Friday, May 21, 2010

Finanzkrise: Bundestag billigt Euro-Rettungspaket

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Nach einer turbulenten Sitzung hat der Bundestag mit knapper Mehrheit den milliardenschweren Bürgschaften für Euro-Länder in der Krise zugestimmt. 319 Abgeordnete votierten für das Gesetz - sieben mehr als notwendig. Die Opposition kritisierte das Schnellverfahren heftig.

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Kanzlerin und Vizekanzler am Freitag auf der Regierungsbank. Bild: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung

Der Bundestag hat den deutschen Anteil am Rettungspaket für den Euro gebilligt. Die von Kanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU) erhoffte breite Zustimmung kam aber nicht zustande. Der deutsche Anteil an dem 750-Milliarden-Euro-Schutzschirm umfasst Kreditgarantien von bis zu 148 Milliarden Euro. Für das Gesetz zur Euro-Stabilisierung stimmten am Freitag in einer turbulenten Sitzung 319 Abgeordnete. Es gab 73 Nein-Stimmen, 195 Parlamentarier enthielten sich. >>> Faz.net mit dpa | Freitag, 21. Mai 2010
Le voile intégral embarrasse 
la classe politique égyptienne

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Très rare en Égypte il y a une dizaine d'années, au moins en milieu urbain, le voile intégral est désormais omniprésent jusque dans les rues des quartiers huppés du Caire. Photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Selon une étude publiée par la presse, le voile intégral serait porté par 17% des femmes.

Elle était étudiante, et rien n'y faisait. Ni la fureur du doyen de l'université, qui lui arrachait sa voilette quand il la croisait, ni la désapprobation de son père, qui, bien que très conservateur, ne voulait pas que sa fille porte un niqab. Nadia el-Awady y tenait. «Les jeunes sont en quête d'idéal. Le mien, à l'époque, c'était d'être proche de Dieu, et pour moi, cela signifiait se couvrir le visage comme les femmes du Prophète. C'était mon choix. Une phase de ma vie.» Une phase révolue. Dans son appartement proche des Pyramides, la tête aujourd'hui couverte d'un simple foulard clair, Nadia sourit : d'abord médecin, puis devenue journaliste scienti­fique, elle n'a pas, dit-elle, la moindre intention de remettre le niqab qu'elle a porté pendant huit ans. >>> Par Tangi Sala | Jeudi 20 Mai 2010

David Cameron and Angela Merkel to Clash Over EU Treaty Call

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron and Angela Merkel will today clash over Germany’s call for a new European Union treaty to tackle the euro crisis.

On his first foreign trip, the Prime Minister meets the German Chancellor for talks that diplomats have suggested will be “chilly or even frosty”.

Cameron will warn Merkel that he has promised Britons a referendum on a new EU treaty.

Chancellor Merkel has insisted that all European countries must give up sovereignty to give the EU new economic powers to prevent another Greek and euro zone crisis.

She has previously expressed anger at Mr Cameron, before he became Britain’s leader, over his opposition to the Lisbon Treaty.

A Conservative decision last year to break away from her Christian Democrats and other pro-EU centre parties to form a eurosceptic group in the European Parliament also angered her.

At the same time as Mr Cameron is in Berlin, George Osborne is in Brussels for a meeting of Europe’s finance ministers charde by Herman Van Rompuy, the EU President.

At the meeting, Germany will formally propose changes to the existing Lisbon Treaty in a move towards “economic government.” >>> Bruno Waterfield, Berlin | Friday, May 21, 2010
Gold Bulls Claim Price Could Double to $3,000 in Five Years

THE TELEGRAPH: Fears that American, British and other governments intend to inflate their way off the rocks of excessive debt prompted record inflows into gold this week.



Now some fund managers claim the price could more than double to $3,000 (£2,080) per ounce within five years.

Heavily indebted governments throughout the developed world are struggling to fill deficits of black-hole dimensions in public finances by imposing spending cuts and tax rises. Both are expected in Britain's emergency Budget on June 22 and neither will be popular.

But keeping interest rates lower than inflation and letting the currency take the strain is another way to reduce the real value of debt. You can see why politicians may feel that is the ''least worst'' option.

Stealthily robbing savers by eroding the purchasing power of money is less likely to cause riots in the streets than spending cuts, because inflation tends to hit older people hardest while unemployment hits the young.

Governments can devalue their own currencies, but it is harder for them to make more gold. That fact helped prompt record inflows of $484m (£336m) into gold exchange-traded commodities this week, while gold trading volumes peaked at $2.1bn (£1.45bn). Read on and comment >>> Ian Cowie | Thursday, May 20, 2010
City Fears of 'Great Depression Mark II'

THE TELEGRAPH: Leading City experts have started raising the prospect of "Great Depression II" amid worries that the European economic crisis could trigger a deeper bout of chaos.

Markets on both sides of the Atlantic dipped to fresh lows as fears surrounding the fate of the euro project transmuted into worries about the wider global economic system.

Bill Gross of bond fund Pimco said that hedge funds were starting to liquidate their positions in a bid to preserve their capital – a worrying "mini relapse" towards 2008 territory.

Andrew Roberts, head of European rates strategy at RBS, said "Great Depression II" could now be approaching, adding: "It now has potential to speed toward its conclusion; a European $1trn package which does little and political panic tells you we are about to reach the end of the road. The world should be discussing deflation, not inflation." Read on and comment >>> Edmund Conway, Economics Editor | Friday, May 21, 2010
Home Secretary Makes Gay Adoption U-Turn

SKY NEWS: Theresa May, the Home Secretary and Equalities Minister, has changed her mind on gay adoption amid criticism of her voting record.

Mrs May faced accusations that she was unsuitable for the job because she voted against allowing gay couples to adopt children in 2002.

Two years before that, she opposed the repeal of Section 28, a law which banned the "promotion" of homosexuality in schools.

But more recently she backed civil partnerships and called for tougher action on homophobic bullying.

Questioned by the BBC over her voting record on gay adoption, Mrs May said: "I have changed my mind." >>> Sky News | Friday, May 21, 2010
Google TV Launched

THE TELEGRAPH: Google has launched 'smart' TV, a service that unites surfing on the internet with surfing TV channels.



The technology company has joined forces Sony Corp., Intel Corp. and Logitech International.

Google wants to turn televisions into giant monitors for internet browsing so it can make more money selling ads. The company generated nearly $24 billion in revenue last year, mostly from internet ads displayed on computer screens.

Although Google began selling ads for regular television programming three years ago, analysts say that has yielded paltry dividends so far.

"I think this is going to be the biggest improvement to television since colour," Intel CEO Paul Otellini said. >>> | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Historic Wall Street Overhaul Passed by US Senate

TIMES ONLINE: The US Senate has passed legislation that will usher in the biggest overhaul of Wall Street since the Great Depression, fulfilling President Barack Obama’s vow to toughen regulation of the financial sector following the credit crisis.

The Senate voted 59 to 39 to pass the 1,500-page Restoring American Financial Stability Act overnight, after months of argument between Democrats and Republicans over President Obama’s reform proposals.

The House of Representatives passed its own bill based on the President’s ideas last December. Now lawmakers from both branches of Congress must meld the two bills into one piece of legislation.

The Senate’s yes-vote is a significant achievement for President Obama, who made reforming America’s financial regulatory system one of his key domestic priorities. Since passing his historic healthcare reform bill in March, the President has thrown much of his energy into urging Republicans and Wall Street to support the changes, which attempt to plug the holes in America's patchwork of financial monitoring. Read on and comment >>> Christine Seib, New York | Friday, May 21, 2010

NZZ ONLINE: Der US-Senat verabschiedet Obamas Finanzreform: Mehr Kontrolle über die Banken und besserer Schutz für Konsumenten >>> sda/dpa/afp | Freitag, 21. Mai 2010

LE MONDE: La réforme de Wall Street adoptée par le Sénat américain >>> LeMonde.fr avec AFP et Reuters | Vendredi 21 Mai 2010
Benedict Brogan: Discarded Policies Are the Price of Coalition

THE TELEGRAPH: Telegraph View: Will there be a coherent policy approach, or a hotchpotch of ideas with no real consistency or theme?

The publication yesterday of the agreed programme for the coalition Government resembled the launch of an election manifesto. The document certainly has the feel of one, with its mix of firm pledges, half-promises and vague aspirations. Not until the ideas begin to take legislative form in next week's Queen's Speech will we see what the true priorities are, and whether the give and take necessitated by the negotiations has produced a marriage of convenience, or of principle – will there be a coherent policy approach, or a hotchpotch of ideas with no real consistency or theme? Read on and comment >>> Benedict Brogan | Thursday, May 20, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron Drops More Tory Pledges As He Hails Coalition Deal >>> James Kirkup, Political Correspondent | Thursday, May 20, 2010

New Dark Age Alert! Outrage as Gay Pair Are Sentenced to 14 Years’ Hard Labour in Malawi

TIMES ONLINE: Two homosexual men have been sentenced to 14 years in prison with hard labour in Malawi for gross indecency and unnatural acts.

In a ruling that provoked international condemnation, Judge Nyakwawa Usiwa-Usiwa told the men, who were arrested after a public engagement ceremony, that he wanted to protect the public from “people like you”.

Steven Monjeza, 26, and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, 20, who have been in jail since December, were then driven away from the packed courthouse in the old colonial capital of Blantyre, jeered by a large crowd.

The British Government, Malawi’s largest donor, expressed “dismay” at the sentences, but has not withdrawn aid estimated at about £80 million a year. The US State Department said the verdict was “a step backwards in the protection of human rights in Malawi”.

The judge told the pair: “I will give you a scaring sentence so that the public will be protected from people like you, so that we are not tempted to emulate this horrendous example.”

The judge said the pair — whom he convicted on Tuesday — had shown no remorse. “We are sitting here to represent the Malawi society, which I do not believe is ready at this point in time to see its sons getting married to other sons, or conducting engagement ceremonies,” he said. >>> Jonathan Clayton | Friday, May 21, 2010

Related articles here

Thursday, May 20, 2010

David Cameron Drops More Tory Pledges As He Hails Coalition Deal

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron has hailed his final coalition deal with Nick Clegg, but conceded more Conservative pledges have been “discarded” to satisfy the Liberal Democrats.



The Prime Minister and his Lib Dem deputy have unveiled a 32-page document setting out the details of the shared policy agenda they will follow in government.

The document, entitled “The Coalition: our programme for government” was described by both men as a historic achievement blending their parties’ policies.

However, on several major issues, the partners have effectively deferred a final decision, promising only to establish independent commissions and reviews to consider the issue. >>> James Kirkup, Political Correspondent | Thursday, May 20, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: Coalition plan for government: a policy-by-policy guide: David Cameron and Nick Clegg have launched their coalition programme for government. Here's a breakdown of the key policies promises ageed [sic] by the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats. >>> Heidi Blake | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Labour Party: Diane Abbott Enters Leadership Race

Andrew Gilligan – Islamic Fundamentalism in London: The Threat Is Not Over

TELEGRAPH BLOGS: Rather humblingly, some of the local Bengalis who have campaigned against the fundamentalist Islamic Forum of Europe in Tower Hamlets gave me a thankyou lunch today. As I said to them, and not in any kind of faux-modest way, it is we who should be thanking them for putting their heads above the parapet in the Telegraph and my recent Channel 4 Dispatches film about the IFE.

They are extremely pleased about the election results, which saw the Islamists and their supporters comprehensively crushed. We discussed our next steps, some of which you will soon be hearing about here. In the meantime, you might be interested in this article the Guardian asked me to write, and particularly the cautionary note at the end.

As I say in the Guardian piece, “the danger in Tower Hamlets is not over. The IFE did win one victory this month – in its campaign for a directly-elected Tower Hamlets mayor, which was approved by a referendum held on polling day. The election for the new post will take place later this year. Read on and comment >>> Andrew Gilligan | Thursday, May 20, 2010

Buy The Dawning of a New Dark Age here and here and look inside it on Amazon too. Don't say you haven't been warned of the dangers that lie ahead! – Mark
Iranian Filmmaker Makes Cannes Headlines

UK Films Test Religious Boundaries

Pakistan Blocks Facebook

Bangkok Clean-up Begins Amid Curfews

Miss USA: The Arab View



Related article and videos here
Pakistan Bans YouTube, Facebook in Crackdown on 'Draw Muhammad Day'

Muslim Sensitivity Training

May 20th, 2010 Everybody Draw Mohammed Day

Cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad courtesy of Google Images

Pakistan Blocks YouTube in ‘Sacrilege’ Row

TIMES ONLINE: Pakistan blocked access to YouTube today because of “growing sacrilegious content” on the video-sharing website. It is the latest twist in an escalating international row over Islam and freedom of speech online.

The move came a day after the Pakistani Government responded to a court order by temporarily blocking Facebook over a page advertising a contest to draw cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad.

The Everyone Draw Muhammad Day page and several spin-offs invite users to send in caricatures of the Prophet today – infuriating many Muslims who regard any image of him as blasphemous.

The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority did not say specifically which material on YouTube was deemed sacrilegious, but there are several clips relating to Everyone Draw Muhammad Day. >>> Jeremy Page, South Asia Correspondent | Thursday, May 20, 2010

My Name Is Clive, and I Used to Be an Organoholic . . . But I'm All Right Now

THE TELEGRAPH: After years of chemical-free eating, Clive Aslet admits that he has given up organic produce in favour of cheaper, local and even (whisper it) intensively reared food.

Oh dear, what a world we live in. I don't know what to make of it. Just as I am getting used to a (partially) Tory government declaring war on the middle classes with its proposal to increase capital-gains tax, along comes disturbing evidence that a cherished totem of the better sort of shopper may be toppled. It is not the government that is doing the toppling this time, but birds. Researchers from Newcastle University have found that, given a choice, our feathered friends will reject organic bird seed in favour of the conventional equivalent. They're not fools (the birds, that is). Their beady eyes have spotted that conventional grains contain 10 per cent more protein. Whisper it: organic is not all it's cracked up to be. Read on and comment >>> Clive Aslet | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Thailand Extends Curfew As Hardline Protesters Fight On

THE TELEGRAPH: Thailand has imposed three more days of curfew in Bangkok and 23 other provinces as the military extended its operations to crush an anti-government protest movement.



One day after the army moved into the Red Shirt protestor encampment in the centre of the capital, sparking a night of violence in which 35 buildings were torched, residents of Bangkok were struggling to regain some sort of normality.

But the extension of the first curfew in 18 years was a sign that the chaos of recent months and days had not been banished by the extensive army deployment.

In announcing the curfew would stretch until Sunday, officials said rioting of the part 24 hours had been systematically planned. Col Sansern Kawekamnerd, an army spokesman, said a cache of bombs, "war ammunition" and guns including AK-47 and M-16 automatic rifles in the crackdown had been found at opposition strongholds.

"Such violence couldn't happen without systematic planning," said government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn. "The security forces will continue operations to restore order and arrest those involved in terrorism." >>> Damien McElroy in Bangkok | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Picasso and Matisse Stolen from Paris Museum in €500 Million Raid

THE TELEGRAPH: Paintings worth €500 million (£430 million), including masterpieces by Picasso and Matisse, have been stolen during a daring night raid on a Paris gallery.

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Detail of "La pastorale" de Henri Matisse Pastoral 1905. Photo: Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.

A lone thief broke into the city's Museum of Modern Art overnight on Wednesday, also taking works by George Braque, Amedeo Modigliani and Fernand Lege.

A single masked raider was caught on CCTV entering through a broken window, according to the Paris prosecutor's office.

Police and art investigators have now cordoned off the museum, which is just across the Seine River from the Eiffel Tower.

They believe that a reinforced glass window was smashed late on Wednesday night. A security lock inside the building had also been broken. >>> Peter Allen in Paris | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Voile intégral: Le Pen prône l'expulsion

LE FIGARO: La vice-présidente du Front national (FN) Marine Le Pen a demandé aujourd'hui que les femmes portant le voile intégral et les hommes contraignant celles-ci à le faire soient expulsés du territoire français, à la veille de l'examen en Conseil des ministres du projet de loi sur le sujet. 



Le projet de loi "interdisant la dissimulation du visage dans l'espace public", prévoit comme sanction pour les femmes contrevenantes une amende de 150 euros et/ou un stage de citoyenneté. Il prévoit aussi un nouveau "délit d'instigation à dissimuler son visage", puni d'un an d'emprisonnement et de 15.000 euros d'amende. >>> AFP | Mardi 18 Mai 2010

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Frankreichs Regierung will Burka verbieten: Unverhülltes Gesicht als Bürgerpflicht

NZZ ONLINE: In Frankreich soll das Tragen der Burka in der Öffentlichkeit verboten werden. Die Regierung hat einen entsprechenden Gesetzesvorschlag gebilligt, die unter juristischen Gesichtspunkten höchst umstritten ist.

Die französische Regierung hat am Mittwoch anlässlich einer Kabinettssitzung den Gesetzesvorschlag gebilligt, mit dem ab Frühjahr 2011 das Tragen der Burka in der Öffentlichkeit verboten werden soll. Das Gewand wird nicht namentlich erwähnt. Vielmehr stipuliert der Text, dass auf dem Staatsgebiet das Tragen von Kleidungsstücken verboten sei, dessen Zweck darin bestehe, das Gesicht zu verdecken. Zwang wird bestraft >>> Manfred Rist, Paris | Mittwoch, 19. Mai 2010

Verbunde Artikel hier
‘All Out War’ Threatened Over North Korea Attack On Warship Cheonan

TIMES ONLINE: North Korea has threatened “all out war” if there is any retalation from Seoul for the torpedo attack which sank the South Korean warship Cheonan in March.

Pyongyang made the threat as it dismissed as ‘fabrication’ a report by an international team of investigators which concludes that a torpedo fired by a North Korean submarine was responsible for the explosion that ripped the 1,200 corvette in two, killing 46 sailors in one of South Korea’s worst naval tragedies.

In an escalating war of words, President Lee Myung-Bak, the South Korean president vowed to take “resolute countermeasures” against North Korea for the torpedo attack on the Cheonan, which happened near the disputed border between the two countries.

The investigators’ report, published today, concludes: “The evidence points overwhelmingly to the conclusion that the torpedo was fired by a North Korean submarine.

“There is no other plausible explanation.” Read on and comment >>> Anne Barrowclough | Thursday, May 20, 2010
Facebook Blocked in Pakistan Over Prophet Images



Related article here
France to Build New Mega-mosque

AFP: MARSEILLE, France — French Muslims celebrate a milestone on Thursday when building work begins on a mega-mosque in Marseille, the nation's biggest, and a potent symbol of Islam's place in modern France.

A day after the French government approved a bill banning the full Islamic veil, Muslim leaders will join politicians for a ceremony to lay the cornerstone at a dusty construction site in northern Marseille.

France's second city is home to 250,000 Muslims, many of whom flock to makeshift prayer houses in basements, rented rooms and dingy garages to worship.

With a minaret soaring 25 metres (82 feet) high, the Grand Mosque will hold up to 7,000 people in its prayer room and the complex will also boast a Koranic school, library, restaurant and tea room when it opens in 2012.

For more than 60 years, Muslim leaders have campaigned for a mega-mosque as a prominent gathering place that would bring Islam out of the basements and allow it to thrive under Marseille's Mediterranean sun. >>> Carole Landry, AFP | Thursday, May 20, 2010
France: Women Vow to Fight Ban on Islamic Full-face Veil

David Cameron Takes On Tory Back-bench 'Awkward Squad’

THE TELEGRAPH: David Cameron has made an audacious attempt to stamp his authority on Conservative MPs and smother back-bench dissent.

The Prime Minister announced a controversial move to neutralise the 1922 Committee which gives back-bench MPs a forum for criticising the Conservative leadership.

The move turned simmering anger at Mr Cameron’s coalition deal with the Liberal Democrats into fury among many Tory MPs.

One senior Right-winger described it as a “deliberate provocation” that could split the party. Others likened the moment to Tony Blair’s “Clause IV” confrontation with Labour members in 1995.

On Thursday, Mr Cameron will hail his “partnership” with Nick Clegg, the Lib Dem leader, publishing the “historic” document that details the coalition Government’s full agenda for power. At a meeting with MPs on Wednesday in the Commons, Mr Cameron announced that he wanted to change the way the 1922 Committee was organised.

The committee represents back-bench Conservatives and is traditionally used to communicate rank-and-file MPs’ feelings about the way Tory governments are conducting themselves. The committee is named after the 1922 general election, which was called after the Conservatives withdrew from a coalition government with David Lloyd George’s Liberals.

Ministers and other government members are barred from the 1922, a rule meant to ensure that the party leadership cannot influence the committee directly.

Mr Cameron has proposed a change in the rules to allow him and his ministers and other allies to vote in the committee and even take up elected positions. >>> James Kirkup, Political Correspondent | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
New Dark Age Alert! Uganda Plans Death Penalty For Homosexuals

BBC: In Uganda, plans to introduce draconian new laws against homosexuality look likely to go ahead despite mass protests, a major petition, and condemnation from the international community.

The bill, which proposes the death penalty for so-called 'serial offenders', has already been described as 'odious' by President Obama.

A senior minister in Kampala has suggested that the death penalty could be replaced with life imprisonment.

John Simpson reports from Kampala. Watch BBC video here | John Simpson | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Michelle Obama Evening Dress Sparks Race Row Over 'Nude' Description

THE TELEGRAPH: From the moment she stepped into the limelight, Michelle Obama was feted as the 'First Lady of Fashion'.

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Michelle Obama at the state dinner with President Barrack Obama. Photo: The Telegraph

She was hailed as the successor to Jackie Kennedy, with the style press rhapsodising over her ability to carry off High Street buys and glittering designer gowns with equal panache.

One dress, however, has sent ripples through the fashion world for rather different reasons. Mrs Obama's choice of gown for a State dinner has sparked a debate about race and the delicate matter of whether one can call a dress colour 'nude' when it really depends on the wearer.

The dress in question, which Mrs Obama wore to meet Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the White House, was described by the designer as a "sterling-silver sequin, abstract floral, nude strapless gown".

That simple description has now caused a stir. "We talk of nude now and there is no one colour. It's politically incorrect," said Gale Epstein, founder of the US lingerie brand Hanky Panky. "There is a wide range for skin tone colours. Human skins tones are a whole colour palette unto themselves." Miss Epstein prefers to use a range of names, from "light chai" to "espresso", to describe her wares.

The Associated Press news agency was compelled to revise its reference to the dress colour from "flesh" to "champagne" after one fashion editor objected, asking: "Whose flesh? Not hers." >>> Anita Singh, Showbusiness Editor | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

New Dark Age Alert! Malawi Court Convicts Gay Couple of Gross Indecency and Unnatural Acts

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Photo: Times Online

TIMES ONLINE: A court in Malawi yesterday convicted a gay couple of gross indecency and unnatural acts in a case that has highlighted the persecution of homosexuals in Africa and drawn international condemnation.

Steven Monjeza, 26, and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, 20, who will be sentenced tomorrow, face at least a decade behind bars. They were arrested in December after testing Malawi’s anti-gay laws with a public “engagement ceremony” before a wedding planned for this year.

The action outraged authorities in the deeply conservative country, one of the poorest in Africa. The men have been in prison ever since, despite an international campaign for their release and reports of maltreatment.

Judge Nyakwawa Usiwa-Usiwa, sitting in the old colonial capital of Blantyre, convicted both men of engaging in gay sex, which he said was “against the order of nature”. The couple’s lawyer argued that their actions had not victimised anyone.

“Unlike in a rape case, there was no complainant or victim in this case,” he said. “Here are two consenting adults doing their thing in private. Nobody will be threatened or offended if they are released into society.”

That argument fell on deaf ears in a country in which gays are now in hiding. Large crowds have jeered and pilloried the men on each occasion that they have been brought to court. At a previous court appearance Mr Chimbalanga, who was sick with malaria, was forced to return to the court room to mop up his vomit. >>> Jonathan Clayton, Johannesburg | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

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Bangkok in Flames as Protesters Refuse to Back Down

THE TELEGRAPH: Bangkok is in flames as the government admits it lost control when protesters set fire to key buildings in the city following a day of running battles with troops which left 12 dead and 60 injured.

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A statue of Buddha and a torn Thai national flag remain in front of Bangkok's Central World shopping mall. Photo: The Telegraph

Rioters set fires at the stock exchange, electricity headquarters, banks and government offices. Siam Theatre, a much loved city institution, collapsed in flames. Hundreds of people had to be rescued from the burning headquarters of Channel 3 television. The death toll since fresh outbreaks of violence on Thursday now stands at 51.

The government issued "shoot on site" orders for a dawn raid as troops tried to disperse 2,000 Red Shirts who had been camped in Rajprasong, the capital's premier shopping and office district, for more than six weeks.

Seven of the Red Shirt leaders surrendered to police but militant gangs waged an arson and looting spree. The vast Central World shopping centre was torched as government troops shot to kill in a last ditch effort to defend it.

When the army finally marched cautiously into the protesters' former stronghold they discovered that the 2,000 strong crowd had dwindled to one woman.

Kuesadee Narukan, an elderly nurse, stood holding a red flag in the deserted arena. The sound system remained on and rice was cooking on the boilers. "I am not afraid. I am ready for my punishment," she said. "I am a fighter for democracy. >>> Damien McElroy and Ian MacKinnon in Bangkok | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

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Connector of the Day: Bianca Jagger


Dissimulating Opinion: Why It’s Wrong to Ban the Veil

Watch video here: Why it’s wrong to ban the veil: Reza Aslan, a guest of the Sydney Writers' Festival, explains why it's wrong to ban the burqa and niqab.

Le Brésil et la Turquie demandent à l'ONU de ne pas sanctionner l'Iran

LE POINT: Le Brésil et la Turquie ont écrit mercredi au Conseil de sécurité de l'ONU pour demander aux 15 pays membres de ne pas adopter de nouvelles sanctions contre l'Iran en raison de son programme nucléaire. "Le Brésil et la Turquie sont convaincus qu'il est temps de donner une chance aux négociations et d'éviter des mesures nuisibles à la résolution pacifique de ce problème", déclarent le chef de la diplomatie brésilienne Celso Amorim et son homologue turc Ahmet Davutoglu, dans cette lettre rédigée en anglais et distribuée aux journalistes en poste au Brésil.

Ce document est accompagné de la déclaration conjointe signée lundi à Téhéran par le Brésil, la Turquie et l'Iran, document qui prévoit un échange d'uranium irano-turc afin d'écarter la menace de nouvelles sanctions contre la République islamique, brandie par les États-Unis et ses alliés occidentaux. Le Brésil et la Turquie sont membres temporaires du Conseil de sécurité. >>> AFP | Mercredi 19 Mai 2010

[Australian] Dollar Nosedives As Europe Worries Bite

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: The Australian dollar plunged more than 2.5 US cents in less than 18 hours, compounding a series of significant falls over the past days that have seen the value of the currency hit its lowest level since last September against its US counterpart - down more than 8 per cent since the start of the month. >>> Gabrielle Costa | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Loophole in Arizona Immigration Law

Faisal Shahzad Denied Bail

Coalition Under New Strain Over Human Rights U-turn

THE INDEPENDENT: Fresh strains were showing in the new Lib-Con coalition tonight as senior Tory MPs expressed "dismay" that plans to overhaul the Human Rights Act had been put on a backburner.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg risked further antagonising Conservative backbenchers after he issued a warning that they tampered with the Act "at their peril".

The commitment to repeal the Act - which enshrines the European Convention on Human Rights in UK law - and replace it with a British Bill of Rights was a key commitment in the Conservative manifesto.

But it emerged yesterday that the coalition Government had decided to set up a commission to look at the issue of whether there was a case for new British legislation.

The latest controversy flared as Mr Clegg and Prime Minister David Cameron prepared to unveil the final coalition document tomorrow.

Tory MP Bill Cash - who, as shadow attorney general, had been instrumental in drawing up the original Conservative policy in opposition - said that he was "dismayed" at the latest developments.

He warned that there was "very acute" concern among Conservative MPs that the party's position was being watered down.

"I think our manifesto commitment was crystal clear. It said that we would replace the Human Rights Act with a Bill of Rights," he told BBC Radio 4's The World at One. >>> Andrew Woodcock, PA | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Related article and videos here
Clegg Backs Decision to Stop Deportation of 'al-Qaeda Operative'

TIMES ONLINE: Nick Clegg today defended a decision under the Human Rights Act to allow two Pakistani terror suspects to walk free in the UK despite an assessment that they pose a serious threat to the British public.

In his first major set-piece speech to launch the Liberal-Conservative programme of political reform, Mr Clegg said, “The law is very clear that it is wrong to deport people where there is risk that they will be seriously mistreated, tortured or even killed.”

The Liberal Democrat leader was booed by crowds of young people as he arrived at the City & Islington College in North London for his first major address as Deputy Prime Minister, and opened by saying the “loud reception” was a “sign of how things have changed”.

His speech was designed to launch what the Government says is the biggest shake-up of British democracy since 1832, including a promise to “tear through the statute book” to dispose of unnecessary laws. >>> Judith Evans | Wednesday, May 19, 2010



Carla Gets Serious

THE TELEGRAPH: Carla Bruni-Sarkozy wore glasses for the first time at a public engagement in a bid to cultivate "a more serious image".

The French First Lady, who turns 43 this year, put the black designer frames on during her appearance as an anti-Aids ambassador at an event in Paris.

Dressed in a low cut, white T-shirt with a campaign slogan on it, the glasses transformed her image.

"Carla always tries to look as young as possible, but the glasses made it clear that she wanted a more serious image", a fashion observer close to Mrs Bruni-Sarkozy said.

She was supporting the Born HIV Free campaign, showing off a limited edition T-shirt, and a logo brooch designed by the jewellers Tiffany & Co.

Mrs Bruni-Sarkozy said: "By 2015, let us end the transmission of HIV from mother to child. This is not a dream - we can do it. Life is too beautiful to end before birth." Carla Bruni-Sarkozy out in glasses for the first time >>> Peter Allen, in Paris | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Bangkok's Savage Conflict May Be A Mere Dress Rehearsal

THE TELEGRAPH: Thailand is torn between two rival camps, best characterised as competing patronage networks.

Since March 12, tens of thousands of red-shirted demonstrators have occupied central areas of Bangkok, demanding the resignation of the Oxford-educated prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and the dissolution of parliament. The violence peaked on April 10 – when more than 20 people were killed – and has flared up again, as the military have tried to clear out the Redshirts' encampment.

At times, the security forces have fought pitched battles with protesters. The fatalities have included a Japanese cameraman, and several foreigners have been injured, including a Canadian journalist. In recent days, snipers have been shooting people from high buildings.

This has been portrayed as a struggle between poor farmers from the countryside and an undemocratic Bangkok elite. Yet despite the sympathetic coverage for the Redshirts in much of the international media, this is not a classic "pro-democracy" struggle between good guys and bad guys. It is a savage and dispiriting civil conflict, from which nobody emerges with much credit. Read on and comment >>> Duncan McCargo | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Sarkozy Warns Against ‘Hurt’ Feelings As Cabinet Approves Veil Ban

THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Bill foresees €150 fine for veiled women, men forcing women to veil face jail and €15,000 fine

President Nicolas Sarkozy urged French Muslims on Wednesday not to feel hurt or stigmatised by a planned ban on full face veils that will fine women who hide their faces and jail men if they force them to cover up.

Mr. Sarkozy told a cabinet meeting, which approved the bill that could become law this autumn, that France was an old nation that could not allow its vision of women’s dignity and public order to be violated by the veil.

Only a tiny minority of Muslim women in Europe wear full veils, called niqabs or burqas, but their numbers are growing. The Belgian parliament has already begun debating a ban there and could also impose it in the coming months.

France has reaped criticism from Muslim groups and rights advocates for the planned “burqa ban,” which Mr. Sarkozy called for last year to counter Islamist views among some Muslims.

“This is a decision one doesn’t take lightly,” he said. “Nobody should feel hurt or stigmatized. I’m thinking in particular of our Muslim compatriots, who have their place in the republic and should feel respected.” >>> Tom Heneghan, Paris, Reuters | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Hatred Against Islam Now Political Feast: OIC

SAUDI GAZETTE: DUSHANBE – Islamophobia will dominate the agenda of the 37th session of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) meeting here, marking the first time the Tajik capital has played host to the annual gathering.

The President of the Republic of Tajikistan, Emomali Rahmon, addressed the opening of the three-day conference Tuesday.

“We are happy to notice the recent positive changes and developments in the OIC’s activities as it has increased its international role,” said Rahmon.

OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu highlighted the significance of holding the OIC session in Dushanbe. “The chronicles of Islamic history bear eloquent testimony to the abounding wealth of cultural and edifying legacy, conferred to Islamic civilization, by the illustrious sons of this region,” he said.

Stressing the need to effectively tackle Islamophobia, Ihsanoglu said the hate wave against Islam and Muslim immigrants has become a “political commodity” and a “winning chip” in the hands of political parties during their election campaigns in the West.

Achieving any real progress in this area requires direct and dedicated interaction between OIC member states and the West.

“A high level ministerial meeting must be convened to evolve an Islamic plan for interaction with the West, regarding Islamophobia, and defending our just causes and in facing up to the mounting hate wave against Islam.

I also suggest that the question of Islamophobia be included in all member states’ interactions with their Western counterparts,” he said. >>> Jassim Alghamdi, SG | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Voile intégral : et maintenant ?

LE MONDE: Après plusieurs mois de débats houleux, de controverses juridiques et de prises de positions politiques discordantes, le texte de loi définissant l'interdiction du voile intégral en France a été présenté, mardi 19 mai, en conseil des ministres.

1. Que dit le texte de loi ? Comme prévu, il stipule, dans son article 1, que "nul ne peut, dans l'espace public, porter une tenue destinée à dissimuler son visage". L'article 2 définit ce qu'est un "espace public" : les "voies publiques" ainsi que "les lieux ouverts au public ou affectés à un service public". Des exemptions sont également définies : on pourra porter une tenue dissimulant le visage si celle-ci "est prescrite par une loi ou un règlement, si elle est autorisée pour protéger l’anonymat de l’intéressé, si elle est justifiée par des raisons médicales ou si elle s’inscrit dans le cadre de fêtes ou de manifestations artistiques ou traditionnelles".

La proposition de loi prévoit une amende de 150 euros en cas de non-respect de cette interdiction. Elle ouvre aussi la possibilité d'infliger un stage d'éducation civique. Elle introduit également un délit nouveau : "le fait, par menace, violence ou contrainte, abus de pouvoir ou abus d’autorité, d’imposer à une personne, en raison de son sexe, de dissimuler son visage", puni de 15 000 euros d'amende et d'un an d'emprisonnement. Enfin, un délai de six mois est prévu avant l'entrée en application de la loi. >>> Samuel Laurent | Mercredi 19 Mai 2010
Geert Wilders, the Ultra-right Firebrand, Campaigns to Be Holland's Prime Minister

THE OBSERVER: Radical anti-Islamic politics are under the microscope as a hero of the far right tries to capitalise on cultural divisions

In the street market outside Almere's glass-fronted Stadhuis – the council offices – stalls are selling clothes and toys, typical Dutch sausages and cuts of glistening ham. At another stall, occasional shoppers inspect piles of Islamic headscarves and ankle-length gowns. But if many of the councillors in the Stadhuis have their way, that stall will not be doing a roaring trade for much longer.

The party that won most seats in the municipal elections in Almere earlier this year – although it failed to form a governing coalition – would like to ban the wearing of headscarves in public buildings such as the Stadhuis, as well as banning the construction of new mosques. That party is the far-right Freedom Party (PVV), of Geert Wilders, the populist firebrand behind the anti-Islamic film Fitna, who has accused Muslims of trying to "colonise" his country.

Three months ago, almost a quarter of Almere's voters backed the PVV and Wilders was being tipped as a possible prime minister in forthcoming elections on 9 June. "Today Almere and The Hague," said Wilders –"tomorrow the whole of the Netherlands. This is our springboard for success."

His poll fortunes may have diminished somewhat since then, as the country's mainstream parties have toughened up their own acts on immigration. But the blond-mulleted Islamophobe may yet be credited with transforming how Holland does its politics. >>> Peter Beaumont, Almere | Sunday, May 16, 2010



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EastEnders Actor Marc Elliot 'Abused in the Street' for Gay Character

PINK NEWS: Marc Elliot, the actor who plays gay Muslim Syed in EastEnders, has revealed he gets regular abuse in the street for playing a gay character.

Syed began an affair with Christian (John Partridge) last year. When his mother found out in December, he was forced into marrying a woman.

Elliot said: "Since playing Syed I have really got it in the neck when I'm out. A lot of people are supportive but there is still a huge amount of negativity." >>> PinkNews.co.uk Staff Writer | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Pakistan Court Blocks Facebook Over Mohammed Page

AFP: LAHORE, Pakistan — A Pakistani court Wednesday ordered authorities to block Facebook temporarily over a competition encouraging users to post caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed on the social networking site.

The depiction of any prophet is strictly prohibited in Islam as blasphemous and Muslims across the world staged angry protests over the publication of satirical cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in European newspapers in 2006.

Controversy erupted in the conservative Muslim country last month when a Facebook user set up a page called "Draw Mohammed Day", inviting people to send in their caricatures of the Muslim prophet on May 20.

The move angered thousands of young people and Muslim faithful in Pakistan, unleashing an online campaign and isolated protests that grabbed the government's attention and the controversial page was blocked on Tuesday.

But a group of Islamic lawyers went a step further Wednesday and petitioned the court to order a blanket ban on Facebook in Pakistan. >>> Waqar Hussain, AFP | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Women Protest As French Cabinet Gets Veil Ban Bill

ASSOCIATED PRESS: PARIS — One runs her own company, another is a housewife and a third, a divorcee, raises her children by herself. Like nearly 2,000 other Muslim women who freely wear face-covering veils anywhere in France, their lives will soon change and they are worried.

On Wednesday, French Justice Minister Michele Alliot-Marie presented a draft law to the Cabinet banning Muslim veils that cover the face, the first formal step in a process to forbid such attire in all public places in France. It calls for euro150 ($185) fines and, in some cases, citizenship classes for women who run afoul of the law.

"Citizenship should be experienced with an uncovered face," President Nicolas Sarkozy told the Cabinet meeting, in remarks released by his office. "There can be no other solution but a ban in all public places."

Although the Interior Ministry estimates there are only 1,900 women who cover their faces with veils, the planned law would be another defining moment for Islam in France as the nation tries to bring its Muslim population — at least 5 million, the largest in western Europe — into the mainstream, even by force of law.

The bill is to go before parliament in July, and despite the acrimonious debate that is sure to come, there is little doubt the measure will become law. Sarkozy, who says such veils oppress women, wants a law banning them on the books as soon as possible.

Sarkozy welcomed the bill, saying the government is embarking on "a just path" and urging parliament to take its "moral responsibility" and approve it. >>> Elaine Ganley, AP | Wednesday, May 19, 2010
A Vision for ECB's New Monument to the Euro

Protesters Set Fire to Thai Stock Exchange: Leaders Surrender But Some Protesters Flee, Set Fires Around City

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Hardliners set the Thai stock exchange building in Bangkok on fire even though leaders of the mainstream "Red Shirt" protesters surrendered to the army. Photo: The Wall Street Journal

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: BANGKOK—Hard-line Thai protesters set fire Wednesday to the country's stock exchange, shopping malls and a television station, while Thai authorities called an 8 p.m. curfew, casting doubt on the prospects for a resolution to the country's weeks-long political crisis despite the surrender of protest leaders earlier in the day.

Thai Red Shirt protest leaders called off their marathon rally and surrendered to police Wednesday after an early morning army assault on their heavily fortified camp in the center of Bangkok.

But in the midafternoon, smoke could be seen billowing from the Stock Exchange of Thailand's headquarters as helicopters buzzed in the sky above. Though trading has been taking place at a different, undisclosed location in recent days, stock-exchange officials said markets would be closed Thursday. Earlier in the day, Thailand's benchmark index finished up 0.7% on hopes for a quick resolution. Authorities also said commercial banks around the country would be closed Thursday and Friday.

Thick plumes of smoke rose across other locations in the city as militant protesters targeted some of Bangkok's main commercial centers. In other parts of Thailand, local television broadcast pictures of antigovernment demonstrators setting alight a provincial government building in northeastern Khon Kaen. >>> James Hookway | Wednesday, May 19, 2010

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France: Un débat sur le voile intégral se termine en baston

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Un débat sur le voile intégral, organisé par l'association Ni Putes Ni Soumises, a dégénéré en violences mardi soir à Montreuil, dans la banlieue est de Paris. La police a dû intervenir.

Ce débat, qui a rassemblé une centaine de personnes dans une école primaire, a commencé en début de soirée dans un climat houleux, perturbé par des membres du mouvement pro-palestinien Cheikh Yassine.

Après des insultes, des coups ont été échangés entre des participants qui n'ont pu être identifiés, a constaté le journaliste. Les organisateurs ont décidé d'arrêter le débat et fait appel aux forces de l'ordre.

La police est arrivée peu après, bloquant les sorties, et demandant aux victimes de coups d'identifier leurs agresseurs et de déposer plainte. >>> ATS | Mercredi 19 Mai 2010

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Merkel bezeichnet Euro-Krise als existenziell

WELT ONLINE: Angela Merkel hat in ihrer Regierungserklärung die Euro-Krise als existenziell für Deutschland und Europa bezeichnet. "Die Währungsunion ist eine Schicksalsgemeinschaft. Es geht um nicht mehr und nicht weniger als um die Bewahrung der europäischen Idee", sagt die Kanzlerin. Scheitere der Euro, dann scheitere Europa.

In ihrer Regierungserklärung zum 750 Milliarden Euro schweren Rettungsschirm für die Gemeinschaftswährung hat Angela Merkel von einer existenziellen Bewährungsprobe gesprochen.

„Sie muss bestanden werden", sagte die Kanzlerin. „Die Währungsunion ist eine Schicksalsgemeinschaft. Es geht um nicht mehr und nicht weniger als um die Bewahrung der europäischen Idee." Scheitere der Euro, dann scheitere Europa. Werde diese Gefahr abgewendet, würden der Euro und Europa stärker als zuvor sein.

Europa benötige eine neue Stabilitätskultur. Zudem müsse über Europa hinaus auf Ebene der wichtigsten Wirtschaftsnationen (G20) Vorsorge getroffen werden, um künftige Krisen zu verhindern. Die EU wiederum müsse schonungslos strukturelle Schwächen offenlegen. >>> dpa/fas | Mittwoch, 19. Mai 2010

Welt TV Video, “Der Euro ist in Gefahr” hier abspielen

Balthasar Garzon Wins Permission to Work at International Criminal Court

THE TELEGRAPH: Balthasar Garzon, the controversial Spanish judge currently suspended from his duties in his home country, has won permission work at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

Spain's top judicial panel had suspended Mr Garzon on Friday pending his trial on charges he exceeded his authority by ordering an investigation into mass killings by the forces of former dictator Francisco Franco.

The suspension from his functions as a judge was widely thought in Spain to be an obstacle to a transfer to a foreign court but the judicial panel approved Garzon's request to spend seven months at The Hague court.

"Legal reasons could not be found to prevent the hiring of the judge as a consultant", Gabriela Bravo, spokeswoman for the judicial panel told reporters.

The Spanish judge, who won fame for his attempt to extradite former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet for human rights abuses, faces three separate charges in Spain's Supreme Court. >>> | Tuesday, May 18, 2010

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