Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Matt Frei's Diary: Dangerous Minds

BBC: The Virginia Five, currently imprisoned in Pakistan, the Nigerian "underpants bomber" whose name everyone - including President Obama - is stumbling over; the Jordanian doctor who turned out to be a double agent with a suicide vest in a CIA compound in Afghanistan; what do they all have in common apart from a profound hatred of America and its allies?

They are all the products of relative prosperity and higher education. After all, Osama Bin Laden and his deputy also came from a privileged background.

None of the recent suspects are high school drop-outs or desperate refugees who have nurtured hatred of the West in the frayed lining of an empty stomach.

None have had to watch relatives die in stray American bomb attacks. They have all had a lot to lose and yet they were prepared to lose their own lives for a cause.

So, what makes the 23-year-old son of a prominent Nigerian banker pack his underpants with explosives in pursuit of martyrdom? >>> Matt Frei, BBC News, Washington | Thursday, January 07, 2010
'Decision to Blog Is Risky But Neccessary'

BBC: Wael Abbas is an Egyptian Journalist and a highly influential political blogger. His blog, Misr Digital (Egyptian Awareness), regularly covers political protests, corruption, and police brutality - subjects generally avoided by the mainstream media.

Egypt has the most developed political blogosphere in the Arab world but just how much truth is there in a blog?

Wael Abbas tells Zeinab Badawi that bloggers in Egypt are a vital, independent voice, constantly pushing the limits of freedom of speech. Watch BBC video >>> | Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Turkey Demands Apology from Israel Over Envoy 'Slight'

BBC: Turkey has demanded that Israel apologise over what it called the "discourteous" way its ambassador was treated during a diplomatic meeting.

Israel summoned Turkey's ambassador to rebuke him over a TV series but ensured he was photographed on a lower chair.

Jonathan Head reports. Watch BBC video >>> | Wednesday, January 13, 2010

BBC: Turkey threatens diplomatic action over Israel 'snub': Turkey has said it will recall its ambassador unless a row over his treatment by Israel's deputy foreign minister is rapidly resolved. >>> | Wednesday, January 13, 2010

WELT ONLINE: Diplomatische Verstimmung – Türkischer Präsident stellt Israel ein Ultimatum: Die Spannungen zwischen Israel und der Türkei drohen zu eskalieren. Nachdem Vize-Außenminister Ajalon den türkischen Botschafter öffentlich gedemütigt hat, fordert Präsident Abdullah Gül eine Entschuldigung. Sonst will er die diplomatischen Beziehungen abbrechen. Ajalons bisherige Stellungsnahme sei unzureichend. >>> AFP/ks | Mittwoch, 13. Januar 2010

WELT ONLINE: Botschafter einbestellt – Israel rächt sich für hetzerische TV-Serie: Seit einiger Zeit versuchen Israels Handels- und Verteidigungsminister, die angeschlagenen Beziehungen zur Türkei wieder zu verbessern. Eine andere Straegie verfolgt Außenminister Avigdor Lieberman. Er bestellte den türkischen Botschafter ein – und ließ diesen nach Strich und Faden demütigen. >>> Von Michael Borgstede | Dienstag, 12. Januar 2010

TIMES ONLINE: Israel forced to apologise to Turkey over humiliation of its envoy >>> James Hider in Jerusalem | Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Uganda President Museveni Wary of Anti-gay Bill

BBC: Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has distanced himself from a bill proposing execution for some gay people.

He stressed that the MP who proposed the bill, who is a member of the ruling party, did so as an individual and was not following government policy.

Mr Museveni, who admitted coming under international pressure, said the bill was now a "foreign policy issue" and would be discussed by the cabinet.

The proposals have caused a storm of criticism across the world.

Sweden has threatened to cut aid and other countries have contacted Mr Museveni directly to put their objections. >>> | Wednesday, January 13, 2010

BBC: Uganda fear over gay death-penalty plans >>> | Tuesday, December 22, 2010
Thousands Feared Dead as Huge Earthquake Devastates Haiti

TIMES ONLINE: Thousands of people were feared dead after a powerful earthquake measuring 7.0 rocked the impoverished Caribbean nation of Haiti last night, toppling buildings and causing widespread damage and panic.

The United Nations headquarters was one of scores of buildings that were toppled, including the presidential palace, the World Bank, government buildings and a cathedral. Roads and bridges also lay in ruins after the largest earthquake in 200 years struck just 10 miles (16 km) from the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Communications were widely disrupted, making it impossible to get a clear picture of the damage as violent aftershocks shook the country, where many buildings are flimsy. Electricity was lost in some places.

A thick pall of dust lay over the city as panic stricken residents poured into the streets screaming, with buildings crumbling around them. As night fell, thousands squatted in sports grounds and on the streets, too terrified of aftershocks to return to their homes. >>> | Wednesday. January 13, 2010
US Cult of Greed Is Now a Global Environmental Threat

THE GUARDIAN: The average American consumes more than his or her weight in products each day, fuelling a global culture of excess that is emerging as the biggest threat to the planet, according to a report published today. In its annual report, Worldwatch Institute says the cult of consumption and greed could wipe out any gains from government action on climate change or a shift to a clean energy economy. >>> Suzanne Goldenberg US environment correspondent | Wednesday, January 13, 2009

A Relationship with God, My Foot!

THE INDEPENDENT: To some it is a symbol of female subjugation. But these women believe that their Islamic headwear is a versatile, liberating way of expressing their identities.

Jilbab. Niqab. Al Amira. Dupatta. Burqa. Chador. Even the language used to describe the various kinds of clothing worn by Muslim women can seem as complicated and muddied as the issue itself. Rarely has an item of cloth caused so much consternation, controversy and misunderstanding as with the Islamic headscarf or veil.

For those Muslims who literally wear their religion on their sleeves, hijab (from the Arabic for curtain or screen) can be many things. For some it is a cultural practice handed down through the generations, an unquestioned given that is simply adopted. For others the need to dress and behave modestly can define a person’s relationship with God, their religious devotion or even their politics. For others still hijab is a complicated journey, one with twists and turns where veils are briefly discarded on the ground or taken up with willing fervour.

“Muslim women wear hijab for many reasons including piety, identity and even as political statements,” says Tahmina Saleem, the co-founder of Inspire, a consultancy which helps Muslim women become vocal members of their communities. “Most do so willingly, some unwillingly”. The many faces behind the veil >>> Arifa Akbar and Jerome Taylor | Wednesday, January 13, 2010
24-hour Guard on Hate Cleric Anjem Choudary: Police 'Fury' Over Security Patrols

MAIL ONLINE: Hate preacher Anjem Choudary is being given round-the-clock police protection following his controversial threat to march through Wootton Basset, the Daily Mail can reveal.

Even though the extremist cleric has now called off plans to stage the protest, carrying empty coffins through the town where Britain honours its war dead, he still receives hourly security checks at his East London home.

Metropolitan police officers have been told to give his protection priority above other local policing jobs such as muggings, theft and foot patrols.

The protection was revealed after Home Secretary Alan Johnson yesterday banned Choudary's Islam4UK group, making it a criminal offence to be a member.

As Choudary held a press conference to react to the ban, patrol cars and unmarked vehicles were still instructed to drive past his empty £320,000 rented home - which is funded by council benefits.

Officers tasked with carrying out these patrols have privately expressed their fury at being diverted away from what they regard as 'proper policing'.

But the Metropolitan Police's counter-terrorism unit fears a far-Right group may be plotting an attack on the fanatic.

Their concerns intensified after a Facebook campaign against the march attracted the support of more than 250,000 Britons and led to threats against Choudary's life. >>> Emily Andrews, Rebecca Camber and Claire Ellicott | Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Vatican Accuses Italians of Racism After Southern Riots

THE TELEGRAPH: The Vatican's newspaper on Tuesday accused Italians of being racist in the wake of riots sparked by tensions between locals and African immigrants in southern Italy.

In an unusually forthright attack, the Holy See's official mouthpiece, L'Osservatore Romano, said the violence of local residents towards the migrant farm labourers had revealed a "mute and savage hatred towards another skin colour that we thought we had overcome".

More than 1,000 Africans had to be evacuated to safety from the town of Rosarno in the southern Calabria region at the weekend after they clashed with local residents.

The violence was sparked by a group of Italians shooting at some of the Africans with air rifles and pellet guns on Thursday. There was another, similar attack on Saturday.

Angry immigrants burned cars and shop windows. Locals retaliated by beating them with bars, trying to run them over and setting up barricades.

In an editorial entitled "Italians and Racism", L'Osservatore Romano said: "For once, the press is not exaggerating... We have never excelled in our sense of openness, we Italians, from the north to the south.

"The American example has been futile: Obama-mania has taken hold from politics to art, from style to language, but has not breached the gap in showing the value of bringing different races together," the paper said. >>> Nick Squires in Rome | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Google Will Quit China Unless Web Censorship Ends

THE TELEGRAPH: Google, the internet search engine, has set itself at odds with the authorities in China by declaring that it will stop censoring search results on its Chinese website.

In a surprise announcement, the group issued a veiled attack at Chinese censors and said it was prepared to shut down its operations there entirely if the authorities do not allow it to create an unfiltered search engine.

The company courted controversy in 2006 when it launched in China but, as a concession to the Communist government, agreed to filter the results available on its website for "inappropriate" content. It does not operate such filters in other major countries. >>> Edmund Conway | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

New Dark Age Alert! Studie: Mehr als 2,3 Milliarden Menschen sind nicht frei

WELT ONLINE: Mehr als die Hälfte der Weltbevölkerung muss auf freie Lebensbedingungen verzichten. Die Organisation Freedom House zählt weltweit nur 89 Staaten, in denen die Menschen frei sind – Tendenz sinkend. Selbst in Europa rügt die "Weltpolizei" mit Hauptsitz in Washington mehrere Länder.

Weltkarte: Welt Online

Freedom House, die namhafte Forschungseinrichtung mit Hauptsitz in Washington D.C., beklagt eine „weltweite Erosion der Freiheit“. Weniger als die Hälfte der Weltbevölkerung lebt unter Bedingungen, die man als „frei“ bezeichnen kann, heißt es im Jahresbericht 2010 der Organisation. Im vierten Jahr in Folge überwiege der Rückgang bürgerlicher Freiheiten den Fortschritt demokratischer Grundrechte – die längste Periode kontinuierlicher Freiheitseinbußen in der fast 40 Jahre langen Geschichte der Bestandsaufnahme.

In 40 Staaten registrierte Freedom House eine Verschlechterung der Lage, vor allem in Afrika, Lateinamerika, im Nahen- und Mittleren Osten sowie in den Staaten der ehemaligen Sowjetunion. Der Iran, Russland, Venezuela und Vietnam – ohnehin schon in der untersten Kategorie geführt – hätten ihre Repressionen noch einmal angezogen. Bahrain, Jordanien, Marokko, Kenia und Kirgistan haben ihre zuletzt positiven Tendenzen nicht mehr halten können und wurden gegenüber dem Report von 2009 heruntergestuft. >>> Von Dietrich Alexander | Dienstag, 12. Januar 2010

Freedom in the World 2010 Survey Release

FREEDOM HOUSE: On January 12, Freedom House released its findings from the latest edition of Freedom in the World, the annual survey of global political rights and civil liberties. According to the survey’s findings, 2009 marked the fourth consecutive year in which global freedom suffered a decline—the longest consecutive period of setbacks for freedom in the nearly 40-year history of the report. >>> Release of Findings, Tuesday, January 12, 2010
In einem fremden Kleid

Eine afghanische Burka. Bild: NZZ Online

NZZ am SONNTAG: Der Schleier ist im Westen Symbol von Fundamentalismus und Unterdrückung der Frau. Die Debatte über ein Verbot ist im Gang. Wie ist es in der Schweiz, eine Burka zu tragen? Ein Tag undercover.

Das Tram ist voll. Sie sitzt am Fenster. Draussen flirren Häuserfassaden vorbei. Der nächste Halt. Leute steigen ein. Einer, Typ Sportlehrer mit Rucksack, steuert den Sitz neben ihr an. Bis er sie sieht. Dann steuert er doch lieber daran vorbei. Ebenso eine feste Dame, die sich mit einem Gehstock durch den Gang schiebt. Obwohl das Tram schon wieder fährt. Sechs Stationen, der Platz neben ihr bleibt frei.

Umsteigen. Sie geht wie eine Greisin, um ihr Ziel sicher zu erreichen: die Tür. Unten auf dem Trottoir herrscht ein geschäftiges Durcheinander von Moonboots, Stiefeln, Lederschuhen. Es ist ziemlich kalt an diesem Morgen. Einen Fuss auf die erste Stufe, den anderen auf die zweite. So weit, so gut. Keine dreissig Sekunden vergehen, dann schreit eine sehr kleine Frau mit einer sehr grossen Sonnenbrille in ihr Gesicht: «Gopfertami!» Was ist passiert? Sie sind zusammengeprallt. Versehentlich.

Einen Tag lang bin ich in Zürich unterwegs, fahre Tram, gehe in den Strassen, kaufe ein, in der Apotheke, der Migros. Nichts Besonderes. Besonders aber ist meine Erscheinung: total verhüllt. Über Thermohosen trage ich einen Rock und über dem Rock eine Burka. Eine afghanische, um genau zu sein: blau, hinten boden-, vorne hüftlang, aus einem synthetischen, bestickten Stoff. Mein Gesicht ist bedeckt. Sogar die Augenpartie, wo sich ein Fliegengitter-artiges Fenster befindet. Ein Kollege hat sie an Kabuls «Chicken Street» gekauft, einem Hippieparadies, vor der Herrschaft der Taliban.

«Salam alaikum»

Eigentlich hätte ich sie daheim ein bisschen tragen wollen. Zur Vorbereitung. Habe ich dann doch immer irgendwie aufgeschoben. Wahrscheinlich weil dieser Fetzen Stoff alles ist, was mir, meiner Kultur, meinem Geschlecht, meiner Generation fremd ist. Freiheit? Gleichberechtigung? Selbstverständlich. Wie das Studieren an der Uni oder das Ausüben eines Berufs, den wir uns aussuchen. Niemand sonst. Schon gar nicht ein Mann. Selbstverwirklichung ist unsere Religion. Vielleicht auch Liebe. Trotzdem oder gerade deshalb will ich wissen: Wie ist es, eine Burka zu tragen? In einer Zeit, in der man sich wieder besonders ängstigt vor islamischem Fundamentalismus. In einem Land, dessen Mehrheit schon allein gegen den Bau von Minaretten stimmt. Das nun darüber debattiert, auch dieses Gewand nicht mehr zu tolerieren. >>> Von Carole Koch | Sonntag, 10. Januar 2010
François Fillon se prononce pour une loi sur la burqa

François Fillon a fait un pas vers Jean-François Copé pour tenter de mettre fin à la cacophonie sur le dossier de la burqa. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Le premier ministre s'est prononcé mardi pour une «résolution ferme» assortie de «textes législatifs et de décisions réglementaires». Il prend à contre pied les cadres de l'UMP qui jugeaient la proposition de loi de Jean-François Copé prématurée.

L'interdiction de la burqa n'en finit plus de faire parler d'elle. Fin décembre, Jean-François Copé avait surpris les députés, notamment dans les rangs de l'UMP, en annonçant le dépôt en janvier d'une proposition de loi interdisant le port du voile dans l'espace public sans attendre les conclusions de la mission parlementaire, prévues pour fin janvier. Mardi, alors que les parlementaires faisaient leur rentrée, le sujet était encore sur toutes les lèvres.

Mardi matin, la majorité des cadres de l'UMP ont d'abord reproché à Jean-François Copé d'avoir agi trop vite. Le secrétaire d'Etat à l'Emploi Laurent Wauquiez a ainsi accusé le député-maire de Meaux de vouloir utiliser le débat pour une «opération d'autopromotion». Le président de l'Assemblée nationale lui-même est intervenu mardi : Bernard Accoyer assure qu'il «serait prématuré de déposer une proposition de loi par un seul groupe politique ou par quelques députés alors qu'il y a possibilité de trouver une solution partagée».

D'autres émettaient des doutes sur la légitimité d'une loi. A l'image de Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet qui a estimé qu'une loi précipitée risque de tomber sous le coup d'une annulation du Conseil constitutionnel». La secrétaire d'Etat a plaidé pour «une résolution adoptée à l'unanimité» contre le port du voile intégral. La résolution parlementaire permet aux députés de s'exprimer solennellement sur une question de leur choix. Mais reste non-contraignante.

Une disposition pas assez contraignante pour François Fillon, qui est venu recadrer la majorité. S'exprimant mardi à huis clos lors de la réunion hebdomadaire des députés UMP, le premier ministre a déclaré que l'interdiction du port du voile intégral devait «passer par une résolution suffisamment ferme pour fixer les principes, ainsi que des textes législatifs et des décisions réglementaires pour appliquer ces principes». «L'objectif, c'est de faire en sorte que la burqa n'ait pas sa place en France», a assuré François Fillon. «Il faut que la mission parlementaire aille à son terme au plus vite, ça n'empêche pas les uns et les autres d'exprimer les positions», a ajouté le premier ministre. L'UMP peine à trouver une unité >>> Jim Jarrassé (lefigaro.fr) | Mardi 12 Janvier 2010
Even My Parents Think I'm Overpaid, Admits RBS Chief Executive

THE GUARDIAN: But Stephen Hester tells MPs that although his bonus package could be worth up to £10m, it is currently worthless as shares in the state-controlled bank have failed to rise

Stephen Hester giving evidence to the Treasury select committee today. Photo: The Guardian

Stephen Hester, chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland, admitted today that his parents believe he is paid too much as he stressed that his bonus package was currently worthless because the bank's shares had failed to rise.

Asked by the Treasury select committee of MPs whether he understood why the government wants to restrict bonuses at the state-controlled bank, Hester replied: "Yes".

He insisted that the bank did not yet know the size of the bonus pot that would be split between its 22,000 investment bankers. Hester also revealed that a "handful" of highly paid bankers would avoid the restriction placed on the bank not to pay cash bonuses to anyone earning more than £39,000 because of legal commitments made to them.

He told the MPs, who are also taking evidence from his counterparts at Lloyds Banking Group and Northern Rock, that his "biggest single business problem" was recruiting people who were concerned about the criticism they might encounter if they work for RBS.

Institutional investors had "raised concerns about our ability to keep and motivate good people".

The bank would not tell staff whether they will get a bonus and how large it would be until the end of February, he said.

The Treasury has a power to veto bonuses at the bank under the terms of insuring £282bn of troubled loans through the asset protection scheme (APS). Hester insisted no board directors have threatened to resign as a result of this restriction and insisted he wanted to pay "the minimum possible while keeping staff engaged".

Of his own pay deal, which is linked to the RBS share price but could be worth almost £10m over three years, Hester said: "If you ask my mother and father about my pay they'd say it was too high as well, so some people close to me have that view of bankers." >>> Jill Treanor | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

THE GUARDIAN – BUSINESS BLOG: Bank pay row reaches a crescendo: Banks are preparing to snub the politicians and begin a bumper bonus round later this week. First they have to brave a few final assaults: Obama's threatened tax in America and the House of Commons Treasury committee >>> Dan Roberts | Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Wootton Bassett Protest Group Islam4UK to Be Banned

THE TELEGRAPH: Islam4UK, the Islamist group which provoked outrage with its plan to march through Wootton Bassett will be banned under counter-terrorism laws, Home Secretary Alan Johnson has announced.

The groups leader Shajjadar Choudhury (2nd from left) arriving at Luton Magistrates Court. Photo: The Telegraph

The order will come into effect on Thursday and make it a criminal offence to be a member, punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

Mr Johnson said the group had tried to escape proscription simply by changing its name.

He said the order would apply to the group's other names, including Al Muhajiroun.

"I have today laid an order which will proscribe Al Muhajiroun, Islam4UK, and a number of the other names the organisation goes by," he said.

"It is already proscribed under two other names - Al Ghurabaa and The Saved Sect. >>> | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Islam4UK Loses the 'Freedom' It Claimed to Despise

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOGS: Islam4UK has been banned. It is now an illegal organisation membership of which is prohibited under anti-terrorisim law. Its spokesman, Anjem Choudary was quick to issue a statement denouncing this move by the Home Secretary as an outrage against democratic freedom – presumably this is the same democratic freedom which his organisation openly professes to loathe. Read further & comment >>> Janet Daley | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Anjem Choudary Discusses the Islamic March That Would Have Taken Place



THE TELEGRAPH: To what extent does Anjem Choudary represent the Muslim population? : Who represents whom within Muslim communities, indeed any community, is contested ground, writes Jamie Bartlett. >>> Jamie Bartlett | Thursday, January 07, 2010
Yemeni Officials Admit They Are Losing the Battle Against al-Qaeda

THE TELEGRAPH: Yemeni officials have admitted they are losing the battle against al-Qaeda and the terror group is extending its reach into remote regions where state control has all but disappeared.

Men claiming to be Al-Qaeda members address a crowd in Yemen's southern province of Abyan. Photo: The Telegraph

Regional politicians have presented a much bleaker prognosis than the authorities in the capital Sana'a, who have repeatedly sought to play down the threat posed by extremists in the wake of the Detroit terror attack.

They say al-Qaeda has forged its strongest relationship with local tribes in the sparsely populated mountains and desert of the south, where long simmering resentment of the government has given way to near-rebellion.

On the outskirts of Zinjibar, the ramshackle principal town of Abyan province, the gates of an ageing villa set deep in a banana plantation are guarded by more than a dozen Yemeni soldiers and policemen.

Sitting inside his heavily protected official residence, Ahmed al-Misri, Abyan's governor, is a gloomy man who frankly admits he regrets ever having taken up the job.

As well he might, Yemen observers say. Along with the provinces of Shabwa and Marib, Mr Misri's fiefdom forms an ungovernable crescent east of Sana'a and Aden, Yemen's main cities, which many commentators have described as "the new Waziristan". >>> Adrian Blomfield in Zinjibar | Monday, January 11, 2010

Wiki: Zinjibar >>>
US Gay Marriage Ban Challenged in Federal Court

Two gay couples are testifying at the trial. Photograph: BBC

BBC: The first US federal court case to determine whether states are allowed to ban same-sex marriages has opened in San Francisco, California.

Any ruling reached is expected to be challenged, possibly taking the case all the way to the US Supreme Court.

A Supreme Court ruling would determine the fate of gay marriages nationwide, without the possibility of appeal.

The suit, filed by two gay couples, challenges Proposition 8 - a ban on gay marriage in the state of California.

The law amended California's constitution to restrict marriage to a union between a man and a woman.

Supporters of the challenge are comparing it to landmark cases which ended segregation in US schools and overturned a ban on interracial marriage, the BBC's Rajesh Mirchandani reports.

They say the Constitution enshrines the right to marry but, by limiting it to heterosexual couples, it discriminates against gay people. >>> | Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Anne Frank Protector Miep Gies Dies Aged 100

THE TELEGRAPH: Miep Gies, the last surviving member of the group who helped Anne Frank and her family hide from the Nazis, has died in the Netherlands. She was 100.

Miep Gies died in a nursing home after suffering a fall before Christmas. Photograph: The Telegraph

Gies and other employees of Anne's father, Otto, smuggled food and books to the Franks as they hid with the van Daan family for two years, from 1942 to 1944, in a secret annex above Frank's business premises in Amsterdam.

Anne's diary, a log of life in hiding, which ended in betrayal, is one of the most enduring records of the Holocaust. Anne was sent to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where she died of typhus.

Mrs Gies found Anne's diary after the family was deported and locked the papers away, handing them over to Otto Frank, the family's sole survivor, after the war. >>> | Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Sarah Palin Signs On as Fox News Commentator

THE TELEGRAPH: Sarah Palin has signed on as a commentator with Fox News, fulfilling predictions that she would pursue a career in television after stepping down as governor of Alaska.

The conservative star will not have her own show, but will contribute to various news programmes and present an occasional series involving ordinary American heroes.

She will therefore have time for other pursuits that will keep her name alive as a potential presidential candidate in 2012, but the move will increase speculation that her future lies outside of electoral politics.

"I am thrilled to be joining the great talent and management team at Fox News," Mrs Palin said in a statement posted on the network's website. "It's wonderful to be part of a place that so values fair and balanced news." >>> Alex Spillius in Washington | Monday, January 11, 2010

LE MONDE: Sarah Palin, nouvelle commentatrice de la chaîne Fox News >>> LEMONDE.FR avec AFP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010
'Islam Is' Not Being Censored by Google

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOGS: It doesn’t take much to get a conspiracy theorist going. Once they’ve found one conspiracy, they start seeing them everywhere. Pretty soon, the tinfoil hat never comes off.

Conspiracy theories about Google are particularly tiresome because they so often come from people who don’t understand how the search engine works. Wondering why your story is no longer in Google News? Perhaps it got too long to be listed – that can happen. There’s usually a sensible explanation but sensible explanations just further infuriate conspiracy nuts. “This cannot be accidental,” they bluster.

Anyway, the latest Google conspiracy posits that the search giant is censoring offensive descriptions of Islam.

It works like this: if you go to the Google homepage and type the words “Christianity is” then Google will suggest possible endings for your query. When I tried it I got “Christianity is ——–”, “Christianity is not a religion” and “Christianity is a lie”, among other things.

The same applies to the other major religions. Except Islam. Type “Islam is” into Google and the great oracle is silent. >>> Shane Richmond | Monday, January 11, 2010
Quakers Call for Legal Recognition of Same Sex Marriages

NEWSMAKER: Australian Quakers, meeting in their annual meeting in Adelaide today, called on the Federal Government to amend the Marriage Act to give full and equal legal recognition to all marriages, regardless of the sexual orientation and gender of the partners.

‘Australian Quakers celebrated our first same sex marriage in 2007 and seeking legal recognition for such unions is consistent with our long held spiritual belief in the equality of all people’, said Lyndsay Farrall, Presiding Clerk of Australia Yearly Meeting.

‘Ongoing discrimination against people on the basis of their sexual orientation and gender under Australian law is a matter of growing disquiet for Quakers’, Lyndsay Farrall said.

Quakers agreed today to practise full marriage equality within Quaker Meetings around Australia, including celebrating the spiritual aspects of same sex weddings, and expressed their hope that the Marriage Act will be amended as soon as possible to allow Quakers to support such couples to full legal recognition. >>> | Monday, January 11, 2010

Monday, January 11, 2010

Great Australian Website

AUSTRALIAN ISLAMIST MONITOR – Objectives: Islam in its current form, as preached, taught and propagated by the mainstream Muslim elites, is incompatible with the existing political system in Australia. This is because Islam in this form is not just a religion but an entire political system, and regulatory force, controlling every aspect of the life of its followers and requiring them to actively secure for Islam the dominant, privileged position.

This is not confined to religious dominance, but most importantly it aims to replace our Australian political system and democratic principles with Islamic ones. Moreover, Muslims living in Australia are instructed by their religious leaders that Islamic law (Sharia) has primacy over Australian law. This process has already begun. There is considerable evidence that (here and elsewhere) Muslim leaders use covert means to achieve their goals by subverting existing democratic processes and procedures. Misleading information is given to our political leaders, the community and religious leaders about Islam's final intent. The involvement of other countries with financial and political support poses an additional threat to our nation.

We at AIM believe that this form of Islam (called Islamism) has become a serious threat to the viability of Australia as a Western Democracy, to our egalitarian values, and our freedom. Furthermore we believe that if this process is not stopped now, Australia will become yet another part of the world suffering chronic violence, intolerance (discrimination against non-Muslims which has its basis in the Qur'an) and declining legal and intellectual freedom. On behalf of Australians who cherish their freedom and democracy, we reject Islamism and Shariah in any form.

We urgently call on truly moderate Muslims to reform Islam, so that it becomes a true, personal religion, not an ideology, and can take its place alongside the peaceful religions which make up our multifaith community. Click over and discover a great site! >>>

Australian Islamist Monitor – Homepage >>>
New York: Metropolitan Museum entfernt Mohammed-Bilder

Mohammed und der Erzengel Gabriel. Persische Miniatur. Bild: Welt Online

WELT ONLINE: Aufregung in New York: Das Metropolitan Museum of Art will einem Medienbericht zufolge Kunstwerke mit Mohammed-Bildern nicht mehr zeigen. Außerdem soll die Abteilung für "Islamische Kunst" umbenannt werden. Ein Islamwissenschaftler von der Yale Universität spricht von einer "Schande".

Das Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York will Kunstwerke mit Mohammed-Bildern nicht mehr zeigen. Außerdem werden diese Bilder wohl auch nicht mehr in der neuen Ausstellung, die 2011 nach der Renovierung des Museums eröffnet werden soll, hängen, berichtet die „New York Post“.

Momentan sind wegen des 50 Millionen Dollar teuren Umbaus des Hauses nur etwa 60 von 60.000 islamischen Kunstwerken im Metropolitan zu sehen. Weil aber konservative Muslime am Abbildungsverbot für ihren Propheten Mohammed festhalten, seien die Kunstwerke „unter Beobachtung“, heißt es. Außerdem habe das Museum angekündigt, seine Abteilung für „Islamische Kunst“ in „Arabische Länder, Türkei, Iran und Zentralasien“ umzubenennen. >>> Von Uta Baier | Montag, 11. Januar 2010

’Jihad’ Jitters at Met

NEW YORK POST: Mohammed art gone

Is the Met afraid of Mohammed?

The Metropolitan Museum of Art quietly pulled images of the Prophet Mohammed from its Islamic collection and may not include them in a renovated exhibition area slated to open in 2011, The Post has learned.

The museum said the controversial images -- objected to by conservative Muslims who say their religion forbids images of their holy founder -- were "under review."

Critics say the Met has a history of dodging criticism and likely wants to escape the kind of outcry that Danish cartoons of Mohammed caused in 2006.

"This is typical of the Met -- trying to avoid any controversy," said a source with inside knowledge of the museum.

The Met currently has about 60 items from its 60,000-piece Islamic collection on temporary display in a corner of its vast second-floor Great Hall while larger galleries are renovated. But its three ancient renderings of Mohammed are not among them. >>> Isabel Vincent | Sunday, January 10, 2010
Europe's Gay Leaders: Out at The Top

TIME: When Iceland installed Johanna Sigurdardottir as Prime Minister last February, newspapers around the globe printed variations of the same headline: ICELAND APPOINTS WORLD'S FIRST GAY LEADER. Everywhere, that is, except Iceland. The Icelandic media didn't mention Sigurdardottir's sexuality for days, and only then to point out that the foreign press had taken an interest in their new head of state — a 67-year-old former flight attendant turned politician whom voters had consistently rated Iceland's most trustworthy politician. Sure, she was gay and had entered a civil partnership with another woman in 2002. But Icelanders hardly seemed to notice. "The media silence echoed the sentiment of the public. Nobody cared about her sexual orientation," says Margret Bjornsdottir, the director of the Institute for Public Administration and Politics at the University of Iceland. "Being gay is a nonissue here. It's considered unremarkable."

Buoyed by liberal attitudes such as those, politicians across Western Europe are stepping out of the closet and into their country's highest political offices. Eleven openly gay men and women now serve in the British Parliament, including two in the Cabinet. Last June, Nicolas Sarkozy appointed Frédéric Mitterrand, a gay television presenter, to the post of Minister of Culture. Paris' Mayor Bertrand Delanoë, tipped by some to contest the 2012 presidential race, is gay. And Guido Westerwelle, chairman of Germany's Free Democratic Party, has just become his country's Foreign Minister, joining a gay élite that includes the mayors of Berlin and Hamburg, Germany's two largest cities. Klaus Wowereit, Berlin's mayor, says coming out ahead of the 2001 mayoral race while under pressure from tabloids strengthened his campaign. "My confession might have contributed to my popularity," he says. "Many people appreciate honesty."

That's a far cry from the climate in most of the U.S., where — despite the recent election of Annise Parker, a gay woman, as mayor of Houston, America's fourth largest city — honesty can still end a gay politician's career. Openly gay politicians such as San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk began winning seats in U.S. cities with large gay populations in the 1970s. Progress has since slowed, says David Rayside, a professor of political science at the University of Toronto. He believes that the relative strength of incumbency in the U.S. creates a barrier to the corridors of power, as does "the strength of religious conservatives." Of the 511,000 elected offices in the U.S. — from local school boards way up to President — openly gay men and women occupy just 450 of them, according to the U.S.-based Victory Fund, an organization that offers financial support to gay political candidates. No openly gay person has ever sat in the Senate, and only three hold seats in the House of Representatives.

The gap between the U.S. and Europe doesn't just exist at the top: 49% of Americans polled by the Pew Research Center in 2007 believed that society should "accept" homosexuality. Contrast that with attitudes in Europe where more than 80% of French, Germans and Spaniards had such a view. Only Catholic and conservative Poles felt as uncomfortable with the idea as Americans. Denis Dison, a spokesman for the Victory Fund, says those attitudes can make it difficult for gay people to campaign — let alone obtain office. "In places where the climate isn't friendly, it's hard for them to even go into a town hall meeting or public forum because they get such nasty questions." The European Difference >>> William Lee Adams | Monday, January 18, 2010
Le pape en remet une couche sur l'homosexualité

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: SOCIÉTÉ | Benoît XVI a dénoncé lundi les lois qui, selon lui, aboutissent à nier la différence entre les sexes. Cette intervention du pape fait suite à l'adoption par le Portugal d'un texte autorisant le mariage homosexuel.

Lors de sa traditionnelle audience de début d'année au corps diplomatique accrédité auprès du Vatican, Benoît XVI a qualifié d'«attaque» envers ce que Dieu a créé, les «lois ou des projets qui, au nom de la lutte contre la discrimination, portent atteinte au fondement biologique de la différence entre les sexes». >>> AFP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010

Pope Slams Gay Marriage as 'Attack' on Creation

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: Pope Benedict XVI has called laws ignoring the difference between the sexes an "attack" on creation just days after Portugal moved to legalise gay marriage.

Creatures, including humans, "can be protected or endangered", the Pope, 82, told the Vatican diplomatic corps in a traditional January address focusing mainly on environmental issues.

"One such attack comes from laws or proposals which, in the name of fighting discrimination, strike at the biological basis of the difference between the sexes," he said, citing "certain countries in Europe or North and South America". >>> AFP | Tuesday, January 12, 2010

LE MONDE: Le pape dénonce les lois qui, selon lui, nient la différence entre les sexes: L ors de sa traditionnelle audience de début d'année au corps diplomatique accrédité auprès du Vatican, Benoît XVI a qualifié, lundi 11 janvier, d'"attaque" envers ce que Dieu a créé, les "lois ou des projets qui, au nom de la lutte contre la discrimination, portent atteinte au fondement biologique de la différence entre les sexes". >>> LEMONDE.FR avec AFP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010
Caricatures de Mahomet: islamiste inculpé de terrorisme

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: DANEMARK | La justice a annoncé lundi l’inculpation pour terrorisme d’un islamiste somalien qui avait tenté de tuer le 1er janvier un auteur de caricatures du prophète Mahomet.

L’homme de 28 ans, soupçonné de liens avec Al-Qaïda, était entré par effraction au domicile du dessinateur Kurt Westergaard à Aarhus, la deuxième ville du pays, à 200km au nord-ouest de Copenhague. >>> AP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010
Le prince saoudien Al-Walid veut bâtir une tour de 1000 mètres

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: RYAD | La course se poursuit dans le Golfe. Alors qu'une tour de 828 mètres vient d'être inaugurée à Dubai, l'Arabie pourrait bien dépasser largement l'émirat...

Le prince milliardaire saoudien Al-Walid ben Talal a annoncé lundi que son groupe, Kingdom Holdings, préparait des investissements dans l’hôtellerie et l’immobilier, y compris une tour d’un kilomètre de haut dans la ville portuaire saoudienne de Jeddah.

Si cette tour voit le jour, elle battra en hauteur la tour Khalifa de Dubaï, haute de 828 m, et qui a été inaugurée le 4 janvier.

Le prince, l’une des plus grosses fortunes du monde, a indiqué avoir transféré 180 millions de ses actions dans Citigroup au Kingdom Holdings, soit 597 millions de dollars, pour financer les nouveaux investissements. >>> AFP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010

France Set on Banning Muslim Niqab in Public

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Sarkozy's party, opposition in unison about need to curb use of ‘prison for women,' but disagree about how to do so without violating constitutional rights

A bruising battle is shaping up in France over whether fully veiled Muslim women should be banned from appearing on the street or in any other public setting, a proposal already endorsed by many of President Nicolas Sarkozy's rightwing allies.

The fight is not over whether the face-covering niqab , or burka , as it is commonly called in France, should be tolerated.

Mr. Sarkozy has said the head-to-toe garment is unwelcome on French soil. The leader of his party bloc in the National Assembly called it a “negation of life in society.” The spokesman for the Socialist opposition condemned it as “a prison for women,” a description only slightly less damning than that of his Communist colleague who termed it “ambulatory prison.”

Five months after setting out to ban the burka , French politicians are with few exceptions divided only over how to go about it without violating constitutional guarantees of freedom of expression.

The Socialists' spokesman, Benoît Hamon, said on Wednesday that while his party opposes the niqab , it has decided that an outright ban would be unenforceable. But a number of leftwing deputies have indicated they will refuse to follow the party line if a ban comes up for a vote.

Several members of Mr. Sarkozy's party have said they plan to introduce a bill to outlaw the wearing of the niqab in the next few days.

Jean-François Copé, the party's parliamentary leader, called the garment a threat by radical Islamists to the nation's security. “Extremists are testing the republic by encouraging a practice they know to be contrary to the essential principles of our country,” he said.

Women wearing the head-to-toe covering, which leaves just a narrow opening for the eyes, are a rare sight in France. The French domestic intelligence agency said late last year it has even counted them, and found precisely 367 niqab-wearers in a country with a Muslim population estimated at close to six million.

Still, the garment has become a red flag, feeding a more generalized unease over the visibility of Islam that has dominated a continuing government-sponsored debate on France's national identity. >>> Susan Sachs | Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Pat Condell: Islam in Europe

Former Muslims United: Nonie Darwish



Former Muslims United >>>
Obama’s New Year Gift to the Saudi King

FRONTPAGE MAGAZINE: Islam is in trouble at the heart of its birthplace, Saudi Arabia, and consequently in other Muslim countries. Muslim leaders and media are desperately trying to regain control both internally and externally. Muslims are starting to openly and defiantly ask questions about their religion and rulers; while the international image of Islam is being tarnished daily with by every act of Islamic terror, hate speech and calls for jihad from the pulpits of mosques. The traditional Muslim call for violence and jihad that Islam got away with for centuries is now under increasing — scrutiny especially after 9/11. Islam is now under the microscope. That is the quagmire of Muslims today. How can they continue teaching their basic religious jihad education but still save Islam’s reputation in a culture where image and honor is everything?

The West is not fully aware of what is happening in the Muslim world today, where taboo topics are being discussed by brave Muslim reformists and former Muslims. There are ground-breaking Arabic TV and internet shows aired inside homes in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Algeria, etc, discussing what ordinary Muslims were never allowed to hear before.

The brilliant Rachid Hmami, a former Muslim-turned-Christian and originally from Morocco, has a show, Suaal Garii ‘Daring Question,’ that is making shock waves across the Middle East. Another equally effective show is that of the brave Coptic priest, Father Zakareya Botros, who was imprisoned in Egypt for proselytizing to Muslims. Father Botros’s show is a huge success in exposing tyranny, contradictions and weaknesses in Islam. Muslims who call in are often shocked by what they hear for the first time about their own religion, yet another proof that the Muslim establishment intentionally spreads misinformation and ignorance about basic Muslim doctrines to Muslims. Many Muslims, even from Saudi Arabia, call in to renounce Islam.

Unprecedented defiance is happening in the heart of the Muslim world. Recently a prominent Egyptian female attorney and human rights advocate, Nagla Al Imam, announced she left Islam and became a Christian and insists that she will remain in Egypt, in defiance of Islamic law condemning her to death. She is now under intense 24-hour security. Islam is in trouble from within.

Both King Abdullah, custodian of the two Holy Mosques of Islam in Mecca and Medina, and the Islamic establishment everywhere, are extremely alarmed by the status of Islam today. Their power to control Muslims, trained for centuries to blind submission, is slipping away. Huge sums of oil money dedicated to rescue Islam’s image, is not enough to do the job.

That is where Obama’s services come to the rescue of King Abdulla. Obama’s bow to the king was no small matter, but of great significance in Muslim culture. It is a Muslim symbol of subjugation and inferiority. >>> Nonie Darwish | Monday, January 11, 2010
France: The Banning of the Burqah



Inside Story: The Burqah in France

Jewish Burqa Trend: The Frumka

Part 1:



Part 2:



JTA: >>> Ami Eden | Friday, February 08, 2008
High Cost of Leaving Ultra-orthodox Judaism

Ultra-orthodox communities often have their own neighbourhoods, away from secular society. Photograph: BBC

BBC: "The kids, that's the highest cost," says Ido Lev, 30, who hasn't seen his two children for five years.

It's hard to imagine the software engineering student, now wearing jeans and a checked shirt, in the black hat and suit of the ultra-orthodox Jew he used to be.

It is seven years since he walked out of his home, cut off his curly side locks in a public toilet and slept in a shopping mall for a week.

Israel's ultra-orthodox Jews, also known as Haredim, make up roughly 10% of the population. Most live their lives in voluntary isolation from the secular world.

Men tend to spend their days studying the Jewish scriptures, which are the primary focus of education for both genders.

Posters on the walls of ultra-orthodox areas pass on community news, as many residents shield themselves from what they see as the secular influence of television and radio.

Images of women are banned, and anyone driving on the Jewish Sabbath is likely to have stones thrown at their car.

Every detail of life is determined by religious observance, says Mr Lev, "even how you put on your shoes". >>> Heather Sharp, BBC News, Jerusalem | Monday, January 11, 2010
Young UK Men 'Tortured' While Held in Yemen

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: LONDON: A group of British Muslims who were detained and allegedly tortured last month while travelling in Yemen say their interrogators demanded detailed information about mosques in London and their associates in Britain.

The three young men and a teenage boy were held for almost five weeks after being dragged off a bus outside the capital, Sana'a, where they had enrolled in an Arabic language institute a few days earlier.

They say that while being held at a prison run by one of the Yemeni Government's intelligence agencies they were beaten, deprived of sleep and forced to watch others being tortured. They allege that they were then ordered to write a list of mosques they attended in London, told to describe those mosques and some of the people who pray there, and instructed to hand over the names and telephone numbers of some of their associates in Britain.

They were released without charge. The men are angry that the British Foreign Office has made no complaint about their alleged mistreatment to Yemeni authorities, although they reported it to Scotland Yard and Foreign Office officials.

They are also angry that the Foreign Office denies any of them had visible injuries when they were visited by a British consular official shortly before their release. >>> Ian Cobain | Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Homosexual Africans Face Prison, Intolerance and the Death Penalty

THE TELEGRAPH: In Africa 38 out of 53 countries have criminalised consensual homosexual sex.

Matuba Mahlatjie is gay, African and married, which is unheard of outside liberal South Africa, because the continent's governments are clamping down on homosexuality.

Gay pride parades, same-sex marriages and the famously gay-friendly city of Cape Town puts South Africa way ahead of countries such as nearby Malawi, where a gay couple was thrown in jail this month for trying to marry.

But scratch the surface and sexual intolerance and hate crimes still riddle the continent's powerhouse.

"We still have hate crimes perpetrated against gay and lesbian people in our communities. The legalisation of same-sex unions did not make our life any easier," said Mahlatjie, who feels gays are still "under siege" in the country.

Across Africa governments are laying down the law against homosexuality and 38 out of 53 countries have criminalised consensual gay sex, in what Human Rights Watch says is a method of "political manipulation".

Uganda has been criticised for the tabling of a bill against the "sinful lifestyle" that would toughen penalties for gays and also punish anyone who "promotes" homosexuality.

In Malawi, where discussing sex is taboo, the attempt by the gay couple to get married was labeled a matter of "gross indecency". A judge is expected to decide next week whether they will face trial. >>> Fran Blandy, in Cape Town for AFP | Monday, January 11, 2010
Nahost: Israel baut Zaun an der Grenze zu Ägypten

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Israel will seine Grenze zu Ägypten befestigen: Ein Zaun soll künftig das Eindringen von Extremisten und illegalen Einwanderern verhindern, kündigte Ministerpräsident Netanjahu an. Damit solle der "jüdische und demokratische Charakter" Israels bewahrt werden.

Jerusalem - Israel will nach den Worten von Ministerpräsident Benjamin Netanjahu entlang der Grenze zu Ägypten eine Grenzbarriere bauen. Damit sollen "Eindringlinge und Terroristen" daran gehindert werden, ins Land zu gelangen. Der "jüdische und demokratische Charakter des Staates Israel" solle so bewahrt werden, sagte der israelische Regierungschef in einer am Sonntag veröffentlichten Erklärung.

Israel stehe zwar weiterhin für Flüchtlinge aus Konfliktgebieten offen, könne es aber nicht zulassen, dass tausende illegale Arbeiter in das Land strömten, so Netanjahu. Die israelische Polizei geht nach eigenen Angaben davon aus, dass jede Woche 100 bis 200 illegale Arbeitssuchende, Flüchtlinge und "Kriminelle" die israelisch-ägyptische Grenze passieren. Entlang des Grenzzauns sollen auch Bewegungsmelder angebracht werden. >>> anr/dpa/Reuters | Montag, 11. Januar 2010
Al-Qaida menace de tuer un otage français au Mali

Pierre Camatte (à droite sur la photo) a été enlevé au Mali le 27 novembre dernier. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: La branche de l'organisation terroriste au Maghreb islamique affirme qu'elle exécutera Pierre Camatte, capturé le 27 novembre dernier, si quatre de ses prisonniers au Mali ne sont pas libérés sous 20 jours.

Al-Qaida au Maghreb islamique (Aqmi) a dévoilé ses revendications dans l'affaire Pierre Camatte. Le groupement terroriste menace d'exécuter l'otage français enlevé fin novembre, si quatre de ses prisonniers au Mali ne sont pas libérés sous vingt jours, ont affirmé lundi les centres américains de surveillance des sites islamistes, SITE et Intelcenter.

Pierre Camatte a été kidnappé le 27 novembre dernier, en pleine nuit, dans un hôtel de Ménaka, au Mali. Agé de 61 ans, le ressortissant français préside notamment l'association «Gérardmer-Tidarmene». Il se rendait «régulièrement» au Mali où il s'impliquait dans la culture d'une plante thérapeutique contre le paludisme.

En décembre, l'Aqmi avait revendiqué son enlèvement, de même que celui de trois autres humanitaires espagnols, enlevés quatre jours plus tard en Mauritanie, un pays frontalier du Mali. Un «risque sérieux d'enlèvement» au Mali >>> M.B. (lefigaro.fr) avec AFP | Lundi 11 Janvier 2010
China's First Gay Pageant Gives Glimpse of New Acceptance

THE GUARDIAN: Contest aims to boost community's confidence in country where homosexuality was classed as illness until 2001

Contestants in China's first gay pageant, to be held in Beijing this week. The winner will compete for the title of Worldwide Mr Gay in Norway. Photograph: The Guardian

There's a swimwear round and a talent section where contestants can show off their singing and dancing. But organisers insist the contest to be held this Friday is a serious business. It is China's first gay pageant.

The event is a striking sign of how far attitudes in China have changed and of gay people's increasing confidence. Gay sex was illegal until 1997. Homosexuality was classed as a mental illness for four years after that. Now an emerging gay community is busting stereotypes.

"We are intelligent, we're professionals, we're gorgeous – and we're gay," said contestant Emilio Liu, from Inner Mongolia. "I want the audience to know there are a whole bunch of people like us living in China. It's a wonderful life and it's not hidden any more."

These days there are gay support groups and websites helping people to explore their sexuality and meet potential partners. There are gay venues in most major cities; last year, the first government-backed bar opened in Kunming, in south-western Yunnan. Shanghai held the first Gay Pride week and in Beijing, campaigners called for same-sex marriages.

Now comes Mr Gay China, reported in approving terms in English-language state media. Eight finalists will take to the stage of a Beijing nightclub to strut their stuff in casual clothes and swimwear, exhibit their talents and answer questions. The winner – picked for his ability to represent gay issues as well as his skills, personality and looks – will head to Norway for next month's finals of Worldwide Mr Gay. >>> Tania Branigan in Beijing | Sunday, January 10, 2010
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: Licentiousness Breeds Extremism

THE INDEPENDENT: The collapse of all restraint in society is pushing some Muslims to the edge of reason

Last week I once again condemned the burkha and will do so till the end of my days. By that time, with the unstoppable rise and rise of Wahhabi Islam, they will probably have incarcerated me in black polyester and turned off my voice.

I unconditionally hate fanatical proselytisers – male and female – what they do to my faith and the faithful. The way they ban pleasures and progress, fill young minds with strictures to paralyse the will and suppress god-given desires in lands of freedom and autonomy. Their inner lives are stormy, psychological dramas which turn dangerously unstable. Some of the resulting turmoil and sexual unrest may be swelling the seething brain of the next terrorist manqué.

On blogs now thought to be written by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian accused of trying to blow up a plane over Detroit, you are given the impression from news reports that he was a lonely boy, unhappy with his peers who drank and partied. At university he apparently cut himself off, tried to hold on to Islamic Puritanism in a country of no shame, no restraint. Millions of Britons of all backgrounds are alarmed by the dissipation and debauchery that now defines Britain.

For Umar Farouk and many other Muslim men like him, living in such a landscape is literally intolerable. He confesses that he does try to lower his gaze in front of females, wonders if he should get married because he is getting too aroused. You could make a movie, a Taxi Driver for our times, about just such an anti-hero, the hormonal male who is expected to live a life of total abstinence in the middle of licentiousness.

The Pakistani journalist Maruf Khwaja describes this inner chaos in an Open Democracy blog. In some homes they cannot watch television, listen to music, dance or indulge in anything pleasurable: "[Muslims] want to do what their secular friends do, have nights out, go clubbing, have boyfriends and girlfriends. Many are depressed by social isolation and attempt to escape by leaving parents and Islamic legacies behind."

Others, like Asif, revert. He says he had a contact list full of willing white women whom he chatted up to "get into their knickers" and now that he is a good Muslim, he talks to covered-up ladies and can "really communicate with them". The saintly Muslim female has desexualised herself, protects herself in the polluted land she lives in full of mad, bad and dangerous sinners.

Women who are not coerced but choose to cover themselves are expressing that revulsion and fear of contamination. Their solutions are as bad as the problems they are trying to escape, sometimes worse. Sexual abuse, rape and forced homosexuality remain the dirty secrets of British Muslim communities, kept under wraps as it were, while they flap around proclamations of purity.

I cannot stand these false virtues and self-reverential pieties nor am I pleading on behalf of screwed-up men who would murder us naming Allah. I am saying that the collapse of all restraint in our societies is breeding sicknesses and madness, and may be pushing some Muslims to the edge of reason. >>> Yasmin Alibhai-Brown | Monday, January 11, 2010

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Love in Saudi Arabia

Saudi Professor Calls for "Positive Hatred" of Christians

Ravi Zacharias: Compulsion in Religion and the Freedom to Disbelieve



Is the Koran Absolute?

What Bill Clinton Allegedly Told Ted Kennedy about Obama: ‘A Few years Ago He Would Have Been Getting Us Coffee’

Controversy: Senator Harry Reid (left) and former US President Bill Clinton have come under fire for comments they are said to have made about Barack Obama. Photographs: Mail Online

MAIL ONLINE: Bill Clinton was at the centre of a race storm last night after he was accused of denigrating Barack Obama.

The former president allegedly claimed during the hard-fought Democratic primary race: ‘A few years ago, this guy would have been getting us coffee.’

He is said to have made the racist remark in a phone call entreating Senator Teddy Kennedy, the party’s vastly influential elder statesman, to endorse his wife, Hillary, in the delicately balanced 2008 nomination battle.

But the call so offended Senator Kennedy that it backfired and helped make up the veteran Washington power broker’s mind to throw his complete support behind Mr Obama’s historic bid for the White House, according to a new book.

Mr Clinton was once lauded by African-American admirers as America’s ‘first black president'.

But the ‘coffee’ controversy has opened old wounds from the campaign trail when Mr Clinton was accused of being racially dismissive about the underdog who went on to derail his wife’s White House dreams.

At the time, Mr Clinton scorned Mr Obama’s primary election victory in South Carolina, noting that Jesse Jackson had also carried the state in his failed presidential bid two decades earlier.

The former two-term president angrily denounced critics who suggested the comments were racially motivated and still seethes about the rumpus it caused to this day.

Last night, he was unavailable for comment about the new claim, which is featured in a new book about the presidential election called ‘Game Change.’ >>> David Gardner | Sunday, January 10, 2010

BBC: Harry Reid apologises for 'light-skinned' Obama remarks: The US Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, has apologised for private comments he made about Barack Obama before the 2008 presidential election. >>> | Sunday, January 10, 2010
FPÖ-Neujahrstreffen: "Wir wollen mächtig sein"

DIE PRESSE: HC Strache will in Wien und auf Bundesebene auf längere Sicht zur Nummer eins werden. Bürgermeister Häupl sei rücktrittsreif. Nicht nur die Gegner der Wien-Wahl waren die Zielscheiben der zweistündigen Ansprache.

Heinz-Christian Strache. Bild: Die Presse

Mit einem zünftigen Frühschoppen in der blau ausgeleuchteten Wiener Messehalle hat am Sonntag das Neujahrstreffen der FPÖ begonnen. Rund 2000 freiheitliche Sympathisanten waren erschienen, um der Rede von Parteichef Heinz-Christian Strache zu lauschen. Der hat seine Anhänger nicht enttäuscht und zu einem Rundumschlag gegen den politischen Gegner auf Bundes- und Landesebene ausgeholt. "Wir wollen mächtig sein", lautete die Ansage, mit der die blauen Funktionäre auf den Wahlreigen 2010 eingestimmt wurden. Der Schwerpunkt der gut zweistündigen Rede lag natürlich auf der Wien-Wahl, den amtierenden Bürgermeister Michael Häupl (SPÖ) bezeichnete Strache als "rücktrittsreif".

"Ich will nicht nur dritte Kraft in Österreich bleiben, ich will, dass die Freiheitliche Partei in Österreich einmal zweite und auch erste Kraft wird", setzte sich Strache die Latte gewohnt hoch. Vor allem Wien, wo der FPÖ-Chef das Rathaus erobern will, war der Großteil der Ansprache gewidmet. Häupl sei "gescheitert an all dem, was er als Bürgermeister angegriffen hat", viele Wiener hätten "die Schnauze voll". Daran könne auch die geplante Volksbefragung nichts ändern. Im Gemeindebau habe man der Wiener SPÖ längst den Rücken gekehrt. Strache: "Herr Bürgermeister Häupl, genieren Sie sich für Ihre Leistungsbilanz, sie sind in Wirklichkeit rücktrittsreif."

Auch das Ausländerthema ließ Strache nicht aus, in gewissen Bezirken seien die Wiener zur Minderheit geworden, betonte er: "Ich will Wien wieder zu einer Weltstadt und nicht zu einer Allerweltsstadt machen." Bei der Vergabe von Gemeindebauwohnungen müssten Staatsbürger wieder bevorzugt werden, in Schulklassen dürfe es nicht mehr als 20 bis 30 Prozent an Migranten geben. Vor dem FPÖ-Chef brauche sich niemand zu fürchten, "außer ein paar rote Bonzen und ein paar Kriminelle, denen wir ordentlich einheizen werden". >>> Ag. | Sonntag, 10. Januar 2010
Hong Kong sous le choc après une série d'attaques à l'acide

La dernière attaque s'était déroulée dans le quartier très fréquenté de Causeway Bay Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Trente personnes, dont des touristes, ont été blessées samedi dans un quartier commerçant de la ville. La sixième attaque de ce genre en seulement un an. Un suspect a été interpellé.

Trente personnes, dont des touristes étrangers, ont été blessées samedi à Hong Kong au cours d'une nouvelle attaque à l'acide, la sixième en un an, a indiqué la radio publique RTHK. Dix-neuf hommes et onze femmes ont été hospitalisés. Parmi eux figurent neuf touristes et un enfant de sept ans.

La police a précisé qu'une bouteille d'un liquide corrosif avait été jetée au beau milieu d'un marché nocturne de Yau Ma Tei, un quartier commerçant animé de la cité, qui compte marchands ambulants, diseurs de bonne aventure et discothèques. Un suspect a été interpellé dimanche et placé en détention. L'homme, un Chinois d'une trentaine d'années, a été arrêté après avoir été repéré sur le toit d'un immeuble proche du lieu où s'est produit le méfait.

Depuis fin 2008, la plupart de ces attaques ont été commises dans des quartiers commerçants. Le dernière en date remontait jusqu'ici au 12 décembre : de l'acide avait été lancé depuis un toit d'immeuble à Causeway Bay, faisant six blessés, dont deux graves. 100 personnes blessées au total >>> F.G. (lefigaro.fr) avec AFP | Dimanche 10 Janvier 2010
Iran und Saudi-Arabien: Stellvertreterkrieg im Jemen

ZEIT ONLINE: Die Regierung in Sanaa kämpft gegen schiitische Rebellen. Beide Kriegsparteien werden aus dem Ausland unterstützt, von Saudi-Arabien und Iran.

Saudische Soldaten rücken zur jemenitischen Grenze vor. Bild: Zeit Online

Die Kampfjets ließen den Rebellen keine Chance. Sie bombardierten die Stellungen der schiitischen Aufständischen im Jemen und töteten zahlreiche Kämpfer und Anhänger der Huthi-Miliz. Die Flugzeuge kämpfen für die jemenitische Regierung, das Kriegsgerät gehört aber der saudischen Armee. Das mächtige Nachbarland des Jemen unterstützt das sunnitische Regime in der Hauptstadt. Die schiitischen Rebellen sollen dagegen Waffen und Geld aus Iran erhalten.

Der Bürgerkrieg in der Provinz Saada im Jemen hat sich längst zu einem Stellvertreterkrieg der beiden Regionalmächte Iran und Saudi-Arabien entwickelt. Die Rivalen werfen sich gegenseitig vor, die jemenitischen Konfliktparteien aufzurüsten und sich in die inneren Angelegenheiten des Landes einzumischen. Riad beschuldigt Teheran, im Jemen eine zweite Hisbollah aufzubauen und den Terrorismus zu fördern. Iran warnt Saudi-Arabien, sich nicht weiter in den Bürgerkrieg einzumischen. >>> Von Hauke Friederichs | Donnerstag, 07. Januar 2010
Deutschland – Tief “Daisy”: Der Norden kämpft gegen Schnee und Sturm

WELT ONLINE: Das Sturmtief "Daisy" hat mit meterhohen Schneeverwehungen den Verkehr im Nordosten Deutschlands fast völlig lahmgelegt. Autos blieben in Schneewehen stecken, Helfer kämpfen verzweifelt gegen Deichbrüche. Besonders schlimm traf es die Ostsee-Insel Fehmarn.

Sturm "Daisy" fegte über Deutschland: Auf der A 20 in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern hat heftiges Schneetreiben einen Lkw zum Stehen gebracht. Bild: Welt Online

Tief „Daisy“ ist über die Ostseeküste gefegt und hat in Schleswig-Holstein zu teils katastrophalen Verhältnissen geführt. Besonders betroffen waren die Ostseeküste und der Südosten. Auf mehreren Bahnstrecken musste der Verkehr zeitweise eingestellt werden. Das öffentliche Leben der Ostseeinsel Fehmarn war praktisch lahmgelegt, wie der Chef des für den Winterdienst zuständigen Inselbauhofs, Timo Jaedke, berichtete. Die Lage auf der Insel blieb am Abend weiter angespannt.

"Neunzig Prozent der Insel Fehmarn sind dicht. Wir haben überall Verwehungen, es passiert gar nichts mehr“, sagte Jaedke. Bis zum Nachmittag waren zwar einige der 35 Inselorte wieder erreichbar. Rund die Hälfte bleiben voraussichtlich auch über Nacht von der Außenwelt abgeschnitten und werden erst im Verlauf des Montags wieder erreichbar sein. >>> ddp |Sonntag, 10. Januar 2010

Winterwunderland. Bild: Welt Online

ZEIT ONLINE: Sturmtief “Daisy” – Deutschland versink im Schnee: Noch immer sorgt Tief "Daisy" für Chaos: Besonders Norddeutschland leidet unter den ungewöhnlichen Schneemassen. Am Frankfurter Flughafen saßen Tausende Pass[ag]iere fest. >>> Zeit Online, dpa, Reuters | Sonntag, 10. Januar 2010

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Vague de froid en Europe, l'Allemagne paralysée par la neige : HIVERNAL | Avions cloués au sol, axes routiers bloqués: l'Europe continuait dimanche à subir une vague de froid polaire accompagnée de chutes de neige. Le nord de l'Allemagne a été particulièrement touché. >>> ATS | Dimanche 10 Janvier 2010
Violences racistes en Italie

leJDD.fr: Après trois jours de violences, Rosarno, petite ville de Calabre, a retrouvé son calme. Les ouvriers agricoles africains, victimes d'une véritable "chasse à l'homme" initiée par la population locale, ont fui la ville. Le pape Benoit XVI a appelé dimanche à plus de tolérance envers les immigrés.

Victimes de violences, des centaines d'ouvriers agricoles immigrés ont fui le sud de l'Italie et un calme précaire est revenu dans la ville de Rosarno (Calabre). Après trois jours de heurts, les autorités italiennes ont déclaré dimanche que les habitations de fortune des immigrés seraient détruites et le reste des occupants évacués vers le nord du pays. Les violences ont fait une cinquantaine de blessés.

Le ministre de l'Intérieur, Roberto Maroni - qui appartient à la Ligue du Nord, un mouvement d'extrême-droite - a tenu à féliciter dimanche les autorités qui ont "brillamment résolu le problème d'ordre public" ainsi que la police qui a œuvré de "façon exemplaire". Mais cette prise de position n'est pas du goût de tous. L'opposition accuse le gouvernement de Silvio Berlusconi d'alimenter la xénophobie ambiante. Un journal italien va même jusqu'à parler de "nettoyage ethnique". Parallèlement, beaucoup accusent le président du Conseil italien de laisser faire, estimant qu'il a besoin du soutien de la Ligue du Nord, membre du gouvernement de coalition qu'il dirige.

Selon des organisations de défense des droits de l'Homme, les immigrés seraient en fait exploités par la Ndrangheta, la mafia calabraise, la plus puissante du pays. "L'Etat n'existe pas en Calabre. C'est la Ndrangheta qui régule les relations sociales", affirme de son côté le chef de l'Union des chrétiens démocrates d'opposition, Pierferdinando Casini. Quelque 8000 immigrants clandestins sont employés illégalement en Calabre méridionale. Travaillant à la cueillette des agrumes, ils s'entassent dans des entrepôts désaffectés, sans eau courante, ni électricité. Tirs au fusil à air comprimé >>> Anne-Charlotte Dusseaulx, leJDD.fr | Dimanche 10 Janvier 2010
At War with Radical Islam: It’s Time to Connect the Dots

AISH.COM: The past year has seen a serious and alarming increase of violent extremist activities throughout the United States. Contrary to what some in the media would have you think, this clear and present danger is not coming from the radical "right" or the liberal "left." It is coming from Muslim terrorists whose activities are frightening and well-documented.

Authoritative Islam is a radical theo-political ideology that openly aims to kill Jews, Christians and other non-believers who do not convert or submit to Islam. This threat should be the primary concern of leaders and citizens alike. Unfortunately, we are living in a country where political correctness has trumped all security threats. Therefore, how can we aggressively fight our enemy, when some of us refuse to even identify them as such?

So the question that begs to be answered is: Is America at war with radical Islam and those who seek to carry out its doctrine?

To help answer that question, take a closer look at some of the recent jihadi activities that have been glossed over and labeled as isolated occurrences. >>> Lori Averick | Sunday, January 10, 2010

Watch video clip: The Third Jihad: Radical Islam’s Vision for America >>>