Monday, November 16, 2009

People Must Be Free to Hold Intolerant Views about Homosexuality

THE TELEGRAPH: Ministers seem set on eroding yet another safeguard to our liberty, says Philip Johnston.

An important blow for free speech was struck in the dying hours of the last parliamentary session, despite a desperate rearguard action by the Government to quash it. Ministers wanted to remove a protection inserted into a law, passed only last year, which made it an offence to express hatred of homosexuals. But they were twice beaten back in the Lords and eventually ran out of time.

They may try again in the coming session that starts on Wednesday, the last before the general election.

This story encapsulates much that has been so pernicious about the 12 years of misrule to which the country has been subjected. No one can remember a government returning in the very next session to try to undo something to which it had agreed (albeit reluctantly) in the preceding parliamentary term. The free speech protection was proposed by Lord Waddington, a former Home Secretary. It stated: "For the avoidance of doubt, the discussion or criticism of sexual conduct or practices or the urging of persons to refrain from or modify such conduct or practices, shall not be taken of itself to be threatening or intended to stir up hatred."

This was done for a purpose. There are too many instances of people being questioned by the police under existing public order legislation for holding views that may be considered offensive or intolerant for yet another measure to be passed without setting out the circumstances in which it is meant to be used. These instances include a grandmother, Pauline Howe, who was visited by two constables because she wrote to her local council to complain about a gay rights march and what she considered a "public display of indecency". She was told she might have committed a "hate crime".

A similar experience befell Joe and Helen Roberts, a Christian couple lectured by Lancashire police on the evils of "homophobia" after criticising gay rights in a letter to Wyre Borough Council. A few years ago, Lynette Burrows, a family campaigner, was the target of a police inquiry after saying on the radio that she did not believe homosexuals should be allowed to adopt. Sir Iqbal Sacranie, the former head of the Muslim Council, had his collar felt, as did the Bishop of Chester for making remarks in a religious context that no sane person could have taken as stirring up hatred against homosexuals. The most preposterous example was the Oxford student who was arrested and threatened with prosecution for calling a police horse gay. >>> Philip Johnston | Monday, November 16, 2009
Grave of Neda Soltan Desecrated by Supporters of Iranian Regime

TIMES ONLINE: Supporters of Iran’s regime have desecrated the grave of Neda Soltan, the student who became a symbol of the opposition after she was shot dead during an anti-goverment demonstration on June 20.

The incident was confirmed by Ms Soltan’s fiancé, Caspian Makan, who fled from Iran after being released on bail following 65 days in prison. A recording of Ms Soltan’s mother weeping and cursing those responsible has been posted on the internet.

Mr Makan, 38, also disclosed that the regime tried to force him and Ms Soltan’s parents to say that she was killed by the opposition, not by a government militiaman on a motorbike as eyewitnesses have claimed. A documentary to be shown on BBC Two next week contains an unseen clip of demonstrators catching the militiaman seconds after the shooting.

Mr Makan, who is in hiding said: “The breaking of Neda’s gravestone broke the hearts of millions of freedom-loving people around the world. The repressors, believing they can stifle the cries for freedom, have even attacked, beaten, threatened and insulted Neda’s parents. This is while the Islamic Republic of Iran denies Neda’s murder.” >>> Martin Fletcher | Monday, November 16, 2009
Texas Accounts for Half of Executions in US But Now Has Doubts Over Death Row

THE GUARDIAN: Overturned convictions and growth of DNA forensic evidence shake state's rock-solid faith in capital punishment

Even in Texas they are having their doubts. The state that executes more people than any other by far – it will account for half the prisoners sent to the death chamber in the US this year – is seeing its once rock-solid faith in capital punishment shaken by overturned convictions, judicial scandals and growing evidence that at least one innocent man has been executed.

The growth of DNA forensic evidence has seen nearly 140 death row convictions overturned across the US, prompting abolition and moratoriums in other states that Texas has so far resisted.

But the public mood is swinging in the conservative state, which often seems to have an Old Testament view of justice. A former governor, Mark White – previously a strong supporter of the death penalty – has joined those calling for a reconsideration of capital punishment because of the risk of executing an innocent person.

The number of death sentences passed by juries in Texas has fallen sharply in recent years, reflecting a retreat from capital punishment in many parts of America after DNA evidence led to the release of scores of condemned prisoners.

The number of death sentences passed annually in the US has dropped by about 60% in the past decade, to around 100.

"In Texas we have seen a constant stream of individual cases that really destroy public faith and integrity in our criminal justice system," said Steve Hall, former chief of staff to the Texas attorney general for eight years, who is now an anti-death penalty activist.

"You are seeing that scepticism reflected in a lot of different ways. You are seeing juries more reluctant to issue death sentences. You are also seeing a different approach by district attorneys. Some are breaking with the past culture of seeking the death penalty whenever they can." >>> Chris McGreal in Livingston | Sunday, November 15, 2009

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Italy's Foreign Minister Says Post-Lisbon EU Needs a European Army

Mr Frattini said the experience of Afghanistan strengthened the 'necessary objective' of a Europe-wide army. Photo: Times Online

TIMES ONLINE: Italy is to push for the creation of a European Army after the "new Europe" takes shape at this week's crucial EU summit following the adoption of the Lisbon Treaty.

Franco Frattini, the Italian Foreign Minister, said that the Lisbon Treaty had established "that if some countries want to enter into reinforced co-operation between themselves they can do so". This was already the case with the euro and the Schengen accords on frontier-free travel, and could now be applied to "common European defence".

In an interview with The Times at his office in the monumental marble-halled Foreign Ministry on the banks of the Tiber, Mr Frattini said: "We have finally concluded a never-ending story". The Lisbon Treaty, which comes into force in December, will be sealed on Thursday with an EU summit to choose an EU President and Foreign Minister.

He warned that "if we do not find a common foreign policy, there is the risk that Europe will become irrelevant. We will be bypassed by the G2 of America and China, which is to say the Pacific axis, and the Atlantic axis will be forgotten. We need political will and commitment, otherwise the people of Europe will be disillusioned and disappointed. People expect a great deal of us. After Lisbon we have no more alibis". >>> Richard Owen in Rome | Sunday, November 15, 2009
BNP Leader Nick Griffin to Stand in Barking at General Election

THE TELEGRAPH: Nick Griffin, the leader of the British National Party, has confirmed he will stand in Barking at the next General Election.

According to the BNP leader, for the first time ever, the party has really serious challengers in a number of seats. Photo: The Telegraph

Speaking shortly before he addressed the BNP's annual conference in Hindley Green, Wigan, he also set out the key topics on which the party will fight for seats in the House of Commons.

He said: ''For the first time ever, we are really serious challengers in a number of seats. We're looking at half a dozen really seriously with big amounts of resources.

''And on top of that we will be fighting, I'm sure, our largest number ever - so I guess in excess of 200.''

The BNP's annual conference began on Saturday and finished with a key-note speech by Mr Griffin, in which he spelt out the future of the party to delegates.

He explained why he has chosen to fight in Margaret Hodge MP's Essex constituency in his campaign to get to Westminster.

''I am going to stand in Barking,'' he said. ''The thrust of that campaign will be the housing and education problems in the borough, and the way that the Labour party has let that borough down in a catastrophic way.''

The MEP for the north-west said bringing home British troops for Afghanistan is a key policy for the party and one that he believes has wide support across the country.

He said: ''It is the issue that everyone in the public wants a party to take the lead on. The three main parties are completely out of kilter with public opinion.'' >>> | Sunday, November 15, 2009
News Hub: Palin Hopes for More Than a Bestseller in Going Rogue

Diplomatie : Sommet de l'Asean à Singapour : les États-Unis font pression sur la Birmanie

LE POINT: C'est une première. Barack Obama a demandé directement au Premier ministre birman la libération de la dissidente Aung San Suu Kyi. Le président américain a profité de sa première rencontre avec Thein Sein, au cours d'une réunion sans précédent avec des leaders de l'Association des États d'Asie du Sud-Est (Asean), qui s'est ouverte dimanche dans un hôtel de Singapour. Mais pas seulement : les États-Unis et l'Asean ont appelé la Birmanie à faire en sorte que les élections promises par la junte en 2010 soient "libres, justes, transparentes et ouvertes" à l'opposition. >>> LePoint.fr avec AFP | Dimanche 15 Novembre 2009

TIMES ONLINE: Obama demands release of Burma democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi >>> Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent | Sunday, November 15, 2009
Venezuela: Chávez ruft zu den Waffen

ZEIT ONLINE: Staatspräsident Chávez ist in Rage. Er sieht sein Land durch das Militärabkommen zwischen Washington und Bogotá gefährdet und bereitet sich auf einen Krieg vor.

Venezuelas Präsident Hugo Chávez ist kampfbereit. Er glaubt, dass die USA und Kolumbien sein Land angreifen wollen. Bild: Zeit Online

Venezuelas Staatschef Hugo Chávez wirft den USA und Kolumbien vor, einen Angriff auf sein Land zu planen. Die Regierungen beider Länder hätten einen "teuflischen Pakt" geschlossen, um einen Krieg gegen Venezuela vorzubereiten und den bolivarischen Sozialismus zu bremsen, sagte der linksgerichtete Staatschef am Freitag bei einer Parteiveranstaltung in Caracas.

Grund für seine heftigen Verballattacken ist das kürzlich abgeschlossene Militärabkommen zwischen Washington und Bogotá, das eine stärkere Militärpräsenz der USA in Südamerika ermöglicht.

Chávez betonte, Venezuela werde niemanden angreifen, aber das Land sei darauf vorbereitet, sich zu verteidigen. Der Staatschef rief erneut das Militär und die Milizen in Venezuela auf, sich auf einen Krieg vorzubereiten, um die Souveränität des Landes gegen die Bedrohung der USA über Kolumbien zu verteidigen. >>> Zeit Online, dpa | Samstag, 14. November 2009
El-Assad rejette un dialogue direct avec Israël

«Ce qui nous manque, c'est un partenaire israélien qui est prêt à aller de l'avant et prêt à parvenir à un résultat», a dit Bachar el-Assad après s'être entretenu, vendredi à Paris, avec Nicolas Sarkozy. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Le président syrien, reçu vendredi pour déjeuner à l'Élysée, a évoqué avec Nicolas Sarkozy la relance du processus de paix.

Convié vendredi à l'Élysée, deux jours après Benyamin Nétanyahou , le président syrien Bachar el-Assad a opposé une sèche fin de non-recevoir à l'offre de dialogue direct faite par Israël sur la question du plateau du Golan, occupé depuis 1967 et annexé en 1981 par l'État hébreu. «Ce qui nous manque, c'est un partenaire israélien qui est prêt à aller de l'avant et prêt à parvenir à un résultat», a dit Bachar el-Assad après s'être entretenu, vendredi, avec Nicolas Sarkozy. Une invitation à déjeuner et trois rangées de gardes républicains dans la cour de l'Élysée, le raïs syrien a été reçu avec les prévenances réservées à un invité qui compte.

C'était sa deuxième visite à Paris, après celle de juillet 2008, qui avait marqué son retour dans l'arène internationale. «Depuis, les relations avec la France se sont beaucoup améliorées et développées sur une base de franchise», s'est d'ailleurs félicité vendredi Bachar el-Assad. >>> Alain Barluet | Vendredi 13 Novembre 2009
«Die Zeit wird knapp» : Obama und Medwedew drohen Iran

NZZ ONLINE: Die USA und Russland haben Teheran aufgefordert, ein Abkommen über die Verarbeitung angereicherten Urans ausserhalb des Irans zu unterzeichnen. «Die Zeit wird knapp», sagte der amerikanische Präsident Barack Obama bei einer gemeinsamen Pressekonferenz mit dem russischen Präsidenten Dmitri Medwedew am Sonntag in Singapur.

Im Atomstreit mit dem Iran haben der amerikanishe Präsident Barack Obama und der russische Staatschef Dmitri Medwedew den Druck auf die Führung in Teheran erhöht. Die Zeit für die Annahme des internationalen Kompromissvorschlags laufe allmählich ab, sagte Obama in Singapur.

Der Iran habe leider bislang nicht dem Vorschlag zugestimmt, der allgemein als kreativer und konstruktiver Vorstoss angesehen werde, sagte der amerikanische Präsident an einer gemeisamen Medienkonferenz mit Medwedew am Rande des Gipfels des Asien-Pazifik-Forums (Apec) am Sonntag.

Auch Medwedew äusserte sich unzufrieden über das Tempo der Verhandlungen. Wenn es keine Ergebnisse gebe, müssten andere Mittel erwogen werden. «Unser Ziel ist klar: ein transparentes Atomprogramm statt eines Programms, das die Sorgen Anderer erregt», sagte Medwedew. >>> sda/Reuters | Sonntag, 15. November 2009
Exclusive: Boyfriend Speaks of His Love for Neda Agha Soltan, Murdered Iranian Protester

THE OBSERVER: Neda was prepared 'to take a bullet in the heart' in fight against President Ahmadinejad

Neda Agha Soltan, the young Iranian woman whose face became the international symbol of protest against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, told her fiancé she was prepared to "take a bullet in the heart" in the fight against the president's regime.

The revelation comes as her boyfriend speaks out for the first time after being imprisoned following Neda's death last June, when she was shot by Iranian police at a demonstration in Tehran. Caspian Makan, a photographer, spent two months in prison for criticising the authorities after her death. In a moving interview, he told the Observer that far from being a bystander caught up in the demonstrations, she was committed to the overthrow of Ahmadinejad. As a result of her high-profile presence at the protests, he believes she was targeted by the regime loyalists who killed her.

Makan has fled Iran and given two in-depth interviews. His meeting with director Angus Macqueen, which is featured in today's Observer Review, will appear in a BBC film about Neda. In both interviews she emerges as a markedly different figure to the young woman depicted at the time of her death. Her fiancé describes her as politically active and assertive, convinced she was fighting for "democracy and freedom" for Iranians. Neda joined the first wave of protests. After the election results were announced, she headed to the Interior Ministry in central Tehran – a focal point for the emerging movement supporting Ahamdinejad's election rival, Mir Hossein Mousavi. Makan remembers telling her that the scenes she described to him would quickly lead to a violent response from the regime.

She said: "No, they will continue because the people are too many and the scale too widespread… Everyone is responsible for reaching democracy," Makan recalls her as saying. "If I get shot in the heart or arrested, it's not important because we are all responsible for our future." >>> Iason Athanasiadis | Sunday, November 15, 2009

Caspian Makan: 'I Cannot Believe It Yet. I Still Think I Will See Neda Again'

THE OBSERVER: Neda Agha Soltan, killed on camera by a sniper's bullet, became the symbol of opposition to Iranian President Ahmadinejad this summer. Her boyfriend, Caspian Makan, who has just fled the country, talks to Arash Sahami and Angus Macqueen about their romance, his imprisonment after her death and his terrifying escape

A demonstrator holds a photo of dead Iranian student Neda Agha-Soltan during a protest in New York. Photo: The Observer

Caspian Makan has been run over by the blind, careering juggernaut of history. Just five months ago his girlfriend was killed on the streets of Tehran, one of some 80 deaths reliably reported during the tumultuous demonstrations that followed the disputed presidential elections. Most victims' relatives and friends have grieved in private – but Neda Agha Soltan, Caspian's girlfriend, died live on phone camera, an almost unbearable 90-second sequence that turned her into an icon. Uploaded on to the internet, within hours her face became the face of protest.

But symbols destroy lives. In the days and weeks that followed, Caspian has lost not only the woman he was planning to marry, but also his country, his family, his friends and his career. Anyone and everyone who had anything to do with Neda's death are now toxic to the Iranian government. Members of her family have been bullied, threatened and even detained. The doctor who is caught on camera trying to save her life is now exiled in Britain. The music teacher who was with her when she died has been rolled out on Iranian television, patently required to deny what he saw: that Neda was shot by a member of the religious militia.

And Caspian disappeared. In the days after her killing, he spoke out on foreign satellite stations and then vanished. Finally it was confirmed he was in the notorious Evin Prison in Tehran – the frightening symbol of the Shah's oppressive regime smoothly transferred into the hands of the Islamic Republic's secret police. He was held for more than two months, some of that time in solitary confinement. In September he was released on bail pending trial – perhaps being prepared for one of the extraordinary show trials that have been broadcast on Iranian TV over the past months, in which leading supporters of the opposition have been obliged to recant their actions. Urged on by family and friends, Caspian decided he had to escape. >>> The Observer | Sunday, November 15, 2009

'An Iranian Martyr', directed by Monica Garnsey, will be broadcast on BBC2 on Tuesday, 24 November, at 9pm.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

US-Präsident: Obama warnt Nordkorea vor Konfrontationskurs

Barack Obama redet in der Suntory Hall in Tokio. Bild: Welt Online

WELT ONLINE: US-Präsident Barack Obama hat während seiner Asienreise erneut Nordkorea aufgefordert, seinen Konfrontationskurs zu beenden. In seiner Grundsatzrede zur Außenpolitik bekräftigte Obama die Beistandsgarantie für die langjährigen Verbündeten Japan und Südkorea und lobte die wirtschaftliche Entwicklung Chinas.

US-Präsident Barack Obama hat Asien in seiner fünften außenpolitischen Grundsatzrede eine gleichberechtigte Partnerschaft angeboten. Vor 1.500 Zuhörern in Tokio bekräftigte er die Beistandsgarantie für die langjährigen Verbündeten Japan und Südkorea, lobte den Aufstieg Chinas zur Wirtschaftsmacht und warnte Nordkorea davor, seinen Konfrontationskurs fortzusetzen. Anschließend reiste Obama zum Gipfeltreffen des Asiatisch-Pazifischen Wirtschaftsforums (APEC) in Singapur.

Die Regierung in Pjöngjang müsse lernen, dass die Nichterfüllung internationaler Verpflichtungen im Umgang mit seinem Atomprogramm nicht zu mehr, sondern zu weniger Sicherheit führe, sagte Obama. Das isolierte Nordkorea habe nur dann eine bessere Zukunft, wenn es zu den Sechsparteien-Gesprächen zurückkehre. „Wir werden weiter eine klare Botschaft senden, nicht nur mit Worten, sondern mit unseren Handlungen“, betonte der US-Präsident. >>> AP/ks | Samstag, 14. November 2009
Obama Bows to Emperor of Japan

Our Alcoholic Father Beat Me, Says Barack Obama's Half Brother, Mark

THE TELEGRAPH: As President Barack Obama begins his China visit, his half brother who lives there reveals that when he was a child their father was a violent drunk

Barack Obama's half brother, Mark Ndesandjo, paints a shocking picture of his and President Obama's father. Photo: The Telegraph

The southern Chinese city of Shenzhen is a world away from Washington DC.

The booming border town and the staid American capital are both home to members of the Obama family. That, though, is where the similarities end, because while Barack Obama resides in the splendour of the White House and is perhaps the most recognisable person on the planet, his younger half-brother Mark lives anonymously in a rented two-bedroom flat in Shenzhen's suburbs.

Now, on the eve of his older sibling's first-ever visit to China, Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo has emerged from the shadows to reveal the disturbing truth about the late Barack Obama Sr, his and President Obama's father.

Last week, Mr Ndesandjo published an autobiographical novel, Nairobi to Shenzhen: A Tale of Love In The East. It paints a shocking picture of his abusive and alcoholic father, one that is at odds with the man portrayed in Dreams From My Father, President Obama's best-selling 1995 memoir.

"I can remember my father hitting my mother and me. They're memories I don't like to dwell on because it's very painful for me," said Mr Ndesandjo, who has lived in China for seven years.

"I had a very difficult early childhood and there were things that happened to me that really hardened me."

In his book, Mr Ndesandjo describes a father who was a heavy drinker and who began to abuse his wife, verbally and physically, soon after they were married. Their son witnesses his mother running, screaming, into the night to escape being beaten. >>> David Eimer in Guangzhou | Saturday, November 14, 2009

Ce demi-frère qu'Obama va retrouver en Chine

Même silhouette longiligne et athlétique, Mark Ndesandjo présente aussi de vraies ressemblances dans les traits avec son demi-frère Barack Obama. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo, né du même père et d'une autre mère, vit à Shenzhen au sud de la Chine. Il vient de publier un roman autobiographique et sera dimanche à Pékin pour accueillir le président.

En s'aventurant pour la première fois en terre chinoise, dimanche, Barack Obama pourra s'appuyer sur une épaule familiale s'il est pris du vertige du grand dépaysement. Son «frère chinois» devrait être là pour l'accueillir. Resté jusqu'à présent très discret sur sa parenté si intime avec le président américain, Mark Ndesandjo vient de sortir un peu de l'ombre.

Longtemps, l'homme avait tu cette prestigieuse affinité­ lignagère, y compris à ses bons amis, jusqu'à ce que la presse le débusque l'an dernier. Depuis, il avait refusé toutes les sollicitations. Aujourd'hui, c'est cependant fort opportunément que Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo sort un livre, à mi-chemin entre le roman et l'autobiographie, à l'aube du voyage du président américain à Pékin. Si pour Barack Obama, le chemin s'est fait de Hawaï à Washington, celui de Mark l'a conduit De Nairobi à Shenzhen, titre de son ouvrage. Le demi-frère de l'homme le plus puissant du monde, comme on le souligne ici, a fait souche depuis sept ans dans la grande ville du sud de la Chine, à un jet de pierre de Hongkong. Une ville qui reste le symbole des réformes lancées par Deng Xiaoping, le temple du capitalisme rouge, pour ne pas perdre tous ses repères américains.

David, le nom du héros du roman, y pose son sac dans le sillage du 11 septembre 2001, après avoir perdu son travail. Il tombe sous le charme de la Chine par l'intermédiaire «d'une femme magnifique et d'un jeune orphelin». David est le fils d'une mère juive américaine, divorcée de son mari kényan. Dans la vraie vie, Obama père, divorcé en 1964 de la mère de l'actuel président, Stanley Ann Dunham, a ensuite rencontré une autre de ses quatre femmes, la jeune Ruth Nidesand, avec laquelle il est reparti l'année suivante au Kenya, où il a eu six nouveaux enfants. Ce père est au cœur du livre de Mark Ndesandjo, comme il l'était des célèbres Mémoires de Barack Obama, Les Rêves de mon père. Les deux hommes se rejoignent en peignant douloureusement le portrait d'un homme brillant, mais qui n'a jamais pu ou su tenir ses talentueuses promesses ni ses responsabilités familiales. Il disparaît dans la nature quand Barack a 2 ans, et le jeune garçon ne reverra son père que brièvement huit ans plus tard. Obama Senior est mort dans un accident de la route en 1982, à l'âge de 46 ans. Cette absence du père a été la grande blessure du président américain, en quête de cette part fuyante de son identité. Son cadet Mark, qui tait son âge, a connu les mêmes blessures. Il raconte ce père grignoté par l'alcool, battant sa mère, le frappant lui-même. De manière émouvante, il a confié combien l'élection de son demi-frère avait en ce sens transformé sa vie. La fierté ressentie devant ce succès et la liesse de millions d'Américains transfigurés par un nouvel espoir l'ont réconcilié «avec beaucoup de choses, y compris le nom d'Obama». >>> Par correspondant du Figaro à Pékin, Arnaud de La Grange | Vendredi 13 Novembre 2009

NZZ am SONNTAG: Der Halbbruder aus Shenzhen: Auf seinem Staatsbesuch in China trifft der US-Präsident auch einen Verwandten >>> Bernhard Bartsch, Peking | Sonntag, 15. November 2009

TIME: Obama's Half Brother Makes a Name for Himself in China >>> Ling Woo Liu / Guangzhou | Monday, November 16, 2009

TIME PHOTOGALLERY: Barack Obama’s Family Tree >>>
Obama Blowing Smoke!

With his bomber jacket, open-necked shirt, and smoking one cigarette after the other, Obama thought himself to be the ‘king of cool’! Photo: Stern.de

Check out these photos of Obama >>>

Erekat: PA* May Declare State via UN

YNET NEWS: Chief Palestinian negotiator: PA seeking global support for declaring statehood

Chief Negotiator Saeb Erekat says the Palestinian Authority is making an effort to elicit international support for declaring statehood, Al-Ayyam newspaper reported Saturday.

According to Erekat, the PA intends to promote this issue in order to bring it for a vote at the UN Security Council. The Palestinians are interested in declaring a state in line with the 1967 borders, he said.

"The idea is clear and understandable," he said, adding that "now we mobilize" and criticizing Israel's policies in the West Bank which he said prompted the latest Palestinian effort.

The move would send a message that "settlements and other unilateral actions are null and void and do not establish rights or territory," Erekat said, noting that he spoke about the Palestinian initiative with both American and European officials. >>> Ynet | Saturday, November 4, 2009

*PA – Palestinian Authority
Denmark to Pay Immigrants £12,000 to Go Home If They ‘Can’t or Won’t’ Assimilate

MAIL ONLINE: Denmark is boosting cash incentives to entice immigrants to return to their homelands if they 'can't or won't' assimilate into society.

The offer now on the table is close to £12,000 for every person who takes up the offer to leave.

Critics of the measure say it sends the wrong message to foreigners but the centre-right government in Copenhagen is forging ahead with the plan.

The financial carrot is ten times more than that previously offered under a scheme which as been law since 1997.

'We thought it was important to substantially increase this aid so that immigrants who want to return home because they are not able to adapt to Danish society have a strong financial basis to start a new life,' said foreign affairs spokesman Soeren Espersen of the far-right Danish People's Party.

The offer is aimed at immigrants and refugees who 'cannot or do not want to integrate into Danish society,' said the head of the DPP's parliamentary group, Kristian Tuelesen Dahl. >>> Allan Hall | Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Hat tip: Jihad Watch
Bob Schieffer on Nadal Malik Hasan: Muslim or "Religious Nut?"



This video shows that people really do not have a clue about Islam and Jihad. These men talk through their hats! Little wonder we are lsoing the war against militant Islam!

Hat tip: Jihad Watch
Barack Obama Bows and Talks of Green Tea Ice Cream as He Pushes US Ties in Asia

THE TELEGRAPH: President Barack Obama has bowed to the Emperor of Japan and revealed his childhood affection for green tea icecream as he pushes stronger US ties with Asia.

President Barack Obama is greeted by Japanese Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko upon arrival at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo. Photo: The Telegraph

There was talk of green tea ice cream, memories of a childhood visit to Japan and even a reference to the remote fishing town Obama as the US President set out his vision for US relations with Asia in a keynote speech.

He later bowed deeply to Japanese Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, upon arrival at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo for a private lunch before he headed to Singapore on the next leg of his Asian tour.

Beneath the signature charm and rhetoric, President Barack Obama's message was clear: the US fully intends to deepen dialogue with China and pursue greater cooperation with countries across Asia.

Speaking before 1,500 people in a central Tokyo concert hall on the second day of his whistlestop tour of Asia, Mr Obama also pledged his "unshakeable" commitment to Asian security and insisted that the US would not be "cowed" by North Korea's nuclear tests.

Calling himself "America's first Pacific President" during a 40-minute address, Mr Obama said: "I want every American to know that we have a stake in the future of this region, because what happens here has a direct effect on our lives at home.

"This is where we engage in much of our commerce and buy many of our goods. And this is where we can export more of our own products and create jobs back home in the process."

The president reaffirmed the alliance between Japan and the US, which spans nearly five decades and has recently been overshadowed by a dispute over the relocation of American troops in the southern Okinawa region, and their continued presence in Japan overall. >>> Danielle Demetriou in Tokyo | Saturday, November 14, 2009
Muslims Must Quit British Forces, Says Iranian Envoy Abdolhossein Moezi

Ayatollah Abdolhossein Moezi says the death of protesters in Iran was regrettable but unavoidable. Photo: Times Online

TIMES ONLINE: The Iranian Supreme Leader’s representative in Britain has told Muslim servicemen and women to quit the Armed Forces, saying that their involvement in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars is forbidden by Islam.

The cleric, personally appointed by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to be his special envoy to the UK, also urged Muslims to defeat the opposition to the Iranian regime and keep the 30-year-old Islamic Republic alive.

In his first interview with an English language newspaper, Ayatollah Abdolhossein Moezi, director of the Islamic Centre of England, said he regretted that protesters were killed by the Iranian security forces after the presidential election in June but that their deaths were “unavoidable”.

Ayatollah Moezi, the most senior Iranian spiritual leader in Britain with thousands of followers from the Shia sect, said that it was wrong for followers of Islam to serve in the Armed Forces, especially in Afghanistan and Iraq where Muslims were being killed.

“Not only do I not accept it for Muslims to go there, I don’t accept non-Muslims to go there as well,” Ayatollah Moezi told The Times through an interpreter provided by him. “We say that Muslims are not allowed to go and kill Muslims. Do you think that Christians are allowed to go and kill Muslims?” >>> Richard Kerbaj | Saturday, November 14, 2009

Tehran Unlikely to Dissuade Muslims from Joining British Army

TIMES ONLINE: Anyone who counts Ayatollah Abdolhossein Moezi as a spiritual leader is unlikely to have joined the British military in the first place. He is the religious envoy of the same regime that calls Britain “the little Satan”.

Ayatollah Moezi is the director of the Islamic Centre of England, the London outpost of Iran’s neoconservative regime — a role to which he was personally appointed by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His leadership — as political as it is religious — is anathema to most British-Iranians, the majority of whom came to the country to escape the Islamic Revolution.

Shia Muslims, who traditionally take their spiritual guidance from imams such as Ayatollah Khamenei, are outnumbered in Britain by Sunni Muslims, mostly from Pakistan and Bangladesh, who do not all recognise any special priestly authority. >>> Catherine Philp, Diplomatic Correspondent | Saturday, November 14, 2009
Profile: Angela Merkel and the Talent of Seeming Ordinary

THE TELEGRAPH: Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, has the gift of making Germany seem routine, and worthy of little apprehension

Angela Merkel's studied ordinariness hides a ruthless and effective politician. Photo: The Telegraph

When the Berlin Wall came down, Margaret Thatcher was not the only person who worried that Germany might be about to become too interesting again. The reunited Germany, celebrating the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Wall this week, is a very powerful country, the most powerful in Europe. Yet under the leadership of Angela Merkel, the scientist from the East, it arouses very little apprehension.

This week, Mrs Merkel, who successfully regained the office of Chancellor in recent elections, chose not to dwell on the fall of communist eastern Europe and the events that led to a reunified Germany. Instead of grandstanding and gladhanding she warned instead in a big speech that the country's economic problems would "get bigger before they get better". She added that the growing budget deficit would not prevent the government from pressing ahead with cuts in income tax in an effort to stimulate growth.

The focus on economics and tax cuts highlighted the qualities of Europe's latest superstar woman politician: she is a ruthless power player who does what is needed, yet she conveys an impression of magnified ordinariness, right down to the determination to continue doing her own shopping and to queue in her local supermarket.

Nobody can read Mrs Merkel's mind, a talent she developed while growing up in East Germany as the daughter of a Lutheran pastor. To be allowed by the regime to build a successful career as a scientist, without actually joining the ruling Party of Socialist Unity (though she was active in its youth wing), required a prodigious capacity to veil her own opinions, to seem unthreatening and to concentrate in a pragmatic way on the task in hand.

Mrs Merkel has an excellent sense of humour and often smiles, but people no more know what lies behind her smile than what lies behind the Mona Lisa's. >>> Andrew Gimson | Friday, November 13, 2009

Friday, November 13, 2009

Débat sur l’identité nationale : Comment la France accueille ses immigrés

LE POINT: Ils sont vingt-quatre. Certains se sont mis sur leur trente-et-un, chaussures cirées et costume apprêté. D'autres ont préféré le confort de baskets et la chaleur d'un gros pull en laine pour affronter cette journée. Tous sont arrivés à l'Office français de l'immigration et de l'intégration (OFII) en avance sur leur convocation. Leurs regards se sont posés sur les grands drapeaux français et européens déployés à l'accueil : d'ici quelques heures, ils en seront. Ces immigrants auront leurs papiers français. Mais en attendant la remise de leur carte de séjour, un peu plus tard dans l'après-midi, les participants de tous âges sont venus aujourd'hui signer leur " contrat d'accueil et d'intégration " (CAI). Un passage obligatoire depuis 2007 pour tous les étrangers admis en France pour la première fois en vue d'une installation durable. Objectif : transmettre les symboles et valeurs de la République aux immigrés. À l'heure des débats initiés par Éric Besson , lepoint.fr est allé découvrir "l'identité nationale" telle qu'on l'enseigne aux nouveaux arrivants.

"Vous êtes sur la plate-forme d'accueil de l'OFII car vous allez recevoir votre premier titre de séjour", articule Christelle, l'auditrice en charge du groupe convoqué cet après-midi. Malgré un grand "bonjour" scandé à l'unanimité à l'entrée de la jeune femme, l'assemblée semble stressée. "Vous allez signer le CAI et vous engager par contrat à respecter les valeurs de la République française", continue Christelle solennellement, en parlant lentement. Aujourd'hui, tout son auditoire comprend le français : personne n'a eu recours à un traducteur ou à l'un des audioguides disponibles à l'entrée. Ousmane N'Diaye semble - comme le reste de l'assemblée - tendu. Ce Sénégalais de 34 ans s'est assis au milieu de la salle, comme s'il voulait se faire tout petit. Passer inaperçu, il connait cela par coeur : cela fait plus de quinze ans qu'il vit à Paris, sans papiers. Le grand gaillard écoute tout de même avec attention le film diffusé, "Vivre ensemble, en France". Tout un programme. >>> Par Louise Cuneo | Vendredi 13 Novembre 2009

Extraits : "Vivre ensemble, en France"

UN Meets Homeless Victims of American Property Dream

NAME: UN special rapporteur says wealthy US ignoring deepening homeless crisis while pumping billions into bank rescues / UN say US is neglecting deepening homeless crisis

A United Nations special investigator who was blocked from visiting the US by the Bush administration has accused the American government of pouring billions of dollars into rescuing banks and big business while treating as "invisible" a deepening homeless crisis.

Raquel Rolnik, the UN special rapporteur for the right to adequate housing, who has just completed a seven-city tour of America, said it was shameful that a country as wealthy as the US was not spending more money on lifting its citizens out of homelessness and substandard, overcrowded housing.

"The housing crisis is invisible for many in the US," she said. "I learned through this visit that real affordable housing and poverty is something that hasn't been dealt with as an issue. Even if we talk about the financial crisis and government stepping in in order to promote economic recovery, there is no such help for the homeless." >>> Chris McGreal in Los Angeles | Thursday, November 12, 2009
New York Trial for Alleged 9/11 Mastermind

TIMES ONLINE: Five Guantanamo Bay detainees alleged to have masterminded the September 11 attacks are to be taken to the United States to stand trial in a civilian court in New York, an Obama Administration official said today.

Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and four alleged accomplices will be brought on to US soil for trial as part of President Obama’s pledge to close down the detention centre in Cuba.

The Attorney General Eric Holder is expected to officially announce the decision today.

Mr Obama initially planned to close Guantanamo by January 22 next year but the Administration is no longer expected to meet that deadline.

The high profile trial will be an enormous legal and political test for Mr Obama’s approach to terrorism. If the case suffers legal setbacks the administration will face criticism from those who believe that it should have been held in a military court The case is also likely to force the federal court system to confront a host of controversial legal issues surrounding the President Bush-era counter terrorism programmes that started after the 2001 attacks. >>> Nico Hines | Friday, November 13, 2009
Zweierlei christlicher Umgang mit dem Islam: Christian Waber und CVP-Nationalrätin Barbara Schmid-Federer im Gespräch

NZZ ONLINE: Ein Minarettverbot verspricht laut einem EDU-Vertreter der Initianten eine Stärkung christlicher Werte in der Gesellschaft. Aus CVP-Sicht beeinträchtigt hingegen eine Einschränkung der Religionsfreiheit den religiösen Frieden und die Integration.

Was ist besonders christlich an einer Initiative, die für eine Religion eine Einschränkung vorsieht?

Christian Waber: Die Religionsfreiheit wird in keiner Weise tangiert. In der Schweiz können alle Religionen gelebt werden, auch die vielen Richtungen des Islam. Aber die Schweiz ist ein christliches Land. Und das erste der Zehn Gebote lautet: Du sollst keine anderen Götter haben neben mir. Allah und unser Gott sind nicht der gleiche Gott. Zu einem Minarett gehört der Muezzin, und er lobt Allah als einzigen Gott.

Vernachlässigt die CVP das Christentum, indem sie gegen die Initiative ist?

Barbara Schmid-Federer: Die CVP ist als politische Partei der Verfassung verpflichtet, versucht aber die ethischen Grundwerte des Christentums in die Politik einzubringen. Ein zentraler Glaubenssatz des Christentums ist die Gleichwertigkeit aller Menschen. Die Initiative können wir nicht annehmen, weil sie ganz klar eine einzelne Religionsgemeinschaft diskriminiert. Nur den Muslimen wird eines ihrer religiösen Symbole untersagt. Herr Waber, Sie widersprechen sich, wenn Sie die Religionsfreiheit bejahen, aber die Gleichbehandlung des Islam ablehnen.

Hätte das Minarettverbot vor dem Europäischen Gerichtshof für Menschenrechte Bestand?

Waber: Selbstverständlich. Artikel 9 der Europäischen Menschenrechtskonvention (EMRK) sieht ja wie auch der Uno-Menschenrechtspakt Ausnahmen vor. Und gerade das neue Strassburger Urteil über Kruzifixe in den italienischen Schulen zeigt, dass die Religionsfreiheit Schranken hat.

Schmid: Mit Ausnahme der Initianten sind alle Parteien und Juristen einhellig der Meinung, dass sowohl der Uno-Pakt als auch die EMRK verletzt werden.

Waber: Der Kern der Religionsfreiheit wird auch nach Meinung des Bundesrats nicht verletzt. Der Menschenrechtsgerichtshof akzeptiert beispielsweise das Schächtverbot.

Schmid: Wenn Minarette als Symbol verboten werden, ist das Feld frei für andere Forderungen. So könnte jemand Kirchtürme verbieten wollen.

Waber: Das ist doch kein Problem. Wenn eine solche Initiative lanciert wird und das Volk zustimmt, ist es ein demokratischer Prozess. Ist die Schweiz überhaupt ein christlicher Staat? >>> Interview: C. W. | Freitag, 13. November 2009
NY Gov. Paterson on Marriage Equality: The Advocate Sits Down with New York Governor David Paterson to Discuss LGBT Rights

Eurozone Emerges from Recession

BBC: The eurozone economy has emerged from recession after growing between July and September, figures have shown.

The 16 nations that use the euro collectively grew 0.4%, after shrinking by 0.2% between April and June.

The French and German economies both grew for a second consecutive quarter, confirming the eurozone's two largest economies are out of recession. >>> | Friday, November 13, 2009
Switzerland: Divided Over Minarets

Political Correctness Claims Thirteen Lives at Fort Hood

EXAMINER.COM: Yet another practitioner of the religion of peace has gone on a murderous rampage, this time at the US Army post at Fort Hood, Texas. The suffocating blanket of political correctness that dominates America and its military ensured that the perpetrator could operate in open and carry out his attack with ease. It is becoming apparent that anyone could have seen that he was an enemy of the United States and an aspiring terrorist, but the government and media template will be that he was simply a troubled individual acting alone, and that the attack had nothing to do with his Muslim faith. >>> Todd Keister | Thursday, November 12, 2009
Persecution of Doctor Who Treated Neda Soltan

TIMES ONLINE: As Arash Hejazi sat in an Oxford coffee bar, members of Iran’s Basij militia in Tehran were demanding his extradition outside the British Embassy.

The previous day the Iranian regime had sent an Oxford college a letter of protest over a scholarship given to honour Neda Soltan, the student killed during a huge demonstration against electoral fraud in Tehran in June. The letter also suggested that Dr Hejazi was responsible for her murder.

For Dr Hejazi, who had tried to save Ms Soltan’s life, that was the final straw. He decided that it was time to speak out. It was time to reveal how the regime has sought to vilify, punish and silence him ever since he told the world, immediately after Ms Soltan’s death, how she had been shot by a government henchman for peacefully protesting against President Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election.

Dr Hejazi is now living in exile in Britain, jobless and fearful, while back in Tehran the regime blackens his name and hounds his friends, family and colleagues. “I told the truth. I just did what I had to do, but there were dire consequences,” he told The Times. In short, a quirk of fate — that he happened to be standing near Ms Soltan the moment that she was shot — has turned his entire life upside down and made him “another victim of tyranny”. Iranian doctor Arash Hejazi who tried to rescue Neda Soltan tells of wounds that never heal >>> Martin Fletcher | Friday, November 13, 2009
If Forbes Can Put a Drug Baron on the List of the Most Powerful, Is It Such an Honour for Obama to Be Number One on That List?

TIMES ONLINE: He is Mexico’s most wanted drug lord, the head of a cartel that has brought billions of dollars’ worth of cocaine into the United States, a man with a $5 million (£3 million) price tag on his head — and he has been named by Forbes magazine as one of the world’s most powerful people.

Joaquin Guzman, known as “El Chapo” or Shorty, took 41st place in the new ranking, ahead of Presidents Medvedev and Sarkozy and Binyamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel. Guzman is the alleged head of the Sinaloa drug cartel that has funnelled up to $19 billion worth of cocaine into the US through tunnels under the border fence.

He was arrested in Mexico on drug and murder charges in 1993 but managed to escape from prison in 2001. Cocaine baron makes it on to magazine's list of world's powerful >>> James Bone in New York | Friday, November 13, 2009
US Mosques and New York Skyscraper Seized Over Iran Links

THE GUARDIAN: Federal investigators moved to seize four mosques in the US and a skyscraper in Manhattan yesterday over their alleged financial aid to Iran, in an extraordinary step likely to worsen relations between Washington and Tehran.

Prosecutors in Manhattan filed a civil complaint in the federal court seeking the forfeiture of more than $500m in assets of the Alavi Foundation, which describes itself as a charitable foundation, and a company, Assa.

The mosques are in New York City, Maryland, California and Texas.

Prosecutors claim that the foundation and the company have been engaged in money laundering, with the cash sent back to Tehran.

The move could be designed to punish the Tehran government at time when its relations with the US are already strained over Iran's alleged nuclear weapons programme.

But the Obama administration also risks incurring the anger of American Muslims if the mosques, all Shia, are seized. The takeover of mosques would also raise constitutional questions around the right of freedom to religion.

The move comes at a sensitive time, with a debate under way in the US over the loyalty of American Muslims after the shooting at Fort Hood last week. Major Nadil Malik Hasan was yesterday charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder. >>> Ewen Macaskill in Washington | Friday, November 13, 2009
Libyen stellt Schweizer Geschäftsleute vor Gericht

DIE PRESSE: Der Streit zwischen Gaddafi und der Schweiz verschärft sich: Zwei in Libyen festgehaltene Schweizer sind wegen Steuerhinterziehung angeklagt worden. Libyen weist den Vorwurf der Geiselnahme zurück.

Zwei seit Juli 2008 Monaten in Libyen festgehaltene Schweizer Geschäftsleute sollen in dem nordafrikanischen Land vor Gericht gestellt werden. Ihnen werden unter anderem Verstöße gegen die Aufenthaltsbestimmungen und Steuerhinterziehung zur Last gelegt.

Die Affäre belastet seit Monaten die Beziehungen zwischen der Schweiz und Libyen. Die Schweiz wirft dem libyschen Staatschefs Muammar Gaddafi vor, die Schweizer festzuhalten, weil sein Sohn im Juli 2008 in Genf wegen Misshandlung von Angestellten vorübergehend festgenommen wurde. Die Schweizer Außenministerin Micheline Calmy-Rey sprach im Oktober erstmals öffentlich von einer "Geiselnahme".

Diesen Vorwurf wies Libyens Vize-Außenminister Khaled Kaim am Donnerstag zurück. Es gebe keinen Zusammenhang mit der Festnahme von Motassim Bilal (genannt "Hannibal"). Weil Bern jedoch einen solchen Zusammenhang hergestellt hätte, seien die bilateralen Verhandlungen erschwert worden. >>> Ag | Donnerstag, 12. November 2009

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Spanish Region Takes Hands-on Approach to Sex Education

THE GUARDIAN: Officials launch campaign to teach young people about 'sexual self-exploration and discovery of self-pleasure'

It is a subject that would make most governments blush, but officials in the Spanish region of Extremadura have launched a major programme to encourage what could be described as a more hands-on approach to sexuality.

The region's socialist government has launched a €14,000 (£12,600) campaign aimed at teaching young people how best to set about "sexual self-exploration and the discovery of self-pleasure" – or to put it less delicately: masturbation.

"Pleasure is in your own hands" is the slogan of a campaign that has sparked political controversy and challenges traditional Roman Catholic views on people having sex, even on their own, for non-reproductive reasons. >>> Giles Tremlett in Madrid | Thursday, November 12, 2009
Iran Issues Tacit Warning to Saudi Arabia Over Attacks on Rebels

TIMES ONLINE: Iran warned Saudi Arabia yesterday not to become further entangled in supporting the Yemen Government’s drive to put down Shia Muslim rebels.

After a week of Saudi air raids and the imposition of a naval blockade by Riyadh to prevent weapons from reaching the insurgents, Iran issued comments that are certain to escalate tensions between the regional powers.

“Those who pour oil on the fire must know that they will not be spared from the smoke that billows,” said Manouchehr Mottaki, the Iranian Foreign Minister, in a clear warning to Saudi Arabia — which attacked Huthi rebels after they took control of a Saudi border town last week.

Iran is a majority Shia Muslim country and supports Shia groups across the region, particularly in Lebanon and Iraq, while Saudi Arabia is a Sunni Muslim state. >>> James Hider, Middle East Correspondent | Thursday, November 12, 2009
Argentina: Challenging the Church

Watch Journeyman Pictures video here | Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Yemen: Child Marriage

Watch Journeyman Pictures video here | Monday, November 09, 2009
Israel: An Impossible Situation

Watch Journeyman Pictures video: Hot Property: Israel/Palestine >>> | Monday, November 09, 2009
Venus, the Roman goddess of love and beauty is usually equated with the Greek goddess, Aphrodite. Image: Google Images

Britons Are Ugly, Dating Website Concludes

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Fewer than one in eight British men and just three in 20 women who have applied to BeautifulPeople.com have been accepted, according to the website

Britons are among the ugliest people in the world, according to a dating website that says it only allows “beautiful people” to join.

Fewer than one in eight British men and just three in 20 women who have applied to BeautifulPeople.com have been accepted, according to the website.

Existing members of the “elite dating site” rate how attractive potential members are over a 48 hour period, after applicants upload a recent photo and personal profile.

Swedish men have proved the most successful, with 65 per cent being accepted, while Norwegian women are considered the most beautiful with 76 per cent accepted, the website said.

Canadian women were accepted 24 per cent of the time, and men 23 per cent. And Americans? Thirty-seven per cent of women got in, and 24 per cent of men.

The way that BeautifulPeople.com accepts new members is simple. A potential member applies with a photo and a brief profile. Over 48 hours, existing members of the opposite sex vote whether or not to admit them, the site said.

Options are: “Yes definitely,” “Hmm yes, OK,” “Hmm no, not really” and “No definitely not.”

The site was founded in 2002 in Denmark and went live across the globe last month. Since then, the site has rejected nearly 1.8 million people from 190 countries, admitting just 360,000 new members. >>> Reuters | Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Dmitri Medwedew, Russlands Präsident, will sein Land zurück zur alten Stärke führen. Bild: NZZ

Medwedew will Rückkehr zum Weltmachtstatus: Russland soll seine «chronische Rückständigkeit» überwinden

NZZ ONLINE: Russland soll nach dem Willen von Präsident Dmitri Medwedew wieder eine Weltmacht werden. Dafür müsse das Land seine «chronische Rückständigkeit» überwinden und «grundlegend modernisiert» werden, sagte Medwedew bei seiner zweiten Rede an die Nation im Kreml.

Russland könne sich nicht mehr auf den Errungenschaften aus den Zeiten der Sowjetunion ausruhen. Bei der Erneuerung müsse sich das Riesenreich vielmehr auf demokratische Prinzipien stützen, betonte Medwedew.

Öl und Gas

Der Kremlchef kritisierte zudem erneut die «beschämend geringe Wettbewerbsfähigkeit» der russischen Wirtschaft sowie die hohe Abhängigkeit seines Landes von Öl und Gas.

Medwedew sprach von der «ersten Modernisierung in der Geschichte des Landes auf Grundlage der Werte und Institutionen der Demokratie». Er forderte seine Landsleute auf, sowjetisches Denken zu überwinden. >>> sda/dpa | Donnerstag, 12. November 2009

LE TEMPS: Dmitri Medvedev veut une modernisation radicale : Dans son discours annuel à la Nation, le président russe a, entre autres, annoncé une réorganisation en profondeur des conglomérats publics, qu’il a qualifiés, en l’état, de «sans avenir» >>> AFP | Jeudi 12 Novembre 2009
Lou Dobbs Resigns from CNN

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES: The outspoken newsman says he has been urged 'to go beyond my role here.' Is politics in his future?

Reporting from New York - In a surprise announcement, CNN host Lou Dobbs resigned on the air Wednesday after a recent history of controversial comments on immigration, among other topics, drew heated protests from liberal groups and created friction within the cable network.

Dobbs said that CNN/U.S. President Jon Klein released him from his contract so he could pursue other opportunities. He did not offer specifics but suggested that he is seeking a role in which he will not be constrained from speaking freely.

"Over the past six months, it's become increasingly clear that strong winds of change have begun buffeting this country and affecting all of us," Dobbs said as he opened his daily program. "And some leaders in media, politics and business have been urging me to go beyond my role here at CNN and to engage in constructive problem-solving, as well as to contribute positively to a better understanding of the great issues of our day. And to continue to do so in the most honest and direct language possible." >>> Matea Gold | Thursday, November 12, 2009
9/11's Delayed Legacy: Cancer for Many of the Rescue Workers

THE GUARDIAN: A spate of cancer-related illnesses among New York's rescue services who worked at Ground Zero sparks fear of an epidemic

The chemicals and toxic fumes from New York's Twin Towers on September 11 2001 may have a long-term effect on rescue workers. Photo: The Guardian

A spate of recent deaths of New York police and fire officers who took part in the emergency operation at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks has heightened fears that it could be the start of a delayed epidemic of cancer-related illness.

Five firefighters and police officers, all of whom were involved in the rescue and clear-up at the site of the collapsed Twin Towers, have died of cancer in the past three months, the oldest being 44. Three died last month within a four-day period.

Those three were Robert Grossman, a Harlem-based police officer who spent several weeks at the emergency site and died of a brain tumour aged 41; fellow police officer Cory Diaz, 37; and firefighter Richard Mannetta, 44.

In addition, John McNamara, a 44-year-old firefighter, died in September; and Renee Dunbar, a police officer in her late 30s, died in August.

The cluster of cancer deaths comes as Congress is under pressure to pass legislation that would provide federal help to emergency workers who have contracted illnesses since 9/11. Campaigners hope that a bill will be put to the House of Representatives by the end of the year that would set up a $10bn (£6bn) national fund for hundreds of people who now have cancer, respiratory illnesses and other diseases that may be linked to their work at the World Trade Centre site. >>> Ed Pilkington in New York | Thursday, November 11, 2009
Battle of Tours 732 AD



Hat tip: Always On Watch
Sarkozy et Nétanyahou mesurent leur désaccord

Nicolas Sarkozy et le premier ministre israélien Benyamin Nétanyahou, mercredi sur le perron de l'Élysée. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Le premier ministre israélien a été reçu, mercredi, à l'Élysée, alors que les relations bilatérales connaissent des crispations.

Blocage total du processus de paix, crise politique palestinienne, coup de froid franco-israélien : c'est peu dire que l'étape parisienne de Benyamin Nétanyahou se déroulait mercredi sous des auspices défavorables. Le ­premier ministre israélien a été reçu pendant une heure quarante à l'Élysée par Nicolas Sarkozy, alors que les deux pays traversent une pé­riode de tension, la France reconnaissant un «vrai différend politique», selon l'expression lâchée mardi par Bernard Kouchner. «Les entretiens ont permis d'aller au fond des choses, de façon dense, directe, détaillée, dans un climat de confiance, ce qui n'exclut pas des désaccords» , résumait-on mercredi soir dans l'entourage du chef de l'État.

Le «vrai différend» mis sur la table mercredi par Nicolas Sarkozy et Benyamin Nétanyahou s'explique aussi par les conséquences du rapport Goldstone, mettant en cause l'État hébreu pour crime de guerre. Israël a mal pris la position française, illustrée notamment par une lettre signée de Nicolas Sarkozy et de Gordon Brown, pour demander une enquête indépendante sur le conflit à Gaza. À la fin du mois dernier, cette crispation a notamment conduit Bernard Kouchner à reporter la visite qu'il devait effectuer en Israël et dans les territoires palestiniens. L'étape névralgique de ­cette tournée était à Gaza, où la France s'est engagée à reconstruire un hôpital, détruit par l'intervention militaire israélienne, fin 2008. Le ministre des Affaires étrangères avait finalement effectué un déplacement limité au Liban. Le voyage pourrait finalement avoir lieu «dans les prochains jours», a indiqué le porte-parole du Quai d'Orsay.

La pierre d'achoppement la plus saillante reste néanmoins la colonisation, que le premier ministre israélien propose non pas de stopper complètement, mais de limiter. Une offre saluée de façon inopinée la semaine dernière par la secrétaire d'État Hillary Clinton, véritable revirement de la diplomatie américaine, qui exigeait depuis des mois l'arrêt des implantations juives. Dans la foulée, Nétanyahou recevait, lundi à la Maison-Blanche, un accueil à huis clos et manifestement plutôt frais. Incompréhension à Paris >>> Alain Barluet | Jeudi 12 Novembre 2009
Muslims Take Over Paris Street (Every Friday)



Hat tip: Pastorius
Ministry of Defence Civil Servants Paid £47 Million in Bonuses

THE TELEGRAPH: Civil servants at the Ministry of Defence have been paid £47 million in performance bonuses so far this year.

A total of 232 British service personnel have been killed in Afghanistan since 2001. Photo: The Telegraph

The MoD said the bonuses were paid for “exceptional performance” but the disclosure came as the Government faced increasing pressure over the lack of equipment for troops serving in Afghanistan.

There are 85,000 civil servants at the MoD — one for every two active soldiers, the highest level among the Allied nations — and about 50,000 will get a performance bonus this year.

Troops serving in Afghanistan would be “aghast” at the payments, the Conservatives said last night.

The bonus figure covers just the first seven months of the financial year. The MoD said yesterday that the bonuses would average less than £1,000, but a senior civil servant could pick up £8,000. Last year, the department had 95 employees who were on a salary of more than £100,000. A private in the Army can be paid as little as £16,681 a year, with a bonus of £13 a day for serving in Afghanistan.

British troops are dying in Afghanistan at a rate not seen since the Falklands conflict and polls indicate that voters are turning against the mission.

A total of 232 British service personnel have been killed in Afghanistan since 2001. Commanders have said that some of those deaths could have been avoided if there had been more helicopters available.

The bonus payments have risen sharply even as the MoD’s record has come in for growing criticism. In 2003-04, total bonus payments were £24.9 million. >>> Rebecca Lefort and James Kirkup | Thursday, November 12, 2009

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Why Is Britain Harbouring Bahrain's Dissidents?

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOG – Con Coughlin: I’ve just attended a seminar on Bahrain hosted by Field Marshall Lord Inge at the House of Lords where I was alarmed to learn that London has become a safe haven for a group of Islamic radicals who are trying to overthrow the Bahraini government.

I suppose, on one level, I should not be surprised by this revelation. After all “Londonistan” has long given sanctuary to Islamic militants of all persuasions – including several key al-Qaeda leaders.

But I am nonetheless surprised that, in the post-September 11 world we live in (not to mention July 7), the British authorities are still giving asylum to those who are trying to harm one of our key allies in the Gulf region.

Apart from being viscerally pro-British, the genial, Sandhurst-educated King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa is a key strategic ally in a region where the antics of Iran’s Islamic republic poses a major security challenge to the West. Bahrain provides the U.S. with a massive naval base, and would prove to be a vital asset to the West in the unfortunate event that a military conflict erupted over Iran’s controversial nuclear programme.

Bahrain has, I know, had its problems in the past, where relations between the Sunni ruling family, and its citizens, who are predominantly Shia Muslims, have, on occasion, been strained. Nor have these problems been helped by the unwelcome interference of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards which, on at least two occasions, have orchestrated plots to overthrow the royal family. >>> Con Coughlin | Wednesday, November 11, 2009
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Merkel and Sarkozy Improve Diplomatic Relations on Armistice Day

It’s such a pity that the British haven’t found it within themselves to get into the spirit of the EU, for the British, too, could have been part of this axis, the British could have been part of the entente. The British, alas, prefer to moan on the sidelines – they prefer to bemoan their loss of sovereignty, bemoan their loss of influence in the world.

We, too, could be part of the eurozone (I’m sure that big business would love us to be). We, too, could be a force in Europe to be reckoned with. The French and Germans are our brothers and sisters in Europe. We, too, should be embracing each other. Unfortunately, we prefer to be triumphalist; but in so being, we are losing sight of the future, losing sight of the bounty that could be ahead of us. What a pity! Quel dommage! Wie Schade!
– © Mark


TIMES ONLINE: France and Germany pledged themselves to renewed partnership at the core of the European Union yesterday as Chancellor Angela Merkel became the first German leader to mark Armistice Day with the French.

President Sarkozy stood beside Ms Merkel below the Arc de Triomphe in Paris at a ceremony of reconciliation that he staged as part of his plan for a grand relaunch of the old Franco-German axis. The immediate impact is a joint Franco-German list of candidates for the EU Presidency and other top Brussels jobs under the newly ratified Lisbon treaty.

"We share the same values, the same ambition for Europe, the same currency," Mr Sarkozy said. "So it is natural that French and German policy should be conducted more and more closely." Ms Merkel voiced German contrition over the suffering of the French in two world wars. "What happened cannot be forgotten, but there is a force that can help us ... the force of reconciliation," she said.

Ms Merkel, who has warmed to "Super-Sarko" after a bumpy first two years, called the reconciliation a miracle and a gift. "When there is antagonism between us, everybody loses," she said. "When we are united, everybody wins," she told a ceremony that included French and German military personnel.

"Lieber Nicolas" and "Chere [sic] Angela", as they addressed one-another, also conferred privately on the new EU posts. On Monday in Berlin they were reported to have agreed on Herman Van Rompuy, the Belgian Prime Minister, but the equation has changed with the withdrawal of David Miliband, who they supported for the new EU Foreign affairs post. >>> Charles Bremner in Paris | Wednesday, November 11, 2009

THE TELEGRAPH: David Miliband rules himself out as EU foreign minister: David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, has publicly ruled himself out of the running to be the European Union's new foreign minister. >>> Damien McElroy | Wednesday, November 11, 2009
German Killer of Muslim 'Veil Martyr' Jailed for Life

THE TELEGRAPH: Alex Wiens, a German who stabbed a pregnant Egyptian woman, Marwa El-Sherbiny, to death in a courtroom in front of her husband and three-year old son, has been jailed for life for her murder.

The case of Alex Wiens, 28, who has admitted holding anti-Islamic and xenophobic views, shocked Germany and incensed the Muslim world, sparking protests from Egypt to Iran.

Security was exceptionally high for the trial, with 200 police officers and snipers securing the court in Dresden, the east German city where the killing took place in July.

Wiens, of Russian origin, was convicted of murdering Marwa El-Sherbiny, whom he stabbed 16 times with a kitchen knife, and given the maximum penalty. He also stabbed her husband Elwy Okaz, who was trying to defend her.

Their son, Mustafa, watched as his mother bled to death in the courtroom.

Mrs El-Sherbiny came to be knwon [sic] as the "veil martyr" as she was wearing a headscarf when Wiens murdered her.

Wiens was shielded by bulletproof glass, his head covered by a hood, his eyes hidden behind dark glasses, and his ankles shackled as the verdict and sentencing were read. >>> | Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Gay Unions Made Legal in Australian Territory

THE TELEGRAPH: The Australian Capital Territory has become the first region in Australia to legalise civil partnership ceremonies for same-sex couples.

Under the new laws, gay couples will be able to hold a legally recognised civil union ceremony in front of friends and family in the territory, which is home to the capital Canberra and the nation's parliament.

The region's legislators approved the bill, which moved by the local Greens party.

Andrew Barr, an ACT minister who is in a gay relationship, wept as he spoke in support of the bill.

"Love, trust and intimacy and commitment are found at the heart of all good relationships," Mr Barr later told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"I'm proud that this parliament will send that signal that my relationship with Anthony is equal to any other." >>> Bonnie Malkin in Sydney | Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Armistice Day Memorial Service: Nation Falls Silent to Honour War Dead

THE TELEGRAPH: The nation fell silent at 11am today as the passing of the First World War generation was marked at a moving Westminster Abbey memorial service for Armistice Day.



The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, senior politicians and the heads of the Armed Forces gathered for the ceremony in central London.

Former and serving military personnel joined members of the public in standing for the traditional two-minute silence to remember the sacrifice of those who have died for their country. >>> | Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Silence Marks Passing of WWI Generation

THE INDEPENDENT: The nation fell silent on Armistice Day as the passing of the First World War generation was marked at a moving memorial service today.

The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh, senior politicians and the heads of the armed forces gathered for the ceremony at Westminster Abbey, in central London.

Former and serving military personnel joined members of the public in standing for the traditional two-minute silence to remember the sacrifice of those who have died for their country. >>> Sam Marsden and Laura Elston, Press Association | Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Sarkozy et Merkel commémorent ensemble l’armistice

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: PARIS | "Profondément émue" par la cérémonie, Angela Merkel a insisté sur le rôle déterminant de l’Europe et de l’amitié franco-allemande en Europe pour maintenir la paix et la prospérité.

Nicolas Sarkozy et Angela Merkel ont ravivé mercredi matin la flamme du soldat inconnu sous l’Arc de Triomphe. Crédits photo : Tribune de Genève

Nicolas Sarkozy et Angela Merkel ont ravivé mercredi matin la flamme du soldat inconnu sous l’Arc de Triomphe: un "geste historique" salué par le président français qui a voulu transformer les commémorations de l’armistice de la guerre 1914-1918 en journée de l’amitié franco-allemande avec la présence, pour la première fois, d’un chef de gouvernement allemand.

"En ranimant ensemble la flamme du souvenir, nous avons exprimé symboliquement, Madame la Chancelière, la volonté commune de nos deux peuples de garder à jamais vivant ce souvenir dans leur coeur", a déclaré ensuite Nicolas Sarkozy devant des soldats français et allemands, d’anciens combattants et des élèves des deux pays, ainsi que devant le Premier ministre, François Fillon, l’ancien président Valéry Giscard d’Estaing ou encore son épouse Carla Bruni-Sarkozy.

"En ce 11 novembre, nous ne commémorons pas la victoire d’un peuple contre un autre, mais une épreuve qui fut aussi terrible pour l’un comme pour l’autre", a souligné le président de la République, regrettant que les deux pays n’aient pas su faire la paix en 1918, "non seulement parce que les vainqueurs manquèrent de générosité, mais aussi parce qu’ils refusèrent de voir le destin tragique qui les liait aux vaincus et que l’indicible horreur de la guerre venait de révéler". >>> AP | Mercredi, 11. Novembre 2009

LE FIGARO: «Un geste exceptional d’amitie» >>> Constance Jamet, lefigaro.fr | Mercredi 11 Novembre 2009

LE FIGARO: Sarkozy-Merkel, la nouvelle entente >>> Charles Jaigu | Mercredi 11 November 2009
Nahost: Hisbollah regiert mit im Libanon

ZEIT ONLINE: Fünf Monate nach der Wahl hat sich Ministerpräsident Hariri mit der Opposition auf eine "Regierung der nationalen Einheit" verständigt. Die Hisbollah stellt zwei Minister.

Die neue Regierung ist besiegelt. Aus diesem Anlass treffen sich Ministerpräsident Hariri (r) und Präsident Suleiman im Präsidentenpalast in Baabda nahe Beirut. Bild: Zeit Online

Der Machtstreit im Libanon ist beendet, eine neue Regierung gefunden. Insgesamt sollen ihr 30 Minister angehören, zwei davon werden von der oppositionellen Hisbollah gestellt, kündigte der vom Westen unterstützte libanesische Ministerpräsident Saad al-Hariri an.


"Endlich ist die Regierung der nationalen Einheit gebildet", sagte Hariri nach einem Treffen mit Staatspräsident Michel Suleiman. Damit werde ein neues Kapitel in der Geschichte des Landes aufgeschlagen. >>> Zeit Online, Reuters, dpa | Dienstag, 10. November 2009
Mode für Muslima: Schrill, jung und traditionell

Bild: Die Presse

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Saudiarabien verhängt Seeblockade gegen Jemen: Drohender Konflikt mit Iran

NZZ ONLINE: Saudiarabien hat eine Seeblockade über die nordjemenitische Küste am Roten Meer verhängt. Zuvor hatte Iran die Länder der Region davor gewarnt, sich in die inneren Angelegenheit des Jemens einzumischen. >>> ap | Dienstag, 10. November 2009