News Feed 20110711

Financial Crisis
» A Danger of Backsliding: ‘Politicians Like to Use the EU as a Scapegoat’
» Breaking the Power of the ‘Big Three’: German Firm Wants to Set Up New Rating Agency
» Brussels: 25 Mln for 3,582 Former Renault Workers
» EU Holds Crisis Meeting as Concern Grows Over Italy
» EU Moves Towards Partial Gag on Ratings Agencies
» EU Races to Ease Euro Crisis Contagion Fears
» Eurozone Swept by Fresh Panic as Leaders Mull Greece
» Germany: Indian Exec Touted as Next Deutsche Bank Boss
» Greece: FinMin to Chase 41 Bln Euros in Unpaid Taxes
» Greece: Finance Minister Speeds Up on Privatizations
» Greeks Increasingly Concerned and Angry
» Greek Budget Deficit Grows Despite Austerity Drive
» Holder Launches Witch Hunt Against Biased Banks
» Italy: Stock Market Slide Continues as Debt Fears Hit Markets
» Letting Greece Into Euro Zone Was “A Mistake”
» Spain: Debt Spread Reaches All-Time High
» Spain: Public Deficit Castile La Mancha ‘Dramatic’
» The Disappearing Black Middle Class
» Top Eurozone Officials Meet Amid Alarm on Italy
» ‘We’ll Send a Strong Signal to Money Markets,’ Italy Vows
 
USA
» NASA Chief: Final Shuttle Launch Begins New Era
 
Europe and the EU
» Arctic Shipping Routes Unlikely to be ‘Suez of the North’
» Cooperation Talks: Germany’s RWE Mulls Gazprom as Major Shareholder
» Germany: Ex-Stasi Informants and Newspaper Clippings: UN Social Report Relied on Questionable Sources
» Italy: Workers in Florence: Time for a Smoke Break? Then Punch the Clock
» Italy: ADOC: Only 20% of Italians to Vacation Due to Price Hikes
» Pope: Hostages Must be Treated With Humanity by Pirates
» Portrait of the Danish Soldier
» Radical Islam in Germany: The Convert as Missionary
» Strasbourg Minaret Ruling Causes No Surprise
» Sweden: Animal Rights Activists Claim McDonalds Firebomb Responsibility
» Sweden: Seven Year-Old Stabbed to Death, Relative Arrested
 
Balkans
» Austria-Hungary Was Better…
 
North Africa
» Algeria: 500,000 More Council Houses
» France Changes Stance in Libya, Political Solution Needed
» Libya: Real Negotiations Are With Paris, Gaddafi
» Libya: EU Parliament: Some Frozen Assets Should Go to NTC
» Libya: Gaddafi Representatives Are ‘In Talks With France’
» Libya: Head of Pro-Gaddafi Tribe Wants End to NATO Actions
» Libya: Livni Met With Gaddafi’s Envoys, Press
» Press: Air France: Threat of Rockets in Sahel
» Srdja Trifkovic: The ICC Orders Qaddafy’s Arrest
» Tunisia: Tomato War Breaks Out
» Tunisia: Citizens Clash, Then Cooperate Against Police
» Tunisia: Arab Democracy ‘Impossible’ Without Islamists
 
Middle East
» Libya-Turkey: Rebels Ask Ankara for Access to Frozen Assets
» Panetta: US Forces Against Iran-Supported Militias in Iraq
» Syria: Turkish and Iranian FM Meet in Tehran
» Syria: Assad Loyalists Raid USA & French Embassies, Clashes
 
South Asia
» Indonesia: Muslim Threats Against Yasmin Church in West Java Continue
» Pakistan: State Jobs in Punjab, Government Fails to Respect Quota for Minorities
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Do a Deal With Islamist Rebels to Save the Starving, UN Tells Aid Agencies as Kristin Davis Flies in to Support Refugees
» EU Countries Recognise South Sudan
» North Sudan: What Next?
 
Immigration
» Barge Carrying 40 People Intercepted
» Boat Sets Sail From Lampedusa With 1,121 Migrants on Board
» How Immigrants Become “Muslims”
» Two Tons of Lead Batteries Recovered From Lampedusa Seabed
 
General
» Ethane Lakes in a Red Haze: Titan’s Uncanny Moonscape
» How Tough Turtles Survived Dino-Killing Meteor
» Sharks Fin Soup Bans Don’t Stop Strong Demand

Financial Crisis


A Danger of Backsliding: ‘Politicians Like to Use the EU as a Scapegoat’

In a SPIEGEL interview, Werner Hoyer, a senior German Foreign Ministry official, discusses the European Union’s current unpopularity, German stereotypes of “lazy” southern Europeans and his concerns about Denmark’s reintroduction of border controls.

SPIEGEL: Could the EU fall apart?

Hoyer: No. But for the first time in the 25 years that I have been involved with the European project, I see the danger of backsliding, including in relation to the major goals of peace, freedom and prosperity. At the same time, we are in danger of missing the boat when it comes to a much-needed reorientation of the EU so that it is fit to deal with globalization.

SPIEGEL: There have already been setbacks. Denmark has reintroduced border controls, for example.

Hoyer: Denmark is setting a dangerous precedent. In this case, part of a common European achievement is being sacrificed to right-wing populist tendencies. Other Europeans cannot stay silent.

SPIEGEL: The European minister for the state of Hesse, Jörg-Uwe Hahn, who also belongs to the FDP, has called for Germans to boycott Denmark as a vacation destination.

Hoyer: I share his concerns about the fate of a core European achievement and about Denmark’s image as a model example of a cosmopolitan and tolerant country. Nevertheless, I do not support threats and boycott, because they only play into the hands of the right-wing populists.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Breaking the Power of the ‘Big Three’: German Firm Wants to Set Up New Rating Agency

European politicians are blaming the escalation of the euro crisis on the major rating agencies, and are determined to break the monopoly of the “Big Three.” Supporters of an intiative by a German consulting firm to set up a European rival agency believe that their time has come. The euro crisis also has its share of winners. They include Markus Krall, a management consultant with the Munich-based consulting firm Roland Berger. For months, he has been soliciting the support of banks, insurance companies and investment funds for a bold project: the establishment of a European rating agency. Krall has to raise at least €300 million ($426 million) by the end of the year to develop a competitor for the controversial “Big Three” rating agencies: Moody’s, Fitch and Standard & Poor’s. The campaign had gotten off to a slow start. But ironically, now that Europe is sinking more deeply into debt, Krall’s venture is gradually gaining momentum. “There is a very good chance that the idea is about to take off,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Brussels: 25 Mln for 3,582 Former Renault Workers

(ANSA) — BRUSSELS, JULY 11 — The European Commission has given green light to the almost 25 million euros requested by France to help the 3,582 workers that have been dismissed by Renault and subsidiaries find new work. The funds will mainly be used for education and retraining, to support the creation of companies and for guidance in the search for a new job. The money will be allocated by the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund (EGF) as part of a 37.6 million euro aid package. EU Labour Commissioner Laszlo Andor said that “the financial crisis has slowed down the economy, hitting the car industry particularly hard. Automobile production in Europe has collapsed and workers in the sector are still suffering the consequences.” The regions in which Renault dismissed its workers are Ile-de-France, Upper Normandy and Nord-Pas-de-Calais. In Ile-de-France most people who lost their jobs worked at Renault’s general headquarters Guyancourt Aubevoie, while in Upper Normandy Cleon (near Rouen) and Sandouville (near Le Havre) were hit hardest. In Nord-Pas-de-Calais the involved cities are Douai and Mauberge, both in areas where unemployment is already high. After approval by the European Commission the European Parliament and Council of EU Ministers have to approve the move.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Holds Crisis Meeting as Concern Grows Over Italy

The euro zone is heading into what could be a turbulent summer recess. Finance ministers can’t agree on a second aid package for Greece, and now markets are getting nervous about Italy. The EU’s sluggish crisis management is partly to blame. The last meeting of euro-zone finance ministers before the summer recess was meant to focus on a second aid package for Greece. But over the weekend, attention switched to a far more important euro-zone member: Italy, the third-largest economy in the single currency bloc.

According to media reports, there is mounting concern that the debt crisis could spread to Italy, due partly to the nation’s high government debt and sluggish economy, but also to worries that Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi may be trying to thwart efforts by Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti to cut spending and get the budget deficit under control. Concern over Italy seems to be so great that a small group of top EU officials is meeting on Monday ahead of the euro-zone finance minister talks. European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso were be joined in their meeting by European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the region’s finance ministers, and Olli Rehn, the EU’s economic and monetary affairs commissioner.

EU officials have stressed that it’s not a “crisis meeting.” But it is precisely that.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Moves Towards Partial Gag on Ratings Agencies

Brussels on Monday urged a clampdown on the world’s ratings agencies, including a ban on ratings for countries covered by international rescue packages, and possible legal action. Internal Markets Commissioner Michel Barnier said in a speech delivered in Paris but released in Brussels that he would ask Poland, which currently holds the rotating European Union presidency, to put action on ratings agencies to ministers soon. “We must first and foremost be more demanding on ratings of sovereign debts,” he said. “We see each day the effects on the countries concerned: a hike in the cost of credit, weakened states, possible contagion to other economies.”

Arriving in Brussels for eurozone talks, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said that verification was needed “to check if there is abusive behaviour” by the agencies. “We need to examine the possibilities of smashing the rating agency oligopoly,” he added. Moody’s came under heavy EU fire last week after downgrading Portugal’s rating to “junk” status, casting new doubts on markets over EU efforts to manage the eurozone debt crisis. Some leading European Union personalities were particularly upset over the timing of the ratings cut. The downgrade was made just as Portugal begins to implement austerity measures in return for a 78-billion-euro ($110-billion) EU-IMF bailout agreed in April, and as the eurozone struggles to craft a new rescue package for Greece.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Races to Ease Euro Crisis Contagion Fears

The European Union’s top economic officials raced Monday to head off fears of debt crisis contagion to Italy and beyond by seeking to swiftly iron out differences over a new Greek rescue package. Amid signs of a knock-on effect to Italy, the eurozone’s third largest economy, EU president Herman Van Rompuy has called talks with Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker and European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet, ahead of a same day gathering of finance ministers from the 17-nation eurozone. “This is not a crisis meeting, but to coordinate positions,” said Van Rompuy’s spokesman, Dirk De Backer. “The agenda is Greece, not Italy,” he added of the 1000 GMT preparatory talks. Meanwhile in Milan, Italy’s financial regulator imposed temporary curbs on short selling after shares plunged on fears of contagion from Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, and in Asia the euro fell further on the same concerns.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurozone Swept by Fresh Panic as Leaders Mull Greece

Europe’s debt crisis threatened to spill over to Italy, Spain and beyond Monday, challenging eurozone finance ministers to overcome sharpening divisions over options for indebted Greece. Meeting in Brussels to finesse a second rescue package for Athens in September, ministers from the 17-nation zone huddled as fears of debt crisis contagion rattled Italy and Spain, its third and fourth largest economies. The euro slumped to its lowest level in six weeks, stock markets closed with heavy falls, including an almost four percent plunge in Milan, and borrowing costs rose to 12-year euro-era record highs in Spain and Italy. “We are looking at something which is more systemic” than Greece, said Spanish minister Elena Salgado. “It concerns the stability of the eurozone in general.” With the fate of the single currency again hanging in the balance, EU finance officials were under mounting pressure to bridge a rift over the terms of a second Greek bailout and speak with a single voice.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Indian Exec Touted as Next Deutsche Bank Boss

Anshu Jain, the 48-year-old Indian head of Deutsche Bank investment banking, is tipped to be named co-chief executive of the German bank, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported Monday. This followed a meeting on Sunday of members of the bank’s supervisory board who decided to recommend that Jain, along with Jürgen Fitschen, currently head of the bank’s German operations, take over from current chief executive Josef Ackermann in 2013. The decision will quickly be put to the whole supervisory board, the paper said, while warning that the two candidates were not yet assured of a majority vote.

The main problem resides in the fact that Fitschen, at age 63, is considered close to retirement, and that his appointment would in effect leave Jain in charge. Jain, who has spent much of his career in London, does not speak German. He has been responsible for running Deutsche Bank’s most profitable division. The banker, who captains Deutsche Bank’s cricket team, until recently owned

a stake in the Mumbai Indians, the all-star Indian Premier League cricket team

owned by the super-rich Mukesh Ambani. Armed with a degree from Delhi University and an MBA in finance from University of Massachusetts Amherst, Jain first cut his teeth at Merrill Lynch in New York before moving to his present employer in London in 1995.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: FinMin to Chase 41 Bln Euros in Unpaid Taxes

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 11 — Greece’s finance ministry will step up efforts to collect part of about 41 billion euros in unpaid taxes and penalties as it scrambles to boost revenues and shrink the budget deficit, as daily Kathimerini reports. Athens is under pressure to meet fiscal targets set by its international lenders, a key prerequisite for funding, as revenue slippage in the first half of this year meant more taxes had to be paid. At a meeting with the ministry’s top brass on Friday, Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos decided to use lawyers, accountants and auditors from the private sector to assist in the government’s collection effort. The ministry said that out of a total of 900,000 cases of tax arrears, collection efforts would focus on 14,700 — each owing amounts over 150,000 euros or 37 billion euros in total, a sum equal to about 11% of the country’s debt. Of these 14,700 cases, 6,500 involved individual taxpayers and 8,200 legal entities.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Finance Minister Speeds Up on Privatizations

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 11 — Greece’s Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos will inform his eurozone counterparts on Monday about the progress of the new privatization fund to be created, starting with the composition of its governing board, as Athens News Agency reported. Sources suggest that former Justice Minister Michalis Stathopoulos will chair it. On the same day the state will cash in some 391.6 million euros from the sale of a 10% stake in OTE telecom to Deutsche Telekom. The next sell-off moves are set for September and will probably include state gaming company OPAP, Athens International Airport and the state lottery, adding up to a targeted amount of 1.5-1.7 billion euros. The government will not wait for the new fund to take shape but will start the privatization process this quarter in an effort to get results as soon as possible.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greeks Increasingly Concerned and Angry

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 11 — People in Greece are deeply concerned about the economic and social situation in the country and are angry with the political system: this emerged from a survey carried out by Kapa Research on behalf of Sunday newspaper To Vima tis Kyriakis (The Sunday Tribune). The percentages that indicate how people would vote if elections were held next Sunday are meaningful for the country’s two largest political parties: Pasok (governing socialist party) and Nea Dimocratia (centre-right main opposition party). Pasok would obtain just 16.5% of votes in that case, Nea Dimocratia 17.8%. The number of votes for these parties taken together (34.3%) is lower than the number of people who did not know for which party to vote (35%). On the other hand, 49.6% of interviewed people approve of the violent and aggressive reactions towards Ministers and MPs (against 40.5% who disapprove). Such reactions are considered “spontaneous” by 61.4% of interviewed (against 32.3% who see them as “organised actions”) and 58.7% do not see the small left-wing Syriza party as responsible for this type of response, as Pasok claims.

Besides, 67.6% of people who were interviewed for the survey said they are in favour of organising early elections this autumn if the goals of the Programme are not reached by September. On the other hand, 24.4% are against early elections.

Focusing on the much-discussed public administration, 54.2% of people in Greece, according to the survey, are in favour of dismissing redundant civil servants.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek Budget Deficit Grows Despite Austerity Drive

Debt-hit Greece’s budget deficit grew by 27.9 percent in the first quarter of 2011 despite over a year of austerity efforts, the finance ministry said on Monday. The ministry said state finances were over two billion euros adrift with a recorded shortfall of 12.78 billion euros ($18.0 billion) instead of a targeted 10.37 billion euros. Fiscal revenue was down by 8.3 percent compared with the same period last year while expenditure has increased by 8.8 percent, it added. The state deficit is a big component of the critically important public deficit as measured by EU standards. The ministry said the country’s interest payments had increased by 1.28 billion euros to over seven billion euros, while another 429 million euros had been set aside to settle old hospital debts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Holder Launches Witch Hunt Against Biased Banks

In what could be a repeat of the easy-lending cycle that led to the housing crisis, the Justice Department has asked several banks to relax their mortgage underwriting standards and approve loans for minorities with poor credit as part of a new crackdown on alleged discrimination, according to court documents reviewed by IBD. Prosecutions have already generated more than $20 million in loan set-asides and other subsidies from banks that have settled out of court rather than battle the federal government and risk being branded racist. An additional 60 banks are under investigation, a DOJ spokeswoman says. Settlements include setting aside prime-rate mortgages for low-income blacks and Hispanics with blemished credit and even counting “public assistance” as valid income in mortgage applications.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Stock Market Slide Continues as Debt Fears Hit Markets

Milan, 11 July (AKI/Bloomberg) — Italy’s benchmark stock index continued to fall, dropping 1.5 percent early Monday amid fears the country could be the next to be threatened by the eurozone’s woes. European Union officials were due meet in Brussels to discuss the growing crisis.

Italy’s financial-market regulator moved to curb short selling after the country’s benchmark FTSE MIB index plunged 3.8 percent on Friday — the most in almost five months and bonds tumbled on investor concern Italy would be the next victim of the region’s debt crisis.

The regulator known as Consob after an emergency meeting Sunday ordered short sellers must reveal their positions when they reach 0.2 percent or more of a company’s capital and then make additional filings for each additional 0.1 percent. The measure takes effect on Monday and lasts until 9 September.

The decision came ahead of a regular meeting of Europe’s finance ministers to seek ways to shore up Greece and defend the region’s other heavily indebted nations.

The Italian ruling follows similar action taken in other European countries, including Germany, Rome-based Consob said in a statement posted on its website.

A decline in shares in Italy’s largest bank and other bank shares that are the among the largest holders of the country’s debt drove the FTSE MIB index’s drop. The yield on Italy’s 10-year bonds rose to a nine-year high of 5.27 percent, driving the premium investors demand to hold the country’s debt over German bunds to a euro-era high of 244 basis points.

UniCredit shares plummeted 7.9 percent and those of Banca Intesa, the second-biggest lender, dropped 4.6 percent. Both hit lows not seen since the period when markets were emerging from the crisis spawned by the collapse of Lehman Brothers investment bank in 2008.

Italian politicians including Paolo Bonaiuti, an undersecretary for prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and one of the premier’s main spokespeople, blamed the slide on “speculators” and pledged action to rein in investors perceived to be attacking Italy. Bonaiuti said Italy would be united “in blocking the effort of speculators.”

On July 5, European lawmakers voted in favor of a ban on short selling of government bonds in the EU unless traders have at least “located and reserved” in advance the securities they intend to sell. The European Union Parliament in Strasbourg, France, also called for restrictions on traders’ use of credit- default swaps to profit from defaults on sovereign debt they don’t own.

Short selling involves the sale of securities borrowed from the owner, and generates profit when the trader repurchases them at a lower price and returns them to the owner. The amount of shorting is limited by the willingness of owners to lend.

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



Letting Greece Into Euro Zone Was “A Mistake”

With the benefit of hindsight, the decision to admit Greece into the euro zone was an error, Austria’s chancellor at the time tells swissinfo.ch.

Wolfgang Schüssel also says Austria’s decision to join the European Union in 1995 “made perfect sense”, although he hedges his bets when asked whether Switzerland should do the same.

Schüssel, who headed the Austrian government from 2000 to 2007, played down similarities between his country and Switzerland. At the same time he stressed that Brussels and Bern “needed” and “appreciated” each other.

He was speaking at an international human rights conference in Bonn, “Human rights in a globalized world — challenges for the media”, which took place at the end of June.

Wolfgang Schüssel: It’s a good question. The euro is obviously a political project, but it obviously also has very precise economic conditions. I was there [when the criteria were set] as foreign minister in 1997. We came up with criteria that had to be applied: the annual government budget deficit mustn’t be greater than three per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), gross government debt mustn’t exceed 60 per cent of GDP, and the exchange rate must be stable.

In 1998, the only countries that were accepted [into the eurozone] were those that could fulfil these criteria. Greece wasn’t one of them — it’s acceptance was delayed by three years. In their assessment, the European Commission and the European Central Bank said they were both satisfied. That was a mistake — looking back today, that has to be said quite categorically.

That said, the Greeks also used tricks. For example, military expenditure rose between 2000 and 2010 from €3 billion (SFr3.66 billion) to €10 billion. This was calculated not in the year of purchase but in the year of delivery — that twists the picture.

W.S.: I don’t think Austria can be compared with Switzerland. Switzerland has the advantage that it didn’t have to go through two world wars and was more international right from the beginning.

Switzerland has large global players, which operate abroad from Switzerland. Austria doesn’t. Switzerland has very low debt — we don’t, because we’ve had loads of catching up to do. Those are big differences.

For Austria, joining the EU made perfect sense. We slid from the edge of Europe right into the middle. For us it was a unique opportunity, also to rethink our own rules. The Union helped us overcome many corporatist ways of thinking and isolation.

But I don’t believe that in Switzerland Europe is seen as the Titanic, being steered towards an iceberg. Switzerland is the EU’s second-biggest trading partner — bigger incidentally than many other large countries…

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



Spain: Debt Spread Reaches All-Time High

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JULY 11 — The risk differential between the Spanish 10-year bond and the German benchmark bund has today surpassed the maximum of 300 base points, reaching a historic high of 301.9 points under a large amount of market pressure due to the situation in Greece and Italy. European Council president Herman Van Rompuy has called an extraordinary meeting for today in order to deal with the latest emergency situation. The IBEX, the Spanish stock exchange index, began trading today with declines of over 1%, in line with the other European stock exchanges.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Public Deficit Castile La Mancha ‘Dramatic’

(ANSAmed) — Madrid, JULY 11 — The economic situation of the municipality of Castile La Mancha “is dramatic” and the region’s public debt is more than twice as high as the target of 1.3% of GDP set by the central government to reduce the public administration’s deficit. This was announced today by municipality president Maria Dolores de Cospedal, quoted by Europa Press. De Cospedal has requested an emergency meeting with Vice Premier and Economy Minister Elena Salgado, to “explain the dramatic situation” of the region. The region’s debt is not only higher than the government-imposed 1.3%, but instead of the initially estimated 1.7% “is much higher than 4% of GDP,” said a member of the People’s Party. Castile La Mancha is a former socialist stronghold that is currently governed by the People’s Party.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



The Disappearing Black Middle Class

Millions of Americans endured financial calamities in the recession. But for many in the black community, job loss has knocked them out of the middle class and back into poverty. And some experts warn of a historic reversal of hard-won economic gains that took black people decades to achieve. “History is going to say the black middle class was decimated” over the past few years, said Maya Wiley, director of the Center for Social Inclusion. “But we’re not done writing history.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Eurozone Officials Meet Amid Alarm on Italy

Top eurozone officials are meeting on Monday (11 July) morning to discuss the debt crisis in the 17-nation single currency region amid concerns that it could spread to Italy. European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet, EU monetary affairs commissioner Olli Rehn, eurozone chief Jean-Claude Juncker and Jose Manuel Barroso, the head of the European Commission, are attending the specially-convened event in Brussels. The meeting, called by European council President Herman Van Rompuy, is expected to focus on the second bailout for Greece and its implications for broader eurozone stability.

Discussions on the fresh Greek package stalled earlier this month over disagreement on the nature of private creditor involvement. At the time, it was said talks would probably restart in September, after the summer recess. But events once again overtook the political process — Van Rompuy called the event on Saturday, the day after Italian stock markets suffered a dramatic fall of 3.5 percent. Markets became jittery after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi publicly criticised his widely-respected finance minister Giulio Tremonti. There is also concern about the health of Italian banks, with the results of EU stress tests due out on Friday. At the end of last week, the premium which Italy pays to borrow money compared with Germany’s soared to its highest point since the eurozone came into being.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘We’ll Send a Strong Signal to Money Markets,’ Italy Vows

Austerity package will be passed ‘within a week’ says Tremonti

(ANSA) — Rome, July 11 — Italy has vowed to give the financial markets an unequivocal message that its latest debt-cutting measure will be approved as fast as possible and will do what it sets out to do.

“We’ll send the markets a strong signal,” Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti said Monday as Italian bonds were again targeted by speculators and the differential with German bunds hit a new high.

“The austerity package will be approved within a week,” he said, denying suggestions it might be tweaked to please voters after recent local-election and referendum defeats for Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s centre-right government.

The near-50-billion budget-cutting measure will bring the deficit down to 0.2% of GDP by 2014, Tremonti promised.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel phoned Berlusconi Monday to urge a fast passage for the austerity package and Italian President Giorgio Napolitano called for “national cohesion” as shares on the Milan stock market fell by 2.5%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

USA


NASA Chief: Final Shuttle Launch Begins New Era

In an exclusive interview with The Root, Charles Bolden talks future space missions (think Mars) and the importance of black astronauts.

There is an ongoing effort to recruit more astronauts of color, women and other minorities. That has been ongoing since 1977, when NASA recruited its first group of space shuttle astronauts. Personally, I’m never satisfied with the number that we have; nor do I think we’ll ever have enough. I really want to be able to inspire young people of all races and colors to want to follow in my footsteps and become an astronaut. One of the things we do is spend significant amounts of our education funding in collaboration with historically black colleges and universities. We have a number of scholarship programs, internship programs and grant programs that go into minority neighborhoods, all the way from middle and high school on up. We try to use as many of our astronauts as possible who look like kids in some of the minority neighborhoods to talk to them about how they became interested in space, and how they studied and made very diligent efforts to get there. It’s hard to become an astronaut; we don’t want them to be afraid of it, so we try to tell them how much fun we’ve had in getting here.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Arctic Shipping Routes Unlikely to be ‘Suez of the North’

Late last year a cargo ship made maritime history. It became the first foreign bulk carrier to make a commercial trip across Russian Arctic waters. Carrying over 40,000 tonnes of iron ore, the MV Nordic Barents left Kirkenes port in Norway on 4 September. It sailed the North Sea route, a path that runs eastwards from northern Europe, along Russia’s north coast and through the Bering Strait. Some three weeks later, it docked in Xingang, northern China. “The whole trip went very well. There were no big delays and it was a lot cheaper. Just compared to going via the Cape of Good Hope, the savings for fuel alone was around $550,000,” said Christian Bonfils, CEO of Nordic Bulk Carriers, operator of the ship.

The Russians have been using Arctic waters all year round for decades. Retreating sea ice due to global warming in recent years has seen foreign shipping companies start to look northwards for the possibility of commercial shipping routes. But until recently the area has been closed to foreign ships wanting to get to hungry Asian markets. Instead companies use the Suez Canal — a trip which, counted from Norway, is almost twice as long. Last year Tschudi Shipping, which owns a mine in Kirkenes, approached the Russians about the possibility of using the North Sea route to get to China, the mine’s biggest customer. “We got a very clear message from the Russians. It was: ‘We want to compete with Suez’,” said CEO Felix Tschudi. The Norwegian company hooked up with Nordic Bulk Carriers, who had the right type of ice ship, to make the trip.

Until then uncertainty about how much the Russians would charge for the mandatory use of their ice-breakers meant the trip was not economically viable. “The rate we paid last year [$210,000] for ice-breaker services was very comparable with the Suez Canal,” said Bonfils. So what prompted the Russian thaw? According to Professor Lawson Brigham, an expert on Arctic policy at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, it comes down to Russia wanting to exploit natural resources in the area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Cooperation Talks: Germany’s RWE Mulls Gazprom as Major Shareholder

German energy firm RWE and Gazprom, Russia’s largest company, are considering far-reaching cooperation and RWE could imagine Gazprom buying a major stake in it. RWE head Jürgen Grossmann met Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller in Paris on Friday to discuss gas supply contracts but also the possibility of future link-ups, SPIEGEL has learned. Grossmann told confidants after the meeting that he could imagine the Russian giant taking a long-term major stake in the company. He aims to inform his supervisory board of the outcome of the negotiations in early August. Gazprom has supplied the German company with gas for years. Germany’s decision to stop using atomic power by 2022 has left RWE in a difficult position. Grossmann has said that Berlin’s decision to accelerate its nuclear power exit plans would leave the firm facing “several billions” of unexpected costs over the coming years. Adding to its costs, the German firm, a leading CO2 producer, will have to buy emissions permits starting next January.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Ex-Stasi Informants and Newspaper Clippings: UN Social Report Relied on Questionable Sources

A damning United Nations report has caused an uproar in Germany by severely criticized social inequalities in the country. But it does not hold up well under closer examination. Several passages were taken word-for-word from lobby groups and one part relies on testimony from a group associated with the former East German secret police.

The report also sharply criticizes economic and social conditions in eastern Germany. The crucial data for this part of the report was contributed by the Society for the Protection of Civil Rights and Human Dignity (GBM). This organization’s membership boasts several former officials from former East Germany, including many ex-employees of the Stasi, the country’s dreaded secret police. They have never been able to forgive the government of reunited Germany for curtailing their pensions just because they harassed their fellow citizens during the communist era. The group has also made a name for itself by conferring a human rights award on Fidel Castro and by lauding the merits of East Germany in letters to the editor.

The GBM is no doubt elated that it succeeded in drawing UN officials to their side. The UN committee expressed its concern about the “discrimination” to be found in Germany when it comes to “the pension rights of former (East German) ministers and deputy ministers.” This corresponds exactly with the formulation that Harald Nestler, formerly a senior East German trade official to China, had suggested when he testified before the UN committee in Geneva.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Workers in Florence: Time for a Smoke Break? Then Punch the Clock

New rules in the Italian city could require all public workers to get docked for every time they step outside the office for a smoke

Smokers working for the Florence registry office now have a new rule to follow. Any time they step out for a cigarette break, they will have to punch the time clock. The accumulated time spent smoking instead of working will therefore not be included in work hours. Needless to say, smokers are fuming, and local union representatives have lashed out at the new regulation.

“A cigarette break is a necessary moment of physical and psychological recovery for a smoker,” says Stefano Cecchi, a representative of the RSU (United Union Representatives) syndicate, who has called on city officials to reverse the decision. But Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi — a non-smoker — likes the idea. “I won’t even consider changing this rule,” he declared. Renzi is even planning to extend it to all of the 5,000 municipal employees.

“Public service must set an example,” says the mayor. “Of course, everyone is free to take a break for a coffee or a cigarette. But employees should be conscientious. They should punch the clock, go out for a fifteen-minute break and then come back. Otherwise citizens see a bad example.” Some municipal employees have said that if they are docked for the cigarette breaks, the only solution may indeed be to finally quit smoking for good.

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



Italy: ADOC: Only 20% of Italians to Vacation Due to Price Hikes

(AGI) Rome — The ADOC announced a black summer for tourism in Italy. According to the consumer association, only 20% of Italins will go on vacation, with price increases averaging 200 euros for transportation and lodging weighing on family budgets. ADOC President, Carlo Pileri stated, “This will be a black summer for tourism, only a fifth of Italians will go on vacation and the majority of these will opt for shorter and mor economical trips.” According to ADOC study data “six Italians out of ten will vacation for a week at most, while only 1% can afford almost a month of relaxation”. This is also because, traveling and lodging this year one will spend, on average, 200 euros more than in 2010.

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



Pope: Hostages Must be Treated With Humanity by Pirates

(AGI) Castelgandolfo — The Pope prayed to day “for the seafarers kidnapped by pirates.” The Pope was speaking to worshippers gathered in the courtyard of his Castelgandolfo residence, which today also included relatives of some of the hostages. He said after the Angelus that he hoped “they would be treated with respect and humanity” adding that he was “praying for their relatives to hold strong to their faith and not lose hope of seeing their loved ones again soon.” .

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



Portrait of the Danish Soldier

Danish soldiers serving abroad are mostly male, white and totally average

A new study by the Danish National Centre for Social Research (SFI) released earlier this week busts some popular myths about soldiers being more violent and less educated than civilians, but shows that the vast majority are still white men. The study, titled “The soldier before and during duty”, is the first of its kind to systematically compare the educations, incomes, family backgrounds, genders, ethnicities, criminal records and much more of soldiers with those of the population at large. The study is based on personal statistics about the 26,028 men and women who did a total of 53,861 foreign tours of duty for the military between 1992 and 2009. The vast majority served in the Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan. In contrast with the United States and Britain, where people with underprivileged backgrounds are over-represented in the military, the SFI study indicates that the backgrounds of Danish soldiers reflect society as a whole.

Soldiers from Denmark are mainly white. Who could have guessed that?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Radical Islam in Germany: The Convert as Missionary

by Veli Sirin

Abu Hamza, born a German named Pierre Vogel in 1978, is a very popular Islamist preacher in Germany. The former professional boxer became Muslim in 2001 and is now among the most influential German representatives of Saudi-originated Wahhabi fundamentalism, which masquerades as “Salafism.”

His “kunya” or “Islamic nickname,” Abu Hamza, means “father of the strong.” He should not be confused with the notorious radical Muslim agitator currently locked up in Britain, Abu Hamza al-Masri, known for his missing eye and a prosthetic hook that substitutes for his right hand, or for the two late al-Qaida terrorists active in Pakistan and Iraq, who also used the same name. Vogel’s impact among German Muslims is no less ominous, however, even if his extremism appears more restrained.

Adherents of Wahhabism like Pierre Vogel, alias Abu Hamza, call themselves “Salafi” in claiming they emulate the prominent adherents of early Islam. “Salaf” is an Arabic noun meaning “predecessor” or “forefather,” and the first three Muslim generations are collectively referred to as “al-Salaf as-Saleh,” or the “Pious Predecessors.”

Vogel received his religious training in an Islamic school in Saudi Arabia. Through nationwide lecture tours and the creation of several websites, he has reached out to very religious young German Muslims, as well as to young non-Muslim Germans with identity problems.

Those who flock to him are impressed by Vogel’s apparent knowledge of Islam and his mastery of Arabic, the language of the Koran. Central to his teaching is the belief that Islam is the only true religion, while all Christians and Jews are “kuffar,” or “unbelievers.” In addition, Vogel sees “da’wa,” or calling others to Islam, as an obligation incumbent on every Muslim. He has fashioned himself as a missionary and argues explicitly that he possesses theological evidence for the superiority of Islam.

Vogel’s worldview embodies a rigid distinction between Islamic and “un-Islamic” behavior. The strict division between “the bad” and “the good” appeals to some young Muslims, because they are promised a clear orientation in their everyday lives and identification with a like-minded community. Although Vogel rejects the use of violence in the cause of Islam, the German authorities see his Manichean outlook — the harsh separation of “bad” and “good” — as dangerous, because of its radicalizing effects on the very religious and the confused.

The preaching of Pierre Vogel and his limiting Islam to a formal set of “Salafi” rules is opposed increasingly by other German Muslim personalities and organizations. They also criticize Vogel for exploiting complaints of discrimination against Muslims in Germany. On his websites, Vogel asserts that Muslims in Europe are faced with an impending Holocaust.

The internet is his main stage. His sites have gained five million hits in one and a half years, a matter of which he is proud…

           — Hat tip: ESW [Return to headlines]



Strasbourg Minaret Ruling Causes No Surprise

The European Court of Human Rights issued a long-awaited ruling on Friday, turning down two appeals from Swiss Muslims against Switzerland’s ban on building minarets.

The ruling by the court in Strasbourg has been met with no surprise, by either opponents or supporters of the Swiss law.

In a popular vote November 2009 the Swiss approved an initiative to add to the constitution a ban on the construction of any new minarets. Of those who voted, 57 per cent were in favour.

Silvia Bär, deputy secretary-general of the right-wing People’s Party, which supported the minaret ban, told swissinfo.ch that the party had expected that the Strasbourg ruling would go the way it did.

“As we have always said, the minaret initiative does not affect either the freedom of religion nor the right to practise a religion,” she said.

The party expects to see the same ruling in the cases that are still pending.

Walter Wobmann, the chairman of the committee that launched the anti-minaret initiative, told the Swiss News Agency that he was “naturally pleased” at the ruling — but added that the court could hardly have decided otherwise.

“We are a sovereign state, the people voted clearly in favour of the minaret initiative and the initiative had been declared valid,” he said.

A necessary step

Although the Strasbourg ruling is definitive, and other similar cases will certainly be thrown out on the same grounds, the plaintiffs are not downhearted.

“We suspected that it would be ruled inadmissible, but it was necessary to take this step,” said Hafid Ouardiri, co-president of the Interknowing Foundation, and former spokesman for the Geneva mosque, who submitted one of the appeals to the Strasbourg court.

Ouardiri had included in his case the claim that “he had no effective remedy available to seek a ruling that the constitutional amendment was in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights”.

He told the Swiss News Agency that he felt “positive and calm” after the ruling: the European court had “set a process in motion”, and reminded the Swiss state of its duty.

He was apparently referring to the judges’ statement that the Swiss courts “would be able to examine the compatibility of a possible refusal to authorise the construction of a minaret with the [European Human Rights] Convention”.

Ouardiri’s lawyers issued a statement saying they were “encouraged” by the ruling, since they were convinced the Swiss courts were bound to conclude that the ban violates human rights and is a threat to religious peace.

Yahya Hassan Bajwa, who heads an office for intercultural communication in Switzerland and is a member of the Aargau cantonal parliament told swissinfo.ch that he could understand why a minority that feels legally discriminated against should have lodged an appeal.

He expressed disappointment that the People’s Party should come up with initiatives of this kind which “disturb the country’s social peace”. The behaviour of Muslims in Switzerland shows that they behave democratically, he said.

Strasbourg principles

Swiss international human rights lawyer Walter Kälin told swissinfo.ch that the appeals laid by Ouardiri and the other plaintiffs — a group of Swiss Muslim organisations — had made no difference to the issue.

It is a well-established principle that only people who are directly affected by a law can take their case to the Strasbourg court, he said. This can only be done once they have exhausted all possible recourses in their own country.

“You can’t go to Strasbourg in order to combat a law in general terms, or to have it checked,” he explained.

“If an actual group submitted a building application for a minaret, and didn’t get a permit, and then went through the Swiss courts — the administrative court up to the federal court [Switzerland’s highest legal body], and if the federal court then said: ‘You cannot have a permit because of the article in the Constitution’, it’s only at that stage that Strasbourg can look into the case.”

There is potentially such a case in Switzerland already: Muslims in the town of Langenthal in canton Bern had been given permission to build a minaret before the vote was held. This case is still going through the Swiss legal system, as opponents of minarets appeal against lower court rulings that construction can go ahead.

The fate of the Langenthal minaret is not affected by Friday’s decision in Strasbourg…

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



Sweden: Animal Rights Activists Claim McDonalds Firebomb Responsibility

The Animal Liberation Front has claimed responsibility for Friday’s fire attack at a hamburger restaurant in Gothenburg, according to local media reports.

In a posting on the animal rights activists website Bite Back Magazine, those allegedly responsible described how they smashed two windows with hammers at the burger restaurant at the Scandinavium Center, poured ten liters of petrol in and set it alight. The posting continued, “We were in a hurry as the sun had risen and it was light outside, so we threw the containers with written ALF-messages on them and some lighted matches into the restaurant and it went up in a big fire instantly. Burn in hell animal killers and capitalists!” Nobody was in the restaurant at the time of the attack, said to be around 5 o’clock in the morning, though damage is extensive. Police have confirmed that the perpetators will face charges of aggravated arson.

On the Bite Back website activists also claimed responsibility for other attacks in Sweden including a hunting and fishing shop in Nyköping where windrows and doors were destroyed, a Pressbyrån shop in Eskilstuna and another McDonalds in the same city, where stones and tar bombs used to smash windows in the fast food joint. Bite Back was founded in 2001 by Nicolas Atwood, an animal rights activist in West Palm Beach, Florida, with a mission to “support animal rights prisoners of conscience and report on current events in the struggle.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Seven Year-Old Stabbed to Death, Relative Arrested

A seven year-old boy was stabbed to death in Umeå in northern Sweden on Sunday. Two of the boy’s relatives — a man and a woman — were arrested on murder charges, but the woman was released around 7pm Sunday evening. “She was released after interrogations. The man remains in custody, suspected of murder, and a remand hearing will be held on Monday,” Ebbe Nyberg, duty officer at Västerbotten police force, told the TT news agency. The police are keeping a tight lid on the circumstances of the event, which has been described as “a very tragic family drama”. “Severe mental disorders are nearly always involved in this type of crime,” said criminologist Mikael Rying, of Mittuniversitetet, to TT.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Austria-Hungary Was Better…

Our attention has been belatedly drawn to a news item over a month old: Valentin Inzko, the International High Representative of Bosnia-Herzegovina, has decreed that it is “deeply deplorable” that the Republika Srpska (RS) — the Serb half of the Balkan non-country — plans to help fund the defense of General Ratko Mladic at The Hague Tribunal.

“This is taxpayers’ money and this is also the money of the mothers of Srebrenica,” a visibly indignant Herr Inzko fumed: “I cannot imagine that an Austrian war criminal, a Nazi war criminal, would get financial support from the Republic of Austria… This is what is going on now and is deeply deplorable… [RS President] Dodik is really stretching the nerves of international community and also the nerves of really peaceful Bosniak community.”

Herr Inzko’s outburst came only days after Pope Benedict, among others, came out loudly in support of Croatia’s immediate membership in the European Union. Croatia is salonfähig, it appears, eminently clubbable at the Berlaymont… even though the Croatian government has gone out of its way to support, propagate and organize legal teams for the appeals of Generals Gotovina and Markaè, who were already convicted by the Trial Chamber earlier this spring, and sentenced to a total of over fifty years in prison, at the self-same Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague.

Furthermore, it has been reported that Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor “has announced the strengthening of [Croatia’s] diplomatic offensive, with a team of experts that would help the generals’ defence as it prepares to appeal the verdict.” This means that Croatian officials, civil servants and diplomats will be mobilized and ordered, on government time, to try and exert political influence on a legal process concerning these two convicted war criminals…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: 500,000 More Council Houses

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 11 — The lack of council housing has been at the heart of daily protests in Algeria for months. In some cases these protests have led to real uprisings aimed at public offices and buildings. The main cause of the chaos was the publication of lists specifying to whom council houses would be allocated, leading invariably to violent reactions from the side of people who fell left out or discriminated. Some people have even committed suicide over the issue, often by setting themselves on fire.

The main complaint is that people often requested a house years ago, and that they still haven’t been assigned one. But many protest against the selection criteria which, in their view, are not very clear, leave too much space to the selection commissions and therefore space for favouritism, approaching unlawful acts. Some newspapers report that sometimes houses are awarded to people who live in another city, who can lay no claim to these houses for that reason. Housing has therefore become a social problem as well as a problem of public order. This becomes evident from the dozens of streets which are systematically blocked immediately after the publication of the lists of assignees. The government is trying to respond, and yesterday the Council of Ministers, in a meeting chaired by Abdelaziz Bouteflika, decided to allocate 10 thousand hectares, spread over 2 “wylaia” (comparable with a Province) to the construction of 550,000 council housing accommodations, part of the 2010-2014 5-year plan.

It seems obvious that the government and President Bouteflika are trying to respond to the protests. Bouteflika has underlined, APS reports, “the need to carry out the public housing programmes within the scheduled time.” Bouteflika also pointed out that much has already been done in this sector, and that the country’s efforts will continue to respond to the people’s needs. He added that substantial resources have been made available (around 20 billion euros) for the realisation of the 5-year plan, which includes the construction of schools and public health structures. The number of council housing accommodations have been increased from 2 million to 2.5 million to meet the demands of the people.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



France Changes Stance in Libya, Political Solution Needed

(AGI) Paris — France changes stance from being supporter of military action in Libya to urging direct rebels-regime negotiations. Defense Minister Gerard Longuet maintains that the time has come for both parties to sit around a table and negotiate “because we have proved that there is no solution by only using force.” .

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



Libya: Real Negotiations Are With Paris, Gaddafi

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 11 — Seif Al Islam Gaddafi, the son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and regime spokesman, has said that Tripoli is conducting the true negotiations on the conflict in Libya with France and not with the rebels. In an interview with the Algerian daily Al Khabar, Seif said that “we are actually conducting the true negotiations with France, and not the rebels”. “Through the intermediary of a special envoy who met with the French president, we have received a clear message from Paris,” Seif said. “The French president told our envoy very frankly that ‘we are the ones who created the council (the National Transitional Council, the government of the rebels in Benghazi, Ed.) and without France’s support, its money and arms, it would not exist.” “President Sarkozy insisted that he is Tripoli’s interlocutor and not the rebels,” Seif added. “The French have officially informed us that they want to set up a transitional government in Libya. Sarkozy told the Libyan envoy that he had a list and that those on it are ‘France’s men’ .”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Libya: EU Parliament: Some Frozen Assets Should Go to NTC

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, JULY 7 — MEPs have requested that a portion of the Libyan assets that have been frozen by EU states be made available to the National Transitional Council for the most urgent needs of the people. In a resolution approved today by European Parliament, the assembly expressed concerns regarding the scarcity of food, lack of medical assistance and lack of money that the Libyan people are dealing with. The resolution reiterates “the commitment of the international community to protect the civilian population in Libya, also intensifying the pressure put on the Libyan regime”, and called for the European Council to keep the arrest warrant issued by the ICC for Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in mind. The left-wing GUE Group in European Parliament was the only group that abstained from the vote, because they believe that the military operations in the country have exceeded the boundaries of the UN mandate, designed to protect the Libyan people.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Gaddafi Representatives Are ‘In Talks With France’

Tripoli, 11 July (AKI) — Libya and France are conducting negotiations, according to Muammar Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam.

“The truth is that we are negotiating with France and not with the rebels,” he told Algerian El Khabar newspaper.

France is one of a number of countries to have recognised the opposition rebel National Transitional Council, or NTC, as Libya’s legitimate leaders, at least in an interim capacity.

French president Nicolas Sarkozy has spearheaded international efforts to conduct military missions against forces loyal to Gaddafi.

“Our envoy to (Nicolas) Sarkozy said that the French president was very clear and told him: “We created the (rebel) council, and without our support, and money, and our weapons, the council would have never existed’,” Saif al-Islam said in the interview.

No comments were immediately forthcoming from the French government but French defence minister Gerard Longue recently said that rebels should conduct talks even if Gaddafi is in power.

The NTC says the rebels will take part in talks with Libya only after Gaddafi steps down from power.

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



Libya: Head of Pro-Gaddafi Tribe Wants End to NATO Actions

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JULY 11 — “The Arab League has handed Libya over to the ‘Council of International Horror’, also known as the (UN) Security Council, which decided on NATO’s intervention in Libya,” the daily Assharq Al Awsat was told in an interview by Muftah Al Waer, head of the delegation of pro-Gaddafi tribes currently in Cairo to back three refusals: “no to the country’s break-up, no to NATO’s military operations and no to conflict between Libyans”. “The West,” said Al Waer, “ is trying to control Libyan funds abroad, which total some 300 billion dollars.” The tribal leader made an appeal to Egypt, which he considers the only country able to apply pressure to stop the bloodshed in Libya. Al Waer’s visit to Cairo is to include, according to the daily paper, talks with the Military Council, the prime minister, Al Azhar, the Arab League and other political groupings.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Livni Met With Gaddafi’s Envoys, Press

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JULY 11 — Israeli opposition leader Tzipi Livni met with Libyan businessmen close to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi last week in Tel Aviv, according to the private Channel 2 television station. Livni has opted not to comment on the matter so far. The pro-government daily Israel Ha-Yom reports that the delegation included four Libyan businessmen (who arrived in Israel on foreign passports) as well as two representatives with origins from Libya’s Jewish community, one Frenchman and one Italian.

The newspaper added that the delegation had also been received by a representative of the centrist party Kadima, former justice minister Meir Shitrit.

“They censured NATO over the bombing of Libya, and it seems they were hoping that Israel would speak out against the operations,” Shitrit said. Israel Ha-Yom holds that the men wanted to convince Israel to take part in a diplomatic effort to stop the attacks. In exchange Gaddafi — according to the newspaper — would have given back property left by Jews of Libyan origins to those who had left it when leaving Libya. Political sources quoted by the paper expressed surprise that Livni had not informed the government of the meeting which — they noted — “was by no means looked on approvingly” by Israel.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Press: Air France: Threat of Rockets in Sahel

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 6 — Air France security officials are closely evaluating the alarm raised by French intelligence authorities regarding the possibility that flights in the Sahel could be targeted by ground to air missiles originally from the Libyan arsenal and now in the hands of Al Qaida, according to the website of weekly magazine Jeune Afrique. The weapons are reportedly mainly Sa-7 missile-launchers (Russian made), as well as more modern versions (SA-14, SA-16 and SA-18), which are capable of striking airplanes while taking off or landing, at up to 1,500 meters in altitude. The missiles can be fired by a single operator and can strike a target that is 5km away. According to the weekly publication, the weapons are reportedly part of the arsenal that belonged first to pro-Gaddafi troops and now have reportedly ended up in the hands of Al Qaida in the Maghreb in an unknown quantity. According to Jeune Afrique, French specialists have been in N’Djamena, Niamey, Bamako and Nouakchott in recent weeks to help local authorities strengthen security at their airports.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Srdja Trifkovic: The ICC Orders Qaddafy’s Arrest

The Libyan affair became a choreographed farce on June 27, with the International Criminal Court (ICC) issuing arrest warrants for Muammar Qaddafy, one of his sons, and his chief of military intelligence. This move is a carbon copy of The Hague Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) indicting Slobodan Milosevic for war crimes at the height of NATO’s bombing campaign against Serbia in 1999. In both cases a transnational court of dubious legitimacy, controlled and financed by the intervening powers, acted on cue to provide retroactive justification for an illegal and unprovoked act of military aggression.

The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Luis Moreno-Ocampo called on Qaddafy’s closest aides to become “part of the solution in Libya” by deposing him. “Justice will be done,” he declared at the court’s headquarters at The Hague. ICC judge Sanji Mmasenono Monageng had already explained that “evidence submitted to Ocampo”—she did not disclose the identity of the submitter(s)—was enough to establish “reasonable grounds to believe” the three were guilty of murder, the persecution of civilians, and “crimes against humanity..”

The statements by Their Honors emanating from their virtual world would be as irrelevant as the fatuities of Bertrand Russel’s Vietnam “tribunal” 45 years ago, were it not for the fact that their “warrants” will be used in the manner that has destructive political and military consequences. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland promptly announced “the U.S. believes that the decision to refer the case to the ICC was the right decision” and that “Qaddafy’s got to take the message that it’s time to go.” White House spokesman Jay Carney called the decision “another step in this process of holding him accountable.” Over in Brussels the EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton declared that the “the European Union fully supports the International Criminal Court, which plays a key role in the promotion of international justice.” This means that Qaddafy’s removal—decided upon in London, Paris and Washington long before the limited UN Security Council authorization for “protecting civilians” was adopted in March—now has ex post facto international legitimacy. This is on par with the Nazi government decreeing on July 2, 1934, the Staatsnotwehrgesetz (the Law on State Self-Defense) which retroactively “legalized” the Night of the Long Knives two days after the bloodbath.

Back in 1999 Louise Arbour’s ICTY indictment convinced Milosevic of the need to stiffen resistance to NATO and encouraged the Albanians to escalate the KLA campaign of terror. In Libya Qaddafy will be more determined than ever not to end up like Milosevic and the insurgents will be equally determined not to seek a compromise solution, now that their Western mentors have upped the ante to the point where third-party mediation efforts are meaningless.

That the Obama Administration is enthusiastically supporting the actions of the ICC reflects not only the immediate political utility of the latter’s decisions but also the fact that the liberal-hawk sisterhood in Obama’s inner circle (Hillary Clinton, Susan Rice, Samantha Power), and their allies in the academia and the State Department bureaucracy, are intent on the United States signing on to The Rome Statute establishing the ICC. They do not worry about having a court that could theoretically prosecute American officials for pursuing American policies: who pays the piper calls the tune…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Tomato War Breaks Out

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 8 — Tunisia’s tomato production sector has always been important for agriculture in the country, because most of the harvest is exported. But tomato farming is going through a difficult period, because a price war has broken out between growers and the processing industry.

What has been going on for five days now in Sidi Othman, Nachaa and Nabeul, where tomato processing plants are blocked by producers, may seem of little importance in the eyes of a European. But one has to consider the economic side of the conflict, because the producers want more money for their delivered fresh tomatoes. At the moment the price is fixed at 115 millimes per kilogram, where 1000 millimes equals one dinar, around 50 euro cents. The money paid to the Tunisia growers is not even enough to pay the costs of growing, they say now, also due to rising costs caused by international fluctuations, or real speculation. The anger Tunisian tomato producers show today, blocking processing plants, is a consequence of the conflict that has been going on for some time in the important sector for Tunisia’s agriculture. The protests, commissioner for agricultural development in the Nabeul region Ridha Haj Salem told TAP, have become “a serious threat to the tomato processing industry” because they are the cause of heavy losses, both for growers and the processing industry. There seems to be nothing wrong with the argument Ridha Haj Salem defends: we cannot change the sales price of fresh tomatoes now because it is fixed at the start of each harvest by a national commission, which includes representatives of UTAP (Tunisian union for agriculture and fisheries), of the Tunisian Union for Industry, Commerce and Handicrafts (UTICA) and of the Ministries of Industry, Trade, Finance and Agriculture. But the producers reply that the price is not fixed, but that it can be changed in the light of developments on the national and international markets. To fully understand the problem, it should be stressed that the Governorate of Nabeul contributes 35% of national processed tomato output. The current tomato harvest is estimated at 340 to 370 thousand tonnes, of which 240 to 270 thousand tonnes will go to the processing industries. The anger of growers has already led to protests in Nabeul, but producers in Sidi Bouzid and Kairouan (around 100 thousand tonnes produced per year) are considering to follow in the footsteps of their colleagues and join the protest.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Citizens Clash, Then Cooperate Against Police

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 11 — Since yesterday there has been a curfew from 8 PM to 4 AM in the Tunisian city Sbeïtla, in the Kasserine governorate, location of extremely violent clashes between group of citizens which security forces were forced to act harshly to quell. The curfew was established by the Interior Ministry after groups of inhabitants began throwing rocks at each other for reasons yet to be identified on Saturday evening. When the police intervened to break up the fights, the violence turned on the barracks, which was attacked and sacked. People were injured in the clashes but no numbers have yet been released.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Arab Democracy ‘Impossible’ Without Islamists

Tunis, 11 July (AKI) — The Arab countries will never be democratic without the participation of moderate Islamist groups in the political process, said Rachid Ghannouchi, leader of Tunisia’s Islamist al-Nahda, or Renaissance party.

“A transition to democracy in the Arab world is impossible without a moderate Islamist current, he said in an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI).

“That current in Tunisia is represented by al-Nahda and by the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt,” he said.

After about two decades of exile, Rachid Ghannouchi returned to Tunisia on after a month of popular protests unseated Tunisian president Zine El Abedine Ben Ali who fled to Saudi Arabia.

Ghannouchi, who was born in 1941, doesn’t believe his party can govern alone, but rather must share power with other political forces.

““For this reason I ask that an executive is formed by an national alliance. And the same for Egypt where it isn’t in the interest of the country that the Muslim Brotherhood governs alone,” Ghannouchi said.

Ghannouchi was met at Tunis airport when he arrived to his native Tunisia from London where he lived in exile since 1989. He has said he doesn’t intend to run for president.

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

Middle East


Libya-Turkey: Rebels Ask Ankara for Access to Frozen Assets

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 7 — A Libyan opposition representative has asked Turkey to grant access to frozen Libyan assets in A&T Bank to the rebel-led Transitional National Council, or TNC, as daily Hurriyet reports. Ankara said Wednesday, however, that international law does not allow the frozen Libyan assets to be allocated to the TNC, but that Turkey had signed an additional 200-million USD loan deal with the Libyan opposition. An international legal basis should be established in order to hand off frozen Libyan assets to the TNC, a senior official from the Turkish Foreign Ministry told Hurriyet on Wednesday. “No legal ground has been established by the international figures yet,” the official said. “The current U.N. resolution is not sufficient to create the legal basis for delivering frozen Libyan assets abroad. An additional decision is needed to release those assets.” The issue would be taken up at the Libyan Contact Group meeting scheduled for next week in Istanbul, to which the representatives of Russia and China were also invited, the official added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Panetta: US Forces Against Iran-Supported Militias in Iraq

(AGI) Baghdad — US forces are carrying out military operations against Shiite militias in Iraq. Shiite militias are supported and armed by Iran. This is what the US Secretary of Defence Leon Paneta said upon his surprise arrival in Baghdad. He said: “We are very concerned about the role played by Iran and about the arms it supplies to extermists in Irak. We lost many soldiers because of these attacks in June”.

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



Syria: Turkish and Iranian FM Meet in Tehran

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 11 — Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu met Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi in Tehran on Sunday, as Anatolia news agency reports from the Iranian capital. Holding a joint press conference after his meeting with Salehi, Davutoglu said that they discussed regional issues, adding, “our region is experiencing a very important historical transformation process.” Noting that all countries in the region should exert efforts to restore a more prosperous, peaceful and stable structure in this transformation process, Davutoglu said that peoples in many countries in the region had right and legitimate demands. These demands should be turned into a reform process through peaceful methods, he added.Davutoglu also said that Turkey was against every type of external intervention in the region. On the other hand, the Iranian minister said that Turkey and Iran had rooted relations, adding that the trade volume between the two countries was expected to reach 14 billion USD this year. He expressed hope that the annual trade volume would reach 30 billion USD within the next few years. Noting that they discussed recent developments in Syria during their meeting, Salehi said that Turkey, Iran and Syria were members of a family, and if a problem appeared in one of them, they all should launch initiatives to solve it. Salehi said that it was important to meet the demands of the people, adding that developments in the region affected the whole world.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Syria: Assad Loyalists Raid USA & French Embassies, Clashes

(AGI) Damascus — Supporters of President Bashar Assad burst into the American and French Embassies in Damascus. The protesters got into a shootout with the security forces policing the French Embassy. Yesterday, the Government had expressed its irritation for the visit of the American and French Ambassadors to Hama, the city that is at the core of the protest demonstrations against the regime, and had summoned the diplomatic representatives.

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

South Asia


Indonesia: Muslim Threats Against Yasmin Church in West Java Continue

The faithful still have to pray by the roadside after their church was shut down. Radical Muslim groups continue to disrupt their activities and issue threats against them. The mayor of Bogor still refuses to accept a ruling by the country’s Supreme Court upholding the Church’s right to build its own places of worship.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Diani Budiarto, mayor of Bogor (West Java), does not give up. He still wants to force the members of the Yasmin Protestant Church (GKI) to leave their church building, even though it was built in accordance with the rules. The mayor has refused to uphold a direct order by the Supreme Court of Indonesia, which authorises the Yasmin Church, to build a place of worship on land it owns. Local sources have told AsiaNews that Mayor Budiarto has also tried to stir anti-Christian sentiments among extremist Muslim groups.

On Saturday, the mayor again sent a letter to the Church demanding it stop holding Sunday prayers outside the church building. He also suggested other places where they church congregation could meet, for instance the Harmoni Function Hall.

However, Yasmin Church officials are steadfast in refusing the mayor’s proposal to go elsewhere. They note that the mayor has never said where they could build their new church, and that his latest letter is worthless since it does not provide “any date or useful information”.

On Sunday, hundreds of faithful met again on the road next the church site to celebrate a religious service. However, dozens of radical Muslims swarmed the place, disrupting the function. The same had occurred a week earlier; on that occasion, the protesters tried to interrupt the service by singing.

Rev Ujang Tanusaputra and his secretary, Rev Diah Renata Anggraeni, denied claims by the mayor in his letter that they had accepted to stop praying in the street. Contrary to what the letter said, their Church did not hold any meetings on the indicated dates, namely 6, 7 and 8 July. Instead, they urged the mayor to respect the Supreme Court’s decision.

Mr Bona Sigalingging Sh, a spokesperson for the Church, told AsiaNews “the idea of moving the road service to Harmoni Function Hall is not part of the solution.” Instead, “the mayor created a new problem by ignoring the supremacy of the law. The Church will not be chase away from the road where it meets,” he added.

“Two protesters tried to reach our leader, Jayadi Damanik,” Bona Sigalingging explained. “They told him to persuade the faithful to stop praying by the road, but he rejected their request. Even a Bogor city official intervened, asking me to persuade the community to stop its activities because Muslim groups view them negatively. I rejected the request. The real problem is the fact that the mayor has ignored the Supreme Court decision.”

Minor incidents followed the service. “At least, eight demonstrators got close to Jayadi Damanik and Tomas Wadu Dara to force them to stop and take them away,” Bona Sigalingging said.

The two clergymen said they were taken away and locked up in a room in a nearby building in order to convince them to stop praying in the street. The Yasmin Church will not however give up.

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



Pakistan: State Jobs in Punjab, Government Fails to Respect Quota for Minorities

The quota was introduced by Shahbaz Bhatti, Minister for Minorities, killed on 2 March. Selected candidates only Muslims, Christians protest. A Catholic priest: “Without the Ministry for Minorities we are orphans in our own country.”

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — The Punjab government has ignored the rule that reserves 5% of federal government and provincial governments jobs to minorities, in District Coordination Officer recruitment (DCO) in Khanewal. “The government had announced 65 vacancies in the district administrative office — explains Munir Masih, a Christian — and many Christians have sent their cv’s. But while meeting the requirements, none of them were taken. “ The quotas were introduced by Shahbaz Bhatti (in photo), Minister for Minorities murdered on March 2 last. The job assumptions have sparked protests from Christians, who have demonstrated outside the office of the DCO on July 8.

Fr. Yaqoob Masih, of the Diocese of Khanewal, claims to have personally delivered 15 applications to the DCO: “I was shocked when I saw that the office gave the positions to only Muslim candidates. And now that the federal government has abolished the Ministry for Minorities [cf. AsiaNews, “ Islamabad abolishes Minority Affairs Ministry, as Bhatti murder could go unpunished “], we Christians do not have any body to turn to. We are orphans in our own country. “

However, Rashid Mahmood Langrial, of the DCO of Khanewal, denies any wrongdoing: “The minorities have the right to protest, but it is the responsibility of the Committee to consider the proportion of 5%. I can neither indicate, nor to force any selections. “

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

Sub-Saharan Africa


Do a Deal With Islamist Rebels to Save the Starving, UN Tells Aid Agencies as Kristin Davis Flies in to Support Refugees

Communication should be opened with rebel groups — who are controlling foreign access to large parts of Somalia — in order to ease the ‘absolutely appalling’ suffering of millions facing a famine, brought on by one of the most severe droughts the region has seen in decades.

Antonio Guterres, the UN’s high commissioner for refugees, said the agencies must do what they can to persuade militant groups to allow them access to those badly affected.

As many as 12million east Africans have been hit by drought — with Somalia thought to be the worst-hit — and are now in need of urgent help.

Thousands feeling famine are now streaming towards the war-torn Somalian capital city of Mogadishu — despite fierce fighting between the Government and the insurgent group al-Shabaab.

The rebels now control almost all of Somalia’s centre and south and have refused to allow foreigners to work in their territory. However a spokesman for al-Shabaab said last week that they would be willing to allow in aid for the starving masses.

Yesterday, the head of the UN refugee agency said Sunday that drought-ridden Somalia is the ‘worst humanitarian disaster’ in the world after meeting with refugees who endured unspeakable hardship to reach the world’s largest refugee camp.

The Kenyan camp, Dadaab, is overflowing with tens of thousands of newly arrived refugees forced into the camp by the parched landscape in the region where Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya meet.

Sex And The City actress Kristin Davis visited the camp this weekend to meet refugees as part of her role as an ambassador for Oxfam.

She looked shocked as she met with Somalians and heard how they had fled famine, in some cases walking for weeks.

She met Madina Farah Yusuf, who arrived at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya a week ago after walking for 10 days with her seven children.

On the way she came across four other young children who had lost their parents. She took them in and brought them all to Dadaab, where they are now taking shelter under a tree.

She said: ‘We left Somalia in fear our lives. There was so much hunger and war. Bandits robbed us of our food and clothes on the way. I found these four young children as we came. They were on their own as their mother had died of starvation.

‘We brought everyone here (Dadaab) as we thought we could get help. But we stay under this tree. It gets very cold at night, and the children cry. We only have one blanket.’

The World Food Program estimates that 10million people already need humanitarian aid. The U.N. Children’s Fund estimates that more than 2million children are malnourished and in need of lifesaving action.

Antonio Guterres, appealed to the world to supply the ‘massive support’ needed by thousands of refugees showing up at this camp every week. More than 380,000 refugees now live there.

In Dadaab, Guterres spoke with a Somalia mother who lost three of her children during a 35-day walk to reach the camp. Guterres said Dadaab holds ‘the poorest of the poor and the most vulnerable of the vulnerable.’

The mother, Muslima Aden said: ‘I became a bit insane after I lost them. I lost them in different times on my way.’

Guterres is on a tour of the region to highlight the dire need. On Thursday he was in the Ethiopian camp of Dollo Ado, a camp that is also overflowing.

He said: ‘The mortality rates we are witnessing are three times the level of emergency ceilings.

‘The level of malnutrition of the children coming in is 50 percent. That is enough to explain why a very high level of mortality is inevitable.’

Dr Dejene Kebede, a health officer for UNHCR, said there were 58 deaths in camps in one week alone in June.

Most of the deaths take place at the registration office and transition facilities of the refugee camps in the southeastern Dollo region of Ethiopia, the health officer said.

Up to 2,000 Somali refugees are crossing the border into Ethiopia every day, UNHCR said. Thousands of families arrive in poor conditions often after walking for days in search of food.

Guterres said the influx is overwhelming for UNHCR and other international and local aid organisations: ‘Nothing can compare to what we have seen this month. I believe Somalia represents the worst humanitarian disaster in the world.’

The camps are full and lack capacity to provide the Somali people with food and shelter.

This makes effective health treatment almost impossible, said Jerome Souquet, head of Doctors Without Borders at the Dollo Ado camps.

He said: ‘We can treat the severely malnourished children, but they will definitely come back to us underfed because there is not enough food and almost all of them suffer from diarrhea.’

Habiba Osman Ibrahim, a 76-year old Somali refugee from the al-Shabab-controlled Luk region of Somalia, said she walked for three days with her two underfed grandchildren. Al-Shabab is Somalia’s dangerous militant group. It had forced out all international aid groups, but earlier this month said they could return considering the desperate conditions.

The epicenter of the drought lies on the three-way border shared by Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, a nomadic region where families heavily depend on the health of their livestock. Uganda and Djibouti have also been hit.

The World Food Program said it expects 10 million people in the Horn of Africa to require food assistance. WFP currently provides food aid to 6 million people in East Africa.

Somalis desperate for food are also overrunning Dadaab, the world’s largest refugee camp in neighboring Kenya, which is seeing some 10,000 new arrivals each week, six times the average at this time last year.

The U.N.’s refugee agency says Dadaab’s three camps now host more than 382,000 people, while thousands more are waiting at reception centers outside the camp.

Yesterday, a U.S. official revealed his fears that the Ethiopian Government might be underestimating its own country’s needs in the worsening famine crisis.

Officials announced 4.5million Ethiopians needed food aid — a 40 per cent increase on last year — but aid agencies believe the actual number to be higher. The three-country drought crisis is also devastating communities in Kenya and Somalia.

Jason Frasier, mission director of US Aid in Ethiopia, said: ‘We are concerned that we are underestimating the situation, especially in the southern provinces.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



EU Countries Recognise South Sudan

All 27 EU member states have officially endorsed the independence of South Sudan despite ongoing differences on recognition of Kosovo and, potentially, Palestine. “On this historic day, the EU and its member states welcome the Republic of South Sudan as a new independent state,” the EU said in a formal communique on Sunday (9 July) after the flag raising ceremony in the new capital of Juba on Saturday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Sudan: What Next?

Nothing will change in Sudan until the world addresses the religious element of its conflicts.

The recent declaration of independence by South Sudan from its northern neighbor is certainly a welcome event. After two civil wars (1955-1972 and 1983-2005) that took the lives of more than 2.5 million Christians and animists, secession was the only reasonable option. Of course, there are immediate challenges for South Sudan, as it seems unlikely that 7,000 UN peacekeeping troops can protect a new nation that has vast oil reserves and a population living largely in abject poverty.

But what about North Sudan’s future? One noteworthy development in the north is the aerial bombardment targeting civilians in the Nuba Mountains, which are part of the petroleum-rich province of South Kordofan that will be the main oil producing region for North Sudan, following the south’s secession. The Nuba Mountains — once a base for the Sudan People’s Liberation Army that fought against the Arab-led government in Khartoum during the second civil war — are primarily inhabited by the Nuban people, a mixed Christian and Muslim population with their own language and culture.

Indeed, as Amar Amoun (a Nuban MP in North Sudan’s opposition) says, the bombing is a deliberate tactic to depopulate the Nuba Mountains. With Nuban rebels starting to take up arms and hoping to achieve more civil rights or independence for the Nuban people, war with the central government appears likely, hence the potential for another humanitarian catastrophe as in Darfur.

Here is the heart of the issue. It’s all very well to have South Sudan secede, but the root of the problem has still not been addressed: namely, the traditional doctrines of jihad that underlie the Islamist and Arab supremacist ideology of the ruling elite in Khartoum.

           — Hat tip: Derius [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Barge Carrying 40 People Intercepted

(AGI) Catanzaro — A barge carrying 40 non-EU citizens has been intercepted by two Financial Police motor boats. The operation took place between Catanzaro Lido and Sellia Marina. The vessel, which was 16 metres long and had Arab writing on the sides, was then escorted to the port of Crotone.

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



Boat Sets Sail From Lampedusa With 1,121 Migrants on Board

Lampedusa, 11 July (AKI) — A ship set sail from Lampedusa on Monday with 1,121 illegal immigrants on board who landed on the tiny southern Italian island over the weekend.

Since the unrest that has hit North Africa this year, over 41,000 migrants have reached Lampedusa, whose sole detention centre can hold a maximum of 850 people. The latest immigrants land on Lampedusa were due to be transferred to holding centres in Sicily and on the southern Italian mainland.

Earlier on Monday, police arrested ten migrants suspected of people trafficking and of fomenting riots that broke out on Friday inside a holding centre in Pozzallo, on the southern Sicilian cost.

After a surge of Tunisian arrivals in early 2011 following the unrest in the North African country that toppled longtime leader Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from power, most migrants now reaching Lampedusa and nearby islands have set sail from Libya.

Most hail from sub-Saharan Africa and are more likely to gain political asylum than Tunisians, who are considered economic migrants.

The European Union’s border protection agency Frontex said in June that Italy has replaced Greece as the chief route for illegal migration to Europe.

The surge in illegal migration to Europe from North Africa has sparked rows between EU states, with Rome arguing that other EU member states must share the burden of the influx of illegal immigrants to the bloc.

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



How Immigrants Become “Muslims”

Terror attacks, political manoeuvering by rightwing parties and oversimplification in the media explain why Muslims in Switzerland are perceived as a threat.

The National Research Programme 58 study into religious pluralism says immigrants from predominantly Muslim countries have been singled out even though this group has no reason to be suspected as fundamentalist.

The research, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation, was led by Patrik Ettinger and Kurt Imhof of Zurich University.

The authors point out that the immigrants in question come from very diverse countries like Turkey, Macedonia and Morocco and practise their faith in a variety of ways, seeing themselves first and foremost as members of a particular ethnic group.

Their research focused on how often and in what way Muslims were mentioned in domestic newspapers and public television reports beginning in the 1960s. Parliamentary debates were also included, and how these were covered in the media.

Oversimplification, the study says, has increased among both politicians and in the media in recent years, leading to the approval by voters of a ban on the construction of new minarets in 2009.

“It wasn’t as much the media reports about the 9/11 attacks as the bombings in Madrid and London, as well as the Danish caricatures of the Muslim prophet. The reporting on these events led to the creation of the image of a violent Islam and a clash of civilisations,” Ettinger told swissinfo.ch.

Political debate

“It was in particular the Swiss People’s Party and to a lesser extent the Federal Democratic Union who took the image of Muslims out of an international context and put it into a national one,” Ettinger pointed out.

In this way Muslim immigrants became “the Muslims”.

Previously, Ettinger explained, they were categorised according to their ethnicity; like Turks or Bosnians. “That doesn’t mean that immigrants were regarded favourably, rather problems were put down to ethnic traits rather than religion.”

The researcher added that a broad debate about Switzerland’s role in Europe also played a role. In the end, the political elite were discredited, enabling the People’s Party to take advantage of the situation and promote its own version of what it means to be Swiss, with an emphasis on disassociation from foreigners.

“There were also grave fears that Protestant cities in German-speaking Switzerland would become predominantly Catholic when waves of Italians immigrated in the 1960s — which is very similar to today’s fears of an Islamicisation of Switzerland,” Ettinger said.

“And just as few Catholics from Italy and Spain were fundamentalist in their views, the same can be said of the majority of Muslims here now.”

Questionable value

In response to the findings, the People’s Party said the study results were of “questionable value” highlighting the fact that since 1970, the Muslim population in Switzerland has grown from 16,000 to more than 350,000.

“Coverage of Islam in the study has no bearing on the real situation in the country and popular perceptions,” People’s Party General-Secretary Martin Baltisser told swissinfo.ch.

Baltisser said integration issues, respect for the rule of law, and attitudes toward family life, school and public institutions were reasons for debate.

He also said public appearances by exponents of the Islamic community played a part. The authors of the study, according to Baltisser, have presented a “peculiar understanding of causality”. Public perception is much more complex, he argued.

However, support for the findings came from the imam of the Bosnian community in Zurich, Sakib Halilovic. Halilovic said the results pointed in the right direction and the research apparently had been done seriously.

“I think the statement is spot on that the media have failed to differentiate between global terror on the one hand and Islam on the other, and from Muslims in Switzerland, most of whom are integrated.”…

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



Two Tons of Lead Batteries Recovered From Lampedusa Seabed

(AGI) Agrigento — About 1.2 tons of lead batteries, 300 litres of sulphuric acid and 100 kilos of plastic from vessels transporting immigrants have been recovered from Lampedusa port’s seabed by experts from the Coast Guard in cooperation with the National Consortium for Collection and Recycling. This completed the recovery of 7o lead batteries in the Molo Madonnina area and those surrounding the port. In an operation supervised by the Harbour Master in cooperation with the Lampedusa Island Natural Reserve Organization, these accumulators from vessels carrying migrants and also from private ones were all collected, and will now be professionally recycled by staff from Palermo-based Brugnano s.r.L. appointed by Cobat for operations in Sicily. Legambiente and Marevivo also took part in this operation .

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

General


Ethane Lakes in a Red Haze: Titan’s Uncanny Moonscape

We knew very little about this strange world before NASA’s Cassini spacecraft arrived at Saturn seven years ago. Since then, the ringed planet has completed a quarter of an orbit around the sun and Titan has passed through its spring equinox. In that time, Cassini has swooped by Titan almost 80 times and has released the Huygens lander onto its surface. Together they have penetrated the haze that hides Titan’s surface to reveal modest mountains, vast fields of sand dunes, rocks, and even streams, lakes and weather.

Titan looks surprisingly familiar, although it is a cold, dimly lit world made from unfamiliar materials, says planetary scientist Elizabeth Turtle of Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Baltimore, Maryland. “The rocks are water ice and the lakes are methane and light hydrocarbons, yet we see processes very similar to what we see on Earth.” So far, there are no recognisable signs of organic life. That’s not surprising: by terrestrial standards, Titan is a deep freeze with surface temperatures at a chilly -180°C. Yet Titan is very much alive in the sense that its atmosphere and surface are changing before our eyes. Clouds drift through the haze and rain falls from them to erode stream-like channels draining into shallow lakes. Vast dune fields that look as if they were lifted from the Sahara sprawl along Titan’s equator, yet the dark grains resemble ground asphalt rather than sand. It is a bizarrely different world that looks eerily like home.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Tough Turtles Survived Dino-Killing Meteor

What does it take to survive a catastrophic meteor impact? The tough turtles of the Cretaceous know a bit about that; they seem to have survived the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs because of their slow metabolisms and aquatic lifestyles, researchers now say. “Turtles are very tough animals, if times get tough they can go into a state of suspended animation,” said study researcher Tyler Lyson, of Yale University. “Animals that were living in the water were kind of protected against whatever killed the land plants and the dinosaurs.” Essentially, since their bodily processes were so slow, needing very little energy, they could survive on sparse resources during and after the wipeout of dinosaurs.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sharks Fin Soup Bans Don’t Stop Strong Demand

Shark fin soup has been served as a delicacy for centuries in China and elsewhere. But it’s more than just an expensive bowl of soup; it’s considered to have special medicinal properties and is used in Chinese medicine. It’s one of many folk remedies and alternative medicine cures threatening endangered species around the world. The shark fin industry has come under mounting pressure in recent months. Shark populations have declined dramatically in recent years, fueled in part by the demand for shark fins. Scientists estimate as many as 73 million sharks are killed annually for their fins. The sharks are often thrown back into the ocean to die after their fins have been cut off. Some shark species populations have dropped by 90 percent, studies find.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110710

Financial Crisis
» China: EU Bailout Leaves ‘Fundamental Problems’ Unresolved
» Eurozone Split as it Takes Fresh Stab to Ease Greece Crisis
» Government of Sociopaths
» Greece: Church Property Exempt From State Sell-Offs
» IMF Rewards Greece for Its Debt-Reduction Efforts
» Italy: Debt Payment Costs Risk Jumping $14 Billion a Year
» Italy: Geronzi: Cragnotti Given Jail Terms for Cirio Collapse
» Italy: Food, Wine Exports Outstrip Cars and Bikes
» Real Unemployment Rises to 16.2% in June
 
USA
» Is This Why White House Funded ‘Guns-to-Drug-Lords’ Scheme?
» The Insidious Kumbaya on American College Campuses
» U.S. Holding Millions in Aid to Pakistan, Says Obama’s Chief of Staff
 
Europe and the EU
» France: Strauss-Kahn Faces Paris Inquiry Into Attempted Rape Case
» Germany: Spider Shuts Down Saarland Supermarket
» German Prize for Putin Stirs Controversy
» Greece’s Electricity Charges Among Lowest in the EU
» Italy: Four Arrested Over High-Speed Train Link Protests to Stay in Jail
» Italy: Finance Minister Gives Up €8,500/Month Apartment Paid for by Ex-Aide
» Italy: Islamic Finance Volume, USD 2 Trillion in 5 Years
» Italy: MP Accused of Corruption and Conspiracy
» Italy: Naples to Send Trash Outside Region
» Italy: Berlusconi Firm Fined 560 Million Euros in Bribery Case
» Meat BBQ? A Battle in Northern Italy Over Brown Bears in Parks and on Plates
» Netherlands: Rosenthal: ‘Government Will Not Gag Wilders’
» Skilled German Muslims Held Back by Stereotypes
» Spain: After 28 Years Socialists Lose Extremadura
» Sweden: Academy Blocks Iranians From Flight Training
» Switzerland: Basel: Proposal for Muslim Old-Age Home
» Top Czech Scientist Outed as Communist STB Collaborator
» Voters Desert the Sweden Democrats
» What is Wrong With This Tour De France Cyclist’s Leg?!
 
Balkans
» Albanian Town Thanks George W. Bush With Statue
» Serbia: Minister Apologises to Roma Gypsy Family for Police Brutality
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Jobless Attempt Suicide, Arrested 4 Months Later
» Algeria: Volunteers Working Against Child Abuse
» Algeria: Army Will Lead Fight Against Terrorism
» Bossi Says Napolitano Wanted War in Libya Too
» Egypt: Christians Registered as Muslims Can Change Their Status
» Egypt: Alleged Abductions of Young Coptic Women Fuel Christian-Muslim Conflict
» Egypt: Birth of “Liberal Egyptians”, Sawiris’ Secular Party
» Egypt: Muslim Sisterhood, Ready to Participate in Public Life
» First Meeting on Islamic Finance in Tunis
» Gaddafi Counterattack Underway 50 Km From Tripoli
» Libya: Berlusconi Reiterates Opposition to NATO Mission
» Libyan Crisis ‘Doesn’t Threaten’ Italian Energy Supply
» Tunisian Amazigh Fighting for Equal Rights
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Israel: Maximum Alert, Pro-Palestinian Activists Stopped
 
Middle East
» Saudi Prince Says No Change in News Corp Investment
» Syria: Mar Musa Monastery on Last Legs, Monks Demand Help
 
Russia
» Muscovites Suffer Hours in Traffic for a Weekend at the Dacha
» Orthodox Nationalists Attempt to Prevent Jehovah’s Witnesses Congress
» RWE Said to be in Investment Talks With Russia’s Gazprom
 
South Asia
» Afghanistan: Twenty-Four De-Mining Workers Kidnapped
» Canadians Eye Home Front as They Quit Afghanistan
» Clashes Between Police and Islamic Demonstrators in Dacca
» Indonesia: Govt to Give Migrant Workers Mobile Phones
» Janet Levy: Is the Fate of the Infidels Tied to the Buddhas?
» Over 1,400 Arrested, Tear Gas Fired in Malaysia Protest
» Pakistan: Mullen Called ‘Irresponsible’ For Accusing Govt of ‘Sanctioning Reporter’s Killing
» Police: Islamists Clash in Bangladesh, Dozens Hurt
» Sri Lanka: Sinhalese and Tamil Muslims Together for Rizana Nafeek
» Video Shows Children of Killed Taliban Fighters Being Trained to Kill Our Troops
 
Far East
» China Throws Out ‘Flashmob’ Swedish Blogger
 
Australia — Pacific
» Carbon Tax: Pensioners to Receive Compensation
» New Australian Law to Make Muslims Lift Veils
 
Immigration
» Coast Guard Rescue 299 Migrants Off Lampedusa Waters
» Fifteen Immigrants Rescued Off Sant’Antioco Coast
» More Eastern Europeans in the Netherlands
» Norwegians Claim Immigration Policy Failing
» Sweden: ‘Lower Wages Will Give More Immigrants Jobs’
 
Culture Wars
» Indian Health Minster Creates Stir With Homosexuality Remarks
 
General
» 1.5 Million Sexless Years No Good for Stick Insects
» Governments Turn to NGOs as Proxy Conflict Negotiators

Financial Crisis


China: EU Bailout Leaves ‘Fundamental Problems’ Unresolved

China’s ambassador to the EU has said Greece might default despite EU and IMF efforts, but indicated that Beijing will continue to support the single currency. “Despite the recent payment of €12 billion by the EU and IMF, some of the fundamental problems in Greece have not yet been resolved … People are still discussing if there will be a restructuring [of Greek debt] or a default, obviously a restructuring would have much smaller negative consequences,” ambassador Song Zhe told press at an event in Brussels on Friday (8 July). Reacting to analysts who say Beijing is buying risky bonds in Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain in order to gain political influence in the EU, Song said the purchases have no “suspicious” motives.

With EU-China trade growing to €480 billion in 2010, the ambassador noted: “We can build stronger trade ties only by investing in a sound EU economy. We hope in this way to bring back the stability of the euro so that in the future we can move ahead [on trade issues] more smoothly.” Song predicted the European Union as such will emerge from the crisis. But when asked if he thinks China will get its money back from Athens, he answered: “Risk goes along with any kind of investment.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Eurozone Split as it Takes Fresh Stab to Ease Greece Crisis

Eurozone leaders head into fresh talks Monday to craft a new rescue package for Greece hoping to bridge widening splits over private sector involvement as Europe’s debt crisis threatens to spiral. After a tumultuous week that saw debt contagion hit Italian banks and Spanish bonds, and borrowing costs peak for eurozone struggler Ireland, finance ministers from the 17-nation area meet from 1300 GMT. Their counterparts from the full EU 27 will join them on Tuesday. Gathered just a week after plucking Athens from default this summer — clearing a 12-billion-euro ($17 billion) slice due from its first 2010 bailout — eurozone leaders have delayed a final decision on a second rescue until September. Observers are not expecting a quick fix at this week’s talks.

Instead, it will focus on how to get banks to bear a fair share of involvement in a second Greek bailout — and in such as a way as to avoid it being interpreted as a credit default that would ripple across the single currency zone. The prickly issue in the last days has exposed sharp splits in the euro-front, and comes days ahead of much-awaited July 15 data on European bank stress-tests. Differences that flew into the open after a market-rattling decision last week by Standard & Poor’s ratings agency need to be addressed swiftly, EU sources said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Government of Sociopaths

It’s politically risky to raise taxes. It’s politically risky to cut spending. The one thing that isn’t politically risky to do is go deeper and deeper into debt. Whatever agreement evolves or devolves out of congress it will likely allow Republicans to satisfy their base by cutting spending a little, allow Democrats to satisfy their base by raising taxes a little, and kick the ball down the road by going deeper into debt.

The real subject of this is not Medicare or the Stimulus plan— it’s long term thinking.

We did not suddenly go to sleep and then wake up the next day with a political class that acted this way. Or with CEO’s that act this way. The erosion of long term thinking is progressive. It begins slowly before becoming pervasive.

[…]

Lack of long term thinking manifests itself as a lack of responsibility.. The difference is not in intelligence. Very intelligent people show no grasp of responsibility and no understanding of consequences. ‘Stupid’ behavior by intelligent people is often a symptom of that. Sociopaths, who often have very high IQ’s, yet a poor understanding of consequences, are at the farthest limit of that category…

What explains this behavior? Socialization and empathy. Sociopaths are often quite bright, but it is the company of other people that makes us fully human. Sociopaths are too detached from other people to be able to rationally calculate long term consequences in a social context.

[…]

Worsening symptoms leave [sociopaths] even more detached. They use “I” often. Everything that happens is processed through their own experience. Everything becomes about themselves. Celebrity becomes a consuming craze. They feel driven to be witnessed by other people, otherwise they feel unreal. The truth becomes a mutable thing to them. They recreate it at every turn and forget that they have done it. Nothing is their fault anymore. Nothing at all.

Finally there is a stage so near that of the sociopath that it hardly makes any difference anymore. Long term consequences vanish. Everything takes place in the present. Reality is infinitely mutable. They have no patience for obstacles. Life to them is a game. And they are determined to win it. The answers to everything seem clear, and do not require any reality testing. Everything either exists to accommodate them, or it shouldn’t be allowed to exist at all.

What does a country run by sociopaths look like? It looks a lot like our own actually. Lots of short term fixes. Lots of ‘keep this thing running’ pragmatism. Short attention spans. No sense of responsibility. And no thought for the future.

This is the problem with filling a cabinet full of bright people who don’t understand responsibility or long term thinking. While their intelligence should allow them to solve most problems, the situations they are confronted with are social, not abstract. And they lack empathy for the people involved, any sense of them as individuals, and any real understanding that they will also have to live with the long term consequences of those decisions.

To the Sociopath, most situations come down to, “How Do I Make Person X Do What I Want.” This sounds a lot like the Cass Sunstein theory of ‘Nudges’…

[…]

Put bluntly, the behaviors which are common to politicians are also common to sociopaths. But the worst of these is irresponsibility. Without responsibility, there is no self-correcting mechanism. The experience of negative consequences does not lead to avoidance of the same behavior.

…there are also entire societies where the general population acts and thinks this way. Where empathy is an alien notion, where doing whatever you please if you think you can get away with it is the norm, and where no one thinks in the long term. And we are slowly headed that way.

In the late 20th century, an economic system built on hard work and inventiveness, was replaced with one built on temporary bubbles and salesmanship. A culture with thousands of years of moral and intellectual tradition, was forced to make way for one built on egotism and instant impulse satiation. A nation of few laws and many mores, was replaced with a nation of a million laws and few mores.

Which economic system and culture looks more like a sociopath habitat, the one we had before or the one we have now?

[…]

READ THE WHOLE THING…

           — Hat tip: Nat [Return to headlines]



Greece: Church Property Exempt From State Sell-Offs

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 7 — The property held by the powerful Greek Orthodox Church will be excluded from the list of those under the State Property Valorisation Office — the authority to be tasked with the privatisation programme provided for by the agreement between Athens and its creditors — and will not be sold to foreigners. Moreover, priests’ salaries will continue to be paid by the Greek state, while as concerns the new tax law being drawn up, there will be a consultation with Church representatives before the presentation of the draft law in Parliament. This was decided — according to reports in Greek newspapers today — by Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos and the archbishop of Athens and all of Greece Ieronymos in a meeting in which all the members of the Holy Synod of the Greek Church took part. However, a special body will be set up through a collaboration between the Church and the State to valorise Church property, with the revenue to be allocated exclusively to charity. “The Church,” the minister said at the end of the meeting, “already contributes in a decisive manner and is willing to contribute even more towards getting out of the crisis that Greece is dealing with.” The archbishop Ieronymos instead said that “in this country the Church has always stood by the side of the people, it has fought and given what it could. It will do the same in this difficult situation, but under some conditions as has been decided and as will be shown in deeds done.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



IMF Rewards Greece for Its Debt-Reduction Efforts

The IMF has given the Greek government’s austerity measures the thumbs up by releasing the latest tranche of its first bailout. Its new managing director, however, warned that much work was still to be done. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday released 3.2 billion euros ($4.6 billion) of an emergency loan to Greece, the fifth loan disbursement to Greece that is part of a 110-billion-euro EU and IMF bailout package meant to help the debt-stricken country avoid bankruptcy. Following a meeting of the IMF’s executive board, the global lender’s newly elected managing director, Christine Lagarde, praised the Greek government’s efforts to climb out from under its mountain of debt. Taking steps to reduce public debt is a condition set out by the EU and the IMF for releasing the funds to Greece.

“The fiscal deficit is being reduced, the economy is rebalancing, and competitiveness is gradually improving,” Lagarde said in a statement following a meeting of the board at the IMF’s Washington headquarters. “However, with many important structural reforms still to be implemented, significant policy challenges remain,” she said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Debt Payment Costs Risk Jumping $14 Billion a Year

Rome, 7 July (AKI/Bloomberg) — Italy risks becoming a debt crisis casualty if bond yields remain at their current levels because annual interest costs will jump by more than $14 billion, according to Gary Jenkins at Evolution Securities Ltd.

Yields on Italy’s 10-year bonds yesterday exceeded 5 percent for the first time since 2008, threatening to add an extra 9.7 billion euros to coupon payments, Jenkins, London-based head of fixed income at the brokerage, wrote in a note. The nation has more than 860 billion euros of notes maturing in the next five years, he wrote.

Italy has so far avoided being sucked into the crises that have engulfed Greece, Ireland and Portugal, and which threaten Spain. Lawmakers are seeking to balance the budget by 2014 and plan to push deficit-cutting measures worth 40 billion euros though Parliament later this year.

“If contagion spreads to the point where Spain is unable to fund itself in the market and there is concern over private participation in any bailouts, it is difficult to see how highly indebted Italy could escape unhurt,” Jenkins wrote. “Debt reduction will become considerably harder if contagion spreads and funding costs increase further.”

The nation, which has more than 1.6 trillion euros of bonds outstanding, the world’s third-largest pile of debt after the U.S. and Japan, already spends more than 4.25 percent of economic output servicing its debt, according to Jenkins. Each percentage point increase in rates would cost it about 9 billion euros, or 0.6 percent of gross domestic product, if applied over the whole 2011-2016 period, according to the note.

Italy also has 260 billion euros of one-year notes, according to Evolution. While the average yield on one-year notes is 1.8 percent over the past year, that has now increased to about 2.25 percent, adding 1.2 billion euros to servicing costs, Jenkins wrote.

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



Italy: Geronzi: Cragnotti Given Jail Terms for Cirio Collapse

Pair given four-year and nine-year sentences respectively

(ANSA) — Rome, July 5 — Former Cirio chairman Sergio Cragnotti and Cesare Geronzi, until recently one of Italy’s top financiers, have been given nine-year and four-year jail terms for the fraudulent bankruptcy of the foods conglomerate in 2003.

Three of the children of Cragnotti, a prominent figure in Italy before the collapse as he was the chairman of Serie A soccer club Lazio as well, were also among some 25 people convicted of offences related to the case, along with his son-in-law. Geronzi was convicted over the alleged role of Banca di Roma, a bank he was in charge of at the time which is now part of the Unicredit group. Geronzi, also the former chairman of Mediobanca, recently lost his leading role in Italian capitalism when he stepped down from the helm of insurance giant Generali in April.

In Italy jail terms do not usually take effect until the appeals process is exhausted, with two appeals granted in each case.

“I’m relaxed because I still consider myself to have acted correctly, within my statutory responsibilities, performing a job that is natural to me, that of a banker, without committing any crimes,” said Geronzi.

Cirio collapsed in July 2003 after defaulting on more than one billion euros in bonds. Banca di Roma came under investigation when it surfaced that it had been selling Cirio bonds when there was a conflict of interests since it was one of the group’s creditors.

Cirio’s collapse left about 30,000 small investors holding worthless bonds and led to accusations that Banca di Roma had sold the bonds in order to shift the group’s debt off their books.

The bank maintained it was not aware that Cirio was in financial difficulty.

Unicredit has been fined 200 million euros for Banca di Roma’s alleged role in the bankruptcy.

Founded in the mid-19th century, Cirio was Italy’s oldest food canner.

Cirio’s collapse was followed by that of Italian dairy and foods giant Parmalat.

Parmalat went under in December 2003 in a false accounting scam that resulted in estimated debts of 14.5 billion euros.

The dairy multinational’s meltdown left more than 150,000 investors with virtually worthless bonds.

After his arrest at the end of 2004, Parmalat’s disgraced founder and ex-CEO Calisto Tanzi accused Geronzi of “pressuring” him to buy the Eurolat milk company from Cirio at a price far above its market value.

Geronzi denied Tanzi’s accusations which he said were “self-serving”.

However, the operation raised some eyebrows because proceeds from the sale were given directly to Banca di Roma, which not only had lent large sums of capital to Cirio but was also involved in placing both Parmalat and Cirio bonds with small investors.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Food, Wine Exports Outstrip Cars and Bikes

Agro business up 23% in five years, auto down 11%

(ANSA) — Rome, July 7 — Exports of Italian food and wine have started to outstrip those of cars, motorbikes, tractors and other vehicles, the Coldiretti farmers association said Thursday.

In the first quarter of the year, it said, agro exports amounted to 7.1 billion euros while automotive exports were no higher than 6.6 billion euros.

Over the last five years, Coldiretti said, Italian food and wine exports rose 23% while motor vehicle exports fell 11%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Real Unemployment Rises to 16.2% in June

The real unemployment rate rose to 16.2 percent in June, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported on Friday, marking a return to levels not seen since January 2011.

The “real” unemployment rate is technically a combination of three measures of unemployment: the unemployment rate, the number of people working part-time who want full-time work, and the number of people “marginally attached” to the workforce.

Those who have left the workforce but would still like to be employed are considered marginally attached.

This figure is considered a more complete measure of unemployment because it captures a broader spectrum of those affected by the weak economy. Merely counting those who apply for unemployment benefits as “unemployed” does not fully account for everyone who is out of work or underemployed.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

USA


Is This Why White House Funded ‘Guns-to-Drug-Lords’ Scheme?

Misleading data target gun owners in scandal that could rock Obama

Under the Obama administration, a controversial government project that runs guns into Mexico has contributed to fraudulent statistics seemingly targeting U.S. gun owners.

The misleading data raise questions about the intentions of Project Gunrunner, which some believe could be a defining scandal for the White House.

In February 2008, William Hoover, Assistant Director for Field Operations of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF, testified before Congress that over 90 percent of the firearms that have been recovered in or intercepted in transport to Mexico originated from various sources within the U.S.

[…]

After a series of independent reports contradicted the ATF claims, however, the bureau then admitted in November 2010 that its 90-percent figure cited to Congress “could be misleading” because it applied only to the small portion of guns verified through its eTrace system, an Internet-based firearm database that Project Gunrunner was build around.

The ATF admitted its statistics were based on the guns it traced, all of which originated in the U.S., thus skewing the data.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Insidious Kumbaya on American College Campuses

On June 7, President Obama appointed Azizah al-Hibri, a Muslim professor and scholar, to the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. Obama has already taken al-Hibri’s advice to stand up for Muslims against their American critics. According to Daniel Greenfield’s article entitled “The Professor Who Sharia’ed Bill Clinton” (FrontPage Mag.com article of June 14), Al-Hibri called on Obama to do so at an ISNA meeting two months before her appointment, and she has spent a good deal of her time promoting Islamic law in the United States advocating that Sharia law is superior to American law.

This April, preceding his appointment of Al-Hibri, President Obama set in motion the Interfaith and Community Service Challenge, an initiative to foster tolerance in religion on college campuses. He designated Eboo Patel, a Rhodes Scholar heading the Interfaith Youth Core, which is an organization that trains “interfaith fellows.” Mr. Patel has been known to delegitimize fears of Islam, and he once said that the polarizing opinions held by Franklin Graham and Amjad Choudry were the same—nothing that a cup of coffee together wouldn’t solve (Washington Post, Oct 4, 2010). Patel’s Interfaith Youth Core recruits student participants in order to improve inter-religious relations on campus and alleviate potential religious conflict stemming from religious diversity.

Apparently, Mr. Patel, who was named by Islamica Magazine as one of the ten young Muslim visionaries shaping Islam in America, and who served on the president’s religion advisory council, has identified religious divides and discovered real solutions to this pervasive American problem. But shaping Islam in America is what the Interfaith Youth Core is really about.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Holding Millions in Aid to Pakistan, Says Obama’s Chief of Staff

Washington (CNN) — The United States is holding back $800 million in aid to Pakistan, President Barack Obama’s chief of staff said Sunday.

Appearing on ABC’s “This Week,” White House Chief of Staff William Daley confirmed a report in the New York Times that the aid was being withheld.

While Pakistan has “been an important ally in the fight on terrorism,” Daley said, “now they’ve taken some steps that have given us reason to pause on some of the aid which we’re giving to the military, and we’re trying to work through that.”

A spokesman for the Pakistani military told CNN the military was not informed of any such plan.

“Since we haven’t received anything in writing,” Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas said, “we will not comment on this matter.”

Senior U.S. officials, who declined to speak on the record because of the sensitivity of the situation, said the curtailing of aid, which represents a third of U.S. security assistance to Pakistan, was done both to pressure Pakistan to crack down on militants and as retribution for expelling U.S. military trainers.

The funding includes $300 million to compensate Pakistan for the cost of deploying more than 100,000 troops to its border with Afghanistan to combat extremists. Hundreds of millions in training assistance and military hardware is also on the chopping block.

Additionally, officials said that still other portions of the aid cannot be sent because Pakistan has denied visas to American personnel required to operate the equipment that includes helicopter spare parts, radios and night vision goggles.

“In many cases the personnel and the equipment comes as a package,” one senior official said.

The aid also includes rifles, ammunition and body armor that Army Special Forces trainers took home with them after Pakistan threw them out of the country after shutting down an American program to train Pakistani troops combating the Taliban and al Qaeda in the country’s tribal and border areas.

“While the Pakistani military leadership tells us this is a temporary step, the presence of our trainers is having the immediate consequence of preventing us from delivering a significant amount of military assistance,” a senior State Department official said.

“We remain committed to helping Pakistan build its capabilities, but we have communicated to Pakistani officials on numerous occasions that we require certain support in order to provide certain assistance. Working together, allowing an appropriate presence for U.S. military personnel, providing necessary visas, and affording appropriate access are among the things that would allow us to effectively provide assistance,” the official added.

The move comes amid intense pressure among lawmakers to halt U.S. security assistance. Last week the House approved a Pentagon budget bill than limits funding for Pakistan’s military until the secretaries of defense and state submit a report to Congress explaining how the money will be spent to combat militants.

“When it comes to our military aid,” Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told a Senate panel last month, “we are not prepared to continue providing that at the pace we were providing it unless and until we see certain steps taken.”

Tensions between the United States and Pakistan, further aggravated by the U.S. raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbotabad, continue to mount. Last week Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen stepped up U.S. rhetoric against Pakistan, becoming the first American official to publicly accuse Pakistan of sanctioning the murder of journalist, Saleem Shahzad, who was critical of the regime.

The Pakistani military and Inter-Services Intelligence agency denied any involvement in Shahzad’s killing, and Pakistani Information Minister Firdous Ashiq Awan called Mullen’s statement irresponsible.

The senior State Department official said that while the United States wants a “constructive and mutually beneficial relationship with Pakistan,” Washington is urging Islamabad to strengthen its cooperation toward the two countries’ “shared security goals.”

“We are taking a very clear-eyed approach to our relationship with Pakistan — weighing both the importance of a continued long-term relationship and the importance of near-term action on key issues,” the official said.

On the ABC program Sunday, Daley said the U.S. relationship with Pakistan “is very complicated.”

“Obviously there’s still a lot of pain that the political system in Pakistan is feeling by virtue of the raid that we did to get Osama bin Laden,” although the United States has “no regrets,” he said. The relationship with Pakistan “is difficult, but it must be made to work over time,” he said.

“But until we get through these difficulties, we’ll hold back some of the money that the American taxpayers have committed to give.”

Responding to whether that figure was “some $800 million,” Daley said, “Yep.”

Abbas, the Pakistani military spokesman, told CNN, “We have said in the past that military aid should be redirected to the civilian area where it’s needed more.”

“As far as the impact is concerned,” he added, “we have stated in the past we have conducted operations against militants in the tribal region — and they have been successful operations — using our own resources without taking any external support. Those operations in the tribal areas will continue.”

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


France: Strauss-Kahn Faces Paris Inquiry Into Attempted Rape Case

(AGI) Paris — Prosecutors in Paris have started an inquiry into a journalist’s claims that Strauss-Kahn tried to rape her. It was announced by judicial sources who confirmed that a preliminary inquiry is underway. Tristan Banon said she was sexually assaulted in 2003 by the former IMF managing director who allegedly tried to rape her in a Paris flat during an interview.

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



Germany: Spider Shuts Down Saarland Supermarket

Experts in the western German town of Bexbach are still searching a supermarket for a spider that jumped out of a Colombian fruit crate on Friday. The eight-legged escape artist is thought to be a highly venomous banana spider. A spokesman for the grocery store told German news agency DAPD that the supermarket remained closed to ensure customer safety. He said experts were “frantically” working to track down the creature, though there had still been no trace of it. Staff from the zoo in Neunkirchen are at the scene, and zoo director Norbert Fritsch said the risk is not to be underestimated if the arachnid in question was, indeed, a banana spider. He said the spider’s bites can be life-threatening, even for a healthy adult. Banana spiders can grow to be 13 centimeters in size. The term refers to two genera of spiders, one of which is large but relatively harmless, and another highly venomous species.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Prize for Putin Stirs Controversy

A prominent German political prize will go to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, a spokesman said Sunday, in a move sharply criticised in the German press due to his rights record. The Quadriga Prize, bestowed on the anniversary of German reunification on October 3, is a private award that recognises “role models for enlightenment, dedication and the public good,” the Werkstatt Deutschland organisation said. Its board of trustees is comprised of top officials from across the political spectrum, journalists and business executives. Previous winners include European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso, former Czech president Vaclav Havel and Serbian President Boris Tadic.

Werkstatt Deutschland spokesman Stephan Clausen confirmed reports that Putin would accept the prize in Berlin. However he admitted that the board’s choice was a matter of “heated debate,” with Greens party leader Cem Özdemir abstaining in the vote, which nevertheless garnered a majority for Putin. “Reliability paired with staying power, dependability paired with the ability to communicate make up the character and personality of Vladimir Putin,” the daily Süddeutsche Zeitung quoted the organisation as writing in its report on the selection of Putin.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece’s Electricity Charges Among Lowest in the EU

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 7 — Greece had the third-lowest charges for electricity of all European Union states in the second half of last year, according to data released on Wednesday by Eurostat. This, as daily Kathimerini reports, was despite the fact that electricity charges in Greece rose by as much as 17% from 2009 to 2010, which was the third-highest increase across the bloc.

The average annual increase in EU electricity rates came to 5.1%, the data showed. Comparisons are made based on purchasing power. In absolute terms, Greece’s rate of 12.11 euros per 100 kilowatt-hours is the fifth lowest in the EU. It was only beaten by Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia and Romania. Electricity charges are set to increase from 2013, when the free rights to carbon dioxide emissions by power plants comes to an end, according to EU law. The cost of this will be rolled over to consumers.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Four Arrested Over High-Speed Train Link Protests to Stay in Jail

Turin, 7 July (AKI) — Four people arrested on Sunday during violent protests in northwest Italy over a planned high-speed rail link between Turin and the French cityof Lyon must stay in jail, a judge ruled on Thursday.

The four protesters are all in their early thirties and were named as Marta Bifani from the northern city of Parma, Salvatore Soru, from Maranello, Roberto Nadalini from Modena and Gianluca Ferrari from Marghera.

Nearly 400 people including almost 200 members of Italy’s security forces were injured during hours of clashes on Sunday between police and around 6,000 demonstrators in Chiomonte, Valsusa, west of Turin in the Piedmont region. The protesters are seeking stop the construction of a tunnel which is part of the work site at Chiomonte.

The clashes drew condemnation from Italy’s president, Giorgio Napolitano, from prime minister Silvio Berluscconi and politicians from across the political spectrum.

Italy’s interior minister Roberto Maroni on Monday described the violent protests against the train link link as “terrorism” and vowed the project would go ahead as planned.

Work on the main 58-kilometre tunnel, of which 12 km are in Italy, is due to begin in 2013 and go into service around 2023, cutting three hours off the current seven-hour train journey between Paris and Milan.

The project has sparked fierce opposition including from residents, environmental groups and 23 local mayors. Protesters claim drilling to build the train link will damage the local ecosystem and could release potentially harmful substances into the atmosphere.

Construction of the high-speed link in Italy was brought to a standstill by protests before and after the Turin Winter Olympics in 2006 and has been disrupted by protests over the past 18 months.

The European Commission on Thursday reiterated its support for the project, saying it would contribute to Europe’s economic growth, but warned it would review funding for the project in light of the delays.

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



Italy: Finance Minister Gives Up €8,500/Month Apartment Paid for by Ex-Aide

Rome, 8 July (AKI) — Italian finance minister Giulio Tremonti says he has moved out of a luxurious Rome apartment paid for by a former aide and member of parliament who is under investigation for his alleged involvement in secret a network of favour giving among politicians and businessmen.

Tremonti, often praised by prime minister Silvio Berlusconi for resisting a government spending spree to stimulate the economy, has by equal measure come under attack by members of the government for too tightly controlling the public purse strings.

The 8,500 euros per month for the apartment in the heart of Italy’s historic capital was paid for by Marco Milanese, a close adviser to Tremonti who was once employed by the Italian tax police, according to daily La Repubblica.

“I had accepted the offer made by Milanese for the temporary use of part of the property,” Tremonti said in an e-mail statement late Thursday.

“After learning the judicial developments concerning the property, as of this evening I will change my arrangements.”

Milanese resigned on 26 June from his job as an adviser to Tremonti. He was a member of the prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Liberty party.

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



Italy: Islamic Finance Volume, USD 2 Trillion in 5 Years

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JULY 6 — >From a current business volume of a trillion dollars, Islamic finance will reach 2 trillion within the next 5 years, according to Rushdi Sadiki, head of Thomson Reuters Corporation’s islamic finance sector.

The Islamic finance sector will benefit, according to financial experts cited by ‘Al Arabiya, from the Arab Spring and the West’s changed outlook toward this financial world which was previously often associated to terrorism. Despite the global financial crisis, the Islamic financed sector has continued to grow, proving that the lack of transparency inherent to the traditional banking system caused many financial institution’s significant financial losses. Due to a lack of liquidity, the West, claims Sadiki, will “be forced to” focus its interests on Islamic finance, hoping to attract petrodollars.

The climate of protests which swept through Arab countries has led several of the affected countries to transfer their financial institutions to more stable countries. Indeed, some Islamic funds were moved from Bahrain, which was traditionally a hub for this sort of activity, to Dubai.

Despite growing interest in Islamic finance at the global level, it only accounts for 1.5 percent of the global economy, which amounts to 65 trillion dollars, and 1.5 percent of the traditional banks’ equity. Despite positive medium-term forecasts, Sadiki believes that estimates with regards to growth within the Islamic banking sector to a sum of two trillion dollars is linked to the provision of new services and the West being aware of the differences between the Islamic banking sector and the traditional one. The former is still very new, no older than 40, whilst the traditional sector has been operating for over 100 years and has equity amounting to some 100 trillion dollars.

Some of the challenges the Islamic sector will have to face include: transparency, lack of information on companies, banks and Islamic products and the lack of communication between Islamic financing institutions and the rest of the world.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: MP Accused of Corruption and Conspiracy

PdL MP took Ferrari, Bentley, say investigators

(ANSA) — Naples, July 7 — Authorities issued an arrest warrant for an MP accused of corruption, divulging judicial secrets and conspiracy Thursday.

Marco Mario Milanese, an MP in Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party, allegedly took bribes of money, expensive watches, jewelry, luxury cars — including a Ferrari and a Bentley — and overseas trips in exchange for confidential information related to a police investigation into the EIG insurance company.

“The Naples prosecutor’s office does not discriminate,” said Naples Chief Prosecutor Giovandomenico Lepore. “Police officers, judges and politicians are all treated as regular citizens under the law”.

Milanese is part of a larger investigation into the dealings of EIG.

A warrant has also been issued for Carlo Barbieri, mayor of Voghera, which is outside Milan.

It is unclear how he is connected to the investigation.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Naples to Send Trash Outside Region

Lombardy, Sicily among recipients

(ANSA) — Rome, July 7 — Large amounts of Naples waste are to be moved to other Italian regions, said the governor of Campania Thursday.

Leaders from Sicily, Puglia, Marche, Tuscany, Emilia Romagna, Lombardy and Friuli Venezia Giulia are expected to sign an agreement Friday, according to Governor Stefano Caldoro, allowing Naples to ship rubbish to their territory.

Still, it is unclear if the measure will resolve the trash crisis that has snarled Naples streets in recent weeks.

“It does not fix the emergency,” said Caldoro, “neither in method nor in merit”.

A central government measure passed last week permits the Campania region to export refuse to other parts of the country, though not without resistance from the regionalist Northern League party.

Armed police escorts had recently begun accompanying garbage trucks as exasperated protesters had resorted to tipping over dumpsters, blocking traffic and setting fire to the growing piles of waste choking the daily flow of city life.

Naples and the surrounding region of Campania have suffered similar crises periodically for a number of years.

The previous public outcry occurred last November when weeks of clashes and rising trash piles brought Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to the city.

It was then that the premier, who won plaudits by sorting out a similar emergency in 2008, made a vow to clear the streets in three days.

But the problems have returned partly because of technical failures in local incinerators and the lack of investment in other landfill sites.

The issue is further complicated by the role of the local mafia, or Camorra, and claims that they have infiltrated waste management in Naples and dumped toxic waste on sites near residential areas.

The government has said it will present a plan within one month outlining a proposed solution to the crisis.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Firm Fined 560 Million Euros in Bribery Case

An appeals court in Milan has ordered Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s media holding company to pay damages worth more than half a billion euros to a business rival. A Milan appeals court ruled Saturday that Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s media holding company, Fininvest, must pay compensation totaling 560 million euros ($800 million) to rival media group, Compagnie Industirali Riunite (CIR), after Fininvest bribed a judge to approve a company takeover. The verdict is the latest installment in a long judicial tussle that goes back to 1991, when Fininvest was first accused of bribing a judge to win a takeover battle for one of Italy’s leading publishing houses, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore. Fininvest won control of Mondadori at the expense of CIR thanks to a ruling at the time by a Rome judge, who was later sentenced and sent to prison for corruption. Saturday’s appeals court decision, however, reduced by a quarter the original compensation judgment of a lower court asking for 750 million euros in damages.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Meat BBQ? A Battle in Northern Italy Over Brown Bears in Parks and on Plates

A political battle erupts when locals objecting to the arrival of bears decide to hold a very particular kind of barbecue

It was meant to be a provocative protest against plans to populate a wooded area in northern Italy with brown bears. But to some members of the Italian government and other critics, it was simply barbaric.

A planned BBQ of bear meat was halted just before kick-off, sparking the ire of its organizer. “I’m as mad as a bear,” said Erminio Boso, a local politician and longtime member of the Northern League, a member of the ruling coalition known for flamboyant and highly controversial stances against immigrants and Muslims. And now, it seems, bears.

Boso had organized the outdoor banquet featuring some 100 kilograms of bear meat, imported from Slovenia, to protest against an initiative aimed at populating the woods in Trentino, an Alpine region in northern Italy. He fears it would prevent people from taking hikes in the woods. His solution? Eating a bear.

The plan in the small village of Imer prompted immediate protests of not just animal rights groups, but also of members of the government, the League’s allies in Rome, including prominent ones such as the foreign minister. Eventually, Italy’s health minister sent members of a police unit usually dealing with food contaminations and animal disease, who seized the meat. “They spoiled the party,” Boso complained. He and his fellow party-goers were left with sausages and a pasta dish with minced deer sauce.

As it turned out, the police also found that organizers lacked proper documentation for the import of the Slovenian bear.

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



Netherlands: Rosenthal: ‘Government Will Not Gag Wilders’

THE HAGUE, 09/07/11 — The cabinet is rejecting calls by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to muzzle Party for Freedom (PVV) leader Geert Wilders.

‘The Dutch Government will continue to reject any call to gag a politician. The Netherlands enjoys freedom of expression and attaches great value to it,” accordign to Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal. He was responding on the ministry’s website to a call from the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to “contain the campaign of hatred and incitement” by Party for Freedom (PVV) leader Geert Wilders.

“To prevent any misunderstanding the Dutch government wants to make clear that Mr Wilders is not a part of the government,” stated Rosenthal. “It is well known that the government takes a different view of Islam from the PVV. The government considers Islam a religion and the Netherlands respects freedom of religion.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Skilled German Muslims Held Back by Stereotypes

They are ambitious, well-educated and jobless. In Germany, a rising number of skilled Muslims are complaining of discrimination. Especially women wearing a headscarf feel excluded from the job market. “My name is Ismahen Dabbach, I am 26 years old, I was born in Germany and I am a trained office clerk. I am very flexible, independent and open to everything that carries me further forward in life.” This is how Ismahen Dabbach describes herself in job interviews. She is wearing a light-blue shirt and a black woolen scarf that covers her hair, neck and shoulders — an outfit she would also choose when meeting her potential employer for the first time. But Dabbach, whose parents are Tunisian, feels that since she decided to wear the Muslim headscarf four months ago, her search for a job has become extremely difficult.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: After 28 Years Socialists Lose Extremadura

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JULY 7 — For the first time since the end of Franco’s rule, the Spanish socialist party led by Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has lost control of Extremadura, the region on the Portuguese border where it had been in power for 32 years. The leader of the Extremadura People’s Party, José Antonio Monago was elected as the new regional President this morning, as a result of the abstentions of regional deputies from the left-wing Izquierda Unida party. The PP came out on top in the region in the local and regional elections held on May 22, which proved humbling for Zapatero’s PSOE party.

The socialist party now have presidents in only 2 of Spain’s 17 regions: Andalusia and the Basque Country, though Basques did not vote in the May 22 elections. Polls are predicting the victory of Mariano Rajoy’s People’s Party at the next general election, which is due to be held in March next year, though some analysts believe it could be brought forward to November. The current Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister, Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, will lead the PSOE into the next parliamentary elections, with Zapatero due to stand down at the end of his term.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Academy Blocks Iranians From Flight Training

An aircraft pilot training academy will no longer teach students from Iran Air following recent sanctions brought by the Americans against the airline. Arlanda Airport in Stockholm is used as a base by the Oxford Aviation Academy, formerly the SAS Flight Academy, who have been training pilots from the Iranian airline since January this year. However, in line with American sanctions against the airline the contract between the two parties has been abandoned with immediate effect. America claims that Iran Air has links with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, an organization that allegedly supports terrorist activity in the Middle East, according to a report in Aftonbladet. According to reports, the airline has been providing materials and services to the IRGC. Terrorism expert Magnus Ranstorp said to the paper, “There is an escalation of pressure against Iran”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Basel: Proposal for Muslim Old-Age Home

The Basel-City canton is considering opening an old-age home for Muslims. Philippe Waibel, head of health services in the canton wrote in the Basler-Zeitung that the canton needs to see what services will be needed in the future, and that multicultural services don’t just start with old-age homes. In February, two socialist deputies of Turkish origin suggested opening such homes. Gülsen Oeztürk explained that until now the canton had neglected to consider how to care for first generation immigrants.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Czech Scientist Outed as Communist STB Collaborator

The Czech scientific community has been split by the revelation that one of the country’s most distinguished scientists collaborated with the Communist-era secret police (StB) as an industrial spy, stealing biological cultures and equipment in the West. The facts about Jirí Bártek’s underground activities from 1985-1990 stem from extracts of his StB files, which form the basis for Thursday’s revelations in the daily Mladá Fronta Dnes. Bártek, who is currently the head of Department of Cell Cycle and Cancer at the Danish Cancer Society, used study visits to Germany and Britain to collect cell cultures being used for cancer research and brought them back home in a thermos flask partly filled with ice, the paper reported.

The secret police gave him the code name Rak or Raki, an abbreviation for the slang term in Czech for cancer (rakovina). Bártek has admitted his collaboration but defends himself on the grounds that he was acting for a good cause — scientific advancement and cancer treatment at home — and that he never turned anyone over to the StB. Bártek also says his decision was a result of the times. “The young are lucky today that they do not have to make such choices at all,” he told the paper a few weeks ago. He says that today’s perspective where a scientist can choose to live and work where he wants and take his family with him makes it difficult to judge the past. “For me, it was all about work. In the West I learned a lot of things. Today it is commonplace; no one would even think that they would have the restrictions that existed then,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Voters Desert the Sweden Democrats

The Sweden Democrats Party has lost one in three voters over the past month according to the latest opinion survey. Only 4.2 of the electorate described the party as their favourite last month, down by 2.4 percent from the previous month, reports TT. The voter survey, carried out by Skop, was based on telephone interviews with 1059 people made during the period between June 17th and July 3rd. They were asked the question: “Which is your favourite political party?” The result was good news for the centre-right Alliance which saw a 2.3 percent rise in popularity, closing the gap on the Red-Green opposition, polling their second best result since the election in 2010. Support for the two largest parties, the Moderates and the Social Democrats, remains at a pretty steady 30 percent meanwhile.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



What is Wrong With This Tour De France Cyclist’s Leg?!

As American cyclist George Hincapie pedals his way toward a record-tying 16thTour de France that started July 2, it looks as though his brain is escaping from his leg. Actually, he’s suffering from an unsightly case of varicose veins, says Dr. Walter M. Whitehouse, Jr., a vascular surgeon and Medical Director of Restoration Vein Care in Ann Arbor, Mich. In Hincapie’s case, it’s likely caused by his hours and hours of sitting on his bike. Sitting or standing for long periods can put pressure on the veins and cause them to bulge. “These are the ugliest varicose veins I’ve seen in awhile,” he says. “They are more severe than the typical patient. I’ve seen bigger, but these are just a huge mass that are clumped together.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Albanian Town Thanks George W. Bush With Statue

A tiny Albanian village that U.S. President George W. Bush visited in 2007 has unveiled a shirt-sleeved statue of him, in a square named for him.

The 2.85 m- tall statue of the former president, raising his left hand in greeting, was unveiled on Wednesday in the square festooned with Albanian and American flags for the occasion.

“Albanians’ pro-Americanism has its roots in our attempts… to build our deserved future as a free nation, as a free country,” Prime Minister Sali Berisha told the crowd.

Bush, who marked his 65th birthday on Wednesday, was the first U.S. president to visit post-communist Albania, which is hoping to join the European Union.

Albanians have a special affection for the United States, which they credit with ending their country’s Cold War isolation and leading NATO’s 1999 bombing offensive that halted ethnic cleansing of Kosovo Albanians by Serbian troops.

Washington also was a staunch supporter of Albania’s drive to join NATO, which accepted it into the military alliance in 2009.

“He left his mother in the United States but he found a mother here,” Thomaidha Kaziu, 72, who had seen Bush in 2007 and was told Bush had found a resemblance between her and his mother.

“I will not die without meeting him again,” she said.

In Kosovo, which borders Albania, a statue of former U.S. president Bill Clinton has been erected to thank him for taking action to stop Belgrade’s 1998-99 war against Albanians in Kosovo.

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



Serbia: Minister Apologises to Roma Gypsy Family for Police Brutality

Belgrade, 28 June (AKI) — Serbian police minister Ivica Dacic Tuesday issued an apology to a Roma family for police brutality in a case that shocked the public and sparked protests by human rights organisations.

Dacic received a Roma youth, Danijel Stojanovic and his father Gani, after it was discovered that Danijel was brutally beaten by police in the eastern city of Vrsac four years ago.

The scandal wound up on the popular Youtube video-sharing website and caught public attention after one of three policemen who took part in the beating sold his mobile telephone on which he filmed the beating in Vrsac police station.

Apologizing to Danijel, now 22, Dacic said two police officers had been arrested over the beating and legal proceedings were under way for a third who had in the meantime retired, Dacic said.

Police claimed Stojanovic and his father were involved in criminal activities, but Dacic said these allegations could not justify the policemen’s brutal behaviour.

“It is in the public interest that citizens think well of police, not badly,” Dacic said. “I hope this event will be a turning point for police and for the Stojanovic family and that all will draw a lesson from it,” he added.

Police brutality was widespread in Serbia due a lack of reform including internal controls, according to Ivan Kuzmanovic, an official from Serbia’s Helsinki Committee for Human Rights group.

His organization had interviewed about 300 prisoners in Serbian jails and more than 200 of them complained that they had been subject to “some sort of torture” by police, Kuzmanovic told Belgrade television B92.

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

North Africa


Algeria: Jobless Attempt Suicide, Arrested 4 Months Later

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 4 — Two unemployed individuals have been arrested in Algeria because four months ago, out of desperation, they had tried to commit suicide in front of a security forces barracks. To press for the release of the two — Hamza Ziouane and Aldjia Adel — a demonstration was held today in front of the courthouse in the Saharan city Ouargla in which hundreds of people took part, reports the online edition of El Watan. “Shame, from the unemployed in front of a courthouse” and “We are Algerians, not Israelis” were the slogans yelled out by protestor. Some of the demonstrators quoted by the daily paper asked polemically whether “trying to commit suicide is a crime punished by the law.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Volunteers Working Against Child Abuse

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 8 — There are no official figures, perhaps due to the reluctance to report cases and obstacles linked to the culture and family traditions, but every year in Algeria 7,000 children reportedly suffer sexual abuse, many times within their own homes. It is a huge figure if looked at in relation to the population, and one which is rarely spoken of, being as it is an issue many would like to marginalise or even eliminate from potential debate. One of the aspects that those studying the issue holds as emblematic is that often these episodes occur in family settings, making it even more unlikely that the crime will be reported or prosecuted. However, a part of Algerian society is instead now focusing on the problem, as can be seen in child protection associations and those dealing with families which have decided to come out into the open and bring in an awareness campaign highlighting the problem and giving strength to those who can report the abuse. Monday will see the official creation of a network for the protection of children including Nada, the SOS Village and the Association of Volunteers for Childhood and the Family. Among the many obstacles to a solution for the problem is cultural resistance to report sexually-related crimes. This leads to the direct consequence of utter impunity for those committing the crimes and leaves the victim to suffer the dire consequences, many times for the rest of their life, and especially when the “bad guy” is a relative or even someone living in the same house. Those working in the Algerian associations have collected numerous cases in which the “monster” can be anyone: a neighbor perhaps offering to lend a hand by keeping an eye on the child while the latter’s parents are away; a shopkeeper who draws the boy or girl sent by his or her parents to pick up something into the backroom; or teachers who use their role unscrupulously to intimidate, deceive and violate. However, according to the files, the one to commit the abuse is often a father, uncle or brother. The volunteers know that they cannot carry out their mission alone, and for this reason have asked for help from the national authorities who on Monday — as part of the forum which will officially launch the network — will become not interlocutors but part of the process to defend childhood and its rights.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Army Will Lead Fight Against Terrorism

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 6 — All activities geared toward tackling terrorism and subversion in Algeria will be the Army’s responsibility; this was decided by a ministerial decree, ‘el Watan’ reports, published on June 5’s official bulletin.

Therefore, going forward, the PNA will be coordinating security services, the gendarmerie and police on the ground.

The newspaper remarks that this is a somewhat logical decision in light of the state of emergency being lifted. The aim behind the government’s decision is apparent: to give guidance from a single source in leading action against terrorism which, in recent months, has seen a surge, increasing attacks and, above all, giving the impression that it has plenty of room for manoeuvre and the ability to attack the State through its uniforms. Aside from the fact that terrorist clusters operate from a regional base, targeting the entire Sahel.

The key role within the new Army formation goes to the organisation’s chief, who will be in charge of “leading” and “operational coordination against terrorism and subversion” ..

Another innovative aspect, compared to the previous setup, is that the Army will also be tasked with harmonising the security forces, gendarmerie and police intelligence units.

However, the decree significantly limits the Army’s mandate within urban areas, except when it is considered absolutely necessary. Had this measure been adopted previously, recent episodes could have been avoided in which Army units reacted to terrorist attacks with excessive violence in urban settings, to the point where their behaviour triggered heated protests on the part of some sectors of the population.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Bossi Says Napolitano Wanted War in Libya Too

(AGI) Trescore Cremasco -Bossi remarked, “The war party is very numerous, Berlusconi went to Libya because the President sent him.” He added, “One needs to tell the truth, the war in Libya was supported by the President of the Republic too, without naming anyone.” Umberto Bossi made the comment during a meeting at Trescore Cremasco in the province of Cremona.

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



Egypt: Christians Registered as Muslims Can Change Their Status

Egyptian Supreme Court ruling handed down. Words “ex Muslim” may be removed from documents, because of discrimination. Spokesman for the Egyptian Catholic Church: “Results will only be seen with the real application of the law.”

Cairo (AsiaNews) — Christians under duress or by mistake registered as Muslims will be able to write the right religious denomination on their identity cards. This was decided in recent days by the Egyptian Supreme Court. The verdict clears the law that forced the Christians who “converted” by error to Islam from having “ex-Muslim” written in brackets next to religion on their documents. In order to change the status it will now be sufficient to present a birth certificate confirming the registration as a Christian, with a confirmation of church membership.

To date, in many Egyptian registry offices, infants and anyone who has to change their documents are registered as Muslims. Often officials refuse to correct the error and encourage Christians not to change their status because “being Muslim is an advantage” (AsiaNews See “ Hegazi case: Islam’s obsession with conversions”). According to some Christian scholars this demonstrates the willingness of some government offices to take advantage of their position to “Islamize” Christians. Muslim organizations claim the “conversion” to Islam of at least 10 thousand Christians every year.

Fr. Greich Rafiq, spokesman for the Egyptian Catholic Church, told AsiaNews that “the Court’s decision is a positive sign of the change taking place in the country.” “In the past — said the priest — the Court has repeatedly proposed a revision of the discriminatory rule, but it has always received strong opposition of Habib Adli, the former interior minister, now in prison for corruption.”

However, according to Fr. Greich opposition comes mainly from low-level officials. “The law — said Fr Greich — will not necessarily be applied by all, results will only be seen with the real application of the law, especially in remote areas of the country. “ (Sc)

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



Egypt: Alleged Abductions of Young Coptic Women Fuel Christian-Muslim Conflict

Coptic activists say more 150 abductions have taken place since 1993, but cannot provide sufficient evidence to back their claims. Many Christian women escape their homes to get married against their family’s wishes. The editor in chief of ‘Arab-West Report’ blames the problem on hasty interpretations of the facts and the confusion between social issues and religion.

Cairo (AsiaNews) — Sectarian conflict between Egyptian Christians and Muslims is being fuelled by the kidnapping of young Coptic women forced to convert to Islam, with both sides accusing the other. Coptic activists claim that 150 young Christian women and girls have disappeared since 1993, abducted and forced to convert in order to be married. Muslims counter that these women fled their homes because of family problems or to get married despite the parents’ opposition.

The latest case occurred on 12 June in Minya (Upper Egypt), when two girls, Nancy (age 14) and Christine (age 16), were reported missing. Police found them later in Cairo, wearing a niqab but recognisable by the Coptic cross tattooed on their forehead.

Despite their parents’ protestation, the two girls are being held in a Cairo psychiatric hospital and it is unclear whether they escaped or were abducted.

Some analysts point the finger at erroneous and hasty interpretations of events that are dubbed religiously motivated abductions, a definition that fuels tensions between Christians and Muslims.

This attitude favours extremists and unscrupulous criminals let out after the fall of Mubarak’s regime. An example is the outbreak of violence in Imbaba (Cairo) on 8 May. Twelve people died after extremist gangs stirred up Coptic-Muslim animosity over allegations that a woman had been abducted, a claim that later turned out to be false.

Cornelis Hulsman, editor in chief of Arab-West Report, an international news agency, said that in most cases, there is no hard evidence to back allegations. Social problems and religious issues end up being confused.

Often, police neglects to follow up on cases and refuses to release data about the problem.

Coptic families are afraid of retaliation and in most cases do not report their missing relative.

Muslims instead take advantage of family problems to encourage young women to escape and leave their faith.

For Hulsman, it is impossible to separate what is true from what is false. The issue of abductions is used by both sides to promote their own political interests, turning a social problem into a religious conflict. (S.C.)

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



Egypt: Birth of “Liberal Egyptians”, Sawiris’ Secular Party

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JULY 7 — “Almasrien Alahrar” (Liberal Egyptians) is the name of the new secular party founded by the billionaire Naguib Sawiris, the owner of Wind and one of Egypt’s most successful businessmen. Sawiris, a Copt, has an estimated wealth of 2.5 billion dollars. The new party was officially launched today during a reception in a Cairo hotel. “The new party will take part in the construction of a modern Egypt and will help to raise it to the level that it deserves,” said Hani Sareddin, a member of the political office of Liberal Egyptians.

“We believe that the country should respect all religions but should be secular,” said Mohammed Hamed, another party official, who was quoted by Middle East Online. “The new party has around 65,000 members and we do not allow any of them to speak in the name of the religion that they follow,” Hamed added.

Liberal Egyptians, the website says, is diametrically opposed to the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice party, which was founded a month ago, and is the first party launched by the organisation to be legally recognised since 1928.

Sawiris has called on all liberal forces and parties to join a single list ahead of the first parliamentary elections since the ousting of Mubarak, which are due to be held in September.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Muslim Sisterhood, Ready to Participate in Public Life

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JULY 4 — “We have regained the freedom the corrupt regimes have denied us in the past 60 years, keeping us from doing our work publicly.” This statement was made by the Egyptian Muslim Sisterhood at the end of the congress they held the day before yesterday at the Al Azhar University in Cairo.

“The woman, from revolution to awakening” was the name of the conference, organised by the Muslim Brotherhood in response to accusations that the movement marginalises women.

More than two thousand women from several provinces in Egypt participated in the congress, as well as the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Badi. During the debate, newspaper Assharq Al Awsat reports, the responsibility of women in the development of society and of public activities in collaboration with men was underlined, as well as the need to make women aware of potential threats that can undermine faith and the values of their families. “Organising the conference with the Muslim Sisterhood makes it a very important event”, said Shorouk Al Shawaf, one of the organisation’s leaders, adding that “the security services of the corrupt regimes have kept us from working in the open in the past 60 years.” “The revolution has not changed our view”.

The mentality of the Muslim Sisterhood, the movement’s leader underlined, is very closed due to the abuse suffered in the past by the organisation of the Muslim Brotherhood. But this must change because the Islam, she continued, “is not against the participation of women in public life.” Al Shawaf concluded that the role of women inside the organisation also needs to change, giving them more power, particularly when both sexes are working together. The conference concluded with a series of recommendations to guarantee the political role of women and to allow them to represent the Muslim Brotherhood in national and international conferences. The recommendations include primary social services like literacy programmes, drug addiction treatment and help to children living on the street, facilitation of marriage and active participation in information in all its forms.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



First Meeting on Islamic Finance in Tunis

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 08 — The first meeting of officials from the world of Islamic finance has been scheduled to take place in Tunis on July 15-16. The encounter will allow for the actions undertaken by the countries of the Maghreb regarding Islamic finance to be assessed and to identify the prospects and opportunities that the sector offers for their development. Encounters have also been scheduled for global leaders in Islamic finance as well as experts from North Africa in order to evaluate opportunities for cooperation and development. The meetings will be attended by the President of the Islamic Development Bank, Ahmed Mohamed Ali, and Sheikh Salah Abdallah Kamel, the president of Islamic banks and financial institutes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Counterattack Underway 50 Km From Tripoli

(AGI) Tripoli — Troops loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have launched a counter-attack on rebel positions 50 Km from Tripoli. The battle is underway in the area of Gualish, a center in the hands of rebels and a strategic point on the road leading to the Libyan capital.

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



Libya: Berlusconi Reiterates Opposition to NATO Mission

Rome, 7 July (AKI) — (AKI) — Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi remains opposed to Nato’s mission in Libya, he said on Thursday in comments that exposed rifts among the military alliance over its operation against strongman Muammar Gaddafi.

“I am and was opposed to intervention in Libya but the parliament of my country tied my hands and I was forced to accept it,” Berlusconi told a press conference at the lower house of the Italian parliament.

Libya was an Italian colony from 1911 to 1943 and Italy is the North African country’s biggest trade partner.

Berlusconi had forged close ties with Gaddafi, going so far as to kiss his hand during a visit to Libya.

Nato warplanes have mounted air strikes in Libya since the end of March under a United Nations mandate, but the cost of the operation and its failure to produce a decisive outcome to the civil war between Gaddafi and rebel forces have put mounting strain on the operation.

Italy’s defence minister Ignazio La Russa said that the cost to Italy of the Libya operation would fall from 142 million euros in the first half of the year to less than 60 million euros in the second half as part of general defence spending cuts.

About one-quarter of Italian troops involved in military missions abroad (2,078 men) will be brought home by the end of the year, saving the country 117 million euros annually, La Russa and reforms minister Roberto Calderoli told journalists in Rome on Thursday.

The Italian aircraft carrier Garibaldi with three aircraft on board with 890 soldiers on board will be withdrawn and their tasks would be taken on by land-based aircraft, the ministers said.

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



Libyan Crisis ‘Doesn’t Threaten’ Italian Energy Supply

Rome, 6 July (AKI) — The civil war in Libya doesn’t pose a threat to Italian and international energy supplies this year, according to the Italian energy regulator.

“There remains a more than sufficient margin to meet demand for 2011,” the Italian Energy Authority’s chief Guido Bortoni said Wednesday at an annual presentation to parliament in Rome.

Bortoni’s comments came after Libya’s 1.6 million barrels a day of oil was lost to the international market because of the conflict, which began in mid-February.

Italy is Libya’s biggest trading partner and Rome-based energy giant Eni is the largest international company operating in the country.

The armed conflict between rebels and forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has brought the country’s oil production to a halt. Libya is the African country with the most oil and gas reserves.

Italy depends on Libya for around 25 percent of its petroleum and 12 percent of its gas. Prior to the Libyan crisis, Eni was producing around 280,000 barrels of Libyan oil per day, out of the country’s total daily output of around 1.6 million barrels.

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



Tunisian Amazigh Fighting for Equal Rights

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 8 — Tunisian Amazigh are fighting so that the new constitution will take into account the values of their culture and especially their language. The promoters of the campaign -which is being conducted mainly through online social networks — note that only the Amazigh language is held in minority status, whereas their cultural values are shared at the national level. In their opinion, the new constitution should establish Islam as the state religion and Arabic as the official language. The term Amazigh identifies the Berber population in North Africa, and in Tunisia they are found mainly in the southern part of the country.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Israel: Maximum Alert, Pro-Palestinian Activists Stopped

With a wide-reaching operation that has stretched as far as Europe, Israel today countered attempts by hundreds of political activists to meet at “Lydda” airport (the Arab name for the town of Lod, near Tel Aviv), where, in the presence of Israeli border guards, they were due to start a rally provocatively entitled “Welcome to Palestine”. More than two hundred activists were stopped as they attempted to board planes at a number of European airports (including Paris, Geneva and Vienna), as a result of “black lists” forwarded to airlines by Israel’s Interior Ministry. Around sixty others were intercepted at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport. These included passengers of the Alitalia flight from Rome. Half of these passengers (Belgian, French, American, Spanish, German and Dutch) were immediately ordered to return home. For the others, checks by the Israeli Interior Ministry are continuing. Israeli police had planned for the event by raising the level of alert in the airport’s arrival hall and in areas close to the airport, in an attempt to prevent solidarity protests by left-wing Israeli activists.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Saudi Prince Says No Change in News Corp Investment

DUBAI (Reuters) — Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal said on Sunday there would be no change in his Kingdom Holding’s investment in News Corp.

“No change, my investment is strategic, not thinking of selling anything,” he told Reuters by telephone. “The crisis does not make Kingdom Holding blink at all. It makes our partnership stronger.”

News Corp chairman and chief executive Rupert Murdoch flew into London on Sunday to tackle the telephone-hacking scandal that may cost him a multi-billion dollar deal to take full control of British Sky Broadcasting Group Plc.

Alwaleed’s Kingdom Holding is the second biggest shareholder in News Corp and controls 7 percent of the votes, he said. News Corp owns in return 14.5 percent of Alwaleed’s Rotana Media Group.

Alwaleed said he was in contact with News Corp from the onset of the crisis and that he supported the decision to close Britain’s News of the World tabloid engulfed in the scandal.

“Since the crisis erupted I have been in touch with them to contain this problem,” he said. “Their decision to shut down this tabloid in England is supported by me because we have to put this issue behind us.”

“What happened in the scandal is a deviation from what News Corp wants now which is full control of the remaining shares (of BSkyB).”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Syria: Mar Musa Monastery on Last Legs, Monks Demand Help

The Syrian crisis may also account for the Mar Musa monastery, a site for Christians and Muslims in the middle of the desert that was opened in 1982 by the Roman Jesuit, Paolo Dall’Oglio, and that has become a meeting point for pilgrims around the world, with an average of more than 50,000 travelling to the area every year. The Jesuit and his colleagues yesterday sent out an appeal for “money, commitment and prayer”, as the monastery is no longer able to rely on donations from its visitors and is at risk of closure, at a time when the local community has the greatest need for help and support. Only yesterday, for instance, the monks took in W., a two and a half year-old child. “His parents have disappeared in the storm that is afflicting this country. A widow with three young girls picked up little W. and came here,” the monks said in their statement.

Set deep in the mountains east of Nebek (a town 80 kilometres north of the capital Damascus), the monastery stands at 1,320 metres above sea level and has a staircase of 300 steps built into the rock of a breathtaking valley. The original 6th century building was dedicated to Bar Musa, Saint Moses the Abyssinian, and is surrounded by caves that were used for centuries by hermits, which have also been revived by Father Paolo. “Concern for the physical safety of the Syrian relatives of our monks and nuns is compounded by anxiety over a galloping economic crisis, which is even more serious for the tourism sector, which is in a disastrous state,” the statement continues. “Up until Easter, we would have hundreds of visitors. Tonight, one Chinese tourist came here and we looked at her as if she were a martian. Many young people, most of them destitute, reacting with their work and prayers to the depression and stress that threatens us all”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Muscovites Suffer Hours in Traffic for a Weekend at the Dacha

It wouldn’t be summer in the Moscow region without regular trips to the dacha, or country cabin. And it wouldn’t be a trip to the dacha without hours spent in traffic trying to get there. Russia’s capital, Moscow, can be unbearable in the summer. More than 10 million residents crowd the city, most of them living in crowded high-rises dating from Soviet times. The temperature can reach above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) and, aside from the polluted Moskva River and a just a handful of outdoor pools, there are hardly any places to swim. But for many Muscovites there is a solution: They spend their weekends at their dachas — small summer or garden houses. Spending time at your dacha is a tradition that the Czars and Soviet leaders alike fostered and it remains popular today. The only problem? Dachas are often located more than 100 kilometers (62 miles) away from the city and, with millions heading out of town at the same time, getting to the beloved dacha often means sitting in traffic.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Orthodox Nationalists Attempt to Prevent Jehovah’s Witnesses Congress

The event should take place this weekend, but the organization ‘Council of the People’ asks the attorney general to verify its legality: “The JWs are a dangerous cult and violate the law.”

Moscow (AsiaNews) — The Orthodox activists of the nationalist movement ‘Council of the People’ are trying to prevent a large national convention of Jehovah’s Witnesses (JW), scheduled from July 8 to 10 in Moscow. As announced by Russian agencies, the organization — which in Russian is called ‘Narodny Sobor’ — has asked judicial authorities to verify the legality of the event and prevent “violations of federal law,” as it said in a statement addressed to the Attorney General and published by Interfax.

The convention of Jehovah’s Witnesses, according to a report in the daily Gazeta Nezavizimaya, should be held this weekend at the Crocus Expo, a large arena for mass events just outside the Russian capital and is expected to host more than 9 thousand faithful. According to the nationalist Orthodox, the Jehovah’s Witnesses “have not asked for permission to organize and hold a public religious ceremony … thus violating the law on freedom of conscience and religious associations,” the statement continues.

The Narodny Sobor — whose accusations in the past have led to the conviction of the organizers of the exhibition considered blasphemous ‘Forbidden Art-2006’ — stresses that the JWs are “one of the most dangerous sects in Russia” who have several criminal and civilians cases hanging over them. Often in Russia religious confessions and denominations that can not be classified among the traditional religions or are unacceptable to the political and Orthodox authorities are often defined as sects or destructive cults. Since 2004, the Jehovah’s Witnesses have been particularly targeted, becoming the subject of a real persecution, which the leaders of the community compared to that suffered under Stalin. Several Russian courts have banned many of their publications and outlawed their activities. Assaults and vandalism against the community are becoming more frequent. The organization is also accused of “the violation of the rights of non-believers” through “attempts to enter their homes to pray and aggressive forms of evangelization.”

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



RWE Said to be in Investment Talks With Russia’s Gazprom

The head of German energy giant RWE, Jürgen Großmann, is mulling a partnership with Gazprom, the largest company in Russia, according to a Saturday news report. Der Spiegel magazine reported that Großmann met Alexey Miller, the head of Gazprom, in Paris on Friday to discuss potential investment opportunities that could see the Russian gas producer take a stake in RWE, Germany’s second-largest power supplier. Großmann hopes to be able to present the results of those negotiations to RWE’s supervisory board by early August. The RWE chief executive is seeking a new way forward in light of the German parliament’s decision to abandon nuclear power by 2022 — which has Großmann mulling a strategic partnership between Gazprom and RWE or its subsidiaries. That involvement could see Gazprom assume the role of major stakeholder in the German company. Gazprom’s own majority stakeholder is the Russian government, which holds 51 percent of the company’s shares.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Afghanistan: Twenty-Four De-Mining Workers Kidnapped

Kabul, 6 July (AKI) — Twently-four people working as de-miners in western Afghanistan have been kidnapped by Taliban militants, according to news reports.

The group of de-miners in Farah province were kidnapped early Wednesday along with their four drivers, according to provincial head of police Syed Mohammad Roshandil, news agency Xinhua reported.

The kidnapping occurred while the de-miners were at work. They are all employed by the Afghan non-government organisation Demining Agency for Afghanistan.

An average of 52 Afghan civilians lost their lives per month in 2010 due to landmine explosions, according to Mine Action Coordination Centre of Afghanistan, a humanitarian group.

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



Canadians Eye Home Front as They Quit Afghanistan

Canadian troops have begun to return home from Afghanistan, as the country’s nine-year combat mission comes to a close.

For the Canadian troops leaving Afghanistan for the last time, the smiles and laughter as they filed across the tarmac to their transport plane said it all — they were finally going home.

The 117 troops who left Kandahar airfield, the giant military base in the heart of the southern war zone, early Wednesday were among nearly 3,000 Canadian combat troops whose mission ends this week after nine years and 157 deaths.

Still in uniform, carrying camouflage kit bags and flashing thumbs-up signs to photographers, most were purely and simply looking forward to going back to their families.

But others were conscious that the adjustment from frontline to civilian life might not be totally straightforward, despite a five-day “decompression” period in Cyprus on the way home to help them acclimatise.

Speaking on the runway moments before boarding the C17 transport aircraft, Captain Giles McClintock was desperate to get back to Canada to catch up on lost time with his infant son.

“I got to meet him for a week before I was deployed and during three weeks’ break,” he said. “I haven’t even known him as a baby — I’m coming back to him as a little boy.”

McClintock, who spent eight months in Afghanistan working with an engineering unit building roads and schools, said it felt “great” to be going home.

But some more senior officers cautioned that some soldiers might have a harder time adjusting to the aftermath of war.

Lieutenant-Colonel Martin Arcand spent 15 months in a senior operational role for Canadian forces and starts work as a military adviser to Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations in New York later this month.

“Here, you’re always on, you’re called throughout the night. Back home it’s going to be more like nine to six. You don’t bring much work home. It will need some adjustment for sure,” he said.

In Cyprus, the troops will attend talks on the psychological impact of war, while counselling will be available for those who want it. It will also be their first chance in months to drink alcohol.

Arcand said the Cyprus stop-off aimed to help them prepare for going home.

“You’ve been away for a year, you’re going back home, your family have been doing stuff together for a year so you need to be able to adapt to a normal life,” he said.

McClintock, though, was ambivalent about the prospect of the extended layover.

“Obviously it will be nice to be with the guys in a relaxed setting,” he said. “However, all of us just want to go home.”

A few soldiers whose husbands, wives or partners were also in the military in Afghanistan do not feel in such a rush to head back to their families.

Warrant Officer Yves Martin served as a physician specialising in trauma at frontline bases around Kandahar province, one of Afghanistan’s most dangerous.

He said that members of his team provided strong support for each other, particularly after dealing with some of the most harrowing cases of dead and injured soldiers.

“After every case, we would get together and do a debrief,” he said. “You can’t save all the lives. You need to make sure everybody knows they did their best. So far I’ve been lucky, knock on wood, that I haven’t had anything too traumatising.”

Martin also had his wife to turn to, although military rules prevent intimacy between serving couples.

“We saw each other but we couldn’t be too close. We played a lot of cards,” he said.

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



Clashes Between Police and Islamic Demonstrators in Dacca

(AGI) Dacca — Several people were hurt in clashes between police and Islamic demonstrators in the Bangladesh capital, Dacca. The twelve Islamic parties of the country called for a 30-hour general strike, to impose the insertion of a new Constitutional law, affirming “absolute faith and confidence in Allah”.

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



Indonesia: Govt to Give Migrant Workers Mobile Phones

Jakarta, 8 July (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesia’s national agency for the placement and protection of migrant workers has signed an agreement with telecoms firm PT Nurkumala Abadi to provide cell phones to migrant workers sent to South Korea.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had earlier promised the public that he would provide every Indonesian migrant worker with a cell phone, following numerous cases of abuse in several countries.

“It is highly expected that the cell phones will enable them to communicate with their family members and related government authorities in Indonesia more frequently,” the agency’s head Jumhur Hidayat said on Friday.

“ Let’s hope that this reduces the amount of problems faced by migrant workers,” he added.

The government sent 2,923 migrant workers to South Korea between the 1 January and 4 July.

PT Nurkumala Abadi Hermin general manager Abdul Syukur said that before leaving for South Korea, workers would be asked to complete a registration form.

“Once they arrive in South Korea, they will receive cell phones just by showing the form,” he said.

He said PT Nurkumala Abadi had committed to provide 8,000 to 10,000 cell phones each year.

Accordin to the agency’s data, 3,962 migrant workers were sent to South Korea in 2010 and 2,024 workers in 2009. The highest number of workers sent to South Korea was recorded in 2008 when 11,885 workers were sent there; almost tripling the 2007’s figure of 4,303 workers.

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



Janet Levy: Is the Fate of the Infidels Tied to the Buddhas?

No fanfare and little notice marked the 10th anniversary earlier this year of the destruction of the 1,500-year-old Bamiyan Buddhas. These 6th-century stately statues carved into sandstone cliffs in central Afghanistan included one of the tallest standing Buddhas in the world. On March 12, 2001, the 180- and 121-foot Buddhas crumpled under dynamite set off by the Taliban — the Islamist militia group ruling Afghanistan from 1996 through late 2001. Mullah Omar, the leader of the Al Qaeda-supported movement, deemed the statutes idolatrous graven images insulting to Islam and ordered their destruction. Other Buddhist images, including statues and relief carvings as well as ancient Sikh gurdwaras and Hindu temples, were also destroyed by the Islamic terrorists belonging to the Taliban Movement.

This kind of cultural destruction has been part and parcel of Islam since its inception. According to Dr. Bill Warner, founder of the Center for the Study of Political Islam, “Political Islam has annihilated every culture it has invaded or immigrated to by destroying the host culture.”

Dr. Warner cites the extinction of a once-Christian Middle East, Turkey, and North Africa, and a Zoroastrian Persia, as a result of Islamic jihad. He also includes the decimation of Hindus and Buddhists as well. All told, he totals more than 270 million “nonbelievers,” including Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Africans, and Jews, who have died in Islamic massacres since the birth of Islam 1400 years ago.

Prior to the Islamic conquests, which began in the 7th century, Afghanistan was primarily Hindu with significant minorities of Buddhists and Jains. Hinduism, the oldest living religion, began in the Indus Valley around 1500 B.C., in land which is today part of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Northwest India. Many areas of Afghanistan had strong cultural links to the Indian sub-continent where Buddha was born in modern-day Nepal to a Hindu family during the 5th century B.C. The religion he founded was an offshoot of his Hindu belief system. In the 3rd century B.C., Buddhism spread from the Indian sub- continent to Central, East, and Southeast Asia.

By the 11th century, the region that includes modern-day Afghanistan had been Islamized and the remaining Hindus and Buddhists were stripped of their legal and social rights and relegated to dhimmi status. This meant they were required to exist under shariah or Islamic doctrine and forced to pay the jizya, a tax payable to Muslims to guarantee protection against forced conversion or death.

When the Taliban came to power in 1996, Hindu and Buddhist minorities were forced to identify themselves by wearing yellow badges and the women were required to wear burkas. The destruction of the Buddhas was yet another attempt to demoralize and humiliate Hindus and Buddhists and destroy their culture. Afghanistan had been ruled by Hindu kings until 1002 A.D. and Buddhists shared common cultural and religious traditions with the rest of the Hindus; thus, the Bamiyan Buddhas were representative of the 3,000-year-old Hindu civilization and identity in Afghanistan and, as such, needed to be destroyed.

Similarly, like Afghanistan, which once flourished under Hinduism and Buddhism, the Indian sub-continent is now under siege by Islam. In Bangladesh and Pakistan, Islamization has decimated Hindus and Buddhists and forced survivors to flee. Hindus, who made up 30% of the Bangladesh population in 1941, have been reduced to a mere 11% today. In Pakistan, where the Hindu population was reduced to 3% of the population from 10%, the remaining traces of Hindus and other religious minorities are endangered by rape, forcible conversion, and marriage to Muslims. In India, with a Hindu majority, the government is yet failing to sufficiently resist attempts to elevate Islam and delegitimize Hinduism. Indian textbooks lionize Islam and cast Hinduism as an evil, exploitative, backward faith. Legislation has been proposed that will discriminate against Hindus by specifically punishing communal violence against minorities, such as Muslims, but not violence committed by minorities against majority Hindus. The official discourse omits the atrocities and genocides committed under Islamic rule, including a past replete with the destruction of religious sites, civilian massacres, and forced conversions.

The fact that nothing was done to commemorate the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas speaks to the legacy of 1,000 years of Hindu and Buddhist dhimmitude. Buddhists, who practice non-violence and offered no resistance to Muslim invaders in Afghanistan and Bangladesh, are once again threatened by Muslim attacks in Thailand. Buddhists hesitated to make demands of the Afghan government, preferring to take comfort in the belief that Buddha “takes care of himself.”…

[Return to headlines]



Over 1,400 Arrested, Tear Gas Fired in Malaysia Protest

Malaysian police fired repeated rounds of tear gas and detained over 1,400 people in the capital on Saturday as thousands of activists evaded roadblocks and barbed wire to hold a street protest against Prime Minister Najib Razak’s government.

At least a dozen people were hurt in the demonstration for electoral reform in downtown Kuala Lumpur. There were no reports of serious injuries but some analysts said the police action was excessive and would dent Najib’s image.

“We are not criminals, we are just asking for free and fair elections,” opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim’s daughter, Nurul Izzah Anwar, told reporters after her father was knocked down and hurt in a melee when he and his supporters were tear gassed.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Pakistan: Mullen Called ‘Irresponsible’ For Accusing Govt of ‘Sanctioning Reporter’s Killing

8 June (AKI) — Pakistan fended off accusation by a top-ranking American military official that it was behind the killing of a journalist calling it “extremely irresponsible.”

On Thursday, Adm. Mike Mullen said he believed the Pakistani government “sanctioned” Shahzad’s killing. He said he could not directly link the killing to the country’s powerful spy agency.

Soon after Mullen made the comments state news agency Associated Press of Pakistan issued a statement citing an unnamed government spokesman who called Mullen’s allegations “extremely irresponsible” and said that it “will not help in investigating the issue.”

The powerful military agency Inter-Services Intelligence agency, or ISI, has come under widespread suspicion for Saleem Shahzad’s death. It has denied killing him but accusations persist.

Mullen’s comments can’t help strained relations between the Washington and Islamabad which hit a low in early May when US commandos flew into Pakistan from Afghanistan by helicopter and killed Osama bin Laden.

Mullen, who as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff is one of president US Barack Obama’s closest military advisers, said Pakistan must stop persecuting journalists.

“It’s a way to continue to, quite frankly, spiral in the wrong direction,” he said.

Earlier this week, the New York Times reported that the US was in possession of classified information that fingered the ISI as the culprit in Shahzad’s killing.

Days before his abduction on 29 May in Islamabad, he published an article in Asia Times alleging links between Al-Qaeda and officials in the Pakistani navy. In recent years he wrote articles probing the relationship between the militants and Pakistani military.

Shahzad was the 37th journalist killed in Pakistan since the 11 September attacks in the US, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Pakistan in June appointed a commission to investigate Shahzad’s killing. The findings are scheduled to be released early in August.

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



Police: Islamists Clash in Bangladesh, Dozens Hurt

DHAKA (Reuters) — Police in Bangladesh on Sunday fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse Islamist activists trying to enforce a nationwide strike over the removal of a Muslim phrase in the constitution, and witnesses said around 50 people were injured.

The clashes erupted when thousands of bludgeon-carrying Islamists cut off a stretch of highway leading to the capital’s eastern suburbs with barricades.

The protesters also damaged several cargo trucks before the police crack down, and some 100 people were detained.

The strike, which began two days after the country emerged from a 48-hour stoppage enforced by the opposition, was called to protest a recent amendment to the constitution which dropped the words “absolute faith and trust in Allah”.

The Islamists also want to scrap “secularism” as a state principle in the Muslim-majority country.

The strike, which was called for by 12 Islamist parties, was however, largely ignored by most people in Bangladesh, where businesses and transportation was operating as normal.

The strike was spearheaded by the Bangladesh Islami Andolon, one of a handful of small Islamist parties that have no representation in parliament but who back the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) of former prime minister Begum Khaleda Zia, who is trying to force early elections.

The BNP lost to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League in the 2008 parliament polls and has since been trying to rally support of the Islamist and other groups.

The two women have dominated the south Asian country’s often volatile politics for two decades and are likely to face off again in the next election due by end of 2013.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Sri Lanka: Sinhalese and Tamil Muslims Together for Rizana Nafeek

The Sinhalese maid was sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia for allegedly killing an infant in 2005. Q protest rally is held outside the Saudi Embassy. Activists say that the child’s death was an accident and blame both countries for the situation.

Colombo (AsiaNews) — More than 500 Sinhalese and Tamil Muslims demonstrated outside the saudi Embassy in Colombo demanding the immediate release of Rizana Nafeek, a Sri Lankan maid sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia for allegedly killing an infant.

The Muslim Rights Organization (MRO) and other civil society organisations staged the demonstration in Colombo’s famous Lipton Circus.

Concern over Rizana’s fate rose after an Indonesian woman was executed in Saudi Arabia after being convicted of murder (see Mathias Hariyadi, “Indonesian woman beheaded in Saudi Arabia, Jakarta threatens to stop flow of migrants,” in AsiaNews, 21 June 2011)

For MRO President Per Mujiboo Rahumaan, the Saudi government cannot execute Rizana for an accident. “She was hired as a maid. If the parents needed someone to look after their baby, they should have hired a qualified babysitter.”

Rizana was not an adult when the incident occurred.

“I am not afraid to say that the governments of both countries are responsible for this,” said Catholic human rights activist Nimalka Fernando. “As a mother, I feel close to her family and their pain.”

Sri Lanka’s Foreign Employment Minister Dilan Perera said that the Sri Lankan government is prepared to pay compensation in exchange for the young woman’s release.

“One parent of the dead child has pardoned the maid, but that is not enough,” the minister said. “This incident needs to be handled with caution and should not be exploited for political gain.”

Rizana Nafeek has been in a saudi jail since 2005. The young Muslim woman comes from a very poor family in the village of Mutur (eastern district of Trincomalee).

She arrived in Saudi Arabia at the age of 17 using a fake passport to work as a maid.

If her sentence is upheld by the king, she could be executed at any time.

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



Video Shows Children of Killed Taliban Fighters Being Trained to Kill Our Troops

Taliban train children as young as three

The chilling video was shot at an Al Qaeda camp where boys as young as THREE are turned into trained killers ready to wage war on ­British soldiers.

It shows how, in the wake of its leader Osama Bin Laden’s death in May, his terror group is brainwashing a new generation of child soldiers. British commanders in Afghanistan say children are increasingly used as suicide bombers and human shields during battles.

In the most ­disturbing sections of the video children appear anxious and unhappy as they are trained with guns. The film also shows a “dentist” pulling a child’s back tooth out with a pair of pliers for an ­initiation ritual.

The ­footage, filmed in North Waziristan near ­Pakistan’s border with ­Afghanistan, was ­obtained by our ­investigators after it was posted on an underground Al Qaeda ­website. It was issued by the ­Islamic Movement of ­Uzbekistan, which acts as a “foreign ­legion” supplying fighters to wage war alongside the Taliban.

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Throws Out ‘Flashmob’ Swedish Blogger

A Sweden-based student in China has been sent home after calling for a flashmob in Shanghai in support of freedom of expression. reports Swedish Radio news programme Ekot. The Swedish Radio news programme Ekot reports that the 24-year-old man chose to make his protest on July 1st, the day that the Chinese Communist Party celebrates its 90 year anniversary. He wrote on his Swedish language blog “I have long had in mind to try to organize something small, a small marker, which also could attract some of the paranoid authorities’ attention.” In the blog, the 24-year-old called on party chairman Hu Jintao to join a flash mob to mark the occasion, although it is unknown whether the public event actually took place, because its organiser was already being held for questioning when it was due to happen. In his blog he called on people to write the word “Freedom” in Chinese characters anywhere on their body, then congregate at a specific location in downtown Shanghai at an allotted time and stand there for five minutes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Carbon Tax: Pensioners to Receive Compensation

AUSTRALIA’S 3.4 million pensioners will receive compensation at least equal to cost of living price rises under the Gillard government’s carbon price.

Australians on age pensions, disability pensions, carer payments, service pensions and the Seniors Supplement will all receive assistance as part of the government’s $14.9 billion compensation package.

Pensioners will receive lump sum advance payments of up to $250 for a single pensioner before the carbon price begins in July 2012.

They will start receiving a new Clean Energy Supplement equal to a 1.7 per cent increase in the maximum pension rate from 2013. This supplement will be equal to an annual increase of up to $338 for singles and $510 for couples combined.

About 90 per cent of pensioner households will benefit from a buffer of at least 20 per cent above their expected average price rises from the carbon price, the government says.

The assistance will be permanent and will rise in line with the consumer price index.

About 280,000 self-funded retirees who hold Commonwealth Seniors Health Care Cards will get the same amount of assistance as age pensioners.

“Age pensioners and self-funded retirees have worked hard all their lives to build our nation, so the Gillard government is determined to provide cost of living help as we go about cutting carbon pollution,” the government said in a statement.

Arrangements will be introduced to ensure compensation is shared fairly between aged care residents and providers.

Aged care providers that bear many costs for their residents — including electricity — will receive around half of the assistance paid through the age pension.

Pensioners in aged care will receive the remainder to help them with increases in their other living costs.

People who have high electricity costs due to their use of essential medical equipment such as dialysis machines or other life-support equipment, will be eligible for an annual cash payment of $140 a year.

Public housing tenants will get the full benefit of assistance.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]



New Australian Law to Make Muslims Lift Veils

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Muslim women would have to remove veils and show their faces to police on request or risk a prison sentence under proposed new laws in Australia’s most populous state that have drawn criticism as culturally insensitive.

A vigorous debate that the proposal has triggered reflects the cultural clashes being ignited by the growing influx of Muslim immigrants and the unease that visible symbols of Islam are causing in predominantly white Christian Australia since 1973 when the government relaxed its immigration policy.

Under the law proposed by the government of New South Wales, which includes Sydney, a woman who defies police by refusing to remove her face veil could be sentenced to a year in prison and fined 5,500 Australian dollars ($5,900).

The bill — to be voted on by the state parliament in August — has been condemned by civil libertarians and many Muslims as an overreaction to a traffic offense case involving a Muslim woman driver in a “niqab,” or a veil that reveals only the eyes.

The government says the law would require motorists and criminal suspects to remove any head coverings so that police can identify them.

Critics say the bill smacks of anti-Muslim bias given how few women in Australia wear burqas. In a population of 23 million, only about 400,000 Australians are Muslim. Community advocates estimate that fewer than 2,000 women wear face veils, and it is likely that even a smaller percentage drives.

“It does seem to be very heavy handed, and there doesn’t seem to be a need,” said Australian Council for Civil Liberties spokesman David Bernie. “It shows some cultural insensitivity.”

The controversy over the veils is similar to the debate in other Western countries over whether Muslim women should be allowed to wear garments that hide their faces in public. France and Belgium have banned face-covering veils in public. Typical arguments are that there is a need to prevent women from being forced into wearing veils by their families or that public security requires people to be identifiable.

Bernie noted that while a bandit disguised with a veil and sunglasses robbed a Sydney convenience store last year, there were no Australian crime trends involving Muslim women’s clothing.

“It is a religious issue here,” said Mouna Unnjinal, a mother of five who has been driving in Sydney in a niqab for 18 years and has never been booked for a traffic offense.

“We’re going to feel very intimidated and our privacy is being invaded,” she added.

Unnjinal said she would not hesitate to show her face to a policewoman. But she fears male police officers might misuse the law to deliberately intimidate Muslim women.

“If I’m pulled over by a policeman, I might say I want to see a female police lady and he says, ‘No, I want to see your face,’“ Unnjinal said. “Where does that leave me? Do I get penalized 5,000 dollars and sent to jail for 12 months because I wouldn’t?”

Sydney’s best-selling The Daily Telegraph newspaper declared the proposal “the world’s toughest burqa laws.” In France, wearing a burqa — the all-covering garment that hides the entire body except eyes and hands — in public is punishable by a 150 euro ($217) fine only.

The New South Wales state Cabinet decided to create the law on July 4 in response to Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione’s call for greater police powers. Other states including Victoria and Western Australia are considering similar legislation.

“I don’t care whether a person is wearing a motorcycle helmet, a burqa, niqab, face veil or anything else — the police should be allowed to require those people to make their identification clear,” State Premier Barry O’Farrell said in a statement.

The laws were motivated by the bungled prosecution of Carnita Matthews, a 47-year-old Muslim mother of seven who was booked by a highway patrolman for a minor traffic violation in Sydney in June last year.

An official complaint was made in Matthews’ name against Senior Constable Paul Fogarty, the policeman who gave her the ticket. The complaint accused Fogarty of racism and of attempting to tear off her veil during their roadside encounter.

Unknown to Matthews, the encounter was recorded by a camera inside Fogarty’s squad car. The video footage showed her aggressively berating a restrained Fogarty and did not support her claim that he tried to grab her veil before she reluctantly and angrily lifted it to show her face.

Matthews was sentenced in November to six months in jail for making a deliberately false statement to police.

But that conviction and sentence were quashed on appeal last month without her serving any time in jail because a judge was not convinced that it was Matthews who signed the false statutory declaration. The woman who signed the document had worn a burqa and a justice of the peace who witnessed the signing had not looked beneath the veil to confirm her identity.

Bernie, the civil libertarian, said the proposed law panders to public anger against Muslims that the case generated on talk radio and in tabloid newspapers, which itself is a symptom of the suspicion with which immigrants are viewed.

Muslims are among the fastest-growing minorities in Australia and mostly live in the two largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne. There are many examples to suggest they are not entirely welcome.

Muslim and non-Muslim youths rioted for days at Sydney’s Cronulla beach in 2005, drawing international attention to surging ethnic tensions. Proposals to build Islamic schools are resisted by local protest groups. The convictions of a Sydney gang of Lebanese Muslims who raped several non-Muslim women were likened by a judge to war atrocities and condemned in the media.

In 2006, then-Prime Minister John Howard published a book in which he said Muslims were Australia’s first wave of immigrants to fail to assimilate with the mainstream.

Government leaders have also condemned some Muslim clerics who said husbands are entitled to smack disobedient wives, force them to have sex and for suggesting that women who don’t hide their faces behind veils invite rape.

“I wouldn’t like to go and say this is Muslim bashing,” said Ikebal Patel, president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, of the proposed New South Wales laws.

“But I think that the timing of this was really bad for Muslims,” he said.

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Coast Guard Rescue 299 Migrants Off Lampedusa Waters

(AGI) Lampedusa — The Italian Coast Guard rescued a migrant boat, escorting it to the island of Lampedusa. The vessel’s engine had broken down and a fire was about to break out onboard. Coast Guard personnel extinguished the fire, restarted the engine and proceeded to guide the boat towards the island.

Officials report 299 Sub-Saharan African migrants onboard, including 13 women and 1 child.

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



Fifteen Immigrants Rescued Off Sant’Antioco Coast

(AGI) Cagliari — As of tonight, the Elmas refugee camp has resumed activity to host 15 north african immigrants. The camp is in the military airport near Cagliari. The immigrants, probably Tunisians, were intercepted by the Finance Police patrol unit off the south western coast of Sardinia. They were taken ashore, on the island of Sant’Antioco, and were then transferred to the controversial temporary shelter camp, from which a group of Tunisians to be repatriated escaped last week.

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



More Eastern Europeans in the Netherlands

There were 125,000 workers from central and eastern Europe in the Netherlands in March 2011, according to new figures from the national statistics office CBS.

This is 20% up on March 2010, the CBS says.

Four out of five have Polish nationality, two-thirds are male and their average age is 33. Most have seasonal jobs in the farming and market gardening sectors.

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



Norwegians Claim Immigration Policy Failing

One in two Norwegians thinks the country has enough immigrants and criticise the government for its policies.

At the same time Norway needs more people to fill vacant positions, especially engineers, an increase in the number of immigrants entering Norway has made the natives sceptical, reports Aftenposten.

53.7% of the 1,380 people surveyed said they want to see a stop in the numbers of immigrants being accepted into Norway, according to latest results from Integrerings Barometeret (translated “Integration Barometer”). The figure was 45.8% when the inquiry was first conducted in 2005.

Two Norwegians Aftenposten met in Bislett, scene of last month’s drive-by shooting that killed Einar Opsahl, believe the media is mainly responsible for the increased xenophobia shown by the poll.

“It is unfortunate that so many are negative towards further immigration, but I’m not surprised. I think the [Norwegian] media is to blame to a large degree. Newspapers and television should tell the truth if an immigrant shoots a man on the street, as happened here in Bislett, but by doing so, it influences many to generalise about foreigners” says 25-year old Laura Emdal.

Declaring foreigners, Norwegians, and politicians should do more to aid integration, 24-year-old Elise Larsen Håvoll says, “Everyone should have to take a language test, not just a course.”

Foreigners now have to complete 600 hours of Norwegian tuition instead of 300 previously. However, both Laura Emdal and her Canadian partner Chris Parsons, who came to Norway as an immigrant four years ago, claim the courses need modernising.

“The problem with these is that many participate because they have to and don’t pay attention,” he says, having chosen to take a test instead.

Whilst the fur is flying over who is to responsible, results of the poll show 60% and 83.5% blame Norwegians and foreigners, respectively, for their lack of integration efforts. Six out of ten criticise authorities for their unsuccessful clampdown on high levels of immigration.

On a positive note, 88 percent of Norwegians think immigrants should have the same rights to jobs as their so-called ‘ethnic Norwegian’ peers, according to the inquiry, which shows they respect foreigners’ traditions and values.

Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre has also announced that foreigners can apply for visas, residence permits, or citizenship online.

“Using the application portal, you can register your visa application wherever you are, whenever you like, without any queue. This reduces waiting time for applicants and ensures more effective processing of all types of applications,” he said.

Norwegian authorities dealt with between 100-450 applications a day last year, and received 18,000 requests to reside in the country.

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



Sweden: ‘Lower Wages Will Give More Immigrants Jobs’

The best way to boost employment levels among Sweden’s foreign-born is by reducing wages for low-paying jobs, argues Jenny von Bahr, author of a report on the subject commissioned by liberal Swedish think tank Timbro.

Having a job not only brings an income, but it is also serves as a way for people to build their professional networks and skills. For those who have migrated to a new country, work is an important bridge to the new country’s culture and an opportunity to develop skills in their new language. Employment is therefore important not only for economic security, but also a prerequisite for successful integration.

The WSP Analysis and Strategy consulting firm has therefore been commissioned by the liberal Swedish think tank Timbro to conduct an evaluation of Swedish integration policy. The aim has been to answer the question as to whether current policy is sufficient to eventually reach the goal of full employment among Sweden’s foreign-born.

Today, the employment rate for foreign-born workers in Sweden is 61.8 percent, far below the rest of the population’s level of 76.5 percent. The rate is particularly low among foreign-born women, for whom the employment rate is 56.5 percent and which has fallen in 2010.

In our report “Bidrag — vägen till arbete?” (‘Benefits — the way to work?), we identified four key explanatory factors for the lower employment rates among Sweden’s foreign-born.

Foreign-born earnings are on average much lower in the first years in Sweden before later increasing. This is due to the relocation factor, namely that a person’s human capital is initially less valued in a new country than at home. This is because language and social skills, personal networks and the like, to some extent become useless with a move.

Our study shows that the relocation factor increases the more culturally and linguistically distant a country is. For example, immigrants from Asia and Africa in Sweden earn on average earned incomes of 86,000 and 95,000 kronor per year ($13,960 and $15,420), respectively, after five to nine years in Sweden, while the corresponding level for a newly arrived immigrant from the northern hemisphere is 205,000 kronor. The relocation factor, of course, also affects Swedes moving abroad — most of them would have an easier time finding a new job in Oslo than in Mogadishu.

The merit factor describes how employers have a hard time judging the merits of a foreign-born worker. Most employers have less knowledge of higher education standards in other countries and language barriers also make it difficult to take references from previous employers. According to the study, there is also a trend for employers to weed out applications from foreign-born workers. Meanwhile, the general trend of discrimination in Sweden is significantly lower than in other countries.

The third factor is the wage factor. The high minimum wages in Sweden exclude people who, because they are immigrants for example, have a lower productivity when entering the labour market. The work they can perform is simply not valued at the same level as the lowest wages currently agreed upon between unions and employers.

High unemployment among immigrants is not a natural law; in countries with a significantly lower minimum wage than Sweden, employment levels among the foreign-born are often the same as those for people born in the country, or even higher.

The fourth factor is the incentive factor, which deals with welfare benefits that can counteract pro-work policies. The Swedish social welfare system can work against the incentive to find a job for large groups of foreign-born because, on the margin, they earn little or nothing more by working than they would by remaining on benefits.

This is of course also the case for native-born Swedes as well, but the relocation factor reinforces this tendency. One consequence of this is that up to 12 percent of Sweden’s foreign-born receive some form of income support, compared with 2 percent for people born in Sweden.

The study also examines how Swedish integration policy is currently designed.

Swedish integration policy has a very clear focus on the relocation and merit factors, by providing language training, employment training and validation measures. In the 2008-2009 academic year, for example, just over 110,000 foreign-born took Swedish For Immigrants (SFI) languages classes and 70,000 were enrolled in adult education programmes. At the same time, Sweden’s National Public Employment Service (Arbetsförmedlingen) provides different types of work traineeships, wage subsidized employment opportunities, and validation measures.

Measures to mitigate the effects of the relocation and merit factors are both extensive and generous. The conclusion of our study is that further action in these areas will not result in anything more than marginal effects on employment levels of Sweden’s foreign-born.

On the other hand, very little has been done to tackle the wage factor. Wage formation is the responsibility of labour market parties, but politicians who see the problem can also take up the discussion with unions and employers.

Awareness of the incentive factor has, however, increased. The government declared in December 2010 that it had “broken with the dependency mentality” and has introduced a full-time attendance-requirement for newcomers participating in establishment measures in order for them to receive full compensation.

The government has also introduced an option for newly arrived refugees participating in establishment programmes to maintain an income of 8,000 kronor per month without having their establishment benefits reduced. This is good, but the measure only covers 1 to 2 percent of the approximately one million foreign-born people of working age living in Sweden.

Despite increased awareness of the incentive factor, there is much to be done to strengthen pro-work policies within the benefit system. Special focus should be placed on encouraging foreign-born women to enter the labour market.

The conclusion of the study is that current integration policy, with a focus on comprehensive reception measures, is inadequate. This policy has been in place for decades and has no potential to increase employment more than very marginally.

The reason is that improvements in the reception system for newly-arrived immigrants have little use if there isn’t a labour market that takes over when the reception measures end.

In order to reduce unemployment among immigrants, the focus should instead be on reforms in wages and incentive factors: general reforms that encourage more jobs with lower requirements for language skills and a clearer pro-work approach within the benefits’ systems.

Such a policy has — in contrast to the current policy — a good position to reduce social exclusion among immigrants in Sweden.

This article was originally published in Swedish on the Newsmill opinion website. English translation by The Local

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

Culture Wars


Indian Health Minster Creates Stir With Homosexuality Remarks

Indian gay rights activists voiced shock and outrage Tuesday over public comments by the health minister who said homosexuality was unnatural and a “disease” brought to India by foreigners.

Speaking at a national meeting Monday of district and mayoral leaders on HIV/AIDS prevention, the minister, Ghulam Nabi Azad, stated that gay sex was “unnatural and not good for India.”

“Unfortunately this disease has come to our country too…where a man has sex with another man, which is completely unnatural and should not happen, but does,” Azad said at the conference.

Activists said his comments served to set the nation back in its battle both for gay rights and against HIV.

Members of the Indian government, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress Party leader Sonia Gandhi were in attendance at the conference, but the prime minister’s office declined to comment on Azad’s statement. The Health Ministry has also refrained from issuing a statement, the Associated Press reported.

Activist groups, however, quickly condemned the minister’s remarks. Anjali Gopalan, head of the NAZ Foundation, a rights group that promotes equal rights for homosexuals and works with HIV-positive people, said Azad’s remarks were worrisome given the nation’s difficulty in fighting against HIV.

“These comments help no cause. It’s definitely not going to help in our fights against HIV,” she told AP.

With 2.5 million HIV positive citizens, India has the largest population of people living with the virus in Asia. Because of the nation’s history of marginalizing the gay community, experts said the HIV/AIDS awareness message did not always reach those who needed it most.

“If you’re not going to invest in community building then gay people will continue to be marginalized,” Gopalan said.

Homosexuality remains taboo in most of India, despite some advances in acceptance around the country. In 2009, the Delhi High Court struck down a law that made homosexual intercourse a crime punishable by up to 10 years in jail. The law — rarely enforced — was largely used for harassment.

Gay rights activists said Azad’s inflammatory words required immediate action.

“How can the health minister say something so unscientific and irrational?” Nitin Karani, a gay rights activist told a television new channel, AP reported. “He needs to apologize immediately or he needs to go.”

Azad once said Indians should watch late night TV as an alternative to sex in order to control population, a remark that received public attention.

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

General


1.5 Million Sexless Years No Good for Stick Insects

ONE stick insect species may have been celibate for 1.5 million years. Ditching sex means no risky matings, but harmful mutations build up over the generations, so asexual animals shouldn’t survive for long. Bernard Crespi of Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, established the last time Timema tahoe stick insects had sex by studying mutation rates of two genes. A lack of sex might eventually catch up with the insect, says David Hillis of the University of Texas at Austin, as 1.5 million years is not long in evolutionary terms. “It looks like asexuals arise commonly and must go extinct commonly too,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Governments Turn to NGOs as Proxy Conflict Negotiators

State actors are increasingly turning to private organizations to broker peace deals in the world’s conflict zones as governments look for ways to avoid the risks associated with direct involvement in mediation. Just as private contractors and proxy armies have provided governments with the necessary distance to become involved militarily in international conflicts which could have been inflamed through state intervention, so nations are increasingly turning to non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to manage their peace negotiations in the world’s war zones.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110709

Financial Crisis
» Obscure Clause May Help US Avert Default
» Signs of Life in Tunisia’s Economy as Italian Trading Partners Get Back in Business
 
Europe and the EU
» Cyprus: EU: New Funds to Support Turkish Community
» Italy: De Gennaro: Secret Services to Hire Through University
» Italy: Nero’s Golden House to Remain Closed to Visitors
» Italy: Nine Germans Given Life for World War II Massacres
» Italy: Milan Brings First Civil Action Against ‘Ndrangheta
» Netherlands: Wilders Receiving More Threats From Abroad
» Spain: Brussels Opens Inquiry Into ‘Discounted’ Ships
» Spain: 12th Century Manuscript Disappears From Compostela
 
Mediterranean Union
» France Supports Moroccan Solar Power Plan
 
North Africa
» Algeria: 60% of Imported Goods Are Fake
» Algeria: Record Citrus Production in 2011
» Algeria: No More Minors in Adult Prisons Starting in 2012
 
Middle East
» Association Donates 2 Tons of Books to Baghdad Library
» Syria: Mar Musa Monastery on Last Legs, Monks Demand Help
» Turkey: Two Deputies Propose Trousers for Women MPs
 
Russia
» Moscow Bans Abortion Ads That Don’t Inform Women of the Risks
 
South Asia
» British Writer Released From Prison in Singapore
» Hindu Temple in India’s Kerala Reveals €8bn Treasure
 
Far East
» Vietnamese Protest Against the “Tyrannical” Expansion of China
 
Immigration
» Another 4 Boatloads Land on Lampedusa, Over 1,000 Refugees

Financial Crisis


Obscure Clause May Help US Avert Default

The White House could resort to an little-known line in the US constitution to prevent a ruinous default if Democrats and Republicans do not agree to raise the debt ceiling by August 2, experts say.

The 143-year-old clause, written to address still-potent divisions after the bloody Civil War, has been dredged up by legal scholars as well as the US Treasury secretary to suggest how a debt debacle might be avoided.

But resorting to it could spark a constitutional crisis over just who — the Congress or the White House — controls the power of the federal purse, analysts say.

The US government reached its debt limit of $14.29 trillion in May and since then the Treasury has used special measures to allow the government to keep paying its bills.

But unless the limit is raised by August 2, the Treasury says, growing spending and debt service commitments will force a default, which would have disastrous ripple effects throughout the global financial system.

Republicans in Congress — which sets the debt cap into law — have refused to raise it unless the move is accompanied by deep spending cuts, and their talks with Democrats have made little visible progress.

If the impasse is not broken, could President Barack Obama simply ignore the ceiling and borrow more money?

Some legal experts believe he could, citing the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, adopted in 1868.

With the country still wrestling with post-war divisions, section four of the amendment was written after politicians from the defeated south sought to block the north’s commitment to repay large debts arising from its victorious campaign.

“The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law … shall not be questioned,” it reads.

Neil Buchanan, a professor at George Washington University Law School, said that means the government’s obligation to make payments cannot be abrogated by some “arbitrary limit.”

“If Congress has enacted laws that create public obligations, then those obligations must be met,” Buchanan wrote in a column on Thursday.

Taken a step farther, some suggest, the law may make the debt ceiling itself unconstitutional.

While some have argued that the constitutional clause was specific to the situation of the time, a 1935 Supreme Court ruling established that it still applies, Buchanan said.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who has warned that a default would have “catastrophic” consequences, raised the clause during a discussion of the debt ceiling in May — though he did not say the White House should invoke it if negotiations fail.

If invoked, experts say, it could spark a nasty fight over constitutional powers between the White House and Congress.

Asked about it during his Twitter town hall this week, Obama — a former constitutional law professor — emphasized the need to reach a deal in Congress.

“I don’t think we should even get to the constitutional issue. Congress has a responsibility to make sure we pay our bills,” he said.

Geithner’s mention of the law does not mean he thinks it can be used to ignore the debt cap, the Treasury said Friday in a letter addressed to The New York Times.

“The secretary has cited the 14th amendment… in support of his strong conviction that Congress has an obligation to ensure we are able to honor the obligations of the United States,” a senior lawyer for the department wrote.

[Return to headlines]



Signs of Life in Tunisia’s Economy as Italian Trading Partners Get Back in Business

Tunisia’s recent “Jasmine revolution” has brought much of the country’s economy to a standstill. Foreign tourists are still a rare sight right now, but long-established Italian companies are eager to reignite old economic ties

At the first Italian-Tunisian business forum after the revolution, which took place last week in Tunis, jasmine flowers were everywhere: scattered on the desks and window sills, and even decorating men’s buttonholes. The flower — a symbol of the Arab spring — has replaced the pictures of former Tunisian president Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, in the streets and in all the offices of Tunisia’s transitional government.

At the forum, Tunisia’s new trade and tourism minister, Mehdi Houas (who came back from Paris only six months ago) met many Italian businessmen, as well as Italy’s industry minister Paolo Romani. “I am here to reassure the Italian business community and also to be reassured by the Tunisian authorities about the further steps towards transition of a country which is a dear friend of Italy,” Romani told him.

Italy is Tunisia’s second most important trading partner (after France), with a global volume of trade of 5.8 billion euros. Around 740 Italian companies, which together employ 55,000 people, do business in Tunisia. The Italian clothing retailer Benetton, for example, employs 15,000 Tunisians.

“The situation is improving but is still fragile, given that the transitional government has not been legitimized by an election,” said sources at the Italian embassy in Tunis. The election of the constitutional assembly has been postponed from July 24 to October 24, which some see as a setback. Moreover, the war in neighboring Libya — which has prompted almost 2,000 refugees to cross the border almost every day — is also adding strain. In Tunis, a sense of insecurity makes people stay indoors as soon as the night falls. Thousands of former detainees have been freed and burglaries have picked up. Many people have installed iron bars over their windows. Armored vehicles are parked in front of the national television building.

Collapse of tourism

Many people in Tunisia are worried about the increasing appeal of the Islamic party — which, according to some polls, could obtain about 20% of the votes —, the high unemployment rate among the young. The collapse, by as much as 50 percen, of the tourism sector has had particularly devastating results, since it employs around 8% of the total workforce. This summer, the resort complexes of the Italian tour operator Valtour will remain closed in both Tabarca and Bizerte.

If Italian tourists have decided to avoid Tunisia this year, Italian companies have stayed put. Colacem, a cement manufacturer, and Gervasoni, a steel manufacturer, have continued making business as usual; another Italian company, Clerprem, is still producing car armrests in Bizerte, in northern Tunisia.

Construction is resuming as well, especially in Tunis, where many buildings still await to be completed. Todini, a construction company, will build two plots of the new expressway between the cities of Gabes and Sfax, for a total value of 100 milllion euros. Ferretti Construction has recently resumed work as usual, and the Italian Gwh, a biomasses producer, and the French Thales, which produces radio navigation systems, have recently opened up new offices in Tunisia. Still, some companies have complained about a number of custom issues at the borders; the uncertainty linked to the next elections and government also makes some payments unsure.

But no one doubts that the economy can help Tunisia’s transition to democracy. During the Italian-Tunisian forum, Tunisian ministers promised a series of investment incentives for Italian businessmen willing to open new firms (such as exemption from paying any taxes or VAT for export only companies during the first ten years of investment). Tunisia is also inviting small and medium firms to invest in mechanics, electronics and food farming in a country that is now the central trade platform towards Egypt, Morocco and Jordan.

“This is positive,” said Michele Tronconi, president of the Italian Textile and Fashion Federation. “Now they have to liberalize distribution, real estate, transportation and media, all of which were until now under the monopole of Ben Ali’s family.”

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

Europe and the EU


Cyprus: EU: New Funds to Support Turkish Community

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 27 — Today the European Commission approved 26.5 million euros of funding for the Turkish Cypriot community. These funds will focus on measures to promote reconciliation and confidence building. Beneficiaries will include civil society organisations, schools, farmers, villages, SMEs. “These 26.5 million euro — said Stefan Fule, EU Commissioner for European Neighbourhood Policy — demonstrate the continued commitment of the EU to the Turkish Cypriot community and to a Cyprus settlement. The activities implemented by the Commission with this fresh funding are reunification-driven, underlining the EU’s expectations for a successful end of the talks towards reunification of the island”.

The whole Aid Programme for Turkish Cypriot community will total 28 million euros in 2011 and 1.5 million euros has already been approved earlier this year to fund the EU Scholarship Programme for the academic year 2011/2012.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: De Gennaro: Secret Services to Hire Through University

(AGI) Rome — DIS Director De Gennaro has said the secret services will hire the first 15 young people recruited through the university. Gianni De Gennaro made the announcement at the signing of an accord-program between the Department of Information for Security and the La Sapienza University of Rome, which forsees the creation of bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degree courses to train experts in information.

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



Italy: Nero’s Golden House to Remain Closed to Visitors

Rome, 8 July (AKI) — Roman Emperor Nero’s first century Domus Aurea villa will be closed to visitors for at least another three years as complicated repairs to the sprawling complex cause its scheduled 2011 reopening to be delayed, said the Italian culture minister’s director general for archeology Luigi Malnati.

“You first and foremost have to avoid further collapses and save it,” he said in an interview with Il Messaggero newspaper published on Friday.

Some historians say Nero started the great fire that charred much of Rome in 64 AD to make room for his 300 acre Domus Aurea, or Golden House that was adorned by gold leaf and dazzling frescos.

Following his suicide in 69 AD, the complex was considered a symbol of Nero’s arrogance and was buried and built over after the gold, pearls and other valuable jewels laid into its some 150 rooms were stripped.

After 18 years of restoration work it was reopened in 1999 but was repeatedly closed because of collapses due to moisture.

“The problem is the rain that seeps inside,” Malnati said.

“The vaults are covered with calcium and the walls are bloated with humidity.

He said the site must be restored with parts being sealed with a solution to protect it from water damage but its vast size means an effort to secure the entire area is too ambitious.

“The place is a colander and the restoration is so delicate that it required much calm and time,” Malnati said.

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



Italy: Nine Germans Given Life for World War II Massacres

Verona, 7 July (AKI) — A court in northern Italy gave nine Germans life sentences for the killing of more than 140 civilians during the World War II German occupation.

The men — who were convicted in absentia and who are in their 80s and 90s — where part of the “Hermann Goehring” division with the responsibility of putting down Italian resistance. Their 140 victims were killed in the Modena region in 1944.

The Germans were also convicted for carrying out massacres in the Emilia Romagna and Tuscany regions. Three others died during the trial that lasted seven months following a five-year investigation.

The sentence was read late Tuesday in front of family members of some of the victims.

“At last there is justice for the victims and their relatives and a bloody page of history can be closed,” plaintiff Demos Malavasi told the Corriere della Sera newspaper.

The 2009 Italian movie “The Man Who Will Come” is the true story of the 1944 killing of 700 Italians in the mountain village of Marzabotto near Bologna in Emilia Romagna.

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



Italy: Milan Brings First Civil Action Against ‘Ndrangheta

(AGI) Milan — To the satisfaction the mayor,Giuliano Pisapia, The City of Milan has be allowed to bring a civil action in the criminal trial for the kidnapping and murder of Lea Garofalo.

This is the first time the City of Milan has been granted such status in a trial involving crimes linked to the presence of the mafia, as requested by the municipality’s lawyer, Maria Rosa Sala.

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



Netherlands: Wilders Receiving More Threats From Abroad

Freedom Party leader Geert Wilders is increasingly being confronted with threats from outside the Netherlands. In an interview with Dutch daily AD on Saturday the controversial MP said at the end of last year people in the south-easternmost tip of Europe were preparing an attack.

“At the end of last year there was solid information about people somewhere in the Caucasus who were making preparations to harm me,” said Mr Wilders. The reason the politician is able to reveal this incident is because the case had been resolved and there was no longer a threat. Although he said he could not go into detail.

The threat was so serious that various scenarios were discussed. If they had not been stopped at an early stage he was told he should leave the country. “I refused. I am a politician here. I have a party to lead.” He said it was up to the security team to come up with a plan to keep him safe.

Mr Wilders believes the increase in threats are due to him becoming better known internationally. There are always threats to his life, but they have increased. “A couple of years ago there were clearly fewer threats,” he said.

A spokesperson for the National Coordinator of Counter Terrorism (NCTb) declined to respond to Wilders’ comments. “We never discuss actual threats and indications in the media and see no reason to do so now,” said the spokesperson.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Spain: Brussels Opens Inquiry Into ‘Discounted’ Ships

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JULY 4 — The European Commission has opened an inquiry into the tax breaks granted by Spain for the purchase of ships, which could be considered illegal state aid according to EU regulations.

The latter would allow maritime transport companies to purchase ships, in some cases, at a cheaper price of up to 30% off the market one. At this point in the investigation, according to Brussels, the tax regime would create benefits for companies making use of it and harm EU competition. “The European Union,” said EU Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia, “needs a competitive maritime sector at the international level and allows for a favourable taxation system to prevent enterprises from moving their activities elsewhere. The inquiry does not bring into question the principle of these rates, but the EU Commission must make sure that the Spanish system does not go beyond what is allowed for by EU rules, and that it does not distort competition within the internal market.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Spain: 12th Century Manuscript Disappears From Compostela

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JULY 7 — The precious Codex Calixtinus dating back to the 12th century, the first ‘guide’ for the pilgrims of Compostela, considered to be of inestimable value, disappeared from the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, where it was kept in a vault in the Archives, report Spanish police. The disappearance of the Codex, attributed to Pope Callixtus II, was reported to police by religious authorities on Tuesday night.

The Codex, made up of five books which were grouped into a single book in 1964, is considered to be one of the gems of Galicia’s cultural heritage. Spanish police have issued a European alert in case the work has been robbed, as specialists interviewed by El Correo Gallego believe, by a group specialising in art theft, which could have acted on an order from a wealthy and unscrupulous collector. The Codex is unsellable on the legal market. Police have activated a large-scale search, reports ABC online. According to sources in the investigation cited by Radio Cadena Ser, the work could already be outside of Spain. The Codex is a sort of guidebook for pilgrims created to promote the worship of St. James, who is believed to be buried in the Galician city. It offers advice, indications on accommodations, descriptions of the path, works of art and customs of the various regions that were travelled through.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


France Supports Moroccan Solar Power Plan

(ANSAmed) — RABAT, JULY 8 — The French Development Agency (AFD) has decided to grant a loan of 100.3 million euros to Morocco to support the country’s solar energy plan. The money will also be used for the construction of a solar power plant in Ouarzazate.

The financing, MAP writes, consists of a loan of 100 million and a financing of 300,000 euros to support the Moroccan plan that was launched in 2009. Goal of this plan is to develop 2000 MW of solar power production capacity by 2020. An important goal for a country that depends for 97% from other countries for its energy supplies. Most of the solar power that is generated in the context of the Moroccan plan will be used on the local market; part of it will be exported to Europe.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: 60% of Imported Goods Are Fake

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 14 — 60% of goods imported into Algeria and put on sale are fake. The figure, which outlines the massive reach of this phenomenon and which raised concern, was reported by Mohamed Abdou Bouderbala, the general director of Algeria’s Customs office, who was quoted by Aps. Bourdebala stated that some two to three million fake products are seized every year by the Customs office task force charged with fighting this type of fraud.

Almost all goods imported into Algeria are counterfeit products, from make-up to electronic devices to spare parts and cigarettes.

What is most alarming is what is done with medicines which, during the first stage (when importation has to be authorised) arrive as original products, but are then substituted with counterfeit items.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: Record Citrus Production in 2011

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 6 — Citrus production in Algeria reached 11.5 million quintals in 2011, according to the Ministry for Agriculture and Rural Development, quoted by APS. Compared with the previous season, citrus production increased by 41%.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Algeria: No More Minors in Adult Prisons Starting in 2012

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 8 — By the year 2012 the programme to move young prisoners to rehabilitation centres that will allow minors who are currently imprisoned in regular jails, where, however, they are still kept separate from the adult population, will be completed. The announcement was made by the Director General for the Prison and Rehabilitation System, Mokhtar Felioune, during a visit to the Oussera prison, reports APS. The programme calls for rehabilitation centres to be up and running as soon as possible, as they are part of the five-year prison building programme. These centres, added Felioune, will be educational in nature, as opposed to normal prisons. Currently 411 minors are in Algerian prisons, mainly for robbery or acts of violence.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Association Donates 2 Tons of Books to Baghdad Library

(AGI) Pescara — The Pescara-based association “Aiutiamoli a vivere” has donated two tons of books to the Baghdad library.

“Everything went as planned” said the president of the association, Tusio De Iuliis. “I left from Pisa on June 9 aboard a civil flight with some soldiers who were travelling to Afghanistan. With the two tons of books that we took with us, we can say that the library there, named after Ignazio Silone, is now complete. The situation in Iraq is terrible: there’s no electricity, gasoline is hard to find and temperatures can reach 50 degrees. The situation is bound to get worse as the summer approaches” De Iuliis explained. The mission was possible thanks to the valuable contribution of the municipality of Spoltore and the municipality and province of Pescara.

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



Syria: Mar Musa Monastery on Last Legs, Monks Demand Help

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JULY 8 — The Syrian crisis may also account for the Mar Musa monastery, a site for Christians and Muslims in the middle of the desert that was opened in 1982 by the Roman Jesuit, Paolo Dall’Oglio, and that has become a meeting point for pilgrims around the world, with an average of more than 50,000 travelling to the area every year. The Jesuit and his colleagues yesterday sent out an appeal for “money, commitment and prayer”, as the monastery is no longer able to rely on donations from its visitors and is at risk of closure, at a time when the local community has the greatest need for help and support.

Only yesterday, for instance, the monks took in W., a two and a half year-old child. “His parents have disappeared in the storm that is afflicting this country. A widow with three young girls picked up little W. and came here,” the monks said in their statement.

Set deep in the mountains east of Nebek (a town 80 kilometres north of the capital Damascus), the monastery stands at 1,320 metres above sea level and has a staircase of 300 steps built into the rock of a breathtaking valley. The original 6th century building was dedicated to Bar Musa, Saint Moses the Abyssinian, and is surrounded by caves that were used for centuries by hermits, which have also been revived by Father Paolo.

“Concern for the physical safety of the Syrian relatives of our monks and nuns is compounded by anxiety over a galloping economic crisis, which is even more serious for the tourism sector, which is in a disastrous state,” the statement continues. “Up until Easter, we would have hundreds of visitors. Tonight, one Chinese tourist came here and we looked at her as if she were a martian. Many young people, most of them destitute, reacting with their work and prayers to the depression and stress that threatens us all”.

The harsh truth is that “if things continues like this, within a few weeks we will be incapable of meeting the expenses of our secular collaborators,” the monks say, and, as a result, “the life of the monastic community would become very difficult, not to mention that of the needy families whom we help regularly”. A deterioration of the situation, in other words, would mean “bankruptcy” for Mar Musa, another negative signal for Syria’s future.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Two Deputies Propose Trousers for Women MPs

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 8 — Two Turkish parliamentarians proposed amendment to parliamentary bylaw to allow women deputies to wear trousers during Parliamentary General Assembly meetings, as Anatolia news agency reports. Justice & Development (AK) Party deputies Ihsan Sener and Sibel Gonul presented the proposal to Parliament Speaker’s Office on Thursday. Under the proposal, women deputies can wear trousers and jackets besides suits. It amends Article 56 of the bylaw, which states “women deputies wear suits”, as “women deputies wear suits or jacket and trousers”. The reason for the proposal is to let women deputies wear more comfortable clothes during long and exhausting General Assembly meetings.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Moscow Bans Abortion Ads That Don’t Inform Women of the Risks

Move contained in a bill passed in the Duma. The government continues to fight the decline in population: over 1.5 million abortions every year.

Moscow (AsiaNews) — Concerned by the continuing population decline that afflicts the world’s largest country, the Duma (the lower house of parliament) has approved a bill according to which, all advertisements relating to practices of abortion must contain warnings about possible risks to the health of women. The draft has passed its third reading last July 1 and now awaits the green light from the Federation Council (Senate) and then its signing — virtually taken for granted — by President Dmitry Medvedev, who has always championed the values of life and family.

According to Russian press reports, it is an amendment to the law on advertising, which states that 10% of the space used to advertise abortion should also inform women about the possible negative consequences such as infertility. “The advertising for abortion should not contain statements on the safety of these health services,” reads the text of the bill, released by news agencies. “These ads — said Viktor Zvagelsky, deputy of the ruling party United Russia — lead the young people to believe they will have no problems interrupting a pregnancy”, and he motivates the proposal of the new law with the “depressing” situation of abortions in Russia.

The Federation has one of the highest abortion rates in the world and for time now, experts have been speaking of “a demographic coma”. According to figures published by the Duma website, in 2007, there were 1.5 million abortions. The Soviet Union was the first country to legalize abortion in 1920, banned again by Stalin (from 1936 until his death in 1954) interested in encouraging births. For the same purpose, the Communist Party also bestowed awards and money on the most prolific couples, but immediately after the collapse of the USSR the demographic decline has become unstoppable: from 1992 to 2008 the population fell by more than 12 million people to about 143 million. The United Nations estimates that by 2050, Russia will lose a fifth of its population, reaching 116 million. The phenomenon is due to a poor diet that causes heart problems, high rates of alcoholism among men, the spread of HIV / AIDS and the high number of violent deaths.

To combat what Moscow sees as a real war for survival, the government also supports the Orthodox Church which for years has asked for more stringent measures to reduce the number of abortions. According to data from the Russian Social University, the annual abortion rate is far higher than official figures, and in reality is around three to four million.

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

South Asia


British Writer Released From Prison in Singapore

(AGI) Singapore — The British journalist Alan Shadrake has been released from prison in Singapore, after serving a 5-week sentence for writing a book which is critical of the use of death sentences in this small Asian country. The 76-years-old had been arrested last July on charges of criminal defamation against the country’s judges after writing study on Singapore’s justice system called “Once a jolly hangman” .

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



Hindu Temple in India’s Kerala Reveals €8bn Treasure

(AGI) New Delhi — Digs at a Hindu temple in India’s southern state of Kerala have led to the discovery of an 8bn euro treasure. The underground rooms at the temple have been found to contain thousands of silver and gold necklaces and precious stones, currently estimated to be worth some 500bn rupees.

Kerala authorities say the estimate is a preliminary one.

According to Secretary of State K. Jayakumar “there is still another secret room we have to open. It has remained close for 140 years.” ..

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

Far East


Vietnamese Protest Against the “Tyrannical” Expansion of China

The Hanoi government has to find the “positive and effective” measures to protect the fishermen and vessels for oil exploration as soon as possible. In June, nearly 3 million Vietnamese in the world held a sit-in in front of Chinese embassies in the United States, France, Germany and other countries. Meanwhile, China seeks bilateral agreements to dominate the South China Sea.

Hanoi (AsiaNews) — Old, young, children, students, scientists, teachers, writers, farmers, factory workers: the entire Vietnamese people today, took to the streets to resist the ‘“tyrannical oppression and expansion” of the Chinese Communist regime in the South China Seas. In an announcement yesterday, intellectuals called on the government of Vietnam “ to find positive and effective measures to protect the fishermen and boats for oil exploration as soon as possible.” Because Hanoi “has to rely on the strength of the whole Vietnamese people, both at home and around the world.”

In recent weeks, at least 3 million Vietnamese fishermen and sailors all over the world organized sit-in in front of Chinese embassies of France, Germany, the United States and other countries. All cried, “Trung Qu?c dà d?o lu?c xam” (down with the Chinese invasion), protesting against the repeated attempts to occupy the Spratly Islands.

Nguyen, a Vietnamese-American, told AsiaNews: “I am very concerned about the aggressive ambitions of China. On 3 July I took part in a peaceful demonstration in Hanoi. The people who were with me spoke of the Chinese paramilitary ships, which for years have blocked Vietnamese fishing vessels, killing hundreds of thousands of fishermen and shooting women, children and elderly living in the border provinces in northern Vietnam. “

Meanwhile, the newspaper Revolutionary Military of China’s People says the “leaders of the Chinese military” are heading to Vietnam “to resolve sensitive issues” and guide Vietnamese public opinion “in the right direction.” In fact, Beijing continues to seek only bilateral agreements, so as to intimidate smaller countries and force them to accept their claims on maritime boundaries in the South China Sea. The other countries are instead calling for multilateral agreements.

In June of this year tension between China, Vietnam and the Philippines increased after beijing’s “paramilitary ships” disguised as fishing vessels, arrived in Vietnamese waters. May 25 and June 9, armed ships cut the cables of two Vietnamese ships for oil exploration, the Binh Minh 02 and the Viking II. And since June 15, Beijing has sent a large ship from its coast guard to control navigation, explicitly signalling its ambitions on the Spratly and Paracel islands, uninhabited, but very rich in resources and raw materials. The hegemony of the area is of strategic importance for trade and exploitation of raw materials, including oil and natural gas.

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

Immigration


Another 4 Boatloads Land on Lampedusa, Over 1,000 Refugees

(AGI) Lampedusa — The Coastguard reports that four boats have put into Lampedusa in quick succession after several days’ respite. 1,042 migrants landed on the island between 11.30pm and 6.30am (CET), including roughly a hundred women and thirty or so children. Most of them are of Sub-Saharan origin and came from Libya.

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

News Feed 20110708

Financial Crisis
» Arrivals in Greece Up by Almost 10% in January-June
» High-Speed Trading Algorithms Place Markets at Risk
» Italy: Family Buying Power Slumps
» OECD Joins Criticism of Rating Agencies
» Strichet: Rating Requirements Suspended for Portugal
» UK: Victims of the Recovery: Women Lose 218,000 Jobs Since the End of the Recession (While Men Gain 768,000 Posts)
 
USA
» Colorado Mastodon Dig So Big Scientists Call in Reinforcements
» Final Shuttle Launch Occasions Anxiety About Future of U.S. In Space
» NASA Launches Space Shuttle on Historic Final Mission
» Oil Giant ENI Starts Production in New Gulf of Mexico Field
» Threat of James Webb Space Telescope Cancellation Rattles Astronomy Community
 
Europe and the EU
» 8,000-Year-Old Dog Tomb ‘Significant’ Find
» Belgian Government Talks Unravel, Again
» ‘British Journalists Bend the Truth, Plagiarize Competitors and Break Laws’
» Democratization Can’t Save Europe: The Need for a Centralization of Power
» Faithful Fans Bid Tearful Farewell to Harry Potter
» Fossils in Saxony Shed Light on Ancient Lizard Life
» Future of Space Exploration is Bright, German Astronaut Says
» Ireland: ‘Race Hate’ Gang in Temple Bar Orgy of Violence
» Italy: Police Battle No-TAV Demonstrators Again
» Italy: Thousands of Troops in Foreign Missions to be Brought Home
» Man Receives World’s First Synthetic Windpipe
» Muslim Appeal on Swiss Minarets Rejected
» Polar Bears Can Claim Irish Ancestry
» Second World War Bombers Changed the Weather
» Swedish Woman Beats Up Groper — Goes Free
» Unless It’s Reformed, Europe’s Project is Doomed
» Vatican: Holy See Seeks to Boost Financial Watchdog’s Independence
 
Balkans
» Albania: Brussels Wants Reasons for Tirana Mayor Decision
» Serbia: UN Tribunal Frees Former Yugoslav Army Officer
 
Mediterranean Union
» Business: Euro-Arab Conference in Milan to Support SME
» Media: Agreement Al Jazeera-ANSA on Editorial Cooperation
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Protest After Fundamentalist Attack on Prostitutes
» Libya: NATO: Mission Progress But Gaddafi Forces Regrouping
» Libya: Six Thousand Refugees Arrive Every Day in Tunisia
» Tunisia: Camel Drivers on Strike
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Where is Promised Arab Funding for the Palestinians?
 
Middle East
» Caroline Glick: Rival Hegemons in Syria
» Opinion: Illegal Antiquities Trade Funds Terrorism
» Qatar Sets Sights on Stem Cells
 
South Asia
» Indonesia: Migrant Worker Taskforce to Focus on Saudi Deathrow Cases
» Kazakhstan: Astana: Praying for the Sick Without Authorisation Can Lead to Fines and Prison
 
Far East
» Saudi-Sino Relations Are Flourishing
» South Korea’s Pupils to Go Paperless by 2015
 
Australia — Pacific
» Climate Policy Turning Politics Upside Down
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» South Sudan Independence: Thousands of Peacekeepers to be Sent to Prevent it Becoming Failed State
» ‘Whatever We Do the Pirates Have Adapted’
 
Immigration
» UK: Locked Up Again: The Somali Crook We Can’t Send Home Because of His Human Rightsby James Slack
 
Culture Wars
» Swedish Fire Service Sued Over Affirmative Action
 
General
» Commercially Valuable Fish Species Hit the Red List
» Homo Sapiens, Meet Your New Astounding Family
» Neptune Begins to Give Up Its Secrets
» The Anthropocene Debate: Do Humans Deserve Their Own Geological Era?

Financial Crisis


Arrivals in Greece Up by Almost 10% in January-June

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 8 — International arrivals in Greece rose 9.5% on an annual basis in the first six months of the year, according to the Association of Greek Tourism Enterprises (SETE), bringing the total to 4.2 million. Excluding the 3% drop at Athens International Airport, terminals outside the capital registered a record rise of 15.9%, led by the islands of Rhodes (up 33.2%) and Kos (31.1%).

SETE, as daily Kathimerini reports, argues that the rise is a result of the unrest in North Africa, the tension between Israel and Turkey, the reduction in value-added tax in accommodation prices and the improvement in the visa system in Russia.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



High-Speed Trading Algorithms Place Markets at Risk

Computers that buy and sell shares in a fraction of a second are in danger of destabilising stock markets around the world says Andrew Haldane, executive director for financial stability at the Bank of England. Speaking last night at the International Economic Association in Beijing, China, Haldane said that High Frequency Trading (HFT) firms were in a “race to zero” that could increase market volatility.

HFT algorithms can execute an order in just a few hundred microseconds, rapidly trading shares back and forth in order to quickly eke out profits from minor differences on the various exchanges. These trades are so fast that the physical location of the computers executing them becomes vital — even being a few hundred kilometres away from the exchange could mean missing out. It’s commerce far removed from any ordinary experience, as Haldane illustrated with an every day example: “If supermarkets ran HFT programmes, the average household could complete its shopping for a lifetime in under a second.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Family Buying Power Slumps

Inflation outruns incomes

(ANSA) — Rome, July 8 — Disposable income for households slumped in the first quarter of the year, according to statistics released Friday, a further confirmation that the economy continues to struggle to recover from the 2008 economic downturn.

Adjusting for inflation, the effective purchasing power of families fell by 0.8% in the first three months of 2011, despite a net growth of 1.1% that has not kept pace with rising currency values since the same period last year, the data showed.

Household saving in the first quarter was down by 0.9% on the previous quarter with the average Italian family setting aside 11.5% of its income, roughly corresponding to the drop in household spending power.

Italy’s slow economic growth will also affect its targets to reduce the budget deficit and national debt and, according to Bank of Italy Director-General Fabrizio Saccomanni, corrective measures equal to 2.3% of GDP will be needed over the next three years to meet current goals.

“Until household spending picks up, industrial orders cannot rebound and employment will not improve,” according to consumer group Codacons.

“In other words, the key to pulling out of the crisis is to boost consumer spending”.

The government has just launched an austerity package to wipe out the budget deficit by 2016, but critics claim the economy also needs stimulus measures.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



OECD Joins Criticism of Rating Agencies

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development accused ratings agencies on Thursday of aggravating the eurozone debt crisis by creating “self-realising prophesies.” OECD chief economist Pier Carlo Padoan said in an interview with Italy’s Stampa newspaper: “Lately, rating agencies have proved that they are strongly ‘pro-cyclical’ and produce self-realising prophesies” Padoan said the agencies did not merely pass on information but “express judgements, speeding up trends already at work.” He said: “It’s like pushing someone who is on the edge of a cliff. It aggravates the crisis.”

Rating agencies came under strong attack from senior personalities in the European Union on Wednesday after Moody’s downgraded Portugal’s rating to “junk” status, casting new doubts on the markets over EU efforts to manage the eurozone debt crisis. Moody’s said that Portugal may need a second round of bailout funds before it can return to capital markets. Portuguese bank shares fell and the yield on 10-year government bonds climbed from 12.185 to 12.719 percent. Asked about the possibility of a second aid package for Portugal, Padoan said it was “too soon to say.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Strichet: Rating Requirements Suspended for Portugal

(ANSAmed) — FRANKFURT, JULY 7 — “We say no to selective default,” said president of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet regarding the idea that involving private lenders in the new bailout for Greece can include any form of insolvency by the country.

The executive council of the European Central Bank, Trichet continued, decided today to suspend the its minimum rating requirement for Portuguese shares by banks as collateral for loans. Earlier the ECB has done the same for Greece and Ireland.

Portugal has recently seen its rating cut to ‘junk’ by Moody’s.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Victims of the Recovery: Women Lose 218,000 Jobs Since the End of the Recession (While Men Gain 768,000 Posts)

Working women have suffered the most during the recession as bosses axe staff to survive the downturn, figures revealed yesterday.

The research, by the Office for National Statistics, found women were more likely than men to lose their full-time jobs.

Figures comparing June 2008 with June 2010 show a ‘net loss’ of nearly one million full-time employees in Britain.

‘Net loss’ is the difference between the new posts created and the number losing their job.

The ONS said there were 5.7 per cent fewer women in full-time work last year compared with 2008, while the full-time male workforce dropped by 4.7 per cent in the same period.

And the worst is not over. Experts warned yesterday that women were also facing a disproportionate threat as the Government begins to cut back the State workforce, expected to mean 400,000 job losses in the next five years.

Around two-thirds of the public sector workforce is female, meaning women are again far more likely to bear the brunt of job cuts.

The ONS research, published yesterday, also highlights significant regional differences in the impact of the recession.

In Yorkshire, 37,600 women lost their job, equal to 7 per cent of the total, compared with 39,900 men, only 4.2 per cent of the total.

One of the reasons is that women dominate the sectors which have been most affected by the downturn, such as retail and accommodation.

To make matters worse, since June last year, when the ONS’s analysis ends, the situation for women has deteriorated.

In the past year, unemployment among women jumped by 46,000, while falling by 103,000 for men.

Of all the new jobs created over the past year, just one in six went to a woman.

Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, said: ‘This analysis shows the recession was a devastating blow for millions of workers and their families.’

In total, the ONS report showed that in June last year there were 11,154,300 male full-time workers in the UK and 6,829,000 female.

The ONS figures also revealed that a typical family have seen their weekly income drop by £4 a week in a year. In 2008/9, average weekly household income in England and Wales was £703. A year later it had fallen to £699.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

USA


Colorado Mastodon Dig So Big Scientists Call in Reinforcements

Diggers at an excavation in west-central Colorado turned up almost 5,000 large bones in seven weeks from mammoths, mastodons, giant ground sloths, bison, horses, deer and camels. They also uncovered thousands and thousands of smaller remains, like rodent teeth and salamander vertebrae. The scientists in charge knew early on that this dig would require more shovel work than they could do alone, so they called in reinforcements, including 15 educators from the surrounding valley. These teacher-volunteers worked alongside the scientists and other volunteer diggers, turning up clues to the creatures that inhabited this area somewhere between 150,000 and 50,000 years ago. The dig ended Sunday (July 3), having yielded 4,826 large bones in seven weeks and leaving the teacher-volunteers with lessons to pass on to their students.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Final Shuttle Launch Occasions Anxiety About Future of U.S. In Space

There is a certain sense of unreality as I sit this morning at the Kennedy Space Center press site, with Atlantis on the launch pad just over three miles away awaiting its last mission (STS 135), NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver finishing a briefing on NASA’s ambitious plans for the future, a hundred enthusiastic young people from all over the country gathered for a “Tweetup” to communicate their impressions of being at a launch-while in Washington, D.C., the House Appropriations Committee apparently is intending today to cut almost $2 billion from NASA’s budget. There is a remarkable disconnect between the excitement surrounding the last shuttle launch, set to lift-off Friday, and the pervasive and merited anxiety about NASA’s future that is almost the first thing out of the mouths of any of the space veterans I have encountered in the past 24 hours.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



NASA Launches Space Shuttle on Historic Final Mission

The space shuttle Atlantis soared into the heavens and the history books Friday (July 8), kicking off the last-ever mission of NASA’s storied shuttle program.

Atlantis and its four-astronaut crew are headed for a rendezvous with the International Space Station. The main goal of the shuttle’s 12-day flight — Atlantis’ 33rd mission after nearly 26 years of flying — is to deliver a year’s worth of supplies and spare parts to the orbiting lab. But the world’s attention is fixed more on what Atlantis’ last mission means than on what it will accomplish in orbit.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Oil Giant ENI Starts Production in New Gulf of Mexico Field

San Donato Milanese, 6 July 2011 (AKI) — Italy’s Eni has started oil production at a new field in the Gulf of Mexico, the oil giant said on Wednesday.

The field is located 110 kilometres off the coast of the southern US state of Louisiana and the oil well lies at a depth of approximately 760 metres, southwest of New Orleans, Eni said, adding that it is operating the entire Appaloosa field.

Production began on 21 June and the well is presently flowing at a rate of approximately 7,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, Eni stated.

Appaloosa is the second Eni field producing on the Corral Platform, which i is now processing 46,600 gross barrels of oil equivalent per day (33,000 net to Eni).

“This development, the second start-up this year for Eni in the US following the Nikaitchuq field start up in Alaska, further strengthens Eni’s role as an operator and enhances Eni’s position as one of the top producers in the Gulf of Mexico,” Eni said.

Eni’s total daily net production in the US is over 100,000 barrels of oil equivalent and it operates 60 percent of this.

The company owns lease interests in 333 blocks in the Gulf of Mexico and in 411 leases in the Barnett gas shales onshore Texas, in partnership with US natural gas and oil exploration and production company Quicksilver.

Eni said it owns interests in 140 leases in Alaska, between offshore and the North Slope, where it is currently operating the Nikaitchuq oil project.

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



Threat of James Webb Space Telescope Cancellation Rattles Astronomy Community

As NASA prepares to wrap up its shuttle program, leaving open questions about what comes next for U.S. human spaceflight, the next big thing in NASA’s astronomy program has been dealt a blow. The James Webb Space Telescope, a tennis court-size spacecraft that would take up a position in deep space to peer farther than ever into the cosmos, has been in development as a replacement for and successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, which has already logged 21 years in orbit. But the House Appropriations Committee, in a bill announced July 6, proposed axing the project entirely this week, citing mismanagement and bad budgeting. The bill, which would cut $1.6 billion, or about 9 percent, from NASA’s overall budget, would have to clear the full House and gain Senate approval before becoming law. But the specter of JWST cancellation looms large over a field already facing diminished resources.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


8,000-Year-Old Dog Tomb ‘Significant’ Find

Archaeologists have discovered an unprecedented 8,000-year-old dog tomb — the oldest in southern Europe — in a shell mound near the Portuguese town of Alcaçer do Sal. Project co-director Mariana Diniz told Lusa News Agency the find held “significant importance” because previously there had been no such sign of ancient “canine symbology” in southern Europe, in contrast to northern parts of the continent. “Eight thousand years ago [southern] communities domesticated dogs, an animal with an economic role, but also a symbolic one”, Ms. Diniz said “The ritual burial of dogs was done with care, not just any way, with special significance”, she added of the find. Lisbon’s National Museum of Archaeology has dispatched a specialist team to the site to consolidate and remove the tomb for conservation and future public display. The find was made by archaeologists from Lisbon University and the Spanish University of Cantabria.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgian Government Talks Unravel, Again

The long-standing political crisis in Belgium deepened on Thursday (7 July) when a fresh plan for restarting government coalition talks was rejected by the separatist Flemish party. Hopes were high that the 110-page position paper put forward on Monday by Socialist Elio Di Rupo could form the basis for further negotiations, with Belgium now getting on for about 400 days without a government. This is the eighth attempt to reach an agreement between the Flemish and the Walloons since elections in June 2010. The plan appeared to go a substantial way to meeting the demands of the Flemish separatists, the N-VA party — the biggest winners in last year’s elections — for more fiscal autonomy, institutional change and devolution of powers. However, Bart De Wever, the N-VA head, rejected the paper out of hand.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘British Journalists Bend the Truth, Plagiarize Competitors and Break Laws’

News International has decided to close the 168-year-old tabloid News of the World in response to a phone-hacking scandal at the newspaper. German commentators say the affair reveals just how murky the world of British journalism is.

It was a sentence that sent shock waves through the international world of media: “This Sunday will be the last issue of the News of the World.” The announcement was part of a statement by James Murdoch , the son of Rupert Murdoch and CEO of News Corporation Europe, that was read out to News of the World staff on Thursday afternoon. There will be no commercial advertisements in the paper’s final issue, and any advertising space will be donated to charity, Murdoch said in his statement. The shock decision to close the 168-year-old newspaper came after a week of revelations about a phone-hacking scandal that have put the paper’s owner News International — a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation — under increasing pressure.

On Friday, Prime Minister David Cameron promised to hold two investigations into goings-on at the News of the World and into future media regulation. Also on Friday, Andy Coulson, the former editor in chief of the newspaper who later became Cameron’s communications chief, was arrested on suspicion of conspiring to intercept communications and corruption. The tabloid, which is said to have the most readers of any English-language newspaper, is accused of hacking into phone messages belonging to crime victims, families of dead soldiers, celebrities and politicians. As many as 4,000 possible targets have been identified by police. It is also accused of paying police for information.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Democratization Can’t Save Europe: The Need for a Centralization of Power

Despite the myriad problems currently facing the European Union, democratization is not the answer. Rather, the EU’s elites need to improve — and power has to be taken away from the periphery. An Essay by Herfried Münkler

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Faithful Fans Bid Tearful Farewell to Harry Potter

There were tears and cheers from the cast and the crowd at the final Harry Potter premiere in London as the boy wizard waved his wand for the last time. Meanwhile in Indonesia, fans are missing out on the film. Thousands of fans braved the rain and security restrictions in London on Thursday to bid farewell to Harry Potter at the world premiere of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2.” “Thank you for queuing up for the books for all those years, for camping out in a wet Trafalgar Square,” Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling told the crowd. The fans gathered along the red carpet hoping to catch a glimpse of the former child stars Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint, who starred as the main characters Harry, Hermione and Ron since the movie series was launched in 2001.

The movie is the final installment of a series of eight films, with the seven released so far grossing 4.5 billion euros ($6.4 billion) in ticket sales alone. Since 1997, British author J.K. Rowling’s saga about a boy wizard and the struggle of good against evil, which the movies are based on, sold more than 400 million copies worldwide, making Rowling the first billionaire author.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fossils in Saxony Shed Light on Ancient Lizard Life

Scientists in Saxony have discovered 290-million-year-old fossil skeletons of a previously unknown, tree-dwelling lizard species in a perfectly preserved petrified forest that casts new light on the habits of ancient reptiles. The researchers in Chemnitz have found five well-preserved fossil skeletons of a reptile species that lived more than 50 million years before the reign of the dinosaurs. The species resembled a modern iguana and was 30 to 40 centimetres from head to tail. The species is unusual because it lived predominantly in trees rather than on the ground. Because of the fossils’ excellent preservation, scientists could learn a lot about reptile life in the Permian period between 300 million and 250 million years ago, said Jörg Schneider, professor of palaeontology at Freiberg University, who is involved in the excavation in Chemnitz.

“Most other reptiles lived on the ground,” he told The Local. “For the first time we really know this animal was specialized for living in trees … They have unusually long and slim fingers and very long tails … It is a completely new form that is unknown.” The Permian period was marked by the diversification of land vertebrates and appearance of modern trees such as conifers. All of the modern continents were clumped together in the single supercontinent, Pangea.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Future of Space Exploration is Bright, German Astronaut Says

In a DW interview, former astronaut Thomas Reiter says the space shuttle program’s end is just a ‘bottleneck.’ The European Space Agency official adds that China and India are rising space powers as well.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Ireland: ‘Race Hate’ Gang in Temple Bar Orgy of Violence

A MOB went on a wave of random race violence on Temple Bar, which left five Dubliners with horrific injuries.

One man — a Dublin DJ — was almost killed in the attack as he suffered serious head injuries when he was set upon by the gang.

The level of violence has shocked gardai and the many witnesses to the race hate orgy — believed to be the first of its kind in the city.

One member of the African gang was arrested today in pre-dawn raids by detectives across the capital.

Five Dubliners, all aged in their 20s, were left with horrific injuries in the October 2010 attacks, which have only come to light now.

Shocked

The gang — all aged in their late teens — savagely attacked six Irish people in the Temple Bar area of the capital in the early hours of October 10 last.

The gang, who are heavily involved in other street robberies and beatings, are all expected to appear in court.

Sources say that even seasoned detectives were left “horrified and shocked” by the extreme level of violence used in the attacks which occurred in the Eustace Street and Curved Street areas of Temple Bar at around 3.30am on the date in question.

A senior source explained: “We believe that what happened on the night was motivated by racism — that is racism against white people.

“When the suspects were first questioned they tried to use racism as a defence — they tried to say that they had been racially abused by the victims for being black.

“But absolutely no evidence of that was ever uncovered and gardai are satisfied that the culprits were not racially abused.”

Dozens of people witnessed the shocking chain of events which started when two young men and a woman were randomly attacked at Eustace Street.

In the space of less than three minutes, five people were left with terrible injuries as bottles, punches and kicks were used to hurt the victims.

In the most serious incident, a DJ who was standing on Curved Street was set-upon and almost killed by the gang of thugs.

A source explained: “The DJ was standing outside a premises while other assaults were going on around him. His DJ bag — with records in it — was on the ground beside him.

“One of the gang picked up the DJ’s bag and ran off, with the victim running after him. Then the attacker turned around and punched the victim, knocking him unconscious.

“When the DJ hit the floor, the culprit stamped on the man’s head in what was a ferocious display of violence.

“This victim is very lucky to be alive — the entire left side of his head was broken because of that stamping incident. The victim ended up having to have a metal plate inserted into his head — if this did not happen he would have lost his eyesight.”

Sources have revealed that another victim suffered a fractured skull in an incident in which gardai believe a glass bottle was used.

The gang are now expected to face a huge number of charges, including multiple serious assault charges, violent disorder, theft and production of an offensive weapon.

Trafficking

The arrest was made this morning after a massive investigation by detectives from Pearse Street Garda Station.

Other suspects were being hunted today.

The mother of one of the suspects has a conviction and served jail time for trafficking children into France from Nigeria.

The gang is suspected of being involved in other street assaults and have links to a criminal who was involved in robbing head shops and has been convicted of hijacking a Dublin taxi.

           — Hat tip: Reinhard [Return to headlines]



Italy: Police Battle No-TAV Demonstrators Again

Work suspended as 188 officers are injured in attack on construction site. Protesters applaud successful operation

CHIOMONTE — The two Japanese tourists thought it was a village fair. No-TAV demonstrators had set up stalls laden with bottles of red wine, T-shirts, hats and maps explaining how to get to Cresta dei quattro denti, the highest peak above the “Free Republic of La Maddalena”, kept under close observation by 2,000 police officers. Genuine No-TAVers, the ones actually from Val di Susa, had been milling around the stalls in the centre of Chiomonte since early morning. More than 35,000 people, including families and groups of friends, were there to protest and watch battle commence. One middle-aged lady told us: “Those kids up there might be anarchists but we have to thank them for doing something for us”. Stefano, a mountain guide from Chiomonte, was shaking the hands of all the out-of-towners he bumped into: “Thanks for being here”.

In other words, the locals were out in force. They forgathered at 9 am outside the fortress of Exilles to start the first, larger, march. Younger protester met at Giaglione on the far side of the valley and began their own march. Both groups split up with the more battle-hardened heading off into the woods to join the black-clad “combatants”. Everyone else carried on down the hill to shout their support from the new protest site near the town’s hydroelectric power station at the start of the Avanà road, the very edge of the “red zone”. Each tear-gas canister explosion — and about a thousand projectiles were fired, about the same as last Monday — was followed by chants of “Shame, shame”…

English translation by Giles Watson

www.watson.it

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



Italy: Thousands of Troops in Foreign Missions to be Brought Home

Rome, 7 July (AKI) — About one-quarter of Italian troops involved in military missions abroad will be brought home by the end of the year, Italy announced on Thursday.

Reforms minister Roberto Calderoli speaking at a Rome press conference with defence minister Ignazio La Russa said: “2,078 men will return home by the end of the year.”

Part of this troop reduction is made possible by Italy’s plan to repatriate its Garibaldi aircraft carrier Garibaldi and its 890 soldiers engaged in Nato’s Libya operation.

The ship will return to Italy by the end of July and be substituted by a smaller vessel, La Russa said.

Italy has soldiers involved in 29 overseas missions in 28 countries, the Italian defence ministry said on 30 June. Afghanistan has 4,200 Italian troops, followed by 1,780 in Lebanon and 650 in the Balkans.

Libya, where Italy’s warplanes and ships are taking part in the Nato mission, was not included on the list.

The Italian troop reduction will save the country 117 million euros a year, falling to 694 million euros from 811 million euros, La Russa said.

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



Man Receives World’s First Synthetic Windpipe

A 36-year-old man returned home this week after receiving the world’s first “synthetic” trachea in an operation at the Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden. Made of a bendy polymeric nanocomposite material, the trachea could be the first of many “off-the-shelf” organs for transplant. Performed by Paolo Macchiarini of the Karolinska Institute, the surgery on 9 June built on earlier pioneering procedures in which Macchiarini transplanted into a female patient a section of windpipe taken from a dead donor, stripped chemically of the donor’s cells and recoated beforehand with the patient’s own cells. The advantage of the synthetic trachea is that no death or donation is needed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslim Appeal on Swiss Minarets Rejected

A European court rejected appeals against a ban on the construction of new minarets in Switzerland.GENEVA — A Muslim appeal against a ban imposed on the construction of new minarets in Switzerland was rejected on Friday, July 8, by the European Court of Human Rights, saying that the plaintiffs were not victims of an alleged human rights violation.

“The main complaint was that a disputed constitutional provision offended their religious beliefs,” the court statement cited by Swiss Info news agency said on Friday.

“However, they did not allege that it had had any practical effect on them.”

The lawsuit was first filed in December 2009 by a former spokesman for a Geneva mosque and several Swiss Muslim groups.

The Strasbourg-based court on Friday announced that the complaints by the applicants were not admissible as the plaintiffs failed to show how the ban had harmed their human rights.

The applicants could not prove either that they were indirect victims because none of them was planning on building a mosque with a minaret in Switzerland in the near future, it added.

The controversial ban was enforced through a referendum called for by the far-right Swiss People Party.

After 57 percent of the voters agreed on the proposal, article 72, paragraph 3 was introduced in the Federal Constitution to bar the construction of minarets nationwide.

According to the CIA Factbook, Switzerland is home to some 400,000 Muslims, representing 5 percent of the country’s nearly eight million people.

There are nearly 160 mosques and prayer rooms in Switzerland, mainly in disused factories and warehouses.

Only four of them have minarets, none of them used to raise the Azan, the call to prayer, which is banned.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



Polar Bears Can Claim Irish Ancestry

First it was JFK. Then Barack O’Bama. Now it seems even polar bears can celebrate their Irish roots. A team led by Ceiridwen Edwards — now at the University of Oxford but at Trinity College Dublin in Ireland during the study — has found that modern polar bears are descended from extinct brown bears that loped over the present-day islands of Britain and Ireland between 43000 and 3000 years ago. At times during this period the two islands were connected by an ice sheet. Edwards’s team analysed short chunks of mitochondrial DNA — each 100 to 176 base pairs in length — from the teeth and bones of 17 ancient bears from caves across Ireland, and then compared them with a global dataset of DNA sequences from polar bears and brown bears, extinct and modern.

Mitochondria have their own DNA, which is passed from mother to offspring through the egg. “The main reason for looking at mitochondrial DNA is that there is a very high number of copies in archaeological samples” says Edwards. This makes it more likely that enough mtDNA survives for analysis. “The mtDNA is passed down the matrilineal line effectively unchanged.” Ten of the Irish bears were from the maternal lineage that gave rise to all modern polar bears, but curiously not from the lineage that gave rise to modern brown bears. Among polar bears, though, the Irish line has beaten all comers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Second World War Bombers Changed the Weather

Allied bombing raids during the second world war inadvertently experimented on the weather by producing huge contrails over south-east England. A study of one 1944 raid offers a rare opportunity to check our models of how contrails change temperatures. After listening to a radio programme in which an elderly woman recalled seeing a wartime sky “turn white with clouds” as fleets of bombers took off, Roger Timmis of Lancaster Environment Centre in the UK realised that the planes could have affected the weather. Contrails are known to have several effects on climate. On the one hand, they act as a blanket, trapping heat that would otherwise escape into space. On the other, during the day they reflect incoming sunlight, cooling the Earth below more than it is warmed by the other effect. But overall, the consensus among climatologists is that they warm the planet.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Woman Beats Up Groper — Goes Free

A Swedish woman who went berserk after being groped in the underground station will not be charged with assault, according to Swedish newspaper Metro. The woman was paying for her ticket in a Stockholm underground station when an inebriated man in his 40’s came up behind her and groped her buttocks. Footage from security cameras shows how the disgruntled woman responded by kneeing him in the groin, giving him a well-placed kick and punching him in the face. “She kicked my ass, basically,” said the man, who can’t understand why he is the only one facing charges, to Metro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unless It’s Reformed, Europe’s Project is Doomed

Europe is in a dire situation. If it doesn’t address the underlying causes of the Greek crisis quickly, Europe’s political project will face the same fate as communism and the US Confederacy, writes James K. Galbraith.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Vatican: Holy See Seeks to Boost Financial Watchdog’s Independence

Vatican City, 7 July (AKI) — In a bid to boost its new financial oversight agency’s independence, the Vatican Thurday relieved its president of his parallel duties running the office that oversees the Vatican’s assets.

Pope Benedict XVI replaced Cardinal Attilio Nicora with Bishop Domenico Calcagno as head of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See, leaving Attilio free to focus exclusively on his role as president of the Authority of Financial Information, the Vatican’s new financial watchdog.

The watchdog began work in April, tasked with ensuring that Vatican transactions comply fully with European Union and international anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism financing laws.

The agency’s creation in December 2010 came amid a probe by Rome prosecutors into suspected money laundering at the Vatican bank. The probe greatly embarrassed the Vatican as it sought to shed its image as a murky tax haven tainted by scandal and to issue new laws to comply with EU norms

The Vatican bank”s chairman Ettore Gotti Tedeschi and his deputy were placed under investigation and the Rome prosecutors seized 23 million euros which were allegedly transferred to German an Italian commercial banks illegally without identifying the send or recipient.

The two men have not been charged and prosecutors recently released the 23 million euros.

The Vatican has repeatedly said a “misunderstanding” arose over the suspect transaction, that there had been no wrongdoing by its bank or its employees and that it sought complete transparency in its financial operations.

It is not the first time the Vatican bank has been mired in scandal, however.

In November 2009, investigators were reported to be probing the bank for suspected money laundering via one or more accounts it opened with Italy’s largest commercial bank, UniCredit.

Some 60 million euros passed through UniCredit between 2006 and 2008, according to prosecutors spearheading a probe being carried out in conjunction with Italian tax police.

The Vatican bank owned a small part of the Banco Ambrosiano and was held partially responsible for the a fraud scandal that led to the bank’s 3.5 billion dollar collapse in 1982. At the time Banco Ambrosiano was then Italy’s largest lender.

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

Balkans


Albania: Brussels Wants Reasons for Tirana Mayor Decision

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JULY 8 — The European Commission is “awaiting” clear explanations on the final decision by the Elections Court on Albania’s local elections, with the win by Lulzim Basha, right-wing majority candidate under PM Sali Berisha, against Edi Rama, leader of the socialist opposition and outgoing mayor. This was said in Brussels today by Maja Maja Kocijancic, on behalf of European Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fule in response to journalists’ questions. “We have been watching the developments in the May 8 elections,” noted the EU Commission spokesperson, “carefully and with much concern. We are waiting to see the what the reasons are behind it to gain a clearer perspective.” Before making any comments, “we first need to see details of the decision,” Kocijancic reiterated. The spokesperson then noted Brussels’ position on the possibility of Albania as part of the EU: “We want to see mature political dialogue and progress in the field of reforms.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Serbia: UN Tribunal Frees Former Yugoslav Army Officer

Belgrade, 7 July (AKI) — The United Nations war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia on Thursday freed former Yugoslav army officer Veselin Sljivancanin, after he served two thirds of his jail term.

Sljivancanin and two other officers, Mile Mrksic and Miroslav Radic, had convicted by the tribunal for aiding and for failing to prevent a murder of some 200 Croatian prisoners on “Ovcara” farm in eastern Croatia in November 1991.

Mrksic was sentenced in September 2007 to 20 year in prison, Sljivancanin to five years and Radic was acquitted.

The tribunal’s appeals panel increased Sljivancanin’s sentence to 17 years in 2009, but in a unique move, then cut it to ten years last December.

The tribunal president Patrick Robinson said Sljivancanin was released according to the rules of the tribunal, based on “good behavior” and the fact that he had expressed remorse for all crimes committed during the 1991-1995 war that followed the breakup of the former Yugoslavia.

Sljivancanin’s lawyers said he already arrived in the Serbian capital, Belgrade, on Thursday afternoon and rejoined his family.

Since it was founded by the United Nations Security Council in 1993, the tribunal has indicted 161 individuals, mostly Serbs, for crimes committed in the war. More than sixty have been sentenced to over one thousand years in jail.

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

Mediterranean Union


Business: Euro-Arab Conference in Milan to Support SME

(ANSAmed) — MILAN, JULY 8 — The second Euro-Arab Conference that will be held on Monday and Tuesday in Milan in support of small and medium-size enterprise aims to deepen relations between governments, institutions and economic players in European Union and Arab League countries. Two days of meetings and discussions with experts, agents, members of industrial and commercial institutions and associations about the impact of changes in the Mediterranean region on economic activities, the prospects of financial development and partnership opportunities. The organisers of the event explain that the main focus will be on sectors like agro-industry, furniture, textile and leather, electronics and automotive and construction materials. The initiative is organised by Promos and promoted by the League of Arab States, the Foreign Ministry, the Ministry of Economic Development, by the Lombardy Region and by the Chamber of Commerce of Milan. There will also be technical studies during the two days on how to develop business on both sides of the Mediterranean, with meetings between Arab and European companies.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Media: Agreement Al Jazeera-ANSA on Editorial Cooperation

(ANSAmed) — ROME — Al Jazeera and ANSA have signed in Doha (Qatar) a protocol to develop editorial cooperation to promote communication between social, cultural, and economic players worldwide and at regional level. Khalid A.AlMulla, Deputy Director General for Al Jazeera Network, AbdulAziz Al-Horr, Director of Corporate Development Bureau, Giuseppe Cerbone, Chief Executive Officer, and Luigi Contu, Editor in Chief have stressed the common grounds in independent and reliable news. The two companies will exchange news, videos, pictures, and business know-how.

The editorial cooperation will focus especially on editorial opportunities in the area of Web information services and portals. Web surfers and clients will find on ANSA and Aljazeera products and services, and in depth coverage about the areas of respective interest. Al Jazeera is a leading globally oriented media network based on high standards of values that strives for truth and facts. It provides a round-the-clock live worldwide coverage with high editorial standards due to the availability of its offices and correspondents in almost every part of the world. ANSA is the leading italian news agencies and one of the largest in the world with offices in all italian regions and in 80 countries around the world with its 700 journalists and correspondents, providing multimedia services in italian, english, arabic, and spanish.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Protest After Fundamentalist Attack on Prostitutes

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 8 — A harsh condemnation of the fundamentalist-linked attacks on prostitutes in M’sila over the past few weeks has come from the Violence Against Women Observatory, which has released a statement censuring most especially the lack of reaction by institutions. The statement, quoted by El Watan, claims that enough is enough: “the Algerian authorities are obliged to protect women against the barbaric acts of men without honour who set themselves up as hangmen, guardians of women’s and the public’s morality,” in the absence of state institutions.

“We declare that the men carrying out these acts are dangerous for Algeria’s present and future,” said the statement, which went on to highlight how the latter attack “the weakest part of society, women”. These expeditions, stated the observatory, “take us back to 1980, when Islamic militias attacked women for the clothes they wore in order to safeguard Islamic morals.”

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: NATO: Mission Progress But Gaddafi Forces Regrouping

(ANSAmed) — NAPLES, JULY 7 — NATO has spoken of “tangible progress” during the Operation “Unified Protector”, the mission in Libya that began on March 23, and says that it is “certain that its task will be completed successfully”.

During a meeting at the Alliance’s “JFC Command Naples” to update the press on military operations, the military spokesperson, Lieutenant-Colonel Mike Bracken, speaking to Brussels via video link, said that “over 14,000 flight missions have been carried out”, reaching targets “with a high degree of precision”.

“The skies over Libya are well protected and the no-fly zone is being enforced,” the spokesperson said. The Alliance also believes that the naval embargo has also been positive, with the result that “people and humanitarian aid are able to move freely over Libya On the ground, however, referring to news of the killing of 14 rebels in Misrata by forces loyal to Gaddafi, the spokesperson admitted that NATO “has no direct information”. “Gaddafi’s determination remains intact,” Bracken said, “his forces are re-arming and regrouping in cities such as Misrata, Kiklah and Dafniyah”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Six Thousand Refugees Arrive Every Day in Tunisia

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 8 — An average of six thousand refugees arrive every day in Tunisia, coming from Libya. The news was reported in a press meeting by colonel of the Tunisian Army Mokhtar Ben Nasr. Representing the Defence Ministry, the colonel explained the situation at the Libyan border, which he called “stable”.

On Wednesday night alone 7,115 refugees arrived at the Tunisian border crossings; 6,850 of these were Libyans. They have been sent to the Dehiba and Tataouine camps.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Camel Drivers on Strike

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 8 — In a Tunisia ever more plagued by strikes and sit-ins, streets blocked and factories unable to open their gates due to enraged workers, news of yet another strike could seem run-of-the-mill. But finding out that camel drivers taking tourists to Hammamet and Nabeul aournd have also decided to take to the streets in protest does have a certain effect. As must seeing them in Nabeul’s squares on their animals, demanding aid from the authorities at an extremely delicate moment for Tunisian tourism, which is forced to face up to a halving of its business. It is a colourful sit-in but a dramatic one at the same time, since — according to the camel drivers — due to a lack of tourists and reservations, many hotels have said they will no longer be able to make use of them to take foreigners around amongst the dunes and palm trees. In June they had staged a protest in front of the governorate’s offices without receiving any assurances or guarantees. They have resumed their protest today since their ordeal seems endless, as Le Temps put it today.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Where is Promised Arab Funding for the Palestinians?

Where is Palestinian Accountability?

by Khaled Abu Toameh

The Palestinian Authority has announced that it is facing a severe financial crisis, largely due to the failure of Arab countries to fulfill their promises to help the Palestinians. Because of the failure of the Arab countries to provide financial aid to the Palestinians, the Palestinian Authority is almost entirely dependent on US and EU contributions. The financial crisis in the Palestinian Authority raises doubts as to whether the Palestinians are indeed ready for statehood. If the Palestinian Authority has to ask Americans and Europeans to pay salaries to its civil servants, how can it demand an independent and sovereign state from the United Nations in September?

What other country in the world depends on foreign aid to support its civil servants and employees? In addition, the Palestinian Authority should launch a real and serious investigation to find out what happened to hundreds of millions of dollars that went missing under Yasser Arafat. Many Palestinians believe that the stolen money could resolve the current crisis and improve their living conditions. The Palestinian Authority should at least show the US and the EU countries that it is making an effort to restore the money and punish those responsible for embezzlement. Future aid to the Palestinians should be contingent on the Palestinian Authority leaders’ proving that they have done their utmost to get the money back.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Caroline Glick: Rival Hegemons in Syria

Last Saturday, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah gave Hezbollah-backed Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati the political equivalent of a public thrashing. Last Thursday, Mikati gave a speech in which he tried to project an image of a leader of a government that has not abandoned the Western world completely. Mikati gave the impression that his Hezbollah-controlled government is not averse to cooperating with the UN Special Tribunal for Lebanon. The Special Tribunal just indicted four Hezbollah operatives for their role in the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri.

But on Saturday night, Nasrallah gave a speech in which he made clear that he has no intention whatsoever of cooperating with the Special Tribunal and that since he runs the show in Lebanon, Lebanon will not cooperate in any way with the UN judicial body. As an editorial at the NOW Lebanon website run by the anti- Hezbollah March 14 movement wrote, last Saturday night Nasrallah “demolished Mikati’s authority and the office from whence it comes, and used it as a rag to mop up what is left of Lebanese dignity.”…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Opinion: Illegal Antiquities Trade Funds Terrorism

The illicit trade in antiquities is a worldwide epidemic on the list with drugs, weapons and human trafficking and yet it is rarely talked about. While I was serving in counter-terrorism operations in Iraq in 2003 as a Colonel in the United States Marine Corps, I volunteered to investigate the looting of Iraq’s National Museum. From my experience, I can say that the illegal antiquities trade has become a revenue stream for terrorist activity in the region. In 2005, every single weapons shipment that we seized, whether from terrorists or insurgents, also contained antiquities. These trucks, but also caves, buildings and other hiding places, would contain boxes of rocket propelled grenades alongside boxes containing ancient tablets and figurines.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Qatar Sets Sights on Stem Cells

Small nation has big plans for science.

Qatar intends to become an internationally respected scientific base for the Arab world. In 2006, the country’s head of state, Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, committed to spending 2.8% of the country’s gross domestic product on research — an investment that came to an estimated US$3.5 billion in 2010. Much of that money flows through the Qatar Foundation, which was set up in 1995 with a multi-billion dollar endowment from the emir. One big focus of research is stem cells, and a dedicated centre is set to open next year. With funding flowing freely, can Qatar negotiate ethical concerns and build the expertise necessary to become a world leader in the field?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Indonesia: Migrant Worker Taskforce to Focus on Saudi Deathrow Cases

Jakarta, 7 July (AKI/Jakarta Post) — Indonesia’s Migrant Worker Taskforce, established last week as a follow-up to directives from president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, will initially focus on advocacy for four migrant workers facing the death penalty in Saudi Arabia, a taskforce member says.

“The advocacy for those four migrant workers is urgent because there are no legal channels left,” taskforce spokesman Humprey Djemat told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday

Humprey was referring to migrant workers Siti Zaenab, Satinah binti Jumadi Ahmad, Aminah binti Hajibudi, and Darmawati binti Taryani.

Siti Zaenab and Satinah are facing the death penalty for allegedly murdering their employers, while Aminah and Darmawati were sentenced for allegedly killing and mutilating the body of another migrant worker.

Humprey said the taskforce would contact relevant Saudi officials, including ulema, to act as mediators between the taskforce and the families and relatives of the victims.

“We will be asking for pardon from family members or relatives, because that’s the only way left for those concerned workers to avoid death penalty,” he said.

At least 27 Indonesian migrant workers (TKI) are currently on death row in Saudi Arabia, Humprey said.

The president issued several directives in efforts to protect migrant workers, amid public protests over the shocking execution of Indonesian worker Ruyati binti Satubi in Saudi Arabia last month.

The execution, conducted without notifying Indonesian authorities or Ruyati’s family, angered the Indonesian government, which later recalled its Ambassador in Riyadh in a sign of protest over the execution.

Relations between the two countries somewhat soured following Jakarta’s decision to suspend Indonesia’s labor export to Saudi Arabia. Saudi authorities later announced a retaliatory policy, also banning work permits for domestic workers from Indonesia

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



Kazakhstan: Astana: Praying for the Sick Without Authorisation Can Lead to Fines and Prison

The secret police accuses a Protestant clergyman of harming a man’s health by praying for him. Another pastor is told to apply for the appropriate “authorisation” from the Health Ministry. For months, police have been going after Protestant meetings and identifying participants.

Astana (AsiaNews/F18) — Rev Yerzhan Ushanov, a pastor with the New Life Protestant Church in the city of Taraz, could face up to two years’ imprisonment if criminal charges of harming an person’s health are brought against him for praying for the patient, this according to the Forum 18 news agency, which also reports other examples of heavy handed actions against religious freedom by Kazakhstan’s National Security Committee (KNB), the country’s secret service.

According to the charges, Aleksandr Kereyev got sick after Ushanov used hypnosis against him in a church. Local sources say the patient was not a member of the community, and that he visited their church three or four times over a six-month period that ended in March.

“This is not the first time the authorities in the southern regions of Kazakhstan bring such absurd accusations against pastors for allegedly using hypnosis, while in reality all they do is pray for the sick,” New Life Church members, who asked for anonymity, told Forum 18.

Rev Ushanov is facing prosecution under Criminal Code Article 111 (“causing severe damage to health due to negligence”), which includes heavy fines and jail time.

In another case in Jambyl Region, the KNB charged another local Protestant clergyman, Rev Vissa Kim, pastor of Grace Light of Love Protestant Church, Forum 18 reported. The latter was given a fine of 141,300 tenge (almost US$ 1,000) for praying for a sick woman. The money is the equivalent of more than eight years of salary. The conviction was upheld in appeal and Kim was forced to pay the fine.

Eventually, the Kazakhstan Supreme Court overturned the lower court’s decision on a technicality but the clergyman has not yet been refunded.

Many members of the New Life Protestant Church want to know why the KNB and the Department for the Fight against Extremism, Separatism and Terrorism went after the Church.

The KNB has not stopped harassing the Church. On 19 June, it searched one of its places of worship in Taraz because a woman, Olesya Kotlyarova, had “complained that she was poisoned when she ate at the Church cafeteria recently”.

On 25 June, police searched Usharov’s home looking for evidence. They claimed to have found a book in Russian about modern hypnosis, which the reverend denies ever owning.

During the raid, the KNB seized his computer and hundreds of DVDs, Christian books, and documents and data concerning the Church’s membership. They told the clergyman to “change profession” and leave Taraz for his own good. They also warned him not to create “troubles” for the members of his Church.

Forum 18 contacted the authorities, which refused to discuss the case. However, the faithful continue to complain that the KNB has been interfering with their Church’s activities for months.

On 29 April, police barged into a church, interrupting a meeting. During their action, they videotaped those present and warned that their Church was a “dangerous sect”.

The church’s pastor, his wife and their three children were taken to a local station for questioning that lasted several hours.

In response to the Church’s subsequent complaint, Aktobe City Police responded in an official letter that the actions of the officers were “not appropriate” and that they would be “reprimanded”.

On various occasions in the past few months, police has put pressure on the New Life Church to cancel its meetings, as well as on those willing to rent them space.

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

Far East


Saudi-Sino Relations Are Flourishing

As a controversy rages in Germany about a reported secret deal to sell tanks to Saudi Arabia, another partnership is less known. China and Saudi Arabia have become increasingly close in recent years. Whether the Americans or the Chinese are the biggest consumers of oil in the world is still a matter for debate. However, what is clear is that China, alongside the US, is one of Saudi Arabia’s best customers. Saudi Arabia supplies China with a fifth of its energy needs, making Riyadh Beijing’s most important provider of “black gold.” But it is not all about oil — the Saudis buy food, textiles and industrial goods from China and bilateral trade is already worth over 40 billion dollars a year. There are more imported goods made in China than in the US on the Saudi market now. More and more Saudi Arabian students are coming to China to study and some oil sheikhs have started flying to China to buy furniture instead of jetsetting to New York, Paris or London.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



South Korea’s Pupils to Go Paperless by 2015

THE fusty aroma of old textbooks may take you back to your school years, but children starting school after 2015 in South Korea are more likely to recall the smell of an overheating tablet computer. That’s because the education ministry intends to transform schools into paperless digital operations by then, according to Korean news site The Chosun Ilbo. Under its Smart Education programme, announced on 1 July, the ministry is to spend 2.2 trillion Won ($2 billion) digitising all elementary and secondary school textbooks currently in use so they can be read on a variety of devices, including computers, interactive whiteboards, iPad-like tablets and smartphones. Classes will also be video-streamed online so children who can’t come in due to poor health or weather don’t miss out. Children with disabilities may also benefit: e-books could be controlled by eye-tracking or gesture recognition, for example.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Climate Policy Turning Politics Upside Down

In 2008, 67 per cent of the Australian population supported an emissions trading scheme, but Kevin Rudd could not get one through Parliament.

In 2011, only 38 per cent of Australians support a price on carbon, but Julia Gillard looks likely to win parliamentary approval for hers.

Again, climate change policy is turning the norm of politics on its head.

In a complete reversal of the usual instinct to run away from anything the public doesn’t like, this Parliament has strengthened its resolve on the issue even as it has become less popular.

The latest anomaly flows from the upheavals that have gone before — the clawing down of a Liberal leader who refused to renounce what he believed to be true, and then the stabbing of a Labor prime minister because of the public backlash when his party persuaded him to make exactly such a renunciation.

And it is not the result of a sudden assertion of deep inner political conviction.

Labor rediscovered its spine only because it ran out of expedient options, almost losing the 2010 election in part because of its lack of convictions and then re-embracing climate change policy as part of the price of forming minority government. The Greens, of course, discovered political pragmatism once they had a good look at Tony Abbott’s policy alternative.

The Prime Minister’s talking points say Labor has “always believed in the need to tackle dangerous climate change”. Yet everyone who has been paying even scant attention to this debate knows that belief was well hidden for a while.

And meanwhile, as the Nielsen polling figures show, its task had become much harder.

But again, not in the conventional way.

In the normal order of things, when a controversial public policy is unveiled, businesses and lobby groups would use the wavering balance of power holders in the Senate to prosecute whatever changes they desire.

The minor parties and independents propose amendments, the lobby groups exert public pressure, the amendments are haggled upon, the fate of the bills hangs in the balance and a compromise is finally agreed upon. But when the carbon tax is unveiled on Sunday, the deal to get it through the Parliament will have already been done.

The Greens and the three lower house independents have all said they will vote for it.

Tasmanian independent Andrew Wilkie was the last to declare, but as a former Green who won a Labor seat on Green preferences and who supports carbon pricing, voting down a Labor/Green carbon deal would have been a very brave career move.

So the climate deal will not be fought out in Canberra backroom deals over amendments or the passage of legislation. This is now a fight to the death in the arena of public opinion.

And because of Labor’s prevarications, Tony Abbott has had an 18-month head start in that battle … and he has spent his time well.

He has convinced many voters they should measure whether Australia is ahead or behind or in step with the rest of the world on the basis of whether other countries have a carbon tax — rather than whether they are going to meet the emission reduction targets that both major parties agree line up fairly against Australia’s bipartisan minimum target of a 5 per cent cut.

Abbott has tried hard to give the impression that his Direct Action alternative is painless and almost cost-free.

And he has embraced the climate sceptics by emphasising that his plan “makes environmental sense” even if you don’t believe in global warming.

Initially he hitched his anti-tax campaign to public anger about increases in power bills occurring for other reasons. Lately he has targeted the possible impact on mining and manufacturing industries, already under pressure because of the high dollar and the mining boom. It is through exactly those relevant electorates that he will “barnstorm” next week and throughout the five-week parliamentary winter recess.

His barnstorming is intended to stop the “Clean Energy Future” bills from passing Parliament in August or September by finding the political pain threshold of at least one of the parties who say they will vote for it.

Julia Gillard is banking on the underlying support in the community for taking some kind of action, as well as the fact that what she unveils on Sunday will not be anything like as scary as Abbott has been making out.

She is also banking on the fact that the members of the multi-party committee have just as much riding on this issue as she does.

But as well as Abbott’s untiring anti-tax campaign, Sunday will also mark the start of the Greens’ efforts to differentiate themselves from Labor, with claims about what they achieved in the carbon tax deal.

Labor will want to present the scheme as at least as cautious as Kevin Rudd’s carbon pollution reduction scheme. The Greens will emphasise all the other elements, like the flexibility to argue for more ambitious targets in the future and the extra money for renewable energy, which they insist makes it tougher, although not as tough as it should have been.

Lost in the entire melee will be the truth that, however it compares with the carbon pollution reduction scheme, the final package will be a modest scheme, imposing modest costs on households and businesses to achieve the gradual reductions in emissions which both major parties ostensibly support.

It will even include some elements of the Coalition’s Direct Action, including a tender for the early retirement of some of the highest-emitting, brown coal-fired power stations. It will leave fuel out, possibly dealing with transport emissions through regulation: which is exactly what the Coalition environment spokesman, Greg Hunt, said should happen back in 2008, when he insisted there was little evidence that higher petrol prices would drive down emissions and backed regulation as a more effective way to cut pollution in the sector.

In another political universe, in fact, this is the kind of scheme both major parties could have backed. In the current world of knock ‘em down and drag ‘em out politics, that really would be turning things on their head.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


South Sudan Independence: Thousands of Peacekeepers to be Sent to Prevent it Becoming Failed State

A fresh force of international peacekeepers is expected to be agreed on Friday to protect South Sudan, the world’s newest nation, falling into chaos and becoming a failed state.

The UN Security Council will vote on sending up to 7,000 armed blue berets to the Republic of South Sudan, which wins independence from its former enemy Sudan at midday on Saturday.

Ban Ki-moon has recommended that the new mission should focus on protecting civilians — with force if necessary — and on reforms to the police, army and justice systems.

There are fears that from its outset, the world’s 193rd country will be unable adequately to police its territory, guard its borders or protect its eight million citizens.

Sudan’s majority Christian south fought its Muslim north for 38 of its 54 years of independence from Britain, and the hangover of that war is almost a million guns, mostly in civilian hands in the south.

The southern army, born from the rebel force which fought the war, is bloated with troops and drains as much as 60 per cent of South Sudan’s annual budget. One diplomat in Juba quipped that it was “in essence the state’s welfare system”.

The police force, provincial administration, courts and tax systems are, at best, stumbling, raising the risk of widening public anger among a population expecting an instant windfall from independence.

“We need to be modest in managing the expectations of what South Sudan can achieve, and how quickly,” said George Conway, deputy head of the UN Development Programme’s office in Juba, South Sudan’s capital.

“There has been good progress since the end of the war, but real change is going to be generational.” In reality, the Republic of South Sudan will from its first days easily fulfil most requirements of a failed state.

Separated from the more advanced north, it will also immediately knock Zimbabwe off the bottom spot on the index of human development.

At least 80 per cent of the population is illiterate — rising to 92 per cent for women — the majority of civil servants did not finish secondary school and there are estimated to be fewer than 500 trained doctors in a country the size of France.

A 15-year-old girl is more statistically more likely to die in childbirth than she is to finish school.

“It’s fair to say that these are political and security challenges that would tax even the most developed countries,” said a senior Western diplomat in Juba.

“South Sudan is facing all of them, and all at once.” There was little evidence of the severity of that challenge in Juba yesterday.

Ahead of tomorrow’s independence ceremonies, roads that were dirt a year ago are now freshly laid with asphalt.

Armies of women swept streets as government gardeners hastily planted bougainvillea bushes on the main roads preparing for an onslaught of VIPs.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, leads the delegation from London. Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the UN, will represent the Obama administration.

So many presidential planes from other African countries are due to land at the city’s ramshackle airport in the coming hours that civilian flights have been cancelled for two days.

“We are very happy to show the world the best of our new country,” said Abraham Mayom, 32, a mechanic working on a Chinese-made motorcycle by the roadside.

“But what of next week, or next month, or next year? We are like a baby not yet able even to crawl. We will need help for long before we are up on our two feet walking alone.” Almost £90 million of British aid will flow through the small Department for International Development office in Juba this year — almost £12 for each Southern Sudanese man, woman and child.

DfID is also outsourcing chunks of its work in Sudan to private British firms, including Mott McDonald, Atos Consulting and the Adam Smith Institute, which manage schemes focused on security, justice and government practice.

Even Sudanese refugees who fled to Britain during the civil war are returning home to invest money and spread technical know-how picked up during their education overseas.

Albert Rehan, 38, who won asylum in Britain in 1995, now runs a recruitment consultancy with offices in Juba and in Holborn, London, specialising on filling technical and managerial level jobs in South Sudan’s booming private sector.

“I’m still struggling to find good candidates,” he said, sipping sweet black tea under a mango tree in central Juba.

“But that’s because now clients demand people with the right skills for the job, not just the right family name. That in itself gives us reason to be optimistic.” That optimism must be tempered, however, by key planks in the peace deal that have still not been secured.

There is no agreement on sharing oil, which lies mostly under southern soil but must be refined and exported through the north. It is unclear how foreign debts, borrowed when Sudan was unified, will be repaid once it splits.

Of most concern, however, is the border between the two new neighbours.

Its precise route has not yet been decided. Already Omar al-Bashir, the president in the north, is accused of supporting loyal militia in the south to raise rebellion, especially in the oil-rich Abyei state.

Tens of thousands of northern civilians are still fleeing south after repeated bombing raids against them by the Sudan Air Force, under the instructions of Mr Bashir who is already wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court.

“The increasing violence and human rights violations this year underscore the need for a robust and flexible peacekeeping presence in South Sudan,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



‘Whatever We Do the Pirates Have Adapted’

On his first day captaining a new ship, Peter Newton was subject to an attack by pirates. Newton believes he only survived the attack in the South China Sea because he had not yet got around to installing an alarm on the safe in his cabin. “[The pirate] put me on my hands and knees and said ‘if the alarm sounds, you will die instantly.’ And I believed him,” said the now-retired British captain. In the event, the pirates, armed with knives and swords, made off with about €25,000 and Newton went on to sail another 18 years at sea.

But although he describes his experience as “quite terrifying”, Newton says the scale and type of piracy today, particularly in the Gulf of Aden and Arabian Sea where Somali pirates typically operate, is of a completely different order. “The nature of piracy has changed. It has now become big business for pirates. And it’s absolutely risk-free for them.” Neil Smith, an analyst from Lloyds agrees: “The thing that has changed with the Gulf of Aden is that the pirates recognize that there is a value for the vessels and the cargo but their main hook is holding onto the crew for ransom.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


UK: Locked Up Again: The Somali Crook We Can’t Send Home Because of His Human Rightsby James Slack

A serial criminal from Somalia who cannot be deported from Britain is back behind bars after committing yet more offences.

Abdisamad Sufi was jailed for two attempted burglaries only days after Strasbourg judges granted his release from an immigration detention centre.

MPs said the case showed how human rights laws had made a mockery of British justice.

The Home Office had been trying to kick him out after he was convicted of a string of offences dating back to 2005.

They include burglary, fraud, making threats to kill and indecent exposure.

But, in a shock ruling which could pave the way for up to 200 Somali criminals to stay in the UK, the European Court of Human Rights last week decided it would not be safe to send him back to his homeland.

Amazingly, a few days later, he was back in court for attempting to burgle homes in Shepherds Bush, West London, and then resisting arrest. He was found with screwdrivers and wire cutters and police had to use CS spray to detain him.

Magistrates sentenced him to six weeks in prison on Monday after he admitted the crimes.

However, upon his release, officials are likely to still find it impossible to remove him. Tory MP Philip Davies said the European court’s judgment had created ‘completely unnecessary victims of crime’.

He added: ‘It is just so predictable and pathetic. This man has seen you can do anything and everything in the UK and still not be deported so what incentive has he got to change?’

Sufi, 24, has at least 17 convictions since he entered the UK illegally eight years ago using a fake passport.

He claimed asylum on the grounds that he belonged to a minority clan persecuted by the Somali militia. His claim was rejected by officials and an appeal tribunal said his account was ‘not credible’.

Sufi was imprisoned on Monday just days after claiming that he had changed his criminal ways.

Speaking through an interpreter last weekend, he said: ‘I want to contribute to society, not to be costing the country money, but I have been unable to get education and skills here because of my status.

‘I am full of shame for having to beg or borrow to live and I do not want to be a burden to anybody.

‘I understand why people are angry that I committed crimes, I see their point of view and I am sorry. I did not come to Britain to commit crimes.’

‘This highlights exactly why we wanted to remove this individual from the UK and why we were so disappointed with the recent decision from the European Court. We are determined to remove foreign national criminals from the UK.’

– UK Border AgencyThe Strasbourg court ruled that Sufi and a second man, drug addict Abdiaziz Ibrahim Elmi, might be persecuted in war-torn Somalia, and that they must be allowed to stay to protect their human rights.

It means that, irrespective of how heinous their crimes are, or the danger they present to the public, Britain has no power to expel them.

The ruling, a test case, will now also apply to 214 other similar cases which have been lodged with the court using Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Article 3, which protects against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment, is an ‘absolute’ right, meaning that it applies regardless of the offences committed. The two men, who were both granted thousands in legal aid to fight their cases, were jointly awarded more than £20,000 for costs and expenses.

The judges said Sufi could not join his relatives in Somalia because they lived in an area controlled by a strict Islamic group.

If returned, he could face punishment according to their code — also a breach of his rights.

He would also be particularly vulnerable if forced to live in a refugee camp because he has a ‘psychiatric illness’, the court said. Tory MPs said the case showed that Britain no longer has control over its borders.

A UK Border Agency spokesman said: ‘This highlights exactly why we wanted to remove this individual from the UK and why we were so disappointed with the recent decision from the European Court. We are determined to remove foreign national criminals from the UK.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Swedish Fire Service Sued Over Affirmative Action

Södertörn’s fire department, just south of Stockholm, is being sued for actively choosing to hire women and people with foreign background, according to Sveriges Radio (SR). The fire deparment’s gender and ethnicity quota became an unpleasant surprise for Simon Wallmark, who was informed that despite having trained as a firefighter, he was not encouraged to apply for a summer job, on account of being Swedish and male. “The response I got from Södertörn was that I wasn’t qualified to apply for the summer jobs, because the jobs were reserved for women and people with an immigrant background,” said Simon Wallmark to SR.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Commercially Valuable Fish Species Hit the Red List

Study shows perilous state of fish stocks as management meeting begins.

Ahead of a key international meeting on tuna catches, an assessment is painting a bleak picture of the conservation status of some of the world’s most commercially valuable fish species. Bruce Collette, who studies ocean fish at the National Marine Fisheries Service Systematics Laboratory in Washington DC, and his colleagues conducted the first global assessment of the scombrids and billfish, groups of fish that include some of the species with the highest value as seafood, such as tuna and marlin, as well as staples such as mackerel.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Homo Sapiens, Meet Your New Astounding Family

Once we shared the planet with other human species, competing with them and interbreeding with them. Today we stand alone, but our rivals’ genes live on inside us-even as their remarkable stories are only now coming to light.

A single, unforgettable image comes to mind when we ponder human origins: a crouching ape slowly standing and morphing into a tall, erect human male poised to conquer every bit of habitable land on this planet. ?We walk this earth-we, this unparalleled experiment in evolution-reflexively assuming we are the crown of creation. Certainly we are rare and strange: As biological anthropologist Owen Lovejoy of Kent State University says, “The chances that a creature like us will ever happen again are so small that I can’t even measure them.”

But that ascent-of-man picture is looking as dated as the flat earth. A series of scientific and technological breakthroughs have altered much of our fundamental understanding of human evolution. In the new view, the path to Homo sapiens was amazingly dilatory and indirect. Along the way, our planet witnessed many variations on the human form, multiple migrations out of Africa, interspecies trysts, and extinctions that ultimately wiped out all hominid species except one (pdf). “Human evolution used to seem simple and linear,” says paleoanthropologist William Jungers of the State University of New York at Stony Brook. “Now, you look at almost any time slice and you see diversity. We may be special and we may be lucky, but we’re far from the only human experiment.” Unexpected fossil finds keep showing us an ever-expanding variety of human and prehuman species.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Neptune Begins to Give Up Its Secrets

Scientists have discovered how fast the Solar System’s outermost planet rotates, but it still holds many mysteries. Next week, Neptune will complete its first full orbit of the Sun since it was discovered in 1846.

There is also the question of why Neptune exists at all. The planet is 30 times further from the Sun than is Earth. That far out, planet-formation models suggest that the solar nebula, from which planets condensed during the formation of the Solar System, should have been very diffuse, says Francis Nimmo, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. So scientists believe that Neptune formed closer to the Sun, where the nebula was denser, then moved outwards. But many Neptune-mass planets in other planetary systems seem to have migrated inwards, rather than outwards, says Nimmo.

Atreya says that understanding these “hot Neptunes” elsewhere in the Universe requires a better understanding of why our own large planets have ended up so far from the Sun. “The mystery of Neptune transfers to hundreds of exoplanets that superficially seem similar to Neptune,” says Geoffrey Marcy, an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley, who hunts for planets outside the Solar System.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Anthropocene Debate: Do Humans Deserve Their Own Geological Era?

With climate change, concrete deserts and agriculture, human beings have fundamentally altered the face of the Earth. But have we really ushered in a new geological era, the so-called Anthropocene? Paul Crutzen, winner of the Nobel Prize in chemistry, finds it hard to believe. “It’s incredible to see what a single word changes,” he says. Crutzen coined the word “Anthropocene,” Greek for the “recent age of man,” 12 years ago at a scientific conference in Mexico. He used the term as a way of describing radical change in nature, saying that man’s influence on the environment was now so overwhelming that a new epoch — the “Anthropocene” — had begun.

For some geologists, the proposal has been nothing less than revolutionary, and an unwelcome challenge. Indeed, it has unleashed a heated debate that has now spilled over from the scientific world into the public realm. Newspapers and magazines are proclaiming the advent of the “age of man” on their cover pages, artists are invoking the Anthropocene and even German governmental advisers have adopted the term. Indeed, there are many who are enthusiastic about the defining of a human epoch.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110707

Financial Crisis
» Auf Wiedersehen, Spain: Learning German to Escape the Crisis
» Greece: Industrialists Criticise Govt Again
» Greece: MP Calls for Re-Examination of Wartime Pensions
» Ireland: Bailout is Good Business for IMF and EU
» Merkel’s Migraine: The Man Who Wants Greece to Give Up Euro
 
USA
» Casey Anthony Sentenced to 4 Years
» Oops: Janice Hahn Gets Double Slammed on Her ‘Gang Intervention’ Debacle
 
Europe and the EU
» Belgium: Di Rupo’s Guide to Saving a Country
» France: Marine Le Pen’s Populism for the Masses
» Germany: Islamist Charged for US Airmen Killings
» Germany Will Use Fossil Fuels to Plug Nuclear Gap
» Germany Brings Charges Against Frankfurt Airport Shooter
» Italian Cabinet Approves 700 Mln Euros for Foreign Missions
» Italian Government Passed Decree for Missions Abroad
» Italy: Catholic Priest Jailed for Repeatedly Raping a Nun
» Italy: More Garbage in Naples, Fires and Protests
» Polar Excess: Remote Music Festival Lures Fans to Arctic Circle
» Polish Leader Confronts ‘Nationalist’ Denmark
» Spain: Digital Download Tax Aborted
» Sweden: Högsby Retrial Brings ‘Honour’ Killings Back Into Focus
» Sweden: Björn Borg Shares His Underwear With McEnroe
» UK: A Decade After the Riots, Bradford is Still Uneasy About Race Relations
» UK: Murdoch to Close Tabloid Amid Fury Over Hacking
» UK: Suicidal Diplomat on Roof of London Embassy Changed Mind About Killing Himself — But Slipped and Fell to His Death
» UK: Teenage Girl ‘Lured Two 16-Year-Olds Into Rape Ordeal With Three Asian Men in Their Thirties’17-Year-Old Described Alleged Attackers as ‘My Boys’
 
Balkans
» Exhibitions: Serbia, Land of Frescoes, Spirituality
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Prostitutes Targeted by Extremists
» House of Representatives Stops U. S. Aid to Libya Rebels
» Libya: Press: Sarkozy Wants to Win Gaddafi War on July 14
» Tunisia: Protests in Tunis & Sousse Against Fundamentalism
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» The Churches Against Israel
 
Middle East
» A Syriac Church Reopens in Eastern Turkey After 90 Years
» Iran Threatens ‘Serious Action’ Over BBC Plans to Screen Documentary Series on Muslim Prophet Muhammad
 
Russia
» Cosmonaut: Soviet Space Shuttle Was Safer Than Nasa’s
 
South Asia
» Father of Pakistan’s Atomic Bomb Says North Korea Bribed for Info
 
Far East
» China Produces the Worst Milk in the World
 
Immigration
» 89 Abandoned in Ionian Sea, 3 Pilots Stopped
» Dear Germany: What Can You Offer Your Immigrants?
» Denmark: Is This the Death of Schengen?
» Norway: 54 Percent Want No More Immigrants
» Stand Up for Britain’s Silent Majority, Patten Tells BBC as Director-General Admits: We Failed to Address Immigration
 
Culture Wars
» Dutch Court: Municipality Failed to Protect Gay Couple
» EU Parliament Backs Female Quotas for Top Corporate Jobs
 
General
» Article on Muslim Brotherhood Website: Implement Shari’a in Phases
» Hydrogen Peroxide in Space Suggests Water and Oxygen, Scientists Hope

Financial Crisis


Auf Wiedersehen, Spain: Learning German to Escape the Crisis

Amid record unemployment, young people in Spain are desperately looking for a way out. One village believes it has found the answer: German courses for residents, to prepare them for a life in Europe’s largest economy. But their teacher is trying to warn them that not everything is perfect in the land of beer and sausages.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Industrialists Criticise Govt Again

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 6 — Despite the recent, double approval of fresh austerity measures by the Greek parliament, Greek industrialists have once again criticised the government for the controversial and painful economic measures. “Once more the Athens Chamber of Commerce and Industry (EBEA) urges the government to change its policy since — as has been seen — the measures brought in do not achieve the desired results. To the contrary, they lead the country towards a deeper recession, the market to stagnation and society to desperation,” said EBEA chairman Constantinos Michalos in the presentation of the bi-monthly survey carried out by the Alco company on EBEA’s behalf.

The survey on May-June 2011 shows that the percentage of Greeks who feel that the economic policy followed by the government is wrong has reached 81% from 77% in the two previous months, while 7 out of every 10 citizens say they are pessimistic over the economic trend in the country as well as over their own personal economic situation. Moreover, 66% of respondents said that the Medium-Term Economic Programme will lead the country to a deeper recession, while the same percentage said that the recent government reshuffle would not improve the government’s actions.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: MP Calls for Re-Examination of Wartime Pensions

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 7 — Democratic Alliance party president MP Dora Bakoyannis suggested the immediate re-examination of pensions paid to WWII-era national resistance fighters (around 300 euros per month), as Athens News Agency reports. In a tabled question addressed to Labour & Social Insurance Minister Giorgos Koutroumanis, she referred to “unreasonable expenditures” and “pension approvals based on political criteria and clientele relations”. She also called for all relevant documents be submitted to Parliament. “In many instances individuals who were not eligible presented false documents to receive the national resistance pension,” according to Bakoyannis. She also asked the government if it “intends to order an investigation into pensions received by alleged resistance fighters born in the 1930s who, during WWII, were either infants or under the age of 10,” as she said.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Ireland: Bailout is Good Business for IMF and EU

Irish Independent, 6 July 2011

“IMF and EU to make €9bn profit on bailout,” headlines the Irish Independent. Such is the lucrative figure the international organisations stand to earn in interest if the €85bn in loans extended to the economically stricken member state are drawn down in total. Furthermore, former colonial power Britain “is also entitled to send auditors and accountants here to check the books as part of its bilateral deal to Ireland,” the Dublin daily reveals. The revelations, made by Finance minister Michael Noonan, come as the IMF-EU bailout team fly into Dublin to rule on whether the Government is meeting the terms of the bailout. On the agenda will be more cuts to the public sector and to wage-setting systems for low earners. “Mr Noonan said yesterday that he may have to slash €4bn from Government spending next year to meet the IMF-EU budget deficit target, rather than the €3.6bn previously flagged,” the Irish Independent adds.

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



Merkel’s Migraine: The Man Who Wants Greece to Give Up Euro

A member of Angela Merkel’s junior coalition party is becoming a liability for the chancellor. As she tries to push through Greek bailout measures, Free Democrat Frank Schäffler is working to foment resistance. All he needs is 20 votes in parliament to block the next aid measures for Athens and the euro.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Casey Anthony Sentenced to 4 Years

Casey Anthony, who earlier this week was found not guilty of killing her daughter, was sentenced on Thursday to four years in jail, minus the time she has served, for lying to investigators.

Judge Belvin Perry said that he would have to meet with lawyers for at least an hour to decide how much time Ms. Anthony should be credited with serving. A decision is to be reached sometime Thursday. She was also fined $1,000 for each of the four counts of lying.

[Return to headlines]



Oops: Janice Hahn Gets Double Slammed on Her ‘Gang Intervention’ Debacle

So the story goes like this: There’s a special House election next Tuesday in CA-36. Janice Hahn, the Democrat, tried to kill a negative story about herself on the local Fox affiliate, concerning her ridiculous and wasteful “gang intervention program,” which more or less put gang members on the city payroll when she was a Los Angeles city council member. Fox 11 investigated the program and found that it was one massive debacle. Hahn fired off a cease and desist to get Fox’s story killed. That backfired as you’ll see in the video below, in which Fox 11 spends 8 full minutes of its newscast going over all the story’s details. Do yourself a favor and watch the story to get a very detailed look at just how wonderful Hahn’s gang program really was. The comparison between Hahn and Pittsburgh Steeler Troy Polamalu is particularly entertaining. But the bottom line is that Hahn wasted public money on a project centered on unrepentant gangbangers. One of the gangsters sucked up over $1 million being an “intervention” type, but is in jail now for selling illegal machine guns. Nice work, Janice! Way to turn ‘em around!

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belgium: Di Rupo’s Guide to Saving a Country

Cecile Bertrand (La Libre Belgique)

Thirteen months after the last elections, the francophone Elio Di Rupo has put forward his proposals to unblock the political stalemate. It’s one step forward, says the Belgian press, but the country’s future is still not guaranteed.

“Elio Di Rupo breaks all the taboos”, writes a pleased La Libre Belgique. In a one-hundred page policy document presented to King Albert II on July 4, the formateur laid out the steps to resolve the crisis that has torn Belgium for over a year: consolidation of public finances, reform of the Finance Act, splitting the BHV (Brussels-Halle-Vilvoorde electoral arrondissement), delegating more responsibilities to the regions, and certain socio-economic reforms.

Di Rupo “proposes a thorough reorganisation of public finances in the order of 22 billion euros” by 2015, notes L’Echo. The goal: to balance the budget and get the country out of the sights of the rating agencies.

On the institutional side, Di Rupo proposes splitting up the Bruxelles Halle-Vilvoorde district, which straddles the Brussels-Capital Region and the Flemish region. The 150,000 francophones living in Flemish municipalities is one cause of tension between the two communities…

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



France: Marine Le Pen’s Populism for the Masses

French politician Marine Le Pen is attracting new voters to the National Front, the right-wing populist party founded by her father, by railing against immigration and globalization. With France’s elections a year away, Le Pen is already polling ahead of President Nicolas Sarkozy. When Marine Le Pen walks into a room, she dominates it physically. She is slim, wears tight jeans and blazers and has dyed blonde hair, and yet she seems as if she were walking into a ring, tense and ready to lash out. The 42-year-old French politician has inherited her father’s broad shoulders and wide face. She is unmistakably the daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen, but she is also very much her own person. She fascinates people because she both resembles and contrasts with the man who was the bête noire of French politics for decades. She also has her father to thank for a powerful voice that booms even when she is speaking normally.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Islamist Charged for US Airmen Killings

German federal prosecutors said Thursday they had indicted a 21-year-old Islamic extremist from Kosovo over an attack on US troops at Frankfurt Airport in March that killed two airmen.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Will Use Fossil Fuels to Plug Nuclear Gap

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government claimed to be “ushering in the age of renewables” as German MPs passed legislation this week to phase out nuclear power by 2022 — but the basic arithmetic of the energy-switch policy suggests the country will struggle to fill the hole left by nuclear power — and emissions may rise in the interim. The vote means that by early next decade Germany will lose 20 gigawatts of nuclear power, which supplied the country with 23 per cent of its electricity last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Brings Charges Against Frankfurt Airport Shooter

German authorities have indicted a man accused of shooting two US airmen at Frankfurt International Airport in March. Arid U., who is of Kosovar background, was accused of killing US servicemen Nicholas Alden and Zachary Cuddeback. The 21-year old was also charged with three counts of attempted murder, for trying to kill three others before his gun jammed. He faces life imprisonment. Prosecutors declined to charge Arid U. with terrorism, saying he was a loner with no connections to terrorist groups. The man is suspected to have carried out the attacks on the soldiers to avenge US actions in Afghanistan.

Federal prosecutor Rainer Griesbaum told reporters the suspect shot the first airman in the back of the head at point-blank range after asking him for a cigarette outside the bus. He then entered the bus, yelling “Allahu Akhbar” (“God is Great”) and shot the driver dead. He then shot two others before putting the gun to the head of another serviceman and pulling the trigger twice, according to Griesbaum. However, the gun jammed and the man subsequently fled into the terminal. He was chased by the man he had attempted to kill, who apprehended shortly thereafter. Prosecutors in Karlsruhe said Arid U., a Muslim, was radicalized by reading Islamist propaganda on the Internet.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italian Cabinet Approves 700 Mln Euros for Foreign Missions

Libya funding to be cut by ‘a third’

(ANSA) — Rome, July 7 — The Italian cabinet on Thursday approved a decree authorising an extra 700 million euros for military missions abroad including Libya.

“We have just voted unanimously on the decree that refinances all the international missions,” Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa told a media conference in Rome.

The move was endorsed by the cabinet after threats from Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s main coalition partner, the Northern League, to withhold its support and block the decree.

Italy’s involvement in Libya was discussed at a top-level meeting between Berlusconi and senior ministers including La Russa and Foreign Minister Franco Frattini and Northern League ministers Roberto Maroni and Roberto Calderoli.

In a concession to the League the cabinet authorised 200 million euros less than was previously earmarked for foreign missions.

Italy is currently involved in military operations in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq and Libya.

Of the 9,950 Italian military personel involved in missions abroad, Calderoli predicted 2,078 would return to Italy by the end of the year. “Of the 2,078 personnel that will return home, I have noted that 100 are expected to return from Libya in a one-third reduction of the cost of that mission, from 142 million euros in the first quarter to 58 million euros,” said Calderoli.

“For Libya the refinancing is until September 2011, so our demand has been met”.

Sources said Interior Minister Roberto Maroni also obtained approval for an extra 440 million euros to handle the immigration crisis.

More than 30,000 immigrants — mostly from Tunisia and Sub-Saharan Africa — have arrived on the southern island of Lampedusa off the coast of Sicily since January.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italian Government Passed Decree for Missions Abroad

(AGI) Rome — The Italian Government passed with one accord a decree concerning the funding of Italian military missions abroad. It was communicated by Defence Minister Ignazio La Russa. Costs for the mission in Lybia were cut by 50% and the funding extended only until September 30 2011. Less than 600 soldiers will remain in Lebanon, while the mission in Congo was discontinued .

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



Italy: Catholic Priest Jailed for Repeatedly Raping a Nun

Cosenza, 6 July (AKI) — A court in southern Italy Wednesday jailed Catholic priest Fedele Bisceglie for nine years and three months for drugging and repeatedly raping an African nun. His secretary received a six year and three month prison term for the crime.

After the sentences were read out, Bisceglie, a flamboyant figure in the Calabrian city of Cosenza, yelled out in court that the verdict was “shameful”.

“You have sullied the reputation of an honest priest. This is the most painful chapter even written by magistrates in Cosenza,” Bisceglie shouted.

He has been in prison since January 2006 for gang-raping the nun five times after drugging her, according to the prosecution.

Bisceglie’s lawyer Franz Caruso said he would wait for the court to issue its reasoning behind Wednesday’s sentences before commenting on the verdict.

“We need to see how the court overcame the many contradictions in the evidence it was presented with during the trial,” he said.

Bisceglie founded a centre to the help the poor in Cosenza, was an avid fan of the city’s football team and was famous locally for having helped a porn star find religion.

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



Italy: More Garbage in Naples, Fires and Protests

(AGI) Naples — Garbage on the streets of Naples continues to heap reaching 1.400 tons. Waste disposal plants of Giugliano and Tufino can dispose of about 1077 tons, about 150 tons less than what is daily produced. Street protests continue with garbage scattered in Piazzetta Cariati, in the heart of the Spanish quarter.

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



Polar Excess: Remote Music Festival Lures Fans to Arctic Circle

Those prone to seasickness should steer clear of the Traena Music Festival. A five-hour boat ride is just one leg of the multi-day odyssey required to reach the remote Norwegian island the event calls home. For three days, music fans from around the world take over a part of the Arctic Circle that normally sees more seagulls on rocks than rock’n’roll.

Music lovers hoping to catch this year’s show at the Kirkeheleren will need a boat, hiking boots and lots of energy. Kirkeheleren, which translates to “cathedral cave,” is one of the venues of the Traena Music Festival. It’s no posh Oslo club, but a remote cavern on Sanaa, a northern Norwegian island set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Arctic Sea. To get here, festival-goers must make an arduous journey that includes airplanes, boats and lots of walking.

Since 2003, the Traena Music Festival has managed to lure music lovers from around the world to the far reaches of arctic Norway. Guests come from as far away as Germany, France, the United States and even Japan. Most of the time, these remote islands in the Arctic Circle hear only the calls of seagulls and waves crashing on the rocky shore. But for three days a year, some 2,000 fans add their voices to the screeching of the gulls as they enjoy musical performances surrounded by cliffs and caves in an eerie far-north atmosphere.

“The trip from Oslo to Traena takes as long as the trip from Oslo to Bangkok,” the festival’s founder Erlend Mogard-Larsen told SPIEGEL of the 1,000-kilometer journey.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Polish Leader Confronts ‘Nationalist’ Denmark

Polish leader Donald Tusk has criticised Denmark’s “nationalist” border checks in his maiden speech to the European Parliament under the Polish EU presidency. “I am against any barriers to internal free movement under the pretext of dealing with migration problems. What Denmark is doing is a concern for anybody who thinks that free movement is going to be restricted even further,” he told MEPs in Strasbourg on Wednesday (5 July).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Digital Download Tax Aborted

La Vanguardia, 5 July 2011

“The government has backed down and decided to scrap the digital tax,” reveals La Vanguardia. Brought in in 2008, this tax on cultural products stored on digital media was intended to compensate authors affected by the increase in illegal downloads. According to La Vanguardia, the government is awaiting “the outcome of the SGAE case [the General Society of Authors and Publishers],” to officially announce the abolition. On July 4, Teddy Bautista, president of this powerful institution, which represents “a true lobby of cultural creatives faced with (largely illegal) digital downloads” and two other officers were placed on probation. They are accused of embezzlement. La Vanguardia reports that the EU Court of Justice had declared the tax illegal in 2010, ruling that it could be applied only to digital copies for private use.

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



Sweden: Högsby Retrial Brings ‘Honour’ Killings Back Into Focus

With the topic of ‘honour’ killings back in the headlines in conjunction with the new trial for the 2005 murder of Abbas Rezai in Högsby, contributor Lina Sennevall takes a look at the phenomenon in Sweden.

‘I feared for my own life’: father of convicted son (15 Jun 11)

‘Dad told me to grab the knife’: convicted son (14 Jun 11)

The retrial to determine who really was behind the murder of 20-year-old Abbas Rezai has brought the issue of honour killings in Sweden back into focus.

“This re-trial sends out a message that Sweden won’t accept honour-related crimes,” Martin Permen, a police officer specialising in dealing with ‘honour’ killings, tells The Local.

In 2005 Rezai was found scalded, beaten, and repeatedly stabbed in the back and chest in his apartment.

Prior to the killing, his girlfriend’s family, which hailed from Afghanistan, had expressed their displeasure with the relationship.

The under-aged brother of Rezai’s girlfriend was convicted for the murder in 2006, but has recently changed his story and is now claiming that his parents, who were also suspects at the time, were responsible for Rezai’s death.

The ensuing retrial has pitted family members against one another and once again put the issue of ‘honour’ killings back into the headlines.

Rezai’s case is unique, not only because of the circumstances of his retrial, but also because he is the first known man to be killed in the name of honour in Sweden.

“It’s very unusual that the victim is a man but it only confirms that it’s not only women who are subjected to these crimes,” says Permen.

The issue of ‘honour’ killings was fairly unknown to Swedes until the late 1990s, when the term started to enter the public lexicon, especially following the 1999 murder of Pela Atroshi.

Pela, an Iraqi Kurd, was murdered by her uncles while visiting her hometown in Iraq because she wanted to go back to Sweden instead of being married off to a man she didn’t know.

Her uncles were subsequently sentenced to life in prison in Sweden.

While Pela’s murder may have awakened Swedes to the phenomenon of ‘honour’ killings, it was the 2002 murder of Fadime Sahindal that really kicked off a national conversation about the issue.

Fadime, a Kurdish immigrant from Turkey, was killed by two shots to the head from her father after living under threat with her Swedish boyfriend of four years.

Before her murder, Fadime had spoken at schools around the country and also to the Riksdag about the problems that young foreign girls face in Sweden.

“The men in the family began to call and threaten me by phone. They told me that I would never get away with this,” she said in a speech to the Riksdag in November 2001.

“My little brother was assigned to kill me. Why he was chosen was natural, he was under-aged and didn’t risk incurring any greater punishment. In addition, it was his task, as the only son of the family, to ensure that his sisters were within the cultural frameworks.”

According to Sara Mohammad, who works to educate at-risk and immigrant women about honour-related violence, ‘honour’ killings are comparable to a pure execution in their preparation and planning and are meant to help restore the reputation of a family that considers itself shamed by an unwelcome relationship or act.

“The shame you’ve carried around is washed away and your honour is restored. The person committing the crime becomes a hero,” she tells The Local.

Mohammad is founder and chairwoman of Never Forget Pela and Fadime (Glöm aldrig Pela och Fadime — GAPF), a non-profit organisation dedicated to informing immigrant women about their rights in Sweden.

She explains that honour-related violence often occurs in families where it is the mother’s responsibility to raise a girl and teach her how to behave, while the men in the family consider it their job to control the other family members.

“If you don’t control your immediate family you’ll be alienated from the extended family. It’s when a man loses control of the woman that an honour killing could be justified,” she says.

In Sweden, families where honour-related violence occurs often believe girls have become too westernized.

By dressing unacceptably, refusing an arranged marriage, or having sex out of wedlock, women and young girls can dishonour their families and thus give their families a reason to carry out honour-related violence, according to Mohammad.

‘Honour’ killings are also strongly connected to a woman’s virginity, as the father is supposed to guard it till the daughter’s wedding day.

“The honour lies between a woman’s legs,” she explains.

“Sexuality is what controls everything. A woman’s genitals are the most important, most dangerous and also the dirtiest part of a woman. A woman can lose her life if she loses her virginity before her wedding day.”

Permen says that the police haven’t seen either a rise or a decline in honour-related crimes in recent years.

Nevertheless, they remain far from common, despite concerns about there being many unreported cases.

“I would like to say that the police have become better at detecting the honour-related crimes. It’s not always murder either. We see girls who commit suicide on the influence of their family,” he says.

Mohammad says that an increasing number of girls and women are contacting her organisation today compared to when it was founded in 2001, but says that this is likely to do with increased media attention and a rise in honour-related violence.

“There’s an increased awareness today,” she explains.

Permen says that the Swedish police work extensively with honour related crimes and especially in trying to educate their staff on the differences between a “normal” murder and an honour-related one.

“They are normally very organized and well planned. There are also often a lot of people involved and it’s very difficult to get witnesses to step forward,” he says.

As prosecutors, Rezai’s relatives, and the family accused of killing him await the verdict following the conclusion of the retrial on Tuesday, Permen believes the case serves as a warning.

“I don’t think the whole truth was revealed at the last trial,” he explains.

Mohammad also believes that educating the public and the government about these questions could stop such crimes from occurring.

“We’re working on a daily basis to make the people of Sweden and also other countries in the world, aware of honour killings,” she says.

Mohammad’s message echoes that which was put forward by Fadime in her Riksdag speech from 2001.

“If society had taken responsibility and helped my parents to become more involved in the Swedish community this could perhaps have been avoided,” she said at the time.

“What has happened to me is not something one can do anything about but I think it is important that you learn something from it and do something in the future, so that these kinds of cases are not repeated.”

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



Sweden: Björn Borg Shares His Underwear With McEnroe

Swedish tennis-legend-turned-designer Björn Borg will be sharing his underwear with former rival John McEnroe. The sports duo will be joining forces, through the launch of a limited edition underwear collection, and have chosen to market it with a Facebook campaign, asking users to find their ultimate opposite, among the 700 million other Facebook users worldwide. “This campaign is a way for us to celebrate the unlikely friendship that Björn and John share,” said Erik Jarnsjö, marketing director at Björn Borg, in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: A Decade After the Riots, Bradford is Still Uneasy About Race Relations

There has been progress, not least the stand residents took against the EDL last year, but threats from the far right remain

Ten years ago today Bradford witnessed race riots that lasted three days and brought the issue of race relations in the city to the country’s attention. Bradford became known as a “racial tinderbox” where the city’s large Asian community was estranged and at odds with the white working class.

You could see the troubles coming as rioting spread across the north from towns on the other side of the Pennines such as Burnley and Oldham. There were the largely forgotten riots of 1995, which should have acted as a warning signal. After those disturbances, Asian residents complained about a lack of opportunities and growing unease about relationships with the police and the white working class. Those calls were mostly ignored, the National Front took advantage and six years later tensions boiled over again.

I was a 17-year-old student at the time, and like many people in the city was shocked to see Manningham turned into a battleground. I remember picking up the Telegraph and Argus and seeing the faces of young men I’d played against in a football semi-final a few months earlier on the front page as wanted troublemakers. Harsh sentences followed for the Asian offenders and the city woke up to the fact that it had been sleepwalking into segregation for more than 30 years.

There was a definite change in the city as the initial shock of the riots turned to disgust and even hatred as people surveyed what “they” had done to “our” city. The fallout continued with the BNP gaining council seats in predominantly white areas like Queensbury and Keighley as far-right groups took advantage of the troubles to reinforce the “them and us” attitude. Lord Ouseley’s report and the Cantle report followed and laid out the drastic action that needed to be taken to counteract the effects of segregation in the city and others like it.

But the anniversary of the riots isn’t the best indicator of how far the city has come when dealing with race relations. That date came on 28 August 2010 when the English Defence League (EDL) brought 700 supporters to the city. The event had been talked about for months and when the static protest started the group faced opposition from a wide range of residents. It was a display of unity which largely went unreported, the focus instead being on the EDL’s clashes with the police. It was the toughest test Bradford’s communities had faced since 2001 and people from all over the city made sure no one group was left to stand up to the far right alone.

The BNP is no longer represented on the council and now Bradfordians are focused on new challenges such as the lack of development in the city centre, which literally left a hole in the heart of the city, and fewer job opportunities after the area’s financial services industry was hit by the economic downturn. When Chris Morris chose the city’s 16th International Film Festival as the place to premier his controversial film Four Lions, which was about a British group of suicide bombers, I was delighted to see someone like Morris in the city. But even more delighted that there wasn’t trouble after the premier, especially considering one of the 7/7 bombers, Shehzad Tanweer, was born in Bradford. It showed me that perhaps now Bradfordians of all races are able to examine even the most uncomfortable aspects of life in the city.

Bradford still faces challenges when it comes to relations between different communities. The white flight that occurred in areas like Manningham is being repeated, this time with Asian middle-class families moving out to areas like Heaton and eastern European migrants taking their place. The school system is still a source of segregation, with many containing a majority of pupils from either white or Asian backgrounds. But progress is being made with exchange programmes and a greater awareness of how without early integration a “them and us” attitude can develop.

Many in the city are happy about the progress that has been made but as the far right regroup again in the form of the EDL, Bradfordians are well aware that their unity will be tested again and so will the city’s race relations.

[Return to headlines]



UK: Murdoch to Close Tabloid Amid Fury Over Hacking

The tabloid at the center of the British phone hacking is to be closed after a final, ad-free Sunday edition this weekend, according to a top official at News Corp., James Murdoch, in a sudden statement that underscored the devastating effect of allegations that targets included not only a 13-year-old murder victim but also relatives of fallen soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

[Return to headlines]



UK: Suicidal Diplomat on Roof of London Embassy Changed Mind About Killing Himself — But Slipped and Fell to His Death

Ayman Mohammed Fayed, 41, suffered catastrophic injuries when he landed head first at the entrance of the embassy in central London.

The father of three had left a signed note, written in Arabic, simply saying ‘Look after the children’ and climbed from his ‘immaculate’ office and on to the roof in an apparent suicide bid.

The administrator at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had even taken off his shoes and watch and locked his office door before climbing on a chair and out the window.

But it is believed he may have ‘changed his mind’, as the only witness saw him trying to get back in the third floor window.

Embassy workers found the Egyptian national lying in a pool of blood three metres from the front entrance, all his limbs were deformed, and ‘obviously fractured’ and he had a gaping head injury.

They carried their co-worker inside, where ambulance crews tried to resuscitate him, but Mr Fayed was pronounced dead at the scene at 4.10pm on January 14 this year.

Kamla Badawi, who works for a commercial arm of the Egyptian embassy in the building opposite, saw Mr Fayed trying to get back in the window.

She said she thought he was a burglar, but as she called the embassy to warn them she heard a ‘loud bang’ and when she went back to her office window, saw him lying in a pool of blood on the pavement.

In a statement read to Westminster Coroner’s Court, she said: ‘The man was on the top floor of the embassy. He was on the grey sloping roof.

‘He had one arm through the window reaching in the embassy. He appeared to be holding on to something that was by the window.

‘He appeared to be trying to get in to the building, that’s why I though he was breaking in.’

The women went to phone the embassy, when the man fell.

She added: ‘I left a message, I was on my way back to the window to see what he the man was doing and I heard a loud bang.

‘There was no longer anyone on the roof. My feeling was that he had lost control and fell.

‘I saw a man on the floor. It was so upsetting seeing a man on the ground. He seemed to be facing down.’

Mr Fayed lived with his wife, Merfet Mohamed Hussein Elsaey, and their three children in Maida Vale, west London.

Detective Inspector Andrew Fleming said he thought Mr Fayed had changed his mind.

He said: ‘We established it was a diplomat who had actually fallen from the window.

‘He landed approximately three metres from the entrance directly below the window. There had clearly been quite a heavy impact to the front of his forehead.

‘Embassy staff had taken him in to the reception area and called the ambulance.

‘The room [his office] was immaculately tidy. The note was there, his watch was left on the table. A chair was up against the window and the window was wide open. I also found his shoes.

‘It was a non-suspicious death. I suspected from what was laid out inside the room that this was a straight forward suicide.

‘But sat on a cold roof, outside in the wet, staring down at the concrete below, I suspect he’s changed his mind, that would fit with what the witness said — he was reaching down trying to get back in through the window.

‘An intent to commit suicide may have turned in to a tragic accident.’

The incident occurred just before violence broke out in Egypt, leading to the resignation of president Hosni Mubarak.

But there was no evidence connecting Mr Fayed to the uprising, and colleagues told police they didn’t know of any reason he would want to kill himself.

Recording an open verdict, coroner Dr Fiona Wilcox said she was ‘completely satisfied’ that there were no suspicious circumstances involved in Mr Fayed’s tragic death.

But she said as there were no witness to the actual event, she couldn’t be sure whether he fell or jumped.

She said: ‘There is simply no evidence to as to whether this is a jump or fall. I am left with no option but to record an open verdict.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Teenage Girl ‘Lured Two 16-Year-Olds Into Rape Ordeal With Three Asian Men in Their Thirties’17-Year-Old Described Alleged Attackers as ‘My Boys’

A teenage girl lured two other youngsters into a terrifying rape ordeal after providing them for sex to three Asian men she referred to as ‘my boys,’ a court heard.

Stephanie Knight, then 17, invited the two 16-year-old girls for a night out clubbing during which they were plied with vodka and drugs and introduced to the group, it was claimed.

Later the girls were taken by Shahid Hussain, 37, his brother, Amjad Hussain, 34, and their cousin, Tanveer Butt, 39, to a dark and empty house without electricity in Accrington, Lancashire, where they were sexually abused, a jury was told.

The three men were said to have taken it in turns to abuse one of the teenagers who was repeatedly raped in different rooms of the house which one of the men used to live in, Burnley Crown Court was told.

Knight, who was to tell police she was Amjad Hussain’s girlfriend, was said to have stopped one of the teenagers from going to her friend’s help as she was raped three times by Shahid Hussain.

Knight was also alleged to have threatened the frightened second girl when she refused to perform sex acts on the men, the hearing was told.

Shahid Hussain, of Drake Street, Butt, of St Albans Street, both Rochdale, Amjad Hussain, of Sharples Street, Accrington, and Knight, now 19, of Preston New Road, Blackburn, all deny two counts of conspiracy to rape, between December 4 and 7, 2009.

Butt also pleads not guilty to three charges of rape against one of the girls and aiding and abetting Shahid Hussain to rape her, Knight also denies aiding and abetting rape, Shahid Hussain also pleads not guilty to three counts of rape against the girl and Amjad Hussain also denies two allegations of raping the girl and rape and assault by penetration against the second girl.

Nick Courtney, prosecuting, told the court the girls were provided with alcohol and drugs before they became the victims of a number of sexual offences.

The first girl was allegedly raped orally, vaginally and anally and the second girl was subjected to a sex act and oral rape by Amjad Hussain in a car.

Mr Courtney said Knight, who had known the girls for about a week, invited them out for the evening, on December 5. During the evening out she was heard to say ‘Got them’ in a mobile phone conversation and named the girls.

At about 10pm, they were picked up by Amjad Hussain, driven from Blackburn to Accrington, and then all got into a large 4×4 vehicle, with Butt at the wheel.

Drink was bought in Accrington and the car was parked at Asda, Burnley and was captured on CCTV. Amjad Hussain added vodka to some bottles of coca cola before giving them to the girls, who were also given drugs to smoke.

Both girls made the men aware they were 16 but both had a lot to drink.

Mr Courtney said: ‘They all had a drink but both girls felt they had a great deal of alcohol to drink. One recalled she was ‘feeling smashed’ and the other said that on a scale of one to 10 of drunkenness she rated a 10.’

They were then driven to Amjad Hussein’s former home where Shahid Hussain was waiting upstairs.

‘When they went into the house all of the lights were off,’ said Mr Courtney. ‘There was some carpet but no furniture downstairs. It looked empty and Stephanie Knight told them there was no electricity.’

The prosecutor said the first girl went upstairs to use the bathroom. Butt went in, refused to leave and forced her to give him oral sex.

When she came out of the room, the Hussain brothers were on the landing, she was pulled in different directions and dragged into a bedroom by Shahid Hussain, who slid a wardrobe against the door and raped her.

The other girl then argued with Knight as she heard screams from her friend, the court was told. ‘Knight told her if she did not give “her boys” a blowjob she would bang her in the back alley,’ said Mr Courtney.

‘Knight went on to tell her “she is chilling with my boys” when she continued to show concern.’

Amjad Hussain allegedly took the first girl into the attic, gave her another cannabis joint and forced her, whilst she was crying, to perform a sex act. Butt was then also said to have raped her again.

Mr Courtney told the jury the two girls were taken home in the early hours by Amjad Hussain, who had locked the car doors.

On the way, he allegedly orally raped them both and committed a sex act on the second girl, after pulling a knife on her. She had put the blade up her sleeve, refused to perform a sex act on him, but he had got mad, grabbed her and forced her.

The prosecutor said the alleged victims made complaints to the police that day. The first girl was found to be cut and bruised when she was medically examined. The defendants were arrested. None of them accepted they were guilty of the allegations.

Amjad Hussain claimed he had been with the girls on that night and had consensual sexual encounters with each of them.

Knight initially told a police constable that she was ‘trying to arrange blowjobs and sex for friends I have just met in Accrington’.

But when interviewed by detectives she later denied she had made the comment and added that the girls knew they were going to a house with her friends, including her boyfriend, Amjad Hussain.

Mr Courtney said: ‘The other two defendants’ case is that they were not with Amjad Hussain, Stephanie Knight and the complainants that night and that they had never met either of the complainants, let alone been involved in any sex of any kind with them.’

The prosecutor alleged: ‘The defendants’ accounts in interview are untrue. The agreement was that Stephanie Knight would provide girls for the defendants to have non-consensual sex with that night.’

One of the girls told police in a video link interview how she had only known Knight for a week and added: ‘She hangs around with a load of Asian lads.’

The trial continues.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Exhibitions: Serbia, Land of Frescoes, Spirituality

Serbia as a land of frescoes and of spirituality: the exhibition inaugurated yesterday evening in Rome in the SS. Apostoli Convent is a trip back in time to get to know the Byzantine art and culture which developed between the XI and the XVI centuries encapsulated within the medieval monasteries of the Balkan country. Thirty-two reproductions of frescoes and sculptures from Belgrade’s national museum, which boasts almost 1,200 copies of the most important works completed between the XI and the XV century. They are, of course, reproductions, but the message conveyed through this exhibition goes beyond the material itself: Serbia is, above all, a land of culture, encounters and religiosity — a concept too often left in the background by inter-ethnic conflict. “There are 6,000 frescoes in Serbia, many of which are unfortunately in Kosovo,” noted the Serbian ambassador to the Holy See Vladeta Jankovic — such as those in the monasteries of Decani (held by scholars to be the “encyclopedia of Serbian painting” due to the multiple nature of the themes covered), Pec, Gracanica and the Church of the Virgin in Ljevisa. “These four monuments have been listed by UNESCO as cultural heritage in danger,” added Jankovic with regret. Among the works on show in Rome are the “Archangel Gariel” (Decani monastery, 1342-1347), “the Annunciation of the Virgin” (Mileseva monastery, 1222) and the “Death of Anna Dandolo (Sopocani monastery, 1272-1274, daughter of a Venetian doge and mother of the queen Elena D’Angio’, who married King Uros I).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Prostitutes Targeted by Extremists

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 7 — In addition to being called the oldest profession in the world, in Algeria prostitution may also become the most dangerous, or at least in the city of M’sila, where over the past few weeks Islamic extremism has fostered an anti-prostitution crusade steadily taking on the semblances of a ruthless “hunt”. A few days ago, the Chebilia district saw fresh violence break out with an “expedition” which only by pure chance did not result in mass casualties. About 400 young men attacked and set fire to a building in which two female prostitutes worked, with the attackers’ rage not even taking into consideration that many families also lived in the building and had absolutely nothing to do with prostitution. The attack, carried out by hundreds of young men, ended with a fire set to a first floor flat which quickly spread to the upper floors, leading to scenes of terrorised people trying to escape the flames. While the fire consumed everything in its path, the smoke reached many other buildings nearby and forced hundreds to flee. In reporting the incident, El Watan placed the blame on police who — instead of going into the streets and arresting the young extremists — simply stayed in the police station, leaving de facto control of the district to them. Their behaviour was called a “bona fide mess” by El Watan, which published a vignette alongside the story in which an old man dressed as an Islamic priest harangues a mass of young people looking lost and almost as if they were unwitting automatons in the hands of their manipulator. Unfortunately, Chebilia is by no means no to this sort of punitive expedition. A few weeks ago another anti-prostitution raid ended with the death of a man and almost the lynching of some women who barely managed to survive but were forced to leave the city. The concern expressed by many is that the Islamic fundamentalist fostering these incidents may turn into a “prostitute hunt”, like the one seen in the 1990s in the city of Ouargla, where many women were burnt alive amid enthusiastic yelling of those killing them.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



House of Representatives Stops U. S. Aid to Libya Rebels

(AGI) Washington — The House of Representatives has voted 225 to 201 prohibiting the Defense Department from aiding the Libyan rebels in their fight against Muammar Gaddafi. The amendment was included in the defense budget forbidding the DoD from giving “supplies or military training to a group or individuals, that do not constitute the armed forces of the country, with the objective of sustaining military initiatives that are in, for or against Libya.” The proposal was put forward by Tom Cole (R-OK), who is part of a group of representatives who are against President Obama’s Libyan policies. There promises to be a bitter fight in the Senate on the defense budget, which will take place tomorrow or a the beginning of next week, before it goes to the president for his signature.

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



Libya: Press: Sarkozy Wants to Win Gaddafi War on July 14

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JULY 6 — French President Nicolas Sarkozy “demands” a victory in the war in Libya on July 14, a day of national celebration in France: this is written today by the satirical weekly ‘Le Canard Enchaine’, which is always well-informed on behind-the-scene activities at the Élysée Palace.

Generals and officials of the general army staff are dismayed, the Canard continues. This presidential order, they claim, “is unprecedented”. Their military discipline forces them to obey orders without discussion, but some have said that they were “astonished” by the directive from the Élysée, which dreams of proclaiming victory and of the fall of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi on July 14, the newspaper continues.

It would be “his victory”, a diplomat who said he was not surprised by the President’s initiative remarked ironically.

“Now we need to win the war in just over a week”, a general complained.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Protests in Tunis & Sousse Against Fundamentalism

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 7 — This evening in Tunis and Sousse there will be protests against the recent episodes of violence perpetrated by Islamic fundamentalists. The demonstrations, which will be held almost at the same time in the streets of the two city centres, have been called by human rights activists who are trying to mobilise as many people as possible through Facebook “to defend freedom and oppose violence”.

In recent days episodes of violence and protests by Islamists linked to Salafist groups have been on the rise.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


The Churches Against Israel

Christian blood libels revived, with Israel being painted as evil, having no right to exist

A few days ago UK researchers announced that 17 skeletons belonged to Jews were found at the bottom of a medieval well in Norwich, England. The Jews were murdered in a pogrom or had been forced to commit suicide rather than submit to demands for conversion to Christianity.

The bodies date back to the 12th or 13th Centuries, at a time when Jewish people faced killings, banishment and persecution throughout all Europe. Those 17 Jews were killed because of “replacement theology,” the most ancient Christian calumny arguing that because of their denial of the divinity of Christ, the Jews have forfeited God’s promises to them which have been transferred to the Church.

Some 10 centuries later, global Christian forums are reviving this theological demonology against the heirs of those 17 Jews: the Jews of the State of Israel. The World Council of Churches, an ecumenical Christian body based in Genève and boasting 590 million worshippers, just ended a four-day conference in the Greek city of Volos. Not a single word of criticism was uttered there against the Islamists who are persecuting Arabs who believe Jesus.

Lutherans arrived to Volos from the United States, Catholics and Protestants from Bethlehem and Nazareth, Orthodox Christians from Greece and Russia, lecturers from Beirut and Copts from Egypt. The conference declared the Jewish State “a sin” and “occupying power,” accused Israelis of “dehumanizing” the Palestinians, theologically dismantled the “choseness” of the Jewish people and called for “resistance” as a Christian duty.

The conference denied 3,000 years of Jewish life in the land stretching between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River, took sides against the very presence of Israel, likened the defensive barrier that has blocked terrorism to “apartheid,” attacked Jewish homes in Judea and Samaria invoking the name of God and conceptually dismissed the Jewish state, imagining it to be a mixture — Islamic, Christian and perhaps a bit Jewish. It even legitimized terrorism when it talked about the “thousands of prisoners who languish in Israeli jails,” proclaiming that “resistance to the evil of occupation is a Christian’s right and duty.”

Copying Ahmadinejad’s rhetoric

In the last few months we have seen a radical and dangerous increase of attacks on Israel by the Protestant and Catholic churches. While the US is home to many Christian supporters of Israel, the groups more closely linked to global public opinion, European bureaucracy, the media industry, the United Nations and various legal forums are all violently anti-Israel and anti-Jewish. They are paving the way for a new Jewish bloodbath by the theological exclusion of Israel’s Jews from the family of nations.

The patriarch of the Antioch Church, the Catholic Melkite Gregory III Laham, proclaimed that there is a “Zionist conspiracy against Islam,” reviving old conspiracy theories that led to infamous pogroms. In Antwerp, once called “the Belgian Jerusalem,” a highly respected and government-funded Catholic school, the College of the Sacred Heart, just hosted a “Palestine Day” replete with anti-Semitic references and activities for youngsters. One stall at the event was titled “Throw the soldiers into the sea,” allowing children to throw replicas of Jewish and Israeli soldiers into two large tanks.

The most influential international Catholic peace movement, Pax Christi, just promoted a boycott of Israel’s goods “in the name of love.” The most hated Israeli product includes Ahava, the famous Israeli cosmetics company, whose shop in Covent Garden, London, has just been closed by the company after years of demonstrations. Strangely, Ahava body lotion tubes have been chosen as a satanic symbol of Jewish colonialism.

Today, most of the divestment campaign against Israel is driven by Christian groups such as the Dutch Interchurch Organization and the Irish Catholic group Troicaré, both funded by the EU. The United Church of Canada, a very popular and mainstream Christian denomination, just voted to boycott six companies (Caterpillar, Motorola, Ahava, Veolia, Elbit Systems and Chapters/Indigo) and South African bishop Desmond Tutu convinced the University of Johannesburg to severe all its links with Israeli fellows.

Last year the Methodist Church of Britain voted to boycott Israeli-produced goods and services from Judea and Samaria. The catholic Pax Christi is also leading the campaign glorifying Mordechai Vanunu, Israel’s nuclear whistleblower who had converted to Christianity.

La Civiltà Cattolica, the Vatican magazine reviewed by the Holy See secretary of state before publication, in January opened with a shocking editorial on Palestinian refugees. Adopting the Islamist propagandist word “Nakba,” just recently invoked by Arab mobs to breach Israel’s borders, the paper declared that the refugees are a consequence of “ethnic cleansing” by Israel and that “the Zionists were cleverly able to exploit the Western sense of guilt for the Shoah to lay the foundations of their own state.” Indeed, Ahmadinejad’s rhetoric is alarmingly similar…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]

Middle East


A Syriac Church Reopens in Eastern Turkey After 90 Years

In the Adiyaman region, the local Christian community has been able to use a church shut down in Ottoman times. After a legal battle that began nine years ago, they were able to open a metropolitan centre with religious and cultural functions.

Istanbul (AsiaNews/Agencies) — For the first time since the end of the Ottoman Empire, the Christian Syriac community of Turkey was able to reopen a church, unused in decades, and celebrate the start of activities of a cultural and religious centre belonging to the minority, victim in the past of persecution and genocide like the Greeks and Armenians.

The ceremony was held last Sunday and saw hundreds of Syriacs come from Turkey and abroad. The church named after Saints Peter and Paul (Mor Petrus and Mor Paulus) and the metropolitan centre are located in the eastern province of Adiyaman.

The place of worship was reopened after a long legal battle and much needed repair given the many decades during which it was closed.

“Lots of Christians live in Turkey’s eastern provinces. This metropolitan building will serve their needs first. Moreover, [the building] will also act as a cultural bridge,” said Laki Vingas, a Greek member of the Foundations General Directorate Council.

A consecration ritual was also held prior to the liturgy on Saturday for the Mor Petrus and Mor Paulus Church in accordance with the laws of the ancient Syriac church.

The previous Adiyaman Metropolitan building, with 800 years of history, was abandoned during the First World War and the Christian genocide.

“There are also Armenians besides Syriacs who are members of our metropolitan church. It was quite difficult for us to provide services to locations many kilometres away from the Mardin metropolitan centre,” Melki Ürek said.

The Syriac community appealed to authorities nine years ago for the metropolitan building to be opened, but they were only able to achieve results after fighting a long and uphill legal battle about one and half years ago.

The Syriac community has four autonomous metropolitan centres across Turkey: the Mardin Deyrulumur (Mor Gabriel Monastery) and the Deyr-ul Zafaran in the southeastern province of Mardin, with two more centres in Adiyaman and Istanbul.

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



Iran Threatens ‘Serious Action’ Over BBC Plans to Screen Documentary Series on Muslim Prophet Muhammad

The BBC is courting controversy with its plans to broadcast a documentary series about Muslim prophet Muhammad.

Three-part series The Life of Muhammad has already been blasted by officials in Iran, who claim the country will take ‘serious action’ if it is screened.

The Iranian minister of cultural and Islamic guidance, Mohammad Hosseini, who has yet to watch any of the series, has branded the film an attempt by the ‘enemy’ to ‘ruin Muslims’ sanctity’.

‘The BBC’s decision to make a documentary on the life of [the] prophet Muhammad seems dubious and if our suspicions are proved to be correct, we will certainly take serious action,’ he told Iran’s Fars news agency.

The documentary, to be broadcast in mid-July, just ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in August, will see journalist and TV presenter Rageh Omaar travel to the place of Muhammad’s birth, Mecca, to re-trace the footsteps of the prophet.

However, the series will feature no visual images of Muhammad in a bid not to offend Muslims, whose religion forbids depiction of the prophet.

Instead, a spoken description of Muhammad will be given, making this the first biographical documentary not to feature visual images of the subject.

The documentary will include three episodes, an hour each, on BBC 2.

The film tells the ‘extraordinary story of a man who, in little more than 20 years, changed the world forever’, according to the blurb.

The first episode looks at the circumstances and society that Muhammad was born into, according to Riazat Butt from the Guardian.

She said that the film follows Muhammad’s childhood and early years when he is orphaned and looked after by his uncle…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Russia


Cosmonaut: Soviet Space Shuttle Was Safer Than Nasa’s

On 15 November 1988, the Soviet Union stunned western observers by launching Buran, its clone of the NASA space shuttle, into low Earth orbit. After circling the globe twice, the uncrewed spacecraft — its name means “blizzard” — flew to an impressive precision runway landing in Baikonur, Kazahkstan. Much was expected of the spacecraft but it never flew again. Despite pressure from the cosmonaut corps itself the craft was not developed into a human-carrying craft and was scrapped.

The idea was to drop weapons from orbit?

Yes, absolutely. A shuttle is particularly useful for this because it can change its orbit and trajectory — so an attack from it is almost impossible to protect against. But the need for such military applications ended.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Father of Pakistan’s Atomic Bomb Says North Korea Bribed for Info

According to a report in the Washington Post, nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan transferred over three million dollars from N Korea to Pakistani officials before sharing sensitive information about nuclear technology. Abdul Qadeer Khan is considered the father of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program. He has been criticized for allegedly profiting from nuclear deals with North Korea, Libya and Iran and has been under investigation in Pakistan. In 2004, he was detained and questioned before eventually confessing to running a proliferation ring. He received a pardon from General Pervez Musharraf who was president at the time. He is no longer under house arrest but remains under close surveillance. Until now, many Pakistani officials have claimed that Qadeer acted alone. However, if a letter that he has released is found to be authentic, it could be evidence that other higher-level officials were also involved. The letter is dated 1998 and was signed by a North Korean official.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Produces the Worst Milk in the World

Chinese milk has a low protein level and high levels of bacteria. “What is produced from garbage is garbage,” one critic says. Ordinary people are concerned in the wake of the melamine-tainted milk scandal. The government lowers safety levels because producers cannot meet stricter standards. Some 70 per cent of milk producers would go out of business if forced to meet them.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) — Chinese authorities have some of the lowest quality standards in the world when it comes to raw milk production. In mainland China, this leads to the production of milk with the lowest protein content but also with some of the highest levels of bacteria, Bright Dairy president Guo Benheng said.

“Our raw milk standards are almost the world’s lowest,” Guo told a forum on Sunday. The mainland’s standard for the protein content of raw milk is much lower than in the United States and European Union.

“International standards for the dairy industry also require checks for antibiotics and nitrites in raw milk, but China does not even make such requirements,” Guo added. “Can we make a very high-end product with a relatively lower standard? In fact, we cannot. What is produced from garbage is garbage.”

Guo’s comments could raise more concerns and lead to a loss of confidence among Chinese consumers, already tried by the melamine-tainted milk scandal that killed six newborn children and caused kidney-related damage to an additional 300,000.

In January, the authorities imposed new standards, ordering dairy product manufacturers to obtain new production certificates this year, and said those unable to guarantee product quality would be shut down.

The new national safety standard for dairy products lowered the minimum protein level required for raw milk from 2.95 per cent to 2.8 per cent.

The new standard also set the maximum limit for bacteria in raw milk at two million cells per millilitre.

In comparison, Western nations’ dairy standards call for a bacterial count of roughly 100,000 per millilitre of raw milk, and a protein content of roughly 3 per cent.

The Ministry of Health said in a statement that the threshold protein count was lowered because most milk producers could not meet the standard.

Nadamude, secretary general of the Dairy Association of Inner Mongolia, told the People’s Daily that 70 per cent of China’s dairy farmers would be forced to throw out their milk or even sell some of their cows if stricter standards were imposed.

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

Immigration


89 Abandoned in Ionian Sea, 3 Pilots Stopped

(AGI) Lecce — After a very long naval-aviation operation in the Ionian Sea, in the south of Santa Maria di Leuca, naval units of the Financial Police Corps have stopped 3 motorboat pilots, probably Ukraine nationals, who were trying to escape on board a small rubber dinghy. They had abandoned 89 immigrants on a sailboat adrift at the limit of territorial waters.

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



Dear Germany: What Can You Offer Your Immigrants?

By Hasnain Kazim

Germany is discussing its shortage of skilled professionals, and it hopes to solve the problem by attracting doctors and engineers from abroad. The government acts as if it can just stand there and start calling out for qualified workers from the around the world. But why should they come to Germany?

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Is This the Death of Schengen?

Since July 5, 50 customs officers have been monitoring the borders of Denmark with Germany and Sweden. The controls were put in place under pressure from the People’s Party, the far-right party that ensures a parliamentary majority for the Liberal-Conservative coalition in power. “Should we laugh or cry?” asks Jyllands-Posten. “The Kingdom of Denmark has been the hit of the summer in the European media. It would be nice if it was voluntary.” The problem, says the Danish daily, is that the government wanted to keep the People’s Party happy without jeopardising the Schengen agreements. That is why it speaks of ‘customs controls’, to show that it is not about personal checks.

But this changes nothing, writes Jyllands-Posten, which believes that the Danish government must have understood by now that it “will not succeed in deceiving European governments” by speaking of the controls in this way.

Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen finds himself confronted with a growing problem, the paper notes, and it’s time “for him to choose whether it’s Europe or the People’s Party he wants to put in its place. We propose, with respect, that it be the latter.”

In Germany, the Süddeutsche Zeitung regrets what it describes as “European sequestration.” “It’s bad enough that Denmark unscrupulously restricts one of the main freedoms the Europeans have fought for: the abolition of border controls,” writes the Munich daily. “But it is worse yet that other European countries are probably going to tolerate this attack against one of the pillars of the unification of Europe. The Commission has known of the intentions of the Danes for almost two months. But since then it has merely ‘examined’ the situation.” However, the SZ remarks, “one cannot put forward the excuse that political power is occupied with the debt crisis. Freedoms are just as vital for the EU as its currency.”

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



Norway: 54 Percent Want No More Immigrants

A majority of Norwegians wants to close the borders to immigrants:

Of the respondents, 53.7 percent stated that the sentence “We should not let more immigrants into Norway” fits very or fairly well with their own opinion. In 2005, when the survey was conducted for the first time, 45.8 percent said the same thing. At the same time, 48.7 percent said that immigrants integration is poor or very poor, an increase of 12 percentage points since 2005. Eight out of ten respondents believe that immigrants should prove their Norwegian language skills through a language test before they are allowed to become Norwegian citizens. The survey also shows that opposition to the wearing of the hijab among women in police uniform is massive in Norway. Over 80 percent of respondents said no to this, and 3.3 percent are “very negative” to the hijab on the police.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Stand Up for Britain’s Silent Majority, Patten Tells BBC as Director-General Admits: We Failed to Address Immigration

The BBC should avoid pandering to ‘metropolitan prejudices’ or a ‘tasteless common denominator’ by standing up for the silent majority, its new chairman has declared.

Lord Patten said the corporation should listen to accusations that it is ‘drowning’ viewers and listeners with ‘prejudices’ and ‘stereotypes’ from the urban elite.

In a plea for the broadcaster to become more representative of the licence fee payer, he said the ideas of the wider public ‘deserve to be considered and reflected’.

His comments will be seen as an attempt to address the long-standing claim that the BBC is guilty of a London-centric, Left-leaning bias which alienates large sections of the public.

On the issue of standards, Lord Patten added it would be an ‘act of treason’ if the BBC reduced quality to chase ratings.

Last night, giving the Royal Television Society’s Fleming Memorial Lecture 2011 — his maiden speech as chairman — Lord Patten also said criticism that the corporation was ‘not impartial’ should ‘keep us on our toes’…

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Dutch Court: Municipality Failed to Protect Gay Couple

THE HAGUE, 07/07/11 — Utrecht city council did not do enough to track down the perpetrators of systematic violence and intimidation against a gay couple, an appeal court in Arnhem has ruled. The couple will now demand damages. The two men, Hans en Ton, made reports at the police eight times on violence and intimidation by Moroccan youths. They took the city council to court. The appeal court has now ruled that the police under the guidance of Mayor Wolfsen indeed gave too little priority to the reports. The court gives as an example of lax behaviour an incident in which Moroccan youngsters apparently deliberately drove into the men’s car. “They neglected to hear the driver and passenger of the car as suspect or as witness.” Nor was any technical investigation of the vehicles carried out.

Hans and Ton have meanwhile indicated that they will hold the authorities liable for the damages caused to them. The damages consist among other things of the loss they had to accept in the sale of their home. They say they sold this below the market value because they felt forced to move to a safer neighbourhood.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Parliament Backs Female Quotas for Top Corporate Jobs

The European Parliament on Wednesday (6 July) advised EU businesses to hire women in their executive boards by next year or face a mandatory quota of 40 percent modelled on the Norwegian experience. Women should make up 30 percent of top management in the largest listed EU companies by 2015 and 40 percent by 2020, MEPs said in Strasbourg in a non-binding recommendation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Article on Muslim Brotherhood Website: Implement Shari’a in Phases

In a June 11, 2011 article on the website of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, veteran movement member Sheikh Ahmad Gad argued that the implementation of shari’a in Egypt must be achieved gradually, by preparing the peoples’ hearts and minds for it and introducing it in stages. He proposed learning from the methods of the early Muslim Brotherhood, which worked in a step-by-step fashion, and called on Al-Azhar to focus on promoting the implementation of shari’a.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hydrogen Peroxide in Space Suggests Water and Oxygen, Scientists Hope

An international team of scientists, including astronomers from the Max Planck Insitute, have discovered molecules in space that are critical to the creation and sustenance of life on Earth. European scientists have found evidence of molecules of hydrogen peroxide within frozen clouds of gas and cosmic dust 400 light years away. Their results, published in the July issue of the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics, highlighted the discovery in a region of our galaxy close to the star called Rho Ophiuchi. The team recorded the characteristic signature of light emitted by hydrogen peroxide coming from part of the extremely cold (-250 degrees Celsius), dense clouds of cosmic gas and dust in which new stars are being born.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110706

Financial Crisis
» Britain Should Start Spying on Eurozone Neighbours, Former MI6 Chief Says
» Fear of Junk Status: Europe Seeks to Free Itself From Rating Agencies’ Grip
» France:45% Will Not Go on Holiday This Year
» Greece: Industrialists Criticise Govt Again
» Greece: Attacks on Politicians Increasing
» Greece Blasts ‘Madness’ of Ratings Agencies
» Italy Must ‘Cut Spending to Avoid Crisis’
» Legal Challenge to Greece Aid: German Court Likely to Rule ‘Yes, But’ On Euro Bailout
» Letting Greece Into Euro Zone Was “A Mistake”
» Portugal Debt Given Junk Status Amid ‘Formidable Challenges’
» Portuguese Borrowing Rate Shoots Up on Debt Downgrade
» Portugal Reels After Moody’s Junk Rating
» Spain Hopes Banks Will Need ‘A Lot Less’ Than 15 Bn Euros
» Spain Has Nearly 700,000 Unsold New Homes: Government
» Spanish Activists Vent Their Anger by Blocking Evictions
 
USA
» America’s Biggest Teacher and Principal Cheating Scandal Unfolds in Atlanta
» Chief Calls Looting, Beatings in Riverwest Barbaric
» Fort Hood Shooting Suspect to Face Death Penalty
» Man With Mich. Ties on FBI Most Wanted Terrorists List
» National Labs Investigate Cyberattack
 
Canada
» Hindu Group Criticizes Toronto School’s Muslim Prayer Sessions
» William and Kate Visit Canada’s Far North
 
Europe and the EU
» Afghan Couple Convicted of Honor Killing in Sweden
» Belgium: Controversial Mosque Gets Go Ahead
» Belgium: Antwerp Diamond Industry Ties Up With China
» Danes Deploy Increased Border Controls
» Denmark: Nine Arrested in Latest Gang War Shoot-Up
» EU: Brussels Proposes 40% Rise in Neighbourhood Funding
» Greece: Taxi Drivers to Strike Over Liberalization
» Italy: Berlusconi Wins Early Battle in Sex Case
» Italy: Berlusconi Pledges to Remove Damages Clause
» Muslims Get Rough Ride in Swiss Media: Study
» Netherlands: PVV Europarliamentarian Accused of Racism
» Netherlands: Smoking Ban Death Blow for Water Pipe Bars
» ‘Other Nations Will Follow Denmark’s Example’
» Paris: Hangar-Mosque to Avoid Praying on the Street
» Spain Aims to Welcome One Million Chinese Tourists in 2020
» Sweden: Chinese Should be Taught in Schools: Minister
» Top Israeli Politician Met Far-Right Millionaire Businessman in Berlin
» UK: Muslim Family Making Mecca Pilgrimage Hauled Off Flight by Armed Police After Relative Told Airline They Were Suicide Bombers
» UN Harshly Criticizes German Social Policies
» UN Says Germany Failing to Tackle Social Inequalites
 
Balkans
» Serbia: Accused Killer of Muslims, Croats Calls for ‘Annual Vacation’
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Rai King Commemorates Anti-French Resistance
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Ancient Israeli House Surprises Archaeologists
» Defense: Israeli Ministers Divided Over Exports to Turkey
» Israeli Ministers Divided Over Exports to Turkey
 
Middle East
» Iran: Mystery Shrouds Fate of Iranian Pastor Sentenced to Death for Apostasy
» Pipeline Attack Prompts Jordan to Diversify Energy Resources
» Saudi Lifts Ban on Jordanian Farmers
» Syria’s Minorities Fear Chaos That Regime Change Could Bring
» Transport: Turkey’s Air Carrier Flies to 26 Cities in Mideast
 
Russia
» 23 Million Live Below Poverty Line
» African Student ‘In Coma’ After Russia Attack
» Putin Calls for Science Projects to Rival Europe
 
South Asia
» Bin Laden’s Family Not Allowed to Leave Pakistan
» India’s Supreme Court Orders Kerala Temple Treasure be Documented
 
Far East
» Chinese Media Attack WTO Ruling Against China
» The Man Leading the Fight Against Anti-Girl Abortions
 
Australia — Pacific
» Sheik Feiz Mohammed Denounced
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» Southern Sudan Prepares for Independence
 
Immigration
» Amid EU’s Open Borders, Workers Stay Put
» Boat Catches Fire in Red Sea, 197 Die
» Dozens Arrested Across Italy for Human Trafficking
» Libya: 688:000 Refugees Have Reached Tunisia Since February
» Libya: Tunisia: Concern About Flow of Refugees to Djerba
» Poland Warns Against Deporting Its Workers
 
Culture Wars
» Indian Gay Rights Activists Slam Health Minister
» Utrecht Gay Bashers Not Prosecuted
 
General
» Developing World Need $1 Trillion a Year for Green Tech: UN
» Hubble Telescope Takes Millionth Look at the Universe
» New Physics Finding May Lead to Non-Electronic Gadgets, Scientists Say
» Private Guards Outnumber Police Worldwide: Survey
» Storm as Wide as Earth Rages on Saturn

Financial Crisis


Britain Should Start Spying on Eurozone Neighbours, Former MI6 Chief Says

Sir Richard Dearlove, Britain’s former chief spymaster has said the country should start spying on its Eurozone neighbours to protect the economy as the common currency is wracked by national defaults.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fear of Junk Status: Europe Seeks to Free Itself From Rating Agencies’ Grip

The “Big Three” credit rating agencies can determine the fate of entire countries, by deciding whether they are creditworthy or not. Now Portugal is under pressure after Moody’s downgraded its debt to junk status. European politicians want to create an alternative, even though they helped give so much power to the agencies in the first place. Strange as it may seem, there are still credit rating agencies that give cash-strapped Greece top marks. The experts at Germany’s Euler Hermes Rating currently give the Mediterranean country their top AA rating, citing its “very strong business environment.” And there is little doubt that Euler Hermes can be trusted. It is the first rating agency that officially meets the tougher European regulations for the industry that were introduced at the end of 2010.

There is only one problem: Their good rating for Greece is not related to the creditworthiness of the state, but to that of Greek companies. When it comes to rating sovereign bonds, that is still done almost exclusively by the three major US-based rating agencies — Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s and Fitch — who are collectively known as the Big Three. That is something that European politicians have long wanted to change, and there have been repeated calls to set up an independent European rating agency. Now the European Union is working on its proposal for what such an agency could look like.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France:45% Will Not Go on Holiday This Year

ALMOST half of French people will not be going on holiday this summer, a new poll has revealed. The France Info and 20 Minutes survey found a lack of money and the need to save instead of spend were the main reasons why 45% of people will stay at home this year. Some 17% of people who would normally take a summer holiday have decided not to do so, and another 28% who did not go away last year will do the same this summer. Of those staying at home, the majority said personal reasons preventing them going on holiday. Some 45% said they could not afford it and 40% said they preferred to save their money for other things.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Industrialists Criticise Govt Again

Despite the recent, double approval of fresh austerity measures by the Greek parliament, Greek industrialists have once again criticised the government for the controversial and painful economic measures. “Once more the Athens Chamber of Commerce and Industry (EBEA) urges the government to change its policy since — as has been seen — the measures brought in do not achieve the desired results. To the contrary, they lead the country towards a deeper recession, the market to stagnation and society to desperation,” said EBEA chairman Constantinos Michalos in the presentation of the bi-monthly survey carried out by the Alco company on EBEA’s behalf.

The survey on May-June 2011 shows that the percentage of Greeks who feel that the economic policy followed by the government is wrong has reached 81% from 77% in the two previous months, while 7 out of every 10 citizens say they are pessimistic over the economic trend in the country as well as over their own personal economic situation. Moreover, 66% of respondents said that the Medium-Term Economic Programme will lead the country to a deeper recession, while the same percentage said that the recent government reshuffle would not improve the government’s actions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Attacks on Politicians Increasing

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 6 — Cases of citizens attacking and insulting politicians are rising by the day in Greece, especially against parliamentarians from Pasok, the socialist party in the government “guilty” of having voted in favour of the Medium-Term Economic Programme launched by the government in collaboration with the country’s creditors. There are already over 80 politicians who have suffered attacks by indignant citizens, while confrontational tones are growing harsher between Pasok and the small left-wing party Syriza over the issue.

Pasok continues to accuse Syriza and its president, Alexis Tsipras, of instigating violence against its parliamentarians, while Tsipras accuses the government of wanting to exploit the issue to downplay the importance of the violence used by police against demonstrators during last week’s 48-hour strike. “We know that since the State started collaborating with the state-controlled organisations, anything is possible. We have told our members to be ready for possible provocation against Syriza,” Tsipras said.

Today the issue will be among those to be dealt with by the Council of Ministers meeting called by George Papandreou.

Newspapers say that the prime minister will make an appeal to all parties in parliament to take on responsibility and will urge politicians to avoid statements which could further stir up citizens’ indignation. Papandreou will also address citizens and urge them to stop attacking politicians from all parties.

Meanwhile, security measures have been stepped up around Citizens’ Protection Minister Christos Papoutsis’s residence after the latter received threats against his family members.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece Blasts ‘Madness’ of Ratings Agencies

Greek Foreign Minister Stavros Lambridinis attacked on Wednesday what he termed the “madness” of ratings agencies in the European debt crisis, saying they exacerbated an already difficult situation. He told a conference in Berlin that the decision by Moody’s agency late on Tuesday to downgrade Portuguese debt to speculative status was not based on any failure to implement economic reforms. The downgrading reflected rather “the assumption that Portugal would need a second bailout.” Lambridinis said that this had “the wonderful madness of self-fulfilling prophecy” by aggravating Portugal’s fiscal straits. He accused market players of undermining his own debt-saddled country by betting on a default. “Unfortunately a lot of people in these ‘rational’ markets have invested billions of euros in (a) Greek collapse,” he said. “That part of the market is more interested in seeing us fighting each other … and hoping that in the end they would make the money that we are losing.” Lambridinis lamented the deterioration in relations between Greece and Germany, the biggest national contributor to the rescue package for Athens, and reminded Germany that it had a vested interest in the strength of the eurozone.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy Must ‘Cut Spending to Avoid Crisis’

Country ‘risks fate of Greece’, says Confindustria

(ANSA) — Rome, July 6 — Italy must cut public spending in order to avoid an economic crisis, said the president of Italy’s industrial employers association Confindustria Wednesday.

“Our country has to cut spending or risk becoming like Greece,” said Emma Marcegaglia. “No one likes to make cuts, but we must”.

Her comments come after the cabinet last week approved an austerity package designed to eliminate Italy’s budget deficit by 2014 by generating 47 billion euros in savings to stop the country getting sucked into the Greek debt crisis.

Key measures include cuts to funding for ministries and local authorities, tax increases on bank trading activities and on high consumption cars, a freeze on civil-servant pay and a new levy on stock-market transactions.

Italy’s fiscal system will be simplified too, with three tax bands of 20%, 30% and 40% set to replace the current five-band system by 2014.

Rating agencies Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s have warned they could downgrade the credit rating of Italy, which is also struggling with low growth and has a national debt of 120% of gross domestic product (GDP), one of the biggest in the world.

Italy’s budget deficit is forecast to fall to 3.9% of GDP this year, compared to 4.6% in 2010, thanks to measures already in place.

The cabinet-approved austerity package must now go through parliament.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Legal Challenge to Greece Aid: German Court Likely to Rule ‘Yes, But’ On Euro Bailout

Did the German government act lawfully by committing billions of euros to the bailout of Greece? The answer of the Federal Constitutional Court, which began hearing the case on Tuesday, will probably be ‘Yes, but.’ The judges are likely to grant parliament greater power in decision-making and perhaps even set an upper ceiling on any future rescue package. The future of the euro is in the hands of the justices of the German Federal Constitutional Court, if the two sides of a legal battle over last year’s bailout of Greece and establishment of a euro rescue fund are to believed.

Germany’s highest court, based in the southwestern city of Karlruhe, began its deliberations on Tuesday with a public hearing on the legality of Germany’s contribution to the bailout. A prominent Bavarian conservative politician, Peter Gauweiler, and a group of professors have mounted a legal challenge against Berlin’s actions last year to help save the single currency. They accuse the German government of breaching both the constitution and European law. They believe the aid paid for Greece and the contribution to the European Union’s euro rescue fund was in breach of EU law, which stipulates that member states must not assume each other’s debts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Letting Greece Into Euro Zone Was “A Mistake”

With the benefit of hindsight, the decision to admit Greece into the euro zone was an error, Austria’s chancellor at the time tells swissinfo.ch. Wolfgang Schüssel also says Austria’s decision to join the European Union in 1995 “made perfect sense”, although he hedges his bets when asked whether Switzerland should do the same.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portugal Debt Given Junk Status Amid ‘Formidable Challenges’

Credit rating agency Moody’s on Tuesday (5 July) downgraded Portugal’s debt rating to junk status, a move hinting at market expectations that a second bailout may be needed as in Greece. The euro slid from 1.4460 to 1.4420 against the US dollar after Moody’s downgrade by four notches to Ba2 status, meaning that pension funds are not allowed to hold Portuguese bonds any more. Citing concerns that Portugal will not be able to meet the “formidable challenges” in cutting its spending, the rating agency said there is a risk the country will need another lifeline by eurozone governments after the €78 billion agreed just in May this year.

The new Portuguese government retorted that the junk status does not reflect the effects of an extraordinary income tax agreed last week and the broad political support for austerity measures which are “the only way to reverse the course and restore confidence” in Portugal. Under the terms of a bailout by the EU-IMF bailout, Portugal must cut its budget deficit to 5.9 percent of GDP this year, from over 9 percent in 2010. Measures similar to the ones in Greece are envisaged: privatising state-owned banks, energy companies and the TAP Portugal airline and reducing a series of social benefits, such as compensation for fired workers. Moody’s also expressed concerns that private investors would be drawn into a second bailout for Portugal, as is the case with the second lifeline for Greece.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portuguese Borrowing Rate Shoots Up on Debt Downgrade

The cost of borrowing for Portugal shot up on Wednesday shortly after rating agency Moody’s downgraded Portuguese debt to speculative status, warning the country might need a new rescue. The rate charged for lending money to Portugal for 10 years rose to 11.749 percent from 10.755 percent late on Tuesday before Moody’s made its statement downgrading the rating from “Baa1” to “Ba2”. The 10-year rate, or yield, on debt issued by Spain rose to 5.563 percent from 5.474 percent late on Tuesday, and on Italian debt to 5.083 percent from 4.993 percent. Both countries are considered to be potentially at risk owing to the state of their public finances and growth prospects, although unlike Greece, Ireland and Portugal, they are not being rescued.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portugal Reels After Moody’s Junk Rating

Bailed-out Portugal paid an immediate price Wednesday for a drastic Moody’s rating downgrade to junk status, having to offer investors a much higher rate of return to raise fresh funding. Dropped four notches to Ba2, Lisbon found itself on the defensive in the markets as rattled investors demanded more for their money, with the new government’s tough austerity programme forgotten quickly in the crossfire. Portugal did manage to raise 848 million euros ($1.22 billion) for three months at a yield, or rate of return, of 4.926 percent, but this was up from the 4.863 paid at a similar sale on June 15. Worse still, the yield on its benchmark 10-year bond soared above 12 percent for the first time ever, and compared with 10.755 percent late Tuesday as the downgrade sparked fresh nerves about the whole eurozone debt crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Hopes Banks Will Need ‘A Lot Less’ Than 15 Bn Euros

Spain hopes its savings banks will need “a lot less” than the maximum estimate of 15 billion euros ($21 billion) in new capital to put them on a sound footing, Finance Minister Elena Salgado said Wednesday. Madrid hoped the banks would require “in the area of half” of the top estimate of 15 billion euros to bolster their balance sheets by September in line with new capital requirement rules, she said in an interview with AFP. Spain’s lenders, especially regional savings banks that account for about half of all lending in the country, have been heavily exposed to bad debt since the collapse of the property sector at the end of 2008. The Bank of Spain has estimated the entire banking system requires no more than 15.15 billion euros to recapitalise.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Has Nearly 700,000 Unsold New Homes: Government

Spain had nearly 700,000 new homes sitting unsold at the end of last year, with more than half clustered on the country’s overdeveloped coast, the government said Tuesday. With demand fuelled by low interest rates and easy credit, Spain built nearly 700,000 new homes each year during most of the previous decade — as much as Britain, France and Germany combined. But the global credit crunch and oversupply caused the property sector to collapse in 2008, plunging the Spanish economy into its worst recession in decades.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spanish Activists Vent Their Anger by Blocking Evictions

As Spain’s economic crisis continues to bite, more and more families are struggling to pay their mortgages. But campaigners for fairer housing regulations are preventing repossessions. When Anwar received notification in June that his home in Madrid was about to be repossessed because he had failed to keep up with mortgage payments, it looked like the end of this Lebanese man’s dreams of making a success of his life in Spain. “There came a moment when I had to decide between eating and paying,” Anwar said. “And I chose to eat.” But several weeks later, Anwar and his wife and daughter are still in the apartment, after dozens of activists gathered to help him on the day of the scheduled eviction and peacefully stopped court officials from entering the premises. This unemployed baker is likely to face a new eviction order in the near future, but for the time being he is staying put.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


America’s Biggest Teacher and Principal Cheating Scandal Unfolds in Atlanta

At least 178 teachers and principals in Atlanta Public Schools cheated to raise student scores on high-stakes standardized tests, according to a report from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Award-winning gains by Atlanta students were based on widespread cheating by 178 named teachers and principals, said Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal on Tuesday. His office released a report from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation that names 178 teachers and principals — 82 of whom confessed — in what’s likely the biggest cheating scandal in US history. This appears to be the largest of dozens of major cheating scandals, unearthed across the country. The allegations point an ongoing problem for US education, which has developed an ever-increasing dependence on standardized tests. The report on the Atlanta Public Schools, released Tuesday, indicates a “widespread” conspiracy by teachers, principals and administrators to fix answers on the Criterion-Referenced Competency Test (CRCT), punish whistle-blowers, and hide improprieties.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chief Calls Looting, Beatings in Riverwest Barbaric

Shaina Perry remembers the punch to her face, blood streaming from a cut over her eye, her backpack with her asthma inhaler, debit card and cellphone stolen, and then the laughter. “They just said ‘Oh, white girl bleeds a lot,’“ said Perry, 22, who was attacked at Kilbourn Reservoir Park over the Fourth of July weekend. Though Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn noted Tuesday that crime is colorblind, he called the Sunday night looting of a convenience store near the park and beatings of a group of people who had gone to the park disturbing, outrageous and barbaric. Police would not go quite as far as others in connecting the events; Flynn said several youths “might” be involved in both. “We’re not going to let any group of individuals terrorize or bully any of our neighborhoods,” Flynn said. Perry was among several who were injured by a mob they said beat and robbed them and threw full beer bottles while making racial taunts. The injured people were white; the attackers were African-American, witnesses said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fort Hood Shooting Suspect to Face Death Penalty

The Army psychiatrist charged in the deadly Fort Hood rampage will be tried in a military court and possibly face the death penalty. Maj. Nidal Hasan is charged in the November 2009 shooting spree at the Texas Army post. (July 6)

           — Hat tip: J-P D [Return to headlines]



Man With Mich. Ties on FBI Most Wanted Terrorists List

Search Under Way For Faouzi Ayoub

DETROIT — Federal documents that were unsealed earlier this month reveal a 44-year-old man with ties to Dearborn, Mich., is on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists list.

According to the indictment obtained by Local 4, Lebanese-born Faouzi Ayoub is accused of trying to use a fake passport on Oct. 8, 2000, to enter Israel for “the purpose of bombing on behalf of the designated terrorist organization Hezbollah.” He used the alias Frank Mariana Boschi.

He is charged with passport fraud in U.S. District Court in Detroit.

The indictment against Ayoub was originally signed and sealed on Aug. 5, 2009.

His profile is listed on the FBI’s website.

The FBI said said Ayoub has been known to use 10 different aliases, speaks Arabic and English and is considered armed and dangerous.

“People need to keep their eyes around and out for him. He did passport fraud, that’s the charge against him,” said Detroit Special Agent Sandra Berchtold. “Anybody that would use a United States passport to illegally enter a country is very concerning to us.”

           — Hat tip: RE [Return to headlines]



National Labs Investigate Cyberattack

YAKIMA, Wash. (AP) — Officials at a nuclear research lab in Richland, Wash., are investigating what they are calling a sophisticated cyberattack that forced them to shut down computer network services for several days.

The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory was targeted, along with the Thomas Jefferson National Laboratory in Newport News, Va., and Battelle Memorial Institute, which operates the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Battelle spokeswoman Katy Delaney says no critical data was lost. She said company officials shut down their Internet connections as a protective measure against the attack Friday afternoon. Normal operations resumed by Tuesday morning.

Representatives at the two laboratories said they hoped to return to normal operations by the end of the week.

Thomas Jefferson National Laboratory spokeswoman Debbie Magaldi says the lab does not conduct classified research, and there was no sign that anything was compromised.

[Return to headlines]

Canada


Hindu Group Criticizes Toronto School’s Muslim Prayer Sessions

A Hindu group that regularly criticizes Islam is going after a Toronto school for holding prayer sessions for Muslim students on Friday afternoons, arguing that it violates principles of secularism in the public school system. For about three years, Valley Park Middle School on Overlea Boulevard in Flemingdon Park has held the services in its cafeteria after non-Muslim students are finished lunch. An imam from a nearby mosque leads the sessions, which last 30 to 40 minutes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



William and Kate Visit Canada’s Far North

Prince William and new bride Catherine landed in Canada’s far north Tuesday to meet aboriginal groups who still refer affectionately to his ancestor Queen Victoria as “grandmother.” Under drizzle and overcast skies in Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories, the indigenous Dene people prepared to greet Britain’s royal couple with dancing and singing to the beat of caribou skin drums. After the performance, honoring both aboriginal and Christian prayers, William and Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge, were to be treated to an afternoon of Arctic sports and lessons in tribal governing by consensus.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Afghan Couple Convicted of Honor Killing in Sweden

An Afghan couple was found guilty on Tuesday of a grisly “honor killing” for which their son had already served four years in prison.

A Swedish appeals court sentenced Raoof Ataei, 47, and Leyla Ataei, 45, to 10 years each in prison for the 2005 murder of their daughter’s boyfriend, who was doused with boiling oil, beaten with a baseball bat and stabbed repeatedly.

After serving their sentences they will be expelled from Sweden, where they have been living since the early 2000s.

Honor killings are relatively rare in Sweden, but a handful of cases involving immigrants in the past decade have stirred a debate about how to protect young women seen at risk of such violence.

The case playing out in the Gota Appeals Court was unusual in that context because the victim was a man, 20-year-old Abbas Rezai, also from Afghanistan.

The girl’s brother, Abdulmajid Ataei, now 23, confessed to the murder in a previous trial. But he changed his story after his release, saying he had taken the blame to protect his parents, who didn’t approve of their daughter’s relationship with Rezai.

Suspicions that the parents were involved in the killing had emerged already in the first trial, but could not be proven.

After hearing the son’s testimony, the Gota Appeals Court ruled that the parents carried out the murder and that their son assisted them.

The son’s sentence already served was reduced from four years to one year and four months. In addition, the appeals court canceled his deportation order.

The court labeled the murder an “honor killing,” motivated by “a relationship that the girl’s parents strongly opposed based on their values and cultural background.”

The son testified that his parents were very upset that his sister had run away with her boyfriend. He said they lured Rezai to their home in Hogsby, in southern Sweden, where the mother cooked up a pot of oil that she poured over Rezai. Her husband then battered him and stabbed him multiple times with a knife.

The parents denied the charges, insisting it was their son who killed Rezai during a fight.

The appeals court said their stories were inconsistent and didn’t match the technical evidence from the scene.

Their son acknowledged that he had fetched the knife when his father ordered him to so, but claims he didn’t participate in the stabbing.

Honor killings are committed regularly in some traditional Middle Eastern societies that enforce strict separation between the sexes and view an unmarried woman’s unsupervised contact with a man, even by telephone, as a stain on the family’s reputation.

The son’s lawyer, Helena Karlsson, said her client was relieved. “He obviously feels it is very positive that the appeals court has listened to the story about his situation, not only regarding this specific event but also generally,” she said, adding her client fears for his life.

“Naturally, this has been an incredibly difficult time for him,” she said. It wasn’t immediately clear if the parents would appeal the sentence.

Ann Kristin Bladh, deputy chair of an organization working against honor-related crimes in Sweden, said there is a growing problem. “We are contacted daily, primarily by young girls, but also by young men, who live very limited lives,” Bladh told local news agency TT.

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



Belgium: Controversial Mosque Gets Go Ahead

The construction of a controversial mosque in the Antwerp town of Lier edged a little closer on Monday. The Planning and Heritage Department of Antwerp province has now approved plans for the building of a mosque cum cultural centre. Earlier the Lier town authorities also gave the project the green light. Plans to build the mosque in the Donk neighbourhood are controversial and attracted 53 formal complaints. The town authorities threw out an earlier application saying that the proposed project was too large scale. Later a second application was approved. With the go ahead from the Planning and Heritage Department in Antwerp no further obstacles should prevent Lier from issuing the required building permit.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Belgium: Antwerp Diamond Industry Ties Up With China

The Antwerp diamond industry, world capital of the gem, on Monday announced an investment deal with leading Chinese bank ICBC. The Antwerp World Diamond Centre (AWDC) in a statement announced the deal with ICBC, which could act as an intermediary to provide finance for diamond transactions in Antwerp. “It is the first time a Chinese bank entirely commits and decides to finance the diamond sector through Antwerp,” said AWDC chief executive Ari Epstein. “The diamond is a special investment product and has a distinct function that other investment products cannot replace,” ICBC’s Jiang Jianqing said.

“We firmly believe that the Belgian economy through the diamond industry will play a predominant role in ending the financial crisis,” he added. The AWDC is planning to organise from October 24 a 10-day roadshow in China to promote Antwerp to the country’s top jewellers. Around 80 percent of the trade in uncut diamonds and half of world trade in cut stones transits through the northern Belgian town, which is facing increasing competition, including from India. ICBC — Industrial and Commercial Bank of China — is the world’s largest bank by market value.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Danes Deploy Increased Border Controls

The European Commission said it would closely monitor the deployment to ensure it did not violate the European Union’s open border rules. The move followed parliamentary approval last week despite concerns voiced by Brussels and Berlin. “Fifty extra officers have already been deployed at certain borders and will be carrying out random checks,” Customs spokesman Finn Serup told AFP.

He stressed though that “they will not be stopping all vehicles. That is not the idea. We are talking about random checks.” The Danish government has defended the move, saying random border checks are in line with the Schengen passport-free travel area and that the aim is to combat the smuggling of illegal goods and drugs, not control travellers. “The commission will strictly monitor the implementation of this first phase to ensure that European law is fully respected,” Michele Cercone, the home affairs spokesman for the European Union’s executive arm, told a news briefing in Brussels. Thirty customs officers had been sent to the Danish-German border at Froeslev, 10 to the Oresund Bridge that links Denmark to Sweden and 10 to the Gedser ferry terminal which services Rostock in Germany, Serup said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Denmark: Nine Arrested in Latest Gang War Shoot-Up

Police find getaway car in flames and suspects burning clothes

This morning police found the getaway car used in a shooting and stabbing incident that took place in a bakery in the Nørrebro district yesterday. Nine young men have been arrested in connection with the attack. The 26-year-old male victim was shot three times in the buttocks, thigh and ankle and was also stabbed in the chest. He survived the attack and is in stable condition at a local hospital.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU: Brussels Proposes 40% Rise in Neighbourhood Funding

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JULY 6 — The European Commission proposed a total of 16.1 billion euros for the future European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI), for the next financial framework 2014-2020. According to the Enpi website (www.enpi-info.eu), if adopted, the new funding for the neighbourhood policy would represent a rise of more than 40%, compared to the 11.4 billion euros under the current European Neighbourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI), which covers the current financial period 2007-2013.

“The Commission — said the Eu commissioner Stefan Fule — has proposed today to increase the funding for European Neighbourhood Policy by 4.7 billion euros for the next financial perspective. I am convinced that the EU’s support to our partners in the South and the East is essential to ensure the success of the democratisation process and improve economic and social development. The significant increase reflects our commitment to our neighbourhood and its growing importance for the EU”.

The future European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI) would continue to provide the bulk of funding to the European Neighbourhood countries, essentially through bilateral, regional and cross border co-operation programmes. The new instrument would be increasingly policy-driven and provide for increased differentiation, more flexibility, stricter conditionality and incentives for best performers.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: Taxi Drivers to Strike Over Liberalization

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 6 — There will be no taxis serving the capital and other major Greek cities on Wednesday as cabbies stage a 24-hour strike, as daily Kathimerini reports. Taxi drivers are protesting plans heralded by Transport Minister Yiannis Ragousis to fully open up their profession to competition. Unionists claim that the 30,000 or so cabbies serving the country’s roads are more than adequate and that relaxing limits on accession to the sector would result in a glut of drivers and curb their income which is already down as a result of the economic crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Wins Early Battle in Sex Case

Constitutional Court agrees to look at jurisdiction

(ANSA) — Rome, July 6 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi won an early battle in his defence against charges he had sex with an underage prostitute on Wednesday, when Italy’s Constitutional Court said it would examine where jurisdiction for the case lies.

The premier denies paying for intercourse with Karima El Mahroug, a Moroccan runaway and belly dancer also known as Ruby, before she turned 18.

He has described this and accusations he abused his power when intervening last year after Mahroug was detained on an unrelated theft charge as “absurd”.

Berlusconi’s defence team have argued that, if the case should have been heard at all, it should have gone to a special court for ministers instead of the Milan court where the trial is currently taking place.

They said Berlusconi was carrying out his official duties when he telephoned a police station in May 2010 to ask about Mahroug, before she was released into the care of an official of his People of Freedom (PdL) party.

Berlusconi has said he was trying to avoid a diplomatic incident as he had been falsely told Mahroug was a relative of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak.

Prosecutors, on the other hand, argue the premier was trying to hush up the affair by calling and then sending an official, comparing the move to a “military attack”.

The Italian parliament, where Berlusconi’s centre-right government holds a slender majority, asked the Constititional Court to look into the matter.

The court is not expected to give a ruling for many months. The premier’s lawyers may now seek to have the trial in Milan suspended until that ruling arrives. The next hearing is scheduled to take place on July 18, when the court in Milan is expected to announce whether it has upheld any of 16 objections to proceedings presented by the defence.

Paying for prostitutes is not illegal in Italy but paying for sex with someone above the age of consent but not yet 18 is a crime and carries a jail term of up to three years.

Abuse of power spells a possible jail term of 12 years.

Berlusconi says left-leaning prosecutors have trumped up the accusations and those in three separate corruption trials to oust him from power.

Mahroug has also denied ever having sex with Berlusconi and said money he gave her was a gift.

Prosecutors, however, say they have evidence showing the premier paid for intercourse with 33 alleged prostitutes after so-called ‘bunga bunga’ sex parties at his home near Milan, including Mahroug, who they say he slept with 13 times when she was 17 after she was allegedly recruited at a beauty contest at the age of 16.

Three other people have also been indicted in the case on suspicion of procuring young women for the premier’s alleged sex parties.

They are Berlusconi’s former dental hygienist, ex-showgirl and now Lombardy regional councillor Nicole Minetti, the PdL official who was sent to the police station for Mahroug last year; a veteran news anchor at one of Berlusconi’s TV channels and close personal friend of the premier’s, Emilio Fede; and a showbiz talent scout and self-styled ‘VIP impresario’, Lele Mora.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Berlusconi Pledges to Remove Damages Clause

PM criticises ‘shameful ballyhoo’

(ANSA) — Rome, July 5 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi on Tuesday pledged to withdraw a controversial article attached to the budget reform bill that would have excused his company from a 750-million-euro damages award.

Earlier on Tuesday a media conference with Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti and Northern League ministers including Interior Minister Roberto Maroni and Simplification Minister Roberto Calderoli, was cancelled amid growing oppposition to the legislative move which critics said would protect Berlusconi’s company, Fininvest.

In a statement released by Berlusconi’s office late in the day, the Premier promised to remove the article, which sources said had surprised and “deeply upset” League ministers.

“To clear up every possible argument I have given approval for this fair and proper regulation to be withdrawn,” Berlusconi said in Tuesday’s statement.

He said he hoped that workers who may face a similar situation to the workers of Fininvest did not suffer and that they should remember this “shameful ballyhoo”.

The legal move, which the media dubbed “Save Fininvest”, was criticised by Michele Vietti, vice-president of the Council of Magistrates (CSM), the judiciary’s self-governing body who said it violated the “principle of equality for all citizens before the law”.

Silvana Mura, from the centre-left Italy of Values Party (Idv) welcomed the announcement saying Berlusconi had been caught with “a mouse in his mouth”.

“The second thing is that this government is getting weaker and up until today a personal law (for Berlusconi) had never been withdrawn in such quick time,” she said.

During his 17 years in office, Berlusconi has frequently been accused of passing laws to suit his personal and professional requirements. With a personal fortune estimated to be around 6.5 billion euros he is one of Italy’s richest men.

Welfare Minister Maurizio Sacconi, from Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party, defended the 47-billion-euro financial reform package passed by cabinet last Thursday saying the latest criticism arose from a “particularly poisonous political climate”.

In August last year Justice Minister Angelino Alfano denied suggestions that the government was considering judicial reform to help the premier avoid paying the award to his long-time business rival Carlo De Benedetti for the early 1990s breakup of the Mondadori group.

Fininvest was ordered to pay De Benedetti’s holding company the damages in 2009 to compensate for bribing a judge in the takeover battle.

The article at the centre of the law would have frozen payments such as Fininvest’s payment until Italy’s highest appeal court, the Court of Cassation, has ruled on a final appeal.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslims Get Rough Ride in Swiss Media: Study

An unfavourable bias in the Swiss media has led to the creation of a negative, stigmatizing image of Muslims in Switzerland, a new study has found. Terror attacks in the news and the political influence of right-wing parties have also contributed to damaging the reputation of Muslim immigrants, who are often labelled as extremists. “During the last few years, there has been an oversimplification that presents Muslims as a danger to Switzerland,” said the authors of the study, carried out by the Swiss National Science Foundation.

The newly published report analyzed coverage of Muslim issues by Swiss media through the years. The research found that, in public debate, followers of Islam are perceived as a “bloc” and as a “threat” to Switzerland, even if they have nothing to do with fundamentalism. Despite coming from different countries — such as Turkey, Macedonia and Morocco — and practising their religion in different ways, they are often considered part of the same ethnic group, it said. The study found Swiss media coverage was in general one-sided, especially during the 2009 national minaret ban vote and the ensuing debate, with opponents receiving more media attention than those who were in favour. Similarly, the conservative Swiss People’s Party, known for its controversial and often provocative stances, has contributed to creating a negative collective image of Muslim migrants, who are often referred to as “violent” or “ignorant,” the study said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: PVV Europarliamentarian Accused of Racism

A MP for the anti-Islam party PVV in the European parliament has been accused of being a racist during a debate on the Polish presidency of the EU in Strasbourg.

During the debate, Barry Madlener had said the Netherlands ‘does not want to pay for the upkeep of the Polish unemployed or Romanian beggars’.

German MEP Martin Schulz, who heads the Socialist alliance in the European parliament, said Madlener had used racist language.

European Commission chairman José Manuel Barroso has also said he had heard statements during the debate which ‘verged on racism’ but did not name Barry Medlener by name.

According to the Volkskrant, Madlener said he abhorred racism but was simply stating what had to be said. ‘I have been mugged twice by a Romanian,’ he said.

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



Netherlands: Smoking Ban Death Blow for Water Pipe Bars

The extension to smoking ban that came into force on July 1 is a major blow for the dozens of Arab-style water pipe bars that have sprung up in big cities such as Brussels, Antwerp and Ghent. The proprietors of the so-called chicha bars had hoped to be spared from the new rules that ban smoking from all public bars. This is the case in a number of other European countries where smoking bans are in force. The owner of the Palmyr chicha bar in Central Brussels told the Brussels regional news site Brusselnieuws.be that “It’s like asking a restaurant to stop serving food.” “When we started up they assured us that the smoking ban wouldn’t come in until 2014. So we were very surprised when we heard that it would be brought in from 1 July 2011.” Around 40 Brussels chicha bars have sought legal advice to try and fight a solution. The ban on smoking could well also spell the end for chicha bars.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Other Nations Will Follow Denmark’s Example’

Denmark’s tightened border controls have rattled Europe. Some politicians say they not only shake the foundations of the European Union, but could also embolden right-wing populists in other countries. While some German commentators believe Copenhagen’s decision is only symbolic, many say it can’t be tolerated.

The center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung writes:

“Sure, there have been protests from Germany and other countries. But none of the heads of state or government has put any serious pressure on the Danish prime minister, such as with threats of political sanctions … The European Commission has known what the Danes were planning for almost two months. Yet they have only reviewed, reviewed and reviewed.” “The Danish example will catch on because no one is standing resolutely in their way. That is a catastrophe for Europe — because the populist temptation to close borders against undesirables is rife in other countries as well. Those who don’t want this must act. It’s no excuse that the euro crisis is simultaneously taking up almost all of the continent’s political energy … Freedoms are just as important for the EU’s survival as the currency.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Paris: Hangar-Mosque to Avoid Praying on the Street

A large hangar on the outskirts of Paris could be turned into a place of worship for Muslims, with the city’s police keen to stop members of the community from praying on the streets. Police authorities have already identified a former barracks that could hold the large number of worshippers who meet every Friday in Rue Myrha and Rue Polonceau, in the multi-ethnic Goutte d’Or area in the north of the city. Prayers take place in the middle of the road because the nearby mosques are too small to deal with the numbers. The situation, which has been going on for some time, has led to traffic and public order problems, with some local residents on a war footing. The leader of the far-right National Front party, Marine Le Pen, has even drawn on the issue as part of her campaign for the 2012 Presidential elections. The government of President Nicolas Sarkozy, mindful of losing votes, has promised to resolve the issue.

Today’s Libération newspaper says that the police have found a huge hangar that could be turned into a makeshift mosque: a disused barracks near Porte des Poissonniers, between the road heading north out of Paris and the Périphérique, the city’s famous ring road. Yesterday, the Imam of the small mosque on Rue Myrha, Hamza Salah, visited the proposed new site. Moussa Diakité, the Imam of the mosque on Rue Polonceau, visited the hangar a few days ago. The building is owned by the Ministry of Defence and part of it is already occupied by an association that provides support for the homeless. The other part, some 1,500 square metres, is currently unused. The plan would see the area shared between North African Muslims from the Rue Myrha mosque with sub-Saharan Muslims from the Rue Polonceau. But in what conditions? And, above all, “who will pay?”, asks Daniel Vaillant, mayor of Paris’s 18th arrondissement, who says that a law passed in 1905 forbids the secular state from financing places of worship.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain Aims to Welcome One Million Chinese Tourists in 2020

Spain, Europe’s second-most visited country after France, aims to welcome one million Chinese tourists in 2020, the government said Tuesday. The country received 89,523 Chinese tourists in 2009, the last year for which figures are available, and Tourism Minister Miguel Sebastian said this figure should rise to 300,000 in 2012. To increase the number of visitors from China, Spain plans to ease visa requirements for Chinese nationals, encourage more direct flights between the two countries and open more tourist offices in the Asian giant, he added. The government also plans to publish guides about Spain in mandarin and encourage restuarants and hotels to offer foods and opening hours that are more suited to Chinese tastes.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Chinese Should be Taught in Schools: Minister

Learning Chinese at any elementary school in the country could become reality for children in Sweden within the next decade, if education minister and Liberal Party head Jan Björklund gets his way. “Chinese will become more important, from an economic perspective, than French or Spanish,” he said to newspaper Dagens Industri. French, Spanish and German are today the languages commonly offered in all elementary and high school language classes. Björklund wants Sweden to be the first European country to introduce Chinese language classes in all schools, in a bid to strengthen the country’s competitiveness. “Not everyone in the business world speaks English. Highly qualified businesses are now leaving Europe and moving to China,” he points out to business newspaper Dagens Industri.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Israeli Politician Met Far-Right Millionaire Businessman in Berlin

BERLIN (JTA) — A top Israeli politician met with a far-right millionaire businessman in Berlin, during a weekend visit to the German capital. Ayoub Kara, deputy minister for Development of the Negev and Galilee, a Likud lawmaker in Israel’s Knesset, met with Patrick Brinkmann, a Swedish right-wing extremist who has supported neo-Nazi and right-wing populist parties in Europe, according to a report in the Israeli daily Yediot Acharonot. Brinkmann, 44, who is pushing an anti-Islam agenda, has been reaching out to Israel in recent months, claiming to want to establish a broad-based, far-right movement “without anti-Semitism.” He reportedly met with Kara and other Israeli politicians while in Israel earlier this year. Over the weekend, Kara, representing Israel in Berlin’s annual Festival of Cultures, confirmed to Yediot Acharonot that he had met with Brinkmann. Noting that he also had met with other politicians, Kara said Brinkmann’s ties with neo-Nazis “do not interest me, it is an irrelevant issue.” Brinkmann, who visited Israel with European right-wing populist politicians in February, reportedly has been working to shed the image of anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism associated with the far right in hopes of building a coalition against Islam together with Israeli rightists. Other European right-wing populists, including Dutch politician Geert Wilders, boast allies in Israeli. Wilders featured a member of Israel’s nationalist Yisrael Beiteinu party at his Berlin appearance last fall. Recently, Brinkmann was forced to confront criticism of his outreach to Israel, coming from the populist camp. In an interview conducted during his Israel trip, Brinkmann told the German right-wing populist website, “Freiheitlich.org,” that he had gone there “because we have common roots and common problems.” At a meeting of the Likud bloc he “was received with friendly applause,” he added. Brinkmann withdrew in March as head of the right-wing populist Pro-Deutschland Party after an openly gay politician — Alexander Schlesinger — ran for the party’s seat on a regional assembly. Brinkmann said at the time that he rejected “all forms of decadence, support for National Socialism and anti-Semitism” and lamented the failure to create “a common front of all Islam-critical forces.”

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



UK: Muslim Family Making Mecca Pilgrimage Hauled Off Flight by Armed Police After Relative Told Airline They Were Suicide Bombers

Two 999 calls said father and son had swallowed something which would explode mid-air

A Muslim family were pulled off a flight from Heathrow to Mecca by armed police after officers had been tipped off they were suicide bombers.

They were on their way to make the traditional Hajj pilgrimage which all devout Muslims are required to do once in their lifetime.

Two 999 calls were made that day by a distant member of the same family who warned that the father, mother and son were from Afghanistan, very religious and had links to Al Qaeda, a jury was told.

Furthermore, the caller Golan Azimi, 48, said the father and son had swallowed a liquid which would explode in mid-air.

Armed police then stopped the family in front of other passengers at the departure gate in November last year.

But officers quickly realised the information was false and the family was able to board the flight they intended to take, with 40 other pilgrims.

‘I thought if I did not report it and people died I would have it on my conscience for the rest of my life. I had to fulfil my obligations as a British citizen’Alison Morgan, prosecuting said two 999 calls were made on the morning of November 9 last year, naming the father and son, and saying they had swallowed something which would explode in mid air.

He told them they would be on an Egypt Air flight leaving from terminal three.

She said: ‘The defendant is related to the other family through marriage and the relationship has not always been without conflict and arguments.

‘In the calls he said the family were very religious people from Afghanistan and alleged they had contacts in Al Qaeda.’

Police traced the caller, Azimi, who admitted making two calls to tip off police, but said he genuinely believed information he had been given was ‘100% true’.

On Tuesday at Luton Crown Court a jury cleared Azimi, from Stratford, East London, of making a bomb hoax call.

‘Police took the information seriously and at face value and armed police stopped them at the departure gate in front of other passengers going on the pilgrimage.

‘But it quickly became apparent that the information was false. They were clearly not bombers and were allowed to rejoin the plane, but were very humiliated.’

Azimi, who pleaded not guilty, told the jury the information had been given to him by a man who had pledged him to secrecy.

‘He said there were liquids that you can put in your body and they are timed to blow up. I asked if he was trying to be funny, but he was very serious. Anyone who heard him would have believed him.

‘For two nights after that I could not sleep. I thought if I did not report it and people died I would have it on my conscience for the rest of my life. I had to fulfil my obligations as a British citizen.’

The jury of seven men and five women took less than an hour to return a unanimous not guilty verdict to the charge of communicating false information with intent.

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UN Harshly Criticizes German Social Policies

United Nations report has ripped into Germany’s social policies, saying the nation’s poor and immigrants continue to suffer greatly. The report by the body’s committee responsible for economic, social and cultural rights, seen by Der Tagesspiegel newspaper, comes four years after a similar report which also slammed Germany. But the UN has expressed “deep concern” because many of its previous recommendations were never implemented, the newspaper reported on Wednesday. The report’s main criticism focuses on discrimination against immigrants and the glaring lack of a comprehensive programme to combat poverty. The report also alleges that one in four German children go without breakfast to school, and urges “concrete measures” so that poorer children can get proper meals. It said 13 percent of Germans live in poverty. As far as immigrants are concerned, the UN identified many injustices in the labour market as well as health and social services. Foreigners continue to see large obstacles to education and employment and asylum seekers are often denied adequate social services, it said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UN Says Germany Failing to Tackle Social Inequalites

A UN committee has sharply criticized Germany’s social and education systems, saying the country fails to provide equal opportunities for immigrants and women. It’s also not doing enough to help poor children and the elderly, the UN says. But the German government alleges the report isn’t based on facts. The German government on Wednesday rejected criticism by a United Nations body that it fails to provide adequate help for society’s most vulnerable and discriminates against immigrants.

A United Nations report obtained by Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel states that German authorities have no comprehensivce program to combat poverty and that elderly and disabled people often live in “degrading conditions.” One in four children in Germany go to school without eating breakfast, the report claims, demanding “concrete measures” to ensure that “children, particularly from poor familes, receive proper meals.” The 10-page preliminary report by UN experts also criticises a lack of equality in the German health and social systems. Immigrants, it claims, suffer major discrimination in their rights to education and employment.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Serbia: Accused Killer of Muslims, Croats Calls for ‘Annual Vacation’

The Hague, 6 July (AKI) — Serbian ultranationalist leader Vojislav Seselj on Wednesday rejected charges by the United Nations war crimes tribunal of contempt of court and demanded to be released for “annual vacation”.

Seselj, the leader of the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party, has been accused of crimes against Muslims and Croats allegedly committed by volunteers recruited by his party in 1991-1995 war that followed the breakup of the former Yugoslavia.

While the main trial is drawing to a close, Seselj was sentenced to 15 months in jail last year for contempt of court for revealing names of protected witnesses. Another contempt of court trial ended last month and the verdict was expected shortly.

He was indicted for a third time in May, but on Wednesday Seselj pleaded “non-guilty. He said the prosecution resorted to contempt of court charges because it had no case against him on war crimes charges.

Seselj surrendered to the tribunal voluntarily in February 2003 and has spent over eight years in detention. “I’m the greatest enemy of the Hague tribunal and the only indictee who managed to break up the tribunal,” Seselj said on Wednesday.

The prosecution ended its case in the main trial earlier this year and gave Seselj time to name his defense witnesses. But Seselj said he would not call witnesses because the prosecution has failed to prove charges against him.

Seselj said he was planning to provoke “another seven” contempt of court charges against him and demanded to be granted an “annual vacation”. Asked by the judge Burton Hall whether it meant he asked for temporary release, he said “yes”.

Seselj said he has spent eight years in detention and that all his rights had been violated. But he said he would not ask for state guarantees from “traitorous, pro-NATO regime in Belgrade” for his release.

According to the rules of the tribunal, indictees can’t be granted temporary release without guarantees from their home country.

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

North Africa


Algeria: Rai King Commemorates Anti-French Resistance

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JULY 6 — Even decades later, the wounds inflicted on Algeria at the time of French colonialism and the draconian repression against those who fought for independence have not fully healed.

This is a historic dispute which rears its head time and time again because referring to the country which was borne of a battle with the French strengthens the unity of a nation whose divergences and differences stemming from culture, politics, religion and the social sphere of a country which ponders its fate on a daily basis, are quite obvious . Therefore, paying tribute to a “martyr” is another way to remember the past, looking ahead to what the future might hold.

As for “officiating” the ceremony, this is something that goes hand in hand with African music, and in this case it changes everything, because in Algeria music is often used as a vehicle for transmitting political messages. Khaled is globally considered to be the biggest symbol of Rai music, traditional Algerian music which, thanks to him, crossed the country’s borders, gathering popularity across the world.

His concerts are always, in a way, a sort of ritual and the show he performed in Oran with another famous singer, Blaoui El Houari, commemorated one of the heroes of modern-day Algeria, who gave his life to the cause of fighting colonial troops. His name was Ahmed Zabana and he was the first Algerian to be a part of the Resistance and to face the guillotine set up in Sekadji prison. That name, along with that of another prison, Barberousse, still has the power to shake Algerians to the core.

Zabana was killed in 1956, at the age of 30, having spent many years fighting the French. He was a brave man, but above all an extraordinary leader, who was able to spread the resistance to every part of the country, creating cells in many cities. Which is why he soon became a major target for French intelligence. The hunt for him came to an end in November of 1954, but only because, during a battle, he was wounded by two bullets. The rest of his story is similar to that of other Algerian rebels: prison, interrogations, perhaps torture, and a lighting trial which had him sentenced to death in less than a week. On June 19, 55 years ago, he faced his execution, according to Algerians today, smiling proudly. The day after his death, the mujahidin, as Algerians call their guerrilla warriors, scattered throughout the Oran region in a series of attacks which lead to the death of 47 mercenaries and the “execution” of two French soldiers. Khaled’s concert dedicated to Zabana was held in an Oran stadium brimming with people; the audience was almost entirely made up of youth, who had made the trip from all parts of the country . To listen to his music, of course, but to whom Khaled addressed a speech in honour of the “martyr”, to make today’s youth aware that History cannot be forgotten.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Ancient Israeli House Surprises Archaeologists

The remains of a house uncovered in the city of Haifa are the best-preserved yet from the Kingdom of Israel, dating back nearly three millennia. The site of the discovery was excavated about 40 years ago, but neglect had left the structure hidden until now. Layers of earth and garbage had piled up atop it, and off-road vehicles had plowed over the area, damaging the artifacts. When archaeologists recently re-exposed the area during a dig, they found the four-room home to be remarkably good shape ? the best-preserved house from the period of the Kingdom of Israel found so far, the researchers said today (July 6). The dig is in an area called Tel Shikmona.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Defense: Israeli Ministers Divided Over Exports to Turkey

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 6 — Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is reportedly blocking the sale of Israeli-made defense products to Turkey despite recently intensified efforts to get the two countries to reconcile, as Today’s Zaman reports quoting The Jerusalem Post. The Israeli Defense Ministry is trying to re-launch the export of defense products to Turkey as part of an attempt to rescue once good ties the two countries enjoyed in the region for decades, but Lieberman, one of the most adamant opponents to Turkish-Israeli rapprochement, is blocking the sale. The Jerusalem Post claimed on Tuesday that Lieberman and Defense Minister Ehud Barak are at odds over whether Israel should renew defense exports to Turkey, Israeli defense officials informed. The total estimated value of the current military contracts that Turkey has awarded to Israeli companies amounts to 1.8 billion USD. This figure comprises a significant amount of the two nations’ total annual trade volume of 2.6 billion USD. Turkey had cancelled dozens of military agreements, war games and military projects with Israel following a lethal Israeli raid of the Mavi Marmara in May of last year; the ship was carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza to breach an Israeli naval blockade. In May 2007, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan visited Israel, which was returned with a visit by Israeli President Shimon Peres in November of that year. After the two visits, Turkey awarded Israel 700 million USD in projects, involving tank modernization and the modernization of 48 warplanes and 300 helicopters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Israeli Ministers Divided Over Exports to Turkey

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JULY 6 — Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is reportedly blocking the sale of Israeli-made defense products to Turkey despite recently intensified efforts to get the two countries to reconcile, as Today’s Zaman reports quoting The Jerusalem Post. The Israeli Defense Ministry is trying to re-launch the export of defense products to Turkey as part of an attempt to rescue once good ties the two countries enjoyed in the region for decades, but Lieberman, one of the most adamant opponents to Turkish-Israeli rapprochement, is blocking the sale. The Jerusalem Post claimed on Tuesday that Lieberman and Defense Minister Ehud Barak are at odds over whether Israel should renew defense exports to Turkey, Israeli defense officials informed. The total estimated value of the current military contracts that Turkey has awarded to Israeli companies amounts to 1.8 billion USD. This figure comprises a significant amount of the two nations’ total annual trade volume of 2.6 billion USD. Turkey had cancelled dozens of military agreements, war games and military projects with Israel following a lethal Israeli raid of the Mavi Marmara in May of last year; the ship was carrying humanitarian aid to Gaza to breach an Israeli naval blockade. In May 2007, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan visited Israel, which was returned with a visit by Israeli President Shimon Peres in November of that year.

After the two visits, Turkey awarded Israel 700 million USD in projects, involving tank modernization and the modernization of 48 warplanes and 300 helicopters.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran: Mystery Shrouds Fate of Iranian Pastor Sentenced to Death for Apostasy

The Supreme Court had overturned the decision on the condition of the evangelical leader return to Islam. The sentence for apostasy, not covered by the Code of laws of Iran of political origin.

Tehran (AsiaNews / Agencies) — Mystery shrouds the abolition of the death sentence of an Iranian Pastor, Youcef Nadarkhani, a convert to Christianity, which was announced in recent days. Christian sources in Iran have stated that the Supreme Court had overturned the conviction of the evangelical leader, but asked for his return to Islam as a precondition. And there is still no written confirmation of the Supreme Court decision to accept the pastor’s appeal against the death sentence for apostasy.

The situation is complicated by the fact that Youcef Nadarkhani’s lawyer, Moahammad Ali Dadkhah should have received written notice of the decision in recent days. But Dadkhah, one of the founders of the Center for Defense of Human Rights along with Nobel Laureate Shirin Ebadi is in a difficult legal position. On July 3, a Tehran court sentenced him to nine years in prison and 10 years of banishment from university and the teaching profession, “for actions contrary to the Islamic regime and propaganda.” Dadkhah has 20 days to appeal, but fears that he might be arrested in the coming days.

Iranian civil law does not provide the crime of apostasy, even if authorities have discussed passing such a law for some time. In the case of Pastor Nadarkhani, which has been described as “distorted” and “extrajudicial”, it seems that there was political pressure on judges, who were divided on the sentence. The court apparently used art. 167 of the Iranian Constitution, which states that if the judges do not find the basis for a decision in civil law then they should “cite Islamic reliable sources or a valid fatwa to arrive at a judgement and issue a verdict.”

Pastor Nadarkhani Youcef, a member of the Church of Iran, was arrested Oct. 13, 2009 in the city of Rasht as he tried to legally register his church. It is believed that his arrest was caused by his position, critical of the Islamic religious monopoly on the education of children in Iran. He was initially accused of protests, but later the charges were changed into that of apostasy and the evangelization of Muslims.

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



Pipeline Attack Prompts Jordan to Diversify Energy Resources

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, 5 JULY — Jordan has devised a plan to diversify its fuel and gas resources in line of continued disruption to gaz supplies from Egypt, an official said today. Prime minister Maruf Bakhit held an urgent meeting with ministry of energy and officials from top electric companies and the national oil refinery to approve a multi-million plan that can guarantee ongoing power supply in the kingdom, Petra news agency reported. The government said gas supplies from Egypt has been halted for the third time in less than two months after the pipeline linking the two countries was blown up. According to Khalid Touqan, minister of energy, the government is working on securing steady supply from other countries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Lifts Ban on Jordanian Farmers

(ANSAmed) — AMMAN, JULY 6 — Future for Jordanian farmers could not look greener after shipping the first load of products to the oil rich neighboring country Saudi Arabia following years of being banned from the large market.

The decision comes after improved ties between Jordan and Saudi and the near inclusion of the kingdom into the Gulf Cooperation Council.

Farmers in Jordan have been suffering from lack of markets after Saudi Arabia banned Jordanian vegetable produce over quality control issues.

According to Radhi Tarawneh, secretary general of the Agriculture ministry, Jordan will be able to export at least 100 tonnes of vegetables and fruits daily.

“The Saudi market is very important to Jordan because the two countries are near each other which makes it more feasible to both sides,” he said. The farming sector has been reeling under impact of years of drought and lack of markets. The government recently promised to support farmers in their difficult financial situation by opening up new markets and reducing fees on services.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria’s Minorities Fear Chaos That Regime Change Could Bring

President Bashar al-Assad continues to forcibly put down demonstrators in Syria. But what would it mean for the region — and for the minorities within Syria — if the regime were toppled? Muslims, Christians, Alawis, Druze and Ishmaelites: No other country in the Middle East, except perhaps for tiny Lebanon, has such a multiplicity of religious and ethnic groups. The Assad family’s regime hasn’t followed a particular political doctrine in its 41-year rule. According to its constitution, Syria is a secular state, and there is a powerful state-run economic sector.

But the protests against the Assad regime could lead to religious and ethnic tensions, says Middle East expert Volker Perthes from the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin. Syria’s religious minorities in particular are worried that the demise of the Assad regime could be a long and bloody affair, and that it could result in civil-war style conflicts. “There could be religious tensions and acts of revenge,” Perthes warned.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Transport: Turkey’s Air Carrier Flies to 26 Cities in Mideast

Turkish national airline company has increased its destinations to 26 in the Middle East with Istanbul-Najaf flight. Turkish Airlines (THY) has started to operate flights between Istanbul and Najaf, its fourth destination in Iraq. “THY has raised its destinations in the Middle East to 26 with Najaf flights,” Executive Board Chairman Hamdi Topcu said on Wednesday at the Najaf Airport, as Anatolia news agency reports. Topcu said THY would make direct connections to Najaf from 183 cities in the world via Istanbul.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


23 Million Live Below Poverty Line

The number of officially recognized impoverished Russians increased by 2.3 million to 22.9 million, or 16 percent of the population, in the first quarter of 2011, compared with the same period last year, according to the State Statistics Service. The number of impoverished had decreased in the first two years after the 2008 recession, but the trend was reversed this year, Kommersant reported. The minimum monthly wage currently stands at 6,437 rubles ($231), up 17 percent in the first quarter of last year. The increase, which was mostly due to rising food and services prices, is coupled with weak salary growth nationwide and has resulted in more people finding themselves below the poverty line, the report said. Analysts told Kommersant that the new figures are more accurate than previous reports by the statistics service but still downplay the actual number of impoverished people in the country. No alternative estimates were provided.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



African Student ‘In Coma’ After Russia Attack

An African student was hospitalised in a coma Tuesday after suffering a beating by racist attackers in Russia’s northwestern city of Saint Petersburg, local police said. “We have learned that a student of Saint-Petersburg Polytechnical University, a 29-year-old native of Ivory Coast, was beaten by three unidentified individuals near a bus station” in the city, a police source that asked not to be identified told AFP. The victim has been hospitalised after suffering numerous head injuries that put him in a coma. Racist assaults are frequently committed by skinhead gangs which have grown in number in recent years in Russia and specifically Saint-Petersburg. They often target people from Russia’s Caucasus region and the former Soviet republics in Central Asia.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Putin Calls for Science Projects to Rival Europe

Russia will develop large-scale scientific projects to rival Europe’s Large Hadron Collider, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said. “Such projects can be comparable to the space or nuclear programs that have been successfully carried out in our country,” Putin told a meeting of the government’s committee on high technology late Tuesday in the Moscow region. The Education and Science Ministry has drawn up a list of six potential projects, including construction of a thermonuclear research center and reactor. The cost of the projects could be 133 billion rubles ($4.8 billion), said Deputy Finance Minister Alexander Novak. The LHC is a 27-kilometer circuit of magnets running under the French-Swiss border that smashes beams of atomic particles to record the resulting collisions. The world’s biggest scientific experiment is recording collisions in its hunt for the origin of the universe’s missing mass and “dark matter.” Putin viewed a Russian collider under construction in the Moscow region town of Dubna, RIA-Novosti reported.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Bin Laden’s Family Not Allowed to Leave Pakistan

A government-appointed commission looking into the killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has said his wives and children cannot leave Pakistan until it gives its prior consent. Sixteen people were detained after bin Laden was killed by US special forces in the northwestern garrison town of Abbottabad on May 2. They included his three wives — one from Yemen and two from Saudi Arabia — and several children. Pakistani officials had originally said they would be repatriated and recent media reports suggested Amal Ahmed Abdulfattah, bin Laden’s youngest wife, would be allowed to return to Yemen. However, on Tuesday the commission issued a statement saying that the Ministry of Interior and Pakistan’s ISI spy agency had been “directed to ensure that the family of Osama bin Laden is not repatriated from Pakistan” without its consent.

Pakistan’s government was widely criticized after the raid on Abbottabad

After bin Laden was killed, mainly opposition lawmakers in Pakistan demanded a civilian — not military — probe into his death and into the fact that the al Qaeda head had been able to live in Pakistan for so long, apparently undetected.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



India’s Supreme Court Orders Kerala Temple Treasure be Documented

India’s Supreme Court has ordered that treasure estimated to be worth billions of dollars found recently at a Hindu temple in the country’s south be filmed and documented. Gold coins, an idol of Lord Vishnu and emeralds are among the many treasures found in hidden vaults of the Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple in the Indian state of Kerala. The 16th-century temple in Thiruvananthapuram, the state capital, contains a 30-meter, seven-tiered tower and a corridor with 365 elaborately carved stone pillars. Four of the six underground cellars were opened regularly but two more, located about six meters below ground had been sealed for over 100 years. Local legend says that opening the vaults brings bad luck but earlier this month, five of them were opened and revealed to be full of precious stones, ancient gold coins and diamond-studded crowns.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Media Attack WTO Ruling Against China

Chinese media on Wednesday lashed out at a ruling by the World Trade Organisation that said Beijing’s export restrictions on raw materials are illegal, and warned rare earths would be the next target. The WTO on Tuesday upheld complaints by the United States, European Union and Mexico, ruling that China had failed to abide by accession commitments when it imposed quotas and duties on several types of minerals. These include bauxite, coking coal, fluorspar, magnesium, manganese, silicon metal, silicon carbide, yellow phosphorus and zinc.

The Economic Information Daily accused the European Union and United States of wanting access to “China’s low-cost resources to satisfy the needs of their domestic industries, especially the development needs of high-tech industries.” The newspaper — owned by the official Xinhua news agency — said China should be “on guard” as some countries pursue their own interests and “make better use of WTO rules to fight for its own lawful rights and interests”. A report carried on the Caixin business website Wednesday also warned China’s export controls over rare earths were “very likely” to become the next target of WTO complaints.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Man Leading the Fight Against Anti-Girl Abortions

Sex-selective abortion has left China with millions more boys than girls. Meet Shuzhuo Li, who is campaigning to reverse the trend

How great is the gender imbalance in China?

In 2005, there were 32 million more men than women under the age of 20 in China. Young men with no prospect of marriage become a disruptive force in society. And with no one to marry, they will have no children and no one to take care of them when they are too old to work.

Is the imbalance an unintended consequence of China’s one-child policy?

Gender-selective abortions exacerbate the problem of dwindling birth rates. In China, a son is not just a source of pride, but a financial necessity. A daughter leaves home to join her husband’s family after marriage, so her parents have no one to care for them in their old age.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Sheik Feiz Mohammed Denounced

AUSTRALIA’S most senior Islamic leader labelled Western Sydney preacher Sheik Feiz Mohammed dangerous, insisting the firebrand cleric be banned from delivering sermons to young Muslims.

Sheik Taj El-Din al-Hilaly told The Sunday Telegraph Sheik Feiz, who recently began teaching in Sydney again after years in self-imposed exile overseas, “prefers for Muslims to be marginalised” in society.

“If religion had something like the Australian Medical Association, or a trade authority, they would never allow him to be preaching — they wouldn’t give him a licence,” Sheik al-Hilaly, the Imam of Australia’s largest mosque at Lakemba, said.

His comments came after The Sunday Telegraph revealed last week Sheik Feiz had quietly returned to Australia in the past few months and resumed preaching, four years after Kevin Rudd declared the Sydney-born cleric was “not welcome” for making inflammatory remarks, including likening Jewish people to pigs.

Sheik Feiz’s followers insist he has changed but his return, to open a new prayer hall in Auburn, has divided the Muslim community.

“What I’m seeing from the young people who attend his talks, this is the same message — I haven’t seen a change in him,” Sheik al-Hilaly said. “Sheik Feiz is like a new fad — young people are attracted to this Rambo style. I’ve heard some of his views and they are not constructive.

“It can lead young people to move away from their family and community [and] to distance and isolate themselves.”

Sheik Feiz, who is monitored by police, declined an interview but declared on a Facebook page he was a “proud Australian citizen” who “always obeyed the law,” adding that he was determined to serve the community “to the best of my ability, including solving social problems and assisting the youth to become better citizens”.

Sheik Feiz, a former boxer who studied Islam in Saudi Arabia, admitted to being involved in a local political scandal, but insisted he was offering good counsel to the culprit and not inflaming what he called “a silly incident” where one of his followers was pulling down election posters.

He said he had “cautioned” the follower “against committing unsocial acts”.

“I have never encouraged anyone to commit any acts which counter the democratic values of this country,” Sheik Feiz said.

“And I would never intentionally seek to break the laws of this country.”

His sermons sparked outrage from political leaders in Australia, Britain and Europe for their hardline views.

These have included denouncing other religions and encouraging Muslim children to choose martyrdom.

The Sheik holds classes on Sharia law and other topics in a musallah behind Auburn’s Bukhari House bookstore, which The Sunday Telegraph visited last week, but was asked to leave.

The building was bought in January by the Ahlus Sunnah wal Jama’ah Association, which made Sheik Mohammed its full-time Amir.

His Facebook site has links to other pages, including one titled the “Flag of Islamic Khilafah” that advocates setting up a “caliphate” or Islamic state of Sharia law.

Backers say he has been transformed and no longer preaches extremist rhetoric.

Lebanese Muslim Association president Samier Dandan said last week: “He’s had enough time overseas to adjust what he has done and correct the faults he had.”

AUTHORITIES have asked Auburn cleric Sheik Feiz Mohammed to remove from his website footage featuring the al-Qaeda spiritual leader Anwar al-Awlaki.

While the clips did not promote hardline rhetoric or incite violence, counter-terrorism authorities described the connection with the Sydney preacher as “unsettling”.

Sheik Feiz was asked to remove the footage and he did so promptly. He has been described as more of an “egomaniac” than a security threat. And recent assessments by NSW Police show that he does not warrant any serious investigation into his activities.

But according to one senior law enforcement source, his past comments remain “concerning”. “We’ve looked,” the source told The Sunday Telegraph. “He’s too big now to be getting up to mischief.” Police rely heavily on community-based contacts to identify extremists.

One such contact said officers quizzed him about Sheik Mohammed and the Ahlus Sunnah wal Jama’ah group he is associated with.

“I just told them that they’re talking tough,” the source said.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


Southern Sudan Prepares for Independence

A new country will come into existence this weekend in Africa. Southern Sudan, rich in oil reserves, is declaring its independence. But an ongoing conflict with the north combined with numerous warlords pursuing their own agendas means that optimism is in short supply. The first impression travelers get when exiting an airplane here is that they’ve landed at a construction site. The new terminal building is but a skeleton, with Chinese laborers covering vast areas with concrete. Welcome to Juba, the capital of Southern Sudan! The city still has much to do before United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and up to 40 heads of state and government fly to Juba Airport this coming weekend, an airfield about the size of that in the German town of Paderborn. On Saturday, July 9, Southern Sudan will proclaim its independence . The move will strip Sudan, Africa’s largest country, of a quarter of its area — and the world will get a new country, the youngest in Africa.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Amid EU’s Open Borders, Workers Stay Put

Europeans tend not to work outside their “home” countries. In 2010, only 3.2% of those working in the 17 members of the euro zone were citizens of another EU member nation. In 2007, the year before the financial crisis really took hold, that proportion was 2.9%.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Boat Catches Fire in Red Sea, 197 Die

One hundred and ninety-seven African migrants headed for Saudi Arabia drowned, died in the fire engulfing the ship or were killed by sharks in an incident in the Red Sea which Sudanese authorities reported yesterday. This morning the official government information agency Sudanese Media Center reported the news and added that a second attempt to bring another 250 Africans from the same area to Saudi Arabia via sea had been thwarted by Sudanese authorities. According to the Red Sea police commander General Haider Ahmed Suleiman, the boats which the migrants — mostly from Nigeria, Chad, Somalia and Eritrea — had left the Sudanese coasts on were reportedly Cuban. The boat which sunk yesterday, “did not have any seats or cabins and had apparently been built for fishing or other purposes,” the high-ranking official told radio Omdurman, “but not for carrying passengers, especially a large number of illegal migrants.” Most of those onboard, according to General Suleiman, died from burns suffered in a fire on the boat, drowned in the attempt to save themselves of were attacked by sharks which live in the waters just off the Sudanese coastline. A small number of them managed to reach the shore by swimming, though some of the latter lost arms or legs in the attacks by sharks and are now in hospital.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dozens Arrested Across Italy for Human Trafficking

Immigrants shipped to France, Switzerland, Denmark and Austria

(ANSA) — Rome, July 6 — Police on Wednesday arrested dozens of people across Italy for allegedly trafficking thousands of immigrants across Europe.

The arrests followed an investigation, which began in May 2010 by the interior ministry’s Central Operations Service (SCO), local police from Lecce, Bologna and Ravenna, and the National Anti-Mafia Directorate At least 18 people were arrested in Lombardy and Emilia Romagna in the north and in the southern regions of Lazio, Puglia, Abruzzo and Calabria.

They are alleged to have trafficked thousands of illegal immigrants of Afghan, Iraqi, Pakistani and Indian origin through cities including Rome, Milan, Bologna and Bari via a complex network headquartered in Greece and Turkey.

Police said many of the immigrants landed in both small boats and large ships along the Adriatic coast of Puglia and they were “in constant fear for their lives”.

Once they landed in Italy, the immigrants were transferred to Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, Austria, France and Belgium.

“Today’s operation has exposed a substantial trafficking of illegal immigrants,” Vincenzo Carella, police commissioner of the southern city of Lecce told ANSA.

“In a year of investigations in Salento (province) we have intercepted more than 5,000 immigrants and conducted major prevention”.

In Rome at least 15 people were arrested on Wednesday for aiding and abetting illegal immigration.

Police claimed the operation included falsifying documents for residency and non-existent work.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: 688:000 Refugees Have Reached Tunisia Since February

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 6 — As of the beginning of tensions and clashes between loyalist troops and rebels, 688,762 refugees from 106 different countries have left Libya for Tunisia.

TAP news agency reports that this figure was provided by the Tunisian Public Health Ministry.

Most of the refugees (some 425,000) are from Libya; 67,000 are Tunisians who were working in the country and were forced to return home. Currently, according to the above source, the refugee camps which have been set up in Tunisia are providing shelter for about 3,000 people, and efforts are being made to improve their living conditions, especially in light of the high temperatures.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: Tunisia: Concern About Flow of Refugees to Djerba

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 4 — Public order in Djerba is at risk due to the large flow of refugees coming in from Libya.

Inhabitants of the well-known Tunisian tourist destination say that the refugees are having a considerable impact on daily life in the seaside resort. Tensions are rising among the inhabitants of Djerba, and they have filed an official protest against the creation of a reception centre for refugees on the island, which forms the heart of urban tourism. According to the most recent estimates made by humanitarian organisations, there are currently more than 8 thousand refugees in Djerba. Many of them — apart from the rich ones who have chosen the location because they used to go there on holiday before the start of the war — need food, clothes, medical assistance and many other things. Aid has been available so far, but this situation may not continue due to a lack of funds, also from international organisations.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Poland Warns Against Deporting Its Workers

“Deporting unemployed Poles and Eastern Europeans is dangerous” Polish Economic Affairs Minister Waldemar Pawlak made this statement in an interview with Dutch newspaper Trouw. Social Affairs Minister Henk Kamp wants to deport Eastern Europeans who do not speak Dutch and have no prospect of finding work. Poland fears other countries may follow the Dutch example. The Polish government says the issue could strain relations if The Hague were to carry put its plans into effect.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Indian Gay Rights Activists Slam Health Minister

India’s health minister has sparked a furious row by describing homosexuality as a ‘disease.’ Gay rights activists and campaigners across the country have held protests and criticized him for his unhelpful remarks. Indian Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) rights groups across India have condemned Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad’s comments earlier this week, when he said at an HIV/AIDS forum that men having sex with men was “unnatural” and a “disease” imported into India that must now be dealt with. Health organizations also said they were disappointed and made clear that this kind of language is disruptive, especially on the part of a health minister. Amid the massive uproar, Azad was quick to recant his comments: “Some people have played with the words. I have been quoted out of context,” he said at a hastily convened press conference. “My reference was to HIV as a disease. As health minister, I know that (male homosexual sex) is not a disease.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Utrecht Gay Bashers Not Prosecuted

A group of youths who harassed a male gay couple until they fled the Leidsche Rijn district in the city of Utrecht will not face prosecution. The Court of Appeal in Arnhem rejected the couple’s request that the Public Prosecutor’s Office be ordered to bring charges against some of the youths involved. The court ruled that a new investigation would be pointless, partly because the alleged crimes were committed more than a year ago. In 2009 and 2010, the gay couple filed six separate reports of harassment, vandalism and damage to property. One of the reports concerned their car having been rammed deliberately by anothe vehicle. The men eventually felt forced to leave the district; selling their home far below market value.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Developing World Need $1 Trillion a Year for Green Tech: UN

The world needs $1.9 trillion in green technology investments a year, with over half of that sum necessary for developing countries,” the UN said Tuesday. “Over the next 40 years, $1.9 trillion (1.31 trillion euros) per year will be needed for incremental investments in green technologies,” the UN Economic and Social Affairs body said in its annual survey. “At least one-half, or $1.1 trillion per year, of the required investments will need to be made in developing countries to meet their rapidly increasing food and energy demands through the application of green technologies,” it added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Hubble Telescope Takes Millionth Look at the Universe

NASA’s prolific Hubble Space Telescope has hit a major milestone after 21 years in orbit: one million science observations, with the latest being a look at possible signs of water in an alien planet’s atmosphere. The landmark observation occurred on Monday, July 4, while the observatory was looking at a planet 1,000 light-years away.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New Physics Finding May Lead to Non-Electronic Gadgets, Scientists Say

Physicists find a way to amplify ‘spin current,’ a significant step in the world of spintronics. Earlier related research made it possible for the solid-state drives found in iPhones and other newer gadgets. In a new scientific paper, scientists in Germany and the United Kingdom have come up with a new technique to amplify the “spin current” of electrons — and that could pave the way for significant improvements in consumer electronics, possibly including storage devices that no require no electricity at all. In an article published online in the journal Nature Materials on Sunday, the team from the University of Cambridge and the University of Münster outlined what may be the next step in “spintronics.”

This new area physics research is being hailed as the successor of conventional electronics, based on transistor and semiconductor technology. In general, for over the last 50 years, the number of transistors that can be put on an integrated circuit doubles approximately every 18 to 24 months. However, the number of transistors is now getting so large, on such a small space, that it’s beginning to hit its physical limits, and will soon reach the size of individual atoms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Private Guards Outnumber Police Worldwide: Survey

Private security companies employ up to 25.5 million people across the world, exceeding the number of police officers, and hold up to 3.7 million firearms, a survey said Wednesday. “The global trend towards downsizing government, including public security institutions, has contributed to the growth of the private security sector,” said the Geneva Graduate Institute’s small arms survey. “In prisons, at airports, along borders and on the street, security provision is increasingly in the hands of private actors,” said Keith Krause, director of the survey project. “The key question — to which we don’t know the answer — is whether these evolving arrangements are enhancing or impairing security,” he said. The formal private security sector now employs between 19.5 million and 25.5 million people worldwide.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Storm as Wide as Earth Rages on Saturn

The Great White Spot on Saturn has been imaged in unprecedented detail and is now yielding clues to how this titanic storm may have formed far earlier than scientists expected. The staggeringly powerful thunderstorm is approximately 6,200 miles (10,000 kilometers) wide, nearly as wide as Earth, and has a tail of white clouds that encircles all of Saturn. The storm began forming in the ringed planet’s northern hemisphere in December. This is about 10 years early for Great White Spots, which usually recur about every 30 Earth years, when Saturn’s northern hemisphere tilts most toward the sun.

Only five similar Great White Spots have been observed in the past 135 years. To learn more about this mystery storm, researchers employed both ground-based telescopes and observations from the Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. Their findings show it to be packing as much total energy as “the Earth receives from the sun within one year,” said researcher Georg Fischer, a planetary scientist at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Graz. The Great White Spot is a massive complex of thunderstorms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110705

Financial Crisis
» Foreign Companies Buying Up Dutch Tech Startups
» Germany: Pensioners Are Falling Behind, Ministry Admits
» Greece: The “Indignant” Continue to Protest
» Greek Islands for Sale, Turkish Company Interested
» How Greece’s Political Elite Ruined the Country
» Introducing George Soros
» Legal Challenge to Greece Aid: ‘The Greeks Would be Well Advised to Exit the Euro Zone’
» Mark Steyn: Liberty and Loss
» Spiegel Interview With Allianz CEO: ‘Greece Has an Opportunity to Attract Investment’
 
USA
» NASA’s Shuttle Program Cost $209 Billion — Was it Worth it?
» That Gallup Poll on Jews and Obama
» Who Owns the Moon Camera? U.S. Government vs. Apollo Astronaut
 
Europe and the EU
» Attack on Border-Free Travel: Boycott Call Enrages Danish Politicians
» Bat Ye’or: On Geert Wilders’s Acquittal
» Danish Border Controls Pass, Despite Objections
» Danish Customs Checks to Cause ‘No Delays’
» EU Keeps Close Eye on Danish Customs Controls
» EU Presidency: Poland Shifts Into Top Gear
» Germany: Merkel Under Fire for Saudi Tank Deal
» Germany: Berlin ‘Playing With Fire’ In Saudi Tank Deal
» German Industry is Skeptical About Major Rare-Earths Find
» Iceland: A New Constitution, Via Facebook
» Italy: Milan to Send Seven Trash Compactors to Naples
» Italy: Vatican Archive Contains Secret Papers on Armenian Genocide
» Italy: Berlusconi Damages Manoeuvre ‘Irks’ Northern League
» Italy: Trash Fires Burn in Naples
» OIC Blasts Islamophobia in Holland
» Six Uranium Traffickers Arrested in Moldova
» State Minister Calls for Denmark Holiday Boycott
» Strauss-Kahn Bid for French Presidency is ‘Weakest Scenario’
» Sweden: Parents Guilty of Högsby ‘Honour’ Killing: Court
» Swiss Party Seeks Anti-Powerpoint Voters
» The Saboteurs Among us: Danish Border Controls Shake EU Foundations
» UK: Duchess of Cambridge at Risk of Anorexia Says Italian Expert
 
North Africa
» 5,200 Year-Old Rock Drawings of Earliest Ancient Egyptian Celebrations Unearthed
» Libya After Gaddafi
» Tunisia: Salafite Attack on Lawyers, Six Arrested
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Gas Pipeline Attack; Israel, National Interests Hit
» Swedish Ship to Gaza Express ‘Grief and Dismay’ At Greek Authorities
 
Middle East
» Caroline Glick: Israel’s Palace Coup Plotters
» Post 9/11 Wars Take Toll on Lives and Budget: Study
» Switzerland Blocks Syrian Assets
» Turkey: Council of Europe Concerned Over Jailed Deputies
 
South Asia
» Pakistan: Christian Hospital Under Attack in Pakistan
» Swiss Hostages Moved to Pakistan Badlands
» Writer Kia Abdullah Mocks Death of Gap Year Students on Twitter
 
Far East
» China’s Women Show Taste for Fast Cars and Whisky.
» Chinese Sweetmaker Confirms Nestle Talks
 
Australia — Pacific
» New Rare Earths Deposit Gives Hope to Technologies Industry
» Vast Reserves of Vital Rare Earths Found in Ocean Bed
 
Immigration
» Human Rights Farce: Meet the Serial Criminal Who Cannot be Deported
» Spaniards Flock to Germany, Many Eastern Europeans Stay Away
» Top Environment Official to Visit Lampedusa Island in Wake of Migrants and Squalor
 
General
» Integral Challenges Physics Beyond Einstein

Financial Crisis


Foreign Companies Buying Up Dutch Tech Startups

For the sixth time this year, a promising young Dutch high-tech company has been bought up by a large foreign concern. This time, it is Epyon, a producer of chargers for electric cars, Het Financieele Dagblad reported yesterday. The fast-growing company from Rijswijk, set up by three students from the university of Delft, makes equipment that can speedily recharge electric cars. It has been swallowed up by Swedish-Swills multinational ABB, which makes electric engines and generators for everything from wind turbines to trains. The takeovers do not indicate that Dutch multinationals like Philips have no eye for home-grown pearls, according to experts. “It mainly shows that high-tech is a global business and that large companies would prefer to buy new technologies than to develop them themselves,” according to Sake Bosch of venture capital provider Prime Ventures.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Pensioners Are Falling Behind, Ministry Admits

Germany’s 20 million pensioners are going to find life increasingly tough with the government confirming for the first time that benefit payments are rising at well below the pace of inflation. Calculations prepared by the federal Labour Ministry have found that the purchasing power of the government pension has shrunk considerably in the past 10 years and old-age poverty is increasing in the long term, according to daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, which has seen the figures. The figures were given to the socialist Left party after its chairman Klaus Ernst asked the government for precise numbers on how the real value of the pension had changed since 2001.

The answer from the Labour Ministry revealed that from 2001 to 2010, consumer inflation ran at an average of 1.36 percent while pension benefits rose at 0.82 percent per year, Süddeutsche Zeitung reported, adding that this was the first time the government had acknowledged the shortfall in figures. Pensions are currently rising at an annual rate of 0.99 percent per year against an inflation rate of 2.3 percent, the paper added. According to the Left party’s calculations, the real value of the pension has fallen 7 percent in the past decade.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: The “Indignant” Continue to Protest

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JULY 4 — Despite the draconian austerity measures provided for in the Medium-Term Economic Plan having already been endorsed by the Greek Parliament, the “indignant” movement is continuing its protest rallies in several cities across the country. Last night, for the 40th day in a row, thousands of citizens gathered at their usual meeting place downtown in Syntagma square, in front of Parliament.

Aside from the anti-government chants regarding the austerity measures, the protesters were shouting anti-police slogans due to the force’s behaviour during last week’s events, while late in the evening there were reports of clashes involving protesters and police; the latter used tear gas.

During the protests, a large group of demonstrators marched before the Civil protection ministry in protest against the government’s decision to stop vessels flying the Greek flag or a foreign flag from leaving the country’s ports to provide humanitarian aid to Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greek Islands for Sale, Turkish Company Interested

A Turkish businessman is eager to buy at least three Greek islands which were put to sale due to economic crisis in this country. Fiyapi’s Executive Board Chairman Fikret Inan is planning to purchase at least three of six Greek islands put up for sale, and to set up a company in Greece in order to buy the islands in case of any obstacle he may face during the purchasing process. “I will implement a hotel and villa project in a Greek island, similar to a project I am planning to implement in 400,000-square meter Garip Ada I have purchased in Dikili (Aegean town) worth 35 million USD,” Inan told Anatolia news agency on Tuesday.

The islands Inan is willing to buy are each close to Italy, Greece and Turkey. “We have not notified anything official that the islands will not be sold to Turks. They may have reservations, and they told us that they can sell them and negotiations will continue,” Inan said. Inan said he would establish a company in Greece and buy the islands through that company. “If we are able to fulfil this project, we can establish a bridge between Turkey and Greece,” Inan said. Inan said the price of Greek islands was ranging between 3 million and 20 million Euro, and he had allocated 20 million Euro to purchase three islands and 80 million Euro more to construct facilities on those islands. The six islands on sale are Lihnari, Kaltsonisi, Amorgos, Kardiotissa, Nafsika and Vouvalo.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Greece’s Political Elite Ruined the Country

The latest tranche of loans from the EU and the IMF has helped buy debt-ridden Greece some time. But the Greeks will find it hard to get back on their feet. Their country has been ruined by three political dynasties, which created a bloated system of cronyism that is hard to change.

George Provopoulos, governor of the Bank of Greece, believes torpedoing the austerity package, as the country’s conservative opposition tried, would have been “suicide.” Still, Provopoulos also believes Greece has “reached the limit” and that it would be impossible to squeeze any more out of the people. In remarks to the conservative newspaper Kathimerini, he spoke about what he saw as the root cause of the crisis. “There is little doubt that the failings of (the existing social and political) system hindered the implementation of policies that would have averted the existing ills,” he said. “We are paying the price of past mistakes.”

The emergency financing will help Greece through the next months and it will buy the rest of the EU some time — time in which the euro crisis may ease somewhat. But it’s unlikely that it can save Greece. The last few decades have seen an elite, with the Papandreou, Karamanlis and Mitsotakis families at its core, establish a system of economic patronage. They threw around billions the government didn’t actually have and showered friends and relatives with prosperity that was all based on credit. These leaders bloated their country’s administration so that everyone could have a piece, and created a bureaucratic monster in the process.

The political parties’ business dealings were always more about favors than policies. Anyone with access to public funds used them to buy friends and voters, who were then beholden to the party — and to the family running it. The result for Greece has been a feudal democracy, where the generations come and go, but the names remain the same: Papandreou and Karamanlis and Karamanlis and Papandreou, with a Mitsotakis thrown in every now and then. No other European democracy has seen the like.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Introducing George Soros

New York hedge fund manager George Soros is one of the most politically powerful individuals on earth. Since the mid-1980s in particular, he has used his immense influence to help reconfigure the political landscapes of several countries around the world?in some cases playing a key role in toppling regimes that had held the reins of government for years, even decades. Vis à vis the United States, a strong case can be made for the claim that Soros today affects American politics and culture more profoundly that any other living person. Much of Soros’s influence derives from his $13 billion personal fortune, which is further leveraged by at least another $25 billion in investor assets controlled by his firm, Soros Fund Management. An equally significant source of Soros’s power, however, is his passionate messianic zeal. Soros views himself as a missionary with something of a divine mandate to transform the world and its institutions into something better?as he sees it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Legal Challenge to Greece Aid: ‘The Greeks Would be Well Advised to Exit the Euro Zone’

Germany’s high court on Tuesday began hearing a legal challenge to the 110-billion-euro aid package provided to debt-stricken Greece in 2010. Retired economics professor Joachim Starbatty is one of those behind the case — and he expects the court to prove him right.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Mark Steyn: Liberty and Loss

Today America is divided between those who see no problem with a bloated, wasteful four-trillion-bucks-a-year behemoth, and those who understand it’s killing the country. A betting man might wonder how long this “free and great people” will wish to remain “together”, especially when the spendaholics’ policies seem consciously designed to fracture the citizenry: The old vs the young, the latter crippled by debt run up by the former. Government union workers vs a beleaguered small-business class, working till it dies to pay for the lavish pensions of those who retire in their 50s. Poor Hispanics vs poor whites, both chasing jobs that no longer exist. Young Hispanics vs old whites: 83 per cent of Medicare beneficiaries are white; 70 per cent of births in Dallas’ biggest hospital are Hispanic. In a post-prosperity America, that would seem an unlikely recipe for social tranquility.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spiegel Interview With Allianz CEO: ‘Greece Has an Opportunity to Attract Investment’

In a SPIEGEL interview, Allianz CEO Michael Diekmann discusses the participation of private creditors in a new bailout for Greece, the German insurance giant’s contribution to the aid package and his proposal for a long-term solution to Athens’ problems.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


NASA’s Shuttle Program Cost $209 Billion — Was it Worth it?

When NASA’s space shuttle program was announced back in 1972, it was billed as a major advance — a key step in humanity’s quest to exploit and explore space. The shuttle would enable safe, frequent and affordable access to space, the argument went, with flights occurring as often as once per week and costing as little as $20 million each. But much of that original vision didn’t come to pass. Two of the program’s 134 flights have ended in tragedy, killing 14 astronauts in all. Recent NASA estimates peg the shuttle program’s cost through the end of last year at $209 billion (in 2010 dollars), yielding a per-flight cost of nearly $1.6 billion. And the orbiter fleet never flew more than nine missions in a single year.

A chief criticism of the shuttle program is that it prevented more ambitious manned exploration missions. There is merit to that argument, experts say. After all, NASA’s Apollo programput boots on the moon in 1969, just 12 years after the space age began. But it’s been four decades since the last manned lunar landing, and in that time, NASA has made little discernible progress toward the next logical giant leap: getting people to Mars. Instead, since 1981, the shuttle has kept zipping around the planet over and over again, just a few hundred miles above Earth’s surface. “It kept us limited to low-Earth orbit,” said space policy expert John Logsdon, professor emeritus at George Washington Universtity and author of “John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). Indeed, some NASA officials have voiced dissatisfaction with the agency’s post-Apollo focus on the shuttle and the International Space Station, which shuttle missions have helped build since 1998.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



That Gallup Poll on Jews and Obama

Gallup has found no significant change in the president’s popularity among Jews after the controversies of the past few months. Gallup measures his approval at 60 percent, statistically unchanged from the 64 percent previously measured-but significantly changed from the 80 percent he registered a few months into 2009.

This doesn’t mean Jews won’t vote for him again, and in landslide numbers, in 2012-especially if the Republicans put up someone Jews decide to despise. But which Jews vote or don’t vote for Obama doesn’t matter all that much except when it comes to conversations around the seder table. Where it matters-where Obama’s team is clearly worried and where it is seeking to come up with counterarguments to give to surrogates-is money. It’s one thing to cast a single vote as the member of a small minority community to which outsized attention is paid. But Jews are uncommonly generous givers, both philanthropically and politically, and while they might still cast a vote for Obama, they might give him nothing. Or half what they gave him in 2008.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Who Owns the Moon Camera? U.S. Government vs. Apollo Astronaut

If the government throws a camera away on the moon and an astronaut then picks it up and saves it, does it become his to own and sell? That’s more or less the question to which the U.S. government is seeking a federal court answer in the case “United States of America vs. Edgar Mitchell,” which was filed in Miami last Wednesday (June 29). The lawsuit, which names the sixth man to walk on the moon as the defendant, asks the court to declare a movie camera that was used during the 1971 Apollo 14 mission as the “exclusive property of the United States.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Attack on Border-Free Travel: Boycott Call Enrages Danish Politicians

A suggestion by a German politician that vacationers boycott Denmark now that the country has introduced tougher border controls has angered leaders in Copenhagen. But the European Union is also concerned that the new customs regime is bad for Europe. Denmark’s decision to increase customs controls on its borders with Germany and Sweden has not gone down well in Europe . And now, politicians in Copenhagen are firing back at a suggestion from the Europe minister in the German state of Hesse that vacationers boycott Denmark. Jörg-Uwe Hahn, a member of the business-friendly Free Democrats (FDP), told the tabloid Bild that “if Denmark reintroduces border controls during the vacation season, I can only advise people to turn around and go on vacation in Austria or Poland.” Hahn has also called for the issue to be placed high on the agenda of the next meeting of Europe ministers from German states.

“Freedom of travel is one of Europe’s most visible achievements,” he was quoted as saying in the Danish daily Jyllandsposten. “Those who assail it … are carving away at the European idea. “ Hahn’s comments come as Denmark began more intense customs checks on its borders with Germany and Sweden. Fifty additional agents took up their posts on Tuesday morning in a move that the European Commission has warned could violate the Schengen Agreement, the treaty which established border-free travel in Europe in 1985. There are now 25 members of the free-travel zone with Bulgaria and Romania expected to join later this year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bat Ye’or: On Geert Wilders’s Acquittal

The acquittal of Geert Wilders has deeper meanings for Europe’s future than it appears at first glance. As Geert Wilders said: it is a victory for truth. But what does truth mean in international policy? Do we not see that in Eurabia the words ‘justice and peace’ are travesties for submission to injustice and terrorism? Here one needs to know the extensive system of lies spread at every political and cultural level in Eurabia, to understand the Copernican revolution achieved by Geert Wilders. A victory performed by a single unarmed man, constantly threatened by death and whose only defence was his courageous and unbending commitment to say the truth. A truth buried by the whole Eurabian transnational and international system created since the 1970s…

           — Hat tip: TV [Return to headlines]



Danish Border Controls Pass, Despite Objections

European Commission vows to hold Denmark to its EU agreements on border controls

The stricter border controls are a reality. As early as Tuesday 50 more customs agents will be stationed at Denmark’s borders, carrying out more “controls” and spot checks on vehicles arriving from neighbouring EU countries. The move is part of the government’s “permanent border control” agreement, which passed parliament on Friday and was immediately approved for funding by the Finance Ministry. The opposition attempted to have the agreement thrown out, but failed to secure a majority. As expected, the agreement was passed by a single vote — with 90 MPs supporting and 89 opposing. Some 30 of the new customs agents are to be stationed at the Danish-German land border; ten are assigned to ferry terminals at Rødby and Gedser. Another ten will be on the Øresund Bridge and the ferry at Helsingør, both connecting to Sweden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Danish Customs Checks to Cause ‘No Delays’

Denmark on Tuesday is to deploy 50 customs officials on its borders with Germany and Sweden, but has vowed to respect EU law and not to cause delays for travellers and lorries.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Keeps Close Eye on Danish Customs Controls

The European Commission said Tuesday it would closely monitor Denmark’s controversial deployment of customs agents to ensure it does not violate the European Union’s open border rules. Denmark was scheduled to resume customs controls at the borders with Germany and Sweden on Tuesday after parliament approved the measures last week despite concerns voiced by Brussels and Berlin. “The commission will strictly monitor the implementation of this first phase to ensure that European law is fully respected,” Michele Cercone, the home affairs spokesman for the European Union’s executive arm, told a news briefing. Danish authorities have told the commission that the customs agents would conduct “spot checks based on a risk analysis,” Cercone said. The Danish government has defended the move, saying random border checks are in line with the Schengen passport-free travel area and that the aim is to combat the smuggling of illegal goods and drugs, not control travellers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Presidency: Poland Shifts Into Top Gear

Milan Jaroš / Respekt

With its rapidly changing capital, its new motorways and EU subsidised farmers, Poland is creating a new identity for itself, less pro-American and more and more europhile. A report.

Martin M. Šimecka

The carriages of the single Warsaw metro line are as crowded with passengers in the morning as any underground line in the world. But compared to Prague or Vienna — not to mention Paris or London — there is one oddity: all the passengers are Poles. Foreigners or visitors aren’t yet exactly pouring into Warsaw. And at first glance, that doesn’t seem surprising.

The dominant feature of the Polish capital remains the Palace of Culture skyscraper, built in the style of the Stalinist era, and the wide boulevards bulldozed in the fifties through the ruins of the war-torn city don’t encourage walking. And to hide from them in cafe’s, where there ought to be an Internet connection, is almost impossible.

And yet this city has something exciting about it. Warsaw, as indeed all of Poland, is pulsing with energy and changing from one day to the next. Cranes bristle across the skyline. Just a short walk from the centre, along the river Vistula, the mighty ring of the new stadium is going up. Poland is getting ready for the European football championship in 2012. Before that, however, there awaits a different task: since July 1, Poland is now chairing the European Union.

The presidency comes at a time when Poland has been dramatically changing its view of the world, and also at time when it has become the sixth largest economy in the EU and is already a bigger trading partner for Germany than Russia. There is no doubt that Poland’s influence on European affairs will only grow.

A country divided

In a quiet passage to Nowy Swiat street, a youthful-looking Marcin Zaborowski sits in an office with an impressive library. “The keyword of this country today is modernisation,” he explains. “New highways, new infrastructure, and a new foreign policy.” Zaborowski is the Director of the Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM) and believes deeply in this change. Until recently he lived in Britain, one of two million mainly young Poles who had fled Poland for other EU countries. A year ago he won the competition for this job, returned home with his British wife and decided to stay.

Foreign policy in Poland is, point-blank, a matter of life and death. When four years ago, following the electoral defeat of the national Conservatives, Poland switched from being a eurosceptic troublemaker to an ardent supporter of European integration, and even began to talk normally with its age-old enemy, Russia.

Some Poles perceived the switch as a betrayal of national interests. The camps are entrenched in their positions: on the one side is the liberal government of Donald Tusk, who advocates a new international orientation, and facing it is the conservative right, led by Jaroslaw Kaczynski. The tensions and mutual aversion dividing politicians, voters and the media could be cut with a knife.

Long live shale

The surprisingly rapid transformation of Poland into a pro-European country is due not just to the new generation of elites, but to other factors as well. One disappointment has been the evolution in recent years of American interests, which have shifted to other parts of the world. Secondly, there is an increasing economic confidence in the country, the only one in Europe to have weathered the global crisis without a recession: today growth stands at four percent, and — most significantly — vast reserves of shale gas have been discovered.

The third phenomenon is the change in public opinion. While in 2004 the European Union was viewed positively by barely 50 percent of Poles, that figure today is nearly 80 percent. Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski can therefore rely on the fact that the vast majority of the population are in tune with his policies. So what made the Poles all of a sudden the biggest euro-optimists in the EU?…

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



Germany: Merkel Under Fire for Saudi Tank Deal

Germany’s centre-right coalition on Tuesday came under increasing fire from both the opposition and Angela Merkel’s own conservatives for a controversial arms deal to supply 200 Leopard tanks to Saudi Arabia despite its questionable human rights record. News agency Reuters reported that most of the parliamentary leadership of Chancellor Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) raised objections to the sale at a meeting on Monday. The environmentalist Greens planned to raise the issue in the Bundestag on Tuesday. News magazine Der Spiegel reported at the weekend that the German government had given the green light to the sale of Leopard 2 battle tanks, which would reap more than €1 billion for the country’s arms industry but reverse its long-held policy not to supply heavy weaponry to the Arab kingdom.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Berlin ‘Playing With Fire’ In Saudi Tank Deal

The German government’s approval of the sale of “Leopard” tanks to Saudi Arabia has outraged opposition parties in Berlin, and the ruling conservatives aren’t happy about it either. Commentators say the deal undermines principles of German foreign policy and could exacerbate the crisis in the Arab region.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



German Industry is Skeptical About Major Rare-Earths Find

A recently-published paper by Japanese researchers reporting vast deposits of rare earth elements in the Pacific has made headlines across the world. In Germany, the news is being met with skepticism.

The deposits are between 3,500 to 6,000 meters below sea level. Although the scientists say that extraction will be easy due to the high concentration of minerals, most experts agree that it will be a number of years before mining can begin. “A mine like this takes five to seven years to start up, said Professor Franz Meyer, mineralogist from the University of Aachen. “Underwater mining can take even longer to get going.” There has been no indication from the researchers as to when mining could begin, and it is unclear who will have ownership of the reserves.

The electronics industry has been hit especially hard, as rare earths are used in a range of electronic items, from televisions, to LEDs, to mobile phones. “At the moment we have a very difficult situation,” said Andreas Gontermann, chief economist at Germany’s Electrical and Electronics Industry Organization (ZVEI). “We hope that through re-opening rare earth mines in Australia and Canada, things will become easier by mid-2012.” “For the future it could be interesting, but I don’t expect it will make any difference in the short to mid-term,” said Carsten Rolle, Energy and Commodities Chief at the Federation of German Industry (BDI).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iceland: A New Constitution, Via Facebook

Sydsvenskan Malmö

Begun after the 2008 financial crisis and the subsequent fall of the government under popular pressure, Iceland’s citizen revolution continues. The most recent example is that all internet users are called upon to draft the country’s next constitution.

Ellen Albertsdóttir

During the financial crisis, Icelanders’ mistrust of the political world skyrocketed. The citizens are just as wary of political power as they are of banks. Confidence has fallen to a historic low. Last year, only 10.5% of Icelanders said they had “high confidence” in the Althing, the Icelandic Parliament. Many feel betrayed.

That’s why transparency must be the foundation of the new constitution being designed for the country. Since last April, the Althing’s Constitutional Council has published weekly accounts of the broad outline of its draft proposals on its internet site. Everybody is invited to share ideas on the site or through social networks.

The Constitutional Council is thus present on Facebook and Twitter and regularly posts videos on YouTube. Furthermore, its meetings are open to the public and broadcast live on its website and on Facebook. The idea of opening up to outside input, known as crowdsourcing, which consists of entrusting a task to a non-defined group of people, particularly on the internet, is gaining ground. Using it this way, however, is a first. On Facebook, the idea has garnered international enthusiasm.

Living in a country of only about 320,000 souls does have advantages in terms of flexibility. More than half of the inhabitants have a Facebook account — and those that don’t can participate in the debate on the Constitution Council’s website. The risk posed by this type of democratic project is that only an elite of passionate people will take part. But that’s how democracy functions; those that play truant carry no weight.

Icelanders are leaving their malfunctions behind them

At least, most people will have the chance to participate in the debate. According to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development statistics, over 80% of Icelandic homes are equipped with broadband internet access. Furthermore, the final draft of the constitution must be approved by referendum before coming into force.

The new constitution has thus a better chance of responding to the citizens than the current constitution which was hastily stitched together. When Iceland proclaimed independence from Denmark in 1944, it, pretty much, kept the Danish Constitution.

This time the changes will be more far-reaching. In the proposed document there are strong measures to protect nature and the country’s common resources. The draft proposal emphasises the rights of future generations, which is undoubtedly a first in a constitution.

But this can also be seen as a response to the destruction of Iceland’s natural habitat by US aluminium producer, ALCOA. During the construction of the gigantic Kárahnjúkar hydroelectric complex in 2006 [destined to supply energy to ALCOA’s Fjardaal plant] a large section of wilderness was destroyed north of the Vatnajökull glacier. Before construction began, 50,000 Islanders demonstrated against the complex.

Since then, Icelanders have, unfortunately, not been lacking in reasons to protest. But we can also see the financial crisis as the opportunity to make a new start. Little by little, Icelanders are leaving their malfunctions behind them. What is being discussed today on Facebook is nothing less than a proposal for a new country: For a second chance.

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



Italy: Milan to Send Seven Trash Compactors to Naples

(AGI) Milan — Milan is sending seven trash compactors to Naples to help the city face its garbage collection emergency. Milan’s mayor, Giuliano Pisapia, said he spoke to Naples’ mayor, De Magistris, and deputy-mayor, Sodano, on the phone, who were said to be “pleased for the help.” Pisapia said, “ Milan has already contributed in the past to help all cities in difficulty. We analyzed the situation in depth and ensured that Milan can provide seven compacting machines.” .

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



Italy: Vatican Archive Contains Secret Papers on Armenian Genocide

(AGI) Rome — Monsignor Sergio Pagano said that Vatican documents on Turkey’s Armenian genocide will form part of an exhibition. The prefect of the Vatican archives explained that the papers will be included in an exhibition of documents from the Vatican secret archives at the Capitoline Museums, which opens next February. It will be the first time some of these precious pieces will have been put on display. The Monsignor was speaking during the presentation of the ‘Lux in arcane’ exhibition, this morning at the press room of the Holy See.

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



Italy: Berlusconi Damages Manoeuvre ‘Irks’ Northern League

Ministers ‘deeply upset’ by budget article

(ANSA) — Rome, July 5 — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi has provoked a sharp reaction from his coalition partner, the Northern League, after appearing to use the budget reform bill to excuse his company from a 750-million-euro damages award.

On Tuesday a media conference with Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti and Northern League ministers including Interior Minister Roberto Maroni and Simplification Minister Roberto Calderoli, was cancelled in Rome amid oppposition to the legislative move which critics said would protect Berlusconi’s company, Fininvest.

Reliable sources told ANSA that the League ministers were surprised last Thursday when they discovered an article in the legislation and were “deeply upset” about the move.

The legal move, which the media has dubbed “Save Fininvest”, was criticised by Michele Vietti, vice-president of the Council of Magistrates (CSM), the judiciary’s self-governing body which said it violated the “principle of equality for all citizens before the law”.

Welfare minister Maurizio Sacconi, from Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party, said the 47-billion-euro financial reform package passed by the government was fair and the latest criticism arose from a “particularly poisonous political climate”.

“It should be evaluated on its own even if it also applies to the premier,” Sacconi said of the contested article.

The former head of the centre-left Democratic Party, Dario Franceschini, called for Justice Minister Angelino Alfano to clarify the government’s position on the law.

The Democratic Party, the main opposition group, claimed the ministers were forced to cancel their media conference on Tuesday because of the “tornado” that had erupted over the Berlusconi move. In August last year Alfano denied suggestions that the government was considering judicial reform to help the premier avoid paying the award to his long-time business rival Carlo De Benedetti for the early 1990s breakup of the Mondadori group.

“Where will I find the money if the judges sentence me?”, Berlusconi reportedly asked friends at the funeral of an Italian Senator in Milan on June 15.

The article at the centre of the law would freeze payments such as Fininvest’s payment until Italy’s highest appeal court, the Court of Cassation, has ruled on a final appeal.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Trash Fires Burn in Naples

Dump site unannounced

(ANSA) — Naples, July 5 — Firefighters battled around 30 separate trash fires in Naples early Tuesday where uncollected waste still covers much of the southern Italian city suburbs.

The blazes set by protesters came on the heels of a Monday announcement from Mayor Luigi de Magistris in which he said that the rubbish crisis was nearing an end, admitting however that a dump site had yet to be determined.

A central government measure passed last week permits the Campania region to export refuse to other parts of the country, yet it was strongly opposed by the powerful Northern League party.

“They’ve slammed the door in the face of Naples and Campania,” said de Magistris of the League before thanking the unnamed regions who have expressed willingness to help Naples and the surrounding regions.

The European Union recently chastised the Italian government and threatened sanctions over the thousands of tonnes of trash that have covered city streets and the surrounding province in recent weeks.

Armed police escorts had recently begun accompanying garbage trucks as exasperated protesters had resorted to tipping over dumpsters, blocking traffic and setting fire to the growing piles of waste choking the daily flow of city life.

Naples and the surrounding region of Campania have suffered similar crises periodically for a number of years.

The previous public outcry occurred last November when weeks of clashes and rising trash piles brought Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to the city.

It was then that the premier, who won plaudits by sorting out a similar emergency in 2008, made a vow to clear the streets in three days.

But the problems have returned partly because of technical failures in local incinerators and the lack of investment in other landfill sites.

The issue is further complicated by the role of the local mafia, or Camorra, and claims that they have infiltrated waste management in Naples and dumped toxic waste on sites near residential areas.

The government has said it will present a plan within one month outlining a proposed solution to the crisis.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



OIC Blasts Islamophobia in Holland

The Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has denounced anti-Islamic acts in the Netherlands, blaming a number of Dutch politicians for supporting Islamophobia.

The foreign ministers of OIC member states issued a statement during a Tuesday meeting in the Kazakh capital, Astana, condemning acts of Islamophobia in the Netherlands. The communiqué also expressed concern over the hateful and provocative remarks made by a number of Dutch politicians against Islam and Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). “Repeated cases of insult to individuals or their beliefs by people, organizations or radical groups, especially when supported by governments, are unacceptable and cause grave concern,” the OIC foreign ministers said.

The document, released during the 38th OIC ministerial conference in Astana, further called for immediate measures to prevent such acts. Meanwhile, OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu has issued a separate statement in which he condemned Dutch rightist lawmaker Geert Wilders for his insulting remarks against Islam, Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), and his wives.

“Wilders has taken a dangerous path, endangering the peace and harmony of civilizations by spreading hate against Islam and Muslims in his own country as well as in other European countries,” Ihsanoglu said in his statement. “Insult to Islam and to the honored Prophet of Islam, Hazrat Muhammad (PBUH), has reached a stage that can no longer be tolerated under any pretext, including freedom of speech,” he added. Ihsanoglu called on the Dutch government to take the necessary measures to stop the Islamophobia campaign by Wilders, and expressed concerns over Amsterdam’s silence on the issue which he said could endanger the country’s relations with the Muslim world.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Six Uranium Traffickers Arrested in Moldova

“On Monday police arrested in Chisinau six people seeking a buyer for a small amount of uranium,” the country’s Prosecutor General, Vitalie Briceag, told AFP.

“The police have learnt that they had found a potential customer, a citizen of a Muslim country in Africa,” he said.

An interior ministry spokesperson said one of the suspects was in possession of a small container of Uranium-235.

The Moldovan authorities received assistance from Germany, Ukraine and the United States in their investigation, the prosecutor said.

[…]

Since the fall of the Communist bloc, experts have issued repeated warnings about the trafficking risks posed by former Soviet republics such as Moldova, an impoverished nation bordering EU member Romania and Ukraine.

           — Hat tip: Euro-Islam [Return to headlines]



State Minister Calls for Denmark Holiday Boycott

With Denmark poised to reintroduce customs checks at its borders after decades of unfettered travel in Europe, a German state minister has called for people to boycott holidays to the Scandinavian country. Europe Minister and deputy premier in the state of Hesse, Jörg-Uwe Hahn, told daily Bild’s Tuesday edition that people should “vote with their feet” to show their disapproval of the Danish government’s policy, which many critics say breaches the Schengen Agreement allowing passport-free travel within most of Europe. Denmark is set to hold its first customs checks at its land borders with Germany and Sweden on Tuesday morning. “If Denmark reintroduces border controls in the holiday period, I can only advise doing a U-turn and taking a holiday rather in Austria or Poland,” said Hahn, a member of the liberal Free Democratic Party. This would constitute a “vote with the feet by which you would be able to show the Danish government what you think of their policy.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Strauss-Kahn Bid for French Presidency is ‘Weakest Scenario’

A new complaint, filed in France for alleged attempted rape, may put an end to Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s presidential ambitions, despite strong approval ratings and the near-collapse of the US case.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Parents Guilty of Högsby ‘Honour’ Killing: Court

The parents of the 23-year-old man previously convicted of the murder of 20-year-old Abbas Rezai, are guilty of the crime, according to Göta Court of Appeal, sentencing them both to ten years in prison. Rezai was found dead in an apartment in Högsby in southern Sweden in November 2005. Police revealed at the time that he had been scalded with hot oil, hit with a variety of objects, and repeatedly stabbed in the back and chest, with the majority of the wounds sustained after his death. He was also almost entirely scalped and one of his fingers had been partially chopped off. The man was allegedly killed because of his relationship with the family’s 16-year-old daughter.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss Party Seeks Anti-Powerpoint Voters

An international movement vowing to rid to world of dull presentations and related software, such as Microsoft’s PowerPoint, has founded a political party in Switzerland. The Anti-PowerPoint-Party (APPP) said it fighting for people’s right not to be subjected to the use of PowerPoint and other presentation software. The party said it is battling on behalf of about 250 million citizens worldwide, including business executives and students, who are obliged to give or attend presentations — a requirement that the group dubs “a grievance.” “The goal of the movement is to decrease the number of boring presentations worldwide and that those who want to renounce PowerPoint will not have to justify themselves in the future,” said a note on the movement’s website. The APPP stresses that it does not want to abolish PowerPoint or other software entirely, only the obligation to use it.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Saboteurs Among us: Danish Border Controls Shake EU Foundations

With the reintroduction of border controls, the Danes are calling into question one of the EU’s greatest achievements. Unfortunately, there has been little protest in Brussels and other European capitals. There is growing fatigue regarding European integration — and that is a bitterly disappointing trend. When he was still the governor of Bavaria, Edmund Stoiber seized every opportunity to curse Brussels officialdom. So it ought to give pause to people that the same Stoiber is today lamenting a “renaissance of nationalism” in European capitals. “I am concerned that Europe is crumbling,” the former leader of Bavaria’s conservative Christian Social Union (CSU) party said in Brussels last week. He has been appointed by the European Commission to reduce EU bureaucracy.

The Schengen Agreement eliminating internal border controls is considered to be a milestone of European integration. No single European Union policy has generated as much enthusiasm among the citizens of Europe as the freedom of borderless travel. Driven by the EU-critical and latently xenophobic Danish People’s Party, the move by the Danish government this week to reintroduce border controls , even if only spot checks, is shaking the foundations of Europe. The development is serious, and is part of a trend. Anti-Europeans are on the rise in other parts of Europe as well. In Holland, a minority government is tolerated by right-wing populist Geert Wilders, in France President Nicolas Sarkozy is competing for votes in the upcoming election with Marine Le Pen of the Front National and in Italy, the right-wingers in Umberto Bossi’s Lega Nord are part of the government.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Duchess of Cambridge at Risk of Anorexia Says Italian Expert

Rome, 4 July (AKI) — The 29-year-old Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton, is at risk of the contracting the slimmers’ disease anorexia, according to an Italian expert.

“You only need look at the pictures from the current visit to Canada to see that she really has lost a lot of weight and that she’s bordering on anorexia,” Fabiola De Clercq told Adnkronos.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s royal tour of Canada and the United States is taking place from 30 June to 10 July.

Before her marriage in late April, the duchess went on the low-carbohydrate Dukan diet and De Clercq said she is concerned what effect the super-slender trend-setter could have on young women.

“As happens increasingly often in the case of fashion models, the young duchess’s appearances risk becoming an advert for anorexia,” said De Clerq, who is the founder of Italy’s Association for the Study and Research of Anorexia (ABA).

“Just look at how many very young female converts Pierre Dukan’s diet there were after the Royal Wedding.

“Today, even women aged 45-50 dream of being like svelte 15-year-olds,” she said.

De Clerq said she is worried a perilous message is being conveyed that it’s desirable to be thin at all costs, even at the expense of a woman’s health.

“When very young women enter the downwards spiral of eating orders, even their future fertility is at risk.

“The first warning before it is too late is when their periods stop — a phenomenon whose dangers are often underestimated,” De Clercq concluded.

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

North Africa


5,200 Year-Old Rock Drawings of Earliest Ancient Egyptian Celebrations Unearthed

Egypt’s Antiquities Authority says archaeologists have unearthed a 5,200-year-old rock drawing depicting a royal festival during Ancient Egypt’s earliest dynasty. The ministry says the scenes were part of a series of rock drawings featuring hunting, fighting and celebrations along the banks of the Nile River. Antiquities chief Zahi Hawass said in a statement Monday the scenes represent the first unearthing of a complete drawing of a royal festival during Dynasty Zero, when the earliest foundations of Ancient Egyptian culture are believed to have been formed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Libya After Gaddafi

By Victor Kotsev

TEL AVIV — Should the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) disband the Libyan security forces and army, like the United States did, controversially, in Iraq, or should it preserve them and hope that their loyalties will switch? Apparently, this is a question worrying top British officials, as Bloomberg reported recently [1].

That contingency plans for Libya’s future, once Colonel Muammar Gaddafi is removed, have advanced so far, is hardly a surprise; neither is the indirect suggestion that the Western-led alliance would then face a quagmire trying to pacify the country. What is significant is that those discussions are now becoming increasingly public, indicating a surprising confidence that Gaddafi’s fate is sealed.

Given the realities on the ground and the ever-increasing signs of NATO’s desperation, this show of confidence could mean one of two or three things. It could be a bluff, perhaps designed to put pressure on Gaddafi to “retire” [2]. Such a bluff is strengthened by the thus far unsuccessful, but also increasingly public, campaign to assassinate the colonel. Not long ago, American Admiral Samuel J Locklear became probably the first NATO official to admit that the alliance is actively targeting the Libyan leader [3].

Russian newspaper Kommersant reported on Tuesday that Gaddafi had indeed agreed to step down. However, so far there has been no other confirmation of this, and meanwhile the rebels retracted their offer for him to stay in the country if he surrenders power [4].

It is hard to imagine such an agreement being implemented successfully, particularly after the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for crimes against humanity for him and a couple of others. The fate of Liberia’s Charles Taylor, who went into exile under similar circumstances but was eventually betrayed by Nigeria, is surely fresh on Gaddafi’s mind.

Louis Moreno-Ocampo, ICC’s chief prosecutor, promptly poured oil into the fire. “Gaddafi will face charges,” he said soon after the warrants were announced. “The arrest warrants are not going away … I don’t think we will have to wait for long.”

A bluff could also serve to pay lip service to hardliners among the alliance (the French government comes to mind) and the rebels, while preparing to settle for much less. In this scenario, a partition of Libya would be in the works, into a western part ruled by the colonel and an eastern part under the rebels’ control.

However, this option also faces considerable obstacles. In the long term, it suits neither the rebels (who do a poor job of covering up their weaknesses and who would thus constantly feel threatened) nor Gaddafi (who would likely wait for an opportune time to try to retake the east by force), and can be expected at best to be a temporary solution, a way for NATO to cut its losses.

Western officials are unlikely to be thrilled by the idea, either: for, once they declared that Gaddafi “must go”, accepting anything less will mean acknowledging a defeat. We can expect France — playing the bad cop in this arrangement — to resist this outcome vehemently.

It does not help that the battlelines are far from neat, and there are considerable pockets of rebel territory in the west, specifically around the coastal city of Misurata. This would make any division of the country difficult and messy, to say the least. It would increase the chances of a subsequent flare-up of violence.

Alternatively, NATO could be in the final preparation stages for a ground invasion of Libya; numerous analysts, including Russian government officials, have speculated for months that this is where the war is going.

A week or so ago, the air campaign passed the 100-day mark, and significant cracks are already visible in the coalition. Italy has threatened to pull out, ostensibly due to the heavy toll on civilians that the bombings are causing. The heated congressional debates in the United States betray little overall political appetite for further military action. Reports claim that some British officials, too, are becoming hesitant about the war. Costs are mounting. According to most assessments, it would be difficult for NATO to continue the campaign much past the end of the summer.

On the ground, the stalemate continues. Despite frequent reports of advances, the rebels seem unable to pose any significant threat to Gaddafi’s rule in the capital Tripoli. Time is not on their side, and not only due to NATO’s constraints: a growing number of reports question their own credibility and war crimes records as well as those of Gaddafi. If the deadlock is not broken relatively soon, they risk being both defeated and discredited, and their Western backers face a thorough humiliation…

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



Tunisia: Salafite Attack on Lawyers, Six Arrested

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 4 — Six Salafis who are held responsible for last week’s attack on several lawyers (of whom two have been injured) in Tunis were arrested today by the examining magistrate of the Tribunal of first instance of Tunis.

The attack took place outside the courthouse in the capital, two days after a Salafite group attacked and damaged film theatre AfricArt, in the centre of Tunis, where A film by Nadia El Fani was scheduled to be screened.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Gas Pipeline Attack; Israel, National Interests Hit

(ANSAmed) — TEL AVIV, JULY 4 — The new attack on the gas pipeline which runs through northern Sinai (Egypt) marks a hit against the security of the countries in the region which it supplies, including Egypt and Israel, according to a top official from the Israeli Defence Ministry, Amos Ghilad. The latter, who has close ties with the higher-ups in Cairo, was speaking in an interview with ‘Radio Jerusalem’ .

“Gas is one of the main pillars of regional stability. It’s up to Egypt to do everything within its power to guarantee gas supplies in the future”. Ghilad believes Egypt’s authorities place great importance on the gas pipeline working properly; it has already been sabotaged three times in the last months, including last night at the Nagah pumping station, in the Bir Abdi region.

Ghilad also stated that Israel is expeditiously returning a certain number of buried corpses belonging to Palestinian militants to the Palestinian National Authority ; some of them have been buried in Israeli cemeteries for decades. This is a goodwill gesture toward Mahmoud Abbas, PNA leader , who has maintained a peaceful environment in the West Bank for some time now. A Palestinian official claims there should be 84 bodies in all, while Ghilad preferred not to mention any specific figures.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Swedish Ship to Gaza Express ‘Grief and Dismay’ At Greek Authorities

The Swedish-based Ship to Gaza rights group on Monday expressed “grief and dismay” at Greece’s decision to block the humanitarian flotilla from sailing to the Palestinian territory. In an open letter to Greek Prime Minister Giorgios Papandreaou, the group said it was “with grief and dismay that we passengers and grass roots in the Swedish people’s movement Ship to Gaza received the decision of your government to block our ships from leaving Greek ports to go to Gaza.” “We are aware of the pressure that your country has been under in recent days, and feel sadness for the Greek people and the difficulties that you are enduring at this particular moment,” the statement said, noting the country’s efforts to avoid defaulting on its loans. “Our mission is completely peaceful,” the group added. The group pointed to the fact that they could address Papandreaou in Swedish, as he himself had been forced to seek refuge in the country in the 1960’s, after a military regime was established in Greece.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Caroline Glick: Israel’s Palace Coup Plotters

On Monday, saboteurs bombed the Egyptian gas pipeline to Israel for the third time since former president Hosni Mubarak was overthrown in February. The move was just another reminder that Israel today faces the most daunting and complex threat spectrum it has ever seen.

From Egypt to Turkey to Iran to the international Left to the Obama administration, Israel faces a mix of military and political challenges that threaten its very existence on multiple levels. To meet these challenges, it is vital for the government and people of Israel to stand strong, unified and determined. The approaching storm will test our resilience as we have never been tested before…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Post 9/11 Wars Take Toll on Lives and Budget: Study

According to a recent study, the post 9/11 wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan have killed 225,000 people. The study, conducted at Brown University, has also estimated that the wars have cost four trillion US dollars. “The cost of war does not end when the fighting does,” says Professor Catherine Lutz, project supervisor and co-editor of the new study at Brown University’s Watson Institute. Until now there has been no comprehensive framework for determining the financial and societal cost of the wars that have been going on since the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. The authors are made up of a group of 20 economists, jurists and political scientists at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. They have estimated that the US has spent between 3.2 and four trillion US dollars (including interest) to date. In their study, the authors have included payments to veterans and extra medical costs for treatment of wounded soldiers as well as military help to Pakistan — the first time that military aid has been taken into account for such a study.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland Blocks Syrian Assets

Switzerland has blocked 27 million francs (€21.9 million) worth of assets linked to the Syrian regime, the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) said on Sunday. Financial sanctions and travel restrictions were imposed against 23 key players in the Syrian regime in May, including President Bashar al-Assad, intelligence chief Ali Mamlouk and interior minister Mohammad Ibrahim al-Chaar, for their “involvement in the repression against demonstrators.” Contacted by AFP, SECO confirmed information first published in Swiss German paper ZentralSchweiz am Sonntag. “The total sum blocked is 27 million francs,” said a SECO spokeswoman, adding however that she could not specify to whom exactly the assets belonged. More than 1,360 civilians have been killed and thousands more arrested in the Syrian regime’s crackdown against pro-democracy protests since mid-March, according to human rights groups.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Council of Europe Concerned Over Jailed Deputies

(ANSAmed) — STRASBOURG, JULY 4 — The imprisonment of dozens of local representatives legitimately elected in Turkey is a source of great concern for Congress — said the president of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe Keith Whitmore in a meeting of the surveillance committee held today in Smyrna. “We do not intend to interfere in the Turkish justice system, but we must insist on the fact that leaving the seats of local representatives elected for such long periods vacant is not in line with what has been sanctioned by the European Charter on Local Autonomy ratified by Turkey,” underscored Whitmore. “When such a large number of elected representatives are prevented from carrying out their duties and cannot therefore follow through on the mandate they have received from citizens, the democratic process is undoubtedly weakened,” the president added.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Pakistan: Christian Hospital Under Attack in Pakistan

A group of Muslims tries to seize forcibly a Christian hospital in Taxila, 32 kilometres from the capital Islamabad by making false claims with police. The intervention of Christian leaders and Bishop Rufin Anthony stops the threat.

Lahore (AsiaNews) — An attempt by a group of Muslims to take over the Christian Hospital in Taxila was recently foiled. On Saturday, Malik Nur Muhammad, Malik Riaz and Malik Abdul Razzak, influential local Muslims, filed a First Information Report (FIR) with police against the administration of the hospital. The facility, which is located almost 32 kilometres from Islamabad, was established by United Presbyterian Church. They complainants say they bought the hospital and accuse the administrators of refusing to hand it over. They also accuse the current administration of blasphemy but did not include such an accusation in their original application.

After filing their complaint, Malik Nur Muhammad, Malik Riaz and Malik Abdul Razzak went to the Christian hospital to have the administrators arrested based on their charges. Four members of the staff were held by police. However, the hospital director Ashchenaz M. Lall rejected the claims made by the Muslims.

“The property was not sold,” he said. “Malik Nur and his sons, with the help of a local politician from the PML-N (Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz) fabricated a case against the administration of the Christian hospital. The Christian hospital was established in 1922 by missionaries from the United Presbyterian Mission. Only the Presbyterian board holds the right to sell the property. This is an attempt to take over a missionary property by force.”

The Catholic Bishop of Islamabad-Rawalpindi Rufin Anthony went to the Christian Hospital in Taxila and contacted various Christian activists and leaders.

Upon the involvement of the Catholic Church, the district coordination officer (DCO) in Rawalpindi, Saqib Zafar, also travelled to Taxila where he ordered an immediate investigation into the matter.

“The initial investigation has revealed that the claims made by Malik Nur Muhammad are false,” DCO Zafar said. “There are loopholes in the FIR. It was registered on the backing an influential politician belonging to the PML-N. We will make sure that the culprits are arrested.”

“This is not a first attempt to take over Church or missionary property by force,” Bishop Rufin Anthony told AsiaNews. “The Christian Hospital in Taxila has been targeted by various groups in the past,” the prelate explained.

“The Catholic Church has always stood by the Churches that have been attacked by extremists. We are closely monitoring the situation and I am in constant touch with the authorities. We demand the government arrest the culprits and set an example so that such incidents are not repeated.”

Samson Simon Sharaf, principal of St. Mary’s College and a Catholic activist, also condemned the incident and visited the Christian Hospital in Taxila. “Religious sentiments against Christians were exploited for petty self-interest,” he said, “and could have led to large scale rioting and arson like in Gojra. A big fiasco was averted” (see Fareed Khan, “Eight Christians burned alive in Punjab,” in AsiaNews, 1 August 2009).

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



Swiss Hostages Moved to Pakistan Badlands

A Swiss couple kidnapped on holiday in Pakistan have been smuggled into the tribal belt on the Afghan border, a notorious haven for Taliban and Al-Qaeda, a local official said Monday. Olivier David Och, 31, and Daniela Widmer, 28, were abducted on Friday while driving through impoverished and sparsely populated Baluchistan province, which borders both Iran and Afghanistan, in southwest Pakistan. “We have information the Swiss couple have been shifted to the tribal areas,” provincial home secretary Zafarullah Baloch told AFP. The semi-autonomous region has been dubbed by Washington as the most dangerous place on Earth and a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda. Parts of the mountainous badlands are subject to American drone strikes against Taliban and Al-Qaeda commanders, and on the ground the region is considered an intelligence “black hole”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Writer Kia Abdullah Mocks Death of Gap Year Students on Twitter

Kia Abdullah, a writer for The Guardian, has sparked widespread condemnation after posting comments on Twitter in which she mocked the deaths of three gap year students in Thailand.

The 29-year-old British Bangladeshi indicated that she felt no sympathy for the three teenagers, who died in a bus crash in the early hours of Tuesday morning, because they were middle class. Describing their travels as a “gap yaar”, Miss Abdullah even said she smiled when she heard the news because two of the young men killed had double barrelled names. Her comments immediately sparked widespread revulsion on the social networking site, with hundreds of people describing her as “sick” and “disgusting”. Bruno Melling-Firth, Conrad Quashie and Max Boomgaarden-Cook, died instantly when the coach they were travelling in to the north of Thailand was involved in a collision with another bus.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China’s Women Show Taste for Fast Cars and Whisky.

Reader Theodore Simon writes: “I can attest to that. Here’s a picture I took on the streets of Beijing a few weeks ago, as I watched this woman try to drive her brand new Ferrari off the showroom floor and into the street. She was ultimately defeated by the planter box on the left, which she wasn’t able to maneuver around. And get a load of the roadster in the second picture, which I took through the window of a showroom near my hotel. There were a half dozen even more exotic models on display. Note the FFF dealership name plate on the windshield. There’s lots of money being spent in Beijing and in the other large cities of China. China has become the ultimate consumer society.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese Sweetmaker Confirms Nestle Talks

Chinese sweetmaker Hsu Fu Chi confirmed on Monday that it was in acquisition talks with Swiss food giant Nestle, in what could be one of the biggest takeovers of a Chinese company by a foreign competitor. Hsu Fu Chi, listed on the Singapore stock exchange, requested that trading of its stocks be suspended from Monday “to avoid abnormal fluctuation over the company’s shares price and maintain shareholders’ interests.” At the end of the trading day in Singapore, the Chinese firm, which has a market capitalisation of about $2.6 billion, issued a statement to confirm negotiations with Nestle.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


New Rare Earths Deposit Gives Hope to Technologies Industry

Japanese researchers have reported the discovery of vast deposits of rare earth minerals in international waters east and west of Hawaii, and east of Tahiti in French Polynesia at 3,500 to 6,000 metres below sea level. Currently, China supplies around 95 percent of the world’s demand for rare earth minerals. Over the past few years, it has tightened its grip on the precious resource by restricting exports. This has sparked an increasing number of international search and mining projects for the minerals.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Vast Reserves of Vital Rare Earths Found in Ocean Bed

The deep sea gold rush has just got more frenzied. Copious reserves of “rare earth” mineral deposits have turned up in the sediments in the floor of the Pacific Ocean. These metals are vital to many green-energy and electronic technologies, such as hybrid car batteries. They were thought to be in short supply: a recent US Geological Survey estimate put world reserves at 100 million tonnes. But now Yasuhiro Kato of the University of Tokyo, Japan, and his team have found the minerals in such high density that a single square kilometre of ocean floor could provide one-fifth of the current annual world consumption. Two regions near Hawaii and Tahiti might contain as much as 100 billion tonnes.

Though some rare-earth deposits are found in Russia, other former Soviet states and the US, China controls 97 per cent of the world’s supply. Mining from the ocean floor will open up this market, which will be welcomed by many governments and companies.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Human Rights Farce: Meet the Serial Criminal Who Cannot be Deported

Abdi Sufi, a serial criminal whose legal appeal has prevented Britain deporting hundreds of undesirable immigrants, is already back on the streets.

Mr Sufi, 24, has at least 17 convictions for crimes including burglary, fraud and indecent exposure since he entered the UK illegally eight years ago. But an attempt by the Home Office to send him back to his homeland of Somalia has been thwarted by judges in Strasbourg, who ruled last week that he would face the risk of inhumane treatment if he was returned. He is now living freely in London. The ruling in the key test case means that more than 200 further Somalis appealing against deportation, most of them convicted criminals, will be able to remain in Britain. Critics say the ruling illustrates how human rights legislation is being exploited by lawyers and foreign criminals to make a mockery of British justice. Sufi’s case was taken to the European Court of Human Rights by the AIRE Centre, a legal advice body which has received funding from the Equality and Human Rights Commission and the European Commission. Because the Home Office lost, both sides’ costs will be paid by British taxpayers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spaniards Flock to Germany, Many Eastern Europeans Stay Away

Germany’s economic upswing is attracting more highly skilled workers from Poland and southern European countries like Spain, while low-skilled workers from eastern Europe are avoiding the country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Top Environment Official to Visit Lampedusa Island in Wake of Migrants and Squalor

Palermo, 5 July (AKI) — Italy’s environment minister Stefania Prestigiacomo was on Tuesday due to visit the tiny southern island of Lampedusa to oversee action to clean up the island after thousands of migrants camped there earlier this year in filthy conditions.

The native Sicilian and ally of prime minister Silvio Berlusconi visits Lampedusa during a huge drop in summer tourism. The local economy has suffered as visitors stay away after seeing months of television images of the island inundated by waves of illegal immigrants arriving aboard boats from Northern Africa where where anti-government uprisings have shaken much of the region.

Prestigiacomo will be met by local Lampedusa and Sicilian officials and will pay a visit to the island’s sole migrant detention centre which has suffered from severe overcrowding. Designed to hold a maximum of 850 people, migrants have been forced to share the limited space with twice this number, or more.

In March, Italy drew international criticism when thousands of migrants were forced to camp in the open for weeks on the island in squalid, cold and unhygienic conditions, a situation that also created tensions with the island’s 5,000 inhabitants whose livelihoods depend on tourism and fishing.

The unrest that has hit North Africa and much of the Arab world this year has triggered an influx of migrants to southern Europe.

More than 41,000 migrants have reached Lampedusa since the start of the year.

After a surge of Tunisian arrivals in early 2011 following the unrest in the North African country that toppled longtime leader Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from power, most migrants now reaching Lampedusa and nearby islands have set sail from Libya.

Most hail from sub-Saharan Africa and are more likely to gain political asylum than Tunisians, who are considered economic migrants.

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

General


Integral Challenges Physics Beyond Einstein

ESA’s Integral gamma-ray observatory has provided results that will dramatically affect the search for physics beyond Einstein. It has shown that any underlying quantum ‘graininess’ of space must be at much smaller scales than previously predicted. Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity describes the properties of gravity and assumes that space is a smooth, continuous fabric. Yet quantum theory suggests that space should be grainy at the smallest scales, like sand on a beach. One of the great concerns of modern physics is to marry these two concepts into a single theory of quantum gravity. Now, Integral has placed stringent new limits on the size of these quantum ‘grains’ in space, showing them to be much smaller than some quantum gravity ideas would suggest.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110704

Financial Crisis
» Debt Renewal May Trigger Default: Rating Agency Issues Greek Rescue Plan Warning
» Germany’s Top Court to Examine Greece Bailout
» Greece Faces ‘Massive’ Loss of Sovereignty
» Greece: Race Against the Clock for the Government
» Regulator Says 10% of European Insurers Fail Stress Test
» S&P Fires Warning Over Greek Debt, Despite Weekend Deal
» Spiegel Interview With Finance Minister Schäuble: ‘We Can’t Allow a Second Lehman Brothers’
» Swiss-Based Greeks Alarmed by Financial Crisis
» The National Inflation Association
 
USA
» Lonely Star State: Texan Germans Dwindling
» Maid Cleaning Up as ‘Hooker’
 
Europe and the EU
» British Muslim MEP and Family Under Round the Clock Police Protection
» German Politicians Consider Banning Facebook Parties
» Italy: Anti-TAV Train Protests See 188 Police Officers Injured
» Italy: Eternit: Judge Asks for 20 Years in Prison
» Italy: Rail Protesters Face ‘Heavy’ Charges
» Italy: House Passes Naples Trash Measure
» Otto Von Habsburg, Heir to Austria’s Last Emperor, Dies at 98
» Shifting Perceptions of Greece in EU
» Spain: Barcelona: First Non-Socialist Mayor After 32 Years
» Stauss-Kahn is ‘Still to be Reckoned With in France’
» Strauss-Kahn to Sue Journalist for Slander
» Westerwelle Calls for Closer Turkey Ties to EU
» Will Glaring Errors Lead to Strauss-Kahn’s Political Rehabilitation?
 
Balkans
» Belligerent Mladic Removed From UN Hearing
» Serbia and Kosovo Sign First Post-Independence Agreement
 
North Africa
» Egypt: Sinai: Explosion Hits Gas Pipeline Built Thanks to Egypt-Israel Accords
» Muslim Brotherhood Spokesman: We Are Willing to Dialogue With US
» Tunisia: Internet and Censorship, Battle Continues for Blogger
» Tunisia: Leftist Parties Report Salafite Attacks
» Two Christian Girls Disappear From State Care Home in Egypt
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Gaza Flotilla Boats Preparing to Confront Greek Coastguard
» Gaza Border Opening Offers Fewer Opportunities Than Hoped
» Greece Offers to Ship Gaza Aid Supplies as Activists Raise a Stink
» PNA Slashes Wages, Promised Funds Delayed
 
Middle East
» Emirates: Facebook Threats Rise, Women More Vulnerable
» Europe’s Largest Healthcare Complex to be Built in Ankara
» Germany Wants to Supply Battle Tanks to Saudi Arabia
» Indian Church in Abu Dhabi: Care of Young and Sick, But Only in India
» Jordanian Official: America’s Withdrawal From Afghanistan Will Turn it Into One Big Terrorist Camp
» Meteorite Hunter: My Two Months in an Omani Jail
» President of American-Iranian Council: US Offered Iran a Non-Aggression Pact
» Saudi Arabia: We Will Seek Nuclear Arms if Iran Gets Them
» Saudi Prince Raises Prospect of Nuclear Arms Race With Iran
 
Russia
» Saber-Rattling as Russia Meets NATO in Sochi
» Trial of Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Turns Into Political Spectacle
 
South Asia
» ‘Billions Worth’ of Treasure Found in Indian Temple
» Pakistan Mounts Search for Swiss Hostages
» Yingluck’s Challenge: Thailand’s New Leader Must Step Out of Brother’s Shadow
 
Far East
» China Wants to Buy Facebook
 
Australia — Pacific
» Police Given Power to Remove Burkas
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» A Trip to Hell
 
Immigration
» Netherlands: Plan to Deport Jobless Poles is Dangerous, Say Polish Ministers
 
General
» Finger Length Linked to Penis Size
» Rupert Murdoch’s Failing Attempts to Control the Internet Reformation

Financial Crisis


Debt Renewal May Trigger Default: Rating Agency Issues Greek Rescue Plan Warning

Rating agency Standard & Poor’s has cast fresh doubt on Greece’s hopes for an economic rescue by warning that a French bank plan to renew maturing Greek bonds could be classified as a default. The agency has also questioned the country’s ability to implement its new austerity program. Credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s warned on Monday that a proposal by French banks to roll over Greece’s debt could be classified as a default, casting fresh doubts on plans to secure a bailout for the crisis-hit nation. “It is our view that each of the two financing options described in the (French banks’) proposal would likely amount to a default under our criteria,” S&P said in a statement. The rating agency is referring to the so-called Paris model under which banks, insurers and hedge funds would renew maturing Greek debt on different terms. German banks have agreed in principle to join the scheme.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany’s Top Court to Examine Greece Bailout

While the EU’s struggles to deal with debt-ridden Greece have been played out in Brussels and in Athens, a new front will open on Tuesday when Germany’s top judges consider whether last year’s €110bn EU-IMF bailout was legal.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Faces ‘Massive’ Loss of Sovereignty

Eurozone finance ministers over the weekend staved off looming bankruptcy in Greece by agreeing to release the next tranche of aid to the country, but Athens will pay with a massive loss of its sovereignty, the eurozone chief has said. In return for the €12 billion — the fifth payment from the €110 billion EU-IMF loan agreed last year — Greece will have to push through a swathe of privatisations reminiscent of the selling of East German firms in the 1990s after the fall of Communism. “The sovereignty of Greece will be massively limited,” Jean-Claude Juncker told Germany’s Focus Magazin in an interview published on Sunday (3 July), just hours after the eurozone ministers reached agreement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Race Against the Clock for the Government

By the end of July the Greek Finance Ministry will have had to begin implementing the new austerity measures laid out in the Medium-Term Plan passed by the Socialist government in cooperation with the country’s creditors. Furthermore, it will have to race against the clock because by the end of 2011 it will have to have raked in 6.8 billion euros to fill the “black hole” in tax revenue. Apparently all this will be dealt with by the EU Commissioners who are expected to arrive in Athens shortly, as announced by Eurogroup President Jean Claude Junker. The agreement between the EU and the Greek government also provides for the setup of an Inter-ministerial Commission which will monitor the institutional reforms launched. There will also be working groups, which will be run by a Greek technocrat with the help of an advisor chosen by Brussels; they will have to report back to the Commission every 3 months on the progress of the reforms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Regulator Says 10% of European Insurers Fail Stress Test

About 10 per cent of European insurance companies tested do not have enough capital to withstand exceptional economic shocks, results published by the sector regulator showed on Monday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



S&P Fires Warning Over Greek Debt, Despite Weekend Deal

Rating agency S&P fired a warning shot over Greek debt on Monday, upsetting relief at a weekend deal by saying that proposals for a payment holiday under a new rescue could trigger partial default. S&P, which has already lowered the long-term rating on Greek public debt to “CCC” from “B”, warned that a proposal floated by the French Bank Federation risked putting Greece into a selective default. “It is our view that each of the two financing options described in the FBF proposal would likely amount to a default under our criteria,” a statement said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spiegel Interview With Finance Minister Schäuble: ‘We Can’t Allow a Second Lehman Brothers’

Last week, Greece passed strict austerity measures and is out of immediate danger of insolvency. For now. SPIEGEL spoke with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble about what happens next, whether a Greek default is inevitable and how dangerous the debt crisis is for democracy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swiss-Based Greeks Alarmed by Financial Crisis

It’s not an easy time to be Greek and the Greek diaspora, including some 9,000 people living in Switzerland, can only watch the economic and social turmoil in dismay.

In the week that the Greek parliament voted in more austerity measures to meet the terms of the EU-IMF bailout and street protests turned violent, the anger and frustration of the Greek public finds an echo in Swiss homes.

With the stakes so high, Greeks have become armchair economists and political commentators. The ties, according to Achilles Paparsenos of Greece’s permanent mission to the UN in Geneva, are very strong and Greek expats are following events very closely.

“The Greeks love to discuss, democracy was born in Greece and the Greeks love dialogue and feel very passionate about their country of origin. A lot of them travel to Greece regularly and there is a genuine affection and interest about Greece,” Paparsenos told swissinfo.ch.

Share the blame

One of the Greek expats best qualified to talk about the situation in Greece is chief economist at Zurich Cantonal Bank Anastassios Frangulidis. It is not as simple as laying the blame on the government, he told swissinfo.ch.

“All of society has to take part of the responsibility. In the last 30 years there has not been only one government or party in power. In a democratic system every population gets the government they deserve,” said Frangulidis.

Today’s problems are the result of a sustained period of Greeks living beyond their means. “This led to a huge current account deficit which was financed for years by foreigners at a very low interest rate — until the economic crisis hit in 2008/9,” the economist added.

By passing the painful austerity package, albeit with a slim majority, the Greek government has bought some time. “We know Greece will survive the next months and won’t have default this summer but the problems remain. Based on the EU-IMF agreement, the Greeks have a lot of homework to do,” Frangulidis said.

Despite his professional distance and 20 years living abroad, Frangulidis is pained by the plight of his country and he finds the anger of the demonstrators “understandable” . “For me the Greek crisis is not only a matter of figures and information. I know the people there and I see their problems,” he said.

Close ties

Theocharis Nastos of the Greek Epirotes Association of Switzerland has lived in Zurich since 1972 but he still watches the Greek evening news on television. Seeing members of his family in financial difficulty, he does blame the government for the current economic mess.

“I have built a house in Greece and I’m closely connected to my home region, as well as to Greeks here in Zurich. The financial crisis is a big subject. My brother had a clothing shop that went out of business.”

There are 120 members in Nastos’ expat club, all from the coastal Epirus region. Children learn the Greek language and traditional dance through the club. There are parties for cultural and religious events.

The Greek community in Switzerland is very active and well-organised, with around 40 such clubs and associations, according to an official at the Greek embassy in Bern. By far the largest group of immigrants lives in Zurich, followed by Geneva and Lausanne.

“A significant group of Greek immigrants arrived in Switzerland in the 1960s and there are now many successful Greeks, some of them third generation, in highly-ranked positions in Swiss society,” said the embassy worker who asked not to be named.

“We have many lawyers, doctors and scientists; there are 17 Greek scientists working at Cern alone,” she told swissinfo.ch. “There are also Swiss politicians of Greek origin, such as Josef Zisyadis, as well as people involved at a high level in business and finance”…

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



The National Inflation Association

The National Inflation Association is an organization that is dedicated to preparing Americans for hyperinflation and helping Americans not only survive, but prosper in the upcoming hyperinflationary crisis. The United States now has over $76 trillion in total debt obligations. Our budget deficit in February of 2011 alone was a record $222.5 billion, more than the entire year of 2007. Although our 2010 cash budget deficit was $1.3 trillion, once you factor in changes in our unfunded liabilities for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, our real budget deficit for the year actually surpassed $5 trillion. NIA believes that not only will it be impossible for the U.S. to ever pay off its national debt, but it will be impossible for the U.S. to ever balance its budget again. Even by the White House’s own projections, the U.S. budget deficit in 2011 will be 43% of total government expenditures. This level of deficit as a percentage of total expenditures is about equal to what most countries have experienced right before reaching an outbreak of hyperinflation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Lonely Star State: Texan Germans Dwindling

Countless German immigrants moved to Texas in the 1800s, forming their own unique culture. With their language now near extinction, Moises Mendoza spoke to some of the last speakers and a professor trying to preserve it. Rodney Koenig can look back upon a career as a high-powered attorney in Houston, but he often prefers to think about his childhood in rural Fayette County in southeastern Texas. Back then, the 70-year-old remembers, everyone spoke German.

“It was our primary language at home,” he recently told The Local from his office where he handles tax and estate planning. “The neighbours all spoke it, the church services were in German.” Today, like many other former havens for German Texans, his home county is now full of native English speakers. And Koenig is one of the last-remaining native speakers of the unique German dialect native to Texas. As the ranks of the roughly 10,000 speakers of the language dwindle, a piece of Texas history, and its rich German heritage, goes with them. Koenig, who is now one of the dialect’s youngest speakers, knows it. “There just aren’t that many of us left,” he said. “It’s sad for some people, but it’s reality.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Maid Cleaning Up as ‘Hooker’

Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s accuser wasn’t just a girl working at a hotel — she was a working girl. The Sofitel housekeeper who claims the former IMF boss sexually assaulted her in his room was doing double duty as a prostitute, collecting cash on the side from male guests, The Post has learned.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


British Muslim MEP and Family Under Round the Clock Police Protection

LONDON, July 4 (APP): The British Muslim member of the European Parliament Sajjad Karim and his family have been placed under 24 hour police protection following a protest by the right wing English Defence League at his constituency residence in north west England. According to the MEP of Pakistani heritage, around 50 EDL extremists turned up unannounced at his UK address on Saturday at just after midday, bearing anti-Islamic placards intent on violence.

“It was only through the presence of Lancashire Constabulary officers that harm was avoided,” he told media via a digital message.

He went on to say that the extremists then carried on to his original hometown of Brier field, Lancashire, where they carried out violent attacks and four arrests were made

           — Hat tip: KGS [Return to headlines]



German Politicians Consider Banning Facebook Parties

Hoards of uninvited guests, extreme noise, destruction and violence: German politicians are at a loss for how to deal with the phenomenon of Facebook parties. Over the weekend some regional politicians urged a ban. But the demand is unlikely to be met.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Anti-TAV Train Protests See 188 Police Officers Injured

(AGI) Rome- Some 6,000 protesters, of whom 3,000 belonged to the no-TAV movement, took part in today’s rallies. The anti TAV [high velocity rain] protest began in Exilles and ended in Chiomonte. The remaining 3,000 protesters who reached Maddalena hailed from Giaglione and Ramat. The number of injured people among the police, according to Turin’s authorities, reached 188 after the clashes, but will certainly continue to rise.

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



Italy: Eternit: Judge Asks for 20 Years in Prison

(AGI) Turin — Judge Raffaele Guariniello has asked a 12 year sentence for culpable catastrophe with an additional eight years added on for continuing criminal activities for the Swiss millionaire Stephan Schmidhaeny and the Belgian Baron Louis De Cartier De Marchienne in the Eternit case. The judge asked for three further punishments; banned from public employment, and from undersigning contracts with the public administratio for three years as well as being on the board of driectors of companies for 10 years.

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



Italy: Rail Protesters Face ‘Heavy’ Charges

Minister calls incident ‘attempted murder’

(ANSA) — Milan, July 4 — After violent weekend protests at a high-speed rail site in Northern Italy left 200 police injured, the Italian interior minister urged prosecutors to press “heavy” charges Monday.

“I consider it attempted murder,” said Interior Minister Roberto Maroni of the actions of some protesters Sunday trying to block construction of a high-speed rail (TAV) tunnel connecting Turin to Lyon.

They were “a group of thugs looking for victims,” he added, referring to protesters who threw Molotov cocktails at police outside the building site in the Alpine town of Chiomonte.

Police have made four arrests and are looking for another suspect.

The grass-roots protest group called “No TAV” said that 50,000 demonstrators came from all over Europe Sunday, whereas police counted only 6,000, at least six of whom required an ambulance and 15 more received first aid.

Opponents to the project say the tunnel will create pollution and mar the area’s natural beauty, arguing that the money would be better spent on improving public transport locally.

Supporters of the project, including most Italian political parties and the European Commission, say the link will actually reduce pollution by minimizing road-based freight traffic.

Construction resumed Monday after demonstrators had used rocks, tree branches and incendiary devices to confront police and disrupt the project in separate instances over a week-long period.

Last week a clash left 28 police officers injured, including five who were hospitalized, after a riot squad broke up a human blockade.

Despite the public backlash, administrators of the project say construction of the 53-km tunnel will continue as planned.

“The state can’t buckle in the face of these protests,” said Transport Minister Altero Matteoli. “Work will go ahead”.

The movement against the tunnel has seen other episodes of violence in the past but opposition has grown more hostile recently.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: House Passes Naples Trash Measure

Northern League opposed

(ANSA) — Rome, June 30 — The House passed a measure Thursday addressing the Naples trash crisis despite a dissenting vote from the Northern League party.

Overriding preexisting law, the measure permits the Campania region to export refuse to other parts of the country, emphasizing that neighboring regions should be the “priority target”. Sources from within the government said that the regionalist Northern League had decided to vote against it even before today’s meeting, “as a way to draw a line between the League and a measure it abhors”.

The European Union recently criticized the Italian government and threatened sanctions for the estimated 14,000 tonnes of trash covering city streets and the surrounding province.

Last week, armed police escorts began accompanying garbage trucks as exasperated protesters resorted to tipping over dumpsters, blocking traffic and setting fire to the growing piles of waste that continue to choke the daily flow of city life.

Police were investigating Thursday how a 40-tonne trash compactor wound up in the Bay of Naples. Naples and the surrounding region of Campania have suffered similar crises periodically for a number of years.

The previous public outcry occurred last November when weeks of clashes and rising trash piles brought Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to the city.

It was then that the premier, who won plaudits by sorting out a similar emergency in 2008, made a vow to clear the streets in three days.

But the problems have returned partly because of technical failures in local incinerators and the lack of investment in other landfill sites.

The issue is further complicated by the role of the local mafia, or Camorra, and claims that they have infiltrated waste management in Naples and dumped toxic waste on sites near residential areas.

With the passing of today’s measure, Berlusconi said that the government will present a plan within one month outlining a proposed solution to the crisis

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Otto Von Habsburg, Heir to Austria’s Last Emperor, Dies at 98

Otto von Habsburg, the eldest son of Austria’s last emperor who became a champion of Europe’s enlargement as a Bavarian politician, died Monday in Germany at the age of 98. The man who was once first in line to the throne of the former Austro-Hungarian empire which covered most of central Europe, died at his home in Pöcking on Lake Starnberg in Bavaria, his spokeswoman said in a statement. The son of emperor Karl I, who reigned for only two years before the empire disintegrated, Habsburg was born on November 20, 1912 in Reichenau an der Rax in eastern Austria. Known abroad as Otto von Habsburg, this elegant man with large glasses and a big smile was just Otto Habsburg-Lothringen in Austria, after the state abolished his family’s titles and confiscated their property in 1919.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Shifting Perceptions of Greece in EU

“Do not worry. Your friends in Europe will eventually find a solution for your country. They have to, otherwise the crisis will undermine the whole system of the Eurozone,” said Sociology professor Savvas Katsikides from the University of Cyprus, a known scholar on European Union, or EU, affairs. “It is the sociological aspect of the Greek crisis that I am more concerned about,” he added. The conversation took place over breakfast at a hotel in Brussels at the end of an interesting youth conference on “Turkey on the doorstep of Europe” hosted by the Cypriot MEP Eleni Theocharous and participated by Turkish, Greek Cypriot and Greek politicians and scholars, as well as students from Turkey, Greek Cyprus, and Brazil. The former Foreign Minister and Justice and Development Party deputy Yasar Yakis and the former Republican People Party, or CHP, deputy chairman Onur Öymen were the main political speakers on behalf of Turkey. They both claimed that at a moment of a deep economic and structural crisis in the EU, the entry of Turkey as a full member could give the kiss of life for a Europe that has lost its dominant role in world political and economic affairs. But however interesting and challenging our meeting in Brussels was, it was obvious to me that neither the Cyprus issue nor Turkey and its problematic relationship with the EU, was at the center of the attention in Brussels this time. The worrying developments evolving at that “remote tip of the Balkan peninsula” had suddenly brought the very idea of the European political and economic integration to question. In a highly politicized society as the Greek society, this serious economic crisis is now developing into a deeper existential crisis, which shakes the very foundations of the perception that Greeks had of themselves as a nation state and their position in the family of the European democratic nations. One of such certainties which had been formed since the Greek rebellion against the Ottomans in the 19th century was that the Philhellenism legacy would keep Greece at a respected place among the Europeans as the “nation who invented democracy”. The threat that Greece’s economic crisis poses in the whole Eurozone structure is fast eroding this concept. In fact, looking more carefully, behind the public statements of support “to our friends, the Greeks”, the attitude of the powerful European member states towards a “misbehaving, corrupt and unruly Greece” has brought to the surface a new intellectual fashion of anti-Hellenism, quite the opposite to what brought so many Western Europeans to fight on the side of the Greek rebels against the Ottoman rulers. The new intellectual trend, which creates a new series of stereotypes among the western populist media, places on the shoulders of Greece — and notably to a much lesser extent on those or Ireland of Portugal — the blame for an obvious systemic weakness. In the words of the eminent Greek historian Prof. Antonis Liakos, “We are witnessing the revival of an internal orientalism, the rise of new nationalist populism in all the European countries, even the ones in the north who were known for their democracy and tolerance.” It may be too far stretched for an idea, but my recent visit to the EU capital, showed me that there are now curious similarities between the way the Western Europeans view Greece and Turkey, albeit for different forms of misbehavior. As if these two countries possess an inherent systemic inability to adjust to the European standards; even if the context of these standards is increasingly becoming obscure against the forces of the market.

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



Spain: Barcelona: First Non-Socialist Mayor After 32 Years

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JULY 1 — Today moderate nationalist Xavier Trias (Ciu) became the new mayor of Barcelona, putting an end to 32 years of socialist reign over the Catalan city.

With the election of Trias as Barcelona’s mayor (who replaces socialist Jordi Hereu), for the first time since the end of the Franco era the nationalists of the Ciu party will simultaneously control the regional government of Catalonia, presided by ‘governor’ Artur Mas, and the municipality of the largest Catalan city. A fact which the website of El Pais defined ‘historic’. According to a survey published on Wednesday, 43% of Catalonia’s citizens would vote in favour of a potential referendum on Catalonia’s independence, compared to 28% who would vote against it.

Catalonia’s nationalists gained the relative majority in Barcelona’s municipal council during the May 22 administrative elections, winning 15 seats out of 41. Trias should govern with the outside support of the eight council members of the Partido Popular and with the support of the two representative of the pro-independence party Unidad per Barcelona, one of which is former Barcelona FC president Joan Laporta.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Stauss-Kahn is ‘Still to be Reckoned With in France’

Dominique Strauss-Kahn has been released from house arrest in New York after serious doubts were raised over the credibility of his alleged victim. But what does it mean for his career? German commentators are uncertain whether Strauss-Kahn will run for French president next year, or even if he wants to. It was yet another shocking twist in the remarkable saga surrounding Dominique Strauss-Kahn: The former head of the International Monetary Fund was released from house arrest on Friday after prosecutors admitted they had serious doubts about the credibility of his alleged victim . Although the charges have not been officially dropped, it appears the man known as “DSK” may soon be cleared. And that leads to the intriguing question of what the future holds for Strauss-Kahn. Before his arrest stunned the world in May, Strauss-Kahn was considered the favourite to clinch the Socialist Party’s nomination to become the party’s presidential candidate in France ahead of next year’s election.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Strauss-Kahn to Sue Journalist for Slander

(AGI) Paris — Strauss-Kahn will sue for slander the French journalist Tristane Banon who has accused him of rape and intends to have him charged for this crime. DSK’s lawyers announced the news today according to Le Parisien. The journalist announced today that she will turn to the courts about the attempted rape allegedly inflicted on her eight years ago. “Seeing him free having dinner at a restaurant makes me fell ill,” said Banon in an interview with L’Express.

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



Westerwelle Calls for Closer Turkey Ties to EU

German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle is calling for deeper integration with Turkey, arguing that the country deserves greater support as it makes a bid to join the European Union. Westerwelle told the daily Die Welt that Turkey is becoming a regional powerhouse and the fact that it’s EU aspirations appear to be at a standstill is shameful to all sides involved. It’s location, diversity and European outlook can make it a “bridge to the Islamic world,” he said. “We want to overcome this impasse,” Westerwelle added. Berlin’s foreign minister has just returned from a trip to Turkey, where he held extensive talks with his counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu. In the coming days Davutoglu will undertake travels in the Arab world, where Germany has deep interests. Turkey’s long-running EU accession bid has run into strong opposition among many Europeans who see it as not being economically or politically ready.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Will Glaring Errors Lead to Strauss-Kahn’s Political Rehabilitation?

Seldom has anyone fallen as far and fast as former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is being tried on charges of attempted rape in New York. The sensational admission by prosecutors that they no longer trust their key witness could pave the way for his political comeback in France.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Belligerent Mladic Removed From UN Hearing

Former Bosnian-Serb General Ratko Mladic was ordered out of his own hearing at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal on Monday after shouting at judges and refusing to enter a plea. A not-guilty plea was entered on his behalf.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Serbia and Kosovo Sign First Post-Independence Agreement

After five months of talks under EU mediation, Serbia and Kosovo on Saturday (2 July) signed a breakthrough deal allowing people to cross the border with Kosovo papers, and to get real estate documents and school diplomas recognised on both sides. The agreement is the first one between the two sides since since Kosovo declared independence three years ago. Belgrade was quick to point out that it does not imply that it recognises its former province as being a state of its own, however.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egypt: Sinai: Explosion Hits Gas Pipeline Built Thanks to Egypt-Israel Accords

Sources tell AsiaNews that Islamic extremists placed the bomb because they are opposed to the government’s pro-Israel policies still in place following Mubarak’s fall. More clashes occur in Tahrir Square ; 12 people are injured.

Cairo (AsiaNews) — A pipeline carrying gas from Egypt through the northern Sinai to Israel and Jordan has been hit by an explosion. It is the third attack on a pipeline in Sinai since February, when a popular uprising toppled President Hosni Mubarak.

Sources told AsiaNews that pro-Palestinian Islamic extremists placed the bomb to force Egypt’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces to change the country’s policy towards Israel.

The pipeline (pictured) began supplying Israel with gas in 2008. It was made possible by the 1978 accords signed in Camp David (US). Under the deal, Egypt will sell natural gas to Israel for 20 years at a preferential rate.

“Extremists want an end to the Camp David accords,” sources said. “They want to force the government to break ties with Israel developed under Mubarak’s regime.”

Another reason is the rising cost of natural gas. “After the Jasmine Revolution, the military government reduced domestic supplies, causing prices to rise,” sources said. “Various Islamic groups, including the Muslim Brotherhood, have criticised Mubarak’s concessions to Western governments and Israel, demanding they be terminated.”

Four months since the fall of Egypt’s strongman, the country is still unstable.

Yesterday, 12 people were hurt in Tahrir Square during a demonstration to commemorate the victims of the Jasmine Revolution.

Clashes were provoked by some local merchants, who attacked demonstrators backed by Islamic extremist groups, media reported.

In Upper Egypt, clashes between Copts and Muslims continue. On 30 June, hundreds of Muslim extremists set fire to Christian-owned homes in Kolosna (Minya). About ten people were injured.

Meanwhile, the trial of 48 extremists began. They were involved in Christian-Muslim clashes that left 12 people dead in Cairo in May. (S.C.)

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



Muslim Brotherhood Spokesman: We Are Willing to Dialogue With US

In response to statements by State Secretary Hillary Clinton about an American intention to dialogue with the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood (MB), the movement’s spokesman, Mahmoud Ghazlan, said that the MB was willing to engage in dialogue as long as it is based on mutual respect. He said that so far no dialogue has taken place, except for some contacts between officials at the US embassy in Cairo and former parliament members from the MB. Dr. ‘Issam Al-’Arian, deputy-chairman of the MB political party, said that several US congress members visited the party headquarters last week.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Internet and Censorship, Battle Continues for Blogger

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 4 — The days of internet censorship by Ben Ali and Mubarak are at an end, but free access to information must be defended from potential new attacks, including those hidden by demands to defend morality or to block pornographic websites. This is the outcome of the debate on “citizen journalism” that ended the annual meeting of Arab communities of Creative Commons, which has brought together in Tunis the bloggers and musicians of the Arab Spring.

“The battle continues because censorship still exists in people’s minds,” says Sami Ben Gharbia, the co-founder of the collective independent blog, Nawaat.org, which played an important role in the Tunisian revolution. “The defence of morality is always the first justification for censorship, and if [the Islamist party] Ennadha came to power tomorrow, we need top guarantee that this would not be repeated”.

This is not merely a theoretical issue, however. Only a few weeks ago, a court in Tunis accepted the fast-tracked request by three lawyers to give the government-run Agence Tunisienne de l’Internet the right to censor pornographic sites. The hearing to discuss the matter has been fixed for today, July 4. The court’s initial ruling is “a very serious decision, which equates to transferring judicial power to the government,” says Riadh Guerfali, a professor of constitutional law who is also part of the Nawaat.org team, writing under the pseudonym Astrubal. Guerfali explains that a distinction must be made between the duty of the judiciar to protect on a case-by-case basis the rights of individuals who feel damaged by internet content, and the potentially unlimited power of an administrative authority entitled to carry out Internet censorship.

This is why “the new Constitution will have to guarantee internet freedom explicitly,” the legal expert says.

The issue is a very topical one in Tunisia, notes Ben Gharbia, who has returned to the country in the last few months after spending years in Holland to avoid trouble from the regime.

But social media are now facing another challenge, that of guaranteeing the “credibility” of the information that they publish. “Our platform’s team does this because they know well the people who they are working with,” he says.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Leftist Parties Report Salafite Attacks

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JULY 4 — A protest by the Communist Workers’ Party of Tunisia (POCT) in Cite’ Ettadhamen (west of Tunis) and another by the Moderate Democratic Party in a Kelibia (Cape Bon) were targeted by Salafite groups yesterday.

The POCT protest, according to spokesman Hamma Hammami, was interrupted by a hail of stones and tear gas, while there were allegedly several attacks on the protesters themselves.

‘Kapitalis’ reports that, according to Hammami, the attackers included several women wearing a ‘niqab’. He added that the attackers “were not just Salafites; they included former RCD (former president Ben Ali’s party) members, as well as drug and dealers.” The police did not make an appearance. According to PSG (Left-Wing Socialist Party) leader Mohamed Kilani, in Kelibia a group of “members of the Islamic freedom party” tried to scupper the first meeting of the Moderate Democratic Party, which was taking place outdoors. Army and police units had to intervene to restore peace.

The Moderate Democratic Party comprises the Etajdjd Movement, the PSG, Al Wifak Al-Joumhouri, the Justice and Citizenship Movement, the Middle Path, The Patriotic Democratic Labour Party, the Reform and Development Party, the Democratic Patriots Movement, the People’s Union Front and the Arab Democratic Party.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Two Christian Girls Disappear From State Care Home in Egypt

by Mary Abdelmassih

(AINA) — Parents and lawyers of Christian teens Nancy Fathy and her cousin Christine Fathy, who allegedly converted to Islam, were shocked to learn the two girls have been taken by security officers from the care home where they were entrusted by the attorney general and held in a undisclosed place without knowledge or consent of the attorney general.

Lawyer Amgad Mourad said he went to the orphanage in Hadayel el_Koba on July 3 with the girls’ parents, but were surprised to learn that Nancy and Christine were taken by security from the orphanage on June 29. “We contacted south Cairo prosecution general, who was surprised and defensive, as we had a meeting yesterday with the General Council for Childhood and Motherhood and we were assured of the presence of Nancy and Christine in the orphanage.”

Today, lawyers with the parents went to south Cairo general prosecutor and were told by him the teens are in a safe place with public security, as they were afraid the parents may go to the orphanage and create problems there, according to Mourad. “Still we were not told where they are staying.”

According to attorney Dr Naguib Gabriel, President of the Egyptian Union Organization of Human Rights, who is also one of the lawyers representing the parents of the Christian girls, the girls were moved to another place because of the threats of violence issued by the unlawful Muslim group calling itself “Alliance for the Support of New Female Muslims.”

“It may be the Muslims knew the whereabouts of the two girls, and they were moved to the safer place,” said Gabriel. He said he contacted Mrs. Lamia Mohsen, head of the Childhood and Motherhood Council and she also had no knowledge that Christine and Nancy were moved from their care home.

Both 14-year-old Nancy Magdy Fathy, and her 16-year old cousin Christine Ezzat Fathy, disappeared while on their way to church on Sunday June 12. Their parents accused two Muslim brothers from a neighboring village of abducting them. Two weeks later, the girls appeared in Cairo and surrendered themselves at a Cairo police station. The Christian minors said they converted to Islam of their own free will, and refused to return to their families, and even applied for protection from them. The prosecution decided to put them in a state care home and provide protection for them, until the completion of the investigation. Al Azhar denied that the two Coptic teenagers had converted to Islam, because they are still minors and have not yet reached 18 years of age, as is required by law (AINA 6-26-2011).

Investigation of their case was transferred to child prosecution at the south Cairo court as they are still minors. The prosecutor ordered reconciliation sessions between Nancy and Christine and their parents in the presence of a social worker from the Childhood and Motherhood Council. Three sessions were held, only one of which was attended by the parents.

Gabriel stressed that “none of the girls said she converted to Islam. During the meeting with their parents the younger threw herself in the arms of her father, sobbing while the older girl said she was afraid to return home, the matter is not conversion to Islam at all, they are just afraid of family retribution”

He said the lawyers went with the parents yesterday to south Cairo prosecution for child care and met with the committee of the Childhood Council, which is comprised of two social workers and two psychiatrists. “The committee wrote conflicting reports. It reported the girls are psychologically disturbed and cannot control their behavior and then it said one of the girls talked of her preparedness to convert to Islam.” He said they objected to the formation of the committee and demanded Christian representation in it. “Even the two social workers wore the Hijab,” he explained. They also demanded that the care home would be a neutral one or at least its administration would include a Christian.

Gabriel believes the psychological rehabilitation will never succeed as long as there is the presence of Sharia associations and Hijab-clad social workers. “We are not assured at all. It is not possible to leave them in the hands of a committee without any Christian presence, and it is not possible to leave them in care for 6 months or a year, until they reach 18 years old, when we will be told they have become Muslims.”

He said he would be meeting Dr. Lamia, of the Childhood Council, to discuss the timeline foreseen for the intended return of the children to their parents and the schedule of the psychiatric rehabilitation. “The main danger for the girls is being kept away from their parents and not by lodging them in a care home.”

He said they demanded that there should be guarantees not to deliver the children to Muslims, or Muslim Brotherhood members, or leave the control over the girls to them, stressing that such requests were approved. “However, we were greatly surprised that after the approval of our demands, the two girls suddenly disappeared from the care home.”

Yesterday in Minya the Court of Appeals released until further evidence appears Gomaa Sayed Gomaa and his brother Arafat, the Muslim men accused of being behind the abduction of Christine and Nancy and taking them to Alexandria and Cairo. “This is a very serious matter, as investigations are still going on and the virginity exam has not yet been carried out on the minors, which is a part of the criminal investigations. Depending on the results, charges in this case would be raping of a minor or minors,” Gabriel said.

           — Hat tip: Mary Abdelmassih [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Gaza Flotilla Boats Preparing to Confront Greek Coastguard

Flotilla members are preparing to defy a Greek order not to sail to Gaza, as Athens says the project would threaten regional stability. Armed and masked Greek soldiers already stopped and detained the US boat, The Audacity of Hope, when it left the port of Perama on Friday (1 July) on grounds that the vessel was not seaworthy. The Greek authorities later the same day issued a blanket order for all nine flotilla boats not to sail and offered to deliver the humanitarian supplies to Gaza themselves together with Israeli help. The Quartet — the EU, Russia, the UN and the US — on Saturday also published a communique urging the boats to deliver their cargo through “established channels.” Greek foreign ministry spokesman Grigoris Delavekouras told EUobserver the sailing ban was made on the basis of “maritime law, both national and international … safety mainly, it has to do with the safety of people at sea.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gaza Border Opening Offers Fewer Opportunities Than Hoped

The 1.5 million Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip could not leave — until Egypt opened the Rafah border crossing in May. That gave rise to many hopes, some of which have been disappointed. The fields of farmer Ahmad Shafi are located just one kilometer from the Israeli border. From nearby fields, Palestinian militants sometimes fire homemade rockets into Israel. As long as such attacks continue, Israel says it will severely restrict imports and exports into Gaza. Israel uses the sanctions as a means to to pressure Hamas, the governing party in Gaza.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Offers to Ship Gaza Aid Supplies as Activists Raise a Stink

Greece clamped down on pro-Palestinian activists when a Gaza-bound aid vessel left port without permission. But after the activists took to the streets in protest, Athens came up with a concessionary plan B. Greece offered to deliver humanitarian supplies to the Gaza Strip itself on Sunday, after protesters denounced the country’s storming of a banned aid boat. “Greece … proposes to undertake the task of transporting the humanitarian aid, with Greek vessels or other appropriate means, through the existing channels” requested by the United Nations, the foreign ministry said in a statement. The move was an apparent bid to counter accusations that Greece was complicit in Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



PNA Slashes Wages, Promised Funds Delayed

The Palestinian National Authority (PNA) will be forced to slash the wages of public sector workers due to a shortage of funds caused by the delay in the arrival of financial aid promised by certain donating countries. This is according to the Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad, who has been speaking in Ramallah. Fayyad said that countries in the region, which he did not name, had not donated the funds promised. The PNA relies on foreign aid to pay the wages of 150,000 public sector workers in the West Bank and in Gaza and for monthly benefits for 75,000 people. So far this year, the PNA has received only 331 of the 970 million dollars promised by donor countries. Fayyad says that the PNA has a monthly cash deficit of 30 million dollars and has now exhausted the possibility of obtaining credit from banks. The Prime Minister added that one of the donor countries, Saudi Arabia, had given 146 million in 2010 and 241 million in 2009, but was yet to pay a penny this year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Emirates: Facebook Threats Rise, Women More Vulnerable

(ANSAmed) — DUBAI, JULY 4 — There’s the version of Facebook which contributed toward coordinating and upholding social aims, fostering the explosion of the Arab Spring, but there’s also the other version, which is set to crash head-on into the deeply-rooted traditions of that same Arab world, alarmingly highlighting women’s vulnerability.

In the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the country with the highest incidence of social network usage in the region (45%), the number of cases which see women blackmailed in exchange for money or sex for having posted pictures in which they are wearing “dishonourable” attire are increasingly rising.

Pictures in a bathing suit, or in an off-the-shoulder top, are explosive tools in a society where, despite the wide liberal margin granted to the majority of the foreign population, respect for traditions, religion, family and honour are still strongly considered to be fundamental principles. The risk of being killed by a male family to rid the family of the shame of dishonour is infinitely smaller than in countries such as Jordan for example, where “honour killings” are still a potential — though increasingly frowned upon — solution to women’s disrespectful behaviour.

The blackmailers are looking for money, forced sexual relations or emotional and psychological control, according to operators from the dedicated department set up by the Ministry of the Interior to tackle this growing phenomenon which has women in the Emirates stuck between a rock and a hard place. If they turn to the police to report cases of abuse they could be arrested. In cases where there were consensual sexual relations, despite being forced through blackmail, the victim can be arrested and locked up for having consented to a sexual act outside of marriage. This is an illegal and punishable act in the UAE.

The ministry’s social department is victims’ only safe harbour at the moment. “We offer victims total privacy”, states a staff member at the office, who requested that he remain anonymous, “but acting as a police department we carry out inquiries and when necessary, such as in cases where there are other victims forced to perform criminal acts, we cannot merely protect, we must also report”. Such would be the case if, for example, the investigation lead to the discovery of a criminal organization, making it more difficult to defende the victims’ privacy. The younger generation’s comments reveal the paradox within a country which is on the fast track toward futuristic investments and projects on the one hand, and proudly tied to Islam and the ancient Bedouin culture on the other. On the one hand, some people praise parents who allow their daughters to open Facebook accounts, even though they ban them from posting pictures, while on the other young men berate “easy” women who “market themselves” using social networks, girls they “would never marry”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Europe’s Largest Healthcare Complex to be Built in Ankara

A Turkish-Italian partnership on Thursday won a tender for the construction of Europe’s largest healthcare complex in Turkey’s capital of Ankara, as Today’s Zaman reports. According to the results of the tender, the Astaldi-Turkerler partnership will build the Ankara Etlik Health Campus, which is expected to cost 2.4 billion Turkish Liras (1 billion euros), and own it for 25 years, with the state operating it, after completion. The state will have to pay rent of 319 million Turkish Liras (136,34 million euros) for the first year, with the annual rent being adjusted according to annual inflation in Turkey for the subsequent 24 years. The state will own the entire complex after a quarter of a century. The facilities within the complex will include eight hospitals and one hotel. (ANSAmed).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Wants to Supply Battle Tanks to Saudi Arabia

Right in the middle of the Arab Spring, Germany plans to supply high-tech weapons to an undemocratic regime in the region. According to information obtained by SPIEGEL, Saudi Arabia is interested in buying up to 200 “Leopard” battle tanks. A sale would end Germany’s traditional restraint on arms sales to the country. Germany is prepared to deliver modern “Leopard” battle tanks to Saudi Arabia in a reversal of its decades-old policy not to supply heavy weapons to the authoritarian kingdom.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Indian Church in Abu Dhabi: Care of Young and Sick, But Only in India

Financial support to 40 seriously ill patients, cataract surgeries already paid for 400 elderly people, scholarships to 40 poor students: this is the charity program of the Marthoma Church. Launched for the 40th anniversary of the church, the program can not take place in the UAE, because of accusations of proselytism.

Abu Dhabi (AsiaNews) — “We are very happy to celebrate 40 years of our church with works of charity, for the next year,” says Rev. George Oommen, bishop-designate of the Marthoma Church, an Indian church in Abu Dhabi. The community has launched a charity drive for one year, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of its founding. However, the plan can only be carried out in India, not in Abu Dhabi: in the UAE, the Church is only allowed freedom of religious worship, not other activities, otherwise it could be charged of proselytizing.

In particular, the plan provides financial assistance to 40 patients, without discrimination of caste or religion. In addition, 40 poor students will receive scholarships to attend professional courses. In the second stage, financial support will be extended to 400 patients, mostly elderly, for cataract surgeries.

Although this program will be implemented only in India, Rev. George is confident that “in the future we can make everyone participate in celebrations like these. The divisions must be overcome and the Church is called to transcend any barrier of caste, colour and religion. God the Father is God of all mankind. “

Also Fr. Paul Thelakat, spokesman for the Synod of the Syro-Malabar Church, said he was “happy” for this initiative, and added: “Usually, the celebrations end up with excessive spending and few useful initiatives. Instead, the Marthoma Church is ready to reach out to those who suffer, wherever possible to alleviate the pain of the people and share their burden” (N.C.)

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



Jordanian Official: America’s Withdrawal From Afghanistan Will Turn it Into One Big Terrorist Camp

In response to U.S. President Barack Obama’s announcement that U.S. troops with be withdrawn from Afghanistan by the end of 2014, Jordanian Broadcasting Authority director Saleh Al-Qallab wrote that the withdrawal will bring destruction upon Afghanistan, for it will leave the country at the mercy of the terrorists and in a state of increasing chaos.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Meteorite Hunter: My Two Months in an Omani Jail

Michael Farmer tells the tale of his quest for extraterrestrial geology and how it landed him in prison, and explains why he eats bits of the moon and Mars

I understand you have an unusual habit. What is it?

I’ve eaten a small piece of every moon rock and Mars rock that I have purchased or found. After all, not many people can say they have eaten a piece of the moon. And I know for a fact that numerous scientists have done the same.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



President of American-Iranian Council: US Offered Iran a Non-Aggression Pact

Iranian-American businessman Hooshang Amirahmadi, president of the American-Iranian Council, who, according to his claim, negotiated with Iran on behalf of the US, told the website Asr-e Iran that the US wants to sign a non-aggression pact with Iran in the Persian Gulf. He said that this American proposal was presented at a meeting attended by USCENTCOM Commander General James N. Mattis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia: We Will Seek Nuclear Arms if Iran Gets Them

Saudi Arabia has warned NATO that it would pursue policies that could lead to “untold and possible dramatic consequences” if Iran obtains nuclear weapons. A source close to Saudi Prince Turki Al-Faisal told the London daily The Guardian that Iranian nuclear weapons would compel the kingdom to develop its own nuclear arms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Prince Raises Prospect of Nuclear Arms Race With Iran

Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former Saudi intelligence chief, has warned that if Iran obtained nuclear weapons, Saudi Arabia would too. Analysts say the two are already engaged in a ‘cold war’ in various parts of the world. Britain’s Guardian newspaper revealed recently that Prince Turki al-Faisal gave an unpublicized speech earlier this month to senior officials at a NATO air base in the UK during which the former Saudi intelligence chief and ambassador to Washington and Britain implied that a nuclear arms race could break out in the Middle East if Iran continues to pursue its nuclear ambitions.

Faisal did not outline specific policies, but warned that if Iran had a nuclear weapon, it “would compel Saudi Arabia … to pursue policies which could lead to untold and possibly dramatic consequences.” The newspaper also quoted an unnamed Saudi official as saying “we cannot live in a situation where Iran has nuclear weapons and we don’t.” “If Iran develops a nuclear weapon, that will be unacceptable and we will have to follow suit,” the official said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Saber-Rattling as Russia Meets NATO in Sochi

As a Russia-NATO summit begins in Sochi, Moscow has threatened to beef up its European forces, if talks between the alliance and the Kremlin fail to resolve sticky missile defense issues. Russia’s NATO ambassador, Dmitri Rogozin, referring to alliance plans to erect a missile defense system in eastern Europe, said Moscow views the West’s intentions as a direct threat to the homeland. “This is the red line, which we must not and will not abandon. No Russian leader can ever question the strategic potential of Russia or reduce it to zero,” Rogozin said. NATO has been planning the system — to be deployed in Poland and the Czech Republic — as a way to protect the continent against missiles from rogue Middle Eastern states. Moscow, however, argues that the system could too easily be used to target its own missiles and is dangerously close to its territory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Trial of Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Turns Into Political Spectacle

The Ukrainian government has accused opposition figure Yulia Tymoshenko of abusing her power when she served as prime minister. She says that government is using the judiciary to silence the opposition. Former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko appeared in court in Kyiv on Monday as the media spectacle surrounding her trial on corruption charges continued. The woman with the trademark braided hair is a shining light for many people in Ukraine. During her pre-trial hearing, about 200 fans gathered in Kyiv’s main boulevard, Khreshchatyk Street, where they set up tents and waved flags with symbols of Tymoshenko’s Fatherland party while playing music and chanting “Yulia! Yulia! Ukraine!”

The charges leveled against Tymoshenko say she abused her powers as prime minister in order to conclude backroom deals that hurt Ukraine’s national interests. The Ukrainian judiciary has flexed its muscles by freezing 1.45 million euros ($2 million) of Tymoshenko’s considerable financial assets as bond for her trial. Tymoshenko faces several different charges all of which stem from the time she served as prime minister.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


‘Billions Worth’ of Treasure Found in Indian Temple

A treasure trove of gold and silver jewelry, coins and precious stones said to be worth billions of dollars has been found in a Hindu temple in southern India, officials said. The valuables have an estimated preliminary worth of over 500 billion rupees ($11.2 billion), said Kerala Chief Secretary K. Jayakumar, catapulting the temple into the league of India’s richest temples. The thousands of necklaces, coins and precious stones have been kept in at least five underground vaults at the Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple which is renowned for its intricate sculptures.

“We are yet to open one more secret chamber which has not been opened for nearly 140 years,” Jayakumar told AFP. The actual value of the treasure haul can be ascertained only after it is examined by the archaeological department, said Jayakumar. The temple, dedicated to Hindu lord Vishnu, was built hundreds of years ago by the king of Travancore and donations by devotees have been kept in the temple’s vaults since. A necklace found on Thursday was 18 feet (six metres) long. Thousands of gold coins have also been found.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pakistan Mounts Search for Swiss Hostages

Pakistan has launched a search operation and engaged tribal elders to help secure the release of a Swiss couple abducted in the insurgency-hit southwest, officials said Saturday. The Swiss nationals were kidnapped on Friday while travelling in impoverished and sparsely populated Baluchistan province, which borders both Iran and Afghanistan. They were seized in Loralai district, 170 kilometres east of the provincial capital Quetta, provincial home secretary Zafarullah Baloch told AFP. “We have launched an intense search. We have alerted police and paramilitary troops and we have also contacted tribal elders to help us locate the abductees,” said Sohail-ur-Rehman, deputy commissioner of Loralai. Loralai police chief Ghulam Ali Lashari said officers had found the couple’s Volkswagen vehicle abandoned in Killi Nigah area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Yingluck’s Challenge: Thailand’s New Leader Must Step Out of Brother’s Shadow

Thailand’s powerful army has recognized the election victory of Yingluck Shinawatra and her Pheu Thai party. But the future prime minister faces a Herculean task: She must redeem her numerous promises, reunite a deeply divided country and step out of the shadow cast by her exiled brother Thaksin.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Wants to Buy Facebook

On Thursday, Business Insider reported that China is trying to buy “a huge chunk” of Facebook. According to the business news website, Beijing approached a fund that buys stock from former Facebook employees to see if it could assemble a stake large enough “to matter.” Moreover, Citibank is rumored to be trying to acquire as much as $1.2 billion of stock for two sovereign wealth funds, one from the Middle East and the other Chinese. Business Insider reports a third source, from a “very influential” Silicon Valley investment bank, confirms that Citi is representing China.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Police Given Power to Remove Burkas

New South Wales police conducting routine car stops will be given the power to demand the removal of head coverings for identification.

Premier Barry O’Farrell says cabinet approved the move on Monday so police could properly identify motorists or any other people suspected of committing a crime.

“I don’t care whether a person is wearing a motorcycle helmet, a burka, niqab, face veil or anything else, the police should be allowed to require those people to make their identification clear,” he said in a statement.

“I have every respect for various religions and beliefs but when it comes to enforcing the law the police should be given adequate powers to make a clear identification.”

Mr O’Farrell says there has to be a balance between religious customs and a police officer’s ability to do their job.

“It’s also an issue with other religions. It’s also an issue with other cultures,” he said.

“But whether it’s a driver’s license or passing through customs, identity checks are required in this day and age and we’re determined to ensure police have the powers to undertake them when required.”

The new laws come in the wake of a successful appeal by a Muslim woman who had been sentenced to jail for falsely accusing a police officer of forcibly trying to remove her burka.

The sentence against Carnita Matthews was quashed on appeal last week.

The magistrate said he was unable to confirm whether Ms Matthews had made the accusation as police had been unable to see the face of the woman who made the complaint.

Attorney-General Greg Smith says he will not be appealing against the Matthews decision, but says the new laws should prevent a recurrence of the case.

Police have had the power to ask women to remove face veils during the investigation of serious offences but did not have such powers during routine car stops.

           — Hat tip: Salome [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


A Trip to Hell

The latest US anti-slavery report says Nigeria is meeting minimum anti-trafficking standards. Yet tens of thousands of Nigerian women are being brought to Europe and forced to work as prostitutes, as a German film shows.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Netherlands: Plan to Deport Jobless Poles is Dangerous, Say Polish Ministers

Plans by the Netherlands to deport jobless Poles and other Eastern Europeans are dangerous and worrying, Poland’s economic affairs minister Waldemar Pawlak is quoted as saying in Monday’s Trouw.

The paper says Pawlak made the comments during a meeting in Warsaw on Saturday. ‘We are concerned about the Dutch plans,’ Pawlak said. ‘This development is dangerous and could lead to the collapse of the European system of freedom of movement.’

Earlier this year, social affairs minister Henk Kamp presented proposals to expel Polish and other eastern European nationals who are without work and have little prospect of finding any. He also plans to withhold welfare benefits (bijstand) from people who do not speak Dutch.

Robust talks

Poland’s European affairs minister Mikolaj Dowgielewicz is quoted as saying there have been ‘robust talks’ with the Netherlands on the plan. He is quoted as saying that he is surprised a maximum of 200 people could lead to such heated political debate.

Such problems could be better solved at a European level, through community-wide agreements on social security and working conditions, he said.

Poland took over the presidency of the EU on Friday for the next six months.

In February, Poland’s ambassador to the Netherlands said Dutch attitudes to Poles bordered on discrimination.

Earlier stories

Attitude to Poles borders on discrimination: ambassador

EU warns Holland on Polish deportation plan

Deport jobless eastern Europeans who won’t go voluntarily: minister

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

General


Finger Length Linked to Penis Size

Men: Hold up your right hand. Are your pointer and index fingers close to the same size? Congratulations, you’re more likely than men with mismatched digits to have a long penis. A smaller ratio between the second and fourth fingers is linked to a longer stretched penis size, researchers report today (July 4) in the Asian Journal of Andrology. The findings go beyond providing a new finger ratio-based pick-up line for men in bars, however; researchers say that a quick look at a man’s fingers could reveal his exposure to male hormones in the womb, providing a hint about his risk for hormone-driven diseases like prostate cancer.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rupert Murdoch’s Failing Attempts to Control the Internet Reformation

Rupert Murdoch lost nearly his entire investment in MySpace the other day when he sold the failing social network to musician and actor Justin Timberlake and an ad agency he backs for some US$30 million. This was a good deal less than the US$500 million-plus Murdoch paid for it. Why did Murdoch make such a bad investment? Because he hoped to use the network as a vehicle from which he could disseminate news. He wanted to make MySpace into a mechanism to deliver current-events content. When it didn’t work out — and he must have known that fairly soon — he obviously lost interest. And as his interest waned, so did MySpace.

This speaks to Murdoch’s desperation — and mainstream media’s generally. In a digital world, he is willing to burn US$500 million simply to confirm that a social network is not a news delivery system. I could have told him that for a much lower fee. This also shows us the importance of news to the powers-that-be. The Anglosphere elites — for whom Murdoch evidently and obviously works — are determined (thus far without much success) to find a way to protect their failing information franchise.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110703

Financial Crisis
» EU Budget: Tug of War Between EU27 and Commission
» Youth Unemployment Endemic in Europe
 
USA
» American Constitution Faces ‘Progressive’ Threat
» French Socialist MP Says Strauss-Kahn Victim of Plot
» Obama Consultants Picked to Draw Arizona Redistricting Maps
» Ohio Cops Tased Mentally Handicapped Teenager With Speech Impediment for ‘Disrespect’
» The Dark Muslim Brotherhood World of Huma Abedin
 
Europe and the EU
» Food Poverty: EU Cuts Funding to the Poor
» Iceland Opens EU Membership Talks
» Italy: MP Elected New Chair of Jewish Parliamentarians Worldwide
» Italy: Judges Reiterate Wiretaps Are Indispensable Instrument
» Italy: 20,000 Tonnes of Waste to be Sent From Naples to Genoa
» Italy: Govt’s PDL Party Blames Left for Naples’ Waste Predicament
» Italy Expels Algerian Terrorist Yamine Bouhrama
» Slovakia — Czech Republic: After the Russians, Ecological Disaster
» Switzerland: Ticino Toughens Its Stance Over Italy Tax Spat
» UK: BBC’s Fears for Newsnight as Viewers Hit All-Time Low
» UK: Guardian Columnist Kia Abdullah Tweets Cruel Taunts About the Death of Gap Year Boys
» UK: RAF’s Rare Anti-Nazi Leaflet That Told Truth to Wartime Germany
 
Balkans
» Croatia: EU Leaders Say Yes, Will be 28th Member State
 
North Africa
» Tunisia: Pact That Bans Normalisation With Israel Adopted
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Messianic Christian Couple in Israel Accused of Converting Minor
 
Middle East
» Nasrallah Defends “Brothers” Accused of Hariri Murder
» Saudi Arabia “To Drive Out” All Indonesian Migrants
 
South Asia
» Lega Nord Leader: Afghanistan Mission is Costing Too Much
» Takeover is the Taliban Plan for Afghanistan
 
Far East
» China Sells Fake Microchips to U.S. Navy
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» AU Urges Members to Ignore ICJ Gaddafi Arrest Warrant
 
Immigration
» Hotel in Ogliastra Rejects 18 Refugees
 
Culture Wars
» UK: Why Was the Man Behind G-A-Y and Porn Idol a Guest at No 10 Party?

Financial Crisis


EU Budget: Tug of War Between EU27 and Commission

The Commission “struggled through” its presentation of the EU budget proposal for 2014-2020, remarks Le Figaro, which reports that “in line with a demand made by Nicolas Sarkozy, the absolute value of agricultural policy funding remains unchanged” [over seven years, 371.7 billion euros or 36.2% as opposed to 39.4% of the proposed global budget of 1025 billion euros, which amounts to 1.05% of the EU’s GDP].

“Less developed Central Europe has obtained a continuation of regional funding, while the priorities of the moment — energy and Internet access — appear to be respected. On the other hand, the financial transaction tax proposed by Brussels to alleviate pressure on the European treasury has already been greeted by a British veto,” reports Le Figaro.

The tax on financial transactions (TFT) or Tobin tax, “levied at a rate that has yet to be determined, would affect all the activities of financial institutions within the EU and bring in between 50 and 70 billion per year,” which would provide the EU with its own budget resources.

For Libération, the proposal amounts to “a revolution, especially when you consider that how the alter-globalisation movement has campaigned for just such a measure, while the incumbent EU administration is the most right wing to hold office since 1958 — a faithful reflection of the balance of political power in Europe (22 out of 27 member states have right-wing governments).” However, there is no guarantee that member states will be in a hurry to introduce a tax which a spokesman for the British government, quoted by Euobserver, has described as “unrealistic.”

Another bone of contention between the Commission and member states is the issue of cuts to what Le Figaro terms “eurocrats’ salaries”: this group of “of approximately 50,000 privileged [civil servants], who have benefited from a remarkable immunity to the crisis, will have to endure the most hard-hitting wage review in 50 years,” remarks the newspaper.

“To speak of a flare-up between the unions and management — which in this case is the Commission — and the shareholders, otherwise known as member states, is an understatement.” Brussels will have to act quickly to resolve a what is a serious equity and credibility issue: it cannot ask everyone else to tighten their belts while it continues to enjoy such an opulent lifestyle “insists the treasurer of one member state. Eleven countries — including France, Germany, the United Kingdom and most of northern Europe — are now involved in the struggle, and have issued an ultimatum to José Manuel Barroso. Le Figaro has obtained a copy of a letter in which they insist: ‘a significant reduction in spending, including cutbacks on wages, pensions and perks, will have to be implemented’. The offensive against “exisiting entitlements” has heated up, at a time when Greece has been forced to make enormous sacrifices.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Youth Unemployment Endemic in Europe

Politiken, 27 June 2011

“No jobs for the young in Europe” leads the daily Politiken, which quotes Eurostat figures showing that one in five Europeans under 25 is unemployed — a 5 per cent increase from three years ago. Taking the lead is Spain, with 45 per cent youth unemployment, followed by Slovakia, Lithuania and Greece. The phenomenon has not spared the countries whose economies were left relatively unscathed by the crisis, Politiken notes: in Sweden, more than 20 per cent of young people are jobless. Denmark, with an unemployment rate of “only” 12 per cent, has, for the moment, escaped. That situation may not last, and in the rest of Europe it will probably get worse, with long-term consequences, says Jesper Rangvid, a professor at the Copenhagen Business School. “When a large part of a generation is absent from the labour market, countries lose out on expertise and important experience,” he told the Danish newspaper. And Greece, which will have to implement a drastic economic austerity plan to get help from other member countries of the EU and the IMF, is likely to face a massive brain drain in the near future — especially when it comes to young graduates.

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

USA


American Constitution Faces ‘Progressive’ Threat

Look what Obama’s buddies plan for founding document

Still more White House officials, including Attorney General Eric Holder, have ties to an effort funded by billionaire George Soros to push for a new, “progressive” U.S. Constitution.

WND previously reported how President Obama’s regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein, maintained extensive ties to Soros’ funding, particularly with regard to a movement that openly seeks to create a “progressive” consensus on what the U.S. Constitution should provide by the year 2020.

Now, it has emerged that Lisa Brown, Obama’s staff secretary, served as executive director of the Soros-funded American Constitution Society, ACS, a progressive legal organization that was behind the Constitution scheme.

Brown’s White House responsibilities include managing the flow of information, advice and decision-making between staff members and Obama.

Also, Holder has been closely tied to the ACS, serving on the group’s board of directors and even keynoting their 10th anniversary national convention earlier this month.

In 2008, Holder also keynoted their convention. At that event, he reportedly urged young lawyers to get involved in the liberal legal network, saying America would soon be “run by progressives.”

“The pendulum is starting to swing. America run by progressives. Really. It’s about to happen. So we’re going to be looking for people who share our values,” he stated, as captured in a YouTube video[link].

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



French Socialist MP Says Strauss-Kahn Victim of Plot

(AGI) Paris — A French Socialist Mp has said Strauss Kahn was the victim of a plot organized between New York and Paris.

Orders would have come from Paris to the Sofitel, a hotel belonging to the French Accor group, where the former director of the International Monetary Fund had a sexual encounter with a maid who then reported him for rape. Socialist Mp, Francois Loncle, pointed a finger at the management of the hotel chain, whose director for this year as of January 15th is Denis Hennequin.

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



Obama Consultants Picked to Draw Arizona Redistricting Maps

Arizona’s redistricting commission again split along party lines on a key staff choice, selecting a Washington-based firm with perceived Democratic leanings as its mapping consultants on Wednesday.

The commission voted 3-2 to have its executive director negotiate a contract with Strategic Telemetry Inc. to advise the commission in drawing new congressional and legislative districts for use in elections in the coming decade.

The commission’s independent chairwoman and its two Democratic members voted to direct the panel’s executive director to negotiate a contract with Strategic Telemetry. The two Republicans voted no.

The split was the same when the commission previously chose two law firms to serve as its attorneys.

A principal of Strategic Telemetry, Ken Strasma, did 2008 work for President Barack Obama’s campaign, and one of the two Republican commissioners said the firm’s expertise appeared solid but that its Democratic leanings could put public confidence in the redistricting process at risk.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Ohio Cops Tased Mentally Handicapped Teenager With Speech Impediment for ‘Disrespect’

The mother of a 17-year-old handicapped child is pressing charges against two head police officers, as well as the city of Dayton, Oh., after the two cops tased, pepper sprayed, and beat the disabled boy without cause.

According to a report from Courthouse News Service (CNS), Officer Willie Hooper and Officer John Howard of the Dayton Police Department (DPD) allegedly mistook Jesse Kersey’s speech impediment for “disrespect,” and tracked the boy all the way home from where they first encountered him, and proceeded to brutalize the boy with all sorts of inappropriate assault tactics prior to finally arresting him.

The report explains that Officer Hooper first stopped Jesse for an unknown reason while the boy was riding his bicycle, and proceeded to try to speak with him. Jesse, who was having difficulty trying to converse with the officer, decided to ride home and get his mother to help him communicate with the man. Hooper then followed the boy home along with Officer Howard, and before Jesse could even make it in the door, the two officers tased the young boy.

Jesse’s mom, Pamela, stated that “[p]rior to the incident … Hooper knew Jesse was mentally challenged / handicapped and a minor child.” And a neighbor who witnessed the chase as Jesse was trying to return home also came out and tried to tell the cops that the boy was mentally challenged, only to be told to “go back into his home, or he would be arrested.”

As Jesse finally made it through the doorway after being tased, the cops followed him inside and began to shoot pepper spray at him. Officer Howard then “struck Jesse with a closed fist in the upper chest area … and repeatedly struck Jesse in the upper left side of his left thigh.” And while all of this was occurring, roughly 20 more officers from various jurisdictions also arrived on the site.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The Dark Muslim Brotherhood World of Huma Abedin

Frontpage Interview’s guest today is Walid Shoebat, a former PLO terrorist and Muslim Brotherhood activist who is the author of the new book For God or For Tyranny.

FP: Walid Shoebat, welcome to Frontpage.

Shoebat: Thanks for having me.

FP: You were the first to break the news on Huma Abedin, Anthony Weiner’s wife, being linked to her mother Saleha Abedin, who, as you have exposed, has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood.

First, let me ask you: how credible are your sources?

Shoebat: Al-Liwa Al-Arabi (translated here) leaked an extensive list, which was partially published by Al-Jazeera and several other major Arab newspapers. The detailed list included Huma’s mother, Saleha Abedin.

Another piece of the puzzle and what was common knowledge in the Arab world is that Huma Abedin has a brother named Hassan Abedin who sits in on the board of the Oxford Centre For Islamic Studies (OCIS) where Huma’s brother is a fellow and partners with a number of Muslim Brotherhood members on the Board, including Al-Qaeda associate, Omar Naseef and the notorious Muslim Brotherhood leader Sheikh Youssef Qaradawi; both have been listed as OCIS Trustees. Naseef continues to serve as Board Chairman.

This becomes an issue since Huma sits in the U.S. State Department with eyes and ears to classified government secrets. Was Huma unaware of all this as she accompanied Hillary Clinton to the Dar El-Hekma women’s college in Jedda-Saudi Arabia? Huma’s mother is the co-founder and a Vice Dean at the college and an active missionary on issues regarding Muslim women and is considered by the Egyptian security services as a dangerous member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Food Poverty: EU Cuts Funding to the Poor

“The decision of the European Commission has paralysed the thousands of charities that help the poorest on the Old Continent: the budget for food aid will be cut by 80 percent,” reports Le Soir. This decision, which reduces to a minimum (from 500 to 113 million euros) the aid the EU will give out in 2012 to charities that provide food to the poor, comes in wake of a legal ruling.

The idea of ??a system of social solidarity to redistribute agricultural surpluses as food aid to the poor was brought in (in the winter of 1986-87) by Jacques Delors, then President of the European Commission. (…) But in the last ten years, food surpluses have fallen. The contributions that had come from surpluses were then replaced by direct financial contributions to charities. One percent of CAP financing — that is, 500 million euros — was to finance the European Programme of Food Aid to the Most Deprived Persons (PEAD). Some countries, like Germany and Sweden, turned to the Court of Justice of the European Union (ECJ), arguing that this amount was purely social assistance unrelated to the CAP.

On April 12 the Court agreed with them by annulling the right to award a portion of the CAP budget for food distribution through charities. The Commission has not appealed. According to the latest study of the impact of the PEAD, more than 13 million people in Europe benefited from the programme in 2006, a year in which the number of people at risk of food poverty was estimated at 43 million in the EU of twenty-five states.

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



Iceland Opens EU Membership Talks

Iceland on Monday opened negotiations to join the European Union, with fishing disputes and anti-EU sentiment on the island the only hurdles for a nation already well integrated with the bloc.

“I feel that Iceland is making history today by formally starting the negotiation process,” Icelandic Foreign Minister Oessur Skarphedinsson told a news conference.

The two sides launched talks on four of the 35 policy chapters that Iceland must negotiate in order to comply with EU laws and promptly wrapped up two of them, education and science.

Hoping to seize on the early momentum, Skarphedinsson said he planned to open half of the chapters this year, including what he called the two “heavyweight chapters,” agriculture and fisheries, and the rest in 2012.

Iceland applied for EU membership in 2009 in the wake of a catastrophic banking and economic meltdown. It faces fewer obstacles than other EU candidates like Croatia, which is expected to join the bloc in 2013 after EU leaders said Friday it was finally ready following six years of negotiations.

The North Atlantic nation and the 27-country bloc are at odds over fishing rights, with a so-called “mackerel war” heating up late last year after Iceland unilaterally multiplied its catch quota. Brussels then blocked Icelandic fishing boats.

“Today of course it was a small step, an easy step,” Skarphedinsson said, noting that EU membership would have to be approved in a referendum.

“Fisheries indeed will be very difficult because this is the first time that the European Union is negotiating with a country that comes to the table with fisheries as the big, vital, special need,” the minister said.

Thanks to its membership of the European Economic Area, Iceland is already in compliance or partially linked with two-thirds of EU rules, said EU enlargement commissioner Stefan Fule.

“With that kind of alignment already achieved, one would indeed expect no shortcuts but indeed a fast process forward, building on the achievements already done,” Fule said. “No doubt there’s going to be challenging moments ahead of us, but we want to face them together.”

Another contentious issue for Iceland could be an ongoing tiff with Britain and the Netherlands over repayment for the 3.9 billion euros they spent reimbursing 340,000 of their citizens hit by the collapse of the online Icelandic bank Icesave in late 2008.

Icelanders have rejected repayment deals in two referenda. The European Free Trade Association has threatened to drag Iceland to court, while Britain and the Netherlands have hinted they could trip up the country’s EU bid.

The dispute has eased since Iceland said the recovered estates from the failed Landsbanki bank, Icesave’s parent company, would basically allow it to repay Britain and the Netherlands, without tapping into taxpayer money.

Skarphedinsson said the Icesave row turned Icelanders against joining the EU, but it is the fisheries talks that voters are watching. The latest poll shows that 57.3 percent of Icelanders oppose EU membership.

“There is especially one thing that weighs on their mind, that is related to the psyche of the nation and to the soul of everyone in Iceland, and it is the fisheries,” he said. “They have to see the outcome of the fisheries before they are ready to commit themselves.”

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



Italy: MP Elected New Chair of Jewish Parliamentarians Worldwide

Jerusalem, 30 June (AKI) — Conservative Italian lawmaker and journalist Fiamma Nirenstein was on Thursday in Jerusalem elected chair of the International Council of Jewish Parliamentarians.

Sixty-five-year-old Nirenstein, a former journalist, succeeds United States Congressman Gary Ackerman.

World Jewish Congress secretary General Dan Diker congratulated Nirenstein on her appointment, calling her “a patriot of Italy and a true friend of Israel and the Jewish people.”

Italy’s prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, for whose ruling centre-right People of Freedom party Nienstein in an MP, welcomed her election as ICJP chair.

“This prestigious and authoritative role is the culmination of the cultural commitment and political passion in defence of the values of liberty , democracy and freedom that Italy and Israel share, which the Rt. Hon. Nirenstein has always shown,” Berlusconi said.

Italy’s foreign minister Franco Frattini in a statement also welcomed Nirenstein’s election. “It is very good news for Italy and for all those who are committed to the ideals of civility, liberty and freedom,” he said.

Florence-born Nirenstein said she would fight attempts to delegitimise Israel. She is vice-president of the Italian lower house of parliament’s foreign affairs committee and an expert on the Middle East conflict, terrorism and anti-Semitism,

Berlusconi earlier in June urged radical Palestinian Islamist group Hamas to recognise the Jewish state during a visit to Rome earlier this month by Benjamin Netanyahu, prompting the Israeli premier to claim Israel had “no better friend”.

Until she was elected to parliament in 2008, Nirenstein was a columnist and Israel correspondent for Italy’s ‘Il Giornale’ newspaper. She still contributes analysis piece for the daily and for the weekly ‘Panorama’.

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



Italy: Judges Reiterate Wiretaps Are Indispensable Instrument

(AGI) Rome — During a hearing with the Senate’s Justice Commission, the president of the National Judges Council, Luca Palamara, said that wiretaps are an indispensable instrument in gaining proof of crimes, both serious and less seriousones.

Another issue,” he added, “concerns the publication of transcripts which should not be linked to individual cases.” .

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



Italy: 20,000 Tonnes of Waste to be Sent From Naples to Genoa

(AGI) Genoa — Over the next weeks about 20,000 tonnes of rubbish in Naples’ streets will be carried to Genoa. Carlo Senesi, local councillor for waste policies, said “it’s undifferentiated urban solid waste, colelcted in the Neapolitan districts where recycling is done. Therefore, none of the waste sent to Genoa will be humid. Over the past weeks — he added — I spoke, over the phone, to Raphael Rossi, chairman of ASIA (Naples’ local waste-management company), to consider the possibility of helping out Naples”.

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



Italy: Govt’s PDL Party Blames Left for Naples’ Waste Predicament

(AGI) Rome — In comment to the Naples waste crisis, PDL party whip Fabrizio Cicchitto blames the ‘Left’ for past mismanagement. Faced with the current emergency, Fabrizio Cicchitto said today, “government is doing its utmost. Proof of that is the recent fast track bill.” Urging regional governments’ to cooperate in allowing Naples’ urban waste to be offloaded at their landfills, Cicchitto went on to canvass political parties across the board to also provide their cooperation, lamenting “the Left’s undue criticism”, which he characterised as going hand in hand with the Left’s efforts to “try and make public opinion forget that the reason Naples faces its current waste crisis is because of years of mismanagement by the Left.” .

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



Italy Expels Algerian Terrorist Yamine Bouhrama

(AGI) Roma — Interior minister Roberto Maroni has personally signed orders to expel Algerian terrorist Yamine Bouhrama.

Described as “a menace to society”, Bouhrama was repatriated to Algiers today, immediately after his release from jail. News of the expulsion was reported by the interior ministry. Bouhrama was sentenced to years in jail by a Naples court, on January 10, 2008, on international terrorism, false papers, stolen goods and violating a crime scene charges. He was detained at Macomer facilities in Sardinia.

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



Slovakia — Czech Republic: After the Russians, Ecological Disaster

SME, 20 June 2011

“Twenty years without the Russians” On June 21, 1991, as Soviet troops left the territory of Czechoslovakia, 100,000 soldiers and their families and all their military equipment rolled out of more than 70 bases. It was a massive logistical undertaking, photographed by Karel Cudlín and published with a report in the weekly Respekt. In Bratislava, the Slovak daily SME draws up the ecological balance twenty years later: “The Russians left devastation behind them…. After the human wreckage that began with the 1968 occupation, the Soviets went on to ravage the landscape for another 23 years,” writes the paper, calculating that Slovakia has paid out some 40 million euros in the fight against “ecological disaster”, especially pollution from fuels.

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



Switzerland: Ticino Toughens Its Stance Over Italy Tax Spat

The Italian-speaking canton of Ticino says it will temporarily block some tax at source revenues belonging to Italian cross-border workers.

The move is a way of putting pressure on the Swiss government to resolve an ongoing tax dispute with neighbouring Italy.

More than half of the amount of money which should go to Italy — around SFr30 million ($36 million) — is to be frozen in a Swiss bank account. It will stay there until the Swiss government starts negotiations with Italy over a new double taxation agreement, agreed the cantonal government on Thursday evening.

The Swiss finance ministry said that it had taken note of Ticino’s decision and that it was also interested in an end to the tax dispute. Spokesman Mario Tuor told the Swiss news agency that the two sides may restart talks next week.

Switzerland has come under pressure from its neighbours to crack down on tax dodgers and abolish its traditional banking secrecy. Italy, led by Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti, has been particularly vociferous, particularly because Switzerland does not want to include the automatic exchange of information about bank clients in any agreement.

Italy has retained Switzerland on its own black list of tax havens despite the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development having cleared the Swiss 18 months ago. As a result, Italy has increased the amount of red tape for Swiss companies, making it harder for them to do cross-border business.

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



UK: BBC’s Fears for Newsnight as Viewers Hit All-Time Low

BBC bosses have become increasingly concerned about flagship news programme Newsnight after discovering that it can be watched by as few as 166,000 people.

Figures obtained by The Mail on Sunday reveal the BBC2 show’s overnight ratings have dropped to the lowest level in its 31-year history.

The Broadcasters’ Audience Research Board (BARB) says the average audience is now around 450,000 viewers — roughly half what it was a decade ago — with some editions regularly struggling to breach the 200,000 mark.

Official industry ‘snapshot’ figures show that one broadcast, on May 19, had only 166,000 viewers.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: Guardian Columnist Kia Abdullah Tweets Cruel Taunts About the Death of Gap Year Boys

A newspaper journalist who cruelly mocked the the deaths of three teenagers killed on a gap year has been forced to apologise for her grossly insensitive comments on Twitter.

Guardian columnist Kia Abdullah tweeted that she had ‘smiled’ when she heard the news that students Max Boomgaarden-Cook, 20, Bruno Melling-Firth and Conrad Quashie, both 19, had died in a coach crash in Thailand.

The journalist, who has published a controversial book about paedophiles, asked her hundreds of followers if it was ‘awful’ that she felt no sympathy for the death of the three school friends, who had spent months saving for a tour of South-East Asia.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



UK: RAF’s Rare Anti-Nazi Leaflet That Told Truth to Wartime Germany

A rare anti-Nazi leaflet dropped over Germany by the RAF during the Second World War will be presented to the UK Holocaust Centre this week.

The document is one of the few surviving White Rose leaflets produced by brave students at Munich University.

The White Rose resistance movement was behind thousands of copies of the leaflets, which gave details of the Holocaust and supported the ideals of democracy, freedom and religious tolerance.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Croatia: EU Leaders Say Yes, Will be 28th Member State

(ANSAmed) — BRUSSELS, JUNE 24 — Croatia will be the 28th member State of the European Union. This much-awaited decision was taken today in Brussels at the summit of State and government leaders of the 27 EU nations. It was not specified when Croatia will join the EU, but the most likely date is July 1 2013, as expressed by the European Commission. “This is a historic moment”, underlined EU President Herman Van Rompuy, President of the European Commission Jose’ Manuel Barroso and Hungary’s Prime Minister and EU President Viktor Orban, addressing Croatian Premier Jadranka Kosor who is in Brussels to harvest the fruits of six years of hard work. “We expect to conclude the negotiations very soon: by the end of June. We should sign the accession treaty before the end of the year 2011”, said Van Rompuy.

“I hope”, added Barroso, “that everything is ready to welcome Croatia as 28th member State on July 1 2013”. Premier Kosor is pleased: “Croatia has come to the end of a long journey”, he said. Today’s decision “is the greatest gift we could receive for the 20th anniversary of our independence”, June 25 1991. The Croatian Premier continued: “we have had some difficult times since the start of negotiations in 2005, but this shows our neighbours that perseverance and hard work pay off”. The European leaders insisted in their conclusions that Croatia should continue its efforts, “in particular regarding the legal sector and fundamental rights”. They asked the European Commission to monitor the situation until Croatia joins the EU. “No new conditions have been added”, said Van Rompuy, to whom Kosor confirmed his intentions to “continue working hard until and after the accession”. According to the time table, the citizens of Croatia have to give their green light in a referendum after the accession contract is signed halfway December. After that, the EU member States have to ratify the accession, a process that should be concluded by July 2013.

In a wider prospect, the green light given to Croatia certainly sends a clear message to other countries in the region, who will also be welcomed in the Union by the EU leaders if “they continue on the road of reforms”, they specify. “This autumn we will discuss how to proceed with the enlargement procedure with other countries” in the region, said Orban. The Balkan dossier will in fact be on the agenda of the December summit.

Meanwhile, Serbia has received a special sign of encouragement from the EU leaders: in their conclusions they call the arrest of former Bosnian-Serb general Ratko Mladic “a positive step for international justice, as well as for Serbia’s European prospect”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Tunisia: Pact That Bans Normalisation With Israel Adopted

(ANSAmed) — TUNISIA, JULY 1 — Today Tunisia’s commission of political reform announced that it adopted (by majority) a “republican pact” that will be the basis of the future new Constitution, and in particular it states the rejection of any normalisation with Israel.

While announcing the pact the president of the commission, Yadh Ben Achour, did not offer any details, but the Arab speaking Tunisian press published its content, which defines Tunisia as a free and democratic country, whose official language is Arab and whose religion is Islam.

The pact, that will serve as the basis of the future Constitution, categorically rejects “any form of normalisation with the Zionist State”, and supports the Palestinian cause.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Messianic Christian Couple in Israel Accused of Converting Minor

A hard-line Jewish ultra-Orthodox group in Israel that singles out Jewish Christians known as Messianic Jews for harassment and abuse is taking aim at a couple it claims is manipulating minors into becoming Christians.

The group, Yad L’Achim, this week placed leaflets around the home of Serge and Naama Kogen, 37 and 42 respectively, in Mevasseret Zion, a suburban community located just west of Jerusalem. The same week someone took out a full-page ad in a local newspaper giving the couple’s address and telling residents they were part of a missionary group “targeting” the community. The Kogens are native Israelis and hence not part of any missionary group.

During the protest, a distraught 16-year-old girl, the alleged target of the couple’s “missionary” efforts, said all of Yad L’Achim’s claims were false. Donna Lubofsky maintains that she has never converted to Christianity. She wanted to speak at the protest to give her side of what happened, but the organizers wouldn’t let her, she said.

“They are all liars, all liars! Ask them, why won’t they let me speak?” Donna told Compass at the protest. “They won’t let me speak because what they are saying is untrue. They [the Kogens] never tried to get me to believe. They are just good people.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Nasrallah Defends “Brothers” Accused of Hariri Murder

(AGI) Beirut — Shiek Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah, defended the 4 members of the Shiite militia accused of the Hariri homicide. Hassan Nasrallah defended the four accused by the UN Special Court for Lebanon for the death of former Sunnite Premier, Rafiq Hariri, killed with another 22 persons by a bomb February 14th, 2005. Speaking for the first time of the indictment, the leader of the Party of God defined the four “brothers” with a “honorable story”.

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



Saudi Arabia “To Drive Out” All Indonesian Migrants

The decision announced June 30. Jakarta replies that it has pre-empted a decision already taken to stop migration. But experts point out that Riyadh needs the Indonesian workforce and Jakarta has millions of unemployed. Instead safety and rights should be discussed.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Tension remains high between Riyadh and Jakarta in the aftermath of the beheading of an Indonesian woman in Saudi Arabia. The latter has decided to ban Indonesian workers (called Tenga Kerja Indonesia or TKI) from the country, but Indonesia had already decided to bring home the majority of its citizens migrated to Arabia, to ensure their safety.

Riyadh’s decision is effective from today. The Indonesian Minister for Human Resources Muhaimin Iskandar, however, commented on June 30 that “there is no problem, because their decision is in line with our moratorium.” During a debate, he added that “they still need our TKI … so we are not concerned about the decision to ban them.”

President Susilo Bambang Yodhoyono had already promulgated the decision to recall some of the Indonesian workers who have migrated to Arabia, as of August 1. Jakarta aims to protest the beheading its citizen Rubati bin Satupi, carried out by Riyadh in violation of “international standards”, without even informing Indonesia (in the picture: a moment of street protests in Indonesia).

The ban affects about 1.5 million Indonesian migrants who live in Saudi on a regular basis and send home at least 2 trillion rupees a year. Experts believe that the two countries should seek a solution together, rather than take unilateral decisions.

Jumhur Hidayat, head of the Indonesian national office for the placement and safety of TKI, said the Saudi decision is in line with Indonesia to stop this migration, but fears that it “will result in many illegal TKI without official documents.”

Rusdi Basalamah, Secretary General of the Indonesian TKI agency, explains that there are thousands of Indonesian workers who have already applied for a visa and are ready to leave for Saudi.

Muhammad Yunus Yamani, head of the Agency, shows that this situation creates problems for both countries, because “Saudi Arabia has a strong need of our TKI and Indonesia relies heavily on TKI remittances from abroad “.

The National Commission for Human Rights of Women believes that any travel ban will have no effect unless alternative forms of employment are created for millions of unemployed domestic workers.

President Yudhoyono is concerned, however, to ensure the effective presence abroad of the newly created body for the safety of TKIs. He notes that there are at least 200 TKI, who are domestic workers in Saudi Arabia, China, Singapore and Malaysia, subject to charges involving the death penalty. “20% of them — he said yesterday — are involved in murder cases, while others in case of narcotic drugs or sexual abuse.” “The Task Force for the TKI should provide them legal assistance and take all steps to minimize the possibility of death sentence.” “We must ensure that any death sentence is transmuted to life imprisonment.”

Minister Muhaimin Iskandar noted however, that the legal protection abroad is only one problem with TKI to discuss with Riyadh. It is also necessary to mention the minimum monthly wage, which Jakarta has asked be raised to at least 11 thousand reais (around 3 thousand dollars), however, this has met with objections.

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

South Asia


Lega Nord Leader: Afghanistan Mission is Costing Too Much

(AGI) Romano di Lombardia — Umberto Bossi has once again expressed his misgivings about Italy’s involvement in Afghanistan. “The truth is that wars end when the money runs out, and we have no money”. Then he added: “there are too many men involved. They cost too much and I can’t see what principle we are trying to defend”. Bossi also said that Italy has troops “in Libya, and Afghanistan and sometimes they die”.

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



Takeover is the Taliban Plan for Afghanistan

The administration’s plan for Afghanistan may include reconciliation with the Taliban, but the latter have no plans that allow American gains, much less bilateral-negotiations to end the conflict.

It appears that the administration is tangoing with an imaginary partner. Neville Chamberlain’s wishful Sept. 30, 1938 proclamation, “I have returned to Germany with peace in our time,” should serve as a chilling reminder to those who are under the illusion that war is receding which in fact, it is about to escalate into global conflict.

The Taliban strategy is not obscure; most of it has been announced, publicized and is based in ideology, as has been the case with totalitarian movements throughout history. U.S. inability to grasp Taliban plans is not due to the jihadists’ highly-developed denial and deception skills, but rather to the unwillingness or inability of the U.S. and its allies to see it.

The Taliban long-term strategic plan is simple: practice taqiyya to gain terrain and power; resume jihad to eliminate the other forms of governance; and implement their version of Shariah to reverse democracy.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Far East


China Sells Fake Microchips to U.S. Navy

The chips weren’t only low-quality fakes, they had been made with a “back-door” and could have been remotely shut down at any time. If left undiscovered the result could have rendered useless U.S. missiles and killed the signal from aircraft that tells everyone whether it’s friend or foe.

Apparently foreign chip makers are often better at making cheap microchips and U.S. defense contractors are loathe to pass up the better deal. The problem remains with these “trojan-horse” circuits that can be built into the chip and are almost impossible to detect — especially without the original plans to compare them to.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


AU Urges Members to Ignore ICJ Gaddafi Arrest Warrant

(AGI) London — The African Union has called on its members to ignore ICJ arrest warrants issued against Colonel Gaddafi. News of the AU’s resolution is reported by the UK’s SkyNews.

According to the AU the ICJ’s arrest warrant “seriously complicates efforts to find a solution to the Libyan crisis.” Should Union’s 53 members agree to the resolution, Gaddafi will be allowed to freely move within the African continent. Similar resolutions were adopted for Sudan’s Omar el Bashir.

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

Immigration


Hotel in Ogliastra Rejects 18 Refugees

(AGI) Cagliari — A hotel in Lanusei (Ogliastra) rejected 18 African refugees, of the group of 52 that landed this morning.

The hotel manager initially offered to give them shelter, having reached an agreement with Sardinia’s civil defence. The six families with children, the first refugees of the 436 landed in Sardinia and to be given shelter in Ogliastra, were then transferred — following the intervention of the Provincial Council and of Social Services councillor Beniamino Lai — to a hotel in Girasole.

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

Culture Wars


UK: Why Was the Man Behind G-A-Y and Porn Idol a Guest at No 10 Party?

David Cameron is to review No 10’s guest policy after a gay nightclub owner who encourages men to strip naked at ‘Porn Idol’ contests was invited to an official function.

Jeremy Joseph, who runs London’s G-A-Y club, attended a Downing Street event last month designed to celebrate the ‘importance gay people play in national life’.

But his contribution to society includes cajoling young audience members to take their clothes off in front of a baying crowd at the weekly Porn Idol nights he hosts at the Heaven nightclub.

An undercover Mail on Sunday reporter attended the event on Thursday and saw Mr Joseph, 44, encourage contestants to strip naked, using lewd language, and urge the audience to jeer at those who were reluctant to do so.

So his presence at the No 10 reception on June 22 shocked many guests. One said: ‘People were astonished to see Joseph there. Many gay people regard his shows as distasteful.

[Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110702

Financial Crisis
» Euro Bailouts Push Up German Debt
» European Council Accepts 2% Rise in EU 2012 Budget
» Europe Clears Urgent Aid to Save Greece From Default
 
USA
» Blacks in New York Grow Sick of Being Used as Liberal Pawns
» Frank Gaffney: The Tipping Point: Embracing the Muslim Brotherhood
» Obama’s Ineligibility: A Vast Conspiracy Against America
 
Europe and the EU
» Sweden: ‘Hot-Saucing’ Couple to Pay Damages to Their Kids
» UK: Three-Year-Old Car Vandal is Youngest Criminal in Britain
 
Balkans
» Breakthrough in Serbia-Kosovo Talks Delivers First Deals
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Italian Specialists for Botanic Garden
» Gaddafi Threatens Attacks in Europe
» Libya: Leptis Magna: Archaeological Jewel
» Tipasa and the Archaeological Park to Protect
» Who is the Muslim Brotherhood?
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Greek Coast Guard Stops Hamas Flotilla
 
Middle East
» Officials Mum on Pakistani Nukes for Saudis
 
South Asia
» India Offers Free Cars in Return for Sterilization
 
Immigration
» Justice Minister Demands EU Probe Danish Border Controls
» Saddam Hussein’s Torture Doctor Has Been Working in British Hospitals for Seven Years, Immigration Scandal Reveals
» UK: Taxpayers Pick Up £200,000 Bill to Care for Nigerian Mother Who Flew to Britain and Had Quintuplets
 
Culture Wars
» Spain: Gays Ask the Pope to Reconsider His Position
 
General
» Unmasking the ‘International Community’
» Why Faces of Other Races Look Alike

Financial Crisis


Euro Bailouts Push Up German Debt

The strong economy will allow Berlin to significantly reduce state debt in 2012 — but the cost of the EU bailouts means that from 2013 Germany will have to borrow more than previously anticipated.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Council Accepts 2% Rise in EU 2012 Budget

European Union president Poland said Friday that member governments have accepted a two per cent spending hike in the EU’s 2012 budget, much less than the five percent sought earlier this year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Europe Clears Urgent Aid to Save Greece From Default

Eurozone finance ministers cleared the way Saturday for Greece to receive urgent funds to avoid imminent bankruptcy, but warned it would take weeks to conclude a new bailout for the debt-hit nation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Blacks in New York Grow Sick of Being Used as Liberal Pawns

In a sign that the Democratic Party stranglehold over the black community is starting to slip, hundreds of blacks protested in New York this past week against the harmful educational policies that the NAACP and the United Federation of Teachers union are trying to force upon their children.

As reported by Caroline May for The Daily Caller, “charter school parents staged another of several rallies to voice opposition to a lawsuit brought by the UFT and NAACP against the New York City Department of Education. If the organizations are successful with their suit, it would prevent enrollment or re-enrollment in 17 charter schools and stop the closure of 22 public schools.”

The teacher’s union has decided that the plum salaries and benefits enjoyed by their members are more important than whether or not black children receive a good education. They are doing all they can to destroy the charter school movement that has for the first time in generations given minority children a chance to succeed, in order to preserve their monopoly which has decimated the black community with far less than 50% graduation rates in most urban communities.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Frank Gaffney: The Tipping Point: Embracing the Muslim Brotherhood

The Obama administration chose the eve of the holiday marking our Nation’s birth to acknowledge publicly behavior in which it has long been stealthily engaged to the United States’ extreme detriment: Its officials now admit that they are embracing the Muslim Brotherhood (MB or Ikhwan in Arabic). That would be the same international Islamist organization that has the destruction of the United States, Israel and all other parts of the Free World as its explicit objective.

On Thursday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tried to downplay the momentousness of this major policy shift by portraying it during a stopover in Budapest as follows: “The Obama administration is continuing the approach of limited contacts with the Muslim Brotherhood that have existed on and off for about five or six years.” In fact, as former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy points out in a characteristically brilliant, and scathing, dissection of this announcement, Team Obama’s official, open legitimation of the Brotherhood marks a dramatic break from the U.S. government’s historical refusal to deal formally with the Ikhwan.

To understand why the Obama administration’s embrace of the Muslim Brotherhood is so ominous, consider three insights into the organization’s nature and ambitions:…

           — Hat tip: CSP [Return to headlines]



Obama’s Ineligibility: A Vast Conspiracy Against America

I believe Obama and his radical supporters will use all means legal or illegal to win in 2012.

Barack Obama is an illegal President, who has likely committed felonies in office and there is an active conspiracy to prevent the American people from learning the truth.

There is evidence that Obama’s birth documents and Selective Service registrations are forgeries and that he is using a stolen Social Security number.

Yet there are no investigations to ascertain the facts. There is only willful ignorance.

Many of our political leaders and government officials are either actively or passively complicit in this crime against our Constitution and our country.

Attorney Leo Donofrio has documented evidence that Justia.com, the main resource on the web for all things related to United States Supreme Court holdings, has been censoring various references to Minor v. Happersett (1875), the Supreme Court case which proves that Obama is an illegal President.

These revisions, which began prior to the 2008 election, must have been directed by persons with sophisticated legal knowledge and were likely perpetrated by Obama supporters to mislead the American people.

There is no way that it was an accident. As Donofrio writes this is a “red alert moment for our nation.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Sweden: ‘Hot-Saucing’ Couple to Pay Damages to Their Kids

A couple in Norrtälje, north of Stockholm, was sentenced to pay damages to their kids after forcing them to swallow Tabasco sauce as punishment for telling lies.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Three-Year-Old Car Vandal is Youngest Criminal in Britain

A boy of three has become Britain’s youngest vandal after police caught him damaging cars in a street close to his home, it emerged yesterday.

The toddler, who is an astonishing seven years below the age of criminal responsibility, was seen attacking a string of vehicles.

But because of his age — a child only becomes responsible for their actions at the age of 10 — the police were powerless to take any action.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Breakthrough in Serbia-Kosovo Talks Delivers First Deals

Serbia and Kosovo took a giant step to ease mutual tension Saturday, striking deals to overcome nuts-and-bolts problems for citizens caused by Belgrade’s refusal to recognise Pristina’s independence.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Italian Specialists for Botanic Garden

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 14 — After a two-year closure for construction works, the London garden in Biskra, created at the end of the 19th century by a British nobleman and considered to be an ecological treasure, has reopened; hundreds of plant species, including tropical species, are grown within the garden.

The garden, created by Count Albert London de Langeville, has reopened, with investments totalling some 270 million dinars (about 2.5 million euros), thanks to Italian specialists’ contributions, using Algerian technicians and gardeners. According to ‘El Watan’ newspaper, there is a small lake which houses thousands of bird species in the part of the garden which is still under construction and will be opened to the public in a matter of months.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi Threatens Attacks in Europe

Libyan leader tells West to ‘retreat before you face catastrophe,’ threatens to launch attacks in Europe should strikes against him persist. ‘If we decide to, we are able to move to Europe like locusts, like bees,’ Gaddafi says

Gaddafi threatens Europe: A defiant Muammar Gaddafi has threatened to carry out attacks in Europe unless NATO halts its campaign of airstrikes against his regime in Libya.

Gaddafi delivered the warning Friday in an audio message played to thousands of supporters gathered in the main square of the capital Tripoli.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Libya: Leptis Magna: Archaeological Jewel

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 14 — From captivating token from a past that goes back to a thousand years BC and that UNESCO wants to protect against any price, to shield of an unscrupulous army loyal to Muammar Gaddafi, whose days are counted and who has been abandoned by most of the international community. This is the strange story of Leptis Magna — one of the most beautiful archaeological gems in the world — a city that was covered by desert sand for hundreds of years and that was given back its ancient splendour in the archaeological campaign in the twentieth century. Today armed men and vehicles equipped with rocket launchers are moving among the remains of this priceless treasure looking for shelter, in the certainty that NATO airstrikes will avoid hits on what has been a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1982. Together with the ancient city of Ghadames, the rocky sites in the natural park Tadrart Akakus and the archaeological sites of Cyrene and Sabratha, Leptis Magna (130 km south-east of Tripoli) is one of the five wonders of Libya. Created as a Phoenician port around 1100 BC as a hub for the flourishing trade in spices, slaves and animals, Leptis Magna was conquered by the Carthaginians who took it from the Romans during the third Punic War (146 BC) and later it was incorporated by Tiberius in the province of Africa. Under the Romans (who added the word ‘Magna’ to its name ‘Leptis’, it became a large metropolis and reached its highest splendor, with more than 100,000 inhabitants, during the period of Septimius Severus (193 AD) who was born in the city. Together with Tripoli and Sabratha, Leptis Magna is one of the three cities that form the basis of the name Tripolitania. When Tripolitania was conquered by the Arabs in the seventh century, Leptis Magna lost much of its old magnificence and became a shadow of itself. It was completely abandoned by all but a Byzantine garrison. Slowly it was swallowed by the sand. After a century of archaeological campaigns and restoration work the site has recovered its old splendour, which becomes clear when looking at the magnificent arch of Septimius Severus, built in 203 AD for the visit of the emperor to his birth city. But also from the site’s giant Theatre in stone, built between the first and second century AD, considered to be one of the most ancient of the Roman world with an incredible stage decorated with hundreds of sculptures; and the market place with its Gorgon texts sculptured in marble; and the Baths ordered by Hadrian and opened in 137 AD. In the year 2000 several mosaics were uncovered, considered to be among the best conserved in the world.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Tipasa and the Archaeological Park to Protect

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 10 — “No cameras, please. You know the flashes can ruin the sites”. The security official at the entrance to Tipasa archaeological park speaks as if he means business, but when we tell him that we are journalists and not photographers he relaxes.

“You can go in, but no photos,” he repeats. So here is Tipasa, a small village on the Mediterranean coast, about 70 km east of Algiers. The ancient city was founded by the Phoenicians in 1857 BCE on three hills overlooking the sea. Of the original houses, most of which were built on the hill in the middle, no trace is left, but the ruins of three churches are still there, along with two cemeteries, a thermal baths, a theatre and amphitheatre which together make up the archaeological park.

Thanks to its strategic position, (giving the city its name, which meant in Phoenician ‘transit point’), the city earned its place in UNESCO’s world heritage list back in 1982 and it is visited by many tourists every year, attracted not just by the beaches, but also by the remnants of Phoenician, Roman and Christian civilisation. But this sprawling archaeological park is far from well looked after, despite the government’s efforts to invest in tourism over past years, trying at the same time to educate the people of Algeria about the riches present in their own country. And some of the fruits of these efforts are visible in Tipasa. There are plentiful waste bins on the site, as well as signs telling visitors not to leave litter. As well, of course, as the warning about not taking photos. That’s as far as it goes. There are no controls on the ruins themselves, on which the tourists sit posing for photographs, trampling precious mosaics underfoot. “A lot of them have been ruined already. What is the point in preventing people from taking photos when anyone can walk across the ruins?” asks the Algerian guide who often accompanies tourists and journalists to Tipasa and who has witnessed how the city loses another piece of its antique splendour as each year goes by. “There have been improvements: the check point at the entrance being the best one, and the bins and the notices, but these are not enough. You need security guards positioned all over the park and heavy fines for those who despoil it,” he added. Confirming his words, it would appear that a delegation from UNESCO called by on Tipasa not so long ago, making several points about the way the area was being protected.

Tipasa continues to attract tourist every year, but the village, once a transit point for navigators, risks deteriorating and its ruins disappearing. It would be a shame to lose this piece of the mosaic of Algeria’s past.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Who is the Muslim Brotherhood?

The MB has has tried to portray itself as moderate and democratic. But at its core it is anything but. The Brotherhood is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Israel National News thanks StandWithUs for helping bring the Muslim Brotherhood to our readers in its own words: The Muslim Brotherhood logo fits its motto: “Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader. The Qur’an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope. Allahu akbar!”

The Brotherhood’s goal is to turn the world into an Islamist empire. The Muslim Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928, is a revolutionary fundamentalist movement to restore the caliphate and strict shariah (Islamist) law in Muslim lands and, ultimately, the world. Today, it has chapters in 80 countries. “It is in the nature of Islam to dominate, not to be dominated, to impose its law on all nations and to extend its power to the entire planet.” -Muslim Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Greek Coast Guard Stops Hamas Flotilla

[…]

On Friday, the Greek Ministry of Citizen Protection issued a statement saying that the Minister, C. Papoutsis, decided to prohibit the departure of ships flying either Greek or foreign flags “to the maritime area” of Gaza.

“By orders of the Hellenic Coast Guard Head Quarters to all local Hellenic Coast Guard Authorities, all appropriate measures are taken for the implementation of the said decision,” the statement said.

The Greek ministry said that the “broader maritime area of eastern Mediterranean will be continuously monitored by electronic means for tracking, where applicable, the movements of the ships allegedly participating” in the Gaza flotilla.

While Cyprus had already banned ships headed for Gaza from leaving their ports, the Greeks had not taken this measure until Friday.

A flotilla of boats planning to challenge Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip is expected to sail next week, after repeated delays that activists blame on Israeli sabotage. Israel has denied the accusations.

           — Hat tip: 1389AD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Officials Mum on Pakistani Nukes for Saudis

Turki: Iranian bomb ‘could lead to untold and possibly dramatic consequences’

The Department of Defense and the State Department are refusing to comment on the prospect that Pakistan may be in the process of providing a nuclear umbrella for Sunni Saudi Arabia in the event that Shiite Iran decides to build nuclear weapons, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.

Informed regional sources said that Sunni Pakistan was prepared to store nuclear weapons at Saudi bases not only for Saudi use but to protect them in the event of terrorist attacks inside Pakistan — even though the Pakistanis claim their nuclear weapons are well-protected.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

South Asia


India Offers Free Cars in Return for Sterilization

Health officials in the Indian state of Rajasthan are launching a new campaign to try reduce the high population growth in the area.

They are encouraging men and women to volunteer for sterilisation, and in return are offering a car and other prizes for those who come forward.

Among the rewards on offer is the Indian-made Tata Nano — the world’s cheapest car.

[…]

A nationwide campaign was abandoned in the 1970s, however, after complaints that thousands of men and women were forced into having the operation.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Justice Minister Demands EU Probe Danish Border Controls

German Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger has sharply criticised Denmark’s decision to reintroduce border controls and demanded EU officials take action against the Scandinavian country.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saddam Hussein’s Torture Doctor Has Been Working in British Hospitals for Seven Years, Immigration Scandal Reveals

A doctor involved in horrific torture by Saddam Hussein’s henchmen is working in British hospitals.

In an astonishing immigration scandal, border officials have allowed the suspected war criminal to treat thousands of British patients.

Dr Mohammed Kassim Al-Byati was given a permit to work as a doctor in the NHS by the Labour government in 2004.

Checks failed to uncover his history of working for the notorious Iraqi Intelligence Agency, which ran the country in a reign of terror during the Saddam years.

His job was to patch up torture victims so that they could be subjected to more appalling treatment.

In 2007, Al-Byati contacted the Home Office to confess to his horrific past so that he could claim asylum.

But, incredibly, this did not prevent him from carrying on earning tens of thousands of pounds working at a hospital in Wales.

Even now, despite his file being referred to a specialist war crimes unit, he remains cleared by the General Medical Council, and has been working in the West Midlands.

The details have only now been unearthed by Home Secretary Theresa May, who was ‘horrified’ to discover what had been taking place.

She has ordered an urgent inquiry, and is planning changes to the rules to stop any similar cases slipping through the net.

There will also be a shake-up of the UK Border Agency war crimes unit.

Whitehall sources say the case shows the total shambles which UKBA became under Labour.

At its heart lies the Human Rights Act and a little-known EU directive which permitted the doctor to work even when his past was known.

It follows the controversy earlier this week of UKBA failing to stop a banned extremist, Raed Salah, from entering the country.

Under Saddam Hussein’s brutal regime countless Iraqis were tortured, maimed and imprisoned.

Favoured methods used by his secret police included eye-gouging; piercing of hands with an electric drill; suspension from a ceiling; electric shock; rape and other forms of sexual abuse; beating of the soles of feet; mock executions; extinguishing cigarettes on the body, and acid baths.

A case history seen by the Mail shows that Al-Byati arrived in Britain on a six-month visitor visa in January 2000, nine years after the end of the first Gulf War which left Saddam in power.

Officials twice extended his leave to stay so he could undertake clinical attachments as a doctor.

In January 2004, by which time Iraq had been invaded again, a work permit was granted and he was employed at a hospital in Wolverhampton until February 2007.

At this point, Al-Byati claimed asylum. In his witness statement he says he worked for the Iraqi Intelligence Agency.

In March 2007, while being interviewed by UKBA, Al-Byati stated that he patched people up after torture and was aware that the victims were returning to torture, but did not feel he could do anything about it.

A month later, his file was referred to the war crimes unit.

In 2008, he applied for permission to work as he had the offer of a four-month contract with a hospital in Wales.

Normally, asylum seekers are barred from working. But there is an EU directive that allows an asylum seeker to work if the case has not been dealt with for 12 months or more through no fault of their own.

As a result, since 2008 Al-Byati has been working full-time as a locum registrar and occasionally as a consultant in the West Midlands.

The scandal was unearthed because UKBA has just given advice to its chief executive that Al-Byati should be granted leave to remain, or asylum.

At this point, the stunned Home Secretary was made aware of what was happening. Leave to remain has not been granted.

A senior source said: ‘The Home Secretary was horrified to find out that this has been allowed to carry on for so long. She dragged the acting chief executive into her office and he got the hairdryer treatment.’

The source continued: ‘We always knew that Labour let the immigration system get out of control but we were genuinely stunned. The Home Secretary is seriously considering having a review of the way the entire agency works.’

The Home Secretary has also been demanding answers from the GMC, which is supposed to check a doctor’s background, but has been frustrated by slow response.

One perversity of the asylum system is that the worse the crimes an applicant has been involved in, the more likely he is to be allowed to stay.

He can claim that, if sent back to the country where the offences were committed, he may be subjected to degrading treatment, which is not allowed under the Human Rights Act.

In the past some asylum seekers have made their past exploits sound worse to bolster their case.

A report last year branded Britain a ‘safe haven’ for war criminals with hundreds of people wanted for murder and torture living here free from prosecution.

The GMC said last night: ‘We have recently become aware of concerns regarding this doctor.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



UK: Taxpayers Pick Up £200,000 Bill to Care for Nigerian Mother Who Flew to Britain and Had Quintuplets

A Nigerian mother who flew into Britain when she learned she was pregnant and had quintuplets has cost taxpayers an estimated £200,000.

The health tourism row erupted after it emerged Bimbo Ayelabola, 33, has asked the Home Office for a six-month extension of her visa which expired last Monday.

She claims that the children — boys Tayseel and Samir, and girls, Aqeelah, Binish and Zara — are too fragile to take back to Nigeria.

They were born at Homerton Hospital, in Hackney, east London, by caesarian surgery at 32 weeks on April 28.

Ayelabola also says that all her friends and family live in the UK and she has no ‘support network’ in Lagos where she lived.

Her husband visited her in hospital but flew back home after discovering it was a multiple pregnancy and he faced having to care for his big family.

She said: ‘If I go back I’ll be on my own without even a roof over my head.’

Ayelabola, now living in a two-bedroom flat in Poplar, east London, was reported to have been taking twice the prescribed dose of a fertility drug when she became pregnant.

Soon after discovering she was expecting, Ayelabola quickly obtained a UK visitors’ visa. On arrival, she had an emergency NHS scan which showed she was expecting quads.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Spain: Gays Ask the Pope to Reconsider His Position

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 10 — The Spanish Federation of gays, lesbians, transsexuals and bisexuals (Felgtb) wrote a letter to the Pope asking him to “reconsider his position” on homosexual and transsexual relations and to the president of the Spanish Episcopal Confederation, cardinal Antonio Maria Rouco Varela, to set up a meeting to “converge on positions”. The letter, as explained to the media by Felgtb president Antonio Poveda, appeals to Benedict XVI to “review his position on relation between people of the same sex and between transsexuals and support the request that these be blessed by the Church. It means that the Church should not take 500 years to recognise the human rights of our community”. An identical letter will be delivered to Catholic authorities in 25 European cities, Vatican City included. The federation’s representatives ask the Spanish Episcopal Confederation to set up a meeting “where we can share points of view and converge on positions that would allow the softening of unnecessary tensions in a democratic society where everyone can fit in”. Along with the letter, Felgtb delivered to Rouco Varela a dossier carried out by the Institute of Youth on figures of the Sociological research centre (Cis) that reports an increase in homophobia amongst the younger generations and the fact that most of the people that discriminate gays and transsexuals state that they are practising Catholics.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

General


Unmasking the ‘International Community’

For many years, the Left in Israel and throughout the world has upheld the so-called “international community” as the arbiter of all things. From Israel’s right to exist to climate change, from American world leadership to genetically modified crops, the Left has maintained that the “international community” is the only body qualified to judge the truth, lawfulness, goodness and justice of all things.

Most of those who uphold this view see the United Nations as the embodiment of the “international community.”

[…]

A glance at UN affairs in recent days is revealing.

Last week UN members elected Qatar President of the General Assembly and Iran one of the body’s vice presidents. Both countries’ representatives will use their platform to advance their regimes’ anti-American, anti-Israel and anti-Western agendas.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Why Faces of Other Races Look Alike

The brain works differently when memorizing the face of a person from one’s own race than when attempting to remember the face of someone of another race, new biological evidence suggests. The well-documented “other-race effect” finds that people are less likely to remember a face from a racial group different from their own. Northwestern University researchers set out to determine what causes this rift in perception and memory by using electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings, which measure brain activity, while participants viewed photos of various faces. The researchers found that brain activity increases in the very first 200 to 250 milliseconds when seeing both same-race and other-race faces. Previous research has associated this very early phase, known as the N200 brain potential, with the perceptual process of individuation. That process involves making out the unique facial features of each person, such as the shape of their eyes and nose.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110701

Financial Crisis
» Double Standards: Greek-Style Austerity Would be Hell for Germans
» European Budget: Crisis to Change Rules for Structural Funds
» Italian Govt Poised to Approve Austerity Measures
» Italian Cabinet Passes Austerity Package
» Poland Demands Seat at Eurozone Meetings
» Spain: Government Gives in to Indignados, Changes Debt Rules
» U.S. Leaders Seek Immigrant “Savants” To Jumpstart American Economy
» Weeklong Rally Lifts Dow Index by 5.4%
 
USA
» Bogus Obama Document ‘Bigger Than Watergate’
» Bully Pres in His Bully Pulpit
» Is Democracy Viable?
» Since When Are July 4th Parades Right Wing?
 
Europe and the EU
» EU Chides Italy for Naples Trash Crisis
» EU Hires 65 Spin Doctors at Taxpayer Expense
» Geert Wilders: A Voltaire for Our Times?
» Germany: ‘A Reversal of the Nuclear Phase-Out is Hard to Imagine’
» Germany: The Pharaoh of Thuringia: Archaeologists Puzzle Over Opulent Prehistoric Burial Find
» Germany: Friedrich Warns of Political Violence
» Italy: Politician Posts 10kg of Trash to Naples Mayor
» Polish Leader Warns About ‘New Euroscepticism’
 
Balkans
» Europe Tires of Albania’s Two-Year Political Deadlock
 
North Africa
» Egypt: ‘Harassment of Christian Girls’ Sparks Sectarian Strife
» Egypt: Thousands in Tahrir Square, Demanding Trials
» Libya: Gaddafi Calls Up Shamans Against Rebels
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Gazans Unimpressed by Flotilla
 
Middle East
» Iran: Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence for Christian Priest
» Iran: Ahmadinejad Cousin Arrested for ‘Corruption’
 
South Asia
» Pakistan: Islamabad Abolishes Minority Affairs Ministry, As Bhatti Murder Could Go Unpunished
» Thailand: Car Blown Sky High as Bomb Disposal Officer Investigates in Narathiwat
 
Australia — Pacific
» Osama a ‘Folk Hero’ And ‘Resistance Fighter’ To Some Supporters in Sydney
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» African Union Will Not Act on Gaddafi Arrest Warrant
» Audio: Violence Surges After Muslim President Takes Reins
 
Immigration
» ‘Corrosion of the Freedom to Travel’: Denmark to Reintroduce Border Controls on Tuesday
» EU Reviews Denmark’s Border Control Plan
» Nigeria: FG to Open Consulates in California, Others Soon
 
Culture Wars
» Germany: Greens Call for Action on ‘Toxic’ Dildos
» LA USD Declares Homework Racist, Classist
» Safer Sex: Greens Warn Against Dangerous Dildos
 
General
» Mind-Reading Scientists Predict What a Person is Going to Do Before They Do it
» Swedish Ships Take Up Arms to Combat Pirates

Financial Crisis


Double Standards: Greek-Style Austerity Would be Hell for Germans

Tough times are ahead for the Greeks, with the government raising taxes, cutting social benefits and selling off state enterprises. Berlin has led the European pack in demanding the measures from Athens. But economists say Germany would be overwhelmed if it were forced to implement similar measures.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Budget: Crisis to Change Rules for Structural Funds

“Brussels has acknowledged that the rules for structural funds will be modified to provide support for countries like Portugal,” reports the Lisbon daily Público. It explains that the European Commission is planning to present a proposal that will allow for a reduction of national governments’ contributions to projects benefitting from structural funds after 2014. This should ease the financing difficulties experienced by countries like Portugal and Greece.

As it stands, explains Público, “European rules dictate that structural funds to support development of the poorest EU countries must be co-financed, to the tune of 15% to 25%, by national governments.” However, the crisis and the austerity polices adopted by the majority of member states “have severely limited their capacity to benefit from European aid.” As of last week, the Commission has proposed that Greece be allowed to reduce its contribution to the structural funds, and that similar conditions should apply, starting in 2014, to all countries that benefit from structural funds.

The European Commission is set to launch the debate on the 2014-2020 EU budget on 29 June, and is also proposing to freeze spending at the 2007-2013 level. Policies described as “future-oriented” — research, innovation, education and neighbourhood policies — will nonetheless be granted budget increases, as will justice and interior affairs.

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



Italian Govt Poised to Approve Austerity Measures

Tough package aims to eliminate budget deficit by 2014

(ANSA) — Rome, June 30 — Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s cabinet was poised on Thursday to approve austerity measures designed to eliminate Italy’s budget deficit by 2014 and stop the country getting sucked into the Greek debt crisis.

The budget aims to generate 47 billion euros in savings, with ministries and local authorities facing cuts, and tax breaks for companies and families being reduced too.

Key measures include tax increases on bank trading activities and a new levy on financial transactions.

But a plan was scrapped to bring forward a raise in women’s retirement age, which is set to gradually increase from 60 to 65 as of 2020.

“The budget leaves a hole in the 2013-2014 period, a question mark, which is a time bomb,” said Pier Luigi Bersani, the leader of the biggest opposition group, the Democratic Party, presumably referring to a lack of specifics in some areas.

“It will all turn into cuts in social services. They have not addressed the problem for three years”.

The budget was set to be approved at cabinet level after Berlusconi managed to soothe over tensions with his Northern League allies, who had been calling for tax cuts to boost the centre-right government’s popularity after heavy defeats recently in local elections and in four referendums. Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti had also come under fire from fellow members of Berlusconi’s People of Freedom (PdL) party for his drive for fiscal prudence. But Tremonti’s position has prevailed amid concerns Italy risks being dragged into the financial turbulence that has hit Greece, Spain, Ireland and Portugal, although big obstacles await the budget in the Italian parliament.

Rating agencies Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s have warned they could downgrade the credit rating of Italy, which is also struggling with low growth and has a national debt of 120% of gross domestic product (GDP), one of the biggest in the world.

“The situation of the public finances and our country’s low growth prospects are weakness factors that, despite the solidity of our banking sector, make us vulnerable to contagion from the Greek crisis,” Giuseppe Vegas, the head of Italy’s stock-market watchdog, said Thursday. The government has said a plan to reduce taxes and simplify the fiscal system is in the pipeline.

Italy’s budget deficit is forecast to fall to 3.9% of GDP this year, compared to 4.6% in 2010, thanks to measures already in place.

Tuscany Governor Vasco Errani, the head of the conference of Italian regional governments, said he was “very worried” about there being major implications for services provided by local governments, who are set to receive 9.7 billion euros less in the 2013-2014 period because of the austerity measures.

The Culture Minister was set to be exempted from the cuts, after being hit hard in pervious budgets, and draft budget featured a measure that would enable taxpayers to allocate a section of their taxes to the culture sector.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italian Cabinet Passes Austerity Package

The Italian cabinet on Thursday passed a series of austerity measures aimed at balancing the budget by 2014 and stopping the eurozone crisis spreading.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Poland Demands Seat at Eurozone Meetings

Poland on Friday said it was at odds with the eurozone over Warsaw’s right as a non-member but current EU president to take part in meetings of the 17-nation currency bloc on solving its lumbering debt crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Government Gives in to Indignados, Changes Debt Rules

The Spanish government led by the Socialist Prime Minister, José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, has today adopted new rules to protect families who have been unable to keep up mortgage repayments since the beginning of the financial crisis, one of the key demands made by the “indignados” movement. The deputy Prime Minister, Alfredo Rubalcaba, said after the weekly meeting of ministers that the new rule increases the share of a family’s monthly income that is not subject to obligatory repayment to banks of the remainder of the mortgage after property has been seized. The minimum income that will not be affected by repayment obligations has risen from 700 to 961 euros, and stands at 1,350 euros if the mortgage is paid by at least two people. The Zapatero government has also ruled that houses put up for sale due to non-repayment of mortgages cannot be sold for less than 60% of the initial price (against the current figure of 50%).

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



U.S. Leaders Seek Immigrant “Savants” To Jumpstart American Economy

Michigan’s Republican Gov. Rick Snyder (left), a former computer executive/entrepreneur, now in his first elective office, has seized upon an idea he believes will dig the state out of its unemployment quagmire — one that’s among the highest in the country. He announced June 21 that he will be looking to “foreign-born engineers, scientists, and cutting-edge tech savants” to jumpstart Michigan’s business and commerce. All kinds of data, he says, support his concept, Global Michigan Initiative. He points to Silicon Valley in particular as having launched some one-half of its computer and silicon chip businesses with immigrant technical wizards.

The real question, though, is what this says about the American-born population’s level of knowledge, creativity, innovative determination, and work ethic. More specifically, what does it say about American schools?

As for job/career readiness, to which some might include “work ethic,” youngsters today are urged to become “team players” — reminiscent of the old Soviet Comintern’s “collective spirit” — not individual achievers. This has far-reaching implications for innovation and creativity. The child learns primarily to be well-liked and not to “make waves” as opposed to being accomplished, well-rounded, and having a grasp of basic disciplines that will catapult the pupil to professionalism in a field later on.

A few outspoken leaders within the U.S. Department of Education admit that American schoolchildren are not held to the standards that many foreign countries demand of their pupils. Pascal D. Forgione, Jr., Ph.D., U.S. Commissioner of Education Statistics, declared in a speech that even if a school is said to compare well on SAT scores, it probably is “lightweight on the international scale.” (That speech has now been removed from the Internet: For proof that it existed see here.) In referring to ongoing educational decline, Dr. Forgione says: “By the time our students are ready to leave high school — ready to enter higher education and the labor force — they are doing so badly with science [that] they are significantly weaker than their peers in other countries… Our idea of “advanced” is clearly below international standards.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Weeklong Rally Lifts Dow Index by 5.4%

American stock markets wrapped up one of their strongest weeks in two years with further gains on Friday, erasing their losses from earlier in June. An unexpected upturn in manufacturing and easing of concerns about a public-debt default in Greece were the driving forces.

The Dow industrials closed on Friday at 12,582.77, a gain of 1.36 percent for the day and 5.4 percent for the week, in preliminary figures. The broader S.&P. 500 did even better, gaining 1.44 percent on Friday and 6 percent for the week.

[Return to headlines]

USA


Bogus Obama Document ‘Bigger Than Watergate’

‘Not just a crime of some plumbers breaking into an opponent’s office’

A retired U.S. military commander who brought a court challenge to Barack Obama’s tenure in the Oval Office says the mounting evidence indicating the “Certificate of Live Birth” he released in April is fake should shock the American public.

“If everyone was intellectually honest, they would admit those images put on the Internet are forgeries,” said CDR Charles Kerchner, whose lawsuit that alleged Congress failed in its constitutional duty to make sure the man elected president was eligible for the office, was turned down by the U.S. Supreme Court.

He cited the work released this week by longtime Adobe software book author and computer expert Mara Zebest.

Kerchner believes there’s evidence Obama’s placement in the White House was orchestrated, and now that the façade that was created for him is cracking, no holds are barred.

“He’s desperate,” Kerchner told WND. “He’ll do anything to survive. He’s way overconfident that the media is never going to do a thing to investigate [and] so far he’s right.”

However, he said, “At some point the truth is going to come out and the house of cards is going to fall.”

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Bully Pres in His Bully Pulpit

Rarely, if ever, has a sitting president displayed so many examples of so many qualities so unbecoming as were flagrantly displayed at his June 29 press conference.

The purpose of the event was to chide Republicans into voting to raise the debt-ceiling before the August 2nd deadline. Obama said:

“The fact that we’re here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign—is a sign of leadership failure. Leadership means the buck stops here. Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better. I therefore intend to oppose the effort to increase America’s debt limit.”

Ooooops! That’s what Obama said in 2006.

On June 29th,2011, it was a different story. According to the new revised version, Obama now says that if Republicans won’t vote to raise the debt ceiling, soldiers won’t get paid. Social security checks won’t be mailed, babies will have no milk. The markets will fall, the global economy will collapse, and the world will go to hell in a hand-basket — and it will all be the fault of the nasty Republicans.

What a load of crap, delivered on national television no less.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Is Democracy Viable?

Frivolity and short-sightedness threaten our ability to keep this republic.

The media have recently been so preoccupied with a congressman’s photograph of himself in his underwear that scant attention has been paid to the fact that Iran continues advancing toward creating a nuclear bomb, and nobody is doing anything that is likely to stop them.

Nuclear weapons in the hands of the world’s leading sponsor of international terrorism might seem to be something that would sober up even the most giddy members of the chattering class. But that chilling prospect cannot seem to compete for attention with cheap behavior by an immature congressman, infatuated with himself.

[…]

While the convention that was writing the Constitution of the United States was still in session, a lady asked Benjamin Franklin what the delegation was creating. “A republic, madam,” he said, “if you can keep it.”

In the middle of the next century, Abraham Lincoln still posed it as a question whether “government of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish from the earth.” Years earlier, Lincoln had warned of the dangers to a free society from its own designing power-seekers — and how only the vigilance, wisdom, and dedication of the public could preserve their freedom.

But, today, few people seem to see such dangers, either internally or internationally.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Since When Are July 4th Parades Right Wing?

Who can object to a patriotic parade but an irrational, anti-American progressive from Harvard who finds somehow that a 4th of July parade is a political stunt aimed at garnering new converts to the Republican Party?

David Yanagizawa-Drott published his three key findings in a recent Harvard Kennedy School of Government study:

  • Attendees to the July 4th parades before the age of 18 are likely to identify as Republicans by a “whopping” 2 percent
  • People watching parades are “likely” to vote as Republicans by another “whopping” 4 percent
  • Parade “revelers” will “likely” make a contribution of 3 percent to Republicans

Since when is patriotism, joy, and pride of being American, of celebrating 235 years of history, accomplishments, and fantastic success right-wing and for sale? It is if you are a “progressive” who is anti-American and tries to tarnish American values and symbols under the faux, pseudo-scientific guise of research for research’s sake. Could it be because Yanagizawa-Drott is a mere Assistant Professor and on a quest to raise his status to Associate Professor by taking cheap shots at the GOP and freedom loving Americans?

Paul Bedard, the author of the article, recommends, “Democratic political candidates can skip this weekend’s July 4th parades.” Celebrations are going to boost GOP turnout on Election Day and turn children into Republicans, so why waste your time attending if you are a Democrat.

Could it be because a large majority of Americans loves their country, its history, its national anthem, its flag, and its symbolism? Could it be that Americans respect all branches of the military and the sacrifices they have made throughout its storied existence?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


EU Chides Italy for Naples Trash Crisis

Government denies health risks

(ANSA) — Naples, June 28 — After 20 trash fires in Naples raged into the morning, the European Union criticized the Italian government Tuesday for the relentless trash crisis, threatening sanctions.

“Recent events show that the Italian authorities have yet to find an adequate or definitive solution to the problem,” said Janez Potocnik, European Commissioner for the Environment, threatening “pecuniary sanctions” if Italy failed to properly resolve the crisis.

The government, which has promised to find a solution to the problem in a Thursday cabinet meeting, insisted that the health concerns in Naples are not grave.

“There is no danger of an epidemic or of particular infections,” said Health Minister Ferruccio Fazio.

“Except maybe some gastroenteritis,” he added, which is a severe inflammation of the stomach and intestines resulting in acute diarrhea and vomiting.

Hundreds from the Naples region of Campania protested in front of the House Monday, blaming the local mafia and the government for the situation, hoisting signs that read “Naples will become a huge land fill”.

The mayor of Naples, Luigi De Magistris, said last week that the open garbage clogging the streets and passageways did pose serious health risks.

Authorities have removed 130 tonnes of rubbish since Monday, bringing the total amount of uncollected trash down to 1,430 tonnes.

Italian President Giorgio Napolitano recently said that the central government had to intervene to resolve the crisis.

Last week, armed police escorts began accompanying garbage trucks as exasperated protesters resorted to tipping over dumpsters, blocking traffic and setting fire to the growing piles of waste that continue to choke the daily flow of city life.

Naples and the surrounding region of Campania have suffered similar crises periodically for a number of years.

The previous public outcry occurred last November when weeks of clashes and rising trash piles brought Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to the city.

It was then that the premier, who won plaudits by sorting out a similar emergency in 2008, made a vow to clear the streets in three days.

But the problems have returned partly because of technical failures in local incinerators and the lack of investment in other landfill sites.

The issue is further complicated by the role of the local mafia, or Camorra, and claims that they have infiltrated waste management in Naples and dumped toxic waste on sites near residential areas.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



EU Hires 65 Spin Doctors at Taxpayer Expense

Austerity might be on the menu in most capitals of the European Union, but in Brussels the institutions are still hiring.

Ever conscious of the need to battle Euro-scepticism and sharpen up its image, the EU has begun recruiting around 65 spin-doctors, or ‘communications specialists’.

Those boasting the appropriate language skills, a background as a journalist, press officer or communications consultant and a willingness to persevere with verbal, numeric and abstract reasoning tests can look forward to a starting salary of 4,267 Euros a month (£3,855), plus perks.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Geert Wilders: A Voltaire for Our Times?

Trouw Amsterdam

Geert Wilders’s acquittal of hate speech charges may open up a new trend in Europe. Now that governments have stopped defending multiculturalism, critics of Islam can come back out into the open, writes a Dutch intellectual pleased with the decision

Thierry Baudet

In acquitting Geert Wilders the Dutch judge bucked a European trend. Despite years of intolerance towards any criticism of Islam, the Netherlands are honouring their tradition of ensuring a sanctuary for open debate. In western European countries over the past few years, things have been quite different: sworn opponents of Islam have been condemned for expressing their views.

Early in May in Denmark, for example, Lars Hedegaard, the ideologue of the Danish People’s Party, was sentenced on appeal for saying that “girls in Muslim families get raped by their uncles, their cousins, or fathers,” and that “if a Muslim rapes a woman, he has the right. It’s part of his culture.”

On 15 February in Vienna, Elisabeth Wolff-Sabaditsch was fined for calling Muhammad, the founder of Islam, a “paedophile”. According to the Austrian court, Mohammad’s marriage to Aisha, who was nine years old at the time, could not be equated with paedophilia, because that would be “disparaging” to the “religious doctrines” of Islam, especially since the marriage continued after Aisha turned 18.

Comparable verdicts for comments critical of Islam were also handed down in France, Belgium and England. Jean-Marie Le Pen was indicted for saying: “The day when we have not five million but 25 million Muslims in France is the day they will be in charge. And the French will hug the walls and scuttle down the street with their eyes on the ground.” Mark Anthony Norwood had to remove from her window a poster that read “Islam out of Britain”. And Belgium’s Daniel Feret, declared ineligible to stand for public election for ten years, was ordered to perform community service in the field of integration. He had called for the “repatriation” of immigrants who he said were “criminals” and demanded that social benefits be given only to Belgians and “Europeans”. When passing down these judgments the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg held that a “legitimate purpose” was being furthered and that the restriction of freedom of expression was, in this case, “necessary in a democratic society.”

Curious, because in none of these cases were there any calls for violence. According to the national courts, the statements overstepped the mark because they incited “hatred” or “discrimination” — concepts that can easily stretch and be used to silence unwelcome political views.

If for a long time it was hard to utter any criticism of Islam, it was because such criticisms were not compatible with multiculturalism. Yet now that leaders such as Cameron, Aznar, Sarkozy and Rutte have all subscribed to the surprising conclusion reached in 2010 by Angela Merkel, who said that “the multicultural society has completely failed,” criticism of Islam is once again allowed.

With the acquittal of Geert Wilders on Thursday, June 23, the Netherlands has become the first country in western Europe where legal authority has drawn explicit conclusions from the abandonment of multiculturalism. The Netherlands have lived up to their reputation of being a haven of tolerance for free speech.

Indeed, for a long time, the writings of countless critics of religion, from Spinoza to Voltaire, could only be published in Holland, while elsewhere in Europe they were banned. The repressive elite of that era who wanted to suppress criticism by resorting to the courts could only keep the ban in place up to the late 18th century. In the end, what had begun as a critical debate gained momentum and led to the French Revolution. A similar development could threaten the European elites of today.

Whether multiculturalism is a good idea or not, whether Islam is a political ideology or a peaceful religion and whether Muhammad was a paedophile or not, none of these ideas should be imposed or prohibited. This can only lead to a radicalisation of opinions. Only open debate can be permitted to decide these issues, and the parties that have been offended or injured can then try to persuade the critics of Islam of their alleged wrongs by force of argument.

If Wilders had been found guilty on Thursday, June 23 — even if only on a single statement — the authority of the judiciary as a whole would have been weakened yet again. Such a decision would have ushered in years of more legal jousting, which would have led to increased politicisation of the courtrooms. It would seem therefore that the judge proved conciliatory just in time. The question is: after this reasonable verdict, which European country will follow suit?

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



Germany: ‘A Reversal of the Nuclear Phase-Out is Hard to Imagine’

It’s been tried before, but this time Germany means it: In about a decade, the world’s fourth-largest industrial nation will have to get by without atomic energy, following parliament’s approval of the government’s nuclear phase-out plans on Thursday. German commentators agree there is no going back.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: The Pharaoh of Thuringia: Archaeologists Puzzle Over Opulent Prehistoric Burial Find

When archeologists recently excavated a 3,800-year-old palace near the eastern German city of Weimar, they discovered about 100 valuable weapons buried next to a massive structure. Now they are puzzling over how an ancient chieftain buried nearby became so rich.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Friedrich Warns of Political Violence

German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich warned on Friday that both right and left-wing extremists pose a growing threat to the nation’s security, even though political violence actually decreased last year.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Politician Posts 10kg of Trash to Naples Mayor

Albenga, 1 July (AKI) — A local politician in the northwestern Italian town of Albenga sent 10 kilogrammes of garbage by express mail to Naples newly-elected mayor Luigi De Magistris on Friday. The stunt was a protest at the southern city’s ongoing trash crisis and a newly approved decree allowing the surrounding Campania region to ‘export’ its trash to other areas of Italy.

“If De Magistris doesn’t know how to dispose of the rubbish and wants to learn how make people play by the rules, he should call his fellow mayors, including ours,” said the stunt’s author, Albenga’s social services city councillor Eraldo Ciangherotti, cited by the Northern Leagues’ La Padania newspaper,

“In 2010, the citizens of Albenga paid no less than 4.8 million euros for the collection and disposal of their garbage,” Ciangherotti added. “If every town council can manage its waste, so can Naples.”

La Padania ran a front-page headline on Friday that read: ‘Not a single sack of Neapolitan rubbish in the regions governed by the Northern League’.

The Italian parliament Thursday approved a decree allowing Naples and the surrounding Campania region to send its trash for disposal in to other regions, a move vehemently opposed by the Northern League.

The junior partner in Italy’s ruling conservative coalition, the Northern League now governs the northern Piedmont and Veneto regions and is the biggest party in Veneto and one of the largest throughout northern Italy.

Naples’ garbage crisis has sparked widespread environmental and health concerns since 2008. Officials say it was originally caused by an underdeveloped garbage disposal infrastructure and grip of the mafia on the waste disposal sector.

De Magistris in May won the election for Naples’s mayoral office in a landslide upset over a candidate supported by Italy’s conservative prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi. Once in office, the former prosecutor was widely lampooned for his failing to keep his promise to clean up the garbage in “4-5 days.”

Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi has also drawn criticism for several similar promises.

The prolonged crisis has sparked periodic protests in the city. This week, residents burned piles of uncollected garbage, filling the skies of the city with black smoke, and called for the resignation of political leaders including Berlusconi.

The European Union has warned that it will impose fines against Italy if it does not resolve the problem.

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



Polish Leader Warns About ‘New Euroscepticism’

The financial crisis and Arab Spring migrants have given rise to a “new euroscepticism” inside the union, Polish leader Donald Tusk has warned as Poland takes over the EU presidency. Contrasting a new breed of hypocrisy with the old “ideological” EU-pessimism in the UK, Tusk said continental leaders have begun aggressively protecting national interests despite their pro-EU rhetoric.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Europe Tires of Albania’s Two-Year Political Deadlock

Two years to the day since Albania’s disputed parliamentary elections, European fatigue has set in over the Balkan country’s longest-running political crisis in two decades.

“Europeans are tired of Albania. It is up to it [Tirana] to take over its responsibilities,” a diplomat from Brussels told AFP, summing up the attitude of the European Union, which Albania hopes to join in the near future.

“I don’t see the situation improving,” EU enlargement commissioner Stefan Fule has said.

The country’s political stand-off was triggered when the Socialist Party led by Tirana mayor Edi Rama claimed electoral fraud and demanded a recount of votes cast in the June 2009 legislative poll.

The ruling Democrats, led by Prime Minister Sali Berisha, have repeatedly rejected the demands of the opposition, which boycotted parliament before a partial delegation returned to the assembly.

Every Albanian election since the fall of communism in the early 1990s has been marred by accusations of fraud.

Albert Rakipi of the Institute for International Studies in Tirana, a non-governmental research body, said there was little sign of resolution “with the majority and opposition accusing each other of causing the current situation.”

“This could endanger the European perspectives of the country,” he added.

Albania has said it would like to achieve EU candidate status by the end of this year.

But as the stalemate continues, many key decisions that demand a three-fifths parliamentary majority are blocked due to the absent opposition lawmakers.

These include laws on judicial and economic reform, such as the fight against organized crime and corruption, sought by Brussels as a precondition for Tirana joining the bloc.

Attempts by Europe as well as the United States to mediate the crisis have failed to yield any results as Berisha and Rama remain at loggerheads.

In January the crisis turned violent when four people were killed and several injured in clashes at an anti-government protest in the capital.

Some are taking advantage of the stalemate, as evidenced by the number of illegal buildings being constructed, including on the Adriatic coast in the past month, local media reported.

The international community had hoped that May 8 local elections would be a chance for Albania to show some political maturity. But as usual the vote count was contested in several areas, including Tirana.

Incumbent Rama, the proclaimed winner of Tirana’s mayoral race, was dethroned after a second vote count by ruling coalition candidate Lulezim Basha.

Rama had been declared the winner by just 10 votes, but several recounts of ballots mistakenly cast in the wrong polling boxes, initially considered invalid, later yielded a 95-vote victory for Basha.

Rama claimed the outcome had been “manipulated” and dismissed the process as illegitimate.

Europe has insisted on a complete reform of Albania’s electoral system. The opposition however has refused to even consider the issue until authorities recognize Rama as Tirana mayor.

“It is evident that a comprehensive reform of the electoral code is needed and must be carried out by the ruling majority together with the opposition and the civil society,” Fule told the European Parliament earlier this month. “This can only be achieved if political parties… find a way to talk together. Confrontational rhetoric will only increase tension in the country.”

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

North Africa


Egypt: ‘Harassment of Christian Girls’ Sparks Sectarian Strife

Samalout, 1 July (AKI) — Security forces on Friday quelled sectarian clashes that broke out late Thursday in central Egypt after local Muslims allegedly harassed some Christian girls, Al Masry Al Youm daily reported.

Eyewitnesses said fighting began in the village of Qolosna in Upper Egypt’s Minya Governorate after several Muslim taxi drivers reportedly bothered a group of Christian girls.

Shots were fired in the air and the injured — four Christians and three Muslims, according to security sources — were taken to hospital in the nearby town of Samalout.

Security sources said 10 people were arrested over the clashes and are being investigated.

Eyewitnesses said the military had imposed a local curfew starting after Friday afternoon prayers.

Coptic Christians account for about 10 percent of Egypt’s population and have been repeatedly targeted by Muslim extremists.

As recently as last week, hundreds of extremist Muslims surrounded a church in a village 7 kilometres south of Minya and threatened to kill the local priest, the Assyrian International News Agency reported. The extremists began targeting the church iin March after renovation work began, threatening to demolish the church.

Twenty-four people were killed and around 100 injured in a New Year’s Eve bombing of a Coptic church in the northern Egyptian port city of Alexandria.

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



Egypt: Thousands in Tahrir Square, Demanding Trials

Thousands of protesters, 10,000 according to some websites, have gathered in Tahrir Square to mark the “Friday of punishment and of martyrs”, a protest organised by young Egyptian revolutionaries and by the 6 April movement to demand trials against those who ordered the violent crackdown during the revolution of January and February and to show support for the families of around 800 “martyrs” killed over the period.

It has been a calm day in Cairo’s central square, after the violent incidents that took place in the early hours of Wednesday morning. A crowd of protesters gathered outside the Council of Ministers but did not attempt to break police lines, while another march attempted to reach the Interior Ministry, but was stopped by security forces. “The people want the death sentence for the murderer”, protesters cried, in reference to the former Interior Minister, Habib El Adly, while others called on the Prime Minister, Essam Sharaf, to “Come to the square”, the very place where he claimed upon taking office that he had received the legitimacy of the people. A number of relatives of young people killed during the anti-Mubarak uprising appeared on stage during the day.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Libya: Gaddafi Calls Up Shamans Against Rebels

Black magic and African shamans are the latest weapon that Gaddafi has made recourse to in order to extend the life of his regime. Shamans and witches from Mali, Mauritania, Gambia, Morocco and Nigeria have the main task of repelling the rebels, who are moving in ever closer to his stronghold in Tripoli. Gaddafi has urged the most famous shamans to help him defeat the rebels, according to the colonel and pilot Saleh Al Ubaidi, who has recently gone over to the side of the rebels and who was quoted by the daily paper Asharq Al Awsat. The pilot said that the shamans send their “priests” onto the battle field with magic talismans in the hope of preserving soldiers’ loyalty. “After the February 17 revolution, shamans — claims Saleh Al Ubaidi — have been used by Colonel Gaddafi as a parallel intelligence agency.” Quoting a source very close to Gaddafi, the pilot said that the leader had requested help from a Gambian shaman, and the latter recited the text of a talisman over Gaddafi’s mantle to protect him from NATO and rebel attacks. Al Ubaidi added that Gaddafi always wears this mantle, even when in high temperatures. He went on to say that the leader also never takes off a silver ring made with the brains and bones of a hyena, which shamans believe has special powers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Gazans Unimpressed by Flotilla

Israeli claims over futility of flotilla receive reinforcement from surprising direction — Gazan businessmen who say it isn’t imports that are problem, it’s exports. ‘Gaza doesn’t need anymore humanitarian aid,’ says Gisha movement director

Israel has been claiming for quite some time that the desire to break through the blockade on the Gaza Strip is devoid of any basis since it is possible to transfer essential goods to Gaza through the monitored crossings. This claim received unexpected reinforcement on Thursday from none other than the Gazans themselves.

In a conversation with Ynet Palestinian businessmen expressed veiled criticism saying that the flotilla organizers were missing their target since the main problem wasn’t getting goods into Gaza — but exporting them outside of the strip.

“The flotilla isn’t bringing things that reach the man on the street,” says Salah Ayash a textile manufactory owner in the strip who, until the beginning of the month worked with Israeli fashion labels who would produce their goods at his factory.

“I think they might be bringing medication, but I’m not sure what they are bringing if anything. The only important thing from our perspective is not importing equipment but exporting goods,” said Ayash adding that there is no shortage of stock — but they can’t get it out.

Mohammad Tilbani, who owns a candy and cookie factory in Deir el-Balah explains that most of his work is based on exports. “60% of the production at my factory was intended for the West Bank, today I’m working at a very low output because production is exclusively for the Gaza market.”

Data published by the Palestinian Industrialists Association reveals that over 80% of Gaza factories have halted operations or are working at less than half of their usual output. Businessmen explain that this has led Gaza Strip unemployment to surge.

“In the past I had 80 workers in my factory, now I’m forced to employ only six or five and only part time,” Ayash explains, “some of the workers are forced to find other income sources and enlist in Hamas or Fatah to support their families.”

The Gisha movement has criticized both the flotilla organizers and Israel over their remarks and claim that they are misleading. “Gaza doesn’t need anymore humanitarian aid. There is only one way to allow Gaza residents long term economic development while maintaining Israel’s legitimate security needs and that is a removal of the sweeping limitations on transfer of goods subject to individual security checks,” said Sari Bashi the Director of Gisha.

Optimistic outlook

The Gazan businessmen stress that they are not opposed to the flotilla: “It is not that we don’t support the flotilla, we just want both. Not just the entry of goods but their export so that the economy will be rehabilitated and people can return to the workforce in the factories,” said Tilbani.

The coordinator of the government activities in the Palestinian territories presents a more optimistic picture. At a briefing Wednesday, Major-General Eitan Dangot said that Israel is in the final stages of approving an additional export package for the Gaza Strip.

Dangot noted that Israel is working in coordination with EU and Palestinian representatives to export produce like potatoes and tomatoes to Jordan and that the preparation work will soon be completed and exports will commence.

He stressed that in the past year Israel enabled the export of dozens of tons of flowers and hundreds of tons of fruits and vegetables from the Gaza Strip to European markets. According to Dangot, the exports ceased because it was the end of the season and due to the fact that some of the produce failed to adhere to European standards.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Iran: Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence for Christian Priest

Tehran, 1 July (AKI) — Iran’s Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence handed to a Chiristan priest convicted of apostasy, Iranian website Peykeiran reports.

A lower Iranian court sentenced the priest, Yousef Nadarkhani, from the city of Rasht on the Black Sea, in December 2010 after finding him guilty of apostasy. He has been held for almost two years in Lakan prison and was arrested in October, 2009 while attempting to register his evangelical church in the city of Rasht.

The young priest was born to a Muslim family but denies he was ever a Muslim.

Under Iran’s Sharia law, converting to another religion from Islam is apostasy, a crime punishable by death.

Churches are reported to have come under intense pressure in the last year, with a wave of random arrests and increasingly anti-Christian rhetoric.

In May, high profile Iranian cleric Ayatollah Mesbah Yadzi reportedly chided the authorities for failing to stem the growth of churches despite stepping up their efforts.

The ayatollah reportedly urged the government set up a central system to monitor and coordinate the suppression of churches.

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



Iran: Ahmadinejad Cousin Arrested for ‘Corruption’

Tehran, 1 July (AKI) — Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s cousin Omid Mehmari has been arrested for corruption, according to opposition website Iranpressnews.

According to the report, Mehmari was arrested after resigning last week investment company Qadir where he faced pressure to step down.

Three other people close to Ahmadinejad have been arrested over the past two weeks, according to the site.

In May, 12 people with close links to the Iranian president were detained on orders from magistrates, whose institution is close to Ayatollah Seyed Ali Hoseyni, Iran’s powerful Supreme Leader.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei humiliated Ahmadinejad earlier this year by publicly reversing the president’s decision to fire the intelligence minister.

Mohammad Sharif Malekzadeh Iran’s former deputy foreign minister for administrative and financial affairs and Ahmadinejad ally was also arrested last month, according to semi-official news agency Fars.

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

South Asia


Pakistan: Islamabad Abolishes Minority Affairs Ministry, As Bhatti Murder Could Go Unpunished

The chief of the team investigating the death of the Catholic minister wants to close the case for lack of evidence. Islamabad police points the finger at the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The federal government plants to close Bhatti’s old ministry. Christian garbage collector is murdered by Muslim merchant.

Islamabad (AsiaNews) — The murder of Shahbaz Bhatti, the Catholic Minister for Minority Affairs, on 2 March in Islamabad, could go unpunished. Investigators are divided over the case with some in the Islamabad police pointing the fingers at the Taliban and al-Qaeda. In recent weeks, an attempt was made to shift the blame to “internal squabbles” among Christians. Meanwhile, the government has decided to abolish the Federal Ministry of Minority Affairs, shifting responsibilities to the provinces, this in a country where Christians continue to die from abusive behaviour and personal vendettas.

Joint Investigation Team Chief Tahir Alam said that the file should be closed for “lack of evidence”. After interrogating 519 suspects, including Mumtaz Qadri, who killed Punjab Governor Salman Taseer, Alam said that he had nothing to go on to find the culprits.

Likewise, Muhammad Hafiz Nazar was released by a judge. He had been recently arrested under suspicious circumstances—some observers suggesting that his detention was an attempt to divert attention from the case by hinting that Bhatti’s murder was somehow connected to “internal squabbles” in the Christian community.

Backed by the Interior Ministry, Islamabad Inspector General Police Bin Yameen insists that Bhatti’s murder leads to the Taliban and al-Qaeda. For him, Ilyas Kashmiri and his 3131 Brigade are to blame.

Kashmiri carried out various attacks against sensitive sites in the country, and may have died several weeks ago during a US drone attack.

“We have reasons to believe that the group carried out the operation” that led to the death of the Catholic minister, Nazar said.

Meanwhile, the federal government has announced its intention to abolish the Minority Affairs Ministry as part of a decentralisation plan that would see powers in this area transferred to the provinces.

For federal government leaders, this is an “historic step” to empower provinces. However, for many, it is also symptomatic of the climate of indifference and loss of control now prevailing in Pakistan, where Christians continue to die for the most futile and trivial motives.

The latest example dates to 21 June, when a Christian municipal sanitation worker in Lahore was stabbed to death by a Muslim merchant.

Muhammad Ilyas savagely attacked Abas Masih, a 40-year-old father of four, because the latter did not immediately heed his demand to clean the area outside his shop.

Initially, city authorities tried to prevent charges from being filed; however, pressured by local residents, police opened a first information report and arrested Muhammad Ilyas.

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



Thailand: Car Blown Sky High as Bomb Disposal Officer Investigates in Narathiwat

This incredible sequence of pictures captures the moment a car bomb exploded this morning in Thailand’s southern province of Narathiwat.

The images show a member of a Thai bomb squad standing to the left of the car as it is blown apart in the blast.

The man was hurt in the blast although the extent of his injuries is unknown.

The bomb is believed to have been planted by separatist militants behind the uprising by the Malaysian border, in the south of the country.

Critics accuse the government of failing to address the grievances of Thailand’s Malay Muslim minority, including alleged abuses by the military and a perceived lack of respect for their ethnic identity, language and religion.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Osama a ‘Folk Hero’ And ‘Resistance Fighter’ To Some Supporters in Sydney

FOR most of the world he was a symbol of death and evil — a mad man who was dedicated to killing innocents.

But, for some Muslims, dead arch-terrorist Osama bin Laden is a “folk hero” similar to Australia’s Ned Kelly.

Hardline Islamic group Hizb ut-Tahrir Australia’s spokesman, Uthman Badar, said the group rejected democracy, seeking to establish a trans-national Islamic caliphate state, and viewed bin Laden as a “resistance fighter” with huge sympathy among Muslims.

“The type of figure Muslims see Osama bin Laden as is similar to Ned Kelly,” Mr Badar told The Sunday Telegraph.

“The person does things that would otherwise be viewed as crimes, but he is seen as a folk hero.

“Most Muslims accept him as someone who fought a resistance … the real terrorists are the Western governments. When we say the Western governments are terrorists we include the Australian Government in that.”

It was a view echoed at Auburn’s Bukhari House Islamic Bookstore, where Wassim Fayad, a volunteer working at the shop, all but praised the dead terrorist.

“For the sake of Allah, our brother died a martyr,” Mr Fayad said.

“He was a soldier of God. He did not fight for the sake of his government or for another human being.

“Quote me on this: if he died, he died a martyr and he is now in paradise.”

The Bukhari bookshop has drawn attention from authorities before, when it was recently revealed the radical Islamic cleric Sheik Feiz Mohammed — who has previously urged children to die for their religion — was conducting sermons for youths at the Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama’ah centre, which operates out of one of the bookshop’s back rooms.

“No comment regarding Osama bin Laden, but it is sad for anyone to die in the Muslim world,” a spokesman said.

In contrast to those supporting bin Laden, influential Sydney imam Abdul Salam Mohammed Zoud did not speak of bin Laden during his half-hour sermon at Belmore mosque at noon on Friday.

According to an independent translator, he told a congregation of 150 people — mainly men and children — to keep the faith alive at a time when enemies were trying to undermine Islam.

Many Muslims also revelled in the chance to publicly reject bin Laden. At a Lebanese bakery, Australian-born Ahmed Ajaj said of bin Laden: “Nowhere in Islam is what he did acceptable,” but he added his crimes “did not compare” to those of the US and UK.

For Sam Zaky, who came to Australia from Iraq two and a half years ago, the death of bin Laden was welcome news.

He knew first hand just what bin Laden stood for, having seen friends killed by al-Qaeda car bombs while they walked to university in Baghdad.

“I know many who were killed for nothing,” he said.

He said he was disturbed by the number of “ignorant” Australians who had come into the shop he works in and declared bin Laden their “hero.”

The first person charged under Australia’s terror laws, taxi driver Jack Thomas, said he was pleased the man he once met in the hills of Afghanistan was dead.

In March 2001, five months before the September 11 attacks on the US, Mr Thomas shook bin Laden’s hand. But the man dubbed “Jihad Jack” said he knew young and impressionable people in Australia who were being bred into extremism.

“No doubt there are angry young Muslim men in Australia that have been misled by Osama bin Laden,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


African Union Will Not Act on Gaddafi Arrest Warrant

(AGI) Malabo- African countries will not act on the arrest warrant for Muammar Gaddafi issued by the International Criminal Court. The African Union made the announcement at the close of the summit in Equatorial Guinea. The final document states that African leaders believe the warrant “seriously complicates” efforts to find a peaceful solution to the Libyan crisis.

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



Audio: Violence Surges After Muslim President Takes Reins

Fighting in Ivory Coast follows forced transition of power

Reports are surfacing that the violence that erupted while recently installed Ivory Coast President Alessane Ouattara was trying to take control of government following a disputed election is worsening, with claims of Ivorians who are loyal to ousted president Laurent Gbagbo being murdered.

This time the reports have an added detail: The executions and house burnings are being done under the knowledge and possible consent of Ouattara, according to reports.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Immigration


‘Corrosion of the Freedom to Travel’: Denmark to Reintroduce Border Controls on Tuesday

The Danish parliament in Copenhagen moved on Friday to reintroduce limited border controls in the country by deploying additional customs agents starting Tuesday. In Germany and Brussels, politicians believe the country could be violating the terms of the Schengen Agreement on passport-free European travel.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Reviews Denmark’s Border Control Plan

The European Commission said Friday it was reviewing whether controversial customs controls sought by Denmark respect rules governing Europe’s border-free Schengen travel area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Nigeria: FG to Open Consulates in California, Others Soon

As parts of its efforts to make immigration matters easier for Nigerians living in some remote parts of the United States, the federal government has concluded the arrangement to begin the operation of a Consulate-General in California.

Also, the government of Nigeria is considering the opening of Consulate offices in Chicago, North Carolina and some other places, according to Professor Adebowale Adefuye, the Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United States.

Making this known recently during a function jointly organised by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and the Continental Africa Chambers of Commerce,

Ambassador Ade Adefuye noted that he had been able to discuss the idea of opening a Consulate-General in St. Francisco with President Goodluck Jonathan during his last visit to the United Nations.

He added that the President assured him that everything would be put in place to begin the operation very soon, noting that it will be very easy and fast since Nigeria already has its own building in the area.

Professor Adefuye further said that Nigeria was thankful to the US government for the assistance it rendered to the country during the last historic elections, adding that the help from the America enabled President Jonathan to fulfill the promise he earlier made to President Barrack Obama to conduct credible elections in 2011…

           — Hat tip: RE [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Germany: Greens Call for Action on ‘Toxic’ Dildos

The environmentalist Greens have a new worry for the German people on top of nuclear power and GM food: the toxic dangers inherent in dildos, vibrators, butt plugs and other sex toys.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



LA USD Declares Homework Racist, Classist

How to deal with the rude K-12 achievement gap in Los Angeles? District officials have a new solution that should be pretty popular all-around. Based on the theory that homework is more likely to be completed by kids with a secure home life and involved parents — aka, the white middle class — LAUSD is forcing teachers to cap homework at 10 percent of a student’s grade, beginning next month. “The policy is intended to account for the myriad urban problems facing the district’s mostly low-income, minority population,” writes the Los Angeles Times today.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Safer Sex: Greens Warn Against Dangerous Dildos

Germany’s Green Party is worried about the health risks of sex toys. Dildos and vibrators contain dangerously high levels of phthalates and other plasticizers, which can cause infertility and hormone imbalances, they claim. Now the party wants the government to take action to protect the 20 percent of Germans who use sex toys.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Mind-Reading Scientists Predict What a Person is Going to Do Before They Do it

It has long been a dream of both scientists and law enforcement officials alike.

Researchers monitoring brain activity can now determine what action a person is planning before he carries it out.

Although it is currently only possible to know what someone is going to do just moments before it happens, the implications of the breakthrough are huge.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Swedish Ships Take Up Arms to Combat Pirates

Swedish commercial shipping firm Wallenius has employed armed security staff to police its fleet to help combat the risk posed by pirates in the Gulf of Aden.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110630

Financial Crisis
» Brussels Seeks Financial Tax in New EU Budget
» Brussels Urges EU VAT, New ‘Rebates’ In Big Budget Overhaul
» EU Budget ‘Too High’, Dutch Finance Minister Says
» Germany Blasts Proposed EU Budget
» Greek Reforms ‘Like Putting a Band-Aid on a Mortal Wound’
» Protesters Clash With Police in Athens After Vote in Favor of Austerity Bill
» Reaction to Greek Vote: Relief Abroad, Riots in Athens
» Sweden Slams EU Budget Proposal
» UK Civil Servants Strike Over Government Pension Reforms
 
USA
» American Revolutionary War Museum to Honor Al-Jazeera
» California Tells Online Retailers to Start Collecting Sales Taxes From Customers
» Cuomo Will Seek to Lift Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing
» Founders Without Whom America Would Not Exist
» Harvard: July 4th Parades Are Right Wing
» John Lennon Was a Ronald Reagan Fan
» Obama to Establish Formal Contacts With Muslim Brotherhood
» Stakelbeck Exclusive: Is the Muslim Brotherhood Coming to Brooklyn?
» Strauss-Kahn Case Seen as in Jeopardy
» With Talks Deadlocked, N.B.A. Heads for a Shutdown
 
Europe and the EU
» Belgium: Flemish Nationalists Climb on Future Mosque Roof
» Dutch Poised to Resist EU Budget Proposals, Fight to Keep Rebate
» Dutch Interior Minister Argues for Burka Ban
» Fuming Over the Phase-Out: Energy Shift Deeply Divides German Companies
» Germany: E. Coli May Have Had Egyptian Origins
» Germany: Parliament Backs Nuclear Energy Phaseout
» Spike in Metal Theft Imperils German Railways
» Switzerland: Row Over Foreign Criminals Goes Into New Round
» Switzerland Tops Global Innovation Index
» UK: Doctor Barred From Flying After Refusing Body Scan on Health Grounds
» UK: NHS ‘Betrays’ 400,000 Elderly in Care Homes
 
North Africa
» Britain Gives Body Armour, Uniforms to Libyan Rebels
» European Harakiri in Libya
» France Defends Arms to Libyan Rebels
» Gaddafi’s Grannies: Now Dictator Resorts to Training Elderly Female Soldiers
» U.S. Shifts to Closer Contact With Egypt Islamists
» US, EU Warn Against Libyan Arms Flow to Al-Qaeda
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Flotilla II: The Merchant Ships of Hamas Propaganda
 
Middle East
» Israeli Tourist Numbers to Turkey Cut in Half in 2011
» NATO: Iran to Sit on Parliamentary Assembly at La Maddalena
» Saudi Arabia to Stop Hiring Indonesian Domestic Workers
» Saudi Official: Riyadh Will Seek Nukes if Iran Gets Them
» Yemen’s Revolutionaries: The Tent-Dwellers of Sana’a
 
Russia
» Even Putin Drives Lada as Soviet Relic Approaches Top Europe Market: Cars
 
South Asia
» Pakistan: US Told to Curb Criticism of Anti-Insurgency Effort
» Taliban Says Prisoners Swapped for French Hostages
 
Far East
» Chinese Collectors Come to Europe for Chinese Art
» Chinese Take Over Swiss Watchmaker
 
Australia — Pacific
» Elixir of Life Discovered on Easter Island
 
Sub-Saharan Africa
» EU, US Ponder Fight Against Al-Qaeda in Africa
» US Hit Shebab Somali Guerrilla First Time With Drone
 
Latin America
» Breaking: Hugo Chavez Has Cancer
» Poll: Most Jamaicans Believe UK Rule Better
 
Immigration
» 611 Refugees Make Landfall on Lampedusa
» Blue Maryland Seeing Red on Immigration
» Immigration: More Land on Lampedusa
» In Czech Republic, Russians Are Back and Thriving
» Italy: Pakistani Accused of Killing His Wife Appears in Court
» Legitimizing Resident Aliens
» Netherlands: Mayors Concerned About Afghan Asylum Seekers
» Netherlands: A Burka Conflicts With Good Manners, Like Public Nudity, Says Minister
» Obama ‘Defiance’ of Constitution Earns Impeachment Call
 
Culture Wars
» Leave Me Alones vs Make it Betters
» Progressivism Masquerading as Education
 
General
» Fossil Eyes Reveal Predator’s Sharp Vision
» The First Non-Human Meat Farmers

Financial Crisis


Brussels Seeks Financial Tax in New EU Budget

Future EU spending is set to increase, focusing marginally less on agriculture and more on research, education and transport, according to European Commission proposals for the next seven-year budgetary period (2014-2020). Brussels also wants a financial transaction tax to help fill EU coffers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Brussels Urges EU VAT, New ‘Rebates’ In Big Budget Overhaul

The European Commission on Wednesday proposed an EU sales tax, a financial services tax and a sweeping reform of “rebates”, including Britain’s, as part of a vast rethink of the EU budget.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU Budget ‘Too High’, Dutch Finance Minister Says

Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager attacked the European Commission’s proposal for the next 2014-2020 budget as “too high”, saying Europe should cut back in line with member states. “The suggestion by the Commission is too high,” De Jager said in a statement issued in The Hague. “Member states are cutting back strongly and Europe must do that as well,” he said. “Together with other frugal countries we will work hard to keep the budget under control,” he added. De Jager’s statement comes as both Germany and Britain also blasted the proposal, saying it set a poor example during the eurozone debt crisis.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Blasts Proposed EU Budget

Germany on Thursday blasted as “irresponsibly high” the European Commission’s proposal for the next 2014-2020 budget, saying it set a poor example during the eurozone debt crisis. “My first impression from the proposals presented… is that the Commission’s total volume of the budgetary framework is, for the German government, irresponsibly high,” Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in a statement.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek Reforms ‘Like Putting a Band-Aid on a Mortal Wound’

Greece may have averted the worst by passing an austerity package on Wednesday, but the government of Georgios Papandreou will continue to face massive public resistance to its course. German commentators warn that Athens isn’t out of the woods yet.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Protesters Clash With Police in Athens After Vote in Favor of Austerity Bill

Protests turned ugly in Greece after lawmakers approved a contentious austerity bill that includes spending cuts, tax hikes and privatizations. A second key vote on the details of the austerity comes Thursday. Greek lawmakers are set to hold a second vote on a fierce package of austerity measures Thursday, as scores of mostly young people continue their protests outside parliament in Athens. The Greek government passed the austerity measures in a 155-138 vote on Wednesday, but the second vote will focus more on the details of their implementation. The market outlook was optimistic on Thursday after trading in Asia and North America boosted the euro against the dollar.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Reaction to Greek Vote: Relief Abroad, Riots in Athens

Foreign governments have reacted with relief to the Greek parliament’s vote in favor of a far-reaching austerity package. But demonstrators in Athens responded to the news with rage amid brutal clashes with police. Prime Minister George Papandreou can expect further resistance to his reforms.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden Slams EU Budget Proposal

EU’s budget proposal has been heavily criticised by Sweden, with one MP calling it “the most provocative budget in EU history”. Among the proposed reforms is a new EU tax on sales and services and a fee linked to financial transactions to finance a five percent increase in the EU budget. “This is the most provocative budget that the EU has ever proposed,” Swedish MP Jonas Sjöstedt said to news agency TT. Former MEP Sjöstedt, representing the Left party on the Riksdag’s EU committee, thinks that the proposals take the EU one step closer towards the formation of a European state. “Levying taxes is a core function of a state,” he said to news agency TT. Sjöstedt is also critical of the hefty increase in expenses.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK Civil Servants Strike Over Government Pension Reforms

The conservative British government’s deficit reduction plan includes reforms to the pension system, and though details on the reform are not yet finalized, several unions in the UK have decided to strike in protest. About 600,000 public sector workers in the United Kingdom went on strike Thursday to protest pension reforms, threatening to disrupt schools and airports. The 24-hour strike was called by four education and public sector unions in response to reforms that they say would give them less for more: higher payments into pension funds and longer work hours for reduced pensions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


American Revolutionary War Museum to Honor Al-Jazeera

The General Henry Knox Museum is honoring a representative of Al-Jazeera, the channel associated with various terrorist organizations, on July 28 on the stage of The Strand Theatre in Rockland, Maine. The museum says that an intimate Gala dinner and reception will follow at 7:30 p.m. at Camden National Bank’s historic Spear Block location in Rockland.

Knox played a significant role in the American war for independence from Britain and was close to General George Washington.

The idea of an American museum devoted to patriotism honoring a representative of a foreign-funded channel, described by Middle East experts such as Walid Phares as “Jihad television,” is not going down well in Maine and across the country. The most visible public face of Al-Jazeera Arabic is the anti-Semitic cleric, Sheik Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who approved suicide bombings against Israeli civilians and American military personnel in Iraq.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



California Tells Online Retailers to Start Collecting Sales Taxes From Customers

Beginning Friday, Amazon.com and other large out-of-state retailers will be required to collect sales taxes on purchases that their California customers make online.

[…]

Both Amazon in Seattle and Overstock in Salt Lake City have told affiliates that they would have to move to another state if they wanted to continue earning commissions for referring customers.

“We oppose this bill because it is unconstitutional and counterproductive,” Amazon wrote its California business partners Wednesday. Amazon has not indicated what further actions it might take to challenge the California law.

Many of about 25,000 affiliates in California, especially larger ones with dozens of employees, are likely to leave the state, said Rebecca Madigan, executive director of trade group Performance Marketing Assn. The affiliates combined paid $152 million in state income taxes last year, she pointed out.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Cuomo Will Seek to Lift Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing

The Cuomo administration is expected to lift what has been, in effect, a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing, a controversial technology used to extract natural gas from shale, people briefed on the administration’s discussions said.

Administration officials are discussing maintaining a ban on the process inside New York City’s sprawling upstate watershed, as well as a watershed used by the city of Syracuse, according to people briefed on the plan. But by allowing the process in other parts of the state, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo would open up New York to one of the fastest-growing — critics would say reckless — areas of the energy industry.

[Return to headlines]



Founders Without Whom America Would Not Exist

As we enter another Independence Day weekend, I think it would be good to remind ourselves of who those men were that counted the cost and paid the price to bring this land of liberty into existence. Unfortunately, the vast majority of Americans today seem to have very little — if any — knowledge and appreciation for the sacrifices that our Founding Fathers made in order to birth this great country. We can thank the vast majority of our schools (including the institutions of higher learning), major media, political institutions, and even churches for this egregious embarrassment. Accordingly, I think it fitting that today’s column will attempt to renew in our hearts the respect and reverence that these great men whom we call Founding Fathers so richly deserve.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Harvard: July 4th Parades Are Right Wing

“Fourth of July celebrations in the United States shape the nation’s political landscape by forming beliefs and increasing participation, primarily in favor of the Republican Party,” said the report from Harvard.

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]



John Lennon Was a Ronald Reagan Fan

(AGI) Toronto — By the time of his murdered, John Lennon, the icon of the pacifist movement, had become a crypto-Republican.

Lennon was a great fan of Ronald Reagan, and stated that if he were American, he would “ vote for him due to his dissatisfaction with (the Democrat president Jimmy) Carter”.

This surprising revelation was made by Fred Seaman, the last personal assistant of the former Beatle from 1970 until December 1980, when the latter was murdered by David Chapman.

The news was given by the Toronto Sun quoting excerpts from a new documentary on the Beatles.

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



Obama to Establish Formal Contacts With Muslim Brotherhood

The Muslim Brothers “must understand that their work in America is a kind of grand Jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and “sabotaging” its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated and God’s religion is made victorious over all other religions.” — “An Explanatory Memorandum on the General Strategic Goal for the Brotherhood in North America,” by Mohamed Akram, May 19, 1991.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Stakelbeck Exclusive: Is the Muslim Brotherhood Coming to Brooklyn?

On a day where we learn that the Obama administration is formally reaching out to Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, I have a new report that shows the extent of the Brotherhood’s presence right here in America.

The Muslim American Society (MAS)—a group whose leaders admit was created by Brotherhood members—is building a very expensive mega-mosque on a quiet residential street in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn.

Neighbors are up in arms. I was recently on the ground in Brooklyn to talk to them and report on the mosque’s Brotherhood connections. Watch my exclusive report at the link above.

           — Hat tip: Erick Stakelbeck [Return to headlines]



Strauss-Kahn Case Seen as in Jeopardy

The sexual assault case against Dominique Strauss-Kahn is on the verge of collapse as investigators have uncovered major holes in the credibility of the housekeeper who charged that she was attacked by the French politician in his Manhattan hotel suite in May, according to two well-placed law enforcement officials.

Although forensic tests found unambiguous evidence of a sexual encounter between Mr. Strauss-Kahn and the woman, prosecutors do not believe much of what the accuser has told them about the circumstances or about herself.

Since her initial allegation on May 14, the accuser has repeatedly lied, one of the law enforcement officials said.

[Return to headlines]



With Talks Deadlocked, N.B.A. Heads for a Shutdown

About two weeks after celebrating an electric championship series and a revitalizing season, the N.B.A. is shutting down — perhaps for a very long time.

Negotiators for the owners and the players union made a final attempt to broker a new labor deal Thursday afternoon, but they separated without an agreement and without much hope of bridging a gap of several billion dollars.

[Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Belgium: Flemish Nationalists Climb on Future Mosque Roof

(AGI) Brussels — Some members of Vlaams Belang, an intensely xenophobic Flemish nationalist group, occupied the roof of an Antwerp building that the municipal authorities will turn into a mosque. The protest against “the islamisation of Antwerp” and the “supermosque” (as Vlaams Belang leader Filip Dewinter defined it) may continue next week with a pork barbecue in the same building.

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



Dutch Poised to Resist EU Budget Proposals, Fight to Keep Rebate

The Netherlands may be able to keep around 50% of its current €1bn rebate on its European Union contributions under new EU budgetary plans, news agency ANP reports on Thursday.

But the proposal to introduce a new EU-wide tax was rejected by finance minister Jan Kees de Jager. He is quoted as saying that the Netherlands wants to keep its entire rebate and that taxation is a matter for individual nation states.

The European Commission on Wednesday unveiled its plans to amend the complex rebate scheme, boost its own income through EU taxes and shift more resources from farming to research and innovation.

Rebates

The proposals include an increase in spending by 5% for the period 2014 to 2020 — a move which will generate strong resistance from a number of countries, including the Netherlands, Germany, the UK and France.

They have all already made it clear they want the EU budget to be frozen, or rise no more than inflation. In June, a majority of MPs told prime minister Mark Rutte he must go for an absolute freeze in EU spending.

Rutte had said earlier that Dutch backing for a rise in line with inflation would make it easier to negotiate a new rebate on Dutch contributions to the EU.

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



Dutch Interior Minister Argues for Burka Ban

“You can’t walk down the street naked either. That is the result of our norms about decent behaviour. The Netherlands also has norms which make it advisable to ban clothing which covers your face.” Interior Minister Piet-Hein Donner was speaking during a debate about his integration bill, which would introduce a ban on burkas. One of the main themes of the bill is a shift from the current ‘target group’ approach to holding individuals responsible for their own integration. Although parliament generally supported this, the minister himself was subject to a great deal of criticism from the opposition.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Fuming Over the Phase-Out: Energy Shift Deeply Divides German Companies

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s nuclear phase-out is deeply dividing the German business community. The only issue where there seems to be any agreement across industry lines is that more government subsidies are going to be needed as the price of electricity rises.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: E. Coli May Have Had Egyptian Origins

Fenugreek seeds exported from Egypt to France and Germany may have caused an E. coli outbreak that has killed 48 people in Europe, the European Food Safety Authority reported. A “rapid risk assessment” conducted by the EFSA and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), “has thus far shown” that Egyptian seeds exported in 2009 and 2010 may be implicated, it said in a statement. “There is still much uncertainty about whether this is truly the common cause of all the infections as there are currently no positive bacteriological results,” it stressed. At least 48 people have died from an outbreak of a killer strain of E. coli bacteria centred in Germany, blamed on organic vegetable sprouts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Parliament Backs Nuclear Energy Phaseout

The German parliament on Thursday overwhelmingly approved plans to scrap nuclear power by 2022, making Germany the first major industrial nation to ditch atomic energy in the wake of the Fukushima disaster in Japan.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spike in Metal Theft Imperils German Railways

As metal prices continue to climb, theft along Germany’s railways has reached record levels. The missing parts are not only dangerous, the delays and cancellations they cause are damaging Deutsche Bahn’s reputation. Travelers and businesspeople pushing their way through the underground train station at Cologne Bonn Airport are intercepted at the escalators down to the tracks by security personnel from Deutsche Bahn, Germany’s national rail provider. No, these officers inform the passengers, no trains are running at the moment. And no, they don’t know when operations will start again. Frustration and annoyance spread palpably through the crowd.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Row Over Foreign Criminals Goes Into New Round

Experts have presented proposals to implement a rightwing initiative approved in nationwide vote last November to automatically expel foreign criminals from Switzerland.

The report, published on Tuesday, serves as blueprint for the government’s bill to parliament, but the rightwing Swiss People’s Party is adamant that only its proposal is true to the intentions of the initiative.

Of the four proposals drafted by the seven-member group of experts, only three won a majority, while the hardline proposal was backed merely by the two People’s Party representatives on the committee.

“The goal of our group was to present options to translate the demands into law which are compatible with the constitution and international law,” said Heinrich Koller, a former senior justice ministry official who headed the committee. He said the mandate was not to find a compromise.

“The group was unable to find a common position which is hardly surprising given the different points of view from the outset,” Koller added.

Hardline

The People’s Party — the driving force behind the initiative — wants all non-Swiss convicted of a list of about 30 different crimes, including welfare fraud, to be expelled, regardless of the seriousness of the offense. Exceptions would only be allowed for those criminals who would face death or torture in their country of origin.

However, opponents say such a strict implementation is in breach of the constitution and international human rights agreements.

Koller warned of a conviction by the European Court of Human rights and of repercussions on a series of bilateral treaties with the European Union if the hardline proposal was accepted.

“A small country like Switzerland should put particular emphasis on the respect of human rights to prove its reliability,” he said.

For his part, People’s Party representative Georg Rutz reiterated that the majority proposals were “unsatisfactory” and the outcome of last year’s ballot proved that a majority of voters wanted the courts to be much tougher.

He also argued that there was no need for Switzerland to “slavishly follow the legislation of the European court”.

Six-month sentence

The three majority options presented to the media on Tuesday link deportations to a prison sentence of at least six months.

They allow exceptions for citizens of the European Union to comply with the terms of bilateral treaties between Switzerland and Brussels. It also exempts people from deportation taking into account their personal situation and practical reasons.

The report says about 3,400 people would have to be expelled annually under the terms of the majority proposals.

“That is roughly the figure the hardline initiative called for and therefore it is not correct to argue that the proposals are ignoring a voter decision,” said Roger Schneeberger, representative of the 26 cantonal justice and police departments.

The People’s Party proposal would lead to expulsion orders for more than 16,000 convicted foreigners.

It is now up to the justice ministry to prepare a draft bill for the government, including consultations with major parties and institutions, before parliament will discuss the proposed legal amendments. But it is unlikely to be tabled in both chambers before 2013.

Initiative

The group of experts was set up last December in the wake of the nationwide ballot.

A 53 per cent majority of voters approved a proposal for the automatic expulsion of foreign offenders convicted of crimes ranging from murder to breaking and entry as well as social security fraud. It denies judges discretion over deportation.

A counter-proposal by government and parliament which called for a case-by-case examination won only 46 per cent of the vote.

It was the second time within 12 months that the Swiss approved an initiative despite opposition by the government and parliament. The electorate also accepted a controversial ban on the construction of minarets in November 2009.

The run-up to the vote was marked by an emotional campaign with a controversial black sheep poster and a dispute within the centre-left parties over whether or not to support the counter-proposal…

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



Switzerland Tops Global Innovation Index

Switzerland is the world’s most innovative economy, followed by Sweden, Singapore, Hong Kong and Finland, according to a study. The Global Innovation Index 2011, released on Thursday, evaluated 125 economies. Last year, Switzerland ranked fourth. The index recognises the key role of innovation as a driver of economic growth and prosperity. Although Switzerland did not rank first in any of the individual criteria, its overall performance earned it first place. Contributing factors included the stable political and economic conditions, very good education system, high spending on research and development, efficient infrastructure, high demands of the domestic market and the ability to channel these strengths into successful innovations.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Doctor Barred From Flying After Refusing Body Scan on Health Grounds

An eye consultant was barred from boarding a flight at Manchester airport after refusing to go through a body scanner in case if gave him a dangerous dose of radiation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: NHS ‘Betrays’ 400,000 Elderly in Care Homes

Hundreds of thousands of elderly people are being denied basic access to medical treatment simply because they live in care homes, a report warns.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Britain Gives Body Armour, Uniforms to Libyan Rebels

Britain has given the Libyan rebels 5,000 sets of body armour, as well as police uniforms, high-visibility vests and communications equipment, Foreign Secretary William Hague said Thursday. He said this was “fully in line” with the UN Security Council resolution governing international action on Libya and the arms embargo.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



European Harakiri in Libya

By Sreeram Chaulia

As European economies wilt under unchecked fiscal imprudence and fears of contagious sovereign defaults, it seems absurd that Britain and France are leading a depleted North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) coalition to militarily attack Libya. Financially imperiled states facing mass protests from irate citizens are puzzlingly prosecuting war in North Africa.

After an initial burst of aerial strikes on Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi’s defenses by the United States, the Barack Obama administration stepped back to hand over the bulk of operations to Britain and France under the NATO banner. The passing of the baton made pragmatic sense for Washington, which has been hard-pressed since the corporate bailouts of 2008-2009 to cut its ballooning budget deficit.

Even playing second fiddle to Britain and France in the Libyan conflict has been controversial in the US, with the Republican opposition crying hoarse about Obama running a de facto war without congressional authorization. Last Friday, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted against formal approval of the ongoing American participation in the combat in Libya.

The recent televised debates of early hopefuls for the Republican presidential nomination revealed an isolationist but fiscally responsible streak among candidates backed by the Tea Party movement. They broke ranks with traditional Republicans by arguing that the US must put its own indebted economy in order and disentangle completely from the slow-attrition war in Libya (besides pulling out bag and baggage from Afghanistan).

But no such wisdom has yet dawned in Britain and France, which are emptying their depleted exchequers to pay for air assaults in Libya. According to the French Defense Ministry, Paris is spending US$1.4 million each day in the Libyan war, while some predict that Britain may incur a cost of $1.4 billion if it continues hitting targets in Libya until September.

Some Western media outlets mocked at the ridiculous spectacle of Gaddafi amusing himself with a game of chess against a Russian sports official when Libya was on fire. What the governments of Britain and France are doing in Libya is no less an act of fiddling while rioters are running amok in London and Paris against benefit retrenchments.

If British Prime Minister David Cameron and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are gambling on the Libyan mission as a diversionary tactic to pacify citizens furious at their tanking economies, it is poor politics. The eventual ouster of Gaddafi will not restore British and French jobs, subsidized college education, or welfare benefits.

If Cameron and Sarkozy are placing bets on military Keynesianism (a spinoff economic theory that big war spending can pull a country out of recession by revving up demand for the defense industry and heavy machinery sectors), history shows that past wars in Suez (1956) and the Falklands (1982) did not magically pull Britain and France out of economic slumps.

Cameron has even rebuked senior British naval and air force officials who have rung alarm bells that Britain’s air fighting capacity will be badly undermined if the Libyan war goes on indefinitely. The Conservative prime minister struck an adamant note that the British military would keep waging war in Libya “as long as is necessary”.

One plausible reason why deficit-laden London and Paris have plunged into the Libyan war is geopolitical. American strategists have commented that North Africa is a “European affair”, ie a sphere of influence that has greater strategic value for Europe than for the US.

Although Europe’s global footprint has been shrinking in the past few years while China’s shadow has lengthened, the urge to dominate Africa is viewed by some European foreign policy pundits as natural. Denomination of regions of Africa as “Anglophone”, “Francophone” and “Lusophone” zones owes to this nostalgic neo-colonial mentality.

Secondly, European policymakers are growing jittery about a deadly weapon that Gaddafi has unleashed since the war began — African immigrants and refugees headed towards Italy first and then seeping across open borders to the rest of the European continent.

The Mediterranean boat people were hitherto controlled by the Gaddafi regime in exchange for symbolic and economic concessions from the European Union. That sinister pact, where desperate human beings were pawns in an international diplomatic game, came unstuck once NATO started bombing Libya.

So, Britain and France (disregarding Italy’s agony about a deluge of refugees triggered by the NATO bombing campaign) are apparently fighting to get rid of Gaddafi and to install a friendlier government that will curb the African exodus to the continent as a matter of policy.

Here too, the contradictions are glaring…

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



France Defends Arms to Libyan Rebels

Russia on Thursday demanded an explanation from France over its reported arms drops to Libyan rebels, as Paris denied a newspaper report that they had included anti-tank missiles. “We are awaiting a response,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, Russian news agencies reported. “If this is confirmed, it would be a brazen violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1970,” Lavrov said. That resolution, passed in February, prohibited states from providing any kind of arms to Libya.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gaddafi’s Grannies: Now Dictator Resorts to Training Elderly Female Soldiers

The Libyan government has unveiled its latest weapon to defend Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s regime from rebel fighters — women.

As the NATO bombing campaign in the country entered its 100th day on Monday, loyalists to Gaddafi paraded their new female fighters in front of the world’s media.

The 500 women loyal to the embattled leader had just completed a programme to teach them how to fire weapons, at a base near Tripoli, according to the Guardian.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



U.S. Shifts to Closer Contact With Egypt Islamists

BUDAPEST (Reuters) — The United States will resume limited contacts with Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton confirmed on Thursday, saying it was in Washington’s interests to deal with parties committed to non-violent politics.

While Clinton portrayed the administration’s decision as a continuation of an earlier policy, it reflects a subtle shift in that U.S. officials will be able to deal directly with officials of the Islamist movement who are not members of parliament.

The move, first reported by Reuters on Wednesday, is likely to upset Israel and its U.S. supporters who have deep misgivings about the Brotherhood, a group founded in 1928 that seeks to promote its conservative vision of Islam in society.

Under president Hosni Mubarak, a key U.S. ally, the Brotherhood was formally banned, but since the ousting of the secular former general by a popular uprising in February, the Islamists are seen as a major force in forthcoming elections.

“We believe, given the changing political landscape in Egypt, that it is in the interests of the United States to engage with all parties that are peaceful, and committed to non-violence, that intend to compete for the parliament and the presidency,” Clinton told reporters at a news conference.

“Now in any of those contacts, prior or future, we will continue to emphasize the importance of and support for democratic principles and especially a commitment to non-violence, respect for minority rights, and the full inclusion of women in any democracy,” she added.

Clinton would not say whether the Obama administration had already begun such contacts or at what level it planned to deal with the group.

On Wednesday, a senior U.S. official disclosed the decision to Reuters, saying that where U.S. diplomats previously dealt only with group members in their role as parliamentarians, a policy he said had been in place since 2006, they will now deal directly with Brotherhood officials.

BROTHERHOOD WELCOMES MOVE

In Cairo, a spokesman for the Islamist group said it would welcome any formal contacts with the United States as a way to clarify its vision, but no such contacts have yet been made.

“We welcome such relationships with everyone because those relations will lead to clarifying our vision. But it won’t include or be based on any intervention in the internal affairs of the country,” spokesman Mohamed Saad el-Katatni told Reuters.

“Until now no contacts have been made with the group or the party,” said Katatni, who is also secretary-general of the Brotherhood’s new Freedom and Justice political party.

“This relationship will clarify our general views and our opinion about different issues.”

There is no U.S. legal prohibition against dealing with the Muslim Brotherhood itself, which long ago renounced violence as a means to achieve political change in Egypt and which is not regarded by Washington as a foreign terrorist organization.

But other sympathetic groups, such as Palestinian Hamas, which identifies the Brotherhood as its spiritual guide, have not disavowed violence against the state of Israel.

The result has been a dilemma for the Obama administration. Former officials and analysts said it has little choice but to engage the Brotherhood directly, given its political prominence after the fall of Mubarak.

Clinton sought to play down the shift, which former U.S. diplomats viewed as all but inevitable given the group’s political heft and the fact that with parliament dissolved after Mubarak’s toppling, U.S. diplomats had to find another way to justify dealing with Brotherhood officials.

“The importance here is that this is not a new policy, that it is one that we are re-engaging in because of the upcoming elections, but there will be certain expectations set and certain messages delivered,” Clinton added.

“We hope that the move toward democracy that is taking place in Egypt will actually result in the kind of inclusive, participatory political system that we would like to see.”

Widely regarded as Egypt’s best organized political force, the Muslim Brotherhood is expected to do well in parliamentary elections that are scheduled for September.

But it has said it does not want a parliamentary majority, nor will it field a candidate for president.

Egypt’s military rulers, who took over on Mubarak’s toppling after massive street protests against his authoritarian rule, have promised a presidential vote by the end of 2011.

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



US, EU Warn Against Libyan Arms Flow to Al-Qaeda

The United States and European Union warned Thursday of a threat of Libyan army weapons making their way to Al-Qaeda’s offshoot in north Africa’s Sahel region. US Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano and European powers discussed how to prevent the Al-Qaeda network getting hold of the sophisticated weaponry, Spain’s interior minister said after a meeting here. Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is active in the Sahara desert and Sahel scrubland to the south — an area nearly the size of Australia stretching from western Mauritania through Mali and Niger. The group has carried out kidnappings of foreigners and staged attacks in the region.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Flotilla II: The Merchant Ships of Hamas Propaganda

The pro-Hamas flotilla of international ships planning to defy Israel’s lawful naval blockade of Gaza is getting underway, despite some delays caused by insurance and mechanical problems. Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman was spot on when he told Israel Radio that the so-called Freedom Flotilla II participants are nothing more than “terror activists, seeking to create provocation and looking for blood.”

The merchant ships of Hamas propaganda are supporting the terrorist organization that is the governing authority in Gaza and whose covenant calls for the killing of all Jews, the destruction of Israel and its replacement with an Islamic state. The flotilla’s purpose is to rally international public opinion against the legitimacy of Israel as a Jewish state, striving to achieve on the propaganda front what their Hamas friends are aiming to do with their rockets and their suicide bombers.

Their method is to create an international incident by replicating last year’s flotilla confrontation that led to the death of nine Hamas sympathizers on board a Turkish ship. These extremists attacked Israeli soldiers who were seeking to enforce Israel’s lawful maritime blockade. Israeli’s soldiers acted in self-defense.

At least one of the vessels that are due to participate in this year’s flotilla is reportedly carrying “sacks of dangerous chemical materials” to be used against the Israeli troops, according to Israeli intelligence. The flotilla organizers are making sure that sympathetic press from the likes of Al-Jazeera, CNN, NBC will be on hand to beam Israel’s ‘brutal’ response to the world.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Israeli Tourist Numbers to Turkey Cut in Half in 2011

The number of Israeli tourists visiting Turkey between January and May this year decreased by about 59 percent compared to the same period last year, according to data published by the Tourism Ministry.

The figure stands in stark contrast to last year, when figures showed a 133 percent increase over the same time period in 2009.

About 30,000 tourists from Israel visited Turkey in the first five months of the year, compared to the 72,500 Israeli tourists who came to Turkey during the same period in 2010. The decrease was even sharper for May, when only 6,417 tourists from Israel came to Turkey, compared to 18,295 in the same month last year.

Turkey’s relationship with Israel has been strained since a May 31, 2010, raid by Israeli commandos on the Mavi Marmara, the lead ship of an international flotilla trying to breach Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip. The raid led to the death of eight Turks and one American of Turkish descent.

Diplomatic tension, however, has not hampered mutual trade between the two countries, with trade between Israel and Turkey increasing by 25 percent between 2009 and 2010 and by 40 percent in the first quarter of 2011 compared to the same period last year. Bilateral trade by the end of last year peaked at $3.44 billion, up from $2.58 billion in 2009.

Meanwhile, the total number of foreign tourists visiting Turkey during the January-May period hit 9 million, marking a 14.56 percent increase compared to the same period last year, according to data recently published by the ministry on its official website.

Some 3.3 million foreign tourists visited the country just in May, marking a 4.28 percent increase compared to May 2010.

German tourists accounted for 15 percent of all visitors for the January-May period, topping the list. Russia, Iran, the United Kingdom and Bulgaria followed Germany in tourist traffic to Turkey. In May, Russia tourists assumed the top rank, followed by Germany and the U.K.

About 235,000 foreign tourists that visited Turkey in May, accounting for 7.15 percent of the total, were day trippers, according to the data.

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



NATO: Iran to Sit on Parliamentary Assembly at La Maddalena

After years of frosty relations with the West, Iran is to take part for the first time in the NATO parliamentary assembly on the Mediterranean and the Middle East, which is to be held in La Maddalena on July 4 and 5. The announcement was made during a press conference at the Italian Senate by senator Sergio De Gregorio, who highlighted the historical importance of Iran’s attendance. “The junior Foreign Minister, Ali Ahani, will travel from Tehran. The Iranians will open the season of dialogue thanks to the new climate brought about by the US President, Barack Obama, who has worked to put an end to years of closure by pressing the “reset” button. Many NATO member states agree with the idea of going down a road of dialogue as far as possible,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Saudi Arabia to Stop Hiring Indonesian Domestic Workers

(AKI/Jakarta Post) — The Saudi Arabian government has announced plans to stop issuing visas for domestic workers from Indonesia and the Philippines amid stricter requirements and “unfair” regulatory provisions imposed by the two countries.

“The Ministry of Labor will stop issuing work visas to domestic workers from the Philippine and Indonesia as of Saturday [July 2],” Saudi Ministry of Labor spokesman Hattab Bin Saleh Al-Anzi said Wednesday according to arabnews.com.

Al-Anzi said that Saudi recruitment agents would seek to recruit domestic workers, including maids, from countries other than Indonesia and the Philippines.

The ministry’s decision comes after several other “labor exporting countries evinced a keen interest” to send domestic helpers to work for Saudi families, he said, adding that the ban on recruitment would be followed strictly.

Earlier, Indonesia had also imposed a moratorium on the export of labor to Saudi Arabia after an Indonesian migrant worker, Ruyati binti Satubi, was executed by Saudi authorities after she was convicted of murdering her Saudi employer.

The Indonesian government said the moratorium would come into effect on August 1 and remain in place until the Saudi government agreed to sign a memorandum of understanding to protect the rights of Indonesian workers.

Al-Anzi said the Labor Ministry had been working with other countries to meet the shortfall expected from the stoppage of recruitment from Indonesia.

The decision to also suspend recruitment from the Philippine comes after Manila put forward several strict conditions on the recruitment of domestic helpers.

On Wednesday, Albert Q. Valenciano, the labor attaché at the Philippine Embassy in Riyadh, said he was saddened and amazed at the outcome. Valenciano added that the embassy had sent a note verbale to the Saudi Foreign Ministry on June 19 to request a joint follow-up meeting, but had received no response. On April 27, the Kingdom had sent a delegation to the Philippines to negotiate the labor dispute, but talks broke down.

Based on estimates from the Philippine government, there are more than 1.2 million Filipinos working in Saudi Arabia, of which about 15 percent or 180,000 are domestic workers such as maids and drivers.

Meanwhile, more than 1 million Indonesian workers are said to be in Saudi Arabia, most of whom are employed as maids.

Previously, Saudi officials announced plans to employ more domestic workers from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Nepal, Eritrea, Sri Lanka, Mali and Kenya.

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



Saudi Official: Riyadh Will Seek Nukes if Iran Gets Them

Saudi Arabia would be forced to seek nuclear weapons if Iran became nuclear-armed, the Guardian quoted a senior Saudi official as saying on Wednesday.

“We cannot live in a situation where Iran has nuclear weapons and we don’t. It’s as simple as that,” the official said. “If Iran develops a nuclear weapon, that will be unacceptable to us and we will have to follow suit,” the official said, clarifying an earlier statement from Saudi Prince Turki al-Faisal.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Yemen’s Revolutionaries: The Tent-Dwellers of Sana’a

While President Salih licks his wounds abroad, Yemen’s protest movement is establishing its presence in the capital city, hoping to bridge the country’s divide. The revolutionaries — for now — live in tents.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Russia


Even Putin Drives Lada as Soviet Relic Approaches Top Europe Market: Cars

Lada, the car of the Soviet proletariat, survived the transition to capitalism and is now expanding to fend off General Motors Co. (GM) and Fiat SpA (F) two decades after the collapse of communism. Lada’s parent OAO AvtoVAZ, which is 25 percent-owned by Renault SA (RNO), plans to invest about 153 billion rubles ($5.4 billion) to introduce seven models in the next three years. The cars will in some cases replace vehicles that were developed before Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985 and presided over the collapse of the Soviet Union.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Pakistan: US Told to Curb Criticism of Anti-Insurgency Effort

Islamabad, 30 June (AKI/Dawn) — Pakistan’s military has asked US commanders to be mindful of its ‘concerns and constraints’ before publicly lashing out at its counter-militancy efforts.

“Our concerns and constraints must be taken into consideration before making any statement questioning our commitment to fighting militancy,” said ISPR chief Maj-Gen Athar Abbas in a rejoinder to statements made at their testimonies before US Senate’s Armed Services Committee by Lt-Gen John Allen, nominated as the next commander of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan, and Admiral William McRaven, designated to lead Special Operations Command.

Gen Abbas said: “We reject the allegations levelled by senior US military officials… casting aspersions on the desire and capability of Pakistan Army to fight militancy.”

Admiral McRaven, speaking on Pakistan’s reluctance to launch military offensive against the North Waziristan-based Haqqani network, had said it was “both a capacity issue and potentially a willingness issue”. He added: “I don’t think it (the mindset) is likely to change.”

Gen Allen had said Pakistan looked to be “hedging” against a possible US withdrawal by not acting against the Haqqanis.

The statements by American commanders expressing doubts about intentions of Pakistani commanders in the fight against militants are indicative of the rapid deterioration in military ties between the US and Pakistan in the aftermath of May 2 raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound.

The army, Gen Abbas said, is engaged in active operations against militants in three of the seven agencies in the tribal belt, whereas in the other agencies it was intensely involved in consolidation and stabilisation of the areas regained from militants.

Separately, another senior military official criticised the US for pushing Pakistan for action against Haqqanis and other militant groups at a time when it was holding negotiations with the Afghan Taliban.

“Our plate is too full,” he cautioned, adding that if the troops were further thinned down to start new operations reversals of gains made against militants could begin.

The official regretted that military strategists in Washington did not grasp the ground situation. “It is not just about kinetics (active military operations); in Pakistan’s case the army has to back the operations with consolidating and stabilisation because the civilian infrastructure is virtually non-existent in those areas.”

He said Pakistan Army cannot resort to indiscriminate use of force against its own people in tribal areas and would take tribes on board before acting against militants.

“Our concerns and constraints must be taken into consideration before making any statement questioning our commitment to fighting militancy,” said military public releations chief Maj-Gen Athar Abbas in a rejoinder to statements made at their testimonies before US Senate’s Armed Services Committee by Lt-Gen John Allen, nominated as the next commander of US and Nato forces in Afghanistan, and Admiral William McRaven, designated to lead Special Operations Command.

Abbas said: “We reject the allegations levelled by senior US military officials… casting aspersions on the desire and capability of Pakistan Army to fight militancy.”

McRaven, speaking on Pakistan’s reluctance to launch military offensive against the North Waziristan-based Haqqani network, had said it was “both a capacity issue and potentially a willingness issue”. He added: “I don’t think it (the mindset) is likely to change.”

Allen had said Pakistan looked to be “hedging” against a possible US withdrawal by not acting against the Haqqanis.

The statements by American commanders expressing doubts about intentions of Pakistani commanders in the fight against militants are indicative of the rapid deterioration in military ties between the US and Pakistan in the aftermath of 2 May raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound.

The army, Abbas said, is engaged in active operations against militants in three of the seven agencies in the tribal belt, whereas in the other agencies it was intensely involved in consolidation and stabilisation of the areas regained from militants.

Separately, another senior military official criticised the US for pushing Pakistan for action against Haqqanis and other militant groups at a time when it was holding negotiations with the Afghan Taliban.

“Our plate is too full,” he cautioned, adding that if the troops were further thinned down to start new operations reversals of gains made against militants could begin.

The official regretted that military strategists in Washington did not grasp the ground situation. “It is not just about kinetics (active military operations); in Pakistan’s case the army has to back the operations with consolidating and stabilisation because the civilian infrastructure is virtually non-existent in those areas.”

He said Pakistan Army cannot resort to indiscriminate use of force against its own people in tribal areas and would take tribes on board before acting against militants.

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



Taliban Says Prisoners Swapped for French Hostages

The Taliban said Thursday that some of its jailed commanders had been freed in exchange for the release of two French hostages, who returned home after 18 months in captivity in Afghanistan. “France was made to accept the conditions of the Islamic emirate of Afghanistan (Taliban) and agreed the release of a number of mujahedeen commanders in exchange for the release of the journalists,” it said in a statement. The Taliban claimed the abduction of the two television journalists, who vanished on December 30 2009 in Kapisa province, northeast of Kabul.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Chinese Collectors Come to Europe for Chinese Art

Apparently, the best place to buy antique art from China is Europe. More and more Chinese collectors are coming to London, Paris or Cologne to buy Chinese art at auction. Here they can be half-way sure it’s authentic.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese Take Over Swiss Watchmaker

Watchmaker Eterna has been bought by China Haidian Holdings, as previous owners the Porsche family from Germany confirmed on Thursday. No price was reported. Eterna, one of the few Swiss companies to manufacture mechanical watches, would be the second Chinese-owned Swiss watchmaker after Milus, according to business magazine Bilanz. The company, located in Grenchen in canton Solothurn, had turnover of SFr12 million ($14.4 million) last year and employs 70 workers, Bilanz said.

The Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry said it wasn’t worried by the purchase, but added that it hoped the Chinese would invest in the brand.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Elixir of Life Discovered on Easter Island

A drug has been discovered which scientists believe can reverse the effects of premature ageing and could extend human life by more than a decade.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Sub-Saharan Africa


EU, US Ponder Fight Against Al-Qaeda in Africa

The United States and European Union powers gathered in Spain on Thursday to ponder how best to battle Al-Qaeda’s offshoot in north Africa’s Sahel region. US Homeland Security chief Janet Napolitano met with interior ministers from the G6 European Union nations — Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain, a Spanish interior ministry spokeswoman said. They planned to focus on “the fight against terrorism in the Sahel”, said the spokeswoman for Interior Minister Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, who is also deputy prime minister. Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb is active in the Sahara desert and Sahel scrubland to the south — an area nearly the size of Australia stretching from western Mauritania through Mali and Niger.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



US Hit Shebab Somali Guerrilla First Time With Drone

(AGI) Washington — The United States have used a drone for the first time to hit Shebab Islamic guerrilla positions in Somalia. In the course of the operation, according to Washington Post, two important guerrilla commanders, who “were planning various actions also outside Somalia”, were hurt.

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

Latin America


Breaking: Hugo Chavez Has Cancer

This just in at the Miami Herald,

Hugo Chavez admits cancerous tumor.

President Hugo Chavez acknowledged Thursday night that he had a cancerous tumor.

He made the admission in a late-night speech, his first since falling ill 21 days ago.

Here is the video in Spanish, supposedly taped in Cuba [see link above]

My translation: if you use this text, please credit me and link to this post…

           — Hat tip: Fausta [Return to headlines]



Poll: Most Jamaicans Believe UK Rule Better

A new poll suggests that most Jamaicans believe the island would be better off under British rule. The poll of 1,008 Jamaicans for The Gleaner newspaper was conducted over four days by U.S. pollster Bill Johnson. Sixty percent of those surveyed believed the island would be better off if it had remained a U.K. colony. Seventeen percent said the island would be worse off as a British colony and 23 percent said they did not know. The poll had a margin of error of 4 percentage points. Jamaica achieved independence from Britain in 1962.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


611 Refugees Make Landfall on Lampedusa

(AGI) Lampedusa — 3 boats with immigrants made landfall on Lampedusa in only a few hours. According to Caoast Guard sources, the refugees that landed on the island between late last night and early this morning are 611 in all. The first boat was carrying 174 persons, the second 249 and the third 188, all of which included women and children.

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



Blue Maryland Seeing Red on Immigration

Sorry no time to go into it today, but just wanted readers to know about this unbelievable political shake-up in Blue Maryland on illegal immigration. The mainstream media has missed one of the hottest political stories of the summer in Maryland as organizers of a petition drive to put a new law (signed by Democrat Governor Martin O’Malley) that would give in-state tuition rates to illegal aliens will (I predict) succeed in being taken to referendum.

The drive ends today and the Washington Post finally wrote about it as a news story yesterday! Be sure to check out what they say about what an impact this initiative will have on the national discussion about immigration—-Blue Maryland sends a message!

From the Washington Post:…

           — Hat tip: AC [Return to headlines]



Immigration: More Land on Lampedusa

(ANSAmed) — LAMPEDUSA (AGRIGENTO), JUNE 30 — More boats carrying immigrants have landed on Lampedusa after weather conditions began improving yesterday. A large boat with 170 migrants as passengers, including 24 women and 4 children, landed just before midnight on the island, while a second boat carrying about a hundred people and escorted by Coast Guard patrol boats will soon be reaching the port. Yesterday another 533 refugees who had left from Libya arrived on the island. The boat which reached the port in the morning was carrying 249 people, while 188 were instead immigrants intercepted on a third boat which experienced difficulties 18 miles off Lampedusa and was aided by port authorities patrol boats and those of the Coast Guard. Among the 437 migrants who arrived today there are 25 women and 7 children.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



In Czech Republic, Russians Are Back and Thriving

Twenty years after Soviet troops left to the delight of a liberated nation, Russian schools, businesses, newspapers and communities are thriving in and around Prague. But while many Czechs seem to be leaving decades of bad blood behind them, there’s alarm in Russia at the economic impact of a new wave of middle-class immigration to Eastern Europe, where life seems far simpler and where EU membership brings dynamism. “Private property rights are questioned every day. It’s an awful business environment here [in Russia]. There is even a danger for people’s freedom,” opposition leader Mikhail Kasyanov said in an interview. Statistics reveal a deep loss of confidence in Russia among foreigners and Russians alike.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Pakistani Accused of Killing His Wife Appears in Court

Modena, 30 June (AKI) — Pakistani immigrant Khan Ahmad Butt and his son appeared in court Thursday in northern Italy accused of murdering Butt’s wife Shahnaz Begum in October 2010 in the town of Novi di Modena.

During the hearing in the city of Modena, the presiding judge accepted a request from the Association of Moroccan Women in Italy to form the plaintiff in the case.

“This tragedy is the latest in a long line of crimes committed by men who think they have the right to stone to death or torture their women,” said the association’s president and member of the Italian parliament Souad Sbai.

Butt, a 53-year-old manual worker allegedly killed his 47-year-old wife during a violent quarrel after she defended their 20-year-old daughter Nosheen for refusing an arranged marriage and intervened after he allegedly attacked Nosheen with a wrench, leaving her with a severe head wound.

Butt’s 19-year-old son Umair Butt was arrested on suspicion of helping his father bludgeon his mother to death with a rock and attack his sister, who was admitted to hospital in a critical condition

The Association of Moroccan Women, the Friuli Venezia Giulia region, and the Province of Pordenone are the plaintiff in the ongoing trial of a Moroccan immigrant chef El Ketaoui Dafani for another ‘honour’ crime. Dafani is on trial for the murder of his daughter Sanaa Dafani in northeastern Italy in September 2009 after he discovered she had a love-affair with a 32-year-old Italian man.

“Such crimes are unacceptable in this country and are the result of a poisonous multculturalism which allows foreigners to behave in a way that we cannot allow any Italian citizen to,” Sbai added.

Several ‘honour’ killings committed by Muslim immigrants have shocked Italy in the past few years and raised questions about their integration.

Just this week, a Moroccan carpenter living in northern Italy was arrested on suspicion of stabbing his wife to death because she wanted to leave him and allegedly begin a more liberated and western life with another man.

A Pakistani immigrant, Mohammed Saleem and two other male relatives are serving long prison sentences in Italy for the murder of his 20-year-old daughter Hina Saleem found buried in the garden of her family home with her throat slit and her head facing Mecca in August 2006.

Hina had ‘dishonoured’ the family by dressing in western clothes, working in a pizzeria in the northern town of Sarezzo and living with her Italian boyfriend and refusing and arranged marriage.

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



Legitimizing Resident Aliens

Utah’s latest version of its driving privilege card takes effect Friday — one that expands background checks on undocumented immigrants in a compromise that saved the program from being dumped entirely.

The 6-year-old program allows cardholders to drive legally in Utah without having to prove legal residency and is based on the premise that the permit allows these drivers to obtain auto insurance.

Nanette Rolfe, director of public safety, said the new application and renewal process targets only those convicted of felonies or with outstanding warrants by requiring applicants to be fingerprinted and bring photo identification to obtain a driving privilege card.

“If they’re an individual that is upholding the law, there should be no reason the fingerprints should be shared with anyone unless there is a felony or outstanding warrant,” Rolfe said. “There is no reason to be afraid.”

Data on an applicant who has a felony will be sent to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement; information on an individual with an outstanding warrant will be forwarded to local police.

Alfonso Gonzalez, 42, an undocumented immigrant from West Valley City, renewed his driving privilege card on Monday before SB138 takes effect. But the Mexican national must submit his fingerprints next year when seeking renewal.

“I have lived in this country for over 20 years and have had no legal problems, so I have no fear of submitting my fingerprints,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Van Grungy [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Mayors Concerned About Afghan Asylum Seekers

Eleven mayors have written to immigration minister Gerd Leers expressing their concern about Afghan asylum seekers in their cities who are suspected of war crimes, reports Trouw on Tuesday.

The asylum seekers have been declared ‘undesirable’ by the foreign affairs ministry because they are suspected of being members of the Afghan intelligence agency KhAD/WAD.

However, the mayors, among them Rotterdam’s Ahmed Aboutabel and Maastricht’s Onno Hoes, say many of them have never been to court and have therefore never been found guilty.

They want Leers to stop all deportation procedures against them now that a court in The Hague has said the lack of an individual hearing is ‘unacceptable’.

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



Netherlands: A Burka Conflicts With Good Manners, Like Public Nudity, Says Minister

Just as the people are not allowed to walk around the streets naked, wearing an all-encompassing burka is also against Dutch norms and manners, home affairs minister Piet Hein Donner said during a parliamentary debate on integration on Wednesday.

The government’s plan to introduce a ban on the burka is not so much about public safety as about the fact ‘in our society, you should be able to see each other’, the minister is quoted as saying by the Telegraaf.

National anthem

The cabinet, supported by its anti-Islam alliance partner PVV, is planning to shake up the current rules surrounding the integration of foreigners, and a ban on the burka is part of that.

The new policy will remove targets and make immigrants responsible for their own integration. ‘When I was at school, there was much greater segregation — between Catholics and Protestants,’ Donner said. But that is now over, he pointed out.

The minister also told MPs that knowledge of the Dutch national anthem, the Wilhelmus, will be included in integration courses for new immigrants from July 1.

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



Obama ‘Defiance’ of Constitution Earns Impeachment Call

‘What use are elections if the executive branch rules by decree?’

An organization that represents the 75 percent of American citizens who want more control over illegal immigration is calling for the impeachment of Barack Obama over his involvement in the transfer of weapons to Mexican drug lords and his efforts to provide amnesty to illegal aliens.

“President Obama is no longer the legitimate president of the United States,” said William Gheen, president of Americans for Legal Immigration PAC, in calling for the action today.

“By arming drug and human smugglers with assault weapons that have been used to kill American and Mexican citizens and police forces, and by ordering amnesty for illegal aliens which has been rejected by both the Congress and the American public more than eight times, Obama has committed a form of treason against the United States and must be removed from office by Congress,” he said.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Leave Me Alones vs Make it Betters

The two streams in American politics are not liberal vs conservative, they can be roughly defined as “Leave Me Alone” vs “Make It Better”. Leave Me Alone seeks personal independence, self-reliance and freedom from interference. Make It Better believes in the progressive betterment of society through regulation, intervention and education.

Most people associate the “Leave Me Alones” with conservatism and the “Make It Betters” with liberalism. That’s partly true, but not entirely. The hijacking of liberalism and the Democratic party by the radical left has them into the standard bearers of a ruthless “Make It Better” agenda. But “Make It Better” is found often on the right as well. The loss of the cultural war to the left has pushed conservatives into a defensive position. And the ascension of the left has moved it into a state of permanent aggression.

“Leave Me Alone” is defensive. It creates boundaries and asks that they be respected. “Make It Better” is offensive, it pushes through individual boundaries in the name of the greater good. Neither of these are purely moral positions. Rather they are preferential positions. “Leave Me Alone” can turn a blind eye to evil with long term consequences. “Make It Better” sometimes brings positive change. But like any course of positive action, “Make It Better” is more likely to be associated with negative consequences.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Progressivism Masquerading as Education

A couple of weeks ago the results of a nationwide history test given at various grade levels were released by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). To virtually no one’s surprise, only 20 percent of fourth graders, 17 percent of eighth graders and 12 percent of high school seniors demonstrated “proficiency” on the exam. Most Americans, if we’re being honest, are equally incompetent, if not more so, regarding basic economics. Throw in a lack of proficiency regarding the Constitution, and you get a trifecta of ignorance that ought to embarrass any First World nation. Yet if the Maryland public school system is any indication, we’re beyond embarrassment: “environmental literacy” will now be required in order to graduate high school.

Understand, no reasonable person has a problem with teaching children to be responsible stewards of the planet. But anyone who has watched the steady evolution of public schools from places of education into propaganda centers for the progressive worldview knows exactly what is going on here. The State Board of Education hides the truth by saying there are no specifics regarding what is to be taught, but Maryland Governor, Democrat Martin O’Malley, lets the cat out of the progressive bag when he notes the law with serve as “a foundation for green jobs.”

You know which country had a romance with green jobs? Spain. Know what they discovered? For every green job created, 2.1 non-green jobs were lost. Spain’s unemployment rate is currently 22 percent. And then there’s Great Britain. Three weeks ago, one of their largest utility companies, Scottish Electric, announced that the gas and electricity bills of five million customers would go up by a whopping 19 and 10 percent respectively, beginning August first. Six other major power providers expected to follow suit.

Why is it happening? Part of the reason is higher wholesale costs for power, but the other reason is depressingly familiar. Raymond Jack, Scottish Power’s chief executive: “The rising burden of non-energy costs faced by Britain’s energy suppliers — including the cost of meeting government environmental and social programs and the cost of distributing electricity on the national grid — has also placed further upward pressure on energy bills.” The result? In Britain, the Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) points out that many of the country’s poor will be faced with a choice between “heating and eating” next winter.

[…]

It is not education. It is indoctrination. It is an indoctrination so thorough that the same high school students who can already quote chapter and verse on environmentalism, don’t know the century in which the Civil War was fought, and can’t add or subtract without a calculator.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

General


Fossil Eyes Reveal Predator’s Sharp Vision

Ancient animals saw the world through multi-faceted compound eyes, a new fossil discovery reveals. The ancient eyes, which date back half a billion years, probably belonged to a predator, likely a giant shrimp-like creature. Like a modern fly, the ancient creature relied on compound eyes consisting of thousands of separate lenses to see the world. Each lens provides a pixel of vision. The more lenses, the better the creature could see. The mysterious ancient shrimp saw better than any other animal yet discovered from its era: Its eyes contained 3,000 lenses.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The First Non-Human Meat Farmers

It’s the real animal farm: an African ant appears to farm other animals for meat — it may be the best example of true domestication besides our crops

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110629

Financial Crisis
» A New Leader for the IMF: ‘Convinced European’ Christine Lagarde Takes Over
» As Police Crush Protests, EU Narrowly Wins Greek Vote
» Bankrupt Greece Blackmails Europe, Bailout or Euro Zone Dies, Global Financial System Collapse
» Barroso Hails Lagarde’s IMF Nomination
» D-Day for Greece as Lawmakers Vote on Austerity
» Despite Fears: Owning Home Retains Allure, Poll Shows
» EU Holds on to IMF Chairmanship
» EU to Greece: No More Solidarity if You Vote No
» Greece: Police Use Tear Gas in Front of Parliament
» Greek Austerity Gains Momentum Despite Growing Protests
» New French Plan: German Banks Signal Willingness to Help Greece
» Portugal Cuts Budget Deficit to 8.7% of GDP
» Portugal Shows Austerity Zeal, Postpones High Speed Rail
» Respite for the Euro: Greece Dodges Insolvency by Passing Austerity Package
 
USA
» Claim: TSA Employees Now Developing Cancer Clusters From Standing Near Body Scanner Machines
» Hitchcockian Crows Spread the Word About Unkind Humans
» Jail for NY Synagogue Terror Plotters
» No Child Left Inside Act, Agenda 21 in the Classroom
 
Europe and the EU
» ‘Berlin is Playing Into the Hands of the Chinese’
» Berlin’s Dance With the Dragon
» Brussels Threatens Fines Over Naples Waste
» Chinese Cyber Attacks Target German Ministers
» Dutch Coffee Shops Allowed to Sell Cannabis to Foreigners, For Now
» Dutch MPs Back Unanaesthetised Slaughter Ban
» French Opposition Leader Joins 2012 Presidential Race
» Germany: Revenge Attacks Spark Fear of Extremist Violence
» Italy: Work Restarts on Lyon-Turin Rail Link
» Ministers Agree on Extension of Germany’s Anti-Terrorism Laws
» Netherlands: Verhagen: Fear of Foreigners Understandable
» Opposition Leader Stirs Up Trouble for Polish EU Presidency
» Right vs. Left: Arsons and Stabbings in Berlin as Extremist Groups Clash
» Sweden: Three Injured in ‘Gang-Related’ Shootout
» Swedish Police Backtrack on ‘Ethnic’ Profiling
» Switzerland: Plan for Foreign Criminal Expulsions Hits Impasse
» UK: Children’s Minister: Asian Communities Hampering Child Sex Inquiries
 
Balkans
» Kosovo: Serbians Comemorate 1389 Battle vs Turks, Tension
 
Mediterranean Union
» Publishing: Mediterranean, ANSA to Host Aman 2012 Assembly
 
North Africa
» Egyptian Court Dismisses Muslim Case Against Christian Woman
» Egypt: Protestors Clash With Police in Tahrir Square
» Egyptian Salafis Boycott Coptic Businessman
» France Air Drops Arms to Libya Rebels: Source
» France: Paris Dedicates Square to Initiator of Tunisia Revolt
» Muslim Brotherhood Figure and Former Spokesman in the West: Establish a Global Islamic State
» UK Won’t Supply Libyan Rebels With Weapons as France Did
» Unlike France, Britain Won’t Arm Libya Rebels: Minister
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Column in Saudi Daily Denies Holocaust, Criticizes Mandatory Holocaust Studies for Arab-Israeli Pupils
» Israel Rejects Gaza Ship Claims as ‘Bond-Esque’
» Organization Involved in Gilad Shalit’s Abduction Promises More Kidnappings
 
Middle East
» Ahmadinejad: Iran and Cuba Play an Important Role in Restoring World Order
» Averting a Swarm: Yemen’s Political Instability May Make it Difficult to Control Locust Breeding.
» Conference Defines U.S., Israel as Source of Global Terrorism
» Erdogan: Imprisoning Turkish Generals — And Ending Secularism
» Europe Must be Ready for Arab Reform Long Haul
» In Saudi Arabia, Renewed Discussion on Fatwa Permitting the Killing of Coworkers Who Do Not Pray
» Iran Denounces Upcoming BBC2 Documentary on Muhammad as Attempt to “Ruin Muslims’ Sanctity”
» Iran: Turkey Must Not Pressure Syria
» Lebanese Cleric: Demolish U.S. Embassy in Beirut
» Special Stakelbeck on Terror Show: Hezbollah Rising
» Syrian Terror Campaign Forces Refugees Across Northern Border
» Turkish Opposition Boycotts Parliament Opening
» Uprisings: OIC Islamic Countries, Change is Irreversible
» Yemeni Soldiers Killed in Clashes With Al Qaeda Militants
 
Russia
» Polish Opposition Blames Russia for President’s Death Crash
 
South Asia
» France’s Vinci Builts First 3D Cinema in Turkmenistan
» France Says Does Not Pay Ransoms, As Hostages Released
» Indian Cricket Plots Control of World Game
 
Far East
» Famine Threatens to Return to North Korea
» North Korean Players Struck by Lightning, Coach Claims
 
Australia — Pacific
» PNG Tribesman Attacks New Zealander With Arrows
 
Immigration
» 553 Refugees Land in Lampedusa
» 840 Refugees Arrive in Lampedusa, 117 Women 28 Children
» Netherlands: Anti-Islam Party Wants New Definition of ´non-Native´
» Netherlands: Fear of Foreigners ‘Understandable’, Says Verhagen (Update)
» Over 500 Sub-Saharan Migrants Land on Lampedusa
» ‘Tighten Border Controls’: Sweden Democrats
» Two Boatloads of Immigrants Land in Lampedusa
 
Culture Wars
» Rhode Island Lawmakers Pass Bill to Allow Civil Unions for Gays
» Swiss Drop Plans to Tighten Euthanasia Rules
 
General
» Astronomers Find Brightest Object of Early Universe
» Rover May Tackle Kilimanjaro-Sized Mound on Mars
» Space Station’s Brush With Space Junk Highlights Growing Threat

Financial Crisis


A New Leader for the IMF: ‘Convinced European’ Christine Lagarde Takes Over

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has called it “a victory for France.” But Christine Lagarde, appointed to replace the disgraced Dominique Strauss-Kahn as head of the International Monetary Fund, insists she is independent. Despite a looming inquiry into past indiscretions, Lagarde has widespread backing.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



As Police Crush Protests, EU Narrowly Wins Greek Vote

As the Greek parliament managed to narrowly pass a package of sweeping privatisation and draconian cuts to public services at the insistence of the EU and IMF, police deployed an unprecedented level of violence to suppress mass protests and prevent demonstrators from blocking the parliament. With a slim 155 in favour and 138 against, the centre-left government of Prime Minister George Papandreou managed to pressure all rebel MPs to back the package, shocking his deputies with visions of tanks on the streets of the capital if the bill did not pass.

Unconfirmed Twitter reports from on the ground suggest that plastic bullets have also been fired on demonstrators. “Normally there are provocations on the sides, but the police are attacking normal demonstrators,” Maniou Panayota, an assistant to Greek left-wing MEP Nikolaos Chountis told EUobserver from Athens. “These are university professors, locally elected politicians. The police violence is incredible. They are attacking with no mercy.”

She confirmed reports that police had fired gas into the metro stop underneath the square where a makeshift medic unit had been established. Takis Frantzis, a community activist, told this website: “Several times, the police have tried to occupy the streets using unprecedented levels of tear gas,” he added. Demonstrators describe an orange-green gas being used that they have not seen before. According to a Red Cross tent, some 500 people have been treated for respiratory troubles, with 20 taken to hospital for burns and bruises. “Teams of doctors are trying to heal the wounded,” Frantzis added.

Some 29 have been arrested, according to police. Of their number, 19 have been injured. Frantzis reports that the main rallying call people have been chanting is an old slogan from the days of the military junta: ‘Bread, education, freedom!’ “But now added is the phrase: ‘The junta didn’t stop in ‘74’,” he continued. “We don’t have democracy at the moment.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Bankrupt Greece Blackmails Europe, Bailout or Euro Zone Dies, Global Financial System Collapse

The Greek population is in constant revolt with another 48 hour national strike underway against ever expanding announcements of economic austerity though to date little of which has actually been implemented and therefore risks at the very a least a delay of the latest tranche of Euro 12 billion in what has now become a permanent flow of funds from core Euro-zone to Greece and other peripheral eurozone countries, therefore tax payers of core Europe and to a lesser degree Britain are being taxed to pay for the unwillingness of the PIIGS to pay their bills.

Core Euro-zone countries are effectively being black mailed by Greece to finance Greece’s public budget deficit and the interest payments due on the ever expanding debt mountain, none of which that the Greece population are having to bare the consequences of, for were they then Greece would have gone bust Iceland style a year ago. The facts are that IF Greece were not being financed as a consequence of being within the Euro-zone then all of the middle class of Greece would have already been swiftly wiped out, as the value of earnings, savings and assets would have collapsed along with the Greek economy as a consequence of the markets immediate adjustment to the true level of debt and inability to ever repay.

Some argue that a short- sharp shock Iceland style would prove better in the longer run but there would be blood in the streets perhaps even revolution that would be infinitely worse for the Greek population than what is taking place today as international trade would literally seize up overnight due to the inability to make payments on goods and services and if a country can no longer import foods, then all that would be left would be food aid being shipped in Africa style to prevent starvation.

Therefore the Greeks life style is being subsidised by hard working tax payers elsewhere, and those demonstrating on the streets of Greece are mostly delusional or represent subversive interests such as the communist party that are banking on profiting from debt crisis chaos, for if Greeks actually got what they are asking for i.e. an exit from the Euro and debt default, then the Greek population would soon, perhaps within 24 hours come to regret the outcome as all roads would lead to instant bankruptcy with all of its consequences. So all this talk of the Greeks wanting to leave the Euro-zone is a load of nonsense, for what the Greeks really need to worry about is Greece being kicked out of the Euro as it continues to act as a funding black hole that is currently costing core euro-zone tax payers Euro 100 billion per year that they will never get back.

If Greece were ejected from the Euro-zone then there would soon be an exodus of Greece’s best and brightest workers as they sought earnings in hard currency such as the Euro rather than be paid in worthless Zimabwe-esk Drachma’s. Something that the Euro-zone politicians may be considering behind close doors in a desperate attempt to save the Euro currency from collapse.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Barroso Hails Lagarde’s IMF Nomination

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso hailed French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde’s nomination to become the next IMF chief as an “excellent choice.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



D-Day for Greece as Lawmakers Vote on Austerity

Greece faces a financial D-Day as lawmakers vote on a tough austerity plan to secure new money from creditors to avoid sovereign default despite a last-ditch general strike by protesters.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Despite Fears: Owning Home Retains Allure, Poll Shows

Owning a house remains central to Americans’ sense of well-being, even as many doubt their home is a good investment in after a punishing recession.

Nearly nine in 10 Americans say homeownership is an important part of the American dream, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. And they are keen on making sure it stays that way, for themselves and everyone else.

Support for helping people in financial distress over housing is higher than support for helping those without a job for many months.

[Return to headlines]



EU Holds on to IMF Chairmanship

French finance minister Christine Lagarde has been elected as the new chief of the International Monetary Fund at a time of unprecedented economic turmoil in the eurozone.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



EU to Greece: No More Solidarity if You Vote No

On the eve of perhaps the most significant vote in the Greek parliament since the return of democracy to the country, the European Commission has warned there will be no more EU solidarity if the country says no to more cuts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Police Use Tear Gas in Front of Parliament

Police used tear gas on protestors in front of Greece’s Parliament building this morning to disperse demonstrators who are protesting against the austerity plan set to be voted on by MPs today. Europe’s attention is focused on Athens today, where MPs will be asked to vote in favour of a austerity programme, crucial to prevent the country from going bankrupt and to ward off danger for the Eurozone. Protestors have been arriving to the city centre since this morning to try to demonstrate against the vote by symbolically surrounding Parliament. According to a France Press journalist, police started to use tear gas to move a group of protestors away. Subsequently, numerous people moved back, taking refuge at the entrance of the Syntagma Square metro station. The press has learned that the vote, initially scheduled to take place at 11:00am, will probably be moved due to the large number of MPs involved in the debate.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greek Austerity Gains Momentum Despite Growing Protests

Greece’s latest round of austerity measures continues to divide its people and lawmakers, with workers continuing a two-day strike as parliament votes on the bill. Approval is necessary to save Greece from default. Greek lawmakers appeared increasingly likely to pass a new round of austerity measures on Wednesday, with the fate of the country’s emergency loan package and perhaps its place in the eurozone at stake. The bill’s passage is contingent on the government’s ability to keep in line its slim majority of 155 out of 300 seats. A small number of lawmakers from the ruling Socialist party have defected or threatened to vote against some of or all of the measures. However Thomas Robopoulos, one of three Socialist deputies who said he would vote against the bill, backtracked before the vote and told Reuters news agency he would support the bill. “I have made the decision to vote for the plan because national interests are more important than our own dignity,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



New French Plan: German Banks Signal Willingness to Help Greece

A new plan by French banks could lead to a breakthrough in efforts to create a second bailout for debt-stricken Greece after German banks also signaled their willingness to participate. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble has reportedly scheduled meetings with the country’s top bankers to discuss the scheme. The German government has repeatedly insisted that private investors must take part in further financial aid for Greece, a requirement that has been met with some resistance. But now a potential solution to the conflict has emerged. A number of media reports say that German banks are prepared to take part in a new “soft” debt restructuring plan by Paris aimed at encouraging private sector participation. “The French proposal should form the basis for working out a German decision,” an unnamed German Finance Ministry insider told news agency Reuters on Tuesday afternoon. Meanwhile Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble was expected to meet personally with leaders of the country’s largest banks and insurers on Thursday to negotiate a plan.

According to the model proposed by French banks, which are among the most vulnerable to Greek debt, financial institutions would roll over some 50 percent of Greece’s soon-to-mature bonds and invest in new bonds not set to mature for another 30 years. Some 20 percent would flow into a special fund secured by high-value securities.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portugal Cuts Budget Deficit to 8.7% of GDP

Portugal’s first quarter budget deficit fell to 8.7 percent of Gross Domestic Product from 9.2 percent the previous quarter thanks to spending cuts and increased tax receipts, the INE national statistics institute said on Wednesday. The outcome reflected “reduced public spending, including salary cuts” and higher tax revenue, INE said in a statement. Faced with a potentially devastating sovereign debt crisis, Portugal agreed to slash its public deficit to 5.9 percent by the end of 2011 in exchange for a 78-billion-euro bailout programme from the European Union and International Monetary Fund. The deal, agreed earlier this year, aims to bring the deficit down to three percent of GDP, the EU limit, by 2013. Elected last month, Portugal’s new centre-right government has vowed to “scrupulously apply” the measures negotiated with the EU and IMF and promised even deeper budget cuts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Portugal Shows Austerity Zeal, Postpones High Speed Rail

Portugal’s new centre-right government vowed Tuesday to exceed austerity targets agreed in its EU-IMF bailout, sacrificing the completion a high-speed rail link with Spain. Suspending construction of the Lisbon-Madrid high-speed rail link that was due to be completed by 2013, formed part of a four-year government programme submitted to parliament for approval. The government of Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho vowed to “apply scrupulously the measures negotiated with the International Monetary Fund and the European Union,” but said it wants to be “more ambitious in the adjustment process for the Portuguese economy”.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Respite for the Euro: Greece Dodges Insolvency by Passing Austerity Package

Greek parliament on Wednesday passed a vital 28 billion euro austerity package, allowing the country to avoid immediate insolvency. Efforts to come up with a vast new bailout for Athens have also made progress this week.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Claim: TSA Employees Now Developing Cancer Clusters From Standing Near Body Scanner Machines

(NaturalNews) In a new twist to the TSA saga to which we can only say, “We told ya so,” the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) has obtained documents through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) that reveal TSA employees are reporting “cancer clusters” among their own employees who work near radiation body scanners. At the same time, DHS refuses to issue dosimeters to TSA employees because, obviously, those dosimeters would indicate alarming levels of radiation exposure. So it’s better to just keep everyone ignorant and keep irradiating all the TSA employees and hope nobody notices, apparently.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hitchcockian Crows Spread the Word About Unkind Humans

The common crow knows when you’re out to get him — and he’s likely to teach his friends and family to watch out for you, a new study finds. In results that can only be described as Hitchcockian, researchers in Seattle who trapped and banded crows for five years found that those birds don’t forget a face. Even after going for a year without seeing the threatening human, the crows would scold the person on sight, cackling, swooping and dive-bombing in mobs of 30 or more. “Most of the birds that are scolding us are not the ones we captured,” said study researcher John Marzluff, a professor of wildlife science at the University of Washington and an occasional victim of crow attacks. “It’s likely that they’re learning from their parents and their peers that this dangerous person is still out there.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Jail for NY Synagogue Terror Plotters

Three men have each been jailed for 25 years for planning to attack two New York synagogues and to shoot down US military planes.

James Cromitie, 45, David Williams, 30 and Onta Williams, 35, were arrested in May 2009 following a year-long sting operation.

The men, who were provided with inert explosives by an undercover informant, were convicted in October 2010 after a two-month trial.

The US Attorney’s Office said the three had voluntarily agreed to target synagogues and military planes using what they thought were real bombs and missiles.

An FBI informant was approached in June 2008 by Cromitie, who talked to him about Afghanistan.

Cromitie told the informant his parents had lived in Afghanistan, and said that if he died a martyr, he would “go to paradise”.

The informant told Cromitie he was involved with a Pakistan-based terrorist group known as Jaish-e-Mohammed, and Cromitie said he would like to join the group to “do jihad”.

The informant continued to meet Cromitie, the two other defendants and a fourth defendant, Laguerre Payen, who has not yet been sentenced.

The group discussed attacking synagogues in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, and shooting down military aircraft from the Air National Guard Base in Newburgh.

The informant provided the men with a non-functioning surface-to-air guided missile and three Improvised Explosive Devices, each with C-4 plastic explosive.

The men were arrested as they took “active steps to carry out the operation”.

The men’s defence team claimed they were victims of entrapment, but Assistant US Attorney David Raskin said the sting did not undermine the seriousness of the men’s crimes.

He said: “The bombs that they were going to use were supposed to kill a lot of people. The fact that they were all fake really doesn’t matter.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]



No Child Left Inside Act, Agenda 21 in the Classroom

On June 21, 2011, the Maryland State Board of Education proudly announced that students must be environmentally literate before they can graduate from high school. Each child must receive a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary environmental education aligned with the Maryland State Environmental Literacy Standards.

[…]

The sponsors of the bill claim, “studies show environmental education has a measurable, positive impact on student achievement not only in science but in math, reading, and social studies. Business leaders also increasingly believe an environmentally literate workforce is critical in a burgeoning green economy. Where is this “burgeoning green economy? I see no signs of it.

I did find plenty of data showing the dismal state of education and schools in Maryland when it comes to math, science, and reading. Students can barely read, write, balance a checkbook, or solve simple math problems yet are now required to be stewards of the environment and explore it in depth across the curriculum. Sarbanes believes that a more holistic approach to the curriculum is necessary. Somehow holistic does not mesh well with curriculum. It sounds like a College of Education new age, feel-good teaching method of the moment; let us throw $500 million in this “green” direction. We failed at teaching students to read, write, and compute, perhaps we can be successful at brainwashing them into believing that human activity is bad, causes global warming, and destroys the planet.

Apparently, who knew environmental study and “green play” helps children cope with ADD and ease obesity rates. I thought proper nutrition, PE classes, competitive sports, and recess time where designed for physical exercise and thus weight control. What is “green play” anyway?

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


‘Berlin is Playing Into the Hands of the Chinese’

Trade was the focus of the meeting of German and Chinese leaders in Berlin this week, with German companies eager to get a piece of the massive Chinese market. But commentators warn of the dangers of becoming too dependent on the emerging Asian superpower.

The center-right Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes: “Relations between China and the Europeans can be described using two key words: business and human rights. The Europeans leave geopolitics and big-picture strategy to the Americans. This is both shortsighted and naive. While we (Europeans) see free trade as something that is desirable from an economic standpoint, Beijing views economic issues as a strategic lever to be used for its geopolitical positioning. …. Now, Premier Wen Jiabao is traveling through Europe with his checkbook, buying up sovereign bonds from debt-stricken countries, having China’s state banks grant low-interest loans or promising new investments for companies that China has invested in. China, which is already the US’s largest creditor, is also becoming a powerful economic player in Europe, and not only as a market for our goods.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Berlin’s Dance With the Dragon

A by-the-numbers exchange on human rights. Mutual praise and admiration. New deals worth billions. The Chinese juggernaut has passed through Berlin, leaving German commentators pondering the implications in The Local’s media roundup on Wednesday. Newspapers, regardless of their political stripes, were all but unanimous in expressing concern about the danger of too-great China’s influence in Germany and Europe after Chinese premier Wen Jiabao travelled to the region this week. Some bemoaned the lack of a united European policy on China, allowing the emerging Asian giant to use its considerable economic lure — and bulging wallet — to more easily influence each country individually.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Brussels Threatens Fines Over Naples Waste

The European Commission warned Italy on Tuesday that it risks fines unless it improves waste collection in Naples where thousands of tons of garbage have built up in recent days.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Chinese Cyber Attacks Target German Ministers

Chinese cyber attacks on German computers rose sharply in number last year and included attempted penetrations of government ministers’ PCs, according to a Wednesday media report. Even as Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao wrapped up a glittering visit to promote trade and a closer relationship, daily Bild reported the dramatic increase in attacks by Chinese hackers, whom the Cologne-based Bundesverfassungsschutz intelligence agency believes are working for Chinese intelligence. Angela Merkel had discussed the issue with Wen during their talks, Bild reported. Germany and China held their first joint cabinet meeting Tuesday and inked more than $15 billion in business deals amid deepening economic and political ties between the two countries. The Bundesverfassungsschutz’s latest report says the number of “electronic attacks” on German federal officials in 2010 was 2,108, which is about 600 more than the previous year, the paper wrote. “Most of the attacks aimed at federal officials and German business, because of their characteristics, can be assigned an origin in China,” the intelligence report says.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Coffee Shops Allowed to Sell Cannabis to Foreigners, For Now

The closure of a coffee shop that sold cannabis to foreign visitors has been deemed unlawful by the top Dutch court. However, the court’s decision hinted there would be legal grounds for a change to the law in future.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch MPs Back Unanaesthetised Slaughter Ban

The Dutch parliament voted on Tuesday to ban the unanaesthetised slaughter of animals — much to the disappointment of Jewish and Muslim organisations. The final count of MPs’ votes in the 150-seat lower house was 116 ballots for the draft legislation, with 30 against. Animals are killed using the ritual slaughter technique — throat-slitting without stunning the animal in advance — to obtain kosher and halal meats. Jewish and Muslim representatives had argued that animals do not suffer more in the process than they do when other methods used in modern, non-religious slaughterhouses are applied.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



French Opposition Leader Joins 2012 Presidential Race

The leader of France’s Socialist Party, Martine Aubry, has joined the race to become president in 2012. The veteran politician is regarded as her party’s second-strongest contender to challenge president Sarkozy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Revenge Attacks Spark Fear of Extremist Violence

A string of tit-for-tat attacks in Berlin between political extremists on the far-left and right, including an alleged knife attack on a young mother walking with her three children, has given rise to fears of surging ideological violence. In the past week, violence between the two sides has escalated. There have been several attacks on neo-Nazis, including assaults on high-ranking members of the National Democratic Party (NPD) and also on the xenophobic pro Deutschland group. These were followed by arson attacks on leftist premises overnight Sunday. Some of the violence has been targeted against election campaigns ahead of Berlin’s city election in September. Berlin Interior Minister Ehrhart Körting told daily Der Tagesspiegel’s Tuesday edition that he was concerned about the danger of things spinning out of control.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Work Restarts on Lyon-Turin Rail Link

La Stampa, 28 June 2011

“TGV en route after battle ends,” headlines La Stampa in the wake of the violent clashes that marked the opening of the work site for the construction of the high-speed Lyon-Turin rail link in the Susa Valley in Northwest Italy. The newspaper reports that the skirmishes, which injured four protesters and 25 police, broke out when authorities moved into to dismantle barricades manned by several thousand supporters of the No TAV (“No to High Speed”) collective. They were blocking road access to the work site.

La Stampa welcomes the breaching of “the wall of illegality that surrounded the work site,” while acknowledging that fears voiced by local residents about the site’s impact on the valley are legitimate. “The start of work will send a positive signal to the European Union, which had issued a number of ultimatums over delays on the Italian section of the project.” As La Stampa points out, if construction work had not begun by the end of June, 600 million euros in European grants for the Lyon-Turin line — which is set to cut journey times between Paris and Milan from seven to three hours — could have been lost.

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



Ministers Agree on Extension of Germany’s Anti-Terrorism Laws

A month-long disagreement among government ministries about the extension of anti-terrorism laws in Germany appears to have ended. The government is to reauthorize the laws for another four years. The German justice and interior ministers have agreed on a four-year extension of a group of contentious laws used to investigate and prosecute suspected terrorists, the government said Wednesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Netherlands: Verhagen: Fear of Foreigners Understandable

Vice-Premier and Christian democratic (CDA) leader Maxime Verhagen considers the fears among the Dutch of foreign influences “understandable”. NRC Handelsblad newspaper was quoting yesterday from a speech that Verhagen was due to make at a party meeting in the evening. The paper concludes that, in his view, “the CDA must listen more to the concerns that foreigners continually change the Netherlands, that foreign products are can also bring a foreign illness with them, that churches will be replaced by Islamic mosques, that immigrants get rid of Dutch employees too quickly or that newcomers do not adapt.”

“Never before has Vehagen associated himself so explicitly with the ideas of the PVV (Party for Freedom) on foreign influences which could threaten the Netherlands,” writes the leftwing newspaper. Other media that also obtained the speech early however concluded yesterday that the CDA minister was actually stressing that the PVV way is not the solution. In a literal quotation from the speech, the CDA leader asked himself the question: “Will my neighbourhood still be my neighbourhood if another church is closed and a another mosque built? Why do the newcomers not adapt to us? They surely will not grab the job of my son?” These concerns are widespread among the population, he added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Opposition Leader Stirs Up Trouble for Polish EU Presidency

Opposition leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski has depicted the Polish government as being grossly incompetent and dangerously close to Russia in its handling of the Smolensk tragedy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Right vs. Left: Arsons and Stabbings in Berlin as Extremist Groups Clash

Berlin officials are carefully watching a rise in violence between far-right and far-left groups. Right-wing politicians have been attacked on the street, and left-wing clubs and youth homes have been set on fire. Now Berlin state politicians have issued a joint statement condemning right-wing parties. There has never been much love lost between left-wing and far-right groups in Berlin, but in recent years the level of escalation has seldom been as high as it is now. A spate of politically motivated violence in Berlin has officials talking about revenge attacks, and the police in Germany’s capital are on the alert. The city’s mainstream political parties have also issued a joint statement against right-wing extremists. Last weekend, five different arson attacks were reported against left-wing organizations in Berlin. The wave of arson was apparently motivated by revenge, following several attacks within the past week on far-right politicians on the streets of Berlin, with weapons ranging from water balloons to glass bottles.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Sweden: Three Injured in ‘Gang-Related’ Shootout

Three people were seriously injured in what police suspect may have been a gang-related shooting in Norrköping in eastern Sweden on Tuesday night. Police made several arrests following the incident, which took place at a restaurant in the city centre. “A number of people have been detained and we’re interviewing a number of different people who have information to provide,” Anne Asp of the Östergötland County police told the TT news agency. A dispute between two gangs precipitated the shooting. Two men were shot, while a third man was stabbed in the chest. A 31-year-old man from Malmö was taken to Linköping university hospital with life-threatening injuries. The two other victims are said to be in serious, but stable condition.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Police Backtrack on ‘Ethnic’ Profiling

Police in Stockholm have been forced to apologize after singling out three nationalities in a letter to a local neighbourhood watch group warning them against organised crime, according to Swedish media reports. “Criminals are criminals, their nationalities are a lesser matter,” Mauro Gonzalez of the Federation of Chilean Associations in Sweden (Chilenska Riksförbundet) told The Local. The letter sent out by police in Huddinge, a southern suburb of Stockholm, advised residents to be especially vigilant of “South Americans — in particular from Chile”, “Lithuanians” and “Romanians”, after a wave of burglaries in the area.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Plan for Foreign Criminal Expulsions Hits Impasse

A controversial plan to deport foreign criminals from Switzerland hit an impasse this week after a governmental working group indicated it cannot agree on how to implement the measure. The expulsion initiative, calling for the immediate deportation of foreign offenders convicted of serious crimes, was approved by Swiss voters last November and the working group was set up a month later. But the seven-member committee presented four options to the Federal Council to consider after failing to make a common recommendation this week, the Neue Zürcher Zeitung reported on Wendesday.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK: Children’s Minister: Asian Communities Hampering Child Sex Inquiries

“Closed” Asian communities are hampering investigations into child sexual exploitation, the children’s minister, Tim Loughton, has warned.

He claimed that a combination of political correctness and racial sensitivities have kept cases of child sex grooming by Asian gangs “under the radar”. Mr Loughton made the comments in an interview for the BBC Politics Show in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, which has been investigating claims that girls as young as 12 have been targeted by organised Asian gangs. He said: “In many cases we are dealing with some closed communities. Closed in terms of things being able to go on under the radar and away from the public glare. I think that political correctness and racial sensitivities have in the past been an issue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Balkans


Kosovo: Serbians Comemorate 1389 Battle vs Turks, Tension

Yesterday Serbs in Kosovo celebrated the 622-year anniversary of the legendary battle lost against the Turks on June 28 1389, a date marking the beginning of the Ottoman occupation which lasted almost 5 centuries. Tension arose during the commemoration. An official ceremony was held in Gazimestan, memorial near the Kosovo capital Pristina which commemorates the Serbs who lost their lives in the battle. Among the approximately 2,000 Serbs in attendance there were a few hundred ultranationalists, who chanted extremist slogans against the US and the European Union and waved Serbian flags and banners. Some interrupted the speech given by the hereditary prince to the Serbian royal family, Aleksander Karajordjevic, loudly chanting the names of Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic: the two Bosnian Serb leaders in jail at the International Criminal Court in the Hague (ICC) on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. “Respect”, “respect”, reiterated the prince, clearly annoyed.

Participants also burned a flag of the United States, the main supporters of Kosovo independence (February 17 2008) and harshly criticised the European Union which, many have said, is of no use to Serbia, which is friends with Russia. Serbian media report that a number of people were taken in by police on charges of vandalism and disturbing public order. Speaking in Gazimestan was also Serbian Orthodox patriarch Irinej, who celebrated mass, delivering a sermon with strong tints of patriotism and nationalism. “Everything possible needs to be done so that Kosovo remains a part of Serbia,” he said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Mediterranean Union


Publishing: Mediterranean, ANSA to Host Aman 2012 Assembly

The next general assembly of Aman, the Alliance of Mediterranean News Agencies, will be held in Rome in 2012 and will be hosted and organised by the ANSA agency. The decision was taken in Tangiers, at the end of the twentieth general assembly of the Alliance. The proposal made by ANSA president Giulio Anselmi to host next year’s general assembly in Rome was approved by the 20 agencies that are part of the association. Idrissi Hachemi Khalil, the director of Morocco’s press agency (who has just been appointed Map leader by king Mohamed VI) congratulated Anselmi and emphasised the excellent cooperation relationship between the two agencies. At the end of the meeting Aman general secretary George Penintaex announced the members of the Aman board for the 2011/2012 period, comprising Map as president, ANSA and Afp as vice presidents and Cyprus’ Cna press agency as general secretary.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Egyptian Court Dismisses Muslim Case Against Christian Woman

by Mary Abdelmassih

(AINA) — The Egyptian administrative court of the State Council dismissed today the lawsuit filed by Muslim lawyers, demanding the disclosure of the whereabouts of Camilia Shehata, the wife of a Coptic priest, who was alleged to have converted to Islam and held against her will by the Coptic Church. In reaching its decision, the court said the Muslim lawyers failed to provide proof to support their claim of the detention of Camilia by the church.

Camilia’s attorney, Dr. Naguib Gabriel, said “The only thing the Muslim lawyers delivered as proof for their claims were snippets of newspapers from the Internet.”

The case lasted over four months, during which Dr. Gabriel submitted as proof unequivocal documents that Camilia was never detained by the church and she never converted to Islam as alleged. Among the documents was a power of attorney from Camilia for him to represent her at court. “This was issued by the public notary, by a Muslim employee and in which she wrote “Christian” beside her religious affiliation, while she could have easily written Muslim instead.” said Gabriel. “If she was really detained by the church, she could have asked for help from the employee when she went to the notary,” he added. Also, a certificate from Al-Azhar stating that she never converted to Islam was presented as evidence.

The prosecution also heard the testimony of Bishop Armiya, secretary to Pope Shenouda III, who denied the church had detained her. It also took the testimony of Anba Agapios, Bishop of Deir Mawass, Minya Governorate, who also refuted the charge.

Previously, the court had responded to the Muslim lawyers’ demands regarding Camilia’s conversion to Islam, saying the issue was the beliefs of people, but whether there was a detainment or not. Also, the Muslim lawyers had demanded Camelia appear in person before the court, which was refused by the court.

“Today’s court ruling closes the curtain on one of the most famous and difficult cases in Egypt.” said attorney Dr. Gabriel. “Muslims will not be allowed to demonstrate regarding this matter anymore, which they used as a pretext to create sectarian strife between Muslims and Christians.”

The story of Camelia Shehata, which became a public issue for the last 11 months, started on July 19, 2010, when after a dispute with her husband, Father Tedaos Samaan, priest at St. Georges Church in Deir Mawas, she left home and went to Cairo to stay with relatives, without telling anyone of her whereabouts. “This was my biggest mistake,” said Camilia in an interview with Al-Hayat Christian TV Channel from her hide-out with her husband and 2-year-old son.

Her husband, believing she was abducted by Muslims, like many other cases, came with some 3000 Copts from his congregation to protest her disappearance at St. Mark’s Coptic Cathedral in Cairo (AINA 7-23-2010”).

State Security found her a few days later and handed her over to her sister who lives in Cairo. She later reconciled with her husband and the family has lived in hiding ever since, as Muslim demonstrations started to take place, demanding the return of “their sister in Islam, Camelia.”

Faked photos of Camilia in a Hijab appeared on the internet and over 20 demonstrations were staged by Muslim, accusing the church of abducting new converts (females) to Islam and holding them against their will in churches and monasteries, where they were tortured (AINA 9-18-2010).

Camilia appeared in a video clip from her hideout, taken under utmost security by the independent daily El-Youm7, in which she denied ever converting to Islam (video). The Muslims said it was not Camilia but was her double who appeared, and carried on with their demonstration, the last of which was on April 30, when they encircled the Coptic Cathedral and the Pope’s residence vowing that “Camilia must return” (AINA 4-30-2011). Camelia appeared for a second time on May 7, in a one-hour interview on Al-Hayat TV, in which she denied all Muslim claims of ever having met any of them or having been to Al Azhar with them. On both occasions she confirmed her Christian faith.

           — Hat tip: Mary Abdelmassih [Return to headlines]



Egypt: Protestors Clash With Police in Tahrir Square

There were at least 14 demonstrators injured, one seriously, in the violent clashes which broke out over the night between protestors and security forces using tear gas to break up the protest. Reports were from the MENA news agency, which added that 26 policemen had been injured in the clashes, suffering bruises and suffocation caused by tear gas. About a thousand protestors are still in the large square in central Cairo, yelling slogans demanding the removal of the head of the Armed Forces, Hussein Tantawi, who over the night released a communiqué to condemn the incidents. In the communique’ number 26, the military council called the incidents in the square “deplorable” and said that their sole objective is to “destabilize the country according to an organised plan based on the use of the blood of martyrs to sow division between revolutionaries and security forces.” The military council made an appeal “to the Egyptian population and the youths of the revolution not to follow this call.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Egyptian Salafis Boycott Coptic Businessman

Coptic businessman and “Free Egyptians Party” founder Naguib Sawiris posted an image on his twitter account depicting a bearded headdress-wearing Mickey Mouse with Minnie Mouse in a niqab. The image angered salafi Muslims in Egypt. In response, an Internet campaign has been launched, calling on the public to boycott Sawiris’ businesses, including newspapers and cellular telephone and communication companies. In addition, they have filed a complaint against Sawiris for harming religions.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Air Drops Arms to Libya Rebels: Source

France has begun parachuting arms shipments to Berber rebels fighting Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi’s forces in the highlands south of Tripoli, the French daily Le Figaro reported on Wednesday. According to the paper, which said it had seen a secret intelligence memo and talked to well-placed officials, the air drops are designed to help rebel fighters encircle Tripoli and encourage a popular revolt in the city itself. “If the rebels can get to the outskirts of Tripoli, the capital will take the chance to rise against Kadhafi,” said an official quoted in the report.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France: Paris Dedicates Square to Initiator of Tunisia Revolt

(ANSAmed) — PARIS, JUNE 29 — Tomorrow the city of Paris will name a square after Mohamed Bouazizi, the young Tunisian man who sparked the ‘Jasmine Revolt’ with his sacrifice. The square, located in the 14th arrondissement near Montsouris Park, will be dedicated to the young martyr “as a tribute to the Tunisian people and to the January 2011 revolution”. At the ceremony, specified Paris City Hall in the statement, the Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe will be present, as well as the President of the Tunisian Human Rights League, Mokhtat Trifi, together with Bouazizi’s family and representatives from numerous associations and organisations involved in Tunisia. Singer Abri Nasraoui is also expected to perform, signing a song written after the revolt. On December 17 of last year, Mohamed Bouazizi lit himself on fire in front of the Sidi Bouzid Governorate headquarters and died on January 4 at Ben Arous Hospital in the southern outskirts of Tunis, where he had been taken in critical condition.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Muslim Brotherhood Figure and Former Spokesman in the West: Establish a Global Islamic State

In a June 8, 2011 interview with the Egyptian daily Al-Shorouq, Dr. Kamal Al-Helbawy, former Muslim Brotherhood spokesman in the West, called upon the Arab youth to launch a new revolution that would eliminate the borders drawn by imperialist nations and bring about the establishment of a global Islamic state — “called ‘The United States of Islam.’“ According to Al-Helbawy, the Muslim Brotherhood is active in approximately 80 countries and strives to realize the dream of becoming a global organization.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



UK Won’t Supply Libyan Rebels With Weapons as France Did

(AGI) Brussels — Britain will not supply weapons to the rebels in Libya as France did. Earlier today, France began parachuting weapons to re-supply the rebels in the mountains south of Tripoli. It was announced by British Defence Minister Gerald Howarth, who explained that doing this would “raise quite a few issues, not least the United nations resolution (1973) (which authorised raid strikes to protect the civilian population) although in some circumstances that could be justified”.

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



Unlike France, Britain Won’t Arm Libya Rebels: Minister

Britain will not deliver arms to Libya’s rebels as France has done, a senior British defence official said Wednesday, saying it raises “quite a few issues”. “No, Britain is not considering supplying arms to the opposition in Libya,” Gerald Howarth, minister for international security strategy, told reporters on the sidelines of a defence policy forum in Brussels. “We think that it does raise quite a few issues, not least the United Nations resolution, although in some circumstances that could be justified,” he said. “But it is very much a matter for France, and no criticism of France intended,” he said. “But it is not something that we should be doing.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Column in Saudi Daily Denies Holocaust, Criticizes Mandatory Holocaust Studies for Arab-Israeli Pupils

In his May 17, 2011 column in the Saudi daily Al-Iqtisadiya, Dr. ‘Abd Al-Rahman Al-Trairi, who is also a professor at King Sa’ud University, expressed support for claims by Roger Garaudy and other well-known Holocaust deniers questioning the number of people who perished in the Holocaust, and said that the Jews had taken advantage of the Holocaust in order to coerce the world into establishing the state of Israel. Al-Trairi protested a recent decision by the Israeli Ministry of Education requiring Israeli Arab pupils to study the Holocaust as part of their matriculation curriculum, claiming that Israel’s schoolbooks ignore the Palestinian narrative and do not consider the “other” to be equal. He also dismissed as groundless claims which first arose in the wake of 9/11 that Saudi schoolbooks convey messages of hatred and encourage terrorist acts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Israel Rejects Gaza Ship Claims as ‘Bond-Esque’

Israeli authorities have rejected claims of the Swedish Ship to Gaza movement that “foreign agents” were behind the damage to their boat, which was reported sabotaged on Monday. “It sounds like a ‘James Bond-esque’ insinuation, which is pretty funny, but has no bearing on reality,” said Ilana Stein of the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs to news agency TT. The Swedish Ship to Gaza group reported on Monday that their ship Juliano had been sabotaged while berthed in Piraeus harbour in Greece. “It is time for the international community to put their foot down and say: It’s enough!” said Swedish spokesperson Mattias Gardell in a statement at the time.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Organization Involved in Gilad Shalit’s Abduction Promises More Kidnappings

Marking the fifth anniversary of Gilad Shalit’s abduction, a website close to Hamas posted an article titled “Kidnapping Soldiers — The Best Way to Ensure the Liberation of the Prisoners,” which detailed all the prisoner exchange deals between Israel and the Arabs since 1948. Hamas issued a communiqué promising that Shalit will not see the light of day until the Palestinian prisoners are released in an honorable deal. Popular Resistance Committees spokesman Abu Mujahid said that the resistance will continue to abduct Israeli soldiers until every last Palestinian prisoner is freed, stressing that, after five years of trying to bargain with the resistance and gather information about Shalit, the Zionist enemy realizes that it must capitulate to the demands of the resistance. The mother of one of the kidnappers said that her son, who was killed in the operation, and another of the kidnappers who was also killed, had “pushed Israel’s nose into the dirt,” and had attained the martyrdom they had wished for. The anniversary of their martyrdom is a day of celebration for the Palestinians, she added.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


Ahmadinejad: Iran and Cuba Play an Important Role in Restoring World Order

In a meeting with Cuban Vice President Esteban Lazo Hernandez in Tehran, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said that both countries stand as a united front against terrorism, and must strengthen their cooperation. Ahmadinejad added that Tehran would stand by Cuba until “the final victory” and that the two countries play an important role in rectifying “the oppressive world order.” Hernandez said that Iran is his country’s main partner, and that it plays an important role in Latin America. He added that Cuba, which stands by Iran, does not fear U.S. threats.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Averting a Swarm: Yemen’s Political Instability May Make it Difficult to Control Locust Breeding.

Diplomats and analysts aren’t the only ones preoccupied by the armed clashes and demonstrations in Yemen. Scientists and agricultural officials have been keeping watch on the turbulent nation as well, hoping that a lack of rainfall will accomplish what the Yemeni government probably cannot: prevent a large-scale outbreak of the fearsome desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria).

The grasshoppers have already infested Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea coast. Special locust squads, guided by satellite data to the breeding grounds, have sprayed more than 90,000 hectares since January. But international agricultural officials worry that some of the grasshoppers might escape to Yemen, where they often breed. There they could potentially take advantage of the country’s weakened defences and multiply into the kind of swarm that has previously ravaged large swathes of Africa and the Middle East.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Conference Defines U.S., Israel as Source of Global Terrorism

On June 25-26, 2011, the Iranian regime hosted the first “World Without Terrorism Conference” in Tehran. The conferees included Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmonov, Pakistani President Asif ‘Ali Zardari, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, and Sudanese President ‘Omar Al-Bashir, as well as representatives from Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Mali. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad both spoke at the conference’s opening ceremony. In his address, Khamenei said that the conference’s aim was to clearly define terrorism and to identify its root causes. He pointed to “satanic world powers which use terrorism in their policies and in their planning to achieve their illegitimate goals,” specifying that the “Zionist regime” and Zionism in general had from their very beginning perpetuated global terrorism. He went on to say that the U.S., the U.K., and other Western governments had “a black record of terrorist behaviors.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Erdogan: Imprisoning Turkish Generals — And Ending Secularism

Andrew G. Bostom

Turkey continues its regression to full re-Islamization — a process already begun within a decade of Ataturk’s death in 1938 — and about to be fully realized under the fundamentalist Erdogan regime. Shredding the Turkish Constitution, which institutionalized Turkey’s harshly imposed secularism by assigning the military as “protectors of the secular order,” there are now more generals that have been imprisoned for purported “coup attempts” against Erdogan’s fundamentalist rule than are in active service for the military.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Europe Must be Ready for Arab Reform Long Haul

Europe should prepare for the long haul of democratic reform in the Arab world, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said Wednesday as his country is to assume the EU presidency July 1. To support this process of democracy-building, Warsaw has proposed the creation of an “autonomous and abundantly financed” European foundation or endowment for democracy, Sikorski told foreign journalists in Warsaw. “Transforming a 500 million Arab, Muslim world towards democracy will not take a couple of years — it will take a couple of decades at least,” Sikorski observed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



In Saudi Arabia, Renewed Discussion on Fatwa Permitting the Killing of Coworkers Who Do Not Pray

A 2009 fatwa by Saudi Sheikh Saleh Al-Fawzan, which permits an employee to kill his coworker if he does not pray, has reappeared in discussion on Internet message boards and social networks. Extremist fatwas such as this raise the question of whether they should be issued by individual clerics, or by groups of clerics such as the Saudi Association of Senior Clerics — Saudi Arabia’s official religious institution.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran Denounces Upcoming BBC2 Documentary on Muhammad as Attempt to “Ruin Muslims’ Sanctity”

There may be a language barrier evident in the wording, but the supremacism and sense of entitlement come through loud and clear. The documentary’s makers have already made a major effort not to offend, avoiding any visual depiction of Muhammad, but they are assured of offending someone nonetheless. In particular, in this case, if they lean too Sunni, they will offend Shi’ites; if they lean too Shi’ite, they will offend Sunnis. And if they lapse for a moment in hagiography or leave room for a shadow of doubt about Muhammad’s prophetic credentials, they will offend still other viewers. James Thurber’s observation applies: “You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far backward.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Iran: Turkey Must Not Pressure Syria

The Iranian daily Kayhan, which is close to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, warned Turkey that if it continues to pressure the Syrian regime and to call on Hamas to recognize Israel, then Iran, Syria, and Iraq would limit their cooperation with it. An article in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps weekly Sobh-e Sadeq said that Ankara had encouraged Syrian citizens to flee to its territory in order to increase the number of refugees there — thus justifying foreign intervention in Syria. The article further said that Ankara’s actions against Syria on behalf of the U.S. and Israel, would lead to an uprising by the Syrian Turks and by millions of Alawis living in its territory.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Lebanese Cleric: Demolish U.S. Embassy in Beirut

Sheikh Muhammad Abu Al-Qat’, a Sunni Lebanese cleric and head of the preacher association in Lebanon, claimed that the U.S. Embassy in Beirut is spreading “political prostitution” and plots, and called to demolish it and deport its employees. He also expressed support for the resistance, calling it a religious duty.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Special Stakelbeck on Terror Show: Hezbollah Rising

On this week’s special edition of the Stakelbeck on Terror Show, we take an in-depth look at the group many consider to be the world’s most dangerous terrorist organization—more like a terrorist army, in fact—Hezbollah.

Watch as terrorism expert and bestselling author Walid Phares takes Stakelbeck on Terror on a tour of Hezbollah’s hotspots in Lebanon, the Middle East and around the world. He also discusses the threat Hezbollah poses to America and Western interests.

In our Map Room segment (8:40 to 17:0 mark of the show), Phares also outlines what a future Middle East war — sparked by Iran, Hezbollah and their allies attacking Israel — would look like and how it could affect America’s national security.

Click the link above to watch.

[Return to headlines]



Syrian Terror Campaign Forces Refugees Across Northern Border

In the past few weeks, thousands of people have fled the violence in Syria, straining the resources of the towns accommodating them and relations between Turkey and Syria. The Syrian military has made further advances through northern border towns, moving in on the village of Naija and reportedly targeting fleeing Syrians who had set up makeshift tent camps in wooded areas at the border.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Turkish Opposition Boycotts Parliament Opening

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s third term in office has got off to a turbulent start after opposition parties refused to turn up to the swearing-in of parliament, in protest over court rulings. More than 30 percent of elected MPs in the Turkish parliament refused to take their oath on Tuesday when parliament reopened for the first time following elections on June 12. That result saw Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AK party comfortably re-elected for a third term. The main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) boycotted the opening ceremony in reaction to court decisions last week not to release two party members from detention in a high-profile trial. The CHP won 135 seats in the 550-member parliament.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Uprisings: OIC Islamic Countries, Change is Irreversible

Cautious diplomacy, dialogue, and a political solution for the crises in Libya and Syria: an impossible equilibrium is being sought between Islamic regimes and the Arab Spring in Astana, Kazakhstan, at the 38th summit of foreign ministers from the Organsiation of Islamic Cooperation, the new name with which the OIC, the largest inter-governmental organisation in the Muslim world since 1969, hopes to breathe new life into itself.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Yemeni Soldiers Killed in Clashes With Al Qaeda Militants

(AGI) Aden — Thirty Yemeni soldiers have died in clashes between the army and Al Qaeda fighters in southern Yemen near the town of Zinjibar. At least 14 militiamen are thought to have died in the clashes as reported by military sources. This morning, air raids in the same area killed four civilians and wounded twelve ..

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

Russia


Polish Opposition Blames Russia for President’s Death Crash

Poland’s conservative opposition on Wednesday blamed Moscow for last year’s air crash in Russia that killed its president Lech Kaczynski, his wife and dozens of other senior Polish officials. “The Russian side carries primary responsibility for this disaster,” said Law and Justice lawmaker Antoni Macierewicz, a hardline ally of the party’s leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the late president’s twin brother. Macierewicz is head of a Polish parliamentary commission probing the April 10, 2010 crash in Smolensk, western Russia. The commission’s members are all from Law and Justice.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


France’s Vinci Builts First 3D Cinema in Turkmenistan

Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov on Wednesday inaugurated the first 3D cinema in a country where films were banned until 2008 by his eccentric predecessor. “(The French group) Vinci has built the first 3D cinema in Turkmenistan for 20 million dollars,” the group’s regional director general, Igor Gorwiz, said at the opening ceremony. The previous Turkmen president Saparmurat Niyazov, who died in December 2006, launched a cultural crackdown in 1999 that saw the ballet, opera, circus and cinema all banned for falling foul of “the national mentality.”

Located in the historical centre of the Turkmen capital, Ashgabat, the newly built cinema consists of an ordinary screening room with 500 seats and a separate 70-seat 3D screening room. Until now, the city had only two cinemas, which showed Turkmen and Indian films. Berdymukhamedov has rejected some of the more bizarre aspects of the cult of personality introduced by his predecessor in the ex-Soviet Central Asian republic.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



France Says Does Not Pay Ransoms, As Hostages Released

Foreign Minister Alain Juppe insisted Wednesday that France does not pay ransoms for hostages, as questions were asked about the release of two journalists held in Afghanistan by insurgents. Juppe said Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai had helped Paris secure the return of Stephane Taponier et Herve Ghesquiere, who had been captured by Taliban rebels 18 months earlier in the restive province of Kapisa. “France does not pay ransoms,” Juppe told reporters, when asked whether Paris had cut some kind of a deal with the hostage-takers.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Indian Cricket Plots Control of World Game

World cricket could be hijacked by India for decades to come at the International Cricket Council’s annual meeting in Hong Kong starting on Sunday.

The ICC’s governance review committee, heavily influenced by the BCCI (Board of Control of Cricket in India), has proposed changes to the ICC constitution that would pave the way for the ICC president to rule indefinitely, and for two successive presidents to come from the same country. Sharad Pawar, the former head of the BCCI, is the ICC president but under the present regulations, an Indian could not succeed him. The proposal, which would allow India to impose their will on the cricketing world, needs the support of most of the 35 Associate members — and 38 votes out of 50 in the voting council — and it could well get voted in such is India’s financial muscle because of their vast television audiences.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Far East


Famine Threatens to Return to North Korea

As political tension increases between North and South Korea, the head of a Swiss aid agency in Pyongyang says the number of people suffering from hunger is growing. Katharina Zellweger, head of the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) in the North Korean capital, says the situation is not as serious as 1995, when up to 3.5 million of 22 million people starved to death, but serious food shortages are again an issue. Zellweger, who has lived in North Korea since 2006, was in New York to speak at the United Nations. “You see more and more people pulling out roots, grass and other edible plants. Or they cut down trees and try to grow corn or potatoes in their place,” she told swissinfo.ch.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



North Korean Players Struck by Lightning, Coach Claims

North Korea’s women’s football coach has claimed several players played in the opening 2-0 World Cup loss to the United States on Tuesday suffering from the effects of being struck by lightning at a training camp. “Frankly speaking, when we were having training and test matches before we left for this tournament, five of the players were hit by lightning and were in hospital,” said coach Kim Kwang Min, through an interpreter in the post-game press conference. “We had an accident in Pyongyang before we left for this tournament. Some of the players were left behind. Some were in hospital and came later. Until now they were not fully treated for the match.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


PNG Tribesman Attacks New Zealander With Arrows

A tribesman in the remote jungles of Papua New Guinea shot and badly wounded a young New Zealander with arrows and also attacked his terrified French girlfriend, an aid group said Wednesday. The pair were bathing in a river in the Nomad area of Papua New Guinea’s Western Province when the young man, an anthropologist who was working in the area, went to retrieve his towel and was hit by the arrows. “There was an arrow in his ribs and one in his stomach,” Delene Evans, the general manager of Australian Doctors International, whose volunteer medics helped save the man, told AFP. “The attacker also hit him on the head with a rock.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Immigration


553 Refugees Land in Lampedusa

(AGI) Lampedusa — Two boats carrying 553 African refugees on board have landed this morning in Lampedusa; many women and children. The first boat carried 225 refugees, the second one 328. The latter declared an SAR emergency, and some Coast Guard officers went on board, as the 16-meter boat was likely to sink. Complicated rescue operations were conducted by the local Coast Guard. Migrants took off from Libya, but come from Sub-Saharan Africa.

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



840 Refugees Arrive in Lampedusa, 117 Women 28 Children

(AGI) Lampedusa — A record 840 Libyan refugees arrived in Lampedusa tonight, including 117 women and 28 children. The refugees arrived in Lampedusa shortly after 7.30pm aboard an about 20-metre-long boat which had been rescued earlier today some 16 miles off the island. The migrants, all of them from sub-Saharan Africa, left Libya some days ago. It is the largest single landing of immigrants on the island ever. Some weeks ago, 932 immigrants arrived in Pozzallo, in the province of Ragusa.

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



Netherlands: Anti-Islam Party Wants New Definition of ´non-Native´

The anti-Islam party PVV has called on the government to extend the formal definition of non-native or allochtoon residents of the Netherlands to include third generation immigrants.

In an interview with website nu.nl, PVV MP Joram van Klaveren says that by considering third-generation immigrants to be Dutch, it is impossible to get a good idea of how integrated they are into Dutch society.

´Non-western immigrants are still over-represented in the crime figures. Soon we won´t see that any more because they will be classified as natives,´ Van Klaveren said.

Some 80% of third generation immigrants are younger than 10 years old.

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



Netherlands: Fear of Foreigners ‘Understandable’, Says Verhagen (Update)

Native Dutch people’s worries about foreigners are ‘understandable’, deputy prime minister Maxime Verhagen is set to say in a speech to Christian Democratic party members on Tuesday night, the NRC reports.

There is unease in Dutch society about wider issues than simply the economy and the CDA should listen more to concerns about the way foreigners are changing the Netherlands, the paper quotes Verhagen as saying in a leaked copy of the speech.

People are concerned about churches being replaced by mosques, about the fact immigrants don’t integrate and the risk that they will take Dutch jobs, the paper quotes the speech as saying.

Populism

Verhagen said he wants to distance himself from populism but that he is not blind to what drives it. ‘We have to make sure we do not dismiss these concerns as being offensive or unmentionable,’ he will say. ‘Such unease should also be the unease of a people’s party like the CDA.’

Solutions offered by some parties are populist and simplistic, Verhagen says, in a veiled reference to the anti-Islam PVV. ‘The fact that the multi-cultural society has failed is not a reason to crawl back behind the dykes and to reject everything which is strange and unfamiliar.’

The NRC points out that the CDA has lost ground in four elections in a row and is looking for a new direction to recover the support of its traditional voters.

[Editor’s note: this article has been updated following the publication of the full speech on the NRC website]

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



Over 500 Sub-Saharan Migrants Land on Lampedusa

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 29 — Two large boats carrying immigrants landed on the shores of Lampedusa in the early morning hours today. On the boats, which were assisted by port authority patrol boats, there were an overall 553 migrants including about 50 women and 17 children. The immigrants are from Sub-Saharan Africa and may have weighed anchor from Libya.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



‘Tighten Border Controls’: Sweden Democrats

The Sweden Democrats demanded increased border controls when the Riksdag debated free movement within the European Union on Tuesday. “Criminal networks have been given the present of the century by the EU as have you here in this chamber through the decisions that have been taken here over the last two decades,” said Kent Ekeroth of the Sweden Democrats during the debate. According to Ekeroth the lack of border controls within the EU only benefits criminals. He also claimed that the border police in Malmö in the south of Sweden have given up in the fight against refugee smugglers, saying that illegal immigrants should be seen as criminals. He demanded that Swedish border controls should carry out more random testing against people they suspect “don’t belong here”. But justice minister Beatrice Ask retorted that to bring back border controls between European countries would prove an impediment for all the Swedes that are set to head out towards European destinations in the next few weeks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Two Boatloads of Immigrants Land in Lampedusa

Women and children among more than 500 arrivals

(ANSA) — Lampedusa, June 29 — Two large boats carrying more than 500 immigrants landed on the southern Italian island of Lampedusa early Wednesday.

Port authority officials met the first boat with around 225 immigrants as it arrived at the entrance to the port, while coast guard officials then intercepted the second boat carrying around 328 people two miles off the coast.

The immigrants were mostly from sub-Saharan Africa and the boats included more than 50 women and 17 children.

Both boats are believed to have departed from Libya and the new arrivals were immediately transferred to the island’s immigrant welcome centre.

Immigration is a politically divisive issue in Italy and Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s main coalition partner the Northern League is demanding an end to Italy’s support for bomb attacks in Libya, claiming they are responsible for the recent influx of refugees.

Around 30,000 immigrants, mostly from Tunisia, Libya and sub-Saharan Africa, have landed on the small island off the coast of Sicily since January.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Rhode Island Lawmakers Pass Bill to Allow Civil Unions for Gays

Less than a week after same-sex marriage was legalized in New York, the Rhode Island State Senate approved on Wednesday evening a bill allowing not marriage, but civil unions for gay couples, despite fierce opposition from gay-rights advocates who called the legislation discriminatory.

The bill, which already passed in the stateâ€(tm)s House of Representatives and which the governor said he will likely sign, would grant gay and lesbian couples most of the rights and benefits that Rhode Island provides married couples. It was offered as a compromise this spring after Gordon D. Fox, the openly gay speaker of the Democratic-controlled House, said he could not muster enough votes to pass a same-sex marriage bill.

[Return to headlines]



Swiss Drop Plans to Tighten Euthanasia Rules

The Swiss government on Wednesday rejected proposals to tighten rules on assisted suicide, saying that they could inadvertently legitimise organisations offering assisted suicide. “The Federal Council decided against introducing specific provisions in criminal law on organised assisted suicide. It concluded that such an amendment to criminal law would have various drawbacks,” it said. Amid an emotional uproar sparked by several international media reports and documentaries on foreigners who had come to Switzerland to die as well as on the practice of assisted suicide in the country, Bern in 2008 decided to reassess legislation on the issue.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Astronomers Find Brightest Object of Early Universe

Scientists have discovered the most brilliant object yet from the infancy of the cosmos, a super-bright galaxy that challenges notions of how extraordinarily massive black holes evolved. The brilliant enigma is a quasar, a stage that some galaxies go through when lots of material falls into the supermassive black holes at their cores, giving off light as it does so. The quasar, assigned the name ULAS J1120+0641, is the most distant one found to date. It is by far the brightest object discovered from the early universe, giving off 60 trillion times as much light as our sun. (A trillion is 1 million millions.)

The distance to the quasar was then determined from observations made with the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope and the Gemini North Telescope. Based on how greatly the light from the quasar was stretched during its journey by the expansion of the universe, the scientists estimate the quasar existed only 770 million years after the Big Bang. By analyzing the light from ULAS J1120+0641, researchers estimate the quasar was powered by a black hole 2 billion times the mass of the sun. How black holes became so massive so soon after the Big Bang is difficult to explain.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Rover May Tackle Kilimanjaro-Sized Mound on Mars

Talk about a tough road to climb. On 24 June, mission scientists endorsed two landing sites for NASA’s next Mars rover from a shortlist of four. One of the two would see Curiosity tackle a mound of rocks nearly as high as mount Kilimanjaro. Where to land the $2.5 billion robot, due to blast off in November, has been debated for years. NASA will now mull over the mission scientists’ recommendations but is not obliged to follow either of them. One pick is the 150-kilometre-wide Gale crater (pictured), which hosts a 5-kilometre-high mound. The mound contains clays and sulphate minerals that require water to form, suggesting it was laid down in layers as sediment when water filled the crater over a period of a few hundred million years, beginning about 3.8 billion years ago. “Because it’s a bowl, it has been collecting this evidence in the sediment as to what’s been happening to Mars over time,” says Ray Arvidson of Washington University in St Louis, who participated in earlier discussions about possible landing sites.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Space Station’s Brush With Space Junk Highlights Growing Threat

The near-miss yesterday (June 28) between the International Space Station and a piece of space junk highlights the growing threat posed by the huge cloud of debris whizzing around Earth. The piece of space debris zipped uncomfortably close to the orbiting lab Tuesday at 8:08 a.m. EDT (1208 GMT), forcing the outpost’s six astronauts to take shelter in two docked Russian Soyuz lifeboats for only the second time ever. The spaceflyers would have attempted a speedy escape in the craft had a collision occurred and severely damaged the space station. The station’s shielding protects it from a near-constant pelting by tiny motes of fast-moving debris. But those defenses would likely have been breached had the object slammed into the orbiting lab yesterday. The piece was large enough to be tracked, meaning it was at least 4 inches (10 centimeters) in diameter, NASA officials said.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

News Feed 20110628

Financial Crisis
» Athens Burns in Riots: Protests Explode as Greek MPs Debate EU’s Call for £25bn in Cuts
» Brussels Demands an Extra £2billion a Year From UK in ‘Outrageous’ 12 Per Cent Rise
» European Bankers Mull French Plan for Greek Rollover
» Financial Crisis Saw Massive Drop in EU Investment
» Greece: Papandreou Free Falling in Polls
» Greece: General Strike Today and Tomorrow Against Austerity
» Greece Hit by 48-Hour General Strike
» How Capitalism Went on a Brief Sabbatical Which Became a Permanent Vacation: Rosenberg Explains “The Artificial Recovery”
» Italy: Thousands in Rome ‘Struggle to Feed Themselves’
» Spanish Government to Propose Limits on Regional Budgets: PM
» Unpopular Austerity Measures: Europe Anxiously Awaits Greek Vote
 
USA
» Back in Iowa: Obama Says USA Must Up Its Game
» Billionaire George Soros Trying to Stack the Courts, Critics Say
» Embracing Realism: Obama Turns to Rebuilding America
» Muslim Woman Suing Abercrombie & Fitch After She Was ‘Fired for Wearing Headscarf at Work’
» No Budget Senate to “Streamline” Appointments
» Principal Criticized for Delivering Graduation Speech in Spanish
» The School From Hell (Video)
» The White Working Class: The Group That Will Likely Decide Obama’s Fate
» U.S. Soccer Team Booed in Their Own Country as Mexican Fans Turn LA Into an ‘Away’ Game
» Woman’s Leg Broken, Others Hurt in Spring Garden Mob Attack
 
Europe and the EU
» Bulgaria Gets Eur 73.8m Aid for Shut Nuclear Units
» Could Shakespeare’s Bones Tell Us if He Smoked Pot?
» Dutch Vote to Ban Religious Slaughter of Animals
» EU Ready to Apply Sanctions Over Naples Garbage Problem
» Flanders Sees “Mini Baby Boom”
» Germany: Dresden Police Chief Steps Down Over Phone Sweep Scandal
» Germany Pledges to Dramatically Boost Trade With China
» Italy: Burqa: Sbai: Law Presented in Commission by End of Summer
» Italy: President Calls on Government to Save Naples From Rubbish
» Italy: Moroccan Immigrant Murders Wife for Being ‘Too Western’
» Oldest Beer From Shipwreck Yields Dead Yeast, Sour Bacteria
» Spain: Franco’s Daughter, Not Moving Body From Valle Caido
» UK: Victim’s Mum Reveals Full Horror of Hearts Star Craig Thomson’s Depravity
 
North Africa
» Algeria: Housing Protests Spread, Some Resort to Suicide
» Drugs: Algeria: 5% of Population Are Users
» Egypt’s Business Mogul Sawiris Under Fire for Islamic Cartoons
» Germany to Supply Bombs for Libya Mission
» International Arrest Warrant for Gaddafi Will Not Change the Situation in Libya, Del Boca Says
» Libya: Who Controls Kufra and Desert? “Black Hole” Of War
» Libya: A Non-Hostile War
» Request From NATO: Berlin Willing to Supply Weapons for Libyan War
» Tunisia: Islamic Fundamentalists Raid Film Festival
» United in the Face of Adversity
 
Israel and the Palestinians
» Caroline Glick: The Invisible Palestinians
» Gaza Flotilla Begins Mission Despite EU Warning
» Gaza Flotilla Ship ‘Sabotaged by Divers’
» Israel Backtracks on Threat to Journalists
» Mideast: Activists of Flotilla 2 Want to Kill Troops, Press
» Swedish Gaza Flotilla Ship Sabotaged: Report
 
Middle East
» 7-Months Pregnant After Delivery!
» Kidnapped French Aid Workers ‘Located’ And ‘Alive’: Yemen
» Pope Calls on Leaders to Support Middle East Christians
» Saudi Law Approves Marriage With Foreigners
» Student Goes Into Labour During Exam
» Syria: Blogger: Alawites Have Lost Their Identity
» Syria: Arms Market Proliferating in North Lebanon, Press
» Turkey: Daily: 34 Generals Imprisoned for Coup Plans
 
Russia
» Metals, Hydrocarbons Hold Russia’s FT Rank
» Russia Resumes Vegetable Imports From Two EU Countries
 
South Asia
» Governor of Central Bank of Afghanistan Flees to USA
» Indonesia: “Obedient Wives Club”, Pretext for Legalizing Polygamy in Indonesia
» NATO Says Helicopters Kill Three Attackers on Kabul Hotel Roof
» Pakistan’s Nuclear Bomb
» Suicide Bombers and Gunmen Attack Kabul Hotel
» Two More Explosions Rock Kabul Hotel
» United Nations Praises Terrorist-Sponsoring Iran
 
Australia — Pacific
» Firebomb, Shooting Fuels Gang War Fears
 
Latin America
» Brazil to Grant Permanent Visa to Battisti
 
Immigration
» Asian-Born Australians May Soon Outnumber Whites, Says Government Study
» Switzerland: Row Over Foreign Criminals Goes Into New Round
» The Joke of ‘Secure Britain’: Vile Banned Militant Extremist Strolls Through Heathrow Immigration as 200 Somalian Criminals Are Allowed to Stay Due to Human Rights
» White House Revives Push for Dream Act
 
Culture Wars
» Feds Find Fix Was in on ‘Study’ Of Homosexuality in Ranks
» Hillary, State Dept. ‘Instrumental in Sealing Deal’ For Lady Gaga’s Gay Pride Gig in Rome
 
General
» Asteroid Protoplanet May Hold Clues to Earth Formation
» Irradiating Organic Food Would Save Lives
» Space Junk Forces Astronauts to Take Shelter in Russian Spaceships

Financial Crisis


Athens Burns in Riots: Protests Explode as Greek MPs Debate EU’s Call for £25bn in Cuts

Riot police fought running battles with hooded youths in Athens yesterday as tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets against tough austerity measures.

Parts of the Greek capital were ablaze and dozens were injured as youths hurled rocks, bricks and petrol bombs at police, who responded with baton charges and tear gas.

Last night protesters, taking part in a two-day national strike, were on the streets again.

Hundreds of terrified tourists ran for safety from cafes and restaurants as youths, many wearing gas masks and scarves covering their faces, rampaged in front of luxury hotels in Syntagma Square.

Five thousand police patrolled the streets, but shops, banks, trucks and bins were set on fire.

The rioting came as the Greek parliament debated a £25billion austerity package demanded by the European Union.

Parliament is due to vote today and tomorrow on spending cuts, tax increases and privatisations agreed as part of a massive bailout — the second granted to Greece — aimed at averting the eurozone’s first debt default.

EU economics commissioner Olli Rehn warned that if Greece did not vote for more austerity, there would be no more bailout money.

‘I trust that Greek political leaders are fully aware of the responsibility that lies on their shoulders to avoid default: the only way to avoid immediate default is for parliament to endorse the revised economic programme,’ he said.

The reforms are expected to scrape through parliament.

Without a new plan in place, the EU and International Monetary Fund say they will withhold around £10billion in euro loans that Greece needs to repay debts in mid-July.

However, polls suggest up to 80 per cent of Greeks oppose the measures, which Prime Minister George Papandreou says are the only way to put the country ‘back on its feet’.

The government’s opponents say the measures will place taxes on minimum-wage earners and other struggling Greeks, already hit by an earlier austerity package and facing unemployment levels of more than 16 per cent.

‘The situation the workers are going through is tragic and we are near poverty levels,’ said Spyros Linardopoulos, a protester with the PAME union blockading the port of Piraeus.

‘The government has declared war and to this we will answer back with war.’

Everyone from doctors and ambulance drivers to casino workers and even actors at a state-funded theatre stopped work yesterday to join the strikers or held stoppages for several hours.

The general strike halted public services, closed banks, devastated train, bus and ferry networks, shut airports and blocked ports. At the same time, an ongoing strike by electricity workers has resulted in rolling blackouts.

[Return to headlines]



Brussels Demands an Extra £2billion a Year From UK in ‘Outrageous’ 12 Per Cent Rise

Eurocrats are about to demand an ‘outrageous’ budget increase of up to 12 per cent — three times the rate of inflation.

This means Britain’s contribution to running the EU — already £15.3billion a year — will rise by another £2billion.

The budget, being finalised by the European Commission, is a clear rebuff to David Cameron’s calls for belt-tightening in Brussels.

It will leave every family here handing over a total of nearly £700 a year to Europe just as they face an income squeeze.

Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso also wants to raid Britain’s budget rebate, negotiated by Margaret Thatcher, which saves taxpayers £3billion a year.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



European Bankers Mull French Plan for Greek Rollover

European lenders are considering the ‘first draft’ of a plan put forward by French banks for a rollover of some 70 percent of the institutions’ holdings of Greek debt.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Financial Crisis Saw Massive Drop in EU Investment

The worldwide financial crisis, which erupted in late 2008, saw foreign investors massively cut their flow of money to the EU.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece: Papandreou Free Falling in Polls

(ANSAmed) — ATHENS, JUNE 27 — For the second time in less than a week, Greece’s main opposition party, Nea Dimocratia (ND, centre-right, led by Antonis Samaras) was ranked first in the voting polls in Greece over the governing party, socialist PASOK led by Premier Giorgio Papandreou. According to a poll conducted by Marc and published by centre-left daily “Ethnos tis Kiriakis” (The People of Sunday), PASOK’s free fall in the polls is continuing following the austerity plan passed in agreement with the troika to rescue the country from bankruptcy.

Based on the poll, 21.4% of the people polled were in favour of Nea Dimocratia, compared to 20% who were in favour of PASOK. The Greek Communist Party stood at 7.5%, small right-wing party Laos had 5.8% and Syriza, Greece’s other left-wing party, came in with 3.6% in the poll. The survey also showed that Greeks are not satisfied by the recent government reshuffled by the premier. A total of 65.7% of the people interviewed said that they do not believe that the new government will adopt a fairer economic policy (compared to 26.7% who believe the opposite), while 59.5% believe that the new government will not be more effective than the previous one.

The overwhelming majority of Greeks (68.2%) are against early elections (28.2% are in favour), while 60.3% are in favour of collaboration between the parties (33.7% are opposed). A total of 54.9% believe that Nea Dimocratia would win early elections.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Greece: General Strike Today and Tomorrow Against Austerity

All public transport except for the Athens Metro, will grind to a halt on Tuesday and Wednesday all over Greece, and public services will be thrown into disarray as workers join a 48-hour strike called by the country’s two main unions to coincide with a Parliamentary debate and vote on the government’s new austerity measures. There will be no service on buses, trolley buses, the tram, trains, the suburban railway and the Kifissia-Piraeus electric railway though the Metro will be running. Air traffic controllers are to join the strike with two four-hour stoppages — from 8 a.m. to noon today and from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. tomorrow.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Greece Hit by 48-Hour General Strike

Greece ground to a halt Tuesday as a 48-hour general strike began to bite while the bankruptcy-threatened government attempted to push through sweeping austerity cuts.

Apart from the metro, no public transport was operating in Athens and the streets were relatively empty, with many people deciding to stay away from work to join the fourth general strike called this year by the country’s two biggest unions. Subway employees decided not to strike so as to allow Athenians to join planned protests in the capital. But banks were closed and hospitals were functioning on reduced staffing while at airports, dozens of domestic flights by Greek airlines Olympic Air and Aegean were cancelled as air traffic controllers went on strike.

In the port of Pireus, near Athens, which links most Greek islands with the mainland, the main seamen’s union was not officially on strike, as the tourist season is just getting under way. Nevertheless around 200 militants from a communist union and a port employees’ union picketed to prevent ferries from leaving the port. A string of rallies are planned for Tuesday, focused on Syntagma Square — home to the Greek parliament and a magnet for tens of thousands of protesters who see the international community as imposing tough conditions for their bailouts.

“We think these measures and government policy are bad for workers in general. They are cutting salaries, they are cutting pensions and cutting social services. In fact they are taking money off workers to give it to banks and big business,” a port employee and unionist told AFP. Parliament is scheduled to vote Wednesday and Thursday a package of austerity measures aimed at slicing 28.6 billion euros from government spending by 2015, and raising what international partners hope can reach 50 billion in privatisation receipts.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



How Capitalism Went on a Brief Sabbatical Which Became a Permanent Vacation: Rosenberg Explains “The Artificial Recovery”

Indeed, this 2009-2011 recovery and cyclical bull market has been as artificial as the 2003-07 expansion. That last one was fuelled by financial engineering in the financial sector. This one is being underpinned by unprecedented government intrusion in the credit markets. As of this quarter, your government has replaced the private sector as the largest source of outstanding mortgage market and consumer-related credit (see front page of the Investor’s Business Daily). So not only is the U.S.A. turning Japanese in many respects, it is also now resembling China where the government also redirects the flow of private sector credit. When we said capitalism went on a sabbatical three years ago, we didn’t expect this to be a permanent vacation.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Thousands in Rome ‘Struggle to Feed Themselves’

The economic crisis has hit Rome and its vicinity hard making it difficult for almost 7 percent of the people living the Lazio region that includes Italy’s capital to manage to eat an “adequate meal’ at least every two days,” according to a new report by Rome-based Catholic charity Sant’ Egidio. In the capital itself, in the shadow of the Vatican, 100,000 people out of a population if 2.7 million are living in “absolute poverty,” according to Sant’ Egidio’s “First Report on Poverty in Rome and Lazio” released on Monday. The populous Lazio region has 5 million inhabitants. More than 8 percent of Italians were without work in April, but that number hits almost 30 percent for young people between 15 and 24 years of age. Unemployment isn’t expected to decline any time soon as Italy’s weak economy and one of the world’s highest debt loads creates worries among companies that might otherwise hire new staff.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spanish Government to Propose Limits on Regional Budgets: PM

Spain’s central government will propose setting a limit on the budgets of the the country’s powerful regional governments, Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero said Tuesday. The measure, which aims to “guarantee fiscal sustainability in the mid-term,” will be proposed next month and it will be similar to a limit on spending in place for the central government, Zapatero he told parliament during an annual state of the nation debate.

Last week, Zapatero’s cabinet approved a 3.8 percent reduction in central government spending for next year as it fights to retain the trust of markets rocked by Greece’s sovereign debt crisis. Spain’s regional government debt is a major concern for the markets which fear it could compromise the central government’s goal to cut the annual public deficit down to 6.0 percent of Gross Domestic Product this year and to a eurozone limit of 3.0 percent in 2013.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Unpopular Austerity Measures: Europe Anxiously Awaits Greek Vote

Some 20,000 Greeks have taken to the streets in protest of crucial but unpopular austerity measures up for parliamentary vote on Wednesday. But if the embattled government fails to approve the plan, it will fail to qualify for the next tranche of its EU bailout package, leading to insolvency.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

USA


Back in Iowa: Obama Says USA Must Up Its Game

BETTENDORF, Iowa — President Barack Obama on Tuesday brought a made-in-America pitch to this politically vital state, saying innovation and adaptation will help the manufacturing sector and the entire U.S. economy rebound with more gusto. He admonished a divided Washington to stop bickering and rally together like a team.

Here in the home of the first presidential caucuses, Obama made a quick but unmistakable nod to his own re-election bid. Fondly recalling his win here in 2008, Obama said to Iowa: “We’ve got some history together. And together we’re going to make some more history for years to come.”

The president, under steady pressure to bolster a sluggish economy, is showering attention on manufacturing as an American story of adaptation. He chose the setting of Alcoa Davenport Works, an aluminum factory whose products are exported around the world and used for such high-tech applications as the wings for the presidential jet Air Force One.

The plant has re-hired the workers it laid off during the recent recession and is eying an expansion, said Obama, who pushed a broader theme of American resilience.

“You had to up your game,” Obama said to the workers. “And that’s what we’ve got to do as a country as a whole. I want the cars and planes and wind turbines of the future to bear the proud stamp that says ‘Made in America.’“

Obama’s victory in the 2008 Iowa caucuses catapulted his presidential campaign, and the state is now being flooded with Republicans seeking their party’s presidential nomination and criticizing his economic leadership.

The president said that the country has the workers, companies and industries to mount a stronger economic recovery: “We are still the United States of America.”

The stop is part of Obama’s effort to promote job creation in the midst of an economic slowdown that has reduced hiring and weakened his job approval standing with the public. After last month’s weak unemployment report showed an uptick in the jobless rate to 9.1 percent, the White House is warily eyeing the release of more up-to-date numbers on July 8.

The White House sees a recovery in the U.S. manufacturing industry as one way to create jobs and stay competitive in the global marketplace. Last week, Obama announced a $500 million joint effort by industry, universities and the federal government to help reposition the United States as a leader in cutting-edge manufacturing.

Back in Washington, Obama is in a high-stakes stalemate with Republicans over a deal that could cut some $2 trillion from the nation’s debt and perhaps clear the way for Congress to extend the nation’s borrowing limit. The administration says that debt limit must be raised by Aug. 2 or the government will face a catastrophic default on its obligations.

Obama made no direct reference to that fight but called on the country and its leaders to start “thinking like a team, instead of turning on each other.”

“I promise you,” he said, “if you we continue to adapt and we continue to innovate and we work together to compete around the world, America will come back stronger than before.”

The chairman of the Iowa Republican Party said it comes as no surprise that Obama showed up in the traditional political battleground.

“There’s a famous political saying that ‘no politician comes to Iowa by accident.’ I’m sure part of this is a political calculation,” Matt Strawn said.

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who has not said whether she will run for president, was in Iowa on Tuesday for the screening of a documentary about her.

Obama made time in Iowa to relax with the locals. His first stop was Ross’ 24-Hour Restaurant, a Bettendorf diner. Among the president’s orders was a “Magic Mountain,” a house specialty that includes Texas toast and mounds of ground beef.

“I hope he brought his antacids,” quipped Cynthia Freidhof, the daughter of the restaurant’s founder.

[Return to headlines]



Billionaire George Soros Trying to Stack the Courts, Critics Say

Billionaire George Soros spends tens of millions each year supporting a range of liberal social and political causes, from drug legalization to immigration reform to gay marriage to abolishing the death penalty.

But a less well-known Soros priority — replacing elections for judges with selection-by-committee — now has critics accusing him of trying to stack the courts.

Most non-federal judges around the country are selected by voters in elections. But some states use a process called “merit selection” in which a committee — often made up of lawyers — appoints judges to the bench instead.

Soros has spent several million dollars in the past decade in an attempt to get more states to scrap elections and adopt the merit method. Supporters say it would allow judges to focus on interpreting the law rather than on raising campaign funds and winning elections.

[…]

“The left can’t get their agenda through the legislatures anymore … so they think they can get their agenda through by taking over the courts,” attorney Colleen Pero, author of a new report titled “Hijacking Justice,” told FoxNews.com.

Pero’s report found that Soros, through his Open Society Institute fund, has given $45 million over the last decade to “a campaign to reshape the judiciary.” But that number is hotly contested by Justice at Stake, the group that got the most Soros money.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Embracing Realism: Obama Turns to Rebuilding America

Roads for Kentucky instead of Kabul: With the US still deep in the economic doldrums, President Barack Obama has begun to shift priorities away from expensive involvement in foreign wars and toward development back home.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Muslim Woman Suing Abercrombie & Fitch After She Was ‘Fired for Wearing Headscarf at Work’

Abercrombie & Fitch is being sued by a stockroom worker who claims she was fired for refusing to take off her Muslim headscarf while at work.

Hani Khan, 20, said a manager asked if she could remove the hijab while working — and when she refused she was suspended, and then sacked.

It is the second time in as many years the clothes retailer has been charged with discriminating against Muslim women over the wearing of the garment.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



No Budget Senate to “Streamline” Appointments

What would you say if I told you that a Senate which hasn’t passed a budget in 800 days and seemingly does nothing but model ties and cut ribbons is about to “streamline” presidential appointments by abdicating authority to the executive branch?

It’s true. This do nothing Senate is so overworked that it has decided unilaterally to gut the system of checks-and-balances conceived in liberty by America’s Founders.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Principal Criticized for Delivering Graduation Speech in Spanish

He congratulated the graduating class of 2011, but one but one principal’s commencement speech actually offended some in the crowd.

The graduating class at Whittell High School has only 30 students. Just a few weeks ago during graduation their principal gave an encouraging speech congratulating his students and their parents.

“Class of 2011, I want to congratulate you for all your accomplishments this year,” said Principal Crespin Esquivel.

He then said the same thing in Spanish, making sure his commencement speech could also be understood by his Spanish speaking parents and students who make up the second largest group of the school.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



The School From Hell (Video)

Teachers fear for lives as students run amok

Kids hoot and yammer so loudly that their ruckus drowns out the teacher. A trash can is overturned in class and dumped. Grimy floors are littered with sunflower-seed shells, spit out by the hundreds. Books and supplies fly out the windows. Mouse droppings are everywhere, even on the computers. MS 344, the Academy of Collaborative Education in Harlem, is a hellhole where teachers should get combat pay — they are cursed, assaulted and sometimes groped. “It was literally war,” said a teacher who once found a sticky used condom in her purse. “I was pushed, shoved, scratched, thrown against the wall, spit on and pickpocketed. I just wanted peace.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The White Working Class: The Group That Will Likely Decide Obama’s Fate

Each election cycle there occurs a tired ritual, in which pundits and reporters rediscover that yes, indeed, there are still a lot of white working class voters in America, and they represent a serious vulnerability for the Democrats. But just this once, let’s skip the period where everyone initially ignores this group and cut straight to the chase: There will be a lot of white working class voters showing up at the polls next November, and the degree to which they support (or abandon) President Obama could very well make or break his reelection. In 2008, during his otherwise-solid election victory, Obama lost the white working class vote by 18 points. In 2010, however, things got much worse: Congressional Democrats’ experienced a catastrophic 30 point deficit among the same group. While the first number is a figure Obama could live with repeating, the second could very well prove fatal.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



U.S. Soccer Team Booed in Their Own Country as Mexican Fans Turn LA Into an ‘Away’ Game

If the U.S. soccer team were hoping for the home advantage during Saturday’s Gold Cup final then they were in for a nasty surprise. Despite being the ‘home’ side in California’s Rose Bowl stadium, the majority of fans — most of them American born of naturalized Mexicans — booed and jeered the U.S. team. The surprising scenes were followed by angry outbursts from U.S. team goalkeeper Tim Howard, who was visibly shaken after the entire post match ceremony was conducted in Spanish.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Woman’s Leg Broken, Others Hurt in Spring Garden Mob Attack

A WOMAN’S leg was broken and several other people were injured Saturday night when a large group of teens accosted pedestrians in Spring Garden, police and witnesses said. Philadelphia police responded to two reports of pedestrians being assaulted by a large group of young people along Broad Street about 9:30 p.m.

One of those reports came from Emily Guendelsberger, 27, city editor for local arts and entertainment content for the Onion, the satirical newspaper and website. She was walking with seven friends on Green Street near Broad when they were accosted, she said. Guendelsberger, who remained hospitalized with a broken leg yesterday, declined to comment further.

According to the police report of the incident, Guendelsberger was “jumped” by 30 to 40 men who punched and kicked her numerous times. Police said they checked the area for surveillance but had no luck. Shortly before Guendelsberger’s assault, police said, they responded to another assault, about five blocks away at Broad Street and Fairmount Avenue, of a 20-year-old man who said that he was attacked by a large group of men and women. Police said that he was treated for a bruise and abrasion under his right eye. Twitter users said that the mob ranged from 50 to 100 people and that participants not only assaulted people but also threw trash cans and lit fireworks.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Europe and the EU


Bulgaria Gets Eur 73.8m Aid for Shut Nuclear Units

Bulgaria signed grant agreements on Tuesday to receive 73.8 million euros ($105.3 million) for energy projects as compensation for shutting down four units at its Kozloduy nuclear plant ahead of joining the EU in 2007. The Balkan country had already received a total of 575 million euros as compensation from an EBRD-operated international decommissioning support fund for Kozloduy as the plant’s partial closure cost the country its position as a top electricity exporter in the region.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Could Shakespeare’s Bones Tell Us if He Smoked Pot?

A South African anthropologist has asked permission to open the graves of William Shakespeare and his family to determine, among other things, what killed the Bard and whether his poems and plays may have been composed under the influence of marijuana. But while Shakespeare’s skeleton could reveal clues about his health and death, the question of the man’s drug use depends on the presence of hair, fingernails or toenails in the grave, said Francis Thackeray, the director of the Institute for Human Evolution at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, who floated the proposal to the Church of England. Thackeray conducted a study in 2001, which found evidence of marijuana residueon pipe fragments found in Shakespeare’s garden. Cannabis was grown in England at the time and was used to make textiles and rope. Some Shakespearian allusions, including a mention of a “noted weed” in Sonnet 76, spurred Thackeray’s inquiry into whether Shakespeare may have used the mind-altering drug for inspiration.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Dutch Vote to Ban Religious Slaughter of Animals

“This is absolutely impossible to prove,” Jacobs said. “You can’t ask the animal how it feels afterwards.”

Britain’s Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks visited the Netherlands last week to lobby against the law, arguing that pre-stunning failed in up to 10 percent of cases and that caused more pain than the swift cutting of the throat by a razor-sharp knife.

Philip Carmel, International Relations Director for the Conference of European Rabbis in Brussels, stressed the upper house of parliament could still reject the law. “We believe the Dutch parliament and people, who have a history of tolerance, will see sense and make the right decision,” he said.

Dutch Muslims, mostly of Turkish and Moroccan origin, have complained they felt stigmatized by the planned ban, debated amid growing support for anti-Islam populist Geert Wilders.

A court cleared Wilders last week of charges of hate speech against Muslims. His Freedom Party has supported the ban.

“There was no reason for passing this law,” said Imam Mahmut of the El Tawheed mosque in Amsterdam. “This is a political decision. Who has the authority to determine whether the way of killing animals is good or not?”

European Restrictions

European Union regulations require animals to be stunned before killing but allow exceptions for ritual slaughter, which the European Court of Human Rights has ruled is a religious right. Animal rights activists insisit this is inhuman.

Carmel said the European Parliament last week rejected a bid by animal rights advocates to have kosher and halal meat specially labeled as coming from unstunned animals.

Luxembourg, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland ban ritual slaughter. Swiss animal rights groups and far-right politicians have called for a ban on imported halal and kosher meat.

Of the 500 million animals slaughtered annually for food in the Netherlands, only 1.2 million animals are slaughtered according to Muslim or Jewish traditions, Dutch statistics show.

           — Hat tip: Steen [Return to headlines]



EU Ready to Apply Sanctions Over Naples Garbage Problem

(AGI) Brussels — The EU may start procedures against Italy due to the unresolved problem of waste in Naples, since “the problem has not been solved and if anything the problem has increased in the last few years.” At this point, explained the spokesman for the Environment Commissioner Janez Potocnik, the only thing Brussels can do is “open a procedure for “non-compliance” following the first sentence passed by the Court of Justice in March 2010, issuing a warning to Italy envisaging the possibility of fines.

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



Flanders Sees “Mini Baby Boom”

Last year, 69,924 babies were born in Flanders. That’s according to statistics published by the medical journal Artsenkrant. The number of new-born babies is the highest the Flemish region has seen in 24 years.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany: Dresden Police Chief Steps Down Over Phone Sweep Scandal

Dresden’s police chief has been forced out of his job after it emerged that police collected a massive amount of data from mobile phones during February anti-fascist demonstrations that left more than 100 officers injured.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany Pledges to Dramatically Boost Trade With China

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has announced plans for a major increase in trade with China, as Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao concludes his European tour in Berlin. Multibillion euro business deals have also been secured.

As Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao wrapped up his European visit in Berlin on Tuesday, Chancellor Angela Merkel said Germany intended to boost trade with China to at least 200 billion euros ($283.8 billion) in the next five years. Trade between the world’s number two economy, China, and Germany, at number four, currently stands at 130 billion euros annually.

The Chinese premier followed Merkel’s announcement by asserting China’s confidence in the eurozone. “It’s true that right now some European Union countries are encountering economic problems. These are, however, of a temporary nature,” he told the business forum. The European Union is “strong enough to master the current challenges,” he added. Dozens of people demonstrated in Berlin against China’s human rights policies

Wen was in Germany for the third and final leg of his European tour. He arrived in Berlin on Monday evening, having already secured a trade deal worth almost 1.6 billion euros with British Prime Minister David Cameron.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Italy: Burqa: Sbai: Law Presented in Commission by End of Summer

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 23 — Pdl MP Souad Sbai relies on the approval before the end of the summer of the law that prohibits the burqa and the niqab in the Constitutional Affairs Commission. The MP spoke today during a convention on “Women, Islam and freedom” set up by the Averroé and La Martinella cultural centres, and explained that “We are putting the finishing touches on a body of law that I hope may reach the commission hearing as of next week. Only some lexical details still have to be dealt with”. In Italy the number of women forced to wear the full veil are still relatively few, the MP of Moroccan descent admitted, “but we need to act right now, before their numbers increase” as a result of an growing hold of more conservative trends within the immigrant communities. She pointed out that only two years ago talking about the veil meant talking about the hijab, in other words the one that only covers hair, “which now has become the norm”. She emphasised that the problem is not the veil in itself, but “the mentality” and “the oppression of women” it relates to. Today’s convention, dedicated in particular to the law against the full veil that has been in force in France since April, saw a speech, among others, by Alexandre Del Valle, an Italian/French geopolitics researcher and the promoter of a new current, Free Right, he announced, in Sarkozy’s Ump. He reported that “There is an alliance between Islamic fundamentalism and the Marxist and ‘politically correct’ culture that reigns everywhere” and which would see the use of the veil as a right.

He added that it is also thanks to this alliance that “most of the representation of European Islam is assigned to the fundamentalists, from the Muslim Brothers to the Salafites”.

And he announced the proposal of a Charter for Islam in France capable of guaranteeing the rights of those who want to be Muslim in a different manner. He emphasised that “True anti-racism is to also guarantee to a Muslim the right not to believe”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: President Calls on Government to Save Naples From Rubbish

Foreign minister considers sending trash abroad

(ANSA) — Naples, June 24 — The central government must step in to solve the worsening Naples trash crisis, said Italian President Giorgio Napolitano in a written statement Friday.

“An intervention is absolutely indispensable and urgent,” he said, adding that the situation had reached “acute and alarming” proportions.

Armed police escorts have begun accompanying garbage trucks as exasperated protesters have resorted to tipping over dumpsters, blocking traffic and setting flames to the growing piles of waste that choke the daily flow of city life.

Firefighters put out 55 separate trash fires in the city by early morning as others blazed in Naples province.

Napolitano went on to mention the government’s inability to pass emergency measures after two days of deliberation, largely due to Northern League opposition to a proposal to transfer thousands of tonnes of rubbish outside the province to other Italian regions.

One possible course of action is to move the trash outside Italy.

In a telephone conversation Friday between Campania Governor Stefano Caldoro and Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini, the foreign minister discussed the option of “international agreements with countries that have offered the use of their facilities.” Approximately 2,400 tonnes of trash lie uncollected in the city and province of Naples after an escalation of the problem in recent months.

Naples and the surrounding region of Campania have suffered similar crises periodically for a number of years.

The previous public outcry occurred last November when weeks of clashes and rising trash piles brought Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi to the city.

It was then that the premier, who won plaudits by sorting out a similar emergency in 2008, made a vow to clear the streets in three days.

But the problems have returned partly because of technical failures in local incinerators and the lack of investment in other landfill sites.

The issue is further complicated by the role of the local mafia, or Camorra, and claims that they have infiltrated waste management in Naples and dumped toxic waste on sites near residential areas.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Italy: Moroccan Immigrant Murders Wife for Being ‘Too Western’

Padua, 28 June (AKI) — A Moroccan carpenter living in northern Italy is suspected of stabbing his wife to death because she wanted to leave him and begin a more liberated and western life with another man.

Police suspect 36-year old Zrhaida Hammadi of killing his 33-year-old wife Fatima Chabani at their apartment in the city of Padua near Venice by stabbing her repeatedly in the neck and shoulder, severing her jugular vein.

Neighbours telephoned the police after hearing blood-curdling screams from the apartment late Sunday, but the police said they found Chabani already dead and Hammadi awaiting their arrival, sitting motionless in a chair with his head bowed.

The couple were married in 2002 and had a six-year-old son. The family moved to Padua in January from the surrounding province in Italy’s northeast. Members of the local Moroccan community described Hammadi as “a quiet, decent and hard-working” man.

The couple reportedly had frequent rows and police are probing Hammadi’s’ claims that his wife was seeing another man.

On Tuesday, a cultural mediator in Padua, 30-year-old Tunisian Muslim immigrant Maher Selmi sparked controversy by claiming that it was right to stone “adulteresses” to death.

Moroccan women’s activist and member of Italy’s parliament Souad Sbai deplored Chabani’s “chilling” slaying and the remarks by Selmi, who is a graduate in Italian language and literature.

“This is the latest outrage against an innocent young woman whose only crime was her desire to live peacefully,” said Sbai.

Sbai is a member of parliament for the ruling conservative People of Freedom party and president of the Association of Moroccan Women in Italy.

Her group made an unsuccessful application to form the civil plaintiff in the murder trial of three male relatives of a twenty-year-old Pakistani woman, Hina Saleem found buried in the garden of her family home with her throat slit and her head facing Mecca in August 2006.

Hina had ‘dishonoured’ the family by dressing in western clothes, working in a pizzeria in the northern town of Sarezzo and living with her Italian boyfriend and refusing and arranged marriage

In February, 2010, Italy’s Supreme Court said Hina’s father Mohammed Saleem must serve the entire 30-year prison sentence handed to him for her murder, ruling that he acted “out of a distorted, pathological sense of parental possession” rather than for religious and cultural reasons.

Hina Saleem’s shocking murder is one of several “honour” crimes which have brought the issue of Muslim cultural integration in Italy into stark relief in recent years.

El Ketaoui Dafani a Moroccan immigrant cook is currently standing trial for the murder of Sanaa Dafani in northeastern Italy in September 2009 after he discovered she had a relationship with an older Italian man.

Italy’s equal opportunities ministry, the Association of Moroccan Women in Italy, the Friuli Venezia Giulia region, and the Province of Pordenone and forming the plaintiff in that trial.

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



Oldest Beer From Shipwreck Yields Dead Yeast, Sour Bacteria

Finnish scientists have cracked open a cold one … a 170-year-old cold one, that is. The bottle of beer, salvaged last summer from the wreckage of a ship that sank near the Aland Islands in the Baltic Sea, was thought to be the oldest drinkable beer ever found. Unfortunately, the Technical Research Center of Finland (VTT) reported June 27, the first bottle opened did not withstand the stresses of time. Seawater made it into the bottle, contaminating the brew. Nonetheless, the researchers were able to analyze the chemistry of the pale golden liquid. They found malt sugars, aromatic compounds and hops typical of what you’d expect to find in a bottle of beer today.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Spain: Franco’s Daughter, Not Moving Body From Valle Caido

(ANSAmed) — MADRID, JUNE 15 — The Spanish government wants to convert ‘Valle de los Caidos’, the monastery ordered by Francisco Franco in San Lorenzo del Escorial, into a “place of reconciled memory”, but the dictator’s daughter is against exhuming and moving her father’s remains to another place. In statements reported by El Pais, Carmen Polo, the daughter of the ‘caudillo’, commented that “The family believes that they should stay where they are, in the basilica”. In recent days the minister of the presidency, Ramon Jaregui, asked a panel of experts, comprising jurists, historians, philosophers and a Benedictine monk to reach a decision on the potential transfer of Franco’s remains, which are held in the basilica along with those of the founder of the Falange, Primo de Rivera. The socialist government wants to turn the mausoleum into a place of reconciled memory, “a democratic monument rather than one for dictatorship”, as Jaregui explained to the media. The mausoleum was built between 1948 and 1950 following the orders of the generalissimo, who moved there the remains of thousands of the victims of his regime, without asking for the approval of their relatives. The experts will have to report their decision to the government within five months. They will have to decide whether Valle de Los Caidos can become a place of worship for the republican victims as well and, in the event, move the remains of the military coup general. Only then, according to the minister of the presidency, the executive will officially contact Franco’s family. But during informal meetings held to date Franco’s relatives have been against a potential transfer of the body, for example to the Mingorrubio cemetery, located in the Pardo, to be buried next to the remains of his wife.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



UK: Victim’s Mum Reveals Full Horror of Hearts Star Craig Thomson’s Depravity

THE mum of a schoolgirl groomed by footballer Craig Thomson called on his club to sack him yesterday and asked: “Have you no shame?”

Breaking her silence, she condemned the sex-shame player and his bosses at Hearts after they announced he would be kept on at the club despite his conviction for targeting her 12-year-old daughter and another young girl online.

She revealed the defender — who was a close family friend and had known his victim for years — bombarded her girl with obscene messages over nine months from January 2010.

The shattered mum, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told how Thomson, 20, begged the youngster not to tell anyone about him.

He made filthy comments about her appearance, tried to take her on drives and even sent naked photographs of himself.

Speaking to the Sunday Mail at the family home near Edinburgh, the 47-year-old woman said Scotland under-21 international Thomson had known exactly how old her daughter was.

He was put on the sex offenders’ register for five years and fined £4000 after admitting lewd, libidinous and indecent behaviour earlier this month.

The mum-of-three said: “Hearts are not taking this seriously enough. As far as we are concerned, Thomson has got off with this. He needs to be sacked.

“The only thing that will teach him a lesson is if he goes. Football is all he cares about.

“Hearts are a family club and if he continues in football, he is obviously going to be around children. But who would take their kids to a game when they know he is on the pitch?

“They obviously don’t want to lose him because he is a decent player and could make them money.

“They should be taking notice and investigating this. But there doesn’t seem to have been anything of the sort — we haven’t even heard a word from Hearts about it.

“To us, he has been let off really lightly. By the time he is 25 he won’t even be on the sex offenders’ register anymore. And a £4000 fine is nothing to him.

“He’s meant to be a role model for kids and yet he has used his celebrity status to get at young girls.”

The horrified mum, a support worker, said she had known nothing about Thomson’s vile chats with her youngest child, now aged 13, until the police got in touch with her.

And when she heard how the player — who had been a friend of the family through the girl’s older sister for around six years — had been grooming the girl, she was at first stunned then furious.

The mum said: “He was somebody we knew and trusted. It’s not that my daughter was in awe of him because he was a footballer. He was a family friend she had known since she was about six.

“He went to school with my older daughter and he used to come about the house quite often. He knew the whole family from a young age.

“This was someone my older daughter was very close with. But while she was attending Hearts events that Thomson had invited her to, he was also grooming her little sister.”

Thomson began chatting to the 12-year-old at a party they were both invited to and the next day he added her as a friend on Facebook, then began chatting to her on MSN Messenger.

The girl’s mum said: “She would mention that she had been chatting to him and I thought nothing of it. I worry that I didn’t pick up on that.

“I wonder if she was trying to tell us something but didn’t know how to.

“He had asked her if she had told her big sister they were chatting. He told her he didn’t think she should and that he didn’t imagine she’d be too happy about it.

“A couple of days in, he had pushed her into speaking to him in front of the webcam.

“When I heard the things he was saying to her after the police became involved I was shocked and disgusted. He was commenting on her figure, saying he liked her big chest, what she was wearing and would turn up in places that he knew she was going to be.

“Nearly every time he was in contact with her he asked her to take her top off.

“He moved on to sending her pictures of himself naked and asking her if she thought he was big. She was a 12-year-old girl, it’s disgusting.”

The sickened mum added: “He was well aware of how young she was. At one point he asked her how old she was now and when she told him she had turned 13, he said to her ‘I knew that’ before saying what he wanted to do to her. It is disgusting.

“He also invited her to come to his house for a sleepover, as long as she promised to walk around in her underwear. He tried to take her on drives and I’m just so relieved she didn’t go with him. I dread to think what might have happened.

“I feel a bit stupid for letting this happen to my daughter. The worst of it is that if even if I had’ve known he was offering to take her out to McDonald’s and that kind of thing, I would have just thought what a nice laddie he was. I wouldn’t have thought he had any other motive than being nice to his friend’s little sister.

“He disgusts me. If he was a total stranger who had come on and said that type of thing, then she would have deleted him straight away. But because she knew him, she thought there was a wee bit of protection.

“And it went on so long because she was frightened to say because he was a friend of the family.”

The family are unsure how Thomson came to be investigated but the mum told how when her daughter went to the police station about it, there were four other girls there too and she knew three of them.

She said: “He has been found guilty of two, but there is probably lots more. This is a 20 year old footballer who could probably have any girl he wanted, yet he chooses to hang around at schoolgirls’ parties.”

I Shook When I Saw Him

The Victim

Thomson’s young victim yesterday said the player’s unwanted attention gave her the creeps.

The girl, now 13, said: “I used to see him around all the time, he was everywhere.

“I would always put my head down or put sunglasses on to try and avoid him. I just hated seeing him.

“I used to shake when I did. He was always commenting on what I was wearing if I saw him. One time he drove past and waved and then later he asked if I was still wearing the leggings I had on earlier.

“So I’d wear things that wouldn’t get his attention.

“I was scared to tell my mum and sisters in case they thought I had done something wrong. I was relieved once it all came out.

“When I look back I think ‘How did I ever think that was okay?’ but I think I thought to myself that he was a friend of my family, and also a footballer, so surely he wouldn’t do something that was wrong.

“Surely he wouldn’t risk everything by doing something bad.

“Even when I see him now, he doesn’t try and hide, he just stares right at me.”

Putting Money Before Morals

The Agent

A top football agent yesterday accused Hearts of putting money before morality.

The players’ rep, who asked not to be named, said: “The reason they have kept Thomson is quite simple.

“He’s an asset to the club and is somebody they will feel they can sell for upwards of £500,000 or maybe seven figures in a year or two.

“They have invested a lot of time training him and they aren’t about to discard him now.

“This is a financial decision, pure and simple. If he was an ordinary 20-year-old they’d be delighted to get shot of him. He stays because he has talent.

“Football is littered with bad boys being given another chance and, as long as Thomson is doing the business on the grass, there will always be be a taker.

“Of course, there may be clubs who take the moral high ground and won’t want anything to do with it, but there will be plenty clubs who won’t care.”

The agent, who has done business with Vladimir Romanov’s club, said: “This whole thing isn’t surprising to me. I have had a few dealings with the people at Hearts.

“They are unpredictable, to say the least, and are tough negotiators when it comes to money.”

           — Hat tip: Nick [Return to headlines]

North Africa


Algeria: Housing Protests Spread, Some Resort to Suicide

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 23 — A clear idea of the heights to which emotions have escalated over Algeria’s housing problem is given by the headline on the font page of today’s Le Temps d’Algeria: “The Lists of Fear”. These are the lists being drawn up by local authorities to announce the names of those fortunate enough to have been assigned a council home — and triggering the anger of those who feel they have been shut out.

And the issue has been taking on a tragic face; those who find themselves excluded and don’t have the strength to protest have been that cruelest of short-cuts: suicide,”preferably in the most spectacular way possible, with self immolations and people blowing themselves to pieces. The phenomenon has taken an alarming turn and is involving the whole of the country. The numbers who have committed suicide over the past months run into dozens (many of them women and family breadwinners), even though there has been no official admission of the fact, only including the off-hand mention that the person concerned came from a deprived background”.

The Algerian ‘powder-keg” is ready to explode, from the capital to the most distant and deprived towns where homes are not a status simbol, but the only way out of marginalization and degradation after a life spent in a shanty. The measure being taken by the authorities — that of delaying publication of the lists in the hope of calming the anger, is backfiring, making the sense of exasperation even worse and fuelling people’s readiness to come out onto the streets to vent their anger at any one — mostly those who have nothing to do with the problem. So government officials, who are simply following instructions from above, are now hate figures among the populace.

The latest to protest in Algiers were the residents of the Hussein-Dey area who, when the lists were released started a demonstration that was quelled by police anti-riot squads. One of many similar events, staged by those who feel excluded and who accuse the state of favouritism. The number of demonstrations has increased as has their level of protest, with vital traffic streets and motorways being blocked.

Barricades include burning tyres, attacks have been made on council and local government offices with some mayors under a state of siege, waiting for a rescue party to arrive. Post offices and police stations have also been ransacked.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Drugs: Algeria: 5% of Population Are Users

(ANSAmed) — ALGIERS, JUNE 27 — Five percent of the population in Algeria uses drugs, according to the figures provided during a press conference for the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, reports El Watan. Abdelmalek Sayah, the Director General of the National Office for the Fight Against Drugs, said that in recent years, 42,000 Algerians have successfully went through detox treatment at specialised centres established by the Health Ministry. Today, according to figures released by the centres, there are about 302,000 Algerians who are habitual drug users. Of these, 180,000 are between the ages of 20 and 39, while another 94,000 are over 40 years old. According to statistics, 5% of drug users are women. The percentage of Algerians who consume psychotropic substances is low (0.38%). By the end of the year, the network of support structures in the fight against drugs will be expanded, with another 15 detox centres and 185 listening centres for drug users.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Egypt’s Business Mogul Sawiris Under Fire for Islamic Cartoons

Egyptian business tycoon Naguib Sawiris may be summoned by the prosecutor general for tweeting cartoons that were deemed defamatory to the Islamic faith

Islamic lawyer Mamdouh Ismael and 14 lawyers submitted a complaint to the general prosecutor’s office against Naguib Sawiris after he posted a cartoon of popular cartoon characters Mickey Mouse with an Islamic beard and dressed in a Jilbab and Minnie Mouse wearing a full Muslim veil on twitter. The post was accompanied with the comment: “Mickey and Minnie after” Ismael said that the images were defamatory and ridiculed the Islamic faith. However, Ismael stressed that he is not going after Sawiris because he is a Copt.

Ahmed Mahmoud Kareema, Professor of Islamic Shariaa at Al-Azhar University, said that insulting religion is criminalized by the Islamic faith and Sawiris would not like it if the tables were turned and people mocked the clothes worn by Christian clerics, and, furthermore, had he mocked the clothes of Jewish rabbis, he would have been accused of being an anti-Semitic. Following the incident, Sawiris who was attacked on social networking sites, insisted that he meant no harm and simply thought the images were funny. However, “Boycott Sawiris,” groups were launched on both Twitter and Facebook. The Facebook group titled, “We were also joking Sawiris,” urged people to boycott his products saying that “if you are really a Muslim, boycott his (Sawiris) products if you love your faith. Spread the message, we have to cut the tongues of those who defame our faith.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Germany to Supply Bombs for Libya Mission

Germany will supply bombs and weapons technology to NATO for the military intervention into Libya despite its stated opposition to the mission, according to a media report.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



International Arrest Warrant for Gaddafi Will Not Change the Situation in Libya, Del Boca Says

For the historian, the Libyan leader would rather be killed than give up power. Few hopes for a diplomatic solution persist before September.

Roma (AsiaNews) — “The arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court will not have any repercussions on the current situation in Libya. NATO will not stop its strikes and Gaddafi will not go away. If he does flee, he’ll go to a country that won’t extradite him,” Prof Angelo Del Boca told AsiaNews. A journalist and university scholar, Del Boca has studied Libya and its leader for 30 years.

“Gaddafi has built up his myth for more than 42 years,” Del Boca said. “He’s rather be killed than lose and give up power.”

The same thing is true for France, Great Britain and Italy, which continue to bomb, in spite of domestic criticism, the high costs and the US pulling back.

A peaceful solution to the conflict can be excluded before NATO’s official operation ends in September, the historian said.

All attempts made so far have failed. Yesterday, the Libyan leader walked out of talks organised by members of the African Union, the only international organisation that is still willing to deal with him.

“Gaddafi does not see himself as a head of state, but rather as a revolutionary leader, one that has no specific function,” Del Boca explained. “He uses this to prevent agreements and hide his weakness.”

“However, given Gaddafi’s peculiar traits, no one can exclude some dramatic turn of events. As long as he is alive, he still holds all the cards.”

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



Libya: Who Controls Kufra and Desert? “Black Hole” Of War

(ANSAmed) — ROME — If everything, or almost, is known about the battles raging in Tripoli, Benghazi and the other major Libyan coastal cities, there is very little information on the goings-on in the vast areas of desert in the country, where coverage from journalists is rare and often risky. No-one, not even the rebels, is able to say for sure who is in control of the Kufra area.

While the mass media concentrate on clashes between warring faction between Benghazi and Ajdabiya, along a tarmacked coastal road where the weather is mild, many experts admit that the situation south of Ajdabiya is unknown.

In the Kufra oasis in particular, where the roads leading to Chad and to the Sudanese region of Darfur cross over, the situation is unstable. On western observer quoted by the Al Arabiyya website said that the events in these areas are a “black hole”. No-one can really be sure of the situation there, the observer added. Journalists in Benghazi cannot travel towards these remote parts for fear of being captured by forces loyal to Colonel Gaddafi.

“The vastness of the area of Kufra makes it impossible to say who is controlling the area,” Mustafa Gheriani, the spokesperson for the National Transitional Council, told Al Arabiyya. “Is it our rebels or Gaddafi’s troops?”.

Towns in the Libyan desert have very small populations and the tribes inhabiting the areas are completely isolated from the rest of the country, where the revolution that begun in the middle of February has degenerated into civil war.

The desert area of Kufra is inhabited by two tribes: the Arab Azzawia tribe and the Tobo tribe, which resides in the border areas between Libya, Niger and Chad. In November 2008, there were a number of clashes between the two tribes, with many Tobo families chased out of Kufra. The rebels claim that they have the support of the Azzawia tribe, while Colonel Gaddafi is suspected to have hired a number of mercenaries from the Tobo tribe in Chad.

Many of the pro-Gaddafi soldiers captured by rebels in Benghazi say that they are from Sabha, the biggest Libyan desert town, some 500 kilometres south of Tripoli. Although Gaddafi was born in the city of Sirt, Sabha remains the stronghold of Ghathathifa tribe, which is home to the elite 32nd battalion, which is led by the Colonel’s son Khamis.

“Sabha remains Gaddafi’s stronghold but we have many supporters in the small towns surrounding the area,” Gheriani explains.

Ibraheem Al Thalathini, a resident of Benghazi, says that his family lives in southern Sabha. “Before, I could speak to them over the telephone,” he says. “Even though they were very scared, my relatives kept saying that all was well. Now, I am no longer able to contact them and no-one knows what is going on there”. Libya has been covered by two telecommunications networks since the beginning of the uprising. The rebels have set up a network called Libiana in the east of the country, while Libiana and Madar continue to operate in western areas. Many Libiana users in rebel-controlled areas have complained that they are unable to communicate with the rest of the country.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Libya: A Non-Hostile War

by Srdja Trifkovic

On balance, the most harmful consequence of our “engagement” with Libya, from the standpoint of the American interest, is the brazen manner Obama and his legal team have deployed in evading the strictures of the War Powers Resolution of 1973. The White House claims not only that U.S. action in Libya is made legitimate by the United Nations, but that such UN authorization per se makes Congressional approval unnecessary. This is some light years from candidate Obama declaring, in 2008, that “the President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”

The claim that a war involving the United States can be “legitimated” by a multinational agency-the UN, or NATO, or the Arab League-is legally absurd. It is also immoral and potentially treasonous. It opens the way to any number of future “engagements” which bear no relevance to American interests, security, or welfare…

           — Hat tip: Srdja Trifkovic [Return to headlines]



Request From NATO: Berlin Willing to Supply Weapons for Libyan War

NATO is running out of munitions to use in the Libya conflict. Now the German government is willing to supply weapons to its allies, despite its fundamental opposition to the war, SPIEGEL ONLINE has learned. The defense minister has already approved a NATO request.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Tunisia: Islamic Fundamentalists Raid Film Festival

(ANSAmed) — TUNIS, JUNE 27 — Last night a group of Islamic extremists raided a movie theatre in the centre of Tunis where a film show on documentaries is taking place, interrupting screenings with cries of “Allah is great”. One hundred men, many wearing hoods, gathered in front of the movie theatre. With no police presence, they condemned the event, accusing it of being atheistic, writes TAP. Then about twenty of the men, all “bearded”, entered the theatre, breaking windows and ripping posters for the event, and then attacked the ushers. The extremists threatened the lives of the spectators, saying that the film being screened, “Neither God nor Master” by Nadia El Feni, is “blasphemous”. The public, stricken by panic, tried to exit the theatre, but found the security exits blocked by the fundamentalists. Only then, reports TAP, did police intervene to bring order back to the movie theatre and surrounding area.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



United in the Face of Adversity

After centuries of voluntary segregation in the Libyan mountains, Arabs and Berbers are forced today to live together in refugee camps in the Tunisian desert. The fight against Gadhafi could bring them closer together.

Harraz pointed to the ancient enmity between Arabs and Berbers of Libya. The latter hardly amount to 4 percent of the war-torn country’s population. Berbers barely differ physically from their Arab neighbors, but they have their own language which the call “Amazigh” and follow a branch of Islam which diverges from the hegemonic Sunni orthodoxy in Libya. Accordingly, their mosques in the mountains might be the only ones in the whole Muslim world that are not oriented toward Mecca. “All our mountain villages are built from a defensive angle, in Nafusa’s most rugged and inaccessible spots. Nalut, Jadu, Qalaa, Kabaw Yefren are Berber villages, while Arabs live in Zintan, Rayaina and Rushba,” Waheed, a native of Nalut, told Deutsche Welle. “We have lived apart for centuries because that was the only way to survive, and not to vanish among the ever-growing Arab population. In Tunisia there is hardly anyone who speaks the Amazigh and in Libya it has only been preserved in the mountains of Nafusa,” added this Berber from the TV tent. Unsurprisingly, nobody here wants to miss the latest information coming from the front through the Al Jazeera news network.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Israel and the Palestinians


Caroline Glick: The Invisible Palestinians

Sunday was the first day of Sgt. Gilad Schalit’s sixth year in captivity. Schalit was kidnapped on June 26, 2006 and has been held hostage by Palestinian terrorists affiliated with Hamas in Gaza ever since.

For five years, Schalit has been held incognito. His terrorist captors have permitted him to send but one letter to his family and released but one video of Schalit over this entire period. He has been denied visits by the International Committee of the Red Cross. He was clearly emaciated in the video…

           — Hat tip: Caroline Glick [Return to headlines]



Gaza Flotilla Begins Mission Despite EU Warning

Organisers say one ship is already at sea and 10 are to sail from Greek ports on Wednesday or Thursday, after EU countries warned the group not to go ahead.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Gaza Flotilla Ship ‘Sabotaged by Divers’

Activists say Swedish ship due to join attempt to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza has been damaged in Greek port.

Ten ships bound for Gaza are expected to set sail from Greece in the coming days [Photo: Ship to Gaza Sweden]

A Swedish ship due to join an upcoming Gaza-bound aid flotilla has been sabotaged in the Greek port of Piraeus, organisers say.

In a statement, they said “hostile divers had destroyed the propeller house and cut the propeller shaft” of the vessel Juliano on Monday.

The ship is part of the 10-vessel Freedom Flotilla II that is expected to set sail from Greece and elsewhere for the Gaza Strip in the coming days in a bid to break Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian territory.

About 350 pro-Palestinian activists from 22 countries are likely to participate.

Israel insists the latest flotilla is a “dangerous provocation” and has vowed to intercept it.

Determined organisers

Organisers of the flotilla, however, remain defiant and said the Juliano would be ready to sail within one or two days after being repaired. They said they had documented the sabotage with their own camera-equipped divers.

“We are sad that people are doing such things but we are determined to continue to Gaza,” Dror Feiler, one of the organisers, told Al Jazeera from aboard the Juliano.

“We will not be frightened by Israel, and we are going to continue. Our friends from all around the world are with us, and we are all going to Gaza.”

Mattias Gardell, a spokesperson for Ship to Gaza Sweden, also condemned the act of sabotage.

“It’s one thing for a foreign power to press the Greek government to delay our voyage with red tape. It is quite another thing for enemy agents to operate on Greek territory.

“It is high time for the international community to put their foot down and say: Enough!”

Israeli allegation

Israeli newspaper Haaretz quoted senior Israeli officials as saying that “radical elements” among the flotilla activists had stated an intention to “spill the blood of Israeli soldiers”.

According to Tel Aviv daily Yedioth Aharonoth, military sources said participants of the flotilla were planning to pour chemicals, such as sulfur, on Israeli soldiers.

But according to activist Feiler, the goal of the flotilla is to “come in peace” to Gaza.

“We are shocked by the Israeli actions, and their propaganda that we have weapons and acid and are going to attack Israeli soldiers, when we are all dedicated to peace,” Feiler said. “We will not throw objects or attack them in any way.”

The flotilla comes a year after another aid shipment was intercepted by Israeli commandos. At least nine activists were killed when commandos stormed Mavi Marmara, the Turkish-owned lead aid ship.

Besides the Juliano — named after Juliano Mer-Khamis, the Arab-Israeli actor, director and political activist who was shot dead in the West Bank town of Jenin in April — boats from Greece, France, Italy and Spain are also among those joining Freedom Flotilla II. Two cargo vessels will carry medicines, a fully equipped ambulance car, and cement.

A number of journalists are among those taking part in the bid to break Israel’s five-year naval blockade on the Gaza Strip, which is home to 1.5 million Palestinians.

Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations secretary-general, and several international leaders have urged the flotilla not to set sail, and the US has warned its nationals not to join the attempt to break the embargo.

The border has remained largely shut since June 2006, when Israel imposed a tight blockade on the coastal territory after Palestinian fighters snatched Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who is still being held.

The UN has called the blockade illegal and repeatedly demanded it be lifted. A ban on civilian goods and foodstuffs was eased last year but many restrictions remain in place.

[Return to headlines]



Israel Backtracks on Threat to Journalists

ISRAELI Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has intervened to defuse a brewing international furore over his government’s efforts to deter journalists from boarding a protest flotilla sailing for the blockaded Gaza Strip.

On Sunday, international media representatives based in Israel received a letter from Government Press Office director Oren Helman warning that anyone who boarded the flotilla faced a 10-year ban on re-entering the country.

About 30 international reporters are believed to be on a number of ships set to join the flotilla, as well as Pulitzer prize-winning US author Alice Walker.

Advertisement: Story continues below In the letter, Mr Helman described the flotilla as a provocation organised by “Western and Islamic extremist elements to aid Hamas”, the militant Palestinian movement that controls Gaza.

After the letter was widely condemned, Mr Netanyahu’s office issued a statement ordering the “responsible authorities to formulate” special procedures for foreign journalists covering the flotilla.

“When the matter was brought to his attention, the Prime Minister directed that the regular policy against infiltrators and those who enter Israel illegally not be implemented,” said the statement from Mr Netanyahu’s office.

“It has also been agreed that members of the Israeli and international media will be attached to Israel Navy vessels in order to create transparency and credible coverage of the events,” the statement added.

The Israeli Foreign Press Association welcomed Mr Netanyahu’s decision. “We are pleased to see that Israel has recognised the value of allowing reporters to cover an important news event, and understands that journalists should be treated differently from political activists,” the press association said.

Organisers of the flotilla of at least eight ships, which are anchored at several ports around the Mediterranean, were last night preparing to set sail for Gaza as part of an effort to draw attention to Israel’s continuing maritime blockade of the Palestinian enclave.

Last year, Israeli naval commandos shot dead nine passengers on board the Turkish-flagged Mavi Marmara, which was leading another protest flotilla.

One Israeli military official quoted by the newspaper Maariv said intelligence indicated that activists had threatened that “a lot of Israeli Defence Forces soldiers will be killed in this flotilla”.

Israeli intelligence officials also allege that organisers have loaded the ships with sulphuric acid and other dangerous chemicals to throw at troops trying to board the vessels.

Israeli dissident Dror Feiler, one of the flotilla’s organisers, strenuously denied reports that activists planned to harm Israeli troops.

[Return to headlines]



Mideast: Activists of Flotilla 2 Want to Kill Troops, Press

Israel recently received information that pro-Palestinian activists who will be on board of the Flotilla headed for Gaza want to kill Israeli soldiers, several Israeli media report today. A Flotilla spokesman has already denied the accusations. Based on the information, also reported by military radio, bags filled with chemicals — including sulphuric acid — have been taken on board of some ships. The acid is reportedly meant to be thrown at Israeli troops in case they intercept the convoy, and then to be set on fire. ‘They come to kill’ is the dramatic headline in newspaper Maariv. The newspaper specifies that the pro-Palestinian activists headed for Gaza include members of Hamas and of the Turkish NGO Ihh, which staged an active resistance last year when the passenger ship Marmara was boarded by the Israeli Navy.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Swedish Gaza Flotilla Ship Sabotaged: Report

The ship scheduled to carry the Swedish activists in the Ship to Gaza aid flotilla at the end of the week has been sabotaged in its berth in Greece, the organisation reported on Monday. The group has reported that the ship Juliano has been sabotaged while berthed in Piraeus harbour, in Greece. “It is time for the international community to put their foot down and say: It’s enough!” said Swedish spokesperson Mattias Gardell in a statement on Monday. According to Mikael Löfgren, press coordinator of the organisation, it is not known who was behind the attack in which hostile divers destroyed the propeller housing and severed the two propeller axles beneath the boat.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

Middle East


7-Months Pregnant After Delivery!

When a Saudi man took his wife to hospital, doctors were shocked to learn she is pregnant in her seventh month although she delivered only three months before. But their shock was nothing compared to that of the husband.

Hospital staff were on their feet trying to find an explanation after the confused husband rushed to the management and complained how on earth his 19-year-old wife delivered three months ago while she is pregnant in her seventh month.

“The mystery was unraveled when the hospital manager and the doctors checked their medical files and found that the woman who delivered three months ago was not the same woman who has just been checked although they carry the same name,” the Saudi daily Alwatan said in a report from Riyadh.

The paper said both women had been visiting the same hospital and that the man’s wife had already delivered three babies at that hospital.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Kidnapped French Aid Workers ‘Located’ And ‘Alive’: Yemen

Three French aid workers kidnapped in southeastern Yemen a month ago have been “located” and are “alive,” the deputy information minister told reporters on Tuesday. “Security services have managed to locate the French. They are alive,” Abdo al-Janadi said. Yemeni authorities “cannot provide any information on the kidnappers or their demands to ensure the safety of the investigation and to secure their release as soon as possible,” he added. The three — two women and a man — were kidnapped in the Hadramawt town of Seyun, 600 kilometres (370 miles) east of Sanaa on May 28. The trio are part of the French non-governmental organisation Triangle Generation Humanitaire, and were working with a group of 17 Yemenis in Seyun. “They were kidnapped because they had written a letter to Yemeni security services asking not to be accompanied by anyone for protection,” said Janadi, who added that their demand was accepted.

Foreigners have frequently been kidnapped in Yemen by tribes who use the tactic to pressure the authorities into making concessions. More than 200 foreigners have been kidnapped in Yemen over the past 15 years, with almost all of them later freed unharmed.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Pope Calls on Leaders to Support Middle East Christians

‘The East is their Earthly homeland,’ Pontiff says

(ANSA) — Vatican City, June 24 — After repeated assaults targeting Christian communities in the Middle East, Pope Benedict XVI made a fresh plea, Friday, calling on world leaders to support the Christian presence there and in North Africa.

“The East is their Earthly homeland,” he said before the Reunion of Organizations for Aid to the Oriental Churches (ROACO).

“Intervene with the public authorities with whom you have contacts at the international level,” he told members, “to ensure that the pastors and faithful of Christ can remain in the East where they were born, not as strangers but as citizens who bear witness to Jesus Christ as the saints of the Eastern Churches did before them”.

A surge of sectarian violence in Cairo has so far killed 24 and injured more than 200 Christians following the wave of political revolutions in the Middle East known as the “Arab Spring” which began last December in Tunisia, spreading to Egypt and other countries.

Since the downfall of former Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak in February, three churches have been burned in Egypt where Christians make up 10% of the 80 million population.

“If things don’t change for the better, we’ll return to what was before, maybe even worse,” said Coptic Catholic Patriarch of Alexandria Antonios Naguib at a conference this week in Venice on the Arab Spring and Muslim-Christian relations.

The Pontiff’s comments came as an uprising escalates in Syria, where, as in Mubarak-era Egypt, Christians and other minorities have been granted a degree of protection by a secular dictator, Bashar al-Assad.

Anti-Christian violence predated the Arab Spring revolutions in the Middle East.

Last October 50 people were killed and 80 wounded in a Catholic church in Baghdad when security forces took on insurgent hostage-takers.

“At present,” said Pope Benedict in response to that massacre, “Christians are the religious group which suffers most from persecution on account of its faith”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Saudi Law Approves Marriage With Foreigners

Law sets conditions for such marriages and SR100,000 fine for violators

Saudi Arabia approved a law regulating marriage between its citizens and foreigners after several years of haggling because of widening rifts among law makers on the landmark law, the official media reported on Tuesday.

The law allowed Saudis to have foreign spouses but stipulated that they need prior approval by a new government committee which could take up to three months to decide whether to agree or reject the request.

Under the law, the marriage must be in line with Islamic rules and the couple must be free of any serious diseases, should not be drug addicts and the age gap between them must not exceed 25 years.

After a lengthy debate on Monday, the Shura council, the Gulf Kingdom’s appointed parliament, ratified the law which gave Saudis the right to have spouses from the other members of the Gulf Cooperation Council.

A Saudi man or woman seeking to marry from outside the Kingdom or the GCC must submit an application to a government committee to be created shortly by the ministries of interior, foreign affairs, justice and social affairs. The committee also comprises representatives from the Saudi Human Rights Commission.

“After receiving the application, the committee will present its proposal to the minister of interior to decide on the application three months after it is submitted to the committee,” the official Saudi press agency said.

“Those who violate the new rules on the marriage of Saudis to non-Saudis or non-GCC citizens will be fined a maximum SR100,000 ($26,500) to be deposited with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency and credited to the ministry of social affairs, which will allocate the funds to help Saudi men seeking to marry.”

Experts described the law as a policy turnaround in the conservative Moslem nation and reverses recent calls to introduce tougher curbs on mixed marriage.

They said the new law would help reverse an upward trend in the number of spinsters in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter.

Official data showed Saudi Arabia had around 1.8 million unmarried national women above 30 years old and that their number could exceed four million in the next four years. Officials attributed the problem to the fact that many Saudi men prefer foreign wives despite the existing curbs due to the high wedding expenses and dowries demanded by national spouses.

Another reason is the high divorce rate among Saudis, standing at 18,000 cases in 2010, nearly 30 per cent of the total 60,000 marriages last year.

The new law is a reversal of a recent tendency by Riyadh to introduce harsher laws against mixed marriage

The Kingdom, which controls over 20 per cent of the world’s oil, already enforces controls governing the marriage of Saudis with foreigners.

Before it was ratified by Shura on Monday, the marriage law faced reservations from the country’s human rights groups, which had demanded the cancellation of the proposal to deprive those involved in mixed marriage from government loans because such a move will also affect the relatives of the spouse.

According to a Shura member, around 700,000 Saudi women are married to foreigners but their husbands and children are deprived of most government benefits granted to Saudis. The new law is expected to end this practice.

“The Shura is also considering a draft law to grant Saudi citizenship to foreign husbands of Saudi women if they meet specific terms,” Shura member Sadqa Fadel said, quoted by the Arabic language daily Almadina.

“These include the need to get children, the continuation of marriage for many years and the need for the foreign husband to prove his good intention towards his Saudi wife and to treat her nicely.”

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Student Goes Into Labour During Exam

RIYADH: A Saudi pregnant school girl went into labour during examinations, prompting the teacher to stop her and phone her husband, a newspaper in the Gulf Kingdom reported on Thursday.

The woman at a secondary school in the northern province of Qiryat felt sharp pain and started groaning during the semi annual examinations, Aljazira Arabic language daily said.

“The teacher noticed her and quickly phoned her husband, who rushed to the school and took her to hospital,” it said.

The paper said the woman delivered a baby boy and agreed with her husband to name him Abdullah after Saudi Arabia’s Monarch.

           — Hat tip: heroyalwhyness [Return to headlines]



Syria: Blogger: Alawites Have Lost Their Identity

(ANSAmed) — ROME, JUNE 23 — Syrian Alawites are no longer sure of their religious or cultural identity. The only thing still holding them together is their support for the ruling Assad clan, which belongs to this religious group. This, in summary, is the damning content of a post left by a Syrian Alawite on the blog of the American professor Joshua Landis’s blog (one of the most authoritative sites for issues regarding Syria). For security reasons, the blogger gives his name as “Khudr”.

“Today, many Alawites support the regime, or rather the Assad clan,” the blogger says. Some Alawites, he continues, “who were once extremely critical of the actions of President Assad, today defend him with daggers drawn”.

The overriding feeling is that Assad has used his power to transform the cultural, religious and tribal identity of the Alawites, the blogger explains. “Today we identify ourselves solely as a minority sect that controls power. For decades, we lived in denial of this”. The blogger claims that very few acknowledge this fact and openly admit this to be the case. The Alawite of today “no longer corresponds to a certain type of ideal, but more than anything means belonging to a certain ethnic group. A person is an Alawite as a result of their birth, without understanding what this really means”.

The one thing holding this branch together, he claims, “is our common sense of profound injustice over persecution suffered in previous centuries”. For a long time, “Alawites were unable to express their traditions freely and were forced, like other minority branches of Islam, to live in the shadows. In a free society, this would never have occurred”. Today, then, many Alawites realise that belonging to this community outside the Assad clan no longer has any meaning. Now that the entire structure is under attack, Khudr continues, “Alawites have turned into fanatical ‘Basharists’“ However, the blogger warns, “Alawites only feel under attack because the regime is falling and not because anyone is threatening them”. Alawites, he ends, “will fight until the end to defend the regime”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Syria: Arms Market Proliferating in North Lebanon, Press

(ANSAmed) — BEIRUT, JUNE 27 — With degenerating security conditions in neighbouring Syria, the market for light weapons is proliferating in the Lebanese border region of Wadi Khaled where, according to a reportage by the Saudi pan-Arab daily Asharq Al Awsat, prices for automatic weapons have increased by 40%. Over the past 72 hours in Wadi Khaled — an area well-known for heating fuel and building supplies smuggling from and to Syria — 400 more refugees have arrived from the Syrian province of Homs, which since Friday has been the target of a wide-ranging military operation by the Syrian regime to crack down on demonstrators and dissidents. “The price of a kalashnikov has risen to 1,000 dollars,” wrote the author of the reportage Susan Al Abtah. “I wish I had bought a kalashnikov before,” said one Wadi Khaled inhabitant, who admitted that “no one can foresee what will happen in the near future and we are forced to defend ourselves.” According to witness statements gathered by the daily paper, those buying arms from the North Lebanese market for the last few months are also Syrian pro-regime armed groups, made up for the most part of Alawites and known as “shabbiha”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]



Turkey: Daily: 34 Generals Imprisoned for Coup Plans

(ANSAmed) — ANKARA, JUNE 27 — A total of 34 generals and admirals have been remanded into custody in Turkey due to investigations into alleged coup plans against the moderate Islamic government of Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The news was reported in Turkish daily Vatan, underlining that there are more generals in prison (28) than there are in service for the General Staff.

The total of 34 officers being held at the military prison in Hasdal, explained the daily, was reached following the arrest of rear admiral Mucahit Sislioglu under accusations in connection with the “Balyoz” (Hammer) plan. The highest ranking official in jail is General Belgin Balanle, the Commander of the Military Academy. Under the Constitution, the Turkish Armed Forces are the protectors of the secular order in Turkey, which has a 99% Muslim population.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Russia


Metals, Hydrocarbons Hold Russia’s FT Rank

Eleven Russian companies ranked among the world’s 500 largest companies, according to the Financial Times Global 500 index. Russian companies featured prominently in the metallurgy and the oil and gas sectors of the index, but were absent from other key sectors, including information technology and telecommunications. Russia was 12th on the list of countries where the largest companies are located. It was also among the countries that had the largest growth in the market capitalization of their companies over the past year. Gazprom ranked highest among the Russian companies in 15th place with $190 billion in market capitalization.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Russia Resumes Vegetable Imports From Two EU Countries

Russia on Tuesday resumed vegetable imports from the Netherlands and Belgium after imposing an embargo on the 27-nation EU bloc due to Germany’s killer E. coli outbreak at the start of the month. “After an expert assessment, we allowed imports from the Netherlands and Belgium,” Russia’s consumer protection agency chief Gennady Onishchenko was quoted as saying by Russian news agency.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

South Asia


Governor of Central Bank of Afghanistan Flees to USA

(AGI) Kabul — The governor of the Central Bank of Afghanistan, Abdul Qadir Fitrat, has fled to the US and resigned. He claims that his life was in danger. The background to the unexpected move is a corruption scandal involving leading figures in Afghan politics, which the governor publicly denounced. The former governor said that “The independence of the bank has been undermined by repeated high level political interference.” .

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



Indonesia: “Obedient Wives Club”, Pretext for Legalizing Polygamy in Indonesia

The club, based on the original Malaysian model divides the country. The goal is to teach women total devotion to their husbands, even in the sexual sphere. For activists it is a pretext to justify marriage with several women. Islamic scholar: the relationship is like a car, the husband is the driver and the wife a “submissive and obedient” passenger.

Jakarta (AsiaNews) — Civil society is divided between those in favour and against, the ruling class has expressed concern, while the fundamentalist Islamic wing strongly supports the initiative. What is certain is that the birth in Indonesia — after Malaysia — of the Obedient Wives Club (OWC), an organization in which women are completely subject to their husbands, even regarding their sexual demands, has not passed unobserved. Critics point out that the foundation of the club is only a “pretext” to legitimize polygamy in the country, opposed by the majority of the population and outlawed by former President Suharto, in power from 1967 to 1998.

On 19 June KlubTaat Suam Global Ikhwan was born, under the leadership of President Gina Puspita. The group has 50 women members already, even though the association claims about 300 have joined. The purpose is to teach Indonesian women how to be “good wives” in the eyes of the family and husband and at the same time reinforce the principles of the Islamic faith in wives.

For Mrs. Puspita, head of the club, the real aim is to inculcate in women the desire to “accept” polygamy, if the case is decided by the husband. And to do that, the president uses the example of the car: the husband is the driver and the woman should assume the attitude of “good” a passenger, in short faithful, submissive and obedient.

The attempt to introduce Islamic law through the principle of polygamy in Indonesia — opposed by civil society and prohibited by law — is denounced by women’s rights activists. They remember how the OWC is the fruit of the same “source” that in 2009, gave birth to the controversial Polygamy Club, which was founded by conservative and fundamentalist Islamic group with ties to Global Ikhwan in other countries including Thailand and Singapore.

The powerful Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) has supported the establishment of the clubs and states that it is not contrary to the dictates of Sharia, or Islamic law. Gusrizal Gazahar, deputy head of the MUI of Padang in West Sumatra province, said that “it is the duty of every Muslim woman to obey her husband in everything.”

Among the earliest critics of the association is Linda Agumar Gumelar, Indonesian Minister for the Empowerment of women, according to whom it represents “a backwards step” for society and the journey towards equality between the two sexes. The Indonesian National Commission for Women — better known as Komnas Perempuan — also points the finger at the mayor of Bogor Diani Budiarto (also the protagonist of the episode where he opposed the construction of the Catholic Church in Yasmin), in accordance with the principle of polygamy has recently married his fourth wife, a girl of only 18.

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



NATO Says Helicopters Kill Three Attackers on Kabul Hotel Roof

KABUL, June 29 (Reuters) — Two helicopters from the NATO-led coalition in Afghanistan fired on and killed three insurgents on the rooftop of a hotel in Kabul after Taliban fighters, including suicide bombers, launched an attack, a spokesman said on Wednesday.

“Two International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) helicopters have just engaged three individuals on the roof,” coalition spokesman Major Tim James told Reuters. “The indications are that the three individuals on the roof have been killed.”

Afghan officials said at least five suicide bombers attacked Kabul’s Intercontinental Hotel, one of two major hotels frequented by Westerners in Kabul, late on Tuesday night. (Reporting by Paul Tait; editing by Alistair Scrutton)

[Return to headlines]



Pakistan’s Nuclear Bomb

‘We May Be Naive, But We Are Not Idiots’

He built Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and is accused of having sold his knowledge to Libya and Iran. Since 2004, Abdul Qadeer Khan has been under a state of house arrest. In an e-mail interview, he now explains why he accepted sole blame for the accusations at the time and points a finger at the Pakistani army.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Suicide Bombers and Gunmen Attack Kabul Hotel

Four suicide bombers and four gunmen attacked a Western-style hotel in Kabul late on Tuesday night and police who went to the scene fought the assailants with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, Afghan officials said. Some Afghan provincial governors were staying at the hotel.

Samoonyar Mohammad Zaman, a security officer for the Ministry of Interior, said officials believe there are still four gunmen in the Inter-Continental hotel, which sits on a hill overlooking the capital.

“They may be on the roof. We’re seeing gunfire going back and forth. Some of that is Afghan police firing from hilltops onto the roof,” he said. “I saw the bodies of two suicide bombers at the main entrance of the hotel.”

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to the Associated Press.

Zaman said some Afghan provincial governors were staying at the hotel and some of them had left. But some members of their entourages might still be inside.

“There have been some people who have escaped, but most of the guests are still inside,” he said.

Zaman said there were 60 to 70 guests at the hotel, which is frequented by Afghan political leaders and foreign visitors. He said the insurgents were armed with machine guns, anti-aircraft weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and hand grenades. The were using grenade launchers, he said.

Afghan national security forces were moving inside the blacked out hotel slowly as to not frighten or hurt any guests, he said.

Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said all the suicide bombers either blew themselves up or were killed while two gunmen continued to fire from the roof.

“There are foreign and Afghan guests staying at the hotel,” Sediqqi said. “We have reports that they are safe in their rooms, but still there is shooting.”

Associated Press reporters at the scene said the two sides fought with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. They saw tracer rounds go up over the darkened hotel and saw shooting from the roof of the five-story building in the rare, nighttime attack in the Afghan capital.

Police ordered bystanders to lie on the ground for safety.

There was no immediate word from Afghan officials on casualties among the guests or workers inside the hotel.

Mujahid later issued a statement claiming that Taliban attackers killed guards at a gate and entered the hotel.

“One of our fighters called on a mobile phone and said: ‘We have gotten onto all the hotel floors and the attack is going according to the plan. We have killed and wounded 50 foreign and local enemies. We are in the corridors of the hotel now taking guests out of their rooms — mostly foreigners. We broke down the doors and took them out one by one.’“

The Taliban often exaggerate casualties from their attacks. The statement did not disclose the number of attackers, but only said one suicide bomber had died.

A few hours into the clashes, an Afghan National Army commando unit arrived at the hotel.

The US-led military coalition said the Afghan Ministry of Interior had not requested any assistance from foreign forces.

A guest who was inside said he heard gunfire echoing throughout the heavily guarded building. The hotel sits on a hill overlooking the city and streets leading up to it were blocked. The scene was dark as electricity at the hotel and the surrounding area was out.

Azizullah, an Afghan police officer who uses only one name, told an Associated Press reporter at the scene that at least one bomber entered the hotel and detonated a vest of explosives. Another police officer, who would not disclose his name, said there were at least two suicide bombers.

Jawid, a guest at the hotel, said he jumped out a one-storey window to flee the shooting.

“I was running with my family,” he said. “There was shooting. The restaurant was full with guests.”

Earlier on Tuesday, officials from the US, Pakistan and Afghanistan met in the capital to discuss prospects for making peace with Taliban insurgents to end the nearly decade-long war.

“The fact that we are discussing reconciliation in great detail is success and progress, but challenges remain and we are reminded of that on an almost daily basis by violence,” Jawed Ludin, Afghanistan’s deputy foreign minister, said at a news conference. “The important thing is that we act and that we act urgently and try to do what we can to put an end to violence.”

The attack occurred nearly a week after President Barack Obama announced he was withdrawing 33,000 US troops from Afghanistan and would end the American combat role by the end of 2014.

It took place the day before a conference was scheduled in Kabul to discuss plans for Afghan security forces to take the lead for securing an increasing number of areas of the country between now and 2014 when international forces are expected to move out of combat roles. Afghans across the country were in the city to attend, although it’s not known if any where staying at the Inter-Continental.

[Return to headlines]



Two More Explosions Rock Kabul Hotel

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Back-to-back explosions have rocked a Western-style hotel where Afghan police are battling insurgents who attacked with suicide bombers, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.

Associated Press reporters at the scene said the two blasts — about a minute apart — occurred around 2:30 a.m. Wednesday.

Three helicopters flew over the roof of the Inter-Continental hotel where some attackers have taken up positions. At least one rocket was fired from the helicopters.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.

Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi says four suicide bombers either blew themselves up or were killed in the attack.

A U.S. official in Washington said initial reports are that there were no Americans at the hotel.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Four suicide bombers and four gunmen attacked a Western-style hotel in Kabul late Tuesday night and police who rushed to the scene fought the assailants with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, Afghan officials said. Some Afghan provincial governors were staying at the hotel.

Samoonyar Mohammad Zaman, a security officer for the Ministry of Interior, said officials believe there are still four gunmen in the Inter-Continental hotel, which sits on a hill overlooking the capital.

“They may be on the roof. We’re seeing gunfire going back and forth. Some of that is Afghan police firing from hilltops onto the roof,” he said. “I saw the bodies of two suicide bombers at the main entrance of the hotel.”

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack in a telephone call to The Associated Press.

Zaman said some Afghan provincial governors were staying at the hotel and some of them had left. But some members of their entourages might still be inside.

“There have been some people who have escaped, but most of the guests are still inside,” he said.

Zaman said there were 60 to 70 guests at the hotel, which is frequented by Afghan political leaders and foreign visitors. He said the insurgents were armed with machine guns, anti-aircraft weapons, rocket-propelled grenades and hand grenades. The were using grenade launchers, he said.

Afghan national security forces were moving inside the blacked out hotel slowly as to not frighten or hurt any guests, he said.

said.

Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqqi said all the suicide bombers either blew themselves up or were killed while two gunmen continued to fire from the roof.

“There are foreign and Afghan guests staying at the hotel,” Sediqqi said. “We have reports that they are safe in their rooms, but still there is shooting.”

Associated Press reporters at the scene said the two sides fought with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. They saw tracer rounds go up over the darkened hotel and saw shooting from the roof of the five-story building in the rare, nighttime attack in the Afghan capital.

Police ordered bystanders to lie on the ground for safety.

There was no immediate word from Afghan officials on casualties among the guests or workers inside the hotel.

Mujahid later issued a statement claiming that Taliban attackers killed guards at a gate and entered the hotel.

“One of our fighters called on a mobile phone and said: ‘We have gotten onto all the hotel floors and the attack is going according to the plan. We have killed and wounded 50 foreign and local enemies. We are in the corridors of the hotel now taking guests out of their rooms — mostly foreigners. We broke down the doors and took them out one by one.’“

The Taliban often exaggerate casualties from their attacks. The statement did not disclose the number of attackers, but only said one suicide bomber had died.

A few hours into the clashes, an Afghan National Army commando unit arrived at the scene.

The U.S.-led military coalition said the Afghan Ministry of Interior had not requested any assistance from foreign forces.

[Return to headlines]



United Nations Praises Terrorist-Sponsoring Iran

Iran hosts “World Without Terrorism Conference” conference and invites Sudanese international criminal.

Has the United Nations no shame? Apparently not, as it continues to legitimize some of the world’s worst tyrants and human rights abusers.

The most recent example is the UN leadership’s endorsement of the so-called “World Without Terrorism Conference” hosted by the Iranian regime in Tehran on June 25-26, 2011. The “distinguished” roster of attendees included the indicted international criminal Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir, the corrupter-in-chief Afghan president Hamid Karzai, and the hear-no-Bin Laden, see-no-Bin Laden Pakistani president Asif ‘Ali Zardari.

The conference website set the tone with an anti-Semitic cartoon depicting a hooked nose Israeli soldier looking like the devil with horns and another cartoon displaying the Statue of Liberty holding a stick of dynamite in her hand.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Australia — Pacific


Firebomb, Shooting Fuels Gang War Fears

COOLAROO residents who witnessed drive-by attacks on a Guildford Avenue house last week fear a gangland war could erupt in their area.

The house was firebombed last Tuesday and sprayed with gunfire the next morning, hours after another shooting at a house in nearby Jacana.

No one was injured in the attacks.

Broadmeadows Detective Superintendent Kevin Sheridan told the Weekly police were investigating if the incidents were linked.

The Santiago Taskforce, which has investigated the fatal shooting wars between drug families in Melbourne’s north and west, has taken over the investigation.

Superintendent Sheridan said the taskforce would determine if the attacks were related to Lebanese crime circles.

“There’s no evidence to suggest that it’s gangland-related yet, it’s too early in the investigation,” he said.

He conceded the consecutive attacks on a single house was “unusual”.

A witness to the Tuesday morning shooting on the Guildford Avenue address, who asked not to be named, said he saw a small truck smash in the front of the house and heard swearing before shots were fired.

“It’s a rough neighbourhood, and this house has been targeted a few times,” the witness said.

“It’s like a war, the whole neighbourhood is sick of it.”

Superintendent Sheridan tried to abate any fears, saying the gunman had targeted the Coolaroo house, rather than it being a random attack.

A heightened police presence and security would be in place at night.

The head of the Coolaroo household, Abdul Tiba, told reporters he was not scared by the latest attack, but feared for his family and residents of the neighbourhood.

“I’m worried for my family and neighbours. I feel really sorry for my neighbours,” he said.

A Victoria Police spokeswoman said arson and explosives squad detectives had not yet determined what type of bomb had been thrown through the window of the family home. The investigation is ongoing.

           — Hat tip: Nilk [Return to headlines]

Latin America


Brazil to Grant Permanent Visa to Battisti

Italy appealing refusal to extradite left-wing terrorist

(ANSA) — Brasilia, 23 June — Local authorities in Brasil have moved to issue a permanent residence visa to former Italian left-wing terrorist Cesare Battisti. The visa, which is pending approval by the justice minister, will afford the four-time convicted murderer the same rights as Brazilian citizens, minus the right to vote or to run for office. Thursday’s decision to grant the visa came just two weeks after Brazil’s supreme court ruling to release Battisti from custody, prompting Italy to recall its ambassador to Brazil.

On his last day in office, outgoing Brazilian president Inacio Lula Da Silva declined Italy’s request to extradite Battisti last December.

Italy is appealing at the International Court of Justice in The Hague against the refusal to extradite him. Battisti’s release had already brought relations between the two countries to a new low with officials and victims’ relatives voicing anger.

In January, the relatives of Battisti’s victims staged street protests outside the Brazilian embassy in Rome and consulates and offices elsewhere in Italy, while members from Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s key government ally the Northern League called for a boycott of Brazilian goods.

Battisti was arrested in Brazil in April 2007, some five years after he had fled to that country to avoid extradition to Italy from France following the end of the Mitterrand doctrine which gave sanctuary to fugitive leftist guerrillas.

He had lived in France for 15 years and become a successful writer of crime novels.

In January 2009 the Brazilian justice ministry granted Battisti political asylum on the grounds that he would face “political persecution” in Italy.

The ruling outraged the Italian government who demanded that it be taken to the Brazilian supreme court, which in November 2009 reversed the earlier decision and turned down Battisti’s request for asylum.

However, the court added that the Brazilian constitution gave the president personal powers to deny the extradition if he chose to.

Battisti’s legal counsel have stated that their client would continue to live in Brazil.

“He has a lot of friends here. He’ll probably work as a writer”.

           — Hat tip: Insubria [Return to headlines]

Immigration


Asian-Born Australians May Soon Outnumber Whites, Says Government Study

The number of Asians in Australia has almost doubled in a decade, from 1.03 million in mid-2000 to 2.1 million in the middle of last year, according to government statistics.

Pramod Kumar is part of a wave of immigration that has changed the face of Australia over the past decade. Mr. Kumar is from Hyderabad in India’s northwest. He recently graduated from a private college in Melbourne after arriving in Australia’s second-largest city in 2008. He is in the process of applying for residency and has been given an 18-month bridging visa while his application works its way through the system.

“Close to 1 in 10 people in Australia are born in Asia,” says Bob Birrell, a director at Monash University’s Centre for Population and Urban Research. “There is nothing like that in other countries including the US or Canada, which are considered highly multicultural. It is a massive shift and it has happened over a very short time span.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Switzerland: Row Over Foreign Criminals Goes Into New Round

Experts have presented proposals to implement a rightwing initiative approved in nationwide vote last November to automatically expel foreign criminals from Switzerland. The report, published on Tuesday, serves as blueprint for the government’s bill to parliament, but the rightwing Swiss People’s Party is adamant that only its proposal is true to the intentions of the initiative. Of the four proposals drafted by the seven-member group of experts, only three won a majority, while the hardline proposal was backed merely by the two People’s Party representatives on the committee.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



The Joke of ‘Secure Britain’: Vile Banned Militant Extremist Strolls Through Heathrow Immigration as 200 Somalian Criminals Are Allowed to Stay Due to Human Rights

Britain’s powerlessness to control who has the right to be in this country was glaringly exposed last night by two extraordinary cases.

In the first, an anti-Semitic preacher of hate whom the Home Secretary had banned from entering Britain was able to stroll in through Heathrow.

Last night, Raed Salah was giving a lecture organised by Islamist radicals to a large crowd in Leicester, and today he was due to speak at Westminster at the invitation of Left-wing Labour MPs.

In the second, a bombshell ruling by European judges blocked the deportation of some 200 Somali criminals back to their homeland.

The Strasbourg court said the men, including drug dealers and serial burglars, might be persecuted in war-torn Somalia, and that they must be allowed to stay to protect their human rights.

So, irrespective of how heinous their crimes or the danger they present to the public, Britain has no power to expel them.

The ruling by the European Court of Human Rights stemmed from appeals against deportation by two asylum seekers convicted of a string of serious offences including burglary, making threats to kill and drug dealing.

But it will now also apply to 214 other similar cases which have been lodged with the court using Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Article 3, which protects against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment, is an ‘absolute’ right, meaning that it applies regardless of the offences committed.

The two men, who were both granted thousands in legal aid to fight their cases, will now be released from immigration detention centres and will be free to walk the streets.

They were jointly awarded more than £20,000 for costs and expenses.

Critics accused the Government of rolling over to the demands of the court, and branded the Human Rights Act a ‘criminals’ charter’.

Backbench Tory MP Douglas Carswell said: ‘The pathetic truth is that we do not have control over our borders, and these cases quite clearly show that we do not control not only who comes in to the country but who we choose to remove.

‘My constituents do not want any more mealy-mouthed promises about getting a grip on this — they want to know what the Government is actually going to do.

‘Successive governments have given all the promises on immigration you would expect of a second-hand car salesman. Ministers now need to start actually delivering on real promises and real control over our borders.’

UK Independence Party MEP Gerard Batten said: ‘It is the absolute duty of the British Government to protect the lives and property of British citizens.

‘If foreign nationals prey on people here they should be sent home to where they came from — no ifs, no buts.’

He added: ‘For the European Court of Human Rights to give Britain orders is bad enough; knowing that the Government will roll over to their demands is worse.

‘This decision confirms that the Human Rights Act is a criminals’ charter.’

The case involves two Somalis whom ministers intended to return to the Somali capital, Mogadishu, because of their serial offending.

Abdisamad Adow Sufi, 24, entered the country illegally in 2003 using a fake passport. He claimed asylum on the grounds that he belonged to a minority clan persecuted by the Somali militia.

His claim was rejected by officials and an appeal tribunal said his account was ‘not credible’.

Since then he has amassed a string of convictions for offences including burglary, fraud, making threats to kill, indecent exposure and theft.

The second Somali, drug addict Abdiaziz Ibrahim Elmi, 42, was granted asylum in 1988. Since then he has committed crimes including handling stolen goods, fraud, robbery, carrying a replica gun, perverting the course of justice, theft and dealing heroin and cocaine.

Attempts to deport him began in 2006 and his appeal was rejected by an immigration judge. A deportation order was stayed in 2007 pending the outcome of his Strasbourg case, and since then he has been convicted of possessing Class A drugs and charged with drug dealing.

The panel of seven judges ruled that because the level of violence in Mogadishu was so high there was a real risk of the men coming to harm.

In a unanimous judgment, the court also rejected the argument the men could leave the capital and return to safer parts of the country.

The judges said Sufi could not join his relatives because they lived in an area controlled by a strict Islamic group. If returned, he could face punishment according to their code — also a breach of his rights.

He would also be particularly vulnerable if forced to live in a refugee camp because of his ‘psychiatric illness’, the court said.

Elmi claimed he would be at risk of persecution if he moved to an area controlled by the same group, because he wore an earring, which might lead to them thinking he was gay.

If they found out he was a drug addict and thief he could face amputation, public flogging or execution, he said.

The court ruled he had no experience of living in a strict Islamic area because he has been in this country for so long and would therefore be at risk of harm.

The ruling said: ‘The court reiterated that the prohibition of torture and of inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment was absolute, irrespective of the victims’ conduct.

‘Consequently, the applicants’ behaviour, however undesirable or dangerous, could not be taken into account.’

The case will seriously hamper further attempts by ministers to deport foreign criminals, failed asylum seekers and illegal immigrants back to Somalia. Last year just 35 were kicked out.

Around two thirds of the 214 other cases are thought to involve criminals. Others are failed asylum seekers and illegal immigrants.

A UK Border Agency spokesman said: ‘We are very disappointed with the European Court’s decision and are considering our legal position.

‘This judgment does not stop us continuing to pursue the removal of foreign criminals who commit a serious crime, nor does it find that all Somalis are in need of international protection.’

           — Hat tip: Gaia [Return to headlines]



White House Revives Push for Dream Act

Administration officials are beginning to ratchet up the pressure on Congress to pass controversial immigration-reform measures, but critics fear the changes are already being made without lawmakers’ consent.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan told reporters on Monday the nation “desperately” needs to enact the Dream Act, which would prevent the deportation of illegal immigrants who are studying at American colleges and universities or have served at least two years in the military.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]

Culture Wars


Feds Find Fix Was in on ‘Study’ Of Homosexuality in Ranks

Inspector General says executive summary written before troops surveyed

A previously undisclosed report by the inspector general of the Department of Defense concludes that the fix — maybe even handed down by the White House — was in before the military ever started asking soldiers and sailors about how opening the ranks to homosexuals would affect the nation’s defense.

The 33-page report is marked “For Official Use Only” and describes an “Investigation of improper disclosure of For Official Use Only information from the Comprehensive Review Working Group draft report.”

However, the inspector general documents how the co-chair of the commission working on the assessment, Jeh Johnson, “read portions of ‘an early draft’ of the executive summary … to a former news anchor, a close personal friend visiting Mr. Johnson’s home” three days before service members even were given the survey.

A source provided the IG report, which aimed to determine who prematurely released information about the study, to Elaine Donnelly of the Center for Military Readiness. Donnelly analyzed the documentation and warned that it suggests Congress was deceived, probably deliberately, by those with a pro-repeal agenda.

           — Hat tip: JD [Return to headlines]



Hillary, State Dept. ‘Instrumental in Sealing Deal’ For Lady Gaga’s Gay Pride Gig in Rome

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday that the State Department played an instrumental role in “sealing the deal” for pop-rock star Lady Gaga to perform at a gay pride rally in Rome, Italy. Clinton specifically pointed to a letter that David Thorne, the U.S. ambassador to Italy, sent to Lady Gaga urging her to participate in the event. “And then there is the work that our embassy team in Rome has been doing,” Clinton said. “Two weeks ago they played an instrumental role in bringing Lady Gaga to Italy for a Euro Pride concert. “Now as many of you know Lady Gaga is Italian American and a strong supporter of LGBT rights,” said Clinton. “And the organizers of the Euro Pride event desperately wanted her to perform and a letter to her from Ambassador Thorne was instrumental in sealing the deal.”

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]

General


Asteroid Protoplanet May Hold Clues to Earth Formation

Never have old leftovers made so many scientists salivate. After a four year journey, NASA’s Dawn spacecraft has returned the first close-up views of the giant asteroid Vesta, a relic of planet-building that could hold clues to how Earth formed. At 530 kilometres across, Vesta is one of the biggest denizens of the asteroid belt, the junkyard of leftover planetary building blocks found between Mars and Jupiter. For most of Dawn’s journey, Vesta appeared as no more than a star-like speck in the sky. But Dawn is now close enough to return the best views of Vesta yet, surpassing the detail available in Hubble Space Telescope portraits. Last week, NASA showed off the images to the media and described what Dawn will do to investigate Vesta while in orbit.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Irradiating Organic Food Would Save Lives

The organic industry can be proud of its achievements in putting animal welfare, environmental protection, traceability and food quality at the heart of the farming and food agenda.

However, in recent years I have become increasingly concerned by the willingness of the organic industry to market its products as both a healthier and safer alternative to conventional food production. They are not. In fact, by shunning science, organic producers could be increasing consumers’ risk of contracting Escherichia coli and other food-borne diseases.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]



Space Junk Forces Astronauts to Take Shelter in Russian Spaceships

A piece of space junk zoomed uncomfortably close by the International Space Station today (June 28), so close that the outpost’s six-man crew had to take shelter in Russian space capsules in case of a collision. The space debris made its closest approach to the space station at 8:08 a.m. EDT (1208 GMT), coming within 850 feet (260 meters) of the space station, where it posed a slim chance of hitting the station. However, the debris passed by the station without incident and the spaceflyers were able to re-enter the station after about a half hour. “Mission Control, right after the time of closet approach, gave the crew an all-clear and told them they could back out,” NASA spokesman Kelly Humphries told SPACE.com from the Johnson Space Center in Houston.

           — Hat tip: Fjordman [Return to headlines]