FIGARO – BLOG _ GEORGES MALBRUNOT: L’ex raïs tunisien a quitté le Palais de l’ex roi Faysal à Djeddah, où il avait été hébergé à son arrivée en Arabie saoudite, le 15 janvier dernier. «Mais depuis personne ne sait où il est », nous affirme un habitant de la cité portuaire saoudienne sur la Mer rouge. «Il y a beaucoup de rumeurs, mais c’est un sujet qui est tabou ici à Djeddah», ajoute-t-il. Continuez à lire et écrire un commentaire >>> Georges Malbrunot | Lundi 28 Février 2011
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
FIGARO – BLOG _ GEORGES MALBRUNOT: L’ex raïs tunisien a quitté le Palais de l’ex roi Faysal à Djeddah, où il avait été hébergé à son arrivée en Arabie saoudite, le 15 janvier dernier. «Mais depuis personne ne sait où il est », nous affirme un habitant de la cité portuaire saoudienne sur la Mer rouge. «Il y a beaucoup de rumeurs, mais c’est un sujet qui est tabou ici à Djeddah», ajoute-t-il. Continuez à lire et écrire un commentaire >>> Georges Malbrunot | Lundi 28 Février 2011
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Georges Malbrunot,
Jeddah,
Jidda,
l'Arabie saoudite,
Tunisie

LE FIGARO: L'héritier du roi Idriss Ier, renversé par Kadhafi il y a quarante-deux ans, se considère comme un point de ralliement possible, «une ombrelle pour tous les groupes d'opposition».
De Londres, il regarde à la télévision les insurgés libyens brandir son drapeau, la bannière rouge, noire et verte frappée de l'étoile et du croissant, celle de la monarchie libyenne. Mohammed al-Sanusi, 51 ans, héritier du trône de Libye, souhaite le départ de celui qui, jeune capitaine, avait renversé son grand-oncle le roi Idriss Ier il y a quarante-deux ans. «Son combat pour rester au pouvoir ne sera pas de longue durée en raison de la volonté de liberté du peuple libyen. Cette grande révolution populaire finira par être victorieuse, grâce à l'unité du peuple libyen», dit-il dans un communiqué. Rêve-t-il de monter sur le trône? Rencontrant Le Figaro à Paris en décembre 2007, il laissait la porte entrouverte: «Je me bats d'abord pour l'histoire, pour faire respecter le nom ma famille. Si dans l'avenir les Libyens choisissent la monarchie, je suis là. S'ils font un autre choix, je le respecterai.» Mohammed al-Sanusi s'était installé dans un hôtel parisien à 300 mètres de la tente de Kadhafi, alors en visite officielle à Paris. >>> Par Pierre Prier | Lundi 28 Février 2011
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Libya
FAZ.NET: „Habe Rücktrittsgesuch schweren Herzens angenommen“ : Bundeskanzlerin Merkel hat mit Bedauern auf den Rücktritt von Verteidigungsminister zu Guttenberg reagiert. Einen Nachfolger im Verteidigungsministerium gab sie nicht bekannt. Guttenberg hatte als Folge der Plagiats-Affäre seinen Rücktritt eingereicht. Er habe die Grenzen seiner Kräfte erreicht, sagte er in Berlin. >>> FAZ.NET | Dienstag, 01. März 2011
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Labels:
Libyen
REUTERS: Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi despatched forces to a western border area on Tuesday in defiance of Western military and economic pressure, stirring fears that the bloodiest Arab revolt may grow more violent.
As the West weighed military options, suspicions grew that the veteran leader, in power for 41 years, did not grasp the strength of the forces now gathering against him.
In Moscow, a Kremlin source suggested Gaddafi should step down, calling him a "living political corpse who has no place in the modern civilized world," Interfax news agency reported.
But Gaddafi appeared oblivious to outside pressure. >>> Maria Golovnina | Tripoli | Tuesday, March 01, 2011
AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: Defence minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg resigns amid claims he plagiarised his doctoral dissertation.Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, Germany's defence minister, has resigned over allegations he plagiarised his doctoral thesis, saying he could no longer carry out his duties as minister.
The popular politician, who was seen as a rising star in government, said on Tuesday he had "reached the limits of his strength" as he announced his resignation.
The 39-year-old had his doctorate title revoked after admitting last week there were "grave mistakes" in his 2007 thesis. He said he made some errors, but not deliberately, and insisted it was not plagiarised. >>> Agencies | Tuesday, March 01, 2011
THE GUARDIAN – EDITORIAL: The conflict inherent between policy and principle continues to this day
The international community has been compromised by the revolution sweeping the Arab world. In three uncertain weeks, the United States vacillated from urging stability to shore up a strategic ally in Hosni Mubarak to cheering his overthrow. France trod the same path in Tunisia. Happily, the foreign minister Michèle Alliot-Marie, whose first reaction to the uprising was to offer Ben Ali France's superior knowledge in riot control, has finally resigned. But her family's involvement with the ancien regime (her parents had shares in a property company owned by a businessman close to the regime) provided its own morality play.
Few were disinterested observers. When it came to the crunch, such as organising the interrogation under torture of jihadis picked up in Pakistan, the CIA, among others, traded with the darkest elements of Mubarak's regime being denounced with such ardour today. Russia and China, both of whom have much to fear from spontaneous demonstrations by their own people, have fared little better. Continue reading and comment >>> Editorial | Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Labels:
Africa,
Arab world,
Maghreb,
Middle East,
uprisings
SKY NEWS: The Libyan regime has accused the British government of being behind the recent unrest in Arab countries.
A spokesman for Libya's Ministry of Information accused UK Prime Minister David Cameron of leading a campaign for regime change in Libya and neighbouring countries.
Khaled al Koabi claimed to have information that Britain is "planning to carry on some activities that can create an environment of instability in some Arab countries, for the sake of changing regimes".
He also called on British MPs to oppose what he called the Government's "dangerous behaviour". >>> Adam Tate, Sky News Online | Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Labels:
David Cameron,
Gaddafi,
Libya,
United Kingdom

I would like to take this opportunity to wish all my Welsh visitors a very Happy St. David’s Day!
St. David is the patron saint of Wales, whilst the daffodil and the leek are the emblems of Wales.
Labels:
Wales
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: There is no place in British law for Christian beliefs, despite this country’s long history of religious observance and the traditions of the established Church, two High Court judges said on Monday.
Lord Justice Munby and Mr Justice Beatson made the remarks when ruling on the case of a Christian couple who were told that they could not be foster carers because of their view that homosexuality is wrong.
The judges underlined that, in the case of fostering arrangements at least, the right of homosexuals to equality “should take precedence” over the right of Christians to manifest their beliefs and moral values.
In a ruling with potentially wide-ranging implications, the judges said Britain was a “largely secular”, multi-cultural country in which the laws of the realm “do not include Christianity”.
Campaigners for homosexual rights welcomed the judgment for placing “21st-century decency above 19th-century prejudice”. Christian campaigners claimed that it undermined the position of the Church of England.
The ruling in the case of Owen and Eunice Johns, from Derby, is the latest in a series of judgments in which Christians have been defeated in the courts for breaching equality laws by manifesting their beliefs on homosexuality.
Senior churchmen, including Lord Carey, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, recently began a campaign urging Christians to stand up for their rights and have petitioned the Prime Minister to review human rights laws.
In their ruling yesterday, the judges complained that it was not yet “well understood” that British society was largely secular and that the law has no place for Christianity. >>> Tim Ross, Religious Affairs Editor | Monday, February 28, 2011
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fostering,
homosexuality,
UK
ABC NEWS: U.S. Exclusive: Christiane Amanpour Sits Down for an Interview With Libya's Embattled Leader
I interviewed Col. Moammar Gadhafi this evening, when he told me he could not step down because he is not a president or king, and denied there were demonstrations against him anywhere in Libya.
"They love me. All my people with me, they love me," he said. "They will die to protect me, my people."
We conducted the interview at a beachfront restaurant in the Corniche, a coastal road on Tripoli's Mediterranean coast. Dressed in his flowing trademark robes and gold-rimmed aviator sunglasses, Gadhafi looked every inch the flamboyant character he's known to be. The longtime leader, who didn't seem to be surrounded by huge amounts of security, seemed relaxed and focused. Walking unabashedly into the restaurant, Gadhafi wanted to show he's not hiding in any underground bunker and that he believes he's still very much in charge.
Gadhafi said he wanted to speak to the press to get the truth out, and he spent more than an hour with us trying to put forth his side of the story.
The Libyan leader laughed when I asked him whether he would step down in response to calls against violence by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Obama.
"Would anyone leave his homeland? Why would I leave Libya?" Gadhafi said, laughing.
He invited the United Nations and any other organization to come to Libya and do a "fact finding mission" and questioned how they could freeze assets, impose sanctions and an arms embargo, and implement a travel ban based purely on media reports alone. >>> REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK BY CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, TRIPOLI, Libya | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
Christiane Amanpour,
Gaddafi,
Libya,
Tripoli
REUTERS: Forces loyal to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were massed in the west of the country on Tuesday, residents said, and the United States said it was moving warships and air forces closer to Libya.
Residents feared pro-Gaddafi forces were preparing an attack to regain control of Nalut, about 60 km (38 miles) from the Tunisian border in western Libya, from protesters seeking an end to Gaddafi's rule.
The United States and other foreign governments discussed military options on Monday for dealing with Libya as Gaddafi scoffed at the threat to his government from a popular uprising.
U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice said Gaddafi was "disconnected from reality," was "slaughtering his own people" and was unfit to lead.
She said Washington was in talks with its NATO partners and other allies about military options. The United States also said about $30 billion in assets in the United States had been blocked from access by Gaddafi and his family.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said his government would work to prepare for a "no-fly" zone in Libya to protect the people from attacks by Gaddafi's forces.
Gaddafi rejected calls for him to step down and dismissed the strength of the uprising against his 41-year rule that has ended his control over eastern Libya and is closing in on the capital Tripoli.
"All my people love me. They would die to protect me," he told the U.S. ABC network and the BBC on Monday.
He denied using his air force to attack protesters but said planes had bombed military sites and ammunition depots. He also denied there had been demonstrations and said young people were given drugs by al Qaeda and therefore took to the streets. Libyan forces had orders not to fire back at them, he said. >>> Maria Golovnina | Tripoli | Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Labels:
Ban Ki-moon,
Barack Hussein Obama,
Gaddafi,
Libya,
Susan Rice
Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
coalition,
Conservatives,
Lib Dems,
UK politics
BBC: Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi has told the BBC he is loved by all his people and has denied there have been any protests in Tripoli.
Col Gaddafi said that his people would die to protect him.
He laughed at the suggestion he would leave Libya and said he felt betrayed by leaders who had urged him to quit.
Earlier world governments condemned attacks on Libyan civilians, with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton saying Col Gaddafi must "go now".
The EU on Monday imposed sanctions including an arms embargo, asset freeze and travel ban on Col Gaddafi and his close entourage.
Col Gaddafi is facing a massive challenge to his 41-year rule, with protesters in control of towns in the east. (+ video) >>> | Monday, February 28, 2011
The interview with Col Gaddafi took place in a restaurant on the seafront overlooking the port in Tripoli. He came in with his entourage, he had sunglasses on, and some kind of autumnal brown robe. He was relaxed throughout the interview.
He laughed quite a bit when asked various questions. He seemed very unconcerned about foreign pressure, saying the Libyan people were behind him, the Libyan people loved him.
He departed at the head of his motorcade, which consisted of dozens of vehicles. They left at high speed. – Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East editor, Tripoli
Lien en relation avec l’article >>>
LE MONDE: Comment organiser une alternative politique durable dans un pays en proie au chaos, sans partis, sans syndicats et sans Constitution ? C'est la question qui divise aujourd'hui les leaders de l'opposition au colonel Kadhafi, alors que la capitale est toujours aux mains du Guide de la révolution libyenne.Dimanche 27 février, à Benghazi, fief de la contestation situé dans l'est du pays (voir la carte des villes libyennes désertées par les pro-Kadhafi), des dirigeants du mouvement insurrectionnel ont annoncé la formation d'un Conseil national indépendant de transition représentant les villes tombées aux mains des insurgés. Sa composition et son mode de fonctionnement n'ont pas été arrêtés. Selon son porte-parole, Abdelhafez Ghoqa, l'instance est surtout chargée d'incarner "le visage politique de la révolution". Elle ne constitue en aucun cas un gouvernement provisoire. >>> LEMONDE.FR | Lundi 28 Février 2011
Au 14e jour de l’insurrection, le Guide libyen ne contrôle plus que Tripoli et sa région. «Nous avons tout lieu de penser que le gros des champs d’exploitation (de gaz et de pétrole) n’est plus entre les mains de Kadhafi», a déclaré le commissaire européen à l’énergie, Günther Oettinger.
Après l’ONU et les Etats-Unis, l’Union européenne a adopté lundi un embargo sur les armes contre la Libye ainsi qu’un gel des avoirs et des interdictions de visas d’entrée dans l’espace Schengen contre le colonel Kadhafi et 25 de ses proches. >>> ATS | Lundi 28 Février 2011
TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: "Mon peuple m’adore. Ils mourraient pour me protéger", a affirmé lundi le colonel libyen Mouammar Kadhafi dans un entretien à plusieurs médias dont la chaîne de télévision américaine ABC."Mon peuple m’adore. Ils mourraient pour me protéger", a affirmé lundi le colonel libyen Mouammar Kadhafi dans un entretien à plusieurs médias dont la chaîne de télévision américaine ABC. >>> AFP | Lundi 28 Février 2011
ISRAEL TODAY: Most of the international community, and certainly the mainstream international press, has moved on from Egypt and its 18-day uprising that lead to the downfall of former President Hosni Mubarak and his dictatorial regime. The new story on everyone’s lips is Libya, where the masses are fighting, and dying, to similarly remove Col. Muammar Gaddafi.But what is happening now in Egypt? The sudden removal of Mubarak cannot be the end of the story, and with the future of such a significant regional power hanging in the balance, what happens in the weeks and months after is far more important than the president’s resignation.
Amazingly, while the Western intelligentsia spent the two weeks leading up to Mubarak’s departure alternatively insisting that the Muslim Brotherhood was either not a threat or too small to worry about, almost no one covered the February 18 return to Egypt of Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Yusuf al-Qaradawi as the major event it was.
Qaradawi was exiled from Egypt decades ago by Mubarak, and was also banned from entering the US and Britain for his radical views and teachings. But that didn’t stop the cleric. Instead, he was given a spot on Al Jazeera, where his show “Sharia and Life” quickly became the top rated program on the Middle East network.
When he stepped into Cario’s now-famed Tahrir Square this month, it was to a hero’s welcome by the estimated two million Egyptians that came to hear him. During his speech, Qaradawi advised those who had toppled Mubarak that “the revolution is not finished,” and insisted that democracy in Egypt must be along Islamic, not Western lines.
The Muslim Brotherhood’s platform officially states that Egypt’s government must be “republican, parliamentary, constitutional and democratic in accordance with Islamic Sharia law.” >>> Ryan Jones | Sunday, February 27, 2011
Labels:
Egypt,
Qaradawi,
sharia law
ISRAEL TODAY: The Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip continued its transition to Sharia Law this week when the ruling Islamic terror group arrested five local hair stylists for cutting women’s hair.The Palestinian Center for Human Rights reported that the five were made to sign a declaration that they would never again work at salon’s that cater to women, and ordered all local beauty salons to employ only female stylists.
Other recent similar actions include banning Gaza women from smoking the water pipes that are so prevalent in Arab culture, and forbidding women to ride behind men on motorcycles.
Hamas has also taken to banning certain books from entering Gaza that it feels violate Islamic law. [Source: Israel Today] Ryan Jones | Friday, February 25, 2011
Labels:
Gaza,
sharia law
ISLAM TIMES: Israeli television interviewed close members of Gaddafi’s family and announced that Muammar Gaddafi is a Jew.
Islam Times reports that the Israeli channel 2 interviewed Rachel Saada, and Guita Brown, Gaddafi’s cousins, about Gaddafi’s Jewish roots. The television host asked Muammar Gaddafi’s Saada when she found out that Gaddafi’s mother and father were Jewish.
Rachel Saada answered: “The story goes that Gaddafi’s grandmother, herself a Jewess, was married to a Jewish man at first. But he treated her badly, so she ran away and married a Muslim sheikh. Their child was the mother of Gaddafi.”
The host asked whether his mother became Muslim which she did. But, the host then reminded the viewers that according to religious law she was still ethnically Jewish. He then said: “So, the point is that Gaddafi doesn’t just have Jewish relatives, he is Jewish.”
Israel Today Magazine stated: “If the story told by Brown and Saada is true, Gaddafi is entitled to immigrate to Israel as a Jew under Israel’s Law of Return. Even if every other country on earth refused him entry, Israel would be obligated by its own laws to take Gaddafi in.” [Source: Islam Times] Islam Times | Wednesday, February 23, 2011
AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: US secretary of state says Gaddafi's government must be held to account as EU approves new sanctions against Libya.Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, has said the government of Muammar Gaddafi must be held to account over atrocities committed in Libya as she reiterated calls for the leader to step down.
Speaking at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerland, on Monday, Clinton said Gaddafi must leave power "now, without further violence or delay". "Gaddafi and those around him must be held accountable for these acts, which violate international legal obligations and common decency," she said.
"We have seen Colonel Gaddafi's security forces open fire on peaceful protesters. They have used heavy weapons on unarmed civilians. Mercenaries and thugs have been turned loose to attack demonstrators." Clinton said Washington was keeping "all options on the table" in terms of action against the government, and that a no-fly zone was "an option we are actively considering".
She also said two US humanitarian teams are being sent to Libya's borders with Egypt and Tunisia to provide aid to refugees fleeing the country.
Meanwhile, a Pentagon official said the US military was repositioning naval and air forces around Libya. >>> Al Jazeera and agencies | Monday, February 28, 2011
AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: Demonstrations calling for economic changes continue into third day in northeastern city of Sohar.
Residents in the northeastern Omani city of Sohar have reportedly looted a supermarket damaged in protests, as demonstrations over economic woes carried on into a third day.
Security forces sealed off main roads to the city on Monday and hundreds of protesters reportedly stormed a police station, while protests spread throughout the city.
Sohar, a city about 200km northwest of the capital of Muscat, was the scene of protests over the weekend, as demonstrators demanded higher salaries, jobs for the unemployed and the removal of some government ministers.
But police did not respond to Monday's protests, witnesses said, and appeared to have withdrawn from the scene of the looting.
"It's a free for all," said one man who watched while people grabbed food and other goods, piling their hauls into stolen trolleys and heading away from the burnt Lulu Hypermarket, according to a report from the Reuters news agency.
"There's no security ... I want to live," said a 28-year-old Omani, who identified himself as Youssef, walking away with 10 bottles of juice.
One woman was seen stacking up slightly burned cartons of eggs, powdered milk, orange juice and cream cheese on her trolley and calmly leaving the supermarket. >>> Al Jazeera and agencies | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
Sultanate of Oman
THE GUARDIAN: Court rules against Christian couple who claimed their beliefs on homosexuality should not prevent them becoming foster carersA Christian couple opposed to homosexuality because of their faith have lost a landmark high court battle over the right to become foster carers.
Eunice and Owen Johns, aged 62 and 65, from Oakwood, Derby, went to court after a social worker expressed concerns when they said they could not tell a child a "homosexual lifestyle" was acceptable.
The Pentecostal Christian couple had applied to Derby city council to be respite carers but withdrew their application, believing it "doomed to failure" because of the social worker's attitude to their religious beliefs.
They asked judges to rule that their faith should not be a bar to them becoming carers, and that the law should protect their Christian values.
But Lord Justice Munby and Mr Justice Beatson ruled that laws protecting people from discrimination because of their sexual orientation "should take precedence" over the right not to be discriminated against on religious grounds. >>> Press Association | Monday, February 28, 2011
Related >>>
Henceforward, it is to be hoped that Muslim couples will also be disallowed from fostering children, because no faith is as homophobic as Islam is (if indeed Islam is a faith rather than a socio-political ideology). Somehow, though, I can't see this happening, can you? – © Mark
Labels:
fostering,
homosexuality,
UK
Spaniens König Juan Carlos ist im Vergleich zu seinem marokkanischen Nachbarn Mohammed VI. ein armer Schlucker. Als die Zeitschrift „Forbes“ den 47 Jahre alten Alawiten-Herrscher zuletzt auf seine Liste setzte, wurde sein privates Vermögen mit knapp 2 Milliarden Euro angegeben. Juan Carlos ist zwar vor einigen Jahren mit fast dem gleichen Betrag auch auf die Liste gerutscht. In seinem Fall handelte es sich aber um ein Versehen, weil der Wert all der königlichen Schlösser mitgezählt wurde, die in Spanien dem Staat gehören. In Marokko ist das anders. Dort gehören die fünf Paläste in Rabat, Casablanca, Fes, Meknes und Marrakesch „M6“, wie er im Volksmund genannt wird, allein. Und auch in Frankreich hat er noch einen, von seinem Vater Hassan II. geerbten Palast nahe Paris, wo er um den Jahreswechsel, als Nordafrika von Tunesien bis Ägypten schon politisch in Brand geraten war, geruhsame Ferientage verbrachte. >>> Von Leo Wieland | Montag, 28. Februar 2011
FAZ.NET: Marokko will eine Königsdemokratie: Hau ab! Dieser Schlachtruf aller Demonstrationen im arabischen Raum ist in Marokko nicht zu hören. Niemand verlangt dort die Abdankung des Monarchen Mohammed VI. Stattdessen erhofft man neben der Demokratie auch eine Reform des Königtums. >>> Von Joseph Hanimann, Rabat | Dienstag, 22. Februar 2011
Labels:
König Mohammed VI,
Marokko
BEAUTIFUL ATROCITIES: UN Security Resolution 1970 dealing with crimes against humanity in Libya lists six individuals whose assets shall be frozen & who are placed under an immediate travel ban: “Member States shall take the necessary measures to prevent the entry into or transit through their territories of individuals listed“: Check them out and comment >>> | Monday, February 28, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: International action to pressure Gaddafi into surrendering gathers momentum with Russia and China joining the west in backing calls to prosecute him for war crimesThe European Union has agreed sanctions against the Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, including an arms embargo, asset freeze and visa ban.
EU ambassadors agreed the sanctions at a meeting to assess the deteriorating situation in the north African nation. An announcement confirming the decision is expected later on Monday.
William Hague, the British foreign secretary, warned there would be a "day of reckoning" for anyone involved in supporting Gaddafi's human rights abuses against protesters in Libya.
Hague, who is attending a meeting of the UN human rights council in Geneva to discuss the crisis, called on other countries to join Britain in backing a resolution being debated by the UN general assembly in New York on Tuesday which would make Libya the first nation ever to be suspended from membership of the council.
David Cameron will make a statement to MPs later on Monday. >>> Hélène Mulholland and agencies | Monday, February 28, 2011
Related >>>
REUTERS: Sons of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi have failed to persuade prominent Saudi clerics to issue religious rulings against a revolt that is threatening to bring down the veteran leader, Al Arabiya television said on Monday.The Saudi-owned channel said on its website that Gaddafi's son Saif al-Islam had contacted one cleric, Salman al-Awda, and Saadi Gaddafi had reached out to a second, Ayedh al-Garni, but both rejected their calls.
"You are killing the Libyan people. Turn to God because you are wronging them. Protect Libyan blood, you are killing old people and children. Fear God," Garni said he told Saadi.
Garni made the remarks on air on Sunday, the website said, adding Awda gave the same message to Saif al-Islam.
Awda has a weekly television show on Saudi-owned pan-Arab channel MBC1 and has been praised by al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden before as a religious scholar he felt did not toe the government line. Garni gave lectures in Libya last year. Continue reading and comment >>> Reporting by Andrew Hammond, editing by Mark Trevelyan | Dubai | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
Saif Gaddafi,
Saudi Arabia,
Saudi clerics
REUTERS: Rebels "down" Libyan aircraft, governments discuss next move: Rebels downed a military aircraft on Monday as they fought a government bid to take back Libya's third city, Misrata, a witness said, while foreign ministers discussed how to help them oust Muammar Gaddafi. >>> Maria Golovnina | Monday, February 28, 2011
AL JAZEERA ENGLISH: Leaked diplomatic cables tell a tale of sibling rivalry, private armies and multi-million dollar parties.On Saturday, the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to adopt a resolution imposing international sanctions on Libya, including an arms embargo, asset freezes and travel bans. Resolution 1970 also referred the situation in the country to the International Criminal Court (ICC) - and marks the first time that the US has ever voted in favour of such a move.
This comes after more than 10 days of protests in Libya, which have been met with violence by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi, the country's leader. Speaking after the vote, Ibrahim Debbashi, Libya's deputy ambassador to the UN, said that at least 2,000 people had been killed and added that the newly passed resolution would target all those responsible, including members of the Libyan leader's family.
Heir apparent?
Of all Gaddafi's children, the most outspoken throughout the uprising has been his eldest son from his second marriage. Once considered the heir apparent, Saif al-Islam has remained defiant since he declared that his country faced civil war and "rivers of blood" on February 20. He again spoke out on Saturday to say that his family was standing firm. Up until a week ago, many Western observers saw Saif al-Islam as a reformer - but times have since changed.
Recent years brought about a rapprochement of sorts between Libya and the US, after Gaddafi’s government renounced the development of weapons of mass destruction and accepted responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing. The Bush administration announced in 2006 that full diplomatic ties between the two countries would be re-established and that Libya would be taken off the US state department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism.
Two years later, Saif al-Islam was welcomed in Washington, where he met with Condoleezza Rice, the then secretary of state. In a recently leaked US diplomatic cable, US officials wrote about his "high-profile role as the public face of the regime to the West" being a mixed blessing. "While it has bolstered his image (he is probably the most publicly recognised figure in Libya other than Muammar Gaddafi), many Libyans view him as self-aggrandising and too eager to please foreigners at the expense of Libyans' interest." >>> Karim Haddad | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
Libya
Labels:
Egypt,
Muslim Brotherhood
FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Im Oman haben am Montag wieder Hunderte Menschen für mehr Arbeitsplätze und politische Reformen demonstriert. Die Zahl der Toten nach Zusammenstößen am Sonntag zwischen Demonstranten und der Polizei blieb weiterhin unklar.
Im Oman haben die Demonstrationen für mehr Arbeitsplätze und politische Reformen die Hauptstadt Maskat erreicht. Hunderte Menschen protestierten am Montag vor einem Regierungsgebäude. In der Industriestadt Sohar blockierten ebenfalls Hunderte Demonstranten Zufahrtswege zum Hafen, zu einer Raffinerie sowie einer Aluminium-Fabrik. Nach Auskunft des Hafenbetreibers konnte Öl jedoch wie gewohnt exportiert werden. Die Zahl der Toten nach Zusammenstößen am Sonntag zwischen Demonstranten und der Polizei war zunächst unklar. >>> FAZ.net | Montag, 28. Februar 2011
Labels:
Muscat,
Sultanate of Oman
ZEIT ONLINE: Wohlklingende Versprechungen für die Landsleute, klare Worte zur Integration für die Deutschen: Der türkische Premier ist auf Stimmenfang. Von Lars Geiges, DüsseldorfRecep Tayyip Erdogan kommt zu spät. Gut anderthalb Stunden sind es. Das Flugzeug des türkischen Ministerpräsidenten hat einfach etwas länger für die Reise aus Ankara gebraucht. Und dann war da noch der dichte Verkehr auf den Straßen von Düsseldorf: 10.000 Türken hatten sich aufgemacht, um Erdogan zu sehen. Doch die Hauptperson steckte im Stau. Zum großen Auftritt gehört die kleine Verspätung.
Erdogans Fans nahmen das klaglos hin. Die letzte Rede Erdogans in Deutschland liegt drei Jahre zurück, da kam es auf einige Minuten nicht an. Sein Auftritt in Köln damals war politischer Zündstoff. Seine Anklage, Assimilation sei ein "Verbrechen gegen die Menschlichkeit", zog eine heftige Integrationsdebatte nach sich. Und heute? Würde Erdogan nachlegen? >>> Von Lars Geiges | Montag, 28. Februar 2011
FAZ: Westerwelle und CSU kritisieren Erdogan: Als Reaktion auf die Rede des türkischen Ministerpräsidenten in Düsseldorf hat Außenminister Westerwelle das Erlernen der deutschen Sprache als „Schlüssel zur Integration“ bezeichnet. Die CSU kritisiert, Erdogan habe den Besuch genutzt, seine hier lebenden Landsleute „aufzuwiegeln“. >>> | Montag, 28. Februar 2011
ASHARQ ALAWSAT: Abha – A study by Saudi Arabian social researcher at the University of Umm al-Qura, Dr. Mahmoud Kisnawi, claims that 60 percent of Saudi Arabian husbands financially exploit their wives.The study argues that many working wives allowed their husbands to take advantage of their salaries, under the pretence of ensuring family stability, despite the wives religious and legal right to her complete salary.
Dr. Kisnawi confirmed to Asharq Al-Awsat that 60 percent of husbands utilize their wives[‘] salaries to enter the real estate market or complete the construction of a home, without taking into account the needs and desires of the wife. He added that this phenomenon contributed to the increase in divorce rates in Saudi Arabia.
Kisnawi added "in some cases, husbands have demanded that their wives provide them with large amounts of money so that they can complete the construction of their home. However these husbands may be deceiving their wives and want to complete construction in order to marry a second wife, with this [second] wife living in the home bought by the first wife's salary. This causes psychological trauma to the [first] wife and causes her to lose her trust in the sanctity of marriage, and as a result she would [therefore] seek separation and divorce."
Dr. Kisnawi told Asharq Al-Awsat that the issue of what happens with a wife's salary remains a thorny issue in Saudi Arabian society, and has contributed in the increase in divorce rates. He added "many wives perceive that their husbands are stealing their rights with regards to their monthly salary, and this causes [marital] problems, often forcing the woman to submit to her husband in order to protect the integrity of the family and the welfare of her children." >>> Fatin al-Shehri | Friday, February 25, 2011
Labels:
Saudi Arabia
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Rocked by a wave of scandals, Hong Kong's legendary generation of tycoons are increasingly becoming the objects of public derision on the island.In their heyday, the entrepreneurs built Hong Kong into one of the most successful cities on earth and established near total control over the property, shipping and retail industries.
But over the past year, the city's residents seem to have lost patience with the greed and arrogance of the tycoons and a series of scandals has tarnished their legacy.
On Sunday, the 44 year-old son of Li Ka-shing, the richest man in Asia, became the latest man to find himself splashed across the media when his 22-year-old partner announced she was leaving him.
Isabella Leong Lok-si, an actress who bore twin sons to Richard Li last June, said she was ready for a "new chapter" in her life.
Mr Li is the chairman of PCCW, Hong Kong's largest telecommunications company. His father has a fortune of more than £13 billion. >>> Malcolm Moore, Hong Kong | Sunday, February 27, 2011
Labels:
Hong Kong
L'ex-président égyptien Hosni Moubarak et sa famille proche sont interdits de quitter le pays, et leurs avoirs en Égypte sont gelés, a-t-on appris lundi de source judiciaire égyptienne. Outre le président, qui a démissionné le 11 février, cette requête concerne son épouse Suzanne ainsi que ses deux fils, Alaa et Gamal, et leurs épouses Heidi Rasekh et Khadiga al-Gammal, selon cette source.
Hosni Moubarak, qui a quitté le pouvoir à la suite d'une révolte populaire et confié le pouvoir à l'armée, a, depuis, quitté Le Caire pour la station égyptienne de Charm el-Cheikh, sur la mer Rouge, selon le gouvernement. Ni lui ni les membres de sa famille proche n'ont fait d'apparition publique depuis lors. Le 21 février, la justice égyptienne avait annoncé avoir demandé le gel des avoirs à l'étranger de l'ex-président et de sa proche famille. Selon le journal gouvernemental Al-Ahram, la famille Moubarak aurait "des comptes secrets dans des banques égyptiennes". Le journal cite des dépôts sur ces comptes de 147 millions de dollars pour Suzanne Moubarak, 100 millions pour Alaa et 100 millions également pour Gamal. >>> Source AFP | Lundi 28 Février 2011
Labels:
Égypte,
Hosni Moubarak
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The High Court will today rule in a case involving a Christian couple who say they were ''doomed not to be approved'' as foster carers because of their traditional views on homosexuality.Eunice and Owen Johns, 62 and 65, said issues were raised over their suitability as foster carers after they told social workers they could not tell a child a homosexual lifestyle was acceptable.
The Pentecostal Christian couple from Derby had applied to Derby City Council to be respite carers.
But at a hearing last year, two High Court judges, sitting at Nottingham Crown Court, heard the couple withdrew their application after a social worker expressed concerns over their attitudes towards homosexuality.
At the hearing of the case, the couple's lawyer Paul Diamond told the court the couple were ''doomed not to be approved'', which was why they agreed with Derby City Council to seek clarification of the law from the High Court. >>> | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
fostering,
homosexuality
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Libyan protestors have overrun several strongholds of Col Muammar Gaddafi in the western part of the country.
* Witness reports jet gunned down near Misrata and crew captured
* Geneva-German foreign minister proposes moratorium on all financial transfers to Libya for 60 days
* Libyan loyalists evicted from towns of al-Zawiyah and Nalut
Gaddafi loyalists had been evicted from Nalut, 145 miles west of Tripoli. "The city has been liberated since February 19. It has been run by a revolutionary committee named by the town's communities," said Shaban Abu Sitta, a local lawyer and member of a revolutionary committee.
"The towns of Rhibat, Kabaw, Jado, Rogban, Zentan, Yefren, Kekla, Gherien and Hawamed have also been free for days. In all these towns, Gaddafi's forces have gone and a revolutionary committee put in place," he said.
Libyan rebels established a transitional national council to coordinate administration in several cities seized from the Gaddafi regime, and have called on the army to help them take Tripoli, the capital. >>> | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
Libya
ZEIT ONLINE: Der libysche Staatschef verliert die Kontrolle über sein Land. Immer mehr seiner Offiziere desertieren. Die Opposition hat bereits eine Übergangsregierung gebildet.
Die Machtbasis des libyschen Staatschefs Muammar al-Gadhafi bröckelt. Bereits die Hälfte der Offiziere habe die Geheimdienste und Militärkomitees verlassen, berichtet die arabische Tageszeitung Asharq al-Awsat unter Berufung auf einen Mitarbeiter der libyschen Sicherheitskräfte.
Die Oppositionellen bildeten mittlerweile eine Übergangsregierung, wie der arabische Fernsehsender Al-Arabiya berichtete. Demnach hatte sich der ehemalige Justizminister Mustafa Abdul Dschalil zuvor mit Stammesführern geeinigt. Dschalil ließ verbreiten, dass die Übergangsregierung für drei Monate im Amt bleiben solle. Danach werde sie durch eine gewählte Regierung ersetzt. Die Übergangsregierung soll in Bengasi sitzen, der zweitgrößten Stadt Libyens. >>> dpa, AFP, Reuters | Sonntag, 27. Februar 2011
LE FIGARO: Dans son allocution télévisée dimanche soir, le chef de l'Etat a justifié le remaniement gouvernemental par les défis diplomatiques et sécuritaires auxquels est confrontée la France, notamment en Méditerranée.
Fait inhabituel : c'est à l'occasion d'une allocution télévisée que le chef de l'Etat a lui-même annoncé le remaniement de son gouvernement. Nicolas Sarkozy a justifié ce changement d'équipe, le quatrième en onze mois, par la complexité de la situation actuelle dans les pays arabes : «C'est mon devoir de prendre les décisions qui s'imposent quand les circonstances l'exigent», a-t-il expliqué, sans jamais citer Michèle Alliot-Marie. «Pour obtenir les résultats que vous attendez et que nous obtiendrons, je me dois de ne faire prévaloir aucune autre considération que le souci de l'efficacité et de l'intérêt général dans le choix de ceux auxquels sont confiées les plus hautes responsabilités de l'Etat». >>> Par lefigaro.fr | Dimanche 27 Février 2011
Labels:
France,
le monde arabe,
Nicolas Sarkozy
REUTERS: The massive U.S. budget deficit is the gravest threat facing the economy, topping high unemployment and the risk of inflation or deflation, according to a survey of forecasters released on Monday.
The National Association for Business Economics said its 47-member panel of forecasters increased its estimate for the 2011 federal deficit to $1.4 trillion from $1.1 trillion in its previous survey in November.
"Panelists continue to characterize excessive federal indebtedness as their single greatest concern," with state and local government debt the second-biggest worry, the survey said. It was conducted between January 25 and February 9.
The panel's deficit forecast is lower than the Obama administration projection of a record $1.65 trillion this fiscal year, or 10.9 percent of U.S. gross domestic product.
Although the White House budget proposes $1.1 trillion in deficit reductions over 10 years, Republicans in the House of Representatives say that is not enough. >>> Reporting by Rachelle Younglai; Editing by Dan Grebler | Washington | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
China
REUTERS: Libyan rebels awaited a counter-attack by Muammar Gaddafi's forces on Monday, after the country's leader defied demands that he quit to end the bloodiest of the Arab world's wave of uprisings.
Rebels holding Zawiyah, only 50 km (30 miles) west of Tripoli, said about 2,000 troops loyal to Gaddafi had surrounded the city.
"We will do our best to fight them off. They will attack soon," said a former police major who switched sides and joined the rebellion. "If we are fighting for freedom, we are ready to die for it."
Gaddafi is fighting a rebellion which has swept through his Mediterranean oil producing nation after uprisings toppled entrenched leaders in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt. His fierce crackdown has killed hundreds, triggering U.N. sanctions and Western condemnation, but has not turned the tide of protests.
Residents even in parts of the capital Tripoli have thrown up barricades against government forces. A general in the east of the country, where Gaddafi's power has evaporated, told Reuters his forces were ready to help rebels in the west.
"Our brothers in Tripoli say: "We are fine so far, we do not need help'. If they ask for help we are ready to move," said General Ahmed el-Gatrani, one of most senior figures in the mutinous army in Benghazi.
Analysts say they expect rebels eventually to take the capital and kill or capture Gaddafi, but add that he has the firepower to foment chaos or civil war -- a prospect he and his sons have warned of. >>> Maria Golovnina | Monday, February 28, 2011
Labels:
earthquake,
New Zealand
REUTERS: Omani protesters demanding political reforms blocked roads to a main export port and refinery on Monday and a doctor said the death toll from clashes with police in the Gulf Arab sultanate had risen to six.
Hundreds of protesters blocked the entrance to the industrial area of the northern coastal town of Sohar, which includes a port, refinery and aluminum factory. They pushed back four army vehicles that had been observing the scene.
"We want to see the benefit of our oil wealth distributed evenly to the population," one protester yelled over a loudhailer near the port. "We want to see a scale-down of expatriates in Oman so more jobs can be created for Omanis."
The unrest in Sohar, Oman's main industrial center, was a rare outbreak of discontent in the normally sleepy sultanate ruled by Sultan Qaboos bin Said for four decades, and follows a wave of pro-democracy protests across the Arab world.
Oman's government, trying to calm tensions, promised on Sunday to create more jobs and give benefits to job seekers.
A main supermarket in Sohar was burning on Monday after being looted, witnesses said. Protesters stormed the town's police station on Sunday to try to free detainees before burning it. They had also set two state offices alight.
As well as those demonstrating outside the industrial area, hundreds more were at the main Globe Roundabout, angry after police opened fire on Sunday at stone-throwing protesters demanding political reforms, jobs and better pay.
Graffiti scrawled on a statue said: "The people are hungry." Another message read: "No to oppression of the people."
Nearby, sidewalks were smashed and office windows broken. Troops deployed around the town but were not intervening to disperse protesters.
"There are no jobs, there's no freedom of opinion. The people are tired and people want money. People want to end corruption," said Ali al-Mazroui, 30, who is unemployed. >>> Jason Benham and Saleh Al-Shaibany | Monday, February 28, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: Emergency meeting of Privy Council held at Windsor Castle after Libyan leader reportedly moved £3bn to Britain
Britain froze the assets of Muammar Gaddafi and his five children on Sunday evening at an emergency meeting of the Privy Council at Windsor castle presided over by the Queen.
The chancellor, George Osborne, acted amid reports that the Libyan leader had moved £3bn to Britain last week. In a separate cloak-and-dagger operation, £900m of Libyan currency was impounded in Britain.
Earlier ministers announced they had stripped the Gaddafi family of its diplomatic immunity in Britain.
A special meeting of the Privy Council at 5.15pm on Sunday approved an order in council freezing the assets of Gaddafi, his sons Saif al-Islam, Hannibal Muammar, Khamis Muammar, and Mutassim, and his daughter Aisha Muammar. The Times reported on Saturday that Gaddafi had deposited £3m with a Mayfair-based private wealth manager last week. >>> Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent | Sunday, February 27, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: Russia and China join west in UN war crimes ruling as Britain revokes immunity for leader and family
Muammar Gaddafi is running out of options and friends as international action to pressure him into surrendering gathers momentum, with Russia and China joining the west in backing calls to prosecute him for war crimes.
Britain said it was revoking the diplomatic immunity of the Libyan leader and his family, including his high-profile son Saif al-Islam, who has had close links with the UK. David Cameron echoed Barack Obama in calling on him to go. The PM said: "All of this sends a clear message to this regime: it is time for Colonel Gaddafi to go and to go now. There is no future for Libya that includes him."
Hillary Clinton said the US was reaching out to the Libyan opposition and was not negotiating with Gaddafi.
"We want him to leave and we want him to end his regime and call off the mercenaries and troops who remain loyal to him," the US secretary of state said. "How he manages that is up to him." >>> Ian Black, Middle East editor | Sunday, February 27, 2011
Labels:
China,
David Cameron,
Gaddafi,
Hillary Rodham Clinton,
Libya,
Russia
Sunday, February 27, 2011
THE GUARDIAN: Michèle Alliot-Marie had faced criticism over links with former regime in Tunisia and has been replaced by defence ministerBeleaguered French foreign minister Michèle Alliot-Marie has resigned after weeks of criticism over her links with the former regime in Tunisia.
She was replaced by the defence minister, Alain Juppé, a former prime minister convicted in a corruption scandal six years ago, in an unplanned but widely predicted government reshuffle.
Alliot-Marie, 64, known as MAM, insisted in her resignation letter that she had "committed no fault". She is one of the longest-serving ministers in France, having held many important cabinet posts, including defence and justice. She had been at the foreign ministry for just three months.
As civil unrest spread through the Arab world, Alliot-Marie committed a series of gaffes leading to her downfall. In January, she offered the services of French security forces to quell the uprising in Tunisia, just three days before protesters forced dictator Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali to flee. >>> Kim Willsher | Sunday, February 27, 2011
Labels:
France,
ministers,
resignation
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