Friday, April 30, 2010

Who Cares What You Think, Bliar? Voters Don’t Need Input from You; They Are Quite Capable of Making Up Their Own Minds

TIMES ONLINE: Tony Blair tries to shore up Gordon Brown’s flagging election campaign today with a warning that a vote for Nick Clegg is “not a serious thing”.

With five days to go, the former Prime Minister makes his first serious intervention since Labour’s slump in the polls. He tells The Times that the Liberal Democrats would be flaky partners in government and that a hung Parliament is a “thoroughly bad idea”.

To voters considering backing Mr Clegg, he says: “The fact that it might seem an interesting thing to do is not the right reason to put the keys of the country in their hands.”

Amid warnings from senior Labour figures that a poor showing next week will threaten the future of the party, Mr Blair pitched himself into battle for the minds of voters seduced by Mr Clegg.

He conceded that the Liberal Democrat leader had been clever in projecting his promise of a new kind of politics. But he accused Mr Clegg of peddling “the oldest politics in the book” in seeking to blame his rivals for all the country’s ills.

Mr Blair urges voters to remember they are electing a government on May 6, not expressing a feeling. He insists that Gordon Brown deserves another five years because of the “political character”, strength and resilience he has shown during the financial crisis.

Mr Clegg dismissed Mr Blair’s arrival on the campaign trail as a sign of desperation, accusing Labour of “wheeling out the golden oldies to try to help out Gordon Brown in his hour of need”. He said the Lib Dems were in a two-horse race with the Tories. Blair says a vote cast for Clegg is 'not serious*' >>> Rachel Sylvester, Alice Thomson, Roland Watson | Saturday, May 01, 2010

*And was a vote for you serious, Mr Blair? – © Mark
John McCain Swings Right in Desperate Bid for Political Survival

THE GUARDIAN: One-time moderate Arizona senator keeps step with the Tea Party and gets tough on illegal immigration

John Ladd points to the piles of empty water and Coke bottles, a yellow blanket and numerous other bits of debris abandoned on his cattle ranch in Cochise county, near Tombstone, Arizona. The sprawling estate, stretching 10 miles along the US-Mexico border, is a favoured route for those making the illegal, dangerous and often fatal, journey to what they hope is a bright new future. >>> Ewen MacAskill in Tucson | Friday, April 30, 2010
Iran: We'll 'Cut Off Israel's Feet' If It Attacks Syria

HAARETZ: Iranian Vice President Mohammad Rida Rahimi warned on Friday that Iran would "cut off Israel's feet" if it attacked Syria, French news agency AFP reported.

"We will stand alongside Syria against any [Israeli] threat," Rahimi told reporters during a news conference with Syrian Prime Minister Mohammad Naji Otri in Damascus, adding that "If those who have violated Palestinian land want to try anything we will cut off their feet."

According to AFP, the Iranian vice president said that "[Syria is a] strong country that is ready to confront any threat," adding that Tehran "will back Syria with all its means and strength."

On Thursday, United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton referred to the recent torrent of allegations that Syria had transferred Scud missiles to the Hezbollah in Lebanon, and said that the Syrian President Bashar Assad was pursuing dangerous policies that could unleash war on the Middle East. >>> Haaretz Service and Natasha Mozgovaya, Haaretz Correspondent | Friday, April 30, 2010
Israel: Rightists to Burn Posters of “Anti-Semitic” Obama

YNET NEWS: Activist Noam Federman says burning of posters bearing American president's image a legitimate act 'because he hates Jews'

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Obama pics in Lag B'Omer piles. Photograph: Ynet News

Right-wing activists residing in Jerusalem's Shmuel HaNavi neighborhood threw posters bearing the image of US President Barack Obama into dozens of piles of wood and other flammable materials they intend to burn as part of the Lag B'Omer celebrations.

The activists prepared the heaps on Thursday so as not to desecrate the Sabbath. Lag B'Omer: Rightists to burn Obama photos >>> Shmulik Grossman | Friday, April 30, 2010
Barack Obama Threatens to Impose Peace Plan on Middle East

THE TELEGRAPH: Barack Obama has warned Israel he will pave the way for an independent Palestinian state if the peace process remains deadlocked until the autumn.

The US president is proposing to hand control of the Middle East peace process to the international community unless there is a breakthrough in the next few months, Israeli officials have said.

Mr Obama has formulated a secret plan with leading European allies to convene an international peace conference by the end of the year, according to Israel's Haaretz newspaper.

The move would fulfil one of Israel's deepest fears by effectively stripping the Jewish state of its power to dictate the course of talks.

The conference would attempt to end decades of Israeli-Palestinian conflict by pressing both sides to accept difficult compromises on issues ranging from the future of millions of Palestinian refugees to the status of Jerusalem.

Mr Obama is also eager to gain international recognition for the creation of a Palestinian state. >>> Adrian Blomfield in Jerusalem | Friday, April 30, 2010
On Outskirts Of London, Far-Right Seeks Foothold

Debt Contagion Fears Mount for Eurozone




Debt-ridden Greeks Angry at Defense Deal

Tony Blair flies to the rescue. Photo courtesy of ‘The Telegraph’

Puff the Magic Bliar!

THE TELEGRAPH: Tony Blair has denied that Gordon Brown had been a "failure" as Prime Minister, despite Mr Brown's apparent admission that Labour was heading for defeat in the General Election

Visiting Harrow in north-west London, Mr Blair insisted Labour still had "every chance of succeeding" in the general election.

Questioned about whether Mr Brown had failed in his time at Number 10, he said: "No I don't think he's failed at all."

Asked about the prospect that the party could come third in the share of the vote on May 6, the former PM replied: "I don't believe that will happen. I believe Labour has every chance of succeeding." General Election 2010: Tony Blair denies Gordon Brown has 'failed' >>> Robert Winnett, Andrew Porter and Murray Wardrop | Friday, April 30, 2010
Austerity Britain Will Hate Its New Government, Says King

TIMES ONLINE: The Governor of the Bank of England was at the centre of an electoral storm last night after saying that the austerity measures needed to tackle Britain’s budget deficit would be so unpopular that whoever wins next week would not get back into government for a generation.

Mervyn King’s opinion, revealed hours before the prime ministerial debate on the economy, came as a respected think-tank predicted that taxes would have to rise by the equivalent of a 6p-in-the-pound increase in income tax over the next ten years.

The Governor’s prediction was made to the American economist David Hale, who passed on the remarks in an Australian television interview. Mr Hale, who has known Mr King for many years, was commenting on debt levels in major economies when he turned to the British election. “I saw the Governor of the Bank of England last week when I was in London, and he told me whoever wins this election will be out of power for a whole generation because of how tough the fiscal austerity will have to be,” he said.

The Times has also learnt that Mr King gave a further indication of the concerns in Threadneedle Street when he recently told a senior American official that the markets would take a very aggressive view if no credible plan was contained in the Queen’s Speech on May 25. >>> Patrick Hosking, Peter Stiff, Richard Partington | Friday, April 30, 2010
Greeks Face Tax, Pensions and Pay Misery in Austerity Plan

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Photograph: Times Online

TIMES ONLINE: An increase in the retirement age from 53 to 67, a three-year wage freeze and cuts in public sector pay are understood to be among the austerity measures agreed to by the Greek Government in exchange for a €24 billion (£21 billion) rescue package.

The measures include severe cuts in Civil Service wages, with public servants losing their “13th and 14th” months’ salary and pension entitlements, a reduction of state benefits and tax increases on alcohol and tobacco to help cut the deficit. >>> Emily Ford | Friday, April 30, 2010
Campaign a Two-horse Race, Says Clegg

BBC: Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has said the election is now "a two-horse race" between his party and the Tories.

Speaking a day after the final TV prime ministerial debate, he told an audience of students in Leicester that his party offered "real change, not fake change".

He said he would be "going for gold... in getting the most number of people voting for the Liberal Democrats". >>> | Friday, April 30, 2010
Greece Is Just the 'Tip of the Iceberg', Nouriel Roubini Warns

THE TELEGRAPH: Greece is just the "tip of the iceberg” of a sovereign debt crisis that has the potential to derail a global recovery, Nouriel Roubini has warned.

Professor Roubini, the New York-based academic who was one of the few to anticipate the scale of the financial crisis, told a panel in California that the buildup of debt is likely to lead to countries defaulting or resorting to inflation to ease the burden on their populations.

“While today markets are worried about Greece, Greece is just the tip of the iceberg,” Roubini told the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California. "The thing I worry about is the buildup of sovereign debt.” >>> | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Fresh Hopes of Greek Aid Lift Euro

THE TELEGRAPH: The euro extended gains against the dollar on Friday as fresh hopes of aid for Greece eased fears about Athens' ability to reduce it massive deficit.



By mid-morning, the single currency was trading above $1.33, up from a one-year low against the dollar of $1.31 hit earlier in the week following downgrades on Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt.

Stock markets in Germany and France also edged higher as investors took heart at speculation that talks on a rescue loan should be completed in the next few days after it seemed Germany had accepted it must act quickly to support a bail-out. >>> | Friday, April 30, 2010
British Conservative Candidate Works to Overcome His Posh Background

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES: In a nation where class issues often determine how people vote, David Cameron is campaigning for prime minister as an ordinary bloke.

Reporting from Peasemore, England
The man who may be Britain's next leader grew up in a spacious country home in this village of thatched roofs, green fields and classic red phone boxes, playing tennis on the family court and joining the occasional foxhunt.

He got his university degree from Oxford, where he belonged to an exclusive club of young men with a reputation for wearing tails and drinking to excess.

His closest political ally is the son of a baronet, and Queen Elizabeth is a distant cousin.

David Cameron, 43, who first won public office just nine years ago, is a strong contender to become the first Conservative prime minister since 1997 when Britons go to the polls May 6. Out on the campaign trail, he cheerfully promises to usher in a modern, compassionate conservatism that will help Britons help themselves.

What Cameron can't help, though, is his privileged upbringing — and the fact that, even in 21st century Britain, after the free-market revolution of Margaret Thatcher and the "Cool Britannia" of Tony Blair, questions of class still infuse this society like tea in water.

That's one reason why Liam Didsbury can't imagine voting Conservative, no matter how hard Cameron may try to downplay his past and sell himself as an ordinary bloke.

" British people don't like to see posh people pretend not to be who they are," said Didsbury, a Labor Party supporter in the northern English working-class town of Rochdale.

Didsbury described Cameron as a blue-blooded Tory "who's been to Eton" — Britain's toniest prep school — and "went to Oxford."

And not just him. His "front bench," the fellow Tories who would form his Cabinet if Cameron becomes prime minister, is stacked with other privately educated individuals from wealthy, even aristocratic, backgrounds.

Such facts don't go unnoticed here, even if class divisions aren't as rigid as they once were in a nation still peopled with dukes, earls, countesses, knights and dames. Experts say class remains one of the strongest determinants of how voters cast their ballots, an enduring force never far below the surface of the British psyche.

That explains why Prime Minister Gordon Brown of the Labor Party, who is trailing badly in the polls, trumpets himself as a product and champion of the middle class. And why Nick Clegg, the head of the Liberal Democrats, a smaller party that has recently surged in popularity, skates lightly over his education at an expensive prep school and Cambridge.

The preoccupation with class turned a spoof "campaign poster" of Brown challenging Cameron to "step outside, posh boy," into an instant hit. (The Guardian newspaper gag also poked fun at Brown's alleged anger-management issues.) Another takeoff paired Cameron's tanned and smiling face with the statement, "Some of my best friends are poor."

Cameron makes no apology for his background and denies that it's any handicap to his electability. >>> Henry Chu, Los Angeles Times | Sunday, April 25, 2010

Let's Talk About Sex: Johann Hari Grills David Cameron Over Gay Rights

THE INDEPENDENT: Once upon a time, the Tory party set its face gainst gay rights. In the Cameron era, all that's changed. Or has it? Johann Hari puts the would-be PM in the firing line

The great mystery of British politics is striding into the room, 15 minutes ahead of schedule. In the flesh, David Cameron looks thinner and younger and smaller than on television. The caricaturists are wrong: his cheeks don't appear full and ruddy at all. He looks sleek, and wired, with an intense gaze. He knows he could be a few months from Downing Street and the history books – so he is here to woo a crucial electoral bloc that is wary of falling into his arms by giving an interview to Attitude, Britain's best-selling gay magazine. He calls for coffee and dispenses with the photographer briskly: he poses for two minutes before saying, "Right, that's enough," and walking out of the shot. He places himself on his sofa, in the shadow of Big Ben, and says: "Right. Let's start." >>> Johann Hari | Thursday, February 04, 2010
Was Heidi Actually es Meiteli* Called Adelheid from the Big Canton?

THE TELEGRAPH: Heidi, the quintessentially Swiss mountain girl who lived with her grandfather in the Alps, may in fact have been German.

The original Heidi book was written by a Swiss author, Johanna Spyri, but scholars claim that she borrowed heavily from a book written 50 years earlier by a German, Adam von Kamp.

The suggestion of literary plagiarism - or at least heavy borrowing of characters, setting and plot line - in one of the classics of Swiss literature has set off an unseemly squabble between the alpine neighbours.

It has also fueled the traditional animosity among German-speaking Swiss towards what they regard as the "arrogance" of their big northern neighbours in Germany.

Peter Buettner, the researcher who has come up with the claim, has a foot in both camps - he is German but based in Zurich. Swiss Heidi may in fact be German >>> Nick Squires | Thursday, April 29, 2010

*es Meiteli = ein Mädchen in Swiss-German. In English it means ‘a girl’.
Arizona's Illegal Immigrant Crackdown Inspired by 'America's Toughest Sheriff'

THE TELEGRAPH: A controversial sheriff who inspired Arizona's new immigration rules risked provoking more anger on Thursday as he launched a new sweep on crime and illegal immigrants.

Joe Arpaio, dubbed "America's toughest sheriff'" has risked provoking more anger as he launched a new sweep on crime and illegal immigrants after saying he would concentrate on high-crime areas, targeting immigrant smugglers and the houses where they hide their customers.

The sheriff of Maricopa County, which includes the sprawling city of Phoenix, has already conducted 14 so-called "crime suppression" sweeps since 2008.

Critics have complained that the sweeps invariably take place in Hispanic areas and they have accused his deputies of racially profiling Hispanics while conducting them.

He has countered that people stopped by the patrols were approached simply because officers had probable cause to believe they had committed crimes.

Mr Arpaio - who is being investigated by the Justice Department for alleged civil rights abuses - has never seemed concerned by what his critics say and has still been voted back in as sheriff five times.

His popularity is widely believed to have inspired Janet Brewer, Arizona's governor and a politician fighting for re-election, to sign the new state-wide immigration bill which has sparked protests across America. >>> Tom Leonard in New York | Thursday, April 29, 2010

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES: Obama administration considers challenges to Arizona immigration law: Federal attorneys are examining legal options to prevent the strict new rules from taking effect this summer. A team of top government lawyers has quietly begun studying legal strategies for the Obama administration to mount a challenge to Arizona's new illegal immigration law, including the filing of a federal lawsuit against the state or joining a suit brought by others who believe the bill unfairly targets Latinos. >>> Richard A. Serrano and Peter Nicholas, Tribune Washington Bureau | Thursday, April 29, 2010

Related articles here
US-Saudi Business Forum Gets Under Way in Chicago

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Minister of Commerce and Industry Abdullah Zainal Alireza, standing third from left; Deputy Minister for Foreign Trade Abdullah Al-Hamoudi, standing extreme left; Chairman of Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry Abdul Rahman Al-Jeraisy, standing extreme right; with senior US business leaders and officials at the first Saudi-American Business Opportunity Forum in Chicago on Wednesday. Photo: Arab News

ARAB NEWS: CHICAGO: On the banks of the sparkling green Chicago River, overlooking the vast expanse of Lake Michigan, the Sheraton Towers Hotel, venue of the first Saudi-American Business Opportunity Forum, was literally bursting at the seams and the action was as much in the corridors and lobbies as in the meeting halls.

In the lull between plenary sessions, in harmonious counterpart to official presentations, friends and colleagues gathered, relationships were forged or renewed, all in an atmosphere of palpable excitement. These spontaneous exchanges were not a distraction from formal program but rather the embodiment of the forum's primary theme: The commitment to a vital and enduring partnership between the two countries.

A notable aspect of the event was the turnout: over 1,000 attendees (many of whom braved skies tainted with ash and smoke in order to make it to Chicago).

The Organizing Committee had expected something close to 400. The overwhelming response on the part of both the US and Saudi delegates is testament to the sense of how vitally important this relationship is.

When asked about his initial reaction to the event, Omar A. Bahalwa of the Committee for International Trade said, "Marvelous! This event is unique. The number of registrants means that this is the largest-ever forum in the history of our two countries. And for the first time, we're targeting small- and medium-sized entrepreneurs. When someone said large crowds and a jam-packed schedule were 'bad news,' David Chaudron, representing Organized Change, laughed and added, 'It's absolutely wonderful that the bad news is the good news!'"

While the forum's theme of "The US and Saudi Arabia: A New Economic Order" was elaborated through a variety of lenses and business perspectives, the subtext of each panel's presentations was the recent global financial crisis and how the messages of that catastrophe have served to catalyze the need for increased communication and cooperation. >>> Peaco Todd, Arab News | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Opinion: The Euro Zone Needs New Rules

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The Parthenon in Athens: The Greek crisis has demonstrated the limitations of the Growth and Stability Pact. Photo: Spiegel Online International

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The current Greek crisis has shown all too starkly the limits of the euro zone's sanction and support mechanisms. If the monetary union is to have a future, it needs new rules to keep members in line and bail them out if necessary.

Europe is in the worst crisis of the postwar era. For months, the governments of the European Union member states have proven to be incapable of developing a convincing solution for the serious debt problems of individual countries, as well as for the reduction of imbalances within the monetary union. Uncertainty among investors has grown in recent weeks, which is primarily attributable to the helplessness of political leaders, and only secondarily to the influence of speculators.

The banking crisis of the fall of 2008 demonstrated that bailout packages approved in response to market pressures fail to have the desired effect in the event of a massive crisis of confidence. At the time, it took the comprehensive approach of the Financial Market Stabilization Act to finally bring about stabilization in Germany. Today, the euro zone needs a common strategy that successfully combines sound public finances with solidarity between member states. On the one hand, the member states must be protected against the excesses of the financial markets. On the other hand, steps must be taken to ensure that the solidarity of member states doesn't undermine efforts to achieve fiscal consolidation in individual countries. In other words, what is needed is the appropriate balance of support and requirements. >>> Peter Bofinger* | Thursday, April 29, 2010

*Peter Bofinger has been a member of the government-appointed German Council of Economic Experts known colloquially here as the "Five Wise Men" since 2004. He is a professor of monetary policy and international economics at the University of Würzburg. His most recent book, published in German, is called "Ist der Markt noch zu retten?" ("Can the Market Still Be Saved?").
2009: Nick Clegg at Anglo-Arab Organisaton

Part 1:



Part 2:

Cameron and Clegg Tie on Final Debate, with Brown Left Behind

TIMES ONLINE: David Cameron and Nick Clegg ended up neck and neck in the final debate, leaving Gordon Brown trailing well behind in third place, according to a Populus online poll for The Times.

The poll, of 1,929 voters who watched last night’s debate, confirms that the Tories have the initiative in the campaign, but the Lib Dems will be delighted that Mr Clegg has held up his level of support for the second week, following his victory a fortnight ago.

Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg were seen as winners by 38 per cent, similar to last week’s 37/36 per cent margin. Mr Brown was seen as the winner by just 25 per cent, against 27 per cent in the second debate. The figures have been rounded up to the nearest point.

The dead heat contrasts with other polls which show Mr Cameron as the winner over Mr Clegg by 2 to 9 points. Mr Clegg is ahead as the leader most of those questioned would most like to see as Prime Minister, by 38 per cent, just ahead of Mr Cameron on 37 per cent. The two were level last week. The Lib Dems may benefit most, with 15 per cent saying they are more likely to vote for the party. Some 16 per cent say they are more likely to vote Tory, and 9 per cent to vote Labour. Mr Clegg remains the most likeable of the three leaders, >>> Peter Riddell | Friday, April 30, 2010
Staatsbankrott: Reiche Griechen bringen ihr Geld ins Ausland

WELT ONLINE: Ausgerechnet die Bezieher kleiner Gehälter und Rentner werden für den griechischen Staatsbankrott aufkommen müssen. Sie zahlen bereits freiwillig in einen Unterstützungsfonds zur Rettung der Nation ein. Die Reichen haben allein in den ersten zwei Monaten dieses Jahres acht Milliarden Euro aus dem Land abgezogen.

Ganz Griechenland wartet darauf, einen ersten Blick aufs Henkerbeil der kommenden Sparmaßnahmen zu werfen. Die Regierung tagte hinter geschlossenen Türen, verhandelte mit den Vertretern vom IMF und der EU. Von produktiven Gesprächen war die Rede und davon, dass man frühestens am Abend, spätestens aber am Sonntag bekanntgeben werde, was auf das Volk zukommt.

Was immer es ist, es wird niemandem gefallen. „Nehmt es von den Reichen“ – so lautet die Standardantwort, wann immer man dieser Tage Griechen fragt, wo denn der Staat Geld für seine horrenden Schulden auftreiben soll. Die Reichen gelten in Griechenland als Profiteure des korrupten Systems, aber zahlen werden sie wohl nicht. Allein in den ersten zwei Monaten des Jahres wurden acht Milliarden Euro Bankeinlagen aus dem Land abgezogen, also etwa so viel wie Griechenland im Mai an Schulden bedienen muss. >>> Von Boris Kalnoky | Donnerstag, 29. April 2010
Baroness Ashton Expected to Quit EU Job within Months

THE: Baroness Ashton is expected to stand down within months after widespread criticism that she has failed in the European Union foreign minister post she had been expected to fill for five years.

Less than six months into the job as EU High Representative for foreign affairs, The Daily Telegraph has learned that colleagues believe Lady Ashton, the best paid female politician in the world, is "on the verge of resignation".

Senior officials predict that the Labour peer, 54, could step down later this year after being politically damaged by accusations that she is too inexperienced and weak to be EU foreign minister, a post created by the Lisbon Treaty.

"Every day is an uphill struggle," said a European Commission official. "No one predicts she can stay five years, not even she."

Lady Ashton has come under fire from powerful countries led by France, for allowing the Commission to seize too much control of a new EU diplomatic service that she is building from scratch.

Her lack of political authority has been blamed for a failure to stamp out bureaucratic Brussels in-fighting over who will control the new European External Action Service, with 7,000 diplomats manning over 130 embassies around the world. >>> Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Friday, April 30, 2010
In Abuse Crisis, a Church Is Pitted Against Society and Itself

NEW YORK TIMES: VATICAN CITY — As the sexual abuse crisis continues to unfold in the Roman Catholic Church, with more victims coming forward worldwide and three bishops resigning last week alone, it is clear the issue is more than a passing storm or a problem of papal communications.

Instead, the church is undergoing nothing less than an epochal shift: It pits those who hold fast to a more traditional idea of protecting bishops and priests above all against those who call for more openness and accountability. The battle lines are drawn between the church and society at large, which clearly clamors for accountability, and also inside the church itself.

Uncomfortably, the crisis also pits the moral legacies of two popes against each other: the towering and modernizing John Paul II, who nonetheless did little about sexual abuse; and his successor, Benedict XVI, who in recent years, at least, has taken the issue of pedophile priests more seriously.

He has had little choice, given the depth of the scandal and the anger it has unleashed. But when supporters defend Benedict, they are implicitly condemning John Paul and how an entire generation of bishops and the Vatican hierarchy acted in response to criminal behavior.

“The church realizes that it doesn’t have a way out, at least not until it confronts the entirety of its problems,” said Alberto Melloni, the director of the liberal Catholic John XXIII Foundation for Religious Science in Bologna, Italy. >>> Rachel Donadio | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Sarkozy Pushes for Sanctions

Politics At The Pub


Goodbye Kemalism! Turkey Plans Constitutional Reform Granting Prime Minister Unrivalled Power

THE TELEGRAPH: Turkey is preparing to hold a referendum next month on key constitutional changes that will grant its Islamist prime minister unrivalled power in a country traditionally dominated by the military.

Parliament finished a debate Thursday on the constitutional package, which marks the culmination of a seven year drive by Recep Tayyip Erdogan. the prime minister, to make the democratically elected government Turkey's most powerful institution.

Mr Erdogan used his AK Party's majority to pass a set of 27 amendments over the opposition of the country's minority parties. Antagonism between the factions escalated during the debate and three politicians, including the Trade Minister and a Kurdish leader, suffered facial injuries in attacks.

President Abdullah Gul is expected to trigger the referendum within two weeks.

Analysts said that the era of untrammelled military power and extensive interference in the political system by the judiciary would be consigned to the past by the vote. >>> Damien McElroy in Istanbul | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Goldman Sachs: US Opens Criminal Investigation into Fraud

THE TELEGRAPH: US federal prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into whether Goldman Sachs Group Inc or its employees committed securities fraud in connection with its mortgage trading.

The investigation by the Manhattan US Attorney's Office, which is at a preliminary stage, stemmed from a referral from the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The SEC already has filed a civil fraud lawsuit against Goldman, charging that it hid vital information from investors about a mortgage-related security.

A spokesman for the office of the Manhattan US Attorney said she could "neither confirm nor deny" the existence of any Goldman investigation. >>> | Friday, April 30, 2010
Church Warned that Flag of Jesus Is 'Religious Advertising'

THE TELEGRAPH: A vicar has been warned by council officials about flying a flag depicting Jesus Christ outside his church because it was deemed to be “religious advertising”.

Rev Mark Binney, vicar of St Andrew’s Church, Hampton, Worcs, said he had been told he needed planning permission if he wanted to fly a flag “advertising Christianity” in future.

The flag was put up outside the church in the week preceding Easter Sunday displaying the words 'This is Holy Week' and an image of Jesus on the cross. >>> Richard Savill | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Belgium Decides To Ban The Burqa

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Photo: Yahoo! News

YAHOO! NEWS: Belgium is set to become the first ever country in Europe to ban the burqa from being worn in public places.

The vote in Parliament for a nationwide ban on Islamic clothes or veils that do not allow the wearer to be fully identified was almost unanimous.

The full-face niqab and burqa worn by some muslim women are not a mandatory requirement for the religion of Islam, but one of personal choice. >>> Sky News | Friday, April 30, 2010

Belgian MPs Vote to Ban the Burqa

THE TELEGRAPH: Belgium is set to become the first country in Europe to ban the burqa after the country's parliament voted on Thursday night to prohibit the wearing of the face-covering Islamic veil in public.

Not a single MP in the lower house of parliament voted against the ban on clothes or veils that do not allow the wearer to be fully identified, including full-face Muslim dress such as the niqab or burqa. There were two abstentions.

Supporters said the law would help fight terrorism and grant rights to Muslim women.

Daniel Bacquelaine, one of the liberal MPs who originally called for the ban, insisted the new law was "aimed at stopping people from not being identified".

"It's not about introducing any form of discrimination," he said.
The ban, which is thought to affect around 100 women, would be imposed in streets, public gardens and sports grounds or buildings "meant for public use or to provide services".

Those Muslims who ignore the ban could face fines of £22 and a jail sentence of up to seven days unless they have written police permission to wear the garments. >>> Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Thursday, April 29. 2010

Les députés belges interdisent le port du voile intégral

LE FIGARO: Si le texte est également adopté par le Sénat, la Belgique sera le premier État européen à légiférer sur le sujet.

La Belgique, déchirée entre Flamands et francophones, serre les rangs contre la burqa. Dans un rare moment d'unanimité, la Chambre des représentants a voté jeudi soir l'interdiction totale du voile islamique intégral dans l'espace public, faisant du royaume le premier État européen à légiférer sur le sujet. La loi doit encore être adoptée par le Sénat.

L'image du pays est peut-être écornée mais «on peut être fier d'être belge aujourd'hui, a affirmé l'un des initiateurs de la loi, le député réformateur Denis Ducarme. Nous espérons être rapidement suivis par les Français, les Suisses, les Italiens et les Néerlandais». Le texte, qui devait être voté au pied levé en début de soirée, a survécu contre toute attente à la démission du gouvernement Leterme. >>> Par Jean-Jacques Mevel, Claire Gallen | Jeudi 29 Avril 2010

Erstes Burka-Verbot in Europa in Belgien verabschiedet: Parlament will Regelung für den gesamten öffentlichen Raum durchsetzen

NZZ ONLINE: Belgien hat als erstes europäisches Land ein Burka-Verbot auf den Weg gebracht. Das Parlament in Brüssel stimmte am Donnerstag mehrheitlich für das Verbot der Vollverschleierung von muslimischen Frauen, das an allen öffentlichen Orten gilt.

136 Abgeordnete stimmten für das Gesetz, zwei enthielten sich. Der Text verbietet «das Tragen jedes Kleidungsstücks, welches das Gesicht ganz oder hauptsächlich verhüllt».

Darunter fallen also die Burka, die ein Stoffgitter vor die Augen setzt, und der Nikab, bei dem ein Sehschlitz frei bleibt. Allerdings wird keines der Kleidungsstücke ausdrücklich genannt. Normale Kopftücher sind ohnehin nicht betroffen, Ausnahmen gibt es für Verkleidungen an Karneval oder für Schutzhelme.

Das Verbot gilt an Orten, die der Öffentlichkeit zugänglich sind. Darunter fallen nach Auskunft von Parlamentariern neben Strassen, Parks und öffentlichen Gebäuden auch Geschäfte und Restaurants. Würde eine Frau dort verschleiert angetroffen, drohen ihr Geldstrafen und/oder Haft von einem bis zu sieben Tagen. >>> sda/afp/dpa | Donnerstag, 29. April 2010
Michael Nazir-Ali: The Legal Threat to Our Spiritual Tradition

THE TELEGRAPH: The McFarlane judgment raises fundamental questions about church and state, says Michael Nazir-Ali.

Lord Justice Laws's judgment on the Gary McFarlane case in the Court of Appeal – that legislation for the protection of views held purely on religious ground cannot be justified – has driven a coach and horses through the ancient association of the Christian faith with the constitutional and legal basis of British society.

Everything from the Coronation Oath onwards suggests that there is an inextricable link between the Judaeo-Christian tradition of the Bible and the institutions, the values and the virtues of British society. If this judgment is allowed to stand, the aggressive secularists will have had their way.

It also raises a number of fundamental questions to which answers need to be provided. Will there be, once again, a religious bar to holding office? We have already had a rash of cases involving magistrates unable to serve on the bench because of their Christian beliefs, registrars losing their jobs because they cannot, in conscience, officiate at civil partnerships, paediatricians unable to serve on adoption panels… Will this trickle gradually become a flood, so that rather than conforming to the Church of England, the new discrimination tests will involve conforming to the secular religion as promoted by Lord Justice Laws?

Laws mentions the case of the civil registrar Lillian Ladele – who objected on religious grounds to "gay marriage" and refused to conduct ceremonies – as a precedent for his judgment, and believes that the issues in this case are identical to the ones in the other. In that judgment, the court treated the Christian faith and its tenets as on a par with mere prejudice or bigotry. It attempted to distinguish belief from practice and to identify what is "core belief " from Christian moral teaching. This is not a distinction that those who believe in biblical, historic Christianity would recognise.

Such is Lord Justice Laws's enthusiasm for a secular Britain that he charges on with some even more breathtaking assertions. He claims that religious faith is subjective, irrational and incommunicable. There may be some faiths like that, but the Christian faith is not one of them. It is committed to a proper understanding of how the world is and who we are, but also to what makes for a better world and better people. >>> Michael Nazir-Ali | Friday, April 30, 2010

Related:

THE TELEGRAPH: Gary McFarlane: judge's assault on 'irrational' religious freedom claims in sex therapist case: A senior judge has launched a dramatic assault on religious faith, dismissing it as “subjective” with no basis in fact. >>> John Bingham | Friday, April 30, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: Special Legal Protection of Christianity 'Divisive, Capricious and Arbitrary' >>> Frances Gibb, Legal Editor | Thursday, April 19, 2010

Thursday, April 29, 2010

1929 – The Great Wall Street Crash & Depression






President Sarkozy Tells Greece: We’ll Help You Solve Debt Crisis

TIMES ONLINE: The Greek Government has the “fully determined” support of France as it attempts to bring its debt under control, the French President said today.

During a state visit to China, Nicolas Sarkozy said that both France and Germany were in agreement on their approach to the crisis, which led to stock markets around the world falling and took the euro to its lowest level for a year this week.

The European Union said today that it hoped to have reached a deal with the International Monetary Fund and Athens on how to haul Greece out of its downward “debt spiral” by the weekend. Read on (+ video) >>> Emily Ford | Thursday, April 29, 2010

Aide à la Grèce : Sarkozy assure que "la France sera au rendez-vous"

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Nicolas Sarkozy a évoqué la crise grecque lors de son voyage officiel en Chine, jeudi. Photo : Le Point

LE POINT: La France "est totalement déterminée à soutenir l'euro et à soutenir la Grèce", dont le plan de sauvetage est "crédible", a déclaré jeudi le président français Nicolas Sarkozy, en visite à Pékin. "Nous faisons confiance au gouvernement grec et nous travaillons d'arrache-pied pour que tout ceci se mette en place sans délai", a ajouté le président. 



"La France prendra toute sa part. Nous serons au rendez-vous", a-t-il ajouté à la sortie d'un entretien avec Wu Bangguo, président de l'Assemblée nationale chinoise, au deuxième jour de sa visite à Pékin. Nicolas Sarkozy a, par ailleurs, insisté sur "la parfaite entente entre l'Allemagne et la France" sur les moyens de résoudre la crise de la dette grecque. "J'ai constamment la chancelière (Angela Merkel) au téléphone, on se voit", a ajouté Nicolas Sarkozy. "J'ai été très satisfait des déclarations de (...) la chancelière sur la crédibilité du plan grec , sur sa détermination à mettre en application le plan européen de soutien à l'euro", a-t-il ajouté alors que Berlin a été très réticent à venir en aide à la Grèce. >>> AFP | Jeudi 29 Avril 2010
Special Legal Protection of Christianity 'Divisive, Capricious and Arbitrary'

TIMES ONLINE: Christianity deserves no protection in law above other faiths and to do so would be “irrational” , “divisive, capricious and arbitrary”, a senior judge said today, as he rejected a marriage guidance counsellor’s attempt to challenge his sacking for refusing to give sex therapy to gay couples.

In the latest clash between the judiciary and Christian believers, Lord Justice Laws said that laws could not be used to protect one religion above another.

He also delivered a robust dismissal to the former Archbishop of Canterbury who had warned that a series of recent court rulings against Christians could lead to “civil unrest.”

To give one religion legal protection over any other, “however long its tradition, however rich its culture, is deeply unprincipled”, the judge said.

It would give legal force to a “subjective opinion” and would lead to a “theocracy”, which is of necessity autocratic.”

The judge went on to dismiss Lord Carey’s plea for the establishment of a specialist panel of judges to hear cases involving the practice of religious beliefs.

That would be “deeply inimical to the public interest,” he said.

Lord Carey had given a witness statement in support of the counsellor, Gary McFarlane, 48, from Bristol, a member of a Pentecostal church.

Mr McFarlane wanted permission to appeal against an Employment Appeal Tribunal ruling that supported his sacking by Relate Avon in 2008[.]

The father of two, who had worked for the national counselling service since 2003, had alleged unfair dismissal on the grounds of religious discrimination.

But rejecting Mr McFarlane’s application to appeal, Lord Justice Laws said that legislation for the protection of views held purely on religious grounds could not be justified.

He said it was “irrational, as preferring the subjective over the objective”, adding: “it is also divisive, capricious and arbitrary.”

“We do not live in a society where all the people share uniform religious beliefs.["]

“The precepts of any one religion - any belief system - cannot, by force of their religious origins, sound any louder in the general law than the precepts of any other.”

“If they did, those out in the cold would be less than citizens, and our constitution would be on the way to a theocracy, which is of necessity autocratic. >>> Frances Gibb, Legal Editor | Thursday, April 19, 2010
Edmund Conway – Greek Crisis: Athens to Ashes

THE TELEGRAPH: The Greek horror story should scare us all, says Edmund Conway. Its problems are not unique.

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Anger bubbles over in Athens Photo: The Telegraph

It has all the ingredients for a perfect Hollywood sequel. The cliffhanger plot kicks off right where its predecessor ended; the cast is stellar, some characters from the original reprising their roles. But this time the stakes are even higher, the mood even tenser.

Greece is on the brink of bankruptcy. Based on almost any yardstick, markets are now betting that the government will default on its debt. At a staggering 18 per cent, the going rate to borrow for a mere two years is similar to the penal rates credit card companies charge their dodgiest customers. The government, International Monetary Fund and European Union have promised, vaguely, to hand over the necessary cash to help tide the country over, but to no avail.

It would be all the more shocking had it not happened before. But Greece's problems today are merely Lehman Brothers redux. This is Global Meltdown 2. Granted, this time it is a country, rather than a mere bank, that faces collapse; this time, the victim may really be too big to fail. But the pattern is eerily familiar: the money starts to run out; investors realise with horror that there is a real chance of failure; the politicians promise that they will stand behind the institution; in a last-gasp attempt to halt the disaster, they ban short-selling; eventually the law of gravity proves irresistible, investors stage an effective run on the banks and the end is nigh.

Faced with such a scenario, there are two options: confront the crisis, knowing you simply may not have the firepower to deal with it, or go running, screaming, for the hills. The head of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Angel Gurria, has chosen the latter path, declaring that the contagion is spreading "like Ebola... when you realise you have it you have to cut your leg off in order to survive".

Before we lapse into amateur dramatics, however, let's establish the facts: the market for Greek government debt has effectively frozen, much as the money markets did worldwide in 2007 – the initial trigger point for the crisis. Its banking system, stacked high with those same government bonds, is effectively insolvent. The country had been due to return to investors on May 19 to raise money; if a bail-out cannot be agreed by then, Greece will have no option but to default. But even that deadline is increasingly academic: the country has fallen victim to a run, and as anyone who watched Northern Rock's demise knows, what follows is not usually pretty. How did it come to this? >>> Edmund Conway | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Hamas Accuses Egypt of Poisoning Palestinians in Smuggling Tunnel

THE TELEGRAPH: Hamas has accused Egyptian security forces of pumping poisonous gas into a cross-border smuggling tunnel, killing four Palestinians as a result.

An Egyptian intelligence official has denied they pumped gas into the tunnel although admitted security forces blew up the entrances to several tunnels earlier this week and were not aware of any casualties.

Egypt, which has been under pressure to shut down the cross-border tunnels into Gaza, routinely blows up entrances to seal the tunnels off.

Palestinian medics working for the Hamas-run health ministry said the four had died from suffocation and that there was evidence of poisonous gas.

The Egyptian official said fires sparked by such explosions could use up all the oxygen in the tunnel and people caught inside could suffocate. >>> | Thursday, April 29, 2010
France: Liès Hebbadj Faces Accusations of Polygamy and Fears Loss of Passport; Denies Multiple Wives But Admits to Mistresses

Watch AP video here | Monday, April 26, 2010

Related articles here
Welcome to Arizona, Outpost of Contradictions

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Photograph: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: PHOENIX — Arizona is well accustomed to the derision of its countrymen.

The state resisted adopting Martin Luther King’s birthday as a holiday years after most other states embraced it. The sheriff in its largest county forces inmates to wear pink underwear, apparently to assault their masculinity. Residents may take guns almost anywhere, but they may not cut down a cactus. The rest of the nation may scoff or grumble, but Arizona, one of the last truly independent Western outposts, carries on.

Now, after passing the nation’s toughest immigration law, one that gives the police broad power to stop people on suspicion of being here illegally, the state finds itself in perhaps the harshest spotlight in a decade.

The law drew not only the threat of a challenge by the Justice Department and a rebuke from the president, but the snickers of late-night comedians. City councils elsewhere have called for a boycott of the resort-driven state; one trade group of immigration lawyers has canceled a conference planned for Scottsdale at a time when the state is broke and desperate for business. Meanwhile, a continuous protest is taking place at the State Capitol. >>> Randal C. Archibold and Jennifer Steinhauer | Wednesday, April 28, 2010



Immigration Law Fosters Division, Triggers Opportunities for Harassment of All People

ARIZONA DAILY STAR: The newly signed immigration law is not about immigration; it is about division. It is a blatant attempt to create an identifiable sub-class made up of the politically dispossessed: The undocumented.

But it went too far; its scope is overbroad. In their zeal, the proponents of the law crossed the line. The law affects not only the undocumented but also everyone in the state of Arizona. As a lawyer friend told me, "Hell, I could be from Lithuania."

Because of its overbreadth, the struggle against its enforcement won't be confined to the people who, in the eyes of the proponents, can arouse reasonable suspicion of being here illegally. It will be between those who want to restrict civil liberties and oppress the defenseless - and the rest of us who will not stand for it.

There are about 7 million of us in Arizona; we are about 30 percent Hispanic (in some counties that number is as high as 80 percent); 5 percent Native American, and 4 percent black; 2.5 percent are Asian, and another 2 percent or so are persons with two or more races; that leaves about 57 percent as white, non-Hispanic, as identified by the census. >>> Jesús Romo Special To The Arizona Daily Star | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Nicht alle «PIGS» sind gleich: Italien erscheint stabiler als Griechenland, Portugal, Spanien und Irland

NZZ ONLINE: Auf Italien lastet die grösste Staatsschuld in der EU. Das Land ist aber noch nicht in die Schusslinie der Finanzmärkte geraten. Es scheint solider als die «PIGS» Griechenland, Portugal, Spanien und Irland zu sein.

In den Jahren vor der internationalen Finanzkrise wurde Italien wiederholt als der am schwersten kranke Patient der Euro-Zone geschmäht. Tatsächlich hat die drittgrösste Euro-Wirtschaft die Wirbelstürme an den internationalen Finanzmärkten bisher aber weit besser überstanden als andere hochverschuldete Mitglieder der Europäischen Währungsunion. Die Zins-Spreads zwischen italienischen und deutschen Staatsanleihen zogen weit weniger an als im Fall Griechenlands, Portugals, Spaniens und Irlands. Und auch laut Vertretern führender Rating-Agenturen ist Italien immerhin noch das stabilste Land in der Gruppe der «GIPSI» (Griechenland, Irland, Portugal, Spanien und Italien). Und das I in der anderen pejorativen Abkürzung PIGS stehe für Irland. >>> Nikos Tzermias, Rom | Donnerstag, 29. April 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Finsternis in Griechenland: Griechische Bevölkerung zwischen Verlustängsten und Verzweiflung >>> Von Perikles Monioudis | Mittwoch, 28. April 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Zorn auf die griechische Elite: Verunsicherte Bevölkerung – Furcht vor schmerzhaften Sparmassnahmen >>> Amalia van Gent, Athen | Donnerstag, 29. April 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Berlin streitet um Griechenland-Hilfe: SPD wirft Kanzlerin Merkel vor, die Deutschen zu belügen >>> ddp | Mittwoch 28 April 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Berlin neigt zum fiskalischen Nationalismus: Die Hilfe für Griechenland als Wahlkampfthema >>> Ulrich Schmid, Berlin | Mittwoch, 28. April 2010
Griechen fordern bis zur Selbstzerstörung

WELT ONLINE: 70 Prozent der Griechen lehnen Sparmaßnahmen und das EU-Rettungspaket ab – mit fatalen Folgen: Der Protest der öffentlichen Verkehrsbetriebe führt zu einem Ausfall von zehn Millionen Euro pro Jahr. Auch die Lehrer wollen streiken und so das Abitur ausfallen lassen. Nun drohen die Pharmahersteller.

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Bild: Welt Online

Auf der Karolustraße ist das alte Griechenland der Maßlosigkeit in vollem Schwung. Bauern marschieren zum Landwirtschaftsministerium, sie wollen mehr Geld vom Staat.

„6000 Euro stehen mir zu, weil die Ernte schlecht war und die Preise gesunken sind“, sagt Korkas Christos. Als er merkt, dass er mit einem deutschen Reporter spricht, folgt eine Belehrung über das hässliche Deutschland. „Wir mögen euch hier nicht.“ Also ist wohl auch deutsches Geld nicht willkommen? „Doch, das Geld wollen wir natürlich. Wir brauchen es.“

Das ist Griechenland, wie es bisher funktionierte: fordern bis zur Selbstzerstörung. Die Krise führt nirgends zur Einsicht, dass man sich ändern muss. Die Regierung tastet fieberhaft nach Wegen, den Volkszorn zu besänftigen. Ab Montag sollen Medikamente per Regierungsbeschluss um 27 Prozent billiger werden. Folge: Die Pharmahersteller wollen keine Medikamente mehr liefern. >>> Von Boris Kalnoky | Donnerstag, 29. April 2010
Nick Clegg se rêve en premier ministre britannique

LE FIGARO: Au cas où les travaillistes arriveraient en tête mais sans majorité, le chef des LibDems se voit comme un recours.

Nick Clegg dans le fauteuil de Gordon Brown ? Il déclare ne pas trop y penser, car ce serait selon ses termes «absurde et présomptueux, (…) dans un environnement aussi changeant». D'ailleurs, il ne sait pas s'il vivrait au 10 Downing Street : «Quoi qu'il m'arrive, je voudrais que mes enfants restent exactement là où ils sont.» Mais tout de même, Nick Clegg l'affirme : «Bien sûr que je veux être premier ministre.» >>> Par Rose Claverie | Jeudi 29 Avril 2010
Nick Clegg Throws a Wrench in Britain's Prime Minister Race

LOS ANGELES TIMES: The leader of the minor-party Liberal Democrats has soared in popularity after recent televised debates. A traditionally two-horse race is suddenly unpredictable.

Reporting from London
He is an avowed atheist who famously claimed to have slept with "no more than 30" women. He has criticized British governments for their "slavish" relationship with Washington.

And he may be the most popular politician in the country.

Nick Clegg, the leader of the perennial also-ran Liberal Democrats, is suddenly being compared by the more breathless British media to President Obama and Winston Churchill. Millions of voters will be watching as he takes the stage Thursday night for the last of three televised debates between the men hoping to emerge as Britain's prime minister after elections May 6.

Clegg, 43, has upended the usual narrative of such elections here by turning a traditional two-horse race between the Labor and Conservative parties into an unpredictable and potentially historic three-way heat. Running on a platform of targeted spending cuts, a tax on big banks and clean government, Clegg's left-of-center party is poised for its best-ever showing in a general election.

Credit for that goes almost entirely to the Cambridge-educated Clegg — and the power of television.

Until the first debate two weeks ago by Clegg, David Cameron of the Conservative Party and Labor Prime Minister Gordon Brown, British voters had never seen their prospective leaders spar on national television during an election campaign.

As standard-bearers of the two major parties, Brown and Cameron were guaranteed extensive media coverage. But the first live face-off offered Clegg a national platform he never would have had otherwise.

He stole the show. >>> Henry Chu, Los Angeles Times | Wednesday, April 28, 2010

An amazingly frank interview >>> | Monday, March 31, 2008
Merkel Says Euro Stability Is at Stake

Korea's Wonder Women Fight to Leave Kitchen

Brown’s ‘Bigot’ Blunder Plunges Labour Campaign into Crisis

TIMES ONLINE: Gordon Brown prostrated himself as a “penitent sinner” yesterday after a brush with a voter triggered a calamitous chain of events that threatened to derail Labour on the eve of tonight’s pivotal TV debate.

The Prime Minister spent an unscheduled 45 minutes inside the terraced house of Gillian Duffy apologising to the Labour-supporting widow for insulting her behind her back.

His muttered description of her as a “bigoted woman”, picked up by a microphone as he drove off from their combative but apparently friendly encounter, plunged Labour’s high command into its most serious crisis of the campaign. >>> Roland Watson, Political Editor | Thursday, April 29, 2010

Related links:

’Bigotgate’ = Duffer Brown + Mrs Duffy >>>

Bomb Discovered Outside George Clooney's Lake Como Villa

THE TELEGRAPH: An unexploded Second World War bomb has been discovered outside George Clooney's Lake Como villa.

The 500lb explosive was discovered 15 yards underwater in Lake Como just in front of the actor's 30million euro 30-bed mansion, Villa Oleandra.

Bomb squad experts raced to the scene on the shores of the Italian lake in the Lombardy region in the alpine north of the country. >>> | Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Warning for Britain as Financial Chaos Spreads to Spain

THE TELEGRAPH: Spain's economy was thrown into chaos on Thursday when its credit rating was cut, sharpening fears that Britain may suffer a similar fate.

The turmoil came just a day after Greece’s rating was cut, increasing concerns of a Europe-wide financial crisis.

The euro fell sharply and the interest rates European governments pay to borrow money jumped after Standard and Poor’s, a credit ratings agency, downgraded Spain.

Last night the government in Madrid appealed for calm, promising an “austerity programme” to cut spending.

But economists fear that events in Spain show that financial “contagion” is spreading from Greece, as investors are scared off investing in any European country with significant government deficits. >>> James Kirkup and Christopher Hope | Thursday, April 29, 2010

Britain Risks Greek-style Crisis, Warns Vince Cable

THE TELEGRAPH: Britain risks sliding into a Greek-style fiscal crisis unless the next government takes drastic action to cut borrowing, warned Vince Cable, the Liberal Democrat finance spokesman.

Greece is currently in talks with the IMF and the European Union on getting a €45bn bail-out package to prevent a sovereign default, and a slashing of its debt to junk status has sent global financial markets into a tailspin.

"The Greek position is much more serious but is a salutary warning that unless the next government gets seriously to grips with the deficit problems, as we're determined to do, we could have a serious problem," Mr Cable told Reuters Insider television. >>> | Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Laura Bush Memoir Claims President Was Poisoned at G8 Summit

THE GUARDIAN: Former first lady's book floats idea of poison plot against George Bush and entourage at 2008 Heiligendamm summit

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President George Bush and first lady Laura Bush arrive at the opening dinner of the G8 summit at Heiligendamm. The former first lady's new book blames the president's illness on a possible poison plot. Photo: The Guardian

The former first lady Laura Bush has opened a diplomatic can of worms by writing in her new book that she and her husband may have been poisoned during a state visit to a G8 summit in Germany in 2007.

The passage of Spoken From the Heart in which she discusses the incident amounts to the first time that the idea has been floated that George Bush's illness at the summit may have been the result of poisoning. The then US president succumbed to a stomach complaint, as did his wife and several members of their entourage, during a three-day meeting of world leaders in Heiligendamm.

The book is to be published early next month but a sneak preview of it was gained by the New York Times. >>> Ed Pilkington | Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Related article here.

Spain Hit as Greek 'Illness' Spreads Over Europe

TIMES ONLINE: The crisis affecting the eurozone worsened yesterday when Spain’s credit rating was downgraded less than 24 hours after Greece was sent into financial meltdown.

Fear of contagion gripped Europe’s financial markets when the debt rating agency Standard & Poor’s cut the rating on Spain’s sovereign bonds. The decision — coming after the agency downgraded Portugal’s rating and cast Greek bonds into the scrapyard, designating them junk — sent the euro plunging against the dollar.

The risk that weak eurozone economies might be infected by a Greek financial virus added pressure to an emergency meeting in Berlin, where the heads of the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank considered a proposal to triple the size of a bailout for Greece. Read on (+ video) >>> Carl Mortished, World Business Editor | Thursday, April 29, 2010
Egyptian Businessman Who Denies Murder Shown Photos of Dead Lover

THE TELEGRAPH: An Egyptian businessman accused of killing his lover, a Lebanese singer, has been shown gruesome photographs of her dead body.

Hishaam Talaat Moustafa, a property and hotels magnate with close ties to the Egyptian government, is being retried on murder charges for which he was sentenced to hang last year.

Opening the case against him in a Cairo court, the prosecution displayed pictures of Suzanne Tamim lying on the floor of her Dubai flat with her throat slit. She also had wounds indicating she tried to defend herself in a struggle.

The court was also shown closed circuit television footage taken from the apartment block, in Dubai's Jumeirah Beach Residences complex.

In it, a man identified as Mohsen el-Sukkari, a security officer working in one of Mr Moustafa's hotels, was seen to enter on the day in July 2008 that Miss Tamim was killed. Prosecutors say that, acting on Moustafa's orders, he gained access pretending to work for the apartment's owners and killed her when she answered her door. >>> Samer al-Atrush in Cairo | Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Related links here and here.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

’Bigotgate’ = Duffer Brown + Mrs Duffy

THE TELEGRAPH: Gillian Duffy had only popped out to buy a loaf of bread. But by the time she got home, following a chance encounter with the Prime Minister, the 65-year-old widow had become the woman who could seal the outcome of the general election.

Mrs Duffy, a lifelong Labour supporter, had the temerity to tackle Gordon Brown on the national debt, education and his party’s immigration policy.

In return, the Prime Minister branded her a “bigoted woman” in an ill-tempered aside which was caught on a microphone still on his lapel as he was chauffeured away.

Mr Brown’s visit to Rochdale, had been the latest salvo in a new Labour strategy to put him in front of real voters.

It ended with the most disastrous gaffe of the campaign and his party’s election strategy in turmoil.

Within hours, Mr Brown had interrupted his schedule to return to Rochdale, Greater Manchester, where he was forced to make a personal apology to Mrs Duffy.

During an extraordinary address to a live television audience from the grandmother’s driveway he described himself as “a penitent sinner”.

Later, the premier emailed all Labour supporters — including candidates — to make clear his “profound regret” at what he had done.

Coming on the eve of today’s final televised leaders’ debate, some Cabinet ministers privately feared that the blunder had fatally undermined Labour’s campaign.

There was more bad news for Labour when it emerged that Mrs Duffy had been signed up by the PR firm Bell Pottinger, part of a group chaired by Lord Bell, Margaret Thatcher’s favourite PR man. She was thought to have signed an exclusive deal with a tabloid newspaper.

Mr Brown insisted that he was “mortified” by his outburst, claiming he had “misunderstood” what the pensioner had said to him. Mrs Duffy’s family suggested the public had been given an insight into the hypocrisy of the Prime Minister, who had laughed and joked with her in public before insulting her in private when he thought he was no longer being recorded.

Prime Ministerial aides also feared that millions of voters who shared Mrs Duffy’s measured views on immigration, policing, education and the economy would feel slighted by Mr Brown’s remarks. General Election 2010: Gordon Brown's Gillian Duffy 'bigot' gaffe may cost Labour >>> Andrew Porter and Rosa Prince | Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Related links here and here.