Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Greek Immigrants Urge Parties to Isolate Far-Right Golden Dawn

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Greece's immigrant community on Monday urged political parties to work together to isolate a far-Right, virulently anti-immigrant party that won more than 20 seats in parliament for the first time.

Chrysi Avgi, or Golden Dawn, regarded as a fringe group only a year ago, stunned political observers by winning 6.97 per cent – 21 seats – in Sunday's election.

Leader Nikos Michaloliakos, who gave the fascist salute upon taking his seat in the Athens town council two years ago, said: "The time for fear has come for those who betrayed this homeland."

Flanked by menacing shaven-headed young men who form the party's core, he added: "No one should fear me if they are a good Greek citizen. If they are traitors – I don't know." » | Alex Spillius, Athens | Monday, May 07, 2012

Related »

Monday, May 07, 2012

Rechtsextreme dürfen Mohammed-Karikaturen zeigen: Polizei fürchtet weitere Salafisten-Krawalle in NRW*

FOCUS ONLINE: Gewaltbereite Salafisten machen in NRW nach Erkenntnissen der Polizei erneut mobil. Nach den Krawallen in Bonn wollen sie sich in Köln gegen die rechtsextreme Splitterpartei Pro NRW versammeln. Einen Angriff auf Polizisten werten die Ermittler als Mordversuch.

Nach den schweren Ausschreitungen in Bonn hat die Polizei Hinweise auf weitere geplante Gewalttaten von Salafisten an diesem Dienstag in Köln. Dort ist eine Wahlkampf-Kundgebung der rechtsextremen Splitterpartei Pro NRW geplant. Die Behörden haben es mehr als 100 Islamisten verboten, Kölner Stadtgebiet zu betreten, teilte das Innenministerium in Düsseldorf mit. Außerdem dürfen die Rechtsextremisten von Pro NRW nicht in unmittelbarer Nähe einer Moschee demonstrieren und auch keine islamkritischen Karikaturen zeigen.

Verwaltungsgerichte in Minden und Arnsberg haben indes das Zeigen der Mohammed-Karikaturen erlaubt. Bei Ausschreitungen zwischen Salafisten und der Polizei waren am Samstag in Bonn 29 Polizisten verletzt worden, zwei durch Messerstiche schwer. Gegen einen 25-jährigen Islamisten wurde Haftbefehl wegen dreifachen versuchten Polizistenmordes erlassen. Der Mann aus Hessen sei wegen mehrfacher gefährlicher Körperverletzung bekannt, sagte ein Sprecher der Bonner Staatsanwaltschaft. Er habe den Angriff auf die Beamten gestanden, bestreite aber eine Tötungsabsicht. » | jba/dpa | Montag, 07. Mai 2012

*NRW – Nordrhein-Westfalen target=_blank> » [E]
France's Hollande Plunges into Debt Crisis

President-elect Francois Hollande's decisions on eurozone austerity and NATO troop withdrawals will be closely watched.


Related »
AT&T to Pay Muslim Woman $5m in Harassment Case

THE KANSAS CITY STAR: KANSAS CITY, MO. -- A former Kansas City woman who converted to Islam in 2005 said she was harassed for years at AT&T, and that the abuse boiled over in 2008 when her boss snatched her head scarf and exposed her hair.

A Jackson County jury on Thursday awarded Susann Bashir $5 million in punitive damages in her discrimination lawsuit, along with $120,000 in lost wages and other actual damages.

The Kansas City Star (http://bit.ly/JKWbqR) reported Saturday the award appears to be the largest jury verdict for a workplace discrimination case in Missouri history.

Bashir said in court documents that her work environment became hostile immediately after she converted, with her co-workers making harassing comments about her religion and referring to her hijab as "that thing on her head."

"I was shocked. I thought, 'What is going on?'" she told the newspaper. "Nobody ever cared what I wore before. Nobody ever cared what religion I was before."

Bashir worked at AT&T's office in Kansas City for 10 years as a fiber optics network builder before being fired from her $70,000-a-year job. She claimed she endured religious discrimination nearly every day of the final three years she worked there, including being asked if she was going to blow up the building and being called a "towelhead" and a terrorist.

AT&T said Friday it disagrees with the verdict and plans to appeal. » | The Associated Press | Saturday, May 05, 2012
Toronto Islamic School Removes Parts of Curriculum from Website Casting Jews as ‘Treacherous,’ Akin to Nazis

NATIONAL POST: A Toronto Islamic school said Monday it had removed part of its curriculum from its website following a complaint about the material, which depicts Jews as “treacherous” and comparable to Nazis.

“We are looking into it,” said Masuma Jessa, principal of the East End Madrassah, which operates out of David and Mary Thompson Collegiate Institute, a Toronto District School Board facility.

In a press release, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs complained the madrassa’s curriculum was rife with antisemitic slurs. The document refers to “Jewish plots and treacheries” and calls Jews “crafty.”

“Using religion to promote hatred among youth is not just offensive and abhorrent – it shows a stunning disregard for Canada’s basic values of decency and tolerance,” David Spiro, Greater Toronto Co-Chair of centre said.

“Canadians of all backgrounds would be outraged to learn that horrific conspiracy theories are included in this curriculum, including the blood libel that Jews plotted to kill Muhammad. » | Stewart Bell | Monday, May 07, 2012
Nicolas Sarkozy arrête définitivement la politique

LE FIGARO: Le président sortant Nicolas Sarkozy a confirmé lundi aux poids lourds de la majorité qu'il quittait la vie politique et livré son regard sur sa défaite.

De l'émotion. De la gravité aussi. Nicolas Sarkozy a reçu son comité de campagne lundi à 14 heures, à l'Élysée. Une vingtaine de personnes, dont François Fillon, Jean-François Copé, et les représentants des différentes sensibilités, ainsi que des ministres et ses principaux collaborateurs, dont sa plume Henri Guaino. Le président sortant les a reçus à l'heure dite. La réunion a duré une heure. Fatigué, le teint gris et les traits marqués, Sarkozy a toutefois fait bonne figure en se montrant calme et serein, au lendemain d'une défaite à laquelle il a cru jusqu'au bout pouvoir échapper. Il a une nouvelle fois confirmé qu'il arrêtait la politique: «Une page se tourne pour moi, a-t-il confié. Je ne serai pas candidat aux législatives, ni aux élections à venir.» Il a ajouté, dans un sourire: «Soyez rassurés, je renouvellerai ma carte (de l'UMP) et je payerai ma cotisation. Mais je quitte l'opérationnel.» » | Par Solenn de Royer | lundi 07 mai 2012

Une vidéo en relation avec cet article »

Sarkozy is quitting politics for good. He loves life too much to be bitter. He’d leave tomorrow if he could, but he has to respect tradition. The French falling out of love with him, his personality, his politics will be worse for him than his divorce from Cécilia. Carla will welcome his withdrawal from political life. »
Schwere Verluste für Regerierungsparteien


Verwandt »
Angry Greeks Send a Message by Punishing Parties of Austerity

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Greek voters on Sunday delivered a resounding message to Europe's leaders that their tolerance for austerity has reached its limits by choosing a parliament with a majority of MPs from anti-bailout parties.


The two mainstream parties that approved the second international £110 billion rescue loan and its stringent requirements for cuts were heavily punished as support surged for the Left and Right.

The shattering of the political status quo threw into doubt Greece's commitment to meeting the terms of its debt and could spread instability throughout the euro zone. Weeks of uncertainty are likely to follow as numerous parties vie to cobble a majority coalition, with a fresh election within two months a distinct possibility.

There will also be fears that ensuing political instability will see a return to the street violence that has scarred Athens since the debt crisis surfaced two years ago. » | Alex Spillius, Athens | Sunday, May 06, 2012

Related »

eKathimerini »
Falklands: Argentina Ambassador Calls for Britain to Hand Back 'Colonial Enclave'

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: British relations in South America could falter if the UK Government refuses to hand over the Falkland Islands to Argentina, the country's ambassador to London said today.

Alicia Castro tried to pull Argentina's immediate neighbours into the dispute, claiming UK diplomatic and business relations could be damaged if the islands were not handed over to Buenos Aires.

She said Las Malvinas – Argentina's name for the Falklands – would be better off if they cut their ties with the UK.

Describing the islands as a "colonial enclave", she said her government would send teachers to the islands to teach Spanish, while it also wanted to re-establish direct flights between the Falklands and the mainland.

She told Dermot Murnaghan on Sky News that Argentina "did not want to change the way of life" on the Falklands, insisting the islands had to be "given back to Latin America as a whole". Read on and comment » | Sunday, May 06, 2012

Penguin News »
Benjamin Netanyahu Calls Early Israel Election

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Israel was propelled into election season one year ahead of schedule on Sunday night with an announcement from Benjamin Netanyahu that the country will take to the polls in four months.

“I am not interested in a year and a half long election campaign that would damage the country. I would rather have a four-month swift election campaign that would bring political system to stability quickly,” Mr Netanyahu told fellow Likud party members during his opening address at their annual conference in Tel Aviv.

Mr Netanyahu praised leaders of rival parties, whom he conceded had “much to offer” but swiftly dismissed them as viable candidates to replace him as prime minister.

“The state of Israel cannot afford to have a prime minister without the economic, diplomatic and security experience necessary [for the job],” he said.

Mr Netanyahu's announcement had long been predicted by Israeli media and government officials. » | Phoebe Greenwood in Tel Aviv | Sunday, May 06, 2012
US Election 2012: Joe Biden Weighs into Gay Marriage Debate

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Joe Biden, the US vice president, said he was "absolutely comfortable" with gay marriage on Sunday as he waded into one the most divisive issues of the forthcoming presidential election.

"I am absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women, and heterosexual men and women marrying another are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties," he said a television interview.

His remarks came as the Obama administration continued to walk a political tightrope over same-sex marriages, with Barack Obama's own position on the issue said by aides to be "evolving".

In a sign of how sensitive an issue gay marriage is for Mr Obama's campaign strategists, gay rights groups initially took Mr Biden's words on NBC's "Meet the Press" as a significant step towards full endorsement, only for senior Obama aides to say the position remained unchanged.

David Axelrod, the Obama campaign chief strategist, clarified on Twitter that Mr Biden had only "precisely" stated Mr Obama's position that "that all married couples should have exactly the same legal rights".

A Biden aide then added further clarification: "The vice president was saying what the president has said previously – that committed and loving same-sex couples deserve the same rights and protections enjoyed by all Americans, and that we oppose any effort to rollback those rights. » | Peter Foster, Washington | Sunday, May 06, 2012

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Bahrain Arrests Prominent Rights Activist

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Bahraini rights activist Nabeel Rajab, a leader of protests against authorities in the Gulf kingdom, has been arrested on his return from a trip abroad, the interior ministry and activists said on Sunday.

Mr Rajab, who heads the non-governmental Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR), was arrested at the airport late on Saturday over charges of "participating in illegal assembly and calling others to join," the centre said in a statement.

His trial is expected to begin on Sunday.

"Nabeel Rajab arrested by order of public prosecution. All legal procedures are being taken," the interior ministry said on its Twitter account.

Mr Rajab was returning from Lebanon where he met the representative of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, according to activist Mohammed al-Maskati, who travelled with him.

He was led away by people in plainclothes, Mr Maskati wrote on his Twitter page.

The BCHR said Mr Rajab could face further charges, as he was summoned for interrogation on April 26 accused of "insulting the statutory bodies". » | Source: AFP | Sunday, May 06, 2012
Nicolas Sarkozy : "Je porte toute la responsabilité de cette défaite (...). Il me faut en tirer toutes les conséquences."


Lien en relation avec cette vidéo »
François Hollande raconté par sa famille et ses mentors

Son visage est apparu sur la scène politique en 1981 lorsqu'il est devenu conseiller de François Mitterrand. Pourtant, il y a quelques mois encore, ils étaient peu nombreux à imaginer François Hollande à L'Elysée. Sa passion de la politique l'a forgé, dès l'enfance. – FTVi / Hélène Hug et Frédéric Faure - France 2

Clinton 'Hurt' by Charges of Anti-Islam US Bias

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she was hurt by the idea that the United States was against Islam, during a public forum in Muslim-majority Bangladesh. Clinton claims the US has gone farther than most countries to guarantee legal protections for minorities.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Sunday she was deeply hurt by charges that the United States was biased against Muslims, staunchly defending her country's record in protecting minorities.

Clinton, visiting the world's third largest Muslim-majority country Bangladesh, was asked by a student at a public forum about perceptions that the United States was against Islam.

"That hurts me so much," Clinton said. "It's a painful perception to hear about and I deeply regret that anyone believes that or propagates it."

Clinton said that the decade of US-led war was "self-defense" after the September 11, 2001 attacks by Al-Qaeda and said extremists "perverted" the teachings of Islam. » | AFP | Sunday, May 06, 2012
Al Qaeda Releases New Video of Elderly American Hostage

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Read the article here | Brian Ross and Rhonda Schwartz | Monday, May 07, 2012

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player
Syria Goes to Polls amid Deadly Unrest

For the first time in decades, Syria will hold multi-party elections on Monday. The parliamentary vote is seen by supporters of Bashar al-Assad as proof of his committment to political reform. But critics say it is anything but. Al Jazeera's Hashem Ahelbarra reports on whether this election is likely to achieve any political change.

Putin Sworn In as Russia's President

Vladimir Putin attends glittering Kremlin ceremony a day after police clashed with thousands of protesters in Moscow.

François Hollande Elected as French President

With the celebrations barely over, France's president-elect has already got down to business, promising massive change. Francois Hollande says he'll spend more and create new jobs. The Socialist leader says he'll also challenge the strict economic austerity measures imposed by Europe. Al Jazeera's Emma Hayward reports from Paris, the French capital.


Related »
Socialist Hollande Wins French Presidency

Francois Hollande has been elected president of France, the country's first Socialist leader in nearly two decades. Addressing jubilant supporters in the French capital, Paris, he called for a change in Europe's austerity direction. Al Jazeera's Andrew Simmons reports.


Related »
Pro-bailout Parties Weakened in Greece Vote

Greeks have voted heavily against austerity measures in Sunday's parliamentary poll. The country's two main political parties, both backers of the eurozone's stringent bailout scheme, suffered a dramatic fall in support. With no outright majority, the next government will most likely be a coalition. Al Jazeera's Barnaby Phillips reports from Athens.


Related »
Greek Voters Punish Ruling Coalition Over Austerity

FRANCE 24: Voters delivered a blow to Greece's traditional ruling parties, the conservative New Democracy and the Pasok socialists, on Sunday as voters moved to anti-austerity parties on the far right and left. Nobody won enough votes to form a government.

AP: Furious Greeks punished the two parties that have dominated politics for decades in the crisis-battered country Sunday, leaving its multibillion dollar international bailout - and even its future in the euro currency - hanging in the balance.

With more than 83 percent of the vote counted, Greece appeared to be heading toward political stalemate. Nobody won enough votes to form a government, and the two parties that backed the bailout - the conservative New Democracy and socialist PASOK - conceded they need to win over adversaries to form a viable coalition.

“I understand the rage of the people, but our party will not leave Greece ungoverned,” said New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras.

New Democracy was leading with nearly 20 percent of the vote, which would give it 110 seats in the 300-member parliament. PASOK, which has spent 21 years in government since 1981 and stormed to victory with more than 43 percent in 2009, saw its support slashed to about 13.5 percent. It will have just 41 seats, compared to 160 in the last election.

The two parties saw their support plummet to the lowest level since 1974, when Greece emerged from a seven-year dictatorship. The outcome showed widespread public anger at the harsh austerity measures imposed over the past two years in return for rescue loans from other European Union countries and the International Monetary Fund. Without the funds, Greece faced a disastrous default that could have dragged down other financially troubled European countries and seen it leave the euro.

Voters who deserted the two mainstays of Greek politics in droves headed to a cluster of smaller parties on both the left and right, including the extremist Golden Dawn, which rejects the neo-Nazi label and insists it is nationalist patriotic. The movement has been blamed for violent attacks on immigrants and ran on an anti-immigrant platform, vowing to “clean up” Greece and calling for land mines to be planted along the country’s borders. The party looked set to win about 7 percent of the vote, giving it 21 deputies in parliament - a stunning rise for a group that earned just 0.29 percent of the vote in 2009. (+ video) » | News wires | Monday, May 07, 2012

Related »

Sunday, May 06, 2012

France, Greece and Germany Election Results Send Austerity Shockwaves Through Europe

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The stunning victory of the French Socialists and wipe-out of mainstream parties in Greece sent shock waves on Sunday night crashing throughout the continent of Europe.

François Hollande's election threws [sic] down the gauntlet to Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, who has railroaded the eurozone into agreeing a new "fiskalpakt" treaty enshrining Germany's austerity doctrine.

The economic doctrine of austerity, to cut the burden of state spending to free up the economy, has ruled supreme with the support all of Europe's leaders, the European Union and financial markets.

But political leaders were on Sunday night conceding the consensus had been shattered beyond repair.

With Europe's economies plunging further into recession and as unemployment in the eurozone breaks record levels, voters demands for a new approach had finally become to great to ignore.

The popular backlash to EU imposed austerity to the centrist New Democracy and Socialist parties in Greece threatens the existence of the euro itself.

Greece is potentially ungovernable as a minority government must try and pass a new raft of austerity measures next month which are a condition of an EU-IMF bailout and Greek membership of the euro.

In France, while Hollande, the Socialist President-elect is a centrist, he is sitting on a powder keg of resentment at measures that his government will have to pass if it is not spark a meltdown of financial markets.

He has refused to ratify the treaty unless the eurozone and EU also sign up to a "growth pact". » | Bruno Waterfield, Devorah Lauter in Paris and Matthew Day | Sunday, May 06, 2012

THE HUFFINGTON POST: Greece Elections 2012: Nikolaos Michaloliakos, Extreme Right Leader, Warns Greek 'Traitors': ATHENS, Greece -- The leader of an extreme-right, anti-immigrant party on course for shock success in Greece's general elections Sunday lashed out at those he described as "traitors" responsible for the country's financial crisis and said his party was ushering in a "revolution." ¶ The far-right Golden Dawn party is set to win 7 percent of the parliamentary vote, according to early projections, as Greeks punished the traditionally dominant parties who backed harsh austerity measures tied to debt-relief agreements. » | Nebi Qena | AP | Saturday, May 05, 2012

Related »
German Police Arrest 100 Salafist Protesters

ASSOCIATED PRESS: BERLIN — Clashes erupted in Germany when police tried to separate competing rallies by an ultraconservative Muslim group and a small far-right march, injuring 29 officers, authorities said Sunday. More than 100 Salafist protesters were briefly arrested.

The trouble in the western city of Bonn started late Saturday when hundreds of Muslims protested against the rally of about 30 supporters of the local far-right party Pro NRW, which has angered Muslims by showing unfavorable cartoons depicting Islam's Prophet Muhammad. Strict Muslims oppose any depiction of their prophet.

About 110 Salafist protesters were arrested after they started attacking security forces with stones and bottles, police said. Two of the injured police officers were hospitalized with serious wounds after being stabbed. » | AP | Sunday, May 06, 2012
Hollande siegt über Sarkozy: Der Präsident, der Frankreich enttäuschen muss

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Der Favorit hat gesiegt: Der Sozialist François Hollande wird neuer französischer Präsident. Doch er wird viele Anhänger bitter enttäuschen müssen. Präsident Hollande hat einen der schwierigsten Jobs der Welt gewonnen.

Bis zum Ende wollte Amtsinhaber Nicolas Sarkozy alle glauben machen, der Ausgang stehe auf Messers Schneide und er könne noch gewinnen. Er hat sich geirrt. Neuer französischer Präsident wird François Hollande. Zum zweiten Mal in der Geschichte der französischen Republik haben die Wähler nach François Mitterrand einen Sozialisten ins Amt gewählt.

Der Sieg Hollandes ist zunächst einmal eine Abrechnung mit Nicolas Sarkozy. In den fünf Jahren seiner Amtszeit ist er, der nach seiner Amtseinführung eine Zustimmungsrate von mehr als 60 Prozent hatte, zum unbeliebtesten Präsidenten der Fünften Republik geworden. Das hängt natürlich auch mit der großen Krise zusammen, die vor ihm bereits neun andere europäische Staatenlenker das Amt gekostet hat. Aber die Ablehnung geht tiefer: Viele Franzosen eint das Gefühl, dass Sarkozy das Amt entweiht habe, dass er sich nicht wie ein würdevoller Ersatzkönig verhalten habe, sondern wie ein Emporkömmling, der sich selbst mit dem Staat verwechselte und sich als eine Art moderner Napoleon gebärdete. Am Ende gab es bis ins bürgerliche Lager viele Franzosen, die ihn regelrecht hassten. Die Wahl Hollandes muss deshalb zunächst als Abwahl des amtierenden Präsidenten verstanden werden. Sarkozy und die Franzosen - das ist die Geschichte einer enttäuschten Liebe, die in ihr Gegenteil umschlug.

Nun wollen die Franzosen nach dem abnormalen wieder einen normalen Präsidenten - und so einer zu sein, das versprach ihnen François Hollande. Es ist noch nicht lange her, da hätte ihm niemand dieses Amt zugetraut. Er galt als weichlicher Witzbold. Einen "Tretbootkapitän" nannte ihn der Linkspopulist Jean-Luc Mélenchon zur allgemeinen Belustigung. Er war ja auch nur die zweite Wahl der Sozialisten, nachdem der große Favorit Dominique Strauss-Kahn im vergangenen Jahr über seine Sexaffären gestolpert war. Doch im Verlauf dieses Wahlkampfs ist es François Hollande gelungen, eine Mehrheit der Franzosen davon zu überzeugen, dass er das Zeug zum Präsidenten hat. Er tankte präsidiale Aura, er hielt Reden, in denen er sich in eine Reihe mit François Mitterrand stellte, und schließlich krönte er sich beim großen TV-Duell gegen Sarkozy selbst. Sogar Sarkozys Freund und Berater Alain Minc sagte neulich: "Wir haben diesen Kerl alle unterschätzt. Entweder haben wir uns getäuscht, oder er hat sich wirklich verändert." Sarkozy hat Hollande bis zum Schluss unterschätzt.

Hollande positionierte sich im Wahlkampf deutlich links: Er kündigte an, Einkommen über eine Million Euro im Jahr mit 75 Prozent zu besteuern. Das Rentenalter für manche Franzosen wieder von 62 auf 60 zu senken. Und er versprach ein Ende der europäischen Austeritätspolitik - er positionierte sich als Gegenstück zu Angela Merkel, und rief seinen Anhängern zu: "So viele Menschen in Europa ersehnen unseren Sieg! Ich will kein Europa der Austerität, in dem Nationen auf die Knie gezwungen werden." » | Eine Analyse von Mathieu von Rohr, Tulle | Sonntag, 06. Mai 2012

Verwandt »
François Hollande, l'«homme normal» devient président

LE FIGARO: Élu président de la République, François Hollande succède à François Mitterrand dans l'imaginaire socialiste. Pourtant, il revient de loin. Personne ne pensait qu'il serait un jour le héros de la gauche

Comme si de rien n'était, François Hollande est devenu président. Personne ne l'avait imaginé, sauf lui sans doute. À 57 ans, il succède pourtant à François Mitterrand, l'équivalent pour la gauche du général de Gaulle. Ce n'est pas rien: il entre dans l'Histoire comme le deuxième président socialiste de la Ve République. Qui pense encore aujourd'hui que Hollande est un «homme normal» ? Lui sans doute. Il revendique la formule. Mais pour les autres, les regards vont définitivement changer. François Hollande ne sera plus jamais cet ancien rondouillard bonhomme, vif et blagueur, que décrivaient ses camarades socialistes avec une pointe de condescendance. C'est la clé: personne ne s'est jamais méfié de lui alors qu'au fond, il construisait patiemment son ambition. Quand a-t-il commencé à y songer? Secret à l'extrême, l'homme n'en parlait jamais. Au PS, on s'en doutait. Mais on ne lui donnait aucune chance. «Hollande président? On rêve!», s'est un jour exclamé Laurent Fabius. Hollande président? «Quelle histoire!», aurait pu dire François Mitterrand. » | Par Nicolas Barotte, François-Xavier Bourmaud | dimanche 06 mai 2012

Lien en relation avec l’article »
François Hollande Wins French Presidential Election

THE GUARDIAN: Nicolas Sarkozy concedes defeat to Socialist party candidate, who has become first leftwing president in almost 20 years

François Hollande has won power in France, turning the tide on a rightwards and xenophobic lurch in European politics and vowing to transform Europe's handling of the economic crisis by fighting back against German-led austerity measures.

The 57-year-old rural MP and self-styled Mr Normal, a moderate social democrat from the centre of the Socialist party, is France's first left[-]wing president in almost 20 years. Projections from early counts, released by French TV, put his score at 51.9%.

His emphatic victory is a boost to the left in a continent that has gradually swung rightwards since the economic crisis broke four years ago.

Nicolas Sarkozy, defeated after one term in office, became the 11th European leader to lose power since the economic crisis in 2008.

He conceded defeat at a gathering of his party activists at the Mutualité in central Paris, urging them from the stage to stop booing Hollande. "I carry all the responsibility for this defeat," he said.

He had spoken to Hollande to congratulate him. "From the bottom of my heart I want France to succeed with the challenges it faces. It is something much greater than us; France. This evening we must think exclusively of France."

He said that after 35 years in politics and 10 years at the top of government, he would now become a simple "Frenchman among the French".

The defeat of the most unpopular French president ever to run for re-election was not simply the result of the global financial crisis or eurozone debt turmoil. It was also down to the intense public dislike of the man viewed by many as the "president of the rich" who had swept to victory in 2007 with a huge mandate to change France. The majority of French people felt he had failed to deliver on his promises, and he was criticised for his ostentatious display of wealth, favouring the rich and leaving behind over 2.8 million unemployed. Political analysts said anti-Sarkozy sentiment had become a cultural phenomenon in France. » | Angelique Chrisafis in Paris | Sunday, May 06, 2012

Related »
Socialists Celebrate as French Vote Nears Close

REUTERS.COM: France looked set to crown Francois Hollande as its first Socialist president in nearly two decades in an election on Sunday, marking a shift to the left at the heart of Europe and heralding a fight back against German-led austerity.

Conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy, swamped by anger at a surge in unemployment during his five-year term, faced being the 11th euro zoneleader to be swept from power by the economic crisis after final opinion polls placed Hollande between four and eight points ahead.

A wide margin of victory would give Hollande greater authority to pursue his promise to temper unpopular German-led austerity, which sparked protests across southern Europe last week, and refocusing economic policy on fostering growth.

In a decisive day for the recession-hit single currency area, Greece's mainstream political parties were punished in a parliamentary election for rising economic misery due to IMF-imposed spending cuts, exit polls showed.

Hollande cast his vote for the presidential runoff in the central town of Tulle, where he was mayor for seven years, shaking hands and kissing voters, many of whom he knows personally. "I am confident. I am sure," he told Reuters as he ate later in a local restaurant packed with Tulle residents.

In Paris's Bastille square, a flashpoint of the 1789 French Revolution and the Socialists' traditional gathering point for electoral celebrations, crowd barriers were already laid out in anticipation of an Hollande victory. Party supporters gathered in excitement two hours before the last polls closed, and giant television screens were erected.

In Tulle, Hollande supporters drove around the town honking car horns. » | Sybille de La Hamaide and Daniel Flynn | PARIS | Sunday, May 06, 2012

Related »
La victoire de François Hollande se confirme

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Toutes les sources concordent pour l’instant: François Hollande deviendrait le nouveau président de la République Française. Il réunirait 53% des votes. Avant l'instant fatidique de 20h, toutes les infos en direct... » | dimanche 06 mai 2012

STERN: Agentur meldet Sieg Hollandes: Sarkozy-Herausforderer Francois Hollande wird offenbar der nächste französische Präsident. In Griechenland sind die Regierungsparteien schwer abgestraft worden. » | Sonntag, 06. Mai 2012

Lien en relation avec ceci »
John Bercow: More MPs Seeking Help for Alcoholism

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Commons Speaker John Bercow said more MPs are seeking help for alcoholism as Parliament attempts to crack down on Westminster's drinking culture.

Mr Bercow also suggested there may be politicians with "other addiction issues" as he insisted the House reflects wider society.

Last week it emerged Commons staff are to be told to top up MPs' glasses fewer times at Parliamentary receptions to encourage "responsible alcohol use".

The move comes in the wake of the fight in the Commons Strangers Bar that saw Eric Joyce attack fellow MPs.

Mr Bercow said there is no longer a heavy subsidy on alcohol served in Parliament's bars.

In an interview for Sky News' Murnaghan programme he said: "I think that there are a number of other factors. I think there are issues relating to members who have had too much to drink.

"I think it is important that the medical service in the House is aware as it can be of members with problems.

"There is some evidence now that more members and staff who have got drink-related issues are seeking help and that's a positive.

"I think we are a reflection of society and just as there are people in every walk of life who have got issues to do with alcohol, and possibly other addiction issues, there can be problems in this place." » | Sunday, May 06, 2012
Osborne Urges ‘100% Focus’ on Economy after Election Defeats

BBC: George Osborne has said his party will focus on what matters to the public amid criticism from Conservative MPs in the wake of local election defeats.

Some Tories have urged the coalition to drop plans for electing the House of Lords and legalising gay marriage in favour of more populist policies.

The chancellor told the BBC ministers should "focus 100%" on the economy and not get "distracted" by other issues.

But they would still do "socially progressive" things, he insisted.

He was responding to criticism of the coalition's direction and priorities from some Conservative-supporting newspapers and backbench Tory MPs.

On Wednesday, the coalition will outline its agenda for the next year in the Queen's Speech, as it tries to regain the initiative after both the Conservatives and the Lib Dems suffered heavy losses in local elections.

'Change direction'

Many Conservative MPs want ministers to use the occasion to assert more traditional Conservative priorities on issues such as welfare, crime and tax and either delay or abandon proposals to legalise gay marriage and reform the House of Lords, seen predominately as Liberal Democrat ideas.

Mr Osborne told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that "100% of our efforts need to be directed" at fixing the economy, which is back in recession. » | Sunday, May 06, 2012


Related »
Présidentielle : les Français font leur choix

LE FIGARO: Depuis 8 heures ce matin, les électeurs sont appelés aux urnes. Peu après 10h30, le candidat socialiste a voté. Avant midi, Nicolas Sarkozy devrait faire de même.

Plus de 44,5 millions d'électeurs sont appelés aux urnes ce dimanche pour choisir qui de Nicolas Sarkozy ou de François Hollande sera le prochain président de la République. Si le scrutin a débuté ce matin à 8 heures en France métropolitaine, les Français d'outre-mer et les expatriés ont commencé à voter dès samedi, décalage horaire oblige. » | Par lefigaro.fr | dimanche 06 mai 2012

Lien en relation avec l’article »
Wer wird Frankreichs neuer Präsident?

Das Wahlwochenende in Frankreich verspricht spannend zu werden, Sozialist François Hollande liegt schon seit Wochen in den Umfragen vor dem amtierenden Präsidenten Nicolas Sarkozy. Doch dieser konnte etwas aufholen.  Einschätzungen von Micheal Gerber, SF-Korrespondent, in Paris

Tagesschau vom 05.05.2012

Verwandt »
Egypt's Generals Wait in the Wings as Battle for Democracy Sours

THE GUARDIAN: In Cairo, violence flares between gangs and Islamists. In Alexandria, discontent grows as the country's politicians lose their way ahead of elections. And over them all looms the shadow of an army far from ready to give up power

There is a narrow footbridge overlooking the entrance to the ministry of defence in the Abbasiya district of Cairo. On Friday afternoon, this crowded bridge provided the best view of the frontline in the latest round of violent clashes between the army and demonstrators who suspect the country's ruling generals of wanting to hold on to power.

On one side of a ring of barbed wire, soldiers hurled bricks and fired tear gas. Below the bridge, the protesters facing the soldiers threw their own missiles, while others removed the injured on motorbikes or carried them limp on their shoulders, some insensible, others spattered in blood.

I bumped into Hazem Abdel Rahman, a young protester, drenched in sweat, holding his injured arm. "I came here this morning and everything was peaceful. People linked arms to keep the crowd back from the ministry of defence. But then after Friday prayers people came who we did not know and infiltrated our demonstration and started throwing stones," he said.

Others say the trouble started after some protesters were grabbed by the soldiers trying to cross the wire. A few minutes after I spoke to Hazem, the first sound of live gunfire rang out, driving the protesters back in panic. I ran, but found myself trapped between two groups of soldiers, forced to climb several walls and cross a railway line to escape, only to be confronted by an angry group of supporters of the military.

"You are a spy," one shouted, attempting to drag me away for questioning, prevented in his efforts by the intervention of other residents. Other journalists covering events in Abbasiya in the last few days have not been so fortunate. Eighteen have been arrested or injured, including one who reportedly had an ear cut off during an attack. » | Peter Beaumont in Cairo | Saturday, May 05, 2012
Britain's Far Right to Focus on Anti-Islamic Policy

THE GUARDIAN: Head of English Defence League to join British Freedom party as deputy leader with virulent anti-Muslim platform

The head of the English Defence League, Tommy Robinson, will be named deputy leader of the British Freedom party this week after proposing that the group adopt virulent anti-Islamic policies as its central strategy.

Confirmation that Robinson is to be offered a political platform within the BFP is contained in internal documents revealing that he has forwarded a number of "potential policy suggestions" that suggest the party will widen its attacks on Muslims.

The document suggests the BFP with Robinson would "focus on non-Islamic population, not white/black population", a move that critics describe as an attempt to antagonise relations between Muslims and other Britons. Other proposed areas of campaigning for the party, which will contest several seats in this week's local elections, include calls for regulation of all mosques and religious schools and the banning of the burqa and niqab.

The unveiling of Robinson as deputy leader of the British Freedom Party will take place in Luton ahead of an EDL demo in the town, during which supporters will be banned from its centre by police, following previous disturbances. » | Mark Townsend | Saturday, April 28, 2012

Saturday, May 05, 2012

French Election: Final Polls Suggest Swing to Nicolas Sarkozy

THE GUARDIAN: Defending president promises supporters a 'surprise' as Socialist rival François Hollande says he is certain of nothing

Socialist voters face a nervous wait for the results of today's presidential election runoff between Nicolas Sarkozy and François Hollande after final opinion polls following Wednesday's fiery television debate revealed a late surge in favour of the outgoing president, who has previously trailed his leftwing rival throughout the race.

The polls indicated that Hollande was still on track to win the second round runoff vote, but revealed that the gap between the presidential rivals had narrowed from 10 percentage points a week ago to just four. An Ifop poll for Paris-Match showed Hollande at 52% and Sarkozy at 48%.

On Friday, before the official midnight deadline for campaigning to end, Hollande warned his supporters not to consider the election as being in the bag. At his last campaign meeting in Périgueux in south-west France, he said the battle was not yet won.

"It's true that you are confident and you want to win. I feel it," he told the crowd. "I don't want to be a killjoy, but don't make what could be the fatal mistake of thinking that the game is already over … that you needn't turn out. I have to tell you that I am sure of nothing. This victory is still not certain." » | Kim Willsher in Paris | Saturday, May 05, 2012

Related »
Battleplan to Avert Tory War

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: David Cameron is planning a fightback to stop his party descending into civil war with a Queen’s Speech offering help to “striving” families and moves to create jobs.

The Prime Minister will produce a series of measures that he hopes will give “red meat” to Conservative backbenchers, who are calling for action to appeal to their core voters after poor local election results.

And he will offer an olive branch to his critics by avoiding Parliamentary legislation on the controversial High Speed 2 rail link and watering down plans to reform the House of Lords.

But he has faced criticism from MPs who said the party needed “sanity” — and Boris Johnson made a jibe at the Prime Minister’s misfortunes as he celebrated winning a second term as Mayor of London.

“We survived the rain, the BBC, the Budget and the endorsement of David Cameron,” Mr Johnson told supporters early on Saturday — then spoke of tax cuts and cutting waste as Mr Cameron went to London’s City Hall to congratulate him.

The joke emphasised the stark contrast between Mr Johnson’s victory and the Tories’ overall showing as one back-bench MP said he would be “very happy” to see the mayor as party leader.

Mr Cameron will start his fightback this week with the Queen’s Speech. » | Patrick Hennessy and Robert Watts | Saturday, May 05, 2012

Related »
Colombian Prostitute Thought Obama Bodyguards Were 'Fools'

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A US Congressman is demanding that government investigators interview the prostitute at the centre of the Secret Service's Colombia sex scandal after she described the bodyguards as 'fools'.

New York Republican Peter King, chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, acted after Dania Londono Suarez [Dania Londoño Suárez] appeared on television to reveal her side of the story.

She said that it would have been easy for her to steal any of the documents or plans that President Barack Obama's bodyguards had with them in a hotel room on a presidential trip to Cartagena, Columbia, last month.

Miss Suarez said: "They were a bunch of fools. They are responsible for Obama's security and they still let this happen.

"I could have done a thousand other things. If I had wanted to, I could have gone through all his documents, his wallet, his suitcase."

Miss Suarez told Caracol News in Cartegena that she called the police after the Secret Service agent with whom she spent the night refused to pay her the $800 (£500) he had promised.

"Let's go, bitch – I'm not going to pay you," she said that he told her before throwing her out of the room in the early morning. » | William Lowther in Washington | Saturday, May 05, 2012
Royal Book Exclusive: How Prince William Overcame Being Wounded by His Warring Parents as Their Marriage Fell Apart

MAIL ONLINE: At the age of 13, Prince William faced the daunting prospect of becoming a new boy in a school that was almost ten times the size of his old one. That was hard enough.

What made his transition to Eton far more of an ordeal was that no one — from masters to pupils — could fail to be unaware of the open warfare that was tearing his parents’ marriage apart.

Unlike his prep school, where the head often pretended the news-papers hadn’t been delivered, multiple sets arrived on the premises daily — and William could simply no longer be shielded.

So it was doubly unfortunate that, almost immediately after his arrival, his mother’s love life was once again making lurid headlines. This time, the man in question was the England rugby captain Will Carling, whom William had met several times with Diana.

For a boy trying to handle his first weeks at a big school, it was excruciatingly hard to bear.

But there was worse to come, as his house master Andrew Gailey soon discovered. While William was still settling in, Gailey learned that the Princess of Wales was recording an interview in secret for the BBC.

Concerned for his pupil, he phoned Diana and told her it was imperative to explain to William, face-to-face, what she was intending to do.

‘Is that really necessary?’ she said. It was, he said — but she refused to come. The next day he phoned again and was even more insistent. Reluctantly, she agreed to go to the school.

In the end, the meeting between mother and son lasted no longer than five minutes. Diana told William that the programme she’d recorded would not contain anything controversial.

It would make him proud of her, she assured him. And before he had a chance to ask any questions, she left. There’s no doubt she anticipated a magnificent triumph. ‘It’s terribly moving,’ she told her private secretary, when he asked what the programme contained.

On November 20, 1995, a large proportion of the nation sat glued to their TV sets in disbelief as Diana gave the performance of her life on Panorama. » | Penny Junor | Friday, May 04, 2012

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: William 'deeply upset' by Diana's Panorama interview: The young Duke of Cambridge was left “deeply upset” by the Panorama interview in which his mother lifted the lid on her marriage to the Prince of Wales - after she had assured him it would contain nothing controversial - according to a new biography. » | Saturday, May 05, 2012

The Price of Treating Us with Contempt

MAIL ONLINE: Many will remember Henry Kissinger’s joke about the 1980s Iran-Iraq war: ‘It is a pity they can’t both lose’. That is the way millions of British people felt as they trudged to the polls, as if to a gallows, for Britain’s rag-bag of elections.

Seldom in modern history has the electorate felt so disenchanted with all the parties vying for its support. Tories ask what is Tory about David Cameron. Labour voters inspect the rabble heading their own party as if they were greenfly on the roses. Many of the dwindling band of Lib Dems look on their representatives in the Coalition as traitors to every potty value they hold dear.

The election turnout and outcome – a triumph for the Apathy Party no matter how many seats Labour gained – highlights disenchantment with the political process.

Most conspicuous was the expected victory of Boris Johnson in the London mayoral election. He professes to be a Conservative, but in truth is the sole member and spokesperson of the Boris Party, a self-promotional vehicle of supertanker proportions.

It is dismaying that he has become the most popular Conservative in Britain. Johnson is an undisputed whizz as a TV quiz-show panellist. But it is crazy to speak of him as a prospective prime minister. If Boris reached Downing Street, government would become a permanent pier-end panto, probably with a strip show thrown in.

Johnson’s defenders say he upholds ‘proper’ Conservative values such as Euroscepticism, a small state and low taxation. This is true but surely the British people deserve better than a comic, cad and serial bonker, however entertaining. Read on and comment » | Max Hastings | Friday, May 04, 2012

Related »
Boris Johnson Elected London Mayor

BBC: Boris Johnson has won the London Mayoral election, beating close rival Ken Livingstone.

Earlier on Friday it had seemed Mr Johnson would win easily, but the gap between him and Mr Livingstone shrank as the count continued. The result was delayed after two extra ballot boxes were "found" in the Brent and Harrow constituency.

In his acceptance speech, Mr Johnson acknowledged that it had been a "long and gruelling fight", but insisted that he would "continue to fight for a good deal for Londoners." He also paid tribute to Ken Livingstone, describing him as "amongst the most creative and the most original" of left wing politicians. Watch BBC video » | Saturday, May 05, 2012
Ken Livingstone Loses London Mayor Race

Religious Butchering Now Commonplace in Britain, Leading Vet Claims

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Non-Muslim Britons are being forced to eat animals slaughtered in "appalling" pain because religious butchering is becoming so common, a former chief vet has claimed.

Prof Bill Reilly, ex-president of the British Veterinary Association, said cutting the throats of lambs, chickens and other animals without stunning them breaches legal requirements because it causes significant pain, fear and distress.

British and EU law permits the method of religious slaughter to account for Muslim and Jewish dietary practices, but stipulates that the animals must not be caused "unnecessary suffering."

Prof Reilly called for the practice to be dramatically curbed, suggesting that some slaughterhouses are refusing to stun animals simply to cut costs, rather than for religious reasons.

Writing in the Veterinary Record [Full text £], he said the number of animals having their throats slit while still fully conscious – a practice known as non-stun slaughter – was "unacceptable".

Referring to a report by the former Animal Welfare Council he claimed that "such a massive injury could result in very significant pain and distress", particularly because the throat has a large number of nerve endings. Read on and comment » | Nick Collins, Science Correspondent | Friday, May 04, 2012

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Dutch parliament votes to ban ritual slaughter of animals: The Dutch parliament on Tuesday voted to ban ritual slaughter in landmark animal rights legislation that has been compared to Nazi persecution of the Jews by the country's Chief Rabbi. » | Bruno Waterfield | Tuesday, June 28, 2012

THE TELEGRAPH: Ban urged on kosher and halal butchery: Muslim and Jewish methods of slaughter, involving slitting animals' throats and letting them bleed to death, should be banned immediately, Government advisers said yesterday. ¶ The Farm Animal Welfare Council, which advises ministers on livestock cruelty, said in a report published yesterday that the way in which halal and kosher meats are produced was intrinsically cruel and caused severe suffering for sheep, goats and cattle. » | Robert Uhlig, Farming Correspondent | Wednesday, June 11, 2003

Related here, here, and here
Marlene Dietrichs letzte Jahre: Der lange Fall der Filmgöttin

SPIEGEL ONLINE: 13 Jahre auf dem Sterbebett: Sie war eine lebende Legende, dann zog Marlene Dietrich sich plötzlich zurück. Nach einem Unfall versteckte die Schauspielerin sich mehr als ein Jahrzehnt in ihrem Pariser Apartment. Sie trank, nahm starke Medikamente - und telefonierte mit der Queen und Gorbatschow. Von Benjamin Maack

"Vorhang runter! Runter!", schrie sie. Und der Vorhang fiel schwer. Er fiel endgültig.

Es war Ende September 1975, ein Konzertabend im Her Majesty's Theatre in Sydney. Das Orchester spielte "Ich bin von Kopf bis Fuß auf Liebe eingestellt", das Zeichen für ihren Auftritt. Plötzlich zerriss ein dissonanter Ton die Melodie. Es war der Moment, in dem die Musiker Marlene Dietrich taumeln und fallen sahen. Sie hatte getrunken, sie trank viel. Ein Laster, das sie bis ans Ende ihres Lebens nicht mehr aufgeben sollte. Marlene Dietrich versuchte noch, Halt zu finden, dann stürzte sie in den Orchestergraben. Ihr linker Oberschenkelknochen brach und bohrte sich durch die Haut der 73-jährigen Hollywood-Göttin.

45 Jahre war das, nachdem sie als Josef Sternbergs blauer Engel berühmt wurde, 36 nach ihrem furiosen Auftritt als Saloonsängerin Frenchy an der Seite von James Stewart in "Der große Bluff", 18 Jahre nach ihrer Meisterleistung als Billy Wilders Zeugin der Anklage. Dieser Abend in Sydney markierte das Ende ihrer Bühnenkarriere - und den Beginn eines neuen Mythos: Der von dem Phantom, das im vierten Stock in der Avenue Montaigne 12 in Paris hauste und versuchte, die Welt auszusperren. Für immer.

Die Lebenszeichen der Filmdiva nach ihrem Sturz lassen sich an einer Hand abzählen: Zuerst wurde sie ins New York-Presbyterian Hospital gebracht. Acht Monate lang steckte Marlene Dietrich in einem Gipsverband, der von der Taille bis zum Knöchel reicht. Die Diva fühlte sich hilflos und gedemütigt. An der Tür zu ihrem Zimmer hing ein Schild: "Keine Besucher! Keine Information!" Blumen und Geschenke gingen an die Absender zurück. Ihre alte Freundin Katherine Hepburn reiste an, um sie aufzuheitern und wurde weggeschickt. So sollte sie niemand sehen. » | Benjamin Maack | Samstag, 05. Mai 2012
Speeding Ostrich Runs Amok on Saudi Street

Bizarre footage captured by a driver in Saudi Arabia shows a runaway ostrich sprinting down a busy main road causing traffic chaos as it overtakes and dodges cars.