Monday, May 23, 2011
Labels:
Sudan
TELEGRAPH – BLOGS – JAMES DELINGPOLE: Ah Bejaysus and Begorrah! Oi’ll be swearin’ boi the auld shrine to the Vorgin with the shamrocks growin’ round it next to the hill where Cuchullain slew the Great Leprechaun of Kildare on St Patrick’s Day that Barack Seamus O’Toole Flaherty Joyce O’Bama is the most Irish US president that ever set foot on the Emerald Oisle, so he is, so he is.
Except, when he’s in Africa, of course, when he disappears into the dry ice and re-emerges with a grass skirt and a bone through his nose and declares himself to be Mandingo, Prince of the Bloodline of the Bonga People, Drinker of Cattle Urine, Father of A Thousand Warrior Sons, Keeper of King Solomon’s Mines, Barehanded Slayer of Lions, Undaunted Victim of the Evil Colonial British Empire.
And in the Middle East, where he is Al-Barak Hussein Obama, Protector of the Holy Shrine, Smiter of the Kuffar, Lion of the Desert, Tent-Loving-Aficionado-of-the-Oversweetened-Coffee, Chomper of Sheeps’ Eyeballs, Restorer of the Caliphate.
Etc.
Tony Blair used to do this trick too, his accent mutating from broad Glaswegian to genteel Edinburgh to Mummerset to Estuary to Richard E Grant to Sarf London Grime – often in the course of one Downing Street reception – the better to persuade his target audience that he was their kind of guy. And it is, of course, the hallmark of an unutterable charlatan. » | James Delingpole | Monday, May 23, 2011
CACTUS THORNS: Wait a second Steven, his nibs is claiming to be Irish? This changes everything » | Dan Obrien | Friday, May 06, 2011
THE SLOG: This is the last chance to put our banks back in the cage
For a few days starting tomorrow, President Obama will smile at the well-wishers in Britain, show deference to the Queen, and generally pretend to like us. While he’s around (and I’m not breaking any injunctions here) I understand he’s going to have an economics session with Prime Minister David Cameron.
If and when that meeting of barren minds takes place, they should be able to reach a simple conclusion: no matter how hard you try to get banks to behave like social animals, they will screw you and pump up their bonuses.
Obama tried to get help to the repossession sector of the US housing market, using Federal funds. The idea was ill-conceived (chucking good money after bad) but at least three major banks used the funds fraudulently, and are now the subject of SEC investigations. His man Bernanke has been pumping Fed funds into the banking sector, in an effort to increase liquidity into the economy, for nigh on two and a half years – depending on who you believe about when it stopped, or if it ever stopped. This ‘POMO’ (Permanent Open Market Operations) scheme’s main achievement has been to send the Dow through the roof: the banks used the money for two purposes – to underwrite multinational megamergers, and buy stocks on behalf of their clients. Jobs have been lost, not created, as a result of this double-cross.
Cameron and his Chancellor George Osborne first of all tried to get the banks to set an example, and forego bonuses for 2010. Bob Diamond explained that this item would not be on the agenda, and they ended up paying themselves more than ever. Almost no money has filtered through to the small business sector after QE, and the financial sector – that’s the banks, remember – is still the only bit of the economy holding its end up. Not hard when you consider they’ve been doing it mainly with taxpayers’ money. Manufacturing has grown, but much as the Government tries to hype this, growth on a base of 12% of all economic output is a spit at the tornado of problems we face. » | John Ward |Monday, May 23, 2011
THE GLOBE AND MAIL: Saudi authorities arrested a female activist on Sunday who launched a campaign to challenge a ban on women driving in the conservative kingdom and posted a video on the Internet of her driving, activists said.
The YouTube video, posted on Thursday, has attracted more than 500,000 views and shows Manal Alsharif, who learned to drive in the United States, driving her car in Khobar in the oil-producing Eastern Province.
“Police arrested her at 3 a.m. this morning,” said Maha Taher, another female activist who launched her own campaign for women driving four months ago to spread awareness of the issue.
An Eastern Province police spokesperson declined to comment and an interior ministry spokesperson was not immediately available for comment. » | Reuters | JEDDAH | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Related video »
Labels:
Libya
Labels:
Syria
In Spain's most politically conservative of cities, an unexpected and growing revolt - against the status quo, established political institutions, and against the old acceptance that nothing much will ever change.
The country's ruling party is facing growing anger over Spain's economic problems, and many people shunned the polls and chosen to protest instead.
Al Jazeera's Tim Friend reports from Madrid.
Labels:
Spain
The recent uprising in Egypt brought political changes to the country, but it has also scared the tourists away.
In February, there were just over 200,000 foreign visitors, while the year before the number was 1.1 million.
With this loss, many businesses are now struggling to cope. And even the finance minister admits that when the tourist industry is hit, the entire economy takes a knock.
Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher reports from Giza.
The UN Security Council has urged Khartoum to withdraw soldiers from the disputed oil region of Abyei, after northern Sudanese tanks entered the oil rich area.
The UN condemned the attack as the north accused South Sudan of targeting one of its military convoys on Thursday.
The South meanwhile says the North has been carrying out a bombing campaign in Abyei.
And as Nazanin Sadri reports, there are fears this latest escalation of could derail Sudan's peace agreement.
Labels:
Sudan
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The medical standards watchdog is facing a backlash from doctors after censuring a Christian GP who raised his personal beliefs with a patient of a different faith.
Dr Richard Scott, a family GP with 28 years’ experience, is facing disciplinary action and fears he could lose his job after he discussed his faith in Jesus with a patient last year.
The 50-year-old is being investigated by the General Medical Council but Christian doctors rallied to his defence and criticised the way that the professional standards regulator had handled the case.
In 2010, Dr Scott, who works at Bethesda Medical Centre in Margate, Kent, a practice known for its Christian partners, saw a patient at the request of the patient’s mother. He maintains that he only discussed how his faith in Jesus had helped him at the end of the consultation, and with the patient’s consent.
But the GMC wrote to Dr Scott, warning him that he had distressed the patient and risked bringing the profession into disrepute. He has appointed a human rights lawyer to fight the reprimand.
Niall Dickson, chief executive of the GMC, said doctors should not normally discuss their personal beliefs with patients “unless those beliefs are directly relevant to the patient's care”. » | Tim Ross, Social Affairs Editor | Sunday, May 22, 2011
TELEGRAPH VIDEO: Christian GP reprimanded by the General Medical Council for talking to a patient about God »
Labels:
Christianity in the UK,
doctors
Sunday, May 22, 2011
LE POINT: Les images de DSK abondent. Son accusatrice, elle, est invisible depuis le début de l'affaire. Direction le Bronx, son quartier.
C'est la femme sans visage. Où est Nafissatou Diallo, alias Ophelia, la jeune femme que DSK est accusé d'avoir agressée sexuellement ? Alors que, depuis une semaine, les images sous toutes les coutures de l'ex-patron du FMI, de son épouse, de sa fille (sur)abondent, aucune photo "officielle" de la victime présumée ne circule. On sait qu'elle a 32 ans, serait musulmane et originaire de Guinée et a une fille adolescente.
Le Sofitel où elle est employée depuis trois ans assure qu'elle donnait "toute satisfaction" et son avocat a expliqué à la télévision que c'était une femme qui travaillait dur et qu'elle "a(vait) peur", qu'elle était "perdue". Le reste, ce sont des rumeurs. Un jour, elle est mère célibataire, le lendemain, divorcée, le troisième, veuve. Elle a un frère qui n'est pas son frère, une soeur qui l'aurait fait venir aux États-Unis il y a 7 ou 15 ans. Elle est très grande, a le visage grêlé par l'acné...
Bouche cousue
Alors, après la traque DSK, tous les médias se sont lancés sur la piste de la jeune femme. Une piste qui commence dans le Bronx. Le coeur de la communauté guinéenne se trouve sur la 3e avenue et la 166e rue, un quartier pauvre avec des garages, un petit restaurant qui propose des plats traditionnels, une épicerie, un boucher qui vend des chèvres et des moutons vivants... et une mosquée, le centre islamique Fouta, un petit bâtiment de briques avec deux gros rideaux de fer au rez-de-chaussée. En ce samedi, la salle de prière au premier étage, une grande pièce moquettée, est occupée par l'école coranique pour les enfants. » | Dimanche 22 Mai 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE: Anne Sinclair kämpft mit Format, Geld und Engelsgeduld um die Zukunft ihres Mannes Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Eine-Million-Dollar-Kaution hat sie gezahlt, damit ihr Gatte aus dem New Yorker Schwerverbrecherknast Rikers freikam.
Was für eine Frau! Er hatte ihr den Elysée-Palast versprochen – und jetzt muss sie ihn mit ihren Millionen vor dem Gefängnis retten. Anne Sinclair hat die Eine-Million-Dollar-Kaution gezahlt, ihre Luxusvilla im Washingtoner Stadtteil Georgetown als Hypothek freigegeben, damit Dominique Strauss-Kahn aus dem New Yorker Schwerverbrecherknast Rikers freikam. Sie hat eine Wohnung gemietet, in der er mit einer elektronischen Fessel am Fuß bleiben kann. Auch wenn erst einmal nichts daraus wurde. Wegen des Medienrummels waren die Nachbarn dagegen, sitzt Strauss-Kahn nun in einem Apartment in der Nähe von Ground Zero in Hausarrest. Anne Sinclair, die unschuldig in einen entehrenden Sexskandal gezogene Ehefrau, setzt ihr Vermögen aufs Spiel, damit die besten Anwälte ihren Mann vor Gericht verteidigen. „Die Beweislast gegen ihn ist umfangreich“, sagt der New Yorker Staatsanwalt. „Sie wächst jeden Tag weiter.“ „Dominique Strauss-Kahn kann sich glücklich schätzen, dass er eine Frau wie Anne Sinclair hat“, sagt Robert Badinter, der sozialistische Justizminister, der 1981 in Frankreich die Todesstrafe abschaffte.
Ohne zu wissen, was in der Suite 2806 des New Yorker Luxushotels Sofitel zur Mittagsstunde wirklich geschah, entschloss sich Anne Sinclair zu unbedingter Solidarität. Ihr Mann soll ein schwarzes Zimmermädchen vergewaltigt haben? „Ich glaube keine Sekunde lang den Anschuldigungen, die gegen meinen Mann erhoben werden“, schrieb sie in einem Kommuniqué. „Ich zweifle nicht daran, dass sich seine Schuldlosigkeit erweisen wird.“ » | Von Michaela Wiegel, Paris | Sonntag, 22. Mai 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
IWF,
New York,
sexual assault
CYBERPRESSE.CA – BLOGUE – RICHARD HÉTU: Le New York Times publie aujourd’hui en première page un excellent papier sur le «purgatoire» que vit Anne Sinclair depuis l’arrestation de son mari, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Le quotidien raconte qu’elle était prête à mettre au service des ambitions présidentielles de DSK une partie de l’importante fortune dont elle a hérité de son grand-père maternel, Paul Rosenberg, marchand d’art et galeriste célèbre pour avoir représenté Picasso, Braque et Matisse, entre autres.
Selon les confidences d’un ami de Sinclair au journal Le Monde, l’ancienne journaliste voulait «prouver que, 75 ans après Léon Blum, les Français étaient capables d’élire un juif». Un autre ami, Alain Duhamel, confie cependant au Times que la femme de DSK appréhendait la campagne présidentielle et qu’elle et son mari considéraient leur religion comme «une question pratique pour la campagne» et non une quelconque grande cause. » | Richard Hétu | Samedi 21 Mai 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
OTTAWA CITIZEN: While media fire shots over U.S. 'puritanism' and French 'perversion,' little thought is given to Dominique Strauss-Kahn's alleged victim, writes Keith Spicer
Manacled, unshaven, and dazzled by media lights, a grim and shaken Dominique Strauss-Kahn did the "perp walk" toward a Rikers Island jail cell. French observers called the stunning fall of the managing director of the International Monetary Fund a Greek tragedy. Most rushed to defend him as a respected national figure who had likely been headed to the French presidency.
Americans tended to judge "DSK" (as Strauss-Kahn is known in France) as a disgusting, violent sex criminal -already showcased as a "perpetrator" by New York police. These sharply differing views highlight again how wide the Atlantic really is in perceptions of justice, culture, rationality, media and class.
The scandal, most French feel, is about a U.S. justice system visually sabotaging the presumption of innocence. Sober top jurist Robert Badinter (a close friend of DSK) called the perp walk "a lynching, murder by media." In France, it's illegal to insinuate guilt by parading a handcuffed accused before news cameras.
French intellectuals, also pals of DSK, spluttered their fury at U.S. justice. All-purpose philosopher-opinionator Bernard-Henri Levy (as BHL, an acronym guy like DSK) assured that his renowned skirt-chasing friend was "not a Neanderthal." On the perp walk, BHL said: "Nothing in the world justifies throwing a man to the dogs like that."
English-speaking opinion-makers, however, saw DSK's humiliation as noble evidence that U.S. justice treats everybody - rich or poor, famous or obscure - exactly the same. Mistreats everybody the same might seem more apt. But in American minds, sticking to strict police procedures designed partly to prevent escapes is a normal precaution.
Why else do U.S. police routinely, and rather gleefully, choreograph the shaming of suspects? Because spiriting them in and out in blacked-out vans doesn't delight the police's key publics: picture-hungry media and crowd-pandering elected district attorneys. » | Keith Spicer | OTTAWA CITIZEN | Saturday, May 21, 2011
Labels:
France,
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault,
USA
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Refugees fleeing conflict in Libya are gathering in Calais in an attempt to enter Britain.
n a filthy squat two miles from the entrance to the Channel Tunnel, Mohammed Yosif and his friends are hoping for a new life in Britain.
The 21-year-old is one of at least 40,000 to have fled to Europe as a result of the Arab Spring that has seen political unrest sweep north Africa.
Many are migrant workers from sub-Saharan Africa who now believe their lives are at risk, especially in Libya where the regime used black mercenaries to attack rebel forces.
A growing number have now arrived in France and are sleeping rough near ports in a bid to sneak into the UK or at the Gare du Nord Eurostar station in Paris.
“It is very difficult to get on the train, but I dream of England,” said Mohammed, who arrived in Calais on Tuesday after fleeing the war in Libya, where he was a migrant worker from Chad.
“Maybe I will hide, but I hope to find a way to get there somehow. England is a great country where I can have my human rights.”
Until he can sneak onto a lorry heading for Britain, he is living with up to 400 other migrants in a squalid, chaotic encampment nicknamed 'Africa House’. » | Alastair Jamieson | Saturday, May 21, 2011
My comment:
Isn't this in part a spin-off of Cameron's war on Libya? So the bottom line is this: The UK will increasingly be subjected to Islamisation; Libya will eventually be improved. But in the meantime, the UK will have to suffer still more. Gee! Thanks David! You've 'done us proud.' Again, yet another politician who can't tell his a*** from his elbow! And doubtless, as tigerchopper rightly said: These people will get their council houses, welfare benefits, breeding assistance, etc. This ties in with my other comment today: here – © Mark
This comment is also appears here
And a Saudi woman is held after mounting an internet campaign to get more females driving
A woman has been detained in Saudi Arabia for defying the ban on driving.
The kingdom is the only country in the world where women are discouraged from getting behind the wheel.
Manal al Sharif is part of an online campaign group determined to get women in the driving seat more.
Al Jazeera's Anu Nathan reports.
Labels:
Saudi Arabia,
women drivers
Barack Obama will make his first appearance as US president at the annual conference of America's largest Jewish lobby.
His speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee comes days after the Israeli prime minister publicly rejected Obama's views on the Middle East peace process.
Al Jazeera's Tom Ackerman reports.
Labels:
Barack Hussein Obama,
Israel,
USA
Syrian rights groups say security forces there killed more than fifty anti-government activists during the last two days.
President Bashar al-Assad has been meeting with local dignitaries over the two-month long unrest, with a view to urging a national dialogue.
But opposition groups within and outside the country are setting strong conditions for any talks.
Al Jazeera's Zeina Khodr reports from neighbouring Lebanon.
Labels:
Bashar Al-Assad,
brutal crackdown,
Syria
Iceland's most active volcano has started erupting, prompting the closure of the country's main international airport.
But experts say the eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano is unlikely to cause a repeat of the disturbance to European air traffic caused by another Icelandic volcano last year.
Last year, another eruption led to a major air travel chaos for days, affecting some 10 million travellers.
Al Jazeera's Catherine Stancl reports.
Lien en relation avec cet vidéo »
Labels:
Iceland
ARAB NEWS: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates: A special appeals court in Bahrain upheld death sentences Sunday for two people convicted of killing policemen during anti-government demonstrations in March.
A report by the Bahrain News Agency said the court upheld death sentences against Ali Abdullah Hassan Al-Singace and Abdul Aziz Abdul Redha Ibrahim Hussein, who were accused of killing the policemen intentionally by running them over with a car.
BNA identified two other accused whose death sentences were reduced as Qasim Hassan Mattar Ahmed and Saeed Abdul Jalil Saeed.
Bahraini state media last month aired government-produced videos that including clips of purported confessions of the policemen’s killings. They also included testimonials from alleged relatives of one of the slain policemen and a taxi driver killed in the unrest.
The case was the first related to this year’s unrest, which was inspired by uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.
Capital punishment is extremely rare in Bahrain and is typically not applied to the country’s citizens. A Bangladeshi man was executed last July after being convicted of premeditated murder. » | Adam Schreck | AP | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Labels:
Bahrain,
death sentence,
executions,
rebellion
Labels:
economy,
mass protests,
Spain,
unemployment
THE GUARDIAN: Women on the frontline of demonstrations against Syria's brutal regime are now being targeted by security forces
They came for the men first, as the security forces of Syria's PresidentBashar al-Assad killed, beat and arrested people protesting against his regime.
Next, they came for the women of Syria's revolution. Despite the threats, however, they refuse to be silenced.
As the violence has become worse, women activists have organised a Friday protest of Free Women showing solidarity with those seized or killed. Women-only protests in towns across the country have led the effort to let the outside world know what is happening in Syria. But they are now being targeted as well, with the same lethal brutality.
Two weeks ago three women were shot dead at an all-women march near the besieged city of Banias. A week later human rights activist Catherine al-Talli, 32, was detained in the Barzeh district of Damascus after being forced off a minibus when it was stopped at a checkpoint by the secret police.
Others, such as Razan Zeitouneh, whose husband has been arrested, have been forced into hiding as evidence emerges that the regime is targeting relatives of those it is seeking to arrest.
Yesterday it was Zeitouneh who reported that the final death toll for the latest crackdown on Friday protests by the regime had been 30. Twelve were reported dead in Ma'aret al-Nu'man, south of the city of Aleppo, after tanks entered the town earlier in the day to disperse protesters; 11 in the central city of Homs and seven in Deraa, Latakia, the Damascus suburbs and Hama. » | Peter Beaumont | Saturday, May 21, 2011
Labels:
Bashar Al-Assad,
brutal crackdown,
rebellion,
Syria
ARAB NEWS: SANAA, Yemen: The US, European and Gulf Arab ambassadors were trapped inside a diplomatic mission Sunday by an armed mob angry over a deal for Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh to step down after 32 years in power.
Prospects that Saleh would sign the pact as promised were thrown into doubt.
Wielding knives, daggers and swords, hundreds of Saleh loyalists blocked the entrances to the United Arab Emirates Embassy, where at least five ambassadors were gathered in expectation the embattled leader would arrive to sign the deal.
“Everybody is worried. We can’t leave the embassy,” said a Saudi diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
Pro-Saleh militiamen dressed in traditional Yemeni dress roamed the streets of the capital, especially outside embassies, and blocked the road to the presidential palace. » | Ahmed Al-Haj | AP | Sunday, May 22, 2011
DIE PRESSE: Wesley Clark, einstiger US-Oberbefehlshaber im Kosovo-Krieg, ist überzeugt, dass Luftangriffe ausreichen, um Libyens Diktator Gaddafi zu Fall zu bringen. Die USA werden ihre globale Machtposition beibehalten.
Sie leiteten 1999 die Nato-Militäroperation im Kosovo. Damals beklagten Sie den fehlenden Willen, Bodentruppen einzusetzen. Müsste diese Kritik nicht nun auch für den Libyen-Krieg gelten, der seitens der Alliierten ebenfalls nur aus der Luft geführt wird.
Wesley Clark: Wir mussten damals im Kosovo die Eskalationsdominanz erreichen: Wenn die Luftangriffe allein nicht ausgereicht hätten, wäre die Nato zum nächsten Schritt gezwungen gewesen. Gott sei Dank war das nicht notwendig, aber wir hätten darauf vorbereitet sein müssen. In Libyen schlägt die Nato denselben Weg ein.
Ist denn irgendjemand bereit, Bodentruppen nach Libyen zu schicken?
Nein, diese Bereitschaft gibt es nicht ... Gibt es überhaupt eine Strategie in Libyen » | Von Christian Ultsch (Die Presse) | Samstag, 21. Mai 2011
Labels:
Gaddafi,
General Wesley Clark,
Libyen
HAARETZ: Washington has had no diplomatic presence in Iran since the 1979 revolution; arrests come two days after Obama made a speech reiterating that the U.S. views Tehran as a sponsor of terrorism.
Iran has arrested 30 people it said were spying for the United States, official media reported on Saturday.
"The Intelligence Ministry's active and pious forces, in their ardent confrontations with the agents of the CIA ... arrested 30 people who were spies for America," state television's lunchtime news announced.
According to the semi-official Fars news agency, the suspects had passed information to U.S. officials at embassies and consulates in third countries, including Malaysia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. » | Reuters | Saturday, May 21, 2011
HAARETZ: Attorney Benjamin Brafman says that if Strauss-Kahn had not been famous and had not been a foreigner, the court would not have demanded the unusually high bail.
The lawyer of former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn told Haaretz Sunday that his client would be acquitted of the sexual assault charges that have shocked the economic world.
"He'll plead not guilty and in the end he'll be acquitted," said attorney Benjamin Brafman in his first interview since his client was arrested last week for the alleged attack on a New York City chambermaid.
Brafman, on a short trip to Israel to attend to family obligations, spent the weekend in north Jerusalem with his son - a rabbi - and his grandchildren.
Brafman met with Haaretz while he was on his way to light a Lag Ba'omer bonfire with the grandchildren.
Brafman, 62, is used to scandals and high-profile cases. He has defended Michael Jackson, crime boss Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano, online gambling king Jay Cohen and rapper Jay-Z. Another of his clients, rapper Sean Combs, gave him the nickname "Uncle Benny." » | Chaim Levinson | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
rfi ENGLISH: The French weeklies all put up special dossiers on the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair. The right-leaning magazines aren’t mincing words. "Shame" headlines Le Figaro. "Downfall" writes Le Point. "The scandal that changes everything" says l’Express and “descent to hell”, according to left-leaning Le Nouvel Observateur.
France is ashamed of Strauss-Kahn’s humiliating pictures writes Le Figaro - ashamed of being ridiculed in the eyes of the world. The conservative journal says in an editorial, that the affair lends credence to the erroneous, but long –upheld view, that France is a nation of pleasure seekers. Le Figaro states that Strauss-Kahn has always had a soft spot for women which he often boasted about. The journal lambasts the socialists for rushing out to support him as the scandal broke out.
Some said it was a diabolical smear and lynching campaign hashed by a black cabinet to prevent him from becoming president of France. Le Figaro regrets that the politicians who piled-up all the blind support for DSK had no word for the poor black woman at the centre of the case. Le Figaro dispatched a team to New York’s Bronx district, home to the alleged rape victim, Nafissatou Diallo. It reports that the Guinean community there has been staging demonstrations in support of her clamour for justice.
Le Point agrees with Le Figaro that the Strauss-Kahn affair has claimed a terrible toll on France’s image abroad."What a fall" screams the journal which runs a 10-page dossier on the tragic descent to hell of the popular politician who had been poised to possibly become France's next president. Le Point runs excerpts from the New York tabloids reporting of the damaging story including The Daily News, The New Yorker and even the respected Wall Street Journal. The magazine says Strauss-Kahn's name has been tarnished forever, no matter the outcome of the case, pointing to the fact that his socialist comrades are already burying him, some with flowers, others without. » | William Niba | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
HAMSAYEH.NET – EXTRACT: The Sofitel Hotel is run by its French owners and is considered one of the most expensive hotels in New York. There have been numerous reports of a frame up by powerful political factions in particular those connected to Nicholas Sarkozy and his supporters. Also, it seems that powerful interest groups have been worried over Strauss-Kahn’s future plans to reorganize the way the IMF nromally functions. Read it all » | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
ECHOS D’AFRIQUE: Qui est vraiment LA VIERGE Nafissatou Diallo? Celle qui a dit NON comme le president Sekou Toure.
Une jolie femme de nationalité guinéenne sans histoire, sérieuse et qui n’a pu être manipulée selon ses collègues et employeur.
Selon sa famille, qui préfère rester anonyme, Nafissatou Diallo, 32 ans, est aux États-Unis depuis treize ans, où elle menait jusqu’à samedi 14 mai 15H09 une vie sans histoire.
Fille d’un commerçant guinéen, originaire de la région de Labé Guinee-Conakry ou Sekou Touré, Nafissatou Diallo a suivi son mari, un commerçant guinéen, aux États-Unis en 1998. Ce qu’on appelle en France un regroupement familiale. » | Source: Afrohistorama | Mercredi 18 Mai 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
COUNTER PUNCH: The French are for the millionaire. The Americans are for the maid. Among the French, three out of five think the IMF’s former managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, has been framed. (Strauss-Kahn tendered his resignation as head of the IMF May 18.) Here in the USA there’s not been a reliable poll, but public sentiment is clearly against Strauss-Kahn, amplified by self-congratulation that America is a nation of laws, a maid’s word as potent as that of a millionaire, in contrast to the moral decay and deference to the rich prevalent in France.
The French, for their part, stigmatize America as a puritanical, omnipotent imperial police state, whose intelligence agencies are efficiently capable of any infamy. But even as they charge that Strauss-Kahn was set up, the French press is rather weak on identifying or even suggesting the precise mastermind or group working to destroy a man who might have been the French Socialist Party’s candidate, evicting Sarkozy from the Elysee Palace. (They miss the real damage to France's reputation, not to mention balance of payments, which is that previously women from the US or northern Europe have booked costly tours to France hoping to be seduced by Charles Boyer or Michel Piccoli or Alain Delon or, if you like heavy smokers, Jean-Paul Belmondo, or Gerard Depardieu. They will will now, rather than be attacked by a Gallic sexual psychopath, elect to go straight to Italy notwithstanding the chances of a semi-senile Berlusconi jumping out of the bushes, shouting "Bunga, Bunga.")
In Parisian financial circles some charge that this is an attack on “les juifs”. Following this line, they suggest it’s a plot by the Muslims, presumptively eager to contrive any embarrassment to a well-known Jew, and indeed ardent Zionist, also perhaps because the agent of Strauss-Kahn’s downfall, the 32-year maid accusing Strauss-Kahn of a serious sexual assault – widely identified on French and West African websites as Nafissatou Diallo -- is a Muslim from the West African nation of Guinea. (And yes, the name Diallo does ring a bell. Amadou Diallo (September 2, 1975–February 4, 1999) was a 23-year-old Guinean immigrant in New York City who was shot and killed on February 4, 1999 by four plain-clothes members of the NYPD who fired 41 rounds at him. They were all subsequently acquitted.) » | Alexander Cockburn | Weekend Edition, Friday, May 20, 2011 – Sunday, May 22, 2011
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
ZEIT ONLINE: Ex-IWF-Chef Strauss-Kahn hat gegen Kaution die Gefängnisinsel Rikers Island verlassen. Als er in ein Penthouse in Manhattan einziehen wollte, rebellierten die Nachbarn.
Nur eine Woche hat das Leben des einst mächtigsten Bankers der Welt dramatisch verändert: Letzten Samstag standen Dominique Strauss-Kahn noch alle Türen offen, nach der Anklage wegen versuchter Vergewaltigung ist der gefallene IWF-Chef in New York zum Paria geworden. Die Bewohner eines Wolkenkratzers in der betuchten Upper East Side rebellierten, als sie hörten, dass Strauss-Kahn seine Zelle gegen ihr Penthouse eintauschen wollte.
Gegen eine Kaution von insgesamt sechs Millionen Dollar war der 62-jährige Franzose am Freitag von der berüchtigten Gefängnisinsel Rikers Island im New Yorker East River entlassen worden. Der Ex-Chef des Internationalen Währungsfonds steht unter Hausarrest, muss eine elektronische Fußfessel tragen und wird wegen Fluchtgefahr rund um die Uhr von bewaffneten Sicherheitsbeamten überwacht.
Nachdem ihm eine Wohnung im eleganten Bristol Plaza verweigert worden war, kam Strauss-Kahn vorübergehend in einem umgebauten Bürogebäude am New Yorker Broadway in der Nähe von Ground Zero unter. Dabei hatte seine Frau, Anne Sinclair, das Penthouse im Bristol mit Blick über Manhattan bereits für 14.000 Dollar (knapp 10.000 Euro) im Monat gemietet, berichtete die New York Times.
Das Bristol hätte einen Swimming Pool auf der Dachterrasse, täglich frische Handtücher und allerlei Service geboten. Womit Sinclair nicht gerechnet hatte, war die Reaktion der Nachbarn. "Es ist einfach nicht richtig, ihn hier absteigen und unsere Gastfreundschaft genießen zu lassen, nach dem, was er sich der Anklage nach hat zuschulden kommen lassen", wurde eine Frau aus dem Bristol von der Zeitung zitiert. Weiter lesen und einen Beitrag abgeben » | QUELLE dpa | Samstag, 21. Mai 2011
Labels:
IMF,
IWF,
New York,
sexual assault
TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche, les forces de l'Otan ont visé les alentours du complexe résidentiel de Mouammar Kadhafi à Tripoli.
L’Otan a mené une frappe aérienne dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche près du complexe résidentiel de Mouammar Kadhafi à Tripoli. Les forces libyennes ont bombardé, selon un site de l’opposition, des quartiers résidentiels de Misrata, dans l’ouest du pays.
Selon des responsables libyens, l’Alliance atlantique a effectué des frappes près du complexe de Bab al Aziziah et des images de Reuters Television ont montré une colonne de fumée s’élevant au dessus de la capitale. » | AFP | Samedi 22 Mai 2011
Labels:
bombardements,
Kadhafi,
Libye,
Otan
TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Le volcan Grimsvoetn est entré samedi en éruption sous le plus grand glacier d’Islande. Le principal aéroport international ferme ses portes.
L’espace aérien islandais a été temporairement fermé dimanche matin en raison de l’éruption du volcan le plus actif du pays, qui a déclenché un immense panache de fumée, ont annoncé les autorités aéroportuaires (Isavia).
"L’aéroport de Keflavik, notre principal aéroport international ferme. L’espace aérien ferme", a déclaré la porte-parole d’Isavia, Hjordis Gudmundsdottir, peu avant 11 heures suisses.
Cette fermeture devrait durer "au moins pour les prochaines heures", selon la porte-parole, indiquant qu’un nouveau point serait fait à 13 heures. » | AFP | Samedi 22 Mai 2011
Labels:
Iceland
BBC: Saudi Arabia has not seen the large-scale protests of the kind sweeping many Arab countries - it is a place which, above all, values stability.
There were hundreds of them, migrant workers, from South and East Asia, coming to Saudi Arabia to work for meagre, but tax-free, wages.
And their arrival in Riyadh coincided with my flight, making for a teeming but fairly orderly passport hall.
The queues were not moving much, however, and so one tall, thin Indian man decided to sit on the floor.
Not for long though.
Out of nowhere, one of the guards shoved his way into the line - spraying people left and right - and hauled the man back on to his feet.
Moments later, the same guard kicked the arm of another migrant worker who could not figure out how to operate the biometric scanning machine.
All this had taken place within 20 minutes of me setting foot on Saudi soil.
It was my first impression of the country - and to the extent that the incidents highlight the authoritarian, uncompromising nature of Saudi society, not to mention the appalling manner in which some low-skilled migrant workers are treated, then it has proven fairly accurate.
I have travelled the breadth - if not the length - of this desert kingdom over the past week or so, and the lesson I have learned again and again is that there is a Saudi way of doing things which is quite unique.
'Un-Islamic'
A tribal, hierarchical society defined almost exclusively by its religion tends not to tolerate much dissent - and looks suspiciously at any new behaviours and ideas.
A suggestion last week, for instance, from the education minister that it was maybe time to consider sending boys and girls to mixed-sex primary schools led to one opponent claiming the idea would turn boys into transvestites.
Any notion that Saudis had that the uprising in other Middle Eastern countries might take root here was brushed aside a few weeks ago by an edict from the country's religious leaders that dissent and protest were un-Islamic, and that Saudis should obey their rulers.
We do not challenge our parents in the house, one man told me, and so what makes you think we are going to challenge our government in the streets?
Beside a big stick, a rather large carrot has also been dangled in front of Saudis. » | Michael Buchanan, BBC News, Riyadh | Saturday, May 21, 2011
Labels:
Arab world,
King Abdullah,
rebellion,
Saudi Arabia
BBC: The US President Barack Obama has spoken exclusively to the BBC's Andrew Marr ahead of his visit to the UK and Ireland.
The president spoke about the raid in Pakistan which led to the death of Osama Bin Laden, and Afghanistan's future.
Andrew Marr also asked Mr Obama what it was like meeting the Queen. (+video: Full Interview) » | Andrew Marr | Sunday, May 22, 2011
Here is the full transcript of the BBC's interview with President Barack Obama. »
THE DAILY BEAST: The maid allegedly sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss-Kahn was so distressed she had difficulty speaking and tried to vomit, sources tell John Solomon. Plus, new details on how her supervisors responded. Related: The timeline of Strass-Kahn’s weekend.
The luxury-hotel maid who alleges she was sexually assaulted by Dominique Strauss-Kahn was found by a supervisor in a hallway where she hid after escaping from the former International Monetary Fund director's room. Hotel workers described her as traumatized, having difficulty speaking, and immediately concerned about pressing charges and losing her job, according to sources familiar with the investigation.
The maid also repeatedly spit on the walls and floors of the suite in front of her hotel colleagues as she alleged that Strauss-Kahn locked her in his room and forced her into oral sex acts. That saliva is being tested for DNA markers and could become a crucial piece of evidence in the case, the sources said.
The sources, who spoke only on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation, provided The Daily Beast details of what happened inside New York City's Sofitel hotel in the hour between the alleged attack and when hotel security notified the police, a gap Strauss-Kahn's defense team is certain to question as the case proceeds in court. Strauss-Kahn's lawyers deny any wrongdoing on his part.
The sources said the fact that it only took an hour for the hotel to calm the woman, get her to overcome her difficulty describing what happened, do a thorough interview and get police on scene for forensic testing helped make the case and apprehend the suspect before he fled the country. » | John Solomon* | Saturday, May 21, 2011
*John Solomon is executive editor of the Center For Public Integrity.
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Tensions over the military campaign against Libya have cast a cloud over President Barack Obama’s state visit to Britain this week, The Sunday Telegraph has learned.
Military and diplomatic sources in both Britain and the US are privately critical over the other side’s role in the action which has hit a damaging “stalemate” and left Colonel Muammar Gadaffi clinging to power.
Britain wants the US to take more of a defined role in the campaign, with UK military chiefs protesting that the effectiveness of bombing raids is being lessened by the absence of American leadership.
US diplomatic sources, meanwhile, have criticised Britain as a “skittish” and unpredictable ally which frequently issues a “red card” -- effectively vetoing a target, causing confusion and greatly hampering proper planning.
Mr Obama emphasised the differences between the two allies yesterday, describing the action against Libya as “limited” in a letter to US lawmakers.
Mr Cameron is expected to pass on the frustration over the lack of leadership from the US when he holds talks with Mr Obama at 10 Downing Street on Wednesday, although Downing Street sources last night denied there were tensions.
Both London and Washington are keen to proclaim a new era for the “special relationship” between the two nations on the eve of the trip, which will see the president and his wife, Michelle, spend two nights in Britain, with the programme including a state banquet at Buckingham Palace and a speech by Mr Obama to both houses of parliament.
It will also feature a barbecue in No 10’s rose garden on Wednesday, hosted jointly by Samantha Cameron and Mrs Obama, which both leaders are expected to take time out of their schedules to attend. » | Patrick Hennessy, Philip Sherwell and Andrew Gilligan | Saturday, May 21, 2011
My comment:
Has it come to this? That the UK can't wage an effective war against a country like Libya without 'Big Daddy' helping in the background? Only seventy years ago, we could put up a damn good fight against the military might of the Third Reich – alone. Now, we can't take on even Qadhafi alone!
But for Cameron's vanity, we wouldn't have started a war against Libya anyway. We have no business being there. It is wrong to interfere in an internal revolution. That's what revolutions are all about: upheaval in the internal affairs of a nation. And as for all the crap about protecting civilians – sheer nonsense! Nato, the UK, and France have inflicted more pain and suffering on civilians than Qadhafi ever did.
Qadhafi is an evil man. Of that there is no doubt. But should we really have gone in there to 'sort them out' when we turn a blind eye to equally unpalatable atrocities in Bahrain and Syria, to name but two examples? Indeed, it was only yesterday that Cameron gave us a photo shoot of himself with the Crown Prince of Bahrain, the man some are calling the "torturer-in-chief". And boy, didn't Cameron look weak! And such hypocrisy! One thing is for sure: This is not the UK's "finest hour".
Lastly, whilst I have every respect for the US, and even though I frequently visit that fine country, I find it rather unacceptable, rather nauseating, that we have to look for US approval for everything. We have to follow their lead all the time, and follow their trends. Isn't it about time that the UK grew a backbone? – © Mark
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Saturday, May 21, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: President Barack Obama and Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, are squaring up for another clash on Sunday as relations between the two countries plunge to their worst level since the founding of the Jewish state.
The two men will both address the leading pro-Israel lobbying group, the American-Israel Political Affairs Committee (AIPAC), two days after Mr Netanyahu publicly rebuked Mr Obama's peace plans for the Middle East from inside the Oval Office.
Such is the controversy aroused by Mr Obama's stance that AIPAC's leader, Lee Rosenberg, has been forced to write to members begging them not to boo the president when he addresses them.
Mr Obama's clash with Mr Netanyahu, who accused his host of wanting a "peace based on illusions", has sent a sharp divide down American, Israeli and international opinion.
Mr Netanyahu objected to Mr Obama's demand in a speech on Thursday for a Palestinian state based on borders from before the 1967 Six Day War, with revisions to take into consideration security concerns and some of Israel's settlements.
Mr Obama was immediately backed by the Middle East "Quartet", the mediation body comprising the United States, the United Nations, Russia and the European Union. It issued a statement expressing its "strong support". » | Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent | Saturday, May 21, 2011
Labels:
Barack Hussein Obama,
Israel
RADIO NETHERLANDS WORLDWIDE: Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and populist Freedom Party (PVV) leader Geert Wilders clashed in parliament today over more financial aid for Greece. Mr Wilders is against a further bailout, saying that Greece should quit the euro.
The minority coalition of the conservative VVD and Christian Democrats (CDA) relies on support from the PVV on a majority of issues. However, the Greek euro crisis has caused a major divide between the PVV and the coalition parties.
The PVV and the opposition Socialist Party are against more financial aid for Greece. However, the government’s position of not ruling out more aid has the support of Labour, the D66 democrats and Green Left - all opposition parties. » | mw/hs | Thursday, May 19, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: One of Australia's major tobacco companies has warned that the price of cigarettes could halve if a plan to bring in plain packets is carried out.
At the launch of a multi-million dollar campaign against the government's proposals, British and American Tobacco Australia (BATA) said more people would end up smoking if plain packaging was introduced.
BATA warned that uniform packets would make illegal imported cigarettes made in China and Indonesia and known as "chop chop" easier to disguise and would eventually force prices down sharply as tobacco companies tried to compete.
Last month, Australia unveiled the world's toughest laws on tobacco promotion that would see cigarettes sold in ugly olive-green packets plastered with graphic health warnings. Under the plan, due to take effect next year, all logos would be removed and replaced with the brand name in a small, specific font.
But BATA has vowed to fight the move, warning that it will backfire and spark a boom in black market tobacco.
"When all cigarette packs look the same and lose their trademarks and distinguishing features, counterfeiters will have a field day mass producing packets to smuggle into Australia," David Crow, BATA's chief executive said. Continue reading and comment » | Bonnie Malkin, In Sydney | Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Labels:
Australia,
cigarettes,
smoking
Labels:
French politics,
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: EGYPTE | Hospitalisé à Charm el-Cheikh, l'ancien président Hosni Moubarak, actuellement en détention préventive, serait dépressif et aurait besoin d'un suivi psychiatrique.
Le président égyptien déchu Hosni Moubarak, en détention préventive dans un hôpital, est dépressif et a besoin d’être suivi par un psychologue, a indiqué samedi une source médicale citée par l’agence officielle Mena.
L’ancien président, âgé de 83 ans, est hospitalisé à Charm el-Cheikh, sur la mer Rouge, depuis le mois dernier à la suite d’un accident cardiaque survenu durant un interrogatoire.
M. Moubarak fait l’objet d’une enquête sur l’origine de sa fortune ainsi que sur la répression du soulèvement populaire contre son régime en janvier et février, qui a fait plus de 800 morts.
Son transfert en prison dans l’attente d’un éventuel procès est conditionné à l’évolution de son état de santé. » | AFP | Samedi 21 Mai 2011
Labels:
Égypte,
Hosni Mubarak,
Sharm as-Sheikh
TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: GUERRE CIVILE | Les forces de sécurité syriennes ont ouvert le feu sur la foule, qui sortait du cimetière de la ville de Homs. Trois personnes ont été tuées et des dizaines d'autres blessées.
Trois personnes ont été tuées et des dizaines blessées samedi par les forces de sécurité syriennes. » | ATS / AFP | Samedi 21 Mai 2011
Labels:
Syria
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A BUS containing foreign journalists was attacked by a knife-wielding mob in Libya on Saturday, in the first significant manifestation of public hostility to Westerners.
The vehicle was stuck in a traffic queue in the town of Zuara, sixty miles west of Tripoli, when it was stormed by a crowd of about 50 civilians apparently angered about growing petrol shortages.
Only the intervention of Libyan security forces saved the journalists from being injured or killed.
Guy Desmond, a reporter for the Reuters news agency who was on board, said: "We were stopped opposite a petrol queue and the people in the queue were obviously tired and agitated. One guy came and kicked in the door of the bus, saying we'd been filming. Then a crowd of about fifty people tried to get on board. They wanted to drag us out. A soldier with an AK47 from a nearby checkpoint jumped in through the driver's door and tried to hold them back."
About six of the angry crowd, some armed with knives, managed to get past the soldier and on to the vehicle. "A guy with a knife came towards me and was stopped by the soldier. The government minder with us tried quite courageously to put himself between us and the crowd. He was punched and slapped," said Mr Desmond. » | Andrew Gilligan in Tripoli | Saturday, May 21, 2011
Labels:
Libya
ADN KRONOS INTERNATIONAL (AKI): Bologna - Italy's first-ever 'halal' supplier has opened for business in Italy's northern city of Bologna, selling meals prepared according to Islamic principles to restaurants and canteens in Italy and abroad.
"Integration is also being able to eat as one should and to be at peace with God," Hamza Piccardo, told Adnkronos International (AKI).
Piccardo, an Italian convert to Islam, is the director of the 'Tre Alfieri Halal', which is based in Bologna, a renowned gastronomic centre.
"Our new company wants to be a triumph of integration: to combine Italy's great cuisine and Islam's rules without losing the flavours of the former and the spiritual rigour of the latter," he said. » | AKI | Friday, May 20, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The country's most celebrated writer, Alaa al-Aswany, was inspired by the Tahrir protesters, but fears a counter-revolution
On 28 January a young Egyptian man was urging the novelist Alaa al-Aswany to write a book about the revolution that was gathering momentum in Cairo's Tahrir Square. Just minutes after their brief conversation the protester was shot dead by a government sniper from a nearby roof.
Aswany never learned his interlocutor's name, but that and other killings, along with the sheer bravery of revolutionaries motivated by "an untameable anger and a profound sense of injustice", are seared into the memory of Egypt's most celebrated living writer as he articulates his feelings about the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak and what it means.
"The revolution was a great human achievement," Aswany says in a booming voice that amplifies his evident emotion. "It means people are willing to die for freedom and justice. When you participate in a real revolution you become a much better person. You are ready to defend human values."
Now though, like other Egyptian democrats, he fears a counter-revolution led by old regime loyalists fomenting violence and sectarian attacks, precisely in line with the finger-wagging warning by Mubarak of the "chaos" that would follow if he were forced from the presidency.
Uncertainties abound, Aswany admits, smoking furiously between appointments in his dental surgery in Cairo's Garden City district, its leafy streets a haven from one of the noisiest urban spaces on the planet, and whose fading charms and human vibrancy he captured in his best-selling novel The Yacoubian Building [I].
"The revolution succeeded in Egypt but there is someone else taking the decisions," he muses. "The army is seen very positively ... but we have to keep up pressure [on it] to take the decisions of the revolution. It needs a lot of effort ... and then, at some point, they respond." » | Ian Black in Cairo | Friday, May 20, 2011
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: David Cameron risked criticism after he was pictured shaking hands with the Crown Prince of Bahrain on the steps of Downing Street.
The Prime Minister met Sheikh Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa for talks at No 10 amid concern of the Gulf state’s human rights record.
The pair met in private for discussions on the uprisings across the Middle East and north Africa, including a bloody crackdown by Bahraini authorities on demonstrators.
But critics said officials should not be “rolling out the red carpet for Bahrain's torturer-in-chief”, insisting the meeting sent out the wrong signal.
It came as President Barack Obama gave a major speech last night throwing American weight behind the Arab Spring protests, which have been shaking the autocracies of the Middle East.
Mr Cameron was said to have urged Bahrain to embrace ''reform rather than repression'' in response to pro-democracy protests in the Gulf state.
Hundreds of anti-government protesters have been arrested and put on trial in special courts[.]
The Crown Prince’s London visit also follows a row about his invitation to last month’s Royal Wedding of the Duke of Duchess of Cambridge.
He later declined the invitation amid fears his presence might act as a distraction and attract widespread demonstrations. » | Andrew Hough | Friday, May 20, 2011
THE INDEPENDENT: In Bahrain, it was another day of violence and repression as the Saudi-backed Al-Khalifa dynasty continued to clamp down on protesters demanding a better life for the repressed Shia majority.
But in Downing Street, David Cameron exchanged a warm handshake with Bahrain's Crown Prince, Sheikh Salman bin Hamad al-Khalifa. While other Arab tyrants feel the full force of British disapproval, Sheikh Salman is here on a mission to repair the damaged reputation of his dynasty. His visit prompted an outcry from politicians and civil rights campaigners. It came on the day when President Obama delivered his first major speech on the Arab Spring, which he said would open a "new chapter in American diplomacy". "It will be the policy of the US to promote reform, and to support transitions to democracy," he promised.
The Labour MP Denis MacShane, a former Foreign Office minister, said: "It's unbelievable, at a time when Bahrain is becoming the torture chamber of the Gulf, with terrible reports of killings and beatings, that David Cameron has even allowed the torturer-in-chief into Britain, let alone into Downing Street." Amnesty International UK's director, Kate Allen, said: "The Prime Minister ought to make it clear to Sheikh Salman that Bahrain's relations with the UK will suffer if the Bahraini authorities refuse to allow peaceful protests or conduct proper investigations into numerous allegations that detained protesters have been tortured." Continue reading and comment » | Andy McSmith | Friday, May 20, 2011
Labels:
IMF,
New York,
sexual assault
Labels:
earthquake,
Turkey
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