Monday, September 20, 2010

Pastor Who Threatened to Burn Korans Told to Pay Police Bill

THE TELEGRAPH: US pastor Terry Jones, who threatened to burn copies of the Koran, has been told he must pay $180,000 (£115,000) for security costs triggered by the controversy.

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Pastor Terry Jones arrived in New York the night before the anniversary after cancelling his scheduled burning of the Koran. Photo: The Telegraph

The city of Gainesville, Florida said that local police agencies spent more than a month working on security plans to ensure the community close to the planned site of the burning was safe.

Mr Jones sparked outrage when he announced his plan to burn the Muslim holy text on the anniversary of the September, 11, 2001, attacks. He eventually agreed to abandon the idea after pressure from Barack Obama and other world leaders.

Gainesville police spokeswoman Cpl. Tscharna Senn told CNN that the threat led to a large police operation. >>> | Monday, September 20, 2010

Why should he pay the police bill? Has the police bill been paid by al-Qaeda? – Mark
Hillary Clinton Urges Iran to Dump Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

THE TELEGRAPH: Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has called on "responsible" leaders to assert control in Iran and said tough UN sanctions were turning the screw on the military-backed regime.

Short of an explicit call to the Iranian people to revolt, Mrs Clinton's comments represented a sharpening of rhetoric as she increasingly seeks to portray Iran as a military dictatorship.

Mrs Clinton said the military, especially the elite Revolutionary Guard, was wielding more and more power to prop up a regime struggling to maintain its legitimacy since last year's "very flawed" presidential elections.

"And I can only hope that there will be some effort inside Iran, by responsible civil and religious leaders, to take hold of the apparatus of the state," she told ABC News.

"When you empower a military as much as they have to rely on them to put down legitimate protests and demonstrations, you create a momentum and unleash forces that you do not know where they will end up.

"And I know that that's a concern of people inside Iran. We read reports coming out of Iran. And it is something that would be even more distressing for the Iranian people." >>> | Monday, September 20, 2010

Interview With Hillary Clinton

ABC NEWS: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sits down with Christiane Amanpour.



Interview With Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

ABC NEWS: Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad joins Christiane Amanpour on "This Week."

Liberal Democrat Conference: Nick Clegg Defends Coalition Cuts

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Nick Clegg has defended the coalition's policies amid criticism from activists over the impact of the impending spending cuts.

The Deputy Prime Minister denied that the Government "relished" having to impose tight budget reductions, but insisted there was "nothing fair" about forcing future generations to pay off the nation's debt.

He said the Government had restored the earnings link to pensioners and was reversing the "grotesque inequality" in the tax system.

But he was told the deep spending cuts to be outlined in next month's spending review would "disproportionately" affect the poorest in society.

Speaking to party members during a question-and-answer session at the Liberal Democrat conference in Liverpool, Mr Clegg said: "The fact of this deficit, which (Labour) created, you and I can't wish it away.

"You cannot build social justice on the sands of debt. It can't be done." >>> | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Pope Visit: Benedict XVI Says Goodbye to Britain

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Britain's historic papal visit has come to an end as Benedict XVI gave his final wave from the steps of his aeroplane.



The Pontiff took off from Birmingham Airport on a windy Sunday evening after thanking the nation for its hospitality.

In speeches to a small crowd of dignitaries on the airport's apron, both he and Prime Minister David Cameron pledged to strengthen relationships between Britain and the Vatican.

The hustle and bustle of the airport continued throughout the day, with holidaymakers oblivious to frantic behind-the-scenes preparations for the Pope's departure.

Hours before his arrival, police and officials swarmed round the Alitalia plane, checking every detail, while officials practised "walk-throughs" on a specially-laid cross-shaped red carpet. >>> | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Pope Visit: Britons Thirst for Holy Word, Says Holy Father

THE TELEGRAPH: The British people have a “deep thirst” for the message of Christianity, the Pope said as he ended his historic state visit to Britain.



On his arrival, the Pope said the country’s Christian culture was under threat from “aggressive forms of secularism”. But before his departure he said that he had seen evidence of a continued interest in religion.

He called upon the local Roman Catholic bishops to help people turn away from the “vain enticements of this world”.

The Pope made his comments to Catholic bishops in Birmingham after beatifying Cardinal John Henry Newman, the Victorian theologian who converted to Rome.

Despite controversy over his speeches in some quarters and a well-attended protest rally, the Vatican believes the first papal state visit to Britain has been a “wonderful” success with an estimated 500,000 attending open-air services or lining the streets to see the Pope over the past four days.

Images of the Pontiff meeting the Queen at Holyroodhouse Palace, embracing the Archbishop of Canterbury at Westminster Abbey and addressing four former prime ministers in Parliament will go some way to restoring the Church’s reputation after the scandal over clergy abusing children.

Last night Britain’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal Keith O’Brien, spoke of his hope that the four-day trip would lead to a “Benedict bounce”. >>> Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Monday, September 20, 2010
The Pope's Parting Gift

THE TELEGRAPH: Benedict XVI's historic visit to Britain has been a resounding success – and may have changed attitudes towards the role of religion in modern life, says Peter Stanford.

In a damp Birmingham park before a crowd of 55,000 worshippers, Pope Benedict XVI rounded off his visit to Britain yesterday by beatifying the Victorian convert and theologian John Henry Newman. Like Newman (best remembered, said Benedict, for his "keen intellect and prolific pen"), this Pontiff has long enjoyed a reputation for being a complex, clever but rather dry academic, favouring language that is difficult to understand and moral positions that are uncompromising. Hence his nickname, "God's rottweiler". Or at least that was how Benedict was seen until he arrived in Britain. What a difference four days can make.

When the Pope argued in his homily that, contrary to popular prejudice, Newman was in fact a "warm and human" character, a parish priest and "pastor of souls" as well as a great thinker, he might well have been referring to himself. If this state visit has achieved anything, it has been to show a decidedly sceptical public that the parish priest of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics does indeed have a heart. Since the theme that the organisers chose for the trip was Newman's motto "Heart speaks unto heart", they must be congratulating themselves on a mission accomplished.

From the moment the television cameras picked up Benedict and the Queen chatting amiably in the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh on Thursday, during the traditional exchange of gifts, it was clear that the Pope was determined to reveal himself more as a kindly German shepherd than a rottweiler. Every time the Popemobile pulled to a halt to allow Benedict to reach out and kiss a baby, that pastoral image was reinforced. And it was not a cynical, mechanical ploy. Benedict's voice may have been devoid of intonation, and his face curiously immobile, but his eyes conveyed that same pastorly warmth and humanity that he praised in Newman. Here was an essentially modest man; if not charismatic in the mould of his crowd-pleasing predecessor, John Paul II, then certainly possessing a quiet charm, and emphatically not the woman-hater, gay-basher or ivory-tower bigot of stereotype.

In advance of the visit, siren voices had warned that it would all be a disaster. Few would turn up, we were told. Yet 125,000 lined the streets of Edinburgh, according to the police, and 75,000 came to Glasgow's Bellahouston Park. Everywhere the Popemobile went, the crowds were 10 or 12 deep. As reporters moved among them, it was clear that these were not simply the faithful, coming out of a tribal loyalty to their embattled leader, but people of faith and none, simply curious to witness a moment of history – the first state visit by a pope since the Reformation – and to hear a distinctly counter-cultural message, questioning the remorseless march of the me society, with its twin obsessions of consumerism and celebrity. Read on and comment >>> Peter Stanford * | Monday, September 20, 2010

* Peter Stanford is a former editor of the 'Catholic Herald' and author of 'The Extra Mile: A 21st Century Pilgrimage' (Continuum)
Bermuda Lashed by Hurricane Igor

THE TELEGRAPH: Fierce waves have pounded Bermuda's breakwaters and shores and battered oceanfront hotels as Hurricane Igor lashed the British territory.

Bermudians battened down their homes in pelting rain to wait out Igor, a relatively weak Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph. The wind uprooted trees and power poles, knocking out electricity in many parts of the island. But there were no early reports of major damage.

"We're certainly getting our money's worth in drama," lawyer James Dodi said while standing outside a hotel in downtown Hamilton watching Igor's winds whip through palm trees and howl around buildings.

Some storm-seasoned islanders ventured outside during the day to watch as the hurricane force winds drove 15-foot surf onto shore. Flooding was reported in low-lying areas, while streets in downtown Hamilton, the capital, were covered in several inches of water and littered with tree branches and other debris. >>> | Monday, September 20, 2010

Igor Powers Ashore in Bermuda



Bracing for Igor in Bermuda >>>

Bermuda in More Tranquil Times

Sweden Elections End in Hung Parliament, Rise of Far-Right

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Swedish elections on Sunday night ended in a hung parliament after the rise of a far-Right group narrowly prevented the conservative-liberal coalition government from winning an outright majority in Sweden’s parliament.

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Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt and his wife Filippa. Reinfeldt appears to be heading for an historic second term. Photo: The Telegraph

The result, which gave Frederik Reinfeldt's Moderate-led alliance the largest share of seats in the Riksdag, was the worst result since 1914 for the Social Democrats, effectively ending the party's 80 year domination of Swedish politics.

Official preliminary results showed Mr Reinfeldt’s centre-Right coalition winning 173 seats in the 349-seat parliament and the Social Democrat led Left-Green coalition with 156 seats.

However, the big news of the night for a country which has long prided itself as being one of the most tolerant in Europe was that the anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats (SD) looked set to win 20 seats, their first entry to the national parliament.

Despite winning the largest share of the vote, Mr Reinfeldt’s coalition could face weeks of horse-trading after both his conservative-liberal alliance and the opposition left-Green bloc ruled out working with the far-Right.

“If this result stands we will have an uncertain situation,” said a government spokesman.

Before polling opened, Mr Reinfeldt had pleaded for a clear majority amid fears that in the event of a hung vote far-Right MPs from the SD party could play a “kingmaker” role in forming a new government.

“Don’t expose Sweden to this experiment. Make sure they don’t get any power,” he said of the far-Right. >>> Bruno Waterfield and Matthew Day | Sunday, September 19, 2010

Sweden's PM Re-elected But Fails to Win Majority

THE GUARDIAN: Sweden's ruling centre-right coalition led by prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt beat the Social Democrat opposition in Sunday's election but failed to win an outright majority. The far right Sweden Democrats have won seats in parliament for the first time

Watch Guardian video here

Read article: Sweden's ruling coalition heads for minority government: Prime minister Fredrik Reinfeldt becomes first non-socialist to win re-election since 1930s >>> Julian Borger | Monday, September 20, 2010

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Virginia Set to Execute First Woman in Nearly a Century

THE GUARDIAN: Teresa Lewis will die by lethal injection on Thursday unless an appeal to the supreme court can save her

The state of Virginia this week plans to carry out its first execution of a woman in nearly a century, despite claims that Teresa Lewis has severe learning difficulties.

Lewis's last hope is an appeal to the US supreme court after Robert McDonnell, the state governor, said he will not spare the life of the 41-year-old who was convicted of arranging for two men to murder her husband and stepson. She is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Thursday.

The men who carried out the killings – one of whom was Lewis's lover – received life sentences.

Lewis's last hope of avoiding the death chamber is an appeal before the supreme court. Her lawyers will argue that because she has such a low IQ her execution would be unconstitutional. >>> Chris McGreal in Washington | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Suède: L'extrême droite au Parlement?

leJDD.fr: Selon un sondage réalisé à la sortie des urnes dimanche soir, l'extrême droite suédoise entrerait pour la première fois au Parlement. La coalition de centre-droit au pouvoir arriverait en tête du scrutin, devant l'opposition de centre-gauche, sans pour autant disposer de la majorité absolue. [Source: leJDD.fr] | Dimanche 19 Septembre 2010
Wie der Papst die Zuneigung der Briten gewann

WELT ONLINE: Zum Abschluss seiner Reise spricht Benedikt XVI. John Newman in Birmingham selig und dankt den "englischen Fräulein".

Der Regen hört auf, als Benedikt XVI. an den Altar tritt. Die Sonne bricht durch. Hier, im Cofton Park von Birmingham, hatte John Henry Newman oft Atem geschöpft, zwischen ausladenden Eichen, Kastanien, Nussbäumen und Pappeln, die sich im Wind bogen. Jetzt hat er, 120 Jahre nach seinem Tod, 55.000 Pilger unter sanftem Regen hierhin gezogen, die seine Seligsprechung persönlich miterleben wollen. Trompeten setzen ein, als der Papst mit einer kurzen Erklärung den eminenten Denker und Priester des 19. Jahrhunderts endlich zu einem Seligen der katholischen Kirche erklärt.

Es ist der innere Höhepunkt dieser Reise – nicht weit von Coventry, das die deutsche Luftwaffe vor 70 Jahren in Schutt und Asche legte, vor deren Opfern sich der Papst aus Deutschland nun noch einmal verbeugt, wie vor all den Engländern, „die ihr Leben opferten, als sie so tapfer den Mächten dieser Ideologie des Bösen“ widerstanden. Eine Ewigkeit scheint der Einsatz der Bläser und das überwältigende „Gloria“ der Pilger in der zugigen Landschaft von den wehmütigen Dudelsäcken entfernt, die am Donnerstag die Ankunft des Papstes in Schottland begleitet hatten. >>> Von Paul Badde | Sonntag, 19. September 2010
Tausende feiern Messe mit Papst

SCHWEIZER FERNSEHEN: Tausende Katholiken haben mit Papst Benedikt XVI. eine Messe im Cofton Park von Birmingham gefeiert. Der viertägige Besuch des Papstes in Grossbritannien hatte aber auch viele Proteste provoziert.

Tagesschau vom 19.09.2010
Cult Members Go Missing in Apparent Mass Suicide Bid

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Police launched a helicopter search for 13 missing cult members on Sunday amid fears they had gone to a California desert to commit mass suicide.

The religious sect included eight children, aged as young as three, and was led by a suburban housewife Reyna Marisol Chicas, 32.

She took her two children Ezequel, 15, and Genisis, 12, with her, police said.

The group, made up of El Salvadorian immigrants, left behind a bag with a relative which contained farewell notes in which members indicated the world was about to end and they were “going to heaven.”

An alert issued by the California Highway Patrol said: “It is believed, through further investigation, that their intentions are to commit mass suicide.” >>> Nick Allen in Los Angeles | Sunday, September 19, 2010

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Cult members 'planning mass suicide' discovered praying for end to sexual immorality: Members of a religious cult feared to be planning a mass suicide in a California desert were discovered hours after they went missing. >>> Nick Allen in Los Angeles | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Pope Visit: Benedict XVI Beatifies Cardinal John Henry Newman

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Pope Benedict XVI has beatified Cardinal John Henry Newman at an open-air Mass in Birmingham.

Around 55,000 people attended the two-hour ceremony at Cofton Park on the final day of the pope's four-day state visit. | Sunday, September 19, 2010

Pope Expresses Sadness at No Welsh Visit


BBC: The Pope has spoken of his "deep love" for the Welsh people and his sadness at being unable to visit during his trip to Britain.

In a special address to the people of Wales, broadcast from a mass at Westminster Cathedral in London, the Pope also gave a blessing in Welsh.

He said he was happy to honour the people of Wales and the ancient Christian tradition.

He also blessed a mosaic of St David, the Welsh patron saint.

The pontiff said St David was "one of the great saints of the the sixth century".

"David's preaching was simple yet profound," reflected Pope Benedict.

"His dying words to his monks were: 'be joyful, keep the faith and do the little things'.

He added: "May St David's message, in all its simplicity and richness, continue to resound in Wales today, drawing the hearts of its people to renewed love for Christ and his Church."

The Pope was speaking after he blessed a new mosaic of St David installed in Westminster Cathedral earlier this month.

He also prayed before the statue of Our Lady of the Taper, the Welsh shrine brought from Cardigan to mark the occasion.

The Pope said he hoped the statue, set to return to Cardigan, would be a "lasting reminder" of his "deep love" for the Welsh people and of his "constant closeness" in prayer and in the communion of the Church[.]

He concluded his address: "Bendith Duw ar bobol Cymru! God bless the people of Wales." (+ video) >>> | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Historische Messe in der Türkei: Hunderte von Armeniern feiern im Osten des Landes

NZZ ONLINE: Im Osten der Türkei haben Armenier zum ersten Mal seit hundert Jahren in der Inselkirche Akdamar einen Gottesdienst gefeiert. Der türkische Ministerpräsident Erdogan hatte zuvor grünes Licht gegeben.

Hunderte von Armeniern haben am Sonntag in einer Kirche im Osten der Türkei einen historischen Gottesdienst gefeiert. Zum ersten Mal seit fast 100 Jahren wurde in der Inselkirche Akdamar im Van-See in Südostanatolien wieder eine Messe abgehalten.
Via Leinwand

Da in der historischen Kirche aus dem 10. Jahrhundert nur wenige Platz fanden, mussten die meisten Besucher die Messe auf einer Leinwand verfolgen. Der türkische Ministerpräsident Erdogan hatte die Feier erlaubt, um den Bemühungen zu einer Normalisierung des Verhältnisses zum Nachbarstaat Armenien einen neuen Impuls zu geben. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> sda/afp | Sonntag, 19. September 2010
Au moins 29 tués et 100 blessés dans un double attentat à Bagdad

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: IRAK | Deux attentats à la voiture piégée quasi simultanés ont frappé le nord et l'ouest de Bagdad dimanche matin, a indiqué une source au sein du ministère de l'Intérieur.

Au moins 29 personnes ont été tuées et plus de 100 autres blessées dans deux attentats à la voiture piégée quasi simultanés qui ont frappé Bagdad dimanche matin. Ces attentats constituent les attaques les plus meurtrières depuis le début du mois de septembre.

Les explosions, qui ont secoué les quartiers d'Aden (nord) et Mansour (ouest) de la capitale, ont retenti vers 10h10 (09h10 en Espagne), selon des journalistes de l'AFP sur place.

Au moins 29 personnes et 111 ont été blessées, selon un bilan fourni par une source au sein du ministère de l'Intérieur.

L'attaque la plus sanglante a eu lieu dans le quartier d'Aden (nord) et a fait 19 tués et 53 blessés, selon cette source.

Dans le quartier résidentiel de Mansour, dans l'ouest de la capitale, une autre voiture piégée a explosé, faisant 10 tués et 58 blessés, a également précisé cette source. Le chaos régnait sur les lieux des déflagrations. >>> ATS | Dimanche 18 Septembre 2010
Pope Visit: Benedict Pays Tribute to Britain’s Sacrifices in Fighting Nazis

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Britain’s “courageous resistance” to the “evil ideology” of Nazism was honoured by the Pope as he spoke to a crowd of more than 50,000 in Birmingham.



Benedict XVI said it was “deeply moving” to recall the sacrifices made by Britons during the Second World War and paid particular tribute to nearby Coventry, which was heavily bombed during the Battle of Britain 70 years ago.

Speaking at the Beatification Mass for Cardinal John Henry Newman in Cofton Park, near where the Victorian theologian was buried, the Pope said the destruction of the conflict should be remembered with “shame and horror”.

His words were particularly significant given controversy over his own wartime record. As a 14 year-old growing up in Germany, the then Joseph Ratzinger was drafted into the Hitler Youth and later enlisted in the anti-aircraft corps. >>> Martin Beckford | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Six Freed Over Pope 'Plot'

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Six men quizzed by counter-terrorism police probing a plot to attack the Pope were all released without charge, Scotland Yard said today.

The men, all believed to be of North African origin, were arrested on Friday in London.

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: ''Six men who were arrested under the Terrorism Act 2000 on Friday, 17 September, were all released without charge late on Saturday night (September 18) and early this morning (Sunday September 19).''

Police searched eight homes in north and east London and two business premises in central London, including a street cleaning depot as part of the investigation.

The Metropolitan Police said the searches of the premises had been completed and had not revealed any weapons or suspicious materials. >>> | Sunday, September 19, 2010

Related >>>
Ban on 'Distracting' Miniskirts at School Is Set to Spread

THE OBSERVER: Parents back heads over controversial ban on miniskirts

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Concerns could be addressed by specifying skirts that cannot be customised. Photograph: The Observer

When Mary Quant first raised the nation's hemlines in the 1960s, it was seen as a symbol of women's liberation. Fifty years on and the miniskirt is still causing consternation, and now faces a ban in Britain's schools.

Dozens of schools are considering following the lead of St Aidan's High in Yorkshire and St Alban's in Suffolk, which have banned skirts altogether this term and insisted girls wear trousers. In others, letters have been sent to parents saying that the current fashion for wearing school skirts as short, and as tight, as possible is a real problem in school, and dealing with the issue is a distraction from teaching.

At Kinross High in Perthshire, some parents received a stinging note telling them: "The length of your daughter's skirt is such that she spends a great deal of time pulling it down. It detracts her attention from the learning process."

Last week another Scottish head, Robert Kelly, rector of Berwickshire High in Duns, said short skirts were encouraging "inappropriate thoughts" among boys. Kelly, who had gathered together female pupils for his lecture, referred to a recent anti-rape advert. >>> Tracy McVeigh, social affairs editor | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Nick Clegg Tells Lib Dems: Accept My Cameron Pact

THE GUARDIAN: As party gathers for annual conference, leader says he has been impressed by PM's pragmatism and flexibility

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Nick Clegg has appealed to his party to embrace PM and Conservative leader David Cameron, above. Photograph: The Guardian

Nick Clegg tomorrow will launch a heartfelt appeal to Liberal Democrats to finally embrace David Cameron's centre-right party as he predicts that together they can become a "great, great reforming government". In terms that may deepen unease among Lib Dems unhappy with the coalition, Clegg uses an interview with the Observer to heap praise on Cameron as a "big politician" who fully understands how to share power.

As his party gathers in Liverpool for its annual conference, Clegg admits he was completely wrong to call Cameron a "fake" and a "con" during the election campaign and has been impressed by his pragmatism and flexibility. "He hasn't been dogmatic. He hasn't been doctrinaire," he says. "I think this government definitely has the capacity to be a great, great reforming government."

The Lib Dem leader's central message is that the coalition can only work if his own party accepts it is a full and willing participant that jointly "owns the government". The alternative, he says, is to operate in an atmosphere of "poison" as a competing faction "constantly trying to put little trophies on the mantelpiece to show we are winning victories".

He adds: "In fact the truth is much more radical than that. All the big decisions are jointly taken by David Cameron and myself … that is why I didn't want to have a department, why I am a hop and a skip from his office." >>> Toby Helm | Saturday, September 18, 2010
The Inside Story of Pope Benedict XVI's Visit

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Only a handful of journalists flew with the Pope to Britain and travelled around the country with his touring party. Jonathan Wynne Jones, The Sunday Telegraph's Religious Affairs Correspondent, was one of them

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Pope Benedict XVI greets journalists on board Shepherd One, his private plane. Photo: The Sunday Telegraph

There was a great sense of anticipation on board Shepherd One, the Pope's private plane, as the grey curtain dividing us from the papal entourage was pulled back.

His aides moved to the side to reveal the 83-year-old pontiff shuffling up the aisle, using the seats for balance, to meet the small group of Press given permission to join him on the flight from Rome to the UK.

Standing only a few feet from me, the spiritual leader of more than one billion Catholics cut a fragile and weary figure.

Dressed all in white, except for his red shoes that peeped from under his cassock, his eyes blinked often as he waited for our questions.

It is the only point of the papal visit where the Pope addresses journalists directly, but introducing the session, Fr Frederico Lombardi, the Holy See's spokesman, told the pontiff that the questions and answers would all be in Italian "so as not to tire you".

Pope Benedict's voice sounded hoarse and cracking as he replied to my question on his concerns for the trip.

"Above all I wish you a good-day and a pleasant flight to all of us," he said.

"I must admit that I am not worried, because when I went to France, it was said that it was the most anticlerical country, with strong anticlerical opinions and very few believers; when I went to the Czech Republic it was said that it was the most irreligious country in Europe and the most anticlerical also."

It would have been understandable if he was anxious at the reception that awaited him, given that in the run-up to his state visit to Britain – the first in papal history – opposition had been shrill, with atheists threatening to have him arrested and apathy seeming to be the prevailing mood.

But instead he said he was arriving in "good spirits and with joy".

"Naturally Great Britain has had is own history of anti-Catholicism. This is obvious; but it is also a country with a great history of tolerance."

His reply appeared to be going down well with his posse of aides who stood behind him as he spoke, smiling and nodding at almost every other word.

Most prominent were Georg Ganswein [sic], his private secretary who has become known as Gorgeous George for his Hollywood-good looks, and Cardinal Bertone, the Holy See's secretary of state, who comes across as more mafia don than Don Juan with his bovine face and menacing dark eyes.

Pope Benedict then surprised us by choosing to address the clerical abuse scandal, expressing his shock and sadness at the revelations and criticising the Church for failing to act swiftly enough, before adding: "Now we are in a moment of repentance and humility."

After speaking for 15 minutes, the Pope raised his arms to give his papal wave, before returning to his seat with his entourage filing behind him like bridesmaids dutifully following a bride, Fr Ganswein [sic] gently brushing down his cassock as he walked. >>> Jonathan Wynne-Jones, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Sunday, September 19, 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: Pope visit: wait for a guest who took time to charm his hosts _ Pontiff shows his dislikes about the modern age include rushing about >>> Andrew Gimson | Saturday, September 18, 2010

My essay on Pope Benedict XVI written in 2006! It has taken the MSM in Great Britain till now to catch on, to realize just how wonderful this pope is! (And I speak not as a Catholic, but as a member of the Anglican communion!

Pope Benedict XVI: Saviour of Western Civilization? >>> Mark Alexander | Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Pope to Call for 'Full Communion' Between Anglicans and Catholics

THE TELEGRAPH: The Pope is to make a dramatic offer to disaffected Anglicans to join the Roman Catholic Church.

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Dr Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI embrace on Friday. Dr Williams has admitted that the papal offer last year put him in 'an awkward position' and it is unlikely that he would welcome Anglicans being encouraged to defect to Rome. Photo: The Telegraph

In a move which the pontiff views as a positive step for Christianity, he will on Sunday make a personal plea for the Churches to come together.

Pope Benedict XVI sees this as the best way to challenge the rise of "aggressive secularism" and heal centuries of division.

He will use the final speech of his historic state visit to urge for a "restoration of full ecclesial communion" between the Churches, which separated nearly 500 years ago.

Addressing the Catholic bishops of England, Wales and Scotland, he will argue that his offer to disaffected Anglicans should not be viewed negatively, but as "a prophetic gesture".

However, the speech could undermine his efforts to build bridges with Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who confronted the Pope over the issue last year.

The plea will come at the end of his four day state visit to England and Scotland which has seen tens of thousands of members of the public attend religious ceremonies and thousands more lining the streets to see him. >>> Jonathan Wynne-Jones, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Saturday, September 18, 2010

Cardinal Newman's Beatification 'Miracle'

BBC: The Pope is to perform the first beatification ceremony ever to take place in the UK, paving the way for the Victorian Cardinal John Henry Newman to become a saint.

Thousands are expected to attend the ceremony in Cofton Park in Birmingham, but some have questioned the validity of the miracle attributed to Cardinal Newman.

Robert Pigott reports. Watch BBC video >>> | Sunday, September 19, 2010
Radical Islam on Rise in Balkans

ASSOCIATED PRESS: SKOPJE, Macedonia — An online music video praising Osama bin Laden has driven home a troubling new reality: A radical brand of Islam embraced by al-Qaida and the Taliban is gaining a foothold in the Balkans.

"Oh Osama, annihilate the American army. Oh Osama, raise the Muslims' honor," a group of Macedonian men sing in Albanian, in video posted on YouTube last year and picked up by Macedonian media this August. "In September 2001 you conquered a power. We all pray for you."

Although most of Macedonia's ethnic Albanian minority are Muslims, they have generally been secular. But experts are now seeing an increasing radicalization in pockets of the country's Islamic community, particularly after armed groups from the ethnic Albanian minority, which forms a quarter of the population of 2.1 million, fought a brief war against Macedonian government forces in 2001.

It's a trend seen across the Balkans and has raised concerns that the region, which includes new European Union member Bulgaria, could become a breeding ground for terrorists with easy access to Western Europe. Many fear that radicalized European Muslims with EU passports could slip across borders and blend into society.

At the center of the issue is the Wahhabi sect, an austere brand of Islam most prevalent in Saudi Arabia and practiced by bin Laden and the Taliban. >>> Konstantin Testorides, AP | Saturday, September 18, 2010

Saturday, September 18, 2010

SHARIAH Alert! Britain Goes Halal... But No-one Tells the Public: How Famous Institutions Serve Ritually Slaughtered Meat with No Warning

MAIL ONLINE: A Mail on Sunday investigation – which will alarm anyone concerned about animal cruelty – has revealed that schools, hospitals, pubs and famous sporting venues such as Ascot and Twickenham are controversially serving up meat slaughtered in accordance with strict Islamic law to unwitting members of the public.

All the beef, chicken and lamb sold to fans at Wembley has secretly been prepared in accordance with sharia law, while Cheltenham College, which boasts of its ‘strong Christian ethos’, is one of several top public schools which also serves halal chicken to pupils without informing them.

Even Britain’s biggest hotel and restaurant group Whitbread, which owns the Beefeater and Brewers Fayre chains, among many others, has admitted that more than three-quarters of its poultry is halal.

Animal welfare campaigners have long called for a ban on the traditional Islamic way of preparing meat – which involves killing animals by drawing a knife across their throats, without stunning them first – saying it is cruel and causes unnecessary pain.

Sharia law expressly forbids knocking the animal out with a bolt gun, as is usual in British slaughter­houses. Instead, it must be sentient when its throat is cut, and the blood allowed to drip from the carcass while a religious phrase in praise of Allah is recited.

The extent of halal meat consumption, even in areas of Britain with a very small Muslim population, was revealed as the Pope, on his first visit to Britain, expressed fears that the country was not doing enough to preserve traditional Christian values and customs.

In a strongly worded speech to Parliament, he said: ‘There are those who argue that the public celebration of festivals such as Christmas should be discouraged, in the questionable belief that it might somehow offend those of other religions or none.’

But it is animal rights groups which have been most vociferous in their opposition to halal slaughter. Campaign organisation Viva!, whose supporters include Heather Mills and Joanna Lumley, said in a statement: ‘Other practices which may be undertaken for religious reasons, such as polygamy or the stoning of adulterers, are not permitted in the UK.

‘Religious freedom does not override other moral considerations and the suffering caused by this form of slaughter is so severe that it cannot be allowed to prevent action to be taken. Consumers can do their bit by boycotting places that persist in selling meat from unstunned animals.’ Read on and comment >>> Simon McGee and Martin DelGado | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Papal Visit: The Pope Shows Great Courage

THE TELEGRAPH: Pope Benedict's visit offers a lesson for all Christians in Britain.

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Pope Benedict XVI wipes his brow during a mass in Westminster Cathedral in central London. Photo: The Telegraph

The Pope’s visit to Britain has demonstrated the abiding strength of Christianity within this nation. Throughout his visit, thousands of people from across the country have come to watch the spiritual leader of the world’s Catholics as he makes the first state visit by a Pontiff to these shores. In his speeches, His Holiness has shown a clarity of thought to shame the woolly utterances of Britain’s politicians, throwing down the gauntlet to our overly secularised society and insisting – as this newspaper has on many occasions – that religion still has a vital role to play within our culture. >>> Telegraph View | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Verstimmung zwischen Berlin und Paris: Merkel weiss nichts von einer angeblichen Schliessung von Roma-Lagern

NZZ ONLINE: Die deutsche Kanzlerin Merkel hat die Darstellung Präsident Sarkozys, wonach Deutschland ebenfalls Roma-Lager zu schliessen gedenkt, zurückgewiesen. Bei den deutschen Roma kennt man keine Lager.

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Missverstanden? Merkel und Sarkozy während des EU-Gipfels in Brüssel. Bild: NZZ Online

Ein Sprecher der Regierung in Berlin hat am Freitag Äusserungen des französischen Präsidenten Sarkozy dementiert, wonach auch Deutschland die Räumung von Roma-Lagern plant. Der Sprecher sagte, Bundeskanzlerin Merkel habe weder im Europäischen Rat noch im Gespräch mit Sarkozy über angebliche Roma-Lager in Deutschland, geschweige denn über deren Räumung gesprochen. Sarkozy hatte nach einem Gespräch mit Merkel in Brüssel behauptet, auch Deutschland wolle «seine» Roma-Lager bald auflösen. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> Ulrich Schmid, Berlin | Freitag, 17. September 2010

THE INDEPENDENT: Row with Merkel leaves Sarkozy more isolated than ever: The German Chancellor Angela Merkel has rubbished a claim by President Nicolas Sarkozy that she planned to follow France's example and bulldoze Roma camps in Germany.

The humiliating disavowal by France's closest ally left President Sarkozy more isolated than ever in his battle with the European Union over his campaign against Roma migrants from eastern Europe.
>>>
John Lichfield in Paris | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Kubanischer Newspeak und die harte Realität: Raúl Castro ringt sich zu Reformen durch und gibt sie als Retuschen aus

NZZ ONLINE: Die Machthaber in Havanna maskieren Abstriche am orthodoxen Sozialismus als Perfektionierung des kubanischen Modells. Doch das Wirtschaftsdebakel lässt ihnen keine andere Wahl, als Freiheitsräume in der Arbeitswelt einzuführen.

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Ein Kubaner trägt Blumen aus seinem Auto, die er an einem Verkaufsstand auf dem Lebensmittelmarkt «Cuatros Caminos» bei Havanna verkaufen will. Bild: NZZ Online

Und Fidel hatte doch recht, als ihm der Satz entglitt, das kubanische Modell funktioniere nicht einmal mehr in Kuba selbst. Zwar deutete der «Líder máximo» seine gegenüber einem Journalisten geäusserten häretischen Worte, als sie publik geworden waren, zum Scherz um, den seine unbedarften Zuhörer nicht verstanden hätten. Wenige Tage später aber traf Raúl Castro die ersten dezidierten Massnahmen zur Korrektur des bankrotten Systems.

Das Gesicht wahren

Die Einführung von Leistungskriterien im Staatssektor, der Verzicht auf fiktive Vollbeschäftigung und die Entlassung von vorerst einer halben Million Staatsangestellten in eine Privatwirtschaft, welcher ein fruchtbarer Nährboden erst noch bereitet werden muss, sind wahrhaftig keine blossen Retuschen. Es sind tiefe Einschnitte in die Orthodoxie der Kommunistischen Partei Kubas. Weiter lesen und einen Kommentar schreiben >>> Peter Gaupp, San José de Costa Rica | Freitag, 17. September 2010

THE TELEGRAPH: Cuba to make 500,000 state employees redundant: Cuba has announced it will make at least half a million state workers redundant and reduce restrictions on private enterprise in the most dramatic step yet to remodel employment on the communist-run island. >>> | Monday, September 13, 2010
Meinung: Wie die Islamisten Deutschland unterwandern

WELT ONLINE: Alice Schwarzer warnt vor dem aggressiven Islam. Sie glaubt, dass die Gefahr für unser Bildungs- und Rechtssystem unterschätzt wird.

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Alice Schwarzer warnt vor dem aggressiven politischen Islam – ihm ginge es nicht um Religion, sondern allein um Macht. Bild: Welt Online

Silvester 2007 habe ich in Algier gefeiert. In meiner „algerischen Familie“. Wir haben bis nachts um vier getanzt, nach arabischen wie westlichen Klängen. Wir, das waren auf der algerischen Seite: meine Kollegin Djamila, die fünf Jahre lang bei mir in Köln Zuflucht gesucht hatte, weil sie in ihrer Heimat in Lebensgefahr war. Als unverschleierte Frau und kritische Journalistin stand sie ganz oben auf den Todeslisten der marodierenden Islamisten. Neben ihr rockte ihre gläubige, unverschleierte Schwester Zohra mit Ehemann Zahar, einem Möbelhändler, der in die Moschee geht und gerne Wein trinkt. Dazwischen die Töchter Lili und Mounia, die es in den „Schwarzen Jahren“ gewagt hatten, jeden Tag ohne Kopftuch zur Uni zu gehen, und das so manches Mal nur knapp überlebt haben. Nicht dabei war Djamilas alte Mutter, die das weiße, traditionelle Kopftuch trägt und jedes Jahr nach Mekka pilgert.

Doch am ausdauerndsten tanzte der Sohn des Hauses, Ganoud, tiefgläubig und resolut lebenslustig. Wenn der Mittzwanziger mit uns durch die Stadt und an der Küste entlangstreifte, lautete jeder dritte Satz, mal ernst, mal lachend: „Alice, le prophète a dit ...“ Natürlich habe ich ihn damit aufgezogen. Aber ich habe ihn auch ernst genommen. Und er ist bis heute mein Maßstab: Ganoud, der sauer ist über die „Arroganz und Hegemonie des Westens“. Wenn ich mal wieder die Islamisten angreife, frage ich mich: Was würde Ganoud wohl dazu sagen? Und es würde mich tief beschämen, wenn er eines Tages auch mich in einen Sack mit den „arroganten Westlern“ stecken würde. Ganoud und ich, wir bleiben im Dialog.

Es fehlt an echten Dialogen

In einem echten Dialog. Denn der falsche Dialog und die so lange praktizierte falsche Toleranz haben allen geschadet, nicht nur uns Westlern, sondern allen voran der Mehrheit der nicht fundamentalistischen Menschen im muslimischen Kulturkreis, Gläubigen wie Ganoud und Nichtgläubigen wie Djamila. Diese falsche Toleranz hat den Westen 30 Jahre lang wegsehen lassen: beim Iran, wo die Menschenrechte seit 1979 mit Füßen getreten werden; in Afghanistan, wo die Taliban mit aktiver Unterstützung der USA und Deutschlands die sowjetischen Besatzer verjagten und 1992 die Terrorherrschaft übernahmen; in Tschetschenien, wo nicht nur die russische Soldateska von Übel ist, sondern auch die Islamisten ein Problem sind, die bereits 1996 (!) die Scharia einführten.

In Algerien, wo die sogenannten Afghanen, die aus dem Krieg in Afghanistan zurückgekehrten Söldner, in den 1990er-Jahren einen Bürgerkrieg anzettelten, der über 100000 Menschen das Leben kostete; in Schwarzafrika, wo der von den Gotteskriegern gezündelte Flächenbrand unaufhaltsam um sich greift – und in Europa, wo wir zuließen, dass mitten unter uns Menschen als „die anderen“, als Bürgerinnen zweiter Klasse behandelt werden und der Rechtsstaat relativiert wird. „Die Kulturfalle“ nennt das die Fatwa-verfolgte Khalida Messaoudi-Toumi, als Mathematiklehrerin lange auf der Flucht und heute algerische Kulturministerin. >>> Alice Schwarzer * | Samstag, 18. September 2010

Vorabdruck aus dem am 23.9. erscheinenden Buch von Alice Schwarzer (Hrsg.) „Die große Verschleierung. Für Integration, gegen Islamismus. Ein Emma-Taschenbuch“, Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 318 S.
Tabagie: Un fumeur sur trois est Chinois

20 MINUTES: La Chine compte 300 millions de fumeurs, soit un tiers de la population totale de fumeurs dans le monde.

La Chine compte 300 millions de fumeurs, ce qui représente un tiers de la population totale de fumeurs dans le monde, et 500 millions de fumeurs passifs, a déclaré samedi le vice-ministre chinois de la Santé, Yin Li, cité par l'agence Chine nouvelle. >>> afp | Samedi 18 Septembre 2010
Far-Right Party Poised to Take First Seats in Sweden's Parliament

THE TELEGRAPH: With his clean-cut looks, geeky spectacles, and sensible haircut, 31-year-old Jimmie Åkesson looks more like an accountant than a political extremist.

Yet in the past few weeks Mr Åkesson, leader of the far-Right Sweden Democrat party, has blamed immigrants for rape - especially Africans and Arabs.

His party has played crude television advertisements accusing burqa-clad Muslim women of taking benefits from white Swedish pensioners. And last year he called Islam the biggest threat to Sweden since the Second World War.

To the horror of his compatriots in one of Europe's most liberal and tolerant nations, blaming foreigners has worked electoral magic.

When Swedes vote on Sunday Mr Åkesson's anti-immigrant party will almost certainly win its first seats at a general election - and has even been predicted to come third with 7.5 per cent of the vote, according to one poll.

That would be enough to give them 28 seats out of a total of 349 in the Riksdag, Stockholm's parliament, ahead of five more established parties, and hold the balance of power.

It is the sort of far Right success that has been seen several times across Europe this year, and a prospect has struck fear in the hearts of Sweden's usually moderate voters who never thought they would see extremists get anywhere near power.

Mainstream politicians, deeply troubled by the party's success, have been forced to promise that they wouldn't under any circumstances go into coalition with the Sweden Democrats.

Swedes are bracing themselves for a difficult time of minority government, when their economic problems demand decisive leadership.

Fredrik Reinfeldt, the prime minister and leader of a centre-Right party, has been so rattled that, after ignoring the Sweden Democrats throughout the campaign, last week he came out and warned that a vote for them meant a "gamble with stability".

But Mr Åkesson has won support by saying what for decades most Swedes have considered unthinkable.

"Swedish pensioners can't afford to fix their broken teeth or pay for the medicine that would bring them back to health," he said, blaming the generous welfare system for lavishing money on immigrants.

"Today's multicultural Swedish power elite is completely blind to the dangers of Islam and Islamification," was another of his claims. He has called for massive restrictions to be placed on immigration.

It is a message which has resonated with surprisingly large numbers of voters. >>> Paul O´ Mahony in Stockholm and Nick Meo | Saturday, September 18, 2010

THE GUARDIAN: Swedish elections: The impact of immigration – For many, Sweden represents a modern, liberal, progressive ideal. But after tomorrow's election, a far-right party could hold the balance of power >>> Andrew Brown | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Pope Benedict XVI at Westminster Abbey (September 17, 2010)

Part 1:



Part 2:

US Scientist Charged with Trying to Sell Nuclear Secrets to Venezuela

THE TELEGRAPH: A US physicist and his wife who both worked for a high-level US energy laboratory have been arrested and charged with conspiring to sell nuclear secrets to Venezuela.

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Leo Mascheroni and his wife Marjorie pose in their Los Alamos home. Photo: The Telegraph

Pedro Leonardo Mascheroni, 75, is said to have claimed that he could help Venezuela achieve a nuclear bomb within 10 years.

He was held following a sting operation in which an FBI undercover operative posed as an agent from the South American country.

The US government said that, in reality, Venezuela had not been seeking US secrets, nor had anyone working for it.

Under Mr Mascheroni's alleged plan, Venezuela would have used a secret, underground nuclear reactor to produce and enrich plutonium, and an open reactor above ground to create nuclear energy.

The scientist's wife, Marjorie Roxby Mascheroni, 67, a US citizen, was also arrested.

Both used to work at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, a US government facility which conducts nuclear weapons research.

They appeared in court in Albuquerque, New Mexico to face 22 charges. They could be imprisoned for life if convicted. >>> Nick Allen in Los Angeles | Friday, September 17, 2010
Pope Visit UK: 9,000 Protesters Gather for London Demonstration Against Papal Tour

THE TELEGRAPH: Up to 9,000 protesters have gathered on the streets of London to demonstrate against Pope Benedict XVI's state visit.

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People protest against the visit of Pope Benedict XVI . Photo: The Telegraph

Organisers estimated up to 10,000 were due to join the march to Downing Street in opposition to the papal tour, but shortly before the march police put the growing crowd at between 7,000 and 9,000.

Campaigners held aloft banners stating ''the Pope is wrong – put a condom on'' and ''Pope protects paedophile priests'' as they joined the march.

The action is supported by the British Humanist Association and the National Secular Society among others.

Protesters cite a number of grievances against the Vatican's stance on issues ranging from gay rights, the use of condoms and the Church's response to clerical sex abuse.

As they waited to set off, human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell accused the Pontiff of obstructing police investigations into paedophile priests.

He said: "The Pope's apologies do not ring true. Even today he is refusing to hand over Vatican files he holds under lock and key. Priests who sexually abused children should. Be brought to justice and the church should do his bit."

The action is supported by the British Humanist Association and the National Secular Society among others.

Protesters cite a number of grievances against the Vatican's stance on issues ranging from gay rights, the use of condoms and the Church's response to clerical sex abuse.

As they waited to set off, human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell accused the Pontiff of obstructing police investigations into paedophile priests. >>> Patrick Sawer and Alastair Jamieson | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Anwar al Awlaki: The New Osama bin Laden?

THE TELEGRAPH: Anwar al Awlaki, a preacher broadcasting his Islamist ideology in sermons on the internet, is a clear and present danger, says Philip Johnston.

You may not have heard of him before – but this is the new face of international terrorism. His name is Anwar al Awlaki – and unlike Osama bin Laden, who has not been seen in public for many years, he is loud, obvious and very dangerous. If there is an attack any time soon in London or in another Western capital, the chances are that Awlaki will be behind it. The CIA has put him on their hit-list of assassination targets, and in a rare speech on Thursday, Jonathan Evans, the head of MI5, name-checked Awlaki as the West’s Public Enemy No 1.

“The operational involvement of Yemen-based preacher Anwar al-Awlaki with al-Qaeda is of particular concern given his wide circle of adherents in the West, including in the UK,” said Evans.

So, who is Awlaki and why are intelligence agencies so worried about him? To some extent, he is the creation of the West’s success in restraining al Qaeda’s activities in Afghanistan and the lawless borderlands of north-west Pakistan. Bin Laden’s terror organisation, if not exactly beaten, has been scattered. Where, once most of the terrorist plots against Western targets could be traced back to Pakistan (specifically, the tribal areas of Waziristan), the proportion dropped to 75 per cent three years ago and is now down to 50 per cent. The reason is that a lot of al-Qaeda’s foreign fighters, especially the Arabs, have relocated to Somalia or to Yemen – and it is there where Awlaki rules the roost.

But he is not a gun-toting terrorist warlord like bin Laden. Awlaki, 39, is a preacher, broadcasting his Islamist ideology in sermons on the internet. The web gives him a global reach – literally into the bedrooms of disenchanted and gullible young Muslims who may already have been radicalised by an extremist imam or friend. For the intelligence services, this poses a dangerous new threat because it is so hard to keep under surveillance. Plotters meeting can be watched and followed; but if the conspiracy is internet-based, with would-be terrorists acting alone simply because they have heard Awlaki’s call to jihad on their PC, the chances of stumbling upon it are reduced.

The first time that many people heard Awlaki’s name was at the turn of the year. It is said that he recruited and mentored Umar Abdulmutallab, the young African who attempted to blow up a plane carrying hundreds of passengers over Detroit on Christmas Day, by detonating a device in his underpants. However, Awlaki has been on Western intelligence’s radar for some years, as his connections with terrorist plotters, including the September 11 hijackers and the July 7 London bombers, gradually became apparent.

Far from emerging like an Old Testament prophet from the mountains of Arabia, Awlaki is an American citizen. He was born, somewhat incongruously, given his brand of radical Islam, in Las Cruces, New Mexico. His father, a Yemeni, moved there in 1971 with his wife to attend the state university where he received a master’s degree in agricultural economics. In 1978, when Awlaki was seven, the family moved back to Yemen where his father served as agriculture minister. Aged 20, Awlaki returned to the US in 1991 where he studied civil engineering at Colorado State University. He later lived in San Diego, where he obtained an MA in education, and then studied for a doctorate in Washington. Read on and comment >>> Philip Johnston | Friday, September 17, 2010
Scotland Yard Investigates Political Assassination as Fears Rise of Karachi Gang Violence Spreading

THE TELEGRAPH: Scotland Yard counter-terrorism police have been called in to lead the murder inquiry into the London killing of a Pakistani politician after officials warned a bloody struggle between political factions in Karachi was on its way to Britain.

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Pakistani Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) Secretary-General Imran Farooq. Photograph: The Telegraph

Security sources told the Daily Telegraph the murder inquiry into the death of Imran Farooq, a founder member of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), had been taken over by Scotland Yard's Counter-Terrorism Command which investigates political assassinations. MI5 is also likely to be called in to help with the hunt for the killers.

Scotland Yard last night appealed for witnesses to the crime.

Karachi, Pakistan's commercial capital, was in lockdown following the murder of Dr Farooq, who had lived in the UK since claiming asylum in 1999.

Hundreds of deaths of loyalists from rival political and ethnic gang have been recorded this year in a murky corruption and racketeering turf war.

"This has been going on here for years and it's not a surprise to see something happen in London," said a senior counter-terrorism official in Karachi, speaking on condition of anonymity. "These networks extend a long way and are very well developed." >>> Duncan Gardham and Rob Crilly in Islamabad | Friday, September 17, 2010

If something isn't done about the growth of multi-cultural Britain, it won't just be Heathrow that resembles the Third World, the whole country will! The liberal élite will then have a hell of a lot to answer for. – © Mark
Day of Drama Ends with Plea to Rescue Religion from the Margins

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Pope Benedict at an assembly at St Mary's College in Twickenham. Photograph: The INdependent

THE INDEPENDENT: Benedict XVI hit out at what he described as the "increasing marginalisation of religion" during a dramatic second day of the papal visit during which police arrested six men for an alleged terrorist plot to attack the Pope.

Speaking to members of civil society in Westminster Hall, a venue filled with symbolism for the Catholic Church as the place where St Thomas More was condemned to death for refusing to abandon his loyalty to Rome, the Pope last night praised Britain's Parliamentary tradition for creating a "pluralist democracy which places great value on freedom of speech".

But he also attacked moves to relegate religion to the private sphere and said more should be done to protect religious festivals such as Christmas. Continue reading and comment >>> Jerome Taylor, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Saturday, September 18, 2010

THE INDEPENDENT: Pope's 'deep sorrow' over child abuse scandal: Pope Benedict XVI today offered his strongest public apology of his state visit to victims of child abuse within the Catholic Church.

The Pontiff told of the "shame and humiliation" brought by the scandal and expressed "deep sorrow" once again for the "unspeakable crimes".
>>>
Katie Hodge, Press Association | Saturday, September 18, 2010
Nick Clegg: 'The Lib Dems Have No Future on the Left'

THE TELEGRAPH: Nick Clegg has said that there is no future for the Liberal Democrats as a left wing party.

The Deputy Prime Minister said he sympathised with voters who had turned to his party as an alternative to Labour and were unhappy that they had formed a coalition with the Conservatives.

But he risked alienating key supporters by dismissing those who see the Lib Dems as “a sort of left-wing conscience of the Labour Party”.

"There were some people, particularly around the height of the Iraq war, who gave up on the Labour Party and turned to the Liberal Democrats,” he said.

"I totally understand that some of these people are not happy with what the Lib Dems are doing in coalition with the Conservatives. The Lib Dems never were and aren't a receptacle for left wing dissatisfaction with the Labour Party. There is no future for that; there never was," he told the Independent. >>> Heidi Blake | Saturday, September 18, 2010

Nick Clegg: There Is No Future for Us as Left-wing Rivals to Labour

THE INDEPENDENT: As the Liberal Democrats' conference begins, their leader gives his party an uncompromising message

Nick Clegg has declared that there is "no future" for the Liberal Democrats as a left-wing alternative to Labour as he appealed to his party to show "patience" and maintain a united front with the Conservatives.

In an interview with The Independent on the eve of Liberal Democrat conference starting today, he promised his party it would reap the electoral rewards if it held its nerve about its slump in the opinion polls. >>> Andrew Grice, Political Editor | Saturday, September 18, 2010

Friday, September 17, 2010

We Will Not Be Silenced, Pope Tells Secular Britain

THE TELEGRAPH: The Pope strongly criticised the “marginalisation” of Christianity in modern Britain, claiming that churchgoers were forced to act against their conscience in the name of secular equality.



Delivering the most important speech of his historic visit, he attacked the politically correct ideas that Christmas should not be celebrated for fear of offending minorities and that the faithful should be forced to keep their beliefs to themselves.

Speaking in Westminster Hall before an audience including four former prime ministers, the Pope declared that politicians must not interfere with the running of Roman Catholic institutions, in what would be seen as a reference to those adoption agencies and faith schools that felt under attack from the previous Labour government.

He spoke earlier in the day of the threat posed by “aggressive secularism”, words that were echoed by Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks.

Cheering crowds had lined the streets of London to welcome Benedict XVI, first in Twickenham, then in the centre of the capital. >>> Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Friday, September 17, 2010

BBC: Papal visit: Pope Benedict in London (with video) >>> | Friday, September 17, 2010
Prophet Cartoon Paper Bomb Target

DAILY EXPRESS: A man hurt in an explosion at a Copenhagen hotel was preparing a letter bomb, police have said.

Officers in Denmark claimed that the bomb was likely to have been intended for a Danish newspaper which published cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad. >>> | Friday, September 17, 2010
Pope Warns of 'Increasing Marginalisation' of Christianity

THE INDEPENDENT: Pope Benedict XVI tonight attacked the "increasing marginalisation" of Christianity, arguing that religion should be recognised for its "vital" contribution to the nation.

The Pontiff told MPs, peers, and religious leaders in Westminster Hall that there were "worrying signs" of a failure to appreciate the rights of believers to freedom of conscience and the "legitimate" role of religion in public life.

In his speech, the Pope said he was voicing his concern at the growing marginalisation of religion - particularly of Christianity - even in nations which place a great emphasis on tolerance.

"There are those who would advocate that the voice of religion be silenced, or least relegated to the purely private sphere," he said.

"There are those who argue that the public celebration of festivals such as Christmas should be discouraged, in the questionable belief that it might somehow offend those of other religions or none.

"And there are those who argue - paradoxically, with the intention of eliminating discrimination - that Christians in public roles should be required at times to act against their conscience."

The Pope's remarks are likely to be interpreted as aimed in part at the failure of the Catholic adoption agencies to retain the right to refuse gay couples as potential adoptive parents.

The Church has also come under fire over the right to run faith schools and whether it should be allowed to bar sexually active gay people from key appointments.

In his speech, the Pope highlighted Catholic martyr St Thomas More, who was tried in Westminster Hall and sentenced to death in 1535.

The Pope paid tribute to the role of Parliament and its influence in developing democratic Government across the world.

He said Catholic social teaching had "much in common" with the approach of Britain's democracy with its "strong sense" of the individual's rights and duties and of the equality of all citizens before the law.

Former prime ministers Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Sir John Major and Baroness Thatcher were all present in Westminster Hall to hear the speech. Read on and comment >>> Martha Linden and Andrew Woodcock, PA | Friday, September 17, 2010
Pope Benedict XVI Publicly Shakes Hand with Clergywoman for First Time


Pope Benedict XVI publicly shook hands with a clergywoman for the first time in a historic gesture ahead of a service at Westminster Abbey. >>> | Friday, September 17, 2010