Monday, June 27, 2011

Michele Bachmann Launches Campaign to Be Republican Presidential Candidate

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Michele Bachmann has formally launched a bid to be the Republican presidential candidate next year, warning the United States "cannot afford four more years" of President Barack Obama.

"I seek the presidency not for vanity, but because I think America is at a crucial moment," Mrs Bachmann, a darling of the conservative "Tea Party" movement, said in a speech to some 200 supporters in the key heartland state of Iowa.

The outspoken Minnesota lawmaker, 55, pointed to the swelling US national debt, soaring petrol prices, historically high unemployment and took aim at Obama's signature health law, the target of conservative voter anger.

"We can't afford four more years of millions of Americans who are out of work," she said to voters in Iowa, home to a first-in-the-nation caucus that shapes the Republican presidential field. "We cannot afford four more years of Barack Obama." » | Monday, June 27, 2011
Maroc, vers une revolution? Référendum au Maroc : Partisans et opposants dans la rue

FRANCE SOIR: Alors que le Maroc va organiser un référendum vendredi, des milliers de partisans et d'opposants au projet de révision constitutionnelle promis par Mohammed VI ont manifesté dimanche.

La rue s'est exprimée. Le roi Mohammed VI a présenté un projet de révision constitutionnelle pour renforcer le rôle du Premier ministre, le vendredi 17 juin. Mais dans ce projet de changement de la constitution de 1962, le souverain conserve toutes ses prérogatives de Chef de l'état et de Commandeur des croyants, l'autorité ultime en matière religieuse. Dimanche, alors qu'un référendum doit se tenir vendredi, des milliers de partisans et d'opposants au projet de réforme ont manifesté ensemble, ou plutôt le même jour, notamment dans les grandes villes marocaines telles que Casablanca, Marrakech ou encore Tanger. » | Par Actu France Soir | Lundi 27 Juin 2011
Nigeria Boko Haram Islamists ‘Bomb Maiduguri Drinkers’

BBC: A bomb attack in the north-eastern Nigerian town of Maiduguri has killed at least 25 people and wounded dozens, security sources say.

They say they believe the attack, which occurred in a beer garden, was carried out by the Islamist sect Boko Haram.

The group wants to establish an Islamic government in Nigeria.

It has carried out a number of bombings in north-eastern Nigeria, as well as an attack on police headquarters in the capital Abuja earlier this month.

Gunmen on two motorcycles attacked a packed beer garden late on Sunday, officials said.

"The attackers believed to be Boko Haram members threw bombs and fired indiscriminate gun shots on a packed tavern at Dala Kabompi neighbourhood, killing at least 25 people and seriously injuring around 30 others," an unnamed police officer told the AFP news agency. » | Monday, June 27, 2011
Tunisian Migrants in Italy Struggle to Find Jobs

Since the beginning of Tunisia's revolution last year, more than 24,000 Tunisians have flooded into Italy looking for better economic conditions.

Most arrive by boat at the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa, where many are then granted short term permits to work in Italy.

But finding jobs once they arrive can often be a struggle.

Al Jazeera's Casey Kauffman reports from Rome.


Tobacco Giant Fights Australia Over Brand Ban

Tobacco giant Phillip Morris is taking legal action against a new law in Australia aimed at reducing smoking.

The legislation bans commercial branding on all cigarette packs from next year - the first of its kind worldwide.

Phillip Morris wants the Australian government to strike the measure or pay up billions of dollars in projected losses.

Al Jazeera's Gerald Tan reports.


Hugo Chavez in 'Critical' Condition in Cuban Hospital

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Hugo Chavez, the radical left-wing Venezuelan president, is reported to be in a "critical" but stable condition in a Cuban hospital following surgery earlier this month.

Speculation about Mr Chavez's condition has been mounting ever since he underwent an operation on June 10, for what his government has said was a pelvic abscess.

He remained uncharacteristically silent after the operation, even as Venezuela was hit by prison riots that killed at least 25 people and an electricity crisis, before messages began to appear again on his Twitter account on Friday.

A US-intelligence source told the Miami-based newspaper El Nuevo Herald that Mr Chavez "is in critical condition; not on the brink of death, but critical indeed, and complicated."

The newspaper said its sources could not confirm rumours that Mr Chavez may be receiving treatment for prostate cancer in Havana.

But it reported that his daughter Rosines, and his mother, Marisabel Rodriguez, were "urgently" flown to Cuba in an air force plane last week. » | Robin Yapp, Sao Paulo | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Libya: Nato 'Trying to Kill Col Gaddafi'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A senior American general involved in the Libyan campaign has admitted that Nato forces are trying to kill Col Muammar Gaddafi, according to a member of the United States Congress.

In the first such admission, Adm Samuel Locklear, commander of the NATO Joint Operations Command in Naples, said that efforts had been stepped up to target the Libyan leader, despite declarations by the Obama administration that "regime change" was not the goal.

The admiral's comments were revealed by Representative Mike Turner, an Ohio Republican and member of the House Armed Services Committee.

Mr Turner has opposed the military intervention from the outset was among those who voted in the House of Representatives last week to deny President Barack Obama the authority to wage war against Libya.

Another motion to stop funding for the war failed.

He told Foreign Policy magazine that he came away from his conversation with Adm Locklear convinced that Nato was acting beyond remit of the United Nations 1973 resolution on Libya, which allowed for enforcement of a no-fly zone and the defence of civilians and against Col Gaddafi's forces.

"I believe the scope that Nato is pursuing is beyond what is contemplated in civil protection, so they're exceeding the mission," he said.

The admiral also repeated a comment he made last month that a "small force" might be needed on the ground in the initial stages after the fall of Col Gaddafi's regime. » | Alex Spillius, Washington and Aislinn Laing in Johannesburg | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Moussa Koussa Facing Calls to Return to Britain after Being Tracked Down in Gulf

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Moussa Koussa, Colonel Gaddafi’s former intelligence chief and foreign minister, is facing calls to return to Britain for prosecution after The Daily Telegraph tracked him down to a luxury hotel in the Gulf.

Mr Koussa has been living for several weeks in a 17th-floor penthouse suite at the Four Seasons Hotel in Doha, the capital of Qatar, under the protection of Qatari security services.

He has been in the Gulf state, a close western ally which is also a conduit for support for the Libyan opposition, since being allowed to leave Britain in mid-April.

At the time officials said Mr Koussa was likely to return to the United Kingdom, where his grandchildren live.

But at the weekend he refused to say when he would leave Qatar, or even if would be allowed to. He is constantly trailed by a team of Qatari “minders”, who were summoned to escort The Daily Telegraph away when it approached him for an interview.

The Conservative MP for Harlow, Robert Halfon, called for Mr Koussa to be handed over to the International Criminal Court in the Hague and put on trial for his role in atrocities perpetrated over decades by the Libyan government under Col Muammar Gaddafi.

“He was part of a grim regime,” said Mr Halfon, whose family’s roots are in Libya and whose grandfather fled Tripoli in the 1960s. » | Richard Spencer, Doha | Monday, June 27, 2011
Libya Unveils Its Latest Weapon against Nato: Women at Arms

THE GUARDIAN: More than 500 females of various ages armed to the teeth and swearing loyalty are paraded in front of international media

Screaming and chanting his name, the 500 women and girls vowed their undying love for one man. Not a pop star or Hollywood actor, but Libya's Colonel Muammar Gaddafi.

"Kill all the people in Libya first, then come for Muammar Gaddafi," said 14-year-old Fatima Hassan. "I will kill myself if Muammar Gaddafi is killed. I know our people will kill themselves if he dies."

The event in Tripoli on Sunday was billed as a graduation ceremony for women who had been given weapons training in defence of the regime. Around 50 international journalists, invited and escorted by government minders, arrived to find them clapping, singing, ululating, punching the air and waving green flags in a tented hall set up with chandeliers and two colossal flatscreen TVs.

There were elderly women and little girls in the hall, and every age in between. Some held aloft pictures of a luminous Gaddafi, one framed in green Christmas tinsel. A woman waved a green flag and wore a sparkly green cape, green scarf and green bandana with badges showing Gaddafi's face. Next to her was a woman wearing a watch that displayed his image.

Reporters pondered whether the event had been stage managed entirely for their benefit. The Gaddafi groupies painted the first dozen rows green, but behind them were hundreds of empty seats. Outside was a rattle of gunfire as some enthusiastic graduates fired their new weapons into the air with little regard for where the ammunition might land.

There was also much idolatry, most of all from the teenager Fatima, who said her father is an engineer and she attended an international school near Edgware Road in London. "We love Muammar Gaddafi and we want to save our country," she said. » | David Smith in Libya | Sunday, June 26, 2011

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Inside Story - Syria: An Act of Desperation?

Syrian troops have moved close to the Turkish border in a bid to prevent more Syrians crossing into neighbouring Turkey

Gaddafi Revives Offer of Vote to End Libya Conflict

REUTERS: The Libyan government on Sunday renewed its offer to hold a vote on whether Muammar Gaddafi should stay in power, a proposal unlikely to interest Gaddafi's opponents but which could widen differences inside NATO.

Pressure is growing from some quarters within the alliance to find a political solution, three months into a military campaign which is costing NATO members billions of dollars, has killed civilians, and has so far failed to topple Gaddafi.

Moussa Ibrahim, a spokesman for Gaddafi's administration, told reporters in Tripoli the government was proposing a period of national dialogue and an election overseen by the United Nations and the African Union.

"If the Libyan people decide Gaddafi should leave he will leave. If the people decide he should stay he will stay," Ibrahim said.

But he said Gaddafi -- who has run the oil-producing country since taking over in a military coup in 1969 -- would not go into exile whatever happened. "Gaddafi is not leaving anywhere, he is staying in this country," Ibrahim said.

The idea of holding an election was first raised earlier this month by one of Gaddafi's sons, Saif al-Islam. » | Nick Carey | TRIPOLI | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Unlawful Killing - Controversial Documentary by Keith Allen on Death of Princess Diana

The trailer for the controversial documentary by Keith Allen examining the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, which is set to premiere at Cannes


Keith Allen on Controversial Diana Documentary



Unlawful Killing is the story of the deaths of Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed and their driver Henri Paul: It reveals a cover-up by the British Establishment culminating in a six month inquest. Keith Allen's ground breaking documentary recreates key moments from the inquest and demonstrates how vital evidence of foul play was hidden from public scrutiny, how the Royal Family were exempted from giving evidence and how journalists, particularly those working for the BBC, systematically misreported the events and in particular, the verdict itself. This is the story of how the world was deceived. »

MAIL ON SUNDAY: Mohammed Al Fayed burns the Queen's coat of arms from Harrods for 'cynical' documentary » | Daily Mail Reporter | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Medieval Murder in Modern Times: Woman Faces Death by Beheading in Saudi Arabia for Crime She 'Committed as a Child’

MAIL ON SUNDAY: A young maid is facing death by beheading in Saudi Arabia for a crime she claims she did not commit.

Rizana Nafeek, who alleges she was a teenager at the time of the incident, was arrested in May 2005 on charges of murdering a four-month-old baby who was in her care.

She denies murder and claims she desperately tried to save the child who choked while she was looking after it.

Saudi Arabia have come under fire from Human Rights groups for the handling of her case after it was revealed there had been a mix-up involving the year she was born in.

The authorities have her date of birth as 1982 however her birth certificate states she was born in 1988 - making her 17 at the time of the alleged incident.

If Saudi Arabia went ahead with the execution it would be in breach of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which it has ratified.

Human Rights groups claim Rizana had no legal representation before or during her trial.

Sri-Lankan born Nafeek's mother Rafeena said her daughter moved to the country so that she could send money home to help educate her three siblings.

Desperate for work she found a job as a domestic worker but was shocked when she was asked to look after a baby, Naif al-Quthaibi, because she believed she did not have the skills to care for him.

Just weeks into her employment tragedy struck and the infant choked while he was being fed.

Rafeena, who lives in a tiny village, has previously begged King Abdullah to pardon her daughter and asked him to allow her to return home.

If the execution goes ahead the now 23-year-old will dressed in a white robe and be marched into a packed town centre.

She will also be blindfolded, shackled and forced to kneel facing Mecca before she is prodded between the shoulders so her head is raised naturally.

Rizana will then be executed, medieval style, with one sweep of a sharply-bladed sword. Read on and comment » | Daily Mail Reporter | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Nordkorea: Filme als Propaganda-Mittel

In der letzten Folge der fünfteiligen Serie über Nordkorea besucht das «10vor10»-Team eine der Lieblingsschauspielerinnen des geliebten Führers Kim Jong Il. Dieser ist jeweils persönlich am Set, wenn sie dreht. Filme sind eines der wichtigsten Propaganda-Instrumente der Regierung.

10vor10 vom 24.06.2011
Jimmy Wales: “President Medvedev Is the Only World Leader Who Actually Understands the Internet”

RUSSIA BEYOND THE HEADLINES: At a meeting in Moscow, the founder of Wikipedia said he was encouraged about the future of the Internet in Russia.

With more than 720,000 articles, the Russian-language section on Wikipedia is one of the site's largest. According to site founder Jimmy Wales, it is also one of the fastest-growing. Wales came to Russia in the middle of June to talk with the local wiki-community about freedom of speech, copyright protections and the future of the media.

The month before his visit to Russia, Wales participated in the eG8, a precursor to the G8 meetings in Deauville, France. In deference to the increasing role the web is playing in politics and economics today, French President Nicolas Sarkozy invited the heads of the world’s leading Internet companies to gather in Paris to discuss the future of the Internet and its place in society. In addition to Wales, Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg, the chairman of the board of Google Eric Schmidt and representatives from Microsoft, the BBC and eBay also participated in the meeting.

“Unfortunately Sarkozy thinks that the Internet must be controlled and regulated,” Wales said, describing the eG8 discussions during his press conference in Moscow. “At the G8 meeting, President Medvedev was the only person to say anything sensible whatsoever.”

Medvedev’s enthusiasm for all things online is one reason Wales is so excited about the future of the Internet in Russia. At his press conference, Wales suggested that all the journalists who planned to write about the event title their stories “Medvedev is the only world leader who actually understands the Internet.” » | Vsevolod Pulya | Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Marine Le Pen: Is This the Most Dangerous Woman in France?

THE OBSERVER: Smart, astute and media savvy, Marine Le Pen has achieved poll numbers for the Front National that her father Jean-Marie could only dream of. With a presidential election less than a year away, does she represent the breakthrough the European far right has so long hoped for?

Step inside an office building in the town of Nanterre, just west of Paris, and you are confronted by what the nostrils register as an odour of the past, for it's a rare thing these days to encounter the lingering taint of cigarette smoke in public spaces. The trail of it leads upstairs to a corner office and to the woman who has, in the past few months, come to dominate French newspapers and chat shows, where she is depicted variously as the new face of European bigotry or a herald of a new European political realignment.

Marine Le Pen, the leader of France's far-right Front National party, greeted me with an aggressive handshake and the abrupt body language of a person who has a lot to do. It was spring. A flurry of polls had just come out showing she would beat Nicolas Sarkozy if the presidential election were held at that moment (the election will take place a year from now), and she was working hard to press her advantage. She wore a simple blue suit and no jewellery, and her hair was pulled back somewhat haphazardly, with stray wisps dangling. Her gaze is steely, but her eyes have humour in them. Her deep voice, with its smoker's rasp, carries authority.

Her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, was a founder of the Front National in 1972 and served as its leader, and perennial presidential candidate, until his retirement in January, at 82. Along the way, thanks in part to his penchant for crisply expressed opinions – that the Nazi occupation of France was "not particularly inhuman"; that the gas chambers were "a detail"; that "the races are unequal"; that someone with Aids is "a kind of leper"; that "Jews have conspired to rule the world" – he and his party became emblems of European right-wing extremism. The height of his popularity came in 2002, when he reached second place in the initial round of voting for president and won the right to enter a head-to-head contest with the incumbent president, Jacques Chirac. Le Pen was trounced in that election and his party faded as a force to be reckoned with.

Then in January, Marine – at 42, the youngest of his three daughters – won a battle to succeed her father as president of the party. Almost overnight, she brought the Front National not just back into the spotlight but also into outright competition. The polls that show her matching or outpacing Sarkozy have shuffled the French political game board. Of late, Sarkozy has fired his diversity minister, declared that multiculturalism has been "a failure" and staged a "debate on Islam" that French Muslims saw as a swat at them – all moves that are widely viewed as a direct response to Marine Le Pen's rise. She derided Sarkozy's support for the recently enacted ban on full-face veils as a pandering political manoeuvre that addressed only "the tip of the iceberg" of what she views as the Islamisation of French culture. » | Russell Shorto | Sunday, June 26, 2011
Diabetes Epidemic Affecting 350m – and Western Fast Food Is to Blame

THE OBSERVER: Lancet study shows diabetes now a major health problem • Number of people with disease has doubled since 1980

More than 350 million people in the world now have diabetes, an international study has revealed. The analysis, published online by the Lancet on Saturday, adds several tens of millions to the previous estimate of the number of diabetics and indicates that the disease has become a major global health problem.

Diabetics have inadequate blood sugar control, a condition that can lead to heart disease and strokes, as well as damage to kidneys, nerves and the retina. About three million deaths a year are attributed to diabetes and associated conditions in which blood sugar levels are disrupted.

The dramatic and disturbing increase is blamed by scientists on the spread of a western-style diet to developing nations, which is causing rising levels of obesity. Researchers also say that increased life expectancy is playing a major role.

Type 2 is the most common type of diabetes, accounting for about 85-95% of cases, and is often tied to obesity. It develops when the body fails to produce enough insulin to break down glucose, inflating blood sugar levels. Type 1 diabetes is a separate auto-immune disorder.

"Diabetes is one of the biggest causes of mortality worldwide, and our study has shown that it is becoming more common almost everywhere. It is set to become the single largest burden on world health care systems," one of the study's main authors, Professor Majid Ezzati, of Imperial College London, told the Observer. "Many nations are going to find it very difficult to cope with the consequences." » | Robin McKie | Saturday, June 25, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Low-calorie diet offers hope of cure for type 2 diabetes: British study finds two-month extreme diet can cure type 2 diabetes and overturns assumptions about 'lifelong' condition » | Sarah Boseley | Friday, June 24, 2011
Saudi Arabian Torment of Migrant Workers at Mercy of Abusive 'Madams'

THE OBSERVER: Foreign workers in Saudi Arabia send £17bn to families back home annually. But for some, the cost in physical and mental abuse is too high, writes Jason Burke

Shortly after dawn, as the sun rises over the hills behind the city, tens of thousands of women will wake in the Saudi Arabian port of Jeddah and go to work. Maybe 14 or 16 hours later, their day will be over.

They are maids, almost all from the Philippines or Indonesia, working for £100-£200 a month. There are more than 500,000 of them in Saudi Arabia, among nearly nine million foreign workers who sweep roads, clean offices, staff coffee shops, drive the cars that women are banned from driving and provide the manpower on the vast construction projects.

The story of the maids rarely receives attention, except when a new shocking incident reveals once again the problems many of them face. Last weekend a 54-year-old Indonesian maid was beheaded by sword for killing her female boss with a cleaver. Ruyati binti Sapubi had, an Islamic court heard, endured years of abuse before finally attacking her "madam", as the maids call their employers, when denied permission to return home.

Another Indonesian maid also faces execution for killing her boss whom she alleges tried to rape her. Other recent incidents include a Sri Lankan maid who had nails driven into her legs and arms by her employers, and another who was scalded with a hot iron.

Every year, thousands of the maids run away from their employers in Saudi Arabia.

Often physically or mentally scarred, they find themselves in a legal limbo. In Saudi Arabia, the consent of employers or "sponsors" is needed before any worker can leave the country.

Last week the Observer was able to visit a secret shelter in Jeddah – there are others elsewhere in Saudi Arabia – where 50 women are being looked after by well-wishers. The shelter is tolerated by local authorities, but the women who stay there, often for months on end, are not allowed to leave once they have entered and cannot use mobile phones. Sixteen sleep in a single room. » | Jason Burke | Saturday, June 25, 2011

Saturday, June 25, 2011

It’s the Debt Stupid! Don't Be Distracted by Greece: Americans Must Also Face Financial Facts

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: While Europe wrestles with the dilemma of Greek debt, another far more frightening crisis is brewing, writes Justin Webb.

Forget Greece. Or at least put Greece to one side: the real financial disaster waiting to happen is on the other side of the Atlantic. It is a disaster born of self[-]delusion, in a nation that prides itself on plain speaking and openness.

There is much to be celebrated in the United States. They have Osama bin Laden's scalp. They have a vibrant and open political system. The things, material and intellectual, that people want and admire still tend to be American.

But they (and we) face a huge looming crisis. It transcends politics and political candidates – it is much bigger than Michele
Bachmann's hair or Barack Obama's thesaurus – and sometime soon they are going to have to face it.

It's the debt. » | Justin Webb | Saturday, June 25, 2011
Stevie Wonder: I Just Called To Say I Love You

Bis zu 35 Tote bei Selbstmordanschlag in Ostafghanistan

REUTERS DEUTSCHLAND: Kabul - Bei einem Selbstmordanschlag auf ein Krankenhaus in Ostafghanistan sind am Samstag möglicherweise bis zu 35 Menschen ums Leben gekommen.

Der Attentäter sprengte sein Auto vor einer Klinik in der Provinz Logar in die Luft, wie die Behörden mitteilten. Unter den Opfern sollen auch Patienten und Angestellte sein. Die Provinzregierung bezifferte die Zahl der Toten auf bis zu 35, während das Innenministerium in Kabul von mindestens 20 sprach. Präsident Hamid Karsai verurteilte den Anschlag und sagte, die Zahl der Opfer liege im zweistelligen Bereich. » | Reuters Deutschland | Samstag 25. Juni 2011
New York Marriage Bill Paves Way for Same-sex Divorce

REUTERS: As New York's same-sex couples head to the altar to celebrate their newly won right to marry, they can take comfort in the fact that, if it doesn't work out, their right to get divorced in the state just got a lot easier as well.

State senators on Friday voted 33-29 to approve marriage equality legislation introduced by Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat in his first year of office. New York will become the sixth and most populous U.S. state to allow gay marriage.

"One of the so-called benefits to marriage is actually divorce," said Ruthann Robson, professor of law at the City University of New York. "If same-sex marriage is recognized, same-sex divorce would be recognized too."

In fact, same-sex divorce was first recognized in New York in 2008, when an appeals court found that a same-sex marriage performed in Canada could be legally recognized in New York for the purposes of dissolving the union. » | Reporting by Jessica Dye; Editing by Jesse Wegman and Paul Simao | NEW YORK | Saturday, June 25, 2011
Umstrittener “Präventionsgipfel” gegen radikale Islamisten

Auf einem sogenannten Präventionsgipfel wurde über Strategien gegen islamische Gewalt beraten. Innenminister Friedrich zeigt sich zufrieden über die Ergebnisse. | 24.06.2011

Das Video hier abspielen
Freispruch für Wilders

Ein Gericht in Amsterdam hat den niederländischen Islamgegner vom Vorwurf der Anstiftung zu Diskriminierung und Rassenhass freigesprochen. | 23.06.2011

Das Video hier abspielen
Inside Story - Cracks in the NATO Alliance?

NATO's chief dismissed a call from Italy to suspend military operations in Libya and insists the mission will continue

Listening Post - Greece: Is the Media Part of the Problem?

Greece - the economic story, the protesters and the coverage. And the power of puppets and how politicians have tried their hardest to keep them off air

L'État de New York approuve le mariage homosexuel

LE FIGARO: New York devient le sixième État, et de loin le plus important aux États-Unis, à reconnaître l'union de personnes du même sexe. Les premières célébrations pourront avoir lieu dans un mois.

Dans la communauté gay de New York, l'ambiance était à la fête vendredi soir. Le Sénat de l'Etat venait en effet d'approuver de justesse la loi reconnaissant le droit au mariage homosexuel, par 33 voix contre 29. Quatres sénateurs républicains se sont prononcés en faveur du texte. Le document avait besoin de 32 voix sur 62 pour être adopté. Cela faisait des années que cette chambre haute rejetait un projet de loi qui avait reçu quatre fois le feu vert de l'Assemblée.

Le Sénat était réuni depuis mardi en session extraordinaire pour peaufiner le texte. La loi, fortement amendée par les sénateurs républicains ces derniers jours, prévoit un certain nombre d'exceptions de nature religieuse. Le gouverneur Andrew Cuomo, fervent défenseur des droits des homosexuels et à l'origine du projet, est arrivé dans la salle après le vote et a été accueilli par des applaudissements. » | Par lefigaro.fr | Samedi 25 Juin 2011
Stonewall Celebrates Gay Marriage

Gay Marriage Now Legal in New York


THE NEW YORK TIMES: New York Allows Same-Sex Marriage, Becoming Largest State to Pass Law » | Nicholas Confessore and Michael Barbaro | Friday, June 24, 2011
New Yorks Senat stimmt für Homo-Ehe

WELT ONLINE: Als sechster US-Bundesstaat erlaubt New York die Homo-Ehe. In den übrigen US-Bundesstaaten ist nach wie vor nur die Ehe zwischen Mann und Frau erlaubt.

Der Senat des US-Bundesstaates New York hat am späten Freitagabend (Ortszeit) der Einführung der sogenannten Homo-Ehe zugestimmt.

Wie die „New York Times“ berichtete, stimmten 33 Senatoren für die Zulassung gleichgeschlechtlicher Ehen, 29 dagegen. Zuvor hatte bereits das Unterhaus die Gesetzesvorlage gebilligt.

Die Unterzeichnung durch Gouverneur Andrew Cuomo, einem Befürworter der Initiative, galt als Formsache. Nach Inkrafttreten des Gesetztes, 30 Tage nach Unterschrift, wäre New York der sechste und bei weitem größte US-Bundesstaat, der Schwulen und Lesben die Heirat erlaubt. » | dpa/fbr | Samstag 25. Juni 2011
Iran Giving Out Condoms for Criminals to Rape Us, Say Jailed Activists

THE GUARDIAN: Smuggled letters allege authorities are using mass rape as a weapon inside Iran's most notorious prisons

Prison guards in Iran are giving condoms to criminals and encouraging them to systematically rape young opposition activists locked up with them, according to accounts from inside the country's jail system.

A series of dramatic letters written by prisoners and families of imprisoned activists allege that authorities are intentionally facilitating mass rape and using it as a form of punishment.

Mehdi Mahmoudian, an outspoken member of Iran's Participation Front, a reformist political party, is among those prisoners who have succeeded in smuggling out letters revealing the extent of rape inside some of the most notorious prisons. » | Saeed Kamali Dehghan | Friday, June 24, 2011
Protesters Shot Dead as Assad Forces Open Fire

THE INDEPENDENT: Security forces opened fire yesterday as thousands of anti-government protesters took to Syria's streets in a weekly ritual of defiance as they push for the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad, activists said.

At least seven people, including a child, were reported killed. Four were shot dead in Barzeh, a Damascus district, said human rights activist Mustafa Osso.

State television said unidentified "gunmen" had opened fire, killing three civilians and wounding several security force members. » | AP | Saturday, June 25, 2011
Outcry in America as Pregnant Women Who Lose Babies Face Murder Charges

THE GUARDIAN: Women's rights campaigners see the creeping criminalisation of pregnant women as a new front in the culture wars over abortion

Rennie Gibbs is accused of murder, but the crime she is alleged to have committed does not sound like an ordinary killing. Yet she faces life in prison in Mississippi over the death of her unborn child.

Gibbs became pregnant aged 15, but lost the baby in December 2006 in a stillbirth when she was 36 weeks into the pregnancy. When prosecutors discovered that she had a cocaine habit – though there is no evidence that drug abuse had anything to do with the baby's death – they charged her with the "depraved-heart murder" of her child, which carries a mandatory life sentence.

Gibbs is the first woman in Mississippi to be charged with murder relating to the loss of her unborn baby. But her case is by no means isolated. Across the US more and more prosecutions are being brought that seek to turn pregnant women into criminals.

"Women are being stripped of their constitutional personhood and subjected to truly cruel laws," said Lynn Paltrow of the campaign National Advocates for Pregnant Women (NAPW). "It's turning pregnant women into a different class of person and removing them of their rights." » | Ed Pilkington in New York | Friday, June 24, 2011

My comment:

Americans are losing the plot! This development is totally ridiculous, and will lead to women refusing to have babies for fear of being incarcerated. The West is already short of babies. This sinister development will exacerbate the problem.

Having a baby should be the joyous result of the expression of love between a couple. The threat of a protracted jail term looming over a pregnant woman will destroy the love and turn it into fear. Another ridiculous idea from America! – © Mark

Friday, June 24, 2011

Wie Nordkorea die Wirtschaft ankurbeln will

In der vierten Folge der fünfteiligen Serie über Nordkorea berichtet das «10vor10»-Team über kommunistische Manager. Die Fabriken in Nordkorea sind veraltet und schlecht ausgelastet. Exportiert werden nur noch Bodenschätze – vor allem nach China

10vor10 vom 23.06.2011
Fatal Cocktail of Common Drugs Putting Elderly at Risk

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Hundreds of thousands of older people are being put at increased risk of death or developing dementia by taking combinations of common medicines to treat routine illnesses, according to a new study.


Well-known brands of hay fever tablets, painkillers and sleeping pills pose a previously unknown threat to people’s health when taken together, British scientists claim.

Many are available over the counter at pharmacies as well as being prescribed by GPs, nurses and chemists.

Today the scientists behind the study call for doctors to recognise how dangerous these drug combinations can be and to prescribe harmless alternatives instead.

Researchers from the University of East Anglia and the University of Kent identified 80 widely used medications that, when used in combination, were found to increase the risk of serious health problems.

The drugs, including common allergy treatments Piriton and Zantac, as well as Seroxat, an anti-depressant, are thought to be used by half of the 10  million over-65s in Britain. Many of the drugs, when taken in combination, were found to more than treble an elderly patient’s chance of dying within two years. » | Nick Collins, Science Correspondent | Friday, June 24, 2011
Wilders Acquittal a 'Slap in the Face for Muslims'

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Controversial Dutch politician Geert Wilders was acquitted of inciting hatred against Muslims by a court in Amsterdam on Thursday. But the right-wing populist's statements and the verdict have reignited the debate over free speech.

His supporters have hailed Geert Wilders' acquittal as a victory for free speech, while his many detractors have slammed the decision not to punish a man who described Islam as "fascist." The Dutch right-wing populist politician was cleared of inciting hatred against Muslims by a court in Amsterdam Thursday after the judge ruled that his comments -- which also included comparing the Koran to Hitler's "Mein Kampf" -- were "acceptable within the context of public debate."

In his verdict, leading judge Marcel van Oosten said that while Wilders' statements were indeed offensive to Muslims, they were also part of a legitimate political discussion. Wilders' claim that Islam is a violent religion and his demands for a ban on Muslim immigrants should be viewed in the context of the larger societal debate over immigration policies, the judge argued.

The verdict has sparked a re-examination of free speech in a multicultural Europe, with some asking just how far the basic democratic right to speak one's mind actually extends.

German commentators were deeply divided over the issue on Friday. While some argued Wilders should have been punished, others suggested that free speech trumps any discomfort with extreme opinions. » | David Knight | Friday, June 24, 2011
Witness - To the Last Drop - Part 1

A small town Canada is facing the consequences of being the first to witness the impact of the Tar Sands project, which may be the tipping point for oil development in Canada. Filmmaker Tom Radford describes witnessing a David and Goliath struggle

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Dutch MP Acquitted in 'Hate' Trial

Dutch politician Geert Wilders has been cleared of "hate speech" charges.

A court in Amsterdam said that Wilders' statements were "rude and condescending" but not a criminal offence according to Dutch law.

The case has reopened discussions over freedom of speech in the Netherlands.

Al Jazeera's Tania Page reports from Amsterdam, the Netherlands.




My comment:

This video is a perfect example of biassed reporting. That Geert Wilders was acquitted yesterday is cause for celebration, not criticism: it marks the triumph of freedom over enslavement, the triumph of freedom of speech over oppression, the triumph of the enlightenment of the West over the darkness of the East.

Millions died during World War II for the freedoms we enjoy today. Let not Islam take those freedoms away! The growth of Islam in the West is indeed a serious threat to our Western way of life. Western politicians need to awaken from their slumbers. They have been lulled into a false sense security by the myths that the liberal media has peddled about the peaceful nature of Islam.

Islam is what it has always been: a belligerent, conquering ideology clothed in a deity. The West needs to be mindful of this at all times. There are many peaceful, delightful Muslims. This is very true. But what happens to societies in which Islam gains the upper hand is there around us for all to observe. And never forget this: Where there is no separation of politics and religion, there is no hope of democracy. Without democracy, there is no hope of freedom.

Geert Wilders has won a significant victory in The Netherlands. It is to be hoped that this victory will be a seminal moment for the West. It is to be hoped that this will mark a turning point in the West’s fortunes. Long live freedom of speech! Long live democracy! – © Mark
Sayeeda Warsi Takes on Critics in the Rightwing Press

THE GUARDIAN: Yorkshirewoman and the first Muslim to be first full member of British cabinet pulls no punches against Daily Mail columnist

Sayeeda Warsi rolls back in her chair and bursts out laughing. "I don't read her, actually. I call her Mad Mel," Lady Warsi says of Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips, who has denounced her as "stupid".

Warsi, a proud Yorkshirewoman, rarely pulls her punches. As the first Muslim to sit as a full member of the British cabinet, she fell foul of Phillips in January after she declared in the Sternberg lecture that Islamophobia had "crossed the threshold of middle-class respectability".

Phillips' barbed response was to describe Warsi, the Tory co-chair, on her Spectator blog as "at best a stupid mouthpiece of those who are bamboozling Britain into Islamisation, and at worst a supporter of that process".

Warsi had a mini falling-out with Downing Street after No 10 became alarmed that her lecture appeared to place her at odds with David Cameron on the highly sensitive subject of British Muslims and extremism.

A few weeks after Warsi's speech, Cameron laid the ground for a review of funding for Muslim groups when he asked whether it was right to support groups which "present themselves as a gateway to the Muslim community" while doing little to combat extremism.

Cameron's speech to the Munich security conference in February was interpreted as an endorsement of Michael Gove, the education secretary, who called on the west to wake up to the threat posed by Islamist extremists in his book Celsius 7/7. » | Nicholas Watt | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Muslim Tory Minister Says Pakistan's Treatment of Women Fails Islam

THE GUARDIAN: Lady Warsi says women are being denied rights granted 1,400 years ago in Qur'an

Pakistan is failing to live up to one of the tenets of Islam which guarantees rights to all women, according to Sayeeda Warsi, the Conservative party co-chairman and minister without portfolio, who is the first Muslim to sit as a full member of the cabinet.

In a sign of Britain's impatience with Pakistan, Lady Warsi said the world's first Islamic republic is denying rights granted 1,400 years ago in the Qur'an.

As she prepares to become the first British minister to address the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) next week, Warsi said in a Guardian interview that, in a "nutshell", Pakistan is not living up to the ideals of its founding father, Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

Warsi says she is able to deliver a tough message to Pakistan because she is unencumbered by "colonial baggage". She said she had raised the issue of women's rights last July in Rawalpindi, in a speech in Urdu at the Fatima Jinnah University, named after the younger sister of the founder of Pakistan. "Why is it that today you're being denied the rights that your faith gave to you 1,400 years ago?" Warsi asked, recalling her central message to her female audience. » | Nicholas Watt, chief political correspondent | Thursday, July 23, 2011

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Close Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Aide Arrested

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's president, suffered a further blow on Thursday after one of his closest aides was arrested, in an escalation of a feud with the Islamic state's Supreme Leader.

Mohammad Sharif Malekzadeh who was forced to resign as deputy foreign minister on Tuesday just days after his appointment after a backlash from mainstream conservatives loyal to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was arrested on Thursday on corruption charges.

Mr Malekzadeh was a senior official in the high council of Iranian foreign affairs, run by Mr Ahmadinejad's chief of staff Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, whom conservatives accuse of disloyalty.

Western officials based in Tehran said Mr Ahmadinejad was under pressure after an unsuccessful power grab in which he had tried to install loyalists in the powerful intelligence and oil ministries. » | Damien McElroy, Foreign Affairs Correspondent | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Geert Wilders 'Delighted' after Being Cleared of 'Hate Speech'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Geert Wilders, the prominent Dutch anti-Muslim politician, has been cleared of "hate speech" crimes for comparing the Koran to Mein Kampf and Islam to Nazism in an Amsterdam court.

Judges ruled that although Mr Wilders, whose anti-Islam Freedom Party came third in Dutch national elections last year, had made "hurtful and shocking", his comments were legitimate in terms of a lively Dutch public debate on multiculturalism.

Mr Wilders, 47, was put on trial after complaints of incitement to racial hatred were levelled against him by Muslims after he released a film which presented Islam as the biggest threat to world peace.

Fitna, meaning "strife" in Arabic, juxtaposed pages of the Koran with images of September 11 2001 terrorist attacks and fundamentalist burka clad Muslims with placards warning Europe to "be prepared for the real holocaust".

The flamboyant, peroxide blond Dutch MP, who now holds the balance of power in the Netherlands by lending parliamentary support to the minority government, also described the Koran as "fascist", comparing it to Hitler's book Mein Kampf, a text that is banned in the Netherlands.

In one opinion piece cited during the trial, he wrote: "I've had enough of Islam in the Netherlands; let not one more Muslim immigrate." » | Bruno Waterfield | Thursday, June 23, 2011
’Happy Hour’ Re-defined! EU Officials Use 'Love Hotels' in Their Lunch Break

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: EU officials are the main customers in Brussels "love hotels" where couples can rent brothel-style rooms by the hour to conduct illicit affairs with colleagues.

One popular haunt is the Treviso Hotel on Place Stephanie in the expensive and trendy Ixelles municipality of Brussels where many of the EU's well-heeled Eurocrats live.

The "love box" hotel bills itself as a venue for couples "with room service and discretion assured" in glamorous rooms rented out at £66 an hour.

Anne De Schepper, the hotel's manager, told The Daily Telegraph that the long lunch break was the preferred time of day for her clientele of EU officials to commit adultery. » | Bruno Waterfield, Brussels | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Turkish and Syrian Forces in Tense Cross-border Standoff

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Turkish and Syrian forces engaged in a tense cross-border standoff on Thursday as a fresh military operation against Syrian dissidents threatened to spark a major regional crisis.

An elite Syrian army unit advanced to within quarter of a mile of the Turkish border, expanding an onslaught against opponents of President Bashar al-Assad.

Escalating an already acute refugee crisis, hundreds of Syrian civilians cut their way through a border fence into Turkey as they fled an advance into the frontier village of Khirbet al-Joz by the army's Fourth Division and Presidential Guard, led by Mr Assad's feared brother Maher.

The offensive brought Syrian and Turkish troops into eye-contact for the first time, significantly worsening the increasingly noxious relationship between the two neighbours.

Turkey has watched Mr Assad's brutal operation to quell opposition in Syria's restive northwest with growing alarm and has resorted to increasingly muscular diplomacy to demand an end to military operations close to the border. Most significantly, Turkish officials last week raised the possibility of a limited military incursion into northern Syria to protect civilians.

The offensive has already seen more than 10,000 refugees flee into Turkey.

With thousands more hiding out on the Syrian side of the border, the crisis is only liken to worsen as the army pushes northwards. » | Adrian Blomfield | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Fitna: The Movie

To mark Geert Wilders’ acquittal in The Netherlands, and to celebrate of freedom of speech, I am re-posting "Fitna” today


Comment on Always On Watch’s website »
Muslim Conversion: Islam Will Conquer the World?

All the signs, figures and statistics show that Islam is going to dominate the world. The only hope for Non-Muslims is to manipulate Muslim and secularize them, though Islam and true Muslim never can be dragged from the right path. Islam will prevail over all other Deens. As Allah has promised it in Qur'an

Prescription Drug Abuse On Rise in US

The UN is to release a report on the fight against illegal drugs like cocaine, hallucinogens and heroin on Thursday.

In the US, government surveys have found that hospital admissions for drug abuse have trippled in the past decade.

However, it is the abuse of prescription medication that has begun to cause more worry in the US.

Al Jazeera's Tom Ackerman reports from Virginia, USA.


Scarlet Fever Kills Second Child in Hong Kong

Scarlet fever has killed a second child in Hong Kong - the first people to die from the disease in the city in a decade.

The strain currently doing the rounds is said to be twice as resistant to antibiotics as the last.

Al Jazeera speaks to doctor Lo Wing Lok, an infectious diseases specialist in Hong Kong.


Turkish Rations Feeding Gaddafi Troops

Libyan rebels have been fighting Gaddafi's forces for weeks in the Nafusa mountain range in western Libya.

The rebels are slowly making gains, though, and as Gaddafi's forces flee, they leave behind much of their equipment.

Most of that equipment is quite old: There is a box of ammunition from Gaddafi's stockpiles, for example, dating back to 1978.

Among the supplies at three different bases, Al Jazeera discovered military rations which - according to their labels - were manufactured in Turkey. Bread packets some of inside the rations were produced in March, according to their labels - meaning they were shipped to Libya after the fighting began.

The rations are produced by UNIFO, a Turkish company which specialises in portable rations and meals ready-to-eat, according to its web site.

Al Jazeera's James Bays reports from Libya.


Maid's Beheading in Saudi Arabia Halts Indonesian Domestic Worker Scheme

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Indonesia will suspend sending domestic helpers to Saudi Arabia after the beheading of a maid convicted of murdering her Saudi employer.

Migrant worker Ruyati binti Sapubi, 54, was executed after she was convicted of murdering her Saudi employer, Khairiya bint Hamid Mijlid, with a meat cleaver.

The maid carried out the killing after she was denied permission to leave the kingdom and return to her family in Indonesia, according to officials in Jakarta.

"The Indonesian government has decided to impose a moratorium on sending workers to Saudi Arabia," labour minister Muhaimin Iskandar was quoted by state news agency Antara as saying.

The report did not provide further details but local media indicated the move was aimed at domestic workers, who make up about 70 per cent of the 1.2 million Indonesian workers in the Gulf state.

The suspension will take effect on August 1 and will remain until the Saudi government agrees to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to protect Indonesian workers' rights, Iskandar said.

Saudi Arabia apologised for failing to inform Indonesia of the beheading, while Jakarta formally protested to Riyadh over the execution.

"The ambassador apologised and regretted the situation and said that such a thing wouldn't happen again in future," foreign ministry spokesman Michael Tene said.

Indonesia recalled its ambassador to Riyadh earlier this week for consultations. » | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Syrian Troops Mass on Turkish Border

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Syrian troops massed on the Turkish border overnight, witnesses said on Thursday, escalating tensions with Ankara as President Bashar al-Assad uses increasing military force against a popular revolt.

Hundreds of terrified refugees crossed into Turkey on Thursday to escape an army assault on the border regions, witnesses said.

Protests have grown in northern areas bordering Turkey, following military assaults on towns and villages in the Jisr al-Shughour region of Idlib province to the west of Aleppo that had sent more than 10,000 fleeing to Turkey.

Troops were advancing on a main road leading from Aleppo, the commercial hub, to Turkey, residents said.

On the 100th day of an uprising that has posed the gravest challenge to Assad's rule, soldiers and secret police backed by armoured vehicles set up road blocks on Wednesday along the main road, a major route for container traffic from Europe to the Middle East. They arrested tens of people in the Heitan area north of Aleppo, residents said.

"The regime is trying to pre-empt unrest in Aleppo by cutting off logistics with Turkey. A lot of people here use Turkish mobile phone networks to escape Syrian spying on their calls and have family links with Turkey. There are also many old smuggling routes that people could use to flee," one of the residents, a physician, told Reuters by telephone. » | Thursday, June 23, 2011
British Woman in Dubai Love Triangle Jailed

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A British woman caught up in a love triangle in Dubai when she was attacked in a boyfriend's flat by a Brazilian rival has been jailed for having sex outside marriage.

Danielle Spencer, 31, who worked in real estate in the Gulf emirate, was given a month's sentence after a court rejected her claim she never slept with Toby Carroll, a New Zealander.

Mr Carroll, 33, was jailed for two months – one month each for sex with Miss Spencer and with Priscilla Ferreira Gomez, 25, his ex-girlfriend.

All three were arrested when Miss Ferreira burst into Mr Carroll's flat inDubai Marina early one morning in December and found him in bed with Miss Spencer.

She grabbed a knife and began slashing the furniture and curtains, while Miss Spencer fled into the bathroom and locked herself in. Mr Carroll called the police, who arrested all three and took them to Bur Dubai police station, where they spent a month in cells before being bailed. » | Richard Spencer, Dubai | Thursday, June 23, 2011
Britain and US Urged to Act after Bahrain Arrests [Jails for Life] Eight Political Activists

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Britain and America were under renewed pressure last night to act against their close ally Bahrain after its courts handed out life sentences to eight political activists, including a wheelchair-bound dissident who was arrested after speaking to the House of Lords.

The eight politicians and human rights activists were among 21 people, most but not all Shia, accused of plotting against the monarchy and having contacts with foreign terrorist groups.

All 21 received jail terms, seven in absentia, with nine receiving 15 years and four shorter terms. Protesters set up barricades in Shia villages across the island last night, amid anger from human rights groups.

Among those jailed for life was Abduljalil Abdullah Al-Singace, head of the human rights section of Al-Haq, a radical Shia party, who was arrested in August on his return to Bahrain from London after addressing a House of Lords committee.

The leader of Al-Haq, Hassan Ali Mushaima, received the same sentence. He returned from self-imposed exile in London earlier this year.

The Foreign Secretary, William Hague, raised Mr al-Singace's case with his opposite number in Bahrain, Sheikh Khaled al-Khalifa, but Britain has been noticeably less outspoken about the Gulf state's crackdown on dissents than with other countries facing "Arab Spring" uprisings. » | Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent | Wednesday, June 22, 2011

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RSPCA Moves to Ban Halal Slaughter in Australia

ABC – AM: ASHLEY HALL: With Australia's live cattle exports to Indonesia still in limbo the RSPCA is now turning the focus to the issue of ritual killing in Australia.

It's known as Halal or Kosher slaughter in the Muslim and Jewish communities and it's carried out according to religious laws.

In Australia, the national Halal standard requires abattoirs to stun animals before their throat is cut.

But a number of Australian abattoirs have been given government approval to kill animals without stunning.

The RSPCA says it's a brutal practice and should be banned. » | Jason Om | Saturday, June 18, 2011