eye to Illegal Mosques
 
North Africa
» Tunisia: Foreign Secretary [UK] Comments on Tunisia — One Year on From Ben Ali’s Departure
 
Middle East
» Cameron’s Visit to Saudi Undermines William Hague’s Call for Islamic Democracy in the Middle East
» Iraq Civilians Killed and Injured in Basra Explosion
» The Hyprocrisy of Cameron’s Saudi Trip
» U.S. Warns Israel on Strike
» William Hague: “Freedom is Still Flowering in the Arab Spring”
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria: Moslems Sue for Peace
 
Latin America
» Mexico Drug War Deaths Over Five Years Now Total 47,515
» So What’s Changed in Two Years? Staggering Pictures Show How Haiti is Still a Shattered Wreck (Despite Billions in Aid Donations)
 
Culture Wars
» Judge: NJ Church Illegally Banned Gay Ceremony

USA


Allen West on the Marines Incident: ‘Shut Your Mouth, War is Hell’

“I have sat back and assessed the incident with the video of our Marines urinating on Taliban corpses. I do not recall any self-righteous indignation when our Delta snipers Shugart and Gordon had their bodies dragged through Mogadishu. Neither do I recall media outrage and condemnation of our Blackwater security contractors being killed, their bodies burned, and hung from a bridge in Fallujah.

“All these over-emotional pundits and armchair quarterbacks need to chill. Does anyone remember the two Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division who were beheaded and gutted in Iraq?

“The Marines were wrong. Give them a maximum punishment under field grade level Article 15 (non-judicial punishment), place a General Officer level letter of reprimand in their personnel file, and have them in full dress uniform stand before their Battalion, each personally apologize to God, Country, and Corps videotaped and conclude by singing the full US Marine Corps Hymn without a teleprompter.

“As for everyone else, unless you have been shot at by the Taliban, shut your mouth, war is hell.”

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Emerson: Obama Pass on Radical Islam Hurts

By: Henry J. Reske and John Bachman

President Barack Obama refusal to admit that America’s real enemy isn’t al-Qaida but radical Islam legitimizes groups that believe there is a conspiracy against Muslims, leading terrorism and national security expert Steve Emerson tells Newsmax.TV.

Emerson charged that Obama had taken the easy path by identifying al-Qaida and not confronting the larger issue.

“Mr. Obama, before he was president and as president, only says that al-Qaida is the enemy that’s it,” the Newsmax contributor said. “Al-Qaida isn’t the enemy. Al-Qaida is a subset of the enemy. Radical Islam is the enemy and they won’t admit that. There’s a big issue here.

“What they’re doing is essentially legitimizing the whole spectrum of Muslim Brotherhood groups that dominate the radical world that believe that there is a conspiracy against Islam. … This delusional notion that somehow the West is involved in a war against Islam since 1095 the year of the first Crusades.”

Emerson noted that while al-Qaida remains a major threat overseas, it has not been involved in the majority of attempted attacks in the United States, something the administration refuses to acknowledge.

“There’s been an exponential growth in the number of individual attacks — planned attacks — not orchestrated by al-Qaida or any group, but people who are what they call lone wolves or radicalized, whatever,” he said. “The real bottom line is that al-Qaida is really no longer the major issue in terms of … the United States. Seventy percent of all planned Islamic attacks in the last 5 years have not been orchestrated by a-Qaida. And yet this administration won’t utter the term radical Islam. It says the only problem’s al-Qaida.”

Emerson rejected arguments by some in the Islamic community that many of the threats should not be taken seriously and that the perpetrators are troubled individuals.

“It’s funny,” he said. “If the United States does something like four soldiers urinate on Taliban corpses, it’s exemplary of the entire U.S. military by these same Islamic leaders,” he said. “But if a militant Muslim terrorist plans an attack here, somehow he’s deranged and not motivated by radical Islam. These people are apologists.”

“When you say Muslim pushback, pushback is by the Muslim Brotherhood front groups’ infrastructure in the United States. They dominate 99 percent of the leadership here, unfortunately. So they disenfranchise a lot of moderates. Unfortunately, as is the case overseas, they’ve got the money, the organization, they were here first in 1963, set up organizational front groups, grew all around the country, and now they under the cover of being Islamic civil rights groups like CAIR: the Council on American Islamic Relations.”

On other issues, Emerson said:…

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



Interpol: ‘Butt Slasher’ Suspect Arrested in Peru

WASHINGTON — Interpol says the man suspected of slashing women’s behinds while they were shopping in Fairfax County stores has been captured in Peru.

An Interpol official in Peru tells WTOP Johnny Pimentel, 40, was arrested Friday in a Lima mall. He was arrested by Peruvian police by request of Fairfax County police. He is currently being held there.

Fairfax County Police say they do not have the details of the arrest.

“The work isn’t over, though, since this is one step in a process that will likely take considerable time to complete,” says police spokesperson Mary Ann Jennings.

Police say there is a lot of paperwork involved, so the extradition process could take some time, and include working closely with federal and international authorities.

Fairfax County police learned that Pimental had fled to Peru, where he is originally from, in late December.

Peruvian media widely reported that Pimental had returned to his native country.

Nine slashings were reported between February and July of 2011 at malls and shopping centers in the county, including Fair Oaks Mall and Tysons Corner Center. Police believe he used a box cutter or something like it.

There were no serious injuries reported in the attacks.

Police have still not established a motive for the attacks.

           — Hat tip: Takuan Seiyo [Return to headlines]



Obama Czar Proposed Ban on “Conpiracy Theorizing”

Just prior to his appointment as President Obama’s so-called regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein wrote a lengthy academic paper suggesting the government should “infiltrate” social network websites, chat rooms and message boards.

Such “cognitive infiltration,” Sunstein argued, should be used to enforce a U.S. government ban on “conspiracy theorizing.”

Sunstein defined a conspiracy theory as “an effort to explain some event or practice by reference to the machinations of powerful people, who have also managed to conceal their role.”

Some “conspiracy theories” recommended for ban by Sunstein include:

“The theory of global warming is a deliberate fraud.”

“The view that the Central Intelligence Agency was responsible for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.”

“The 1996 crash of TWA flight 800 was caused by a U.S. military missile.”

“The Trilateral Commission is responsible for important movements of the international economy.”

“That Martin Luther King Jr. was killed by federal agents.”

“The moon landing was staged and never actually occurred.”

Sunstein allowed that “some conspiracy theories, under our definition, have turned out to be true.”

He continued: “The Watergate hotel room used by Democratic National Committee was, in fact, bugged by Republican officials, operating at the behest of the White House. In the 1950s, the CIA did, in fact, administer LSD and related drugs under Project MKULTRA, in an effort to investigate the possibility of ‘mind control.’

Sunstein: Ban ‘right wing’ rumors

Sunstein’s paper is not the first time he has advocated banning the free flow of information.

In his 2009 book, “On Rumors,” Sunstein argued websites should be obliged to remove “false rumors” while libel laws should be altered to make it easier to sue for spreading such “rumors.”

In the book, Sunstein cited as a primary example of “absurd” and “hateful” remarks, reports by “right-wing websites” alleging an association between President Obama and Weatherman terrorist William Ayers.

He also singled out radio talker Sean Hannity for “attacking” Obama regarding the president’s “alleged associations.”

Ayers became a name in the 2008 presidential campaign when it was disclosed he worked closely with Obama for years. Obama also was said to have launched his political career at a 1995 fundraiser in Ayers’ apartment.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Scientists: UN Soldiers Brought Deadly Superbug to Americas

Compelling new scientific evidence suggests United Nations peacekeepers have carried a virulent strain of cholera — a super bug — into the Western Hemisphere for the first time.

The vicious form of cholera has already killed 7,000 people in Haiti, where it surfaced in a remote village in October 2010. Leading researchers from Harvard Medical School and elsewhere told ABC News that, despite UN denials, there is now a mountain of evidence suggesting the strain originated in Nepal, and was carried to Haiti by Nepalese soldiers who came to Haiti to serve as UN peacekeepers after the earthquake that ravaged the country on Jan. 12, 2010 — two years ago today. Haiti had never seen a case of cholera until the arrival of the peacekeepers, who allegedly failed to maintain sanitary conditions at their base.

“What scares me is that the strain from South Asia has been recognized as more virulent, more capable of causing severe disease, and more transmissible,” said John Mekalanos, who chairs the Department of Microbiology and Immunobiology at Harvard Medical School. “These strains are nasty. So far there has been no secondary outbreak. But Haiti now represents a foothold for a particularly dangerous variety of this deadly disease.”

More than 500,000 Haitians have been infected, and Mekalanos said a handful of victims who contracted cholera in Haiti have now turned up in Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, and in Boston, Miami and New York, but only in isolated cases.

How cholera landed in Haiti has been a politically charged topic for more than a year now, with the United Nations repeatedly refusing to acknowledge any role in the outbreak despite mounting evidence that international peacekeepers were the most likely culprits. The UN has already faced hostility from Haitians who believe peacekeeping troops have abused local residents without consequence. They now face legal action from relatives of victims who have petitioned the UN for restitution. And the cholera charge could further hamper the UN’s ability to work effectively there, two years after the country was hobbled by the earthquake.

Over the summer, Assistant Secretary General Anthony Banbury told ABC News that the UN sincerely wanted to know if it played a part in the outbreak, but independent efforts to answer that question had not succeeded. He said the disease could have just as easily been carried by a backpacker or civilian aid worker.

Banbury said the UN, through both its peacekeeping mission and its civilian organizations “are working very hard … to combat the spread of the disease and bring assistance to the people. And that’s what’s important now.”

“The scientists say it can’t be determined for certainty where it came from,” Banbury said. “So we don’t know if it was the U.N. troops or not. That’s the bottom line.”

A UN spokeswoman repeated the answer when asked again last week: “The [scientists] determined it was not possible to be conclusive about how cholera was introduced into Haiti,” said the UN’s Anayansi Lopez.

Scientists Trace Cholera Superbug to UN Peacekeepers

But ABC News has interviewed several top scientists involved in researching the origins of the cholera outbreak, and each expressed little doubt that the UN troop was responsible. The reason: A genetic analysis of the strain found in Haiti matches identically the one involved in an outbreak in Nepal in August and September of 2010; The Nepalese peacekeeping troops deployed for Haiti at precisely that time; Two weeks before the outbreak, Haitians had reported sanitary breakdowns at the Nepalese encampment set along a tributary to the Artibonite River, about 60 miles north of the capital Port Au Prince. The next month, the earliest cases of cholera surfaced in the same remote area, from Haitians who had been drinking and bathing in the river.

“The scientific debate on the origin of cholera in Haiti existed, but it has been resolved by the accumulation of evidence that unfortunately leave no doubt about the implication of the Nepalese contingent of the UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti,” said French epidemiologist Renaud Piarroux, whose research on the outbreak was published by a U.S. Centers for Disease Control journal.

           — Hat tip: Takuan Seiyo [Return to headlines]



SOPA: What if Google, Facebook and Twitter Went Offline in Protest?

Companies including Google, Facebook, Twitter, Paypal, Yahoo! and Wikipedia are said to be discussing a coordinated blackout of services to demonstrate the potential effect SOPA would have on the Internet, something already being called a “nuclear option” of protesting. The rumors surrounding the potential blackout were only strengthened by Markham Erickson, executive director of trade association Net

According to Erickson, the companies are well aware of how serious an act such a blackout would be:

This type of thing doesn’t happen because companies typically don’t want to put their users in that position. The difference is that these bills so fundamentally change the way the Internet works. People need to understand the effect this special-interest legislation will have on those who use the Internet.

The idea of an Internet blackout should seem familiar to anyone who’s been paying attention to the debate so far. In addition to a blackout already carried out by Mozilla, hacking group Anonymous proposed the same thing a couple of weeks ago, suggesting that sites replace their front pages with a statement protesting SOPA. That suggestion itself came a week after Jimmy Wales had asked Wikipedia users about the possibility of blacking out that site in protest of the bill.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Italy: Cruise Ship Costa Concordia: Search for Missing

Emergency teams in Italy are racing to rescue those missing after a cruise ship ran aground off the country’s west coast with about 4,000 people on board.

Coast guard vessels are combing the waters around the Costa Concordia, which is lying on its side. Divers are searching its submerged decks.

There were scenes of panic as it began listing on Friday. Most people reached land by lifeboats but some swam ashore.

Three people are confirmed dead. About 70 are said to be unaccounted for.

However, local official Giuseppe Linardi told reporters that some of those listed as missing may still be housed in private homes on the small island of Giglio — where those rescued reached land.

A large gash can be seen in the hull of the luxury liner as it lies on its side, about 200m from Giglio.

Italian, German, French and British nationals were among the 3,200 passengers on board. There were also 1,000 crew.

Some passengers were rescued by lifeboat, helicopters plucked to safety some who were trapped on the ship, and others jumped from the ship into the cold sea.

Some of the survivors are suffering from shock. About 40 people are being treated in hospital.

Coast guard captain Cosimo Nicastro told Italian TV that divers had carried out an extensive search of the waters near the vessel and found no bodies.

But he added that there still might be some “in the belly of the ship”.

‘Delayed drill’

The Costa Concordia had sailed from Civitavecchia near Rome on Friday morning for a Mediterranean cruise when it hit rocks off Giglio late that evening.

Passenger Luciano Castro told Ansa news agency: “We heard a loud noise while we were at dinner as if the keel of the ship hit something.”

Eyewitness accounts

“The ship started taking in water through the hole and began tilting.”

Some passengers told the Associated Press news agency that the crew had failed to give instructions on how to evacuate the ship.

An evacuation drill was scheduled for Saturday afternoon.

“It was so unorganised, our evacuation drill was scheduled for 17:00 (16:00 GMT),” Melissa Goduti, 28, from the US told AP. “We had joked what if something had happened today.”

Passenger Mara Parmegiani told Italian media there were “scenes of panic”.

“We were very scared and freezing because it happened while we were at dinner so everyone was in evening wear.

“We definitely didn’t have time to get anything else. They gave us blankets but there weren’t enough,” she said.

Several passengers compared the accident to the film Titanic, about the sinking of the giant ocean liner in April 1912 which claimed more than 1,500 lives.

“I can easily understand the comparisons to the film, how it must have been on the Titanic, or in a fiction film,” passenger Francesca Sinatra said.

Hypothermia

Some “tens” of British passengers are believed to have been on board, said the UK Foreign Office, which has sent a team to the area.

Rescued passengers were initially accommodated in hotels, schools and a church on Giglio.

[Return to headlines]



Redefining Islam for the 21st Century

Progressive activists in the ‘critical Muslim’ movement are growing in strength and number

When I last logged into Facebook, I was delighted to see a surge of posters featuring a Muslim woman with the tagline “Occupy the mosque”. This does not mean I support the physical occupation of prayer spaces across the UK (especially not when people are praying), but because I believe in dismantling the status quo — a status quo that many British Muslims, especially women, have had to pay a bitter price for. A series of declarations were listed above the poster, including “Women have an Islamic right to hold leadership positions and as members of the board of directors and management committees”, and “Women have an Islamic right to be full participants in all congregational activities.”

As trivial as these rights may sound to the average secular ear, a fast-growing group of Muslim activists have proved their determination to fight for every single one. Campaigning sentiments are slowly spreading beyond the realm of private whinges, and into community centres and Twitter feeds. It goes without saying that progressive activists are still met with stiff resistance, which extends to threats and intimidation in some cases. Kalsoom Bashir, of Muslim women’s consultancy Inspire, related that extremist films were published about her on YouTube after the Guardian documented her struggle for women’s empowerment.

What is new about these critical voices is their level of organisation, and their willingness to collaborate with diverse groups. A prime example is the coalition of religious and non-religious groups who organised a counter-protest against the poppy-burners of Muslims Against Crusades (MAC) on Remembrance Day 2011 (MAC was banned the night before, rendering the counter-protest unnecessary, but that is a moot point). This week I attended the launch of the Muslim Institute’s new quarterly, Critical Muslim, which promises to usher in a new era of organised critical thought on issues relating to Islam and Muslims. Crucially, this criticism is constructive rather than personal. It is underpinned by values such as truth, justice, compassion and wisdom — values that are both Qur’anic and secular. At the very least, contributors share a deep concern about the problems that 21st-century Muslims find ourselves mired in. There is often dissatisfaction with the lack of nuance and insight in traditional religious leaders’ responses, but this is accompanied by a keen awareness of the numerous agendas that often hijack this discussion. While it would be too crude to label them all as “Islamophobic”, many external hijackers do not necessarily have the best interests of Muslims at heart. Social media interactions have the advantage of making these respective intentions clear, sifting the sincere people from the obscurantists.

This brings me to another unique feature of the critical Muslim movement: we are taking control of our own destiny, without allowing external forces to dictate the terms. For example, the recent “Happy Christmas 4ALL” Facebook campaign was an organic response to the frustration of seeing “Muslims ban Christmas” fabrications in the press. It turned into a celebration of the diverse ways in which people of all faiths and none mark the season. One Muslim friend even shared a picture of her Christmas tree, with a twist — it was festooned with the “Ninety-nine Names of Allah”. Actions like these are a testament to the values of the critical Muslim movement. Let us hope that journals like Critical Muslim further entrench open-mindedness, humility and mutual respect.

[JP note: Anything appearing in the Islamic-terrorism-supporting Guardian is suspect from the start. And festooning a Christmas tree with the names of Allah is highly distasteful.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘I Think I’ve Blown My Acting Career’: First Black Heathcliff Facing Prison After Racially Abused Pregnant Lover

He was plucked from the dole queue and thrust into the spotlight to play the first black Heathcliff in the latest film version of Wuthering Heights.

But instead of putting his troubled past behind him, 24-year-old former drug dealer James Howson is again facing a spell behind bars.

Just months after rubbing shoulders with Hollywood stars at the Venice Film Festival, the brooding actor appeared in court on Thursday, admitting he racially abused his terrified former lover and the mother of his three-month-old daughter during a four-month campaign of harassment.

On one occasion, when they refused to let him in to see his daughter, he yelled racist abuse at them. ‘I will smash your head against the wall and there will be no baby .?.?. you ****ing P*** bitches,’ he said.

He also sent text messages to his ex-girlfriend which read: ‘You little P*** slut. If I catch you I’m going to kill you.’

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Teacher’s Leg Was Shattered and Her Kneecap Broken in a Classroom Attack by a 10-Year-Old Pupil.

Diane Whitehead, 53, had to have surgery to pin her leg back together after she was karate kicked by the out-of-control boy.

She could be off work for more than a year recovering from her injuries.

Shockingly, it is the second time Mrs Whitehead has been attacked — two years ago she suffered two broken ribs in an assault by another pupil.

Last night union bosses called for more protection for teachers after a rise in the number of assaults in the classroom in recent years.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Hundreds Protest Plan for New Sunderland Mosque

HUNDREDS of objections have been filed against controversial plans for a new mosque.The move by an Islamic centre to submit a planning application for the place of worship has prompted a flood of complaints. Sunderland City Council has already agreed to sell the disused vehicle depot in St Mark’s Road, Millfield, which is hoped to provide a replacement for the “illegal” mosque operating further up the road. Many residents are furious at the plans, with one claiming Millfield will “end up being Mosquefield” and the council has received 623 letters of objection and a petition bearing 1,462 signatures. Lib Dem councillor Paul Dixon, who has been working with the objectors, said the residents had fought a “clean campaign” and stressed their objections were not based on racism or Islamophobia. “All credit has to go to the residents on this, and it’s been a difficult time for them to get all the objections in,” he said. “People are concerned about noise, traffic and parking. There’s also the impact on the character of the area.”

Coun Dixon said the mosque, which would include a new frontage with two domed columns, would be out of keeping with the 1900s artisan cottages in the area. He said prayer times — which can take place in the early hours of the morning — were also a concern. He added: “It’s next to a nursing home. I understand the residents and manager have objected and is near a lot of elderly people’s homes.” The councillor said residents had “taken stick from all sides”, including extreme right-wing groups and people at the council. He said Millfield was a multi-ethnic, multi-faith area and the mosque plans risks “upsetting the balance”. The proposals include 20 parking spaces, separate male and female entrances and prayer areas, a library and social services facilities, washing and toilet facilities and a body preparation area.

The application was submitted by Mazhar Mahmood on behalf of the Pakistani Islamic Centre. The Echo was unable to contact anyone from the group. So far, there have been three letters in favour of the development. One supporter, Ahmed Salim, said the new mosque would allow a multicultural society to flourish, and provide services lacking in the area.

Christine Spoor, who lives off Hylton Street, said there were already three mosques in the area, including the present centre in St Mark’s Road, which is operating without planning permission. “It will end up being mosquefield, not Millfield,” she said. Ms Spoor said she was concerned about noise, parking and traffic — particularly highway safety — and fears mosque parking could open the floodgates for illegal parking by passengers using the Metro station. She said: “I understand there’s going to be a morgue there. You can’t predict when someone is going to pass away, so they will want to have access at all times.”

Steven Helens, 43, from Regal Road, vice-chairman of the Millfield Residents’ Association, said: “This development is too big for such a small residential area. There are already issues with parking and noise from the existing mosque in Millfield.” Paul Carr, 36, a sports science student at Sunderland University, lives with wife Helen, 37, and children Hannah, five, and Adam, 10, in Earl Street. He is concerned about noise and highway issues, and the fact he feels the mosque will not fit with the residential area. Mr Carr said the council had been looking at introducing traffic-calming measures, but he understood these had been put on hold in light of the application. He said: “Does that mean the mosque is more important than my kids’ safety? That’s what I’m taking it as.” A spokesman for Sunderland City Council said: “As with all planning applications, interested parties have the opportunity and have been making their representations. This application for change of use of a vehicle storage depot at St Mark’s Road to provide a place of worship will be considered in due course. Details are available at www.sunderland.gov.uk.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Harry’s Place Supports Terrorism

Harry’s Place is a Zionist blog that specialises in witch-hunting politically engaged Muslims, and supporters of the Palestinian cause generally, by portraying them as supporters of violent extremism. Yet last week one of HP’s main contributors, Gene Zitver, posted a piece on the murder of Iranian scientist Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan which concluded approvingly: “Assuming it is the Mossad, their ability to operate like this in the heart of an enemy country is impressive, to say the least.” Yesterday Zitver sneered that in Iran “nuclear science appears to be a notably unsafe profession” and provided a link to his previous post. It’s not difficult to imagine what the response of Zitver and his colleagues would be if Iran’s intelligence service were targeting Israeli nuclear scientists for assassination. Harry’s Place would be furiously denouncing these acts of terrorism and condemning anyone who tried to justify the killings as a terrorist sympathiser. Of course, we’ve come to expect double standards from Harry’s Place. They have loudly called for Raed Salah to be expelled from the UK, claiming that he is an antisemite, but enthusiastically applauded an invitation to the anti-Muslim racist Benny Morris to address a meeting at the London School of Economics. Even so, I was taken aback by Zitver’s open expression of admiration for the terrorist killing of civilians. Hopefully, next time Harry’s Place tries to witch-hunt an individual or organisation from the Muslim community as an extremist supporter of terrorist violence, this will be dismissed as the hypocritical c*** that it plainly is.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: MCB Newsletter — Issue 9

The latest Issue of Network MCB is out! To find out the latest, you can download a copy here: Network Issue 9

Network Highlights:

  • Highlights from the MCB Eid Reception and the Hajj vaccination project
  • An insight into a briefing event on Prevent
  • A full page feature on the Young Muslim Beacon Awards 2011
  • Welcoming MCB’s New Affiliates

And much, much more…!

To pick up your free copy and subscribe to Network MCB, please email: network@mcb.org.uk

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Man Jailed With Friends for Starting Mosque Fire

A BROADFIELD man has been jailed for three years after he and two friends set fire to a mosque. James Everley and his accomplices stole paraffin from a petrol station and then headed to Haywards Heath Mosque. Once there they smashed a window, threw the accelerant inside, started the blaze and fled. Everley, 20, of Broadwood Rise, Josh Morris, 20, of Sussex Road, Haywards Heath, and James Smith, 20, of St Andrew’s Road, Burgess Hill, were sentenced at Hove Crown Court last Thursday. All three had pleaded guilty to theft of the paraffin, a public order offence and arson. They were all jailed for three years. The blaze was started at about 2.10am on Sunday, February 13, last year.

At an earlier hearing, prosecutor Dawn Walmsley said: “The defendants went into a petrol station and stole cannisters of paraffin before heading to the mosque. A window was smashed and an accelerant was thrown inside, which started a fire on a very expensive religious carpet. The person staying at the mosque overnight, to prepare for morning prayer, was awoken by the smoke alarm and managed to put out the fire with a bucket of water. This fire could have developed into a very serious incident with fatal consequences. The group were later stopped by police nearby smelling of petrol.”

After the trio were jailed, Chief Inspector Jon Hull said: “The mosque was occupied at the time this fire was started and it could have had devastating consequences if it hadn’t been put out quickly. Thankfully only damage was caused to the building. Everyone who lives, works or visits Sussex has a right to go about their lives without becoming the victim of a hate crime because of their disability, race, religious beliefs, sexual orientation or gender identity.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Man Injured in London EDL Disturbance

A man was taken to hospital and 15 people were arrested after a fight involving the English Defence League in east London, police say.

Police were called to reports of an assault in Whitechapel Road on Saturday afternoon when EDL supporters travelled to the area after a gathering in Barking.

The fight led to a larger disturbance, at one point involving several hundred people, and bottles were thrown.

All those arrested have been released.

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said the incident began at about 17:00 GMT when there were calls about a “large fight” in the area, which is near to the East London Mosque.

An ambulance was called to assist the injured man and he was taken to hospital. His injuries were said to be not life-threatening.

The police spokesman said passers-by became involved in the disturbance and some bottles were thrown.

Rushanara Ali, MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, said she visited the area after she became aware of police being called.

‘Increased presence’

She said: “I was out visiting constituents when I saw the police cars.

“As far as I could see, the police were doing their job. There were a lot of young people around but the police are very adept at handling these situations.

“What I am saying to people is not to rise to the provocation.

“The police have reassured me that they will have an increased presence in the area.”

Police said the 15 people were arrested to prevent a breach of the peace.

[Return to headlines]



UK: New Accrington Police Station Could be Built by Proposed Mosque

A NEW police station in Accrington could be built on land next to a proposed £4million mosque. Lancashire Police are keen to move from its current Grade-II listed Accrington Road building which is costing the force money to maintain. A £1.5million move to a new building was put on hold last year pending the organisational reviews into frontline policing.

Then provisional plans to rent a property called Castle House adjacent to the existing site were submitted to the council. It is on police owned land and was formerly the road policing unit. Lancashire Police Authority was told that plan would be ‘cost neutral’. Now an alternative option has been added to the equation, with Hyndburn Council saying the police have made inquiries about land between Steiner Street, Portland Street and Frederick Street, off Hyndburn Road in west Accrington.

Part of the land is earmarked for a mosque for 2,500 worshippers. The police station would be built next door to it. Central ward Coun Allah Dad said: “This land was reserved for a mosque. The committee and the community still want it there and there is a demand and a need for it. It was promised in 2009, the funding is there, but there have been delays. I think this is down to a lack of communication and a change in council control. We are waiting for an agreement to be put in place and I’m going to try and make sure it happens. We have only just found about the possible plans for a police station. People don’t want it there and we will campaign strongly against this. We are not against a police station, just the location. This land is reserved for the mosque.” Chief Insp Julian Platt said the site was one of a number of different location being considered. He said: “We are looking for the most suitable site which allows us to best serve the communities of Hyndburn.” A final decision will be made by Lancashire Police Authority.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Predator In Sex Case Jailed

A “PREDATORY” man “saw no harm” in sexually assaulting a teenager from a different ethnic background, a court was told.

Abdul Mehri, aged 25, attacked the girl because he did not think it would transgress his religious beliefs, Bolton Crown Court heard yesterday.

And sending him to prison for six months Judge Steven Everett said: “It is clear to me you were prepared to lie through your back teeth to prevent the jury from rightly convicting you.

The court heard that the offence committed by Mehri would not normally result in a jail sentence. However, Mehri was described as being both predatory and opportunistic.

Judge Everett added: “You saw your victim as an easy target and a way to fulfill your sexual needs without transgressing your religious beliefs. That is patently obvious to me.

“This was arrogant behaviour of someone who believed that if she made a complaint that no-one would believe her. The message must go out to you and others like you that if you take advantage of young women in this way you will go to prison.”

The judge also recommended that Mehri, of Tildsley Street, Daubhill, should be deported to Afghanistan, where he is originally from. He moved to this country in 2005.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo Turns Blind Eye to Illegal Mosques

By Besiana Xharra

An illegal construction boom that has carpeted Kosovo’s cities and villages with unlicensed buildings is not confined to homes and shops. A survey of Kosovo municipalities by Balkan Insight has revealed that more than 100 mosques have been built without planning permission in the past ten years. To date, action has been taken against just one illegal mosque and local authorities told Balkan Insight they are hesitant about committing themselves to removing such buildings in the future. The Islamic Community of Kosovo, BIK, through various funding channels, has been reconstructing 113 war-damaged mosques, as well building as 155 new places of worship, since 1999. An investigation by Balkan Insight can reveal that almost all have been erected illegally. “We have repaired or rebuilt 113 of those [mosques] 218 destroyed during the war,” says Sabri Bajgora of the BIK. “Besides those, we have also built another 155 news mosques by the end of 2010, and are currently building another 20.” Balkan Insight has researched the situation in Kosovo’s seven largest municipalities: Pristina, Prizren, Urosevac/Ferizaj, Pec/Peja, Djakovica/Gjakova, Gnjilane/Gjilan and Mitrovica. Each town or city hall acknowledged that illegal mosques have been erected under their jurisdiction, especially in rural areas, though some refused to provide exact figures.

Prizren is fabled for its ancient Ottoman architecture, but is now becoming better known for its skyline of garish illegal minarets that have been springing up since 1999. The city council told Balkan Insight that that 70 per cent of the mosques in the city had no planning permission. Kosovo’s Islamic community said Prizren is home to the highest number of mosques in the country, 77. If the municipal figures are accurate, this would put the number of illegal mosques in Prizren at 54. Director of urban planning Sadik Paçarizi said: “Of all religious objects, such as Catholic or Orthodox churches, mosques are those that violate the law most. About 70 per cent of mosques in the municipality have no building permit.” He added that a plan had been drawn up to knock down the illegal mosques but had been shelved pending a resolution of the broader problems of illegal builds in the city.

Gjilan mayor Qemajl Mustafa admits that in his municipality almost all mosques built since the war lack building permits. But he said that since he became mayor in 2007 the situation had improved. “From the time I became mayor, this phenomenon has stopped because we have made an agreement with BIK on this issue,” he said. “Now they apply for permits before starting to build any new mosque,” Mustafa added.He confirmed that no illegally built mosque had been destroyed, however.

In the western city of Gjakova, not a single illegal mosque has been tackled since the end of the 1999 conflict. “The reason I didn’t want to destroy any of these illegal buildings is because such buildings are considered sacred and of benefit to citizens,” Gjakova mayor Pal Lekaj said. The director of urban planning in Peja, Gazmend Muhaxhirim, said he had no figures about illegal constructions but admitted that some mosques had been built without permits. “Some illegal mosques were built since the war but recently builders have started to seek permission from the municipality,” he said. “At the moment we are already dealing with several such applications.” Officials at Ferizaj and Mitrovica declined to comment on the issue.

Pristina municipality told Balkan Insight that it had destroyed one unplanned mosque four years ago while it was still under construction. Despite this action, another illegal mosque was rebuilt on the same site. Muhamet Gashi, acting director of inspections, said that given the city’s overall problems with illegal construction, mosques were not a priority. “We have no plans right now to destroy any illegal mosques as we are awaiting approval of a law on how to handle illegal buildings, and then all illegal buildings, together with mosques, will be reviewed,” Gashi said. “Pristina municipality has given permission for the restoration of mosques, but not for new ones,” he added.The issue is particular sensitive in Pristina as the Islamic community this year has protested about the municipality’s failure to find what they consider a suitable spot for a new city-centre mosque. They complain that their situation is markedly different to that of the city’s small Catholic community. The city hall offered them a prime location for a new cathedral, which opened last year. Muhamet Gashi said that the municipality had already issued the BIK a permit to build on a large plot on the edge of the city centre.

But the BIK has so far rejected this. “The issue has stalled. We don’t have any other places to offer, so we haven’t made any further progress,” said Gashi. Sabri Bajgora said their demands for a city-centre location had nothing to do with the position of the new cathedral; it was a question of ease of access. “The site [offered] near the PTK [Post and Telecommunications] is not good because it is a small site and is not in the centre,” he said. “The best place to build a big mosque remains near Pristina University, in front of the Albanology Institute. This is the best place but we haven’t agreed yet with municipality. We are now waiting for another answer from them, but until now nothing has happened.”

Behxhet Shala, director of the Council for Human Rights, says the reason why Kosovo mayors have not tackled illegal mosques is that it could be construed as an attack on religious freedom. He added that the skeletal Orthodox church in the park surrounding Pristina University has also not been touched since construction began in the mid-1990s. “If that illegal church had been destroyed immediately after the [1999] war, it would have set an example for other illegal buildings and for the BIK too,” Shala said. “Now it is difficult to deal with them.” According to him, however, this issue must be addressed at some point.Sabri Bajgora of the BIK admits that mosques have been built without planning permission. “To be honest, mostly in villages, some mosques are built without permission from municipalities. But no mosque is built without our permission,” he said. Bahri Sejdiu, head of the BIK for Pristina, also admits that most mosques in the city centre have no building permit, but blames the municipality for the omission. “Most Pristina mosques have been built without permission because the municipality sits on such requests for months,” Sejdiu said.

This article is funded under the BICCED project, supported by the Swiss Cultural Programme.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia: Foreign Secretary [UK] Comments on Tunisia — One Year on From Ben Ali’s Departure

Speaking ahead of the anniversary of the fall of the Ben Ali regime, Foreign Secretary William Hague gave a statement. The Foreign Secretary said:

“The events in Tunisia culminating on 14 January 2011 with the departure of President Ben Ali marked the beginning of a new era for the Middle East and North Africa, and showed that the desire for freedom can overcome entrenched and repressive regimes. What happened in Tunisia inspired millions of people across the region to demand freedom for themselves and accountability from their governments. In the past year Tunisia has made impressive progress: introducing greater openness, holding free and fair elections and forming an inclusive coalition government. The UK will continue to support Tunisia’s transition and the crucial work now under way to entrench freedoms and build accountable institutions”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Cameron’s Visit to Saudi Undermines William Hague’s Call for Islamic Democracy in the Middle East

David Cameron’s first Prime Ministerial visit to Saudi Arabia today will not be helped by the news that a Shia protestor has been killed in eastern Saudi Arabia’s Qatif region, in a demonstration calling for the release of Shia political prisoners in the country. His visit also comes at a time when MPs on the Committee on Arms Export Controls demand to know why the Government has continued to sell arms to Saudi Arabia, “given there was some unrest”. Whilst bilateral trade between the UK and Saudi Arabia (worth £15 billion) will be discussed, so too will be human rights and “regional and international issues of common interest” (as reported by the official Saudi SPA news agency). The situation in Syria and manoeuvres by Iran in the Persian Gulf will inevitably top the agenda.

However, it is an opinion piece in the Times today by William Hague, which is the domestic springboard for today’s visit. Hague’s comments state the obvious — but it remains to be seen whether it is well or ill-timed for Cameron to raise the issues of human rights and democracy (albeit in different contexts) with the Saudi royal family. Hague admits that despite it not being ideal that “legitimate concerns” exist since “parties drawing their inspiration from Islam” in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya have done “better at the polls” than their secular counterparts, the democratic choices made by the people should be accepted. He continues:

“We must respect these choices while upholding our own principles of human rights and freedom and urging the highest standards. Trying to pick winners would fatally undermine faith in our intentions and our support for democracy. In standing up for the right of peoples to choose their own representatives at the ballot box, we have to accept their choices and work with the governments they elect.”

It is therefore disconcerting that David Cameron will be discussing the democratic future of Syria and the ousting of President Assad when the Saudis have not only been involved in the crushing of dissent in Bahrain (sending 1,000 troops), but also in their own eastern province. Saudi promises of reform, perhaps comparable to Assad’s, have hardly met expectations either. It exposes him to the charge of hypocrisy — and, most crucially, such a stance compromises the diplomatic successes of the Foreign Office under William Hague (and there have been many). Perhaps Cameron’s diplomatic plan is a passive one: for dialogue to continue with the Saudis, as it did with Mubarak and to some extent Gaddafi, in the hope of the regime fading in due course without an active demand of change and democracy. Meanwhile, the rewards of a Saudi relationship can also be reaped. This approach, although perhaps morally objectionable, has its political rewards. The Saudis, who were the first to issue a strong statement condemning the violent crackdown in Syria by regime forces, did so in the full knowledge of their own hypocrisy. As the Guardian’s Brian Whitaker remarked at the time:

“King Abdullah has shown no inclination towards the “quick and comprehensive reforms” that he is now urging upon Syria; Saudi Arabia has nothing to teach Syria about democracy, and protest demonstrations in the kingdom are totally banned. So the king’s message to Syria betrays more than a little irony.”

Both friendliness towards the Saudis, and an understanding given to Bahrain (unlike other Arab states), foreign policy contrasts Hague’s message of “human rights and freedom and urging the highest standards”. He did after all write today:

“Trying to pick winners would fatally undermine faith in our intentions and our support for democracy”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Iraq Civilians Killed and Injured in Basra Explosion

A suicide bombing using an explosives belt left a number of civilians, including women and children, among killed and wounded western Al Basra, a police source announced on Saturday. “A suicide bomber blew up himself, this morning, targeting civilians heading to Al Khotwa mosque, western Al Basra,” the source told Alsumarianews adding that the explosion led to the death and injury of an undetermined number of civilians including women and children. “Ambulance cars rushed to the incident site and transported wounded to a nearby hospital for treatment and corpses to the department of forensic medicine,” the source declared on condition of anonymity adding that a security force cordoned off the region and blocked all roads leading to it, the source told Alsumaria. Al Khotwa Mosque, situated near Al Basra city on the eastern entrance of Al Zubair District center, was the second mosque built following Al Masjid Al Nabawi in the city of Medina, and the first one to be built outside KSA. Imam Ali Bin Abi Taleb prayed, during Al Jamal battle in 36 AH, at Al Khotwa mosque which bears a significant importance for Shiites who mass up by thousands in the mosque on religious occasions.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Hyprocrisy of Cameron’s Saudi Trip

A year ago, Tunisian strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled Tunisia for Saudi Arabia, thus ushering in the Salafi Spring. No doubt now bored out of his mind, this once stubbornly secular leader is said to have caught religion of the deranged Wahhabi variety propagated by his oil-rich hosts. In turn, the Saudis are preparing to welcome Rachid Ghannouchi — the notoriously humble leader of the even more notoriously moderate Ennahda that now controls Tunisia’s parliament — on a state visit. This week Ghannouchi has been heaping praise on the Persian Gulf monarchies, doing us all the favour of revealing where his true sympathies lie when it comes to issues like religious moderation and its love affair with democracy. Tomorrow in Tunisia, where I happen to be, celebrations for the Jasmine Revolution’s anniversary include an invitation list of what can only be described as a Rogues’ Gallery of Arab despots, including Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika and the Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani. Al-Thani, like Ben Ali, seems to have come over all Wahhabi, having renamed his tiny island’s main mosque after none other than Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, the eighteenth-century ‘reformist’ bigot who perhaps did more than anyone else in Islamic history to ensure the Enlightenment never made it to large swathes of the Arab world.

If all this were not depressing enough, David Cameron is choosing to spend the anniversary of the Salafi Spring not in Tunisia but Saudi Arabia, taking time from his own busy schedule of promoting democracy throughout the Middle East by meeting with Prince Naif. Cameron’s goal: to strengthen Britain’s ties with its main trading partner. In a sideshow to the official welcoming party, Naif’s security forces gunned down peaceful Shia protestors in the Eastern Province, killing at least one. It was the British, we should recall, who funded Ibn Saud, the founder of the Wahhabi kingdom — even sending the RAF to bomb his enemies. The idea, of course, was to make Saudi Arabia dependent on his British paymasters. That worked for a while. But the stinking hypocrisy engulfing Cameron’s trip shows that it’s now the Saudis who have the bankrupt British firmly over a barrel.

Consider William Hague’s announcement in today’s Times that the UK will support the Islamic governments elected in the wake of the Arab Spring on account of them representing the will of the people. ‘It is true that parties drawing their inspiration from Islam have done better at the polls than secular parties and there are legitimate concerns about what this will mean,’ he explained. Leaving aside his lack of concern at the barbaric nature of the House of Saud’s rule, the irony is that the Islamists triumphed in elections in Morocco, Tunisia and Egypt for a reason that Cameron can be sure to avoid discussing as purposefully as he will the shooting incident in the Eastern Province: the Islamist parties, like Britain’s economy, are bankrolled by the Wahhabis.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



U.S. Warns Israel on Strike

Officials Lobby Against Attack on Iran as Military Leaders Bolster Defenses

WASHINGTON—U.S. defense leaders are increasingly concerned that Israel is preparing to take military action against Iran, over U.S. objections, and have stepped up contingency planning to safeguard U.S. facilities in the region in case of a conflict.

.President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and other top officials have delivered a string of private messages to Israeli leaders warning about the dire consequences of a strike. The U.S. wants Israel to give more time for the effects of sanctions and other measures intended to force Iran to abandon its perceived efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Stepping up the pressure, Mr. Obama spoke by telephone on Thursday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and U.S. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will meet with Israeli military officials in Tel Aviv next week.

The high-stakes planning and diplomacy comes as U.S. officials warn Tehran, including through what administration officials described Friday as direct messages to Iran’s leaders, against provocative actions.

..Tehran has warned that it could retaliate to tightened sanctions by blocking oil trade through the Strait of Hormuz. On Thursday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed to punish the perpetrators of the assassination—blamed by Iran on the U.S. and Israel—of an Iranian scientist involved in the nuclear program.

The U.S. denied the charge and condemned the attack. Israel hasn’t commented…

[Return to headlines]



William Hague: “Freedom is Still Flowering in the Arab Spring”

Marking the first anniversary of the Arab Spring, Foreign Secretary William Hague has written about developments in an article published today.

Some are already writing the obituary of the Arab awakening. They point to bloodshed in Syria, clashes in Egypt and attacks on religious minorities as evidence that the revolutions have lost their way.Electoral success by parties rooted in Islam has led some to fear that change may be for the worse. But to say that Arab Spring has turned into cold winter is wrong. Such pessimism misses the extraordinary opportunities that popular demand for freedom and dignity bring, and could lead us to disengage at a time when we need to redouble our diplomatic and long-term support to the region. The Arab Spring was always going to be a long process, not an instant fix. It was bound to take different forms in each country. The staging of genuine elections in countries that have been denied them for decades is significant. But it is what happens after elections that will determine success or failure.

The new governments in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya face enormous challenges as well as sky-high expectations from their people. Having paid a high price for their revolutions, they expect tangible improvements in daily life. As Eastern Europe after 1989 showed, this takes time. One year on, we must steel ourselves for setbacks and crises, such as we see in Syria today, but there will also be great progress in other parts of the region. This is the new reality. But being realistic does not mean losing faith. Far from it: greater freedom and democracy in the Middle East is an idea whose time has come. It holds the greatest prospect for the enlargement of human freedom and dignity since the end of the Cold War.

On the positive side, Tunisia has its first democratically elected parliament since the 1950s, with 24 per cent of the seats held by women. Morocco has held free elections under a new constitution that, for the first time in its history, means a prime minister from the party that won most votes, rather than one picked by the King. Turnout in the first phase of Egypt’s elections was above 60 per cent, compared with 23 per cent in the 2005 elections under the Mubarak regime. Libya has a new government after more than 40 years of dictatorship. Positive reform is under way in Jordan, and Yemen has agreed a political transition negotiated by the increasingly influential Gulf Co-operation Council. Bahrain has begun to take steps to implement the conclusions of its commission of inquiry into the violence last year, although the need for full implementation remains.

We are seeing governments required to be more responsive to the demands of their people. Principles that underpin democracy are beginning to take greater hold, such as the need for popular consent, the right to seek redress, to be protected against arbitrary punishment and to have space for freedom of expression. We have also seen a groundbreaking shift in the willingness of members of the Arab League to show leadership in confronting crises in their midst. These are trends that must be supported. It is in our national interest to see stable and open societies emerge across the Middle East over time.

It is true that parties drawing their inspiration from Islam have done better at the polls than secular parties and there are legitimate concerns about what this will mean. Their success is partly a legacy of the refusal of governments to allow the development of meaningful opposition parties in the past. It may also be part of a tendency to vote for groups believed to have done the most to oppose dictatorship and corruption and to offer basic welfare. Either way, we must respect these choices while upholding our own principles of human rights and freedom and urging the highest standards. Trying to pick winners would fatally undermine faith in our intentions and our support for democracy. In standing up for the right of peoples to choose their own representatives at the ballot box, we have to accept their choices and work with the governments they elect.

Again it will not be easy. But these parties will be under pressure to stick by their pledges to share power and chart a moderate course. The scale of the economic problems they face is monumental. They will have to seek coalition partners and to reassure international investors if they are to meet the expectations of their people. We cannot guarantee that they will take this path, but if they do not they risk angering people who can easily turn to the streets. The true test of these governments will be how they act in office and, ultimately, whether they are prepared to surrender power if rejected at the ballot box and will make a commitment to non-violence. This makes our engagement with them all the more important.

Our most immediate challenge is in Syria, where the killing of more than 5,000 people, combined with horrific accounts of torture and oppression, risk plunging that country into civil war. All our efforts are devoted to strengthening the hand of the Arab League as it attempts to broker an end to the violence, maintaining economic and diplomatic pressure on the regime, supporting the emerging opposition, and pressing for a UN Security Council response as well as the departure of President Assad. A more stable and free Middle East will be the work of generations. We cannot dictate choices and each country has a right to find its own way. We respect the concern for stability, but will always argue that no change — or change at a snail’s pace — can no longer ensure it. We will also be adamant that the erosion of women’s rights would be fundamentally wrong and that attacks on Christian communities are unacceptable.

We will work with all governments in the region committed to reform and will invest time and resources in strengthening civil society: we are already supporting 47 projects in nine countries in the region that support the building blocks of democracy including media freedom, voter education and transparency. We will deepen our Arab Partnership Initiative and our Gulf Dialogue, as well as working for bold support from the EU, World Bank and IMF. We will continue to try with our allies to push forward the stalled peace process between Israel and the Palestinians. And we will resist the efforts of those such as elements of the Iranian regime that back bloodshed and repression in Syria and beyond. Now is not the time to lose faith in the Arab awakening — but to show the same boldness in our thinking as the people of the region have shown in their actions.”

This piece first appeared in The Times newspaper.

[JP note: William Hague is the quintessentially optimistic, Muslim Brotherhood sock-puppet.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria: Moslems Sue for Peace

Imams all over the country urge peace and stability

During the Friday Juma’at prayers held all over the country, various Moslem clerics around Nigeria prayed for the resolution of the ongoing fuel subsidy removal crisis in the country and also urged citizens to live in peace. Despite the strike which was in its fifth day, Bauchi State witnessed massive turnout of Moslems who worshipped peacefully at the Bauchi Central Mosque, as well as at Gwallaga and Kano Road Mosques. The Chief Imam of the Kano Road Mosque, Alhaji Mohammed Isa, preached on the need for Nigerians to refrain from demeaning leaders, adding, that “a people get the kind of leadership it deserves”. He enjoined Muslims to put their trust in God, and attributed the travails of the nation to the handiwork of individuals. “Our over reliance on man has led us to blaming all woes on him. The only way to wipe away our tears is to pray and seek God’s forgiveness in the situation we find ourselves today.”

Security personnel were deployed to various mosques in the city to forestall any breach of the peace. In Sokoto State, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar prayed at the Sultan Bello Juma’at Mosque, while the state governor, Alhaji Aliyu Wamakko, prayed at the Sultan Muhammadu Maccido Juma’at Mosque. In Benin, Edo State, the Chief Imam of Benin Central Mosque, Abdulfatai Enabulele, in his sermon urged the worshippers to continue to live in peace and to put their trust in Allah. In Yola, the situation was the same, as thousands of Moslems performed the Friday prayers peacefully across the state capital and environs. Most of the sermons preached in the various mosques centred on the need for peaceful co-existence among the people of the state. There were also special prayers for peace and prosperity of the state and the nation. At the Yola Central Mosque, the Chief Imam, Ahmadu Bobboi, urged Moslems to live peacefully with one another. “Islam prohibits killing of innocent lives, as well as teaches its followers to live and interact peacefully with their neighbours,” Bobboi said. In Ibadan, attendance in various Mosques was low compared to the past. The Chief Imam of the Ring Road mosque, Alhaji Fadhil Siyanbola, prayed for a peaceful end to the nationwide strike.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Mexico Drug War Deaths Over Five Years Now Total 47,515

On Wednesday, Mexico’s Federal Attorney General’s office (PGR) released figures showing that 12,903 people had been killed in drug-related violence during the first nine months of 2011.

It was the first time official statistics had been released since January 2011 and came in response to a series of freedom of information requests over several months.

The PGR said that the 11% rise was “a significant decrease” on previous years.

In 2009-2010, murders jumped 70%; 2008-2009 saw a 63% rise and there was a 110% jump in 2007-2008.

But with the 2011 figures running just until September, the overall number of murders could be some 16,000.

The PGR said that the violence was concentrated in a quarter of Mexico’s states.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



So What’s Changed in Two Years? Staggering Pictures Show How Haiti is Still a Shattered Wreck (Despite Billions in Aid Donations)

Two years after a devastating earthquake, Haiti is struggling to rebuild its ravaged buildings and hundreds of thousands of victims remain homeless.

The 7.0 magnitude quake on January 12, 2010, lasted only a few seconds but killed around 300,000 people and left more than 1.5million without homes.

Since then, however, reconstruction has been painfully slow, with squalid tent camps housing more than a half a million people in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Judge: NJ Church Illegally Banned Gay Ceremony

A New Jersey judge says the Methodist Church violated a state law in refusing to allow a same-sex ceremony on its property in 2007.

On Thursday, Administrative Law Judge Solomon Metzger said the decision made by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association violated New Jersey’s discrimination laws.

Metzger ruled the pavilion area where the couple wanted to hold the ceremony is a public space and is advertised as a wedding venue without any religious pre-conditions.

The church argued that the pavilion was an extension of its wedding ministry, an argument that the judge rejected.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120113

Financial Crisis
» EU Threatens Hungary Over Refusal to Implement Austerity Policies and ‘Authoritarian’ New Constitution
» Fitch Warns of ‘Cataclysmic’ Euro Collapse
» France Loses AAA-Rating: Source
» Growing Worries in Athens: A Greek Default Would Hit the ECB Hard
» Outrage Against Hungary on the Rise in EU Capital
» Ratings Agency Set to Downgrade France
» S.&P. Cuts France’s AAA Rating, Affirms German Credit and Reduces Portugal to Junk Status
 
USA
» So, You Think You’re Free?
 
Europe and the EU
» Airborne Commuters: EU Project Sees Flying Cars in Europe’s Skies
» Berlin’s Roma Want More Than Toleration
» Dutch — World Leaders in Islamophobia
» Evidence of Most-Recent European Great Ape Found
» France: Man Asked for Coffee — Airline Gave Him Drain Cleaner
» Germans Work Six Weeks a Year Longer Than French
» German Priest Admits to 280 Instances of Child Sex Abuse
» German Scientists Pioneer Revolutionary Digital Storage Technique
» High-Speed Controversy: Massive Rail Project Has Britain Divided
» New Find Reveals Swedes’ Role in Ottoman Sex-Slave Trade
» Norway: Breivik to Get New Psychiatric Evaluation
» Norwegian Film Troll Hunter Tops UK Charts
» Polish Protest Against Winston Churchill
» Public Pressure: Court Orders New Psychiatric Review for Breivik
» Sweden: Malmö Dwellers Forced to Deliver Their Own Mail
» Switzerland Knocks Norway Off Big Mac Perch
» Switzerland: Dad Killed Daughter in Brutal Axe Murder
» Turks in Germany Fear Racially Motivated Murders
» UK: ‘Dumbed-Down’ Degrees
» UK: Black Men ‘To Blame for Most Violent City Crime’… But They’re Also the Victims
» UK: Daily Star Editor Denies Paper Has an Anti-Islamic Agenda
» UK: Expenses for BBC Bosses Rocket by 20% as a Result of Move to Salford
» UK: Hard-Pressed Commuters? Would That be With a Haitch?
» UK: Police Open Twitter Threat File
» UK: Stop and Searches Set to Fall Scotland Yard Tries Improve Relations with Black People
» UK: TV News on Moazzem Begg, Cageprisoners and Terrorism
» UK: Unite Against Fascism Call Emergency Protest Against EDL
» UK: Why the Iron Lady Was the Ultimate Women’s Libber
 
Balkans
» Bosnian Parliament Votes in New Prime Minister
 
North Africa
» Middle East: UK to Support Islamic Governments?
» Middle East: Hague Says Will Work With New Islamic Governments
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» UK Set to Talk Tough to Israel as Abbas Visits
 
Middle East
» British Worker Faces Jail in Abu Dhabi for ‘Insulting Islam’
» Fergie Faces 22 Years in Turkish Prison Over Secret Film of Children Abandoned in Orphanage
» Iran: Penis Tattoo Blamed for Permanent Erection
» Iranian Supreme Leader Blames U.S., Israel for Scientist’s Death
» Local Mosque’s Imam Cut From New Cloth
» Turkey: Fergie Faces 22 Years’ Jail for Secret Film in Orphanage
» US Seeking to ‘Close Down’ Iran Central Bank
 
South Asia
» Four U.S. Marines in Sniper Team to be Charged ‘Within Hours’ Over Video Showing Them Urinating on Dead Afghan Bodies
» India Opens Up Stock Exchange to Foreign Investors
» Thailand: U.S. Embassy Warns of Terror Threat in Bangkok
» U.S. Restores Diplomatic Relations With Myanmar in Response to Reforms
 
Australia — Pacific
» Man to Face Court After Discovery of Remains at Woman’s Ashwood Home
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Al-Shabab Forces Strike Inside Kenya
 
Latin America
» Ahmedinejad Visits Latin America, Washington Implores and Seethes
» Iran, Venezuela Plotting Attacks “Worse Than 9/11”
» Two Years After Earthquake, Aid Operations in Haiti Lack Money
 
Immigration
» UK: Border Agency ‘Sorry’ After Missing Chance to Deport Failed Asylum Seeker Who Went on to Kill Partner and Children
 
General
» Zoologger: Unique Life Form is Half Plant, Half Animal

Financial Crisis


EU Threatens Hungary Over Refusal to Implement Austerity Policies and ‘Authoritarian’ New Constitution

The European Union has stepped up pressure on Hungary over the country’s refusal to implement austerity policies and threatened legal action over its new constitution.

The warnings escalated the standoff between Budapest and the EU, as Hungary negotiates fresh financial aid from Europe and the International Monetary Fund.

Over the past months, the country’s credit rating has been cut to junk by all three major rating agencies, unemployment is 10.6 percent and the country may be facing a recession.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Fitch Warns of ‘Cataclysmic’ Euro Collapse

The European Central Bank should ramp up its buying of troubled euro zone debt to support Italy and prevent a “cataclysmic” collapse of the euro, David Riley, the head of sovereign ratings for Fitch, has warned.

“The end of the euro would be cataclysmic. The euro is a reserve currency,” Mr Riley said overnight. “What would that do in terms of financial and political stability?”

“It is hard to believe the euro will survive if Italy does not make it through,” he said, adding that while many saw Italy as too politically and economically important to be allowed to fail, “one might also argue that it is too big to rescue.”

The warning pushed the euro down towards a 16-month low versus the US dollar.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



France Loses AAA-Rating: Source

Standard & Poor’s has decided to downgrade France’s top-notch credit rating but will spare Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, an EU government source told AFP on Friday. “France loses its triple-A rating,” the source said on condition of anonymity. Standard and Poor’s Corp earlier on Friday declined to comment on rumours on the markets that it was about to downgrade several eurozone credit ratings, as stocks and the euro turned lower after earlier gains. In December, S&P warned that it could downgrade several eurozone countries — including France with its top AAA rating — as the debt crisis cuts growth.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Growing Worries in Athens: A Greek Default Would Hit the ECB Hard

Hopes that Greece can be saved are dwindling. Athens had hoped to reach a deal with its creditors on a 50 percent debt haircut, but banks have now made it clear that efforts to reach an agreement could fail. Should the country go bankrupt, the European Central Bank stands to lose the most.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Outrage Against Hungary on the Rise in EU Capital

BRUSSELS — EU condemnation of Hungary is beginning to gather momentum after its leading party, Fidesz rammed through radical amendments to the constitution, putting democratic standards at risk. Among the European Commission’s primary concerns are the independence of the central bank and the national data protection authority, as well as plans to make judges and prosecutors retire at 62 instead of 70.

“Retirement age is one of the primary concerns of the commission,” commission director general for justice, Francoise Le Bail told MEPs at a debate in the EU capital, noting that it could amount to age discrimination. Several deputies criticised the commission in heated tones for failing to act quickly enough.

Le Bail answered that “the commission as a guardian of the treaty can only act on a very strong legal analysis.” She noted that the Hungarian laws were implemented on 1 January only and that a commission decision on whether to take Budapest to court is expected as early as next week.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ratings Agency Set to Downgrade France

In a major setback for euro rescue efforts, reports on Friday emerged that ratings agency Standard and Poor’s was likely set to downgrade the credit ratings of France and other European Union nations. Following the news, the value of the euro fell sharply.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



S.&P. Cuts France’s AAA Rating, Affirms German Credit and Reduces Portugal to Junk Status

Standard & Poor’s Corp. on Friday stripped France of its sterling credit rating, cut Portugal’s credit to junk status and downgraded Italy’s debt by two steps in a wide-ranging action revision of European countries caught in the euro crisis.

The actions were the strongest signal yet that Europe’s sovereign debt woes were far from over and would pose fresh political challenges for politicians, including President Nicolas Sarkozy of France, as they try to stabilize the problem on the Continent, now in its third year.

A downgrade by a single ratings agency would have an immediate, though not devastating, impact on the countries’ ability to borrow money. S.& P. warned in December that the agency was reviewing the credit ratings of 15 European Union countries because of the crisis. Germany and the Netherlands, which were on the original list, were not expected to receive a downgrade Friday, news agencies reported.

[Return to headlines]

USA


So, You Think You’re Free?

Thanks to big government spending and exploding debt, the United States — and indeed the world — is less economically free today than it was a year ago, according to the 18th annual Index of Economic Freedom, released yesterday by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal.

Economic freedom — the ability of individuals to control the fruits of their labor and pursue their dreams — is central to prosperity around the world. Heritage and The Wall Street Journal measure economic freedom by studying its pillars: the rule of law, limited government, regulatory efficiency, and open markets. Things like property rights, freedom from corruption, government spending, free trade, labor policies, and one’s ability to invest in and create businesses all factor in to a country’s economic freedom.

Sadly, economic freedom declined worldwide in 2011 as many countries attempted — without success — to spend their way out of recession. The editors of the Index explain what has led to this troubling decline:

Rapid expansion of government, more than any market factor, appears to be responsible for flagging economic dynamism. Government spending has not only failed to arrest the economic crisis, but also-in many countries-seems to be prolonging it. The big-government approach has led to bloated public debt, turning an economic slowdown into a fiscal crisis with economic stagnation fueling long-term unemployment.

Though some might think that the United States — the land of the free, the home of the brave — is of course a leader in economic freedom, they would be wrong. The United States fell to 10th place in the world for economic freedom, and its score continues to drop. The U.S. ranked 6th in 2009, 8th in 2010 and 9th in 2011.

Heritage President Ed Feulner writes, “Under President Barack Obama, [the United States] has moved to the back of the band. Its economic freedom score has dropped to 76.3 in 2012 from 81.2 in 2007 (on a scale of 0-100).” The culprit? Government spending, which has grown to a level equivalent to over 40 percent of GDP, and total public debt, which exceeds the size of the economy.

Americans have been feeling the effects of the exploding government and resulting reduction in economic freedom. Some 13.1 million Americans are out of work, the unemployment rate has hovered between 8 and 9 percent, and the economy has merely been plodding along on the road to a very slow recovery. Though 200,000 jobs were added in December, Heritage’s James Sherk and Rea Hederman Jr., write, “At that pace, the unemployment rate will not return to normal levels (or 5.2 percent) for four and a half years-not until September 2016.”

America’s job creators know that it’s the policies emanating from Washington that are constraining their ability to create new jobs. According to a new survey of small businesses by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, more than 80 percent are very concerned about the prospect of new regulations, mandates, and higher taxes. There’s another thing Americans should be worried about, as well: According to the Index, the United States has seen its “Freedom from Corruption” score drop, as well, due to the Obama Administration’s pursuit of increased regulations. As Feulner writes, “Each new edict means a new government bureaucracy that individuals and businesses must navigate. Each new law opens the door for political graft and cronyism.”

The United States isn’t alone in the trend away from increased economic freedom. Canada and Mexico lost ground in the Index, and 31 of the 43 countries in Europe saw reduced freedom, as well. Given Europe’s huge welfare programs and out-of-control social spending, that’s unfortunately not surprising. As the world suffers the economic repercussions of Europe’s debt crisis, the price of pursuing policies that constrict economic freedom should be clear.

[…]

Scroll down this essay to see the good news, some of which includes Oz…

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Airborne Commuters: EU Project Sees Flying Cars in Europe’s Skies

An EU-funded project is developing technology that could make flying cars a reality. But to avoid the inevitable dangers of a crowded sky, researchers are borrowing lessons learned from robots and bats.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Berlin’s Roma Want More Than Toleration

Berlin’s Roma community have been in the capital for a long time, but many continue to live in limbo. Deutsche Welle’s Stuart Braun details their search for acceptance.

I see her almost daily out front of the supermarket, holding up the newspaper sold by the homeless, hoping as much for a donation as a sale. Middle-aged, slight, wearing a headscarf and thick coat, she looks to be freezing and forlorn, but strains a smile when some rare change arrives in her hand.

“I come from Romania,” she says in very broken German. “There was no work, no food for my children.” erlin was supposed to be the land of opportunity. It seems not. She is nodding her head, ruing her situation. Her husband has no job. Tonight she’ll likely spend most of her earnings on overpriced accommodation, sharing one room with her entire family. Even in Berlin, the vulnerable are easily exploited.

This woman is Roma, a people labeled — with the Sinti — the ‘gypsies’ of Europe and the continent’s largest minority. She left a country, like most in Eastern Europe, where Roma are heavily marginalized, often living in ghettos where unemployment is 70-80 percent. But heading west, little changes for these people, as I began to find out.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch — World Leaders in Islamophobia

There were more than 100 ‘incidents’ at mosques in the Netherlands between 2005 and 2010 — far more than in other countries. The incidents are detailed in a new Dutch book about Islamophobia and discrimination. Those responsible for the trouble mostly go unpunished and Muslims often file no criminal reports.

In the 1990s, the Netherlands was known for being extremely tolerant of foreign religions, says Frank Bovenkerk, emeritus professor at the University of Amsterdam (UVA).

“… until surveys suddenly showed considerable animosity towards Islam was developing. The researchers thought: ‘This kind of split with the past isn’t possible’. But it in fact was.”

Then came the attacks of 11 September 2001 in the United States and the murder of Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh by an Islamic extremist in 2004. Dr Bovenkerk blames Dutch politicians for fanning the flames of hostility towards Muslims: “After Van Gogh’s murder, the then deputy prime minister, Gerrit Zalm, said that we were “now at war”. Things went differently in the United States as Dr Bovenkerk points out: “The first thing president Bush did after 9/11 was to visit a mosque because he knew that he mustn’t jeopardise his relationship with Muslim Americans. They were really careful about that there. But in the Netherlands, we went along much more easily with politicians such as Pim Fortuyn and later Geert Wilders, who exploited the aversion to Islam for political gain.”

Incidents

Ineke van der Valk has written a book about Islamophobia and discrimination in the Netherlands. She lists 117 incidents at Dutch mosques between 2005 and 2010. The number in the US was just 42 during the same period. The incidents include arson, the daubing of slogans on walls, vandalism and much more. “A suspect letter containing powder, telephone threats, hanging a dead sheep on the building, with ‘No Mosque’ daubed on the body. Or a pig’s head. Or sheep’s or pig’s blood daubed on the wall …” These incidents happened surprisingly often in small places. Ms Van der Valk thinks immigrants are much more accepted in large towns because immigration has been going on there for much longer.

The people responsible have seldom been found. They’ve not been identified in 99 of the 117 cases. “That makes you think it’s time the police and justice authorities did more about it,” she says.

Internet

Then there’s the Islamophobia on the internet. Ronald Eissens from the MDI registration centre for discrimination on the internet : “In 2011, there were 290 reports of Islamopohobic comments, nearly one-fifth of the total reports of discrimination.” He says that discrimination is becoming increasingly more mainstream on the Dutch-language internet. “It’s moving from the dark alleys into the full light of day, on the popular web forums, which are read by everyone.”

Values

What can be done about the situation? Ineke van der Valk: “You’ve got to get to grips with the social problems which play a role in why people turn to discrimination. People who are victims of crimes perpetrated by Muslims are quicker to discriminate.” You also have to push the openness of society and prize the values of diversity. She thinks Norway set a good example in the way it dealt with Anders Breivik’s attacks. “I think we could do well to learn from that because politicians here are far too inclined to look the other way and hope that the Islamophobia craze will just go away. We’ve got to stand up for what we believe in much more, for what we think is important, for democracy and the rule of law.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Evidence of Most-Recent European Great Ape Found

A team of scientists says hominids lived in Europe as recently as 7 million years ago, based on a discovery in Bulgaria. The find lends credence to the idea that part of modern human evolution occurred outside of Africa.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Man Asked for Coffee — Airline Gave Him Drain Cleaner

A French court on Friday ordered Air France to pay €146,000 ($186,000) to compensate a passenger who said he was served poisoned coffee on a domestic flight in 2006.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germans Work Six Weeks a Year Longer Than French

Germans work six weeks longer each year than their French counterparts — but the European champions for staying out of the office are the Finns, new data shows. Germans rack up an average of 1,904 hours at work each year, while the French put in 1,679 hours, according to a top consulting firm’s list of the hardest working countries in Europe.

French consulting firm COERexecode, used raw data from European statistical agency Eurostat to draw up a list of how hard different nations work. The figures, reported in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) on Friday, relate to average working hours during 2010 and take into account time missed because of illness or otherwise.

Ahead of Germany were Poland, Greece and Hungary where employees worked for around 2,010 annual hours at work put them in second place on the list. But it was Romania who bagged the top spot, with workers there busy for 2,095 hours in 2010.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Priest Admits to 280 Instances of Child Sex Abuse

Germany’s Catholic Church has been hit by another case of clerical sexual abuse, with a priest admitting to abusing three boys between the ages of 9 and 15 some 280 times since 2004.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Scientists Pioneer Revolutionary Digital Storage Technique

The new technique relies on antiferromagnetic materials

Researchers in Hamburg and California have shrunk the physical size needed to store data. However, it will likely be several years before a new class of hard drive can be built using this method.

Researchers in Germany and the United States have built the smallest magnetic storage device in the world, signaling a potential breakthrough for computing.

In a paper published Thursday in the journal Science, researchers from the Institute of Applied Physics at the University of Hamburg in Germany and an IBM research lab in California demonstrated how they could store a bit, the smallest possible piece of digital information, in a set of 12 atoms.

Normally a bit, either a one or zero, would require about one million atoms in one of today’s smallest silicon-based storage devices.

In the new technique, only two rows of six iron atoms on a surface of copper nitride were needed.

The researchers said it could be years before their technique leads to new consumer goods, but once perfected this method could lead to new types of nanomaterials able to store large amounts of information in tiny spaces, and to consume less energy while doing it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



High-Speed Controversy: Massive Rail Project Has Britain Divided

Politicians in the British capital are staunchly in favor of a high-speed rail project that would link London with northern England. But those who live near where the tracks would run aren’t so sure. Though the government gave the enterprise the green light this week, many are hoping to block it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New Find Reveals Swedes’ Role in Ottoman Sex-Slave Trade

The recent uncovering of centuries-old documents has revealed that Swedish ships were used in the Mediterranean slave trade. Up to three quarters of the cargo was women who researchers have suggested were sold as sex slaves.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Breivik to Get New Psychiatric Evaluation

An Oslo court on Friday ordered a new psychiatric evaluation of Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in twin attacks in July, after an earlier and widely contested test found him criminally insane. “Due to the gravity of this case, the criminal responsibility (of Behring Breivik) must be examined again,” Oslo District Court judge Wenche Elizabeth Arntzen told a news conference. Two new experts, Agnar Aspaas and Terje Tørrisen, were named to evaluate the 32-year-old right-wing extremist’s sanity.

In late November, two court-appointed psychiatrists concluded that Behring Breivik was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and should be considered criminally insane and therefore not accountable for his actions. If the finding is confirmed, Behring Breivik, who has confessed to carrying out the deadliest massacre on Norwegian soil since World War II, would likely be sentenced to psychiatric care in a closed ward instead of prison.

The initial report, later supported by an expert panel, was controversial in Norway, with critics pointing to the years of detailed planning Behring Breivik had put in and cool and methodic execution of the massacre.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Film Troll Hunter Tops UK Charts

The Troll Hunter, a critically acclaimed horror mockumentary, has become the first ever Norwegian film to top the British DVD and Blu-ray retail sales charts. Employing the “found footage” device previously used in films like The Blair Witch Project, André Øvredal’s movie tracks a group of students as they join a would-be bear poacher on his hunt for trolls in the forests of Norway.

Released in the UK on Monday, The Troll Hunter sold 16,000 units on the first day alone, according to the Norwegian Film Institute. After four days more than 35,000 copies had left the shelves, 34 percent of which were Blu-ray sales. British distributor Momentum Pictures expects the film to stay on top of the charts over the coming weekend.

Momentum also oversaw the film’s cinema distribution in the UK, where it was shown at 83 different movie theatres. The company is set to launch another Norwegian film, Headhunters, later this year. “It’s sensational that a Norwegian film is at the top of the DVD/Blu-ray charts in the UK,” said producer John M. Jacobsen.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Polish Protest Against Winston Churchill

A ONE-man protest against Winston Churchill is being staged in front of the Polish War Memorial.

Paul Bonowicz set-up his camp on the grass verge of the A40 roundabout in South Ruislip on Wednesday, displaying large banners such as: “Churchill betrayed on the end own most [sic] loyal Allies Poland.”

The Gazette visited Mr Bonowicz, a Pole who has lived in London for 10 years, to find out more about why he had chosen to protest in this way.

He told us: “I am protesting against the lies which were put in British books about Winston Churchill.

“I want to put it right. In English point of view Churchill was big war hero, but I am Polish and we know he betrayed Polish people.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Public Pressure: Court Orders New Psychiatric Review for Breivik

An Oslo court on Friday ordered a second expert opinion on the sanity of confessed killer Anders Behring Breivik. A first report concluded he was insane and incapable of guilt. But public pressure and criticism from experts has prompted the court to reevaluate. Many would like to see him land in prison rather than a mental ward.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Dwellers Forced to Deliver Their Own Mail

As postal workers assigned to the Malmö district of Seved feel too threatened to carry out their duties, the residents themselves will now have to deliver their own post. “You do what you have to do, we have to solve it somehow. And we have no idea how it will work before we have tried, that’s how I look at it,” Swedish Postal Service (Posten) district manager Rolf Weiffert to local paper Skånska Dagbladet.

For months, Seved has been plagued by continuing problems. Threatened postal workers in the area were forced to carry panic alarms and many residents say they don’t dare go out at night. From February 1st, two residents in the area will help authorities deliver mail to some 500 households in the area.

The Posten and Malmö city will be co-operating on the project, which will begin as a 6 month trial project and focus on getting young people engaged in postal delivery, according to the newspaper.

“I’m satisfied,” Anders Malmquist, district manager with the city of Malmö, said. “Young adults get an insight and an understanding of how it is to work in the postal service.”

The two young people who will deliver the letters are currently being recruited. They will be employed for 12 months by Jobb Malmö, a community project, and get introductory education by the postal system, followed by an internship and, the plan is, eventual employment as a postal worker.

The municipality sees the venture mostly as a workforce project to steer the unemployed youth into work life, even if the idea itself stems from criminality and the lack of safety that has come to characterize the area.

The postal service denied that there was a need for new postal worker recruitment, but stated that the there was a danger of the postal service coming to a halt.

Since the police beefed up camera surveillance of the area in December, the number of incidents has decreased, but the district, which has 4,500 residents, has always had considerable social problems.

Half of the population is between 19 and 44 with a majority of foreigners. Less than half of the adults have paid employment and the average income is low. Youth gangs have taken over parts of the town and are engaged in more or less open drug trafficking. In October, one postal vehicle was also subjected to an attempted robbery.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland Knocks Norway Off Big Mac Perch

A burgeoning Swiss franc has helped the Alpine nation dislodge Norway from the top of The Economist’s Big Mac index, a study comparing the price of McDonald’s most famous burger with the cost of living in 100 countries. A Big Mac in the Norway costs 41 kronor ($6.79) compared to an average of $4.20 in the US. This means Swiss burger munchers pay the equivalent of 2 cents more than their Norwegian peers.

“The exchange rate that would equalise the price of a Swiss Big Mac with an American one is SFr1.55 to the dollar; the actual exchange rate is only 0.96,” The Economist says. Sweden trails Switzerland and Norway on the podium for the countries with the most overvalued currencies. From the bottom up, India, the Ukraine and Hong Kong have the most undervalued bank notes.

The Big Mac index is based on the theory of purchasing-power parity, explains The Economist. Exchange rates should adjust to equal the price of a basket of goods and services in different countries, but this is not always the case.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Dad Killed Daughter in Brutal Axe Murder

A Swiss prosecutor has described as a “veritable slaughter” the vicious axe murder of a 16-year-old girl by her 53-year-old Pakistani father, who believed his daughter had tarnished her family’s honour. The charge sheet presented by prosecutor Ulrich Krättli suggests he will call for the accused to be given life in prison, the maximum sentence under Swiss law, when the high-profile case goes to trial on March 14th.

On May 10th 2010, 16-year-old Swera was picked up at a Zurich police station by both her parents. She had been held there by police after she was arrested for a minor theft. Once back at their apartment in Höngg, on the outskirts of the city, a heated argument broke out between father and daughter, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reports.

The girl said she wanted to leave home permanently and started to pack her things. She then went down to the basement of the building to get a pair of shoes. While she was gone, her father allegedly retrieved an axe from the balcony and hid it in the bedroom he shared with his wife.

Once she was back in the apartment, the girl went into her parents’ bedroom to pick up some of her belongings. When she bent down to get some things from the wardrobe, her father hit her with the axe on the back of the head, the prosecutor says. The man struck his daughter 19 times with the axe: 12 times with the blade and seven with the blunt end.

The teenager not die instantly, but lay on the ground in agonising pain for several minutes until her life finally slipped away. The father left the axe between her legs, pointing to the feet, a gesture Krättli does not want to interpret, but that usually has sexual connotations and expresses the motives behind the murder, newspaper Tages Anzeiger reports.

After washing his hands, he left the apartment and called his wife to say he had killed his daughter. Fifteen minutes later, he called the police, who arrested him shortly after near his apartment.

In an interview with newspaper Blick, Swera’s boyfriend explained that the girl’s parents had strongly disapproved of her relationship with him, primarily because he was a Christian. The boy said she was desperate to get away from her parents and had already sought help from a local youth shelter.

According to the prosecutor, the defendant killed his daughter because she had violated his archaic values and had brought shame on the family. Krättli says the Pakistani man had planned the killing “in cold blood”.

The 53-year-old man has remained in custody since the girl’s death. He will be tried in March not just for the brutal killing of his daughter, but also for allegedly trying to kill her three weeks earlier.

On April 20th, the pair had argued after the girl’s father suspected she had been smoking marijuana. Seizing his chance while she was in the bathroom, he pushed her into the bathtub, turned on the tap and threw a hairdryer into the water.

He wanted to electrocute her, the prosecutor alleges, but his attempt failed because of an in-built security system in the appliance to prevent electric shocks upon contact with water. On that occasion, the 16-year-old girl managed to get away before running to a friend’s home in her wet clothes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turks in Germany Fear Racially Motivated Murders

Turkish immigrants in Germany have lost faith in the German state as a result of the murder series allegedly committed by the Zwickau neo-Nazi terror cell, a new study shows. Three-quarters of respondents fear there will be further racially motivated killings.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Dumbed-Down’ Degrees

The number of students awarded first-class degrees has more than doubled over the last decade.

A record one in six graduates obtained the top qualification last year, prompting fresh concerns about grade inflation and the value of degrees.

One expert says that degree classifications are now ‘almost meaningless’.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Black Men ‘To Blame for Most Violent City Crime’… But They’re Also the Victims

The majority of violent inner-city crime is committed by black men, police figures suggest.

But the statistics also show that black men are twice as likely to be victims of such crimes.

Police hold black men responsible for more than two-thirds of shootings and more than half of robberies and street crimes in London, according to figures released by Scotland Yard.

The statistics released under Freedom of Information laws have provoked a debate about the racial make-up of violent crime in the capital.

The data, which provides the ethnicity of the 18,091 men and boys who police took action against in London during 2009-10, looked at both violent and sexual offences.

It found that 67 per cent of those caught by police for gun crimes were black.

Among those proceeded against for street crimes, including muggings, assault with intent to rob and snatching property, 54 per cent were black males.

On sex offences, black men made up 32 per cent of all male suspects, with 49 per cent of those apprehended by police being white men.

The statistics also suggest that police hold black women accountable for a disproportionate amount of violent crime. On knife crime, 45 per cent of suspected female perpetrators were black.

Among those women and girls police took action against for gun crime, 58 per cent were black and in robberies that figure was 52 per cent.

The police statistics relate to those prosecuted — whether convicted or acquitted — issued with a caution, warning or penalty notice.

But they also include a number of suspects arrested by police that the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to charge and those whose crimes were ‘taken into consideration’ during proceedings for other offences.

Unsolved crimes were not included. Just over 12 per cent of London’s 7.5million population is black, including those of mixed black and white parentage, while 69 per cent is white, according to the Office for National Statistics.

But the police figures also show that black men are more likely to be the victims of violent crime, with 832 out of 2,882 of male victims of shootings in 2009-10 being black.

Critics say the figures merely show the continuing prevalence of racism in the Metropolitan Police.

Annual figures show that black people are at least six times more likely to be stopped and searched than their white counterparts.

Richard Garside, of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies at King’s College London, said: ‘Given Britain’s long history of racism and imperialism it should not greatly surprise us that black and minority ethnic groups are disproportionately members of social classes that have tended to experience greater victimisation and to be the subject of police attention.

‘Just because the police treat black men as more criminal than white men, it does not mean that they are.’

But one black politician said the black community needed to face up to major challenges.

Shaun Bailey, a Tory election candidate in London and charity worker, said: ‘The community has to look at itself and say that, at the end of the day, these figures suggest we are heavily — not casually — involved in violent crime. We are also involved in crime against ourselves — and we regularly attack each other.’

The Metropolitan Police declined to comment on the statistics.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Daily Star Editor Denies Paper Has an Anti-Islamic Agenda

Dawn Neesom tells inquiry that tabloid is ‘balanced’ in its coverage, and lawyer Nicole Patterson reveals private investigator Steve Whittamore worked for stablemate the Express for five years after his conviction for illegally obtaining information

Daily Star editor Dawn Neesom has denied that the tabloid has an anti-Islamic agenda, insisting that it is “balanced” in its coverage. Giving evidence to the Leveson inquiry, Neesom was asked about claims by former Star reporter Richard Peppiatt that the title pursued an anti-Islamic agenda at the expense of accurate reporting. She said that the Star “writes stories to be as accurate as possible” and had a “balanced agenda”, promising to provide the inquiry with examples of positive coverage of Islam. In turn she denied that the tabloid had published positive coverage of far-right group the English Defence League. She said that, as a part of a “Jewish-owned company”, the Star had been “concerned” about the possibility of the EDL achieving status as a political party and had not intended to show any support for the group. Several stories run by the Star were detailed in court, forcing Neesom to defend its coverage of Islam and other issues after inquiry counsel Robert Jay QC said the stories could be seen as “way over the line of what is ethical”. A front page headline — “Muslim thugs as young as 12 in knife attack on Brit schoolboy” — was shown by Jay to have in fact been about threats made on Facebook.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Expenses for BBC Bosses Rocket by 20% as a Result of Move to Salford

The expenses of senior BBC bosses have soared by 20 per cent in a year largely as a result of the costly move to Salford.

Executives face fresh accusations of profligacy after spending on rail fares shot up by 57 per cent, while its hotel bill surged by 70 per cent.

Figures, which cover the opening months of the new Media City, show the financial impact of the BBC’s plans to become less ‘London-centric’.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Hard-Pressed Commuters? Would That be With a Haitch?

Transport Secretary Justine Greening has for the moment stopped saying ‘haitch’. On Tuesday, Miss Greening made a Commons Statement about HS2, the multi-billion pound railway she intends to cut through the Chiltern Hills. She called it ‘Haitch Ess Two’. Yesterday, during Transport Questions, she opted repeatedly for ‘High Speed Two’. Perhaps she can now persuade guards on Great Western trains not to refer to ‘carriage haitch’ in their Tannoy announcements. It is southern-nancy-boy of me to say such things, I know, but ‘haitch’ is one of those words that sets southern teeth on edge.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Police Open Twitter Threat File

Police are now investigating three separate allegations of death threats from an antisemitic Twitter stalker who advertised himself as an Ed Miliband lookalike. Shereef Abdallah first targeted a young woman who runs the Julie’s Think Tank blog, which supports liberal intervention in the Middle East. He later threatened a former Labour Party press officer who came to her defence online, and a young British-Israeli woman who challenged him on his use of the word “Nazi” to describe people who disagreed with him. The Labour Party has suspended Mr Abdallah’s membership as a result. The Metropolitan Police said: “Officers from the London Borough of Camden are investigating a possible case of ‘malicious communication’, following allegations of antisemitic comments being placed on Twitter. The victim, a 32-year-old woman, received several threatening messages between November 2011 and January of this year.” A spokesman said: “Officers believe there may be further victims, and enquiries continue.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Stop and Searches Set to Fall Scotland Yard Tries Improve Relations with Black People

The number of stop and searches carried out by the Metropolitan Police is set to fall dramatically as the force aims to improve its relationship with the black community.

Scotland Yard confirmed today that Section 60 orders, which permit random stop and searches, are set to be cut by half.

The decision comes after Scotland Yard Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe described random searches as ‘a real challenge’ for the force.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: TV News on Moazzem Begg, Cageprisoners and Terrorism

Moazzem Begg on terrorism:

I was armed and prepared to fight alongside the Taliban and al-Qaeda against the U.S. and others, and eventually retreated to Tora Bora to flee from U.S. forces when our front lines collapsed…. [I] knowingly provided comfort and assistance to al-Qaeda members by housing their families, helped distribute al-Qaeda propaganda, and received members from terrorist camps knowing that certain trainees could become al-Qaeda operatives and commit acts of terrorism against the United States.

ITV on Moazzam Begg:

A man from Birmingham has been describing his experiences at the controversial Guantanamo Bay detention camp, on the tenth anniversary of its opening. Moazzam Begg, who’s 36 and from the Sparkhill area of the city, was held captive for three years at the detention centre in Cuba, after he was wrongly suspected of terrorism. Last night, the human rights charity Reprieve and awareness group CagePrisoners launched an online timeline of events at the camp.

BBC News interviewed Begg at his desk, with the Cageprisoners homepage on the computer screen in the background:[news clip]

Gita Sahgal on the relationship between Amnesty International and Begg’s Cageprisoners, a subject over which she had been suspended:

There has been a history of warnings within Amnesty that it is inadvisable to partner with Begg. Amnesty has created the impression that Begg is not only a victim of human rights violations but a defender of human rights. Many of my highly respected colleagues, each well-regarded in their area of expertise has said so. Each has been set aside.

The topic of Cageprisoners’ working relationship with Amnesty was itself the subject of a BBC Newshour programme.

Other parts of the mainstream media now follow Amnesty’s lead.

[Comment by reader — Larkers on 12 January 2012 at 7:41 pm.]

It was and remains pellucidly clear that Begg trained to fight for the Taliban and or one of its numerous Islamic off shoots. He has received a payment from the U.K. for his detention by others in connection with these activities following his capture (when he laid claim to “British Moslem” status); this payment is effectively an endorsement from the U.K. on his efforts to attack it or its allies interests. He is currently supported by Liberty and is a privileged partner of Amnesty International, and also receives support from prominent jurists, peace campaigners and opponents of western interventions against tyranny actual or hypothesised. It has been well said that liberal society could not come into being today since it lacks the determination to defend itself. Confirmation.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Unite Against Fascism Call Emergency Protest Against EDL

UAF is organising an emergency protest against the English Defence League in Barking and Dagenham, east London, on Saturday 14 January. The EDL is an organisation of racist and fascist thugs, who particularly target Muslims. They plan to march through Barking as part of its attempts to stir up racism and division in the area. EDL supporters have aready staged a series of demonstrations in Dagenham against a proposed mosque. In September, three thugs were jailed after they tried to smash their way into a mosque in the neighbouring borough of Redbridge, attacking the imam. One of the thugs screamed “EDL” during the violent attack. But people in Barking and Dagenham have shown they are fed up of racists and fascists trying to spread their poison in the area. In the 2010 elections, Barking and Dagenham voters kicked out the fascist British National Party’s 12 councillors and sent BNP leader Nick Griffin packing, with a crushing defeat in the Barking parliamentary seat. Now former BNP members are draining into the EDL — and local antifascists are determined to show that the EDL’s racist and fascist thugs are not welcome in Barking either.

The emergency protest against the EDL will assemble at 12 noon, at Barking Station on Saturday 14 January.

UAF news report, 12 January 2012

See also “English Defence League use Nazi band to promote Barking demo”, EDL News, 12 January 2012

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Why the Iron Lady Was the Ultimate Women’s Libber

Back in 2009 Harriet Harman, the then Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, published Women In Power, a government document for schools that listed the 16 women politicians who had shaped British history. Deliberately omitted from the list was the most important name of all: Margaret Thatcher.

Harman’s petty act of spite exemplifies the unforgiving hatred that feminists still feel for Thatcher. Not all feminists, of course, and not me. But it remains a fact that the first female leader in modern Europe has never been recognised, let alone celebrated, by feminists for her great achievement in breaking through to the highest echelons of power.

[…]

Each time Thatcher entered the Commons, Labour MPs chanted ‘ditch the bitch’. Student organisations took up the anti-Thatcher campaign with relish; eggs, rubbish, even rocks were thrown at her.

Britain’s nascent Women’s Movement had its first public meeting in 1970, but not one of the self-styled feminists denounced the virulent abuse suffered by their sister in Parliament.

[…]

Protestors outside Downing Street sang ‘ding dong, the witch is dead’ when Thatcher resigned in 1990. To some, she remains the wicked witch — the single greatest insult to feminism. For the rest of us, she is the role model that we grew up with — the proof that a woman can be anything she wants to be if she puts her mind to it.

           — Hat tip: Egghead [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnian Parliament Votes in New Prime Minister

Bosnian lawmakers have voted in a new prime minister after more than a year of political stalemate. Vjekoslav Bevanda has told parliament he hopes to attain EU candidate status by year’s end.

Lawmakers in Bosnia and Herzegovina voted to name Vjekoslav Bevanda as their new prime minister, ending 15 months of political gridlock that threatened the country’s fragile stability.

General elections in October 2010 produced a fragmented parliament with no party coming close to having a majority. After more than a year of negotiations, 31 deputies in the 42-seat national parliament voted to back Bevanda.

Bevanda, 55, is a member of the Croat HDZ party. He was finance minister for the semi-autonomous Muslim-Croat Federation from 2006 to 2011 and is credited with stabilizing the region’s finances during the 2008-2009 economic crisis.

Speaking to deputies before the vote, he called on politicians representing Bosnia’s three main communities — Muslims, Croats and Serbs — to “join forces to resolve the economic problems.” He added that “European integration is the only path to the future.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Middle East: UK to Support Islamic Governments?

The British government has claimed it will support the popular Islamic governments elected following Islamic Awakening movements despite earlier calling them “extreme.” The British Foreign Secretary William Hague announced on Friday that his government would support the Islamic governments elected in the wake of popular Islamic Awakening movements while maintaining that the popularity of Muslim political parties was a source of great concern for the British government. “It is true that parties drawing their inspiration from Islam have done better at the polls than secular parties and there are legitimate concerns about what this will mean,” Hague wrote in the Times. Hague’s comments in support of Islamic governments come as the British Prime Minister David Cameron described Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood as “extreme” when he visited Egypt in February 2011 after the Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak was forced out of office. During his visit, Cameron decided to meet non-Brotherhood members of Egypt’s opposition in a bid to reinforce their role after the ouster of Mubarak. “This is not an Islamist revolution, it not extremists on the streets,” said Cameron. Nevertheless, realizing its interests would be in danger, the British government took a reverse approach as Hague pledged to “redouble our diplomatic and long-term support to the region.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Middle East: Hague Says Will Work With New Islamic Governments

LONDON — Foreign Secretary William Hague on Friday pledged to support governments elected in the wake of the Arab Spring uprisings, despite “legitimate concerns” over the rise of parties rooted in Islam. Writing in The Times, Hague argued that the recent success enjoyed by religious parties did not mean the Arab Spring had turned into a “cold winter”, warning that bad governance would again force demonstrators onto the streets. “It is true that parties drawing their inspiration from Islam have done better at the polls than secular parties and there are legitimate concerns about what this will mean,” Hague wrote in Friday’s edition. We must respect these choices while upholding our own principles of human rights and freedom and urging the highest standards,” he added. “The true test of these governments will be how they act in office.” The former Tory leader warned that expressing favour for certain parties or philosophies in the ongoing series of Middle East elections would “fatally undermine faith in our intentions and our support for democracy.” Prime Minister David Cameron avoided meeting with officials from Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood during a visit last year, calling them “extreme”, but london now seems keen to build bridges after the party’s strong showing in recent polls.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


UK Set to Talk Tough to Israel as Abbas Visits

The British government has stepped up its war of words with Israel over settlement building in advance of an official visit next week by Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas.

Ministers have grown increasingly frustrated by what they see as Benjamin Netanyahu’s intransigent position on the issue, which is seen as a serious hurdle to peace in the region.

The Jewish Leadership Council and the Board of Deputies have been called in for a meeting with Prime Minister David Cameron and officials just before Mr Abbas’s arrival on Monday.

The meeting is the first of its kind since the election and has led to speculation that senior members of the Jewish community are being “softened up” for British concessions to the Palestinians or even some form of economic or diplomatic action against Israel. Mr Cameron used this week’s Prime Minister’s Questions to emphasise that he had raised settlements during a New Year phone call with Mr Netanyahu.

Speaking at Bar Ilan University on Tuesday, Middle East Minister Alistair Burt spelt out the UK position in some detail. He hailed the political leadership shown by Israel in recommencing talks with the Palestinians in Jordan. But he said settlement building undermined the belief that this was being done in good faith “because building more and more houses across the Green Line does not show that Israel is absolutely committed to finding a just and lasting solution. It risks sending exactly the opposite signal.” The minister, known as a long-standing friend of Israel, said: “I have to tell you that the absence of progress towards peace, together with the almost weekly announcements of this tender or that planning permission for new building, has a real effect on how the world sees Israel.”

His language reflects a hardening of the UK government’s position on Israeli settlements. A Foreign Office spokesman said: “We are increasingly concerned about settlement building. We will continue lobbying the Israeli government in private and voicing our concerns in public”. However, there are no immediate plans for UK sanctions against Israel if settlement building continues. The hardening of the rhetoric follows a row in Israel over comments made last week by UK Ambassador Matthew Gould condemning new settlement building which he believed had been announced just as the negotiators were meeting in Amman. “This is unhelpful and a disappointment to those who want to see the sides turn a corner,” he said.

It later emerged that the plans for settlements in Pisgat Ze’ev and Har Homa had been part of a long-standing process and Mr Gould had to row back, saying the lack of new tenders for settlements was a “welcome reassurance”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


British Worker Faces Jail in Abu Dhabi for ‘Insulting Islam’

A British engineer is facing a month in jail after he told colleagues in a meeting, ‘When will we finish with the damn mosques?’

The worker, who has not been named, told an appeals court yesterday that he did not mean to insult the Islamic religion.

The British engineer works at the parks and recreation section of Abu Dhabi Municipality, and is appealing against a one-month prison sentence imposed by the Court of Misdemeanours.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Fergie Faces 22 Years in Turkish Prison Over Secret Film of Children Abandoned in Orphanage

The Duchess of York faces 22 years in jail after a Turkish court pressed charges against her for secretly filming in an orphanage.

The charges relate to an undercover documentary Sarah Ferguson made with ITV in 2008 to expose ‘appalling’ conditions in state run institutions.

[…]

Theday after the broadcast, however, the Turkish authorities accused the Duchess of taking part in a politically motivated campaign against theircountry and of deliberately trying to derail their bid to join the EU.

[Note from Egghead: Current royal family members get jewels from Saudi Arabia. Former royal family members get jail time from Turkey — a member of NATO, no less. Guess what happens when the ummah takes over — and current royal family members become former royal family members?!]

           — Hat tip: Egghead [Return to headlines]



Iran: Penis Tattoo Blamed for Permanent Erection

A 21-year-old Iranian man now suffers from a permanent erection after getting a tattoo on his penis, according to a report of his case. he man had the Persian phrase “borow be salaamat,” meaning “good luck with your journeys,” tattooed on his penis. He also had the letter M, the first letter of his girlfriend’s first name, tattooed on it, according to the report.

His condition is medically known as priapism, which is said to occur when an erection is not caused by sexual stimulation and lasts longer than four hours. The condition most commonly happens in boys ages 5 to 10, and men ages 20 to 50. The case report, published Jan. 3 in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, notes that this is the first case of tattooing causing the condition.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iranian Supreme Leader Blames U.S., Israel for Scientist’s Death

Tehran (CNN) — Iran’s top cleric has blamed the CIA and Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, for killing an Iranian nuclear scientist, Iran’s state broadcaster said.

Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, who died Wednesday, was the third Iranian nuclear scientist in two years to be killed by what Iran described as a magnetic bomb attached to his car. A fourth survived a similar assassination attempt.

Roshan’s death shows that “the global arrogance spearheaded by the U.S. and Zionism has reached a deadlock in confrontation with the determined, devout and progressive nation of Islamic Iran,” Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was quoted as saying by the state-run Press TV.

Those responsible will not own up, Khamenei said, but the attack “has been carried out by the planning or support of CIA and Mossad [spy] services, like all other crimes of the network of international state terrorism.”

Khamenei ended his message of condolence with a warning: “We shall persist in punishing the perpetrators of this crime, as well those supporting them behind the scenes.”

Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad sent his condolences Friday to the families of Roshan and his driver, who also died following the attack, the state-run IRNA news agency reported. He pointed the finger at “agents of imperialism and international Zionism,” a reference to Israel.

Other Iranian officials also blamed the killings on Israel and the United States, both of which have accused Tehran of pursuing a nuclear bomb — a claim it denies.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton “categorically” denied any role in the attacks, but urged Iran to halt its quest for a nuclear bomb.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta reiterated that message Thursday, telling troops in Texas: “We were not involved in any way — in any way — with regards to the assassination that took place there.

“I’m not sure who was involved, we have some ideas as to who might be involved… but I can tell you one thing: the United States was not involved in that kind of effort, that’s not what the United States does.”

Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces, said on his Facebook page Wednesday: “I have no idea who targeted the Iranian scientist but I certainly don’t shed a tear.”

Meanwhile, a newspaper aligned with Khamenei called Thursday for the Islamic republic to respond in kind to the killings of its nuclear scientists, suggesting Israeli officials could be targeted.

The editor of Tehran daily Kayhan, considered the organ of Khamenei’s supporters, questioned why Iran should not “exercise its legal right to retaliate.”

Mohammad Khazaee, Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations, said the assassinations of scientists were intended to deprive Iranians of the right to peaceful nuclear energy.

“We believe that these terrorist attacks are supported by some elements — especially within the Israeli regime as well as some quarters around the world,” he said.

Iran says its nuclear program is aimed at producing civilian energy, not weapons. But it has rebuffed international demands to halt its enrichment of uranium, and the International Atomic Energy Agency says it has credible evidence that Iran has conducted weapons-related research.

The IAEA, which serves as the U.N. nuclear watchdog, reported in November that it can no longer verify that the Iranian nuclear program remains peaceful.

The scientist’s death comes as Western powers and Japan are tightening the screws on Tehran.

Japan announced Thursday it was prepared to gradually reduce oil imports from Iran, which supplies about 10% of its crude supply, while U.S.-led sanctions targeting Iran’s central bank are driving down the value of the Iranian currency and driving up consumer prices.

At the same time, U.S. observers say a covert campaign of sabotage appears to be under way against Iran’s nuclear program. In addition to the deaths of nuclear researchers, Iran’s Natanz enrichment plant — where Roshan was the deputy director for commercial affairs — has been hit with a computer worm that Western analysts say has damaged about 10% of the centrifuges used in the enrichment process.

In the face of increased pressure, Iran has threatened to close off the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway at the mouth of the oil-rich Persian Gulf.

It brought down and captured a U.S. surveillance drone over its territory and claims to have arrested a dozen American spies, including an Iranian-American former Marine who was sentenced to death this week. The United States says he was wrongly accused.

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



Local Mosque’s Imam Cut From New Cloth

Over the last decade or so, Asif Umar has practiced an unusual Ramadan tradition. The 27-year-old St. Charles native, who started last week as the new imam at the largest mosque in the area, celebrates the end of Islam’s holiest month by going to a Blues game with his buddies. “He’s a sports junkie,” said Umar’s friend Nauman Wadalawala, a third-year law student at St. Louis University. “Whenever we go to a Cards game, he always has to wear his Pujols jersey. It’s interesting to see this religious scholar, sitting in good seats, with his beard and Cardinals jersey.” Umar, whose parents came to the United States from India in the 1970s, is the first native St. Louisan to lead the Daar-ul-Islam mosque, also known as the Islamic Foundation of Greater St. Louis. He also represents the ascendence of a distinctly American brand of Islam, a new generation of Muslim-Americans who were born in the United States and who spent their teenage years in the often uncomfortable glare of the post-Sept. 11 spotlight.

Immigrant parents of American-born Muslims who once insisted that their children become doctors and engineers have begun relaxing those expectations for a new crop of young Muslim-American scholars who feel drawn to be faith leaders, said Yvonne Haddad, a professor of the history of Islam and Christian-Muslim relations at Georgetown University.

“We’re beginning to have larger numbers of American kids going into Muslim studies and become imams,” Haddad said. She noted a new trend in ads recruiting imams, which once asked for overseas experience in places like Egypt, Saudi Arabia or India. “Now if you look at ads for imams, they ask for candidates who know English, can relate to interfaith groups and communicate with a younger generation,” Haddad said. “They don’t want to lose the younger generation.” Muslims both young and old hope Umar can be that kind of leader.

They see him as a potential ambassador of the faith in the St. Louis region, one who can challenge Islamophobic notions, and instead present Islam as simply another faith on the American landscape.

[…]

[JP note: I don’t buy this new cloth baloney — it is the same old Islam.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Fergie Faces 22 Years’ Jail for Secret Film in Orphanage

THE Duchess of York could face more than 22 years in jail after being charged in Turkey with violating children’s privacy by secretly filming in orphanages.

Prince Andrew’s former wife Sarah Ferguson made the trip to the country in 2008 to make a damning undercover documentary for ITV.

She and her younger daughter Princess Eugenie, who accompanied her, were in tears at the mistreatment of youngsters.

The Duchess, disguised in a black wig and green headscarf, and Eugenie, now 21, saw shaven-headed children tied to beds, or held in makeshift straitjackets in rooms stained with urine and faeces.

The programme led to a diplomatic row between Britain and Turkey, which tried unsuccessfully to have the Duchess extradited or tried in the UK. Britain maintained it was not a crime under our laws and there was no justification for her to face charges.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



US Seeking to ‘Close Down’ Iran Central Bank

“We do need to close down the Central Bank of Iran (CBI),” the official told reporters on condition of anonymity, while adding that the United States is moving quickly to implement the sanctions, signed into law last month.

The sanctions, broadly aimed at forcing Tehran to shift course on its nuclear program, targeted Iran’s crucial oil sector and required foreign firms to make a choice between doing business with Iran or the United States.

Foreign central banks that deal with the Iranian central bank on oil transactions could also face similar restrictions under the new law, which has sparked fears of damage to US ties with nations like Russia and China.

“If a correspondent bank of a US bank wants to do business with us and they’re doing business with CBI or other designated Iranian banks… then they’re going to get in trouble with us,” the US official said.

The measures were contained in a mammoth $662 billion defense bill, which President Barak Obama signed on December 31 at a time of rising tension with Tehran

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Four U.S. Marines in Sniper Team to be Charged ‘Within Hours’ Over Video Showing Them Urinating on Dead Afghan Bodies

All four of the U.S. Marines seen in an outrageous video urinating on dead Afghan bodies have been identified and could face criminal charges ‘within hours’ over the incident, it emerged today.

Two men have so far been interviewed but not detained — and the group could face criminal charges on Friday of bringing dishonour to the armed forces, reported CNN, CBS and ABC News.

The revelations come as University of Southern California military psychologist Eugenia Weiss suggested the soldiers involved may have been ‘stressed’ or ‘pranksters with extremely bad taste’.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



India Opens Up Stock Exchange to Foreign Investors

The Indian government has announced that it will open up its stock markets to individual foreign investors. The aim is to attract more foreign funds and to deepen the capital market.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Thailand: U.S. Embassy Warns of Terror Threat in Bangkok

Thai police Friday were questioning a Lebanese man with alleged links to Hezbollah militants as the U.S. Embassy warned of a “real and credible” threat of a terrorist attack against American citizens in Bangkok.

Deputy Prime Minister Chalerm Yubamrung said Thai authorities received a tip-off before New Year’s of a planned attack, which was said to target Israelis. “At first we were told the Palestinians were behind it but it turned out to be the Hezbollah,” he told The Associated Press. He said police detained on Thursday a Lebanese suspect with alleged links to Hezbollah, an avowedly anti-Israel militant group.

Thai authorities had been “following two Lebanese men and called in one of them … for questioning,” Chalerm said. “Technically the two men have not committed any crimes under the Thai law, so we could only use the immigration law to keep this one suspect in custody,” he said.

Chalerm spoke hours after the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok sent an “emergency message” to American citizens earlier Friday warning of a possible terrorist attack. The message said that “foreign terrorists may be currently looking to conduct attacks against tourist areas in Bangkok in the near future.” It urged Americans to “keep a low profile” in public and to exercise caution in areas where Western tourists gather.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



U.S. Restores Diplomatic Relations With Myanmar in Response to Reforms

The United States restored diplomatic relations with Myanmar on Friday, responding to the new civilian government’s rapid campaign of political and economic changes that most recently included a cease-fire with ethnic Karen rebels and the release of prominent political prisoners.

[Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Man to Face Court After Discovery of Remains at Woman’s Ashwood Home

Hunt for evidence after body found

UPDATE 6.30pm: A MAN has been charged with murder after the apparent discovery of his wife’s body under the decking of their house.

The Ashwood man faced an out-of-sessions court hearing charged with the murder of his wife, after a woman’s body was found at their home today.

Det Sen Sgt Ron Iddles of the homicide squad told the court that that Nasir Ahmadi, 46, had been questioned over the murder of his wife Zahara Ramizadegan, who has been missing for a month, before he was charged.

Det Sen-Sgt Iddles said the body of a woman believed to be that of Ms Ramizadegan was found today when police searched the property at High Street Rd, Ashwood.

They pulled apart a new timber deck and found a grave site underneath.

And after breaking up concrete they found the body of a woman underneath, the court hearing heard.

Sen-Sgt Iddles said Mr Ahmadi had visited the Glen Waverley Police Station on December 18 to report his wife missing.

He said an investigation was started leading to today’s 8am arrest of Mr Ahmadi and the search of his property.

A bail justice remanded Mr Ahmadi to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Monday.

The charges follow questioning of Mr Ahmadi at Crime Department headquarters in St Kilda Rd from 8am today.

Mr Ahmadi earlier this week said he believed his wife had been abducted by Muslim hardliners.

Police today entered the couple’s southeast Melbourne home this morning with rakes and shovels in hand.

By this afternoon, the Ashwood property’s backyard had been covered with a tarpaulin and a small deck had been ripped up, before the discovery of human remains.

Search crews formed a line search along a creek behind the property while a forensic team and several detectives combed through the residence.

Police and forensic officers at the Ashwood property where human remains were believed to have been found. Picture: Andrew Batsch, Leader Newspapers

Ms Rahimzadegan’s husband had reported the 46-year-old mother, also known as Mandy Ahmadi or “Glorious”, missing two days after she vanished on December 16 last year.

Neighbours today said they knew the family and had no problems with them.

“We’re just hopeful for a favourable outcome,’’ said one neighbour as he headed out the door.

The couple had come to Australia with their two children as Iranian refugees in 1999, and later became actively involved in converting Muslims to Christianity.

That activity led her husband and a church they are connected with to repeatedly make claims that Muslim hardliners could have abducted her as retribution for her activities.

“Maybe somebody kidnapped (her),’’ her husband told Network Ten earlier this week.

“We don’t like you, you Christian and you convert the people to Christianity.’’

SES volunteers searched a nearby creek behind the Ashwood unit where human remains were found. Picture: Andrew Batsch, Leader Newspapers

Ms Rahimzadegan left behind her purse and wallet and there has been no activity on her Facebook page, bank accounts or mobile phone.

Insp Potter said Ms Rahimzadegan had left the home on occasion before due to family issues but had always maintained contact with her two children, aged 15 and 11.

“She’s made no contact with any of her family or friends, which is highly out of character,’’ he said.

“She has left home before on a couple of occasions but they’ve been for short periods of time and she always made contact with her children … she’s always made sure that they knew where she was.’’

Detectives were also examining whether Ms Rahimzadegan’s activities on Facebook are related to her disappearance.

Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or visit www.crimestoppers.com.au

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Al-Shabab Forces Strike Inside Kenya

Al-Shabab insurgents have attacked a police station in northern Kenya in what they say is retaliation for Kenya’s ongoing military incursion into Somalia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Ahmedinejad Visits Latin America, Washington Implores and Seethes

At the best of times, the U.S. government is regarded as somewhat out of touch with what’s happening in the American “heartland,” much less the world at large, so much so that the phrase “inside the Beltway” was coined to define the syndrome.

But every now and again, an incident occurs that so perfectly encapsulates Washington’s self-absorbed navel gazing that little further comment is needed.

On 9 January U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland provided such a “Kodak moment” to the Washington press corps.

The object of her concern? Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad’s visit to Latin America, where he is touring Venezuela, Cuba, Ecuador and Nicaragua.

Nuland said that, because of its civilian nuclear energy program, which both Washington and Tel Aviv believe masks a covert nuclear program despite persistent denials by Tehran, Iran should have no friends and that “We are making absolutely clear to countries around the world that now is not the time to be deepening ties, not security ties, not economic ties, with Iran.”

During a regularly scheduled State Department press briefing Nuland gravely observed that Iran had “obviously carefully” chosen the four countries but “We are, meanwhile, calling on all of these countries to do what they can to impress upon the Iranian regime that the course that it’s on in its nuclear dialogue with the international community is the wrong one. And, frankly, we think it’s in the interest of all countries, including the countries that he (Ahmadinejad) is visiting in Latin America, that Iran proves the peaceful intent of its nuclear program to the world.”

[Meanwhile what is] the view from Caracas?

[…]

And…What is Venezuela getting out of its dalliance with charter “axis of evil” Iran?

[NOTE: See answers at URL, above]

[Return to headlines]



Iran, Venezuela Plotting Attacks “Worse Than 9/11”

Tensions are mounting between the U.S. and Venezuela as the State Department decided to expel Livia Acosta Noguera, the Venezuelan consul in Miami, declaring her “persona non grata.” The Venezuelan consul was implicated in an alleged plot to launch cyber attacks on U.S. nuclear power facilities. The decision was taken as a direct result of the revelations made by the documentary The Iranian Threat, aired by the U.S Spanish language channel Univision.

In the film, the Venezuelan consul was caught on camera backing Iranian-sponsored cyber-attack against U.S. targets in 2007, when she was vice-secretary in the Venezuelan Embassy in Mexico. According to the documentary, these cyber-attacks would be “worse than 9-11.” The State Department did not want to comment on this decision. However, a U.S. high official stated that this expulsion is a serious issue, as “we do not take it lightly when we declare somebody persona non grata.”

Before the expulsion, four members of the Congress — Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (Republican), Mario Diaz-Balart (Republican), David Rivera (Republican) and Albio Sires (Democrat) — wrote a letter to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, expressing their “grave concern” over the “diplomatic credentials” of the Venezuelan Consul. “According to a documentary by Univision Network titled ‘The Iranian Threat’ […] [the Venezuelan consul] interacted with members from the Iranian and Cuban embassies and with students posing as extremists […] in order to coordinate a cyber attack against the United States Government and our critical infrastructure systems at the White House, FBI, and CIA. If true, these actions demonstrate [Venezuelan consul’s] willingness to undermine U.S. interests and potential threat to our national security posed by [Venezuelan consul’s] activities. With this is mind, we respectfully request the Department of State to investigate these allegations, and if found true, declare her a persona non grata and require her immediate departure from the United States,” they wrote.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Two Years After Earthquake, Aid Operations in Haiti Lack Money

It’s been two years since Haiti was devastated by a massive earthquake in which over 200,000 people were killed. Germans donated some 230 million euros in the wake of the disaster — what has become of this money?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Border Agency ‘Sorry’ After Missing Chance to Deport Failed Asylum Seeker Who Went on to Kill Partner and Children

The UK Border Agency missed the chance to deport a failed asylum seeker who went on to murder his partner and their two children before taking his own life.

Aram Aziz killed Joy Small, 24, their son, Aubarr, 3, and daughter Chanarra, two, at their flat in Leicester, in February last year, before hanging himself.

It has now emerged officials from a department of the UK Border Agency had been searching for Aziz, an Iraqi Kurd, between May 2005 and November 2006, to expel him from the country after he had been denied asylum.

But they did not know another branch of the agency had moved him to Leicester and was paying for him to stay in asylum seekers’ accommodation.

The 32-year-old was branded an ‘abusive monster’ by friends of Ms Small who say he once poured lighter fluid all over her.

Agency bosses said if the two departments had realised they were dealing with the same man, they would have deported him to Slovenia — the first country in which he had claimed asylum after leaving Iraq.

Gail Adams, UK Border Agency regional director, said: ‘Our deepest sympathies are with the family.’ She added mistakes had hindered his deportation — and apologised.

Aziz left Iraq in February 2005 and first applied to the UK for asylum in April that year under the name of Saman Ali Rahim. That was refused a month later because it was found he had already made an application in Slovenia.

He then vanished before re-emerging to make a second UK application, this time in the name Aram Aziz, in January 2006. He was moved to Leicester while that application was considered.

In December 2008, the UK Border Agency denied asylum — but because he had met Ms Small in early 2006 and had two children he was granted a three-year stay in the UK as a partner of a British national.

An investigation carried out by the Leicester Safeguarding Children Board published its findings, following an inquest earlier this week.

Its report revealed Aziz had two applications to remain in the UK turned down and twice absconded when efforts were made to deport him.

It concluded the tragedy could not have been predicted, but added ‘the only known preventative factor’ would have been if the agency had succeeded in their attempts to deport Aziz to Slovenia.

Ms Adams said the agency had tried to remove Aziz from the UK three times.

She said: ‘On two of these occasions, arrangements were made to detain Mr Aziz but he absconded.

‘We recognise that mistakes internally hindered his removal on the third occasion and for this we apologise.’

She said the agency had since changed the way it worked.

Ms Small’s father Kevin Wathall said: ‘Aziz should have been removed from the country before any of this happened.

‘There was the chance to do that but the border agency messed it up because one lot sit in a different office to the others. I would have liked a personal apology but the most important thing is nothing like this should happen again.’

The report also revealed Aziz he was given a conditional discharge for assaulting Ms Small in September 2007.

Police asked if he could be deported but the border agency turned down the request because of his pending asylum decision.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

General


Zoologger: Unique Life Form is Half Plant, Half Animal

Zoologger is our weekly column highlighting extraordinary animals — and occasionally other organisms — from around the world. ny animals transform themselves almost beyond recognition in the course of their lives. Caterpillars become butterflies and tadpoles become frogs, and if we couldn’t watch them do so we might not even suspect that the two stages were the same creature.

Spectacular as these shifts are, they are only shape-shifting. A tadpole and a frog are both animals, so both must take in food from their surroundings. Not so Mesodinium chamaeleon. This newly discovered single-celled organism is a unique mixture of animal and plant.

Plant pals

M. chamaeleon is a ciliate — a kind of single-celled animal covered in hundreds of tiny “hairs” called cilia. It was discovered in Nivå bay in Denmark by Øjvind Moestrup of the University of Copenhagen, also in Denmark, and his team. Other specimens have since been found off the coasts of Finland and Rhode Island.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120112

Financial Crisis
» Italy: Spread and Yield Fall Below Crucial Levels
 
USA
» Muslim Student Sues Connecticut University
» Obama to Hand Commerce Dept. Authority Over Cybersecurity ID
» ‘Saturn on Steroids’: 1st Ringed Planet Beyond Solar System Possibly Found
» Tiny Frog is World’s Smallest Vertebrate
 
Canada
» First Mosque Part of the Heritage of All Canadians
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Aga Khan Appeals Wife’s Bumper Divorce Payout
» France: Parents ‘Can Name Baby After TV Vampire’: Court
» Frenchwomen Ditch G-String for Comfy Pants
» Germany: Frederick the Great’s 300th Birthday Nears
» Swedish Teen Girls ‘Increasingly Violent’
» Swedish Hip-Hop Star Slams ‘Racist’ Cartoon
» UK Loses Human Rights Cases, Damning Report Reveals
» UK: ‘Rival Families in Street Brawl’
» UK: Ken Livingstone: Another Meltdown and Another Lie
» UK: Livingstone Uses BBC Interview to Denounce Andrew Gilligan
 
North Africa
» Israel-Egypt Pilgrimage Cancelled After Threats
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» No Citizenship for Palestinian Brides, High Court
 
Middle East
» Lebanon: Shop Selling Alcohol Bombed in Shiite-Majority South
» Stakelbeck: Meet the Muslim Brotherhood’s “Spiritual Leader”
 
South Asia
» Indonesia: SBY Challenges Muslims to Prove Islam is Peaceful
 
Far East
» Japan Leads the Way in Sexless Love
 
Australia — Pacific
» DNA McSpray to Foil Thieves
 
Latin America
» Remittances to Mexico Are Rebounding
 
Immigration
» Admin Extends Salvadoran Deportation Freeze
» Loo Goes There: Australian University Doles Out Toilet-Training Lessons to Immigrants With Bathroom Posters
» Obama Picks Immigration Reform Advocate to Lead Domestic Policy
 
Culture Wars
» Furor in Greece Over Pedophilia as a Disability
» MI5 Named Britain’s Most Gay-Friendly Employers

Financial Crisis


Italy: Spread and Yield Fall Below Crucial Levels

Stocks up after successful bond auction

(ANSA) — Milan, January 12 — The spread between Italy’s 10-year bond and the German benchmark fell Thursday following a successful bond auction and euro-crisis talks between Italian Premier Mario Monti and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The spread differential was down to 474.5 points and the yield fell to 6.6%, both positive developments as each had been dangerously high in recent weeks. The yield on one-year bonds fell below 3% — half what Italy paid to sell at a December auction, marking the lowest price since June. A total of 12 billion euros of debt was sold in the form of six-month and 12-month bills. The Milan bourse was up 2.83% at 15,313 points in midday trading.

The positive economic signs on Thursday came a day after Monti agreed with Merkel that interest rates on sovereign debt should be lowered by the European Central Bank and that the EFSF should raise its bailout fund above the current 500-billion-euro maximum. On Friday Italy will offer up to 4.75 billion euros of debt in the launch of its 2012 bond-issuing campaign.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


Muslim Student Sues Connecticut University

A Muslim woman is suing the University of Bridgeport, alleging that the school failed to investigate her claims that a fellow student sexually harassed her and instead retaliated by reporting her to the FBI based on a false claim that she was a terrorist. Balayla Ahmad filed the federal lawsuit Tuesday saying that she was sexually harassed by a male student for months in 2009 and that university officials showed “deliberate indifference” to her repeated complaints. She said college officials recklessly disseminated false accusations by the harasser that they had good reason to believe were unreliable and threatened her with arrest by the FBI. Ahmad’s lawyer, Bradford Conover, noted that his client is an observant black Muslim who regularly wears a hijab, the head covering traditionally worn by Muslim women, so her religion was obvious. “I think, because of that, she ended up getting targeted based on some reckless accusations against her, and they completely dropped the ball on the sexual harassment,” Conover said. “They never investigated it. Had they done so, they would have discovered the accusations against her were false and she had been subject to sexual harassment.” The threat of an FBI investigation frightened Ahmad to the point that she was initially in fear of even leaving her apartment, Conover said. “Since her academic dismissal from UB, she has suffered the humiliation and the emotional stress of having been unfairly profiled and targeted and of not being able to pursue her chosen career in medicine,” he said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Obama to Hand Commerce Dept. Authority Over Cybersecurity ID

It’s “the absolute perfect spot in the U.S. government” to centralize efforts toward creating an “identity ecosystem” for the Internet, White House Cybersecurity Coordinator Howard Schmidt said.

The Obama administration is currently drafting what it’s calling the National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace, which Locke said will be released by the president in the next few months. (An early version was publicly released last summer.)

“We are not talking about a national ID card,” Locke said at the Stanford event. “We are not talking about a government-controlled system. What we are talking about is enhancing online security and privacy, and reducing and perhaps even eliminating the need to memorize a dozen passwords, through creation and use of more trusted digital identities.”

Details about the “trusted identity” project are remarkably scarce. Last year’s announcement referenced a possible forthcoming smart card or digital certificate that would prove that online users are who they say they are. These digital IDs would be offered to consumers by online vendors for financial transactions.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



‘Saturn on Steroids’: 1st Ringed Planet Beyond Solar System Possibly Found

A enigmatic object detected five years ago in space may be a ringed alien world comparable to Saturn, the first such world discovered outside our solar system, scientists now say. The finding, announced here yesterday (Jan. 11) at the 219th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, came from studying an unsteady eclipse of light from a star near the mysterious body.

“After we ruled out the eclipse being due to a spherical star or a circumstellar disk passing in front of the star, I realized that the only plausible explanation was some sort of dust ring system orbiting a smaller companion — basically a Saturn on steroids,” said study co-author Eric Mamajek at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile.

The find occurred as astrophysicists investigated the Scorpius-Centaurus association, the nearest region of recent massive star formation to the sun, using the international SuperWASP (Wide Angle Search for Planets) and All Sky Automated Survey (ASAS) projects. Specifically, the researchers analyzed how light from sunlike stars in Scorpius-Centaurus varied over time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tiny Frog is World’s Smallest Vertebrate

They just keep getting smaller. Barely a month after scientists identified the world’s smallest species of frog, this little guy has been snapped relaxing on an US dime. At 7.7 millimetres long from snout to tail, it’s even teenier than December’s “smallest frog ever” — and this time it’s the smallest vertebrate, too.

Paedophryne amauensis was discovered in Papua New Guinea in 2009 by Christopher Austin of Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and colleagues. They have now published an official description. P. amauensis is slightly smaller than the previous smallest vertebrate, a Sumatran fish called Paedocypris progenetica that was described in 2006. Females of this species grow to 7.9 mm.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Canada


First Mosque Part of the Heritage of All Canadians

Ottawa — This May, as Muslims mark the twentieth anniversary of the induction of Al-Rashid mosque in Fort Edmonton Park, the country’s largest living history museum, the spotlight will be on the leadership role of Muslim women in this historic event.

Fifty years after they burst onto the front line to help complete the construction of Canada’s first mosque in 1938, Muslim women took over a floundering campaign to save it from demolition. They surprised many by not only preserving this irreplaceable piece of Canadian heritage but enshrining it in the history museum. Al-Rashid, once a bustling hub of community life, started drifting into disrepair after the congregation outgrew it and moved to a new Islamic centre in 1982. Numerous efforts to raise money and find a new location for the old structure failed. Al-Rashid was set for demolition in 1988. Out of options, the Muslim community could only hope for a miracle. To many, including Canadians of other faiths, the loss of the country’s oldest mosque and a Canadian heritage building was unthinkable. Al-Rashid was more than a place of worship. It was also the story of the struggle, adjustment and integration of early Muslim settlers.

While the community braced itself for the inevitable, the Terrific Twelve, a group of twelve women who belonged to a relatively new and untested organisation, the Canadian Council of Muslim Women (CCMW), which was founded in 1982 to speak for Muslim women, defiantly dug in to save the mosque. Led by Lila Fahlman and Razia Jaffer, founder and president of CCMW respectively, these young, highly educated women of diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds included second-generation Canadians and new immigrants, working moms, full-time homemakers and single professional women. Their audacity to take on what had thwarted community leaders sparked a buzz. The media was taken by surprise by this “strange twist” because the Terrific Twelve did not fit the stereotype of Muslim women as subservient housewives. Within the Muslim community itself, there were sceptics. Doubts were raised about the ability of a women’s organisation to lead the project. Some called the move naïve, while others welcomed it.

Unfazed, the women pressed on. Their unyielding resolve won over many naysayers and inspired a dispirited Muslim community. They formed alliances with Canadian mainstream organisations interested in preserving old and unique buildings in order to draw upon their influence, and launched an educational campaign to calm the fears of those who viewed the admission of a mosque into a Canadian history museum as a “foreign intrusion”, emphasising the contribution of Albertans of all faiths in building the mosque and the deep Muslim roots in the country that predate the Canadian Confederation in 1867.

In the end, they prevailed. Funds were raised and conservation authorities agreed that the mosque, as an historic place with heritage value, deserved a place in the history museum. In 1992, a renovated Al-Rashid, repaired to the meticulous standards prescribed for the heritage buildings and restored to its 1938 look with the original furnishings, opened to the public in Fort Edmonton Park amid tributes to the leadership of these remarkable women. Today, the mosque is a living legacy for all Canadians. Instead of hewing to the old thinking, the Terrific Twelve transformational leaders challenged ingrained attitudes, discarded outdated assumptions and shifted the way local authorities see the collective heritage of all Canadians.

Preserving Al-Rashid was not a Muslim issue, they argued — to the surprise of many Muslims. As a heritage building, it belonged to all Canadians and they shared the obligation to pass their collective heritage to the next generation, undiminished. Their call was heard. Prominent organisations like Fort Edmonton Foundation and the Alberta Historical Society committed funds, making it the only instance that a Muslim religious institution was wholly funded by Canadians with contributions from mainstream organisations.

Simple as this sounds, it was in fact a big leap in thinking and orientation. It made Muslims see themselves as an integral part of the broader society and made all Canadians aware that Canadian heritage is more than just the customs, traditions and artefacts of European sources.

###

* Daood Hamdani (hamdani@sympatico.ca) is a pioneer in the study of Muslim Canadians, faculty member of the Canadian Muslim Leadership Institute and author of “The Al-Rashid: Canada’s First Mosque 1938” and “In the Footsteps of Canadian Muslim Women 1837-2007”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Aga Khan Appeals Wife’s Bumper Divorce Payout

Racehorse billionaire and Islamic spiritual leader the Aga Khan is contesting a divorce settlement that awarded his ex-wife a record €60 million ($77 million), a French judicial source said on Thursday. Paris-based Prince Karim, the 75-year-old head of the 15 million-strong Ismaili Muslim community, divorced his second wife, German singer Gabriele Thyssen, in 2004 and a French court awarded her the sum in September.

But he has now appealed the settlement to France’s Court of Cassation, the country’s highest court, the judicial source told AFP. Thyssen, who had married the Aga Khan in 2000, had won the settlement in an appeal court after an initial ruling awarded her only €12 million. She had been demanding a €200 million settlement.

The Aga Khan’s fortune is estimated at €10 billion and he is well-known for his thoroughbred racing and breeding operations. During the divorce case, French judges had difficulty estimating his wealth as he enjoys a rare fiscal privilege that allows him to pay taxes in Switzerland despite living in France.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Parents ‘Can Name Baby After TV Vampire’: Court

A court in France on Thursday rejected a prosecutors’ request for a couple to be barred from naming their son Daemon after a character in television series “The Vampire Diaries”. Prosecutors had brought Lionel and Blandine Defontaine, from Busigny in northern France, to court under a French law that prevents parents from giving names that would be “contrary to the interests of a child”.

The parents, both fans of the series, had chosen to name their son, born on November 3, after the vampire character Damon — adding the “e” to produce a French version of the name. They said they simply liked the sound of the name and denied it had any Satanic connotation.

The same law had previously been used in 1999 to try to prevent parents Alain and Sophia Renaud from naming their daughter Megane, with prosecutors saying the name sounded too much like that of a popular French car, the Renault Megane. An appeals court in 2000 allowed the girl to keep her name.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Frenchwomen Ditch G-String for Comfy Pants

Men may find it the ultimate turn-on, but the G-string is on its way out in France, a study showed on Thursday. But unlike Bridget Jones, Frenchwomen are insisting on sexy replacements. “Back in the 1990s, the G-string was the key lingerie item for French women, but it’s star has faded,” said Cecile Guerin, exhibition director for the International Lingerie Fair taking place in Paris next week.

But today only one in four French women — among the world’s top spenders on lingerie — own a G-string, down from 30 percent in 2008, according to a survey commissioned ahead of the fair. While 45 percent of women still acknowledge that a G-string can be sexy, a quarter see it as “tacky.” Only one in five see it as fashionable and one in 10 as practical.

Sign of the changing times, there were hardly any G-strings among the slinky outfits on display ahead of the fair, intended as a snapshot of industry trends. “You won’t find any in the women’s magazines either,” said Guerin. For the bare truth, she said, is that most women’s bodies are “absolutely not” suited to the G-string. “It wedges up into your bottom, and does nothing at all for the figure.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Frederick the Great’s 300th Birthday Nears

Warrior, patron of the arts and all-powerful King of Prussia, Frederick the Great captured Germany’s imagination after ascending to the throne in 1740. As his 300th birthday on January 24 approaches, the country is preparing to celebrate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Teen Girls ‘Increasingly Violent’

The number of Swedish teen girls accused of committing violent assaults has more than doubled in the last decade, new figures show, while the number of girls who are victims has also increased. Girls in Sweden also account for an ever-greater percentage of the victims of violent crime, the Dagens Nyheter (DN) daily reported.

While boys continue to be overrepresented among assault victims, Swedish girls accounted for one third of assault victims aged 15-17 in 2010, up from one fourth in 2008. “That susceptibility to violence is increasing faster among young girls that among other groups is likely related to the fact that we’ve long seen that more and more young girls are also suspected of being the perpetrators of violence,” Sven Granath, a criminologist at Sweden’s National Council on Crime Prevention (Brottsförebyggande rådet — Brå) told the paper.

According to figures from the council reviewed by DN, the number of girls aged 15-20 suspected of assault has increased 118.5 percent in the last decade, from 428 in 2000 to 935 reports in 2010. In addition, the number of suspected of assaults directed at girls between 15- and 17-years-old jumped by 63 percent between 2008 and 2010.

According to Granath, it’s no longer possible to overlook the increasing violence directed toward and meted out by young Swedish girls. “For a long time, it was barely considered violence when a girl was hit and therefore wasn’t reported,” he told DN. “That violence involving women is taken seriously today is positive. A society where women are considered non-threatening isn’t especially equal [from a gender perspective].”

Mathias Henriksson of the Stockholm police confirmed that girls are increasingly involved in violent crime. “We see that when it comes to the sort of crimes previously committed primarily by guys, like assault and robbery, it’s becoming more common for girls to be found guilty,” he told the paper.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Hip-Hop Star Slams ‘Racist’ Cartoon

When Swedish newspaper Metro on Tuesday published a comic strip by Norwegian artist Frode Øverli, the paper received a barrage of complaints from readers who perceived the cartoon as racist. Swedish artist Jason “Timbuktu” Diakité was among those who reacted angrily toward the image. “Frode Øverli’s comic strip…was the most insensitive and degrading thing I have ever read in your newspaper. It is a crystal clear case of ignorance and lack of insight in what it feels like to be subjected to racism. I feel deeply offended and very sad,” Diakité wrote in an email to Metro editor Peter Gunne.

The comic strip features a cannibal chief, his daughter, and a prospective suitor. The cartoon was a play on the the phrase “to ask for someone’s hand” and many Metro readers felt that it was based on racial stereotypes. “After all these years of human knowledge it seems you remain in the era of steam engines, racial biology and genocide. You should be ashamed of yourself for not knowing better,” Diakité wrote.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK Loses Human Rights Cases, Damning Report Reveals

Unelected Euro judges are making a relentless attack on British laws laid down over centuries by Parliament, a devastating report warns today.

A group of Tory MPs are demanding action by the Prime Minister over figures which show the UK loses three out of every four cases taken to the unaccountable European Court of Human Rights.

The explosive research will reignite the row over Europe’s demand for rapists and killers to be given the vote in prison, and intensify calls for Britain to withdraw from the court’s jurisdiction.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘Rival Families in Street Brawl’

A 71-YEAR-OLD mosque leader and his 67-year-old wife took part in a violent attack on a rival family in massive street brawl, a court heard. Nadir Khan, president of the New Medina Mosque, and other members of his family, attacked Mohammed Iqbal Khan and his family on August 7, 2009, Bolton Crown Court was told yesterday. A jury heard that Nadir Khan’s family, referred to as the Marlborough Street group, were armed with baseball bats, cricket bats and a car steering wheel lock. The 10 defendants are all charged with violent disorder and a variety of other offences, all of which have been denied. The families attend the same mosque and have a long standing grievance towards each other, the jury was told

Shahzad Bahadar, known as Razaq, who, the Crown say, was the leader of the Marlborough group, contacted Mohammed Iqbal Khan’s brother, Mazhar, and asked them to come and sort out their differences as Ramadan was near and they could start with a clean slate. But when they arrived, there were 20 to 25 Asian men in the street armed with weapons and violence broke out. Peter Barr, prosecuting, said: “It is the Crown’s case that this is a most serious case of a pre-planned ambush, violent disorder. “Weapons were carried, weapons were used and people were seriously hurt.” The court heard that victim Munawar Khan suffered a broken hand and had to have a metal rod inserted after being attacked with the steering wheel lock by Razaq. He was also hit on the head with a baseball bat by Ayaaz Khan, which resulted in a big lump next to his left eye. Those two defendants then moved on to Mukhtar Khan. Razaq hit him with the lock on his back and shoulder, and Ayaaz Khan hit him across the left eye with the bat. The victim was taken to hospital and had four stitches and was left with black eyes and bruising. Mohammed Iqbal Khan was attacked by Majid Dad, who had a baseball bat, and Khushleem Arshad, who had a black stick. Both aimed for Mr Khan’s head, but he managed to deflect the blows, said Mr Barr. Nadir Khan struck him on the head with a baseball bat, the jury was told. Mr Khan fell to the ground and suffered a head wound which required six stitches. Nadir Khan then attacked Ilyas Khan with a cricket bat and he needed eight stitches, the prosecution say. Tahir Iqbal was struck with a bat by Ayaaz Khan, but managed to run away to a car park. There, he was attacked by another man and, as he tried to get up, Dad allegedly threw a large concrete slab at him. Mr Iqbal thought he was going to be killed, but he managed to turn away and the slab hit him on the back of the head, causing cuts. Inayat Khan, Nadir Khan’s wife, is alleged to have attacked Ilyas Khan’s sister as she tried to calm the situation.

The case continues.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ken Livingstone: Another Meltdown and Another Lie

Ken lost his temper on the BBC’s Vanessa Feltz show this morning after being challenged about calling Boris Johnson a “pickpocket” on fares. He spent the first several minutes of the interview angrily attacking me for pointing out the inconvenient fact that he had raised Travelcard prices by almost exactly the same amounts as the “pickpocket” Johnson. The BBC shouldn’t be quoting me, he said, because I killed Dr David Kelly. A winning argument, I feel sure…

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Livingstone Uses BBC Interview to Denounce Andrew Gilligan

expect that even Ken Livingstone’s own campaign team must have despaired at his performance on BBC London 94.9 yesterday where he was interviewed by Vanessa Feltz. The programme had earlier interviewed the Daily Telegraph journalist Andrew Gilligan comparing the increase in bus and tube fares under Boris Johnson to when Ken Livingstone was Mayor. Then Livingstone came on but decided to play the man not the ball.

“You shouldn’t be quoting Andrew Gilligan. Why don’t you look for someone that is more objective…Andrew Gilligan was forced out of the BBC once it was revealed that he’d actually embroidered what he’d been told by David Kelly. He set in train the events and the uproar that led to David Kelly taking his own life…David Kelly is dead, he’s only dead because of that situation.”

A pretty grotesque caricature of events. Not one shared by David Kelly’s widow Janice. Her evidence was that her husband felt “betrayed” by his “political masters.” The spur for this came, as Alastair Campbell put it in his diaries, because: “The biggest thing needed was the source out”, in order to “f*** Gilligan”. Campbell is now backing Livingstone campaign — praising his “fair and reasonable” media appearances. The wider point is the self indulgence of Livingstone using the broadcast in this way. In my review of his autobiography I noted how the book kept going off at tangents to make pursue one vendetta or another. This makes the book pretty unwieldy but at least, I thought, Livingstone will feel better for it, that he will have unburdened himself. Evidently not. For his part Gilligan sticks to highlighting the facts about the fare increases. When Livingstone is challenged on his own record of hiking fares many Londoners will expect him to do better than bluster and make unpleasant personal attacks.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Israel-Egypt Pilgrimage Cancelled After Threats

Ceremony for rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzera to be held in Israel

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JANUARY 11 — The pilgrimage that hundreds of Israeli Sephardic Jews were hoping to make to Damanhour (Nile delta) by the end of this month has been cancelled for safety reasons. The yearly pilgrimage leads to the tomb of rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzera, where the pilgrims come to pray. One of the organisers of the event, rabbi Yehiel Abuhatzera, has told the press that the pilgrimage to Egypt has been replaced by a religious ceremony in Israel, in the light of the serious threats made in the past days against Jews by Egyptian Islamic fundamentalists. Considered to be one of the most respected rabbis in Morocco, Yaakov Abuhatzera died in 1880 in Damanhour while he was on his way to Jerusalem.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


No Citizenship for Palestinian Brides, High Court

Heavily-debated law which since 2003

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM, JANUARY 12 — With six votes in favour and five against, last night the Jerusalem Supreme Court passed a heavily-debated law which since 2003 has refused the right to citizenship and permanent residence in Israel for Palestinian spouses of Israeli nationals. In a successive phase, the law was also extended to the spouses of Israeli citizens from countries hostile to Israel. The law — presented as a temporary measure and initially passed in years seeing a series of dramatic events, with Israel dealing with a wave of Palestinian terrorist attacks — has been denounced as severely discriminatory by representatives of the Arab population in Israel and by human rights organisations. The Supreme Court therefore had to weigh general principles — such as guaranteeing civil rights for the Arab minority in Israel — against national security considerations. “Human rights are not a recipe for national suicide,” reads the sentence by Judge Asher Grunis, summing up the opinion of the six Supreme Court judges. The opposite opinion was expressed by Supreme Court President Dorit Beinish, who found herself in the minority. According to some commentators, yesterday’s decision was one of the most important ever adopted by the Israeli Supreme Court. Noting Beinish’s defeat as well, some say that the Supreme Court “is now giving in to” nationalist pressure from the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament.

Meanwhile, the Arab minority has expressed indignation, saying that the law in question “has no equivalent in any democratic country in the world”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Lebanon: Shop Selling Alcohol Bombed in Shiite-Majority South

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JANUARY 12 — A bomb was blown up by unidentified individuals last night at a alcoholic beverages shop in southern Lebanon, the latest in a series of this sort of attack — for which no one has claimed responsibility — in an area with a Shiite Muslim-majority population. Reports were from the Lebanese news agency NNA. The explosion — which occurred in Sarafand, about 50 kilometres south of Beirut — severely damaged the shop targeted and, to a lesser degree, surrounding ones as well. However, no one was hurt. In multi-confessional Lebanon, the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages is legal and tolerated in many areas, but not in some with a Muslim majority population.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck: Meet the Muslim Brotherhood’s “Spiritual Leader”

Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi has been called the most influential Islamic cleric in the world.

He’s the “spiritual leader” of the Muslim Brotherhood, and a vocal proponent of the Islamic caliphate and sharia rule.

He’s called for the killing of U.S. troops in Iraq and has supported suicide bombings against Israeli civilians.

And according to reports, Qaradawi is acting as a mediator in secret U.S. talks with the Taliban.

Learn more about the man some call a jihadi “Lenin” by watching my new report.

Click the link above to watch.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Indonesia: SBY Challenges Muslims to Prove Islam is Peaceful

Malang, East Java. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, speaking on Wednesday at a a large Muslim Sufi order in Bululawang, East Java, called on Muslims to prove that Islam can live in harmony with a pluralistic nation and in a democratic society. (Antara Photo)

Yudhoyono made the call while opening the congress of the Jam’iyyah Ahlilth Thariqah Al-Mu’tabarah An-Nahdliyah (Jatman), a large Muslim Sufi order in Bululawang, East Java.

“Let us prove to the world that in Indonesia there is no discordance between religion and the state, between Islam and democracy. Islam can answer the various problems of nations and the world. Islam can become a blessing for the universe,” Yudhoyono told the thousands of people attending the congress.

He praised the Sufi’s approach, saying it was religious, calm and educative in broaching problems and therefore a suitable way to deal with disputes, conflicts and clashes in society and the nation.

“We all know that the Indonesian nation is a pluralistic one, it’s wishes and aspirations are numerous and varied,” he said, adding that in such a dynamic environment, clashes and conflict could erupt at any time.

The president called on all Muslims to abide by the four pillars of the state and nation. He cited them as the unitary nature of the country; the state ideology, Pancasila, which puts all religions on equal footing; the 1945 Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion and of worship; and the national motto Bhinneka Tunggal Ika (Unity in Diversity) .

“As Muslims, let us lead a religious life. As citizens, let us implement those four pillars,” Yudhoyono said.

Yudhoyono’s government has been criticized by rights activists as failing to protect the rights of the minority and the freedom of religion or worship.

The country has in recent years been the site of attacks on minority sects and minority religions, with the perpetrators often receiving only light sentences, if any.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Far East


Japan Leads the Way in Sexless Love

Are a new generation of Japanese men really losing interest in sex? And if so, what’s behind the malaise?

It’s not easy being a young man in Japan today. Every few months sees the release of a new set of figures, stats and stories trumpeting the same meme: today’s Japanese men are unmanly — and worse, they don’t seem bothered by it.

Tagged in the domestic media over the past few years as hikikomori (socially withdrawn boys), soshoku danshi (grass-eating/herbivore men, uninterested in meat, fleshly sex and physical or workplace competition), or just generally feckless, Japan’s Y-chromosomed youth today elicit shrugs of “why?”, followed by heaving sighs of disappointment from their postwar elders and members of the opposite sex. With the country’s economy stagnant at best, its geopolitical foothold rapidly slipping into the crevice between China and the United States, and its northeast coastline still struggling with the aftermath of disaster and an ongoing nuclear crisis, the reaction to a failure of Japan’s men to take the reins, even symbolically, has evolved from whispers of curiosity to charges of incompetence.

In the most recent government study, published at the end of last month, the percentage of unmarried men spiked 9.2 points from five years ago. More telling: 61% of those unwed men reported not having a girlfriend, and 45% said they couldn’t care less about finding one.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


DNA McSpray to Foil Thieves

McDONALD’S restaurants are fighting back against thieves by blasting suspected robbers with an invisible DNA spray as they attempt to flee.

“Once there has been a security breach, the hi-tech spray unit will douse fleeing robbers with an invisible, synthetic DNA solution,” McDonald’s Australia’s chief restaurant support officer, Jackie McArthur, said.

“The solution is invisible to the naked eye and unique to each location. It stays on clothing for up to six months and on skin for up to two weeks.”

Using a UVA light, police can see the markings left by the system and link the offender back to the scene.

The spray contains a synthetic DNA strand composed of 60 variable chromosomes

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Remittances to Mexico Are Rebounding

Mexican immigrants living in the U.S. sent an estimated 8% more money back to relatives last year compared with 2010, thanks to an improving U.S. job market.

Head to 4th Street and Broadway in downtown Los Angeles and you’ll see signs of a labor market on the mend. At a Continental Currency Services Inc. branch, a check-cashing and money-transfer business, housekeeper Maria Guadalupe Gutierrez waited patiently in line on a recent afternoon to wire $200 to her mother in Chiapas, Mexico.

Gutierrez used to send more before the economy tanked and clients stopped having their houses cleaned as frequently. But things have picked up lately, and she is getting more calls. “I hope it keeps getting better,” said Gutierrez, 38, before rushing off to finish errands downtown.

Ending a three-year slump, remittances to Mexico are finally on the upswing, thanks to an improving U.S. job market. Analysts expect that money sent home last year by Mexicans living abroad, most of them residing in the United States, will top $23 billion when Mexico’s central bank releases annual figures this month. Although still below the peak of $26 billion in 2007, that would be a solid 8% increase over 2010. Money transfer giant Western Union Co., whose revenue sagged during the recession, saw its remittance business strengthen in 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Admin Extends Salvadoran Deportation Freeze

The Obama administration has extended temporary protected status to El Salvadoran nationals through late 2013, shielding them from deportation and forcible return to their home country.

The Department of Homeland Security cites ongoing disruptions from a series of earthquakes in 2001, concluding that “El Salvador remains unable, temporarily, to handle adequately the return of its nationals.”

The protected status designation currently applies to 215,000 Salvadorans living in the U.S. illegally and otherwise subject to deportation, and remittances from ex-patriate Salvadorans in the United States help keep that country’s economy afloat.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Loo Goes There: Australian University Doles Out Toilet-Training Lessons to Immigrants With Bathroom Posters

It looks more like the kind of ‘amusing’ poster a university student might have up on their wall.

But these explicit toiletry lessons have actually been posted on cubicle doors at Sydney’s Macquarie University after cleaners complained overseas students were not aware of Western WC procedures.

Just to make sure that those whose English might not be up to it, the diagrams make it clear on how to behave when nature calls.

The lessons include descriptions not to stand on the toilet seat or sit on the floor whilst answering a call of duty.

And there are explicit instructions for the ladies on how to dispose of personal effects — not down the bowl but in a waste bin.

Others inform the toilet unaware that the seat cover must be lowered after use and hands must be washed.

A spokesman for Macquarie University said: ‘We received a complaint from our cleaning contractors about the state of some toilets.

‘They believed that some students may have been squatting above the toilet rather than using them in a conventional Western fashion.’

The spokesman told Sydney’s Daily Telegraph that the cleaning company was concerned about cleanliness.

‘We put those posters around the campus in collaboration with the international students’ group and got advice on what information should be contained,’ he said.

Since the posters have gone up, the problems have apparently stopped.

It comes after MP Teresa Gambaro said this week that migrants should be taught to use deodorant and wait in line.

She was later forced to make an embarrassing apology when her comments sparked outrage.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Obama Picks Immigration Reform Advocate to Lead Domestic Policy

The White House announced Tuesday that Cecilia Muñoz, would replace Melody Barnes at the top of the council.

Muñoz is an immigration expert who worked for the National Council of La Raza, the largest Latino civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States, until she joined the administration in 2009. The group works to improve opportunities for Hispanic Americans and advocates legislation that would provide a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Furor in Greece Over Pedophilia as a Disability

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek disability groups expressed anger Monday at a government decision to expand a list of state-recognized disability categories to include pedophiles, exhibitionists and kleptomaniacs.

The National Confederation of Disabled People called the action “incomprehensible,” and said pedophiles are now awarded a higher government disability pay than some people who have received organ transplants.

The Labor Ministry said categories added to the expanded list _ that also includes pyromaniacs, compulsive gamblers, fetishists and sadomasochists _ were included for purposes of medical assessment and used as a gauge for allocating financial assistance.

But NCDP leader Yiannis Vardakastanis, who is blind, warned the new list could create new difficulties for disabled Greeks who are already facing benefit cuts due to the country’s financial crisis.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



MI5 Named Britain’s Most Gay-Friendly Employers

Britain’s domestic intelligence agency MI5 was named Wednesday on a list of the country’s most gay-friendly employers, ranked at number 62 by equality charity Stonewall.

MI5 Director General Jonathan Evans welcomed the news, saying in a statement that MI5 had worked hard in recent years to promote equality and diversity.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120111

Financial Crisis
» Bulgaria Sets Conditions to Join EU Budget Pact
» Europe’s Crisis is Germany’s Blessing
» Fatigue Marks EU-Greece Relations, Says Greek Commissioner
» Germany Could Face Recession in 2012
» Ireland Dismisses ‘Ludicrous’ Talk of Second Bailout
» Italy and France Team Up Against Germany
» Merkel Says ‘Great Respect’ Due to Italy Over Reforms
» Portugal Central Bank Warns 2013 Rebound Unlikely
» Rehn Backs ‘Smart’ Mutual Debt Fund
» Skyscrapers ‘Linked With Impending Financial Crashes’
» Softer Draft of Fiscal Treaty Opens Door for UK
» Spain: Alcoa to Cut Production in Spain and Italy
» Taking on the Speculators: What Would a European Tobin Tax Really Mean?
» US Prof Warns of Norway Housing Bubble
 
USA
» Frank Gaffney: Obama’s Defeatist ‘Strategy’
» Romney’s New Hampshire Win: The GPO’s Duracell Bunny Marches on
» Solid State Swiss Army Knife Can Save Digital Lives
» Ten Years of Guantanamo — and No End in Sight
 
Canada
» Muslim Mother Breaks Down in Court as She is Quizzed Over ‘Honour Killings’ Of Her Three Children and Husband’s First Wife
 
Europe and the EU
» 20 Years of Capitalism: Winemaker Foresees Next France in Moldova
» British PM Clashes With Scotland on Independence
» Denmark: ‘A Celebration of Ice-Cold Water’
» Denmark: Four Arrested in Death of 81-Year-Old
» Dutch Animal Rights Party Worry About Rights of Mice
» Dutch Ban Khat
» Dutch Occupy Movement Now Just a Few Activists
» Ex-Miss Denmark Sues Norwegian Town Over Fall
» Greenland Drowning in Seal
» Italy: Cannabis Makes Its Way to the Dinner Table
» Italy Violated Human Rights in Garbage Crisis
» Man Drowns Himself in a Vat of Whisky at World Famous Scottish Distillery
» Scottish Referendum: 50 Fascinating Facts You Should Know About Scotland
» Scottish Independence: A History of Anglo-Scottish Rivalry
» Secret Aerial Photos: Book Provides Fresh Glimpse of Berlin’s Destruction
» Spain’s Literary Giants Are Lost in English Translation
» Sweden: Hundreds Gather for Slain Malmö Teen’s Funeral
» UK: ‘My Baby’s Dead, My Baby’s Dead’: Parents Held by Police on Suspicion of Murder After Death of Their Six-Week-Old Child
» UK: EDL Thug Who Abused Police at Telford Protest Faces £685 Bill
» UK: Generation of Young Muslims Ending Up in Jail ‘Because of Outdated Imams Who Fail to Engage With Them’
 
North Africa
» ‘Egyptian Revolutionary Guard’ Threatens to Attack U.S. Embassy
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Vandals Deface Mosque, Spray ‘Price Tag’ Graffiti
» Visiting Catholic Bishops Decide: “Gaza is a Prison”
 
Middle East
» Bomb Kills Iranian Nuclear Director
» Dutch Queen’s Visit to Oman Good for Trade
» Finding the Jesus of Islam in Early Christianities
» Indictment of Coup Generals Reflects Shifting Attitudes in Turkey
» Iranian Nuclear Scientist Killed in Car Bombing
» Lebanon: Italy to Maintain Commitment/Troops in Region, Terzi
» More Than 800,000 Children Married in Iran
» Oil Exporters to Up Output if Iran Embargoed: France
» Saudi Arabia Cautiously Navigating Conflict With Iran Amid Arab Spring Storm
» Turkey: Ankara May Rename French Streets Over Genocide Row
» UAE: Muslim Athletes Face Ramadan Hurdles at London Olympics
» US Senators Warn Ashton on Risk of Iran War
» West Blamed by Iran as Yet Another Nuclear Scientist is Assassinated by Magnetic Car Bomb in the Street
 
South Asia
» ‘Fear in Their Hearts’ As Pakistanis Ferry NATO Wares Into Afghanistan
» India’s Chronically Stressed Border Troops Take Up Yoga
 
Far East
» China: Indignant Workers Threaten Suicide at Foxconn Park in Wuhan
» Chinese New Year Revelers Grapple Desperately for Tickets Home
 
Australia — Pacific
» Queensland Government Publishes “Handbook on Hindu Patients”
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Ghana: Illiteracy Said to be Tragedy of the Muslim Community in Ghana
» Nigeria: Gunmen Kill 8, Mob Attacks Mosque as Nigeria Chaos Grows
» Somali Convert From Islam Whipped in Public
 
Immigration
» France: Record Number of Illegal Immigrants Expelled
» Iraqis in Look-Alike Swedish Passport Scam
» Israeli Lawmakers Approve Harsh Penalties for Illegal Migrants, Israelis Who Help Them
 
General
» 160 Billion Alien Planets May Exist in Our Milky Way Galaxy
» Deepest Hydrothermal Vents Teem With Strange Shrimp
» Milky Way Brims With Planets
» Soaring on Titan: Drone Airplane Could Scout Saturn’s Moon

Financial Crisis


Bulgaria Sets Conditions to Join EU Budget Pact

(SOFIA) — Non-eurozone member Bulgaria said Wednesday it will join an EU budget pact for tighter discipline but refused to undertake any financial pledges to aid the eurozone or accept changes to its tax policy. “To sum up our position — ‘Yes’ to reinforcing financial discipline in Europe, ‘No’ to imposing restrictions on our economic policy… and accepting burdens which are beyond our abilities,” Foreign Minister Nikolay Mladenov said.

“Bulgaria will not undertake any financial obligations which require additional contributions to the International Monetary Fund or other mechanisms linked to the stability of the euro since to date we are not members of the eurozone,” he added.

The government, which met Wednesday to map out Bulgaria’s stance on key EU policies for 2012, recognised “the need for observing very strict fiscal rules and discipline and coordinate economic policies across the EU.”

But Mladenov added there was “disagreement with the initiatives for introducing a common consolidated corporate tax base and with proposals for a financial transaction tax.” With its flat 10-percent income and corporate tax rate, Bulgaria, which joined the EU in 2007 as its poorest member, remains the country with the lowest tax burden in the 27-member bloc.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Europe’s Crisis is Germany’s Blessing

Its neighbors may be suffering, but the euro crisis has created conditions that actually benefit the German economy. Not only is the government enjoying the windfall of negative interest rates on bonds, but unemployment is down and exports are booming.

It’s every debtor’s dream. When asked for a loan, the bank not only agrees, but actually pays the borrower for their patronage. It sounds like a fairy tale, as though the laws of the market economy had been suspended. But on Monday it really happened.

The debtor in this case was the German government, which borrowed €3.9 billion ($5 billion) for the next six months at the unbelievable interest rate of -0.01 percent. Even the German Finance Agency was stunned. “This has never happened before,” a spokesperson said.

The Finance Ministry should be pleased. In the last four years, they’ve had to shell out around 1.8 percent in interest for such bonds. But recently even interest rates on German bonds with longer maturities have decreased significantly. The federal government is saving a bundle.

The reason for the windfall? Amid the ongoing euro crisis, Germany is one of the few borrowers that are still regarded as a safe haven. Many investors would rather lend the government money at bargain-basement rates than risk losses.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fatigue Marks EU-Greece Relations, Says Greek Commissioner

Greek EU commissioner Maria Damanaki has said that there is a sense of “fatigue” in Greece-EU relations, Greek daily I Kathimerini reports. “There is a sense that the European institutions have done their job and that they are now waiting for results from Greece,” she said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Could Face Recession in 2012

The German economy grew strongly last year, despite the European debt crisis. Gross domestic product jumped by 3 percent, while the national deficit sank, the Federal Statistical Office reported on Wednesday. But experts warn that, given the slight contraction in the final quarter of last year, Germany could enter a recession in 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ireland Dismisses ‘Ludicrous’ Talk of Second Bailout

(DUBLIN) — Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan dismissed speculation about a second bailout for the eurozone member as “ludicrous” on Wednesday. Noonan’s remarks followed suggestions that Ireland, which was bailed out in 2010, should consider negotiating a standby bailout programme in case it is not able to return to borrowing on the international markets.

“It is ludicrous to be talking about a second bailout when we are in (the first programme) and meeting all the targets in the first programme,” Noonan said referring to economist reports on the country. “We are a year into the rescue programme which was negotiated by the previous government and we are fully funded to the back end of 2013. “So it’s really speculation by economists who, at the start of the new year, speculate on these matters,” Noonan added.

Ireland received an 85-billion-euro ($108-billion) bailout in November 2010 from the so-called troika of the EU, ECB and IMF as massive debt and deficit problems left the country on the verge of collapse. Meanwhile national broadcaster RTE reported that confidential documents released to it by the US government show that US officials are concerned that the Irish bailout could be derailed by poor growth and a lack of government spending.

RTE says the documents detail how US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner used a meeting with Noonan to assess domestic threats to the Irish bailout. The report said officials encouraged Geithner to quiz Noonan on how the Irish economy could grow when its main trading partners were experiencing problems, noting that the success of Ireland’s bailout programme would depend heavily on export growth.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy and France Team Up Against Germany

Germany has long insisted that austerity be the primary strategy used in confronting the ongoing euro-zone debt crisis. Italy has now joined France in demanding a more nuanced approach. Prime Minister Monti will present his ideas to Chancellor Merkel in Berlin on Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Merkel Says ‘Great Respect’ Due to Italy Over Reforms

Chancellor Angela Merkel has praised Italy for its austerity reforms after a meeting with Prime Minister Mario Monti. Ahead of his visit, Monti had sought acknowledgment of Italian austerity efforts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portugal Central Bank Warns 2013 Rebound Unlikely

Portugal is to be hit by a three percent contraction in 2012 and will manage growth of 0.3 percent in 2013, far below government and EU forecasts, the country’s central bank said on Tuesday. In its winter report on the economy, the central bank said it forecasts an “unprecedented” recession this year of 3.1 percent of gross domestic product, in line with forecasts by the Portuguese government and the European Commission of 3.0 percent.

But while the European Commission predicts an economic rebound of 1.1 percent for 2013, the central bank said it expects a contraction in 2011 and 2012 and a “quasi-stagnation in 2013”. The bank said Portuguese GDP shrank by 1.6 percent in 2011 and that according to data already available the slowdown intensified in the fourth quarter.

Pointing to “great uncertainty” in the global economy, the bank said Portugal will be hit by less dynamic world growth and by the effects of stringent budget measures enacted over the past year.

Portugal is in the midst of a tough austerity drive after it had to be bailed out in May of last year with a 78-billion-euro ($100-billion) rescue package put together by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. In November, its parliament adopted a tough austerity budget for 2012 that cut salaries, raised taxes and increased working hours for vast numbers of workers already squeezed by recession.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rehn Backs ‘Smart’ Mutual Debt Fund

BRUSSELS — The idea of mutualising eurozone debt remains as controversial as ever but economic affairs commissioner Olli Rehn has spoken out in favour of a halfway house solution, whose authors say will solve the “impasse” between opposing ideological camps. The idea would see countries with a sovereign debt of above 60 percent of GDP — breaching single currency rules — pooling this excess debt into a redemption fund.

The countries would be obliged to undertake structural reforms and growth-inducing measures and pay their debts back over 20 to 25 years. “While I would not want to mix this with eurobonds proper, I find the proposal smart, potentially do-able and certainly worth exploring further,” Rehn said during a hearing on eurobonds in the European Parliament on Tuesday (10 January).

He made similar remarks in November but the views carry more weight now since a public consultation on eurobonds — in response to a commission discussion paper on the issue — has come to a close. The European redemption fund idea was drawn up by the German government’s panel of independent economic advisors.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Skyscrapers ‘Linked With Impending Financial Crashes’

There is an “unhealthy correlation” between the building of skyscrapers and subsequent financial crashes, according to Barclays Capital. Examples include the Empire State building, built as the Great Depression was under way, and the current world’s tallest, the Burj Khalifa, built just before Dubai almost went bust.

China is currently the biggest builder of skyscrapers, the bank said. India also has 14 skyscrapers under construction. “Often the world’s tallest buildings are simply the edifice of a broader skyscraper building boom, reflecting a widespread misallocation of capital and an impending economic correction,” Barclays Capital analysts said.

The bank noted that the world’s first skyscraper, the Equitable Life building in New York, was completed in 1873 and coincided with a five-year recession. It was demolished in 1912. Other examples include Chicago’s Willis Tower (which was formerly known as the Sears Tower) in 1974, just as there was an oil shock and the US dollar’s peg to gold was abandoned.

And Malaysia’s Petronas Towers in 1997, which coincided with the Asian financial crisis. The findings might be a concern for Londoners, who are currently seeing the construction of what will be Western Europe’s tallest building, the Shard. That will be 1,017ft (310m) tall on completion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Softer Draft of Fiscal Treaty Opens Door for UK

COPENHAGEN — Less stringent constitutional demands, a weaker role for the EU commission and a provision allowing the UK to join at a later stage are among the most recent changes to the draft intergovernmental treaty on fiscal discipline, to be signed by leaders in March.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Alcoa to Cut Production in Spain and Italy

Activity scaled back at 3 aluminium plants

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JANUARY 10 — U.S. multinational Alcoa has notified the unions of a “partial and temporary” production cut at its Spanish factories in La Coruna and Aviles as well as its facility in Portovesme, where soon it will begin a brief period of meetings before closing it definitively. The news came from union sources cited today by the Spanish press. At the Galician factory in La Grela (La Coruna), the group plans to “cut production by half” at the site, which employs 430 workers, informed the president of the union committee at the factory, Nazario Arias. In a statement, the group, headquartered in New York, announced its intention to cutback on production at its three aluminium plant in Europe as part of its overall restructuring plan, which will reduce overall production by about 12% in the first half of 2012, equivalent to 531,000. In Europe a cut amounting to 240,000 tonnes of aluminium production is expected, 5% of the total, including 150,000 at the Italian facility and 90,000 at the two Spanish plants.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Taking on the Speculators: What Would a European Tobin Tax Really Mean?

Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy are pressing forward with plans to introduce a financial transaction tax in the EU — if necessary without Britain, home to Europe’s largest financial center. Critics believe it will cause an exodus of the industry from the euro zone. But a closer look at the proposal suggests the worst wouldn’t necessarily come true.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Prof Warns of Norway Housing Bubble

Norway’s housing market looks increasing like a bubble waiting to burst, according to a highly respected Yale professor. Professor Robert Shiller has emerged as one of the world’s most influential economists after successfully predicting the dot-com crash and the collapse of the US housing market.

The US academic made his prognosis for Norway after taking stock of a 35-percent price rise across the country’s residential housing market in the last five years. “This really does look like a bubble,” he told business newspaper Dagens Næringsliv. Shiller’s own real estate price index shows there to have been a 33-percent drop in home prices in the United States over the same period.

The professor, who is in Oslo to speak at an insurance conference on Wednesday,, said it was difficult to be sure whether a collapse was imminent. “But it does look like it’s pretty close to the end,” he said.

The professor added that bubbles weren’t usually punctured by external factors. It wasn’t the financial crisis that caused the US housing market to crash, he said. In fact, it was the other way around. “It was the drop in real estate prices from 2006 that eventually triggered the financial crisis,” said Shiller.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Frank Gaffney: Obama’s Defeatist ‘Strategy’

Listening to Barack Obama laying out what he calls his new defense strategy, my first reaction was, “Here we go again.” Having basically written off the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, Mr. Obama is falling prey to a temptation several of his predecessors found irresistible in peacetime: Cut defense expenditures. Shrink the military. And hope the rest of the world will neither notice nor take advantage of our weakness.

Something is decidedly different, however. This is the first time in memory that a president has voluntarily eviscerated the armed forces of the United States and redeployed what remains so as to create acute vacuums of power in time of war. Unfortunately, I am referring not just to the war in Afghanistan that we continue to be engaged in, for the time being at least…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Romney’s New Hampshire Win: The GPO’s Duracell Bunny Marches on

Mitt Romney won the New Hampshire Republican primary with ease, despite attacks from a number of party members. He’s too robotic, too rich and lacks principles, they say. But so what? Romney doesn’t need to be perfect, he just needs to be more convincing than his competitors — and he already is.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Solid State Swiss Army Knife Can Save Digital Lives

Victorinox has pulled from its technology pocket a version of its vaunted Swiss Army knife equipped with a solid state drive capable of holding all of the digital data in a person’s life. A USB drive capable of holding as much as a terabyte of data is folded into a Swiss Army Knife being shown-off at the Consumer Electronics Show that officially opened its doors on Tuesday in Las Vegas.

“It fits in the palm of my hand,” Victorinox spokeswoman Renee Hourigan said as she cupped in her palm a one-terabyte drive sheathed in the Switzerland-based company’s iconic red casing. “You can transfer everything to this and then throw your computer’s external hard drive out the window,” she quipped.

The terabyte-capacity version will be released globally by August and be priced at $3,000 (US), according to Victorinox. Drives come with red and black casings. The red one has a blade, scissors, and a nail file while the black one lacks those accessories in order to avoid clashing with air travel security rules.

Swiss Army Knife drives will also come with 64, 128, 256, or 512 gigabytes of memory and be priced from $649 to $1,999, according to Hourigan. Victorinox’s lineup includes a lightweight Slim 3.0 mini Swiss Army Knife memory stick boasted as being waterproof, shock resistant, and secure with 128 gigabytes of memory for $399. Knife parts and engineering come from Switzerland while the electronic components are made in California.

“We’ve had them go through the washer, the drier; run them over with cars and they still work,” Hourigan said. “It’s as high quality as it can be.” Slim knife drives self destruct if they sense hackers trying multiple passwords or other “brute force” attacks to break in. “If it realizes there is software actively trying to get into it, it will destroy itself,” Hourigan said. “It fries the chip with too much current under a brute force attack.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ten Years of Guantanamo — and No End in Sight

Ten years ago, the first detainees were transferred to the US navy base in Guantanamo Bay. President Barack Obama planned to shut the facility down one year after taking office. But it is still in operation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Canada


Muslim Mother Breaks Down in Court as She is Quizzed Over ‘Honour Killings’ Of Her Three Children and Husband’s First Wife

A mother accused of murdering three of her daughters and her husband’s first wife in an honour killing broke down in tears while testifying today in an Ontario court.

Tooba Mohammad Yahya, 41, is accused of conspiring with her husband, Mohammad Shafia, 58, and their eldest son, Hamed, 21, of running one of their family cars into a canal with their four relatives inside.

Prosecutors say that they did so in order to protect their family’s honour because the four women were acting disobediently by having boyfriends, wearing skimpy clothes, and not listening to their strict Muslim father.

Shafia was polygamous, and lived with both his first wife Rona Amir Mohammad, 52, and his second wife, Yahya, in their home in Canada.

Rona was infertile, Shafia was allowed to take a second wife without divorcing his first, which was in accordance to Islamic law.

Now, a Canadian court is judging whether or not Shafia, Yahya and Hamed acted together to kill their family members in an effort to restore honour to their family name, or if Rona, Zainab Shafia, 19, Sahar Shafia, 17, and Geeti Shafia, 13, all died in a tragic car accident as the accused claim.

When the car was found in the canal on June 30, 2009, there was no one in the driver’s seat and three of them had bruising to the back of their heads.

The trial resumed Monday after being paused in December. Mohamma Yahya took the stand, and while she was never asked directly about the death of her relatives, she used her time to rebut the view of their household as a harsh one.

She said that her husband only hit the children once and used to badger them verbally if they were bad, not beat them.

‘He used to go on and continuously; he was just swearing at them and continuously talking about that for weeks,’ she said at the trial.

Other witnesses disagree, saying that their eldest daughter, Zainab, was forbidden to attend school for a year because she had a young Pakistani-Canadian boyfriend, and she fled to a shelter, terrified of her father, the court was told.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


20 Years of Capitalism: Winemaker Foresees Next France in Moldova

Entrepreneur Victor Bostan is on a mission to put Moldova on the map as a wine producer. The brands of wine made by Bostan at his Purcari vineyard by the Bostavan Wineries Group, in which the Horizon Capital fund recently made a $15 million investment, rival French wine and are “even better than Italy” in quality, he said.

Bostan hopes that in as little as five years’ time Moldova, renowned in the Soviet Union for its wines, will be recognized worldwide as a producer on par with these two winemaking heavyweights. The problem is that Moldovan wines are still not known outside the former Soviet Union. “For that, you need time and money to promote (them) throughout the world,” Bostan told The Moscow Times.

Ion Luca, president of the Moldovan Small Wine Producers Association, said Bostan is the man for the job. He called Bostan one of the best winemakers in the country and said his group is “one of the main players on the Moldovan market.” “With some of his wines, he can create a good image for Moldovan wines in the West,” Luca said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



British PM Clashes With Scotland on Independence

British Prime Minister David Cameron urged Scotland Wednesday to bring its independence referendum forward after the head of the Edinburgh government said he would not hold a vote until late 2014. Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond has stoked a constitutional clash with London over the thorny issue of which of the two governments has the right to call a referendum on the break-up the 300-year-old union.

In parliament in London, Cameron reiterated that his government would give Edinburgh special powers to hold the referendum, but accused Salmond’s Scottish National Party (SNP) of stalling. The Conservative leader taunted SNP lawmakers, saying that if they were “so keen to leave the United Kingdom, I don’t quite understand why they want to put off putting the question for so long”.

“I sometimes feel when I listen to them it’s not a referendum they want, it’s a never-endum. Let’s have the debate and let’s keep our country together,” Cameron said. Cameron said he opposed Scottish independence and that the United Kingdom was “stronger together rather than breaking apart,” but said uncertainty over the issue was hurting Scotland’s economy.

His comments came after Salmond insisted that it is the Scottish government that has the mandate to call the referendum for autumn 2014, and accused London of interference. “It must be a referendum built in Scotland and decided by the Scottish people,” Salmond told BBC radio.

The issue has turned into a battle of wits between Cameron and Salmond, a former economist who is regarded as one of the shrewdest political operators in the United Kingdom.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: ‘A Celebration of Ice-Cold Water’

Danes love their winter swimming, and science shows they may be on to something

Visitors to Denmark are often surprised to learn that Danes leave their infants outside to sleep in the cold Nordic air. But it takes living here a little while to discover another peculiarity about Danes’ fondness for the cold: there are a lot of winter swimming clubs — and they have waiting lists.

According to one index, Denmark has 80 official winter swimming clubs, with a total of almost 20,000 registered winter swimmers. At the Helgoland sea baths, 5km from Copenhagen’s city centre, a winter swimming club called Det Kolde Gys (The Cold Shiver) has been in operation since 1929. Today, it has more than 2,000 members and a waiting list.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Four Arrested in Death of 81-Year-Old

14-year-old Bulgarian girl a suspect in deadly robbery

Four Bulgarian nationals have been arrested on a charge of murdering 81-year-old Kirsten Inge Damsgaard. Damsgaard was bound and gagged on her bed while her Herlev flat was ransacked on December 30. Her daughter found her lifeless body on New Year’s Day. Two men, aged 20 and 22, a 19 year-old woman and a 14-year-old girl were been arrested yesterday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Animal Rights Party Worry About Rights of Mice

THE HAGUE, 11/01/12 — The Lower House must combat the plague of mice in the parliament building in an animal-friendly way, says the Party for Animals (PvdD). The party, which holds two of the 150 seats in the Lower House, complains that mouse-traps ahve been place in the building. It asks in a letter to the presidium, the management of the Lower House, it asks for preventive measures, for example by preventing food remains from lying around, instead of mousetraps.

The PvdD actually wants the traps removed and replaced by run-in boxes, so that the lives of the little creatures can be spared. “These mice caught in a humane way can be put somewhere else at a spot where they can live without causing nuisance,” according to a spokesman.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Ban Khat

The Dutch government Tuesday banned the use of khat, a leaf native to East Africa chewed for its stimulant properties mainly by the Netherlands’ sizeable Somali community. “The drug khat is banned,” the Dutch Immigration, Health and Justice departments said in a joint statement.

Khat is grown in the Horn of Africa and has for centuries been chewed by users in Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Yemen. “The problem lies especially within the Somali community, which is much larger than the Kenyan or Yemeni communities within our country,” immigration department spokesman Frank Wassenaar told AFP, adding there were about 27,000 Somalis living in the Netherlands. “If taken in moderation there are no major problems, but an investigation showed it to be problematic among some 10 percent of khat users,” leading to health and social issues, added the statement.

An independent report commissioned by the Dutch government has cited noise, littering and groups of men who “roam the streets perceived as threatening”, as some of the effects. With high unemployment and low education levels, the Dutch Somali community was “late” in terms of integration, the report said.

Imported legally via Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport four times a week, khat is distributed throughout the Netherlands but also in Germany, Sweden, Denmark and Norway, it added. Around 843 tonnes of khat, worth a minimum 14 million euros (U$18 million) passed through Schiphol in 2010, up from 714 tonnes in 2009 and 693 tonnes in 2008.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Occupy Movement Now Just a Few Activists

Three months into the Occupy protest against the culture of greed in the financial sector and just small groups of activists are left in makeshift camps in the major Dutch cities, says the ANP press agency. In Amsterdam, most tents which made up the round-the-clock demonstration outside the city’s stock exchange building have been dismantled, with just a few hard-core protesters remaining.

The city council says the number of incidents and nuisance associated with the protest have dramatically decreased since people were banned from sleeping at the site. The demonstrators themselves say they plan to concentrate in the near future on surprise protests such as flash mobs.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ex-Miss Denmark Sues Norwegian Town Over Fall

Former Miss Denmark Line Kruuse Nielsen has sued the south-eastern town of Sandefjord after a fall on the ice ended her modelling career and left her with lasting injuries. The 29-year-old Kruuse Nielsen came a cropper as she made her way to a dance lesson in December 2008, a year after she represented Denmark in the Miss World beauty pageant, local newspaper Sandefjords Blad reports. The model was in the town for a work assignment when she took a tumble in the town square, hitting her head on the ground as she landed on her back.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greenland Drowning in Seal

The Greenland Fisheries and Hunters Organisation KNAPK is appealing to Denmark to raise the issue indigenous rights and an EU ban on seal products, due to a burgeoning seal population in the Arctic regions. “Hunting seal and sealskin production ensures employment throughout Greenland and in particular in the outlying regions. Seal hunting and skin production helps raise living standards and livelihoods for hunters in our country,” KNAPK Chairman Leif Fontaine tells Sermitsiaq. The European Union has a ban on imports of sealskin and seal products.

Fontaine says that the EU’s ban has wrecked the worldwide trade in indigenous seal products, but equally importantly is threatening both the seal population and fish stocks in the Arctic regions. “We are concerned that the import ban on seal products is harming the eco-systems in our waters,” Fontaine says, adding the increasing population of seals is a ‘ticking bomb’ under the Greenland fishing industry.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Cannabis Makes Its Way to the Dinner Table

‘An amazing ingredient’ says Italian food institution

(ANSA) — Rome, January 10 — Cannabis is an ‘amazing ingredient’ according to Perugia’s Flavour University.

The school, which is part of the National Food Education and Culture Center, made the claim Tuesday in a list of new recipes by the school’s chefs.

The ingredient, cannabis sativa, is not to be confused with cannabis indica, an essential ingredient in marijuana and hashish. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the intoxicating element used to make drugs, exists only in trace amounts in cannabis indica, also known as industrial hemp. “Virtually zero,” said Glenda Giampaoli, director of the Museum of Hemp Sant’Anatolia di Narco, which collaborated with the university on some of its recipes and sells the ingredient. “It’s regularly inspected by the Ministry of Health,” adds Giampaoli. The school claims that the use of cannabis in Italian cooking dates back centuries.

With a taste reminiscent of hazelnut, hemp is versatile as an ingredient in cooking, mostly in the form of flour but also by using its leaves, seeds and oil to “add a twist” to food, according to the school.

Hemp is rich in oil quality, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals and crude fiber, and as a seed contains high quality protein, soluble and insoluble fiber, vitamins, minerals and essential fatty acids.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Violated Human Rights in Garbage Crisis

Italy violated residents’ human rights by not collecting garbage for months in a village near Naples, the European Court of Human Rights ruled on Tuesday. At the height of the crisis, in 2008, residents “lived in an environment polluted by the piling-up of rubbish on the streets,” the court said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Man Drowns Himself in a Vat of Whisky at World Famous Scottish Distillery

A man has killed himself by leaping into a vat of whisky at the Glenfiddich Distillery.

Brian Ettles, 46, drowned after he threw himself inside the 50,000-litre tank.

Paramedics and firefighters were called to the scene but the father-of-two died inside the wooden vat on Saturday

It is believed the incident in Dufftown, Banffshire, took place the day after Mr Ettles’ wife Irene had celebrated her 54th birthday.

Family members were last night too distraught to speak about the tragedy as the distillery was closed for the second day running in tribute to Mr Ettles, who lived in nearby Keith.

Neighbour Eileen Mackenzie, 67, said: ‘I am just really shocked.

‘It’s such a horrible way for someone to go and most people I have spoken to are really quite upset about it.

‘He was just a young man and I have no idea what might have made him want to take his own life in such a way.’

As well as his wife, Mr Ettles also leaves daughter Julie, 25, and 21-year-old son Stuart.

He had a senior role at the distillery, where he had worked for 23 years.

The alarm was raised at around 10.40pm on Saturday, at which point it was hoped a rescue operation could still be launched to save Mr Ettles.

But he died inside the tank, known as a washback, which is used in the early stages of the distilling process.

A Glenfiddich spokesman said: ‘We decided to close as a mark of respect for the person who died. Our thoughts go out to his family.’

A waitress at The Commercial Hotel in Dufftown said Mr Ettles had been in the bar over the festive period.

She added: ‘Brian had been in a few times for food and a pint after he finished work.

‘Nobody here really knew him that well because he lived in Keith, but he seemed like a nice enough man. We are all really shaken up that he has died.’

A spokesman for Grampian Police said: ‘There are no suspicious circumstances.’

Glenfiddich is the world’s best-selling single malt whisky.

The distillery was opened in 1886 by William Grant and is still run by his descendants.

           — Hat tip: McR [Return to headlines]



Scottish Referendum: 50 Fascinating Facts You Should Know About Scotland

Scotland has been part of the United Kingdom for more than three hundred years, but it is unlike anywhere else in Britain. Here are 50 facts you should know about the country:

1.   The official animal of Scotland is Unicorn.
2.   The shortest scheduled flight in the world is one-and-a-half miles long from Westray to Papa Westray in the Orkney Islands of Scotland. The journey takes 1 minute 14 seconds to complete.
3.   Scotland has approximately 790 islands, 130 of which are inhabited.
4.   The Neolithic settlement of Skara Brae (pictured below), on the island of Orkney, is the oldest building in Britain, dating from 3100 BC.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Scottish Independence: A History of Anglo-Scottish Rivalry

The stand-off between David Cameron and Alex Salmond over the future of the Union is the latest confrontation in a 2000-year history of rivalry between Scotland and England.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Secret Aerial Photos: Book Provides Fresh Glimpse of Berlin’s Destruction

Following the end of World War II, photographer Hein Gorny took spectacular aerial shots of the ravaged German capital. His son Peter explains how Hein defied a flying ban imposed by the Allies and managed to snap the dramatic shots.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain’s Literary Giants Are Lost in English Translation

Three cheers for Javier Maras for making it into Penguin Modern Classics: the first Spanish writer to do so since Federico Garca Lorca. Isnt it about time the English-speaking world woke up to the Spanish literature of the last 75 years?

An indisputable criterion of success for any novelist is when Penguin Modern Classics signs up your backlist, especially when its for a five-figure sum. Which is what has happened to Javier Maras. The 60-year-old Spanish writer, whose latest title, The Infatuations Los enamoramientos, will be published in English in early 2013, joins an exclusive group of Spanish writers in Penguins catalogue: Cervantes, Quevedo, Jacinto Benavente, and Lorca.

Yes, thats it. Four writers: the first two of whom died in the 17th century, the next in 1954; although he stopped writing long before that. For Penguin, and most US and UK publishers, it seems that, until now, Spanish literature ended with the murder of Federico Garca Lorca in 1936. But did literature in Spain not stop with the outbreak of civil war and the ensuing four decades of military rule? The impact of the Spanish Civil War on Spanish literature was devastating.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Hundreds Gather for Slain Malmö Teen’s Funeral

Hundreds of Malmö residents turned out on Wednesday to follow the casket of 15-year-old Ardiwan Samir, who died after being shot on New Year’s Eve, in a march arranged by the boy’s family as a protest against violence. The 15-year-old boy was shot in the head and chest on New Year’s Eve near his home in the city’s Rosengård district and died from his injuries the following day.

The killing sparked a strong reaction from Malmö residents, who staged an anti-violence demonstration last week as his family called upon the government to tighten gun laws and take action against violence in the city. “Now the police and the government must act,” Samir’s father, Diaa Noman, told the Aftonbladet newspaper last week.

“It’s not acceptable that people are killed in Malmö and in Rosengård. Now even children are the victims.” Samir’s family had received permission from police to allow the deceased boy’s funeral procession to double as another demonstration against violence in the city.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘My Baby’s Dead, My Baby’s Dead’: Parents Held by Police on Suspicion of Murder After Death of Their Six-Week-Old Child

A six-week-old baby boy at the centre of a murder probe has been named as Mohammed Ismail Malik.

His parents, father Shakeel Hussain and mother Rabeel Malik, are being questioned by Greater Manchester detectives on suspicion of his murder.

They are also being quizzed on suspicion of causing or allowing the death of a child.

Police said they are not looking for anyone else in connection with the boy’s death.

Mohammed Ismail’s devastated family described the little boy as ‘absolutely gorgeous’ and said that the couple would never harm a child.

The youngster was taken by paramedics from the family home in Heaton, Bolton, to the Royal Bolton Hospital just before 4pm last Thursday.

He was transferred to Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool, where he died the next day.

Police were informed of his death at 11am on Saturday and launched an investigation.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: EDL Thug Who Abused Police at Telford Protest Faces £685 Bill

An English Defence League supporter who chanted ‘You’re not English any more’ at a police officer during a protest in Telford has been convicted of using threatening behaviour.

He was fined £50 and ordered to pay £620 costs and a £15 victim surcharge

Davies admitted he had directed a chant of ‘You’re not English any more’ at a police officer in front of him.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Generation of Young Muslims Ending Up in Jail ‘Because of Outdated Imams Who Fail to Engage With Them’

  • Mosques use overseas clerics who cannot speak English and have different outlook, warns cleric
  • Failure to connect leaves a ‘dangerous’ vacuum

Out-dated teaching in mosques is behind a dramatic rise in the number of young Muslims going to prison, a top cleric has said. Ahtsham Ali, an adviser to the Prison Service, said that mosques in the UK fail to engage with the young men that come through their door because they use imams from overseas who are unable to preach in English. He said that more needs to be done to understand problems in society like family breakdown, arranged marriages and drugs. He also said there was a difficulty with the absence of good male role models and too much emphasis on religious rituals. Mr Ali said: ‘It is a tragedy. I have seen youngsters, the next generation, just totally switch off from it. This is dangerous. it allows others to take advantage to take up the vacuum.’

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


‘Egyptian Revolutionary Guard’ Threatens to Attack U.S. Embassy

In recent days, media in Egypt and elsewhere have reported that an organization calling itself “The Egyptian Revolutionary Guard” planned to attack the U.S. Embassy in Cairo on January 25, 2012, the anniversary of the Egyptian revolution, just as its members had previously attacked the Israeli Embassy in Cairo on September 9, 2011. Pro-Hizbullah activist Muhammad Al-Hadari, who calls himself the organization’s secretary-general, admitted that he had called to attack the U.S. Embassy, but said that he had later withdrawn this call after discussing the matter with the members of his Facebook group. Subsequently, an announcement on behalf of the organization was posted on Facebook, stating that the January 25 march on the U.S. Embassy was cancelled, but threatening to hold it at a later date if Israel continued Judaizing Jerusalem and attacking Gaza.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Vandals Deface Mosque, Spray ‘Price Tag’ Graffiti

Vandals defaced a West Bank mosque and torched Palestinian vehicles in yet another far-right attack overnight Wednesday, police said. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the incident occurred in Dir Istiya, west of Nablus. Vandals defaced a West Bank mosque and torched Palestinian vehicles in yet another far-right attack overnight Wednesday, police said. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the incident occurred in Dir Istiya, west of Nablus. Perpetrators sprayed the words “price tag Gal Yosef” on the mosque wall. Gal Yosef is the name of an illegal outpost located near the Shiloh settlement that was dismantled by Israeli security forces Tuesday. Rosenfeld added that three cars belonging to Palestinians were torched. Police sent a forensic team to the village to gather evidence. Defense Minister Ehud Barak said he ordered security forces to track down those behind the latest incident, describing them as “criminals” aiming to “harm the delicate fabric of life between Israelis and Palestinians in the West Bank, and relations between Israel and its neighbors.” “These acts distract the IDF from its missions,” Barak said. Last week Jerusalem saw a far-right attack against Arab property, as well as an attempted attack against the Knesset. Two cars were burned in the Arab neighborhood of Sharafat, a small neighborhood located north of Gilo near Beit Safafa. Next to the burned vehicles, police found graffiti with the words “price tag” and “revenge.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Visiting Catholic Bishops Decide: “Gaza is a Prison”

No mention of rockets on Israeli civilians, nor Islamic persecution of Christians. Visiting bishops saw only how Gaza is a “large prison.”

Eight Catholic bishops from Europe and North America have just visited the Christian community in Gaza.

The Vatican high profile delegation included Patrick Kelly, archbishop of Liverpool; Richard Smith, archbishop of Edmonton, Canada; Gerald Kicanas, bishop of Tucson, US; Michel Dubost, bishop of Evry, France; and Riccardo Fontana, bishop of Arezzo-Cortona-Sansepolcro, Italy.

French Bishop Dubost’s comment was, “Last week, I asked prisoners in the largest prison in Europe (in Evry) to pray for you”.

The inference is clear: Gaza’s Christians are living in a big prison and terrified by Israel…

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Bomb Kills Iranian Nuclear Director

An Iranian university professor working at a key nuclear facility was killed today by a car bomb, a semi-official news agency reported.

The explosion killed Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a chemistry expert and a director of the Natanz uranium enrichment facility in central Iran, the Fars agency said.

A senior Iranian official immediately blamed Israel.

“The responsibility of this explosion falls on the Zionist regime,” the governor of Tehran province, Safar Ali Bratloo, told Iran’s Arabic-language Al-Alam broadcaster.

“The method of this terrorist action is similar to previous actions that targeted Iran’s muclear scientists,” he said.

Two assailants on a motorcycle attached magnetic bombs to Mr Roshan’s car, killing him and wounding two others in the Iranian capital.

The attack in Tehran strongly resembles earlier killings of scientists working on the country’s controversial nuclear programme.

The killing of Mr Roshan was similar to previous assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists that Tehran has blamed on Israel and the United States. Both countries have denied the accusations.

Mr Roshan, 32, was inside the Iranian-assembled Peugeot 405 car with two others when the bomb exploded near Gol Nabi Street in north Tehran, Fars said.

Fars described the explosion as a “terrorist attack” targeting Mr Roshan, a graduate of the prestigious Sharif University of Technology in Tehran.

A similar bomb explosion on January 12, 2010 killed Tehran University professor Masoud Ali Mohammadi, a senior physics professor. He was killed when a bomb-rigged motorcycle exploded near his car as he was about to leave for work.

In November 2010, a pair of back-to-back bomb attacks in different parts of the capital killed one nuclear scientist and wounded another.

The scientist killed in those attacks, Majid Shahriari, was a member of the nuclear engineering faculty at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran and co-operated with the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran. The wounded scientist, Fereidoun Abbasi, was almost immediately appointed head of Iran’s atomic agency.

In July last year, motorcycle-riding gunmen killed Darioush Rezaeinejad, an electronics student. Other reports identified him as a scientist involved in suspected Iranian attempts to make nuclear weapons.

Mr Rezaeinejad allegedly participated in developing high-voltage switches, a key component in setting off the explosions needed to trigger a nuclear warhead.

The United States and other countries say Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons technology. Iran denies the allegations, saying that its programme is intended for peaceful purposes.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Dutch Queen’s Visit to Oman Good for Trade

Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands attended a dinner yesterday evening hosted by Sultan Qaboos bin Said al Said of Oman at the close of the first of a three-day official visit to the country. The banquet was held at the Sultan’s Al Alam palace in the capital, Muscat. Earlier on Tuesday evening, Deputy Prime Minister Maxime Verhagen praised the royal family and an accompanying trade delegation for their efforts in sealing a number of trade deals.

Delegates from Oman signed contracts of intent, which would strengthen ties between the between the two countries, in the presence of Queen Beatrix, Crown Prince Willem-Alexander and Princess Máxima. Dutch waste management company CMTS van Sommeren signed a 160-million-euro contract to set up a national industrial waste system for dangerous substances.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Finding the Jesus of Islam in Early Christianities

In the early days of Islam, a few companions of the Prophet were fleeing persecution in Mecca and sought refuge in Abyssinia. The Christian ruler of the land, Ashama, demanded the companions to read aloud from their scripture and, when one of them recited from the sura of Mary, Ashama and his court were moved to tears. When they were told to make known their beliefs about Jesus, they said that Islam considers Jesus to be a messenger of God, the word of God, and the miraculously born son of the Virgin Mary. After hearing this, Ashama is said to have drawn a line in the sand and said that the differences between them were no more than that thin line. He then decreed that Muslims were allowed safe refuge in his kingdom[1]. It would be nice to think that this story could be applicable to modern Christians and Muslims, but take one look at the news and that thought disappears.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Indictment of Coup Generals Reflects Shifting Attitudes in Turkey

In Turkey, the two surviving leaders of the 1980 military coup have been charged with crimes against the state in a move widely touted as an important step as the country faces up to its dark past of military rule.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iranian Nuclear Scientist Killed in Car Bombing

Iran’s government has blamed the apparent assassination of one of its nuclear scientists on Israel and the United States, mirroring similar attacks in the past and intensifying already hostile relations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Lebanon: Italy to Maintain Commitment/Troops in Region, Terzi

Gen. Paolo Serra to take command of UNIFIL mission on Jan 30

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JANUARY 11 — “Italy will maintain its commitment and troops” as part of the UNIFIL mission in Lebanon, said Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi di Sant’Agata in Paris during a press conference with his French counterpart, Alain Juppé. In response to a question, Terzi added that “our country will take over the command of the UN mission on January 30, and this is only the latest proof of our commitment.” At the end of the month General Paolo Serra will be taking on the command of the UNIFIL mission of peacekeeping troops.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



More Than 800,000 Children Married in Iran

The latest statistics on the marriage of Iranian children shows that under-aged girls are married more than under-aged boys.

Freedom Messenger ) — [According to statistics] 24,506 married girls under the age of 14 and 5,519 boys married between the ages of 10 to 14, shows that more girls marry older men.

There are 848,000 married children between the ages of 10 to 18 in Iran… The number of child mothers which is 6.5 percent more than child fathers shows that 85 percent of married girls between 10 to 18 years of age have become the wives of men over 18 and only 15 percent of these children have married boys their own age… [According to these statistics], 25,000 of the 848,000 married children became divorced when they were under 18 and about 12,000 of them have lost their spouses.

According to the law, girls can marry at 13 while boys can marry at 15 and the law has opened a way for the early marriage of girls based on her special physical characteristics [which means that if she goes through puberty at an earlier age, she can marry].

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Oil Exporters to Up Output if Iran Embargoed: France

If Iran is hit with an oil embargo over its nuclear policy, other major exporters will increase their production in order to steady world markets, the French foreign minister said Tuesday. “Other countries are ready to increase production to avoid an effect on prices. We have made discreet contacts in this direction. The producers don’t want to talk about it, but they are standing ready,” Alain Juppe said.

Briefing a French parliamentary committee, Juppe said he did not share some lawmakers’ pessimism over the prospects for an embargo on Iranian crude. Several Western powers are pushing for stronger economic sanctions to be imposed on Iran’s Islamic regime in order to force it to abandon a nuclear programme they allege is destined to produce atomic bombs.

But China and some other major energy consumers are opposed to any embargo that could cut of oil supplies from the Gulf and boost oil prices at a moment when the world economy is already teetering on the brink of recession.

Juppe admitted some European oil importers, including Italy and Greece, were also nervous about losing Iranian exports, but said: “We are trying to convince our partners that there are other sources of supply.” The French minister said he hoped to have all EU members on board for tougher sanctions before a European foreign minister’s meeting on January 23.

Iran is the world’s third largest oil exporter, shipping around 2.4 million barrels per day, and the regime depends on oil sales for 60 percent of its revenue, having made around $100 billion last year. Taking this oil off the market would be a shock in itself, but Iran has also threatened to disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, which could cut supplies from Saudi Arabia and other major Gulf producers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia Cautiously Navigating Conflict With Iran Amid Arab Spring Storm

In light of the popular uprisings in the Arab world, especially in the Gulf, the past year has seen a considerable escalation of the tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia, which have been in conflict for many years. Both Iran and Saudi Arabia are following with concern the political changes taking place in the various Arab countries, and the impact these changes could have on the balance of power between the Iran-led and Saudi-led camps in the Middle East.

Both countries have lost key allies as a result of the Arab Spring: Saudi Arabia has lost Egypt, its main ally in its leadership of the anti-Iran camp, due to that country’s preoccupation with domestic affairs. Iran has likewise lost its main ally, the Syrian regime, which is currently fighting for its survival amid the wave of protests sweeping the country; if the Syrian regime falls, Iran will be severely impacted, as will be the power-balance between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The difference between the Iranian and the Saudi approaches to the events in Syria is exacerbating the tension between them. In addition, Saudi Arabia is deeply concerned about Iran’s growing infiltration of Iraq, especially following the withdrawal of the American troops from that country. Until now, the American presence to some extent neutralized the Iranian involvement in Iraq. But now that the Americans have withdrawn, Iraq, with its Shi’ite government, is becoming a major theatre of conflict between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Ankara May Rename French Streets Over Genocide Row

Officials in Turkey’s capital threatened Wednesday to rename any streets with French names and erect a monument to Algerian victims of French colonial violence because of the “genocide” row with Paris. A Turkish minister threatened other unspecified reprisals if France went ahead with plans to pass a bill that would outlaw denial that the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turk forces amounted to genocide.

French senators will debate the bill on January 23 and if passed, it would go to President Nicolas Sarkozy for approval. France’s lower house, the national assembly, approved the bill last month. Avni Kavlak, a spokesman for the Ankara city council, said local politicians were waiting for the Senate’s decision before acting.

“Municipal councillors will adopt the decision by a very large majority,” Kavlak predicted. Kavlak said Turkey’s reprisals were the idea of Ankara’s mayor, Melih Gokcek. If officials went ahead with the reprisals, it would mean renaming streets named after De Gaulle, Paris and Strasbourg, he added.

Turkey accuses France of hypocrisy for its own hand in thousands of killings committed in its former colony in 1945 and during Algeria’s struggle for independence between 1954 and 1962. The memorial to Algerians “massacred by the French”, would be erected near the French embassy.

But Algerian Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia last week urged Turkey to stop trying to make political capital from France’s colonial past. He said Turkey had been a member of NATO during the war in Algeria and as such had provided material support to France.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Muslim Athletes Face Ramadan Hurdles at London Olympics

Muslim athletes are set to face an even tougher challenge during this year’s Olympic Games as they gear up to compete in London during the holy month of Ramadan. The summer’s event will clash with the holiest month of the year in the Islamic calendar, when Muslims are expected to fast from sunrise to sunset, a requirement that could hamper the performance of athletes from the GCC. Although the line-up for this year’s UAE Olympic athletes has yet to be confirmed, Saeed Abdul Ghaffar Hussain, the secretary general of the UAE’s National Olympic Committee, told Arabian Business some athletes may opt to postpone their fast to maximise their chances. “I don’t think there will be any problem; our athletes are used to this,” he said. “If you go according to religion, in certain cases it is allowed to break fast but you have to cover that in the later stages. But it depends on the individual; some players don’t like to break fast and continue fasting. I think it [comes down] to the individual,” he added.

Ramadan this year is expected to run from 20 July to 18 August while the Olympics will run from 27 July to 12 August. An estimated 3,000 Muslim athletes are expected to compete at this year’s games, leaving many divided about whether or not to fast. British rower Mo Sbihi, the first Muslim to row for Britain, said in July he planned to postpone his fasting during this year’s Ramadan because he didn’t want to hurt his chances of winning a gold medal due to feeling hungry or dehydrated. “It is a massive risk to fast and compete. My power output could decrease, or I could collapse during the race. This is the last Olympics for some people and I would not want to risk their chances or my own. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity for all of us, and I would not want to ruin it,” he told the UK’s Standard newspaper. Eight UAE nationals, including Sheikh Saeed bin Maktoum Al-Maktoum, Obaid Ahmed Aljesmi and Saeed Rashid Omar Alqubaisi, took part in the Beijing Olympics. UAE nationals competing could be exempt in certain circumstances, said Abdualraham Amourarah from the UAE’s general authority of Islamic Affairs & Endowment.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



US Senators Warn Ashton on Risk of Iran War

BRUSSELS — US senators have warned EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton that Iran’s alleged nuclear weapons programme risks igniting a military confrontation.

“Iran’s nuclear progamme is moving forward — sharply increasing the risks of either a military confrontation or other countries in the Middle East pursuing their own nuclear arsenals,” eight cross-party senators said in a letter sent to the EU’s top diplomat on Tuesday (10 January).

They urged Europe to press ahead with sanctions on Iran’s most valuable export — oil, with EU foreign ministers set to decide on a possible embargo at a meeting on 23 January.

The senators also want the EU to impose sanctions against the Central Bank of Iran, its main financial intermediary. “As you know, the Central Bank of Iran has been carrying out illicit and deceptive financial activities that are supporting the Iranian government’s advancing nuclear programme,” the letter said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



West Blamed by Iran as Yet Another Nuclear Scientist is Assassinated by Magnetic Car Bomb in the Street

Iran pointed the finger of blame at the West today after another of its nuclear scientists was killed in a dramatic street assassination in Tehran today.

Chemistry expert Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a director of the Natanz uranium enrichment facility in the centre of the country, died when a magnetic bomb was attached to his car by two motorcyclists.

Iran immediately described the latest assassination of a recent spate as a ‘terrorist attack’ and claims Israel and the U.S. is resorting to such methods in an underhand bid to halt its nuclear programme.

Four Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed and a number of others hurt or kidnapped in a series of killings dating back to June 2009.

The killing will inflame tensions between the West and Iran which are already high following an International Atomic Agency report which claimed Iran was capable of producing a nuclear bomb.

Iran ratcheted up feelings by capturing a U.S. drone late last year, and refusing to give it back despite a personal plea from President Barack Obama and a series of military manoeuvers and threats and counter-threats over the trade-crucial Straits Of Hormuz have also worried observers.

Witnesses to today’s attack said they had seen two people on a motorbike ride alongside the car and attach the bomb.

Mr Roshan, 32, was inside the Iranian-assembled Peugeot 405 with two others when the bomb detonated near Gol Nabi Street in north Tehran.

A pedestrian also died in the attack and one of the other passengers in the car was seriously injured.

Fars news agency described the explosion as a ‘terrorist attack’ targeting Mr Roshan, a graduate of the prestigious Sharif University of Technology in Tehran.

Deputy Tehran governor Safarali Baratloo was quoted as saying: ‘The bomb was a magnetic one and the same as the ones previously used for the assassination of the scientists, and the work of the Zionists (Israelis).’

A similar bomb attack on January 12, 2010, killed Tehran University professor Masoud Ali Mohammadi, a senior physics professor.

He was killed when a bomb-rigged motorbike exploded near his car as he was about to leave for work.

And in November 2010, a pair of back-to-back bomb attacks in different parts of the capital killed one nuclear scientist and injured another.

The dead victim in that attack, Majid Shahriari, was a member of the nuclear engineering faculty at Shahid Beheshti University in Tehran and cooperated with the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran.

The injured scientist, Fereidoun Abbasi, was subsequently appointed head of Iran’s atomic agency.

Most recently in July 2011, motorbike-riding gunmen killed Darioush Rezaeinejad, an electronics student. Reports identified him as a scientist involved in suspected Iranian attempts to make nuclear weapons.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

South Asia


‘Fear in Their Hearts’ As Pakistanis Ferry NATO Wares Into Afghanistan

NATO forces in Afghanistan rely heavily on overland supply routes from Pakistan. For the Pakistanis who drive the supply trucks, danger lurks around every corner as they face the threat of attack by militants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India’s Chronically Stressed Border Troops Take Up Yoga

Stress is on the rise among India’s paramilitary forces posted at crucial borders. A recent government study found a majority of Border Security Force personnel are sleep-deprived and face abusive behavior from seniors.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China: Indignant Workers Threaten Suicide at Foxconn Park in Wuhan

According to the Chinese anti-government website China Jasmine Revolution, about 300 employees at a Foxconn Technology Park in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, threatened to kill themselves by jumping from the top of a building in the park.

On Jan. 2, about 300 employees at a plant belonging to Taiwan-based Foxconn — the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer — asked their boss for a raise. They were told either quit their positions with compensation or keep their jobs and receive no additional payment. Most employees took the first option, but the company terminated the agreement, and none of them were given the money they were promised.

Eventually, the mayor of Wuhan came to stop dissuade the former employees from committing suicide. At 9:00pm on Jan. 3, the group chose life. Suicides at Foxconn plants resulted in the deaths of 14 workers in 2010, where employees frequently complained of discrimination and long working hours.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese New Year Revelers Grapple Desperately for Tickets Home

Half of the Chinese population now lives in cities. Once a year, former peasants go back to their villages to see their families. In terms of transport, it’s a logistics nightmare.

Beijing West is one of four big railway stations in the Chinese capital. Ahead of this year’s Spring Festival, crowds have gathered as thousands try desperately to get hold of tickets. Military police with megaphones have been deployed to keep order. New Year is the most important holiday in China and it is especially significant for migrant workers in cities who rarely get another chance to go home and see their families.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Queensland Government Publishes “Handbook on Hindu Patients”

Queensland government in Australia has come up with a “Health Care Providers’ Handbook on Hindu Patients” as a “quick-reference tool for health workers to use when caring for Hindu patients”. It covers a range of topics including “prayer and meditation, astrological beliefs, karma, fasting, end of life issues, maternity care, and food requirements.” Hindu statesman Rajan Zed has applauded Queensland government for this clinical support resource, saying that “it is a step in the right direction”. Knowing the beliefs and practices of Hindus would help the providers deliver better healthcare. Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, urged other governments around the world also to come up with such handbooks so that healthcare providers understand the Hindu patients better and be more sensitive to their feelings and requirements. If governments need any help in creating such handbooks, he or other Hindu scholars would gladly assist.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Ghana: Illiteracy Said to be Tragedy of the Muslim Community in Ghana

A traditional ruler in the Upper West Region says illiteracy is one of the tragedies of the Ghanaian Muslim community which needed to be tackled seriously to create more opportunities for the youth to contribute meaningfully to national development. Kuoro Barecheh Nlowie Baninye II, Acting President of the Buwa Traditional Council, has therefore called on Muslims to make education a topmost priority and use all available resources to build a better future for their children. He also appealed to Muslims to stop forcing their daughters into early marriages as that practice held no good future for them. Kuoro Baninye made the observation during the inauguration of a GH¢60,000 Mosque constructed for Muslims in the Niator community with financial assistance from Islamic Council for Development and Humanitarian Services (ICODEHS). He said it was important for Muslims to respect others religions to help bring peace, tolerance and harmony into the country, pointing out that the Muslim world was a delicate one. “My brothers and sisters in Islam, in this delicate world, when planning, be careful, when executing be cautious and when failing be courageous; that is the way to succeed in a delicate world”, Kuoro Baninye cautioned.

Kuoro Baninye commended ICODEHS for providing a mosque for the community and gave the assurance that the facility would help promote the Islamic religion in the area.

He also commended government for providing development projects in the Buwa Traditional Area but mentioned inadequate road network, dam facilities to promote all year farming and electricity to enhance cottage industries as well as classroom blocks and subsidies on agricultural inputs as some of the challenges undermining the development of the people.

Alhaji Taminu Saeed, a Director at the Upper West Regional Coordinating Council, who deputised for the Regional Minister, Alhaji Issahaque Salia, urged Muslims in the community to use the mosque to improve moral standards and values of the people. He called for peaceful co-existence among the various ethnic groups in the area to enhance development.

He appealed to the people to avoid double registration during the voter’s registration exercise to make the 2012 general elections clean and credible.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Gunmen Kill 8, Mob Attacks Mosque as Nigeria Chaos Grows

LAGOS: Gunmen shot eight people dead in northern Nigeria Tuesday and a mob torched an Islamic school in the south, as a nationwide fuel strike and growing religious tension rattled Africa’s oil-rich giant. The two-day-old general strike has not yet affected the output of Africa’s top oil producer but it has paralyzed the country and sent the government, already battling a brutal campaign by an Islamist group, into crisis mode. Suspected members of the extremist Boko Haram sect gunned eight people down in a pub as one of Nigeria’s most respected voices, Nobel Prize in literature laureate Wole Soyinka, warned the country was heading toward civil war. A doctor in Potiskum, a town in the northern state of Yobe, said eight bodies were brought to the morgue after militants stormed a pub and opened fire before speeding away on a motorcycle. “The bodies included five policemen, a bartender, a customer and a 10-year-old girl,” the doctor said. The police confirmed the shooting but did not provide a casualty toll.

Earlier, attackers burned part of the central mosque complex in the southern city of Benin, where clashes earlier killed five, bringing to 11 the number of people killed in incidents related to the strike over two days. “We have recorded so far five deaths — on both sides, those that have been attacked and the attackers,” said Dan Enowoghomwenwa, secretary-general of the Nigerian Red Cross in Edo state, told AFP. He said 10,000 people were also displaced by the violence. Witnesses said an Islamic school adjacent to the mosque was burned Tuesday as was a bus parked next to it. The attacks in Benin city started Monday amid street protests against soaring fuel prices, when a crowd separated from the main demonstration to attack another mosque and terrorized residents of Hausa neighborhoods. Hausas are the largest ethnic group in Nigeria’s north and are overwhelmingly Muslim.

The Red Cross official could not specify who was behind the attacks, only saying there were “indigenes” targeting northerners.

Africa’s most populous nation is roughly divided between a predominantly Christian south and mainly Muslim north. Recent violence targeting Christians in the north and blamed on Islamist group Boko Haram has sparked fears of a wider religious conflict as well as warnings from Christian leaders that they will defend themselves. Fears run high that the strike will fan sectarian tensions and Soyinka, who became Africa’s first laureate of the Nobel for literature in 1986, warned in a BBC interview that Nigeria was heading toward a conflict akin to the 1960s war. “It’s not an unrealistic comparison — it’s certainly based on many similarities … We see the nation heading toward a civil war,” the writer said.

Elsewhere in the country, gangs set up burning roadblocks, police fired tear gas and businesses shut in the many parts as the national strike over fuel prices paralyzed Nigeria.

As thousands took to the streets to protest soaring petrol costs, youth gangs set up roadblocks of burning tires along major roads in the economic capital Lagos and threw stones at cars while extorting cash from drivers. Protesters marched through the streets to the sound of blaring afrobeat music, sometimes with soldiers clapping and taking pictures.

One person brought a goat wrapped in a union flag while others carried a mock coffin labeled “Badluck,” a play on the name of President Goodluck Jonathan. Protesters encouraged those watching from the roadside to join in. Jonathan met his security chiefs in the capital Abuja as he faced the toughest challenge since rising to the job in 2010, battling on two fronts against social protests and Boko Haram. The indefinite strike follows the government’s controversial move to end fuel subsidies on Jan. 1, which caused petrol prices to more than double in a country where most of the 160 million population lives on less than $2 a day.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Somali Convert From Islam Whipped in Public

Woman left bleeding in front of hundreds of spectators for becoming Christian.

A Somali convert from Islam was paraded before a cheering crowd last month and publicly flogged as a punishment for embracing a “foreign religion,” sources said.

Sofia Osman, a 28-year-old Christian from Janale city in Somalia’s Lower Shabelle region, had been taken into custody by Islamic extremist al Shabaab militants in November; the public whipping was meant to mark her release. She received 40 lashes on Dec. 22 while jeered by spectators.

“Osman was whipped 40 lashes at 3 p.m., but she didn’t tell what other humiliations she had suffered while in the hands of the militants,” an eyewitness, told Compass, adding that whipping left her bleeding. “I saw her faint. I thought she had died, but soon she regained consciousness and her family took her away.”

The whipping was administered in front of hundreds of spectators after Osman was released from her month-long custody in al Shabaab camps. Nursing her injuries at her family’s home, in the days after the punishment she would not talk to anyone and looked dazed, a source close in touch with the family said. She has since been relocated.

“Please pray for her quick recovery,” the source said.

Janale, one Somalia’s major cities, is about 200 kilometers (124 miles) from Mogadishu.

Osman became a Christian four years ago and was a member of the underground church in the war-torn Horn of Africa country largely controlled by the al Qaeda-linked militants from al Shabaab.

The al Shabaab militia is being hunted down by Kenya Defense Forces in southern Somalia following the extremists’ incursions into Kenya. They had killed and kidnapped tourists and aid workers inside Kenya, prompting military forces to formally enter into war to secure its borders.

In response, the al Shabaab militants have targeted churches in northern Kenyan towns such as Garissa in the hope of dividing Kenyans along religious lines. The Kenyan public, however, has largely backed the government decision to pursue the militants deep into Somalia.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Immigration


France: Record Number of Illegal Immigrants Expelled

French Interior Minister Claude Guéant boasted on Tuesday that the country expelled a record number of illegal immigrants last year and vowed to significantly reduce legal immigration. The announcement came three months ahead of a presidential election in which far-right candidate Marine Le Pen of the National Front is expected to target President Nicolas Sarkozy’s immigration policies.

Guéant, a close ally of Sarkozy and well-known hardliner on immigration, said France had expelled 32,922 illegal immigrants last year, up from 28,026 in 2010. “This is the highest level ever attained,” he said during a press conference, adding that France would seek to expell 35,000 illegal immigrants this year. Guéant also said the number of legal immigrants allowed into the country had dropped to 182,595 last year, down from 189,455 in 2010.

Describing current immigration figures as a “migration policy out of control”, he said he hoped to reduce the number of legal immigrants to 150,000 per year — a level not seen since the 1990s. Guéant has repeatedly linked immigration with crime in France and on Tuesday said the delinquancy rate among immigrants was “two to three times higher” than the national average.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iraqis in Look-Alike Swedish Passport Scam

Two men, aged 38 and 30, have been arrested in Malmö on suspicions of smuggling Iraqi citizens into Sweden using other people’s Swedish passports. “They have smuggled in a number of people, I won’t go into how many,” said Leif Fransson of the Border Police (Gränspolisen) to the TT news agency.

The case involves Iraqi citizens who travelled to Sweden using genuine Swedish passports bought from their original owners. However, the Iraqis were no longer carrying the passports upon their arrival at airports in Sweden, and proceeded to seek asylum. The arrested men used passports that had been issued to people who had come to Sweden earlier and become Swedish citizens.

The smugglers then gave the passports to other Iraqis who had looks similar to those of the original passport owners and then used the false passports to fly to Sweden. The passports true owners have sold them to the people smugglers, usually for 10,000 kronor ($1,450). The passport sellers then simply claimed they’d lost the documents before applying for new ones.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Israeli Lawmakers Approve Harsh Penalties for Illegal Migrants, Israelis Who Help Them

Israel’s parliament on Tuesday approved harsh new penalties on illegal migrants and Israelis who help them, building on other contentious measures designed to stanch the flood of Africans seeking sanctuary here. The bill allows imprisonment of illegal migrants for an unlimited time without trial. People caught helping them could face prison terms of up to 15 years.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


160 Billion Alien Planets May Exist in Our Milky Way Galaxy

Alien planets are incredibly common in our Milky Way galaxy, outnumbering stars by a large margin, a new study suggests.

On average, each of the 100 billion or so stars in our galaxy hosts at least 1.6 planets, according to the study, bringing the number of likely alien worlds to more than 160 billion. And large numbers of these exoplanets are likely to be small and rocky — roughly Earth-like — since low-mass planets appear to be much more abundant than large ones.

“This statistical study tells us that planets around stars are the rule, rather than the exception,” said study lead author Arnaud Cassan of the Paris Institute of Astrophysics. “From now on, we should see our galaxy populated not only with billions of bright stars, but imagine them surrounded by as many hidden extrasolar worlds.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Deepest Hydrothermal Vents Teem With Strange Shrimp

Researchers exploring the seafloor south of the Cayman Islands have discovered the world’s deepest-known hydrothermal vents, an underwater hotspot teeming with bizarre shrimp with light receptors on their backs. Neighboring the deep vent field was an even more surprising find: an area of vents high on the slopes of Mount Dent, an undersea mountain far from the magma-rich areas where heated vents are usually found.

The researchers discovered the two vent fields (which they named Beebe and Von Damm) after surveys of the Mid-Cayman Spreading Center in the Caribbean Ocean turned up chemical hints of hydrothermal water. The Mid-Cayman Spreading Center is a zone where the Earth’s crust is pulling apart very slowly, much more gradually than other ocean rift zones.

Exploration with submersible vehicles revealed the Beebe Vent Field, 16,273 feet (4,960 meters) deep, in the rifting zone. The Beebe field is nearly 2,890 feet (880 m) deeper than the previous deepest-known vent on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. The researchers were not able to measure the temperature of the vents directly, but given that pressure increases with depth, they calculate that the waters may be hotter than 842 degrees Fahrenheit (450 degrees Celsius).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Milky Way Brims With Planets

Carl Sagan would have loved it: not only are there billions and billions of stars in our galaxy, but every star may also harbour a planet. Millions of these could be like the fictional planet Tatooine in Star Wars, which orbits two stars.

About 700 extrasolar planets have been found in the Milky Way, a small number compared with the number of stars present. To find out whether such planets are truly rare or just hard to find, Arnaud Cassan of the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, France, and colleagues turned to gravitational microlensing, in which one star focuses the light from a more distant star.

While other techniques are best at finding planets around nearby sun-like stars, gravitational microlensing can study any star up to 20,000 light years away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Soaring on Titan: Drone Airplane Could Scout Saturn’s Moon

Physicist Jason Barnes was just six years old in 1982 when scientists first came up with the Cassini spacecraft mission that would tour Saturn’s rings and moons more than two decades later. Now, a fully-grown Barnes has the even wilder idea of sending a robotic aircraft soaring through the skies of Saturn’s mysterious moon Titan.

The “AVIATR” drone design looks eerily similar to those of U.S. military drones patrolling the skies above Earth’s battlefields. But it could fly through Titan’s skies far more easily than those of Earth — the Saturn moon has seven times less gravity and more than three times denser atmosphere to give wings extra lift. That would allow the drone to stay airborne almost forever on nuclear batteries with two-light bulbs-worth of power as it scouts the surface of Titan.

“Because it would be electrically powered by ASRGs (Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generators), we could theoretically go forever on that power,” said Barnes, a physicist at the University of Idaho. “The nominal mission is a year, but we don’t really have an upper limit. We could maintain flight indefinitely.”

A robotic airplane could fly on Titan more efficiently than a hot-air balloon, say Barnes and his colleagues. It could also swoop below Titan’s atmospheric haze and take detailed images of the moon’s surface that usually lies hidden from the cameras of Cassini or other spacecraft in orbit.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120110

Financial Crisis
» Coalition at Risk Over Financial Transaction Tax
» Denmark Launches ‘Tap Water’ Presidency
» EU Raises €3bn for Ireland and Portugal
» French Economy Flatlining — New Figures
» German Exports Reach Trillion-Euro Threshold
» Italy: Liberalisations to Hit ‘All Sectors’, Says Govt
» Moody’s Estimates Spain Needs to Find Savings of 40 Billion Euros to Meet Budget Deficit Target
» One in Five Spanish Homes May be Vacant, Experts Say
» Safety Trumps Yield in Euro Crisis: Investors Pay to Lend Germany Money
 
USA
» Ex-US Soldier Charged With Trying to Join Shebab
» Lehigh Valley Muslims Share American Experiences
» Man Arrested After Firing at Multiple Officers in Gadsden
» Oklahoma Sharia Law Ban ‘Unconstitutional’, Court Rules
» Panetta Says the US Will Continue to Field World’s Strongest Military
 
Europe and the EU
» Anonymous Under Fire: Criticism Mounts Against Anti-Nazi Website
» Antibiotic-Resistant Chicken Found in German Supermarkets
» British Deputy PM: EU Veto is ‘Temporary’
» Czech Government Split on Religious Restitution
» Denmark: Kurdish Station Fined 2.6m Kr for Promoting Terrorism
» EU Orders Hungary to Recover Airline Aid
» European Court Condemns Italy for Naples Trash Crisis
» France: Muslim Bride Sues After Order to Remove Veil
» Germany: Jihadist Killer Deserves Life Say Prosecutors
» Italy: Undersecretary Resigns After Hotel-Bill Furore
» Leading MEP Wants Hungary Stripped of Rights
» Norway: Ethnic Discrimination Rife Among Employers: Study
» Swiss National Bank Chief Resigns
» Turkish Ambassador Returns to Paris
» UK: 1960s Housing Estate, Robin Hood Gardens, To be Transformed
» UK: City’s Proposals to Ban Foreign Students From Shops to Cut Thefts Branded Racist and Ridiculous
» UK: Five Men on Trial in Derby for Urging Execution of Gays
» UK: Gang Imported Up to 158,000 Pairs of Counterfeit Trainers Alone
» UK: Lutfur Rahman Councillor Convicted of Second Benefit Fraud
» UK: Muslim Khalique Miah Jailed for Holding Ex-Wife Zahanara Begum Prisoner in the Toilet
» UK: Plans Submitted for 1,700 Homes Blackwall Reach Regeneration
» UK: Prophet’s Biography Led Me to Islam
» UK: Paedophile With One Million Sickening Images of Child Abuse Spared Jail
» Wall Street Journal Launches German Edition
» Why Swiss Gun Love is Coming Under Fire
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Criticism on 20th Anniversary Republika Srpska
» Kosovo: Risk of Radical Islam, Says Ambassador to Italy
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Magnate Sawiris to Stand Trial for Insulting Religion
» German Support for New North Africa Underlined
» Moroccan Imams Call for Freedom to Preach
» Washington Reaches Out as Egyptian Islamists Extend Lead
 
Middle East
» Devil in Details of Egypt Brotherhood’s Party Platform
» EU to Speed Up Decision on Iran Oil Ban
» Iran and the West Rediscover Oil as Weapon
» Iran: ‘Very Grave Concern’ On Nuclear Programme Says Italy
» Tourism: Investments; Dubai Eyes Turkey
» UAE: Copts Thank Muslims for Christmas Spirit
 
South Asia
» How German Diplomats Opened Channel to Taliban
» Pakistan: 40 Muslim Youths Arrested for ‘Moral Policing’ In Nizamabad
 
Far East
» Chinese Tree Extract Stops Rats Getting Drunk
» North Korea Celebrates ‘The Genius of Geniuses’
 
Australia — Pacific
» Mutilated Wallaby Found in Elermore Vale.
» New Zealand: High-Flying Shark Makes Pilot Look Twice
» Rogues’ Gallery: The Convicts of Early Australia
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria: Boko Haram Attack Claims 12 in Adamawa
» Nigeria: Mosque Attacked in Benin City as Nationwide Strike Grips Nigeria
» Reverend’s ‘Kill Whites’ Tweet a Shocker
» Uganda: Muslims Factions’ Row Over Slaughter Rights
» Uganda: Unveiling Muslim Girls at Makerere University
 
Latin America
» Found: First Solid Evidence of Ancient Mayans’ Tobacco Use
» Sony Ordered to Pay Half a Million in Damages After Brazilian Song Calling Black Woman “Stinking Beast” And Comparing Her Hair to Scouring Pads is Deemed Racist
 
Immigration
» Israel: Jail Without Trial for Illegal Immigrants
» Italy: North African Murder Suspects Have ‘Criminal Records’
» Migration IS Killing Off Jobs: 160:000 Britons Have Missed Out on Employment Because Work Was Taken by Foreigners
 
Culture Wars
» UK: Five Men on Trial for “Gay Death Penalty” Leaflets
 
General
» Siberia Was a Wildlife Refuge in the Last Ice Age

Financial Crisis


Coalition at Risk Over Financial Transaction Tax

Chancellor Angela Merkel is facing a crisis in her governing coalition after agreeing with French President Nicolas Sarkozy to push for a financial transaction tax, even if Britain opts out. Merkel’s junior coalition partner, the Free Democratic Party (FDP), suggested on Tuesday its coalition agreement with her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) was being put at risk.

The pro-business party fears that financial businesses could move from Frankfurt to London, if a tax on financial transactions was introduced in Germany but not Britain. “Coalition agreements can only be changed together and not by one side alone,” Hermann Otto Solms, a finance expert at the FDP, told the Handelsblatt on Tuesday.

Otherwise any coalition’s ability to function would be affected at its core, he said. Certain agreements had to be kept, Solms added. Frank Schäffler, the FDP’s finance expert seemed to threaten Merkel with an mutiny of sorts.

“I clearly warn the chancellor against going further in this direction. She is bound to keep to the relevant agreements, otherwise we as the FDP will no longer have to keep to the arrangements,” he told the Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung newspaper on Tuesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark Launches ‘Tap Water’ Presidency

COPENHAGEN — Tap water instead of bottled water, fewer gifts for dignitaries, more use of public transportation — cost-efficiency is to be the hallmark of Denmark’s EU presidency.

“We are very cost-efficient in Denmark, so we want an efficient presidency at a low cost,” Danish EU affairs minister Nicolai Wammen told a group of Brussels-based journalists on Monday (9 January) in Copenhagen. Pointing to the water bottles for the audience, Wammen quipped: “This is the last time we have bottles on the table during the Danish presidency. We will serve only tap water from now on.”

Less gifts for dignitaries and increased use of public transportation will also be part of a strategy that aims to lower the overall cost to a few dozen million euro. The Polish presidency in the second half of 2011was lavish by comparison. It ran up a €115 million bill. A dinner organised for journalists at the residence of Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt later that evening showed that the cost-cutting strategy was already in place. Pitchers of tap water accompanied the Danish white wine.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Raises €3bn for Ireland and Portugal

In what the European Commission said was “a statement of market confidence (in) the EU,” the European Union on Monday raised €3 billion in a 30-year bond sale for cash-strapped eurozone members Ireland and Portugal, who will each get half of the money in low-interest loans.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Economy Flatlining — New Figures

The French economy was flat in the last three months of 2011, the Bank of France said Tuesday, confirming an earlier estimate amid concerns the eurozone debt crisis could spark a recession. The French central bank said there was no growth between the third and fourth quarters of 2011, an outcome which should allow the government to come very close to meeting its full-year target for a 1.5 percent expansion.

Third quarter growth had come in at 0.3 percent, the national statistics institute INSEE said last month. On the basis of the third quarter performance, the French economy should grow 1.7 percent growth for the year, it said. INSEE said last month it expected France to fall into a brief recession, with the economy contracting 0.2 percent in the three months to December and another 0.1 percent in the first quarter of 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Exports Reach Trillion-Euro Threshold

Latest statistics suggest German exports breached the 1-trillion euro mark for the first time ever in 2011. Experts say overseas demand was boosted by the relative weakness of the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Liberalisations to Hit ‘All Sectors’, Says Govt

Cabinet to approve package within 10 days

(ANSA) — Rome, January 10 — The government is preparing to approve a package of liberalisations within 10 days that will hit “all sectors”, Cabinet Undersecretary Antonio Catricala’ has said.

After approving a 30-billion-euro austerity package of tax hikes, spending cuts and pension reforms to put Italy’s public finances in order, the government has turned its attention to reforms designed to boost the sluggish economy.

“We have to do this,” Catricala’ told RAI television.

“There is a document that Premier (Mario) Monti and I am putting together that regards all sectors”.

These measures will probably seek to reduce privileges for dominant companies and certain groups of professionals, who have been accused of using professional guilds to limit access to, and competition in, their sectors.

For example, former Italian antitrust chief Catricala’ said the package will include measures to increase the number of pharmacies and notary offices.

“We have to enable our citizens to obtain the appropriate discounts,” he said. “It’s not a question of broadening the markets but of reducing prices”.

Taxi drivers staged protests in Bologna and Milan on Monday and in Genoa on Tuesday and a nationwide demonstration is planned for Saturday in anticipation of moves to make it easier to obtain taxi licences.

Catricala’ said the water sector will be affected too, even though the possibility of privatising local Italian water companies was blocked last year by a referendum.

The government has already scrapped restrictions on retail opening times, a move shop-keeper associations are trying to overturn, claiming it will hurt small, city-centre outlets and encourage shoppers to use big malls. Monti’s government has also opened talks with unions and business associations on ways to reform Italy’s labour market to make it easier for young people and women to find jobs. “I believe the multilateral disarmament of all the established groups can enable us to make more room for competition and young people,” the premier said on Sunday. photo: Cabinet Undersecretary Antonio Catricala’.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Moody’s Estimates Spain Needs to Find Savings of 40 Billion Euros to Meet Budget Deficit Target

Finance Minister Montoro says no plans to raise VAT as ratings agency predicts economy will contract by between 0.5 and 1.0 percent this year

Spain needs to find budget savings of 40 billion euros if it wants to meet its deficit target for this year of 4.4 percent of GDP, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report released Monday. The figure is 42.8 percent higher than the combined savings cuts and tax hikes implemented between 2010 and 2011. At the end of last year, the incoming Popular Party government unveiled tax hikes of 6.2 billion euros and spending cuts of 8.9 billion after announcing the outgoing Socialists’ administration overshot its deficit target for last year of six percent of GDP by two full percentage points.

Moody’s said the situation it depicts is “negative” for Spain’s credit profile, and warned further austerity measures are required to return the state’s finances to a “sustainable” path. On announcing the December 30 package, the government said the adjustments were only the “beginning of the beginning.” The ratings agency said having to tame the deficit at a time when the economy is already weak risks further aggravating Spain’s economic prospects. It predicted GDP would contract by between 0.5 and 1.0 percent this year, compared with growth of 0.7 percent last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



One in Five Spanish Homes May be Vacant, Experts Say

Forthcoming survey to draw a precise map of the country’s housing stock

There could be between five and six million empty homes in Spain, or over 20 percent of the total, some experts believe. To get a better picture of the state of Spain’s property sector following the crash, over 5,000 agents from the National Statistics Institute (INE) have taken to the streets to try to draw a precise map of the houses and apartments that are lived in and those that stand empty.

Ten years ago, a similar exercise yielded 3.1 million empty homes, or 15 percent of the total, but the figure is likely to be much higher now, experts warn. Between 1998 and 2007, the housing stock grew by 5.7 million, or nearly 30 percent.

“Knowing whether a dwelling is occupied or not is relatively easy, but knowing whether it is empty on a temporary basis is much harder. How do you know if it is a holiday home, if there is nobody there to tell you?” asks Antonio J. Argüeso, deputy director general of sociodemographic statistics at INE. The field work aims to count only those homes that are permanently shuttered, not second homes or those that are rented out to third parties.

When the work is done a few months from now, it should also confirm that 4.6 million housing units were built during the property bubble, while fewer than three million were sold.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Safety Trumps Yield in Euro Crisis: Investors Pay to Lend Germany Money

While many euro-zone nations are struggling to obtain credit, investors are practically throwing money at Germany. The country on Monday raised almost 4 billion euros in six-month debt at a negative interest rate. In effect, investors paid Germany to be able to lend it money. The move highlights the economic imbalances in crisis-ridden Europe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Ex-US Soldier Charged With Trying to Join Shebab

WASHINGTON — A former American soldier with specialist intelligence and cryptology training has been charged with trying to join Somalia’s Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab militants, US justice officials said Monday. Craig Baxam, a 24-year-old from the Maryland suburbs outside Washington, appeared briefly in court Monday near the US capital to hear charges that he attempted to join — and provide material support to — a terrorist group. Baxam, who served in Iraq and South Korea, was apprehended on December 23 aboard a bus near the Kenyan city of Mombasa with $600 to $700 in cash that he intended to give the Shebab as an introductory offer, prosecutors said. Baxam allegedly told FBI officers he wanted to die fighting for the Shebab “with a gun in my hand,” and replied “that is awesome” when informed that the militant group encouraged beating people who did not attend prayers.

Counter-terrorism experts have expressed growing concern about a steady stream of recruits, many of them British, making their way to Somalia to join the Shebab. An extremist accused of heading a wave of British recruits to the Shebab was arrested four days before Baxam in Mombasa. Baxam, who joined the US military in 2007, was deployed to Baghdad shortly after finishing eight months of advanced training for cryptology and intelligence. He returned home after his Iraq deployment and then re-enlisted before being deployed to South Korea for one year beginning in August 2010. According to court documents, it was in South Korea that he secretly converted to Islam after visiting an extremist website, quitting the army days later and returning to the United States in mid-2011.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Lehigh Valley Muslims Share American Experiences

Even though she and her siblings were the only Muslims in the East Penn School District, 36-year-old Sherrine Eid said her school experience was largely void of prejudice. That hasn’t been the case for Tahaa Shafi. While his school life has improved some since he moved into the Parkland School District where there are other Muslims, the 17-year-old said his years spent in the Northampton Area School District were pretty brutal. “I was constantly harassed for who I was,” he said. “I was constantly called a terrorist.”

This is what it’s like to be Muslim in America, Shafi and Eid told a group of 150 gathered Monday night at Wesley United Methodist Church in Bethlehem for the monthly meeting of Muslims and Christians United: A Lehigh Valley Initiative for Justice and Peace. The group was founded in the fall of 2010 by Wesley United Methodist, First Presbyterian Church of Bethlehem and the Muslim Association of Lehigh Valley but Monday’s event also included members of several other Lehigh Valley churches and Muslim groups.

The seven Muslims who took part in the meeting’s panel discussion largely said they faced more prejudice following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the youngest participants like Shafi, who have lived most of their lives after the event, said they’ve faced the most discrimination. But it wasn’t across the board. Upper Macungie Township resident Nauman Islam said he initially feared moving to rural Alabama a month after Sept. 11, 2001, but found his patients to be welcoming. “Last name Islam — Dr. Islam — there I was going to the Alabama countryside one month after 9-11,” he said. Islam said he’s also had largely positive experiences living in Indiana, Utah and Buffalo, N.Y., as well. Forks Township resident Shahzid Ali said some of his co-workers stopped inviting him out to lunch after Sept. 11. He said his experiences with co-workers have largely improved since but another one recently advised him to shave the new beard he was growing. But Ali said he thinks the Muslims and Christians United group can help reduce such ignorance. “It gives experiences of what Muslims are going through in America,” he said.

The group planned Monday’s topic before the controversy erupted over Lowe’s home improvement store pulled its advertisements during the TLC show “All-American Muslim.” But members felt it was even more pressing to hold the panel discussion following the incident, group co-chairman Greg Cook said. “If nothing else, what happens demonstrates the importance of our group,” he said. “Groups like ours … we believe can increase understanding.” Choosing to wear a Hijab — a headscarf worn by traditional Muslim women — has likely contributed to the discrimination she’s faced, Lehigh University freshman Heba Elsayed said. But she said she’s recently realized her Hijab helps her be a positive public example of Muslims. “By wearing Hijab, you’re basically walking around with a sign saying you’re Muslim and how I act and how people view me is how people are going to view Islam,” she said.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Man Arrested After Firing at Multiple Officers in Gadsden

GADSDEN, AL (WBRC) — A man from Albertville is being detained for attempting to murder multiple law enforcement officers early Sunday morning, according to Gadsden police. He has been identified as Luis Ibarra-Hernandez, age 21. An attempted murder warrant was obtained against Ibarra-Hernandez this afternoon.

Police say Ibarra-Hernandez lured officers to Alabama City west of Wall Street by shooting out store windows. He then opened fire on the officers for about 30 minutes before being pinned down and surrendering, Captain Regina May with the Gadsden Police Department said.

The incident began at approximately 1:25 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 8. Gadsden police officers responded to Rainbow Food Mart on West Meighan Blvd. after receiving an alarm call. They found nothing out of the ordinary after arriving, but shortly afterward another alarm call went out for the Auto Zone nearby on West Meighan Blvd.

Officers responded to the Auto Zone and discovered that the front door had been shattered by a bullet. After completing a police report at Auto Zone, police heard more gunfire in the area, May said. Another glass break alarm went off at the Rainbow Food Mart and officers observed glass had been broken from a gunshot.

As police completed their report on the Rainbow Food Mart incident, the officers saw a suspicious person lurking in the area around 2:55 a.m., according to May.

Ibarra-Hernandez ran from police and the officers pursued him on foot. More officers responded to the activity in the Alabama City area. While running through the streets and alleyways, the suspect opened fire on several of the law enforcement officers chasing him. Police officers took cover behind trees and vehicles and set up a perimeter around the suspect, May said. More law enforcement agencies arrived to the scene to offer support.

Officer Mitchell James, a trained crisis negotiator, responded to the scene after hearing radio traffic about the incident. He had been working off-duty security at the time of the reported gunfire but rushed to the scene and used his vehicle as a cover, May said. Officer James then took over the negotiations that another officer had begun with the suspect.

“Officer James was successful at having the suspect surrender without further incident,” May said in a release. The suspect was pinned down behind trees near 30th Street and Western Avenue and taken into custody.

“After the suspect was taken into custody, he reported that he knew he must do something extreme to draw attention to Islam and himself, so he planned to shoot police officers,” May said.

According to the investigation led by Detective Sergeant Tom Bradley, preliminary reports show that no Gadsden police officers returned fire on the suspect. The reports show that one Etowah County deputy returned fire after being fired upon. Bradley said the Gadsden officers showed “tremendous discipline by avoiding cross fires and considering backdrops.”

“We are very fortunate as a city and a police family that no officers were hurt or killed. Departmental training and sound supervision on the shift contributed to everyone going home unharmed,” May said.

Ibarra-Hernandez is being held in the Etowah County jail without bond.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Oklahoma Sharia Law Ban ‘Unconstitutional’, Court Rules

The US state of Oklahoma has been stopped from introducing a amendment to its constitution, stopping courts from considering Islamic law in judgements.

A federal court of appeals upheld a district judge’s decision to block the implementation of the amendment.

The ban on Islamic law was approved by 70% of voters in a referendum in 2010.

But it was challenged by a Muslim community leader who said the amendment violated his constitutional right to freedom of religion.

Muneer Awad, the head of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) in Oklahoma, had filed a suit saying that the amendment would affect every aspect of his life, including his will and testament.

‘Pre-emptive strike’

The amendment read in part: “The courts shall not look to the legal precepts of other nations or cultures. Specifically, the courts shall not consider international law or Sharia law”.

The author of the amendment, Republican state representative Rex Duncan, had argued that it was not intended as an attack on Muslims, but was rather a “pre-emptive strike” preventing the application of Sharia law.

But the appeals court backed an injunction imposed by Judge Vicky Miles-Lagrange shortly after the referendum in November 2010, and said Mr Awad had made a “strong showing” of potential harm should the amendment come into effect.

“When the law that voters wish to enact is likely unconstitutional, their interests do not outweigh Mr Awad’s in having his constitutional rights protected,” it said.

Speaking after Judge Miles-Lagrange’s decision in 2010, Mr Awad said her ruling had provided an opportunity to “demonstrate that Oklahoma’s Muslim community simply seeks to enjoy the civil and religious rights guaranteed to all Americans.”

           — Hat tip: DW [Return to headlines]



Panetta Says the US Will Continue to Field World’s Strongest Military

The US defense secretary has insisted that the country’s military will remain the world’s strongest despite cuts announced by President Barack Obama. In China, there is concern about the boosted focus on Asia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Anonymous Under Fire: Criticism Mounts Against Anti-Nazi Website

A group of online activists associated with the loose-knit hacker collective Anonymous has set its sights on Germany’s far-right scene. But its method of publishing private information in its raw form, creating the potential for further abuse, has drawn criticism from both its supporters and targets.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Antibiotic-Resistant Chicken Found in German Supermarkets

An environmental group has found large amounts of bacteria resistant to antibiotics in chicken meat bought in German supermarkets. Friends of the Earth say the findings show the perils of industrial farming.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



British Deputy PM: EU Veto is ‘Temporary’

BRUSSELS — British deputy leader Nick Clegg has predicted the UK will drop its veto on the EU fiscal compact, but urged Brussels not to go too far with reforms. Speaking to press after a meeting of Liberal politicians at Admiralty House, a historic building in the government district in London, on Monday (9 January), he said: “We believe (the new treaty) should, over time, be folded into the existing EU treaties so you don’t get a permanent two parallel treaties working separately from each other.”

He added: “We all see this as a temporary arrangement rather than one which creates a permanent breach at the heart of the EU … The language gets confusing. ‘Veto’ suggests something was stopped. It was not stopped. Actually something is carrying on which is a different agreement.” Clegg’s remarks come after British Prime Minister David Cameron at a summit last month blocked member states from adding new rules on fiscal discipline to the EU Treaty.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Czech Government Split on Religious Restitution

The Czech Republic’s coalition government is in danger of collapse over a junior party’s rejection of a plan to compensate religious organisations for property seized by the former Communist regime, Associated Press reports. The plan is part of the coalition agenda, but is now deemed unaffordable due to economic woes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Kurdish Station Fined 2.6m Kr for Promoting Terrorism

Roj TV hangs on to broadcasting license in spite of being judged the voice of the PKK

Copenhagen-based Kurdish TV station Roj TV was found guilty today of charges that it promoted terrorism. Roj TV, which transmits news cultural and children’s programming to an estimated 30 million Kurds worldwide, had been charged with promoting the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is listed as a terrorist organisation by the US, Canada and the EU.

But while the court found the station violates anti-terror law and will be fined 2.6 million kroner, it said the license cannot be revoked because of a technicality in how the charges were brought Prosecutors had demanded immediate closure of the station along with a fine of 20 million kroner for Roj TV and its parent company, Mesopotamia Broadcasting.

Roj TV’s attorney Bjørn Elmquist had first requested an acquittal. He subsequently argued that the station only be required to pay the fine under today’s judgment and be allowed to retain its license until the appeals process is over.

The decision drew protests from Turkey’s ambassador to Denmark, Ahmet Berki Dibek, who was in Copenhagen City Court to witness the verdict. Roj TV was indicted on August 15 on charges that it promoted terrorism through propaganda. The case marks the first time a Danish media organisation was prosecuted for terrorism.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Orders Hungary to Recover Airline Aid

The European Commission on Monday ordered Hungary to recover up to €120 million in “economic advantages” from airline Malev “in order to remedy the distortion of competition”. The Hungarian government in 2010 took a 95% stake in the former national airline after a failed privatisation in 2007.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Court Condemns Italy for Naples Trash Crisis

Rome to present new plan Monday

(ANSA) — Strasbourg, January 10 — The European Court of Human Rights on Tuesday condemned Italy for the long-running trash crisis in the Campania region around Naples.

The court upheld an appeal from a couple in Somma Vesuviana near Naples, saying their right to safeguard their family had been breached since rubbish heaps first began to appear around their home in 1994.

But the court did not recognise a claim that the family’s health had been endangered, saying the conclusions of tests on an alleged rise in tumour rates had been “conflicting”.

Environment Minister Corrado Clini said Italy would present Brussels with a “comprehensive” plan Monday to resolve the refuse emergency, which is still festering despite repeated attempts to solve it.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France: Muslim Bride Sues After Order to Remove Veil

A newly-wed Muslim couple are suing the mayor of Lyon after a local official insisted the bride remove her veil at the town hall wedding ceremony. The bride, identified only as Nassima A., was asked to remove a veil which was covering her hair during her wedding ceremony at a town hall in Lyon in June.

“Nassima thought it was an order and did not think twice about removing her veil. She thought she had to do it to get married and took it off in front of everybody,” says her lawyer Gilles Devers in an interview with the French daily Liberation. He says she felt humuliated during the ceremony. The deputy mayor of Lyon’s 9th district, Fatiha Ben Ahmed, who asked the bride to bare her hair, told the bride that she looked “very pretty” without a veil.

The couple are now suing the mayor of Lyon Gérard Collomb and demanding €50,000 in damages. The mayor says he is ready to negotiate with the couple and admits Ben Ahmed could have been more sensitive during Nassima’s wedding ceremony. After the incident the local official Ben Ahmed said she had acted to defend the rights of women.

In France, officials who conduct wedding ceremonies are required to check the identities of the bride and groom. However in this case, Nassima’s veil was not covering her face.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Jihadist Killer Deserves Life Say Prosecutors

A man who shot dead two American soldiers in Germany last March should go to jail for life, prosecutors demanded on Monday as a court heard closing arguments in his trial. Arid Uka, 21, who was born in Kosovo but grew up in Frankfurt, “wanted to make his personal contribution to the holy war” but not knowing how to get to Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taliban, opted to act closer to home, the federal prosecutor told the court. He should serve at least the usual maximum sentence in Germany of 15 years, argued prosecutor Jochen Weingarten, saying the case involving two charges of murder and three of attempted murder was a particularly severe one.

Defence lawyer Michaela Roth did not contest Uka’s guilt but argued extenuating circumstances, describing the difficult background of the “shy, quiet and well meaning” young man who had never previously been aggressive and was “without future prospects.” The March 2 attack took place at Frankfurt airport, where Uka allegedly opened fire on a group of US soldiers on their way to fight in Afghanistan. Airmen Nicholas Jerome Alden, 25, and Zachary Ryan Cuddeback, 21, were killed. Two more soldiers were wounded.

Uka remained silent with his eyes lowered or closed at Monday’s hearing. At the opening of the trial in August, Uka confessed to the killings and said he wanted to apologise to his victims and their families for what he has called “total idiocy” that contradicted his religious beliefs. He said he was influenced by “lies” and “propaganda” after seeing a video on the Internet purporting to show US soldiers in Afghanistan raping a local woman. Roth has argued that the video may have brought back a childhood trauma to Uka, who she said was molested at the age of six.

Prosecutors believe Uka acted alone and did not belong to a terrorist network. They say he picked out a group of American soldiers who had just flown in from Britain and who were about to travel by bus to the US airbase at Ramstein where troops often take military transport to Iraq or Afghanistan. Uka is said to have cadged a cigarette from one of the soldiers and asked if they were on their way to Afghanistan. Prosecutors say when the American said yes, Uka loaded his pistol and followed the men towards the waiting army bus.

He fired into the back of the head of one soldier at point-blank range, killing him. Then, shouting “Allahu Akbar”, he rushed on to the bus and shot dead the 21-year-old driver before opening fire on two more soldiers, aged 21 and 25, who were both seriously injured, prosecutors say.

He is believed to have taken aim at another man cowering behind a seat, but his pistol misfired and he ran off into the airport terminal, pursued by a soldier. Police arrested him shortly afterwards. The killings have been regarded as the first motivated by Islamic extremism on German soil. A verdict is expected on January 19.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Undersecretary Resigns After Hotel-Bill Furore

Malinconico denies doing favours for probed businessman

(ANSA) — Rome, January 10 — Cabinet Undersecretary Carlo Malinconico resigned on Tuesday following a furore over hotel bills paid by a construction businessman who is under investigation for alleged corruption.

Malinconico said he had been unaware Francesco Maria De Vito Piscicelli has paid for some of his stays at a hotel in the Tuscan seaside resort of Porto Ercole until this was revealed by media reports and said he had “never done favours for the people involved”.

Malinconico stepped down from the helm of the Italian Newspaper Publishers Federation (FIEG) in November to be part of Premier Mario Monti’s emergency government of technocrats.

Piscicelli, who comes from an aristocratic Neapolitan family, is being probed for alleged irregularities regarding contracts for the 2009 G8 summit in L’Aquila.

He landed one of the lucrative contracts for building work for the 2009 World Swimming Championships in Rome, which have also been subject to investigation, shortly after Malinconico’s stay at the hotel in 2007. At the time Malinconico was an undersecretary in the Romano Prodi centre-left government that was in power from 2006 to 2008. Piscicelli hit the headlines when wiretaps leaked to the press revealed that he laughed at the prospect of winning contracts for reconstruction after the 2009 earthquake in Abruzzo, which killed 308 people.

The embattled businessman is also currently on trial for bribery to land the contract for a new Carabinieri training school on the outskirts of Florence.

Piscicelli has denied any wrongdoing.

He is also being probed for landed his helicopter on a public beach north of Rome to take his mother out to eat.

Piscicelli claimed dangerous winds forced an emergency landing but critics accused the wealthy contractor of flaunting his opulence at a time when most Italians are cutting back due to the euro crisis.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Leading MEP Wants Hungary Stripped of Rights

(BRUSSELS) — The European parliament’s centrist group aims to launch proceedings to strip Hungary of its EU rights to protest its controversial constitutional reforms, the leader of the group said Tuesday. Former Belgiam premier and leader of the Liberals and Democrats, Guy Verhofstadt, said in a speech that “I see no other option in the case of Hungary than to launch with the parliament the procedure foreseen in article 7” of the EU treaty.

The text enables the assembly in the case of risk of serious violation of European Union values to suspend the rights of a member state, including voting rights. But a four-fifths majority, or 22 of the 27 states, is required. “The Hungarian crisis is as important as the euro crisis,” Verhofstadt said in a speech scheduled for later Tuesday that was released by his office. “Both concern the credibility of our union in the eyes of our citizens.”

Prime Minister Viktor Orban has come under international fire over constitutional refoms adopted by his parliamentary majority. Critics say they remove checks and balances on the power of the government and increase Orban’s control over the judiciary and central bank, while skewering the electoral system in his party’s favour and curbing freedom of the press.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Ethnic Discrimination Rife Among Employers: Study

Job seekers with Norwegian names stand a much better chance of securing employment than applicants with more unfamiliar names, a new report has shown. Applicants with Pakistani names stand a 25 percent lesser chance of getting called to an interview, the study found. “This tells me we have a serious discrimination problem in Norwegian working life,” Equality Minister Audun Lysbakken told news agency NTB.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss National Bank Chief Resigns

Philipp Hildebrand resigned on Monday as chairman of the Swiss National Bank following allegations of insider trading that benefitted his wife. Hildebrand said he is innocent but noted it is “not possible to deliver a definite proof” that he did nothing wrong.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkish Ambassador Returns to Paris

Turkey’s ambassador to France, Tahsin Burcuoglu, has reportedly returned to Paris over the weekend, two weeks after being called back to Ankara in a row over the French National Assembly’s bill criminalising the denial of the Armenian genocide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: 1960s Housing Estate, Robin Hood Gardens, To be Transformed

Plans for the transformation of a controversial 1960s housing estate in Poplar have been submitted to Tower Hamlets council.

Under proposals for the Blackwall Reach area Robin Hood Gardens will be demolished to make way for up to 1,700 new homes. Around 700 of the homes, some of which will also be located at nearby Woolmore Street, Mackrow Walk, and Anderson House, will be for social rent and shared ownership. The scheme also promises improved community facilities, open space, new shops, a relocated mosque and an expanded school. Tower Hamlets Mayor, Lutfur Rahman, said: “The Blackwall Reach project is truly exciting. It will enable us to deliver a net gain of affordable homes, including many family homes, to meet the growing need in the borough.” The plans were developed by the council and the Homes and Communities Agency in partnership with Swan Housing Association in consultation with the local community.

[JP note: Mr Extremist Links has his fingers in many pies.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: City’s Proposals to Ban Foreign Students From Shops to Cut Thefts Branded Racist and Ridiculous

Foreign students should be restricted from entering shops in groups to cut thefts according to a proposal which was yesterday branded ‘racist and ridiculous’.

The suggestion to limit the students’ access to stores while they study in the UK included in a report aimed at fighting crime.

But yesterday officials behind the report distanced themselves from the plan and claimed it was not supposed to be made public.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Five Men on Trial in Derby for Urging Execution of Gays

Five men are to go on trial on Monday accused of stirring up hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation in the first prosecution of its kind.

Ihjaz Ali, 42, Mahboob Hassain, 45, and Umer Javed, 38, first appeared in court last January to face the charges.

Two other men, Razwan Javed, 28, and Kabir Ahmed, 27, were also charged with the same offence.

The charges related to an allegation that the men handed out a leaflet called “The Death Penalty?” outside a mosque in Derby, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

The leaflet is understood to have called for homosexuals to be executed.

CPS lawyer Sue Hemming said: “The charges relate to the distribution of a leaflet, “The Death Penalty?”, outside the Jamia Mosque in Derby in July 2010 and through letterboxes during the same month.

“This is the first ever prosecution for this offence and it is the result of close working between the Crown Prosecution Service and Derbyshire Police.”

The men will go on trial at Derby Crown Court today.

Ali, Hassain and Umer Javed are charged with three counts each of an offence of sending letters with intent to cause distress or anxiety under section 1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1988, the CPS said.

Ali is also charged with three offences, contrary to section 5 (b) of the Public Order 1986, in relation to the distribution of leaflets outside the Jamia Mosque.

He faces a further four counts of distributing threatening written material intending to stir up hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation, contrary to section 29C (1) of the Public Order Act 1986.

Hassain and Umer Javed are both also charged with two counts each contrary to section 29C (1) of the Public Order Act 1986.

Razwan Javed and Ahmed are both charged with one count each contrary to section 29C (1) of the Public Order Act 1986.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



UK: Gang Imported Up to 158,000 Pairs of Counterfeit Trainers Alone

A senior detective attacked Britain’s ‘Only Fools and Horses’ culture today after a gang was found guilty of running a fake goods empire worth tens of millions of pounds.

Detective Superintendent Dave Clark warned the public to shun market ‘knock-offs’ as four men face jail after attempting to flood the country with counterfeit products.

Zoheir Habet, 41, Maroud Abad, 39, Elies Dehimi, 47 and Sid Dehimi, 24, were the UK arm of a criminal network shipping the fake goods from China.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Lutfur Rahman Councillor Convicted of Second Benefit Fraud

A key supporter of Tower Hamlets’ extremist-linked mayor, Lutfur Rahman, today pleaded guilty to three counts of dishonestly claiming housing and council tax benefits — the second time she has been convicted of such offences. Councillor Shelina Akhtar failed to turn up in court at the start of the case today, claiming that she was unwell and unfit to stand trial, but the judge dismissed her claim and issued a warrant for her arrest. When she finally appeared this afternoon, Judge Platt told her: “I make you no promises today. This is the second time you have committed fraud against the state regarding benefits to which you are not entitled. The court needs to know more before deciding on the appropriate sentence.” Akhtar cheated the taxpayer of just over £1100 in benefits. She will be sentenced next month.

The prosecutor, Michelle Fawcett, said: “She is a local councillor and the case, therefore, was more serious. This defendant has previous convictions for identical matters.”

In 2010 Akhtar, of Blackwall Way, was handed 100 hours of unpaid work and ordered to pay £250 costs after being found guilty of dishonestly claiming jobseeker’s allowance, housing benefit and council tax benefit during a case at Thames Magistrates’ Court. Akhtar is one of eight Tower Hamlets councillors who were expelled from the Labour Party after deciding to support Lutfur, who was sacked as Labour’s candidate for mayor for his close links to an extremist Muslim group, the Islamic Forum of Europe. Lutfur took the Telegraph to the Press Complaints Commission — and lost — after we described Akhtar as a “Lutfur Rahman councillor.” He tried to claim that she was not connected to him. (He has also tried to claim that he is not linked to extremism — he lost that complaint, too.) Interestingly, Ted Jeory has discovered that even after her first conviction and her arrest on this second set of charges, Akhtar claims in her official council engagement log to have attended 34 hours of “group meetings” of the Rahman-supporters and 38 hours of “mayoral engagements” with Mr Extremist Links himself.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Khalique Miah Jailed for Holding Ex-Wife Zahanara Begum Prisoner in the Toilet

A devout Muslim held his ex-wife prisoner on the toilet for an hour and physically assaulted her as punishment for wearing Western clothes.

Khalique Miah has been jailed for 18 months for the attack on Zahanara Begum.

She was on the loo when her former husband burst in dressed in black, wielding a hammer and referring to her underwear as ‘Satan’.

Miah, 35, covered her mouth with a gloved hand to stop her screaming, punched her in the chest and stomach then climbed on top of her, holding her in place, Snaresbrook Crown Court heard.

He started haranguing her about her plucked eyebrows, shaved legs and highlighted hair, telling her she should not wear Western clothes and calling her knickers ‘Satan’.

The couple’s three-year-old daughter woke up and started crying, but Miah refused to let Mrs Begum go and comfort her.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Plans Submitted for 1,700 Homes Blackwall Reach Regeneration

A planning application for a London estate regeneration project that would see up to 1,700 homes built has been submitted to Tower Hamlets Council. The outline planning application — submitted by Swan Housing association and Countryside Property — promotes the transformation of the Blackwall Reach area. The plans comprise up to 1,700 new homes — including 700 for social rent and shared ownership. They also propose to transform the Robin Hood Gardens area by replacing homes for council tenants and homeowners living there. The project would include new public facilities, a new open space, new shops, a relocated mosque and funding to expand a local school. It also aims to improve transport connections.

The planning application has been developed in consultation with the local community by the council and the Homes and Communities Agency (HCA) — in partnership with Swan and Countryside.

The HCA says that, if given the go-ahead, the project would include the “highest sustainability and construction principles”. Mayor Lutfur Rahman, Tower Hamlets Council, said: “The Blackwall Reach project is truly exciting. It will enable us to deliver a net gain of affordable homes, including many family homes, to meet the growing need in the borough. “This project continues to place Tower Hamlets at the forefront of social housing: from the first social housing estate in England, the Boundary Estate, to a high level of Decent Homes investment, we continue to buck the national trend in providing affordable, high standard homes to our residents.” Jackie Jacob, HCA London Director, said: “We believe that the outline application represents an excellent opportunity to improve the quality of life for local people in the Blackwall Reach area. The proposal corresponds with our commitment to supporting the highest quality design and putting residents’ needs at the forefront of delivering new homes.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Prophet’s Biography Led Me to Islam

Before I was Muslim I was what you could classify as a “typical British lad”. I used to go out drinking on a Saturday evening, and all that kind of thing. Then about five years ago, I was going on holiday to Greece. When you go to an airport, you’ve got loads of books packed in your backpack for you to read from, and then you go sitting by the side of the swimming pool with a large bear, sun-bathing and reading a book, and you would never have too many books! I thought I would go to WHSmith and pick up a good book I could read, and I couldn’t find anything. I got my rucksack on my back, and as I turned around to leave, I knocked the bookshelf and all the books fell off. Not wanting to be a bit awkward, so I picked everything up, and the books were all one book, and it was by a western author, called Barnaby Rogerson, and he wrote a book called “The Prophet Muhammad: A Biography”. I read the first page and it looked interesting. I read the second page. Took it to the counter, I bought it and took it on holiday with me. So I read the book, and I thought “Yeah I want to learn more.” So I came back, and I started to go to the local mosque, and I spoke to them and I said I wanted to learn more. And the Imam, who took my shahadah, said “Well to tell you the truth, the best way to understand Islam is to become a Muslim.” I didn’t think twice about it. I just took my shahadah there and then.

[…]

[JP note: By the Prophet’s beard!]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Paedophile With One Million Sickening Images of Child Abuse Spared Jail

A paedophile found with the largest ever haul of child pornography ever seized by Scotland Yard has been spared jail.

More than one million child porn images were seized at the home of 57-year-old Robert Barrow.

However, Barrow who admitted seven counts of making indecent images of children and two counts of possessing child porn with intent to distribute it was spared jail because he is a full-time carer to his 86-year-old mother who is suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and chronic arthritis.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Wall Street Journal Launches German Edition

The Wall Street Journal launched a German edition on Tuesday, breaking into the German business news market with what its editor promised would be a new, international, perspective. “We asked hundreds of our potential readers what they lack at present in the German business press. The answer came loud and clear: A global perspective not only on what happens in Germany, but also on the latest events in Washington, London, Tokyo and in the emerging markets of Asia or Latin America,” wrote Wall Street Journal Deutschland editor Knut Engelmann.

The new edition, which is only on the internet, follows several other forays by the Rupert Murdoch-owned American newspaper into foreign markets — the Journal has English-language editions targeted toward Asia, Europe and India and runs Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish websites.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Why Swiss Gun Love is Coming Under Fire

Almost two centuries have passed since Switzerland last fought in a war, yet the country’s gun ownership rate remains the highest in Europe. After a series of gun-related killings at the end of last year, The Local’s Meritxell Mir looks at what’s being done to get fingers off triggers. Every year, more than 300 people die in Switzerland in gun-related incidents. In many ways, the figure is quite low, when one considers the country has about 2.5 million weapons in private hands — giving it the highest per capita rate of gun ownership in Europe, and the fourth highest in the world.

In the last two months of 2011, however, shots rang out with alarming frequency in a country where around 30 percent of all households keep guns and rifles in their cabinets. In early November, a 23-year-old man killed his girlfriend using his army assault rifle in the village of Saint-Leonard. The vicious crime sparked fervent debate about the lax monitoring of repeat offenders.

After that, the tragic tales began to tumble in thick and fast: Victim shot dead by stranger at Geneva shopping centre; Young man killed in accidental shooting; Evicted tenant kills neighbour with hunting rifle. But in a country that cherishes its centuries-old firearms tradition, gun control is a touchy subject.

“The Swiss have this romantic idea of their culture, in the sense that they have to have the means to protect their independence, and everyone is like a citizen soldier,” explains Philip Jaffé, a Geneva-based psychologist who often works with the police in forensic crime investigations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Criticism on 20th Anniversary Republika Srpska

Serbs committed horrible crimes, Muslim leader Izetbegovic

(ANSAmed) — SARAJEVO/BELGRADE, JANUARY 10 — Bakir Izetbegovic, Muslim member of the Bosnian three-party presidency, has harshly criticised the celebration of the 20th anniversary of the foundation of the Republika Srpska (RS, entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina with a Serb majority). The event was celebrated yesterday in Banja Luka, and Serbia’s President Boris Tadic was one of the speakers. “The expulsion of the Muslim and Croat population from the area went together with horrible crimes and detention camps, culminating in the Srebrenica massacre”, said Izetbegovic.

“Nobody should be proud of this anniversary, not the Serbs in Bosnia nor their leaders or President Boris Tadic”, added the Muslim politician, quoted by the FENA agency. Tadic has said that Serbs, both in Serbia and in the Republika Srpska, have a right to defend their legitimate interests and their national identity. The Republika Srpska was created on January 9 1992, a few months before the start of the Bosnian war (1992-1995). The initiative was taken by the People’s Assembly, in response to the will of the Muslim and Croatian part of the population to proclaim the independence of Bosnia from the Federation of Yugoslavia. This independence was ratified in a referendum that was held between the end of February and the first of March 1992, boycotted by most Serbs. The armed conflict that would cause the death of 100,000 people and make 2 million homeless broke out soon after. The legality of the Republika Srpska was later confirmed in the Dayton agreements that ended the war in November 1995. The agreements stated that Bosnia and Herzegovina are formed by two entities — the Republika Srpska and the Croatian-Muslim Federation — and three peoples: Muslims, Serbs and Croats.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kosovo: Risk of Radical Islam, Says Ambassador to Italy

(by Cristiana Missori) (ANSAmed) — PRISTINA, JANUARY 10 — Four years on from its independence, Kosovo is attempting to reaffirm its native traditions and is calling on the West for help to avoid being swallowed by the slow advance of radical Islam, which is taking advantage of tolerant traditions. The scenario is one of inter-religious dialogue that is progressing at its own slow pace, without making any fuss and seeking to keep its distance from politics, and of a moderate Islamic tradition at risk of Wahabite contagion. As Don Lush Gjergji, Vicar General of the Catholic Church in Kosovo, explained to ANSAmed, “the issues that Kosovo has to tackle are mainly economic in nature. The true problem is the high level of unemployment affecting the population”.

Don Lush speaks about the religious tensions, but without highlighting them. “Inter-religious dialogue is proceeding both with the Orthodox Church and with the Muslims”. As the bishop points out, just a couple of months ago he held a meeting “with the Grand Muftì of Kosovo, Naim Ternava and the Orthodox Bishop of Raska and Prizren, Teodosije Sibalic”. Speaking of a duty to provide a good example and to extinguish any tensions between Orthodox Christians and Muslims, he said, “it is up to the sister churches to show this Christian attitude, allowing others to be themselves. It is indeed impossible to exclude those who do not belong to our own community”, Don Lush said. He recalled how only 3 percent of Kosovo’s population is Catholic. So how is it possible to persuade the monks of Peja/Pec and Decani to leave their monasteries? “They have to overcome their fear,” the Bishop replied. “The monks of Decani have started learning Albanian. This gives us hope of a normalisation of relations between Serbs and Albanians”. The General Secretary of Kosovo’s Muslim community, Resul Rexepji, confirmed the excellent relations with the Catholic Church and spoke of a small opening of relations with the Orthodox Church. “In the past, relations were difficult. But now things appear to have improved. Politics should keep out of inter-religious relations”. As Rexepji pointed out, the country’s Muslim community includes Albanians, Turks, Bosnians, Bektashis and Roma. Today, Kosovo can boast of 760 mosques, while there were only 550 before the war. Unlike other countries, there are clear rules relating to sermons. “In order to become an Imam, you need to have attended a madrasa, to have absolved a competitive process, and entered into a faculty of Islamic studies”. Kosovo society also lives its religious nature in a different way to the Arab Muslims. Here, the great feast of Bairam (the Feast of the Sacrifice), is celebrated by drinking rakìa (an alcoholic spirit similar to grappa). There are few veils, long beards or traditional garments to be seen and it is the Muslims themselves that produce the wine and beer they consume — mainly in the Suhareke and Rahovec areas of the Prizren district. Another distinctive element is the presence of a Sufi brotherhood (a mystic sect within Islam), which is not just tolerated, but takes an active role in Kosovo’s religious life. The most important of these is the tekke halveti of Prizren, which has a following of 15,000 and has been practising its faith since 1713. As the General Secretary of the Muslim community concludes: “We are not in agreement with the Muslim faith as it is practised in Arab countries and we do not intend to go in that direction. For this reason, we are concerned about the advance of radical Islam in our country”. For now, only a few have fallen under the spell of the so-called “Taleban of the Balkans,” Fuad Ramiqi, who, through his organisation, ‘Bashkohu’ (Let us unite), preaches the total conversion of the state to Islam. But then? “If the West were to leave us alone,” the Kosovo Ambassador to Italy, Albert Prenkaj, never tires of saying “our country would risk becoming a pupil of the more fanatical Islamic countries”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Magnate Sawiris to Stand Trial for Insulting Religion

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO, JANUARY 9 — Egyptian businessman Nabuib Sawiris has been ordered to stand trial for insulting religion by public prosecutors, report legal sources. The trial stems from a report filed by Salafi lawyer Mamdouh Ismail against Sawiris for posting an Islamic image of Mickey and Minnie Mouse on Twitter at the end of June. The Egyptian billionaire apologised for the images and removed them after the wave of controversy that followed, but it was not enough for the individual filing the complaint. The Free Egyptians Party, founded by Sawiris, is currently engaged in the first parliamentary elections of the post-Mubarak era. Runoff voting for the third round of voting will take place in the next two days, and until now the party has won 32 seats, placing them third behind the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafi Party.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



German Support for New North Africa Underlined

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle has thrown strong support behind North Africa’s emerging democracies during an historic visit to Algeria, Libya and Tunisia, saying Germany wants to play a key role in helping them succeed. Westerwelle, who wrapped up his weekend trip with a visit to Tunisia’s capital Tunis on Monday, singled out the country for particular praise, calling it a potential “model,” despite European concerns that Islamic parties are growing in strength there.

“I think the concerns have absolutely no justification,” Westerwelle said. “Tunisia can become a model for transformation in the region if it succeeds in perpetuating the fledgling democratization process”

Germany has pledged €32 million in aid to Tunisia and is helping the country reschedule €60 million in debt, said Westerwelle, who also called for deepening economic ties between the two countries. Westerwelle’s travels have been portrayed as an important signal that Berlin is willing to invest key resources in the attempt to help democratic governments in North Africa.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Moroccan Imams Call for Freedom to Preach

Tight government controls on religious preaching in Morocco has led to a surprising wave of protest among the country’s imams. The resulting dismissals of the leading dissenters has sent shockwaves through the provinces.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Washington Reaches Out as Egyptian Islamists Extend Lead

Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood has increased its lead in the final round of the parliamentary elections. With the Islamists about to dominate Egypt’s political landscape, the US is adjusting to new realities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Devil in Details of Egypt Brotherhood’s Party Platform

Mideast: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton insists Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood seeks “democratic reforms” and sees no reason not to engage its newly formed party. Has she read its platform? Banned under President Hosni Mubarak, the radical Brotherhood has emerged as a major winner from the rioting that exiled the U.S. ally. Now the Obama administration is breaking with policy and formally reaching out to the group. It claims the Brotherhood, now operating as the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), has renounced violence and terror. It accepts assurances from its leaders that they’ll build a modern democracy respecting human rights, free trade and Israel’s right to exist. But details in the FJP’s election manifesto make these assumptions seem dangerously naive. They hint that the new Islamist regime will act oppressively at home and recklessly abroad. Red flags pop up throughout the 160-page document, including:

  • The party will focus on “national security issues and vital issues of the nation such as the cause of Palestine … and the problems of Iraq, Somalia and Afghanistan, believing that Egypt’s national security will only be achieved by carrying out its role in the Arab and Islamic region, in response to the Zionist and American plots and plans.” It also calls for cutting off oil and gas supplies to “the Zionist occupiers of Palestine.” The Brotherhood created Hamas. For all its talk of renouncing violence, the Associated Press recently reported that it continues to back the terror group against Israel. The group’s deputy chief says it “will not recognize Israel under any circumstances” and plans to put Egypt’s 30-year peace treaty with Israel to a vote. Will it also support Hezbollah and al-Qaida in the region?
  • FJP will base Egypt’s new constitution on Shariah, or Islamic law, while making “the religion of Islam the supreme authority.” Shariah will be “its frame (of) reference and the source to its articles and the subsequent changes in the legal system.” Shariah is the barbaric legal code practiced in Saudi Arabia that beheads Muslims who deny the faith and amputates the hands of thieves, among other cruel and unusual punishments. This is a prescription for a theocracy with little if any separation of religion and state.
  • The enlightened party also vows to ensure women’s rights — but only when they are “consistent with the values of Islamic law, maintaining the balance between their duties and rights.” In other words, they will be subject to the misogynistic code of Islamic law, which enforces a strict dress and travel code for women. It also denies them equal rights in marriage, divorce, inheritance, child custody and court testimony. The Brotherhood, which has no female leaders, has said women are unfit to assume Egypt’s presidency.
  • In a veiled reference to Egypt’s Coptic Christians, the party notes that “Shariah regulates various aspects of life for Muslims and their non-partners in the homeland.” The regulation of non-Muslims under Shariah law amounts to second-class citizenship.
  • In addition to banning pornography and other unspecified Internet content, the FJP also calls for a “prohibition” of interest and credit — one of the cornerstones of capitalism. Instead, it seeks to promote Islamic banking.

Bear in mind that this is what can be gleaned from the English version of the FJP’s platform. Its Arabic version is no doubt more revealing. Before the election, the Brotherhood struck from its English website bylaws calling for “establishing the Islamic state,” or caliphate. And after Osama bin Laden was killed, it told English audiences it was a good thing for peace. But in Arabic, the Brotherhood praised the terrorist as a “martyr” in Arabic and condemned his “assassination.” The Brothers are masters of duplicity and deception. And it looks like they’ve suckered Clinton and her diplomats.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



EU to Speed Up Decision on Iran Oil Ban

EU foreign ministers are to decide earlier than planned on a possible oil embargo on Iran, Reuters reports EU diplomats as having said Monday. Ministers are now to meet on 23 January instead of 30 January, so as to not overshadow a summit of EU leaders on the later date.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran and the West Rediscover Oil as Weapon

Four decades after the 1973 oil shock, Iran and the West are once again embracing oil as a weapon. Tehran is threatening to block the Strait of Hormuz, while the industrialized countries are considering a boycott of Iranian oil. But both sides will suffer if such tactics are used.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran: ‘Very Grave Concern’ On Nuclear Programme Says Italy

Rome ‘will back tough and lasting sanctions’

(ANSA) — Rome, January 10 — Iran’s decision to start uranium enrichment at a nuclear plant outside Qom is “a source of very serious concern and merits the firmest condemnation,” the Italian foreign ministry said Tuesday.

Spokesman Maurizio Massari said “Tehran, unfortunately, is showing it wants to move in the opposite direction from that indicated by the resolutions of (International Atomic Energy Agency) IAEA and the United Nations”.

“It is inevitable at this point that the pressure on Iran will be exercised through a reinforcement of the regime of sanctions with measures aimed at depriving Tehran of the means to continue its nuclear activities (which are) contrary to international legality,” Massari went on.

“In the face of Iran’s persistent refusal to accept the negotiated dialogue proposed by the international community, Italy will support, with its main European and international partners, the adoption of tough and lasting sanctions,” he concluded.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tourism: Investments; Dubai Eyes Turkey

(ANSAmed) — ISTANBUL, JANUARY 10 — Dubai’s Jumeirah group, the largest tourism company in the Middle East and owner of some of the most expensive hotels in the city, including the first seven-star hotel in the world (the Burj Al Arab Emirates Tower, also known as “The Sail”), has recently shown interest in investing in Turkey. According to statements made by the owner of Istanbul’s historic Pera Palace Hotel, Demet Sabanci Cetindogan, an agreement has already been drawn up with Jumeirah to lease management of the hotel in 2012, even though the terms of the transaction have not yet been made official (as concerns duration and price). Meanwhile, also the Dubai Business Counci (DBC), which manages the funds of the royal families of Gulf states and the UAE, is planning to invest 2.5 billion dollars in Turkey. The latter’s chairman, Suleyman Tasci, has said that the DBC plans to invest initially in the city of Bodrum (an important Turkish seaside resort town on the Aegean Sea) through the creation of a hotel, shopping centre, residence and small port. But in addition to the tourism sector — as can be seen in a statement from the trade office of the Italian embassy in Ankara — in Dubai investments are being planned in Turkey also in such sectors such as construction, food, aviation and energy. On this front, the DBC is reportedly seeking to create strategic alliances with the Turkish energy ministry and with local companies connected with the sector.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Copts Thank Muslims for Christmas Spirit

ABU DHABI // The head of Abu Dhabi’s Coptic church has thanked Muslims who took part in its Christmas celebrations for their show of mutual understanding and respect in the face of recent religious conflict in Egypt. Esehak Anba Bishoy, priest of St Antonious Coptic Orthodox Church, said that although Muslims always attended the January 7 Christmas ceremony, more than usual did so this year. “They usually always come, but they didn’t used to light the candles,” he said. “Yesterday they did, and in public. It was nice participation, to see how much they cared, especially after what happened last year in Egypt.”

On October 9, violent clashes broke out in Egypt when thousands of Coptic Christians marched to the state television building to protest against the burning of a church. The clashes left 26 dead and hundreds injured. Father Bishoy said he received condolences from many officials in the UAE during that time, including the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Dr Anwar Gargash. “[Officials] in the UAE have always joined us in the good times and the bad times,” he said. “They would come to every celebration we had and also share the sadness we had. The tolerance in the UAE is beyond tolerance in many other countries for religion.” He said the UAE’s interfaith policy allowed followers of any religion to practise freely. “They have only been kind to us,” he said. “They gave us land and helped build this church. Their tolerance is only increasing with time.” Before the church was built in 2007, Coptic Egyptians — of whom there are more than 15,000 in the country — held services in rooms rented by the hour from Anglican churches.

[…]

[JP note: Dhimmis.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


How German Diplomats Opened Channel to Taliban

After months of secret negotiations, the Taliban are opening a political office in Qatar, a first step toward peace talks between the US and the group. The breakthrough was largely due to painstaking German diplomacy. But it could be years before the initiative bears fruit.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: 40 Muslim Youths Arrested for ‘Moral Policing’ In Nizamabad

Hyderabad: Many Muslim youths in Nizamabad town of Andhra Pradesh have been arrested for their alleged moral policing. Since April 2011, when the first incident of moral policing took place, as many as 40 Muslim youths have been arrested and booked under serious charges. After arrest, they have been brutally beaten in police custody. According to the police some Muslim youths in the town have formed a gang called “bin laden group” and they are threatening inter religious couples or Hindu youths with Muslim girls. According to the police inspector of Nizamabad town’s remand case dairy, there have been five FIRs registered in relation to this type of incidents in police stations of town. FIR no.s are 35/2011 (16-04-2011), 312/2011 (5-09-2011), 314/2011 (6-09-2011), 351/2011 (29-09-2011), 474/2011 (26-12-2011). The cases are booked under sec 109, 147, 148, 153, 290, 323, 324, 341, 354, 363, 384, 448, 506, 153[A] r/w 34&149 of I.P.C. against those Muslim youths who were doing moral policing. According to the police inspector, in one such case Jami Srinivas Rao, a 2nd year B.tech student on 5-9-2011 came to Nizamabad town to buy some articles. On the bus stop at 4 p.m he met his class mate Nazma. Because the bus was late they went to ice cream parlor situated near the bus stop. Then some Muslim youths came in the parlor and alleged that he is rounding along with their community girl and beat him with hands, snatched away his cell phone, then they called an auto rickshaw and ‘kidnapped’ Nazma and took her in their auto to her hostel. Inspector stated till now 6 youths have been arrested and 4 are absconding in this particular case. He wrote in his remand case dairy before Addl Judicial Magistrate Nizamabad that if the accused are not punished there is every possibility of them to commit this type of cognizable offences again.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Tree Extract Stops Rats Getting Drunk

For hardened drinkers, it sounds too good to be true: a natural substance that keeps them sober no matter how much they drink, neutralises hangovers and eventually breaks the cycle of alcohol addiction. Alcoholism is a huge problem globally, killing 2.5 million people a year according to the World Health Organization. There has been serious research recently looking for drugs that stop people drinking, or at least encourage them to drink less.

Extracts of a Chinese variety of the oriental raisin tree (Hovenia dulcis) could be the answer. The extracts have been used for 500 years to treat hangovers in China. Now dihydromyricetin (DHM), a component of the extract, has proved its worth as an intoxication blocker in a series of experiments on boozing rats. It works by preventing alcohol from having its usual intoxicating effects on the brain, however much is in blood.

Soon, a preparation containing DHM will be tested for the first time in people. “I would give it to problem drinkers who can’t resist going to the pub and drinking,” says pharmacologist Jing Liang of the University of California, Los Angeles, who led the research team.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korea Celebrates ‘The Genius of Geniuses’

On the day he is believed to have turned 29, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has been hailed in the state media as a military ‘genius,’ but there has been no official celebration of his birthday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Mutilated Wallaby Found in Elermore Vale.

On Saturday, 7th January I received a distressed phone call from an Elermore Vale resident who wishes to remain anonymous for obvious reasons, namely due to possible retribution for coming forward with this shocking information.

In the early hours of Saturday morning, fire fighters rushed to Elermore Vale Shopping car park to extinguish a car fire. The fire brigade stumbled across a mutilated brushed tailed wallaby. The disfigured Wallaby had its throat cut and also had its tongue cut off. The mutilated wallaby lay near a loading dock of Elermore Vale shopping centre.

Word spread quickly throughout Elermore Vale about the mutilated wallaby found in Elermore Vale shopping centre car park. Even though the attack took place in the early hours of the morning many curious residents went to the car park to verify this most heinous act of cruelty.

I have also received other phone calls verifying this most cruel act. The residents I have spoken to believe the mutilated wallaby was a possible revenge attack for the recent attack on the Wallsend mosque by drunken teenagers however there is no evidence to support this claim.

Tensions are high in the Elermore Vale community due to the mega-mosque proposal. Local residents have consistently opposed construction of the mosque in Elermore Vale. So far the Newcastle Council has received over 1,390 submissions and ALL were opposed to the mosque proposal

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



New Zealand: High-Flying Shark Makes Pilot Look Twice

Inflatable sharks that were a hit at Christmas are heading for the exits around the country and flying off into the wild blue yonder. Reports of escaping sharks have come in from homes as far apart as Auckland and Riverton in Southland. The issue first drew attention when the pilot of a passenger jet on his descent to Christchurch International Airport on Boxing Day radioed ground control with a sighting of a shark flying at several thousand feet. The fish out of water was identified as a remote-controlled, helium-filled shark that has topped must-have present lists this Christmas.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rogues’ Gallery: The Convicts of Early Australia

Between 1788 and 1868, 170,000 men and women were sent from England or its colonies to the penal settlement in Australia. Depending on when and where they were sent, these convicts experienced a wide range of conditions and treatment—some were rapidly granted parole and given free land, while others were subjected to corporal punishment and solitary confinement. Many of them eventually established families and businesses and became the working class of a successful colony and a modern nation (see “Australia’s Shackled Pioneers,” July/August 2011). Others, however, such as the men depicted here, were rogues who bounced in and out of the penal system for most of their adult lives. Very few photos exist from the convict period, but the Port Arthur Historic Site Management Authority in Tasmania maintains a collection convict portraits, most from later in the convict era, when photography was available. These short bios were assembled by Julia Clark and the portraits supplied by Susan Hood, both of the Port Arthur Historic Site Management Authority.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria: Boko Haram Attack Claims 12 in Adamawa

YOLA — Gunmen, suspected to be members of Boko Haram, yesterday, attacked Christ Apostolic Church in Yola, Adamawa State capital, killing 11 worshippers. Another member died in hospital from bullet wounds. News of the shooting made residents, mostly non-indigenes, to flee their homes in the night and seek refuge at the General Jalo Army Barracks, Yola, for fear of being killed. Meanwhile, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, yesterday, campaigned for the re-election of Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa State despite the nationwide strike called by labour over the recent increase in petrol price. It was learnt that the unknown gunmen, who rode on motorcycles, entered the church and opened fire on the worshippers. 11 members reportedly died on the spot and several others sustained bullet wounds.

One of the wounded church members reportedly died later, bringing the number of those who died to 12, even as five others are in critical conditions at the Specialist Hospital, Yola.

Last Friday, 12 mourners were killed in Mubi, the commercial nerve centre of the state by suspected members of Boko Haram sect. Those killed were allegedly holding a meeting on how to raise money to convey home the remains of three of their relatives earlier shot dead by members of the sect on Thursday before they were attacked. Police in the state said they were investigating the incidents.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Mosque Attacked in Benin City as Nationwide Strike Grips Nigeria

Violence broke out in the Nigerian southern city of Benin during a nationwide strike on Monday over soaring fuel prices which paralysed the country with road, sea and air traffic at a standstill.

The industrial action follows a controversial government decision to end fuel subsidies from 1 January which has seen fuel prices more than double in Africa’s largest oil producer.

At least 10 people are reported to have been injured when protestors attacked a mosque in the city. An appeal by President Goodluck Jonathan on national television on Saturday to win support for the government move was rejected by the unions. Promise Adewusi, Deputy President of Nigeria Labour Congress, said the strike was the result of bad governance and the action would continue until there was a reversal of the pump price increase. “It’s been totally, totally successful. Nigerians have never witnessed a thing like it in the culture and history of their struggles,” he told RFI . “Everything is down, completely. It’s an indefinite strike, we don’t know how long this will last.”

There was massive security in the capital Abuja after protests last week became increasingly volatile with police firing tear gas and accused of using excessive force. Security forces are already under pressure over violence blamed on Islamist Group Boko Haram. Recent deadly attacks on Christians have sparked fears of a wider religious conflict in a country which is roughly divided between a mainly Muslim north and a Christian south. The government says it spent more than six billion euros on subsidies in 2011 and President Jonathan says everyone must be prepared to make sacrifices to save the country. But Nigerians view the subsidies as their only benefit from the nations’s oil wealth and are mistrustful of the government after years of corruption.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Reverend’s ‘Kill Whites’ Tweet a Shocker

A REVEREND used Twitter at the weekend to call for white people in South Africa to be killed.

The man singled out Helen Zille as among those who should be killed.

The Reverend Kemo Immanuel Waters runs a business called the KemoTherapy Institute of Truth

At 1.33am, the reverend wrote: “The only way to end racism is to kill a material number of whites. @helenzille your indifferent and patronizing stance is a double dare…”

The tweet caused an uproar, with many responding angrily.

I will never take it back and I will never apologise,” he added.

Waters said he had been upset after his family had been made to sit at the bar in a busy restaurant in Camps Bay, Cape Town, for half an hour.

“In Joburg, you can go anywhere and you feel welcome.”

Waters said he would never kill anyone but knew black people who would.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Uganda: Muslims Factions’ Row Over Slaughter Rights

A ROW has erupted in Luweero between Muslims loyal to the mainstream Mufti , Shaban Mubajje and those belonging to the Kibuli-based rival Mufti Zubair Kayongo’s faction, over which side has the right to slaughter animals in the District. Each of the two sides has installed their District and sub-county slaughter officers, in the wrangle which has escalated into hot verbal exchanges, prompting the District security committee to intervene on Thursday. The wrangle which started around Christmas time, was after the Old Kampala based Mainstream faction loyal to Mufti Ramathan Mubajje ,replaced Sheikh Issa Sentoogo, whom the Kayongo’s faction had installed as the District slaughter officer with Yasin Doka who is pro- Mubajje. After being appointed the pro-Mubajje District slaughter officer, Yasin Doka went ahead to appoint Issa Matovu as the sub-county slaughter officer for Kikyusa sub-county in Bamunanika county, replacing Muihammad Lukwago who had been appointed by the pro-Kayongo faction. An impromptu meeting to resolve the dispute, which was convened by the Luweero Resident District Commissioner, Paul Lubowa, yielded no fruits after the two sides failed to reach a compromise. The pro-Kayongo Moslems argued that the Old-Kampala based Mubajje faction had no right to impose officials ion them, while those of Mubajje faction, accused their Kayongo counterparts of lacking legitimacy. It was resolved during the meeting which was held in the Luweero District council hall that both sides, be stopped from slaughtering animals until the issue is resolved.

An interim committee chaired by Juma Katende who is regarded as being neutral, was instituted during the meeting to take over the responsibility.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Uganda: Unveiling Muslim Girls at Makerere University

On December 30, the Makerere University mosque could not handle the number of worshipers that had come for the Friday sermon. Designed to accommodate one thousand worshipers, the house was filled to the brim. Hundreds of worshippers had to find space outside in order not to miss the sermon. But this congregation grew to this magnitude not just for prayer. They were gathering for a protest. Earlier, on December 27, Dr Eria Olowo Onyango had pulled Zaituni Namujju (BA Social Sciences) from the examination room for dressing “illegally”. It was after she had agreed to undress that she was deemed legally dressed to write the exam. Removing the veil in public for well-bred Muslim girls is undressing, and the victim reported discomfort as she went back to the exam room, naked. Whatever penal code or regulation the professor was reading, we may never know.

The exchange between our two protagonists before Namujju agrees to undress is quite fascinating:

Dr Onyango: Where did you pass? (Namujju looks on not sure whether the question is calling for an answer). Aren’t you aware that you are not supposed to enter the examination room with headgears?

Namujju: But this is my veil, not a headgear.

The story goes that Namujju was asked to walk out of the room. When she attempted to plead with the help of one female teacher, the mighty Onyango charged: “This is the law; I can’t lose my job just because of you. If you think I want to admire your hair, I have a wife. Go to the Islamic university if you want to veil.”

In 2009, an almost similar incident happened. Aisha Nankya (BSc Education) was faced with a decision between her veil and the exam. Even when she pleaded to undress for any female lecturer for a thorough check, Ms Anne Ampaire insisted that the veil was illegal. She lambasted her student, that she wasn’t “special” and so there was no point wasting her time. After the Onyango-Namujju affair, the Vice Chancellor, Prof Venansius Baryamureeba, wrote to the Muslim students regretting the incident. Drawing attention to rules generated in 2008, he said the university didn’t have a dress code, and all female students, Muslim or non-Muslim, were to be checked by female supervisors and were free to wear their religious garments and enter the exam room.

Even with this clarification, lecturers continue forcing Muslim students to remove their symbolic dresses. In another mindboggling incident, Dr Elias State (interesting pun) of the school of Social Sciences announced to his Muslim students that in his exam and his classes, students dressed in kanzus, turbans and veils were not welcome. Dr State’s declaration aside for its stark oddness, the easy assumptions for unveiling Muslims could be that extra or capacious garments are used to disguise identity or for smuggling illegal material into the examination. But when students agree to undress for scrutiny and are willing to provide proper identification, then the claim does not stand. Responses, especially from Muslims have dismissed Onyango, State, Ampaire and Co. as demented, ignorant and overzealous Christianists, culturalists or atheists. It’s tempting. Onyango pointed out to Namujju that he feared losing his job. This suggests he understood the unfairness of his action, but the fear of poverty blurred his reasoning. This could be true, but the Vice Chancellor’s letter exposed him as having been acting on his whims — the university has no regulation against the veil. What then explains this thought-stopping fury against innocent Muslim girls and their dresses?

In September 2010, Pastor Terry Jones of the Dove Outreach Church in Florida, United States, threatened to burn copies of the Qur’an. Well, even after many sober voices had advised him not to, he did so in April 2011. Many dismissed him as demented and notorious. But this is barely scratching the surface of a rather big problem. Surely, the well-meaning pastor is a victim of a narrative — one that has branded Islam as evil — and by extension, the Qur’an and all the symbols that represent it. Post 9/11 has set in motion a series of reactions in all aspects of the public life in ways that are unprecedented. Responses in Afghanistan, Iraq and actions at airport security points that target Muslims premised on fictions such as “a clash of civilisation” are dividing communities in ways hard to imagine. So many bogus stereotypes are constantly regurgitated on radio, TV and in print: Islam embraces violence; they hate us for our liberties and women’s rights; they are barbaric and anti-modern. Lazy professors and journalists are consuming these fictions, disseminating and acting on them. State, Onyango, Ampaire and Pastor Terry Jones are not the problem; they are victims of the problem. Countering the wrong narrative through re-education might help rescue the situation.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Found: First Solid Evidence of Ancient Mayans’ Tobacco Use

Traces of nicotine discovered in a Mayan flask dating back more than 1,000 years represent the first physical evidence of tobacco use by the Mayans, researchers say. The flask was decorated with text that seemed to read “Yo-’OTOT-ti ‘u-MAY,” which translates to “the home of his tobacco” (or “her tobacco” or “its tobacco”), the archaeologists said, but that by itself wasn’t enough to convince them.

“Textual evidence written on pottery is often an indicator of contents or of an intended purpose — however, actual usage of a container could be altered or falsely represented,” said study researcher Jennifer Loughmiller-Newman of the University at Albany. Their analysis of the samples extracted from the flask identified nicotine, the signature alkaloid in tobacco, as a major component. That indicated the vessel was likely used to hold tobacco leaves, the researchers wrote in the study.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sony Ordered to Pay Half a Million in Damages After Brazilian Song Calling Black Woman “Stinking Beast” And Comparing Her Hair to Scouring Pads is Deemed Racist

Sony Music has been ordered to pay $1.2 million (equivalent to about $656,000 in American dollars) in retroactive compensation back to 1997 for the release of the song “Veja os Cabelos Dela (Look at Her Hair)” by the Brazilian singer, comedian and politician Francisco Everardo Oliveira Silva whose stage name is Tiririca.

The lyrics not only liken a black woman’s hair to “a scouring pad for pots and pans,” but also calls her a “stinking beast.” Oy!

The lawsuit was brought forth by 10 non-governmental organizations that fight against racism. Humberto Adami, the defense attorney of the NGOs, argued that black women were offended, exposed to ridicule and felt violated due to the lyrical content of the song.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Israel: Jail Without Trial for Illegal Immigrants

Parliament passes new draconian law, heavily criticised

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JANUARY 10 — The Israeli Parliament (Knesset) today launched new measures against illegal immigration, with harsher penalties for illegal immigrants and the possibility of preventive detention, without trial, for a period up to three years. The initiative has been heavily criticised; it is part of a more general clampdown on illegal immigration by the government of Benyamin Netanyahu and the right-wing majority. The most controversial issues include the extension of draconian regulations that were introduced in the past decades against the infiltration of potential terrorists to immigrants and asylum seekers, and the possibility of life imprisonment for illegal immigrants who are found guilty of property crimes. The Interior Ministry has defended the hard line by pointing at the most recent data on the increased flow of immigrants from Africa, who reach Israel via the Sinai (often aiming to reach the West). The figures were recently presented by Premier Netanyahu and are cause for concern according to him. The left-wing opposition in the Knesset and several MPs of the Arab minority group have denounced the new measures, saying that they are “anti-democratic” and that they break fundamental principles for the protection of migrants. Several Israeli NGOs, active in the field of human rights, have accused the government of being obsessed by any phenomenon that could harm — even only in theory — “the Jewish identity” of the country. They have called some of the regulations that were approved today ‘out of proportion’ and ‘discriminating’.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: North African Murder Suspects Have ‘Criminal Records’

Police manhunt extended abroad

(ANSA) — Rome, January 9 — The two North African suspects wanted for the murder of a Chinese merchant and his nine-month-old baby have criminal records that include robbery and receiving stolen goods, police said Monday.

Police have launched a massive manhunt in Italy and abroad for the men, believed to be between 20 and 30 years old, using photos, fingerprints and DNA evidence in a bid to track them down.

Zhou Zheng, a 31-year-old Chinese bar owner, and his baby daughter Joy were killed in the Tor Pignattara area in the city’s southeast late Wednesday when two thieves demanded the bar’s takings.

Investigators said traces left at the scene and a bag found nearby containing 16,000 euros of notes stained with blood have led them to believe the killers are two young migrants from the Maghreb region with criminal records.

After the murders the suspects panicked and left evidence everywhere before abandoning their motorcycles and helmets and leaving two stolen bags two kilometres from the crime scene, police said. One of them was also photographed near Rome’s central Termini station.

Chinese shopkeepers are planning to close their stores on Tuesday in a day of mourning to express their solidarity for the victims, said Lucia Hui King, spokeswoman for the Chinese community in Rome.

Members of the community are also expected to march through the streets of the Italian capital on Tuesday to show their support for the family and Chinese immigrants in Italy.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Migration IS Killing Off Jobs: 160:000 Britons Have Missed Out on Employment Because Work Was Taken by Foreigners

A shocking report has shown that 160,000 Britons have missed out on jobs over the past ten years because they were taken by foreign labour.

The true scale of the link between migration and the dole was revealed today in an independent study by the Migration Advisory Committee (Mac).

There are 23 fewer jobs for British workers for every 100 migrants from outside the EU, the Government’s immigration advisers said.

It comes after a report by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (Niesr) said the number of immigrants coming to the UK had little or no impact on the number of unemployed.

An increase of 100 foreign-born working-age migrants in the UK was linked to a reduction of 23 Britons in employment between 1995 and 2010, the Mac said.

Average wages remain the same but it added: ‘Migrants are found to increase wages at the top of the UK wage distribution and to lower wages at the bottom of the distribution.’

The impact and displacement of British workers also does not last for ever, the Mac report found.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


UK: Five Men on Trial for “Gay Death Penalty” Leaflets

The trial of five men accused of stirring up hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation begins today. The defendants are accused of breaking new laws by handing out leaflets calling for gays to be executed. Ihjaz Ali, 42, Mehboob Hassain, 45, and Umer Javed, 38, appeared at Derby Crown Court for the first time last January. Razwan Javed, 30, and Kabir Ahmed, 27, had been charged in December 2010. The men were accused of handing out leaflets called ‘The Death Penalty?’ outside a Derby mosque. The material reportedly said that gay people should be executed. The defendants were also accused of pushing the pamphlet through letterboxes.

The five have been charged under the Public Order Act 1986′s new provisions against distributing threatening material intended to stir up hatred based on sexual orientation.

At a crown court, they face up to seven years in prison and an unlimited fine. Sue Hemming, a lawyer for the Crown Prosecution Service, said last year: “The charges relate to the distribution of a leaflet, ‘The Death Penalty?’, outside the Jamia Mosque in Derby in July 2010 and through letterboxes during the same month. “This is the first-ever prosecution for this offence and it is the result of close working between the Crown Prosecution Service and Derbyshire Police.”

The Public Order Act 1986 was amended by the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 to create the offence of intentionally stirring up hatred on the grounds of sexual orientation.

Stonewall chief executive Ben Summerskill said at the time of the initial charges: “We welcome the Attorney General’s decision to allow this prosecution to go ahead. We lobbied for a number of years for a specific law to protect gay people, matching offences against inciting racial and religious hatred. “Materials like the leaflets posted to homes in Derby create fear and inflame hatred and violence towards gay people. We uncovered a range of similar materials during our campaign to secure much-needed legal protections in this area.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Siberia Was a Wildlife Refuge in the Last Ice Age

SIBERIA, a name that conjures up images of snow and ice, may have been an unlikely refuge from the bitter cold of the last ice age. Ancient DNA from the region paints a picture of remarkably stable animal and plant life in the teeth of plunging temperatures. The findings could help predict how ecosystems will adapt to future climate change.

The permanently frozen soil of Siberia, Canada and Alaska preserves the DNA of prehistoric plants, fungi and animals. “It’s a giant molecular freezer,” says James Haile at Murdoch University in Perth, Western Australia.

Glacial ice can also contain ancient DNA but permafrost is much more abundant than ice and so should provide a more complete picture of the effects of prehistoric climate change, says Haile. Last month, at the International Barcode of Life Conference in Adelaide, South Australia, his colleague Eva Bellemain of the University of Oslo in Norway revealed the first fruits of their analysis of Siberian permafrost DNA.

The samples were extracted from 15,000 to 25,000-year-old frozen sediment in southern Chukotka in north-eastern Siberia. Their age is significant: around 20,000 years ago temperatures plummeted and ice sheets blanketed much of the northern hemisphere — but parts of Siberia, Canada and Alaska apparently stayed ice-free.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120109

Financial Crisis
» Confidence Ebbs in Greece’s Ability to Stay in Euro
» Crisis: Greece, Doctors Continue Strikes Over Austerity
» Dutch PM to Meet With Cameron
» Euro Exchange Rate Decline to Help Exports: Van Rompuy
» Foreign Investors Shunning Euro Bailout Fund: Germany
» German Trade Surplus Grows as Exports Rise
» Ireland to Seek Court Advice on EU Referendum
» Irish Eurosceptic Becomes Euro-Federalist
» New Worries About Greece: Euro Falls Ahead of Merkozy Meeting in Berlin
» Orban’s Hungary Stares Into the Abyss
» Resistance From Private Creditors: Doubts Grow Over Greek Debt Restructuring
» Socialism and Welfare: Republicans Bash Europe in Search of Votes
» Unemployment Mushrooming in Greece, Spain
 
USA
» ‘Extremist’ Arrested in US Bomb Plot
» FBI: Florida Resident Charged With Plotting to Bomb Locations in Tampa
» Florida Man Charged With Plotting Strikes in Name of Islam
» Halal Meals the Result of Complex Planning for Schools
» Idaho Couple Challenges Power of EPA to Say They Can’t Build Home on Their Own Land
» IPad Survives Fall From Edge of Space in Jaw-Dropping Video
» Lew Replaces Daley as White House Chief of Staff
» President Obama Turned the White House Into an Alice in Wonderland Theme Park — at What Cost to the US Taxpayer?
» Record-High 40% of Americans Identify as Independents in ‘11
» Rep. Allen West: GOP Leaders ‘Sold Us Down the Road’ On Payroll Tax Cut
» The New Authoritarianism
» Top Senator: An Attack on Israel is an Attack on US
» White House ‘Covered Up’ Tim Burton-Staged Alice in Wonderland Halloween Party
 
Europe and the EU
» Auschwitz Sees Record Number of Visitors
» Europe Steelmakers File Complaints Against China
» Germany: Scandal ‘Could Mean the End of Merkel’s Government’
» Greece: Fuel-Smuggling Scandal Flares Up
» Indians in Norway Aborting Girls: Study
» Italy: China Wants Killers of Man, Baby Caught
» Norway: Statoil Makes Major Oil Discovery in Barents Sea
» Norway: Reduced Fine in Norway for ‘Being Swedish’
» Norway: Cops Cut Fine for ‘Poor’ Swedish Truck Driver
» Norway Killer Breivik Permitted to Receive Visitors
» ‘Please Give Me a Five-Minute Break, I Need to Rest’: Moment Polish Military Prosecutor Shot Himself After News Conference on Probe Into Mystery Air Crash That Killed Country’s President
» Sicilian Temple Not for Sale ‘Even for 40 Bln’
» ‘Something Rotten in Switzerland’: Blocher
» Spain: ETA Prevents Prisoners From Asking Forgiveness
» Sweden: Malmö Residents March to Protest Violence
» Swedish Sex Hashtag Takes Twitter by Storm
» UK: A Couple Accused of Torturing a Boy to Death “For Being a Witch” Abused a Teenage Girl for the Same Reason, The Old Bailey Heard Today.
» UK: Boy of 10 Batters 2 Women Teachers
» UK: Bernard Mumbaya-Kimbing, 46, Plundered Cash Sent by Kindhearted People to the Charities.
» UK: Burglar Walks Free to Prevent Perception of Racism
» UK: David Cameron: I’ve Finished Angry Birds
» UK: EDL Uses Douglas Murray to Deny Accusations of Racism and Boost Recruitment
» UK: I’ve Never Lived With a White Man, But Racism is Still There in My DNA
» UK: MCB Disappointed at Lib Dem Candidate’s Islamophobic Comments
» UK: Manzar Juma Charged With the Murder of Ruby Love
» UK: Tony Blair Made Millions of Pounds Last Year But Paid Just a Fraction of it in Tax Thanks to the Complicated Web of Companies He Has Established.
 
Balkans
» Poll: Majority of Croatians Favour EU Accession
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Islamists Headed for Win, Constitution Thorny Issue
» Egypt Liberal Secular Leader to be Put on Trial for Minnie Mouse in a Burka Cartoons
» Tunisia’s Islamist Party Slams Anti-Semitic Chants
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» PNA: EU: 47.7 Mln to Salaries and Pensions Civil Servants
 
Middle East
» Ayatollah Vows Iran Will Resist Western Sanctions
» Bahrain: Bulldozers Back at ‘Sex Den’ Mosque
» Haniyeh: Muslims Are Creating the New Middle East
» Iran Sentences American Man to Death in CIA Case
» Syria: Russian Naval Flotilla to Leave Tartus Today
» Turkey: Tourism Growing and Profile of Visitors Changing
» UAE: Dutch Queen Tours Abu Dhabi Mosque
 
South Asia
» Allah’s Energy Marriage — Saudi Arabia and India
» India: Govt Should Cancel Salman Rushdie’s Visa, Says Deoband
 
Far East
» Three Million Catholics Defy Terror Threat to Annual Parade in Philippines
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Danish Warship Frees 14 Hostages
 
Immigration
» Norway: ‘Immigrants Behind Most Rapes in Stavanger’
» Sir Andrew Green: What Do the Public Really Think About Immigration?
» The Number of Migrants Working in the UK Who Were Born in Eastern Europe Rose by 600,000 Since the “A8” Countries, Which Include Poland, Latvia and the Czech Republic, Joined the EU.
 
General
» Antarctic Fossil Shows Sauropod Dinosaurs Were Global
» BP Closes Its Solar Business After 40 Years
» Search for Intelligent Extraterrestrials Targets Known Alien Planets

Financial Crisis


Confidence Ebbs in Greece’s Ability to Stay in Euro

BRUSSELS — Experts in Germany and the Czech Republic are losing faith that Greece will be able to stay in the single currency despite its multi-billion bail-outs. The negative feeling was voiced in two newspaper interviews over the weekend.

Clemens Fuest, an Oxford University economist and an advisor to German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble, told Greek newspaper To Vima on Sunday (8 January) that private bondholders will have to write off more than the 50 percent of Greek debt agreed at an EU summit last October. He warned that even this may not be enough to stop a default, however.

“To my view, Greece has already defaulted … I believe that the best thing would be if one honestly says that the Greek government cannot repay its debt. In such a way, a better settlement could be achieved,” he said. Miroslav Singer, the head of the Czech central bank, told the Hospodarske Noviny newspaper in remarks published on Monday that unless the EU pours in more money, Greece will have to leave the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Crisis: Greece, Doctors Continue Strikes Over Austerity

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JANUARY 9 — Greek doctors employed by the country’s largest health and pension fund, IKA, will continue labour protests this week, with rolling 24-hour strikes starting on Monday and set to last for five days as daily Athens News reports. They are set to be joined by private doctors on Tuesday, while state hospital doctors at outpatient clinics are also planning strikes. Doctors’ associations are angry at sweeping pay cuts in the public sector, as well as other cost-cutting measures taken under Greece’s two-year austerity programme. Unions are planning meetings on Tuesday to examine a possible extension of the strikes. Prime Minister Lucas Papademos’ coalition government has promised to speed up cost-cutting reforms before the general election, now expected in late March or April.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch PM to Meet With Cameron

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte is meeting with his UK counterpart David Cameron on Monday to discuss the state of the eurozone ahead of an EU summit later this month. Rutte will also participate at a meeting of European liberals, together with EU economic affairs commissioner Olli Rehn.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro Exchange Rate Decline to Help Exports: Van Rompuy

(COPENHAGEN) — EU president Herman Van Rompuy said Monday the recent decline in the euro exchange rate could boost eurozone exports and thereby help avoid a deep recession. “New trade opportunities and new markets are to be exploited to stimulate foreign demand and export,” he said, noting that “recent exchange rate developments for the euro will help.”

Van Rompuy was speaking to reporters in Copenhagen following a meeting with Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt, kicking off Denmark’s turn at the rotating European Union presidency which it took over on January 1. The euro dropped Monday to $1.2666 in Asia, its lowest level since September 2010.

Van Rompuy warned that the EU needed to do all it could to prevent falling into recession. “We must avoid a recession. We need to mobilize all our energy for this at the level of the Union and most importantly at the level of the member states,” he added. Most economists have predicted that the eurozone will experience at least a short recession in the coming months. A recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of negative gross domestic product (GDP).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Foreign Investors Shunning Euro Bailout Fund: Germany

(BERLIN) — German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Monday that a bailout fund set up for debt-wracked eurozone countries was struggling to attract foreign investors, who were demanding higher guarantees. “Difficulties have increased in finding private investors because they are demanding bigger guarantees,” he told German radio station SWR2.

“This does not mean that the fund does not have any money. It sold a bond with success last week,” added Schaeuble. “But it does show the uncertainty that investors around the world are feeling when it comes to the eurozone,” he said.

Schaeuble was confirming concerns reportedly expressed by the fund’s chief, Klaus Regling, who said he was mulling raising guarantees against default offered to foreign investors to 30 percent from 20 percent. According to the Bild am Sonntag weekly, Regling told a meeting of German parliamentarians that the current 20-percent guarantees offered were “too low” to cover investors’ risk.

A temporary fund, the 440 billion euro ($560 billion) EFSF uses guarantees issued by eurozone governments to raise financing on money markets which are then lent to debt-wracked eurozone countries such as Ireland, Portugal and Greece.

However, increasing the guarantees offered to investors would reduce the firepower of the fund, already considered far too small to intervene if the debt crisis were to claim a larger victim such as Italy. European governments had hoped the fund would enjoy broad support in cash-rich countries such as China but enthusiasm has thus far been muted.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Trade Surplus Grows as Exports Rise

(FRANKFURT) — The German trade surplus grew in November as foreign demand for German-made products remains surprisingly robust, despite the deepening eurozone debt crisis, official data showed on Monday. Europe’s biggest economy exported goods worth 90.7 billion euros ($115 billion) in seasonally-adjusted terms in November, 2.5 percent more than in October, the national statistics office Destatis said.

By contrast, imports declined 0.4 percent to 75.7 billion euros, so that the seasonally-adjusted trade surplus increased to 15 billion euros from 12.5 billion euros in October. Taking the 11 months to November as a whole, German exports rose 12.1 percent over the year-earlier period to 976 billion euros, while imports were up 13.8 percent at 829.6 billion euros.

That meant the 11-month trade surplus increased by 2.9 percent to 146.4 billion euros. The data “show that the demand for German products is amazingly robust,” said Commerzbank economist Ulrike Rondorf.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ireland to Seek Court Advice on EU Referendum

Irish government officials have discussed if the president should ask the supreme court to rule on whether Europe’s plans for fiscal union would require a referendum, the Sunday Business Post reported. The government is keen to be seen as proactive on the need for a referendum.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Irish Eurosceptic Becomes Euro-Federalist

Declan Ganley, an Irish businessman who in 2009 campaigned for a No vote in a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty, has co-written an essay saying the EU should “take the calculated but worthwhile risk to unite fully in a democratic and federal union” in a bid to stop the crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New Worries About Greece: Euro Falls Ahead of Merkozy Meeting in Berlin

Greece’s continuing inability to bring its debt problems under control is putting the euro under severe pressure ahead of Monday’s meeting between Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, which is expected to prepare the next EU summit on Jan 30. The Czech central bank chief said Greece may have to quit the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Orban’s Hungary Stares Into the Abyss

(BUDAPEST) — Investors are ringing the alarm bells over Hungary, sending the EU member’s currency to record lows and borrowing costs soaring to leave ordinary Hungarians facing a bleak new year. Prime Minister Viktor Orban meanwhile is refusing to do the one thing that could relieve some pressure — alter a new central bank law that is holding up financial assistance from the International Monetary Fund and European Union.

Orban’s Fidesz has a two-thirds majority in parliament and the changes are part of a raft of legislation rubber-stamped by MPs in December that the prime minister’s growing army of detractors at home and abroad say undermine democracy. Other laws, part of a new constitution, increase government control over the judiciary, alter the electoral system in Fidesz’s favour and curb media freedom, they say. Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in Budapest last Monday.

But unlike in these areas, it is with the central bank legislation that the European Union is best able to exercise leverage on Orban. Members of the government “know that there is no other alternative to financing the country than the IMF bailout,” Erste Bank analyst Zoltan Arokszallasi told AFP.

The European Commission says that the legislation risks undermining the independence of the central bank, a feature enshrined in EU law and considered vital not just for former communist Hungary but for the whole bloc.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Resistance From Private Creditors: Doubts Grow Over Greek Debt Restructuring

The outlook for cash-strapped Greece is looking increasingly bleak. Government reforms are behind target, and negotiations with private creditors over voluntary debt relief are stalled. A disorderly default could be just weeks away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Socialism and Welfare: Republicans Bash Europe in Search of Votes

Europe is socialist, bloated and a threat to the global economy. That appears to be the message from the ongoing presidential campaign in the US. Republicans in particular have discovered Europe as a convenient punching bag — and have even begun accusing each other of being too “European.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unemployment Mushrooming in Greece, Spain

Spain, Greece and Cyprus saw the steepest growth in unemployment over the past year, with numbers jumping by 2.5% to 22.9% in Spain and by 5.5% to 18.8% in Greece. Around 24 million men and women in the EU currently have no job, some 723,000 more than in late 2010.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


‘Extremist’ Arrested in US Bomb Plot

Florida — Authorities say a 25-year-old described as an Islamic extremist was arrested in a plot to attack sites around Tampa, Florida, after taking possession of disabled guns and bombs.

The US department of justice announced the arrest of Sami Osmakac on Monday.

Authorities say Osmakac is a naturalised US citizen who was born in the former Yugoslavia.

He has been charged with one count of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction.

His first appearance in federal court is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

Federal officials say a confidential source told them that Osmakac wanted al-Qaeda flags.

The federal complaint alleges Osmakac gave the agent a $500 down payment for an AK-47, multiple homemade explosive grenades and the explosive belt so he could attack various locations in Tampa.

[Return to headlines]



FBI: Florida Resident Charged With Plotting to Bomb Locations in Tampa

TAMPA, FL—A 25-year-old resident of Pinellas Park, Fla., has been charged in connection with an alleged plot to attack locations in Tampa with a vehicle bomb, assault rifle, and other explosives, announced Robert E. O’Neill, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Florida; Lisa Monaco, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; and Steven E. Ibison, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Tampa Division.

Sami Osmakac, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was born in the former Yugoslavia (Kosovo), was arrested Saturday night. He is charged in a criminal complaint in the Middle District of Florida with one count of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction (explosives) and is scheduled to make his initial appearance today at 2:00 p.m. EST, in federal court, before U.S. Magistrate Judge Anthony Porcelli, in Tampa. If convicted, Osmakac faces a maximum sentence of life in prison and a $250,000 fine.

The arrest of Osmakac was the culmination of an undercover operation during which Osmakac was closely monitored by law enforcement officials for several months. The explosives and firearms that he allegedly sought and attempted to use were rendered inoperable by law enforcement and posed no threat to the public.

“The perseverance and diligence of law enforcement caused this investigation to conclude in a successful manner,” said U.S. Attorney O’Neill. “I would like to commend them for their hard work. This investigation was also predicated, in part, by assistance from the Muslim community. I would like to thank them as well.”

“The facts as alleged in this case underscore the need for continued vigilance both at home and abroad. Thanks to a coordinated law enforcement effort, this alleged plot was thwarted before anyone was harmed,” said Assistant Attorney General Monaco. “I applaud the many agents, analysts and prosecutors who worked together to ensure this matter was resolved safely.”

“The Tampa FBI Division has always considered its relationships with regional community groups throughout Central and Southwest Florida extremely important. In this case, we are grateful for the Muslim community’s continued support. This incident clearly demonstrated how citizens can help law enforcement keep our neighborhoods and our nation safe,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Steven Ibison.

According to the complaint affidavit, in Sept. 2011, the FBI received information from a confidential human source (CHS) indicating that Osmakac had asked for al Qaeda flags. In November 2011, Osmakac and the CHS discussed and identified potential targets, in Tampa, where Osmakac intended on carrying out violent attacks. Osmakac allegedly asked the CHS for help in obtaining firearms and explosives for the attacks. The CHS indicated that he/she knew someone who might be able to provide firearms and explosives and introduced Osmakac to an undercover FBI employee.

The complaint alleges that Osmakac met with the undercover FBI employee, in person, on Dec. 21, 2011, and stated that he wished to acquire an AK-47-style machine gun, Uzi submachine guns, high capacity magazines, grenades and an explosive belt. In a subsequent meeting, Osmakac allegedly provided the undercover FBI employee with a $500 down payment for an AK-47, multiple homemade explosive grenades and the explosive belt.

According to the complaint, Osmakac also asked the undercover employee whether he/she could build bombs that could be placed in three different vehicles and detonated remotely, near where Osmakac would conduct a follow-up attack using the other weapons he requested. The undercover employee said he/she could possibly provide explosives for one vehicle. Osmakac also allegedly said that he wanted an explosive belt constructed to kill people.

During a subsequent meeting with the FBI undercover employee on Jan. 1, 2012, Osmakac allegedly described his attack plans by stating that he wanted to obtain a hotel room; park the vehicle with the bomb in it at his target; leave the area; detonate the car bomb; and then retrieve the weapons and explosives from the hotel room. Among Osmakac’s alleged bomb targets were night clubs in the Ybor City area of Tampa, the operations center of the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office in Ybor City and a business in the South Tampa area of Tampa.

The complaint alleges that, as part of the second portion of his planned attack, Osmakac told the undercover FBI employee that, after the car bomb was detonated, he wanted to use the explosive belt to “get in somewhere where there’s a lot of people” and take hostages. He allegedly stated that he would then make demands of the FBI to release some prisoners. According to the criminal complaint, when discussing law enforcement officers that might respond to the scene, Osmakac allegedly stated, “once I have this . . . they can take me in five million pieces” in an apparent reference to the explosive belt that would be attached to his waist.

During the Jan. 1st meeting, the undercover FBI employee noted that Osmakac could change his mind and back out of the plot. According to the complaint, Osmakac immediately shook his head in the negative and stated, “We all have to die, so why not die the Islamic way?”

On Jan. 7, 2012, FBI agents arrested Osmakac after he took possession of the explosive devices and firearms that had been rendered inoperable by law enforcement. The complaint alleges that, shortly prior to his arrest, Osmakac made a video of himself explaining his motives for carrying out the planned violent attack.

This investigation is being conducted by the FBI Tampa Division and the Tampa Joint Terrorism Task Force. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara Sweeney from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, with assistance from Trial Attorney Clem McGovern of the Counterterrorism Section in the Department of Justice’s National Security Division.

The charges contained in the criminal complaint are mere allegations. As in any criminal case, the defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

[Return to headlines]



Florida Man Charged With Plotting Strikes in Name of Islam

ATLANTA — A Florida man was charged with plotting a terrorist spree around Tampa, including bombing night clubs, destroying bridges and shooting police officers in the name of radical Islam, federal authorities said Monday.

The man, Sami Osmakac, 25, an American citizen born in the former Yugoslavia, planned to use firearms and explosives that he had bought from an undercover F.B.I. agent, authorities said. He was arrested Saturday after months of surveillance by the F.B.I.

Shortly before his arrest, Mr. Osmakac filmed a video of himself, seated cross-legged on the floor with a pistol in his hand and an AK-47 behind him, where he said he was willing to die to avenge Muslim deaths.

“We all have to die. So why not die the Islamic way?” he asked, according to a 14-page complaint released by the United States attorney’s office in Tampa.

Authorities did not indicate whether Mr. Osmakac had acted in collaboration with any terrorist group…

[Return to headlines]



Halal Meals the Result of Complex Planning for Schools

The last thing Dearborn Public Schools’ Food Service Director Jeff Murphy wants to see is students not eating, or tossing out food because they feel like they don’t have any lunch time options.

But that was exactly what was occurring 11 years ago, when the schools introduced a pilot program offering halal meats at a singular school building.

Today, more than half of Dearborn’s 32 schools offer halal options for Muslim students, with Haigh, Howard, Lindbergh and Dearborn High being added to that list this year. But making provisions for menus is a complex matter — one that’s decided on several factors, including the population of the school and the needs of an ethnically diverse community.

“I expect that the number of schools that will want halal options will grow,” said Murphy, who began working for the district when the pilot program was introduced.

“We’re a business, and we see the students and parents as our customers,” he added. “This is about meeting their needs.”

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Idaho Couple Challenges Power of EPA to Say They Can’t Build Home on Their Own Land

In 2005, Michael and Chantell Sackett were working toward what many American families work toward, their own home on their own land, until the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) halted their plans by declaring it a “wetland.”

On Monday, Jan. 9, the Sacketts and their attorneys will ask the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court to not only restore the right to use their own land — but to break the absolute power the EPA has over protected wetlands.

The Sacketts, small business owners in Idaho, located a lot in the northern part of the state in a town called Priest Lake. According to court documents, the lot is less than an acre and is just 500 feet from Priest Lake on its west side. It is separated from the lake by a house and a road and has no standing water or any hydrologic connection to Lake Priest or any other body of water.

There are houses to the north and south of the lot.

The lot is located in an established residential area — a platted subdivision — with the required water and sewer hookups.

In 2005, after performing the necessary due diligence, the Sacketts purchased the lot for $23,000. They sought and obtained the needed permits to begin building their new home.

According to the Sacketts, shortly after they began laying gravel for construction, the EPA came onto the property and issued a compliance order without any notice, telling them that the land had been declared a “wetland,” and ordered them to restore the land to EPA’s liking or face $37,500 per day in fines.

[…]Finally, after seven months, the Sacketts received a letter detailing the violation that the EPA claims they committed.They say they were unable to locate their property on the EPA’s online wetland inventory.

Following the EPA “compliance” order, the Sacketts hired a private engineer who, following an inspection of the property, provided a report stating that the property is not wetlands.The EPA did not relent.

[…]

The court held that the Sacketts could not seek judicial review of the EPA “wetlands” designation until after they had restored the land to its original status and had applied for and had been denied a wetland permit.

The wetland permit application is much more expensive and time consuming than local permits.

On Monday, the issue will go before the Supreme Court.

“Should EPA be a law unto itself, without having to answer to the courts and the Constitution?” Pacific Legal senior staff attorney Damien M. Schiff asked. “We believe the answer is, clearly, no.”

But according to the Justice Department’s filings in the case, once the EPA has designated a piece of property as being protected “wetlands,” the Clean Water Act requires that a wetland permit be obtained before a “new use” of the wetland is allowed.

[Return to headlines]



IPad Survives Fall From Edge of Space in Jaw-Dropping Video

A new video has captured an Apple iPad’s mindboggling fall to Earth from a balloon in the stratosphere in what may be the ultimate tablet survivor tale.

The high-definition video shows the iPad falling from a height of 100,000 feet (30,480 meters), with the blackness of space and the bright curve of Earth providing a stunning backdrop. The device free-falls all the way back to Earth to make a crash landing on a rocky Nevada hillside. The video was recorded by the Rhode Island-based company G-Form, which designs protective electronics cases and athletic pads.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Lew Replaces Daley as White House Chief of Staff

William Daley is out as White House chief of staff and budget director Jack Lew is taking over President Obama’s team as it gears up for the 2012 re-election effort.

Lew is a veteran of Washington and has served in President Bill Clinton’s administration, on Capitol Hill and in the State Department.

The path from OMB director to chief of staff is well paved. Leon Panetta did it for Clinton. Josh Bolten did it for George W. Bush.

President Obama made the announcement on Monday afternoon, saying that Daley informed him recently of his decision to resign last week so he can spend more time with his family. Obama said that he asked Daley to reconsider the decision, but ultimately decided he wants to return to Chicago.

“There is no question that I am going to deeply miss having Bill by my side in the White House,” Obama said. “Here in Washington I have every confidence that Jack won’t miss a beat.”

When Clinton tapped Lew to serve as his as his budget director in 1998, he was launched into office as the White House and Congress appeared to corral the government’s profligate spending problem. By the time Lew left office in 2001, the nation had a projected $5.6 trillion surplus over the next decade.

When Obama appointed him last summer, he came to office for a second time with a much tougher task of reversing an annual budget deficit that has ballooned to $1.5 trillion. Obama said Daley recommended he appoint Lew to replace him.

“If there was a Hall of Fame for budget directors, then Jack Lew surely would have earned a place for his service in that role under President Clinton, when he helped balance the federal budget after years of deficits,” Obama said in announcing Lew’s appointment as budget director.

Daley’s departure comes as a surprise, but was presaged by a narrowing of his duties. In October, he told Chicago’s NBC affiliate that he was committed to sticking with the president through his reeelection effort. A month later, some of his duties were shifted to White House senior adviser Pete Rouse.

Daley held the position for less than a year…

[Return to headlines]



President Obama Turned the White House Into an Alice in Wonderland Theme Park — at What Cost to the US Taxpayer?

The Telegraph’s Alex Spillius has 8 Comments today about an elaborate Alice in Wonderland-themed party held by the White House in November 2009, at the height of the US recession. Key details of the Halloween event, revealed in a new book, The Obamas, by New York Times correspondent Jodi Kantor, were reportedly kept secret in order not to offend public opinion at a time when unemployment was running as high as 10 per cent. The party was staged by Hollywood director Tim Burton and his leading actor Johnny Depp ahead of the release of their Alice in Wonderland film. Alex reports:

Depp greeted guests in the costume he had worn in a film version of the Lewis Carroll story released around the same time by Burton, who was given carte blanche to transform the state dining room into a Mad Hatter’s tea party in “his signature creepy-comic style”. A long table was “set with antique-looking linens, enormous stuffed animals in chairs, and tiered serving plates with treats like bone-shaped meringue cookies”, writes New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor in The Obamas, which is released on Tuesday. Fruit punch was served in blood vials at the bar, she adds. … The president’s aides decided the party would send the wrong message at a time when the Tea Party was on the rise with its message against Washington’s excesses and unemployment had risen sharply to ten per cent. “White House officials were so nervous about how a splashy, Hollywood-esque party would look to jobless Americans or their representatives in Congress, who would soon vote on health care that the event was not discussed publicly and Burton’s and Depp’s contributions went unacknowledged,” Miss Kantor writes.

Coming on the heels of the Obamas’ $4 million taxpayer-subsidised vacation in Hawaii, this latest story is an embarrassment for a White House that seems not to have heard of the age of austerity that the vast majority of Americans are now living through. It will further bolster the impression of an out-of-touch, celebrity-obsessed elite ruling the country with an air of impunity. Who knows what else the White House has in store? A Pirates of the Caribbean Christmas? An Edward Scissorhands Thanksgiving? A Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Easter?

It is hard to see the British Prime Minister doing this sort of thing. For starters, the robust British press would have a field day showcasing the vulgarity of it all — in contrast to the Establishment US media, which is typically ignoring the Obama story (even though it comes from a New York Times source). More importantly though, David Cameron would probably have the good sense not to turn Downing Street into a ghoulish theme park, and would be sensitive to both the perception and actual cost of this kind of lavish event, especially at a time when the general public is being called upon to make sacrifices as the government wrestles with a towering national debt.

In contrast, the US president seems beset by extraordinarily bad judgment, as well as a striking disdain for the plight of tens of millions of ordinary Americans who have suffered through a deep-seated economic downturn that has been exacerbated by Barack Obama’s own big spending policies. Now the cat is out of the bag, it would be prudent for the White House to come clean and reveal the full cost to the US taxpayer of its Alice in Wonderland extravaganza, and explain to the American people exactly why the Hollywood stamp on the event was kept remarkably quiet.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Record-High 40% of Americans Identify as Independents in ‘11

[More Americans identify as Democrats than as Republicans, 31% to 27%]

The percentage of Americans identifying as political independents increased in 2011, as is common in a non-election year, although the 40% who did so is the highest Gallup has measured, by one percentage point. More Americans continue to identify as Democrats than as Republicans, 31% to 27%.

[…]

Gallup records from 1951-1988 — based on face-to-face interviewing — indicate that the percentage of independents was generally in the low 30% range during those years, suggesting that the proportion of independents in 2011 was the largest in at least 60 years.

In recent decades, Gallup has observed a pattern of increased independent identification in the year prior to a presidential election, and a decline in the presidential election year. The only exception to that was in 1992, when independent identification increased from 1991, perhaps the result of President Bush’s high approval ratings in 1991 and Ross Perot’s independent presidential candidacy in 1992.

[NOTE: See charts at URL]

[Return to headlines]



Rep. Allen West: GOP Leaders ‘Sold Us Down the Road’ On Payroll Tax Cut

Rep. Allen West…said that the GOP House leadership had caved in to Senate GOP leaders, who “sold us down the road” for “pathetic politics” in the form of a two-month extension.

“I was very upset about what happened with this payroll tax cut extension,” West told WMAL radio station in Baltimore, Friday morning.

“We developed a good piece of legislation that took care of us for one year. It was paid for and would not decimate social security, unemployment insurance and also a two-year ‘doc fix’ and then, all of the sudden — I get back from D.C. on a Wednesday — the next day, on a Thursday, we have a conference call and we’re told were going to accept the Senate, what, two-month extension, which is absolutely pathetic policy.

“We can’t do tax policy that way,” he added.

West said that when the House Republican members get back to Washington on Jan. 17 they plan to have “some serious discussions” about getting “on the same sheet of music” because, he said, the House leadership did them a disservice by caving in to Senate Republican leadership by passing the two-month payroll tax cut extension in December.

“(W)e really felt that our leadership did not stand against the Senate Republican leadership, who kind of sold us down the road with 40 members of the Senate GOP voted for this, you know, pathetic politics. It was not policy,” West added. “And now we are going to start this Kabuki dance all over again.”

Asked whether there would be an attempt to unseat House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), West avoided answering the question.

“Well I’m not going to speculate about that,” he said. “I think that right now the most important thing that we need to focus on is, how do we rectify this economic situation and now the national security situation?”

[…]

[NOTE: See video at URL]

[Return to headlines]



The New Authoritarianism

A firm hand for a “nation of dodos”

By Fred Siegel and Joel Kotkin

“I refuse to take ‘No’ for an answer,” said President Obama this week as he claimed new powers for himself in making recess appointments while Congress wasn’t legally in recess. The chief executive’s power grab in naming appointees to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the National Labor Relations Board has been depicted by administration supporters as one forced upon a reluctant Obama by Republican intransigence.

But this isn’t the first example of the president’s increasing tendency to govern with executive-branch powers. He has already explained that “where Congress is not willing to act, we’re going to go ahead and do it ourselves.” On a variety of issues, from immigration to the environment to labor law, that’s just what he’s been doing-and he may try it even more boldly should he win reelection. This “go it alone” philosophy reflects an authoritarian trend emerging on the political left since the conservative triumph in the 2010 elections.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Senator: An Attack on Israel is an Attack on US

An Iranian attack on Israel would be tantamount to attacking the United States, US Senator Daniel Inouye (D-HA) told an auditorium full of high school students in Jerusalem on Monday.

Inouye, introduced to the students by former AIPAC president Robert Asher as the best friend Israel has in Congress, said he discussed the Iranian threat in a meeting earlier in the day with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.

“We in the US are deeply concerned with the activities in Iran,” said Inouye, who is America’s senior senator, having served continuously since 1963. “If the Iranians should ever develop a nuclear device or bomb, that could mean the end of the world as we know it in the Middle East. It would have an impact on all countries, not just Israel. As a result, our position is that if you attack Israel, you are attacking the United States.”

Inouye is the president pro tempore of the US Senate, making him third in line to succeed the US president, following the vice president and speaker of the house. He is also chairman of the powerful senate appropriations committee, and is here leading a delegation from that committee that also includes Thad Cochran (R-MS) and Barbara Mikulski (D-MD).

Asked to explain the close US-Israel relationship, Inouye said that “if one looks at most of this world, especially the Middle East, one country stands out as a foundation of stability and as a pillar of democracy. And at a time like this, when you have revolution in Yemen, Bahrain, Syria, Egypt, Tunisia and Jordan, thank God we have Israel.”

Inouye, who lost an arm while fighting in Europe during World War II, and was later decorated with a Congressional Medal of Honor for his service, traced his interest in Jews and Judaism to his rehabilitation in a military hospital in New Jersey in 1945.

Inouye said that in the next bed over was another soldier recuperating from his wounds. When Inouye asked the man about his wounds, the “blonde, blue-eyed officer” said it happened after he liberated a prison camp “where there were ovens, and people cooked in the ovens, and bodies stacked up” like kindling wood.

“I asked him what kind of prison it was, was it for murderers?” Inouye retold the tale in his deep, bass voice.

“‘No,’ he said, ‘they were Jews.’ I asked what crime they committed, and his answer changed my life. He said, ‘Well you know, Dan, people don’t like Jews.’“ Inouye said this left a lasting impression on him, and that a few years later, when the honor society at his law school, George Washington University, refused to accept two students because they were Jewish, he said he told the group that if the Jews were blackballed, “then kick me out, too.”

Inouye dated his concrete connection to Israel back to 1951, when he was a salesman in Hawaii for Israel bonds. He quipped that he was the first person in his state to buy an Israeli bond, and still has it framed in his office, along with a mezuzah on the door and “menorahs all over the place.”

“There was a time I considered conversion,” he said.

“But I decided not to because my mother was such a devout Christian, she might not get over it.”

Asked where he thought Israel-US relations would be a century from now, Inouye said it was difficult to predict relations 100 years down the line. As proof, he said, just look at America’s close alliance with Great Britain, once its colonial masters, and with Japan, once the US’s worst enemy.

But, he said, “In the case of Israel, because of the unusual situation in this area, the relationship will be strengthened because of our mutual interests. As long as the mutual interest remains, I’d say we will remain good friends.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



White House ‘Covered Up’ Tim Burton-Staged Alice in Wonderland Halloween Party

The White House covered up an Alice in Wonderland-themed Halloween party staged by film director Tim Burton and actor Johnny Depp for fear of creating the wrong impression during a recession, a new book on the Obamas has claimed.

Depp greeted guests in the costume he had worn in a film version of the Lewis Carroll story released around the same time by Burton, who was given carte blanche to transform the state dining room into a Mad Hatter’s tea party in “his signature creepy-comic style”. A long table was “set with antique-looking linens, enormous stuffed animals in chairs, and tiered serving plates with treats like bone-shaped meringue cookies”, writes New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor in The Obamas, which is released on Tuesday. Fruit punch was served in blood vials at the bar, she adds. George Lucas sent Chewbacca from Star Wars to mingle with invited guests, who included the Obamas’ two daughters Malia and Sasha and friends, the children of White House staff members and military families. The White House press corps was allowed to report on more modest festivities earlier that day for Washington-area school children, but did not release details of the more glamorous festivities that occurred later for what was the Obamas’ first Halloween in office in 2009. The only images released showed the first couple greeting children outside the dining room, with Michelle Obama in a leopard fancy dress costume.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Auschwitz Sees Record Number of Visitors

A record 1.4 million people visited the memorial site at the former death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in 2011.

The figure released yesterday underlines how the death and labour complex that Nazi Germany built in occupied southern Poland during World War II has become one of Europe’s most visited Holocaust remembrance sites.

While the large number of visitors is seen as important for Holocaust education, mass tourism there is also adding strain to the barracks and other structures.

Many are already in very poor condition and the officials overseeing the site are struggling to preserve what they can.

The museum and memorial site said most of the visitors last year were from Poland, but other nations represented in large numbers are Britain, Italy, Israel, Germany, France and the United States.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Europe Steelmakers File Complaints Against China

(BRUSSELS) — European steel-makers have filed an anti-subsidy complaint against cut-rate China imports blamed for undermining the EU industry, the European Steel Association (Eurofer) said Monday. The complaint put to the European Commission on Friday is Eurofer’s second recent move against Chinese steel imports after it called for an anti-dumping inquiry in November against organic coated steel from China, which is used in cars and construction.

The latest complaint is against “massive subsidisation” through preferential loans, grants, tax breaks and cheap supplies across the entire spectrum of the industry — investment, production, sales and exports. “Clearly the miracle of the Chinese steel industry, which now counts for almost 50 percent of global steel production, is not the result of free market forces,” said Eurofer head Gordon Moffat.

“The Chinese government at central, provincial and local level owns, directs and subsidises virtually every aspect of its steel industry and has financed huge excess capacities,” he said. “By promoting a sector intrinsically lacking a genuine cost advantage, China continues to be the major cause of unfair competition in the global steel market, injuring in particular the European steel industry on the domestic and third markets.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Scandal ‘Could Mean the End of Merkel’s Government’

German President Christian Wulff refuses to step down amid a scandal involving a threatening phone call to a major newspaper and dodgy business dealings. German commentators warn that his resignation could cause Angela Merkel’s government to collapse.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Fuel-Smuggling Scandal Flares Up

Mix of corruption and politics a plague, Papandreou

(by Demetrio Manolitsakis) — (ANSAmed) — ATHENS, 5 JANUARY — The much-awaited report that the two high-ranking Greek magistrates Grigoris Peponis and Spiros Muzakitis are due to submit to their senior colleagues should be released soon. Peponis and Muzakitis were assigned the task to fight financial crime, especially tax evasion. Some days ago, the two deputy prosecutors had asked to be relieved of their assignment because they maintained they “could not accept to be conditioned in their work”. They also promised to publicly state the names of those who had tried to prevent them from fulfilling their duty.

This was an unusual decision for the country, whose corruption was publicly acknowledged even by former Prime Minister Giorgos Papandreou. On December 10th, 2009, during an official dinner, Papandreou told his fellow guests that “this country is totally corrupted”. According to a high-ranking EU official who was at the dinner, Papandreou “was very sincere”. Moreover, according to the latest yearly report by Transparency International on the level of corruption at the global level, Greece is one of the most corrupted countries in the world. The fight against the plague of corruption has always been a pet subject for Greek political parties; however, the issue was tackled only during electoral campaigns. Costas Karamanlis, former Prime Minister and former leader of Nea Dimocratia (centre -right) won the 2004 elections by focusing his party’s electoral campaign on the slogans “we will reform the State” and “down with corruption”. In the end, Karamanlis was forced to dissolve Parliament and call for the 2009 elections (that were subsequently won by Papandreou), in order to save his MPs from being imprisoned on charges of involvement in a serious scandal. The Greek quote often and with a certain degree of irony a sentence by another Greek Prime Minister, Socialist Costas Simitis. When he was asked about corruption, Simitis used to answer: “Those who have evidence should go to court”. In the end, two of his closest collaborators admitted they had taken money by German company Siemens. The first one said he had received one million euro to finance the Pasok party, while the second one, one of Simitis’ ministers, admitted he had “accepted” 250,000 euro to finance his own electoral campaign. With the recent resignation of the two magistrates (resignations were, however, withdrawn after a few days), several scandals having involved the mechanisms of the Greek state have come up to the general public’s attention again; for example, fuel smuggling and simulated sales in the Balkan countries. According to daily newspaper Ta Nea, exports to neighbouring countries have doubled in the last three years, increasing from 15% in 2008 to 30% at the end of 2011. Approximately 600 foreign tankers circulate every year on Greece’s territory, without being checked by the police, the Customs Agency, the Sdoe (Greece’s Financial Police). Six out of ten tankers do not carry the compulsory mark with the name of the company they work for, as provided by the law. According to the daily newspaper, six million tonnes of fuel officially exported and sold in 2011 free of tax in neighbouring countries were actually sold in Greece, where special taxes and VAT were added to the price. In the past few days, there were allegations regarding some Finance Ministry’s officials concerning their involvement in this huge fuel-smuggling business. According to daily newspaper Ethnos, a Development Ministry official denounced that for one year, “the Finance Ministry, some tax agency and Customs agency officials, but also some fuel dealers have prevented the installation of a control system checking the quantity of fuel entering-exiting petrol pumps”.

According to Greek newspaper, the installation of this system would have resulted in approximately one billion euro per year entering the State’s Treasury. Certainly, the situation does not look better as for tax collection is concerned. According to Ethnos, judges proved that in one case a company fined for 620,000 managed to pay only 20,000 euro.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Indians in Norway Aborting Girls: Study

Norwegian-Indian woman give birth to abnormally high numbers of boys, a study has shown, sparking fears that families are deliberately aborting female foetuses. “Our study seems to indicate that some parents of Indian origin are practising sex-selective abortion,” said researcher Are Hugo Pripp at the national hospital (Rikshospitalet) to newspaper VG.

The study, which looks specifically at the third and fourth children born to mothers of Indian and Pakistani origin from 1969 to 2005, shows that the ratio of girls to boys changed dramatically among Indian-Norwegian mothers after ultrasound scans became available in Norway in 1987. Before the arrival of ultrasound technology, Indian-Norwegian mothers gave birth to 108 girls for every 100 boys.

After 1987, the ratio fell to 65 girls per 100 boys for Indian mothers while remaining relatively stable at pre-1987 levels for their Pakistani-Norwegian counterparts. ealth Minister Anne-Grete Strøm Erichsen (Labour Party) said she was surprised by the findings, which were initially published in 2010, and would refer the matter to the Norwegian Board of Health Supervision (Helsetillsynet).

“These are surprising numbers. Removing a healthy child because it has the wrong sex — it’s almost impossible to believe,” said Strøm Erichsen. “Sex-selective abortion in completely unacceptable. The equality of the sexes is absolutely fundamental.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: China Wants Killers of Man, Baby Caught

Rome will make ‘targeted’ response, interior minister says

(ANSA) — Rome, January 5 — The Chinese embassy in Rome on Thursday urged Italian authorities to catch the killers of a Chinese bar owner and his baby daughter.

The embassy said it was “shocked and appalled by the tragedy” and condemned the killers’ “atrocity and inhuman violence”.

Zhou Zheng, a 31-year-old Chinese immigrant, and his nine-month-old daughter were killed in the Tor Pignattara area in the city’s southeast late Wednesday, when two thieves demanded 5,000 euros from his bar’s takings as he was returning home with his family.

A single bullet went through the baby’s head and hit the man in the heart, according to an autopsy Thursday.

Speaking about the double homicide and a recent spate of unrelated killings, Mayor Gianni Alemanno said: “Rome’s patience and that of her citizens is finished.

“There are criminal beasts that are operating in our city that must be stopped at all costs”. To tackle the crime wave, 130 new police officers are arriving in Rome Friday, the first of a contingent of 400 that will move in by the end of January, authorities said Thursday.

Police will make a “targeted” response to the murders, Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri said. “We must not neglect any ambit or sector, concentrating, as the chief of police has proposed, a more incisive and visible action of the police on targeted territorial objectives,” she said after an interior ministry meeting.

“The murder of a months-old baby and her Dad on their doorstep sparks dismay. But the State is present and will prove it,” Cancellieri said, vowing an “immediate” response.

“We must give a signal to the community, but also restore serenity,” she added.

Cancellieri, who met Rome prefect Giuseppe Pecoraro and national and local police chiefs, voiced “deep condolences and sympathy” with Rome’s Chinese community.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Norway: Statoil Makes Major Oil Discovery in Barents Sea

Norwegian oil group Statoil announced on Monday a major oil discovery in the Barents Sea that could contain up to 300 million barrels of recoverable oil equivalent. The Havis prospect is the twin of Skrugard, another deposit Statoil discovered in April 2011, confirming the potential of the waters as yet untapped in the Barents Sea.

Together the two deposits could contain between 400 and 600 million barrels of oil equivalent, Statoil said in a statement. “Skrugard and Havis open up a new petroleum province in the North,” Statoil chief executive Helge Lund said in the statement. The two discoveries, which are located just seven kilometres apart but are not connected, could be developed together, which would limit costs.

Covered by the same production licence, the two deposits are owned by Statoil, which holds 50 percent, Eni of Italy, with 30 percent and Norwegian state-owned company Petoro which owns the remaining 20 percent. The two deposits remain modest in size compared with massive Norwegian fields such as Statfjord, which contains some 3.6 billion barrels and was found in 1974 in the North Sea. But they indicate there is potential for Arctic oil and gas riches for Norway, whose oil production has been on the decline for 10 years.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Reduced Fine in Norway for ‘Being Swedish’

A Swedish man received a 8,800 kronor ($1,270) fine while driving in Norway in March 2011, but was surprised to find the compassionate Norwegian police had cut it in half considering Swedes earn less money than their Norwegian neighbors. Ulf Anders Andersson, 61, was driving a trailer for his Norwegian employer when he was pulled over by police.

They concluded the vehicle was a traffic hazard due to its shoddy brakes, and issued a 8,800 kronor fine on the spot, the Aftonbladet newspaper reported citing Norwegian paper Verdens Gang, VG. However, Andersson then received a surprising letter saying the Norwegian police had taken the fact that he was Swedish into consideration, and therefore cut the fine in half “with regards of your income level,” it read.

“I thank them for the rebate, but I find it very strange. I actually make more than my Norwegian colleagues since the Swedish krona is weak and I live in Sweden,” he told VG. “They should be able to figure that out.” The Norwegian paper also spoke to Swedish football professional Daniel Nannskog to get a comment regarding the pitying of the “poor Swedes.”

“That the Norwegians have oil and this and that and that the Swedes are the Polish of the Nordic is just for laughs, but a gap between us can’t develop for real,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Cops Cut Fine for ‘Poor’ Swedish Truck Driver

A truck driver fined for having sub-standard brakes was given a hefty discount by Norwegian police who reckoned the fact he was Swedish meant he probably earned much less money than his colleagues. Ulf Anders Andersson, 61, was driving a truck for his Norwegian employer when he was pulled over by police.

They concluded the vehicle was a traffic hazard due to its shoddy brakes, and issued an 8,000 ($1,330) kroner fine on the spot last March, newspaper VG reports. But Andersson later received a surprising letter saying the Norwegian police had taken the fact he was Swedish into consideration, and cut the fine in half “in light of your income level.” “I’m happy to have got the discount since I’m contesting the fine, but I find it very strange,” he said.

Andersson pointed out that he actually made more than his Norwegian colleagues since he lives over the border in Sweden and benefits from the relative weakness of the Swedish krona. “They should have been able to figure that out,” he said. Police did not wish to comment on the case but conceded that foreign drivers occasionally have their fines reduced since they tend to earn far less than Norwegians.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway Killer Breivik Permitted to Receive Visitors

Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian far-right terrorist, will be allowed to receive visitors for the first time from Tuesday, after state prosecutors decided not to apply for continued restrictions.

The decision will open the way for Mr Breivik to give his first interviews with the media since he killed 77 people last July, and potentially to receive visits from those sharing his extreme anti-Islamic ideology.

Odd Gron, a lawyer at Lippestad, the firm representing Mr Breivik, said his client had received several letters from supporters requesting a visit.

“There have been requests from fans,” he confirmed. “There are letters from people giving him support, there are people who want to tell him that they don’t want to give him support, and also letters from journalists requesting arrangements.”

Breivik, 32, has confessed to setting off a bomb that ripped through Oslo’s government district on July 22, killing eight people, then opening fire at the summer camp of the governing Labour Party’s youth wing, killing another sixty-nine.

But in a manifesto he released on the day of the attack, he argued that the killings were “atrocious” but “necessary” to alert white Norwegians to the threat of a creeping takeover by Islam.

Mr Gron said that the requested meetings will only go ahead if and when Breivik makes an application to the authorities at Ila prison, where he is being held in detention in the run-up to his trial in April.

“We have forwarded these requests to Mr Breivik, and so far he has not made any conclusion on any of them,” he said. “He has not yet decided if he wants to take visits, who he wants to take visits from, and when.”

The ban on visits expires on January 9 under the terms of the extension to Breivik’s time in custody until February 6, which was decided by the Oslo court back in November. A similar ban on Breivik receiving letters and newspapers expired on 12 December.

The prison authorities still have the right to refuse Breivik a visit for safety reasons. The prison’s four psychiatrists stoked controversy last week when it was revealed that they had seen no evidence that Breivik was psychotic, contradicting the conclusion of the official assessment requested by the Olso court.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



‘Please Give Me a Five-Minute Break, I Need to Rest’: Moment Polish Military Prosecutor Shot Himself After News Conference on Probe Into Mystery Air Crash That Killed Country’s President

A Polish prosecutor shot himself today in dramatic footage caught on film in his office after cutting short a news conference.

Moments earlier, he had defended a military investigation into leaks related to a plane crash that killed Poland’s president two years ago.

At the start of the conference at his office in Poznan, Colonel Mikolaj Przybyl said: ‘During my entire service as a civilian and later military prosecutor, I have never brought shame to the Republic of Poland and I will protect the honour of an officer of the Polish armed forces and prosecution.

‘Thank you, please give me a five-minute break, I need to rest,’ Przybyl said, as the reporters then leave the room.

With the camera still rolling, he walks across the floor and, just out of shot, a pistol can be heard being reloaded and then a gunshot sounded.

As he slumps to the ground, only his feet are in the frame.

He was immediately taken to hospital after reporters found him lying in a pool of blood.

Hospital director Leslaw Lenartowicz said Przybyl is in stable condition, conscious, and his life is not in danger. He added that Przybyl had suffered injuries to his face.

Przybyl is a deputy head of the prosecutor’s office and the head of a local department investigating organised crime in the army.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Sicilian Temple Not for Sale ‘Even for 40 Bln’

Russian magnate Prokhorov reportedly wants to buy Temple of Zeus

(ANSA) — Rome, January 5 — The mayor of the Sicilian city of Agrigento said Thursday that he would not sell one of Italy’s prime archaeological treasures even for 40 billion euros after it reportedly attracted the interest of Russian industrialist Mikhail Prokhorov.

The precious-metals billionaire, who plans to run in this year’s presidential elections in Russia as an independent candidate, has set his sights on buying the ruins of the Temple of Zeus in Agrigento’s famed Valley of the Temples, according to media reports.

But Agrigento Mayor Marco Zambuto has moved to nip the notion in the bud.

“I wouldn’t sell the Temple of Zeus even for 40 billion euros, the figure Premier Mario Monti had to find to save Italy’s finances,” Zambuto said referring to the government’s austerity package, which was actually nearer to 30 billion.

“It’s simply unthinkable that a billionaire could buy our historical wonders and take them to their own country”.

Zambuto said, however, that the city was interested in attracting foreign investment in the UNESCO World Heritage site.

“It’s a different matter if we are talking about turning over management (of sites) for events or initiatives, or even the sponsorship of renovations and maintenance of the temples and sanctuaries in the valley,” he said. “I don’t rule out this option”. The seven Doric temples at Agrigento, most of which probably date from the fifth century BC, are one of the glories of Magna Graecia, a swathe of southern Italy which was once dotted with wealthy and culturally lavish Greek cities.

The name Valley of the Temples is misleading as the site is located on a ridge on the edge of Agrigento.

“The history of the Valley of the Temples goes back thousands of years and the site is one of the few historic remains of Magna Graecia,” added Zambuto.

“If a private sponsor intends to finance a restoration, it’s welcome. Our door is always open to this type of proposal”. photo: the Temple of Concordia in Agrigento’s Valley of the Temples.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



‘Something Rotten in Switzerland’: Blocher

Swiss People’s Party figurehead Christoph Blocher has accused the government of covering up the “crap” left behind by central bank president Philipp Hildebrand. In the first Sunday edition of the Basler Zeitung, Blocher added more fuel to the fire engulfing Hildebrand as he brushed aside the Swiss National Bank (SNB) chief’s claims he had not engaged in insider trading.

Hildebrand remains under pressure after reports that his wife Kashya made a large profit on a currency deal last August, just weeks before the SNB took steps to curb the rising franc. Despite Hildebrand receiving the backing of the government and the SNB, the SVP strongman said “Switzerland cannot afford a president of the SNB who speculates with the financial markets”. “If there is anybody in the country who should not make currency transactions, that is Mr. Hildebrand.”

Blocher described as “untenable” the fact that Hildebrand “as a professional influenced the financial markets and as a private citizen speculated in them.” When asked why he passed on bank data he had obtained illegally to the Federal Council even though the move risked hurting the central bank, Blocher said the only things that could destabilize the SNB were “a president who makes currency transactions, journalists who claim [his financial moves] were not speculation, and a Federal Council that covers up this crap with a blanket.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: ETA Prevents Prisoners From Asking Forgiveness

(ANSAmed) — MADRID 5 JANUARY — Eta requested its prisoners not to ask for forgiveness and not to offer compensation for the damage caused to the victims of terrorism. This is what Basque daily newspaper Deia stated, quoting the Ekia bulletin, the internal bulletin for detainees convicted on charges of belonging to the Basque separatist organization and imposing on the armed group’s members “the position they should keep when they are in prison”. The list of Eta’s instructions includes “refusing to offer compensation for damage caused to the victims and asking for their forgiveness”. According to the law, these conditions are compulsory in order to receive jail benefits .

According to Deia, Eta deems the Spanish state responsible for any damage caused by terrorism during the separatist conflict in the Basque Countries. According to the convicts’ association, state authorities “transformed the victims into the Sherpa of repression and into conflict-feeders”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Residents March to Protest Violence

Residents of Malmö have had enough of the ruthless street violence, and on Friday filled the city’s Gustav Adolfs square to show their frustration. “No more violence”, and “This is bloody enough” the signs said, some of them with pictures of the 15-year-old boy who was shot dead on New Year’s Eve. “Where are the police, where is the safety,” they marchers chanted. There was music, a short speech, but no political action during the hour the plaza was filled with people.

“I feel elation when I see that so many have responded to our challenge. Today we form a united front against organized crime and illegal weapons,” said one of the initiators, former Social Democrat Riksdag member Luciano Astudillo. The meeting was first suggested via Facebook after the 15-year-old boy was killed, and a few days later, when another man was shot dead on a Malmö street in broad daylight, about 10,000 people rapidly signed up to partake.

Organizers of the demonstration encouraged people not to bring flags and banners as the protest was not of political nature, daily Dagens Nyheter reported. Speakers emphasized the importance of changing the growing image of Malmö as an unsafe city.

“[Malmö] is such a young city and people move here because they think that’s positive, but the violence denigrates that image and it frightens people,” Astudillo told Dagens Nyheter. The paper described the demonstration as dignified and calm.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Sex Hashtag Takes Twitter by Storm

When Swedish radio host Gurgîn Bakircioglu created a hash tag in Swedish, asking people to describe their sex lives with a film title, he had no idea that the topic would trend and become the second most tweeted topic on Twitter. “I am overwhelmed by the interest people have shown over this and didn’t expect to get so much attention,” Gurgîn Bakircioglu told The Local.

Gurgîn Bakircioglu, a programme host at Sveriges Radio station SR Metropol, has been called a “phenomenon” after he introduced “#beskrivdittsexlivmedenfilmtitel” (literally “#describeyoursexlifewithamovietitle”) on microblogging site Twitter. Despite the hashtag being in Swedish and therefore somewhat confusing to international users, it quickly became the highest trending topic on Twitter.

At one point, several hundred people per minute were posting tweets relating to the tag and started to join in the game of thinking up film titles to describe their sex lives. “Gone in 60 seconds”, “No strings attached”, “Let the right one in” and “Love Actually” were some of the favourites.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Couple Accused of Torturing a Boy to Death “For Being a Witch” Abused a Teenage Girl for the Same Reason, The Old Bailey Heard Today.

Kristy Bamu, 15, suffered 101 injuries at the hands of his sister Magalie and her partner Eric Bikubi, both 28, on Christmas Day 2010, it is claimed. The pair allegedly used pliers, knives and a hammer on him at their Newham flat.

Today prosecutor Brian Altman said that in 2008 they accused a 19-year-old relative of witchcraft.

As with Kristy, Bikubi suspected Naomi Ilonga of harming another child of the family and ordered Bamu to throw away anything the girl had touched, including clothes and pans.

Bikubi is also said to have subjected her to all-night prayer sessions and forced her to endure days without food, before cutting off her hair to “release the witchcraft”.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Boy of 10 Batters 2 Women Teachers

A SCHOOLBOY aged ten has been arrested over a vicious attack on two middle-aged women teachers.

Latest figures for 2010 show 251 teachers were assaulted by pupils in England and Wales. Forty-four had to go to hospital. Almost half of all teachers leave the profession within five years after qualifying. The biggest reason they give for going is abuse, violence or the threat of violence from aggressive pupils. A recent report also revealed more than one in three teachers has also been a victim of bullying. One head teacher was driven to the brink of suicide by a hate campaign, the UK Safer Internet Centre said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Bernard Mumbaya-Kimbing, 46, Plundered Cash Sent by Kindhearted People to the Charities.

The dad-of-six was rumbled when staff at Manchester Mail Centre in Ancoats were placed under investigation after bosses discovered more than £2,000 in charity donations had gone missing there over a three-year period.

Money is also believed to have been taken from children’s birthday cards.

Sorting officer Mumbaya-Kimbing — who had worked at the Ancoats depot for nearly four years — was put under surveillance and was seen emptying 14 charity envelopes over two days.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Burglar Walks Free to Prevent Perception of Racism

A burglar who forced his way into a woman’s flat after grabbing her by the throat walked free after a judge heard he does not want to be perceived as ‘yet another violent black kid.’

Kerol Farquhuarson, 18, barged past Aneema Begum with a gang of youths and ransacked her home in Uamvar Street, Poplar, east London, but left empty-handed when he could not find any money. Ms Begum, who screamed and struggled with the men, told police she still has nightmares about the burglary on July 21 last year.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: David Cameron: I’ve Finished Angry Birds

THE PM shows the concentration that’s seen him complete EVERY level of hit app Angry Birds.

David Cameron boasted in an interview he has “finished” the addictive game, which sees players destroy pigs by firing birds from sling-shots. But MPs questioned whether he should be wasting his time on it. Labour’s John Spellar said: “I don’t imagine Margaret Thatcher spending her time playing computer games when she was in No 10.” However, The Sun’s Gaming Editor Lee Price praised the PM. He said: “Forget getting into No 10. Completing Angry Birds could be David Cameron’s greatest achievement yet.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: EDL Uses Douglas Murray to Deny Accusations of Racism and Boost Recruitment

The English Defence League have posted an article on their website urging support for their fight against “Islamic extremism”. It begins with the usual whinge about how they are falsely accused of being far-right racists: “The eagerness of some in the media to paint a group of patriotic people as some kind of extremists (when they’d never make such an offensive and blatantly untrue generalisations about more ‘sensitive’ groups of people) illustrates the application of a double standard reflective of what we’ve regularly referred to as a growing two tier system.”

However, not all the news is bad: “Luckily there are a few members of the middle and establishment classes who believe that the EDL at least deserve a fair hearing. One of these is the British writer and former director of the Centre for Social Cohesion, Douglas Murray.” This is followed by a video of Murray speaking at the One Law For All seminar last year where he welcomed the EDL as “a grassroots response from non-Muslims to Islamism”. The EDL applauds the fact that Murray “identifies ‘decent ordinary people’ with the EDL. Whilst he’s cautious of the need to ensure that the EDL is not hijacked by undesirable elements (so are we!), he recognises that most EDL supporters simply care about their communities and their countries”. The article concludes: “It’s a pity there aren’t more public figures like Douglas Murray: people who are willing to give us a chance, to give us the benefit of the doubt, and to treat us fairly. But perhaps, having been right about Islamic extremism, it’s much easier for him to avoid falling foul of the tendency common to all those who begin to realise that they’re losing the argument: shouting ‘racist’. Thank you for being right Mr Murray.”

Last year the Centre for Social Cohesion merged with the Henry Jackson Society and Murray is now an Associate Director of that organisation. You might think that this alone would result in the Henry Jackson Society being treated as political pariahs. Yet the HJS continues to serve as the secretariat to two All-Party Parliamentary Groups — on Homeland Security and Transatlantic & International Security — and recently gave evidence to the Home Affairs Committee’s inquiry into the roots of violent radicalisation.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: I’ve Never Lived With a White Man, But Racism is Still There in My DNA

Today I am going to reveal something I have never written about before (and you thought there were no more guts to spill).

Here we go. I’ve never had a relationship with a white man. I’ve never had sex with a white man, although I have kissed the odd one, many years ago.

I have been thinking about this fact over the past week, as the issue of race has reared its head again.

Why am I bringing up the fact I have had relationships only with black and Asian men?

It is not to bleat that, having been on the arm of a man of colour, I have experienced racism first-hand.

Unless you are black or Asian you cannot know what racism feels like.

I think in the Nineties I fell in love with three black men partly because it was fashionable and gave me a veneer of (here comes a racist word) ‘cool’ that, as a boring Essex girl, I didn’t possess.

I married, on the wave of Asians being the new blacks, with lots of hot new books in the bestseller lists, an Indian (that wasn’t the whole reason but, let’s be honest here, it was part of it)….

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: MCB Disappointed at Lib Dem Candidate’s Islamophobic Comments

With reference to a series of Islamophobic comments made on Facebook by Liberal Democrat candidate for Redcar and Cleveland, Dave Stone, the Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain, Farooq Murad said:

“I am deeply disappointed to read these crude and divisive remarks. We might expect this sort of language from the BNP, but not from someone hoping to stand as a candidate for the Liberal Democrats. We hope that Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and other Lib Dem party leaders will take swift action over this affair and think seriously about who represents them as a candidate. At election time Muslim voters will clearly reflect carefully on which political parties have taken serious note of issues such as Islamophobia, and which have not.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Manzar Juma Charged With the Murder of Ruby Love

Ruby Love was found dead in the Grand Union Canal in Southall on Christmas Day morning with bruising to her right eye and a lump on her head.

Her boyfriend Manzar Juma, 27, has since been charged with her murder. The opening of the inquest into her death heard Miss Love had been in a “volatile relationship” with Juma for the past six years, and that he was on bail at the time for domestic violence offences against her.

Her death came a month after she gave birth to her third child. The baby boy and her two-year-old son were fathered by Juma.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Tony Blair Made Millions of Pounds Last Year But Paid Just a Fraction of it in Tax Thanks to the Complicated Web of Companies He Has Established.

The former prime minister’s secretive business empire declared an income of £12million.

But he was able to reduce his tax bill to just £315,000 after writing off almost £11million as ‘administrative expenses’ — a ‘surprisingly’ high figure, according to one accountant.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Poll: Majority of Croatians Favour EU Accession

BRUSSELS — Despite the ongoing crisis sweeping across Europe and the threat of a eurozone breakup, the majority of Croatians favour joining the Union. Nearly 58 percent of Croatians want to join the European Union and become its 28th member, according to the latest poll conducted by Promocija Plus in early January.

The survey comes just ahead of a referendum on EU membership due on 22 January. The referendum is not legally binding but it will be politically important for the government to secure to a Yes vote, with 1 July 2013 already set as the official accession date. While the poll results may provide an additional momentum to the government’s pro-Europe stance, a similar poll held in the immediate aftermath of the United Nations war crimes tribunal decision to convict two former top Croatian generals showed 26 percent supported EU accession. That was only in April 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Islamists Headed for Win, Constitution Thorny Issue

‘Islamic’ success in N. Africa 20 yrs after Algerian FIS

(ANSAmed) — CAIRO — The third round of the first free elections in Egyptian history will soon be over, handing to the Muslim Brotherhood — and the Salafist extremist fringe — the majority in the People’s Assembly, the lower house of Parliament. The victory will be in the line with those seen in Tunisia and Morocco by Islamist movements, who are celebrating their success in North Africa 20 years after Algeria annulled elections in which the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) was heading for certain victory. The definitive election results will be known on January 13 after the run-offs, but the lead held by the Islamists, who reaped the fruits of a revolution they did not begin, will also be sanctioned by the votes racked up by Salafists: a total of about 65/70% of seats in the Assembly will have to go to Islamic parties, which are already getting ready for a probable clash with the military junta over the crucial but thorny issue of the new Constitution. The new Assembly will be meeting for the first time on January 23, two days before the anniversary of the initial uprising which led to the end of the 30 years in powers of the regime under Hosni Mubarak, the former president who now runs the risk of being sentenced to death.

From Morocco to Egypt, on the southern shores of the Mediterranean the successes of “moderate” Islamic currents are becoming ever more consolidated. For the movements fought against and banned for years by the Western-allied regimes, it is a form of revenge coming twenty years after January 1992, when Algerian soldiers, with the tacit consent of Western democracies, deprived FIS of the success gained in Algeria’s first multi-party elections. It is a move which plunged the country into a civil war, costing 150,000-200,000 lives over the course of 10 years. Algerian legislative elections have been scheduled for the spring, and the Islamic party MPS (Movement of Society for Peace) has left the government coalition to stand for office on its own, hoping to capitalise on the success of “brethren” parties in other North African countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egypt Liberal Secular Leader to be Put on Trial for Minnie Mouse in a Burka Cartoons

Naguib Sawiris, Egypt’s richest man and figurehead of the liberal movement for the country’s political leadership, is to be put on trial for insulting religion over cartoons he put on Twitter showing Mickey and Minnie Mouse in traditional Muslim clothing.

The case against Mr Sawiris, owner of the Orascom business empire and the country’s most prominent Christian, was filed originally by a group of lawyers affiliated to the radical Salafi Islamist movement. Few expected it to be taken up by the prosecuting authorities. But the Salafis have become a powerful force in the new Egypt after sweeping to second place behind the Muslim Brotherhood-backed Freedom and Justice Party in elections. They are pushing for tighter implementation if not a rewriting of Egypt’s constitution, which is supposed to be based on the principles of Sharia law. Mr Sawiris, who is outspoken in defence of secular values and often accused of being provocative, “retweeted” a cartoon in June showing Minnie wearing a black face-veil and Mickey in the traditional robe and beard of a Salafi follower.

The Muslim Brotherhood also expressed outrage, but it was a call by the Salafis of a boycott of Mr Sawiris companies, which include Egypt’s largest mobile phone operator, which gave the first indication of the strength of their following. Mr Sawiris apologised, but not before the phone operator lost hundreds of thousands of subscriptions.

One of the lawyers who filed the case, Mamdouh Ismail, a member of the once-banned Gamaa Islamiya, said he had been notified it would go ahead on Saturday. “When we filed the case we didn’t expect anything,” he said. Mr Sawiris set up the Free Egyptians Party after the fall of President Hosni Mubarak. The liberal coalition of which it is part is likely to have come a poor third in the parliamentary elections when final results are announced later this month.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Tunisia’s Islamist Party Slams Anti-Semitic Chants

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — The head of Tunisia’s moderate Islamic party condemned anti-Semitic slogans chanted Monday by a handful of ultraconservative Muslims during the arrival of a top Hamas official that have alarmed the local Jewish community.

It was the latest action by a small group of ultraconservative Muslims over the past few months to have embarrassed the government in what was once one of the more secular countries in the Arab world.

Rachid Ghannouchi reiterated the policy of his Ennahda party, which heads the country’s new government, that Tunisia’s Jews are “full citizens with equal rights and duties.”

“Ennahda condemns these slogans which do not represent Islam’s spirit or teachings, and considers those who raised them as a marginal group,” Ghannouchi said in a statement.

Videos circulated online showed crowd members greeting Ismail Haniyeh, the prime minister of the Gaza government, at the airport in Tunis on Thursday chanting “Kill the Jews” and “Crush the Jews.” The chants came from Salafists, ultraconservative Muslims who have been making their presence felt in Tunisia recently.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


PNA: EU: 47.7 Mln to Salaries and Pensions Civil Servants

Support European funds will continue in 2012

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 05 — The European Union is providing a contribution of 47.7 million euros to assist the Palestinian Authority with the payment of December salaries and pensions of almost 85,000 Palestinian civil servants and pensioners, both in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. “The European Union’s continuing financial support to the Palestinian Authority — said John Gatt-Rutter, the Acting EU Representative — underlines the confidence that Europe has in the PA’s institutions and their ability to provide essential public services. This support will continue in 2012 while the PA moves forward its objective of fiscal sustainability and economic viability”.

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), this contribution, channelled through PEGASE, the European mechanism for support to the Palestinians, is being provided by the European Commission (26.2 million euros) as well as the governments of Spain (20.0 million euros), Ireland (1.0 million euros) and Luxembourg (0.5 million euros).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ayatollah Vows Iran Will Resist Western Sanctions

(TEHRAN) — Iran will not falter in the face of Western-imposed sanctions, the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said it comments broadcast on state television on Monday. “The firm decision of the Islamic Republic is to resist the pressures” of Western powers, Khamenei said.

“While the Iranian people have travelled the road to success and see the signs of new victories to come, the (Western) oppressor is trying to frighten the Iranian people and officials by brandishing the threat of sanctions.”

While analysts and some in Iran’s government have said the latest round of sanctions have hit Iran’s economy, the country’s top leader dismissed claims that the strategy will block his country from pursuing its goals.

“Western officials have declared on a number of occasions that, with sanctions and pressure, they want to discourage the people and lead officials to renounce their plans, but they are mistaken and they will not achieve their objectives,” said Khamenei.

The European Union is joining the United States in ratcheting up sanctions on Iran over its nuclear programme, which the West believes masks a drive to develop an atomic weapons capability. Iran, which insists its nuclear programme is exclusively for peaceful purposes, has said it is “not concerned” by the imminent EU embargo. It says it will easily be able to sell its oil to other markets.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bahrain: Bulldozers Back at ‘Sex Den’ Mosque

BULLDOZERS have rolled in to demolish an abandoned mosque allegedly being used as a sex den.

Work to tear down Al Mawaada Mosque in the old Muharraq area started last February, but was halted in mysterious circumstances within days. But the Sunni Waqf (Endowment) Directorate has brought back the bulldozers following an urgent request from the Muharraq Municipal Council amid complaints from residents. The eastern gate of the windowless mosque had earlier been knocked down and parts of the dilapidated building had collapsed in the last 11 months, but the southern gate was still standing. Residents claim it was being used for immoral acts and have been trying to safeguard the mosque since. However, they have found it difficult to curb the illegal activities reportedly taking place at the mosque during the early hours. “No apparent reason has been given on why the mosque has been left unattended for such a long time, considering that worshippers are waiting for a new mosque to be built in that area,” said area councillor Ghazi Al Murbati. “Prayers have stopped there since February when work to bulldoze the mosque began. However, just a few days later it was halted without giving us a valid reason. Mosques are sacred places, but if they are left abandoned they just become like any other deserted building that is a good location for youngsters to have sex, drink alcohol and use drugs. The Waqf directorate has neglected the place for a long time, but thankfully they have acted upon urgent requests, especially after attempts by residents to limit the immoral, indecent and illegal acts going on.”

Mr Al Murbati praised residents for trying to protect the sacredness of the mosque, but argued they could not continue much longer and demanded its demolition. “There were several youngsters who have been caught by residents and referred to the police,” said Mr Al Murbati, who is also the council’s financial, administrative and legislative committee chairman.

“But residents can’t do everything nor can the police because the problem lies with the existence of the dilapidated mosque. Residents can’t keep guarding the place late at night when the mosque becomes ‘active’ because they need to asleep and it is illogical to stand on the doorsteps waiting for someone to appear.” Mr Al Murbati said the mosque was an “ideal” hideout for youngsters because only one of the two gates was bulldozed. “It is a nice hideout for anyone and unless someone goes inside they wouldn’t be able to identify if there are people inside or not.” mohammed@gdn.com.bh

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Haniyeh: Muslims Are Creating the New Middle East

Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh declared Sunday that the Muslim revolutions born out of the “Arab Spring” would replace US-backed chaos in the Middle East, Hamas affiliate Al Resalah quoted the Hamas leader as saying. “We are among those who will create a new Middle East. We have created a glorious revolution that will bring back the nation and its glory in place of the chaos that the American administration had so desired,” Haniyeh told a gathering of Tunisian Islamist Ennahda party supporters in Tunis.

According to the report, tens of thousands of Tunisians gathered outside the palatial government complex in the Tunisian capital to see Haniyeh speak, chanting in support of “Palestinian liberation.” Protesters also chanted “Death to Israel” and “the army of Mohammed is back,” as Haniyeh reiterated his pledge not “to lay down our arms” or recognize Israel, according to AFP.

The Ennahda party, banned under the rule of ousted Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, has since become the country’s largest party, garnering 40 percent of votes in last October’s parliamentary elections. Haniyeh has traveled Arab and Muslim nations on a Middle East tour that began December 25, including Egypt, Sudan, Turkey and Tunisia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran Sentences American Man to Death in CIA Case

TEHRAN, Iran — An Iranian court has convicted an American man of working for the CIA and sentenced him to death, state radio reported Monday, in a case adding to the accelerating tension between the United States and Iran.

Iran charges that as a former U.S. Marine, Amir Mirzaei Hekmati, received special training and served at U.S. military bases in Iraq and Afghanistan before heading to Iran for his alleged intelligence mission. The radio report did not say when the verdict was issued.

The 28-year-old former military translator was born in Arizona and graduated from high school in Michigan. His family is of Iranian origin. His father, a professor at a community college in Flint, Michigan, has said his son is not a CIA spy and was visiting his grandmothers in Iran when he was arrested.

Behnaz Hekmati, his mother, said in an email to The Associated Press that she and her husband, Ali, are “shocked and terrified” that their son has been sentenced to death. She said the verdict is “the result of a process that was neither transparent nor fair.”

Under Iranian law, he has 20 days to appeal. Hekmati has a court-appointed lawyer who was identified only by his surname, Samadi, and there was no word about an appeal.

Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehei, spokesman for Iran’s judiciary said if the verdict is appealed, it would go to Iran’s Supreme Court, the official IRNA news agency reported.

Hekmati’s trial took place as the U.S. announced new, tougher sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, which Washington believes Tehran is using to develop a possible atomic weapons capability.

Iran, which says it only seeks nuclear reactors for energy and research, has sharply increased its threats and military posturing against stronger pressures, including the U.S. sanctions targeting Iran’s Central Bank in attempts to complicate its ability to sell oil.

The U.S. State Department has demanded Hekmati’s release

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



Syria: Russian Naval Flotilla to Leave Tartus Today

(ANSAmed) — DAMASCUS, JANUARY 9 — A large Russian naval flotilla led by an aircraft carrier has docked in the Syrian port of Tartus in what Damascus state media hailed as a show of solidarity by close ally Moscow, as Turkish daily Hurriyet reports today. The six-day call to the Mediterranean port, where Russia has a recently expanded naval base, is intended to boost ties at a time when President Bashar al-Assad’s government is under mounting Western and Arab pressure over its bloody crackdown on dissent, the Syrian press said. But Russia defense officials said the stop was simply to replenish supplies. “The port call is aimed at bringing the two countries closer together and strengthening their ties of friendship,” Syria’s official SANA news agency quoted a Russian naval officer it identified as Vladimir Yakushin as saying. The governor of Tartus province, Atef al-Nadaf, paid tribute to the “honourable position adopted by Russia which has stood by the Syrian people.”

But Russian defence officials stressed the ships were conducting regular Mediterranean Sea exercises unrelated to the Syrian crisis and had only entered port to replenish supplies. “After replenishing their supplies, the ships will leave Syrian waters on January 9 and continue on their long-distance mission,” the Russian defense ministry said in a statement. Despite strong Western criticism, Russia has stood by its Cold War ally in the face of a mounting international outcry over the death toll from security force efforts to crush nearly 10 months of anti-government protests. In October, Moscow joined Beijing in vetoing a Western-drafted UN Security Council resolution that would have threatened Damascus with “targeted measures” if it failed to rein in its security forces.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Tourism Growing and Profile of Visitors Changing

Fewer Germans and more Arabs. Sermons in English in mosques

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA — The Turkish tourism industry continues to grow and the profile of the average tourist is changing: most visitors are still coming from Europe, mainly Germany, but the number of tourists from Arab countries and regions like South America is on the rise. This fact was underlined by the Turkish agency Anadolu, which has analysed figures on the flow of incoming tourists over the first 11 months of 2011. This flow increased by 10% compared with the same period in 2010, rising to 30.26 million. Today Turkish Culture and Tourism Minister Ertugrul Gunay told Anadolu that he expects Turkey to host 32.5 million tourists this year, generating 24 billion USD in revenues.

The impact of Turkey’s soap operas, which are very popular in North Africa and the Middle East, has raised the number of Arab visitors to the country. But an increase in visitors from the Philippines, Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Norway was also recorded. The most popular tourist destinations are the beaches of Antalya, the history and architecture of Istanbul and the province of Mugla, with the beautiful seaside resort of Bodrum.

Most tourists came from Germany (4.23 million from January to November, 400,000 less than the same period in 2010), followed by Russian tourists (3.4 million, a sharp increase from the 2.64 million recorded in 2009). The figures regarding Arab tourists are lower, but are in line with the rise of the Islam in Turkey, which seems to be freeing itself from the secular heritage of Ataturk. Today the Dogan agency reports that some historic mosques in Istanbul are preparing summaries in English of their sermons. Rather than to devout Islamic tourists, the initiative — already implemented in Germany and Australia — is aimed at visitors of other religions among the 20 thousand tourists who visit the Islam’s places of worship in Istanbul on average every day. Some of them are not only interested in the history and architecture of the mosques, they also want to learn about the religious message that they convey. To that purpose, 250 specialised guides will be trained, who will be able to answer questions on this issue in at least three languages.

Istanbul remains a very attractive tourist destination: according to figures released yesterday by the city’s Culture and Tourism Direction, a growth of more than a million visitors (+16%) was recorded compared with 2010, when the Turkish capital was one of the three European Cultural Capitals. Also in Istanbul most visitors came from Germany, followed by tourists from Russia, the U.S., Italy and France. The most popular month was July (916 thousand visitors), the least popular was January (378 thousand).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UAE: Dutch Queen Tours Abu Dhabi Mosque

Abu Dhabi, Jan 8 (IANS/WAM) Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands visited the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque here Sunday. She was accompanied by Crown Prince Willem-Alexander and his wife Princess Maxima and other senior officials. Queen Beatrix visited the library of the Zayed Grand Mosque and the tomb of late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. She expressed her admiration of the mosque as a huge Islamic landmark. She was received by Yusuf Al Obaidli, director of the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Centre and other officials.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Allah’s Energy Marriage — Saudi Arabia and India

by John Daly

The only question is, what took so long?

Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s leading oil producer and rising BRIC superstar India are deepening their energy ties.

India is seeking massive foreign investment of nearly $1 trillion over the next 5-7 years.

Where is such largesse to come from?

Well, on 5 January, at the at the 9th India-Saudi Arabia Joint Commission meeting in New Delhi, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee proposed establishing a $ 750 million fund to be set up in cooperation with Saudi Arabia to develop joint of infrastructure, exploration and production of hydrocarbons with Saudi Arabia.

Mukherjee told his audience that the investment fund, “to be jointly set up by the Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia, and a counterpart Indian agency, needs to be given high priority as it is mutually beneficial.”

As an indication of the high priority India sets on the investment fund, it represents 75 percent of the foreign investment that India is seeking.

Saudi Arabia is the largest economy in the Middle East and posted the best economic performance in 2011 in two decades despite the ongoing global recession. In 2011 Saudi Arabian-Indian bilateral trade was worth more than $25 billion.

(SEE MORE AT URL, ABOVE)

[Return to headlines]



India: Govt Should Cancel Salman Rushdie’s Visa, Says Deoband

Muzaffarnagar: Opposing controversial author Salman Rushdie’s visit to India, Islamic Seminary Darul Uloom Deoband has said that the government should cancel his visa as he had hurt religious sentiments of Muslims in the past. Sixty five-year-old Rushdie, who had earned the wrath of Muslims worldwide due to his novel ‘The Satanic Verses’, is set to attend the Jaipur Literature Festival this month end. “Indian government should cancel his visa as Rushdie had annoyed the religious sentiments of Muslims in the past,” Maulana Abul Qasim Nomani, the Vice Chancellor of Darul Uloom, said in a release. The government should take into account the feelings of Muslims against Rushdie, he stressed. Rushdie’s novel ‘The Satanic Verses’, which was banned by India, had sparked outrage in the Muslim world, including a fatwa against him by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Supreme Leader of Iran, on February 14, 1989. The Indian-origin Rushdie had earlier visited the literary extravaganza in the Pink city in 2007. On January 21, Rushdie along with authors Rita Kothari and Tarun Tejpal is slated to discuss the nuances of English with noted writer Ira Pande on the topic ‘Inglish, Amlish, Hinglish: The chutnification of English’

[JP note: Well, I’ll be chutnied, Rushdie in a pickle again … business as usual then for dhimmis in the cartoon world of Islam.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Three Million Catholics Defy Terror Threat to Annual Parade in Philippines

More than 3 million Roman Catholic worshippers paraded with a charred Christ statue through the Philippine capital in an annual procession Monday despite a warning from the president that terrorists might target the gathering.

The black wooden statue known as the Black Nazarene was displayed at the seaside Rizal Park where Manila’s Archbishop Luis Antonio Tagle led a Mass and offered prayers for victims of tropical storms and landslides over the past year.

Organizers then brought the statue — believed to have healing powers — down from the stage for its three-mile procession to a popular church as devotees rushed forward to touch it. Police estimated that more than 3 million people had joined the procession; up to 9 million were expected.

President Benigno Aquino III warned Sunday at a hastily called news conference, along with military and police officials, that several terrorists planned to disrupt the event and had reportedly been seen in the capital. But the threat was not high enough to cancel the procession, he added.

[…]

Philippines Interior Secretary Jesse Robredo said without elaborating that six to nine people from the southern Philippines may be involved in the alleged plot, and officials gave no description of their group or its motives. When asked if the threat came from the al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf group, Aquino said that possibility had not been confirmed.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told reporters that raids had been conducted in several suspected terrorist safe houses Manila and nearby Rizal province but without any results so far.

[…]

The wooden statue of Christ, crowned with thorns and bearing a cross, is believed to have been brought from Mexico to Manila in 1606 by Spanish missionaries. The ship that carried it caught fire, but the charred statue survived and was named the Black Nazarene.

Some believe the statue’s survival of fires and earthquakes through the centuries and intense bombings during World War II is a testament to its powers.

           — Hat tip: The Hot Gates 480 B.C. [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Danish Warship Frees 14 Hostages

An investigation is underway to determine what happens next to the pirates and the hostages

Now that a seaborne rescue operation conducted by the Danish warship Absalon against pirates off the coast of Somalia has freed 14 Iranian and Pakistani hostages, investigators are working to determine what should happen next.

On Saturday, the Absalon, which is part of a NATO-led anti-piracy operation, pursued a craft it suspected of being a pirate mother ship off the Somali coast in the Indian Ocean. The pirates surrendered after a three hour standoff, during which the Absalon fired warning shots and instructed the pirates to surrender.

The 25 pirates and 14 hostages are currently being interviewed aboard the Absalon in an effort to establish what exactly happened onboard the captured vessel.

“We are in the process of piecing together what happened”, said Navy commander Mikael Bill from the Søværnets Operative Kommando (SOK) . “We are questioning both the hostages and the pirates. The information we gather will help us decide the next steps.”

Early reports indicate that the Iranian fishing boat was captured two months ago and that the 14 sailors onboard had been held captive since then. They expressed great relief at having been rescued and have made contact with their families.

The captured pirates cannot be prosecuted under Danish law, but Denmark has agreements with Kenya and the Republic of Seychelles that would allow for the pirates to be tried in those countries. The Iranian vessel is seaworthy, and the hostages could use it to get home. “Having the hostages simply sail their ship home is possible, but it is still too early to say if that will happen,” Bill said.

The Iranian vessel, one of the largest captured by a Danish warship in the battle against pirates, is currently being held alongside the Absalon. Somalia has been without a functional government since 1991, and has become a home for pirates who launch attacks on ships off its coast.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Norway: ‘Immigrants Behind Most Rapes in Stavanger’

Of the 20 men found guilty of rape, half were of African origin, five had Asian backgrounds, one had Polish roots and three were ethnic Norwegians, said NRK, which did not disclose the ethnicity of one of the men.

Police investigator Kristian Johansen said he was surprised by the figures

“When we look at the total number of reports we process, the cases involve a higher number of ethnic Norwegians. It surprises me that so few ethnic Norwegians have been convicted,” he said.

By contrast, Stavanger district court judge Helge Bjørnestad said he was not surprised by the figures.

“I don’t think this is an arbitrary grouping. Unfortunately, it tallies with what we’ve seen,” he said…

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Sir Andrew Green: What Do the Public Really Think About Immigration?

The immigration industry is in a corner. The government are proceeding with wide-ranging reform of the immigration system supported by very strong public opinion. Special interest groups are fighting rear guard actions, often based on misrepresentation of government policy. Otherwise, there is nobody arguing against the need to reduce net immigration. Even Labour’s spokesman on immigration, Chris Bryant, was obliged to admit in Parliament that “yes of course we think that immigration has been too high and that it should be lower”. Perhaps that is why some on the left are seeking to suggest that public opinion is not what it seems to be. The IPPR, the Migrants’ Rights Network and others, have latched onto a paper produced by the Migration Observatory entitled “Thinking behind the numbers — understanding public opinion on immigration in Britain”. And guess what… the BBC News website lapped it up too. This paper reported the results of an opinion poll which sought the public’s views on various categories of migrant and whether they should be reduced (or increased). They found, for example, that only about one third of the public wanted the number of students reduced — no doubt for the obvious reason that most of them go home after their courses. The picture on workers was more mixed; 59% wanted restaurant staff cut back but only 31% wanted the number of highly skilled workers reduced.

No surprises there — but the paper went on to suggest that, if the government did not take these preferences into account, they would risk reducing immigration in a way that a majority of the public did not support.

This was the message that the immigration lobby and the BBC latched onto with such enthusiasm. Unfortunately for them, the survey itself bore no relation to the government’s actual policies. The general approach was not described, nor were respondents asked about any of the policy measures actually proposed. On the contrary, they were asked about a range of matters unrelated to present policies. For example, they were asked whether the number of low skilled workers admitted to Britain should be reduced or not. In fact, as the report recognised elsewhere, the only low skilled migrants admitted to Britain are from the EU over which the government has no control. Respondents were then asked whether various categories of students should be increased, reduced or kept the same. In fact, of course, the government policy is not to increase or reduce the number of students; it is to eliminate bogus students — a quite different matter.

The paper did admit, however, that “there is no question that a large majority of the public supports overall reductions to immigration levels”. They found that 69% supported this but even this figure was lower than usual because the survey included Scotland and 15-17 year olds where opposition to immigration is lower. The only valid conclusion from this paper is that the public has a shaky knowledge of the details of immigration policy — a characteristic that appears to be shared by the authors and purveyors of the report. Those who had any part in canvassing, for whatever political party, during the last election will be in no doubt of the strength of public opinion on the subject. If they are to retain the confidence of the public, the government would be well advised to stay firmly on the case.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Number of Migrants Working in the UK Who Were Born in Eastern Europe Rose by 600,000 Since the “A8” Countries, Which Include Poland, Latvia and the Czech Republic, Joined the EU.

At the same time, youth unemployment rose by almost 450,000 and recently exceeded one million.

Youth unemployment in the UK increased from 575,000 in the first quarter of 2004 to 1,016,000 in the third quarter of 2011, figures from the Office for National Statistics showed.

Sir Andrew Green, chairman of MigrationWatch, said: “When the statistics are placed side by side most objective people would consider it a very remarkable coincidence if there was no link between them,

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

General


Antarctic Fossil Shows Sauropod Dinosaurs Were Global

ANTARCTICA has yielded its first sauropod fossil. The long-necked plant-eating dinosaurs are already known to have plodded across the six other continents. The 70 to 80-million-year-old fossil is too incomplete to be given an exact name, but it is distinctive enough to identify as belonging to a branch of sauropods called titanosaurs (Naturwissenschaften, DOI: 10.1007/s00114-011-0869-x).

Ignacio Cerda from the National University of Comahue in Argentina uncovered the fossil on James Ross Island. Excavation is difficult, but the site has yielded other important dinosaur fossils over the past two decades. The beast may have reached Antarctica via an ancient isthmus that linked it to South America. “This specimen is at the highest palaeolatitude of any late Cretaceous sauropod in either hemisphere,” says Tom Rich at Museum Victoria in Melbourne, Australia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



BP Closes Its Solar Business After 40 Years

by Carin Hall

After 40 years, BP exits its solar business in the face of fierce competition. Are they to blame?

If “BP” is short for Beyond Petroleum, it will have to change its name to just “P” now after it officially shut down its solar business last month, a key division in its quest to develop cleaner sources of energy. After 40 years, the final decision to shut the door on solar mostly comes from the impossible competition faced from China.

With the growth of Chinese manufacturing, a global surplus of panels and the subsequent collapse in prices, many solar companies have similarly been forced out of business over the last year.

“The continuing global economic challenges have significantly impacted the solar industry, making it difficult to sustain long term returns for the company, despite our best efforts,” BP said in an internal letter to staff.

(SEE MORE AT URL, ABOVE)

[Return to headlines]



Search for Intelligent Extraterrestrials Targets Known Alien Planets

Until recently, astronomers searching for signals from intelligent aliens have had to scan the heavens blindly. But now that’s starting to change, as scientists are targeting newly discovered exoplanets beyond the solar system for their search. Since the first alien planet was discovered in 1996, astronomers have found more than 700 worlds around other stars.

A leading player in this search is NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope, which has discovered 2,326 exoplanet candidates since its launch in March 2009. Follow-up observations from the ground over the coming years hope to confirm most of these as the genuine article.

Now scientists involved in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) have analyzed their first data from radio telescope observations of Kepler planets. The researchers are searching for radio signals that aren’t likely to be caused by natural phenomena, and thus could represent an extraterrestrial message.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120108

Financial Crisis
» Baroness Ashton Forced to Seek More Money
» End of Euro is ‘Fantasy’, Says Eurozone Policymaker Luc Coene
 
USA
» Northampton Man Says He Was Racially Profiled at Mitt Romney Pasta Party in New Hampshire
» Updated! Why is the Governor Taking Ownership of the Virginia GOP Primary Mess?
 
Europe and the EU
» Anti-Islamic Websites Come Under Greater Scrutiny in Germany
» Stieg Larsson Was an Extremist, Not a Feminist
» UK: Children as Young as 11 Have Been Arrested for Possessing Drugs With Intent to Sell, Shocking Figures Revealed Yesterday.
» UK: Kate and Wills Safety Fears Exposed as Council Gives Public Access to Security Plans for Kensington Palace
» UK: NHS Hospital Where Half of Breast Implants Burst
» UK: Sophie’s Gems From Despots: Countess Faces Questions After Accepting Lavish Jewellery Gifts From Bloody Bahrain
 
Balkans
» Serbia: Diaspora Send Record 5.5 Bilion USD
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israel: ‘Third-Reich State’, Orthodox Jews on the Offensive
 
Middle East
» Iran Uranium Enrichment Site Operational Soon: Official
» Qatar: World’s Leading CO2 Producer Cuts Emissions by 14%
» Turkey: Former Army Chief of Staff Arrested
» Turkey to Negotiate With U.S. Bell to Buy Choppers
 
South Asia
» Croydon, Copenhagen — and Here, In a Rich Suburb of Lahore, Is Benefit Probe Father’s Third Home
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Zimbabwe: Aussie Tourist’s Bungee Cord Snaps
 
Latin America
» Ahmadinejad Arrives in Venezuela
» Iran’s Ahmadinejad to Seek Latin American Support
» Suspended Mexican Soccer Goalie Detained in Kidnap
 
Immigration
» Migrants Here for a Handout
 
Culture Wars
» Sex Toys for Sale at Boots, Prominently Displayed Close to Healthcare Products in Full View of Children

Financial Crisis


Baroness Ashton Forced to Seek More Money

Baroness Ashton has been forced to seek additional funds for the EU diplomatic service after overspending in defiance of Europe-wide austerity cuts.

Lady Ashton, the best paid female politician in the Western world, angered national governments with a poor performance as Europe’s foreign minister.

Her demands for an extra £22 million in funding for this year fuels criticism as it breaches her promise to set up a “budget neutral” European diplomatic service.

In a new move that has infuriated Britain, which has made deep cuts to the foreign office, a report published yesterday, by Lady Ashton, has now completely ditched the pledge of funding her European External Action Service (EEAS) from existing EU budgets without making new spending demands.

“Insufficient provision has been made for the needs of the EEAS as an autonomous body in financial and administrative terms,” said the report. “This means that the service is struggling to meet even minimum standards in terms of activity based management and financial programming, personnel policy, security and IT. There is a structural deficit that will need to be addressed over time.”

Britain fought but lost a battle to stop a “ludicrous” 5.3 per cent increase in Lady Ashton’s £383 million EEAS budget for 2012…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



End of Euro is ‘Fantasy’, Says Eurozone Policymaker Luc Coene

The idea that the troubled eurozone could collapse is “complete fantasy” according to a policymaker at the European Central Bank (ECB).

Luc Coene, a Governing Council member at the ECB, said that even if Greece was to leave the euro, Europe would unite to protect the system. “If the Greeks decide to leave, something that seems to me to be completely inconceivable … Europe will certainly stand shoulder to shoulder to protect the system,” he told the newspaper La Libre Belgique.

Mr Coene said that Europe was starting to take control of its budget deficits, but that it would take time to see how effective the austerity measures put in place would be. “I think that, for the moment, we are starting to have control over the situation,” he said. “Now we need a bit of time to see what is the degree of success that all of these plans will have.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Northampton Man Says He Was Racially Profiled at Mitt Romney Pasta Party in New Hampshire

TILTON, N.H. — A 30-year-old Northampton [Massachusetts] resident said he was “racially profiled” at a Mitt Romney campaign event here on Friday evening.

“The police officer stood beside me and said, ‘You have to come with me right now,’“ said Edan Dhanraj, a 30-year-old University of Massachusetts alumnus and United Auto Workers organizer.

Tilton Police Lt. Richard Paulhus said one person was taken outside during a spaghetti dinner at Tilton Schoolat the request of Romney’s security team, which thought the man might be suspicious. A spokesman for Romney could not be reached for comment.

Police found a bulge in the man’s pocket worrisome, said Paulhus, who denied racial profiling was involved.

Dhanraj said police told him they were concerned about his deep pockets.

“They said, ‘What’s in your pockets, something sharp?’ I go, ‘That’s my wallet,’“ Dhanraj said Friday night at Tilton School, a private college preparatory school north of Concord where Romney hosted Friday’s pasta event.

Tilton Police Lt. Ryan Martin said, “We checked one guy because he had something in his coat, which turned out to be a bulge from his mittens.”

Dhanraj, who described himself as of Indian and Puerto Rican heritage, said he was at the event to hear about Romney’s proposed tax policies. Dhanraj was allowed to return to the event.

Paulhus estimated 500 people were in attendance.

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



Updated! Why is the Governor Taking Ownership of the Virginia GOP Primary Mess?

Christian Adams comments today (PJ Media) on Perry, Gingrich, Huntsman, and Santorum pleadings filed yesterday — which declare “Adding Intervening Plaintiffs (and Governor Perry) will not create a ‘laundry list’ ballot. Instead, it will give Virginia voters a meaningful choice and the right to participate in the most fundamental of American constitutional processes.”

[see more, plus links at URL]

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Anti-Islamic Websites Come Under Greater Scrutiny in Germany

by David Crossland

BERLIN — German authorities have announced a plan to place anti-Islamic websites under surveillance because of growing concern that they are becoming more radical and fomenting right-wing violence.

The domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, said last week it had set up a working group to assess whether German-language sites such as Politically Incorrect and Nürnberg 2.0, whose stated aim is to oppose the “Islamisation of Europe” are in breach of the constitution.

The attack by Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian extremist who killed 77 people in July and posted a “manifesto” on the internet, threw a spotlight on the role played by websites as a forum for spreading hatred of Muslims in Europe.

Right-wing populists and websites condemned Mr Breivik as a crazed loner. But many of the arguments in his 1,500-page declaration matched their own rhetoric, sparking accusations that they have been breeding violence by railing against Muslims.

[..]

A member of parliament for the opposition Left Party, Ulla Jelpke, said closer supervision of such sites was long overdue. “Blogs and websites such as Politically Incorrect or Nürnberg 2.0 clearly promote a racism that extends deep into society,” said Ms Jelpke.

“They call into question the dignity and the rights of a whole group of people solely because of their origin or their faith. They thereby clearly run counter to core values of the constitution.”

She said it was “scandalous” that authorities had been ignoring such sites, and alleged that institutional racism may be to blame for the lack of determination to crack down on them. “Prejudice against Muslims isn’t a problem of the periphery but of the heart of society. That’s why it’s so dangerous.”

Separately, the state prosecutor’s office in Munich said last week it had launched an investigation into Michael Stürzenberger, a politician who has written blogs for Politically Incorrect, on suspicion of incitement to racial hatred.

Mr Stürzenberger, a former spokesman for the conservative Christian Social Union party, wrote on January 5: “The totalitarian claim to power inherent in Islam and its legitimisation of violence and killing cannot have a place in a democratic and free society.”

Politically Incorrect was founded in 2004 by Stefan Herre, 46, a physical education teacher based in Cologne who insists his site doesn’t breach the constitution. He has said it caters for peaceful people and is dedicated to publishing opinions and articles that other media do not want to cover…

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Stieg Larsson Was an Extremist, Not a Feminist

by Nick Cohen

Larsson wasn’t a feminist — or not a consistent one. He wrote with real anger about the oppression of women with white skins. When others tried to do the same about the oppression of women with brown skins, he denounced them as racists. My friend and colleague Johan Lundberg, the editor of the Swedish journal Axess, has done what I should have done and read Larsson’s obscure book on honour killings. He waited for the release of the film to give us his findings.

Larsson did indeed break off from writing the Millennium trilogy to intervene in the debate about the “honour killings” of two Kurdish women in Sweden. Far from worrying about the suffering of women, Larsson and his co-author said those who campaigned for the rights of women in immigrant communities wanted “to portray all male immigrants as representatives of a single homogeneous attitude towards women”. They had sexist as well as racist motives. They only talked about honour crime because they wanted to divert attention from how white men raised in the “patriarchal structures of Swedish society” abused and murdered women as a matter of course.

If all Larsson wanted to say was that the rights of women should be upheld, regardless of colour or creed, then no one could argue with him. He came close to asserting the opposite. Believe that western legal systems, for all their faults, were preferable to forced marriages, religious courts where the testimony of a woman is worth half that of a man and the stoning to death of adulterous women and you were a “rightwing extremist”, carrying on the fascist tradition. In a final descent into paranoid dementia, he accused those who disagreed with him of preparing to unleash “special operations forces, which are ready to begin the ethnic cleansing”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Children as Young as 11 Have Been Arrested for Possessing Drugs With Intent to Sell, Shocking Figures Revealed Yesterday.

The statistics show the extent to which drugs have penetrated the lives of schoolchildren.

Police have made more than 12,000 arrests of under-16s for possessing or supplying illegal substances over the past three years.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Kate and Wills Safety Fears Exposed as Council Gives Public Access to Security Plans for Kensington Palace

Despite the local authority being asked to keep the documents secret, anyone can request access to them.

[…]

The work includes fitting a dirty bomb proof air-lock double door to prevent intruders, rising bollards and a CCTV system.

[…]

Former Scotland Yard protection officer Dai Davies told the Evening Standard: ‘I’m speechless that lessons have still not been learned by those responsible for their security. It beggars belief at the level of incompetence by those who purport to be experts in security.

[…]

‘It is being done so residents and other interested parties can see the proposals and comment on them in the usual way for an application.’

[Note from Egghead: Evidently, the Keystone Cops are in charge of the Queen’s security force. Google Michael Fagan — the unemployed Irishman who broke into Buckingham Palace TWICE — the second time entering the Queen’s bedchamber and sitting on her BED talking to her for 10 minutes. It’s all becoming so much clearer now[…] You should send Tommy Robinson by the office to see the security plans — or a girl in a burqa — or ALL of you Brits should find your way to that office ONE BY ONE to take a peek — and ask about what you are are supposed to do in the case of a dirty bomb — and who exactly would be setting off a dirty bomb, anyway? Asians — or are they called ‘ethnic’ Brits now?]

           — Hat tip: Egghead [Return to headlines]



UK: NHS Hospital Where Half of Breast Implants Burst

Doctors at North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Trust had to remove the implants from seven women out of 13 who had received them over the past few years — a failure rate of 54 per cent.

The figures are contained in a report prepared by NHS medical director Professor Sir Bruce Keogh which reveals several other private firms have suggested the implants could break far more frequently.

It raises further concern for the 40,000 women who have the implants, banned in the UK in 2010 after they were found to contain industrial-grade silicone intended for use in mattresses.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Sophie’s Gems From Despots: Countess Faces Questions After Accepting Lavish Jewellery Gifts From Bloody Bahrain

The jewels, revealed in a list of royal gifts obtained yesterday by the Daily Mail, provoked furious criticism.

Former Foreign Office minister Denis MacShane said: ‘Given the appalling suffering and repression of the Bahraini people, it would be a fitting gesture for the Countess of Wessex to auction these trinkets and distribute the proceeds to the victims of the regime.’

Bahrain’s rulers have been accused of using brute force and torture to crush last year’s pro-democracy protests which resulted in the death of more than 40 campaigners.

The gifts to Sophie, handed over during an official pre-Christmas visit she made to the Arab kingdom on behalf of the Queen, throws an uncomfortable spotlight on the Royal Family’s close links with many hard-line rulers in the Middle East.

[…]

It is not known how much the countess’s gems are worth but when the Duchess of Cornwall was given three suites — or parures — of jewellery by the Saudi royal family in 2007 they were estimated to be worth more than £2million.

[Note from Egghead: The Muslims will take back those jewels when they take over the ummah.]

           — Hat tip: Egghead [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Diaspora Send Record 5.5 Bilion USD

(ANSAmed) — BELGRADE, JANUSARY 3 — Serbs in diaspora sent almost USD 5.5 billion to Serbia in 2011, so despite the economic crisis, the country recorded a record influx of foreign currency in the past 10 years, Minister of Religious Affairs and Diaspora Srdjan Sreckovic has said. “According to estimates from the National Bank of Serbia and World Bank, the foreign exchange funds sent by diaspora in 2011 reached a record level, higher than the one in 2009 and came close to a total of USD 5.5 billion,” Sreckovic told Tanjug news agency. The money from diaspora helped a lot to improve the standard of living, he stated. Data indicate that diaspora was one of the chief factors of macroeconomic stability in 2011, he noted, adding that the money sent by diaspora reached 15 percent of the GDP. The funds sent by diaspora have had a 2.5 times bigger share of the GDP over the past 10 years than direct foreign investments, he pointed out. According to him, Serbia has received more than USD 40 billion from diaspora since 2000, which was an important financial injection that helped the o

ry go through transition easier.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel: ‘Third-Reich State’, Orthodox Jews on the Offensive

New attacks

(ANSAmed) — JERUSALEM — “We survived Hitler and we shall also survive his inheritors…”. These provocative words appeared yesterday on a poster hung across the walls of an ultra-Orthodox neighbourhood of Jerusalem. A clash between two political cultures is reaching boiling point in Israel: between secular Zionists and ultra-Orthodox Hebrews, who display several anti-Zionist aspects.

The reference to a ‘new Adolf’ is aimed, this time round, at local police chief, Niso Shaham. His crime was to have used force in breaking up a recent protest demonstration by Zealots at Jerusalem Shaham, and he appears in a crude photo-montage wearing a Nazi uniform.

In a similar vein, a few days ago, Orthodox demonstrators did not hesitate to don the striped garb Jews were forced to wear in concentration camps. An Orthodox child wearing a yellow star with the word ‘Jude’ (Jew in German) stood with his arms raised in the air — the message is clear: the protest organisers wished to compare the Israeli state to the Third Reich.

And these episodes of ‘Holocaust abuse’ come on top of a month of growing tensions between the Orthodox population (estimated at between eight and ten percent of Israel’s total) and the country’s lay majority. There has been great media focus on the gender segregation practised in public transport linking the Orthodox areas, as on the humiliating practice of forcing women to sit on the back seats of buses. The general uproar in the national press has forced most of the Orthodox community onto the defensive. But a fringe among them (numbering no more than a few thousand across the whole of the country) has decided to go onto the offensive, unleashing its ultimate weapon — that of the Holocaust — with the certainty of hitting lay sensibilities where it hurts.

This latest tussle of controversy between the two sides is destined to die down, but it illuminates some central challenges in need of curing inside the state of Israel, given that in the none-too-distant future, in some of the country’s main cities, Orthodox residents will number half of the total population. The country’s leaders therefore need to increase their efforts to counter the nihilist thesis of the Zealots, but at the same time these citizens need to be absorbed and integrated into the productive part of the population. It is a battle that has already begun within the Rabbinic seminaries, where the Education Ministry is attempting to force teachers to dedicate more time to the essential subjects for the world of work, such as English, Mathematics, General History and Civic Education. It is on the desks of these schools that the future face of Israel is — to a large extent — now taking shape. Meanwhile, another attack by ultra-Orthodox Jews was carried out last night in East Jerusalem between the Arab quarter Beit Safafa and the nearby Jewish suburb Ghlio’. An Israeli police spokesman said that two cars had been set on fire and that in the vicinity “Vengeance” had been written in Hebrew. Local sources noted that the two vehicles had been abandoned for quite some time.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran Uranium Enrichment Site Operational Soon: Official

(Reuters) — Iran’s underground uranium enrichment facility will start operations soon, a senior official was quoted by Iranian media on Sunday as saying, a move likely to increase tension between the Islamic state and the West over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

“The Fordow nuclear enrichment plant will be operational in the near future … 20 percent, 3.5 percent and four percent enriched uranium can be produced at this site,” said the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization Fereydoun Abbasi Davani, the Kayhan daily reported.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Qatar: World’s Leading CO2 Producer Cuts Emissions by 14%

Ahead of climate change summit in Doha

(ANSAmed) — DOHA, JANUARY 6 — Qatar, the country with the highest rate of CO2 emissions per capita in the world has cut emissions by 14% as it prepares to host the Doha Summit on climate change in the next few months. The country could also be the setting for the 18th United Nations convention conference on climate change, according to the Qatari newspaper The Peninsula.

Although the Emirate has increased gas and oil production, Qatar has managed to cut CO2 emissions, surpassing the world average of 9% in the process. “Qatar exports gas to countries that are traditionally dependent on coal and that have been able to cut emissions of CO2 by moving over from coal to gas. This is another reason for which Qatar has been able to reduce to the worldwide cut in emissions,” said the country’s Energy and Industry Minister, Mohammed bin Saleh al-Sada. The initiative is part of the energy differentiation policy undertaken by Qatar, with which the country aims to reduce its dependency on gas. The Emirate is considering investing in nuclear energy to ensure the energy supply needed for the country’s desalination process, though many believe that the focus on nuclear energy has an anti-Iranian geopolitical function. In recent years, Qatar has also invested a great amount in renewable energy, and in particular solar energy. The latest investment of this kind was the Qatar National Convention Center, which was opened at the end of 2011. The 40,000 square metre building will host the country’s leading international events. The structure’s 3,500 square metres of solar panels guarantee 12.5% of the centre’s energy requirements.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Former Army Chief of Staff Arrested

Charged with creating terrorist organization

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JANUARY 6 — Turkey’s former Chief of Staff, General Ilker Basbug, has been remanded in custody today, on suspicion of “leading a terrorist organization”. It is the first time that a former Chief of Staff has been arrested in the country, where the military is traditionally powerful. “The 26th Chief of Staff of the Turkish Republic is arrested on suspicion of creating and leading a terrorist organization,” Basbug himself told journalists as he left a court in Istanbul. The Anadolu agency added that the lawyer for the general who led Turkey’s armed forces between 2008 and August 20 2010 would appeal. It emerged yesterday during questioning of Basbug in court that the charge concerned the organization of anti-government propaganda on 42 websites as part of an attempted coup by the presumed hardline nationalist organisation Ergenekon, which is hostile to the moderate Islamist Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Reports of Basbug’s imminent arrest had begun to circulate in the media and led to rumours, which were later denied, that two armed forces commanders had threatened to stand down in protest, paving the way for a crisis similar to that of las summer, when military leaders were removed to make space for elements closer to Erdogan’s AKP party. Concern within military, the guardians of the constitutional secularity of a majority Muslim country, has been caused by the jailing of dozens of other generals as part of an investigation in to the 2003 attempted coup entitled “Balyoz” (hammer), which saw more than 200 members of the military sent to prison.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey to Negotiate With U.S. Bell to Buy Choppers

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JANUARY 5 — Turkey decided on Thursday to negotiate with a U.S. company to purchase light helicopters, as Anatolia news agency reported. Turkey’s Defense Industry Executive Committee held a meeting in Ankara under the chairmanship of Premier Recep Erdogan. Following the meeting, the committee said that it decided to launch negotiations with Bell Helicopter company to meet light helicopter need of the Directorate General of Security. The committee also authorized the Defense Industry Undersecretariat to order F-35A aircraft to meet new generation war jet need of the Turkish Armed Forces.

Moreover, the committee agreed to launch talks with TUSAS-Turkish Aviation and Aerospace Industry Corporation to sign a contract on the first consignment of serial mass manufacturing of 10 unmanned ariel vehicles of the Air Forces Command.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Croydon, Copenhagen — and Here, In a Rich Suburb of Lahore, Is Benefit Probe Father’s Third Home

It looks like the kind of home owned by a successful businessman or influential politician.

But this imposing five-bedroom house, in one of the most affluent districts of Lahore, Pakistan, is understood to be owned by a man being investigated for benefit fraud in Britain and Denmark.

The opulent two-storey home, worth up to £300,000 in the country’s second-biggest city, is the subject of an investigation by the Department for Work and Pensions and Danish authorities into Hassan Gilani.

Investigators want to know how the father of three, who has allegedly claimed nearly £292,000 of benefits in both Britain and Denmark during the past decade, could afford to keep such a property.

His Pakistani address was included in a file given to the DWP by the Danish authorities following a tip-off that he did not live in Denmark but had been receiving state support since 2002.

Mr Gilani has allegedly been paid huge sums after saying he was disabled and could barely walk, while claiming to live in both countries.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Zimbabwe: Aussie Tourist’s Bungee Cord Snaps

A 22-year-old Australian tourist is lucky to be alive after her cord snapped during a bungee jump over the Zambesi River on the border of Zimbabwe and Zambia, sending her plunging into the rapids below. Erin Laung Worth was forced to swim through the rapids with her feet still tied together after she fell from the Victoria Falls bridge, 111-metres above the water, on New Year’s Eve.

“I landed with my legs tied and then had to swim to the Zimbabwe side [of the river] through the rapids,” Ms Worth told Nine News in an exclusive interview. “It was quite scary because a couple of times the rope actually got caught on some rocks or debris,” she said. “I actually had to swim down and yank the bungee cord out of whatever it was caught on to make it to the surface.”

Southern Province police commissioner Brenda Muntemba told the Post Zambia that Ms Worth was treated at Victoria Falls clinic in Zimbabwe before being evacuated to South Africa. The jump was organised by a company called Safari Par Excellency.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Ahmadinejad Arrives in Venezuela

Caracas, Venezuela (CNN) — Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived in Venezuela on Sunday, his first stop on a four-nation trip to Latin America meant to strengthen ties between Iran and the region.

He arrived about 6:30 p.m. ET, and was met at the airport by Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua.

Ahmadinejad walked off the plane and down a red carpet, flanked by officials in white uniforms, images on state television showed.

It’s no coincidence that Venezuela is Ahmadinejad’s first stop. Despite their cultural differences, Venezuela and Iran have found significant common ground: both are among the world’s top crude oil exporters, and their leaders have become strong allies united by a fierce opposition to what they view as U.S. imperialism.

The two nations have already signed more than 270 accords, including trade deals, construction projects, car and tractor factories, energy initiatives, and banking programs.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has also helped the Islamic republic forge relationships with other members of the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas, an eight-nation regional bloc Chavez founded.

Still, not everyone in Venezuela was happy with Ahmadinejad’s visit. Even before he arrived, the president’s plans for a Latin America tour grabbed global attention as tensions grow between many Western powers and Iran over the nation’s nuclear program.

Diego Arria, an opposition politician who is a presidential pre-candidate, described the trip as a “provocation” to the United States, and an embarrassment for Venezuela.

“It comes at the worst moment — at a time when Ahmadinejad is being looked at by the international community with great fear. …. It’s bringing the threat to the United States closer to home,” he said.

The Iranian president is scheduled to visit Nicaragua, Ecuador and Cuba later this week.

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



Iran’s Ahmadinejad to Seek Latin American Support

(Reuters) — Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will seek support from Latin America’s leftist leaders on a tour starting on Sunday after tough new Western sanctions targeted Iran’s oil industry.

With one eye on his standing at home ahead of March’s parliamentary election, Ahmadinejad will meet other anti-American presidents on a trip Washington said showed Iran was “desperate for friends.”

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



Suspended Mexican Soccer Goalie Detained in Kidnap

Suspended first-division soccer goalkeeper Omar “El Gato” Ortiz has been arrested for alleged participation in a kidnapping ring, Mexican police announced Saturday. Ortiz, whose nickname means “The Cat,” has been under a suspension after testing positive for steroids in April 2010, when he was playing with the Rayados of Monterrey.

Jorge Domene, the security spokesman for Nuevo Leon state, where Monterrey is located, said Ortiz worked with a gang responsible for at least 20 kidnappings. Domene said Ortiz’s job was to select wealthy victims because he moved in the same social circles.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Migrants Here for a Handout

MORE than 70 immigrants lodge new claims for dole handouts every day — just months after arriving in Britain claiming to be looking for work.

In the past five years 117,000 immigrant “workers” claimed out-of-work benefits within six months of entering the UK and getting a National Insurance number.

Last year 26,500 foreigners applied for benefits within a few weeks of arriving, the highest figure for six years, leaving taxpayers facing a bill of £1.7million a week.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Sex Toys for Sale at Boots, Prominently Displayed Close to Healthcare Products in Full View of Children

Boots has been criticised by parents for selling sex toys in its shops, within full view of children.

The chemists’ chain has prominently displayed a range of unpackaged sex aids close to healthcare products such as reading glasses, blood-pressure monitors and pregnancy testing kits.

Customers have to walk past the sex aids in order to shop for shampoo, deodorants, toothpaste and sandwiches.

The sale of sex toys — recently launched in 1,200 of the firm’s 2,500 UK stores — is a far cry from the herbal medicines made by Boots founder John Boot in Nottingham in 1849.

Boots insisted last night that customers had told the company they wanted to buy the range of sex toys — designed to improve ‘sexual wellbeing’. But the retail giant is facing a backlash.

Families said they were ‘shocked’ and ‘disgusted’ that the sex aids were on show, removed from packaging. By contrast, the Ann Summers sex-shop chain serves boxed sex aids only to those aged 18 or over in designated separate sections of its stores.

At Boots in Dartford, Kent, three types of sex aid were on display last week and placed on a shelf low enough for children to see.

Grandmother Julie Burgess, 43, a retail manager from Greenhithe, said: ‘I am appalled. It’s completely inappropriate. I’m shocked that a store like Boots is selling sex toys, let alone displaying them so openly.

‘My two children are grown up now, but I’ve got a little granddaughter and I certainly wouldn’t want to be walking her round Boots and having to explain what a sex toy is. If Boots really wants to sell them, they should be kept behind the counter with the medicines.’

And Scott Millins, 26, from Gravesend said: ‘It’s quite disgusting. I’ve got a nine-month-old baby boy and a three-year-old son and it wouldn’t be a problem now, but when my young boys are older, that’s definitely not the sort of thing I would want them to see. Children shouldn’t know about that sort of thing until they’re grown up and in a relationship with someone. It’s really not very good at all.’

The display was headed ‘Sexual Wellbeing’ in large lettering with the words ‘Help you and your partner have a more positive sexual relationship’. Beneath each of the sex toys on display was a card detailing the toys’ features. Children passing the display for the £34.99 Durex Play Dream were able to read intimate details of how the product could be used. The sex toy earns purchasers 136 Boots loyalty points.

The Durex Play Discover, which costs the same and earns the same points, says it is ‘designed to inspire you to play and sensually explore your partner’s body from tip to toe’.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120107

Financial Crisis
» Eurozone Economic Confidence Falls for 10th Month Running
» Italy: Minister Calls Talks After Shipbuilders Occupy Airport
» Monti Closes Euro-Crisis Talks in Paris
» Spain: Government Checks Salaries Paid to Bank Managers
 
USA
» 51 Reasons to Impeach Obama
» Lawyer for Unmasked Actress Suing IMDb: ‘My Client is Willing to See This Case to Its Conclusion’
» New York Rabbis Call for Destruction of Zionist Regime
 
Canada
» Halifax Mosque Still Working on Gym
 
Europe and the EU
» Bulgaria: Sofia Mosque Clashes
» Italy: Severino Rejects Criticism of Prison Reforms
» Norwegian Muslims Invited to Visit Churches
» Norwegian LNG Carrier Chooses Ice Over Pirates, Russia Opens Northwest Passage
» Spain: First Muslim Government Official Starts in Melilla
» The Puzzle of European Hair and Eye Colors
» UK: Boy Held After ‘Attack’ On Teachers
» UK: Death Threat Tweeter Suspended by Labour Party
» UK: Ed Miliband’s Twitter Slip in Tribute to Bob Holness
» UK: For Years: You’ve Paid Their £2,000-a-Week Rents. But the Housing Benefit Gravy Train’s Hit the Buffers
» UK: I’ll Have an ‘O’ Please, Bob
» UK: If We Go by the Daft Definition of Racism Proffered by Diane Abbott’s Own Social Set Then She *is* a Racist
» UK: It’s Not About You, Ed
» UK: Lib-Dems Anti-Islam Rants: “Put Pork Restaurant Next to Mosque”
 
Mediterranean Union
» EBRD: Tunisia and Jordan Are the New Members
 
North Africa
» Egypt: The Muslim Brotherhood’s Moment
» Europe Concerned Over Sahel Insecurity: German Minister
 
Middle East
» Iranian Ayatollah Says Facebook Un-Islamic, Membership a Sin
 
Russia
» Is Giant Russia a Dying Bear?
 
South Asia
» Musharraf Will be Arrested on Arrival in Pakistan, PTI Reports
 
Far East
» North Korea’s Kim Jong-un Wages Defector Crackdown
» Pressed by U.S., Asian Countries Look for Ways to Reduce Purchases of Iranian Oil
 
Australia — Pacific
» Off His Face and Now Out of Pocket in a Divorce Settlement
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Gambia: Banni Inaugurates New Mosque
» Nigeria: Boko Haram: Sharia or Militant Wing of Northern Politicians?
» Nigeria Christians Hit by Fresh Islamist Attacks
» Nigeria: Over 50 Injured as Angry Youths Attack Muslims in Sapele
» Nigeria: Residents Flee Homes After Boko Haram Attack in Yobe
 
Immigration
» Italy: Police Nab Gangsters Tied to Immigrant Slayings

Financial Crisis


Eurozone Economic Confidence Falls for 10th Month Running

(BRUSSELS) — Consumer and business confidence in the eurozone economy fell for the 10th month in a row in December, the European Commission said Friday as fears of recession loomed large over Europe. “The overall decline in the EU resulted from weakening confidence in services, construction and among consumers,” the commission said in its monthly survey.

Sentiment, however, improved in retail trade and remained broadly stable in industry, the European Union’s executive arm added. Amid concerns that Europe is heading towards recession, the Economic Sentiment Indicator (ESI) dropped by 0.5 points to 93.3 in the 17-nation eurozone and by 0.8 percent to 92 in the wider 27-nation EU.

Among nations in the debt-laden eurozone, sentiment rebounded in Germany, rising one point to 105, and the Netherlands where it rose by 0.8 points to 90.5. It deteriorated in Italy, falling 4.6 points to 85.5, and Spain where it dropped 1.3 points to 89.7. The two countries are considered most at scrambling to cut spending and reform their economies to stave off the eurozone debt crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Minister Calls Talks After Shipbuilders Occupy Airport

Workers protest in Genoa, Palermo over Fincantieri restructuring

(ANSA) — Genoa, January 4 — Industry Minister Corrado Passera will host talks with trade unions on shipbuilding company Fincantieri’s restructuring programme next week after workers whose jobs are threatened occupied Genoa airport on Wednesday, causing disruption for travellers.

Fincantieri workers also staged a protest in Palermo, where the firm plans to axe 140 jobs over the next two years.

“The situation has become unsustainable,” said Bruno Manganaro, the head of the CGIL union in Liguria, the region around Genoa, before the government announced Passera will hold talks on Tuesday.

“If you have to behave like madmen to have a meeting with the government, then we’ll behave like madmen,” added Manganaro, who joined the protest by workers from a plant in the Genoa suburb of Sestri Ponente. “We’re sorry about the disruption. We tried in every way to be respectful and disciplined, but it seems that you get taken for a ride if you behave like that”. The protest caused several companies to take passengers to Milan so they could reroute flights from Linate airport.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Monti Closes Euro-Crisis Talks in Paris

Premier announces Rome meeting with Merkel and Sarkozy

(ANSA) — Paris, January 6 — Italian Premier Mario Monti was in Paris Friday where he met with French President Nicolas Sarkozy to discuss fresh anti-crisis moves and announced another round of meetings with European leaders in Italy. “President Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will be there,” he said of the trilateral talks scheduled in Rome on January 20.

“All this will be part of a sequence,” he added, referring to a key EU summit that will follow on January 30 in Brussels. At the close of the Paris talks on Friday, Sarkozy said that he and Monti shared “an identical point of view” on how to solve the debt crisis in the eurozone. The French president added that Monti’s actions since taking over as the head of Italy’s emergency government in November have “inspired faith in other European heads of state”.

“With concrete action and budget discipline, the government has put a series of parliament-approved measures into place since January, including radical pension reforms,” said Monti.

“Other measures will follow in the coming months”. Last week, the premier promised his government would focus on growth and labour-market reform in the next phase of his 30-billion-euro ‘Save Italy’ economic package, which also includes tax hikes, spending cuts and pension reforms.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Government Checks Salaries Paid to Bank Managers

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JANUARY 5 — The Spanish government is preparing a general plan against tax evasion in 2012, hoping to recover 8.171 billion euros. The government will ask the Bank of Spain for a report on salaries paid to managers of banks that have received State aid, to check if these salaries are justified. These are some of the measures that were discussed today by the government, as government spokesperson and Vice Premier Soraya Saenz de Santamaria announced in the usual conference that follows cabinet meetings. “We will not award those who have led their organisations to a financial situation that required administration by an external commissioner,” said Saenz de Santamaria. Economy Minister Cristobal Montoro presented a report in the meeting on 4,000 organisations and public foundations, part of which could be axed in an operation which Premier Mariano Rajoy has called the “third stage” of simplification and rationalisation of the public administration. This operation started with a reduction of the number of Ministries. The year 2011, according to figures reported by the Vice Premier, was closed with a welfare deficit of 668 million euros, while a surplus was expected. Regarding nuclear energy and the controversial extension of the nuclear power plant in Garoña, opposed by environmentalists, Soraya de Santamaria announced that the Minister for Industry will ask the nuclear safety council whether the plant can stay open, despite the fact that it has been active for more than 40 years.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


51 Reasons to Impeach Obama

The Gunny was going to post this tomorrow but in light of Obama now appointing THREE Obomobots to the NLRB, in conjunction with the appointment of Cordray, it should be posted NOW!

1.   Obama and unrepentant terrorist William Ayers misappropriated over 300 million dollars in donations meant for the education of Chicago’s minority students. They routed the money to Obama’s community activist buddies who then tried to turn the students in radicals. The program was a total failure.
2.   Obama, as an Illinois State Senator, redirected tens of millions in Illinois tax dollars to Valerie Jarrett and Tony Rezko, to provide housing for low income families. They returned the favor with political donations. The housing units were built with cheap materials and labor and are uninhabitable after a mere 10 years of use.
3.   Obama accepted millions in illegal campaign contributions from foreign credit cards after the credit card filters used to screen out foreign money, was switched off. This also allowed domestic donors, who were over the legal limit, to contribute more.
4.   Obama and SecState Clinton’s efforts to bring the US under the UN’s Small Arms Treaty are direct violations of the Second Amendment of the US Constitution.

…and on… and on……

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Lawyer for Unmasked Actress Suing IMDb: ‘My Client is Willing to See This Case to Its Conclusion’

Attorney John Dozier speaks out about his client Huang Hoang’s decision to reveal her name in her battle against the Hollywood database for disclosing her real age.

Huang Hoang, the actress who on Friday was outed in her lawsuit against IMDB for publishing her age, is getting some big-time support from Hollywood’s biggest acting guild. Late Friday, the Screen Actors Guild issued a statement applauding Hoang for her “determination and courage” in “standing up to fight the unfair and abusive practice of publishing actors’ private information online without their consent.” “Thousands of actors have had their careers harmed by the unauthorized publication of their birthdates by IMDb against their wishes,” SAG says in a statement to THR.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New York Rabbis Call for Destruction of Zionist Regime

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — A group of anti-Zionist rabbis gathered in front of the Zionist regime embassy in New York to call for annihilation of the usurper regime and liberation of the occupied lands. The group asked the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council’s members to listen to the voice of the defenseless Palestinians and put an end to the crimes of the Zionist regime in the occupied lands. Rabbi Davis Vice told IRNA that the Zionist regime’s leaders are assuming the identity of Israel and the Jews only to continue their barbaric crimes against defenseless Palestinians. He said that the group of rabbis gathering in front of the Israeli embassy were representing the Jewish nation in a restless fight against the illegitimate Israeli regime and expressed hope that the move would be victorious soon. The rabbi also noted that a number of followers of the Jewish faith called for absolute destruction of the Zionist regime in gatherings in front of their embassies in Canada and the UK.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Canada


Halifax Mosque Still Working on Gym

A gymnasium built with provincial money as part of a two-storey mosque and community centre is still under construction in central Halifax. The mosque on Charles Street has been in use since August, and worshippers supplied every dollar to build it. But people in the local neighbourhood are wondering when the community gym, stage and kitchen will be open to the public. Dr. Hadi Salah, who speaks for the Muslim nonprofit group that is building a multipurpose gym in the mosque’s basement, said the walls of the gym are done and the floor will soon be installed. A prayer room for 700 people upstairs is complete except for chandeliers coming from Egypt. Salah said the push was to get the mosque open for the holy month of fasting and prayer, during which no noise is allowed. “At the end of July, we had to stop the contractors because we wanted to open the building for Ramadan. We did finish Ramadan, but then we’ve been having difficulty getting them back,” he said. The plumber is coming next week, but work was delayed on the gym which has been paid for with $767,681 from the provincial Department of Health and Wellness.

The province contributed the money through a 2007 Nova Scotia government program called B-FIT. The program was introduced as a 10-year initiative to fund major sport and recreation infrastructure. Deputy minister Kevin McNamara said he is confident the gym will open to the public this May. “Our belief is that it still will be realized. We know there’s been a delay and this often happens in some larger projects and also when you’re involved with community groups,” McNamara said. In August, Salah said the basement was about 90 per cent complete and he predicted it would be finished in four to five months. At that time, he also said construction was set to resume after Aug. 29, when the holy month ended.

The nonprofit Muslim group has no bank loans. It still needs to raise $500,000 to finish the $6.2 million project. There are about 15,000 Muslims in the Halifax region. They have been asking for a proper mosque, or Masjid, for more than 15 years.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Bulgaria: Sofia Mosque Clashes

On May 20, supporters of the Bulgarian far right, nationalist, Ataka (Attack) party started a brawl in downtown Sofia, assaulting Muslims during their Friday prayer. The nationalists staged a rally in front of the Sofia’s Banya Bashi mosque, protesting the fact it has loudspeakers that sound Muslim prayers in the entire area around it. The Banya Bashi mosque in downtown Sofia is a part of the city’s unique “triangle of tolerance”, encompassing also the St Nedelya Church, and the Sofia Synagogue are located within metres of each other in the very center of the city. As one of the protesters tried to remove a prayer rug from the space in front of the mosque, tension escalated and a fight started between the two groups. Ataka supporters were reported shouting “Bulgaria” and “Turks, get out” and throwing eggs at the praying.

The incident has had wider repercussions, all the way from Bulgarians flocking to lay flowers at the mosque as a sign of apology, to the start of investigation of Ataka for stirring ethnic and religious hatred and the consolidation of the voters of the Bulgarian ethnic Turkish party DPS (Movement for Rights and Freedoms). On May 27, Parliament adopted a declaration condemning the violence stirred by Ataka. All 127 MPs present at the parliamentary sitting (out of a total of 240) voted in favor of the declaration. Meanwhile, Ataka came out with another declaration, warning that paid thugs pretending to be Ataka activists might stage new provocations during Friday’s Muslim prayer in Sofia. Volen Siderov, the nationalist party’s leader, stated he had never preached violence and those who had attacked the Muslims last Friday were, in fact, not Ataka members. The May 20 clashes drove a rift between GERB and Ataka, the nationalist party having been the only parliamentary ally of the ruling center-right formation, which formed a minority government in 2009.

[….]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italy: Severino Rejects Criticism of Prison Reforms

‘Senior police present at talks’, says minister

(ANSA) — Rome, January 4 — Justice minister Paola Severino on Wednesday rejected criticism about Italy’s prison system saying she was open to making improvements.

Severino has come under fire in recent days over a decree approved by cabinet to reform the justice system and release more than 30,000 low-risk prisoners to ease pressure on the prison system.

Under the proposal, prisoners could serve the final 18 months of their jail sentence at home.

“They are regulations reached with the interior ministry in the presence of senior police,” Severino said, referring to criticism of the prison system and the use of security cells.

“Things have to be tested. I am open to better solutions”.

Severino spoke to the media before facing the Senate justice committee which is examining the government’s latest proposals amid debate about overcrowding in Italy’s 206 jails.

Cirillo, who also testified before the committee on Wednesday, rejected a bid to ease prison overcrowding through the use of electronic bracelets for low-risk criminals and questioned other aspects of the security package. Electronic bracelets were approved in Italy 10 years ago but have rarely been applied.

Cirillo said there are few bracelets available and they cost a hefty 5,000 euros each.

“There are only eight,” Cirillo said of the bracelets. “If we went to Bulgari (jeweller), we would spend less”. According to the latest figures released on Tuesday, 186 people died in Italian prisons in 2011, 66 of them suicides.

At the last estimate the total number of inmates was 67,600 inside the country’s jails, against a nominal capacity of 44,612.

Italy’s prison population is now at its highest level since World War II and recent estimates suggest it will continue rising unless urgent action is taken, with the number expected to climb above 100,000 this year.

Overcrowding is believed to be more than partly responsible for the high number of suicides in Italian prisons compared to those in most other developed countries.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Norwegian Muslims Invited to Visit Churches

(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) — Trygve Slagsvold Vedum (Centre Party) says Norwegian Muslims should visit churches during the Christmas holiday, in order to understand Norway and Norwegians better. He says Norwegian Christian traditions are part of the Norwegian history and culture that immigrants, including Muslims, would be better off knowing. Vedum also emphasized that ethnic Norwegians should visit the mosques and ceremonies of other religions. Mehtab Afsar, General Secretary of the Islamic Council of Norway, was positive about the idea, but said it happens more often than people think. It is not uncommon for people to visit each other’s holy places and to attend each other’s ceremonies. Muslims increasingly participate in cultural Christmas celebrations, even if they do not participate in the religious aspects. On another level, a survey conducted lately by Radio Norway has shown a noticeable change regarding how Norwegians view Islam and Muslims. 54% of them now consider that Islam does not constitute a threat to Norway. The survey also showed that the view of women and those who acquired higher education towards Muslims are less negative than those of men and the less educated. Although 65% of the surveyed said that they do not have any knowledge about Muslims, the department of political science in the University of Oslo has ensured that the crime committed by Brejvik on July 22, 2011 had a positive impact concerning the acceptance of a pluralistic Norway. There is no problem in the openness of Muslims on the societies they live in, nor in celebrating their occasions in the way that preserves their religion and gives a positive and pure image of the aware and open Islamic personality that preserves the security of the society and helps in enriching it, as well as promoting the existing cultural ties.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Norwegian LNG Carrier Chooses Ice Over Pirates, Russia Opens Northwest Passage

Russia has for the first time authorized a Liquefied Natural Gas tanker to sail through its Arctic waters from Europe to high-demand Asian markets, a route that requires about half the usual sailing time, potentially reduces costs and avoids the threat from Somali pirates. Russia authorized the tanker Ribera del Duera Knutsen to sail along the Northern sea route from the Atlantic ocean to the Pacific ocean, Norwegian shipping company Knutsen OAS Shipping said.

In September, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said that he sees the future of the Northeast Passage “as that of an international transport artery” able to compete with other maritime routes on both fees, safety and quality. From Europe, the route is a much shorter way to the Far East than sailing across the Mediterranean Sea and through the Suez Canal, which requires ships to sail through the ‘pirate alley’ in the Gulf of Aden north of Somalia.

It would save a lot of time and money, Knutsen’s Chartering Manager John Einar Dalsvag said, as current LNG rates are at a very high level of about $150,000 a day, so “days are expensive.” Using the shorter Northern route means sailing in icy Arctic waters from the Barents Sea along Siberia to the Bering Strait, then on to Japan or other countries in the Far East. Japan’s demand for LNG has climbed sharply after an earthquake and a tsunami knocked out several nuclear power plants in 2011.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: First Muslim Government Official Starts in Melilla

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JANUARY 3 — The first Muslim government official to be appointed by the executive since the beginning of democracy in the country has begun work in Melilla, the Spanish enclave within Morocco. Abdelmalik El Barkani, 51, has been a member of the People’s Party since 1995 and was granted Spanish citizenship twenty years ago. His swearing-in was attended, amongst others, by the Agriculture Minister, Miguel Arias Canete, and the president of Melilla, Juan Jose Imbroda, El Berkani was previously vice-president of Melilla, and a consultant to the presidency, as well as the director of the Cultural Institute, a centre promoting co-habitation between the diverse communities in the town of 75,000 inhabitants.

As a government official, the equivalent of a provincial state representative, El Berkani will deal with issues concerning the border with Morocco and migratory pressure from North Africa, which increased during 2011. The enclave’s temporary detention centre, which has a capacity of 400 people, currently houses more than double the amount, consisting of migrants awaiting repatriation to their countries of origin.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Puzzle of European Hair and Eye Colors

European populations have an unusually broad palette of hair and eye colors. This diversity doesn’t have a common genetic cause. It is due to a proliferation of alleles at two separate genes: MC1R for hair color and OCA2 for eye color. This proliferation did not come about through relaxation of selection for dark skin as ancestral Europeans moved into higher latitudes. Most of the new alleles have little or no affect on skin color, and in any case the timeframe is too narrow for this evolutionary scenario.

A likelier cause is sexual selection, which favors bright or novel colors that catch the attention of potential mates. If sexual selection is strong enough, a polymorphism of color variants may develop. A new color appears through mutation and, depending on its brightness or novelty, steadily rises in frequency until it is as common as the established color. Over time, these variants will increase in number. Humans have the potential for this kind of frequency-dependent sexual selection, e.g., darker-haired women are sexually preferred to the extent that they are less common. Such selection is consistent with the high number of alleles for hair color and eye color in European populations, the high ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous variants among these alleles, and the relatively short time over which this hair and eye color diversity developed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Boy Held After ‘Attack’ On Teachers

A 10-year-old boy has been arrested over an alleged attack on two women teachers.

One of the victims — who were both in their 50s — suffered a broken leg and suspected dislocated kneecap and the other sustained a facial injury, Scotland Yard said.

Both women were taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital following the alleged incident in Orpington, south-east London.

Police were called to the school in Avalon Road at 1pm on Thursday to reports that a pupil had assaulted two teachers.

A Scotland Yard spokesman said: “A 10-year-old boy was arrested at the scene on suspicion of grievous bodily harm and was taken to a south-east London police station.

“He has been bailed to return on a date in mid-February.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



UK: Death Threat Tweeter Suspended by Labour Party

The Labour Party has suspended one of its members after it emerged that he was using Twitter to wage a campaign of death threats and antisemitic abuse against other users.

Shereef Abdallah, an Ed Miliband “lookalike” who previously worked as a volunteer at the office of Labour MP Glenda Jackson, has been suspended from the party with immediate effect. Mr Abdallah’s stream of abuse included comments directed at others such as “racist tory anti Islamic scum” and “your nightmare is just starting… it will only get worse for you every day 24/7 till you leave twitter”. He also sent threats to “hunt” his targets down and to “end” them. “I fear nothing not even death so will fight you and your ilk to my last breath,” he wrote. Neil Nerva, vice chair of the Jewish Labour Movement and the chair of Mr Abdallah’s local Labour Party, praised the decision. “I am pleased the party has taken immediate action,” he said.

[JP note: What a tweek it has been for the Ed Twiliband — untwitting tweetermonium in twitterland …]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Ed Miliband’s Twitter Slip in Tribute to Bob Holness

‘Blackbusters’ tweet as TV quiz legend dies, 83

ED Miliband faced ridicule last night after making a spectacular Twitter gaffe.

The Labour leader tweeted a tribute following the death of game show legend Bob Holness — but blundered by claiming the star presented BLACKBUSTERS, not Blockbusters. His slip-up came a day after a race row erupted over his party colleague Diane Abbott’s online slur against “white people”. As news broke yesterday of Mr Holness’s death at the age of 83, hapless Mr Miliband tweeted: “Sad to hear that Bob Holness has died. A generation will remember him fondly from Blackbusters.”

Panicking Labour officials swiftly deleted the tweet, but were too late to stop it going global. Last night Mr Miliband’s aides tried to protect their boss by blaming the gaffe on a “junior” member of staff. His spokesman said: “It was a typo by one of the people in the office. Ed always knows what is being tweeted — sometimes he types them himself, sometimes someone else does.” The Twitter boob came 24 hours after the storm sparked by shadow junior health minister Ms Abbott on the micro-blogging service. Last night Labour insiders suggested Mr Miliband might have accidentally written “black” as he was distracted by the Abbott row.

And some critics suggested a simple typing error was unlikely as letters ‘A’ and ‘O’ are so far apart on the standard QWERTY keyboard.

One Labour MP said: “It never rains but it pours. Poor Ed wanted to get on the front foot this year but has ended up shooting himself in the foot.” Meanwhile a generation of fans were last night mourning the death of TV host Bob, who passed away in his sleep at a nursing home.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: For Years: You’ve Paid Their £2,000-a-Week Rents. But the Housing Benefit Gravy Train’s Hit the Buffers

At the kitchen table, two pretty girls giggle as they draw pictures with crayons. On the wall are posters listing their times-tables, while in the corner, the family’s tropical fish, Bubbles and Tiger, swim in a heated aquarium.

But this happy domestic scene is threatened with upheaval because, in nine days’ time, the Rostant family — two parents, eight children and their pet fish — may be homeless.

Until now, the family have been one of four families claiming the highest amount of housing benefit in the country.

Their £2,000-a-week rent (more than £103,200 a year, given to the landlord) has been paid by taxpayers. But the money is to be stopped as the result of the Government’s crackdown, which began this week, on the long-running scandal of housing benefit abuse (which costs the working public a staggering £20billion a year).

The change in the law means that low-income families such as the Rostants will no longer be given huge sums of housing benefit to live in expensive accommodation.

In Central London, where they live, a strict cap of £400 a week for housing benefit pay-outs has been brought in. Andre Rostant said yesterday: ‘It’s a matter of when, not if, we are chucked out by the landlord because we can’t pay the rent.

‘There are 40 families at my children’s primary school who also expect to be evicted from their homes for the same reason.’

Many of these families, living in some of the wealthiest parts of London, have had their huge rents paid by the State for many years. But now, the welfare gravy train has halted.

This week, when local councils were forced to release figures following a Freedom Of Information investigation, it was revealed that as well as the Rostants, there are two other families in London who have their rent of £2,000 a week paid by taxpayers.

A fourth family — thought to live in a grand house in St John’s Wood — has rent of £2,050 a week (or £106,600 a year) picked up by the State. This is the biggest amount of housing benefit ever to be handed out.

Tory MP Anne Main says: ‘This is a staggering sum of money and it shows that the benefit system has been in desperate need of reform. These claimants are enjoying levels of luxury that most working people, even on fairly high salaries, cannot dream of.’

Now though, and not before time, the axe has fallen and councils are writing to tenants to explain the effect of the changes.

Mr Rostant was one of the first to receive a letter from Westminster Council saying his family’s housing benefit will be capped from January 16.

The letter explains the law change will ‘make sure that people on benefit are not living in accommodation that would be unaffordable to most people in work’.

A local councillor has also written to Mr Rostant to say that if the family can’t raise the extra £1,600 a week needed to pay the rent and do not find alternative, cheaper accommodation, his wife, Thirza, and their eight children (aged from three to 14) will be regarded as ‘intentionally homeless’ and won’t even get the capped £400 a week in housing benefit.

Mr Rostant says: ‘I am negotiating with my landlord to get the rent down, but I don’t hold out hope. I am looking for another house. We wouldn’t be human if we weren’t scared. The children know what is happening. The little ones may have to move to another primary school and make new friends.’

He says that if his family has to move — which seems inevitable — his current neighbours have generously offered to put up his three eldest children so they can continue to go to the same school nearby where their father is a governor.

But, whatever happens, it means a rude awakening for Andre, 48, Dutch-born Thirza (ten years his junior) and their children, Ida, 14, Ellen, 13, Andre junior, 11, Philip, nine, Hannah, eight, Louisa, six, Margaret, five, and Maurice, three.

The case reveals the lunacy of the housing benefit system (introduced by New Labour to ‘empower’ tenants) which had been allowed to go unchecked for years.

Enormous sums of taxpayers’ money were wasted by paying private landlords extortionate rents on behalf of families whose own scant financial resources — or failure to work — meant they would never have been able to live in such accommodation without state aid.

Although the crackdown on housing benefit now means millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money will be saved, many thousands of families who have enjoyed being feather-bedded for so long face an uncertain future.

Mr Rostant, a Londoner whose varied career has included jobs as a postman, a financial services adviser and a clerical officer, is now a hypnotherapist who helps clients perk up their sex lives.

His wife has done some part-time jobs, but, needless to say, their large family takes up most of her time.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: I’ll Have an ‘O’ Please, Bob

“Real life has become an episode of The Thick Of It,” says Neil O’Brien. I know what he means. Ed Miliband’s fingers must have slipped as he tweeted in response to the sad death of Bob Holness: @Ed_Miliband Sad to hear that Bob Holness has died. A generation will remember him fondly from Blackbusters.

Oops! Now, trending top in the world on Twitter, is the hashtag “#EdMilibandGameshows”. A few examples: “Family Mis-fortunes”; “Have I Got Unions For You”; “I’m Out of my Depth…Get Me Out of Here!” You get the picture… Labour + social media = cock-up. The staffers at Number 10 have clocked off early today.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: If We Go by the Daft Definition of Racism Proffered by Diane Abbott’s Own Social Set Then She *is* a Racist

by Brendan O’Neill

Is Diane Abbott racist? By any reasoned, rational assessment, of course she isn’t. There’s far more to being a racist than writing the occasional clumsily worded tweet. But if we go by the definition of racism proffered by Abbott’s own social and political set — particularly by the Labour Party — then she is a racist. After all, who was it who redefined racism to include speech and action that is not even consciously bigoted (“unwitting racism”) and to include “any incident which is perceived to be racist by the victim or any other person”? Yep, it was Labour and its various cliques. Abbott has fallen victim to her own mates’ ruthless relativisation of what constitutes racism. One of the most destructive legacies of the New Labour years was the racialisation of everyday life: the way in which all of us were encouraged to see racism in every off-the-cuff remark, tense encounter in the workplace, and even playground scuffle (last year more than 20,000 under-11s in British schools were punished for “racist” or “homophobic” behaviour). By turning the hunt for racist behaviour into a new moral crusade for a chattering class that was seriously bereft of one, New Labour did not defeat the scourge of racialised thinking. Rather it did the very opposite, inviting us all to think in increasingly racialised terms and to have our Offence Antennae permanently switched to High so that we might spot anything even remotely racist. The end result was a more divided, tense and racialised society, which is a far cry from the kind of equality and peace fought for by generations of anti-racists.

Under New Labour, racism was most clearly relativised through the Macpherson inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence. It was Macpherson’s report, published in 1999 and enthusiastically backed and adopted by New Labour, which introduced the idea of “unwitting racism” — the idea that one can be racist without even knowing it — and which defined as racism any incident that is deemed to be racist by the victim of it or by any other person. In short, almost anything — any dumb remark or thoughtless comment — could now be labelled a “racist incident”. New Labour divorced racism from power and politics and reconceptualised it as a form of bad manners that was allegedly widespread in impolite society.

Abbott’s daft tweet conforms very well to the surreal New Labourite definition of racism. She may not have intended to be racist, but so what, you can still be an “unwitting” racist. And as other people have judged her tweet to be racist, that apparently means that it is racist. The bizarre furore over Abbott’s tweeting should remind us that, sadly, racial thinking has not been defeated but rather has been intensified in the post-New Labour era. Perhaps it’s time to go back to having a serious definition of racism — which is after all a very serious thing. We should aspire to live in society of equals, not one in which both whites and blacks alike are continually invited to play the victim card.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: It’s Not About You, Ed

One thing you learn in life is that most people have no idea how they are perceived by others. This is particularly true in Britain, where we don’t generally feel it is polite to tell people what we think of them. Politicians and public figures therefore find themselves in the unusual position of having opinions about them shoved right in their faces. Maurice Glasman’s description of Ed Miliband as having ‘no strategy, no narrative and little energy’ must have been deeply hurtful to the man who elevated a previously little-known academic to the House of Lords. High-profile politicians must cauterise a certain part of their mind (or is it their soul?) in order to cope with the white noise of personal insult they have to endure. Most people would end up a little odd as a result of this process and it is clear that many politicians start off odd from the outset.

Which brings us back to Ed Miliband, a man who has been reminded of his geeky oddness on a minute-by-minute basis since he became Labour leader. The Labour leader’s fightback interview in the Guardian today is, in many ways, impressive. He is right to call Cameron on his commitment to attacking crony capitalism and right to say the Labour Party must re-think its traditional economic strategy of ‘sharing the proceeds of growth’. At times, Miliband shows an unusual degree of self-knowledge, recognising that it was an open-door approach to policy advice led him to embrace ‘interesting guys’ such as Maurice Glasman. But one answer to Patrick Wintour stands out. ‘You discover things about yourself in this job, which is that I am someone of real steel and grit’. This is just toe-curling and something no one should ever say about oneself. People in positions of responsibility should never be allowed to tell others what they have discovered about themselves. I remember a senior news executive prone to favouritism and vindictiveness who used to tell young reporters ‘the one thing you will find about me is that I am tough but fair’. The point is that the political narrative has begun to fix on doubts about Ed Miliband’s leadership. This is not the moment for the Labour leader to share his view of his own capacities with us. If there were no doubts he would not need to reassure us.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Lib-Dems Anti-Islam Rants: “Put Pork Restaurant Next to Mosque”

A Liberal Democrat candidate has refused to apologise for a series of shocking Islamophobic comments. Sick Dave Stone suggested a pork restaurant and a topless bar — named after Islam’s holiest city — should be build next to a mosque. The would-be councillor, who is the party’s candidate for a by-election in Redcar and Cleveland on 19 January, said: “Regarding the mosque being built near ground zero. I say let them build it. But then, across the street we should put a topless bar called “You Mecca Me Hot” … and next to that a pork rib restaurant … Then we’ll see who’s tolerant.”

A number of posts on his Facebook page were seemingly calculated to deliberately offend Muslims — including spreading outright smears. Stones claimed that the Royal British Legion were “not selling poppies in certain areas of the UK”, implying that objections from Muslims were behind the decision

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EBRD: Tunisia and Jordan Are the New Members

Two countries joined Egypt and Morocco in the European Bank

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 04 — Jordan and Tunisia have become members of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) as part of the process of becoming recipients of EBRD investments.

Both countries, according to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), sought membership of the EBRD in 2011, saying that they believed EBRD support would play an important role in helping to implement their programmes of economic and political reform. Jordan and Tunisia now join Egypt and Morocco as EBRD shareholders in the southern and eastern Mediterranean region, with Egypt and Morocco being founder members when the Bank was established in 1991. All four countries are the target of support under the Deauville Partnership that was launched under the French presidency of the G-8 in May 2011 in response to the historic changes under way in parts of the Middle East and North Africa.?? Responding to a call by the international community, the EBRD is extending the remit of its activities to include the southern and eastern Mediterranean region in a three-stage process that has already seen the first flow of technical assistance funded by grants from donors. Technical cooperation funds prepare the way for future EBRD funding, while the second stage in the process, expected in 2012, would be the creation of a special fund that would permit the start of EBRD investments in the four countries ahead of their becoming countries of operations.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: The Muslim Brotherhood’s Moment

This is an exciting time for the editors in Cairo who run Ikhwan, the official website of the Muslim Brotherhood. The Brotherhood has suddenly become popular, and there’s never a lack of news to report.China’s ambassador to Egypt dropped in the other day for an informal talk with Mohamed Morsi, head of the Brotherhood’s political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party. Last week, it was the Russian ambassador who came to chat with Morsi — about democratic values, according to the report on Ikhwan. Diplomats from Nigeria, Cuba, Spain and elsewhere are anxious to connect with the Brotherhood. They realize that it’s now part of Egypt’s political future, perhaps even the most important part. In many places around the world, the Brotherhood has for decades been regarded with suspicion and fear, as a source of the modern Islamist passion that encourages tyranny and terrorism. Many moderate Muslims wish it would disappear. In the long reign of Hosni Mubarak, the Brotherhood was an outlawed organization whose members couldn’t declare their affiliation and had to run as independents for the dubious honour of serving in Mubarak’s sham parliament.

But the Arab Spring changed everything. In February, as protests in Tahrir Square blossomed and Mubarak was being dethroned, the Brotherhood stepped out of the shadows. It started its own party, which is now by far the most popular in Egypt. In the first two phases of the current lower-house elections, Brotherhood candidates received about half the votes. A fifth of the votes went to another Islamist group, the fanatically puritan Salafist political party, al-Nour (The Light). Islamists are expected to do at least as well in the final phase, the results of which are expected on Jan. 13. The voting has produced a dangerous epidemic of wishful thinking, reaching all the way to Washington. The Obama government has quietly reversed the anti-Brotherhood policy of the United States. An anonymous but apparently important figure in the administration told The New York Times that it’s now essential to “engage with the party that won the election.” Senator John Kerry, chairman of the foreign relations committee, explained why he met with Brotherhood leaders: “The United States needs to deal with the new reality.” Washington apparently accepts, for the moment, the Brotherhood’s claim that it wants an Egyptian government that will respect religious freedoms, free markets and international commitments, including Egypt’s treaty with Israel.

That’s what they say to the Americans. On the other hand, the deputy chief of the Muslim Brotherhood, Rashad alBayoumi, recently told the AlHayat newspaper of London that the Brotherhood is not required to recognize Israel, which he called an “occupying entity.” He won’t even meet with Israeli representatives. Many of the rebels who led the Egyptian revolution last winter said they were committed to democracy and a secular society. They were not lying. But the “Tahrir people,” as they are sometimes called, have discovered that election campaigns are harder to organize than street demonstrations. In the campaign, democracyminded candidates discussed constitutional freedoms. Islamists talked about the impossibly high cost of food. The tough policies of Mubarak apparently hardened the Brotherhood into a disciplined and determined organization. They won their position as favourites of the poor through years of political generosity: They subsidized everything from meat to school supplies and gave away sugar, cooking oil and fresh vegetables.

Will they change their extremist ways as they achieve some power? That would mean turning against all the fierce preachers and propagandists who spread the Islamist ideology over eight decades. It could happen, but not likely. Even the optimists believe that the Brotherhood’s moderate attitude will prove temporary. Yasmine El Rashidi, a respected Middle East journalist, writing in the current New York Review of Books, says the Brotherhood will likely emerge after the Egyptian elections as a mediator, perhaps an ally of the liberal coalition in the first parliament. But even she implies that this will be a strategy: “Having waited since 1928 for this moment, the Brotherhood can be expected to wait another few years before attempting to make any drastic or fundamental changes in the social and cultural life of the Egyptian state.”

Meanwhile, the crucial Egyptian tourist industry, which was wounded by the chaos of 2011, has a new worry: the arch-puritan Salafis. They want an Egypt as rigid as Saudi Arabia. They propose separating men from women on the beaches. They hope to ban alcohol. At a Salafist political rally held in a public square in Alexandria, they draped cloth over a sculpture of a mermaid — for decency’s sake. In a way, these hyper-puritans are the Muslim Brotherhood’s best friends. The term “moderate” is relative, after all. And the case for applying it to the Brotherhood’s supporters gets stronger when you set them beside rivals who blush at the sight of a fish-woman’s bosom.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Europe Concerned Over Sahel Insecurity: German Minister

(ALGIERS) — German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle Saturday said Europe has become deeply concerned about the volatile security situation in the Sahel region caused by the rise of Al-Qaeda’s north African branch, in an interview with an Algerian newspaper. “The security situation in the Sahel is a source of major concern for us and our European Union partners,” Westerwelle told the daily Liberte. “That is why we are working in Brussels on a common strategy for security and development in the Sahel.”

Germany’s top diplomat is due to arrive in Algiers on Saturday for talks with top Algerian officials as part of his visit to north Africa which will include stops in Libya and Tunisia. The EU recently launched a strategy for the Sahel with a budget of 150 million euros ($190 million) aimed at encouraging security and development in particular in Mauritania, Mali and Niger.

The Sahel region including Algeria has been plagued by a growing number of attacks and kidnappings, especially of Westerners, by militants of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). About 12 Europeans are currently being held by AQIM and another dissident group.

A flood of arms including heavy weapons has also spread through the region following the collapse of Moamer Khadafi’s regime in Libya. Westerwelle told the paper the EU will give Libya support by “financing the destruction of landmines and detonators and helping to secure its arsenal of chemical weapons in order to reduce the potential risks to the region.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iranian Ayatollah Says Facebook Un-Islamic, Membership a Sin

Tehran (dpa) — An Iranian ayatollah has said that the social networking service Facebook was un-Islamic and being a member of it a sin, the ISNA news agency reported Saturday.

In Iran, it is common for senior clerics to be asked about their stance on certain social issues and whether these issues are compatible with Islamic norms.

Their answers are regarded as a form of decree.

ISNA on Saturday broadcast coverage of the response of Ayatollah Lotfollah Safi-Golpaygani, a senior cleric, to the question about Facebook and Iranian membership in the social networking service.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

Russia


Is Giant Russia a Dying Bear?

Although Russia today accounts for about six percent of the world’s population with a post-secondary education, barely 0.1 percent of the worldwide patents granted by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office over the last decade and a half were awarded to Russians. This is not some U.S. conspiracy against Russian inventors: the records of the UN’s World Intellectual property Organization show that Russia’s share of out-of-country patent applications over that same period was less than 0.2 percent of the global total.

The picture is hardly better when it comes to the output of scienti?c papers: the number of articles by Russians in peer-reviewed journals was no higher in 2008 than it had been in 1990,whereas output almost everywhere else in the world rose over those same years. By 2008, Russian authors were publishing far fewer scienti?c papers than the authors of Russia’s bric peers: Brazil, China, and India. In effect, Russia stands as a new and disturbing wonder in today’s globalized world: a society characterized by high levels of schooling but low levels of health, knowledge, and education.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Musharraf Will be Arrested on Arrival in Pakistan, PTI Reports

Pervez Musharraf, who resigned as Pakistan’s president in 2008, will be arrested on arrival in the country later this month, the Press Trust of India reported, citing a prosecutor.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]

Far East


North Korea’s Kim Jong-un Wages Defector Crackdown

In North Korea, a new Kim may be in command but the same old human rights violations are still in play, including a renewed lethal crackdown on defectors, according to South Korean media reports. Weeks after 20-something Kim Jong Un assumed power following his father Kim Jong Il’s sudden death by heart attack last month, border guards have begun shooting down would-be defectors who try to flee the impoverished nation, the reports said.

Three people who tried to flee the repressive regime were reportedly killed in recent days as they tried to cross the Yalu River along the Chinese border, part of a policy of tightened border controls that Pyongyang is enforcing after Kim Jong Il’s Dec. 17 death. Under Kim Jong Un, North Korea has pledged to hunt down and imprison, or even kill, three generations of family left behind by escapees, successful or not, according to Seoul’s Joongang Daily newspaper.

North Korea watchers say the younger Kim may fear that a rise in defections could destabilize his fledgling hold on power as officials across Pyongyang’s security apparatus jockey to demonstrate their loyalty to the regime’s new strongman. “There was nothing like the eradication of three generations in the Kim Jong Il era, but now it’s happening under Kim Jong Un,” an unnamed official told the newspaper.

The crackdown is seen as part of Kim Jong Un’s attempt to consolidate his power and show backbone to the high-ranking generals of the nation’s 1.2-million-troops-strong military who once revered his father — officers old enough to be the younger Kim’s grandfather. “Obviously it is getting much harder to defect,” Do Hee-yoon, a member of the Citizens’ Coalition for the Human Rights of Abductees, told the Korea Times newspaper.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pressed by U.S., Asian Countries Look for Ways to Reduce Purchases of Iranian Oil

Under growing pressure from the United States, some of Asia’s largest economies are reluctantly looking for options to reduce the amount of oil they buy from Iran, a move that would further tighten the economic vise on an increasingly defiant nation that announced plans for a new round of naval drills in the Strait of Hormuz.

The decision by South Korea and Japan to try to accommodate Washington’s demands follows reports that China has already reduced its purchase of Iranian crude in the past month in a pricing dispute with Tehran. Whatever the motives, the combined loss of sales threatens an economy already reeling, where the currency has plummeted in value, inflation has surged and the general public has expressed growing anxiety about the prospect of war.

China, Japan, India and South Korea together import more than 60 percent of Iranian oil exports, and they all depend on Iran and other Persian Gulf producers for the preponderance of their oil and natural gas needs. As tensions in the gulf have escalated and alarmed Asian governments and businesses, companies and traders from those countries have been putting out feelers to places like Russia, Vietnam, West Africa, Iraq and especially Saudi Arabia to export more oil to them, according to oil experts.

For Tehran, which relies heavily on oil revenues to prop up an economy battered by years of sanctions, the potential cutbacks by its Asian customers follow a decision by the European Union to move toward a ban on the import of Iranian oil. Taken together, the Western efforts represent the most serious economic pressure yet on Iran after years of conflict over a nuclear program that the West charges is aimed at building weapons.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Off His Face and Now Out of Pocket in a Divorce Settlement

FRITTERING away cash on booze and dope during more than 20 years of marriage has cost a man dearly in his divorce settlement.

A federal magistrate decided his excessive drug and alcohol use meant his ex-wife should get an extra $150,000 — or 20 per cent — of their combined assets, The Daily Telegraph reported.

The Federal Magistrates’ Court heard the man drank six to 12 stubbies of beer a night and smoked marijuana almost daily.

“It is not possible to say exactly how much this impacted upon the financial outcome with any certainty,” magistrate Philip Burchardt said in a recently published court judgment.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Gambia: Banni Inaugurates New Mosque

The community of Banni in Sami District, Central River Region (CRR) on Friday 30th December 2011, inaugurated the first mosque of the village with a mass congregational prayer attended by Islamic scholars and people from the satellite villages. The mosque, entirely funded by the natives of Banni both at home and abroad is a product of the community’s ‘testito’ projects and manifests the strong community spirit, unity and harmony existing among natives of the community. The inauguration of the new mosque in the opinion of Alhaji Ousman Dahaba and Alhaji Jimbang Kijera, a member of the mosque committee and council of elders symbolises the fulfillment of the dreams of their forebears, whom they said prayed and worked hard to ensure that the community acquires its own mosque. They further spoke at length about the significance of a mosque and urged the community to maintain the mosque so that it can serve its full purpose.

“Our forebears worked had to build a mosque for the village and could not accomplish that goal. If we, their offspring are able to complete the journey they started, we should return praise to God and commit ourselves further to the strengthening of the religion of Islam which they lived and died for, and which the mosque is built to serve,” said Jimbang Kijera.

Alhaji Ganyie Touray, governor of CRR commended the village for the bold initiative and accomplishment and assured of government’s continuous support for such endeavours. He said: “The Gambia under the dynamic leadership of President Jammeh, as we are all aware is in strong support of the development of religion particularly Islam. So he is also proud to be associated with such developments and would always rally behind the progress of Islam in the country.” He further advised the villagers to maintain the unity and harmony existing in the community and continue to rally behind the leadership and government that make such accomplishments possible.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Boko Haram: Sharia or Militant Wing of Northern Politicians?

IT is a very instructive observation by some concerned Nigerians that, when the Northern Political Leaders Forum (NPLF) failed to force its way politically within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the Ciroma branch of the proverbial “Kaduna mafia” was unable to gain the type of foothold it had within the NPN after its struggle with Shehu Shagari in 1979, in 2011, all hell was let loose. When efforts by a few ‘born to rule” individuals, to warehouse the office of the president failed, anarchy in the guise of Boko Haram became the next choice. The operational tactics of Boko Haram (western education is sin), a supposed religious sect with curious objectives changed and has since become a tool to return presidency immediately to a few who claim that holding on to political power in Nigeria is their god given right.

As an elder politician, a former Central Bank governor and a major stakeholder in the politics of the North East, is it not a matter of great quandary that, while the North East burned and the instigators of the bloodletting in the region extended their bloody hands to the federal capital, the news media, is voluminously silent on a single comment from Ciroma and his NPLF associates. Comments of agreement or disagreement, no matter how distasteful or insipid from the man who presided over the coffers of Nigeria over a lengthy period of time is worthy listening to? As a major player in the politics of Nigeria, he came third in the NPN contest for the presidency in 1978/79 behind Shehu Shagari and Maitama Sule. Despite his sponsorship by the astute administrator Hamza Rafindadi Zayyad, Ciroma knows what is at stake regarding the wielding of political power in Nigeria.

He was in good company when he co-opted Ibrahim Babangida, Aliyu Mohammed Gusau and Abubakar Atiku, all prominent men who have presided over the appropriation of the Nigerian fiscus over a lengthy period of time to claim the Nigerian presidency as a northern heritage, with the north defined along their very narrow perception; a northern Nigeria where northern minorities particularly the people of the middle-belt or north central are second class citizens. Hence, knowing what is at stake, it is no surprise he swore to do everything within his power to ensure that himself and his associates do not play second fiddle to anyone who was not on their side, and that they “would make Nigeria ungovernable”, if Jonathan or anyone who is not within their anointed circle became president of Nigeria.

This type of threat was taken then in the heat of the struggle as part of political angst and dispensed with. But with benefit of hindsight, and with what has happened so far, we know better and now must take it seriously because it was similarly used against Chief MKO Abiola until he was killed. Also, immediately after the PDP primaries, came the first extensive use of incendiary materials by unspecified persons at an INEC office in Suleja. This marked the beginning of many such incidents of carnage recorded at his door step to destabilise the peace of the country. What perhaps is worrisome is the loud silence of Ciroma at a time such as this. And the question to ask is where does he stand? For in truth, looking at the vision of Boko Haram and their current tactics, can we not assume that the bellum sacrum of Boko Haram has aligned with the casus belli of the NPLF? Should we not see their role as those of the political paymasters who have fueled the Taliban in Afghanistan waiting in the wings to devour the political carcass left behind, when the fanatics have had their fill of blood?

Does the silence of the NPLF and their associates not indicate acquiescence or accord? If not, where do they stand? For as William T. Cavanaugh indicated, religion is just a subterfuge and “religious violence” can be and is used to legitimate violence against “others”. So where does NPLF stand? With Nigeria or with the fanatical dissidents? Let us count the victims of Boko Haram and review their targets and see if it has much to do with western education. Insipid statements have been made by top associates of NPLF to the effect that the ongoing security threats are symptomatic of the failure of the security system in Nigeria, which should be overhauled. One agrees wholly with this assertion, but Aliyu Mohammed Gusau was in charge of setting up most of the current security system in Nigeria, having spent decades as the head of Military intelligence and later National Security Adviser of several governments.

In fact, if doctoral qualifications were awarded for on-the-job experience as a security chief, Gusau should have several doctorates on Nigerian security. One can even wager that many of the top operatives in the Nigerian security apparati report first to Gusau before anyone because of recruitment loyalties. As one of the beneficiaries of Ciroma’s dispensing of the power to rule as a representative of the NPLF, as well as his background on how lapses develop in Nigerian security, what has been Alhaji Gusau’s advise to secure the North East, and more important what was the view of Ciroma on effecting such views. In other words, where does Ciroma stand on the security of the North East and Nigeria?

Ciroma was born in Potiskum, where Christianity and Islam have co-existed side by side for decades. In December 2011, 30 shops owned by Christians were set ablaze in Potiskum, while scores of people have been slaughtered in nearby Damaturu. Through all these, we have head the voices of Muslims like Aregbesola a governor and devout Muslim, as well as Fashola, also a Muslim governor condemning such inhuman act of brutality, at the very doorstep of Ciroma and his associates. Yet, there has been no responses from Ciroma and friends. One would distance someone like him from such an act, knowing that the actions of Boko Haram as they are currently been executed would obviously lead to a point where he and his associates may eventually be left with 100 percent of nothing as against the current share of something which they are fighting to gain more of.

But it is a fact that the operatives of Boko Haram who have been caught so far, do not have the financial reserves, the banking proficiency to execute cross-country arms purchases, nor can they afford an extended recruitment of unemployed youths over a lengthy period. In addition, they are unable to pay for the use of Honda vehicles as expendable bearers of suicide bombs. Is it not therefore logical to ask; if the funds expended to recruit operatives of Boko Haram, has been associated with a Senator and former diplomat from Yobe sate, the very doorstep of Ciroma, is he unaware of these activities? If he is not, where does he and his NPLF associates stand? The loud silence of Ciroma and his associates on the operations of Boko Haram when placed against their vow that Nigeria will be ungovernable if they failed to gain political power purchase on the platform of the PDP remains inexplicable. Is this struggle a prelude for the control of the northern political space ahead of 2015 or a persistent assertion of power at the centre by proxy on behalf of the NPLF? Can Nigeria afford the outcome of this struggle?

[JP note: It is indeed a ‘matter of great quandary’ — one faced by the whole world.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria Christians Hit by Fresh Islamist Attacks

Nigeria has been hit by a fresh wave of violence apparently targeting the country’s Christian communities.

At least 17 people were killed in Mubi in Adamawa state as gunmen opened fire in a town hall where members of the Christian Igbo group were meeting. There were also reports of a deadly attack in Adamawa’s capital, Yola. The Islamist Boko Haram group said it had carried out the attack in Mubi and another in Gombe on Thursday night in which at least six people died. The group has staged numerous attacks in northern and central areas in recent months — on Christmas Day it attacked a church near the capital, Abuja, killing dozens of people. One Boko Haram faction has warned all southerners — who are mostly Christian and animist — to leave the mainly Muslim north of Nigeria. Adamawa state borders Borno state, where Boko Haram emerged. Last week President Goodluck Jonathan declared a state of emergency in Yobe and Borno states, as well as Plateau state in central Nigeria and Niger state in the west, following a surge in ethnic and sectarian violence.

But the pace of attacks has increased and he must now consider whether to extend the state of emergency into other states and beef up the military presence in the north in response, says the BBC’s Mark Lobel in Lagos.

Meanwhile, the government is also facing the bleak prospect of a general strike in two days’ time amid popular fury over its removal of a fuel subsidy which has seen fuel prices double for ordinary Nigerians. Residents told the BBC that those killed in Mubi belonged to the Igbo community from the south of the country. They had been meeting to organise how to transport the body of an Igbo man who was shot dead by gunmen on motorbikes on Thursday evening. “It was while they were holding the meeting that gunmen came and opened fire on them,” a resident said. Witnesses said gunmen burst into the hall and shouted “God is great” as they opened fire. Members of the Igbo community in northern Nigeria often own shops and businesses, but the BBC’s Abdullahi Tasiu in Yola says many Igbo traders in Mubi town are reported to have closed their shops and be planning to flee the area.

Later, a man claiming to be a spokesman for Boko Haram told local media the group had carried out both the Mubi and Gombe attacks. “We are extending our frontiers to other places to show that the declaration of a state of emergency by the Nigerian government will not deter us. We can really go to wherever we want to go,” said Abul Qaqa. He said the attacks were “part of our response to the ultimatum we gave to southerners to leave the north” and called on the government to release all Boko Haram prisoners. Later on Friday, there were reports that eight people had been killed in another attack on a church in Yola. “Some gunmen went into the church and opened fire on worshippers killing some people and wounding several others,” a local journalist told the AFP news agency. A source at the local hospital told AFP that between eight and 10 bodies had been taken there.

Police have also been engaged in a gun battle with suspected members of Boko Haram in another north-eastern city, Potiskum, in Yobe state. “Gunmen who are, from all indications, members of Boko Haram came in large numbers and have encircled police headquarters. They chanted ‘Allahu Akbar’ [God is Great] and fired indiscriminately,” a resident told AFP.

Boko Haram, whose name means ‘Western education is forbidden’, is fighting to overthrow the government and create an Islamic state. More than 500 people have been killed by the group over the past year. On Christmas Day, it carried out a string of church bombings which killed 37 people at one church outside the capital, Abuja, alone. President Jonathan, who is a Christian, has vowed to crack down on the group but Christian groups have accused him of not doing enough to protect them.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Over 50 Injured as Angry Youths Attack Muslims in Sapele

SAPELE- ENRAGED youths, numbering over 2,000, armed with battleaxes, cutlasses and other dangerous weapons went on rampage, Friday, sacking and inflicting injuries on over 50 Muslims at the Hausa quarters, Sapele in Sapele Local Government Area of Delta State. A northern security guard was shot dead in a separate incident by a gang of armed robbers that attacked a school in Sapele on Thursday. Vanguard gathered that the youths were incensed by the uninhibited attacks on churches and killing of Christians in the northern part of the country by the Islamic Boko Haram sect. Two of the persons suspected to have carried out the onslaught were, however, arrested by the police in Sapele. There was pandemonium following the attack on Muslims, who were ordered to vacate the town in their own interest since Boko Haram members had also issued ultimatum to Christians to leave the north. Secretary of a Muslim Media group in Sapele, Sadiq Oniyesaneyene Musa who spoke to Vanguard on the attacks by Sapele youths said, “We are disturbed by this attack on Muslims in Sapele and the order that all Muslims in Sapele should return to the north. I am a Muslim and an Itsekiri from Delta state, where do they want me to go to, this is my homeland”. Musa said the youths besieged Muslims in the town very close to the mosque that was bombed, last year, and injured a lot of faithful. “We called the director of the State Security Service, SSS, Asaba and the Area Commander and they responded. The Joint Task Force, JTF, on the Niger-Delta also deployed soldiers to take care of the situation”, he said.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: Residents Flee Homes After Boko Haram Attack in Yobe

KANO-(AFP) — Hundreds of residents fled their homes Saturday in a town in northeastern Nigeria in the wake of all-night gun battles between Islamists and security forces, police and residents said. Police have not yet determined the death toll from the violence in Potiskum, they said. “Our men engaged Boko Haram gunmen in shootouts for most of the night which led to some deaths and injuries,” Yobe state police commissioner Lawan Tanko told AFP. “It is too early to give figures because we are still investigating the incident and taking stock of the situation,” Tanko said. Dozens of armed Islamists stormed Potiskum on Friday and launched gun and bomb attacks on the police headquarters. The scale of damage was not immediately clear as soldiers cordoned off the area. The attackers fired shots and threw a bomb into a nearby police barracks but no one was hurt, said residents in the barracks.

Two banks in the town were also robbed and burnt by the Islamists, residents said. Residents of neighbourhoods around the police headquarters have vacated their homes in fear of military raids in the area in the aftermath of the attack, residents said.

The town is part of regions placed under emergency rule by President Goodluck Jonathan a week ago. Those who fled their homes moved in with relatives and friends in areas unaffected by the attacks, residents said. “Virtually all the residents of the Dogo Tebo and Dogo Nini areas have fled their homes for fear of attack by soldiers who came to the town this morning from Damaturu,” said Idris Bakanike, a resident of the Dogo Tebo area overlooking the police headquarters. Dozens of soldiers were deployed on Saturday and took up positions around the police headquarters, firing sporadic shots in the area. “We are afraid the soldiers will raid and burn our homes like they do in Maiduguri each time Boko Haram attack,” Amiru Umar, a resident of Dogo Nini said. Soldiers in the northeastern city of Maiduguri have been accused of burning homes and shooting residents after attacks by the Islamists, accusing residents of complicity with them.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Italy: Police Nab Gangsters Tied to Immigrant Slayings

Alleged Casalesi extortionists linked to Setola gang

(ANSA) — Rome, January 4 — Police on Wednesday arrested 10 alleged members of the Naples-based Camorra mafia wanted for extortion and for connections to the gang that slayed six West African immigrants in 2008 that sparked immigrant unrest.

In addition to allegedly extorting money at gunpoint from developers in a deal to build a supermarket, the suspects are accused of having ties to the infamous Casalesi clan and Giuseppe Setola, whose gang gunned down six West African immigrants at Castel Volturno near Caserta in September 2008, leading to prolonged immigrant protests. Setola was caught on January 14, 2009, two days after he dodged arrest by crawling through sewers on the outskirts of Caserta, a city north of Naples.

While closing the net on him, police arrested a Carabinieri officer suspected of tipping him off.

In all, Setola was wanted for 17 murders committed over five months in 2008, after he got out of jail in May that year on the strength of a doctor’s certificate that said he was virtually blind.

After the massacre of the six West Africans on September 18 the Italian government sent in the army to bolster efforts against the Casalesi.

Then interior minister Roberto Maroni said at the time that the clan had “declared war on the Italian state”.

The Casalesis, whose fugitive leader Michele Zagaria was arrested earlier this month, became known to an international public thanks to writer Roberto Saviano’s bestselling 2006 book Gomorrah, later turned into a successful film that won second prize at Cannes.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120106

Financial Crisis
» Bad Signs for EU Economy
» Brussels Demands Belgium Pare 2012 Budget
» Critics Say Small Loans Hurt the Poor
» Dubai: Budget Tries to Keep Debt Under Control
» EU: Under-25 Unemployment Rising, Spain and Greece Worst
» Euro Unlikely to ‘Vanish’ This Year: IMF Chief
» French Bonds Find Buyers, But Spain and Italy Cause Concern
» Italian Stocks Suffer, Monti Pays Surprise Visit to Brussels
» Italian Industry Minister Calls to Beef Up ECB
» Italy Launches Winter Clothing Sales in Tight Economy
» Ratings Agency: France ‘Treated Like BBB’ Country
» UK to Do ‘Everything’ Against Use of EU Institutions in New Treaty
 
USA
» A Polymath Physicist on Richard Feynman’s “Low” IQ and Finding Another Einstein
» CAIR: 400 Wash. State Muslims to Meet Lawmakers on MLK Day
» Microsoft Patents ‘Avoid Ghetto’ Feature for GPS Devices
» Police Investigate Students’ (Year-Old) Racial Rant
» Santorum Wants to Impose ‘Judeo-Christian Sharia’
» The Hard Way: Our Odd Desire to Do it Ourselves
 
Europe and the EU
» 952 Children Died in Finland War Prison Camps: Historian
» Belgium: Salafist Twerps Reportedly Harass Passers-by in Antwerp
» Cheap Swedish Beer Gives Norway a Headache
» EU Parliament Groups Call for Sanctions Against Hungary
» France: Sarkozy in Tug-of-Love Over Joan of Arc
» Germany: Bobsleigher Nearly Dies From Wood in Buttock
» Higgs Result Means Elegant Universe is Back in Vogue
» Ministers Identify Glitches in EU Diplomatic Service
» Mullah Krekar to Leave Norway?
» Norway: Mother Drowns Baby Daughter in Bucket While Boyfriend Watches Live on Skype
» Norway ‘Received Phone Threat Before Attacks’
» Norway: Did Breivik Give Advance Notice of His Crime?
» Sarkozy Hails Joan of Arc to Boost Election Campaign
» Sweden: Ek the ‘Most Important Man in Music’: Forbes
» Sweden: Kopimism: The World’s Newest Religion Explained
» Sweden Recognizes Information-Sharing as Religion
» Switzerland: Tense Year Looms in EU Relations
» ‘The Iron Lady’ Should Have Been Delayed: British PM
» UK: ‘The Shard’: The Building That Will Change London Forever
» UK: Acting as Cover for Extremism is the Real Problem
» UK: British Muslims Named in the 2012 New Year Honours List
» UK: Diane Abbott: Taxi Drivers Refuse to Pick Up Black Passengers
» UK: Iron Lady’s Home Town Loath to See Her Cast in Bronze
» UK: Margaret Thatcher: An Embedding Zionist
» UK: Nazi Defender Will Visit SOAS
» UK: Passengers to Face Heathrow Delays as Olympic Athletes Are Given Priority Treatment
» UK: Pollard and Bright’s Islamist Fear Betrays Our Community Values
» UK: The Wind Turbines That Can’t Cope… With the Wind! Three More Are Blown to Pieces in Gales That Swept Across Britain
» UK: Three Men Sentenced Over Arson Attack on Sussex Mosque
» Upset French Fans Sue Michael Jackson Doctor
 
Balkans
» Bosnia: Qaradawi’s Sharia Gradualism is a Threat to Liberal Democracy
 
North Africa
» German Foreign Minister to Tour North Africa
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Arab Cyber-Attack on ‘Zionist’ Credit Cards
» Arab MKs Denounce Police ‘Brutality’
» Caroline Glick: The Land-for-Peace Hoax
 
Middle East
» Death Penalty in Saudi Arabia Almost Triples, UN Alarm
» Saudi Arabia Lifts Ban on Turkish Poultry Imports
» Saudis Will Let Israel Bomb Iran Nuclear Site
» Suicide Blast Hits Damascus During Arab League Visit
» Syria: Attack in Central Damascus; State TV, Dozen of Casualties
» Turkey: Bursa Aims to Attract Half Million Arab Tourists
» Turkey: Erdogan Represses Press Freedom, NYT
» Turkey Jails Former Military Chief
» UN Alarmed at Jump in Saudi Executions
 
South Asia
» The Unholy Madrasas of Pakistan
 
Far East
» Audi Sales in China Outstrip Germany: Firm
» China Puts the Brakes on Foreign Automakers
» Germans Give Pep Talks on Korean Unification
» Spectacular Snow and Ice Display in China
» To Save Its Culture, China Slashes Entertainment TV
 
Australia — Pacific
» Former Prime Minister Bob Hawke Thrills SCG Cricket Crowd Skolling a Beer
» Moon Mineral Found in Ancient Australian Rock
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» 20 Killed as Nigerian Gunmen Attack Christian Mourners
» Freedom Fighters Celebrate a Party in Power as ANC Turns 100
 
Immigration
» Immigration a Tough Issue for Mitt Romney
» Italy: Rome in Midst of ‘Criminal Emergency’, Says Mayor
 
Culture Wars
» France: Town Gets Rid of ‘Mademoiselle’
» Italy’s State-Owned Train Firm Accused of Racism for Using Asian Family on Advert Promoting Fourth-Class Seats
» Men, Women Really Do Have Big Personality Differences
 
General
» Clever Canines: Dogs Can ‘Read’ Our Communication Cues
» Thinnest Silicon-Chip Wires Refuse to Go Quantum

Financial Crisis


Bad Signs for EU Economy

Worrying indicators accumulated on Thursday on the state of Europe’s economy. The EFSF, the eurozone’s bail-out fund, had to pay higher interest rates than expected; the yield on Italian 10-year bonds rose above 7%; and the euro continued to fall against the dollar to hit a 15-month low.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Brussels Demands Belgium Pare 2012 Budget

The European Commission has rejected Belgium’s 2012 budget as over-optimistic and is demanding it shave an extra 1.2 to 2.0 billion euros to avoid breaching the three percent threshold. In a letter sent Thursday to Belgian Finance Minister Steven Vanackere, the EU’s Economic Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said his services “have come to the conclusion … the deficit forecast for Belgium in 2012 should be updated to about 3.25 percent of GDP”.

Belgium’s new government should in consequence “in the coming days” agree to pare down the budget by about 1.2 to 2.0 billion euros, he said. “This would allow us to conclude … that Belgium has undertaken the required fiscal effort,” he said, calling on the country’s new government to inform the Commission of its response “by the end of the week, latest by Monday morning.”

Under new rules agreed in December that give the EU executive added powers to enforce budgetary discipline, infringement of the three percent deficit ceiling can set off a quick train of action including fines and judicial penalties.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Critics Say Small Loans Hurt the Poor

Microcredits have long been seen as an effective and simple tool to help the poor turn their lives around. Yet researchers are increasingly questioning whether microfinance programs are really a solution for everyone.

But ask Milford Bateman, a British researcher based in Croatia, about the benefits of microfinance and he bristles. He calls microfinance “a complete disaster” and points to the stories of over-indebted farmers committing suicide in India, microfinance bubbles in India and Bosnia and exorbitant interest rates that are making headlines.

“Instead of having this massive reduction in poverty and real economic development, we’ve had the complete opposite,” Bateman says. He has spent years researching the negative effects of microfinance, which he believes governments and development agencies chose to ignore.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dubai: Budget Tries to Keep Debt Under Control

But doubts on ability to fulfil obligations continue

(ANSA) — DUBAI, JANUARY 5 — The key words of Dubai’s 2012 budget are caution, optimism and recovery, words that were repeated over and over by the emirate’s authorities in the past 12 months to citizens, regional markets and international investors. The budget was presented a few days ago and includes a cut of 6.83 billion, to “improve the efficiency of expenditure while boosting productivity and social and economic return.” But there are still doubts if Dubai will be able to pay its pending debts: 12 billion over 2012 and more than 93 for what is called “Dubai Inc.”.

The announcement between 2010 and 2011 of a restructuring of the debt of Dubai World, the government holding that forms one of the pillars of Dubai’s economy, caused agitation on the regional markets, as well as outside the region. After months of negotiations with banks and creditors, DW has finalized its obligations totalling 20 billion euros, reassuring the interests that gravitate around its economy.

Still, early in 2012 financial analysts once again raised doubts about the solvency of the emirate. The government-related companies with the highest debts include Jebel Ali Free Zone, called to fulfil its obligations of 1.5 billion euros by November and DIFC, Dubai International Financial District, 970 million euros in sukuk (Islamic bonds) with maturity in 2012. There are already some “rescue” instruments: in 2009 the Fund for financial support was created by the government of Abu Dhabi and the central bank with an endowment of 15.5 billion euros.

Another option is the sale of assets, like DW has already sold some of its international assets, but the success of this option depends on the willingness of foreign investors, which seem less than enthusiastic at the moment. According to the government programme, revenues will be close to 6.5 billion euros, 60% from taxes on services, 22% from customs duties, 11% from the oil sector and 7% from companies that are owned by the government, including Dubai Aluminium, Ducab (which produces power cables) and NBD, the National Bank of Dubai.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU: Under-25 Unemployment Rising, Spain and Greece Worst

Record high increase in joblessness on the year for Athens

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 6 — The rate of unemployment for those under age 25 continues to rise. In November 2011, it was at 22.3% in the 27 members states (compared to 22% in October 2011 and 22% in November 2010). The eurozone figure is not much better, which sees a 21.7% rate in November 2011, compared to November 2010’s 20.6%. These figures were reported by Eurostat, the European statistics institute, which said that marking a new EU record was Spain at 49.6%, though the highest increase of the year-on-year figure was Greece, which in September 2011 had 46.6% of its citizens under age 25 without work, compared with the 36.3% seen in November 2010. Higher than the EU average for under-25 unemployment were also Portugal (30.7%), Italy (30.1%) and France (23.5%). Overall, the rate of unemployment in the eurozone in November 2011 was unchanged compared to October, at 10.3%, while it had been at 10% in November 2010.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro Unlikely to ‘Vanish’ This Year: IMF Chief

The euro is unlikely to “vanish” this year, IMF chief Christine Lagarde said Friday, but warned a report this month will show the global economy growing slower than the 4.0 percent estimated in September. “Will 2012 be the end of the euro currency? My answer is I dont think so,” she told a press conference during a visit to South Africa.

“It’s a young currency, it’s a solid one as well. You have, within the zone, not in relation with the currency, serious pressures and issues concerning the sovereign debt, concerning the strength of the banking system, but the currency itself is not one that would vanish or disappear in 2012.” “Will Greece quit the euro zone in 2012? The euro partners have affirmed, reaffirmed, and reaffirmed their determination. We can only support that,” she said.

But she warned that the crisis was taking a toll on Africa and the rest of the world, with the International Monetary Fund set to release a report around January 25 that is likely to lower the global growth forecast. “We are currently revisiting our world forecast,” she said. “It is very likely to be revised downwards.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Bonds Find Buyers, But Spain and Italy Cause Concern

France successfully raised 7.963 billion euros ($10.23 billion) in new long-term bonds. But concerns about eurozone sovereign debt persist, as the single European currency hits a 16-month low.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Stocks Suffer, Monti Pays Surprise Visit to Brussels

‘I live in Rome and Brussels,’ premier says

(ANSA) — Milan, January 5 — Italian stocks and bonds took a pounding Thursday amid fresh fears about the eurozone debt crisis and as Premier Mario Monti paid a surprise visit to Brussels.

The Milan stock exchange closed 3.65% down while the spread between Italian and German bonds hovered around an unsustainable 520 points and the yield was above the 7% danger level.

The reasons for Monti’s unexpected trip to Brussels were not immediately divulged.

But when he arrived the Italian premier explained the trip by saying “I live in Rome and Brussels”.

On Friday Monti is set to meet French President Nicolas Sarkozy to discuss fresh anti-crisis moves and has other key international meetings scheduled ahead of a European Union summit on January 30.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italian Industry Minister Calls to Beef Up ECB

‘Give Europe a true central bank’ says Passera

(ANSA) — Rome, January 6 — Italian Industry Minister Corrado Passera called on the European Union to boost the role of its central bank in order to tackle the debt crisis on Friday. “We need to give Europe a true central bank, with the instruments to manage stability and liquidity in the markets,” he said.

Passera was in Paris with Italian Premier Mario Monti to discuss fresh anti-crisis moves with French President Nicolas Sarkozy ahead of a key EU summit on January 30.

“We need to complete the architecture of the common currency, with all the instruments and mechanisms of governance that are still lacking in order to guarantee the full stability of the euro,” said Passera. Throughout the crisis, EU leaders have been divided regarding whether the role of the European Central Bank is to be a lender of last resort.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Launches Winter Clothing Sales in Tight Economy

Merchants hopeful yet realistic amid euro-austerity

(ANSA) — Rome, January 5 — Italy’s winter sales season officially launched in most cities Thursday and shop keepers are hopeful yet realistic about how the global economic downturn might affect consumer spending. “Given the crisis, we expect to see a small difference,” says David Cenci, owner of Rome’s chic clothing store Cenci.

A ten-minute line wraps around his entrance on an unseasonably warm January morning.

“It’s like this every year,” he says. “But perhaps this year sales will be down slightly”.

Known the world over for designer labels such as Prada and Versace, Italian fashion is a hot commodity that typically sees discounts only twice a year, once in the winter and once in the summer.

In more prosperous times before the word ‘euro’ was so often followed by ‘crisis’, shop keepers clearing out the last season’s unsold merchandise could expect to make decent profits in high-volume sales this time of year. According to the retail association Confcommercio, the average Italian spent 168 euros on clothing during the winter sales season in recent years.

Yet estimates for 2012 from the leading consumer group Codacons have lowered the amount to 110 euros — a 30% drop — in light of the global economic crisis which has significantly lowered spending power across the country.

From January 2002 to January 2012, Codacons said a four-member family took a total hit of 10,850 euros because of rises in the prices of retail goods, local rates and petrol as well as higher rents and government budget cuts.

Those losses amounted to nearly 40% of a family’s purchasing power since the euro became Italy’s currency.

Despite the burden, the government is hoping to spur consumer spending with a new measure allowing stores to stay open as long as they want. Previously, retailers had to close after a certain number of hours per day, as well as some holidays, Sundays and one day during the work week. The relaxed rules, which also apply to bars and restaurants, are part of the emergency government’s package of stimulus and budget measures that aim to raise 30 billion euros and lift the country out of its debt crisis.

“I think (the measure) is a good thing,” says Cenci. “It doesn’t mean that we have to stay open later, but that we can if we want to”.

But critics argue that the measure will only benefit large companies with the personnel to cover more shifts, while smaller businesses will lose their ability to compete.

“Such deregulation from the Monti government serves to benefit large-scale retailers,” says Marco Venturi, president of Confesercenti, a leading small and medium-size business group.

The full effects of the new deregulation will take time to assess. In the meantime, it’s every storekeeper for himself to try and reel in shoppers during this winter sales season, which goes on for several weeks.

Merchants say the biggest spenders of 2012 tend to be foreigners from Russia and Asia, emerging markets with growing upper classes.

“I do my big shopping only twice a year: January and June,” says Natalia, a Russian tourist who gave only her first name. “I come to Italy for this reason, because clothing costs double where we come from”.

When asked how much she intends to spend, Natalia estimates 4,000 euros, the same as in previous years. Her friend Natasha has similar intentions. “I love Italy and Italian fashion,” she says.

“I don’t know how much I will spend. I don’t care”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Ratings Agency: France ‘Treated Like BBB’ Country

The chief economist at ratings agency Standard & Poor’s has told Le Parisien newspaper that investors are already treating France as if it had a BBB rating. The comment was lent some credibility by a bond auction on Thursday in which France was forced to pay an interest rate of 3.29 percent. This is much higher than the 1.93 percent paid by AAA-rated Germany.

Jean-Michel Six, chief European economist, and Carol Sirou, the president of Standard & Poor’s in France, gave a rare interview with the daily newspaper in which they tried to deflect some of the criticism they and other ratings agencies have received in France. France and several other EU countries were put on notice late in 2011 that their AAA ratings were under threat as the eurozone debt crisis continues.

A prominent union leader said President Nicolas Sarkozy was the “hostage” of the ratings agencies in an interview on Thursday Since receiving its warning, the French government has made cuts of €20 billion ($25.6 billion) in an attempt to bring its public deficit down to 4.5 percent of GDP from 5.7 in 2011. More recently, ministers have been trying to downplay the impact a downgrade might have. “It would be another difficulty, but not an insurmountable one,” the president told Le Monde newspaper in December.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK to Do ‘Everything’ Against Use of EU Institutions in New Treaty

British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged to do “everything possible” to stop signatories of a new fiscal treaty from using the European Commission and the European Court of Justice. “You can’t have a treaty outside the EU that starts doing what should be done within the EU,” he told BBC.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


A Polymath Physicist on Richard Feynman’s “Low” IQ and Finding Another Einstein

A conversation with Steve Hsu

Is it true Feynman’s IQ score was only 125?

Feynman was universally regarded as one of the fastest thinking and most creative theorists in his generation. Yet it has been reported — including by Feynman himself-that he only obtained a score of 125 on a school IQ test. I suspect that this test emphasized verbal, as opposed to mathematical, ability. Feynman received the highest score in the country by a large margin on the notoriously difficult Putnam mathematics competition exam, although he joined the MIT team on short notice and did not prepare for the test. He also reportedly had the highest scores on record on the math/physics graduate admission exams at Princeton. It seems quite possible to me that Feynman’s cognitive abilities might have been a bit lopsided-his vocabulary and verbal ability were well above average, but perhaps not as great as his mathematical abilities. I recall looking at excerpts from a notebook Feynman kept while an undergraduate. While the notes covered very advanced topics for an undergraduate-including general relativity and the Dirac equation-it also contained a number of misspellings and grammatical errors. I doubt Feynman cared very much about such things.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



CAIR: 400 Wash. State Muslims to Meet Lawmakers on MLK Day

SEATTLE, Jan. 5, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — On Monday, January 16, some 400 Washington state Muslims are scheduled to meet with dozens of their elected representatives as part of the annual “Washington State Muslims Day at the Capitol.” The event, one of the largest of its kind in the nation, is being organized by the Washington state chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-WA).

SEE: Washington State Muslims Day at the Capitolhttp://www.cairseattle.org/category/events/muslimcapitolday

CAIR-WA’s event is designed to honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his defense of civil rights through positive civic engagement.

WHAT: 5th Annual Washington State Muslims Day at the Capitol

WHERE: Morning Assembly at Olympia Center, 222 Columbia St. NW, Olympia, WA. March to Capitol, Rally on Capitol Steps and Legislative Visits on Capitol Campus

WHEN: Monday, January 16, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Detailed schedule to be released closer to event date)

CONTACT: CAIR-WA Executive Director Arsalan Bukhari, 206-367-4081 or 206-931-3655, E-Mail: abukhari@cair.com

PHOTO OPPORTUNITIES: Some 400 Muslims march from Olympia Center to the Capitol; Muslims rally at Capitol Steps; Legislative appointments 11:15 a.m.-1:45 p.m. (Media welcome to accompany some groups to meetings. Schedules available on request.) Muslim voters attending the event will represent 33 of the 49 state legislative districts. They will provide information about recent anti-Muslim incidents and will urge their legislators to speak out against Islamophobic rhetoric and hate crimes. Participants will also urge legislators to take action on other issues, including preserving critical public programs and having a balanced approach to the state budget. They will present legislators and their staff with a copy of the English translation of the Quran, Islam’s holy text.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Microsoft Patents ‘Avoid Ghetto’ Feature for GPS Devices

Microsoft has been granted a patent for its “avoid ghetto” feature for GPS devices.

A GPS device is used to find shortcuts and avoid traffic, but Microsoft’s patent states that a route can be plotted for pedestrians to avoid an “unsafe neighborhood or being in an open area that is subject to harsh temperatures.”

Created for mobile phones, the technology uses the latest crime statistics and weather data and includes them when calculating a route.

The patent, written in a combination of tech-speak and legalese, was awarded to Microsoft earlier this week.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Police Investigate Students’ (Year-Old) Racial Rant

PHOENIX — Parents at Arcadia High School get a letter from the school, and now the school is working with Phoenix police to investigate something that was posted on YouTube and Facebook.

WARNING: Video Inappropriate: Graphic Content

Here is the text from the video on YouTube:

“This law is about the new law that just passed in Arizona legislature for you f****** illegals to go back to your homeland. Yeah, so grab your burritos and get the f*** out of our country, because you make our life a living hell.

“Go back to f****** Mexico. Get your f****** green card like everyone else and then come back.

At least five police officers were at the school Friday morning, and Friday’s pep rally and this weekend’s winter dance have both been canceled. The school is afraid of possible retaliation from the video.

The principal wrote letters to parents about the situation on Thursday and Friday:..

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Santorum Wants to Impose ‘Judeo-Christian Sharia’

by Dean Obeidallah

Editor’s note: Dean Obeidallah is a comedian who has appeared on Comedy Central’s “Axis of Evil” special, ABC’s “The View,” CNN’s “What the Week” and HLN’s “The Joy Behar Show.” He is executive producer of the annual New York Arab-American Comedy Festival and the Amman Stand Up Comedy Festival. Follow him on Twitter.

(CNN) — There are two Rick Santorums: The first one I might not agree with, but the second one truly scares me. “Santorum One” pushes for less government regulation for corporations and shrinking the federal government. You may or may not agree with these positions, but they are both mainstream conservative fare. Then there’s “Santorum Two.” This Santorum wants to impose conservative Christian law upon America. Am I being hyperbolic or overly dramatic with this statement? I wish I were, but I’m not.

Plainly put, Rick Santorum wants to convert our current legal system into one that requires our laws to be in agreement with religious law, not unlike what the Taliban want to do in Afghanistan. Santorum is not hiding this. The only reason you may not be aware of it is because up until his recent surge in the polls, the media were ignoring him. However, “Santorum Two” was out there telling anyone who would listen. He told a crowd at a November campaign stop in Iowa in no uncertain terms, “our civil laws have to comport with a higher law: God’s law.” On Thanksgiving Day at an Iowa candidates’ forum, he reiterated: “We have civil laws, but our civil laws have to comport with the higher law.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



The Hard Way: Our Odd Desire to Do it Ourselves

From self-assembly furniture to cake mix, we value the things we make ourselves — however badly we do it

WHEN instant cake mixes hit US shelves in the late 1940s, sales were disappointing. Pioneering consumer psychologist Ernest Dichter went into the nation’s kitchens to investigate. His interviews with housewives led him to a startling conclusion. The mixes made baking too easy; cooks felt undervalued. On Dichter’s recommendation the next generation of mixes required the addition of a fresh egg. They sold like hot cakes.

The story is an example of an odd phenomenon in modern consumer societies. Economic orthodoxy dictates that we should place more value on items that spare us work. As we increasingly identify ourselves as money-rich and time-poor, we should be prepared to spend more of the former to save the latter. But humans and economic orthodoxy don’t always see eye to eye. “People have this very strong, internalised notion that effort equals quality,” says behavioural economist Michael Norton of Harvard Business School in Boston, Massachusetts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


952 Children Died in Finland War Prison Camps: Historian

Nearly 1,000 children died in prison camps after being held for suspected links with a Soviet-backed group during Finland’s 1918 civil war, a war historian said Wednesday. “At that time there was a lot of hatred and distrust in Finland and children were accused because of what their parents and relatives had done,” Tuulikki Pekkalainen told AFP, revealing a little known aspect.

Pekkalainen said that while just over 500 children were killed during the war, 952 others — including babies — died in the prison camps after the end of the war due to horrific conditions. The camps remained in existence after the war as prisoners were held pending trial.

“Children were also born in prison,” the author said. “There is the story of a prison where there was no warm water to wash a baby, so the women warmed the water in their mouths,” she said.

The civil war pitted the social democratic “Reds”, supported by Russia, and the conservative “Whites”, supported by Germany, who fought for control and leadership after Finland’s independence from Russia in 1917. Researching the subject for a book to be published in 2013, Pekkalainen has focused on 350 children, from infants to teens up to the age of 15, whose records are available in Finland’s National Archives.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium: Salafist Twerps Reportedly Harass Passers-by in Antwerp

Brussels (UNN) Belgian police on Wednesday detained 15 members of a radical Salafist Islamic group after they harassed passers-by in the city of Antwerp and shouted anti-Western slogans, police said. The Sharia for Belgium activists distributed leaflets glorifying Islam and criticizing the Western way of life in a central street of the northern port city Antwerpen.

Organisers had made no request for a demonstration, which was therefore authorised,said the spokeswoman. When officers asked the demonstrators to identify themselves they refused,” she added. “This led to skirmishes but no one was injured.”

The group was detained for causing a public disturbance and taken to a police station for identification and questioning. They were released later on Wednesday but Antwerp Mayor Patrick Janssens has decided to fill a complaint against Sharia for Belgium because, he said, he wants public order to be respected in his city, he said. Sharia Belgium wants Islamic law to be introduced in Belgium, whose second city of 480,000 inhabitants has a large Muslim community, mainly from Turkey and Morocco, and one of Europe|s biggest Jewish Orthodox communities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Cheap Swedish Beer Gives Norway a Headache

Cheaper Swedish alcohol, as well as an increase in beer brought illegally across the border, is giving Norwegian vendors a headache, as manufacturers continue to see a drop in sales. Recently, beer sales in Norwegian region Östfold, near the Swedish border, has taken a beating and has reportedly dropped by 5 per cent in the last year, compared to 3 percent for the country as a whole.

“It is the proximity to the border and the fact that the shopping centres are getting better on the other side. The motorway also makes it easier to bring wares home. It must be added, though, that there is a huge amount of smuggling going on,” said Hansa Borg brewery’s CEO Lars Midtgaard to Norwegian TV network NRK. Midtgaard, along with many in the industry, blame this on the increase of tax on alcohol, which was raised by 7 percent over 2011 and 2 per cent at the beginning of 2012.

“At the same time the fees have been stable in our neighbouring country,” Midtgaard told NRK. “The difference in price between us and foreign countries are increasing and it becomes increasingly more profitable to smuggle beer into the country.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Parliament Groups Call for Sanctions Against Hungary

The Green, Socialist and Liberal groups in the European Parliament on Thursday called on the EU to impose sanctions on Hungary following the conservative government’s “dangerous slide towards an authoritarian regime” — according the Greens. Hungary is under attack for restricting media freedom and the independence of its central bank.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Sarkozy in Tug-of-Love Over Joan of Arc

President Nicolas Sarkozy and far-right leader Marine Le Pen this week embark on a tug-of-love over the French patron saint Joan of Arc, a surprise player in the upcoming presidential election. The two leaders are to stage rival celebrations of the 600th anniversary of the birth of the 15th-century Catholic martyr who has been appropriated by the far-right partly for her booting out of medieval English “immigrants”.

The teenage peasant led the French army against the English after experiencing religious visions and was later burned at the stake, but her broad appeal to French of all political colours has ensured her immortality. France is officially a secular state, but the story of Joan’s struggle against the English and Burgundians on behalf of the French crown has often served as an inspiration in patriotic causes.

She is regularly wheeled out as a symbol of French unity, alongside such Gallic icons as general Charles de Gaulle or Vercingetorix, who defied the Romans like a real-life Asterix. Her broad appeal is key: French Catholics see in her a saint, nationalists see her as a royalist warrior who kicked out the English, while Socialists can hail her humble origins, although she was the daughter of a landowner.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Bobsleigher Nearly Dies From Wood in Buttock

Three Canadian bobsleighers are recovering in hospital after a brutal World Cup training crash in Altenberg in the German state of Saxony that briefly left one of them fighting for his life.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Higgs Result Means Elegant Universe is Back in Vogue

AFTER a short spell on the rocks, a mathematically elegant view of the universe is back in vogue. Recent hints of the Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider help explain why we have not seen evidence for the beautiful theory of supersymmetry yet — and point to fresh ways to focus the search. Supersymmetry, or SUSY, is an extension to the standard model of how particles and forces interact. Via elegant equations, it posits that every fundamental particle — including quarks, electrons, photons and neutrinos — has a heavier, as yet unseen “superpartner” with slightly different properties (see diagram). This smooths some embarrassing wrinkles in the standard model. However, not one superpartner has yet shown up at the LHC, the particle smasher at CERN near Geneva, Switzerland, prompting fears that, despite its beauty, SUSY could be wrong.

That changed on 13 December, when LHC physicists reported that they might have found traces of the Higgs boson, the standard-model particle that is thought to give all others mass. The data suggested a mass for the Higgs close to 125 gigaelectronvolts, 133 times that of the proton and too light for a Higgs to survive without a heavier companion particle, which could be a superpartner. “This is very good news for people who believe in supersymmetry,” says Howard Baer of the University of Oklahoma in Norman.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ministers Identify Glitches in EU Diplomatic Service

BRUSSELS — Twelve member states have said bureaucracy and mis-management are hampering the effectiveness of the EU’s new diplomatic service one year after its launch. The foreign ministers of Belgium, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden put forward their ideas in an informal three-page paper dated 8 December and seen by EUobserver.

While couched in polite language, the text strikes raw nerves in Brussels on issues including turf battles between the European Commission and the European External Action Service (EEAS), EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton’s handling of ministerial meetings and her purported neglect of security affairs.

Under current arrangements, Ashton’s service is responsible for framing EU foreign policy and managing joint relations with non-EU countries via 140 foreign delegations. But the European Commission is responsible for funding foreign programmes and for handling many day-to-day EEAS matters, such as making sure Ashton’s people have working computers on their desks and get their expenses on time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mullah Krekar to Leave Norway?

Mullah Krekar, former leader of the extremist Islamic group Ansar Al-Islam and an accused terrorist living in exile in Norway, told Rudaw the media that he will soon return to Kurdistan.

Krekar, the nom de guerre of Najmaddin Faraj, has been under house arrest in Norway since 2001. While Norway has declared him a threat to national security, the country has been unwilling to deport Krekar back to Iraqi Kurdistan on human rights grounds because Iraq practices death penalty.

Krekar, one of Iraqi Kurdistan’s most notorious figures, has been charged with terrorism in Norway — where he sought refuge in 1991 — for allegedly threatening to kill a politician. His bloody past and that of the Kurdish extremist group Ansar al-Islam — which has links to Al-Qaeda — includes charges by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which has accused Krekar and his men of beheading dozens of PUK fighters in Kheli Hama village in 2002.

Rudaw contacted PUK lawyers to find out if the party has filed cases against Krekar in any of Kurdistan’s courts.

Nasih Hama Hassan, a lawyer for PUK politburo, said the PUK “has not filed any lawsuits against Krekar.”

Speaking to Rudaw via telephone from Norway, Krekar said, “My return to the Kurdistan Region has become a major political issue. Each side wants to have me back to fight their opponents for them.”

Krekar is also known for his fiery jihadi messages that he frequently releases via the Internet.

The Kurdistan Islamic Union, a moderate group led by Salahaddin Bahaddin, has often been attacked by Krekakr in his speeches and media interviews.

But Mohammed Hawdiyani, an attorney for the Islamic Union told Rudaw that his party has nothing against Krekar.

Nawzad Baban, a legal advisor and lawyer for Kurdistan Communist Labor Party, also said his party holds no grudge against the former leader of Ansar Al-Islam.

“We have always been a civilian party and have not had any problem with him,” said Baban.

The Islamic League (Komal) and its leader Ali Bapir have not been spared from Krekar’s disparaging comments. Krekar has often described as an Iranian stooge and his party agents of Iran in Iraqi Kurdistan.

The Islamic League’s lawyer said, “Unfortunately, Mullah Krekar has been attacking Islamists for a while but we do not have any lawsuits against him.”

Faraj was one of the founders of the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan until the late 1990s when IMK split and Krekar created Ansar Al-Islam with an extremist wing from the party.

Shwan Qaladizayi, a senior leader at Islamic Movement in Kurdistan, said his party’s doors are open for Krekar to return.

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Norway: Mother Drowns Baby Daughter in Bucket While Boyfriend Watches Live on Skype

A mother drowned her baby daughter in a bucket while her boyfriend watched live over the internet.

Norwegian Yasmin Chaudhry killed the one-year-old by plunging her into a bucket of water during a 3am Skype video call with her British partner.

Chaudhry, 26, said she had just wanted to discipline her baby for waking up and ‘disobeying her’.

She called an ambulance and initially told paramedics that the baby had fallen into the bucket by accident.

The girl was unconscious when the paramedics arrived and was pronounced dead the next day, in October 2010.

Chaudhry was initially arrested on suspicion of negligence because of inconsistencies in the stories she gave to police and the paramedics, but is now facing a preliminary charge of murder.

‘This has been a long investigation and she eventually admitted it to us in October 2011,’ Norwegian police prosecutor Kristin Rusdal told MailOnline.

‘She said it was done to discipline the child. She had been holding her under water.

‘She had discussed the discipline with this friend, with whom she had a relationship. They met online and had met in person only once.

Chaudhry claimed that her boyfriend — who is not the child’s father — told her to do it.

Both she and the Briton deny wanting to kill the baby.

The British man has not yet been named because his name does not appear in any of the court documents published in Norway.

Ms Rusdal confirmed a preliminary murder charge had been filed against the British man and said police were discussing extradition.

Officers from Oslo flew to Britain just before Christmas to question the boyfriend with the help of Scotland Yard.

‘We could issue a formal request to the British authorities to see if they wan to investigate the case, but because it is so closely tied to our investigation we would like to see them together,’ said Ms Rusdal.

Chaudhry’s five-year-old son was taken into care following the horrific episode in October 2010.

Yesterday she was remanded until February 4.

The baby’s father now lives in Pakistan after splitting with the mother.

His lawyer said: ‘He is, of course, very shocked.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Norway ‘Received Phone Threat Before Attacks’

The Norwegian government received a phone threat just months before the July 22nd twin attacks that killed 77 people, but police were not alerted to the call, public radio station NRK reported on Friday. A man with the same refined tones as the gunman Anders Behring Breivik spoke calmly about shooting members of the youth wing of the Labour Party, said the radio station. He also mentioned a manifesto during the phone call to the government in March 2011.

Due to the disturbing contents of the call, the receptionist detailed it on a written note, but this was never transmitted to police, the Norwegian government services centre said. “The call was never considered as a real threat but more like a vague and incoherent conversation,” Margot Vaagdal, head of the centre’s communications, told AFP.

It was only after Behring Breivik’s attacks that the police were alerted as the centre “found that a part of what was said was perhaps relevant for the case,” said Vaagdal, although she would not confirm details of the call.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Did Breivik Give Advance Notice of His Crime?

A man rang government headquarters last year threatening to shoot Labour Youth Movement (AUF) members just months before Anders Behring Breivik’s twin attacks.

Reports surfacing today suggest the menacing call, made by a man with a polished eastern Norway (Østlandet) dialect, also contained abusive and derogatory remarks directed against Jens Stoltenberg, his government, ex Social Democrat (SV) Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, and references to a manifesto.

The incident lasted several minutes, but officials have no record of whom the person was. Written details of the person’s name, telephone number, and date of the call have since disappeared following the bomb explosion.

Moreover, which official the call was transferred to is also unknown. According to NRK the female operator, who warned her superior, does not wish to comment about the matter and is unsure of exactly when the conversation took place. Although she has been interviewed, police have not yet asked for the audio logs.

“It was not considered to be a concrete threat because the caller was so vague and incoherent,” says Eva Måge Brown, Government Administration Services (G.A.S.) head of section, “we still do not consider it to be one [even after 22nd July].”

She confirms this forms the basis of why police were not informed at the time but afterwards. Neither Mrs Måge Brown nor police wish elaborate further.

“Threats must be reported to police and the Police Security Service (PST), irrespective of how serious they are [generally-speaking]. Any threat is investigated […] It’s up to the PST and police to decide whether it is a threat, not the G.A.S.’ job,” PST information advisor Siv Alsén declares.

It is not clear whether the caller actually was Anders Behring Breivik, but the terrorist’s defence counsels have asked police to look into the matter.

“We are aware the conversation is included in the case documents, and are waiting for police to conclude their investigations. I think it’s strange [they have not requested the audio logs]. Besides knowing the caller’s identity, it’s important to establish whether this was an advance warning,” says Vibeke Hein Bæra, verifying only that this has been discussed this with their client.

Meanwhile, Christian Democrat (KrF) leader Knut Arild Hareide, head of Parliament’s 22 July Committee, says using hindsight is easy, but admits, “we have been naïve in certain areas and have to use what now know to ensure better preparedness from now on. The main focus was fighting Islamist terror pre-22 July, and we are now thinking more of Right-Extremism.”

           — Hat tip: The Observer [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy Hails Joan of Arc to Boost Election Campaign

The French patron saint, Joan of Arc, has become an unlikely focus of the presidential election campaign, on the 600th anniversary of her birth. President Sarkozy is seeking to claim her legacy for his own party.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Ek the ‘Most Important Man in Music’: Forbes

Swedish music streaming service Spotify’s ground breaking inventor Daniel Ek has been hailed the most important person in the world of music by American journal Forbes. “The music industry has been waiting more than a decade for Ek,” writes Forbes.

The journal praised Ek for his work and says it believes he has invented a “sustainable revenue model” that will fight piracy because it is much more enticing to consumers. “In the current landscape, where Google provides the search, Facebook the identity and Amazon the retail, Ek wants to supply the soundtrack,” wrote the journal.

The tribute from Forbes comes after an autumn of several backlashes for the company when hundreds of record companies removed their artists from Spotify’s catalogue, while the company was being criticized for “cannibalism”, gobbling up the profits of other digital re-sellers, according to Sveriges Television (SVT).

Spotify defended itself saying that as the company continued to grow, the revenues for the artists and companies would also keep growing. However, after six years of negotiations, Spotify is finally reached agreements with a large number of record companies and Forbes predicts a bright future ahead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Kopimism: The World’s Newest Religion Explained

Isak Gerson is spiritual leader of the world’s newest religion, Kopimism, devoted to file-sharing. On 5 January the Church of Kopimism was formally recognised as a religion by the Swedish government.

Was it hard to become an official religion?

We have had this faith for several years and one day we thought, why not try and get it registered? It was quite difficult. The authorities were quite dogmatic with their formalities. It took us three tries and more than a year to get recognised.

What criteria do you have to meet to become an official religion?

The law states that to be a religion you have to be an organisation that practises moments of prayer or meditation in your rituals.

What are the Kopimist prayers and meditations?

We have a part of our religious practices where we worship the value of information by copying it.

You call this “kopyacting”. Do you actually meet up in a building, like a church, to undertake these rituals?

We do meet up, but it doesn’t have to be a physical room. It could be a server or a web page too.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden Recognizes Information-Sharing as Religion

Three attempts in the past year have paid off for a newly recognized religion in Sweden that views information as holy and copying as a sacrament. Its leaders have previous ties to the Pirate Party Sweden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Tense Year Looms in EU Relations

While there was little movement in 2011 owing to the Swiss elections, 2012 looks like being a crucial year for relations between Switzerland and the European Union. Bern and Brussels will have to find a solution to what is known as the institutional issue.

Among the objectives for 2012 presented in early December by the Swiss government, “clarification of institutional relations between Switzerland and the European Union” is one of the ten biggest priorities.

Beginning in 1972 with the initial agreement on free trade, the patchwork of ad-hoc arrangements between Bern and Brussels has grown steadily; today there are about 120. They range from rather technical matters, such as cooperation on statistics, to issues that are much more tangible for the ordinary mortal, such as the agreement on the free movement of people — the Schengen accord.

Apart from these arrangements, Switzerland and the European Union have been negotiating on around ten other issues which are far from secondary. In particular, tax policy is a topic which the EU will likely want to get back to in 2012 in view of the dramatic financial situation the member states are currently facing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘The Iron Lady’ Should Have Been Delayed: British PM

Prime Minister David Cameron said as “The Iron Lady” opened in Britain Friday that the film showing former premier Margaret Thatcher’s dementia should have been delayed until after her death. The biopic shows Thatcher as a frail, sometimes confused old lady — she is now 86 and is rarely seen in public — looking back at her career with the ghost of her late husband Denis looking on.

Cameron, in his first comment on the film, said he had been impressed by Meryl Streep’s portrayal of Britain’s first woman prime minister, who like him was a leader of the centre-right Conservative party. But Cameron questioned whether it was right to make the film while Thatcher was still alive.

“It’s a fantastic piece of acting by Meryl Streep but I just can’t help wondering why do we have to have this film right now?” he told BBC radio. “It is a film much more about ageing and elements of dementia rather than about an amazing prime minister, and my sort of sense was a great piece of acting, a really staggering piece of acting, but a film I wish they could have made another day.”

Streep, who is tipped for an Oscar for her performance, has said she relished the “opportunity to play someone at the waning of her life… and that interested me too because there aren’t very many films that pay attention to older ladies.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: ‘The Shard’: The Building That Will Change London Forever

British developer Irvine Sellar and Italian architect Renzo Piano are building the tallest building in Western Europe, known as “the Shard.” But ambition and arrogance have blinded the pair to the building’s disregard for London’s history and character.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Acting as Cover for Extremism is the Real Problem

by Martin Bright

As news stories go, it’s about as straightforward as they come. A group of community activists keen to recruit in the Jewish community turns out to have a trustee who has made a public statement celebrating antisemitic terrorists who murder Jews. What’s more, one of the founder institutions of the organisations is a mosque which regularly hosts antisemitic hate preachers from the Middle East and South Asia. And yet, for exposing the links between London Citizens, the “community organisers” best known for their campaign on the living wage, and the Islamic extreme right, the Jewish Chronicle is accused of carrying out a “Jihad against the Jews”. The title of a hastily arranged meeting at this year’s Limmud would have been deeply offensive if it hadn’t been so infantile.

I realise that my description of Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg as a “useful idiot” in these pages has caused anger and upset among his congregation at New North London synagogue and his supporters in the wider community. My words were carefully chosen and I stand by them. The Rabbi himself defends his decision to share a platform with Mohammed Abdul Bari of East London Mosque at the end of a London Citizens parade last month. This is a mosque which recently advertised a discussion with Sheihk Saad al-Beraik, a Saudi cleric who has called for the enslavement of Jewish women by the Palestinians. He also told the Jewish Chronicle last week that he has not challenged London Citizens about its deputy chair of trustees, Junaid Ahmed, who spoke during Operation Cast Lead in praise of Hamas leaders. This seems like a strange abdication of responsibility. Rabbi Wittenberg would surely never take the same approach with a senior member of the British National Party. Apparently he doesn’t “seek to confront people with a record of difficult views”, but would confront abhorrent views if he encountered them directly. The message to those who want Rabbi Wittenberg to act as cover for extremism is simply not to tell him to his face that they hate Jews.

I do not accept Keith Kahn-Harris’s false dichotomy between the “politics of engagement” and the “politics of exclusion”. Engagement for the sake of engagement is pointless and intellectually lazy. In order to engage, it is essential to know with whom you are engaging. Rabbi Wittenberg and those within the Jewish community who feel it is a good idea to make common cause with London Citizens and East London Mosque have stubbornly refused to do the most basic due diligence. The mosque has always been heavily influenced by the Jamaat-i-Islami, the South Asian offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood. In the “politics of exclusion” this party has few rivals, promoting hatred against Hindus, women and other Muslims who do not follow its austere vision of Islam. At present, several prominent members of the party face trial for war crimes associated with the Bangladeshi war of independence in 1971 (Jamaat backed Pakistan in the struggle). One of these men, Delwar Hossein Sayeedi, found himself at the centre of a storm in 2006 when he was invited to speak at East London Mosque. When members of the Bangladeshi community argued that Sayeedi should never have been issued with a visa, Mohammed Adul Bari leapt to his defence.

Have Rabbi Wittenberg and his supporters ever raised concerns about war crimes in Bangladesh or East London Mosque’s relationship with Jamaat-i-Islami’s politics of hate? I somehow doubt it. I am told I would take a different approach if I had better contacts within New North London Synagogue. Mr Kahn-Harris might want to ask himself who it was that raised questions about London Citizens if not concerned members of that congregation. I would be happy to develop the relationship further, but have not been invited by anyone within the Masorti movement to share the intelligence I and others have about their unsavoury partners. To those who argue that engagement with the Islamic extreme right helps bridge divisions between our communities, I ask the following question: where is the evidence that Rabbi Wittenberg’s involvement with London Citizens has stopped a single antisemitic hate preacher coming to East London Mosque?

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: British Muslims Named in the 2012 New Year Honours List

The Muslim Council of Britain congratulates all those named in the 2012 New Year Honours List. They are recognised for their outstanding achievement and service across the whole of the United Kingdom. The MCB also congratulates the following British Muslims honoured today, underlying once again the many positive contributions Muslims make to British society.

If we have missed a name, please do email us at media@mcb.org.uk

To see the full list, go to: www.direct.gov.uk/en/Nl1/Newsroom/DG_200708?cid=rss

Commanders of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

Dr Tahir Ahmed MAHMOOD. For services to Women’s Health.

Officers of the Order of the British Empire (OBE)

Zahoor AHMED. Chairman, Gifts International. For services to International Trade.

Durdana, Mrs ANSARI. For services to Muslim Women in the UK.

Professor Mohamed EL-GOMATI. Professor of Electronics, University of York. For services to Science.

Mohammad HABEEBULLAH JP. For services to the community in Greater Manchester.

Amin Mohamed MAWJI. For public and voluntary service.

Members of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)

Dr Syed Nayyer Abbas ABIDI. For services to the Black and Minority Ethnic community.

Mohammed AKRAM JP. For services to the British Pakistani community in Scotland.

Councillor Mohammad BHATTI. For services to Local Government and to the community.

Sayeeda, Mrs CHOWDHURY. Outreach Worker, Longsight Sure Start Children’s Centre, Manchester. For services to Children and Families.

Hifsa Haroon, Mrs IQBAL DL. For services to Community Cohesion in Staffordshire.

Al’adin MAHERALI. For services to Voluntary Sector and to the Business.

Mohammed Saeed MOUGHAL. For services to the community in Birmingham.

Anwer Ibrahim Issa Ismail PATEL. Managing Director, Cohens Chemist Group. For services to community pharmacy.

Mohammed Foiz UDDIN. For services to Community Cohesion.

Akram ZAMAN. JP Chairman, Protocol. For services to the community in Northamptonshire.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Diane Abbott: Taxi Drivers Refuse to Pick Up Black Passengers

Diane Abbott is facing fresh calls to resign after enraging London’s taxi drivers with a claim that they routinely refuse to pick up passengers who are black.

Miss Abbott came close to losing her job as a shadow health minister yesterday and was forced to apologise over her comment on Twitter that “white people love playing ‘divide and rule’“. It seemed that her apology had deflected the worst of the criticism, which included the deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, condemning her as “stupid and crass” and her own party authorities issuing a public rebuke.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Iron Lady’s Home Town Loath to See Her Cast in Bronze

Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher remains a divisive figure in the UK, 20 years after she left office. Even in her home town the locals are still arguing about whether to honor her, possibly with a statue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Margaret Thatcher: An Embedding Zionist

by Martin Bright

Margaret Thatcher may not have had the visceral or spiritual connection to Israel felt by Tony Blair or Gordon Brown but her premiership marked a sea-change within the Conservative Party, which has defined its policy ever since. Mrs Thatcher’s anti-Communism and uncompromising position on terrorism made her naturally lean towards Israel in the Middle East.

As the academic and former Israeli government adviser Jonathan Spyer has pointed out, UK policy in the Middle East can generally be divided between the “diplomatic approach”, which allies itself with existing regimes or those it judges likely to seize power, and the “strategic” approach, which divides regimes into those judged moderate and those thought to be a threat.

The first approach has traditionally been promoted by the Foreign Office and is generally hostile to Israel, whereas the “strategic approach” has often been preferred by Downing Street and sees Israel as a natural ally (although Attlee and Heath were exceptions to this rule). This did not mean that the Thatcher-era marked a golden era of UK-Israel relations. As the JC revealed in 2010, secret papers released by the National Archives showed that she thought Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin was the “most difficult” man she had to deal with, a man whose policy on West Bank settlements was “absurd”. In June 1981, she unleashed the full force of her fury at Israel after the bombing of Iraq’s Osirak nuclear reactor. In 1983, she made plain her opposition to former Irgun fighter Eliahu Lankin becoming Israel’s ambassador to the UK, as she viewed him as a terrorist. He later withdrew.

Despite a sometimes testy relationship with Israel itself, Mrs Thatcher embedded pro-Zionism within her party — and the essentially sympathetic approach of the Cameron-Osborne leadership of the Conservatives remains part of her political legacy.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Nazi Defender Will Visit SOAS

A lawyer who has defended Nazi war criminals, Holocaust deniers and Palestinian terrorists, will speak at London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies, shortly after Holocaust Memorial Day. Finchley and Golders Green MP Mike Freer, vice-chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group Against Antisemitism, hopes to raise the visit of French-Vietnamese lawyer Jacques Verge’s with Home Secretary Theresa May. Anti-fascist campaigners from Searchlight are urging the Home Office to ban him. Mr Verge’s, 86, counts Nazi Klaus Barbie, Holocaust denier Roger Gaudy and pro-Palestinian terrorist Carlos the Jackal as former clients. In 2008 he said he would happily have defended Adolf Hitler.

Mr Verge’s is due to speak at SOAS on February 3.

Klaus Barbie’s defence was financed by Francois Genoud, a Swiss Nazi who was the executor of Joseph Goebbels’s will. Genoud also paid for the defence of Carlos the Jackal.

Searchlight’s Gerry Gable said the magazine had been investigating Mr Verge’s since October. “His role goes well beyond the legal representation needed to ensure his criminal clients get a fair trial. “It is possible for the Home Office to ban EU citizens if their presence is not conducive to the public good. We think that applies to Jacques Verge’s.” At the planned SOAS debate, Mr Verge’s will speak alongside Finnish international lawyer Martti Koskenniemi, in a panel discussion chaired by French-Algerian journalist Nabila Ramdani.

PhD student Robert Murtfeld, who is organising the event, said: “Jacques Verge’s has been invited as a main speaker with Professor Koskenniemi, a Finnish diplomat for more than 20 years. In his 2002 paper on ‘Between Impunity and Show Trials’, Professor Koskenniemi analyses critically Vergès’ involvement in the Barbie case.” Denis MacShane MP, chair of the European Institute for Study of Antisemitism, said: “Jacques Verges is an ageing sensationalist who has links with some of the most repellent ideas and individuals on the far right, who have sought and seek to justify, excuse or avoid retribution for evil acts. It is sad that SOAS should be lending its name to this stunt merchant, who no longer gets the publicity he craves in France but has found some useless idiots at London University — again! — to promote his noxious narratives”.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Passengers to Face Heathrow Delays as Olympic Athletes Are Given Priority Treatment

They are supposed to be a national celebration of sporting excellence and gold-medal-winning endeavour. But it seems that — whatever the action on the track or in the field — the Olympic Games will cause delays and frustrations for travellers in the UK.

Policy documents for the UK Border Agency, seen by the Daily Mail, warn that the influx of visitors into the country ahead of and during the tournament in July and August, will cause long queues at Heathrow Airport — and may lead to non-Olympic passengers being held up as arrivals connected to the Games are given priority treatment. The collection of biometric data on incoming passengers, including fingerprints, may be a particular cause of delays, the documents warn.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Pollard and Bright’s Islamist Fear Betrays Our Community Values

It is part of the job of the Jewish Chronicle to raise difficult questions. One such troubling question is how far London Citizens, a broad-based coalition of religious and community groups within which some supporters of Islamist extremism are involved, is unwittingly providing a way for fundamentalist groups to gain respectability. At one level then, Martin Bright’s denunciation in these pages of New North London Synagogue (and in particular its Rabbi, Jonathan Wittenberg) for cooperating with London Citizens, appears to be nothing more than Anglo-Jewry’s principle newspaper doing its duty. However, while in theory Martin Bright and the JC have done nothing more than their job, in practice the controversy over London Citizens has exposed a disturbing trend in the paper’s relationship to the British Jewish community. The London Citizen’s controversy is revealing of the chasm between two kinds of politics. New North London Synagogue and other Jews involved in London Citizens are exponents of a ‘politics of engagement’ that prizes dialogue, cooperation and community above all. The JC under Stephen Pollard and Martin Bright is an exponent of a ‘politics of exclusion’ that prioritises principle and ideology and seeks to marginalise anyone that crosses certain ‘red lines’. Both politics have their place and both have their weaknesses. To some extent Martin Bright has highlighted a certain naivety in those in the Jewish community who advocate a politics of engagement. But I would argue that this whole controversy has ultimately been much more revealing of the blindness that an excessive commitment to a politics of exclusion can produce.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: The Wind Turbines That Can’t Cope… With the Wind! Three More Are Blown to Pieces in Gales That Swept Across Britain

The impact of the devastating weather which has swept the country is shown by the state of these wind turbines — which couldn’t withstand the strength of the gales.

The huge blades — 15ft long — flew off three turbines including one on the aptly-named Windmill Lane in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire.

The firm which made the turbines in the Hepworth and Upper Cumberworth areas of the town has promised a full investigation.

Concerned villagers in Hepworth, where the blade from one turbine was flung across a road, warned: ‘Someone could have been killed’.

Frances Barnes, who has 10 acres of grazing land for horses close to the Hepworth turbine, said: ‘It is worrying.

‘People objected to the plans when they first went in — not because it is a windmill but because it is so close to a busy road.

‘It is frightening to think what may have happened had one of the blades flown into the road and hit a car, or indeed if the wind turbine had come down.’

Ryan Gill, of manufacturers Evoco, blamed the exceptionally strong winds for the damage.

A spokesman for the firm — which has 100 turbines nationwide — said wind levels reached 112mph across the Pennines this week and three turbines had been damaged.

He said the company was not alone in experiencing damage to wind turbines and said it had been an exceptionally challenging few weeks for the wind industry following gale force winds last month too.

He said the company built six 50ft turbines in the Hepworth and Upper Cumberworth areas which cost £50,000 each. Each blade is 15ft long, he said.

The turbines are used by local farmers who use them to generate electricity privately and then sell back any excess to the National Grid.

The Evoco website claims the 10kw turbine has been ‘specifically designed to reliably deliver high generation performance in harsh wind conditions’.

The Health and Safety Executive said it had not been contacted about the incident.

Last month, a 300ft wind turbine exploded in flames when it was buffeted by high winds in Ardrossan, Ayrshire, Scotland.

Witnesses said the blades of the £2million turbine were locked at the time, because the National Grid would have been unable to cope with a sudden power surge.

Photographer Stuart McMahon, who took the incredible image, said: ‘The centre of the turbine caught fire first and the flames spread to the covering of the blades.

‘There was burning debris being swept off in the wind and across the fields. These are huge structures and to see one on fire was a spectacular sight.’

Meanwhile, another turbine was knocked over near Coldingham in the Borders which caused several homes to be evacuated and roads to be closed.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Three Men Sentenced Over Arson Attack on Sussex Mosque

Three men have been sentenced for an arson attack on a newly-renovated mosque in West Sussex.

James Everley, 20, of Crawley, James Smith, 20, of Burgess Hill, and Joshua Morris, 20, of Haywards Heath, were all sentenced to three years at a young offenders institute.

The fire at the mosque in Wivelsfield Road, Haywards Heath, was started at about 02:10 GMT on 13 February. Police believe the attack was a religiously-aggravated hate crime.

The men had pleaded guilty at Hove Crown Court to arson, theft of paraffin and a public order offence, which involved racially or religiously aggravated fear of violence.

Ch Insp Jon Hull, district commander for Mid Sussex, said: “The mosque was occupied at the time this fire was started and it could have had devastating consequences if it hadn’t been put out quickly. “Thankfully only damage was caused to the building. Everyone who lives, works or visits Sussex has a right to go about their lives without becoming the victim of a hate crime because of their disability, race, religious beliefs, sexual orientation or gender identity.” The mosque had been renovated and had reopened three months before the attack.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Upset French Fans Sue Michael Jackson Doctor

French fans of Michael Jackson are suing the late pop star’s doctor for “emotional damage” they suffered over his death, their lawyer said Friday. The case against Conrad Murray, who was jailed in November over the star’s 2009 death, is due to be heard in the city of Orleans on April 11, lawyer Emmanuel Ludot said.

“It’s similar to losing a childhood friend in a traffic accident. Because this death affects you, you have the possibility to file a suit and seek compensation,” Ludot said. The lawyer is acting for around 100 fans who are members of an association that calls itself the “Michael Jackson Community”. He said that while each fan could be awarded damages of up to 10,000 euros (13,000 dollars), they were seeking only a symbolic euro.

Jackson, aged 50 at the time of his death, had hired Murray at a salary of $150,000 a month to look after him as he rehearsed and embarked on a series of “This is It” planned comeback shows in London.

The star died on June 25, 2009 at his Los Angeles home of an overdose of anaesthetic propofol, taken to help him battle insomnia. Murray was found guilty in November of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to the maximum four years in prison.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Bosnia: Qaradawi’s Sharia Gradualism is a Threat to Liberal Democracy

by A Millar

During the Balkans war of the 1990s, Alija Izetbegovic, then Bosnia’s President, was championed by the Western media. For Western reporters, educated in the humanities, Bosnian Muslims were Europe’s new Jews besieged by Serbian nationalists — Europe’s alleged new Nazis. That Izetbegovic had been a longtime member of the Young Muslims, a secretive and once-Nazi affiliated movement, was conveniently overlooked. Izetbegovic, for the Western press, was more than a victim, and more than a “moderate Muslim.” He was, in the view of reporters embedded in Bosnian hotels, a defender of the multiculturalism that was under attack from the Serbs (Orthodox Christians). It seems curious today, but probably the only people in the West — certainly in Britain, at least — to challenge this rosy picture were the communists. Early on during the war, one communist organization held an exhibition of photographs of Serbian victims of Bosnian atrocities. It was, of course, ignored by the media.

Significant atrocities were, of course, conducted by Serb forces. Nevertheless, the media, we are led to believe, is composed of “experts.” But, if reporters — allegedly after the truth — ignored photographic evidence of the frequently conducted Bosnian atrocities, and if one or two reporters may even have doctored evidence against the Serbs, universally ignored was Izetbegovic’s own long term plan to tear down the old (semi-communist) system and establish an Islamic state in its place. Even today, occasionally, a carefully extracted sentence or two from Izetbegovic’s Islamic Declaration (originally published circa 1970, and republished in 1990) is reproduced as evidence of his love of multiculturalism. (Readers can judge for themselves whether this is an accurate portrayal, since an edition of the Declaration can be downloaded here).

It is true that Izetbegovic states at one point in the Declaration that non-Muslim minorities would have rights and freedoms in his envisioned Islamic state, although he is clear that this would depend on how assimilated to Islam the non-Muslims became. The more Islamic they became the more rights and freedoms (to be like Muslims) they would have.

Religious minorities were not the only ones that Izetbegovic had in his sights. Notably, the alleged multiculturalist inveighs against feminism — and sees the role of women as that of mothers only — and liberal democracy in his Declaration. He also presents Islam as an essentially political project: “History knows no genuine Islamic movement that was not a political movement at the same time,” he says. For Izetbegovic, one cannot be a Muslim and “act, work, have fun, rule in a non-Islamic way.” For Izetbegovic, a religious revival would pave the way for the Islamic state, crucially, by educating (or indoctrinating) the masses over a long period. This period of indoctrination would ensure the success of the revolution to come.

Izetbegovic is not the only Islamic scholar who has grasped the importance of paving the way for an Islamic or Islamist revolution over a long period, as The Global Muslim Brotherhood Daily Report has noted. TGMBDR notes that the spiritual leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Youssef Qaradawi, has recently stated that “Gradualism in applying the Shari’ah is a wise requirement to follow.” Qaradawi goes on to say: “Being a divine law, gradualism is to be followed on the political level nowadays. That is to say, gradualism is to be observed when it comes to applying the rulings of the Shari’ah in today’s life when Muslims have been socially, legislatively, and culturally invaded. If we want to establish a real Muslim society, we should not imagine that such an end can be achieved by a mere decision issued to that effect by a king or a president or a council of leaders or a parliament.

Gradualism is the means through which such an end can be fulfilled. Gradualism here refers to preparing people ideologically, psychologically, morally, and socially to accept and adopt the application of the Shari’ah in all aspects of life [my emphasis], and to finding lawful alternatives for the forbidden principles upon which many associations have been founded for so long.”

As Qaradawi and Izetbegovic know, sharia is a complete system that creates a particular way of acting and thinking in all situations, public and private. It is, as both would acknowledge, political, although it would mean total submission to the dictates of the religion of Islam. Qaradawi, like Izetbegovic before him, recommends the gradual introduction of the “divine law” of sharia at the “political level.” Even if, traditionally, sharia is not to be applied in non-Islamic countries, it is clear that that is the intention here. Moreover, the establishment of sharia as the law of the land in the UK and elsewhere in the West is desired by a substantial proportion of Muslims — most polls put it around 40 percent. There are an increasing number of sharia tribunals active in the UK. And, although certainly extremists, Muslim or Islamist gangs have recently embarked on campaigns to enforce “shariah controlled zones” in British cities.

Sharia, as state law, demands the stoning of adulterers, and execution for homosexuality and apostasy, as well as other barbaric punishments, such as the cutting off of the hand for thieves. As longtime gay rights activist Peter Tatchell has noted of Qaradawi, “he favours female genital mutilation, wife-beating, the execution of homosexuals in Islamic states, the destruction of the Jewish people, the use of suicide bombs against innocent civilians and the blaming of rape victims who do not dress with sufficient modest.” All of this, we should have no doubt, is absolutely in line with Qardawi’s understanding of sharia. For Izetbegovic, Islamists had to be “preachers first and then soldiers.” Qaradawi might not be advocating violence against Western states, but the Balkans offers a lesson in the consequences of such “gradualism.” Liberal democracy should be defended. If the UK’s Conservative-Liberal Democrats Government, and others in Europe, are serious about defending the rights of minorities, they will make it clear that sharia has no place in their society, and will take steps to prohibit it.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


German Foreign Minister to Tour North Africa

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle will on Saturday embark on a North African tour, one year after the Arab Spring to promote democratic reform efforts, a spokesman said. The trip will begin in Algeria, where Westerwelle will call for a more ambitious timetable for reforms as well as more scope for German non-governmental organisations to work, in talks with Prime Minister Ahmed Ouyahia, the spokesman told reporters Friday.

On Sunday in Libya, Westerwelle will meet leaders of the interim government for discussions focused on German assistance for those wounded in the war to topple Moamer Kadhafi and in securing weapons stashes. Germany, and Westerwelle in particular, faced sharp criticism last year for abstaining in a UN Security Council vote to authorise its NATO partners to extend a no-fly zone over Libya to prevent the slaughter of civilians by Kadhafi’s forces — the only European Union or NATO ally to do so.

But it has since pledged its support for the country’s reconstruction in the post-Kadhafi era. In Tunisia, the birthplace of the uprisings against authoritarian regimes that swept the region, Westerwelle will Monday discuss “concrete measures to promote democracy and economic development” with President Moncef Marzouki including improving job prospects for young Tunisians.

The EU has voiced concern about a rising tide of “economic refugees” in the wake of the Arab Spring.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Arab Cyber-Attack on ‘Zionist’ Credit Cards

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JANUARY 3 — “We have decided to give the world a present in time for the New Year: information about 400,000 Israelis and their credit cards … If you have to buy anything, don’t hesitate to make use of them… Have fun shopping, for us it is enough reward to have created havoc among Israeli credit card companies”. So ran the message sent out last night by a mysterious ‘OxOmar’ — the name of ‘Hackers Anonymous of Saudi Arabia’ who followed it by uploading a heap of data worthy of Julian Assange. This, the message added, is only the first instalment: the objective of this cyber-guerrilla-warfare is to publish online the private details of at least one million Israelis. The information is to be gathered in part — the message explains — by sifting through “Jewish and Zionist” databases. Included in the data are private addresses, identity-card numbers, email addresses and passwords. Some months ago, another group of anarchist and internationalist-inspired hackers unleashed a joint attack against the website of the military spokesperson, of Mossad (espionage) and of Shin Bet (internal security), managing to keep them offline for hours. The bragging by ‘OxOmar’ has therefore caused serious concern in Israel. According to Internal Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovic, “The situation has become unsustainable”.

Throughout the night, those in charge of bank computing systems were busy assessing the size of the scam and blocking endangered credit cards. After many hours it was possible to ascertain that genuine data affected not 400,000 but 15,000 cards. Call centres were being inundated while just about every Israeli citizen was busy checking whether their own card has been included in the public release. Banks promised their customers that any withdrawals would be cancelled and there has only been news of a few dozens affected cards so far. But the incident contributes to lighting up alarm signals at Shin Bet. One of its special units — the Re’em — has been charged with checking out how defences against cyber-attacks on banks and on mobile telecoms companies can be improved.

As for the Interior Ministry’s project to create a ‘biometric database’ for every Israeli citizen, some leading figures are calling for it to be reviewed. “As long as our enemies continue to target our money, there are remedies… but if they start controlling the fingerprints of our citizens, we would be faced with a real national crisis”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Arab MKs Denounce Police ‘Brutality’

MKs Ahmed Tibi and Ibrahim Sarsour condemn the police for raiding a noisy mosque in Jaffa, threaten consequences.

Arab parties Raam and Taal on Thursday issued a statement condemning what they called “the barbaric behavior of the police and the Ministry of Environment” in confiscating the speakers of a noisy mosque in Yafo (Jaffa). The parties said police broke into the mosque on Tuesday and forcefully removed the speakers from the mosque, which is located in a complex belonging to the Abu Sayaf family. MK Ahmed Tibi (Taal) has submitted an urgent query to Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch in which he condemned what he termed the “inhuman” measures taken against the mosque. Tibi also claimed the raid was carried out following complaints about the mosque by factors related to the Yisrael Beiteinu party. He said the complaints were inappropriate since they were filed soon after Yisrael Beiteinu’s MK Anastassia Michaeli submitted her bill that would require mosques to temper the sound of the muezzin.

MK Ibrahim Sarsour (Raam), who also heads the Islamic Movement in Israel, went even further than Tibi, saying the police’s action is “an unjustified escalation, especially in light of the significant deterioration in the relationship between the State and its Arab population, and the brutal assault of Jewish organizations, that receive support from the government and the public, against the holy places of Islam and Christianity.” Sarsour added that the Arab masses reserve the right to respond to these attacks and said that the government alone will be responsible for the devastating consequences of its “brutal” policies. Tibi and Sarsour are both notorious for the anti-Israel statements they constantly make. Tibi recently launched a verbal assault on the head of the Manhigut Yehudit faction in the Likud, Moshe Feiglin.

As both were being interviewed on Channel 2 News, Tibi called Feiglin “an anti-Semitic Jew who supports the burning of mosques” and labeled him “moral garbage.” Tibi’s tirade came after Feiglin suggested that there is no evidence to suggest that the recent arsons in mosques were carried out by Jewish nationalists. Sarsour recently called to establish an Islamic Caliphate centered in Jerusalem and praised Hizbullah for defeating Israel. He has also urged Arab and Muslim leaders to wage war on Israel, citing Christian Zionists as one of the elements conspiring to ‘Judaize’ Jerusalem.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Caroline Glick: The Land-for-Peace Hoax

The rise of the forces of jihadist Islam in Egypt places the US and other Western powers in an uncomfortable position. The US is the guarantor of Egypt’s peace treaty with Israel. That treaty is based on the proposition of land for peace. Israel gave Egypt the Sinai in 1982 and in exchange it received a peace treaty with Egypt. Now that the Islamists are poised to take power, the treaty is effectively null and void.

The question naturally arises: Will the US act in accordance with its role as guarantor of the peace and demand that the new Egyptian government give Sinai back to Israel? Because if the Obama administration or whatever administration is in power when Egypt abrogates the treaty does not issue such a demand, and stand behind it, and if the EU does not support the demand, the entire concept of land-for-peace will be exposed as a hoax…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Death Penalty in Saudi Arabia Almost Triples, UN Alarm

(ANSAmed) — GENEVA, JANUARY 6 — The UN High Commissioner on Human Rights has today expressed alarm over the “significant” increase in the use of the death penalty in Saudi Arabia. The number of executions almost tripled last year compared with 2010, said UN High Commissioner on Human Rights spokesman Rupert Colville in citing a number of reports.

According to data from organisations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, the number of executions went from 27 in 2010 to over 70 in 2011, noted Colville. The spokesman said that Saudi Arabia applied the death penalty for a wide range of crimes, and last month a woman was executed on charges of witchcraft. The UN has also criticised the severe deficiencies of judicial proceedings. Serious concern was also voiced over the recent sentencing of six men accused of robbery to a ‘cross amputation’ (right hand and left foot).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia Lifts Ban on Turkish Poultry Imports

(ANSAmed) — RIYADH, JANUARY 5 — After almost seven years, Saudi Arabia has lifted a ban on Turkish poultry imports that was put in place after a bird flu epidemic in 2005, daily Today’s zaman reports. The government began to allow Turkish products to enter Saudi Arabia after a delegation of Saudi inspectors returned with a positive report on Turkey’s poultry industry. The decision also came on the heels of a visit by Turkish Economy Minister Zafer Caglayan to Saudi Arabia in late December together with some 100 Turkish businessmen. Saudi Arabia imports some 1 billion USD of frozen chicken per year. Turkey’s trade volume with Saudi Arabia was 5.5 billion USD in 2008 before contracting 37% in 2009 due to a global financial crisis. It increased 30% in 2010, reaching 4.5 billion USD.

According to most recent foreign trade data available, this volume had already reached 5.1 billion USD in the first 10 months of last year. In his visit, Caglayan said he expects trade between the two countries to reach 6 billion USD in 2012 and put 20 billion USD as the target volume without specifying a time limit, stressing that he wants to see a bigger share of Turkish products in Saudi Arabia’s imports, which total some 125 billion USD.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Saudis Will Let Israel Bomb Iran Nuclear Site

INTELLIGENCE chief Sir John Scarlett has been told that Saudi Arabia is ready to allow Israel to bomb Iran’s new nuclear site.

The head of MI6 discussed the issue in London with Mossad chief Meir Dagan and Saudi officials after British intelligence officers helped to uncover the plant, in the side of a mountain near the ancient city of Qom.

The site is seen as a major threat by Tel Aviv and Riyadh. Details of the talks emerged after John Bolton, America’s former UN ambassador, told a meeting of intelligence analysts that “Riyadh certainly approves” of Israel’s use of Saudi airspace.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Suicide Blast Hits Damascus During Arab League Visit

A suicide bomber has struck a residential area of the Syrian capital, state television said at least 25 people were killed and 46 wounded. The attack precedes a fresh report on government repression of protesters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Attack in Central Damascus; State TV, Dozen of Casualties

25 peple killed, 47 injured

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT — A major explosion has rocked the centre of Damascus today. Syrian state television says that at least 25 people have been killed and 47 injured in the blast. The BBC reports that the bomb exploded on a bus in the city. Activists from the local anti-regime Coordination Committees also say that they heard explosions coming from the areas of Midan, Kfar Suse and Mantiqat al Wadi. In the meantime, Syria’s state television has said that it will broadcast “footage of Midan after the terrorist attack” in a few minutes. Two weeks ago, also on a Friday, two explosions hit the offices of the security services in the Syrian capital, attacks that the authorities immediately attributed to Al Qaeda.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Bursa Aims to Attract Half Million Arab Tourists

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JANUARY 4 — The province of Bursa, in northwestern Turkey and one of the major tourist destinations along with Istanbul and Antalya, aims to attract half million Arab tourists in 2012. Mehmet Akkus, chairman of executive board of South Marmara Region of Turkish Travel Agencies’ Association (TURSAB), told Anatolia news agency that nearly 800,000 foreign tourists visited Bursa last year and 300,000 of them were Arabs.

Akkus said that they aimed to attract half million Arab tourists to Bursa in 2012. “Bursa will host Turkish-Arab tourism gathering in April 2012 and it will be participated by representatives from 22 Arab countries,” he added. Works have been under way to make Bursa the tourism capital of the Middle East in 2013, he said. Blessed with a delightful climate and the loveliest of settings south of the Karadag coastal uplands, Bursa with its picturesque Old Town and magnificent mosques is one of the highlights of any visit to Turkey. The city also enjoys a long-standing reputation as a spa, the thermal springs in the northwestern suburb of Cekirge, popular even in Roman times, attracting large numbers of visitors.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Erdogan Represses Press Freedom, NYT

U.S. daily underlines arrests and financial machinations

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JANUARY 5 — The New York Times, in an article published today, underlines that the government of Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan is “repressing freedom of the press” in Turkey and therefore “dimming the democratic glow” in the moderate Islamic country that has been mentioned as a model for the Arab Spring.

The authoritative U.S. newspaper writes that freedom of press in Turkey is repressed through a mixture of intimidation, arrests and financial machinations, including the sale in 2008 of a leading newspaper and a television station to a company linked to the prime minister’s son-in-law.” The article in the NYT particularly highlights the case of an internationally well-known journalist, Nedim Sener, who has been charged with complicity in an alleged coup against Erdogan.

According to his defendants however, Sener is in fact punished with a long custody only for having investigated corruption in the government for 20 years. He is currently tried together with a colleague, Ahmet Sik, who has written about Islamic infiltrations in Turkish security forces. The NYT also points out that in March 2011, the only Turk who has ever won the Nobel Prize for Literature, Orhan Pamuk, was fined for a statement he had made about the murder of Kurds and Armenians. Last month many journalists were arrested for their alleged links with Kurd separatism. According to the union of Turkish journalists there are currently 97 reporters, publishers and other people active in the media sector in prison, more than in China. Nevertheless, the Turkish government states that only four people are in prison for what they have written. The New York Times also mentions the estimated 15,000 internet sites that have been blocked by Turkish State censorship on the internet.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey Jails Former Military Chief

The former head of Turkey’s armed forces has been jailed on suspicion of plotting against the government in Ankara. The retired general, Ilker Basbug, is accused of complicity in a failed coup from 2003. General Ilker Basbug was arrested and jailed on Friday near Istanbul, charged with trying to overthrow Turkey’s government. As Turkey’s former military chief — he retired in August 2010 — Basbug is the highest-ranking officer to become embroiled in the so-called Ergenekon case, a long-running crackdown on alleged dissidents within the country’s military and secular establishment.

Prosecutors allege that the hardline nationalist Ergenekon network sought to topple Prime Minister Reccep Tayyip Erdogan’s Islamist government in 2003. This alleged coup plan, called “Sledgehammer,” is one of many allegations linked to the group. In total, some 400 people face charges.

Basbug is also likely to be charged with using military funds to prop up websites seeking to discredit the Turkish government. Other suspects have said they acted in a chain of command, prompting prosecutors to look to Basbug at the very top.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UN Alarmed at Jump in Saudi Executions

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on Friday said it was alarmed at the almost threefold increase in the use of the death penalty in Saudi Arabia last year. “We are alarmed at the significant increase in the use of the death penalty in Saudi Arabia in 2011,” said spokesman Rupert Colville at a regular press briefing.

Saudi Arabia applies the death penalty for a wide range of offences. “What is even more worrying is that court proceedings often reportedly fall far short of international fair trial standards, and the use of torture as a means to obtain confessions appears to be rampant,” he added.

At least 76 death row inmates were executed in 2011, according to an AFP count, while Amnesty International believes that Saudi Arabia carried out at least 79 executions during this period. In 2010, 27 people were executed, according to the UN, citing a report by Human Rights Watch.

Rape, murder, apostasy, armed robbery and drug trafficking are punishable by death in Saudi Arabia, which strictly applies sharia or Islamic law. So-called cross amputation of the right hand and left foot is applied in cases of highway robbery, according to the UN.

“We call on the authorities to halt the use of such cruel, inhuman, degrading punishment. As a party to the Convention against Torture, Saudi Arabia is bound by the absolute prohibition against the use of torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,” Colville said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


The Unholy Madrasas of Pakistan

The Persian word ‘Madrasa‘ literally stands for a school where education is imparted. Conventionally, the religious education related to the Islam has been provided in madrasas. But increasingly, these madrasas across the world are incorporating modern education in their curriculum, along with the traditional Islamic teachings. In Indian state of West Bengal, there are many such madrasas where poor children belonging to all religions, who cannot afford modern education, are admitted. Apart from Urdu, the children here are taught Hindi, General Knowledge, History, Science, Social Studies, and Computers. Indian madrasas seem to be catching up with the times.

But in Pakistan, which was carved out of India in 1947 in the name of Islam, the condition of madrasas is deteriorating day by day. Most of them are said to be imparting training and education based on the Taliban ideology. Apart from instilling extremism, students are indoctrinated against other religions and brainwashed to declare a war on the people of other communities. In these madrasas, children are taught the wrong definition of ‘Jihad‘, and encouraged to become suicide bombs. They are told that dying while pursuing ‘Jihad‘ will secure them a place in ‘heaven.’ This spreading of venom has lead to the massacre of thousands of innocents in AfPak region and around the world. Their major targets have been crowded places like markets, mausoleums, army establishments, police training centres etc in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Those calling themselves Muslims have ended up killing the maximum number of innocent Muslims.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Far East


Audi Sales in China Outstrip Germany: Firm

Luxury German carmaker Audi said Thursday that 2011 sales in fast-growing China had outstripped its home market for the first time, adding it expected further acceleration in the coming years. Audi, a subsidiary of Europe’s biggest carmaker Volkswagen, said it had sold 313,036 vehicles in China last year, breaking for the first time the 300,000 mark. “China is now Audi’s biggest single market,” the company said in a statement.

More than 80 percent of the cars were manufactured locally in China, the firm added. “Particularly the premium segment in China is making very healthy progress — in our view it continues to offer very good growth potential,” said Peter Schwarzenbauer, from Audi’s sales department. Audi is forecasting that it will sell 250,000 cars in Germany in 2012.

Like its German competitors Mercedes-Benz and BMW, Audi is pinning its hopes on China for rapid growth, as it sees more traditional markets lose strength amid the eurozone debt crisis. Audi announced last month it planned to build a vast new plant to provide up to 200,000 new cars a year for the booming Chinese market.

The new factory in the southern Chinese city of Foshan will be up and running by 2013, said the firm. Germany is the world’s number two exporter after China.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



China Puts the Brakes on Foreign Automakers

For years, foreign automobile companies have reaped most of the profits to be had in the enormous Chinese market. But in a largely unnoticed change, Beijing is now ending their preferential treatment of carmakers from abroad to focus more on developing domestic technology and brands.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germans Give Pep Talks on Korean Unification

The border between North and South Korea is the last battlefield of the Cold War. Currently, a delegate of veteran German politicians — from the former east and west — are advising the government in Seoul on how the country might reunify if the opportunity arises in the future. Some see a door opening for change following Kim Jong Il’s death.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spectacular Snow and Ice Display in China

VISITORS from around the world have flocked to China for the annual Harbin International Snow and Ice Festival, which features monuments up to 50m high crafted by some of the country’s best ice sculptors. Multicoloured lights are used to add colour to the sculptures at the event, where tourists can enjoy horse-drawn carriage rides, slide down ice slippery dips and watch brave souls dive from diving boards made of blocks of ice into freezing cold water.

The event has been held since 1963 in Harbin, which is the capital of the Heilongjiang province in northern China. The area is close to Siberia and temperatures can reach as low as -38 degrees celsius in winter. While the festival officially starts on January 5 and lasts for a month, the exhibits often open earlier and stay longer, weather permitting.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



To Save Its Culture, China Slashes Entertainment TV

In a bid to promote cultural values and morals, China is enhancing the quality of its TV programs by slashing foreign entertainment programming.

The Chinese Administration of Radio, Film and Television issued an order in October last year to slash the number of entertainment shows on 34 Chinese satellite television channels, including dating and talent shows, talk shows and dramas, which are considered to be “low taste” or “vulgar.” Such programs are to be cut by two-thirds starting in January and replaced by more “meaningful” ones such as news and educational programming.

As reported by Chinese news agency Xinhua, a spokesperson for the country’s media regulation agency gave further details at a press conference at the beginning of January: The 34 broadcasters will have to limit the number of entertainment shows offered to two every week. Such programming will not be allowed to exceed 90 minutes per day. Two compulsory 30-minute news shows must be aired between 6 pm and 11:30 pm in addition to showing a minimum of two hours of news programming between 6am and midnight.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Former Prime Minister Bob Hawke Thrills SCG Cricket Crowd Skolling a Beer

FORMER prime minister Bob Hawke has been captured on film skolling a whole beer in the outer at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

Mr Hawke, 82, is the star of a video starting to circulate on the internet after he happily bowed to demands from a group of cricket fans during the test match.

“One for the country, Robert!” one of the men yelled at Mr Hawke as he exited his aisle.

“Hey?” Mr Hawke said as he spotted the ale.

“One for the country!” the men yelled back at him.

So Mr Hawke took the cup and drank its contents, only spilling a drop on his chin as fans cheered louder and nearby police laughed.

Mr Hawke, who gave the fans a thumbs up as he departed, is no stranger to beer.

His academic achievements were complemented by setting a new world speed record for beer drinking: he downed 2 1/2 pints — equivalent to a yard of ale — from a sconce pot in eleven seconds as part of a college penalty.

In his memoirs, Mr Hawke suggested that this single feat may have contributed to his political success more than any other, by endearing him to a voting population with a strong beer culture.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Moon Mineral Found in Ancient Australian Rock

A mineral once found only on the moon has now been discovered in billion-year-old rocks in Australia. Tranquillityite is a mineral consisting of iron, zirconium, yttrium, titanium, silicon and oxygen. It is named after the moon’s Sea of Tranquility, where it was first discovered on the Apollo 11 mission. Until now, it was only seen in samples returned from the moon, as well as in lunar meteorites — that is, rocks blasted off the moon’s surface by cosmic impacts that crash-landed here.

Now scientists have identified what appear to be terrestrial versions of tranquillityite in Western Australia. The mineral commonly occurs as clusters of thin, narrow, fox-red strips in dikes or sills — bodies of rock that likely originally intruded as magma into surrounding layers of stone. Its composition is largely the same as lunar tranquillityite.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


20 Killed as Nigerian Gunmen Attack Christian Mourners

Gunmen in Nigeria on Friday opened fire on friends and relatives gathered to mourn the deaths of three Christians killed on Thursday, leaving up to 20 more people dead.

It was the latest in a series of attacks blamed on radical Islamists who have vowed to wage a religious war on Nigeria’s Christians and drive them from the country’s majority-Muslim north.

Several dozen Christians had come together for a meeting in a town hall in Mubi, in Adamawa state, to mark the deaths the day before of several people killed in the town.

Up to four gunmen surrounded the building and opened fire with Kalashnikov rifles, killing up to 20 people and leaving another 15 badly injured.

“We started hearing many gunshots through the windows,” said Okey Raymond, 48, who was at the meeting.

“Everyone scampered for safety, but the gunmen chanted: ‘God is great God is great’ while shooting at us.”

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Freedom Fighters Celebrate a Party in Power as ANC Turns 100

The ANC liberated South Africa from minority white rule, but it has undergone a rocky — some would say incomplete — transition from liberation movement to governing party. ‘A better life for all’ was the African National Congress’ slogan at South Africa’s first democratic elections in 1994, when the whites-only National Party was swept from power. That slogan now has a rather hollow ring to it — the only South Africans who now enjoy a “better life” are the 3 million (out of a nation 49 million) members of the black middle class.

40 percent of the population subsist below the poverty line on less than 50 euros ($ 64) a month. The business empires of ANC freedom fighters such as Tokyo Sexwale or Cyril Ramaphosa, in mining or fast food, are in stark contrast to the poverty suffered by the masses in slums such as Alexandria outside Johannesburg. It’s a well-worn maxim that to succeed in business in South Africa you need an ANC membership card.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Immigration a Tough Issue for Mitt Romney

Experts say Republican’s hard stance during primary may hurt him against Obama in general election

But experts do point to one issue where a position Romney took in the GOP primary may hurt him in the general election, and that’s immigration. The former governor took one of the most conservative positions of any of the Republican candidates when he said all immigrants currently in the United States illegally—estimated to total more than 10 million—should have to return to their home countries before applying for U.S. citizenship. He called a proposal offered by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich to allow immigrants with deep ties to their U.S. communities to stay, while deporting “undesirables,” tantamount to amnesty.

In a November GOP debate, Romney said, “Amnesty is a magnet. People respond to incentives, and if you could become a permanent resident of the United States by coming here illegally, you’ll do so.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Rome in Midst of ‘Criminal Emergency’, Says Mayor

‘Criminal beasts must be stopped’, Alemanno

(ANSA) — Rome, January 5 — Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno said Thursday the city was suffering from a “criminal emergency” after a nine-month-old baby was shot dead in a double homicide.

Zhou Zheng, a 31-year-old Chinese immigrant, and his baby daughter were killed in the Tor Pignattara area in the city’s southeast late Wednesday, when two thieves demanded 5,000 euros from his bar’s takings as he was returning home with his family.

“The latest tragic episode of violence that caused the death of a baby only a few months old and her father is really too much,” Alemanno said. “Rome’s patience and that of her citizens is finished.

“There are criminal beasts that are operating in our city that must be stopped at all costs”. Alemanno was speaking after senior police met for top-level talks to discuss the murder of the father and child.

Zheng was shot in the abdomen as he moved to protect his 26-year-old wife, Zheng Lia, at the entrance of their apartment.

“There are too many drugs and firearms circulating in city districts most at risk,” Alemanno said. “For months I have spoken out about this criminal emergency but the measures taken until now have been clearly inadequate”.

Alemanno asked police and security officials from the interior ministry’s security committee to adopt emergency measures to re-establish control in Rome.

“Rome is waiting for action not promises,” he said.

Meanwhile the city of Rome has proclaimed a day of mourning for the two victims to coincide with the day of their funerals, which has not yet been announced.

Senior police officer and prefect Giuseppe Pecoraro was conducting talks with police on Thursday to discuss the homicides and a co-ordinated response to catching the killers

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


France: Town Gets Rid of ‘Mademoiselle’

A town in the north-west Brittany region has struck a blow for feminist campaigners by banishing the use of the title “mademoiselle”, or “miss”, from all official forms. The continued use of “mademoiselle” in France to refer to an unmarried woman has been the subject of heated debate in recent years.

Regional newspaper Ouest France reported that the town of Cesson-Sévigné, which is a suburb of the city of Rennes, took the decision to get rid of the term from all official forms from January 1st 2012. “This is about getting rid of anything that could be seen as discriminatory or indiscreet,” said a statement from the town hall.

“Having two different terms to distinguish between married and non-married women is discrimination against women as there is no such differentiation for men.” The news follows a campaign launched in September to get rid of the “mademoiselle” term from all official forms across France.

Feminist groups Osez le Féminisme and Les Chiennes de Garde wanted to see the term removed from everything from tax returns to rail pass applications. “Our campaign is aimed at completely removing this sexist title, as it only concerns women,” said a spokeswoman for the campaign at the time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy’s State-Owned Train Firm Accused of Racism for Using Asian Family on Advert Promoting Fourth-Class Seats

Italy’s national train company has been accused of racism after an advert promoting its new four-class system showed a family of Asian immigrants in the cheapest seats.

Trenitalia’s advertising campaign for its high-speed Frecciarossa (Red Arrow) intercity trains spectacularly backfired because white Italians were used for each of the other classes.

The state-owned firm’s online brochure was hastily removed and replaced with a more ‘politically correct’ version following a series of complaints.

Blogger Alessandro Gilioli highlighted what he described as ‘xenophobic overtones’ of the advert on the website of weekly L’Espresso.

He said: ‘If the concept [of social segregation] wasn’t clear enough, here is the image chose to publicise the lowest class: an Asian family, presumably immigrants.

‘Curiously, all the clients in the Premium and Executive classes are white.

‘Now, considering this is all ‘a marketing choice’, I would love to know how much the marketing directives of Trenitalia make a month.

‘I bet it’s a salary that consents them to go to the [on-board] bar without being disturbed by people of ethnic minorities on low incomes.’

But the firm, which has already sparked controversy with plans to ban fourth-class passengers from restaurant carriages, denied it was racist.

It claimed the use of the Asian family was ‘just one of several’ which were chosen to illustrate the new Standard category of seats on the high-speed service.

In a statement it said: ‘Taking action following the internet debate that has developed in recent days surrounding the photograph of the new Frecciarossa, chosen simply to publicise the new services offered and with no obvious intent to offend, Trenitalia has decided to substitute the image on its website.

‘The decision was taken in order not to fuel groundless accusations. The subjects depicted in the images represent the diverse types of clients… that travel everyday on Trenitalia, a reflection of the new Italian society: open and multi-ethnic.’

The train’s new four-class system sees passengers given the choice of Executive, Business, Premium and Standard seats.

The brochure showed a white businessman in a smart suit showing a presentation to two white colleagues in an Executive carriage.

Business class was promoted with images of plush but empty upholstered seats. The Premium offering saw a white member of staff offering drinks to two white passengers.

Controversially, the promotion for Standard, the cheapest of the four classes, featured a smiling Asian couple and their daughter.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



Men, Women Really Do Have Big Personality Differences

If men and women at times seem to be from different planets, it may be because there are large differences in their personalities, a new study suggests. The results show that about 18 percent of women share similar personalities with men, and 18 percent of men share similar personalities with women. But the majority of women have personality traits that are quite distinct from those of men, and vice versa, the researchers say.

Men tend to be more dominant (forceful and aggressive) and emotionally stable, while women tend to be more sensitive, warm (attentive to others) and apprehensive, the study found.

“Psychologically, men and women are almost a different species,” said study researcher Paul Irwing, of the University of Manchester, in the United Kingdom.

The new findings may explain why some careers are dominated by men (such as engineering) and others by women (such as psychological sciences), Irwing said. “People self-select in terms of their personality… and what they think is going to be suitable in terms of the fit,” for their career, Irwing said.

However, the paper, published today (Jan. 4) in the journal PLoS ONE, has drawn criticism from others in the field who argue the methods the researchers used for computing their results are flawed, and that men and women are not so dissimilar after all.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Clever Canines: Dogs Can ‘Read’ Our Communication Cues

Dogs can understand our intent to communicate with them and are about as receptive to human communication as pre-verbal infants, a new study shows. Researchers used eye-tracking technology to study how dogs observed a person looking at pots after giving the dogs communicative cues, such as eye contact and directed speech. They found that the dogs’ tendency to follow the person’s gaze was on par with that of 6-month-old infants.

The study suggests that dogs have evolved to be especially attuned to human communicative signals, and early humans may have selected them for domestication particularly for this reason, the researchers said. Other scientists are excited that the eye-tracking method has been successfully adapted for dogs. “This opens many new opportunities in studying dog cognition,” said Juliane Kaminski, a cognitive psychologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany, who was not involved in the research.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Thinnest Silicon-Chip Wires Refuse to Go Quantum

Not everything is weird at the nanoscale. Wires so small you’d expect them to obey the strange laws of quantum mechanics have instead displayed the same electrical properties as ordinary electrical interconnects. The finding bodes well for conventional computers, because these tiny, conductive wires could make chips smaller. It could be bad news, though, for the super-fast quantum computers that are hoped to come next.

So far, conventional computers have followed Moore’s law: the density of transistors that a conventional integrated-circuit chip can hold doubles approximately every two years, yielding ever-better performance out of ever-smaller devices.

However, it’s getting harder to build smaller interconnects to wire up the devices on the silicon chip. As the width of metal wires drops to few tens of nanometres, their resistivity soars because electrons start interacting with nearby surfaces, dissipating more heat and lowering efficiency. Also, as wires get down to nanometre scales, quantum behaviour usually dominates.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120105

Financial Crisis
» Brussels to Get More Budget Powers Under EU Pact: Draft
» Dutch Never Before So Pessimistic About Their Finances
» Euro Slumps on Renewed Spain Concerns
» French Minister Stokes Divisions on EU Financial Tax
» Germany: Fearful Investors Stash Money in Luxury Goods
» Greek PM Warns of Default
» Greeks and Italians Come to Denmark
» Italy: Senate Stenographer Paid as Much as King of Spain
» Italy: One-Third of ‘Youth’ Have No Work as Joblessness Rises
» Portuguese to Go on Strike
» Spain: Madrid to Tighten Budget Controls Over Autonomous Regions
» The Danger Debt Poses to the Western World
 
USA
» Barack Obama, The Most Arrogant US President in Decades
» Constitution Nullification: How Was it Done?
» Iowa Points to Three-Horse Republican Race
» Los Angeles Arson Suspect Needs Deputies’ Help to Stand in Court
» Okla. Mom Sarah McKinley Won’t Face Charges for Shooting Intruder
» Police Investigating Possible Hate Crime After Walmart Incident
» The Republican Reality Show: Fox News Takes Center Stage in Primaries
 
Europe and the EU
» Anti-Islam Lyrics No Barrier to Norway Music Prize
» File-Sharing Recognized as a Religion in Sweden
» France: Teenagers Go on Three-Day Crime Spree
» France: Louvre Readies to Open New Islamic Wing
» France: First Muslim State Cemetery in Strasbourg
» France: Louvre: Italian ‘Veil’ For Islamic Arts Department
» Germany Forced to Buy Austrian Electricity
» Germany: Drug Problems Persist for Flower Power Retirees
» Italy: Fiat Raises Its Chrysler Stake
» Norway: Plaintiffs Want New Breivik Sanity Check
» Poland: Lego Concentration Camp Sold to Polish Museum
» Sweden: Seven Charged After Burning Victim With Iron
» Sweden: Customs ‘Not Focused’ On Weapons Smuggling
» Sweden: Man Jailed for Slaying Teen on Football Pitch
» Sweden: Malmö Sees Five Shooting Deaths in Five Weeks
» Sweden: Alzheimer’s Risk Can be Detected 10 Years Before Symptoms, Study Finds
» UK: A Holiday Period That Was Scarred by Casual Violence
» UK: Abbott’s Twitter Problems
» UK: Boy ‘Tortured and Drowned’ Over Witchcraft Claims
» UK: Boy, 15, ‘Tortured to Death With Hammer and Chisels on Christmas Day Because Relative Thought He Was a Witch’
» UK: Diane Abbott Faces Calls to Resign Over ‘Racist’ Tweet That Says ‘White People Love to Play Divide and Rule’
» UK: Diane Abbott in ‘Racist’ Jibe Fury
» UK: MP Diane Abbott ‘Sorry’ Over Twitter Race Comments
» UK: Mohammed Amin: What Sharia Really Means to Muslims
» UK: Study Indicates More Britons Are Converting to Islam: Report
» UK: Twitter Fails to Act Over Ed Miliband Lookalike’s Anti-Israel Death Threats
» UK: TV Channel to Launch ‘Alternative Leveson Inquiry’ Into Coverage of Islam
 
Mediterranean Union
» EBRD: Tunisia and Jordan Are the New Members
» EU Offers Scholarships to College of Europe
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Snubbed Millionaire’s Brutal Attack on Girlfriend
» Egypt: Incitement to Murder, Mubarak Risks Death Sentence
 
Middle East
» EU Countries Agree Iran Oil Ban in Principle
» Iran ‘Not Concerned’ About Imminent EU Oil Ban
» Yemen — the Second Somalia?
 
Russia
» ‘Russia Has Awoken’: Anti-Putin Protesters Search for Direction
 
South Asia
» India: Deoband Fatwa Against Selling of Firecrackers
» Phishing: Spam and Cyber Threats Affect India’s Internet Community
 
Far East
» Chinese Airlines Refuse to Pay EU Carbon Tax
» US and China Hunker Down for Talks on Way Forward on North Korea
 
Australia — Pacific
» 50 Detainee Complaints But Just One Reprimand at Maribyrnong
» Government Refuses to Give in to Ransom Demands
» Govt Looking to Brand Anzac Day
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria Church Hit by Deadly Gun Attack Continue Reading the Main Story
» South Sudan’s Cattle Wars Claim Humanitarian Toll
» The Evil Being Perpetrated Against Christians in Nigeria
 
Immigration
» Massachusetts Cannot Prevent Legal Immigrants From Enrolling in Commonwealth Care, Court Rules
 
Culture Wars
» Gay Actor Ian McKellen Convinced Shakespeare Preferred Men
 
General
» Globally, 2011 Was Costliest Disaster Year Ever
» The Hunt is on for Habitable Moons Around Alien Planets

Financial Crisis


Brussels to Get More Budget Powers Under EU Pact: Draft

(BRUSSELS) — The EU’s executive arm would gain the power to take a eurozone state to court for breaking deficit limits under a new draft of a pact being considered by governments to resolve the debt crisis. The tougher budget rules would come into force after at least 15 of the 17 eurozone states have ratified the pact, according to the draft obtained by AFP on Thursday. A previous version called for just nine to sign it.

Britain is the only member of the 27-state European Union to have refused to join the effort to deepen integration, angering its partners at a summit last month. The nine other nations that do not use the euro are expected to sign up.

The “fiscal compact” will be discussed by EU leaders at a special summit on January 30 with the aim of adopting it at another meeting in March. The EU decided to reinforce its rules after governments breached toothless budget rules for years, ignoring a deficit limit of 3.0 percent of gross domestic product and debt ceiling of 60 percent of GDP.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Never Before So Pessimistic About Their Finances

The Dutch have never been so pessimistic about their finances as now, with one third expecting a downturn in their economic situation this year, according to new research from the government’s socio-cultural research institute SCP. The research, based on 1,000 people and mainly carried out in October, shows 40% of people in low-skilled functions expect their personal fortunes to deteriorate this year, compared with 23% of those earning more than average wages. Two-thirds of those questioned also expect the Dutch economy to perform more poorly in 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Euro Slumps on Renewed Spain Concerns

(PARIS) — The euro slumped to a 16-month low against the dollar Thursday after Spain rekindled concern about the magnitude of its banking sector problems and a French bond auction failed to reassure markets. The euro slumped to $1.2831 shortly after the bond auction in France sold its planned amount of long-term debt at modest increases in yields but with demand down considerably despite banks being flush with cheap money from the European Central Bank.

The shared European currency also dived to an 11-year low against the safe-haven Japanese currency to strike 98.58 yen, while European stocks mostly slid. Spain’s new economy minister said Thursday that banks may face up to 50 billion euros ($65 billion) in bad loan provisions and he vowed to crack down on regional deficits in a new austerity drive.

Economy Minister Luis de Guindos’ estimate of the banks’ bad loans, provided in an interview with the Financial Times, was higher than many private forecasts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Minister Stokes Divisions on EU Financial Tax

BRUSSELS — A junior minister in the French government has predicted there will be an EU financial transactions tax by the end of 2012 in remarks likely to annoy fellow EU countries on many levels. EU affairs minister Jean Leonetti spoke out on the subject on the French LCI news channel on Wednesday (4 December), saying: “It’s on the agenda of the next EU summit, Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel have decided it and it will be put in place before the end of 2012.”

He added: “France and Germany have already agreed on it. And I believe the new Italian government, with which we have been in contact, is not opposed. Twenty six out of 27, in fact all the EU countries except Great Britain have no objections to the idea, and except Sweden, which had a bad experiment in this area.” Leonetti’s prediction is more hawkish than that of earlier pro-tax advocates.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Fearful Investors Stash Money in Luxury Goods

The uncertain financial markets and the euro crisis have left many Germans feeling nervous. Worried about the security of their savings accounts, increasing numbers of people are deciding they would rather invest in material goods like art, vintage cars and real estate instead. But experts warn that nothing is 100 percent safe any more.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek PM Warns of Default

Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos on Wednesday said his country might default if it fails to meet EU/IMF demands later this month. “Without an agreement with the troika and further funding, Greece in March faces an immediate risk of an uncontrolled default,” he told reporters in Athens.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greeks and Italians Come to Denmark

Greeks, Italians and other EU nationalities from countries with economic problems are increasingly seeking northwards in order to find jobs and a better life. In the first nine months of this year, Danish authorities have given residence permits to 264 people from Greece, compared to 135 in 2008, and with the Danish embassy in Athens reporting an increased interest in Denmark. “The past 6-8 months have seen a clear interest for work and studies in Denmark,” says Kristian Rasmussen of the Danish embassy.

Greek nationals are not the only ones to have an interest in Denmark. The past four years have seen an increase in the number of people from Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland who have been given residence permits.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Senate Stenographer Paid as Much as King of Spain

Stenographer’s €290,000 salary. Salaries quadruple by end of service. Clerks receive up to €160,000

Can a senator earn half of what the Palazzo Madama barber takes home? Yes, according to some parliamentarians who say their monthly salary is only €5,000 and sidestep questions from voters furious that cuts have failed to materialise. But no, it’s not true. It’s the same old trick — point to the “allowance” net of expenses, attendance allowances and other additional benefits. Taken together, other items all but treble a parliamentarian’s take-home pay.

The story has been dragging on for weeks. On one side, first-term Italy of Values (IDV) deputy Francesco Barbato waved his pay packet on television to show that salary, attendance allowances and assistant’s allowances took his net monthly pay to more than €12,000. On the other side is exclusive focus on the basic allowance. The claim is that other items don’t count. Many deputies (230 against 400 who haven’t) have actually signed contracts with their assistants and a large number pass some of the money on to their party. Often, they do so under duress but the gesture is a legitimate, and even noble, one. Yet is it right to burden the taxpayer with this, in addition to election expenses and allowances given to parliamentary groups? Would relations with the public not be better served by showing an actual pay slip? In the wake of a series of cuts, today’s pay is genuinely lower than the €14,500 revealed by Communist Refoundation (PRC) parliamentarian Gennaro Migliore.

But a confrontation in which both sides focus solely on how much deputies and senators are paid doesn’t make a lot of sense. Worse, it could turn voters off politics and distract attention from the real issue. And that issue is the overall cost of Italy’s resource-devouring political merry-go-round — the 52 buildings occupied by the parliamentary powers-that-be, the cost of red tape and the cost of the political structures, regional authorities, provincial authorities, myriad intermediate bodies and mixed capital enterprises that serve to feed a self-referential system.

The pay packets handed out to Senate employees say it all. Senate staff’s professional excellence has always earned high praise from senators on right and left, whether they come from the south of Italy or the north, but pay levels have risen to heights unparalleled elsewhere. Parliamentarians may be willing to attack Monti, Berlusconi, Bersano or even the Pope but they never criticise the clerks who cosset them day by day. Some hint, however: “We’re not the only ones who are overpaid around here”. The Northern League serjeant-at-arms Paolo Franco says quite openly: “The contract for Palazzo Madama staff is jaw-dropping. It gives them unbelievable career progression. Clearly, no more contracts like these should be stipulated in future. Everything needs to be changed”. How can a system survive when a stenographer can earn more than the King of Spain? It sounds unlikely but that’s the way it is. Without the three-year solidarity cut imposed by Giulio Tremonti for salaries over €150,000, a stenographer in the top pay band rakes in nearly €290,000 gross. Only €2,000 less than Spain pays Juan Carlos de Borbón and €50,000 more than Giorgio Napolitano’s gross salary of €239,181 as president of Italy.

Naturally, no one is stealing anything. Like Ermanna Cossio, the youngest pensioner in the world who retired at the age of 29 on 94% of her final salary, the stenographers can say that they didn’t make the rules. Fair enough. But those rules enable Senate staff to quadruple their pay in real terms over their career, thanks to a ridiculous system of automatic increments. Today, the rules generate sky-high earnings at a time when the rest of the county is being asked to make big sacrifices. Gross of tax and the Tremonti cuts, a clerk or barber can pick up €160,000, an assistant €192,000, a secretary €256,000 and an adviser €417,000. And that’s not all because the salary can be padded out with allowances. A chief clerk in the Chamber of Deputies is entitled to a monthly supplement of €652 gross, which rises to €718 in the Senate. A head service adviser at Montecitorio receives a supplement of €2,101 while a colleague in the Senate gets €1,762, to say nothing of the top-flight jobs. According to l’Espresso magazine, junior minister for the Prime Minister’s Office with responsibility for relations with Parliament Antonio Malaschini earned €485,000 gross in 2007 as the Senate’s general secretary. Subsequently, he received a €60,000 hike that took his pay to an all-time record for the post. Obviously, pensions are in proportion, and according to the tables are never lower than €500,000 gross per annum.

This is one of the issues. Extremely favourable methods of calculation turn high salaries into equally spectacular pensions. We could mention that staff hired before 1998 can still take their pension at 53, albeit with relatively bearable penalties. Like an example? A 53-year-old parliamentary adviser hired at the age of 27, who purchased pension rights for four years spent at university, has accumulated 38 years of pensionable service. This means he or she can retire on €300,000 gross per annum, the equivalent of 85% of final salary. Should he or she stay on to the bitter end — age 60, in this context — then the pension becomes 90% of final salary, more than €370,000 of the maximum €417,000. Lower pay bands work in much the same way. At 53, a clerk can retire with a pension cheque worth €113,000 a year, which can rise to over €140,000 if he or she hangs on until the age of 60. The consequences are mind-boggling. A senator with maximum contributions will never be able to pocket such a healthy pension and all this is still going on as the Save Italy package racks up the retirement age for ordinary Italians while trimming pensions with the move to a pro-rata contribution scheme…

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



Italy: One-Third of ‘Youth’ Have No Work as Joblessness Rises

Rome, 5 Jan. (AKI) — Italian unemployment in November rose for the third month, a sign that the eurozone’s third-richest country is struggling amid what is most likely its fourth recession since 2001. Almost one-third of Italy’s youth were without work.

Italy’s jobless rate advanced to 8.6 percent in November from 8.5 percent in October and from 8.3 percent in November 2010, national statistics agency Istat said in a statement on Thursday to announce preliminary data.

The value of Italy’s economy shrank in the third quarter and industry minister Corrado Passera in December said the country is in recession, while the prominent Confindustria trade association said Italy the economic retreat will last until the second half of next year.

Italy’s new government is implementing a plan to cut 30 billion euros in spending that includes pension reform and a crack-down on tax evasion. The move follows investor worries that weak growth could lead to difficulty for Italy to pay interest on its 1.9 trillion-euro debt load causing Silvio Berlusconi’s government to collapse setting the stage for a so-called technical

Unemployment for Itay’s youth, defined by Istat as those between the ages of 15 and 24 was 30.1 percent, 0.9 percent more than October and 1.8 percent above november 2010.

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



Portuguese to Go on Strike

Manuel Carvalho da Silva, leader of CGTP, Portugal’s largest trade union federation, on Wednesday announced a national strike on 11 February against austerity, national media report. He said that the austerity imposed under the EU/IMF bail-out “only makes things worse.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Madrid to Tighten Budget Controls Over Autonomous Regions

The new centre-right government of Spain is to ensure austerity by passing a law in March that “will establish strict instruments of control over the budgets of the autonomous regions”, Luis de Guindos, the country’s economy minister, said on Wednesday in an interview with the Financial Times.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Danger Debt Poses to the Western World

Countries around the world, particularly in the West, are hopelessly in the red, with debt rising every day. Even worse, politicians seem paralyzed, unable — or unwilling — to do anything about it. It is a global disaster that threatens the immediate future. But there might be a way out.

There are the banks in Europe, which will have to repay about €725 billion in combined debt in 2012, including €280 billion in the first quarter alone. With the private market largely off-limits to them, the banks have had to rely on the European Central Bank (ECB) to bail them out. The ECB is now lending them fresh money — as much as they want — at minimal interest rates.

There is the ECB, which is creating billions essentially out of nothing. On an almost weekly basis, it is acquiring bonds that no one else would buy from Portugal, Spain and Italy and, in the process, it is turning into a reluctant financier of nations. This financial aid already amounts to €211 billion.

There is the €440-billion euro bailout fund, of which €150 billion are already promised to Greece, Ireland and Portugal. But because this amount is still not enough, the finance ministers have decided to “leverage” the fund, a seemingly harmless term for bringing in additional lenders, thereby multiplying the volume of credit.

And then there is the United States, which only remains solvent because the Congress in Washington keeps raising the debt ceiling. The American government already owes its creditors about $15 trillion. Stay tuned for the next installment.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Barack Obama, The Most Arrogant US President in Decades

In December Barack Obama vainly declared himself the fourth best president in American history, up there with the likes of Abraham Lincoln and FDR, just three years into his first term. In an interview with 60 Minutes on CBS he observed:

The issue here is not gonna be a list of accomplishments. As you said yourself, Steve, you know, I would put our legislative and foreign policy accomplishments in our first two years against any president — with the possible exceptions of Johnson, FDR, and Lincoln — just in terms of what we’ve gotten done in modern history. But, you know, but when it comes to the economy, we’ve got a lot more work to do. And we’re gonna keep on at it.

Perhaps this display of self-importance is not surprising, coming from a president who enthusiastically accepted the Nobel Peace Prize after just a few months in the job, and even campaigned thousands of miles across the Atlantic in Berlin while running for office. This is a leader who thinks nothing of taking a $4 million, taxpayer-subsidised vacation in Hawaii — nearly 100 times the average annual salary of an American worker, which currently stands at $41,673. And upon his return from the sun-swept beaches of the Pacific, the president decided to bypass the elected representatives of the US Congress on Wednesday by unilaterally installing “three members of the National Labor Relations Board as well as a director for the controversial new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau” (Richard Cordray), in a huge sop to the powerful Left-wing labour unions. The move has been condemned on Capitol Hill and described by a prominent legal scholar as “a tyrannical abuse of power”.

There is something rotten at the heart of the White House when the President ignores the separation of powers enshrined in the Constitution and rules with impunity. Not only is it an unhealthy power play by executive authority in the freest nation on earth, but it is also a display of extraordinary contempt for the American people 14 months after the US mid-terms where voters emphatically rejected the president’s agenda. Despite his self-proclaimed “shellacking” at the hands of the US electorate, President Obama continues to behave with impunity, in the belief that most Americans are wrong and that he is right. His approach is remarkably lacking in humility and empathy at a time of tremendous public dissatisfaction with the state of the nation.

A major Gallup poll published just before Christmas underscored in sharp detail the depth of the malaise that has set in Obama’s America . According to the survey, US satisfaction in 2011 ranked as the second lowest since 1979, with “on average, 17 per cent satisfied with national conditions”. In the words of Gallup:

Throughout 2011, an average of 17% of Americans said they were satisfied with the way things are going in the United States. That is the second-lowest annual average in the more than 30-year history of the question, after the 15% from 2008. Satisfaction has averaged as high as 60% in 1986, 1998, and 2000.

The 11% readings from August and September are just four percentage points above the all-time low single-poll reading of 7% from Oct. 10-12, 2008, recorded after the financial crisis, passage of the TARP legislation, and a sharp downturn in stock values.

Gallup’s polling chimes with several other surveys from Rasmussen, CBS News, Associated Press and Reuters showing that more than two thirds of Americans still believe the country is moving down the wrong direction. The latest RealClear Politics Average has 70 per cent of Americans believing the United States is on the “wrong track”. At the same time, the unemployment level remains at 8.6 per cent, a dangerously high level for any incumbent president. After all, as even The New York Times acknowledged back in June, “no American president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt has won a second term in office when the unemployment rate on Election Day topped 7.2 per cent.” And the national debt has reached truly terrifying proportions under Obama’s big government leadership. As former Reagan adviser Bruce Bartlett noted in a must-read piece this week describing the findings of the just-released 2011 Treasury Financial Report of the United States Government:

According to the report, the federal debt — simply the cumulative value of all past budget deficits less surpluses — was $10.2 trillion on Sept. 30. But the government also owed $5.8 trillion to federal employees and veterans. Social Security’s unfunded liability — promised benefits over expected Social Security revenues — was $9.2 trillion over the next 75 years, or about 1 percent of the gross domestic product. Medicare’s unfunded liability was $24.6 trillion, or 3 percent of G.D.P. Altogether, the Treasury reckons the government’s total indebtedness at $51.3 trillion — five times the size of the national debt. This would be an unbearable burden if it had to be paid by the current generation out of current resources, for it approximately equals the entire net worth of American households.

America is a superpower on a precipice, sinking under debt, historic rates of unemployment, expensive healthcare reforms, and a continuing housing market crisis. But instead of a presidency that grasps reality and is serious about getting this great nation back on its feet, the American people are saddled with leadership that is intent on bankrupting and condemning them to decades of decline. Barack Obama sits at the helm of a sinking ship holed below the waterline by arrogance and hubris, driven by liberal elites who are fundamentally out of touch with a disillusioned electorate. President Obama’s contempt for public opinion as well as the US Constitution, coupled with his failing big government agenda, will ultimately prove his downfall in an increasingly conservative nation that won’t readily accept the liberal mantra that it’s best days are behind it.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Constitution Nullification: How Was it Done?

by Dennis Sevakis

Over the holidays I received a number of solicitations for contributions to organizations purporting to be working for re-establishing the Constitution or, at least, restoring it to something more closely resembling what it was ‘originally’, rather than what it supposedly is today. For example, here’s a clipping from a Heritage Foundation email:…

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Iowa Points to Three-Horse Republican Race

The outcome of the first Iowa caucuses shows that Republicans are split on which candidate stands the best chance of wresting the presidency from Barack Obama: a conservative, a moderate, or libertarian. Judging by the results of the first caucuses in Iowa, the contest for the Republican presidential nomination could shape up to be a three-horse race between religious conservative Rick Santorum, wealthy moderate Mitt Romney, and staunch libertarian Ron Paul.

“One of the things that’s become obvious in the last few weeks in Iowa is that there will be a great debate in the Republican Party before we are prepared to have a great debate with Barack Obama,” said former US house speaker Newt Gingrich, who was disappointed to finish fourth in the poll with just 13 percent of votes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Los Angeles Arson Suspect Needs Deputies’ Help to Stand in Court

Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) — A man accused of setting a series of fires that terrorized Los Angeles over New Year’s weekend needed the help of deputies to stand at his first court appearance as new information surfaced about his home life.

Harry Burkhart, 24, appeared pale and unwell at the hearing at the state criminal courthouse in Los Angeles. He didn’t enter a plea on the 37 counts of arson that he’s charged with, saying only “yes” through a German interpreter when the judge asked whether he understood he had a right to be arraigned yesterday and when he agreed to a postponement.

California Superior Court Judge Upinder Kalra rescheduled the arraignment for Jan. 24 and set bail at $2.85 million, denying a request by prosecutors that Burkhart, a German citizen born in Chechnya, be held without bail. Burkhart’s public defender, Gustavo Sztraicher, said after the hearing that it was unlikely his client would be able to post bail.

Sztraicher declined to comment on the charges.

After Burkhart’s mother was arrested on Dec. 29, he went on an arson spree that lasted until his own arrest on Jan. 2, Deputy District Attorney Sean Carney said at yesterday’s hearing. Burkhart may have set as many as 52 fires by putting incendiary devices under the engines of parked cars, many of which were parked in carports of apartment buildings, Carney said.

‘Hatred of Americans’

“He has a hatred of Americans,” Carney told the judge. “This defendant engaged in a campaign of terror.”

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Okla. Mom Sarah McKinley Won’t Face Charges for Shooting Intruder

(CBS/AP) BLANCHARD, Okla. — Authorities say they won’t file charges against an Oklahoma widow who fatally shot a New Year’s Eve intruder at her house while she was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher.

Sarah McKinley, 18, asked a Grady County dispatcher for permission to shoot the intruder at her Blanchard mobile home.

“I’ve got two guns in my hand. Is it OK to shoot him if he comes in this door?” McKinley asked the dispatcher.

“Well, you have to do whatever you can do to protect yourself,” the dispatcher is heard telling McKinley in the 911 tape released Wednesday. “I can’t tell you that you can do that, but you have to do what you have to do to protect your baby.”

McKinley’s 3-month-old son was with her when she shot Justin Shane Martin, 24.

Oklahoma law allows the use of deadly force against intruders, and prosecutors said McKinley clearly acted in self-defense. According to court documents, Martin was holding a knife when he died.

“Our initial review of the case doesn’t indicate she violated the law in any way,” Assistant District Attorney James Walters told The Oklahoman newspaper.

However, prosecutors have charged Martin’s alleged accomplice, Dustin Louis Stewart, 29.

Stewart, who called 911 shortly after the home invasion, told a dispatcher he fled the scene when Martin made his way into a Blanchard home, reports CBS affiliate KWTV.

“My name is Dusty Stewart and I think it was my friend that got shot.”

Stewart reportedly told the dispatcher, “I don’t know what he was trying to do. I stood at the fence and told him to come on and I don’t know what he did.”

Stewart was charged with first-degree murder.

“When you’re engaged in a crime such as first-degree burglary and a death results from the events of that crime, you’re subject to prosecution for it,” Walters said.

Stewart was arraigned Wednesday and was being held in the Grady County jail. A bond hearing was set for Thursday.

According to court documents, Martin and Stewart might have been looking for prescription drugs. McKinley said it took the men about 20 minutes to get through her door, which she had barricaded with a couch.

She said her husband had died about a week earlier — on Christmas Day — after being hospitalized with complications from lung cancer earlier that month.

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Police Investigating Possible Hate Crime After Walmart Incident

TAMPA — A stun gun apparently was used on a woman at a New Tampa Walmart on New Year’s Day, and police are investigating whether she was the victim of a hate crime.

The victim, a Muslim who was wearing a traditional ethnic dress known as a salwar, told investigators she was hit by a stun gun fired by another shopper shortly before 9 p.m. Sunday at the store at 19910 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., Tampa police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said.

A video of the incident does not show the victim being hit by the stun gun, said McElroy. But she did have marks “consistent” with being hit by a stun gun, McElroy said.

“She has two marks on her back,” McElroy said. “We have no reason to doubt what she is saying.”

The video shows the suspect and another woman following the victim through the store as if she were being targeted, McElroy said. The video does not show an exchange between the women, the stun gun incident or the victim being hit, but that may have occurred off-camera, said McElroy.

Before police can determine if the incident rises to the level of a hate crime, they must first find the suspect, described as a heavy-set white female, about 5 feet, 6 inches tall and between ages 30 and 49, said McElroy.

Investigators, she said, will have to determine if the offense “was based on prejudice against victim’s race, religion, ethnicity or sexual orientation.”

McElroy said the victim’s daughters raised the issue of whether she was being targeted because of her religion.

Another possibility, said McElroy, is that the victim may have been targeted because of the big purse she had in her shopping cart.

Efforts to reach the victim by phone were not immediately successful.

Hassan Shibly, spokesman for the Council on American Islamic Relations, said, “If indeed this was a hate crime it is a clear sign that anti-Muslim rhetoric is not cost free and may unfortunately lead to senseless attacks against law abiding American Muslims.”

Shibly said via email that regardless of the motive, he hopes the suspect is caught.

[Nilk comment: This is what you call drawing a long bow. check the comments — people are nowhere near as stupid as the meeja and other ‘elites’ seem to think.]

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



The Republican Reality Show: Fox News Takes Center Stage in Primaries

Fox News has long been seen as the American right’s staunchest defender. But this election year has seen the channel demolish the campaigns of several Republican frontrunners. But what is good for ratings may not be good for US conservatives.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Anti-Islam Lyrics No Barrier to Norway Music Prize

A black metal band nominated for Norway’s top music prize has rejected claims that lyrics on its latest album go too far in their criticism of Islam.

Taake’s nomination for the Spellemann Prize in the Best Metal Album category has sparked a strong reaction from listeners who find some of the band’s lyrics objectionable, newspaper Aftenposten reports.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



File-Sharing Recognized as a Religion in Sweden

Zealous file-sharing enthusiasts in Sweden can now take their beliefs to the next level and join the Church of Kopimism, as the widespread practice has now officially been recognized as a religion. “It is a huge relief,” missionary director for the church, Isak Gerson, told The Local on Thursday. For about a year the Kopimists of Sweden, stemming from the Young Pirates, the youth movement of the controversial Pirate Party, have struggled to get their faith to be officially recognized as a religion, but have been forced to face repeated rejection.

In July, after the Kopimists most recent let-down, Gerson said that he was disappointed with Sweden’s Legal, Financial and Administrative Services Agency (Kammarkollegiet) for rejecting the attempt to get their activities registered as a religious faith, as he had done everything in his power to adhere to the agency’s regulations.

“It feels bitter. Last time we applied there were valid reasons for their rejection. We’ve had a dialogue with them since then, and sent in a new application with changes based on this dialogue,” he told The Local at the time. But now, after their third application was successful, the self-proclaimed pirates can finally pray to their own holiness. “Now we will focus on performing our religious practices and to maintain good contact with our members,” Gerson said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Teenagers Go on Three-Day Crime Spree

Three teenagers, aged from 14 to 16, carried out a series of violent attacks on women and a string of house burglaries over three days close to the southern city of Montpellier. The three teenage boys all live close to the nearby town of Béziers, reported Le Parisien newspaper on Thursday.

Driving a stolen Renault Clio, the boys roamed around the area targeting women who were alone in the street. They threatened the women with knives and screwdrivers and made off with handbags, purses and jewellery. An attack on Sunday brought the three to national attention after they tried to snatch the handbag from a 73-year-old woman.

The woman resisted, apparently because her reading glasses were in the bag, causing the boys to push her to the ground. The woman was shaken but not seriously hurt. Police finally caught up with two of the boys while the third is still on the run.

“We’re dealing with a series of robberies using the threat of weapons,” said the Montpellier prosecutor, Brice Robin. “These acts are sufficiently serious that they are being held in prison.” The boys are also suspected of having burgled at least four houses on New Year’s Eve.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Louvre Readies to Open New Islamic Wing

With a roof designed to look like a floating sheet of silk, a reference to the Islamic headscarf, a new wing of the Louvre housing Islamic art is nearing completion. The project to house the Paris museum’s well regarded collection of Islamic objects was launched by former president Jacques Chirac in 2002. Six years later his successor, Nicolas Sarkozy, laid the first stone. After four years of construction, the wing is set to open in the summer.

On Wednesday, the Louvre’s director, Henri Loyette, gave an update on the progress of the building, which is due to open in the summer. He said the new addition to the museum would put on show “collections that have been largely neglected for 25 years.” The building’s architect Mario Bellini, who has designed the structure with Rudy Ricciotti, told the BBC the structure should seem as if it is “floating in mid-air.” “The roof is only supported by eight very narrow tubes which are leaning and dancing together and which support the weight of the veil to the bottom of the foundations,” he said.

The 3,500 square metre space is the museum’s biggest project since the construction of the glass pyramid that sits in the Louvre’s main courtyard twenty years ago. The €98 million ($126 million) new wing will sit in one of the Louvre’s hidden courtyards in the Denon wing of the gallery and can house around 18,000 works. In 2011, the Louvre attracted a record 8.8 million visits, with around two-thirds coming from outside France.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: First Muslim State Cemetery in Strasbourg

The largest Muslim community in Europe lives in France

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JANUARY 5 — The first Muslim state cemetery of France will be built in Strasbourg, in Eastern France. This is the first Muslim state cemetery in France, where the largest Muslim community (at least 4 million people) lives. The building of the Muslim cemetery is regulated by a specific set of rules and regulations issued in the Alsace-Molsheim region concerning relations between the State and the Church. A law issued in 1905, providing for secularism of the French state, prevents state authorities from financing any kind of religious institution. The law was never applied in Alsace, where the 1801 Agreement remained in force. The Agreement is a law issued in Napoleon’s times, allowing municipalities to contribute in financing worshipping activities. In the course of this region’s troubled history (Alsace was long the bone of contention between Germany and France) , the law was never changed neither harmonized with other regions’ legislation. For years now France’s Muslim community has pointed out to the state authorities that there is a lack of areas for the Muslim in state cemeteries all over the county. In Strasbourg, where Muslim areas in state cemeteries are full, several families had to bury their dead in their country of origin. The city invested 800,000 euro to build the cemetery, which is then the first all-Muslim cemetery, whose inauguration is due to take place on February, 6th.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Louvre: Italian ‘Veil’ For Islamic Arts Department

Project of Milanese Bellini, opening expected this summer

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JANUARY 4 — An undulating roofing of glass and metal, covering the 18th century courtyard like a large veil; below, two exposition floors in which natural and artificial light come together with opens spaces, glass cases and walls in black cement: the new department of Islamic Arts has been opened in the Louvre. It was designed and built by the Milanese architect Mario Bellini, together with the French Rudy Ricciotti.

“The idea of the veil is not simply based on a folkloristic image,” Bellini explained to ANSA in Paris, where he visited the nearly completed construction site, “but on the will to protect the collection against the risk of being seen against a background of Western culture, causing it inconvenience. At the same time, we did not want to cover the courtyard with glass, closing it, or construct a building inside, because that would have required a division in several levels, fragmenting the exposition space.” Hence the idea of a hybrid structure in the space of Cour Vincenti, one of the Louvre’s courtyards, without invading it. A light and translucent structure that allows light to enter. The project was also designed to make use of the area below ground level, the same as 20 years ago when the Pyramid was built that has become a symbol of the museum in Paris.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Forced to Buy Austrian Electricity

One of Germany’s energy providers was forced to use reserves from Austrian power stations on two days in December as a “precautionary measure,” according to a newspaper report. According to Die Welt newspaper, grid operator Tennet, which runs a huge section of the German national electricity grid, was forced to tap energy from Austria on December 8 and 9 last year to guarantee the stability of its supply. The transaction has been confirmed by the Federal Network Agency.

Austrian providers were forced to put an old oil power station near the town of Graz back online to export the power to Germany. Following an intense national debate in the wake the March’s nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan, Germany shut down eight of its nuclear power stations last summer, and put five old conventional power stations back on the grid to cover the high-consumption winter months.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Drug Problems Persist for Flower Power Retirees

They may be getting older, but they haven’t outgrown their drug problems. German health workers are reporting a spike in the number of elderly addicts as a generation of baby boomers reaches retirement age. But the healthcare system isn’t prepared to handle them.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Fiat Raises Its Chrysler Stake

Turin, 5 Jan. (AKI) — Italy’s Fiat acquired an additional 5 percent stake in Chrysler, boosting its share of the American automaker to 58.5 percent after achieving a fuel-efficiency target as the Turin-based company aims to integrate the two companies.

“The acquisition of a further 5 percent of Chrysler is a fundamental step in completion of the integration between our two groups, “ Fiat and Chrysler chief executive officer Sergio Marchionne said in a written statement on Thursday.

Marchionne aims to combine, Fiat, Italy’s top car company, with the America’s No. 3 by the end of 2014. The CEO says the combination would create “critical mass.”

Fiat initially took 20 percent of Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler in 2009 when the company was exiting a government bailout.

A retirement trust for the United Auto Workers union owns the remaining 41.5 percent Chrysler stake.

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



Norway: Plaintiffs Want New Breivik Sanity Check

Lawyers for the plaintiffs in the July 22nd twin attacks in Norway that left 77 people dead called on Thursday for a new psychiatric evaluation of the gunman, whom experts have found criminally insane. In a letter released by the Oslo district court, lawyers representing 56 survivors and families of the victims questioned two court-appointed experts’ diagnosis of Anders Behring Breivik which concluded that he was suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia”.

That conclusion means Behring Breivik, a 32-year-old right-wing extremist who has confessed to the killings and claimed he was waging a war against the “Muslim invasion” of Europe, will likely be sentenced to psychiatric care in a closed ward instead of going to jail. “Several of the civil parties who saw him on Utøya (the island where he committed 69 of the killings) found him to be cynical and rational and find this incompatible with the conclusion that he would be psychotic,” the lawyers wrote.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Poland: Lego Concentration Camp Sold to Polish Museum

A Polish museum has purchased a controversial replica of a concentration camp — made of Lego. Zbigniew Libera enraged the toy company in 1996 when he built a miniature version of a Nazi death camp using Lego’s signature colourful bricks. The set featured Lego crematoria and barracks, barbed-wire fences and miniature guards and skeletons, all marked with the company’s name. The Polish artist was heavily criticised at the time for making light of the Holocaust, but his work has since been shown in galleries around the world, including at New York’s Jewish Museum ten years ago. The Lego collection has now been bought from a Norwegian collector for £45,000 by Warsaw’s Museum of Modern Art. The artwork, described by the museum as “one of the most important works of contemporary Polish art,” will go on display later this year.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Seven Charged After Burning Victim With Iron

Seven men in Örebro, central Sweden, have been charged with kidnapping and aggravated assault after having tortured a man in Örebro last October, according to a report in local paper Nerikes Allehanda (NA). The incident occurred in a flat in Örebro at the start of October last year, according to news agency TT. The men allegedly tied the victim’s feet together and put him in a bathtub where they proceeded in burning him with an iron and hitting him repeatedly with computer cables. He was also stabbed with a screwdriver in the thigh.

According to the paper, one of the accused had asked the victim to visit the flat. When he arrived there, the rest of the six men were hiding inside the apartment and jumped him as soon as he entered the flat. One of the perpetrators also filmed part of the torture. According to NA, it seems as if the the torture was meant to scare the man to silence in an upcoming court case. The accused are all between 18 and 21 years old and apart from being charged with aggravated assault and kidnapping, the also stand accused of illegal threats and abusing judicial procedures.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Customs ‘Not Focused’ On Weapons Smuggling

The Öresund bridge, connecting Sweden and Denmark, has long been known to be an important route for weapons smugglers to get their wares into Sweden. Despite this only seven illegal weapons were seized there over the course of 2011. “We have been mainly focusing on drugs,” said Anders Trägårdh, head of operations at customs in Malmö, to daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter (DN).

The debate about the illegal smuggling of weapons has been given a new lease of life after a recent rise in violent crimes in the Malmö region. But in the government directive given to the Swedish customs agency they are told to focus on drugs, alcohol and cigarettes in order to combat organized crime in the country, according to news agency TT.

Illegal weapons smuggling isn’t mentioned in the directive, reported daily Svenska Dagbladet (SvD). Today customs at the Öresund bridge have around 40 sniffer dogs trained to find drugs, but none especially trained to find weapons, unlike the county police with several dogs that can track both weapons and ammunition at their disposal. And that weapons are brought in over the Öresund bridge is not news to the local police.

“Skåne is a prime spot for smuggling illegal weapons, so we are under extra pressure. We have asked for tighter regulations on smuggling for a long time,” said Lars Förstell, of the Skåne police to Svenska Dagbladet (SvD). At least 200 weapons are being confiscated by the police in Malmö annually — but there has been no direct focus on stopping them from coming in to the country in the first place. According to the Swedish National Police Board (Rikspolisstyrelsen) weapons are primarily being brought into the country from the Balkans in small consignments by land in buses or cars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Man Jailed for Slaying Teen on Football Pitch

A 29-year-old man has been sentenced to twelve years in prison and will be deported from Sweden for murdering a teenager on a Stockholm football pitch last July. The man stabbed the 18-year-old in the chest as he played football with friends on a pitch in Hässelby, a suburb of the capital. The group managed to escape to a nearby shop, but were followed by the attacker, who continued to make threats against them. The teenager later died of his injuries.

The killer told police he targeted his victim after recognizing him from a previous fight, but the Stockholm District Court said it had not found evidence to back up that claim. Tests showed that the murderer did not suffer from a serious psychiatric disorder, and was therefore responsible for his actions.

The man’s lawyer, Sargon De Basso, said he would decide next week whether to appeal. He said the crime should have been categorized as manslaughter: “We think it is wrong of the court to find that this was a murder,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Malmö Sees Five Shooting Deaths in Five Weeks

Overworked police bring in enforcements to deal with latest violent episodes

Following the shooting death of a 48-year-old man on Tuesday, Malmö has now seen five gun-related killings in just over five weeks.

As a result, Malmö police are now appointing a special unit to deal with the rise of killings.

“This is an exceptional situation with this many violent crimes,” county police chief Eva Årestad said on Tuesday, according to Sweden’s English-language news site, The Local.

Malmö police will also request the assistance of Sweden’s National Bureau of Investigation (Rikskriminalen) as well as neighbouring police districts.

Tuesday’s shooting death followed the murder of a 15-year-old boy on New Year’s Day. Police in that case say the motive may have been revenge for scaring a young girl with a firework.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Alzheimer’s Risk Can be Detected 10 Years Before Symptoms, Study Finds

In a DW interview, a Lund University scientist says his team has doubled the early detection period for Alzheimer’s. He hopes this will lead to better therapies for patients, as they may be able to be started earlier.

In a new scientific paper published in the January 1, 2012 edition of the Archives of General Psychiatry, a team of Swedish researchers have now shown that it’s possible to detect individuals with a high risk of developing Alzheimer’s 10 years before they show any outward symptoms. If their technique proves successful, it could become an important tool for managing future Alzheimer’s patients.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Holiday Period That Was Scarred by Casual Violence

IT WAS supposed to be the season of peace and goodwill.

But the festive period was marred this year by an unprecedented outbreak of blood-soaked violence, as Christmas and the New Year saw a grim and lengthening catalogue of murders across the country. Many of the incidents were extraordinary in their savagery.

One young woman was hacked to death at a house in Hertfordshire as she babysat her niece and nephew, while an Indian student called Anuj Bidve was shot in the head at point blank range as he walked with friends down a street in Salford on Boxing Day.

Gangland warfare in central London spilled over into murder when a teenage convicted criminal Seydou Diarrassouba was fatally stabbed during a fracas outside an Oxford Street store.

On New Year’s Eve alone, three murders were reported at parties in different parts of Britain. On the following day a young man was shot dead as he celebrated at a London wine bar.

Domestic killings have been just as barbaric, epitomised by the appalling crime at Peterlee this week where in an orgy of killing Michael Atherton shot dead his partner and two of her relatives before turning his gun on himself.

Shocking murders have always happened in Britain. But this recent spate of killings points to something darker and more poisonous at the heart of our society.

Just as the explosive riots last August ripped away the veneer of civilisation in some of our cities, so these murders reveal a dangerous element of violent brutality in our midst that did not exist a few decades ago.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Abbott’s Twitter Problems

That Diane Abbott tweet that Pete mentioned earlier (‘White people love playing divide and rule’) has made her the centre of attention this morning. She may have deleted it, and claimed that it has been ‘taken out of context’, but still the Labour Party has deemed it necessary to give her a public telling off for it. A spokesman said: ‘We disagree with Diane’s tweet. It is wrong to make sweeping generalisations about any race, creed, or culture. The Labour Party has always campaigned against such behaviour — and so has Diane Abbott.’

And Abbott herself has now apologised, although not exactly wholeheartedly: ‘I understand people have interpreted my comments as making generalisations about white people. I do not believe in doing that. I apologise for any offence caused.’

We’ll have to see if that’s enough to draw a line under all this. It may not be, particularly with Tory MP Nadhim Zahawi claiming: ‘If it was a white MP generalising against the black community and saying that the black community divide and rule, they would resign or be sacked in five minutes.’

Update: Before her apology, Abbott spoke to Sky News, but was interrupted by a phone call. According to Paul Waugh, it was Ed Miliband, and the Labour leader gave her ‘a severe dressing down’. Here’s the clip, courtesy of Political Scrapbook

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Boy ‘Tortured and Drowned’ Over Witchcraft Claims

Kristy Bamu, 15, was murdered by his sister and her partner because they believed he was practising sorcery, court told

Over a period of days the pair, originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo, attempted to “exorcise” the evil spirits they believed were in the children “refusing to let them eat, drink or sleep for days while the punishments became increasingly violent, with them using the many implements found in the flat as weapons of torture”, he said.

“However, it was Kristy who became the focus of Bikubi’s attention and, in a desperate attempt to prevent any further suffering, he and his two sisters were eventually to admit to being sorcerers,” said Altman. “As Kirsty’s injuries became ever more severe he even pleaded to be allowed to die,” he added.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



UK: Boy, 15, ‘Tortured to Death With Hammer and Chisels on Christmas Day Because Relative Thought He Was a Witch’

A teenager accused of witchcraft was tortured to death by his sister and her partner in ‘a tale of horror’ on Christmas Day, the Old Bailey heard.

Eric Bikubi, 27, and Magalie Bamu, 28, attacked Kristy Bamu, 15, and his two sisters with pliers, knives and a hammer after accusing them of being ‘sorcerers’, it is claimed.

Kristy was in such pain after days of being attacked with sticks, a metal bar, hammer and chisel that he begged to die, jurors heard.

The teenage boy had suffered more than 100 injuries — his face and head were covered in cuts and some of his teeth were missing when he was found in the blood-soaked flat.

Prosecutor Brian Altman QC said the case involved ‘unspeakable savagery and brutality’.

At one point during their ordeal, the siblings were forced to hit their brother, and when Bikubi realised that the boy’s sister was only pretending he forced a lightbulb into her mouth and threatened her with a knife.

[…]

Mr Altman told jurors that the couple were believers in ‘kindoki’ — a form of witchcraft that pervades almost all sections of their native Congolese society.

He said: ‘Kindoki usually denotes a negative, malicious force, by which people in conjunction with the spirits, or by spirits alone, deliberately inflict harm.

‘Kindoki pervades Congolese life, from high to low, rich to poor, and a believe in kindoki is not inconsistent with Christianity, because in the Congo it is practised in the churches with active support of the pastors.

‘If the practice of kindoki is dislocated from the control of the churches and the supervisory influence of religious leaders, then it may take on a feral and, indeed, evil character — as the prosecution suggest it did here.

‘The defendants were seeking Kristy’s deliverance and exorcism through the dealing out of ever-increasingly violent punishments.’

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Diane Abbott Faces Calls to Resign Over ‘Racist’ Tweet That Says ‘White People Love to Play Divide and Rule’

Black MP Diane Abbott is facing calls to quit over a remark on Twitter that has been deemed racist against white people.

The shadow minister for public health said during a conversation about the sentencing of Stephen Lawrence’s murderers that ‘white people love to play “divide and rule”,’ adding ‘we should not play their game’.

The tweet came with a hashtag that spelt out ‘tactic as old as colonialism’.

Her comment was made to freelance journalist Bim Adewunmi, another Twitter user who had been commenting about the sentencing of Gary Dobson and David Norris for Stephen’s murder.

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



UK: Diane Abbott in ‘Racist’ Jibe Fury

Britain’s first black woman MP, Diane Abbott, was forced to issue a humiliating apology today after making allegedly racist remarks about white people.

A furious Ed Miliband ordered shadow health minister Ms Abbott to say sorry after she tweeted: “White people love playing ‘divide & rule’. We should not play their game.” The controversial remark ignited a furious backlash at Westminster and on Twitter. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg condemned her comments as “stupid and crass”. Tory MP Nadhim Zahawi said: “This is racism. If this was a white Member of Parliament saying all black people want to do bad things to us they would have resigned within the hour or been sacked.”

The comments by Ms Abbott, 58, the MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, were made last night during a conversation on Twitter about Stephen Lawrence’s murderers, Gary Dobson and David Norris, who were sentenced to a minimum total of 29 years yesterday. She told freelance journalist Bim Adewunmi, another Twitter user: “You are playing into the divide and rule agenda.” It provoked a storm of criticism. As the row grew today, Labour leader Mr Miliband phoned her personally while she gave a live interview on television to order her to say sorry. Shortly afterwards she issued a statement saying: “I understand people have interpreted my comments as making generalisations about white people. I do not believe in doing that. I apologise for any offence caused.”

A Labour Party source said: “We disagree with Diane’s tweet. It’s wrong to make sweeping generalisations about any race, creed or culture. The Labour Party has always campaigned against such behaviour and so has Diane Abbott.” During the conversation on Twitter, Ms Adewunmi had complained that so-called “black leaders” were out of touch with the people they claimed to represent. Ms Abbott attempted to defuse the row by saying she had been taken out of context. She updated her page on Twitter at 10am today to say: “Refers to nature of 19th Century European colonialism. Bit much to get into 140 characters.” The Labour MP also suggested that some people had interpreted her comments “maliciously”. But she was ordered to apologise publicly after the storm of criticism. Tory MP Mr Zahawi called on the Labour leader to axe her from his front bench for “inciting hatred against white people”. He branded her comments “intolerable” and “completely hurtful to the white community”. He added: “For a shadow minister to hold these sort of views is intolerable. It is completely wrong and she now needs to go.”

Twitter user stokenewington said she was “fuming” and told Ms Abbott: “Remember that last election? That was the last time I’ll ever vote for you.” She went on: “Never again. What planet are you on?” Joanne Harding, a Labour councillor, tweeted: “Well Diane Abbott has done herself no favours on twitter this eve, very disappointed with her remarks.” It is not the first time that Ms Abbott has courted controversy. On Remembrance Day last year she was heavily criticised after her office tweeted about Labour’s lead in the polls during the two-minute silence. Conservative blogger Iain Dale wrote: “Just imagine a Tory MP making this kind of comment and surviving. I think that Ms Abbott may be in big doo doo.” During the Labour leadership contest in 2010, Ms Abbott clashed with BBC political pundit Andrew Neil over her decision to send her son James to the £12,700-a-year City of London School.

Defending her decision, she said: “West Indian mums will go to the wall for their children.” Mr Neil reacted by asking: “So black mums love their kids more than white mums, do they?” Ms Abbott responded: “I have said everything I am going to say about where I send my son to school.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: MP Diane Abbott ‘Sorry’ Over Twitter Race Comments

Shadow Health Minister Diane Abbott has apologised for comments she made on the Twitter social networking site, amid claims they were racist. She wrote: “White people love playing ‘divide & rule’ We should not play their game” in response to criticism of the term “black community leaders”. Tory MP Nadhim Zahawi had called for her to be sacked for “inciting hatred against white people”. Ms Abbott said later: “I apologise for any offence caused. I understand people have interpreted my comments as making generalisations about white people,” she said. “I do not believe in doing that.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Mohammed Amin: What Sharia Really Means to Muslims

Mohammed Amin is Vice Chairman of the Conservative Muslim Forum but is writing in a personal capacity.

I was inspired to write this piece in response to Martin Parsons’ “Stopping the spread of sharia should be central to British foreign policy.”

I share many of Martin Parsons’ concerns about the increase in religious extremism amongst some Muslims, such as the activities of Boko Haram in Nigeria which I regard as both criminal and un-Islamic. However I want to explain why adopting an explicit policy against Shariah would be disastrous for British foreign policy.

What is Shariah?

I recommend reading Rashad Ali and Haras Rafiq’s article “Sharia doesn’t mean what Islamists claim it means”. Paul Goodman referenced this article in his 31 May 2011 post on the Prevent Review and referred to “sharia, the religious law of Islam.” However treating Shariah as being the same as Islamic law (fiqh in Arabic) actually misses a fundamental point.

My eureka moment was a “dog that didn’t bark in the night” insight when I read Mohammad Hashim Kamali’s “Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence.” While the author is careful to define Arabic terms when he first uses them, he fails to do so with the word “Shariah” and the word is missing from the glossary at the end of the book. This oversight suggests that he thought the word was obvious, because it is so fundamental to Islam, and that caused him to forget to define it.

The original meaning of Shariah according to “The Spirit of Islamic Law” by Professor Bernard G. Weiss is “The path to the water hole”. Given the importance of water in Arabia, it is not surprising that in Islam Shariah came to mean “The path to salvation.” The etymology in the Wikipedia article quotes “Understanding Islamic Law: From Classical to Contemporary” by Irshad Abdal-Haqq as follows “Shar’iah, or more properly Al-Shari’ah, literally means the pathway, path to be followed, or clear way to be followed, and has come to mean the path upon which the believer has to tread.” Accordingly, Shariah is much more than Islamic law (fiqh).

An example of how Shariah is more than fiqh

Muslims are obliged to give Zakat, which is one of the five pillars of Islam. In a country whose laws are based on Shariah, such Zakat is compulsorily collected by the state, as with any tax. There are rules set out in the books of fiqh about how Zakat is calculated, which assets it applies to etc. In countries with secular laws, such as the UK, nobody collects Zakat compulsorily, but the fiqh rules are the same; it is up to the individual Muslim to apply them. In both cases, it is possible to go to experts in fiqh who can tell you the rules. In an Islamic state, some such experts will be judges who arbitrate disputes about the amount of Zakat the state can take off you. In Britain, fiqh experts will give me an opinion; it is then between me and God what I do.

However the general obligation in Islam to be charitable does not stop with Zakat as calculated by the rules of fiqh. Without getting into boring details, a rich person can practice “Zakat avoidance” (similar to tax avoidance!) by primarily owning assets that do not attract Zakat. However the general Islamic obligation to be charitable is an integral part of Shariah, and if I seek to avoid giving Zakat by “Zakat avoidance,” and also do not otherwise give to charity, I would expect a bad outcome on the Day of Judgement. The rules of fiqh however do not tell me how much voluntary charity I should give; the level of charitableness beyond Zakat that God expects of me is not something that you can put into legal rules that a judge can arbitrate on. The same applies to many other things that God requires of us. God requires us to be kind to others. However neither fiqh nor any other legal system can specify how much kindness we should demonstrate; conversely fiqh and all other legal systems do require us to comply with contracts that we enter into.

Overall, Shariah encompasses much more than just those rules that can be litigated within an Islamic legal system or can be arbitrated by human judges. Instead, as Irshad Abdal-Haqq explains, Shariah is the totality of what God expects of us.

Why criticising Shariah upsets Muslims

When you criticise Shariah, for the reasons I explain above, you are criticising Islam itself. Individuals are free to criticise Islam, but I don’t think Her Majesty’s Government setting out to do so will advance the national interest.

What the Government’s policy should be

Our country believes in certain fundamental rights, set out very well in the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights. So do I. Accordingly, we should not hesitate to require all countries to adhere to standards such as:

  • All citizens should receive equal treatment, and a country should not deny citizenship to some of its people on the basis of race or religion.
  • l people are free to practice their religion and to change it. We can actively oppose attempts to punish apostasy without concerning ourselves with the disagreement amongst Muslims as to whether Islam prescribes an earthly punishment for apostasy.

None of this requires the UK to set itself against Islam, which is where Martin Parsons’ proposition would lead us.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Study Indicates More Britons Are Converting to Islam: Report

A new study found that the number of Britons converting to Islam is growing, a London-based newspaper reported on Tuesday. The Independent newspaper said that the estimated number of British converts has always been difficult to count because “census data does not differentiate between a religious person that has adopted a new faith or was born into it.”

According to a new study by the inter-faith think tank Faith Matters, the real figure could be as high as 100,000, with as many as 5,000 new conversions nationwide each year. Previous estimates have placed the number of Muslim converts in the UK at between 14,000 and 25,000. The study used data from the Scottish 2001 census, the only survey to ask respondents what their religion was at birth as well as at the time of the survey; researchers broke down what proportion of Muslim converts there were by ethnicity and then extrapolated the figures for Britain as a whole, the newspaper said. In all they estimated that there were 60,699 converts living in Britain in 2001.

The researchers polled mosques in London to try to calculate how many conversions take place a year. The results gave a figure of 1,400 conversions in the capital in the past 12 months, which, when extrapolated nationwide, would mean approximately 5,200 people converting to Islam every year. Meanwhile, the figures are comparable with studies in Germany and France, which found that there were around 4,000 conversions a year in each country. “This report is the best intellectual ‘guestimate’ using census numbers, local authority data and polling from mosques,” Fiyaz Mughal, director of Faith Matters, told the newspaper. “Either way, few people doubt that the number adopting Islam in the UK has risen dramatically in the past 10 years.” Asked why people were converting in such large numbers, he replied: “I think there is definitely a relationship between conversions being on the increase and the prominence of Islam in the public domain. People are interested in finding out what Islam is all about, and when they do that they go in different directions. Most shrug their shoulders and return to their lives, but some will inevitably end up liking what they discover and will convert.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Twitter Fails to Act Over Ed Miliband Lookalike’s Anti-Israel Death Threats

The social networking site, Twitter, has provoked fury after refusing to act against a user responsible for a stream of death threats and antisemitic abuse. Shereef Abdallah, who advertises himself as an Ed Miliband lookalike and claims to have worked on the Labour leader’s election campaign, began by targeting people identified as supporters of Tony Blair. He has since widened his online attacks to anyone who challenges him. As the violence of his language escalated, Mr Abdallah turned his fire on a young British Israeli woman, “Rachel”, who had criticised his description of his opponents as Nazis. Using often explicit pornographic language, Mr Abdallah made direct threats such as: “I will hunt you down & fight you min by min. hr by hr. day by day. wk by wk. month by month. year by year for the rest of yr life.” He later threatened to beat her to death, noting that this was “a promise” he would carry out. The police have now taken up the case after a former Labour Party press officer intervened — only to be threatened with having his throat cut.

Mr Abdallah, who has worked as a volunteer at the office of Glenda Jackson and blogged for the Labour Party affiliate organisation Young Fabians, started his campaign with attacks on “Julia”, a young woman who runs the Blairite blog Julie’s Think Tank. The JC has been advised not to reveal the identity of the women involved as there is a risk that Mr Abdallah may turn his violent, often sexual fantasies into real acts of violence. Many of his tweets end with the sign-off “R.I.P.” The probation officers’ union, Napo, which is running a campaign to toughen up the laws on stalking, referred the tweets to a psychological profiler who helps the police identify violent offenders. She concluded that there was a 30 per cent chance that Mr Abdallah would turn his threats into real acts of violence.

When a Twitter user known as @blairsupporter reported the abuse received from Mr Abdallah, Twitter responded: “We have investigated the reported account and have found that it’s not in violation of the Twitter rules at this time. We have a policy against violent threats, but the content of this account lacks the specificity to meet the criteria of an actionable threat.” A spokeswoman from Twitter’s “Trust and Safety” department suggested contacting dealing with the matter locally. She continued: “Websites do not have the ability to investigate and assess a threat, bring charges or prosecute individuals.” But the Community Security Trust spokesman, Mark Gardner, said Twitter’s position set a dangerous precedent: “These tweets are a clear example of racist intimidation and threats. We cannot have a situation where modern media is exempt from basic legal protocol.”

Harry Fletcher, who is running Napo’s campaign on stalking law reform, said: “The threat to these women is real, frightening and could escalate. Social media companies need to wake up to their responsibilities and deal with this as a matter of urgency.” John Mann MP, chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group Against Antisemitism, said: “Individuals continue to peddle hate online. This highlights the ever-emerging problem with Twitter and it is very troubling that they refuse to act.”

Mr Abdallah, who has used the names @Sheik74k and @LFCSheikKD on Twitter, bombarded “Julia” with messages such as: “Your nightmare is just starting, Julia, it will only get worse for you every day 24/7 till you leave twitter”; “Zionists can’t save you, Julia, the only way to stop it is to leave twitter. Racist tory anti Islamic scum”; “I fear nothing not even death so will fight you and your ilk to my last breath.” Most chilling of all was the message: “… are you still alive FFS? You will be next after I end [Rachel]… that’s a promise. sleep tight”. The young blogger became seriously concerned when Mr Abdallah turned up at her university. To “Rachel”, he wrote in capital letters: “I WILL BEAT YOU TO DEATH… R.I.P; THIS IS NOT A THREAT… THAT IS A PROMISE.”

The Fabian Society said Mr Abdallah had falsely claimed to be a member of the Young Fabians when he posted as a blogger on its website. His post was subsequently removed.

Mr Abdallah refused to answer the JC’s questions.

â- A Jerusalem-based lawyer has claimed that Twitter is providing services to groups such as Hizbollah. Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, who specialises in cases against terror groups, said that the company could be violating US law. Although Hizbollah does not have an official Twitter account, that of the Al-Manar TV network, which Hizbollah controls, has 7,500 followers.

â- Twitter users in Israel are only able to select “Palestinian Territories” when listing their location. Users can choose a location using their mobile phones. But anyone wanting to choose Israel finds a drop-down menu which offers only “Palestinian Territories”. Twitter says: “We list countries where we’ve launched SMS with at least one operator. We’ve been in touch with operators in Israel but haven’t yet been able to launch SMS there. So it’s not included on the list.”

[JP note: Boycott the anti-Semitic twits at Twitter.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: TV Channel to Launch ‘Alternative Leveson Inquiry’ Into Coverage of Islam

An “alternative Leveson inquiry” is being set up by an Islamic TV channel in order to investigate the way in which British media report on Muslim and Islamic affairs. The Islam Channel is planning to appoint a judge with an independent panel of assessors — just like Leveson — to carry out the inquiry. Its springboard was a public opinion poll which found that people believe the media are responsible for “whipping up a climate of fear of Islam in the UK.” The poll, by ComRes, was published in July, the month in which the Leveson inquiry was instituted. According to its findings, people are twice as likely to say the media is to blame for Islamophobia (29%) than far-right groups (13%), or Muslims themselves, whether abroad (14%) or in the UK (11%). The Alternative Leveson will examine the possible causal effect between media coverage and social attitudes towards Muslims. It will also assess any links between media coverage and subsequent government policy. It will ask editors and journalists to give evidence along with people who believe they have been victims of prejudiced media coverage. One reporter who might well be asked to appear is Richard Peppiatt who told the Leveson inquiry that his former paper, the Daily Star, published anti-Muslim propaganda. An initial meeting to discuss the establishment of a panel will be held on Monday afternoon at the Islam channel’s headquarters in the City of London. The channel, launched in 2004 is broadcast in English by satellite (channel 813) and broadcasts across Europe, the Middle East and north Africa. It is owned by Mohamed Ali Harrath, a refugee from Tunisia who, following the Arab spring, returned to his country for a visit in February after 21 years in exile.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


EBRD: Tunisia and Jordan Are the New Members

Two countries joined Egypt and Morocco in the European Bank

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 04 — Jordan and Tunisia have become members of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) as part of the process of becoming recipients of EBRD investments.

Both countries, according to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), sought membership of the EBRD in 2011, saying that they believed EBRD support would play an important role in helping to implement their programmes of economic and political reform. Jordan and Tunisia now join Egypt and Morocco as EBRD shareholders in the southern and eastern Mediterranean region, with Egypt and Morocco being founder members when the Bank was established in 1991. All four countries are the target of support under the Deauville Partnership that was launched under the French presidency of the G-8 in May 2011 in response to the historic changes under way in parts of the Middle East and North Africa.?? Responding to a call by the international community, the EBRD is extending the remit of its activities to include the southern and eastern Mediterranean region in a three-stage process that has already seen the first flow of technical assistance funded by grants from donors. Technical cooperation funds prepare the way for future EBRD funding, while the second stage in the process, expected in 2012, would be the creation of a special fund that would permit the start of EBRD investments in the four countries ahead of their becoming countries of operations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Offers Scholarships to College of Europe

Open to graduates from Southern Mediterranean countries

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 04 — The European Commission is inviting university graduates from European Neighbourhood Policy countries to apply for scholarships for post-graduate studies for the 2012-2013 academic year, at the College of Europe, founded in 1949 in Bruges (Belgium) and considered “the oldest and most prestigious institute of postgraduate European Union studies”.

According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), the EU is offering a significant number of full scholarships to graduates from ENP countries, including Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestinian territories, Syria and Tunisia, for post-graduate studies to its Bruges (Belgium) or Natolin (Warsaw, Poland) campus. The scholarships cover academic expenses, accommodation, meals and travel costs. The deadline for sending applications is 15 January 2012.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Snubbed Millionaire’s Brutal Attack on Girlfriend

Boyfriend could not control rage after his marriage proposal was turned down

A Norwegian girl was brutally attacked by her boyfriend as she refused to marry him.

Twenty four year old Sulvy Leopreez Sakkur was severely beaten by her Egyptian millionaire boyfriend.

The lady confirmed the news in an interview with Al Wafd newspaper. She identified her boyfriend as Ahmed AL Ajati, the son of Egyptian millionaire Yahiya Al Ajati.

She said, “The reason behind this was because I refused to marry him and asked him to end our relationship”.

Sulvy said she feared to speak up about her ordeal for fear of being punished more by the businessman and his son.

The incident took place on September 7th when she was in her flat at Ma’adi accompanied by her boyfriend. Sulvy asked him to end their relationship and refused his marriage proposal.

She was surprised by his reactiono as he started screaming hysterically then hit her small dog on the wall and trumpled it under his feet.

She pleaded and begged him to stop, but instead directed his anger towards her. He hit her hard on his face and stomach.

She experienced heavy blood flow from her mouth and face. Her neighbour heard the comotion and inquired about the reason for her cries. But Ahmed threatened to beat Sulvy more if she dared to open her mouth.

Ahmed AL Ajat lied to the neighbour who was at the door of her apartment.

Soon after he dragged Sulvy by her hair from her apartment from the fifth floor to the ground and pulled her into the car.

Sulvy tried to call her friend but could not manage to do so as Ahmed grabbed her hand and threw the mobile out of the car.

Sulvy testified that she was saved by pedestrians who carried her to the hospital and reported the incident to the police. But she feared more torture from the powerful business family.

           — Hat tip: SB [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Incitement to Murder, Mubarak Risks Death Sentence

He gave orders to shoot at Tahrir protestors, prosecution

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JANUARY 5 — Hosni Mubarak could be handed down a death penalty. The sentence has not yet been officially requested, but the general prosecutor leaves little room for doubt: yesterday in Cairo in another hearing of the trial against the leader ousted on February 11 2011, he accused the former Egyptian president of incitement to the murder of protestors during demonstrations in Tahrir Square. The charge carried a death sentence. Former interior minister Habib Al Adli and six other police officials have also been charged with the same crime. “The prosecution confirms that Mubarak, Al Adli and the six high-ranking security officials aided and incited those who opened fire to do so” against a crowd demonstrating and demanding the fall of the former dictator, the prosecutor general Mustafa Suleimane was quoted by the MENA agency as saying. The prosecutor also accused the new Egyptian authorities of having “deliberately refused to cooperate with the prosecution” to ascertain the responsibility held by the former president.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


EU Countries Agree Iran Oil Ban in Principle

EU countries have agreed to impose an oil embargo on Iran but are finalising details on how and when before announcing it officially on 30 January, diplomats told press on Wednesday. Oil prices fell the same day despite the news due to fears of an economic slowdown in Europe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran ‘Not Concerned’ About Imminent EU Oil Ban

(TEHRAN) — Iran said on Thursday it was “not concerned” about an imminent EU ban on its oil, saying it would endure the extra sanctions even though they amounted to “an economic war.” “Iran has always been ready to counter such hostile actions and we are not concerned at all about the sanctions,” Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said in a joint news conference with visiting Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.

“We have taken provisional measures. We have weathered the storm for the past 32 years and we will be able to survive this as well,” Salehi said. “These sanctions are an economic war against us,” Economy Minister Shamseddin Hosseini said, according to the official IRNA news agency.

Diplomats in Brussels said on Wednesday that the 27-nation EU bloc has reached an “agreement in principle” to ban Iranian oil imports and was discussing the timing of when the measure would begin. The ban would add to other sanctions already imposed by the West, including a US measure enacted last weekend that targets Iran’s central bank, which processes most of the Islamic republic’s oil sales.

The European Union is the second-biggest destination for Iranian oil after China, accounting for around 15 percent of the 2.6 million barrels exported each day, or some 450,000 barrels. Iran relies on oil sales for 80 percent of its foreign revenues.

The West is squeezing Iran over its nuclear programme, which the United States and allied nations fear is being used to develop an atomic bomb.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Yemen — the Second Somalia?

Ongoing anti-government protests, attacks by Islamic extremists and desires in the south to break from the north, have fueled concerns that Yemen could become another Somalia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


‘Russia Has Awoken’: Anti-Putin Protesters Search for Direction

Where will the Moscow protests lead? Already calling for the creation of their own party, the opposition movement is still searching for a leader. Their hope is to challenge Vladimir Putin in March’s presidential election. But the Russian strongman refuses dialogue with the protesters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India: Deoband Fatwa Against Selling of Firecrackers

Muzaffarnagar: Leading Islamic seminary Darul Uloom Deoband has issued a fatwa against manufacturing and selling of firecrackers, saying it was against Sharia law. Manufacturing and selling of firecrackers is against Sharia law, and bursting of crackers is misuse of money, the fatwa said, adding that men who misuse money are the “brothers of devil.” The fatwa was issued on a query from a man involved in the business of manufacturing firecrackers. A large number of Muslims are involved in manufacturing firecrackers in the country.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Phishing: Spam and Cyber Threats Affect India’s Internet Community

According to a recent study, India holds the world’s top spot for junk mail. Spammers make use of slack laws and near absent enforcement to turn the country into a center of unwanted email.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Airlines Refuse to Pay EU Carbon Tax

A group representing Chinese airlines says it will ignore Europe’s framework for taxing carbon emissions in the aviation industry. Government officials in Beijing want Brussels to got back to the drawing board.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US and China Hunker Down for Talks on Way Forward on North Korea

With the region still in a stir following the death of Kim Jong-Il, senior US and Chinese officials have held high-level talks in Beijing to discuss stability in the reclusive North.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


50 Detainee Complaints But Just One Reprimand at Maribyrnong

ONLY one staff member at Melbourne’s Maribyrnong Detention Centre has been disciplined in 15 months, despite almost 50 complaints against staff.

Centre operator Serco Australia said many allegations had been found to be unsubstantiated.

The Herald Sun this week revealed complaints of abuse and mistreatment by staff accounted for nearly a quarter of the 187 grievances lodged at the centre in the 15 months to March 25 last year.

Few details of complaints against staff were provided in documents released under Freedom of Information. But they included complaints of bullying, threats, intimidation, discrimination, racism and abuse.

One detainee claimed he was subjected to a “kind of torture” when he was not allowed out of a car for a cigarette, coffee or food break on a three-hour city tour.

He said he suffered a painful back and backside and a headache.

“My back got sore and I lost feeling (in) my ass (sic) my head started paining,” he said.

In another case, a member of the public complained of “inappropriate behaviour” by a Serco escort taking a detainee to hospital.

A Serco spokesman said it took its duty of care very seriously and complaints were properly investigated.

“Where appropriate, action is taken, and the complainant is advised formally of the outcome in each case.

“Complaints can often be resolved quickly (and) in many cases allegations are investigated and found not to be substantiated,” he said.

“However, we do not tolerate misconduct and where it is found to have occurred, we will take appropriate action.”

Other common complaints included delayed or inadequate medical treatment; lack of internet access; and poor quality or inadequate food.

Others said some ethnic groups were discriminated against and given less food.

Complaints against fellow detainees related to fights, racism, threats, screaming at night, and “inappropriate” touching.

Other gripes included overcrowding; lack of privacy; poor maintenance, hygiene and cleaning; lack of cash to buy from the centre’s shop; missing and broken equipment; and problems concerning visits.

Last month Serco, along with the immigration department and International Health and Medical Services, were told they had a “greater than normal duty of care” for detainees after being strongly criticised by a NSW coroner over three suicides at Sydney’s Villawood detention centre.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Government Refuses to Give in to Ransom Demands

THE Gillard Government will not pay a $2 million ransom demand for kidnapped Australian Warren Rodwell despite his harrowing video plea for help.

Mr Rodwell is being held by blood-thirsty Muslim extremists in the Philippines with a history of beheading captives when their demands are not met.

The Government and the Opposition are standing by the policy of refusing to pay ransom demands for fear it could encourage other terrorists.

Australian officials are instead assisting Filipino authorities as they try to trace the thugs who seized Mr Rodwell from his home last month.

Looking haggard and distressed, the 53-year-old former soldier pleads for the Australian embassy to help him in a 108-second video sent to his Filipina wife and obtained by Fairfax Media.

“This is your constituent appealing for his life, his safety,” he says.

“To my family, please do whatever to raise the two million US dollars they are asking for my release as soon as possible.”

Human Services Minister Brendan O’Connor said the Government would do everything it could to ensure Mr Rodwell’s safe return — but it would not pay a ransom.

“There’s been a policy, a bi-partisan policy, on not paying ransoms, for many many years,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Govt Looking to Brand Anzac Day

The federal government is reportedly looking to brand the anniversary of the first major military action fought by Australia and New Zealand forces during World War I.

A market research company has been paid $103,275 to conduct focus groups nationwide last year on branding Anzac Day, News Limited reported on Friday.

“It is a political intervention which should be snuffed out immediately, not just because it’s a waste of money but because Anzac Day … (is) profoundly celebrated and commemorated,” former Victorian premier Jeff Kennett said.

A Department of Veterans’ Affairs spokeswoman told News Limited the concept for “a national brand or motif” came after an Anzac Centenary Advisory Board meeting on October 14.

She said the government was tendering for a design and that ideas would be focus group tested.

Victorian RSL boss David McLachlan would not comment until he had seen the plans.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria Church Hit by Deadly Gun Attack Continue Reading the Main Story

Gunmen have attacked a church in north-east Nigeria killing at least six people, the church’s pastor says.

Johnson Jauro said the killings took place when gunmen burst into his Deeper Life Church in Gombe, capital of Gombe state.

He said his wife was among those killed. Ten other people were injured.

Nigeria has recently experienced a surge in ethnic and sectarian violence. The government declared a state of emergency in parts of the country.

“The attackers started shooting sporadically. They shot through the window of the church, and many people were killed including my wife,” Mr Jauro told Reuters news agency.

“Many members who attended the church service were also injured.”

No group said it carried out the attack, but the Islamist group Boko Haram recently carried out a string of bombings on Christmas Day, including against a church in the capital Abuja which killed dozens of people.

Earlier on Thursday, two suspected members of Boko Haram were arrested after a father and son were killed in Maiduguri in neighbouring Borno state.

Escalating violence

Attacks by Boko Haram have become increasingly frequent and are a major problem for the Nigerian authorities.

The wave of Islamist violence is one of the biggest problems faced by President Goodluck Jonathan President Goodluck Jonathan has vowed to “crush” the group.

Several northern states surrounding Gombe have had their borders sealed off under the state of emergency declared by Mr Jonathan following the Christmas bombings.

Boko Haram is fighting to create an Islamic state and wants to impose Sharia law across Nigeria.

Followers of Boko Haram believe any political or social activity associated with Western values should be banned.

This includes voting in elections, wearing shirts and trousers and receiving a secular education.

Boko Haram regards the Nigerian state as being run by non-believers and this was the case even when the country had a Muslim president.

In unrelated violence on Sunday, at least 50 people died in the eastern state of Ebony in clashes between two ethnic groups over a land dispute.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



South Sudan’s Cattle Wars Claim Humanitarian Toll

In South Sudan’s Jonglei state — the size of Austria and Switzerland combined — festering tribal rivalry has erupted into violence, triggering a humanitarian crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Evil Being Perpetrated Against Christians in Nigeria

by Fraser Nelson

The religious cleansing against Christians is intensifying in Nigeria, where Christians have been told they have until Friday to leave the country or face attacks by Islamic extremists. As I wrote recently in the Daily Telegraph, this is a trend sweeping the Middle East. Thousands are fleeing Iraq and Egypt, but Nigeria is the scene of the most ferocious attacks. Its government condemns the attacks, but seems unable to respond to the Boko Haram menace. This from the National Review:

‘Catholic archbishop John Onaiyekan, of Abuja, Nigeria’s capital city, appealed for help. “It’s a national tragedy. We are all unsecured. It’s not only Catholic. Today it’s us. Tomorrow we don’t know who it will be,” he said. Nigeria’s Catholic bishops report that some 200 individuals, mostly Catholic worshippers, were killed in the coordinated Christmas bombings…Archbishop Ade Job, president of the Episcopal Conference of Nigeria, issued a desperate plea: “Members of the Boko Haram sect have claimed responsibility for this shameful crime against God and humanity. We use this opportunity to call on our peace-loving Muslims, especially their leaders from the political, economic, social, and religious spectrums, not only to publicly denounce these acts, but for their own good and good of Nigeria… to do everything positive to end this movement… It is apparent that, if we depend only on our available active security agents, we shall not make much progress. I therefore call on Mr. President to recall the retired experts in criminology and employ foreign experts in this field to assist the active security agents to put an immediate end to [the] Boko Haram menace.”‘

As I blogged last week, the Foreign Office has been reprehensibly slow to respond to the new threat of religious cleansing. It should not be slow to offer whatever help and assistance the Nigerian government may need to stop this evil in its tracks.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Massachusetts Cannot Prevent Legal Immigrants From Enrolling in Commonwealth Care, Court Rules

BOSTON — The state’s highest court has ruled that Massachusetts cannot prevent thousands of legal immigrants from fully enrolling in Commonwealth Care, the state’s subsidized health care program.

The Supreme Judicial Court said in a unanimous decision Thursday that denying legal immigrants access to the program was discrimination and a violation of their equal protection rights under the state Constitution.

Secretary of Administration and Finance Jay Gonzalez said the ruling could cost the state up to $150 million.

The Legislature voted in 2009 to block immigrants from the program to save money. Gov. Deval L. Patrick later created the Commonwealth Care Bridge program to provide basic health care for legal immigrants who had been covered under Commonwealth Care.

Health Law Advocates, which filed a lawsuit on behalf of immigrants, praised the high court ruling.

[Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Gay Actor Ian McKellen Convinced Shakespeare Preferred Men

Shakespearean actor Sir Ian McKellen has boldly announced that there is absolutely ‘no doubt’ the bard was gay.

The Lord of the Rings star is adamant William Shakespeare preferred sex with men even though he was married with children.

And the 72-year-old acclaimed thespian said he came to his conclusion after studying William Shakespeare’s work it is evident the playwright was gay.

Sir Ian reflected in a New York newspaper: ‘I’d say Shakespeare slept with men.

‘The Merchant of Venice, centering on how the world treats gays as well as Jews, has a love triangle between an older man, younger man and a woman.

‘And the complexity in his comedies with cross-dressing and disguises is immense. Shakespeare obviously enjoyed sex with men as well as women.’

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

General


Globally, 2011 Was Costliest Disaster Year Ever

From devastating earthquakes to record tornado outbreaks, 2011 was the most expensive year for natural disasters worldwide, according to a new insurance report. At $380 billion, global economic losses from natural disasters in 2011 were two-thirds higher than in 2005, the previous record year, which had losses of $220 billion. The magnitude 9.0 Japan temblor in Marchalone caused more than half the year’s losses, according to the report from global insurance firm Munich Re. In the United States, a deadly dozen disasters each caused more than $1 billion in damage.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Hunt is on for Habitable Moons Around Alien Planets

While astronomers continue to search for potentially habitable alien planets, they’re expanding the hunt to include moons that could host life as well.

Three new computer simulations may help researchers identify rocky satellites beyond our solar system that could harbor water on their surfaces, if their parent planets circle close enough to their stars.

When scientists working with NASA’s Kepler space telescope announced the discovery of 1,235 planetary candidates in February 2011, the list included 37 Neptune-sized planets and 10 Jupiter-sized planets within their star’s habitable zones — the region of space where water can exist as a liquid on a rocky planet. Though gas giants would not boast liquid water on their surface, their moons might.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120104

Financial Crisis
» Eight Strategic Factors to Consider in 2012
» EU Commission Wants 5-Year Deadline to Save Euro
» French Minister: EU Will Impose Financial Tax by End of Year
» Greece Warns of Euro-Exit as EU Economies Drift Apart
» Italy: Bond Spread Dips Below 500 Points
» Italy Wants ‘Leeway’ On Deficit
» Italy: Govt Re-Evaluating 200-Euro Residence-Permit Levy
» Italy: Monti to Meet Merkel for Talks in Berlin
» Spain: Household Borrowing Down 2.1% on the Year in November
» Swiss Retail Giants Call for Weaker Franc
» US Closes 2011 With Record $15.22 Trillion in Debt, Officially at 100.3% Debt/GDP, $14 Billion From Breaching Debt Ceiling
 
USA
» Bernie Goldberg on Iowa: Mainstream Media Would Never Say ‘South Carolina is Too Black’
» Brain Electrodes Fix Depression Long Term
» Deep-Brain Stimulation Found to Fix Depression Long-Term
» Defying Republicans, Obama to Name Cordray as Consumer Agency Chief
» Fly Parasite Turns Honeybees Into Zombies
» Genetically Engineered Silkworms With Spider Genes Spin Super-Strong Silk
» Harlem Faces a Historic Shift
» Historic Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy: Obama Seeks Ties With Muslim Brotherhood
» Magma Causing Uplift in Oregon
» Mitt Romney’s Luck Has Limits
» Muslim Worker for Sacremento County Sues, Alleges Religious Harassment
» Muslim Woman Settles Religious Discrimination Suit Against Church
» Representative Michele Bachmann Leaves Race
» Survey Tunes in to Dark Energy
» Vatican: Pope Accepts Resignation of Bishop With Kids
» Yahoo Names PayPal President as C.E.O.
 
Europe and the EU
» Encounters With the Calabrian Mafia: Inside the World of the ‘Ndrangheta
» Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Dealt Another Blow
» Floating Wind Turbines Set to Conquer Deep Ocean
» Goodbye Democracy: My Political Analysis is Banned by a European Government as “Hate Speech”
» Greek Group Appeals Against Plans to Build Mosque in Athens
» Italy: Man Prefers Jail to Stay With Monks
» Italy: Berlusconi Allies Face Trial Over P3 Lobby
» Italy: Japanese Tycoon Steps in to Restore Dilapidated Treasure in Rome
» Mind Over Motor: Controlling Robots With Your Thoughts
» Norway: Lawyers Reject New Review of Breivik’s Sanity
» Norway: Doctor Under Fire After Saving Woman’s Life
» Spain: Priceless Roman Mosaic Irreparably Damaged by Thieves in Burgos
» Sweden: Gun Laws May be Sharpened: Minister
» The Politics of Projection in the West
» To Keep Venice From Going Underwater, Researchers Say, Pump Water Under Venice
» UK: Another Islamophobic Rant From Abhijit Pandya
» UK: Brother-in-Law of 7/7 Bomber Sparks Outrage With Claim Murderer Was ‘A Really Good Person’
» UK: Daily Mail Reports That Halal Meat Rejected in Parliament Restaurants and Cafes
» UK: Human Rights Law is Undermining UK’s Democracy
» UK: London 7/7 Bombings: Family’s Lasting Shock Over Attacks
» UK: Rupturing Breast-Implants
» UK: Race Rant Accused Emma West to Face Trial
» UK: Stopping the Spread of Sharia Should be Central to British Foreign Policy
» Wilders: Dutch Government Should Apologize for ‘Passive’ Attitude to WWII Deportation of Jews
 
North Africa
» Algerian Police Raid ‘Made in Israel’ Merchants
» Requiem for the Third See of Christendom
» Tunisia: Hamas Leader’s Next Visit
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Lovers’ Pipe Dreams Emerge From Jerusalem Excavation
» Police Confiscate Speakers From Jaffa Mosque
 
Middle East
» Afghanistan: Taliban Opening Qatar Office, And Maybe Door to Talks
» Five Yemeni Soldiers Killed in Clashes With Qaeda
» Italian General Named Top UN Commander in Lebanon
» Turkey’s Trade With Iran to Continue, Minister Says
» UAE: Auschwitz in Gym Advertisement, Removed
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: US Supports Taliban Negotiations
» Afghanistan: The Taliban’s Peace Offering
» Afghanistan: Italian Soldier Slightly Wounded by Bomb
» Pakistan: Separate Graveyard for Honor Killing Victims
 
Far East
» China: Ningxia: Muslims Against Police Over Mosque Demolition
» China’s Tomb Raiders Laying Waste to Thousands of Years of History
 
Australia — Pacific
» Australia Has Boom in Babies
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies in Face of Protest Threats
» Suicide Attacks in Nigeria: Islamist Terror Network Gains Strength in Africa
 
Immigration
» Britain’s Soft Touch Border Policy Exposed
» Mexico Deports Nearly 50,000 Central Americans
 
Culture Wars
» UK: Forget Tactics; The “Clash of Civilizations” Is Spiritual, Not Intellectual
» UK: Taking the Soft Option
 
General
» Antarctic Hydrothermal Vents Like No Other on Earth
» Antarctic Hot Springs Yields Ghostly New Species
» Bacteria Survive in Cold, Dry, Mars-Like Conditions by Living Off Iron
» Kepler’s Surprise: The Sounds of the Stars
» On Saturn Moon Titan, Weather Report Brings Chance of Methane Rain
» Stephen Hawking at 70: Exclusive Interview

Financial Crisis


Eight Strategic Factors to Consider in 2012

by Gregory R. Copley, and Yossef Bodansky

Rarely in the past six decades has global context counted for as much in strategic forecasting — trend analysis — as it does at the dawn of 2012. Reliance on stove-piped analysis of “strategic sectors” — such as economic and financial issues, security issues, politics, geopolitics, resources and energy, sociology and religion, and so on — will produce skewed and unreliable estimates, and will tend to favor linear extrapolations of recent experience. A study of broad contextual factors, including an expanded view of history, will show how cycles and confluences of trends potentially play a greater disruptive role than at any time since the end of World War II.

We have, in recent writings, stressed the longer-term trends and outlook, but it is important to see how the strategic environment is likely to play out during 2012. Equally, it is important that these trends (and others) are seen collectively, and not separately.

1. Global Economic and Financial Trends: Economic fragility is everywhere, even in fairly robust and growing economies. Some of the new engines of economic and financial growth — Brazil, India, and the People’s Republic of China (PRC) — face significant hurdles in 2012. Indeed, it is likely that we may see economic growth couple with instability, and with an inability of even substantial growth to meet social (and therefore political) expectations. Absent major surprises, watch for India to fall still further behind the PRC in terms of economic, and therefore strategic, competitiveness. But the delicacy of the global situation, as well as the PRC’s leadership transition in 2012, means that the PRC is unlikely, during this year, to see its yuan (renminbi) transform into a major global currency. Three of the major global economic lynchpins — the United States of America, the European Union, and Japan — remain in economic and financial difficulties, and this will constrain their strategic capabilities significantly. The rising debt-to-GDP ratio in both the US and the EU will hollow economic recovery efforts. This situation also means that the US dollar and the euro will retain their status as global trading currencies only by default, and will help reinforce a continuation of a fundamentally inflationary situation in the global marketplace. National statistics, which are biased politically, will continue to obscure real, underlying inflation, and this will continue to be pervasive and exported from the US and eurozone.

(SEE MORE AT URL, ABOVE)

[Return to headlines]



EU Commission Wants 5-Year Deadline to Save Euro

Sources — Brussels wants 27-nation accord

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JANUARY 4 — The 26-state inter-governmental accord to save the euro should be incorporated into EU-wide treaties within the coming five years.

This is the main demand of the EU Commission for the new inter-governmental accord being drawn up between 26 of the 27 member nations (after the United Kingdom withdrew from the negotiations). “This parallel route is necessary because there is no unanimity today,” EU sources say. “We want to see the accords aiming towards incorporation of the new regulations within the Treaty of Lisbon” within a foreseeable time span. “With five years at most from the coming into force of the accord, on the basis of an assessment of its application, an initiative should be launched … with the purpose of incorporating the substance of this accord within the legislative framework of the European Union,” reads part of the six-page document presented by the European Commission to the President of the Council, Herman van Rompuy.

“It important not to lose sight of the objective of keeping within a timeline of a few years for bringing the accord within the framework of treaties for the 27 states,” the source noted.

“For now, we have to use this parallel 26-nation instrument, but with the intention of going further. Our position remains unchanged; we believe it is better to work towards a Community framework,” the high-ranking official added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



French Minister: EU Will Impose Financial Tax by End of Year

French junior minister Leonetti has said on TV the bloc will launch a financial transactions tax by the end of the year despite UK opposition. “Twenty six out of 27, in all truth, none of the European countries expect the UK are against the idea, and except Sweden,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Warns of Euro-Exit as EU Economies Drift Apart

BRUSSELS — Greece may have to exit the eurozone if it fails to secure its second EU-IMF bail-out its government has warned, amid new protests against spending cuts. “The bailout agreement needs to be signed otherwise we will be out of the markets, out of the euro,” government spokesman Pantelis Kapsis told Skai TV on Tuesday (3 January).

The day before, doctors and pharmacists went on strike in reaction to planned spending cuts, with hospitals taking emergency cases only until Thursday. The latest €130 billion bail-out for Greece was agreed in principle by EU leaders in October, provided Athens cuts deeper into public spending, privatises some services and state-owned companies and boosts revenues by clamping down on tax evasion.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Bond Spread Dips Below 500 Points

Yields on 10-year bonds at 6.92%

(ANSA) — Rome, January 3 — The spread between Italy’s 10-year Treasury bond and the German benchmark bond dipped below the psychologically important 500-basis-points mark in early trading on Tuesday.

The spread had opened above 520 points on Monday following market uncertainty in Italy’s ability to service its big debt despite the government approving a tough austerity plan before Christmas aimed at balancing the budget by 2013 and boosting investor confidence.

But a strong start to the week on the financial markets helped bring the spread back down to 500 points on Monday.

The spread on Tuesday was 499.3 points while the yield on 10-year bonds, another indicator of market sentiment, stood at at 6.92%.

Premier Mario Monti has said spreads above 500 points are not justified by the Italian economy’s fundamentals.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy Wants ‘Leeway’ On Deficit

Proposed amendment to new eurozone fiscal pact

(ANSA) — Brussels, January 4 — Italy wants Europe to consider granting leeway for public investments in annual deficit calculations and to consider the economic cycle in assessing the rate of reduction of debt exceeding 60% of GDP, the government said Wednesday ahead of Friday’s eurozone working-group meeting on moves to save the euro agreed last month.

The proposals are contained in amendments the cabinet agreed on January 29 to the draft new treaty for a new fiscal compact aimed at saving the eurozone from implosion, the government said.

Italy’s huge debt, 120% of GDP, is the main reason it is under attack from bond markets.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Govt Re-Evaluating 200-Euro Residence-Permit Levy

Measure seen by many as hitting some of Italy’s poorest people

(ANSA) — Rome, January 4 — The government said Wednesday that it is re-evaluating a controversial new 200-euro levy on residence permits for migrant workers in Italy.

The measure, which is due to come into effect at the end of this month, was approved by Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right administration before the media magnate was forced to resign as premier in November by Italy’s debt crisis.

Premier Mario Monti’s emergency government, which approved a tough austerity package that aims to balance the national budget by 2013, initially left the levy in place.

But Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri and International Cooperation Minister Andrea Riccardi said in a statement the move was being reassessed after complaints from many quarters that it would hit some of the poorest people living in Italy.

“In a time of crisis that hits foreign workers in our country as well as Italians, it is necessary to verify if its application can be changed on the basis of the foreign worker’s salary and the composition of his or her family,” the statement said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Monti to Meet Merkel for Talks in Berlin

Focus on eurozone and development

(ANSA) — Rome, January 4 — Premier Mario Monti will go to Berlin next Wednesday to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel for talks on the eurozone crisis, the German government said Wednesday.

“The talks will focus on bilateral and international themes, the situation in the eurozone as well as economic development in Europe,” the government said in a statement.

Merkel is due to meet French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Monday, two days before Monti, to prepare a European Union summit scheduled for the end of the month. Monti is scheduled to arrive in Berlin late morning and will be greeted with full military honours.

German government spokesman Georg Streiter said the two leaders would meet for lunch before holding a media conference.

The talks were announced as Jean-Claude Juncker, prime minister of Luxembourg and president of the Euro Group, warned that Europe was “on the edge of recession”. There was also renewed concern about inflation as Italy’s annual inflation rate reached 2.8% in 2011 — its highest level since 2008, according to the statistics agency ISTAT.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: Household Borrowing Down 2.1% on the Year in November

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JANUARY 3 — The debt of Spanish households decreased by 2.1% on the year in November, to 878,197 million euros, the same level recorded in the final months of 2007 and the first months of 2008. The figures were released today by the Bank of Spain. The reduction was caused by a decline in consumer credit, which fell by 5% in November compared with the same month in 2010, to 207,195 million euros. The mortgage debt fell by 1.2% in the same period, to 667,935 million euros, 76.05% of total household borrowing. This percentage has remained virtually unchanged over several years. Company borrowing increased by 0.02% in November compared with the month of October, but fell by 2.1% on the year, to 1.26 billion euros.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swiss Retail Giants Call for Weaker Franc

Swiss retailers Coop and Manor have joined forces to ask for a minimum exchange rate of 1.40 francs ($1.50) per euro and longer opening hours. The supermarket and department store titans want the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to intervene again to lower the value of the national currency against the euro in order to fight retail tourism in bordering countries.

“As long as the euro is not worth 1.30 francs ($1.39), the retail trade will suffer a competitive disadvantage against other countries,” said Bertrand Jungo, head of Manor, in an interview with newspaper SonntagsBlick. His counterpart at Coop, Joos Sutter, issued a similar message in a column published in the SonntagsZeitung.

“A minimum exchange rate set at 1.45 francs ($1.55) would help us,” he wrote, admitting the goal was “not realistic” and that a cap of 1.30 francs ($1.39) per euro would also be welcome.

On September 6th, the SNB set a minimum exchange rate of 1.20 francs ($1.28) to the euro in order to stop the “massive overvaluation” of Switzerland’s national currency that has been hurting many industries and economic sectors, such as retail and tourism, for the last two years.

But establishing a new cap for the franc is not the only measure proposed by the heads of Coop and Manor to prevent millions of francs from leaking across the country’s borders.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Closes 2011 With Record $15.22 Trillion in Debt, Officially at 100.3% Debt/GDP, $14 Billion From Breaching Debt Ceiling

By Tyler Durden

…The final debt settlement of US debt about 10 days ahead of schedule, it is now official: according to the US Treasury, America has closed the books on 2011 with debt at an all time record $15,222,940,045,451.09. ..

US debt to GDP is now officially over 100%, or 100.3% to be specific, a fact which the US government decided to delay exposing until the very end of the calendar year. We wonder, rhetorically, just how prominent of a talking point this historic event will be in any upcoming GOP primary debates. And yes, technically this number is greater than the debt ceiling but it excludes various accounting gimmicks. When accounting for those, the US has a debt ceiling buffer of… $14 billion, or one third the size of a typical bond auction.

[see links @ URL, above]

[Return to headlines]

USA


Bernie Goldberg on Iowa: Mainstream Media Would Never Say ‘South Carolina is Too Black’

With the Iowa caucus less than 24 hours away, there is still some hesitation in the media that the caucus, not being an actual election and being somewhere in the Midwest, isn’t entirely representative of the nation. On tonight’s O’Reilly Factor, media critic Bernard Goldberg took on precisely this claim from Andrea Mitchell, suggesting that it was only acceptable in the mainstream media to say Iowa wasn’t representative of the nation because it was white. “We’re not going to hear that South Carolina… is too black,” he argued.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Brain Electrodes Fix Depression Long Term

First placebo-controlled trial of implanted electrodes is positive.

Deep depression that fails to respond to any other form of therapy can be moderated or reversed by stimulation of areas deep inside the brain. Now the first placebo-controlled study of this procedure shows that these responses can be maintained in the long term. Neurologist Helen Mayberg at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, followed ten patients with major depressive disorder and seven with bipolar disorder, or manic depression, after an electrode device was implanted in the subcallosal cingulate white matter of their brains and the area continuously stimulated.

All but one of twelve patients who reached the two-year point in the study had completely shed their depression or had only mild symptoms. For psychiatrists accustomed to seeing severely depressed patients fail to respond — or fail to maintain a response — to antidepressant or cognitive therapy, these results seem near miraculous.

“It’s almost spooky,” says Thomas Schlaepfer, a psychiatrist at the University of Bonn, Germany, who says he has seen similar long-term results in five treatment-resistant depressed patients following deep-brain stimulation (DBS) in the nucleus accumbens brain area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Deep-Brain Stimulation Found to Fix Depression Long-Term

The first placebo-controlled trial of implanted electrodes is positive, but recovery is usually slow and procedures are being fine-tuned

Deep depression that fails to respond to any other form of therapy can be moderated or reversed by stimulation of areas deep inside the brain. Now the first placebo-controlled study of this procedure shows that these responses can be maintained in the long term.

Neurologist Helen Mayberg at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, followed ten patients with major depressive disorder and seven with bipolar disorder, or manic depression, after an electrode device was implanted in the subcallosal cingulate white matter of their brains and the area continuously stimulated. All but one of twelve patients who reached the two-year point in the study had completely shed their depression or had only mild symptoms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Defying Republicans, Obama to Name Cordray as Consumer Agency Chief

President Obama will challenge Senate Republican foes of the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau by naming Richard Cordray as its director while Congress is out of town, according to a senior administration official.

That would allow the agency to establish new regulations over financial institutions, putting into effect elements of the financial regulatory overhaul that was one of the administration’s main achievements in Congress.

Mr. Obama’s exercise of constitutional powers to name top officials without Senate confirmation while Congress is in recess is a stiff challenge to Republicans, who have attempted to block the maneuver by holding “pro forma” sessions over the holidays.

[Return to headlines]



Fly Parasite Turns Honeybees Into Zombies

If deadly viruses and fungi weren’t enough, honeybees in North America now must also deal with a fly parasite that causes them to leave their hive and die after wandering about in a zombie-like stupor, a new study shows.

Scientists previously found that the parasitic fly, Apocephalus borealis, infects and ultimately kills bumblebees and paper wasps, while the “decapitating fly,” an insect in the same genus, implants its eggs in ants, whose heads then pop off after the fly larvae devour the ants’ brains and dissolve their connective tissues. Now researchers have discovered honeybees parasitized by A. borealis in 24 of 31 sites across the San Francisco Bay area, as well as other commercial hives in California and South Dakota.

Genetic tests revealed that some of the bees and flies were infected with deformed wing virus and the fungus Nosema ceranae, both of which have been implicated in colony collapse disorder (CCD). The scientists believe that more research into the parasitized bees and their behavior could yield new insights into the devastating disorder.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Genetically Engineered Silkworms With Spider Genes Spin Super-Strong Silk

In a lab at the University of Wyoming, some silkworms are spinning cocoons of silk, just as every silkworm has done for millions of years. But these insects are special. They have been genetically engineered to spin a hybrid material that’s partly their own silk, and partly that of a spider. With spider DNA at their disposal, they can weave fibres that are unusually strong and tough. It’s the latest step in a decades-long quest to produce artificial spider silk.

Spider silk is a remarkable material, wonderfully adapted for trapping, crushing, climbing and more. It is extraordinarily strong and tough, while still being elastic enough to stretch several times its original length. Indeed, the toughest biological material ever found is the record-breaking silk of the Darwin’s bark spider. It’s 10 times tougher than Kevlar, and the basis of webs that can span rivers.

Because of its enticing properties, spider silk has enormous potential. It could be put to all sorts of uses, from strong sutures to artificial ligaments to body armour. That is, if only we could make enough of the stuff. Farming spiders is out of the question. They are territorial animals with a penchant for eating each other. It took 82 people, 4 years and 1 million large spiders to make a piece of cloth just 11 feet by 4 feet. The alternative is to synthesise spider silk artificially. That hasn’t been easy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Harlem Faces a Historic Shift

Rise of Hispanic Voters Means Neighborhood Could Lose Its Black Voice in Congress

For seven decades, two African-American politicians-first Adam Clayton Powell Jr., then Charles Rangel-have represented Harlem in Congress, symbolizing the New York City neighborhood’s status as the de facto capital of black America.

Now, redistricting under way by the state legislature combined with a fast-rising Hispanic population are threatening to overturn that history. There are more Hispanics than blacks in Mr. Rangel’s district, raising the prospect that Harlem’s roughly 200,000 African-Americans will lose their dominant role in choosing the district’s member of Congress. Similar issues are emerging in several areas around the country, including Southern California.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Historic Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy: Obama Seeks Ties With Muslim Brotherhood

Reaching out in friendship to a group dedicated in its own words to “eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within.”

CAIRO — With the Muslim Brotherhood pulling within reach of an outright majority in Egypt’s new Parliament, the Obama administration has begun to reverse decades of mistrust and hostility as it seeks to forge closer ties with an organization once viewed as irreconcilably opposed to United States interests.

The administration’s overtures — including high-level meetings in recent weeks — constitute a historic shift in a foreign policy held by successive American administrations that steadfastly supported the autocratic government of President Hosni Mubarak in part out of concern for the Brotherhood’s Islamist ideology and historic ties to militants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Magma Causing Uplift in Oregon

Volcanic activity is causing the earth to rise in Oregon, scientists have found. Though whether such uplift is a sign of an imminent eruption remains uncertain.

As early as the summer of 1996, a 230-square-mile (600-square-kilometer) patch of ground in Oregon began to rise. The area lies just west of the South Sister Volcano, which with the North and Middle Sisters form the Three Sisters volcanoes, the most prominent peaks in the central Oregon stretch of the Cascade Mountains.

Although this region has not seen an eruption in at least 1,200 years, the scattered hints of volcanic activity here have been a cause of concern, leading to continuous satellite-based monitoring. Now 14 years of data is revealing just how the Earth is changing there and the likely cause of the uplift — a reservoir of magma invading the crust 3-to-4 miles (5-to-7 km) underground.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mitt Romney’s Luck Has Limits

Mitt Romney barely won the Iowa Republican caucuses, and he’s likely to become the party’s presidential candidate. The former governor is profiting from his rivals’ weaknesses, but this could damage him in the end. If he doesn’t improve his image, the chances of beating Barack Obama are slim.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslim Worker for Sacremento County Sues, Alleges Religious Harassment

A Muslim employee of Sacramento County alleges that he has suffered religious and racial discrimination since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. That’s the same year Abdur-Rahim Wasi, who is African American, started work at the Human Assistance Department. In a lawsuit filed in Superior Court last year, Wasi says co-workers have called him a host of names associated with the terrorist attacks — “Osama Bin Laden,” “Taliban” and “Al-Qaida.” “I’m tired of being called Osama Bin Laden,” Wasi wrote in a complaint to a federal agency two years ago. Wasi went on to say that he considers the Sept. 11 attacks criminal and the “mass murder of innocent people.” Wasi’s attorney, Leo Donahue, would not discuss the case Tuesday, nor would a county spokeswoman, Kerri Aiello. But in its written reply to Wasi’s complaint, the county denies all of his allegations and says it took reasonable steps to stop any harassment or discrimination. Rachel Roberts, Northern California civil rights coordinator for the Council of American Islamic Relations, said, “We’ve seen an uptick in employment discrimination around the country, including the Sacramento Valley, since 9/11.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Muslim Woman Settles Religious Discrimination Suit Against Church

A Muslim woman who claimed she was fired from her job as a bookkeeper at an Easton church because she complained about religious discrimination by the monsignor has settled a federal lawsuit she filed against the Diocese of Allentown. The terms of the settlement between Omayma Arafa and the diocese have not been disclosed in court documents and attorneys on both sides of the case did not return phone calls seeking comment. A settlement conference had been scheduled for Dec. 22 in Philadelphia, but before the hearing, the parties notified federal Magistrate Judge L. Felipe Restrepo they had reached a settlement. Restrepo dismissed the case Dec. 16.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Representative Michele Bachmann Leaves Race

Mrs. Bachmann said Wednesday that she would not continue her campaign for the Republican presidential nomination.

“I have decided to stand aside,” Mrs. Bachmann said at a news conference in West Des Moines.

Of the six candidates who seriously competed in the Iowa caucus, Mrs. Bachmann came in last, winning only 5 percent of the vote.

[Return to headlines]



Survey Tunes in to Dark Energy

Sonic yardstick offers a measure of Universe’s expansion.

David Schlegel’s tool for exploring dark energy, one of nature’s biggest mysteries, is deceptively simple. It is an aluminium plate the size of a manhole cover — or rather, 2,200 of them, each with a specific pattern of holes drilled to match the arrangement of galaxies in a particular section of the sky. Every plate is used once, for an hour, at the prime focus of the 2.5-metre telescope at Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico. When the telescope is pointing at the correct spot, light from each galaxy streams through its corresponding hole. The light is then broken up into its constituent wavelengths and used to clock how fast each galaxy is being carried away from us by the relentless expansion of space.

The study, which began in 2009, will ultimately gather data from 1.5 million galaxies. Its goal is to measure dark energy — a phenomenon thought to be driving the Universe to expand at an ever-increasing rate — and discern whether its influence has remained constant or has varied slightly across billions of years of cosmic history. “The more galaxies we get, the better we do,” says Schlegel, an astronomer at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) in California and principal investigator of the massive undertaking, known as the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS).

But BOSS — and the method behind it — is already coming into its own. On 11 January, Schlegel and his colleagues will unveil their initial findings — based on data from 470,000 galaxies — at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Austin, Texas. Those data have given them a glimpse of cosmic structure by showing where galaxies clump together, like the crests of giant waves. The structure is a relic of a much younger and smaller Universe, in which acoustic waves reverberated through the dense, hot plasma that had not yet cooled enough to form stars and galaxies. These waves, called baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs), pushed matter into regions of high and low concentrations with fairly even spacing — a pattern that evolved, in later epochs, into the giant sheets and filaments of galaxies that are the largest structures in the Universe.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Vatican: Pope Accepts Resignation of Bishop With Kids

Ex-LA auxiliary Zavala heads Pax Christi

(ANSA) — Vatican City, January 4 — Pope Benedict XVI on Wednesday accepted the resignation of an American bishop who last month confessed to him that he had two children.

Msgr Gabino Zavala, 60, ex-auxiliary bishop for Los Angeles, is chair of the US chapter of Pax Christi, the Catholic peace and human rights movement.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Yahoo Names PayPal President as C.E.O.

Yahoo named the president of PayPal, Scott Thompson, as its chief executive to replace Carol Bartz, who was dismissed in September, the company said Wednesday.

Mr. Thompson has been running PayPal, the online payments unit of eBay, since early 2008, and was previously its chief technology officer. PayPal processed $29 billion in payments in the third quarter of 2011.

The former Web powerhouse is undergoing a strategic review as it struggles to compete with newer heavyweights Google and Facebook. It has been run by Tim Morse since Ms. Bartz’s departure; the company said Mr. Morse would return to his former role as chief financial officer.

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Encounters With the Calabrian Mafia: Inside the World of the ‘Ndrangheta

The shadowy Calabrian mafia, the ‘Ndrangheta, has become one of the most powerful criminal organizations in the Western world through its dominance of the European cocaine trade. For the first time, local syndicate bosses described their business model to SPIEGEL. It’s a mixture of entrepreneurial talent, skillful management and deadly ruthlessness.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Dealt Another Blow

Faster-than-light neutrinos can’t catch a break. If they exist they would not only flout special relativity but also the fundamental tenet that energy is conserved in the universe. This suggests that either the speedy neutrino claim is wrong or that new physics is needed to account for it. In September, physicists with the OPERA experiment in Gran Sasso, Italy, reported that neutrinos had apparently travelled there from CERN near Geneva, Switzerland, faster than light.

The claim threatened to blow a hole in modern physics — chiefly Einstein’s special theory of relativity, which set the speed of light as the absolute limit for all particles in the universe. Now a team including Shmuel Nussinov of Tel Aviv University in Israel says it could also put a dent in the principle of the conservation of energy. “This is such a holy principle that has been verified in so many ways,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Floating Wind Turbines Set to Conquer Deep Ocean

The first floating offshore wind turbine is undergoing tests more than 200 miles off the coast of Portugal

As far-fetched as it may sound, giant floating wind turbines will carve their own niche in the offshore wind sector if they can provide access to locations with excellent wind conditions at cheaper prices, industry experts say. Last month, the first offshore turbine ever to be installed without using heavy lift vessels gently floated away on a platform built at a shipyard in Portugal and was towed by a boat 217 miles to the coast of Aguçadoura for a year-long test. It’s a regular 2-megawatt turbine made by Denmark’s Vestas bolted on one of three columns of a triangular floating platform made by Seattle-based Principle Power.

“We are making a similar leap towards new energy resources as the oil and gas industry did in the 1970s when it began using floating structures,” said Alla Weinstein, CEO of Principle Power. The floating technology allows turbines to be located in previously inaccessible locations where water depth exceeds 50 meters and wind resources are superior.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Goodbye Democracy: My Political Analysis is Banned by a European Government as “Hate Speech”

by Barry Rubin

I have just been informed that my PJ article, “Egypt: As Grim Islamists March Toward Power, The Naïve Dance in Tahrir Square” has been barred on sites used by officials of a European government-hint, they speak English there and it is the birthplace of modern democracy and free speech-on the grounds that this article is “hate speech.” What this means is that if you work for any institution that is part of this government-including the Foreign or Defense ministries-you cannot read this PJ Media column on your computer that’s part of such a server.

The message reads: Access denied — reason given : hate speech.

My reader asks sarcastically if complaining about this action would constitute a “thought crime” on his part.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek Group Appeals Against Plans to Build Mosque in Athens

A group of Greeks that includes bishops, academics and military officers have appealed against a parliamentary bill that will allow the construction of a mosque in the Greek capital.

According to the Greek press, a petition submitted to the Council of State in December was signed by Greek Orthodox Metropolitan Seraphim of Piraeus, as well as a university professor, naval officers and five residents of the area in which the mosque is planned to be built.

The appeal argues that the construction of a mosque would be in violation of the constitution and harmful for national unity. It also cites the high cost of the building project in the face of Greece’s financial crisis.

Known for his far-right views, Seraphim said the bill constituted an anti-Christian action and described it as disrespectful to Christian martyrs. He went on to condemn the Greek parliament for approving such a bill.

The controversial bill was passed in 2006 under the New Democracy party government. Renewed debate over the construction of the mosque began in November after the former Papandreou government made a commitment to complete the project by spring 2012, according to the Greek press.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Man Prefers Jail to Stay With Monks

‘Don’t take me back,’ criminal begs police

(ANSA) — Enna, January 3 — A criminal has fled a halfway house run by a particularly austere order of monks for the second time in just over a month, saying he prefers life in jail.

“Prison’s better than the Santa Maria degli Angeli community home,” David Catalano told police on Monday night.

Catalano, 31, first fled the home near Enna in eastern Sicily on November 21 but was ordered back there. The petty criminal has now been granted his wish and is in a local jail.

“I don’t want to go back with the Capuchins,” Catalano said.

The Capuchins broke from the Franciscans in the 16th century saying the order had strayed from the tough regime of founder St Francis.

They formed an offshoot which focused on living a very austere monastic life. The Capuchins are named after their distinctive pointed hoods; ‘cappuccino’ means “pointed cowl” in Italian. The Capuchin monks believe in living as simply as possible. Neither monks nor monastery are allowed to own property, and the monks are expected to beg and rely on charity for all of their needs, never keeping more than a few days’ worth of food at any given time.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Allies Face Trial Over P3 Lobby

Accusations include ‘influencing govt bodies’

(ANSA) — Rome, January 3 — Two of former premier Silvio Berlusconi’s key allies are expected to be sent to trial over their alleged involvement in an influence-peddling lobby dubbed P3 by local media.

Rome prosecutors on Tuesday announced they were seeking indictments for Senator Marcello dell’Utri, a former Berlusconi aide twice convicted over his links to the mafia, and Denis Verdini, co-ordinator of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom Party (PdL).

The two political figures and 18 others are accused of secret association “aimed at influencing the operation of constitutional bodies”.

Among those likely to also face trial are three others who were previously arrested: ex-P2 wheeler-dealer Flavio Carboni, who was acquitted of the 1982 murder in London of ‘God’s Banker’ Roberto Calvi; Arcangelo Martino, a Naples businessman and former city councillor; and Pasquale Lombardi, an ex-mayor, former judge and heavyweight in the now disbanded Christian Democrat party.

Ugo Capellacci, president of the Sardinia region, is accused of abusing his office and is also likely to face trial.

In July 2010 Dell’Utri declined to respond to prosecutors investigating his alleged involvement in the P3 lobby.

Dell’Utri told reporters he had learned his lesson after his dealings with prosecutors in Palermo who began investigations on his links to Cosa Nostra 15 years ago.

“When I was questioned in Palermo 15 years ago I spoke for 17 hours and was brought to trial on the weight of my statements. I’ve learned my lesson since then,” he said.

Dell’Utri, a former Berlusconi employee who masterminded his 1994 entry into politics, had a mafia sentence reduced from nine to seven years in 2010 by a court that found he only had dealings with Cosa Nostra until 1992.

Verdini, one of the three national coordinators for the PdL, was questioned in 2010 by Rome prosecutors who allege the lobby “was able to influence decisions made by government institutions”.

When the allegations emerged, Verdini quit as chairman of the Florence-based Credito Cooperativo Fiorentino and resigned from its board.

In 2010 prosecutors were reportedly investigating some 2.6 million euros in Verdini’s accounts at the bank on suspicion of possible kickbacks.

Verdini at the time denied wrongdoing and said he was the victim of a “media and judicial tempest”.

The P3 case of a suspected cabal of politicians, businessmen and judges was named after a scandal in the 1980s in which the P2 Masonic lodge rocked the Italian establishment.

The suspected P3 members, who include several magistrates, allegedly tried to sway public tenders and influence court rulings including, unsuccessfully, a Constitutional Court verdict quashing a law granting Berlusconi judicial immunity.

The case stems from a probe into alleged contract-rigging for windfarms in Carboni’s native Sardinia.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Japanese Tycoon Steps in to Restore Dilapidated Treasure in Rome

As the Colosseum ‘crumbles’ and awaits a £22 million restoration, a Japanese tycoon has stepped forward to spruce up another of Rome’s ancient treasures: a massive stone pyramid built as a mausoleum for a Roman dignitary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mind Over Motor: Controlling Robots With Your Thoughts

A clever new system helps paralyzed patients and computers work together to control a robot, helping to connect locked-in people with the world.

Over recent months, in José del R. Millán’s computer science lab in Switzerland, a little round robot, similar to a Roomba with a laptop mounted on it (right), bumped its way through an office space filled with furniture and people. Nothing special, except the robot was being controlled from a clinic more than 60 miles away-and not with a joystick or keyboard, but with the brain waves of a paralyzed patient.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Lawyers Reject New Review of Breivik’s Sanity

Prosecution and defence officials rejected a second opinion on Wednesday on the mental health of Anders Behring Brevik, the gunman behind Norway’s twin attacks on July 22nd whom experts have found criminally insane. Lawyers representing some of Behring Brevik’s 77 victims have called for a second psychiatric evaluation.

But in a letter released by the Oslo district court, lawyers for the 32-year-old right-wing extremist said they and their client were opposed to a new evaluation being conducted. “There is already a very detailed forensic medical evaluation of the accused,” lawyer Vibeke Hein Baera said. In a separate letter, the two prosecutors in the case also said a new assessment was “not necessary”.

On November 29th, two psychiatrists appointed by the Oslo court concluded that Behring Breivik suffers from paranoid schizophrenia and that he could not be held criminally accountable for his actions. Given that, Behring Breivik is expected to be sentenced to psychiatric care in a closed ward instead of going to jail.

The conclusions caused outrage in Norway, upsetting victims and the public who noted that Behring Breivik planned the attacks in detail for several years and spent almost an hour and a half coldly shooting dozens of young people.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Doctor Under Fire After Saving Woman’s Life

A doctor at Sørlandet hospital in southern Norway has come in for heavy criticism after giving a woman a blood transfusion despite her written request not to receive the treatment under any circumstances. The 30-year-old woman, a Jehovah’s Witness, was given blood by the doctor after complications arose as she gave birth to her second child in the summer of 2010, newspaper Fædrelandsvennen reports.

Local patient rights official Eli Gotteberg has now called on the Norwegian Board of Health Supervision to launch an inquiry into whether the doctor violated the patient’s rights.

Although the doctor’s action may have saved her life, the woman reserved the right to refuse treatment if she wished, Gotteberg said. She added that physicians could decline in advance to treat Jehovah’s Witnesses if they felt this created the kind of ethical dilemmas they would rather avoid. “Wherever the Bible is clear, we aim to adhere strictly to it,” said Jehovah’s Witness spokesman Tom Frisvold.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Priceless Roman Mosaic Irreparably Damaged by Thieves in Burgos

A priceless IV Century Roman mosaic in Baños de Valderados, Burgos, has been irreparably damaged by thieves, who ripped out three separate sections, including one measuring almost 2.5 square metres, in a theft which was discovered on Wednesday.

The 66 square metre mosaic was only discovered in 1972 and depicts the Roman god Bacchus and was one of the best preserved Roman mosaics of the Iberian Peninsula. The local Mayor, Lorenzo Izcara, told El País that the thieves caused havoc and tremendous damage when they ‘barbarously’ chipped out the stolen sections, ‘probably with a chisel’.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Gun Laws May be Sharpened: Minister

Sweden’s minister for justice, Beatrice Ask, says Swedish weapons laws will be looked over, after recent events in Malmö where five people have been shot within the space of a month. “The previous report didn’t see a reason to change the law. I am not happy with that and we are looking into it at the moment,” Ask told news agency TT.

The Chairman for the Committee on Justice, Social Democrat Morgan Johansson, has been demanding that Ask does something about the situation. “This is really scary. It is about time now that the fight against organized crime becomes a national responsibility. This is not a local or regional issue,” he said. “The National Police Board has to be given more resources. There is currently 30 police officers working with this case. We have proposed an additional 100 million kronor ($14.6 million), which would mean that 130 officers can work with these questions.”

Johansson also suggests to increase penalties for illegal possession of firearms from six months to one year in prison, which would make the crime serious enough in the eyes of the law for police to be allowed to use phone surveillance to catch suspects. Beatrice Ask agrees that the latest rise in violence in the region is very serious and she agrees with Johansson that this is a national problem. However, she is not interested in the reorganisation of the Swedish police.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Politics of Projection in the West

Western liberals applaud the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood but warn of fascism from popular right-wing parties in Europe.

In 2010, one the vilified leaders of Europe’s new right, the leader of the Vlaams Belang party in Belgium, Filip Dewinter, said the following:

We can’t change the past. We can’t deny the dark spots in our history. But we are not prisoners of that history. This bitter experience has been a sobering lesson. We will never ever again believe the false promises of totalitarianism. One could only wish the left-wingers had learned that lesson too.

Today many Europeans celebrate the rise of democracy in the Middle East. However many are fearful of how the democratic will of the Europeans will manifest itself. Interestingly, these fears are not always applied to other parts of the world.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



To Keep Venice From Going Underwater, Researchers Say, Pump Water Under Venice

Venice is sinking, and the nearby Adriatic sea-like the global sea level-is rising. The city could, some estimates suggest, be underwater by the end of the century. Much of the trouble is due to Venice’s precarious, low-lying position in the middle of a lagoon, but human activity in the area has played a role in the city’s subsidence, as well.

One possible solution to the problem may be, in essence, reversing what was done last century: rather than pumping groundwater out from under Venice, some scientists suggest, it’s time to pump it back in. While injecting water won’t undo all the damage, it can stop subsidence-and even slightly lift an area. The technique has worked before; it halted the downward creep of Long Beach, California, half a century ago, as nearby oil extraction caused the city to sink.

In the current study, Italian researchers modeled how groundwater injection would work in Venice and found, happily, that the technique would likely be a success.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Another Islamophobic Rant From Abhijit Pandya

Over at the Mail’s Right Minds blog there is yet another raving anti-Muslim post from former UKIP candidate Abhijit Pandya. David Cameron is denounced for “failing to act” on his notorious Munich speech last year denouncing multiculturalism. This has supposedly resulted in a failure to resist forced marriages, honour killings and, in particular, sharia courts.

According to Pandya, “women are not allowed to speak” at sharia tribunals, which is a new one on me. It would certainly come as a surprise to Amra Bone. Needless to say, the parallel role of Beth Din in the Jewish community doesn’t even rate a mention. Apparently it’s only Muslims’ religious tribunals (“these monstrous courts”) that pose a threat to social cohesion. At the end of the piece we are asked to: “Note also the group ‘One Law for all’ in the UK which is fighting against Sharia Courts.” Maryam Namazie will be so pleased.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Brother-in-Law of 7/7 Bomber Sparks Outrage With Claim Murderer Was ‘A Really Good Person’

The brother-in-law of the 7/7 bombing ringleader Mohammad Sidique Khan has provoked outrage by calling him ‘a really good person’.

Arshad Patel, of Dewsbury, further infuriated the relatives of those brutally murdered by complaining that he had not yet recovered an Xbox from the police.

Mr Patel, who was arrested along with his sister at the time before being released, said on the BBC’s Asian Network: ‘I am trying to get back my computer games because I never got a chance to play with them, so now I’m hoping my kids can.

‘It’s been six years now and we are just starting to get back some of our property. They (the police) took away our Korans and so many of our Islamic books.’

Mr Patel, 30, said he used to discuss political issues with his brother-in-law.

He told the BBC that Khan was a ‘normal, every day guy’ and a ‘really good person’, who fitted in well with the family after marrying Mr Patel’s sister Hasina.

Mr Patel’s mother Farida, from Dewsbury, said she was not happy with the way the police carried out their early inquiries into Khan’s actions.

‘As his mother-in-law I suffered a lot of harassment,’ she said.

‘I had to leave the beautiful bungalow I had moved into ready for my retirement, and even until today I have been unable to go back there.’

‘I have never wanted to go back because it holds such bad memories for me and my family. I have not even been to that area where I had lived since coming to live in the UK.’

Victims’ loved ones called their comments ‘trivial’ and insensitive, according to the Daily Express.

Sean Cassidy, whose son Ciaran, 22, died in the suicide bombings, said the family were lucky have a good lifestyle in Britain.

‘If I was family of a mass murderer, I would be lying low,’ he said. ‘It makes my blood boil.’

           — Hat tip: Seneca III [Return to headlines]



UK: Daily Mail Reports That Halal Meat Rejected in Parliament Restaurants and Cafes

The Daily Mail has once again attempted to perpetuate the myth of the Islamisation of Britain via-halal meat, publishing an article on the rejection of demands to serve halal meat in the restaurants and cafes of the Houses of Parliament.

Titled, ‘We won’t eat halal meat, say MPs and peers who reject demands to serve it at Westminster’, the article states that no halal option will be made available to those who desire to eat it, and that some Muslim MPs and peers have been misled into believing that they had eaten halal meat when it was not so.

From the Daily Mail.

“The Palace of Westminster has rejected demands to serve halal meat in its restaurants. “Muslim MPs and peers have been told they cannot have meat slaughtered in line with Islamic tradition because the method — slitting an animal’s throat without first stunning it — is offensive to many of their non-Muslim colleagues. “The stance has infuriated some parliamentarians who have eaten meat in the Palace’s 23 restaurants and cafes, having been assured that it was halal. “Lord Ahmed of Rotherham said: ‘I did feel misled. I think a halal option should be made available.’“ In 2010, the Mail on Sunday revealed schools, hospitals and restaurants were serving halal meat to unwitting customers. Waitrose, Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Somerfield and the Co-op all said they stocked meat slaughtered according to Islamic tradition without letting customers know. Fast-food chains including Domino’s Pizza, Pizza Hut, KFC, Nando’s and Subway are also using halal meat without telling customers, it was revealed. Members of the Church of England have complained that the spread of halal meat was ‘effectively spreading Sharia law’ across Britain. However, a spokesman for the House of Lords and the House of Commons confirmed that it was not served in their restaurants. Alison Ruoff, a member of the Church of England, said: ‘It’s a bit hypocritical that the Houses of Parliament, which have allowed other people to provide halal food, have ruled it out on their own premises. At Halal slaughterhouses thousands of birds are killed every hour.”

The article does not substantiate the charge that halal meat is “offensive” to non-Muslim colleagues with any statement or quote. Moreover, the relevance of the last sentence on the “thousands of birds” killed in halal slaughterhouses is highly questionable- are thousands of birds, cattle and pigs not also killed in regular slaughterhouses in the UK and in the slaughterhouses which produce the imported meat that many Brits consume? The Daily Mail has been at the forefront of a tabloid-press campaign portraying halal slaughter as unethical and perpetuating the myth that Muslims as well businesses and institutions are imposing their religion on others by serving halal meat options or halal-meat only (see here, here, here and here).

This article, like many before, poses the issue as one of animal rights. If this is so, then why no furore, for example, over the tens of millions of chickens which are battery-farmed in Britain? And why no mention of the fact that Kosher Jewish slaughter practices are almost identical to that of halal slaughter? Moreover, ‘Indian’ restaurants have been serving halal meat for decades, and as curry is something which is often considered the nation’s favourite food. It is somewhat puzzling therefore, that moral outrage has only found expression in the past few years, and that Muslims are singled out for their practices; practices which are significant to the Muslim community but in the context of the issue of animal rights and meat consumption in Britain, form and fraction of the issue. There is little doubt that articles such as this one and those that have preceded it are there to give fuel to anti-Muslim sentiment by peddling the idea that Islam is a barbaric religion and that Britain is slowly being Islamised.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Human Rights Law is Undermining UK’s Democracy

JUST when you think the reputation of the European Convention on Human Rights can’t sink any lower, along comes the case of Abdullah Munawar, a 23-year old Bangladeshi. Mr Munawar came to Britain in 2008 to study accountancy. His visa was, supposedly, strictly limited. But thanks to the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), there is now, it turns out, no such thing as a limited student visa. Mr Munawar has been granted permission to remain here. Why? Because he plays cricket on Sundays. According to Judge Susan Pitt, Mr Munawar was entitled to stay in the UK under Article 8 of the ECHR, which protects the right to a “private life”. By all accounts Mr Munawar is a thoroughly admirable man — and in many ways he would make a model citizen. But the idea that he should gain residency through an international human rights treaty is simply perverse. The world has gone mad when the fact that a visitor to the UK plays cricket in north London and has “formed friendships” is enough to guarantee him permanent residence.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: London 7/7 Bombings: Family’s Lasting Shock Over Attacks

Thinking back to 12 July, 2005, Farida Patel says it was the day her life “fell apart”. That was the day officers from Scotland Yard entered her family home and told her that her son-in-law, Mohammad Sidique Khan, was one of the suspected London suicide bombers. In her first media interview since the 7 July bombings, Mrs Patel described her state of disbelief at the time. “I said ‘Why my house, why search my house?’ and when they told me it was my daughter’s husband, I was shocked,” she said. “At first they thought he was my son, but I said, ‘No he was not my son — he was my son-in-law’.” The police raid came just days after the bombing attacks on London’s transport network, which killed 52 people. Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, was the ringleader of the group behind the bombings, which included Shehzad Tanweer, 22, Hasib Hasan, 18, and Muslim convert Germaine Lindsay, 19.

Khan, originally from Leeds, moved first to Batley and then to nearby Dewsbury, in West Yorkshire, after his marriage to Mrs Patel’s daughter, Hasina, in 2001. They had a daughter in 2004. Mrs Patel, who came to the United Kingdom from South Africa in 1967, had worked in a Dewsbury secondary school and was a key member of the local Muslim community. She sat on a number of committees which aimed to foster links between people of different faiths, and had even served on a local police forum. But she said she was not happy with the way the police carried out their inquiries in the early days of the investigation. “As his mother-in-law I suffered a lot of harassment. I had to leave the beautiful bungalow I had moved into ready for my retirement, and even until today I have been unable to go back there,” she said. “I have never wanted to go back because it holds such bad memories for me and my family. I have not even been to that area where I had lived since coming to live in the UK.”

Mrs Patel’s youngest son, Arshad Patel, said that he came to know Khan well after they became brothers-in-law. “He struck me as a normal everyday guy… so when Mohammad Sidique Khan’s name came up (in connection with the bombings) I was speechless,” he said. “A lot of people do tend to put you in a box and say you were a friend, or from the family of ‘that terrorist’. The community do treat you differently at first. But now they’re all very supportive,” he said. “When something like this happens it’s not only affected us but everyone living close by, and it’s very unfair to label us like that when we do not support such actions.” Mr Patel said that he was angry with the police investigation, and the fact that the police still have most of the family’s property that was seized at the time. “It’s been six years now and we are just starting to get back some of our property. They (the police) took away our Korans and so many of our Islamic books. I am trying to get back my computer games because I never got a chance to play with them, so now I’m hoping my kids can.”

The family believe that the media coverage at the time, coupled with arrests of Arshad Patel and his sister Hasina, who did not want to be interviewed, have left a lasting impact on them. Both Arshad Patel and his sister were later released without charge. Mrs Patel said she had become more reclusive as a result. She now wears a full hijab when in public, and prefers not to show her face. She said she had given up all her community activities, and would not take them up again. “I used to sit on committees which were set up to enable Muslims and other faiths to work together and understand each other better,” she said. “Of course we condemn what happened with the London bombings and we feel nothing but compassion for all those who were victims… we just try not to remember the past and hope the future is better for us all.”

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said it would not discuss individual cases, but added that no complaint had been received from the Patel family. In a statement, the force said: “Officers from MPS conducted a complex and lengthy investigation into the 7 July bombings, which has helped to inform the police response to the criminal trial, and also the inquest.

During the course of this investigation, officers searched a number of addresses and seized items of property. There is an ongoing process in place to return property to the individuals concerned where possible. This a major undertaking given the scale of the inquiry.”

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Rupturing Breast-Implants

At least 50 clinics have reported burst, perished and broken implants made by French firm PIP to the medical watchdog since Friday.

The total number of women whose implants have ruptured is not known, but even conservative estimates suggest it could be as high as 1,000.

The president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, who is advising Mr Lansley, added: ‘The point is not so much the rupture rates but that the quality of the silicone in these implants is not of medical grade.

‘The Government must make sure that women who have these implants are not caught in the middle of an argument over who’s going to pay for their removal.

Nigel Mercer, a former president of BAAPS, said: ‘It would be sensible for the Government to say, “Take them out” and then sort out the funding later.’

In France, between 5 per cent and 10 per cent have ruptured and the state is to fund removal from 30,000 women.

Last night, French health minister Xavier Bertrand ordered a full investigation into the ‘truly contaminated’ implants.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



UK: Race Rant Accused Emma West to Face Trial

A woman charged over an alleged racist rant on a tram that was captured on video and seen online 11 million times is set to face trial at a Crown Court. Emma West, 34, of New Addington, has been charged with two racially aggravated public order offences, one with intent to cause fear. She gave Croydon Magistrates’ Court no indication of her plea and said she wanted to face a Crown Court trial. Ms West was given bail and will appear at Croydon Crown Court on 17 February.

Magistrate Ian Hornby granted Ms West bail on the condition that she does not travel on a tram within Croydon and Sutton, lives and sleeps at her home address and does not comment on the case. Ms West was arrested after footage, filmed on a Croydon-to-Wimbledon tram, allegedly showing her racially abusing fellow passengers was posted on YouTube. She was charged with intent to cause fear or provocation of violence after a passenger, Ena-May Eubanks, said she hit her left shoulder with a “closed fist”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Stopping the Spread of Sharia Should be Central to British Foreign Policy

In the days following Christmas the Christian church has traditionally remembered the visit of the wise men to Jesus. The word magi is in fact a Persian loan word indicating their origin in either what is now Iran or western Afghanistan. The whole story reminds us that Christianity far from being a western religion in fact came to birth in the Middle Eastern world and that there are millions of Christians in the Middle East and the Persian speaking world whose churches predate much of western Christianity. Matthew’s Gospel records that after the visit of the magi the Roman puppet king Herod ordered the massacre of all children under two years old in Bethlehem. The tyrant it seems, as many tyrants are, felt threatened by even the hint of a possible alternative to his brutal rule.

As the Christian church remembers the visit of the magi, now is also a good time to reflect on the suffering of Christians in the region where Christianity originally emerged. The Middle East is unfortunately full of tyrants prepared to imprison, torture and even massacre anyone they think just might threaten their power. Think Qadaffi, think the Assad regime in Syria, think the Mubarak regime in Egypt. Yet even before these regimes began to fall a shadow had begun to rise — the empowerment of Islamists who want to enforce sharia (Islamic law) on the entire population of their countries, including on non Muslims. In parallel with this, and in many cases not unrelated to it, has been a significant increase in acts of intimidation including kidnapping and terrorist acts targeted specifically at Christians and churches, who form the largest non Muslim minority in most Islamic countries. These acts have generally aimed at securing the implementation of sharia enforcement on Muslims and non Muslim alike and in some cases have also additionally aimed at what is now being termed ‘religious cleansing’ — the attempt to create a ‘pure’ Islamic state by the eradication of non Muslim minorities.

In saying this it should be obvious that we are talking about sharia in the sense of a legal code that is enforced, rather than in the secondary sense of a codification of Islamic principles of daily life that individual Muslims may choose to live by — as Islamist apologists have sometimes disingenuously tried to claim. If individual Muslims choose to live a certain way they should, within the limits of British values, be free to do so.However, the enforcement of sharia rules on those who do not chose to follow them, including Christian minorities in the Islamic world is another issue altogether.

Whilst there are four schools of Islamic law in Sunni Islam which predominate in different geographical regions and a separate Shi’a form of sharia, the variations between them are largely a matter of detail in relation to the issues that I will discuss below. Let us just for a moment look at what has been happening in terms of moves towards the spread of sharia enforcement in the last year, including the gaining of power by Islamist parties aiming at the eventual enforcement of sharia:

The advance of sharia enforcement in 2011

In Tunisia where the ‘Arab Spring’ began the Islamist Party Ennhada, which aims to create an Islamic state governed by sharia was legalised in March. Ennhada subsequently gained 40% of the seats in the National Constituent Assembly, making it the largest overall party. The new sense of empowerment felt by Islamists was clearly evident when on 16th September a group entered a Christian church in the town of Kef and attempted to turn it into a mosque.

In Libya the head of the Transitional National Council, Abdel Jalilil stated on 22nd October that laws of the new constitution will be based on Islam i.e. sharia, and any laws opposed to sharia would be abolished. He also called for the banking system to be Islamicised i.e. become regulated by sharia.

In Egypt the Muslim Brotherhood (al Ikhwan al Muslimun) and the radical Salafist Jama’a al-Islamiyya formed a political alliance to fight October’s parliamentary elections. Islamist parties are currently estimated to have gained 70% after the second round of elections — a proportion that is not expected to change significantly in the third round due to take place on the 3rd/4th January. They will therefore dominate the 498 seats of Lower House which is charged with setting up a 100 member committee to draft a new constitution. Both the Muslim Brotherhood and Jama’a al-Islamiyya have stated that sharia should be enforced in Egypt. However, the Muslim Botherhood’s spokesman Dr Kamal el-Helbawy went even further and in an apparent allusion to recreating the early Islamic caliphate called for the borders between Arab states to be dismantled.

The Muslim Brotherhood has long been known to have infiltrated the Egyptian army, which since the fall of Mubarak has essentially run the country. It is therefore particularly disturbing that hundreds of Christian protesters were brutally attacked by the army on Sunday 9th October while they were protesting about the earlier torching of St George’s church in Aswan on 30th September. In the Army’s response to this peaceful protest 25 Christians were killed and hundreds injured as armoured vehicles drove straight at protesters, while generals from the ruling supreme council of the armed forces subsequently blamed Egyptian Christians for the violence. This was by no means the first such attack this year on Egypt’s Christian minority of 10 million who make up around 13% of the population. Attacks on Egypt’s Christian minority have in fact significantly increased since the fall of Mubarak. For example, on 25th June 200 extremists burned 8 houses belonging to Christians in the upper Egypt village of Awlad Khalaf — after rumours spread that a house one resident was building would be used as a church — new church buildings being forbidden by sharia. While on 30th June thousands of extremists looted and torched Christian homes and businesses in Kolosna in Minya province. Despite calls for help, the army and military police took three hours to arrive and even then took no action when properties were attacked. The violence erupted after a Christian husband tried to defend his wife from sexual harassment at a bus terminal. There has also been a big increase in the number of Christian women and girls who have been kidnapped and forced to convert to Islam, with any subsequent renunciation of Islam treated as apostasy which is punishable by death under the Maliki school of sharia which is dominant in Egypt. This is a growing problem for Christian minorities in a number of Islamic countries, including for example, Pakistan. However, in Egypt it has significantly increased since the start of the Egyptian revolution this year.

In Syria there is very real fear among the Christian minority that the Assad regime will be replaced by a radical Islamist government. These fears have been fuelled by pressure put on them and threats made by Islamists to take part in the uprising. For example, Adnan al-Noor a leading Syrian sheikh issued a warning, which many Syrian Christians understood to be directed at them, that all opponents of the revolution will be “torn apart, chopped up and fed to the dogs”. Syria has a Christian population of around 2 million making up approximately 10% of the population, although that number has been significantly increased recently by an estimated 350,000 Iraqi Christian refugees who have fled what is now effectively religious cleansing in central and southern Iraq.

In Morocco an Islamist party won the largest share of vote in elections conceded by King Mohamed in an attempt to avert an Arab spring revolution similar to Tunisia and Egypt’s. However, although there will now be an Islamist prime minister the King of Morocco will still have the final say on government policy relating to defence and religion.

In Iraq where the rule of the secular Ba’ath party has been replaced by a fragmenting coalition of religious parties, the past year has seen ever increasing attacks on Iraqi Christians and churches particularly in the central region. The specific targeting of Christians appears to be designed as a form of ‘religious cleansing’ to eradicate non Muslims from Iraq and has resulted in approximately two thirds of Iraq’s 1.4 million Christian population fleeing as refugees to neighbouring countries such as Syria and Jordan. This religious cleansing is a rare case where some Islamist understandings of sharia differ significantly from those of the classical schools of sharia. The latter base their understanding of sharia on medieval interpretations of the Qur’an which grant Christians dhimmi status (i.e. second class citizens who must pay the jizya tax), while Islamists base their understanding of sharia on their own interpretations of the Qur’an.

In Sudan the Sudanese civil war was essentially about the predominantly Arab and Islamic North trying to impose sharia on the mainly Christian and Animist South. On 9th July, in a rare sign of hope in the struggle against the imposition of sharia, South Sudan became independent as the world’s newest country. However, its long term security will always be an issue as sharia dictates that once an area has at any point in history once been subjected to Islamic law and government it becomes an act of ‘defensive’ jihad to fight to reimpose Islamic government and the enforcement of sharia. Meanwhile in North Sudan on 12th October President Bashir announced government plans to adopt a completely Islamic constitution with sharia as the main source of national law. Already, some Christian pastors in the North have been warned not to hold services on pain of death. While women, including Christian mothers with young babies have been put in prison for not following sharia requirements such as being fully veiled and having a male escort when in public, a situation horribly reminiscent of Afghanistan under the Taliban when many widows with no male family left alive were arrested and imprisoned as they begged for food on streets. There has also been an increasing issue of religious cleansing taking place in North Sudan with President Bashir having announced prior to the separation that he intends North Sudan to be 100% Muslim (it is currently 98% Muslim). There are reports of daily air strikes, arbitrary arrests and executions aimed at non Muslims living in the border region of North Sudan, with Christian leaders being particularly singled out and tortured.

In Iran the enforcement of sharia has continued to become even stricter. In 2011 supreme court upheld the death penalty imposed on Christian pastor Youcef Nadarkhani because he had converted to Christianity from Islam. Although in recent years there have been a number of informal executions of converts from Islam, some of which appear to have been orchestrated by the government, apostasy from Islam is not against Iran’s penal code. However, the supreme court’s decision reflects the fact that judges are allowed to draw on fatwas (legal opinions of sharia judges) and Islamic sources where national law is silent and have done so in this case to formalise the death penalty for apostasy from Islam (i.e. leaving Islam for another faith).

In Pakistan 2011 saw the assassination of two liberal politicians who had voiced support for reform of the Pakistan’s notorious blasphemy laws under which, amongst others, Christian wife and mother of 5 Aasia Bibi who has been sentenced to death for allegedly insulting Muhammud. The assassinations of Salman Taseer, a liberal Muslim who was governor of Punjab Province and Shabaz Bhatti a Pakistani Christian who was minister for religious minorities were welcomed by leading Islamic scholars in Pakistan who viewed them as having committed the sharia offence of blasphemy and therefore deserving of the death penalty because they had advocated the abolition of part of sharia I.e. the blasphemy law.

In the Maldives a revision of the constitution in 2008 just before the dictator Abdul Gayoom departed had already left non Muslim Maldivians in a potentially stateless limbo by restricting the acquisition of citizenship to Muslims. However, Islamists have seen the new democratic process as a road to even stricter enforcement of sharia. In 2009, not long after the first democratic elections in 30 years, the Maldivian parliament almost unanimously passed a bill making the construction of non Muslim buildings illegal and criminalising the public practice of non Muslim worship, something that would put it in the same league of repressive sharia enforcement as Saudi Arabia. Throughout 2011 those concerned for human rights in the Maldives have been waiting to see if this bill will be formally passed into law by the President. It has been reported that the President, Mohamed Nasheed was elected to office in 2008 in the newly democratic country with help from the UK Conservative Party. That is an influence that one may hope foreign office ministers have been seeking to capitalise on to prevent the further encroachment of human rights that this bill represents.

In Uganda which is 85% Christian and only 12% Muslim a similar attempt is being made to introduce sharia. A Muslim Personal Law bill would empower Islamic sharia courts to act on matters of marriage, divorce and inheritance. This is not a benign cultural accommodation. It is precisely in these areas of family law that both women and non Muslims in a family with a Muslim father are significantly discriminated against by sharia. For example, in divorce a mother is automatically denied child custody of any child over 7 years old and of any younger child when they reach 7 years old. Sharia inheritance rules also discriminate against women, with daughters only being allowed to inherit half the share of an estate that sons do. The situation in Uganda is particularly pertinent for the UK as in 2006 an Islamic group regarded as ‘moderate’ by the then government made a similar request for the family law aspects of sharia to become part of UK law.

In Nigeria Christmas day 2011 saw a series of attacks by the Islamist terrorist group Boko Haram including two targeting churches where at least 30 people were killed. These attacks were directly linked to the enforcement of sharia in Nigeria. Sharia enforcement has been steadily implemented since 2000 by state governments in Nigeria’s 12 northern states in defiance of the country’s secular federal constitution. It is estimated that 63% of the population of these states are Muslims, with the remainder being Christians and adherents of African Traditional Religions. The effective appeasement of these unconstitutional acts by a lack of effective action from the federal government has empowered radical Islamists such as the terrorist group Boko Haram whose declared aim is to make Nigeria a fully Islamic state with sharia enforced across all states . Boko Haram is seeking to extend sharia to the 7 states of Nigeria’s middle belt (roughly 55% Christian, 30% Muslim and 15% African traditional religions). Once that has been achieved a majority of states then will have implemented sharia enforcement. Islamists have indicated that they then plan to challenge Nigeria’s secular status and declare a fully Islamic state and with sharia also enforced in the 17 southern states (75% Christian, 20% African Traditional Religions and only 5% Muslim). These attacks by Boko Haram have been increasing over the last two years, but increased very significantly after the election of Christian president in April 2011 (sharia dictates that only Muslims are allowed to be head of state and only Muslims may be part of the government). The Christmas day attacks on churches were not the first this year. For example, two churches were bombed in Sileja in Niger state in the North Nigeria on 10th and 11th July with 3 Christians being killed. The targeting of churches is significant as sharia also dictates that new church buildings cannot be built.

In this highly combustible situation this year the Muslim governor of the Central bank of Nigeria published plans for the introduction of sharia banking. Sharia finance is a very recent newcomer on the financial scene even being avoided by the majority of banks in Saudi Arabia as recently as 2005. Other Islamic countries such as Oman still resist legalising it as they recognise it as part of the Islamist agenda to subject increasing areas of society to the Islamic clerics who act as sharia judges. The latter is unfortunately a lesson Gordon Brown as Chancellor and Prime Minister failed to heed when he naively legalised sharia finance in the UK.

In Senegal in June 2011 eight churches were looted and burnt to the ground in the capital Dhaka as extremists issued a ‘declaration of war’ against “new churches” being built in the city, sharia as we noted forbids the building of church buildings.

In Indonesia in September a suicide bomber blew himself up as a congregation were leaving a church service in Solo, Central Java. Islamists have been waging a violent campaign in Indonesia to eradicate Christianity from Indonesia and enforce sharia on the entire country.

These brief examples do not include many countries such as Saudi Arabia and Yemen where sharia is already enforced. These are simply a snapshot of some of the countries where the Islamist agenda of sharia enforcement has advanced in the last 12 months. The list is by no means comprehensive — in the past year Islamists have also for example launched violent attacks on churches and Christians in Ethiopia (69 churches and a Bible college burnt down, 3 Christians killed and an estimated 10,000 made homeless); In Somalia where a Christian was beheaded by the Islamist terrorist group al-Shabab- beheading being a sharia punishment favoured by Islamists, similarly a Christian was also beheaded in Afghanistan by Islamist terrorists; In Kenya Islamists are targeting Christians in the predominantly Muslim North, with al-Shabab launching a grenade attack on a church, one could go on…

The ideology of sharia

What is happening is not a random unconnected series of events. They have historical precedent in the medieval interpretations of Islam that are termed classical Islam, which envisions the enforcement of Islamic government and sharia, if necessary by means of force, on Muslim and non Muslim alike. However, it is now being primarily driven forward by Islamist ideology. For the last thousand or more years churches in the Middle East have been subject to dhimmi status, a type of second class citizenship accorded Christians and Jews who are termed ‘people of the book’ (Ahl-i-Kitab) in the Qur’an. They have lesser legal rights than Muslims, they are excluded from holding political and judicial office though they may be civil servants, and are required to pay an additional form of taxation for non Muslims termed jizya. They are forbidden from building new churches and any adult male Muslim who embraces another faith faces the death penalty. The most serious offence in sharia is to denigrate the prophet Muhammad — which could of course include denying that one believes he is a prophet — this carries a compulsory death penalty. The testimony in court of a Muslim is given twice the weight of a non Muslim, similarly a woman’s testimony is only equal to half that of a man’s. These lead to appalling instances of injustice where sharia is enforced. For example, accusations of blasphemy are used to settle scores against both Muslims and Christians in countries such as Pakistan, although Christians are particularly vulnerable as the testimony of any Muslim accusing them is given greater weight than their word simply because they are non Muslims. Women who are victims of rape are particularly vulnerable as sharia requires them to produce 4 witnesses and if they cannot do so they risk being imprisoned for making a ‘false accusation’ — even if they are pregnant.

The idea that Muslims should govern non Muslims, which is central to both sharia and its concept of dhimmitude is something that is taught in Classical Islam — the interpretations of the Qur’an taught in madrassas that were fixed in medieval times. That is why, for example, dhimmitude — including the jizya tax was part and parcel of the life of Christians in Turkey in the nineteenth century Ottoman empire. This is certainly not the view of many ordinary Muslims, particularly in Britain. Whilst some do have rather romantic notions about sharia, relatively few appear to have any real understanding of what it actually involves in practice and would probably be shocked to read some of the details in this article. Nonetheless, the fact remains that the enforcement of sharia and Islamic government around the world is the primary aim of all forms of Islamism. I write the above having personally witnessed what it means to live under a radical Islamist government where sharia is enforced on the entire population.

Government action

In February 2011 just as the Arab Spring was getting going I observed that the trend over the last 30 years in Islamic countries was for greater Islamisation, rather than for greater liberalisation. Regrettably that now appears to be the case with the Arab Spring as well. The recommendations I made then for British foreign policy in the Islamic world I believe are now more important than ever:

1.   Prioritises long term aims over short term gains such as developing trade deals with North Sudan.
2.   Focused on developing a functioning civil society so as to allow alternatives to Islamism to develop. This is a point that must be forcibly made to western leaning autocratic governments that are rightly afraid of growing Islamist movements in their own countries.
3.   Focused on the promotion of basic human rights such as freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion etc.
4.   Prioritises the promotion of these basic human rights over the promotion of ‘democracy’, which many Islamists see simply as a route to achieve their own ends.
5.   Recognises that the medium term trend in most Islamic countries is towards greater Islamisation, rather than towards greater liberalisation. As such it must be realistic about the strategies being adopted by Islamist groups.

Crucial to achieving these will be combatting the spread of sharia enforcement across the world. It is in Britain’s national interest that this becomes a central feature of British foreign policy:

The enforcement of sharia and Islamic government around the world is the central aim of Islamists — including violent Islamists. As I have demonstrated before, the aims of Islamists who use the ballot box differ only in their method, not their long term aims from those of violent Islamists, as can be seen where Islamists in countries affected by the Arab Spring have used democracy as a route to power. Although how long those countries remain democratic once Islamists gain power remains to be seen. Once sharia is enforced lobbying by western governments is largely ineffective as it becomes almost impossible to dislodge it, as can be seen from this year’s assassination of two liberal Pakistani politicians who called for reform of the country’s blasphemy laws. Equally, where sharia is enforced it does not assuage the demands of Islamists as some on the liberal-left seem to assume. Rather, it gives them bridgehead from which to seek to expand sharia enforcement further afield, as can be seen from what is happening in Nigeria. Further, once Islamists control an area, it is much easier for Islamist terrorist groups to train others for attacks on the West from there, as can be seen in the safe havens provided to al Qaeda by the Taliban in Afghanistan and Islamists in Sudan. Or, take again the example of Nigeria, if sharia enforcement continues to spread, how long will it be before Boko Haram is training Nigerian extremists and sending them to Britain to engage in global jihad against us?

Some practical steps that could be taken

1. Make stopping the spread of sharia a key aim of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO). The FCO’s aims currently include:

  • pursuing an active and activist foreign policy, working with other countries and strengthening the rules-based international system in support of British values to:
  • safeguard Britain’s national security by countering terrorism and weapons proliferation, and working to reduce conflict;

To that list needs to be added “and working to stop the spread of sharia enforcement around the world.”

2. Annually report on the spread of sharia enforcement across the world and steps being taken by the FCO to prevent further spread.

3. Ensure that the UK asylum system takes full account of the persecution that minority groups face in countries where sharia is enforced so that victims of sharia receive a fair hearing of their case.

4. Sponsoring a UN resolution aimed at stopping the spread of sharia enforcement. Of course it would be opposed, but it would also push the issue up the international agenda and send a signal to countries toying with it that western democracies regard it as an unacceptable system that abuses human rights.

In writing this I am very aware that simply raising the issue of sharia will stir up considerable controversy. However, that is a controversy that needs to be aired, the enforcement of sharia is a central aim of Islamists — whether violent or non violent their aims are the same. It is therefore a nettle that needs to be grasped in terms British foreign policy if we are to be both safe as a country and promote our values abroad.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Wilders: Dutch Government Should Apologize for ‘Passive’ Attitude to WWII Deportation of Jews

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders is calling on the government to apologize for the country’s “passive” response to the mass deportations of Jews by Nazi occupiers during World War II.

The move is likely to re-ignite debate about Dutch attitudes to the wartime persecution of the country’s Jewish population.

Wilders wrote to Prime Minister Mark Rutte Wednesday asking if he would apologize based on comments by two former government ministers in a recently published book about postwar reparations to Jews.

[Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algerian Police Raid ‘Made in Israel’ Merchants

Algerian police are systematically raiding merchants selling clothing bearing a “Made in Israel” label on the items.

According to a report published Wednesday in Algeria’s El-Khabardaily newspaper, the sting was carried out the day after New Year’s Day at a shopping center in the Al-Wadi district of the nation’s capital.

Police allegedly were tipped off by an informant who told them which vendors were selling women’sclothing bearing labels that said “Made in Israel.”

The Attorney General instructed the officers to confiscate the clothing and interrogate the vendors, who denied knowledge of the origins of the products, according to the report.

“We cannot rule out the possibility that an international ring smuggled the Israeliclothes into the country and that its operatives are being assisted by Algerian vendors based in several districts,” said a source quoted by El-Khabar.

The vendors allegedly told police the salesman who had sold them the clothing was a resident of Algiers. He was later arrested, the newspaper reported.

The daughter of former Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi, who until now has been living in Algeria, is allegedly seeking political asylum in Israel, according to a report on the Intelligence Online website.

Algeria was one of the last North African countries to express support for the National Transitional Council (NTC) that emerged from the rebels who toppled Qaddafi’s 42-year regime.

           — Hat tip: J-PD [Return to headlines]



Requiem for the Third See of Christendom

by Robert Spencer

Egypt today is the site of a persecution of the Church on a scale unseen in Western Europe since the darkest days of the French Revolution; the Coptic Church is fighting for its life under vicious and escalating attacks from Muslims. A Muslim Brotherhood government is coming to power that promises to be more hostile. Yet in these dark days the Copts enjoy little support from Catholics who often only dimly understand the great debt we owe to the Church of Alexandria.

It was not ever thus. The Patriarch of Alexandria was once the third most-powerful prelate in the Church, after those of Rome and Constantinople; he was so designated by the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. The Lateran Council, moreover, was merely restating and ratifying — quite belatedly, for a variety of reasons — a canon of the fourth ecumenical council, the Council of Chalcedon, which was held over seven and a half centuries before it, in 451.

The Fathers of Chalcedon, for their part, were actually demoting the See of Alexandria from the second position that it had enjoyed before the Roman Emperors moved their capital to the new city of Constantinople, which accordingly became a great metropolis and a patriarchal see.

Constantinople, as a relative newcomer, initially drew upon the theological and liturgical traditions of two older patriarchal sees, Alexandria and Antioch. In theological investigation, Alexandria was unrivaled. The Church of Alexandria was the home of the Church’s first great theological school, where students could learn from pioneering teachers of Christian theology such as Clement of Alexandria and Origen. No other Christian center, not even Rome, rivaled Alexandria’s theological sophistication and depth, although certainly Alexandrine Fathers — most notably Origen himself — did not always maintain their speculations within the confines of Christian orthodoxy. At the same time, Alexandria was the cradle of Christian monasticism — although in that case, it was more a matter of saints such as Anthony the Great leaving the great city than learning anything in it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Hamas Leader’s Next Visit

in Tunis on Thursday

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JANUARY 03 — Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of the Palestinian Islamic Hamas movement, will be in Tunis on Thursday on a two-day working visit. The announcement of the visit has been made by the press office of the Ennahdha Party, the Islamist party that won a conditional majority in the October 23 elections.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Lovers’ Pipe Dreams Emerge From Jerusalem Excavation

An archaeological excavation in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem has uncovered a centuries-old clay pipe inscribed with the phrase “Love is the language for lovers.” Literally translated, the inscription reads “Heart is language for the lover.” And, not surprisingly, it was most likely a gift to a lover, according to Shahar Puni, of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

“Clay pipes of this kind were very common in the Ottoman period, were mostly used for smoking tobacco, and some were even used to smoke hashish,” Puni said in a statement. Hashish comes from the cannabis plant, like marijuana.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Police Confiscate Speakers From Jaffa Mosque

Yassam, Border Guard and police forces raid house after foreign minister’s mother’s neighbor complains about noise coming from Muezzin calls

Large Yassam, Border Guard and police forces on Tuesday raided the complex of the Abu Sayaf family in Jaffa and confiscated speakers that were used to play Muezzin calls in a mosque situated on the premises. Around 9:20 am, dozens of Yassam and Border Guard officers arrived at the scene and raided the complex. Several minutes later they left with the speakers. An article published in Yedioth Tel Aviv last week revealed that the Abu Sayaf family set up a loudspeaker system in the mosque, and played the Muezzin call to prayer five times a day. Many residents in the surrounding streets complained about the loud volume, calling it a nuisance. As it turns out, the person who eventually came to their help was no other than Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman (Yisrael Beiteinu), whose mother Esther Lieberman lives in a nearby street. However it was the mother’s neighbor, Ludmila Cherkov, who turned to the minister for help.

“I’ve known Avigdor for many years. He comes every week to visit his mother. He’s always here. I decided to turn to him during one of his visits and raise the problem we have been facing. We have been suffering day and night because of this new Muezzin call and for me Lieberman was the last resort,” Cherkov noted. The Abu Sayaf family claimed the move came on the heels of a recent bill, dubbed the “Muezzin bill,” which proposes to restrict the Muslim call for prayer. “We’ve been praying in this mosque for years, and a few months ago we set up some speakers to call people over for prayer. The neighbors didn’t complain, and we received no warning before the search warrant,” claimed Ali Abu Sayaf. “Suddenly, dozens of cops came in and dismantled the speakers. We maintain coexistence; if they would have asked us to play the prayers more quietly, we would have invited them for a cup of coffee and lowered the volume,” he added.

The chairman of the adjacent Ajami neighborhood committee Kamal Agbaria said in response: “The cops acted as if they were carrying out a military operation for all intents and purposes. This is a house of prayer that serves as a mosque. This move is part of the state’s attempt to legislate the ‘Muezzin bill.’ It is an infringement on the freedom of worship. The calls are not terrorizing, but rather a soothing call to prayer, which can be enjoyed. Next Friday we will hold a mass prayer in protest,” he said. Agbaria added that “the atmosphere of a radical rightist wave that is sweeping over the country has reached the courts. We have also seen this with the Grunis Law that was passed in the Knesset. “Democracy is trampling over the minority and is pushing for an unnecessary war of religion,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Afghanistan: Taliban Opening Qatar Office, And Maybe Door to Talks

KABUL, Afghanistan — Giving a first major public sign that they may be ready for formal talks with the American-led coalition in Afghanistan, the Taliban announced Tuesday that they had struck a deal to open a political office in Qatar that could allow for direct negotiations over the endgame in the Afghan war. The step was a reversal of the Taliban’s longstanding public denials that they were involved in, or even willing to consider, talks related to their insurgency, and it had the potential to revive a reconciliation effort that stalled in September, with the assassination of the head of Afghanistan’s High Peace Council. It was unclear, however, whether the Taliban were interested in working toward a comprehensive peace settlement or mainly in ensuring that NATO ends its operations in Afghanistan as scheduled in 2014, which would remove a major obstacle to the Taliban’s return to power in all or part of the country.

In a statement, Zabiullah Mujahid, a spokesman for the Taliban, said that along with a preliminary deal to set up the office in Qatar, the group was asking that Taliban detainees held at the American prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, be released. Mr. Mujahid did not say when the Qatar office would be opened, or give specifics about the prisoners the Taliban wanted freed. “We are at the moment, besides our powerful presence inside the country, ready to establish a political office outside the country to come to an understanding with other nations,” the statement said. American officials have said in recent months that the opening of a Taliban mission would be the single biggest step forward for peace efforts that have been plagued by false starts. The most embarrassing came in November 2010, when it emerged that an impostor had fooled Western officials into thinking he represented the Taliban and then had disappeared with hundreds of thousands of dollars used to woo him. The official killed in September, Burhanuddin Rabbani, had been greeting a supposed Taliban negotiator when the man detonated a bomb in his turban.

The opening of an office in Qatar is meant to give Afghan and Western peace negotiators an “address” where they can openly contact legitimate Taliban intermediaries. That would open the way for confidence-building measures that Washington hopes to press forward in the coming months. Chief among them, American officials said, is the possibility of transferring a number of “high-risk” detainees — including some with ties to Al Qaeda — to Afghan custody from Guantánamo Bay. The prisoners would then presumably be freed later. American officials said they would consider transferring only those prisoners the Afghan authorities requested. Among the names being discussed are Muhammad Fazl, the former Taliban deputy defense minister; two former provincial governors, Khairullah Khairkhwa of Herat and Noorullah Nori of Balkh; Abdul Haq Wasiq, a former top Taliban intelligence official; and one of the Taliban’s top financiers, Muhammad Nabi. Mr. Fazl is accused of having commanded forces that killed thousands of Shiite Muslims, who are a minority in Afghanistan, while the Taliban ruled the country.

The American officials said that another idea under consideration was the establishment of cease-fire zones within Afghanistan, although that prospect was more uncertain and distant. The officials asked not to be identified because of the delicacy of the talks. Some analysts are skeptical of the prospect for meaningful peace negotiations with the Taliban. The Taliban are viewed as unlikely to cede significant ground at a time when NATO has begun to withdraw troops and intends to end combat operations here in less than three years. Another uncertainty is the role of Pakistan, which provides safe haven to Taliban leaders and has undermined past efforts at reconciliation talks that it sees as jeopardizing its interests. But American officials have said for years that the war in Afghanistan would ultimately require a political solution. The “surge” of additional troops at the end of 2009 has largely been aimed at getting the Taliban to the negotiating table.

On Tuesday, the White House affirmed the necessity of a negotiated solution. Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for the White House’s National Security Council, said in an e-mail that such “Afghan-led peace initiatives” were central to the American strategy of “denying Al Qaeda a safe haven, reversing the Taliban’s momentum, and strengthening the capacity of Afghanistan’s security forces and government.” Western officials stressed that a peace process was closer to the beginning than the end. “Publicly, I don’t think we could have asked for a stronger endorsement of the peace process from the other side,” said a Western diplomat in Kabul, who asked not to be identified, in keeping with diplomatic protocol. “But this isn’t even close to having a done deal. That’s going to take years, if it even happens.”

There was no immediate comment from President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, who has been cool to the idea of NATO’s conducting its own talks with the Taliban, fearing a deal that would undermine his control. When word that Qatar had agreed to host a Taliban office first surfaced in December, the Karzai government rejected the notion and recalled its ambassador from the Persian Gulf state. Afghan officials complained at the time that they had not been formally notified by the Qataris, and that they preferred that any such mission be in Saudi Arabia or Turkey. But a week ago, Mr. Karzai grudgingly agreed to Qatar as the site. Still, Mr. Karzai is likely to remain insistent that any talks be limited to reducing tensions rather than achieving a comprehensive solution to the war. Even so, Afghanistan’s High Peace Council, appointed by Mr. Karzai, welcomed the Taliban move. Arsala Rahmani, a top negotiator on the council, called it “a gesture of good faith,” Reuters reported.

Three suicide bombings on Tuesday in the southern city of Kandahar provided a bloody reminder of the violence that continues to plague Afghanistan. Thirteen people, including a child and four police officers, were killed, Faisal Ahmad, a spokesman for the government of Kandahar Province, told The Associated Press. Since the debacle with the impostor, the United States and its allies have focused on establishing a trustworthy channel for pursuing a peace deal with the Taliban. The push began early last year when American and German negotiators managed to make contact with a man they believed to be a legitimate representative of Mullah Muhammad Omar, the Taliban’s reclusive leader. The Western diplomat said Tuesday that the Taliban announcement was a product of 10 months of on-again, off-again talks with the man, Tayeb Agha, a former secretary to Mullah Omar. The talks were shrouded in secrecy in large part to protect Mr. Agha and other Taliban intermediaries. The biggest concern was that Pakistan, where most of the Taliban’s leadership is believed to reside, would obstruct any talks in which it did not play a direct role. Afghan and American officials have long feared that Pakistan aimed to use the peace process, which it says it supports, as a way to solidify a dominant position in Afghanistan. The Qatar office is seen as a way of lessening Pakistani influence over the talks.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Five Yemeni Soldiers Killed in Clashes With Qaeda

ADEN: Five Yemeni soldiers and a girl were killed on Tuesday in clashes with alleged al Qaeda gunmen on the outskirts of the restive southern city of Zinjibar, military and local officials said. The five soldiers, including an officer, were killed in fighting with members of the al Qaeda-linked Partisans of Sharia, the military source said. A local official claimed that nine members of the extremist group were killed on Tuesday in bombing by the army that targeted a house in which they were hiding, in the suburbs of Zinjibar. AFP could not verify the toll with medical sources. The local official said, a girl, 16, was killed in the bombing. Zinjibar is the capital of the southern Abyan province, a stronghold of al Qaeda, and has been the scene of frequent fighting between troops and militants since May. afp

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Italian General Named Top UN Commander in Lebanon

Paolo Serra moves on from role as ISAF commander in Afghanistan

(ANSA) — Rome, January 3 — An Italian general has been named the top commander of the United Nations mission in Lebanon, the Italian Foreign Ministry said Tuesday. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon chose General Paolo Serra to lead the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), where over 1,000 Italian service members currently serve. Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi and Defense Minister Giampaolo di Paola expressed “great satisfaction” over the announcement. Before taking over in Lebanon from Major General Alberto Asarta Cuevas, Serra served in Afghanistan as head of the Italian contingent and International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) Region Command West commander. He also served previously in the international force in Kosovo.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey’s Trade With Iran to Continue, Minister Says

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JANUARY 4 — Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Minister Taner Yildiz said Wednesday that the Turkish Petroleum Refineries Corporation’s (TUPRAS) trade with Iran would continue until a new development took place. Speaking to reporters in Ankara, as Anatolia news agency reports today, Yildiz said that Iran was one of the countries from which Turkey imported crude oil and that they had not yet received any information about widening the scope of international sanctions against Iran. Yildiz’s comments came after a journalist asked a question on the United States and sanctions to be applied against Iran. “TURPAS purchases a great amount of oil from Iran.

As of today, trade with Iran continues. This commercial relation will continue until a new development takes place,” Yildiz stressed.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UAE: Auschwitz in Gym Advertisement, Removed

Criticised for insensitivity, UK managers apologise

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, JANUARY 4 — The ad campaign of a Dubai gym using a black and white photo of the entrance to the Auschwitz concentration camp on a poster under the slogan “say goodbye to your calories” had a brief life. The campaign, posted on the Facebook page of The Circuit Factory gym, was bombarded with criticism over the ad’s bad taste and lack of sensitivity. A few hours later the flyer was removed. “It was only a provocation but if it was badly received then I apologise,” said Phil Parkins, the administrator of the social network page, saying that the Auschwitz poster as a symbol of weight loss and physical labour had been chosen since “the programme that the gym offers, in terms of calories, is like a concentration camp”. Three other posters were removed by the campaign after being judged too vulgar in terms of their images or words by those frequenting its facilities and its online forums on Facebook and Twitter, even in comparison with Dubai itself.

“If Auschwitz had not been among the photos there would never have been such an uproar,” said Ahmed, a Palestinian, adding that “I think, however, that no human tragedy should be used for commercial ends.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: US Supports Taliban Negotiations

BEIJING, Jan. 4 (Xinhuanet) — The US will support an Afghan-led effort to reach a negotiated end to the war with the Taliban. That’s according to the US State Department, which also said it would back the potential establishment of a Taliban political office in the Gulf state of Qatar. US State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said:”We are not aware of any formal decision or any formal announcement but we are ready to support a process that the Afghans support, and with regard to any office, again it would be a question for the host country, the Afghans, and the Taliban to agree on.” (Source: CNTV.cn)

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: The Taliban’s Peace Offering

‘Taliban’ and ‘peace mission’ — the words sure don’t fit very well together. But they’re the words that you’ll see in tomorrow’s papers, given that the Taliban have today revealed their intention to open a peace mission in Qatar. The idea is that foreign diplomats can stop by, share a cup of tea and some Ferrero Rocher, and talk about ending the insurgency in Afghanistan. The news ought to treated with caution for now. After all, the Taliban haven’t given a date for when their Qatar office will be open, and they’re making noises about prisoners being released from Guantanamo Bay in return. But it’s a still a significant moment, whatever happens. For the first time in public, the Taliban appear to be broaching the possibility of peace talks. What has for years been resisted and refuted now seems to be an open and active goal. The idea of talking to the Taliban may seem, in itself, like a admission of defeat by the West. It certainly wasn’t the mission plan in 2001, and it could yet have horrible consequences. But there are plenty of policymakers who now see it as the best, and only, way to proceed. Not only might it spare Afghanistan from decades of internal conflict — the thinking goes — but, played right, it could also limit Pakistan’s influence in the country after 2015, and therefore the Taliban’s too. Why so? As Ahmed Rashid explained in the Spectator in 2010, the head of Pakistan’s army, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, has been supporting the Taliban for years — and in the hope of brokering any eventual peace talks, and steering a heavily-Taliban, pro-Pakistan government into power in Kabul. If the West splays itself across any talks in Qatar, then that outcome may yet be avoided. If not, then it may just be conceding to Kayani’s dangerous agenda.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Afghanistan: Italian Soldier Slightly Wounded by Bomb

Marine’s jeep hit by IED

(ANSA) — Rome, January 4 — An Italian soldier was slightly wounded by a bomb in Afghanistan Wednesday, miliary sources said.

The private, from the marine San Marco regiment, was hurt when an IED (roadside bomb) went off as his convoy went past in the western Afghan district of Gulistan, where Italian troops are stationed.

The soldier’s Lince armoured vehicle withstood the blast well, minimizing the impact of the IED.

The marine was helicoptered to a field hospital at Herat, the Italian HQ, where he phoned his family and told them he was not seriously hurt.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Separate Graveyard for Honor Killing Victims

There is a separate graveyard for those killed under the pretext of karo-kari (honour killing) called ‘karan jo qabrustan’ (graveyard for the dishonoured) near Daharki. At this graveyard, built by the Shar clan, people are buried without last rites and men guard the graves so nobody can visit them and offer Fateha. Even in death, the punishment continues.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China: Ningxia: Muslims Against Police Over Mosque Demolition

Hui Muslims living in the north-central and semi-desert province have traditionally been friendly to the government. More than a thousand police clash with residents in Taoshan. About 50 people are injured and 100 arrested, some sources say.

Hexi (AsiaNews) — More than a thousand police agents in anti-riot gear clashed with residents in Taoshan village, near the city of Hexi, in Ningxia, a semi-desert province in north-central China inhabited by ethnic Hui Muslims. The issue was the demolition of a local mosque. Unlike Uyghurs, Hui Muslims have traditionally been friendly to the government.

Local public officials confirmed the place of worship was demolished because it was deemed “illegal”. Sources cited by the Hong Kong-based Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (ICHRD) said that 50 people were injured and more than 100 detained last Saturday. Still more information is coming from the remote and sparsely populated province.

Hui Muslims are the area’s largest minority and have traditionally been friendly to the authorities. Unlike Turkic-speaking Uyghurs, Hui Islam is not anti-regime. The fact that on this occasion they openly challenged the regime is an indication that the government’s anti-religious crackdown is intensifying.

Hui religious practice is based on Qur’anic teachings that focus on mosque prayers. Hui Muslims have traditionally shied away from politics or open criticism of the government’s religious policies. In fact, they have usually praised them for their openness, at least, until now.

In the past few years, China has become increasingly concerned that fundamentalism is growing among the hitherto “quiet” Hui and that it could fuel social tensions.

Once known for their liberal Islam, more and more people in Hui areas attend mosque prayers, more and more women are wearing the veil, and an increasing number of young people want to study Arabic and the Qur’an.

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



China’s Tomb Raiders Laying Waste to Thousands of Years of History

Bulldozers and dynamite used to strip priceless artefacts from remote sites, with booty sold on to wealthy collectors

China’s extraordinary historical treasures are under threat from increasingly aggressive and sophisticated tomb raiders, who destroy precious archaeological evidence as they swipe irreplaceable relics. The thieves use dynamite and even bulldozers to break into the deepest chambers — and night vision goggles and oxygen canisters to search them. The artefacts they take are often sold on within days to international dealers.

Police have already stepped up their campaign against the criminals and the government is devoting extra resources to protecting sites and tracing offenders. This year it set up a national information centre to tackle such crimes. Tomb theft is a global problem that has gone on for centuries. But the sheer scope of China’s heritage — with thousands of sites, many of them in remote locations — poses a particular challenge.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Australia Has Boom in Babies

AUSTRALIA is in the grip of a mini birthing boom with a record 300,000 babies born in the past 12 months.

The birthing explosion will eclipse the 250,000 births recorded at the peak of the original baby boom in 1961.

Social demographers attribute the increase to our growing population, which is expected to reach 23 million sometime in July.

Despite the record number of births to date, Australia’s fertility rate still remains low, signalling only an echo of the post-war baby boom — or mini baby boom.

The fertility rate at the height of the boom in 1961 peaked at 3.5 babies per woman, compared to just 1.89 in 2010.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Nigeria Ends Fuel Subsidies in Face of Protest Threats

by John Daly

In a nasty New Year’s Day present to his fellow Nigerians, President Goodluck Jonathan directed his administration to end fuel subsidies, effective immediately.

Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency issued a statement noting, “By this announcement, the downstream sub-sector of the petroleum industry is hereby deregulated for (gasoline). Service providers in the sector are now to procure products and sell same in accordance with the indicative benchmark price to be published fortnightly and posted on the PPPRA website.” The government urged people not to panic-buy or hoard fuel, stating, “Consumers are assured of adequate supply of quality products at prices that are competitive and non-exploitative.”

While the government for weeks had been floating the idea of ending the subsidy, the public received no prior warning that it would occur on 1 January. The cost of a liter of gasoline immediately jumped by 116 percent to 141 naira, or 86¢, from 65 naira (40¢) and reportedly even tripled in black market sales in some rural and urban areas.

Sure to stoke public outrage, on 30 December a Senate Joint Committee investigating the management of fuel subsidies during public hearings stated that more than 100 companies, including construction companies during January-August 2011 sharing $8.77 billion in fuel subsidies, with the amount paid since 2006 totaling and astounding $22.5 billion.

According to the committee, the oil, industrial and financial companies that benefited from the sharing of the subsidy include Oando Nigerian Plc., Enak Oil & Gas, Bovas & Co. Nig. Ltd, Obat, AP, Folawiyo Oil, IPMAN Investment Limited, ACON, Atio Oil, AMP, Honeywell, Emac Oil, D.Jones Oil, Capital Oil, AZ Oil, Eternal Oil, Dozil Oil and Fort Oil.

[Return to headlines]



Suicide Attacks in Nigeria: Islamist Terror Network Gains Strength in Africa

On Christmas Day, the extremist Muslim sect Boko Haram carried out a suicide attack on a church in Nigeria that killed dozens. By allying itself with groups such as al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, it has been gaining in strength and is threatening to spark a religious war in Nigeria.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Britain’s Soft Touch Border Policy Exposed

BRITAIN is an easy target for asylum seekers — with the vast majority never being turned away. More than 90% are not even considered for deportation, according to figures seen by the Mirror. Under EU rules UK officials can return asylum seekers to the first European country they set foot in.

Most enter Europe through Greece, then travel to Britain via other “safe” countries such as France and Italy. But in 2010, just 1,600 out of 18,000, around 9%, were considered for removal. That’s 2% down on 2009 — making a mockery of David Cameron’s vow to tighten our borders.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mexico Deports Nearly 50,000 Central Americans

A total of 46,716 Central Americans were deported from Mexico between Jan. 1 and Nov. 30, 2011, said the National Migration Institute (INM). The majority of the migrants — 41,215 — were men and nearly half, some 23,560, were from Guatemala, the INM said in a statement. All of the migrants were deported in an “easy, orderly, dignified and safe” manner, the INM said.

The Central Americans who were returned to their countries accounted for 74 percent of the foreigners processed at Mexican immigration facilities. The remaining foreigners were either given asylum, granted humanitarian visas or sent home using different repatriation systems, the INM said. An estimated 300,000 Central Americans undertake the hazardous journey across Mexico each year on their way to the United States.

The trek is a dangerous one, with criminals and corrupt Mexican officials preying on the migrants. Gangs kidnap, exploit and murder migrants, who are often targeted in extortion schemes, Mexican officials said. Central American migrants follow a long route that first takes them into Chiapas state, which is on the border with Guatemala, walking part of the way or riding aboard freight trains, buses and cargo trucks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


UK: Forget Tactics; The “Clash of Civilizations” Is Spiritual, Not Intellectual

The words “The Clash of Ideas” are splashed across the cover of the special anniversary issue of Foreign Affairs this month. This is of course a play on the “clash of civilizations” narrative that we’ve heard countless times since 9/11, and a nod to the notion that this clash — between radical Islam and the West, or liberal democracy — is fundamentally a “war of ideas.” I have come to believe that this diagnosis is not only wrong, but a large part of the reason why we, who believe in freedom and the rights of the individual, appear to be losing ground. (For example, we are seeing more sharia in the West, despite us knowing that full sharia demands the execution of homosexuals, the stoning of women who commit adultery, and discrimination against religious minorities. And we are seeing our right to free speech eroded, especially across Europe.)

The battle is not one of ideas. It is a spiritual battle, pure and simple. Deploying ideas like soldiers in which the generals do not believe, the “Counter-Jihad” and anti-Islamist pundits have reduced themselves to Sunday intellectuals. A speech by any “Counter-Jihad” spokesperson or anti-Islamist media pundit is liable to denounce the increasing liberalism and “Cultural Marxism” of the West as a symptom of the rot, and to suggest that they are fighting for a more conservative Christian West, before going on to tell us that we are also fighting for liberal ideas, such as women’s rights and gay rights. Such speeches will only ever appeal to the converted — “sensible people” who are able to shut out one half of the message to find support for their gut instincts. Contrast this with the radical imam, who calls for full sharia in the West, and who speaks with passion and conviction, regardless of what anyone thinks. The imam knows what the West does not, i.e., that it is about the fire in the belly and in the eyes. It is first and foremost about integrity, conviction, and spirit. [JP emphasis]

If one wants an example of the ravages of strategy, put above values and integrity, one need look no further than Britain’s main three political parties. With the exception of Brighton — a student city — which elected a member of the Green Party to Parliament in 2010, over the last few decades the members of the British public have ignored those parties that best expresses their values on the grounds that they “won’t get in.”

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: Taking the Soft Option

Just one in five pupils were entered for GCSE exams in traditional academic subjects during Labour’s last year in Government, new figures have revealed today.

In some areas, just three per cent of children were given the chance to study the core academic subjects of English, maths, two sciences, a language or history or geography.

The official figures reveal the extent to which hundreds of thousands of children were encouraged to drop academic subjects in favour of so-called softer options.

They show that in 13 years under Labour, the number of pupils entering these academic core exams fell dramatically from 50 per cent in 1997 to 22per cent in 2010.

Of those who were took these subjects, only 16.5 per cent in England achieved good grades of A* to C.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]

General


Antarctic Hydrothermal Vents Like No Other on Earth

Hydrothermal vents deep in Antarctic waters are unlike vents elsewhere. Many typical vent animals like tube worms are missing, perhaps because they can’t reach the vents through the cold polar waters. Instead the vents are home to huge colonies of yeti crabs like the one above. Researchers led by Alex Rogers of the University of Oxford sent a remotely operated vehicle to explore the East Scotia Ridge, deep beneath the Southern Ocean. There hydrothermal vents pump hot, mineral-rich water up from beneath the seabed.

Such vents are often home to communities of bizarre animals, but the ecosystem on the East Scotia Ridge was particularly weird. “Many animals such as tube worms, vent mussels, vent crabs, and vent shrimps, found in hydrothermal vents in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans, simply weren’t there,” Rogers says. As well as the yeti crabs, the vents were rich in stalked barnacles, limpets, sea anemones and a predatory sea star with seven legs. There was also an as-yet-unidentified pale octopus.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Antarctic Hot Springs Yields Ghostly New Species

A “Yeti” crab, seven-legged seastar and a pale octopus discovered around the vent are reshaping theories on marine life.

The discovery of new deep-sea hot springs off Antarctica may rewrite theories of how marine creatures populate the world’s oceans. Scientists say the underwater plumes — located between the southern tip of South America and the Antarctic Peninsula — are chock-full of new species, including a pale, ghostly-looking octopus, a predatory seven-legged sea star and a hairy-chested “yeti” crab.

Experts say the strangest thing is what they didn’t find — tube worms, shrimp and mussels that have been found at the world’s other deep-sea hydrothermal vent communities.

“It wasn’t just one creature, virtually everything we saw was new to science,” said Alex Rogers, professor of zoology at the University of Oxford and lead author of the new report. “It was a remarkable experience. You’re not quite sure if these things are mineral or biological structures. That’s a very unusual feeling to see all this stuff for the first time and saying I don’t understand what’s going on here.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bacteria Survive in Cold, Dry, Mars-Like Conditions by Living Off Iron

To eke out even the barest subsistence on Mars, a living thing would have to adapt to a formidable set of environmental challenges: an arid, often extremely cold landscape with miniscule amounts of oxygen in the atmosphere and no organic matter to eat. During a recent foray into a similarly inhospitable part of our own planet, scientists have discovered several species of bacteria that hint at what life on Mars, if it exists, might look like. These microbes survive on minerals in the surrounding rocks-minerals also found in the Martian surface.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Kepler’s Surprise: The Sounds of the Stars

Data from NASA’s Kepler space telescope have revolutionized the search for planets outside the Solar System — and are now doing the same for asteroseismology.

Most astronomers gaze at the heavens and see stars. William Chaplin hears an orchestra — a celestial symphony in which the smallest stars are flutes, the medium-sized ones are trombones and the giants are reverberating tubas.

The sounds are internal vibrations that reveal themselves as a subtle, rhythmic brightening and dimming of a star, explains Chaplin, an astrophysicist at the University of Birmingham, UK, and a specialist in asteroseismology. These waves provide information that astronomers can’t get in any other way: triggered by the turbulent rise and fall of hot gases on the star’s surface, the vibrations penetrate deep into the stellar interior and become resonating tones that reveal the star’s size, composition and mass (see ‘Celestial music’). So by watching for the characteristic fluctuations in brightness, says Chaplin, “we can literally build up a picture of what the inside of a star looks like”.

Better still, he adds, asteroseismologists are now hauling in the data wholesale. After years of being hampered by Earth’s turbulent atmosphere, which obscures the view of the Universe and has limited asteroseismology to about 20 of the brightest nearby stars, researchers have been astonished by the trove of information coming from a new generation of space observatories. Thanks to the French-led Convection, Rotation and Planetary Transits (COROT) space telescope, launched in 2006, and NASA’s Kepler space telescope, launched in 2009, they can now listen in on hundreds of stars at a time.

“We are in a golden age for the study of stellar structure and evolution,” says Hans Kjeldsen, an astronomer at Aarhus University in Denmark.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



On Saturn Moon Titan, Weather Report Brings Chance of Methane Rain

Scientists have used models to help predict Earth’s weather for years, but now astronomers are using similar simulations to forecast rain at a more distant locale: Saturn’s biggest moon Titan. The study may help explain features such as rivers, lakes and clouds of methane on Titan, and could predict future changes, researchers said.

On Earth, water flows in a cycle, raining down from the sky, running in rivers and streams to oceans and lakes, and evaporating under sunlight into mist, forming clouds that eventually rain down. Probes sent to Titan have revealed that methane flows in a cycle there in much the same way. To better understand the weather and climate of Titan, scientists created 3D atmospheric simulations of its methane cycle based on circulation models originally designed for Earth.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Stephen Hawking at 70: Exclusive Interview

What discovery would do most to revolutionise our understanding of the universe?

The discovery of supersymmetric partners for the known fundamental particles, perhaps at the Large Hadron Collider. This would be strong evidence in favour of M-theory.

NS: The search for supersymmetric particles is a major goal of the LHC at CERN. The standard model of particle physics would be completed by finding the Higgs boson, but has a number of problems that would be solved if all known elementary particles had a heavier “superpartner”. Evidence of supersymmetry would support M-theory, the 11-dimensional version of string theory that is the best stab so far at a “theory of everything”, uniting gravity with the other forces of nature.

If you were a young physicist just starting out today, what would you study?

I would have a new idea that would open up a new field.

What do you think most about during the day?

Women. They are a complete mystery.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20120103

Financial Crisis
» Belgium: Record Number of Bankruptcies in 2011
» Collapse of the Eurozone ‘Will Start This Year’ As Countries Pull Out of the Single Currency, Leading Think Tank Warns
» Europeans Migrate South as Continent Drifts Deeper Into Crisis
» Greece Urgently Requests Clarity on Bailout Deal
» Greek Doctors Stage First Strike for 2012
» Italian Lawmakers Are Paid the Most
» Italy: Moonlighting in Public Sector
» Italy: ‘Petrol 75% Dearer Than 10 Years Ago’
» Spain’s Jobless Rate Hits 15-Year High in December
» Spain 2011 Finances Could be Worse Than Feared: Minister
 
USA
» NDAA Historic Assault on American Liberty
» Parasitic Fly Could Account for Disappearing Honeybees
» Undecided Iowans Typical of Open Republican Primary Race
 
Canada
» 2011 Homicides: 47 Deaths a Grim Record for Edmonton
 
Europe and the EU
» Cyprus Discovers Gas at Sea. Turkey and Egypt Step Forward
» EU Carbon Tax to Drive Up Cost of Airplane Tickets
» Eurozone’s EFSF to Issue 3 Bn in Bonds for Ireland, Portugal
» Hackers Against Neo-Nazis: Anonymous Takes on Germany’s Far-Right
» Hungarian Leader Accused of ‘Dictatorship’ Over New Constitution
» Italy: ‘Agro-Mafia’ Gets Rich From ‘Fraud’ In 5 Bln Euro Olive Oil Business
» Italy: The Town That Stood Up to the Mafia
» Netherlands: Arrests, Injuries, And Car Fires During New Year Festivities
» Netherlands: New Year Celebrations ‘Not Really a Party’, Says Justice Minister
» Norway: Ex-Progress Party Chief Loses Licence After Crash
» Norway: Herring Galore as Tonnes of Fish Wash Up on Beach
» Powerful Media Ally Abandons German President
» Researchers Bust the Stradivarius Myth
» Sarkozy and Far Right Rivals Celebrate Joan of Arc
» Sweden: One Man Dead After New Malmö Shooting
» Sweden: Stockholm: Police Face Stones and Lasers After Car Pursuit
» Sweden: Another Fatal Shooting in Malmö
» Sweden: Shootings Spate Tied to Availability of Weapons
» UK: Cameron Has Yet to Act on His Multiculturalism Speech. How Many Lives of Muslim Girls Will be Lost Until He Does?
» UK: London’s Beloved Bus Returns, With an Update
» UK: Postcard From Islamic London
 
North Africa
» Egypt: The Treasures of Islam
» Gunfights Are Reported in the Centre of Tripoli, Libya
» Hope Meets Hate in the New Libya
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Caroline Glick: Is Israeli Society Unraveling?
 
Middle East
» A Dangerous Region
» France Calls for Tougher EU Sanctions Against Iran
» Taliban Confirm Deal to Open Office in Qatar
 
Russia
» Dozens Arrested in Moscow New Year Rally
» Russia Says Iran Has No Long-Range Missiles
 
South Asia
» A Muslim Apostate’s Defense of the West
» Afghan Taliban Reach Agreement to Open Qatar Office
» Indian Government’s Anti-Corruption Law Becomes “Waste Paper”
» Indonesia: Muslims Enraged by Call for a “Friendly Islam”
» Iran Shuts Border With Pakistan as Its 3 Personnel Held
» Pakistan Deports Dutch Suspects
» Tajikistan: Muslims Shouting “Infidel” Murder Santa Claus
» Top Indian Businessman Mocks Davos
 
Far East
» China’s President Pushes Back Against Western Culture
» Chinese Muslims Clash With Police Over Mosque
» Man Behind Japan’s Subway Attacks Surrenders After 16 Years
 
Australia — Pacific
» Anti-Islam Pamphlet Concern
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Boko Haram Gives Three Day Ultimatum to the Christians to Flee Northern Nigeria
» British Voice Behind a Call to Arms for Somalia’s Islamic Terrorists
 
Immigration
» Polish-Nigerian Bogus Marriage Network Dismantled
» UK: Welcome to 2042 — the Year When Britain is No More Than a Memory
 
General
» Bizarre Crystal Hitched Ride on Meteorite
» How Marijuana May Drive the Brain Into Psychosis
» Looking Ahead: 2012 Pivotal for Private Spaceflight
» NASA Rover Mission Marks 8 Pioneering Years on Mars
» Nobel Prizewinning Quasicrystal Fell From Space
» The Dust Library

Financial Crisis


Belgium: Record Number of Bankruptcies in 2011

A record number of Belgian companies have gone under during 2011. Since the beginning of the year 10,528 firm have been declared bankrupt. This is up 5.86% on 2010. The figures come from the credit referencing agency Graydon Belgium.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Collapse of the Eurozone ‘Will Start This Year’ As Countries Pull Out of the Single Currency, Leading Think Tank Warns

The stricken eurozone will start disintegrating this year and will almost certainly collapse within the next decade, a think tank warned today.

At least one country will quit before the end of the year and there is a 99 per cent chance of a break-up in the next ten years, forecasters at the Centre For Economics And Business Research (CEBR) claimed.

They added that ‘it now looks as though 2012 will be the year when the euro starts to break up’.

           — Hat tip: Kitman [Return to headlines]



Europeans Migrate South as Continent Drifts Deeper Into Crisis

Tens of thousands of Irish, Greek and Portuguese people leave in search of a new life as the eurozone’s woes worsen

Since its conception, the European Union has been a haven for those seeking refuge from war, persecution and poverty in other parts of the world. But as the EU faces what Angela Merkel has called its toughest hour since the second world war, the tables appear to be turning. A new stream of migrants is leaving the continent. It threatens to become a torrent if the debt crisis continues to worsen.

Tens of thousands of Portuguese, Greek and Irish people have left their homelands this year, many heading for the southern hemisphere. Anecdotal evidence points to the same happening in Spain and Italy. The Guardian has spoken to dozens of Europeans who have left, or are planning to leave. Their stories highlight surprising new migration routes — from Lisbon to Luanda, Dublin to Perth, Barcelona to Buenos Aires — as well as more traditional migration patterns.

This year, 2,500 Greek citizens have moved to Australia and another 40,000 have “expressed interest” in moving south. Ireland’s central statistics office has projected that 50,000 people will have left the republic by the end of the year, many for Australia and the US.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Urgently Requests Clarity on Bailout Deal

The holiday break was welcome, but on Tuesday, a Greek government spokesman said that the next three months were crucial if his country was to remain part of the euro zone. The bailout agreement with the EU, he said, must be finalized. Or else.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek Doctors Stage First Strike for 2012

Greek doctors and pharmacists have gone on strike in the country’s first walkout of 2012, with hospitals treating only emergency cases until Thursday, in protest at changes to healthcare provision. Pharmacists are angry at government plans to cut the cost of medicines in an attempt to reduce state spending.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Lawmakers Are Paid the Most

Rome, 3 Dec. (AKI) — Italian politicians’ average salary of 16,000 euros makes them the top earners among lawmakers in the European Union, according to a report.

A government-sponsored commission was tasked with surveying the gross salaries of EU politicians to put the pay of Italy’s 950 lawmakers in line with the median of their European counterparts.

The report said that Italian politicians made about 2,500 euros a month more than no. 2 France, where politicians gross monthly salary totals 13,500 euros.

The president of Italy’s national statistics agency Istat headed the committee that prepared the report on members of parliament in Italy Germany, France, Spain, Netherlands, Belgium and Austria.

Italy’s new government headed by ex-EU competition commissioner Mario Monti has pushed through a series of emergency measures designed to balance the budget, trim the debt and stimulate growth for third-richest country among the 17 nations that use the euro currency, a monetary block dubbed the eurozone.

Monti in December formed a government of so-called non-politicians to reassure the EU and international markets after an economic crisis toppled Silvio Berlusconi’s rule.

Furious Italians, who will now have to pay more taxes and work longer, have demanded that politicians also feel the pain of the reforms.

Outcries from lawmakers caused Moni to scrap a plan to cut their pay by decree, agreeing to let the them take the initiative.

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



Italy: Moonlighting in Public Sector

Financial police report details 3,300 cases already uncovered

ROME — Some of them clock in and then disappear. Some do private clients’ work in office hours. Others even consult on projects that they then have to process for public bodies. All are public-sector workers who take on outside work without proper authorisation, causing serious damage to the public purse. The numbers are there to prove it. In the past three years, about 3,300 public-sector workers and executives, some high-ranking, have been identified by the financial police and public sector inspectors as having outside activities. Together, they have accumulated more than €20 million in illicit earnings, at a cost to the public purse of nearly €55 million. Wasteful public-sector spending is again confirmed as the area where there is most need for tighter controls to claw back money, and above all to avoid further losses. It’s all there in the annual report of the financial police on double earners, which highlights figures for the period from 2009 to 2011 and highlights the most glaring cases. The report also stresses “the importance of intervention in wasteful public spending, which from the accounting point of view is at least as significant as revenue from taxation. Its importance is even more evident today in an enduring period of crisis and of Italian political commitment to the international community, which dictate that available resources should be spent, down to the last euro, on supporting the economy and the weakest members of society while eliminating waste, inefficiencies and, in the most serious cases, the embezzlement of public funds, all of which represent a barrier to Italy’s growth”…

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



Italy: ‘Petrol 75% Dearer Than 10 Years Ago’

Diesel price rose 104%

(ANSA) — Rome, January 3 — Petrol is 75% dearer in Italy than it was 10 years ago, consumer group Codacons said Tuesday.

Diesel prices have more than doubled since January 2002, it added, with a rise of 104%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain’s Jobless Rate Hits 15-Year High in December

Spain’s jobless numbers rose for the fifth straight month in December to a new 15-year high, official data showed Tuesday, posing a stiff challenge to the country’s new conservative government. The number of registered unemployed rose from the previous month by 1,897 people, or 0.04 percent, to 4.42 million, its highest level since the labour minister started collecting the figures in 1996.

The number of jobless was up in December from the same year-ago period by 322,286 people, or 7.86 percent. “The figures for the number of registered unemployed for the month of December confirm the deterioration of the economic situation during the second half of the year,” the labour ministry said in a statement.

Spain, once the motor of job creation in the eurozone, has struggled to find jobs for the millions thrown out of work by the collapse of a labour-intensive property bubble in 2008. The Bank of Spain warned last week that the economy shrank in the fourth quarter of 2011 as tourism and exports, the drivers of a modest recovery, weakened.

The grim report fueled fears that Spain, the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, was heading back into recession after the economy posted zero growth in the third quarter of 2011. The new government of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has vowed to make make fighting unemployment and fixing the country’s finances its top priorities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain 2011 Finances Could be Worse Than Feared: Minister

Spain’s already strained public finances could turn out to have been in even worse shape than expected last year, the government warned Monday, setting the tone for a difficult 2012. On Friday, the new right-leaning government said the public deficit would easily exceed the 2011 forecast of 6.0 percent of GDP as it unveiled spending cuts and tax hikes totalling 15.1 billion euros ($19.6 billion) for this year.

On Monday, Finance Minister Luis de Guindos said the true position could be even worse, blaming the country’s wayward provinces for the problem. “It is possible that it exceeds 8.0 percent (of Gross Domestic Product) but I hope it won’t be much higher,” de Guindos said. “A big part of this difference (in the forecasts) comes from the regions,” de Guindos told private radio Cadena Ser, adding that he expected them to “make an effort” to help restore fiscal health.

Spain’s 17 autonomous regions, which are responsible for health and education services, were hard hit by a 2008 crash in the housing market and are a growing source of concern for economists and policy-makers as Madrid tries to stabilise the country’s finances. “Everyone must participate in this effort,” the minister said. “We are in a very difficult situation, very complex, and without a doubt the hardest in the past decades in Spain.”

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, freshly installed after beating the Socialists in November elections, has vowed to meet the 2012 target of reducing the public deficit to 4.4 percent of GDP. Madrid aims to narrow the deficit to 3.0 percent — the EU limit — by 2013 through a combination of spending cuts and tax hikes to better balance the government’s books .

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


NDAA Historic Assault on American Liberty

President Barack Obama rang in the New Year by signing the NDAA law with its provision allowing him to indefinitely detain citizens. It was a symbolic moment, to say the least. With Americans distracted with drinking and celebrating, Obama signed one of the greatest rollbacks of civil liberties in the history of our country … and citizens partied in unwitting bliss into the New Year.

Ironically, in addition to breaking his promise not to sign the law, Obama broke his promise on signing statements and attached a statement that he really does not want to detain citizens indefinitely (see the text of the statement here).

Obama insisted that he signed the bill simply to keep funding for the troops. It was a continuation of the dishonest treatment of the issue by the White House since the law first came to light. As discussed earlier, the White House told citizens that the president would not sign the NDAA because of the provision. That spin ended after sponsor Senator Carl Levin (Democrat, Michigan) went to the floor and disclosed that it was the White House and insisted that there be no exception for citizens in the indefinite detention provision.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



Parasitic Fly Could Account for Disappearing Honeybees

Parasitic flies that turn honeybees into night-flying zombies could provide another clue to cracking the mystery of colony collapse disorder. Since 2007, thousands of hives in the US have been decimated as bees inexplicably go missing overnight. The best explanation so far is that multiple stresses, perhaps parasitic mites, viruses or pesticides, combine to tip the bees over the edge.

John Hafernik of San Francisco State University in California and colleagues discovered that hosting Apocephalus borealis, a parasitic fly found throughout North America, makes bees fly around in a disoriented way at night, when they normally roost in the hive, before killing them. Although unlikely to be the sole cause of colony collapse disorder, Hafernik thinks the parasitic fly discovery may help explain why bees quit their hives. “They seem to leave their hives in the middle of the night on what we call the ‘flight of the living dead’,” he says. Since the discovery, the parasitic flies have been found at 77 per cent of sites in San Francisco Bay, and in hives in South Dakota.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Undecided Iowans Typical of Open Republican Primary Race

With the Iowa caucuses officially kicking off the 2012 US Presidential election, the picture among Republicans was muddy. As many as third of voters said they hadn’t decided who they wanted to challenge Barack Obama.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Canada


2011 Homicides: 47 Deaths a Grim Record for Edmonton

EDMONTON — A man found dead in a Mill Woods home in the early morning hours of New Year’s Eve and a woman found dead 12 hours later in a bloody downtown apartment were Edmonton’s final homicide victims in a year that shattered the city’s previous record. Police declared both killings homicides on Saturday, putting Edmonton’s final homicide tally for 2011 at 47. The near homicide-a-week pace meant the city’s previous record of 39, set in 2005, was broken by mid-October, when a homeless man found dead in a Parkdale-area home became the city’s 40th victim. Edmonton’s bloodiest year on record year left a long list of victims. The youngest was a disabled seven-year-old boy whose caregiver has been charged with manslaughter. The oldest was an 84-year-old woman who died in hospital days after a man allegedly broke into her downtown seniors home and sexually assaulted her.

What remains to be seen is whether that pace will continue into the new year. “I think because of the nature of the reality of this part of the world and country we live in, Edmonton being a gateway to the North and many other issues here, we’re probably going to always be in the top three or four (cities) for homicides,” said Insp. Stewart Callioux, with the Edmonton police major crimes section. Traditionally, criminologists agree, crime increases in Canada as you travel east to west. But finding a definitive answer for why Edmonton recorded so many killings in 2011 isn’t that simple — Calgary, for instance, recorded 11 homicides this year.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Cyprus Discovers Gas at Sea. Turkey and Egypt Step Forward

The U.S. Company Nobel Energy has found a deposit of five thousand to eight thousand billion cubic meters southeast of the island. The Greek Cypriot president calls it a “historic” event. Meanwhile, Turkey gives the green light to the Russian-Italian South Stream pipeline to carry Russian gas to Europe.

Nicosia (AsiaNews / Agencies) — The Cypriot government has announced the discovery of natural gas reserves off its coast, to the south east, which could range from five to eight thousand billion cubic meters. Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias said that the reserve was found by the U.S. company Nobel Energy, the same which in 2007 won the exploration concession off the coast of Haifa, Israel; a successful exploration which yielded the discovery of 120 thousand billion cubic meters. The discovery is the first of its kind in Cyprus, and could put an end to imports of natural gas for the country. The President has called the event “historic”, while the Commerce Minister, Parxoulla Antoniadou, has declared that the gas field can satisfy the production of electricity on the island for 210 years. (5/10/2011 Turkey, Israel, Greece and Russia mobilising over Cyprus gas).

But the announcement, confirmed by Noble Energy, also opens up a difficult diplomatic can of worms. In fact, both Turkey and Egypt are moving to not fall behind in the race for the natural resources of the eastern Mediterranean. Israel has already established an agreement with its territorial waters with Cyprus. But the Egyptian Foreign Ministry has not yet done so. “Egypt, Cyprus and Turkey are negotiating the limits of their maritime economic zones, since the limits of 200 miles of their respective territorial areas overlap with each other,” said former Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Abdallah al- Ashaal. Turkey does not recognize the Greek Cypriot government and in September sent a ship to explore the sea, accompanied by warships and combat aircraft in the area close to where Noble Energy was drilling. Cyprus has been divided since the Turkish invasion of 1974, and Ankara argues that development projects must await the settlement of the island’s political status. But the Greek Cypriot President has states that “Cyprus enters the energy map of Europe with a view to contributing substantially to the EU’s energy security.”

In the meantime, Turkey has given the green light to Russia to build a pipeline to bring Russian natural gas to European markets through Turkish territorial waters of the Black Sea, a project called South Stream. This way Moscow’s pipeline will avoid passing through Ukraine, which has given rise to tensions and problems in the recent past. In return, Russia has already decided to lower the price of natural gas sold to Turkey. The announcement was made by the Minister for Energy and Natural Resources, Taner Yildiz. The South Stream project was initiated by the Russian company Gazprom and Eni in 2007, which in 2008 created a joint company for the project, with a minority of Germany and France, as well as Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece and Hungary . South Stream will carry up to 63 billion cubic meters of gas once operative, which is expected in 2015.

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



EU Carbon Tax to Drive Up Cost of Airplane Tickets

German airline carrier Lufthansa has said it will raise ticket prices to compensate for a new EU tax on carbon emissions, which came into force on 1 January. The company said it will do so “as suggested by the EU”, but added it will not happen in the short term.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurozone’s EFSF to Issue 3 Bn in Bonds for Ireland, Portugal

The European Financial Stability Facility, the eurozone bailout fund, said Tuesday it will “shortly” issue three billion euros in three-year bonds to help financially struggling Ireland and Portugal. The EFSF said in a statement it had appointed as lead managers Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale Corporate & Investment Banking for its first three-year bond.

“We will continue to provide our investors with opportunities across the full yield curve in 2012,” said EFSF deputy chief Christophe Frankel. The 440-billion-euro EFSF was created in May 2010 to protect vulnerable eurozone nations after Greece was bailed out by the European Union and the IMF. The temporary fund is to be replaced this year by the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hackers Against Neo-Nazis: Anonymous Takes on Germany’s Far-Right

The loose-knit hacker collective Anonymous has a new target in its sights: Germany’s far-right scene. The group has launched a new WikiLeaks-style website publishing confidential data obtained from the far-right NPD party and other extremist groups. It’s all part of an ongoing war on neo-Nazis that the group has dubbed Operation Blitzkrieg.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hungarian Leader Accused of ‘Dictatorship’ Over New Constitution

BRUSSELS — Tens of thousands of Hungarians on Monday (2 January) went on the streets of Budapest in protest against controversial constitutional changes enacted one day earlier by centre-right Prime Minister Viktor Orban, with former dissidents accusing him of “dictatorship.” According to the organisers of the rally, up to 100,000 people marched outside the opera house in central Budapest where Orban and other politicians celebrated the new constitution.

Protesters chanted slogans denouncing Orban’s “dictatorship”, holding up boards saying “Enough!” and “Orbanistan” as dignitaries arrived for the event. “Viktor Orban and his servants turned Hungary from a promising place to the darkest spot in Europe,” Socialist MP Tibor Szanyi said according to AFP.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: ‘Agro-Mafia’ Gets Rich From ‘Fraud’ In 5 Bln Euro Olive Oil Business

Rome, 23 Dec. (AKI) — Italy’s five-billion-euro olive oil business is a fraud, according to a Friday report in the La Repubblica newspaper.

Eighty percent of the country’s oil carrying the label “Made in Italy” is mixed with lower quality Spanish, Tunisian and Greek oil, the article said, citing an ongoing investigation by different police agencies in collaboration with Italian agriculture trade group Coldiretti.

Italy exports 250 thousand metric tons of oil every year, but imports total 470 thousand tons. Last year oil imports jumped by 100 thousand tons, prompting authorities to ask where it ended up.

Italians and the foreigners worldwide are fooled into thinking they are buying olive oil from the world’s most celebrated producer, according to La Repubblica.

“There’s a group of powerful people in the agriculture business that are making an illegal fortune from the untraceable mixed olive oils,” said Coldiretti consumer protection head Stefano Masini, saying it’s time to talk about an “agro-mafia.”

“Made in Italy” is a coveted label that has come under fire for misleading and outright lying to consumers. Some luxury clothing brands have been accused of manufacturing their goods in China except for the “last stitch” which is done in Italy, allowing them to say their goods were made in Italy.

The report said allied importers and distributers — sometimes belonging to the same companies — have formed a “cartel” of operating mostly in Italy’s central and southern regions that set prices.

“They control the prices, they control the market,” it said.

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



Italy: The Town That Stood Up to the Mafia

El Mundo, Madrid

Ercolano, in southern Italy, has become the first town to stop paying extortion money to the Camorra. A new freedom fiercely defended by the town’s mayor and shopkeepers.

Irene Hernández Velasco

The baker, the mechanic, the gas station owner, the fisherman, the owner of the clothing store, the hairdresser, the barber, the jeweller, the optician, the bar owner… Not even the pastor of the Church of the Santísimo Rosario (Holy Rosary) escaped.

For many years, three generations of residents of Ercolano, a town of 55,000 located 14 kilometre from Naples, have done only one thing: grit their teeth and, without a murmur, stump up extortion money of between 150 and 1,500 euros every month that the members of the local Camorra demanded from the traders, businessmen and even priests, in exchange for not making their lives impossible.

But that is history now. Ercolano, half way between the sea and Vesuvius and famous for its Roman ruins, has said “Enough!” and so has become the first town in southern Italy that has dared to give the finger to the mob and refuse to yield to their extortion rackets.

“Ercolano, territory freed of extortion,” will defiantly proclaim a sign soon to be put up prominently at the entrance to the town. “We no longer put up with abuses,” proudly declare the banners hanging from many shop windows. Quite a provocation, given that, according to the SOS Confesercenti association, extorting “pizzo” — the term for the ‘tax’ the Mafia impose on shopkeepers, backed up by threats and intimidation — brings some 10 billion euros each year into the coffers of organised crime in Italy and affects about 160,000 companies.

Turning point came in 2005

“We’re free of it now in Ercolano,” says Giuseppe Scognamiglio, Coordinator of Radio Siani, a station that speaks out against the Mafia and for the law. The station began broadcasting in 2009 from offices in what had been the headquarters of a local Camorra boss.

“Just a few years ago, though, life here was very different. Everyone was paying off the Mafia, murders were the order of the day, mobsters were walking down the street armed and driving about in armoured cars mounted with machine guns, and people were literally scared to death.”

Ercolano’s rebellion against the criminals began in 2004 when, for the first time in the history of the town, an entrepreneur dared to go to the security forces and report that a mobster had come into her shop and demanded money in exchange for not making life difficult for her. That bold shopkeeper is a flirtatious blonde lady, Raffaella Ottaviano. “I don’t know why, but up until that time they had never tried to extort from me. When that guy came to my shop and told me in a threatening tone that I had to pay up I was afraid, really afraid,” she admits to El Mundo.

“But I thought it was better to close the shop than to live the rest of my life with that fear. So I told the mobster that no, I wouldn’t pay him, and I went straight to the police station to report what happened”, she says. “It’s better to die once than to die every day.”

The heroic act of Raffaella Ottaviano proved a memorable one. Especially since other business people who had dared to stand up to the Mafia had paid dearly for their audacity. One such was Sofia Ciriello, who owned a bread bakery in the centre of Ercolano. Not only did the gangsters come one day to wave a gun to persuade her it was better to pay, they set off a bomb in her bakery.

The great turning point, though, came in 2005, when a man named Nino Daniele was elected mayor of Ercolano, which was then immersed in a bloody war between two Camorra clans that saw about one killing a week and where traders were being suffocated by the “pizzo”. “I can’t give you a figure, but plenty of shops had been forced to close up because they couldn’t handle that burden. All the businesses in the town were in crisis. Ercolano was going through an economic and human drama. I had to do something,” the former mayor of the town recalls…

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



Netherlands: Arrests, Injuries, And Car Fires During New Year Festivities

Hundreds of people were arrested during the New Year festivities in the Netherlands, but it was quieter than previous years, police chiefs said on Sunday. In Amsterdam, 123 people were picked up, mainly for vandalism and public drunkenness. In the Rotterdam region there were at least 99 arrests and in Utrecht 47.

One person was killed in a stabbing incident in the village of Sint Oedenrode, Noord Brabant. There were several arrests news agency ANP said. And in Zoetermeer there were 14 arrests as a gang of youths threw Molotov cocktails at police.

In The Hague, riot police were called in to restore order in the Ypenburg district, but mayor Jozias van Aartsen said it was the quietest New Year celebrations in the city in four years. Nevertheless, some 80 cars were set on fire in The Hague and its surrounding towns, the Telegraaf reported.

In Utrecht, at least 17 cars were set on fire and in Amsterdam four cars and two lorries went up in flames. In Brabant there were some 60 arrests and in Noord Holland at least 50. Last year over 1,200 people were arrested nationwide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: New Year Celebrations ‘Not Really a Party’, Says Justice Minister

More people were arrested during this weekend’s New Year celebrations than last year, and there were more reports of vandalism, the Telegraaf said on Sunday evening. The festivities did not proceed as they should have done, justice minister Ivo Opstelten is quoted as saying.

In particular, Opstelten said the amount of violence directed at the police and emergency service workers is unacceptable. The message to anti-social elements should be ‘if you continue to do this, we will come down hard on you,’ the minister said. So far, there are 8,450 reports of vandalism and other incidents, and 1,350 people were arrested, the paper said. Last year, there were 1,200 arrests. Rotterdam’s mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb on Sunday called on the government to introduce a partial firework ban.

He said he is particularly concerned about the size and power of some fireworks which can be sold to the public. Aboutaleb plans to raise the issue with the mayors of The Hague, Amsterdam and Utrecht to try to present a common front.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Ex-Progress Party Chief Loses Licence After Crash

Former Progress Party leader Carl Ivar Hagen has had his driving licence revoked after he ran over two people in his car at a pedestrian crossing in Oslo on New Year’s Eve.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Norway: Herring Galore as Tonnes of Fish Wash Up on Beach

It was like Whisky Galore — except with fish. Locals taking a stroll at Kvennes beach in northern Norway were in for a surprise as they discovered a carpet of over 20 tonnes of dead fish covering the shoreline. Fortunately, the low winter temperatures in the Nordesia region of Norway mean that the smell isn’t too unbearable, according to dog-walker Jan-Petter Jorgensen, who took this photo.

Jens Christian Holst of the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research is hoping to conduct tests on the fish to ascertain if they died as a result of disease. Other possibilities include being driven into shallow waters by predators, washed ashore during a storm, or even affected by freshwater flowing into the bay from a nearby river. “I have never seen such large amounts of stranded herring,” said Holst.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Powerful Media Ally Abandons German President

Tabloid Bild helped German President Christian Wulff rise to the top, and he gave the paper access to his private life in return — even when he left his wife for another woman. The relationship benefited both sides for years, but those days are over.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Researchers Bust the Stradivarius Myth

You might think concert violinists would rather play vintage instruments, built in the “golden age” of Stradivarius, than new ones. But a test group of virtuosi in the US has shown they would rather hold something new.

Violins made by the Stradivari family have long been the subject of scientific research. In particular, those string instruments made by Antonio Stradivari (1644-1737) have caused scientists around the world to try to find out what makes them sound so pleasingly unique.

But in the latest research, Claudia Fritz of the University of Paris found that 21 concert violinists at an international competition in the United States thought modern instruments were rather more pleasing than three multi-million dollar violins made during the “golden period” of Stradivari and another Italian maestro, Guarneri del Gesu.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sarkozy and Far Right Rivals Celebrate Joan of Arc

President Nicolas Sarkozy and Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front will stage rival public celebrations of the 600th anniversary of the birth of French heroine Joan of Arc this weekend. The 15th century Catholic martyr, a teenage peasant who led the French army against the English after experiencing religious visions and was later burned at the stake, has in recent years become a symbol of the populist right.

But centre-right leader Sarkozy, who will face a strong challenge from Le Pen when he stands for re-election in April, has seized upon the anniversary to make his own pilgrimage to locations associated with her life. On Friday, he will visit her reputed birthplace in Domremy-la-Pucelle in the Vosges mountains of eastern France and nearby Vaucouleurs, which she is said to have visited on her way to meet King Charles VII.

The following day, on Saturday, the National Front — including Marine Le Pen and her father, party founder Jean-Marie Le Pen — will stage a rally in central Paris at the base of a statue of the saint. Saint Joan of Arc, sometimes known in English as the Maid of Orleans, was canonised as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church in 1920. The National Front stages a parade in her honour every May 1.

France is officially a secular state, but the story of Joan’s struggle against the English and Burgundians on behalf of the French crown has often served as an inspiration in patriotic causes. Opinion polls show Sarkozy facing a strong challenge from Marine Le Pen in the upcoming presidential election, and he is reportedly concerned that she could outflank him on the right and knock him out of the race.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: One Man Dead After New Malmö Shooting

Yet another man has been gunned down on the streets of Malmö, making him the fifth in just over a month to be shot dead in Sweden’s third biggest city. “It is a man in his fifties who has been shot outdoors. The perpetrator, or possibly perpetrators, have fled the scene,” said county police head Börje Sjöholm to news agency TT. Police received a call about a shooting around noon on Tuesday, and upon arriving at the site could confirm that a man in his fifties had been killed. The man has been identified, but is not previously known to the police.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Stockholm: Police Face Stones and Lasers After Car Pursuit

Twelve police units and one helicopter were called to Stockholm suburb Rinkeby last night as youths reportedly pelted police with stones. No injuries were reported. Swedish Radio News described the scene as one of “uproar” as about 50 people assembled after police had followed a car which they thought was stolen. As the police left the area near a school, the protesters set fire to the car they had been tracking.

The additional 12 units that were called in kept their distance from the scene. Police personnel in the helicopter reported that pocket lasers were aimed at them. There have been no arrests and police told Swedish Radio News they stood by their decision to not enter the area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Another Fatal Shooting in Malmö

A man in his 50’s has been shot to death in the southern Swedish city of Malmö — the fifth such fatality in recent times. The police maintain that the victim is known to the police but has not been charged with any major crimes. Luciano Astudillo, a former Social Democrat Party member of parliament who lives and grew up in Malmö, has helped organise an anti-gang and gun crime demonstration to take place in the city on Friday.

“The citizens of Malmö have had enough. We have had a war going on for the last year. Until now they have killed each other but sooner or later there will be a bullet killing a civilian and we are concerned about that, we have do to something about illegal weapons and organized crime,” he told Radio Sweden.

Malmö Chief Superintendent Henrik Stiernblad told Radio Sweden that they were doing everything they could to stop the killings. “It is worrying for the public and impact on their sense of security but we are taking additional measures now to make sure that we don’t see a trend developing, we will stop this.” Henrik Stiernblad said that the murder investigation of the 15-year-old was progressing well and the public were coming forward to help.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Shootings Spate Tied to Availability of Weapons

The lethal shooting of a 15-year-old in Malmö on New Year’s Eve, the third fatal gun crime in the city in a short span of time, is being tied to the high number of illegal weapons in circulation in the southern border city. Henrik Stiernblad, at Malmö police’s crime prevention department, tells Swedish Radio News: “Apart from the usual socio-economic and other causes of crime the weapons play an incredibly important role”.

Many of Malmö’s murders are tied to criminal gang activity but police has not found evidence to link the killing of the 15-year-old to the gangs. Police believe many of the weapons are smuggled in from the continent, as Malmö lies 20 minutes away from the Danish capital Copenhagen.

Some voices have been raised in favour of a new weapons amnesty to allow people to hand in arms without legal repercussions. The last weapons amnesty in Sweden was in 2007. Malmö police officer Henrik Stiernblad wants stricter sentencing for illegal gun possession and says: “A while back a gang member was apprehended with a AK47 Kalashnikov. He was given four months in prison. The AK47 is used in combat. I think society is too tolerant if we let a well known criminal get away with four months in jail for possession of such a dangerous weapon.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Cameron Has Yet to Act on His Multiculturalism Speech. How Many Lives of Muslim Girls Will be Lost Until He Does?

The police estimate there are at least an astonishing two-thousand reported cases of forced marriage a year related to ethnic Islamic communities. Just one constabulary, South Wales police got fifty complaints for forced marriages between 2010 and 2011. Many more cases are likely to exist as a result of instances being unreported due to fear. The tragic case of Banoz Mahmod who was murdered by the order of her father by her cousins for fleeing an arranged marriage is only one of many hundreds of cases of girls who are deprived not only of basic autonomy and dignity of choice, but also live under the threat or actual violence from their families in the U.K. By god the Victorians would have been proud of their posterity, if they saw our appalling political acquiescence to this.

This extraordinary level of abuse occurs because of multiculturalism. This appalling abdication of being proud to be British prevents us from fighting for gender equality in minority cultures such as traditional Islam, where equality between the sexes is an alien concept. Multiculturalism allows us to turn a blind eye to issues of gender equality and abuse of women because we do not have to assimilate immigrants to existing values in the UK. Multiculturalism in the UK leaves scores of young Muslim girls in the impossible position of having to confront their parents, when they are to be wed without their consent. Multiculturalism has allowed the existence of Sharia courts in the U.K. where a woman’s testimony is worth less than a man’s, and women are not allowed to speak. Could there be any relationship between our acquiescence in this vulgarity and the treatment of young women in Islamic communities?

What on earth does our acceptance of these monstrous courts in our country say about our moral integrity when it comes to women’s rights? Baroness Cox, the formidable cross-bench peer, has been fighting ALONE in political circles against these degrading so-called courts. Sharia courts, which are biased against women, are still for many immigrants their only and preferred judicial remedy thanks to our cowardice on the cultural assimilation front. (Click here for more information on Baroness Cox’s Bill against Sharia). It’s not just politicians from the Labour party, and so called community leaders from that faith that demands no criticism and all respect, that are in denial about the relationship between the Sharia justice carried out under the Arbitration Act 1996 and the mistreatment of many Muslim women.

The Labour party will continue its denial due to critical votes from inner city Muslim areas such as Birmingham, and perhaps because it was its former Chancellor, Roy Jenkins, that was the original promoter of multiculturalism in the 1970s. This has created some weird historical pride that precludes Labour from admitting its flaws on this doctrine. That this is happening is only because we are allowing third-world cultures into our country through mass immigration, and not putting in the time, effort and requisite systems to assimilate them into our way of life. I recall a few months ago confronting some Muslim proselytiser outside Fulham Broadway underground station on the issue of verse 4.34 in the Koran that says that a man has a right to ‘beat’ a wife that is disobedient. I waited for the predictable response, which was that the word ‘beat’ could include mere vocal admonishment (a surprising interpretation). I then made the point that that was the lesser of two evils, and it was the fact that the man had absolute dominium over the woman that was the critical meaning of the passage that I objected to. This approach surprised my peaceful and polite Muslim attendant who had no reply. I then gave a short, explanatory, synopsis of Wollstonecraft’s life and works and dawdled off down the road after I was met with silence.

Make no mistake about this: the role of women in traditional Islam is a million miles away from the egalitarian approach to gender in the West. It is not that we have been perfect in the U.K. We have not. Shockingly, it was not until the House of Lords case of ‘R against R’ in 1991 that marital rape became a crime in the U.K. But that was twenty years ago and Cameron has a huge opportunity to use his multicultural speech to fight for many abused Muslim women-which he has so far, tragically for these women, failed to do. The response by David Cameron has not just been extremely poor- he is not doing anything about reversing multiculturalism on many issues such as Sharia and the mistreatment of women barring parroting out the odd regret. Having told the public what they wanted to hear on multiculturalism earlier this year, he has completely failed to act upon it. Theresa May says she is keen to criminalise forced marriages, and some protectionist measures are now possible by Scottish courts.

However nothing similar is happening in the rest of the UK. Worryingly there are reports from the Home Office that criminalisation is not in fact on the legislative agenda of this Tory led Coalition Government at all. Worrying for many a young girl indeed. Criminalisation of forced marriages and the abolition of Sharia courts will free many women in Islamic communities and save their lives. It will also pave the way for greater integration and success for many British Muslim girls who may be otherwise forced into early marriage. That the Prime Minister fails to act on his speech opens him once again to criticism of ‘PR’ over action- criticisms that he must ensure have no basis on this pressing issue. We cannot abdicate responsibility for this sort of appalling conduct towards women on our own shores.

[Above , Baroness Cox, the only politician (non-party) in both Houses of Parliament who has had the courage so far to confront the issue of Sharia Courts in the UK. Note also the group ‘One Law for all’ in the UK which is fighting against Sharia Courts.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



UK: London’s Beloved Bus Returns, With an Update

The streets of London were brightened this holiday season by a very new, very red addition. The first running prototype of the new double-decker bus, a modern version of the classic Routemaster, drove across the city the week before Christmas. The sleek bus, a diesel-electric hybrid updating of the traditional postcard cliché model might also be seen as a present for the London mayor, Boris Johnson.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Postcard From Islamic London

by Ben Shapiro

I’ve been spending my Christmas vacation with my wife in Rome and London. We arrived in London on Christmas Eve. It’s truly an amazing city — everywhere you look, there’s history, from the Tower of London to the Churchill Museum. But everywhere you look, there is a more ominous presence: Islam. Now, no less a personage than Prime Minister David Cameron has already admitted that the integration of Muslims into British society has failed dramatically. In February 2011, Cameron stated,

“Under the doctrine of state multiculturalism, we have encouraged different cultures to live separate lives, apart from each other and the mainstream. We have failed to provide a vision of society to which they feel they want to belong. We have even tolerated these segregated communities behaving in ways that run counter to our values.”

That failure of integration is clear from the get-go. There are official signs translated into Arabic for those who do not wish to speak or read English. The chatter of Islamic languages is as prevalent as the mother tongue. The hijab is omnipresent. Perhaps all this might be a charming byproduct of multiculturalism if it weren’t for the fact that so much of the Islamic population of Great Britain is radicalized. That radicalization is not difficult to spot.

[…]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: The Treasures of Islam

Each week we take a look at some of the beautiful treasures and monuments Egypt has to offer the world, trying as we do so to reflect on what those monuments might teach us today. As the New Year begins we take a look at one of the splendours of Alexandria, the Mosque of Abu Al-Abbas Al-Mursi.

The Treasures of Islam by Idris Tawfiq

This great mosque of Alexandria speaks to the world of the beauty of Islam. Its four intricately carved white domes, gleaming in the sunshine of the Mediterranean, stand out on the city’s skyline in praise of Allah and as a reminder to the people of Alexandria that Allah is great and that he alone is worthy of worship. This beautiful mosque was rebuilt with great skill and great care in 1943. It had originally been built by Algerians in 1769, to honour the resting place of the thirteenth century holy man, Ahmed Abu Al-Abbas Al-Mursi, from Andalusia. The arabesque style of the mosque even today, with its eight monolithic granite columns and its colonnade of elongated arches reminds us of the glory of Al-Andalus. It takes us back to a time when Islam was so fresh and so exciting to the world that millions were drawn to become Muslim. For hundreds of years the Muslims in southern Spain showed to the world a civilisation of great refinement and great learning, with paved streets and street lighting, seven hundred years before they would appear in northern Europe. When Paris and London were no more than a collection of timbre and mud dwellings, the city of Cordoba could boast of public parks and libraries. Knowledge was cherished and people of all faiths held positions of honour at Court. The Muslims of that so-called Golden Age of Islam showed that Islam can be both strong and sweet. The extent of the Islamic nation at this time was at its peak. Muslims were zealous in their faith and outstanding in their example. Any visit to the mosque, then, is a great reminder of the rich history of Islam.

Faith, though, is not a journey into the past. It teaches us about our lives today. Another visit to the mosque of Abu Al-Abbas Al-Mursi might teach us something altogether different. Take, for example, one early morning visit in Spring. On this occasion the mosque was bathed in light from the first rays of the sun. A cool breeze was blowing across the Corniche from the Mediterranean. The great doors of the mosque were locked shut and, lying on the floor, fast asleep, was a young boy. He couldn’t have been more than twelve years old. His face and clothes were dirty and his arms were covered in bruises. The stone steps of the mosque had been his bed for the night. His eyes had not yet opened to the harsh realities of the day ahead. If we call ourselves men and women of faith, we cannot ignore the reality of those who suffer in our midst. Indeed, as people of faith we can sometimes get a little bit carried away in our building projects, forgetting what they are about. In the words of the Welsh Anglican priest, R.S.Thomas,

“We have over-furnished our faith. Our churches are as limousines in the procession towards heaven.”

In building mosques and schools we sometimes forget why we are building them at all. We don’t build them just to look nice. Surely they are a reflection in stone of our belief in a Creator, and His call to us to care for His Creation. Islam has many treasures. The world can only marvel at the rich legacy of art and architecture which Islam has bequeathed it. The greatest treasures of all, though, are not made of brick or stone. The greatest treasures which belong to Islam are individual Muslims, created by Allah to work out His plan. We read in the Holy Qur’an: We have indeed created man in the best of moulds. Holy Qur’an 95:4

Talk is certainly very cheap. Surely this verse teaches us of what great care we should take in looking after our brothers and sisters. Our little boy asleep on the floor outside the mosque teaches us a lesson. Monuments in stone are very beautiful. How much more beautiful, though, are the boys and girls, the men and women, who we pass by on the street every day without a thought. How much more glorious than the splendours of Al-Andalus are the ordinary Muslims who devote their lives in obedience to Allah’s will. Prophet Muhammad (may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) used to say that even a smile to your brother is a charity. What would the world think if it could see today how Muslims are one brotherhood and that they treat their fellow Muslims with infinite care? How the mighty powers of the West would look differently at Islam. How the world could be changed and millions could be drawn to the sweet and gentle message of Islam if all of us could live as good Muslim.

British Muslim writer, Idris Tawfiq, is a lecturer at Al-Azhar University. The author of eight books about Islam, he divides his time between Egypt and the UK as a speaker, writer and broadcaster. You can visit his website at www.idristawfiq.com

[JP note: Comedian.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Gunfights Are Reported in the Centre of Tripoli, Libya

(AGI) Tripoli — Violent gunfights broke out in the centre of Tripoli, the capital of Libya, according to a journalist of France Presse. The fights are concentrated near the building where Muammar Gaddafi’s secret services had their headquarters.

In the area, several armed men can be seen and there are several wounded people. Witnesses reported that the fights broke out when the government security forced tried to take possesion of the building, which had been occupied by the former insurgents’ militias .

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



Hope Meets Hate in the New Libya

One year after the Arab Spring, SPIEGEL correspondent Alexander Smolzczyk set out on a journey through the Maghreb to assess the region’s transformation. On the second leg of his journey, he travels through post-revolution Libya and finds a country marked by a mixture of hope, desperation and the will to build a new democracy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Caroline Glick: Is Israeli Society Unraveling?

On balance, Israeli society is extremely healthy.

Unemployment is at record lows. At a time of global recession, the Israeli economy is growing steadily.

Israeli Jewish women have the highest fertility rate in the Western world with an average of three children per woman. Education levels have risen dramatically across the board over the past decade with dozens of private colleges opening their doors to more and more sectors of the population.

Israel’s diverse Jewish population is becoming more integrated. Sephardic and Ashkenazi intermarriage has long been a norm. Secular Jews are becoming more religious. A new educational trend that received significant media attention in recent months involves secular parents who send their children to national religious schools to ensure that they receive strong educational grounding in Judaism…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]

Middle East


A Dangerous Region

Iran’s announcement yesterday that it had test-fired two missiles at the end of 10-day naval exercises in the Gulf was a sharp reminder of regional instability, whether in countries emerging from decades of dictatorship or still subject to arbitrary rule. During the exercises, the government said it would close the Strait of Hormuz, the entrance to the Gulf, were America and the EU to impose embargoes on its oil exports because of its uranium enrichment programme. The Iranian threat has since been withdrawn but the confusing signals coming from Tehran have done nothing to calm nerves in a region racked by violence.

In neighbouring Syria, Iran’s only ally, President Bashar al-Assad, has cocked a snook at Arab League monitors by continuing to fire on unarmed civilians. In that his regime provides a conduit for arming Hizbollah in Lebanon, its fall would be a setback for the Iranians. But there are promising new openings in another neighbour, Iraq, where the Shia prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, seems set on destroying the tripartite Shia/Sunni/Kurdish consensus on which the territorial integrity of the state depends.

Meanwhile, the fulcrum of the Middle East, Egypt, is in the throes of transition between dictatorship under Hosni Mubarak, whose trial resumes in earnest in Cairo today, and representative government, an exercise which has so far favoured Islamist parties and is due to end with presidential elections in June. Political uncertainty has deterred both investors and tourists, a devastating blow to an already weak economy. Still, in contrast to Iran, Syria and Iraq, Egypt is at least moving in the right direction. Success during the coming year in laying the foundations for a stable democracy will be of profound benefit to the region as a whole.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



France Calls for Tougher EU Sanctions Against Iran

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe has called on the EU to impose tougher sanctions against Iran, saying he is convinced Tehran is developing nuclear weapons.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Taliban Confirm Deal to Open Office in Qatar

The Afghan Taliban has expressed willingness to set up an office in Qatar — a step seen by the EU and US as a prerequisite to meaningful peace negotiations. The Taliban have come one step closer to setting up an office in Doha, Qatar, according to Taliban spokesperson Sabiullah Mujahid. It will be used for carrying out peace negotiations.

According to French news agency AFP, the Taliban has issued a statement listing demands, including the release of Taliban prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay as well as an end to the foreign occupation in Afghanistan. Though a date has not yet been set, the EU and the US see the office as a prerequisite to peace talks with the insurgents. The US and Qatar, helped by Germany, had engaged in negotiations with the Taliban over setting up an office in Doha, keeping President Hamid Karzai’s administration in the dark. Kabul reacted angrily last week and recalled its ambassador from Doha.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Dozens Arrested in Moscow New Year Rally

Russian police have arrested up to 70 people at a protest in the capital, Moscow. Demonstrators are calling for an end to Prime Minister Putin’s long domination of the Russian political scene.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Russia Says Iran Has No Long-Range Missiles

Iran has no long-range missiles, a Russian defence official said Tuesday in Moscow’s first response to a series of tests conducted by Tehran near the vital Strait of Hormuz oil supply route. “Iran does not have the technology to create intermediate or long-range inter-continental ballistic missiles,” defence ministry spokesman Vadim Koval told the Interfax news agency. “And it will not get such missiles any time soon,” he added.

Iran reported testing three missiles close to the Gulf oil-transit waterway on Monday amid preparations by Western powers to impose more economic sanctions over Tehran’s nuclear drive. Two of the missiles can fly a maximum 200 kilometres (120 miles), generally considered short-range weapons, although the Iranian media and a navy spokesman described one of them as “long-range”. The other, a Nasr anti-ship missile, had a shorter range of 35 kilometres.

Russia has relatively close ties with Iran and built its first nuclear power station in the southern city of Bushehr. Moscow has also delivered the nuclear fuel for the reactor. Moscow has echoed Western concerns about the nature of the Iranian nuclear programme but has stopped short of publicly accusing Tehran of seeking atomic weapons and always said that the standoff should be solved by diplomacy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


A Muslim Apostate’s Defense of the West

Posted by Bruce Bawer

Ibn Warraq is the pseudonymous, Pakistani-born author of the modern classic Why I Am Not a Muslim and the writer or editor of several other estimable books about Muhammed, the Koran, Islamic culture, Muslim apostates, and Western civilization. Surely few people know as much as he does about both the West and Islam. Therefore I was more than eager to read his new book, Why the West Is Best: A Muslim Apostate’s Defense of Liberal Democracy.

Naturally, I expected something wise and incisive and steeped in learning — and I wasn’t disappointed. But what I hadn’t counted on was how fresh, original, delightfully inspired, and emotionally stirring Warraq’s approach to his topic would be. Take his first chapter, which is about New York, a city he views as “a testament to the robustness of Western culture and to its welcoming catholicity.” Warraq’s goal here is to help us to see a Western metropolis through the eyes of a person from, say, the Islamic world, and thus recognize the magnificence of things so familiar to us that we may take them for granted. Let it be said at once that he is highly successful at this.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Afghan Taliban Reach Agreement to Open Qatar Office

(AGI) Kabul — The Afghan Taliban have announced a “preliminary agreement” on the opening of a political office in Qatar. The Afghan insurgents also reported their demand for the release of a number of prisoners at Guantanamo. “We are right now ready to have a political office overseas, in order to have an understanding with the international community, and in this regard we have reached an initial understanding with Qatar,” spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in an emailed statement.. In late December, US officials announced that negotiations with the Taliban had reached a turning point. Obama administration officials said they were considering a swap to strengthen the process of confidence-building by both parties. The US would transfer five insurgents held at Guantanamo back to Afghanistan and in return the Taliban would denounce terrorism and commit itself to reaching a peace agreement with the government in Kabul.

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



Indian Government’s Anti-Corruption Law Becomes “Waste Paper”

At the meeting of the Rajya Sabha (Upper House) a Parliamentarian ripped up the sheets of a minister, leading a discussion that has forced Parliament to cancel the session. Opposition: “All staged, the government knows it is only a minority.” No comment from the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, but his political future is now at risk.

New Delhi (AsiaNews / Agencies) — The Indian government has failed to pass its Lokpal bill, the anti-corruption law demanded for months by large segments of the population. Yesterday, the Rajya Sabha (upper house or Council of States) literally transformed a year of proposals and counterproposals into waste paper; during the session in fact, a Congress MP stripped the leaves from the hands of a minister, sparking a heated discussion that lasted for 12 hours, until midnight. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had to cancel the session. Everybody expected that the law would be passed definitively, since the Lok Sabha (Lower House or House of People) had approved the draft on December 27 last.

The BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party, Hindu ultra-nationalist party) opposition has accused Singh and the Congress party of masterminding the whole brawl because aware of the “weakness” of the Lokpal bill, even among their own allies.

After the episode yesterday Arun Jaitley (BJP) called the government a “hopeless minority, aware that they do not have the numbers to choreograph a safe escape from failure.” Derek O’Brien, from Trinamool (a Congress ally), said: “This is a shameful day for Indian democracy,” adding that the government has handled the whole situation “very badly”.

According to many, it has been an annus horribilis for the Singh government, having failed to end 2011 by bringing home the most important result for its political future. The non-passage of the bill adds up to another recent defeat, concerning the opening of the retail market to large international supermarket chains, lost by a whisker. The premier did not comment on what happened in the Rajya Sabha, but it seems that the Lokpal bill will be resubmitted with the approval of the 2012 budget.

This end of the year defeat may well prove to be critical for Manmohan Singh, who in 2012 will face presidential primaries ahead of 2014. A difficult time for the politician who in 20 years — first as finance minister and then as prime minister — has made India the second world economy for growth, thanks to his defense of free market policies.

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



Indonesia: Muslims Enraged by Call for a “Friendly Islam”

Bogor. A bumper sticker prompted members of the hard-line Islamic Reform Movement to attack several members of the GKI Yasmin church on Sunday. The bumper sticker, on the back of a church member’s car, said, “We need a friendly Islam, not an angry Islam.” Scores of vociferous Muslims from the group known as the Islamic Reform Movement (Garis) terrorized members of the congregation who came to the church’s New Year’s Eve service in Bogor, GKI Yasmin spokesman Bona Sigalingging said.

Garis chairman Majudien was infuriated by the sticker and began to run after the car. The incident led the congregation to disband and move the service to the home of one of the members. “What is the aim of that sticker being put there? That is a provocative action against us, the Muslims of Bogor,” Majudien said. Bona said that the sticker was a souvenir that was distributed by the family of the late former Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid during a commemoration of his death on Friday.

“All guests who came, including the chairman of the Constitutional Court, the deputy religious affairs minister and other VIPs also got the same souvenir, the same sticker,” he said. On Sunday, the mob from Garis shouted at church members when they began to arrive but were prevented from physical contact by hundreds of police officers who separated the congregation from the crowd.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran Shuts Border With Pakistan as Its 3 Personnel Held

QUETTA: Iran has shut its border with Pakistan as latter’s authorities took three Iranians in to custody over alleged cross-border attack, killing one Pakistani citizen, BBC Urdu said in a report.

Earlier, the incident took place when the Iranians reached Mazan Sar Mashkail, in Washuk district, three kilometres (1.8miles) inside Pakistan where they opened fire on a vehicle they were chasing, according to officials in Balochistan province.

All three personnel of Iranian border security force were taken into

custody for their penetration inside Pakistan and killing a Pakistani national on our soil”, Saeed Ahmad Jamali, Deputy Commissioner of Washuk district told AFP.

A Pakistani national was killed and his brother was wounded by gunshots in the incident, he added.

           — Hat tip: Vlad Tepes [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Deports Dutch Suspects

Two Dutch nationals arrested in Pakistan last June have been sent back to the Netherlands. The two men, both of Moroccan origin, were arrested by the Pakistani secret service on suspicion of trying to join the al-Qaeda terrorist movement. Negotiations on their extradition took place last Friday between Pakistan’s government and Dutch diplomats.

It is not yet clear what will happen to the two suspects on their return to the Netherlands, as the Dutch authorities have no known grounds for arrest. The two men were not officially charged with terrorist activities in Pakistan but were held for not having a valid visa. Sabir K. [full name withheld], another Dutch national arrested in Pakistan, was arrested at Schiphol Airport on being sent back to the Netherlands in April. He is wanted by the authorities in the United States.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tajikistan: Muslims Shouting “Infidel” Murder Santa Claus

DUSHANBE. — An outrageous incident occurred in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, where a group of religious fanatics killed Santa Claus. Parvis Davlatbekov wore [sic] as Santa Claus to congratulate his friends for the New Year. However, a group of fanatics attacked and stabbed him by crying ‘infidel’ in the street.

The young man died on Monday without coming into consciousness. The unprecedented tragic incident is widely discussed in Facebook, ITARR-TASS reports. Tajikistani MFA acknowledged officially the incident. However, it rejected that the brutal killing occurred on religious grounds but claims it was a regular violence. Meantime, local media calls to pay attention to the discussions whether it is right to celebrate the New Year in a state where 98 % of population is Muslims.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Indian Businessman Mocks Davos

Top Indian industrialist Rajiv Bajaj mocked the World Economic Forum in Davos on Tuesday, saying the annual power bash in the Swiss Alps was the source of half the world’s problems. Rajiv Bajaj, the managing director of leading motorbike manufacturer Bajaj Auto, said he would reluctantly travel to the exclusive ski resort for the meeting for the first time later this month.

“I think half the problems start from the World Economic Forum,” the no-nonsense executive told reporters at a product launch in New Delhi when asked about the glitzy January 25-29 meeting. He said he was a believer in the power of engineering to solve problems, not the sort of “top-down globalization” espoused by world leaders and businessmen in Davos.

He acknowledged that his father Rahul Bajaj, chairman of the Bajaj Group conglomerate, had been a regular at Davos over the last decades. India had a huge presence at last year’s Davos, including Sunil Mittal, head of Bharti Enterprises and Azim Premji, chairman of Indian software major Wipro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China’s President Pushes Back Against Western Culture

President Hu Jintao has said that China must strengthen its cultural production to defend against the West’s assault on the country’s culture and ideology, according to an essay in a Communist Party policy magazine published this week. The publication of Mr. Hu’s words signaled that a new major policy initiative announced last October would continue well into 2012.

The essay, which was signed by Mr. Hu and based on a speech he gave in October, drew a sharp line between the cultures of the West and China and effectively said the two sides were engaged in an escalating war. It was published in Seeking Truth, a magazine that evolved from a publication founded by Mao as a platform for establishing Communist Party principles.

“We must clearly see that international hostile forces are intensifying the strategic plot of westernizing and dividing China, and ideological and cultural fields are the focal areas of their long-term infiltration,” Mr. Hu said, according to a translation by Reuters. “We should deeply understand the seriousness and complexity of the ideological struggle, always sound the alarms and remain vigilant, and take forceful measures to be on guard and respond,” he added.

Those measures, Mr. Hu said, should be centered on developing cultural products that can draw the interest of the Chinese and meet the “growing spiritual and cultural demands of the people.” Chinese leaders have long lamented the fact that Western expressions of popular culture and art seem to overshadow those from China. The top-grossing films in China have been “Avatar” and “Transformers 3,” and the music of Lady Gaga is as popular here as that of any that of any Chinese pop singer. In October, at the 6th plenum of the party’s Central Committee, where Mr. Hu gave his speech, officials discussed the need for bolstering the “cultural security” of China.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese Muslims Clash With Police Over Mosque

(Reuters) — Hundreds of Muslims in a northwestern China village trying to prevent the demolition of their mosque clashed with police, causing several deaths, Hong Kong media and residents said on Tuesday.

Fighting between police and members of the largely Muslim Hui ethnic group broke out on Friday in Ningxia region, adjacent to Inner Mongolia province, after authorities declared their newly built mosque illegal, the South China Morning Post said. Hundreds of residents in Taoshan village confronted police armed with teargas, truncheons and knives, the newspaper said. A Taoshan resident told Reuters he was away at the time of the clash, but that his relatives in the town believed five people, including one of their relatives, had been killed. The resident, Jin Haitao, said villagers believed the dead included another two elderly woman, a young man and two people from nearby areas. Residents of nearby areas complained that telephone links with Taoshan had been cut, making it impossible to verify what had happened. “They were just trying to hold a religious activity but the authorities would not allow it. They demolished the mosque and now they’ve covered over the ground, because there was so much blood on the ground,” Jin said. A man who answered the telephone at a police station in the nearby town of Hexi said an incident had occurred with Hui protesters, but he gave no details. Calls to the public security bureau in nearby Tongxin county went unanswered.

Sporadic unrest

A small business owner in Tongxin, three km (two miles) from the mosque site, told Reuters that the village had been sealed off. “It’s ridiculous, I am a Muslim, and Muslims need a mosque. They are just ordinary people, coming together for religious purposes, not to overthrow Communist Party rule,” the man said. China has experienced sporadic unrest among its Muslim minorities, most notably involving the Uighurs, a Turkic language-speaking people native to the country’s western Xinjiang region. There are about 10 million Hui in China, making them the country’s largest Muslim group. In many parts of China, the Hui have blended in with the predominant Han Chinese culture, all but abandoning Islam except for some traditions, such as circumcising male children and avoiding pork. But ethnic tension has led to some unrest. At least seven people were killed in the central province of Henan in 2004 after a car accident involving an ethnic Han Chinese and a Hui sparked rioting. In 1993, a cartoon ridiculing Muslims led to police storming a mosque taken over by Hui in northwestern China. Uighurs in Xinjiang rioted against Han Chinese residents in 2009 and at least 197 people were killed, according to official estimates. China’s ruling Communist Party says it protects freedom of religion, but it maintains a tight grip on religious activities and allows only officially recognized religious institutions to operate.

(Reporting by Michael Martina and Chris Buckley; Editing by Ron Popeski)

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]



Man Behind Japan’s Subway Attacks Surrenders After 16 Years

A former member of the Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo has surrendered himself to the authorities after 16 years of being on the run. The group was responsible for nerve gas attacks in a Tokyo subway in 1995.

Makoto Hirata, one of the former members of the Aum Shinrikyo (‘supreme truth’) turned himself in shortly before the New Year at a police station in Tokyo. According to the Kyodo News Agency, Hirata was arrested immediately after he spoke to the police. Hirata reportedly told investigators that he wanted to admit to his involvement in the subway attacks after he saw the devastation caused by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Anti-Islam Pamphlet Concern

Leaders of Canberra’s Muslim community were surprised and saddened by offensive anti-Islamic pamphlets distributed to homes throughout Queanbeyan over the Christmas holidays.

Householders in Queanbeyan received the material depicting a Muslim man physically abusing a woman and a child and an Islamic elder condoning the violence as acceptable to his faith. One local Muslim leader has questioned the legality of the material and said it was un-Christian to distribute such offensive literature. The pamphlets were published by Chick Publications, a United States-based evangelical company. The company has been listed as a hate group by US civil rights organisations, and it is believed they were delivered to Queanbeyan homes by hand. The distributors did not identify themselves and several church groups in the town denied responsibility.The vice-president of the Islamic Society of the ACT, Yusef Mansuri, said he was unsure of the legality of such material, but that he had not experienced anti-Islamic sentiment in Canberra or Queanbeyan. “We are sad about it, we don’t agree with the booklet or its logic, but that said, Australia is a democratic country and people are entitled to express themselves,” he said.

The pamphlet, entitled Is Allah Like You?, depicts an Islamic man who abuses his wife and son until he converts to Christianity and learns the error of his ways. Mr Mansuri said while he had not come across the anti-Islamic Chick Publications booklets before, he was aware of similar pamphlets targeting Hinduism and Catholics. “They have a very narrow view on the message of Jesus Christ,” he said. “We would like to emphasise that Jesus Christ is our beloved prophet. I don’t think he would have condoned such behaviour, especially at this time of year.”

Chick Publications is responsible for more than 100 cartoon booklets targeting Catholicism, Mormonism, homosexuality and evolutionary theory. According to Chick Publications’ website, its founder Jack Chick converted to Christianity nearly 50 years ago and was inspired to draw cartoons to convert other non-believers to the faith. Brisbane woman Marie Hunter’s organisation, ELE Trust, was the sole distributor of Chick tracts until they were made available direct to the public via mail order. She said that a number of different church groups used various Chick Publications in Australia, but as none had identified themselves on the Queanbeyan pamphlets it was likely they had been distributed by a small group of people or an individual. Mr Mansuri extended an invitation to anyone who was interested in learning more about Australia’s Islamic community to attend an open day at their local mosque.

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Boko Haram Gives Three Day Ultimatum to the Christians to Flee Northern Nigeria

The “Nigerian Taliban” also advise Muslims in the south to return to the north because they risk being killed by soldiers. Thousands of Christians fleeing. The bishops reject the sectarian drift of the conflict and ask for more security, but also no retaliation.

Lagos (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Christians in northern Nigeria have three days to leave the area before a series of attacks against them: This is the ultimatum set by the radical Islamic sect Boko Haram, which has claimed responsibility for the massacres that took place Christmas day in 12 sites across the states of Yobe and Borno (northeast), Niger (West), Plateau (central Nigeria). The killings have claimed the lives of over 40 people and already thousands of Christians are fleeing in terror.

The ultimatum comes a few days after the decision by President Goodluck Jonathan (a Christian) to declare a state of emergency for the areas attacked, with the deployment of armed soldiers.

The ultimatum also includes advice to the Muslims in the south to flee towards the north (which is Muslim majority) to avoid becoming a victim of attacks by soldiers.

A spokesman for Boko Haram, Abul Qaqa, told the media that “our Muslim brothers are advised to return to the north, because we have evidence that they will be attacked. We also issue a three-day ultimatum to the southerners living in the north of Nigeria, to leave. We have serious indications to suggest that the soldiers only kill the innocent Muslims in areas where government has declared a state of emergency. We will face them decisively to protect our brothers. “

The Nigerian police have described these threats and warnings by Boko Haram as “empty and baseless”. “We want to assure all Nigerians that they are safe wherever they live,” said Yemi Ajayi, spokesman for the police. “The Nigerian police — he added — has a mandate to protect lives and property and will continue to offer this responsibility without fear or favouritism.”

Boko Haram (“Western education is a sin”), is a group with suspected links to al Qaeda and the Afghan Taliban, fighting to implement an Islamic state ruled by Sharia. Since the death of its leader, Mohammed Yusuf, two years ago, it seems to have recovered strength, power and effectiveness. Many terrorist attacks of recent years, against Christians, but also against moderate Muslims, are attributed to its members, who call themselves the “Nigerian Taliban”.

The militants of the Boko Haram exploit the difficulties of the country — divided between a poorer (and predominantly Muslim) north and richer (and predominantly Christian) south, together with superficiality and incompetence of the incumbent government — along confessional lines.

The bishops of Nigeria have always rejected the idea of a sectarian war in the country, a major producer of oil and coveted prey for both Middle Eastern and Western governments.

Regarding the ultimatum against the Christians in the North, the Bishop of Jos, Msgr. Ignatius Ayau Kaigama, interviewed by Vatican Radio, has asked the government to ensure the safety of the population, but also not to carry out “reprisals”. “We say no to retaliation — he said — and we continue to preach peace, hoping that all of us in Nigeria, Muslims and Christians, we will be able to work and live happily together. This is our position: no to violence, no to retaliation. We want to live in peace. “

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



British Voice Behind a Call to Arms for Somalia’s Islamic Terrorists

Video reports of al-Shabaab battles with Somali forces feature jihadist with London accent

A militant Islamist group in Somalia that has declared its allegiance to al-Qa’ida is using a young British man to file video propaganda from the front lines of the country’s civil war to try to draw English-speaking Muslims to the Horn of Africa for jihad, The Independent can reveal. The man, who remains masked throughout his videos, speaks in fluent English with a clear London accent and presents breathless reports of battles that the militant groups have fought against Somali government and foreign forces. Intelligence sources and terrorism experts believe the man was either born in Britain or spent considerable time here and that he may have even had some media training before heading abroad to join the militant network.

The Independent has collected at least three videos in which the man features. The first — which runs for 11 minutes and is titled “African Crusaders” — was released in June 2010 and only contains the man’s voice. A second 21 minute long video — “Mogadishu — the Crusader’s Graveyard” — was released a month later and shows the young reporter appearing with his face covered in front of burning tank that he claims was destroyed by Islamist fighters. He disappeared from Al Shabaab propaganda videos until October this year when he returned with a new documentary called “Battle for Deyniile — the Burundian Bloodbath”. The 33-minute report features footage from the front lines of a recent battle between militants and African Union peacekeepers on the outskirts of Mogadishu in which a number of AU troops were known to have perished. Shabaab fighters display the uniformed corpses of at least twenty fighters that they claimed belonged to the Ugandan and Burundian peacekeeping forces currently in control of central Mogadishu.

The documentaries — which were all released through Shabaab’s media wing the al-Kataib Foundation — are a vivid example of the slick propaganda now being produced by violent Islamists in the Horn of Africa and their determination to turn the area into a new base for international jihadists. Britain has become so concerned about the deteriorating security situation inside Somalia that it has convened a summit for February to discuss what to do about the failed state. MI5 head Jonathan Evans has repeatedly warned that the Horn of Africa has become the second most popular terrorist training ground after Pakistan with Brits of Somali, Pakistani, Yemeni, Bangladeshi and North African heritage flocking there.

Whitehall sources believe that there are between three to four people working full time on Shabaab’s media wing, one of whom is a Yemeni who previously worked with al-Qa’ida in the Arabian Peninsula. A second individual is a British Pakistani — thought to be the reporter who appears in the videos.

The group’s latest output represents a tactical shift in the way militant networks are producing their propaganda in that the more recent productions are presented as objective news reports, mimicking the way mainstream news organisations present information. “Instead of featuring a field commander what we’re seeing is supposedly a journalist reporting the facts on the ground in a dispassionate way whilst manipulating the narrative to his group’s advantage,” said Bruce Hoffman, a leading expert on Islamist terrorism at the University of Georgetown. “You wouldn’t put Shabaab in the top bracket within the pantheon of terror groups when it comes to strategies or tactics. But their communication techniques are highly sophisticated.”

The Independent sought comment from al-Shabaab through an email account known to be used by the militants for international enquiries. In a statement the group said their aim was to inspire Muslims in the West: “We are not able to reveal the identity or nom de guerre of the person in question but the aim of our English documentaries is quite simple. With most journalists serving merely as subservient vessels at the hands of warmongers and politicians, the purpose of the Harakat Al-Shabaab Al Mujahideen’s documentary films is to reveal the reality of the current warfare in Somalia to the world and, in particular, to the Muslims living in the Western world.” The statement added: “It is our hope that these English documentaries will enlighten the Muslims by illuminating the reality of the so-called war on terror and help further elucidate the events as they really are on the ground -not as they are erroneously portrayed in the western media.”

Shabaab are a brutal off-shoot of the comparatively moderate Islamic Courts Union which brought a semblance of calm to Somalia after 20 years of fighting but was thrown out of in 2006 following a US-backed invasion by Ethiopian troops. The militant group controls large tracts of southern Somalia and has fought a vicious insurgency against the country’s beleaguered and highly unpopular transitional government whose writ extends little further than the capital Mogadishu. They promote a draconian interpretation of Sharia law and have pledged allegiance to al-Qa’ida and its philosophy of waging violent jihad to establish a global Islamic caliphate. After withdrawing their fighters from the capital in August, they have shifted to more asymmetric tactics such as suicide bombers and improvised explosive devices. A spate of kidnappings hit northern Kenya prompting Nairobi to invade from the south claiming that they would eradicate Shabaab. Ethiopia’s military has invaded once more from the north but there has been little sign so far of any palpable military successes against the militants who have called on help in repelling “infidel crusaders”.

Fearing Somalia is becoming a new gathering point for international jihadists, the United States has increased drone strikes within the Horn of Africa operating out of bases in Djibouti, southern Ethiopia and the Seychelles. The exact number of foreign fighters within Shabaab’s ranks is currently unknown but western intelligence agencies have watched with alarm as both hardened veterans and new foreign recruits have flocked to the area. In early October two 18-year-old Brits from Cardiff were arrested on the Kenya-Somalia border in what the Kenyan police claimed was an attempt to join up with Shabaab militants. One of the teens was of Somali extraction, whilst his friend was believed to be British-Pakistani.

Abdirhman Haji Abdullah, the father of the Somali-British man, gave an interview to BBC Somali in which he claimed his son had been “brainwashed”. “My son was misled into believing that he was fighting in a holy war,” he said. “He was brainwashed and taken away from us and he was told that he was going to fight a holy war in Somalia.” The pair were arrested and returned to Britain only because Mr Abdullah went after his son and alerted the authorities.

Intelligence analysts have commented that Somalia has become an attractive destination for international militants because it is much easier to infiltrate than other militant strongholds such as Iraq, the Afghan-Pakistan border and Yemen. Shabaab’s increasingly sophisticated propaganda releases, meanwhile, have coincided with the arrival of international jihadists and much of the output from al-Kataib is now squarely aimed at recruiting fighters from overseas. Earlier this month the group even appeared on Twitter with an account that has been used to release passport photos of slain African Union troops and taunt the Kenyan military with jibes. Shabaab has made no secret of its desire to welcome foreign fighters. One recent video features masked militants speaking in an array of languages including English, Swahili, Swedish and Urdu. One fighter, who uses the nom de guerre Abu Dujana, claims he is British and speaks with a heavy London accent. Sitting on a white beach, he calls on Muslims “that are living in the lands of disbelief, the lands of oppression, to (migrate) to the land of glory, to the land of (power) to the land of jihad.”

The militant group has also released a number of rap-songs by Omar Hammami, a middle class American with Syrian parentage from Alabama who became increasingly devout and travelled to Somalia for jihad. Within jihadi circles he is known as Abu Mansour al-Amriki and is frequently lauded by militants as an example that western Muslims should follow.

Following the death of Osama bin Laden, Hammami appeared in a video alongside senior Shabaab leaders and read a speech to honour the slain al-Qa’ida founder. Roger Middleton, an expert on Somalia at Chatham House, said he believed Shabaab’s use of a British journalist to present their side of the conflict is part of a wider strategy to encourage recruits from the West. “This guy is turning up more and more often in Shabaab releases,” he said. “It’s difficult to gauge what kind of effect he has had. The general consensus is that the number of British Somalis heading to join Shabaab are in their tens rather than their hundreds. But you do hear stories within the Somali community of young men just disappearing and the family later finding out that they have been killed fighting for Shabaab.”

[JP note: Rare sighting of the phrase ‘Islamic terrorists’ in a mainstream newspaper — cherish it while you can.]

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Polish-Nigerian Bogus Marriage Network Dismantled

(WARSAW) — Poland has broken up a network that arranged fraudulent marriages for Nigerian men for 5,000 euros ($6,000) in exchange for residence permits in the European Union member state, a report said. A total of 31 people face charges, prosecutors said.

“Four Nigerians and five Polish citizens, including three women, were the network’s main organisers,” Marta Zawada-Dybek, spokeswoman for the Katowice regional prosecutor, was quoted as saying by Poland’s PAP news agency. They face five to 10 years behind bars if found guilty as charged.

Polish women who had agreed to marry the Nigerians received 3,000 euros — paid out in equal parts before and after the marriage and after the husbands received their residence papers — Zawada-Dybek said. The investigation into the network had focused on 20 bogus marriages.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Welcome to 2042 — the Year When Britain is No More Than a Memory

by Peter Hitchens

The New Year has always seemed to me to be a time for enjoying a bit of gloom. So in the spirit of hearty pessimism, I’d like to take you forward 30 years, for an imaginary peep into the pages of the ‘China Daily’ of January 1, 2042. You can judge for yourselves how imaginary it really is.

‘Cabinet papers issued today by the state archives of the People’s Republic cast an interesting light on the final years of the country formerly known as Great Britain. Younger readers should know that, 30 years ago, this once-important nation (now dissolved) occupied the vacation islands, famous for their mild climate and their picturesque historical theme parks, which lie off our far western coast. A memo from Prime Minister David Cameron to his deputy, Nicholas Clegg, runs in part “…and thanks so much, Nick, for your continuing self-sacrifice in our joint cause. I’m so sorry you have to put up with those moronic cartoons portraying you as the junior partner when — as we both well know — this is a liberal government in which I am happy to let you get your way. I am especially grateful for your recent performance, a fine piece of acting. The dim old buffers who still vote for my party, however many times we let them down, were genuinely taken in, and thought a) that I had struck a blow for Britain in Brussels and b) that you were angry about it.”

There are also memos to the Interior Minister of the time, Theresa May, congratulating her for “sounding as if you really mean to do something about crime and immigration” and a ruder one to the Justice Minister, Kenneth Clarke, chiding him for “letting the cat out of the bag: it won’t do, old boy! Can’t you just be satisfied with getting your way? There’s no need to gloat in public.” A letter from Mr Cameron to Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish government, is strangely friendly, given Mr Cameron’s frequent public assertions that he was against Scottish independence. Experts from the University of Shanghai have concluded that Mr Cameron secretly wanted a Scottish breakaway as the only chance of his party ever again winning an Election on its own.’

The China Daily continues: ‘No trace can be found of any serious plans to reform the country’s disastrous state schools, nor to curb its out-of-control welfare system, known to be widely abused by criminals and to encourage parasitical sloth. ‘As for the economy, the archives contain only a plaintive note from the Finance Minister to the Premier, bearing the words, “There’s no money!” The documents make it plain that the governing class of the country formerly known as Great Britain had no idea how to cope with the problems they faced and were mainly obsessed with public relations. In the light of this, the events of the next 20 years should have come as no surprise.’

           — Hat tip: JP [Return to headlines]

General


Bizarre Crystal Hitched Ride on Meteorite

A rock fragment containing a previously unidentified natural quasicrystal may be the remnant of a meteorite that originated in the early solar system more than 4.5 billion years ago before Earth even existed. Until now, researchers had assumed such quasicrystals, whose atoms are arranged in a quasi-regular pattern rather than the regular arrangement of atoms inside a crystal, were not feasible in nature. In fact, until now the only known quasicrystals were synthetic, formed in a laboratory under carefully controlled conditions. (This year’s Nobel Prize in chemistry honored Dan Shechtman for his 1982 discovery of quasicrystals, which at the time were thought to break the laws of nature.)

“Many thought it had to be that way, because they thought quasicrystals are too delicate, too prone to crystallization, to form naturally,” researcher Paul Steinhardt of Princeton University said. The new finding, described this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests “quasicrystals are much more common in the universe than we thought,” Steinhardt added.

The rock was discovered in the Koryak Mountains of Russia. Various features of the quasicrystal suggest a meteorite origin, including the shapes of the grains and its chemical composition of metallic copper and aluminum that resemble those found in so-called carbonaceous chondrites; these are primitive meteorites that scientists think were remnants shed from the original building blocks of planets. Most meteorites found on Earth fit into this group.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Marijuana May Drive the Brain Into Psychosis

Two ingredients in marijuana have opposite effects on certain regions of the brain, according to a new study. One chemical, called tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), increases the brain processes that can lead to symptoms of psychosis, while another compound, called cannabidiol, may negate such symptoms, according to the study.

Moreover, the findings are the first to use images of the brain to demonstrate that the reason symptoms of psychosis arise in marijuana users may be because THC interferes with the brain’s ability to distinguish between stimuli that are important, and those that aren’t, according to the study. The results are detailed today (Jan. 2) in the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Looking Ahead: 2012 Pivotal for Private Spaceflight

After the rise of private spaceflight continued step by step in 2011, the year ahead should be a pivotal one. Several leading space groups will take center stage to showcase their wares. Not only will their commercial spacecraft be tested, but so will the relationships that NASA has with the new and old guard of the private space industry.

In suborbital space travel, the most visible program in development is Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic enterprise, a pursuit to create the first commercial spaceline. Virgin Galactic’s future is being shaped by Mojave, Calif.-based Scaled Composites, which is engineering the WhiteKnightTwo/SpaceShipTwo space launch system.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



NASA Rover Mission Marks 8 Pioneering Years on Mars

While people on Earth have just finished celebrating the arrival of a new year, two NASA robots a world away are marking a big milestone of their own: eight years on the surface of Mars. The golf-cart-size Spirit rover landed on the Red Planet eight years ago today (Jan. 3). Its twin, Opportunity, touched down three weeks later, on Jan. 25, 2004. The two robots were originally supposed to spend 90 days searching for signs of past water activity on Mars.

They found plenty of such evidence, dramatically reshaping scientists’ understanding of the Red Planet and its history. And the rovers just kept chugging along, continuing to make observations years after their warranties expired. NASA declared Spirit dead just last year, and Opportunity is still going strong.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nobel Prizewinning Quasicrystal Fell From Space

A Nobel prizewinning crystal has just got alien status. It now seems that the only known sample of a naturally occurring quasicrystal fell from space, changing our understanding of the conditions needed for these curious structures to form. Quasicrystals are orderly, like conventional crystals, but have a more complex form of symmetry. Patterns echoing this symmetry have been used in art for centuries but materials with this kind of order on the atomic scale were not discovered until the 1980s.

Their discovery, in a lab-made material composed of metallic elements including aluminium and manganese, garnered Daniel Shechtman of the Technion Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa last year’s Nobel prize in chemistry. Now Paul Steinhardt of Princeton University and colleagues have evidence that the only known naturally occurring quasicrystal sample, found in a rock from the Koryak mountains in eastern Russia, is part of a meteorite.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Dust Library

Specks of dust are as unique as snowflakes — but no one had ever paid much attention to what individual particles are made of. Until now. THE dusty old library is a bit of a cliché. But take away all the books and you are left with something rather interesting, in its own small way.

Welcome to the dust library. With 63 individual particles catalogued, the collection is hardly dust’s answer to the great library of Alexandria, but there are plans to expand. Besides, far from being dry, this is a genre of unexpected delights. If you haven’t explored it much, and you probably haven’t, you may be in for a pleasant surprise.

Dust means different things to different people. In the trilogy His Dark Materials, author Philip Pullman cast it as an esoteric elementary particle — one with consciousness. To you, it might be simply any fine powder, or mostly dead skin, or the state to which we shall all return. For scientists its allure is long-standing: more than a century has passed since geologist J. A. Udden’s first laboratory experiments. Today, what’s blowing in the wind is of interest to everyone from geologists and environmental scientists to astronomers and health experts. Dust is hugely diverse.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]