Friday, August 02, 2013

'Snowden, Manning, Assange Victims of Morally Bankrupt System'


NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has been granted temporary asylum in Russia and is allowed to enter the country's territory. Investigative journalist Tony Gosling joins RT studio to discuss this.

Snow Storm: US Slams Russia for Granting Temporary Asylum to Snowden


Russia's granting of temporary asylum to Edward Snowden has infuriated Washington. The White House hinted September's summit between President Obama and Vladimir Putin may now be cancelled. That's as some Republican senators called for a major rethink of relations between the two countries. RT's Gayane Chichakyan gauges the US response.

Edward Snowden Asylum Case Is a Gift for Vladimir Putin

THE GUARDIAN: Decision to grant whistleblower asylum is a humiliating rebuff that exposes the impotence of 21st-century US power

For the past four years the Obama administration has tried hard to "reset" relations with Russia. The idea wasn't a bad one. A more co-operative Kremlin might help the White House with its pressing international problems – the war in Syria, the US military draw-down in Afghanistan, Iran's nuclear programme.

On Thursday, however, bilateral relations appeared anything but reset as Edward Snowden – dressed in his trademark grey shirt and carrying a dark backpack – strolled out of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport. He had been holed up there for five and a half weeks, ever since he slipped out of Hong Kong. Now he was free.

Vladimir Putin's decision to grant Snowden asylum – and make no mistake, Putin called this one – is a humiliating, wounding rebuff to the US. In theory Snowden has been allowed to stay for one year. In reality he is learning Russian and ploughing his way through Doystoyevsky. Snowden's stay in Russia could be indefinite. » | Luke Harding | Thursday, August 01, 2013

Thursday, August 01, 2013

Diana, Princess of Wales: Full Biography


NSA Spy Leaks: Snowden Thanks Russia for Asylum

BBC: US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has thanked Russia for granting him temporary asylum, allowing him to leave the Moscow airport where he has been holed up since June.

In a statement, Mr Snowden also accused the US government of showing "no respect" for international law.

The US has charged Mr Snowden with leaking details of its electronic surveillance programmes.

Washington has expressed its "extreme disappointment" at Russia's decision.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said they were considering whether a meeting between US President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in September should go ahead.

The latest developments came amid fresh revelations from the cache of documents leaked by Mr Snowden.

Documents seen by the UK's Guardian newspaper appear to show the US government paid at least £100m ($150m) to the UK's GCHQ spy agency to secure access to and influence over Britain's intelligence gathering programmes. » | Thursday, August 01, 2013

Ex-Italy PM Silvio Berlusconi Jail Term Confirmed

BBC: Italy's supreme court has upheld the prison sentence given to ex-Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi for tax fraud.

However, the court ordered a review of a five-year ban on public office that was part of the sentence.

Berlusconi faces house arrest or community service instead of going to jail because of his age - he is 76.

His lawyers had asked judges at Rome's Court of Cassation to overturn a one-year jail sentence and political ban.

When Berlusconi was convicted in October last year, he was sentenced to four years in prison but this was automatically reduced to one under a 2006 pardon law.

The supreme court's ruling came after a three-day hearing.

The judicial review of the five-year ban from public office will enable Berlusconi to remain as a senator and as leader of his centre-right People of Freedom Party (PDL) for the moment. » | Thursday, August 01, 2013

Edward Snowden 'in a Safe Location in Russia,' Says Lawyer

BBC: US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has left Moscow airport, after being granted asylum in Russia, his lawyer has confirmed.

Anatoly Kucherena said Mr Snowden was in a safe location.

"As he is one of the most wanted people on Earth, he will be making sure his place of residence is absolutely safe," he added. (+ video) » | Thursday, August 01, 2013

Rush Limbaugh Explains His 'Limbaugh Theorem' on Obama


Report: NSA Leaker Receives Asylum in Russia


Greg Palkot reports from London, England

US Officials Fume Over Russia Granting Asylum To Snowden


FOX NEWS: The White House and U.S. lawmakers fumed Thursday after NSA leaker Edward Snowden apparently was allowed to leave the Moscow airport and enter Russian territory on temporary refugee status.

"If these reports are accurate, Americans in Washington should consider this a game changer in our relationship with Russia," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said in a statement, calling Russia's decision "provocative" and "a sign of Vladimir Putin's clear lack of respect for President Obama." Graham called for the U.S. government to meet the decision with a "firm response," which he did not describe.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., called it a "slap in the face of all Americans."

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, D-N.J., also said that Snowden "belongs in a United States courtroom, not a free man deserving of asylum in Russia." He called the development a "setback to U.S.-Russia relations." » | FoxNews.com | Thursday, August 01, 2013

Inside Story: Bradley Manning: Whistleblower or Traitor?


We ask if the US soldier's espionage conviction will help defend national security or merely curb freedom of speech.

NSA's Google: XKeyscore Search Engine for All Private Info


A search engine for all of your private information - that's what an NSA program called XKeyscore. According to freshly published documents - which were provided by Edward Snowden before he arrived in the transit zone of a Moscow airport. They detail what's described as the widest reaching intelligence gathering system used in the world. RT's Gayane Chichakyan has more.

Fugitive Snowden Slips Out of Moscow Airport for 'Secure' Base


REUTERS.COM: Fugitive former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden slipped quietly out of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport on Thursday after Russia granted him temporary asylum, ending more than a month in limbo in the transit area.

A Russian lawyer who has been assisting Snowden said the American, who is wanted in the United States for leaking details of secret government intelligence programs, had gone to a secure location which would remain secret.

After weeks staying out of sight from hordes of reporters desperate for a glimpse of him, Snowden managed to slip away in a taxi without being spotted. Grainy images of his passport showed he had been granted asylum for a year from July 31.

"He is the most wanted man on planet Earth. What do you think he is going to do? He has to think about his personal security. I cannot tell you where he is going," his lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told Reuters.

"I put him in a taxi 15 to 20 minutes ago and gave him his certificate on getting refugee status in the Russian Federation," he said. "He can live wherever he wants in Russia. It's his personal choice."

He said Snowden was not going to stay at any embassy in Moscow, although three Latin American countries have offered to shelter him. Snowden was well, he added. » | Timothy Heritage and Alissa de Carbonnel | MOSCOW | Thursday, August 01, 2013

RT VIDEO: Snowden granted 1-year asylum in Russia, leaves airport »

Edward Snowden Safest in Russia, Says Father


Edward Snowden's father Lonnie Snowden says he would stay in Moscow if he was in his son's position. Speaking to Russia 24 from Washington on Wednesday, Lonnie Snowden says he would be comfortable for his son to spend the rest of his life in Russia

Vox Populi: New Yorkers on Manning Leaks, Abuse, Trial Verdict


MEP's from France, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, Croatia, Ireland, and Germany - signed a letter to President Obama and the U.S. Defence Secretary. They say that Manning 'is not a traitor"... and had the best interests of his country at heart.The lawmakers also expressed their concern over the U.S. war on whistleblowers saying it undermines democracy on both sides of the Atlantic. Manning has suffered too much, the letter says, in spending over three years behind bars - including 10 months in solitary confinement. The message is: Manning should be freed as soon as possible. And that view is shared by plenty of Americans as Marina Portnaya found out.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Espagne : l'infante Cristina part vivre en Suisse

LE POINT: La fille de Juan Carlos, qui a bénéficié d'une suspension de son inculpation dans une affaire de corruption, fait l'objet d'une enquête pour fraude fiscale.

La fille cadette du roi d'Espagne, Cristina, éclaboussée par une affaire de corruption pour laquelle son mari Inaki Urdangarin a été inculpé, part vivre avec ses quatre enfants en Suisse pour raisons professionnelles, a annoncé mercredi son employeur. Cristina "partira sous peu pour que les enfants commencent l'école en septembre à Genève", a confirmé une source proche de la famille royale, précisant que Inaki "Urdangarin reste dans sa résidence de Barcelone" où ils vivent actuellement.

L'infante, directrice internationale de la fondation La Caixa, organisme qui gère les oeuvres sociales de la banque espagnole CaixaBank, est nommée à Genève avec pour "mission de gérer et coordonner ses programmes avec les agences des Nations unies dont le siège est à Genève", explique la fondation dans un communiqué. Cristina travaille pour La Caixa depuis 1993. » | Source AFP | mercredi 31 juillet 2013

Cleared of Aiding the Enemy, Bradley Manning Still Faces a Lifetime in Jail. The Very Least We Owe This Heroic Man Is a Debate on US Foreign Policy

THE INDEPENDENT: Manning revealed the sordid realities of war that the armchair warriors want sanitised

Power has to be relentlessly fought. Without being constantly checked, exposed, harangued, mocked and driven back, it would swiftly devour all the rights that were won at its expense. There is invariably a cost. The powerful know that if those who chip away at their authority are not undermined, or humiliated, or even persecuted, others would be emboldened to strike blows at them, too.

And so it is with Bradley Manning. Although a military judge has found him not guilty of aiding the enemy, the guilty verdicts on other charges will leave him languishing in military custody for much, if not all, of his life: indeed, he faces a sentence of 130 years. Here is the sacrifice he has paid for exposing the secretive actions of a government that claims to act in the name of the US people.

Here's why. Over a decade ago, the US initiated two calamitous wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, with a terrible human cost that is still paid every single day. The then-UN Secretary General Kofi Annan declared that the Iraq invasion was illegal; the country is today still awash with car bombings and gruesome sectarian bloodletting. It was always in the interests of the US elite to keep the consequences of their actions as far away from public consciousness as possible. … » | Owen Jones | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Egypt's Cabinet Orders Police to End Pro-Morsi Sit-ins

BBC: Egypt's military-backed government has ordered police to end sit-ins by supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in the capital Cairo.

"The cabinet has decided to take all measures necessary to confront these risks and put an end to them," an official said in a televised statement.

The statement termed the continued rallies "a national security threat".

Three top Muslim Brotherhood leaders have also been referred to court on charges of inciting violence.

The movement's supporters have been staging sit-ins for several weeks since President Morsi was removed on 3 July, after just one year in office.

They have defied previous threats of removal from their sit-in protests, despite deadly clashes with security forces. (+ video) » | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

BBC: Morsi meeting: EU chief Catherine Ashton speaks to BBC (+ video) » | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Polish Dissident Adam Michnik: 'We Are Bastards of Communism'

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Adam Michnik is editor-in-chief of Poland's leading daily and its most prominent former dissident. In a SPIEGEL interview, he talks about the threat of authoritarian regimes in Eastern Europe, the decline of the region's political culture and feelings of being treated like second-class citizens in Europe.

We are sitting in a room on the sixth floor of the building occupied by the leftist-liberal Warsaw newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza. There are stacks of newspapers and books everywhere, and on the walls are certificates from American and German universities next to photos of Adam Michnik with statesmen from around the world. Michnik is sitting at the table smoking an electric cigarette. He is the editor-in-chief of Gazeta Wyborcza, Poland's most important nationwide daily newspaper, which started being published in 1989 as the first legal newspaper of the Solidarnosc (Solidarity) trade union. Michnik, 66, is the country's most prominent former dissident. He was sent to prison several times for his political convictions, starting at the age of 19. He wrote for underground newspapers and supported the independent Solidarity trade union. When the communist regime declared martial law in 1981, Michnik was detained. In the spring of 1989, he took part in the Round Table talks, as an adviser to Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, and negotiated the first free elections. Since then, he has focused his attention on the upheavals in Eastern Europe. For Michnik, the demonstrations in Bulgaria against the corrupt political class, the authoritarian tendencies in Hungary and nascent nationalism are all the delayed consequences of 40 years of oppression and patronization under communism. Michnik has a special relationship with SPIEGEL. When he was allowed to go to Paris in the 1970s to visit Jean-Paul Sartre, he called the SPIEGEL offices in Hamburg from Paris. He wanted to know whether its editors would like to print an essay he had written, which they did. "It was the first article I was able to publish in a truly important Western publication," Michnik says. "It sent a message to Poland's rulers that they could not sideline me with force." » | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Dispatches: The Accident – Princess Diana Documentary (1998)


The Diana Conspiracy: Documentary


With access to new documents from the Paris crash investigation and exclusive never before seen interviews, this documentary examines the conspiracies surrounding Princess Diana's death, how they came to be, and why people believe in them so fervently.


The Alma Tunnel Mystery: Princess Diana and Dodi Al Fayed Story »

Princess Diana Was 'Madly in Love' with Heart Surgeon Hasnat Khan

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Princess Diana was 'madly in love' with heart surgeon Hasnat Khan and considered moving to Pakistan to be with him, close friend Jemima Khan has revealed.

Diana wanted to marry the doctor, with whom she had a two-year relationship, and secretly met his family in Pakistan to discuss the possibility of a union, according to Jemima.

She is understood to have told two other friends that she wanted a daughter with the eminent surgeon.

"Diana was madly in love with Hasnat Khan and wanted to marry him," Jemima told Vanity Fair. "Even if that meant living in Pakistan, and that’s one of the reasons why we became friends.”

Jemima disclosed that Diana visited her twice in Pakistan to help fund-raise for the hospital where her former husband Imran Khan – a distant cousin of Diana's lover – worked.

"Both times she also went to meet his family secretly to discuss the possibility of marriage to Hasnat," she said. » | Alice Philipson | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Paul Krugman - The Economic Meltdown & What Have We Learned (If Anything)


Caucasus Report: Syrian Fighters Tell North Caucasus Muslims 'Wage Jihad at Home!'


RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY: In a short video address dated July 30, a group of Syrian fighters has appealed to Muslims in the North Caucasus to wage jihad in Russia rather than travel to Syria to participate in the fighting there. Specifically, they refer to the recent appeal by self-styled Caucasus Emirate leader Doku Umarov to prevent the holding of the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi in February 2014.

The address is delivered by a wheelchair-bound fighter identified as Salakhuddin who appears to have lost both legs. He is surrounded by seven masked fighters armed with heavy machine guns and grenade launchers.

Speaking in accented Russian, Salakhuddin begins by conveying Ramadan greetings to Muslims across Russia, and specifically to Umarov, whom he refers to as “our amir.” (He is wearing a black T-shirt bearing the slogan "Caucasus Emirate.")

Salakhuddin says there has been a “huge influx of volunteers” from the North Caucasus to join the armed opposition in Syria. He attributes that wave of volunteers to a widely held belief that "Syria is where you go to join the jihad."

Salakhuddin says it is understandable that Muslims from those areas of Russia where there is no jihad underway should share that belief, but that Muslims in the North Caucasus have an obligation to remain at home and fight there, even though conditions are far more difficult in terms of weaponry, support, and the possibility of withdrawing from the front to the rear. He cites a sura from the Koran in support of that argument. » | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Faces Jail and 600 Lashes For Insulting Islam

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TIMES: An international outcry was triggered by a Saudi Arabian court that handed a seven-year jail and 600 lashes sentence to the editor of a liberal website for violating Islamic values.

Raif Badawi has been in detention since 2012, after being arrested on cyber-crime charges related to Free Saudi, the website he founded which hosted discussions on religion in the ultraconservative Islamic kingdom.

The US and France expressed deep concerns at the punishment also slammed by human rights groups.

"We believe that when public speech is deemed offensive, be it via social media or any other means, the issue is best addressed through open-dialogue and honest debate," said US State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.

"This incredibly harsh sentence for a peaceful blogger makes a mockery of Saudi Arabia's claims that it supports reform and religious dialogue," said Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.

"A man who wanted to discuss religion has already been locked up for a year and now faces 600 lashes and seven years in prison."

Judges at Jeddah criminal court reportedly dropped the heaviest charge of apostasy - which carries an automatic death sentence - after Badawi, gave assurances he was a Muslim. » | Umberto Bacchi | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Snowden's Father Says FBI Asked Him to Visit His Son

BBC: The father of US fugitive Edward Snowden has said the FBI asked him to travel to Moscow and see his son, but adds that he wants more details.

Lonnie Snowden said he had been asked several weeks ago about Edward, who is sought by the US for leaking details of electronic surveillance programmes.

However, he wants to know the FBI's intentions, he told Russian state TV.

He said his son would not get a fair trial in America and, if he were in his son's place, he would stay in Russia.

He described his son as a "true patriot" who had "made America a more democratic country" by revealing secret details of the US National Security Agency's surveillance programmes.

The interview was broadcast live, early in the morning, on the Russia 24 news channel. Mr Snowden spoke English, with a Russian translation.

Mr Snowden has been stuck in transit at a Moscow airport for more than a month as he has no valid travel documents. » | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Gay Rights Around the World: The Best and Worst Countries for Equality


THE GUARDIAN: Equal marriage laws are being passed in several countries, but in Russia, life grows harsher each month for LGBT people. Which places are best and worst for gay rights?

We have a US president who supports gay marriage, and now a pope who, if not exactly signing up to equality for all, is at least starting to talk in language less inflammatory than his predecessor. "If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has goodwill, who am I to judge?" he told an assembled group of journalists on the papal plane back from his tour of Brazil. Then he went on to criticise the gay "lobby" and said he wasn't going to break with the catechism that said "homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered". Still, for a brief moment it looked like a minor breakthrough.

Then you weigh it against a raft of anti-homosexuality legislation that is coming into force in countries across the world. In Russia, gay teenagers are being tortured and forcibly outed on the internet against a backdrop of laws that look completely out of step with the rest of Europe. In what is being described as rolling the "status of LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] people back to the Stalin era", President Putin has passed a number of anti-gay laws, including legislation that punishes people and groups that distribute information considered "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations". The country also now has powers to arrest and detain foreign citizens believe to be gay, or "pro-gay". It has led to the boycott of Russian vodka brands by gay bars and clubs in solidarity, started by writer and activist Dan Savage and taken up by bars in London.

In many African countries where homosexuality is already illegal, more draconian anti-gay laws are being passed and violence against LGBT people is increasing. » | Emine Saner | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Bradley Manning: Not the Enemy


THE GUARDIAN: Manning has been found not guilty of the most dangerous charge levelled at him – 'aiding the enemy'. Even so, this trial was a shameful moment in US history

On Wednesday , Private First Class Bradley Manning was handed a verdict on charges he faced in relation to leaking classified material – after 1,160 days of pre-trial detention. His crime was to release military documents to WikiLeaks.

Contained within this material was footage of a US military helicopter gunning down a father taking his children to school; evidence of a death squad operating in Afghanistan, and files showing that rather than containing just "the worst of the worst", Guantánamo held dementia patients, taxi drivers and prisoners of the Taliban.

Millions worldwide regard Manning as a hero, but he was always going to face prosecution for his actions. Not pursuing him would have been politically untenable given the national security climate in the US. Military leaders would have feared the repercussions of allowing a soldier to get away with such a large-scale leak.

But the Obama administration didn't merely go through the motions in pursuit of Manning. Military authorities imposed a charge that should have sparked far greater alarm than it did. They argued that by talking to the media, Manning had "aided the enemy" – a charge tantamount to treason, which can carry the death penalty (though this was not pursued in Manning's case). » | James Ball | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

WikiLeaks On Manning Verdict: Glad Journalism Is Not Treason, No Term Will Stop Whistleblowers


A US military judge has found Army private Bradley Manning "not guilty" of aiding the enemy. However, he was found guilty of 19 remaining charges, meaning that he still faces the possibility of up to 136 years behind bars. RT talks to Wikileaks spokesperson Kristinn Hrafnsson on the verdict and its outcome.

Bradley Manning Is a 'Hero', Says WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange


WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has attacked the conviction of US soldier Bradley Manning on espionage charges, calling him a "hero".


Read the Telegraph article here | Agencies | Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

L'Arabie saoudite lance un chantier de métro gigantesque


LE POINT: Le projet de métro de six lignes, prévu sur 176 km, vise à "faciliter la vie" dans la capitale dont la population s'élèvera dans 10 ans à 8,5 millions.

L'Arabie saoudite a accordé à trois consortiums internationaux la réalisation du métro de Riyad, un méga-projet de 22,5 milliards de dollars (16,9 milliards d'euros), conçu pour décongestionner la circulation dans une ville de 6 millions d'habitants.

Le projet de métro de six lignes, prévu sur 176 km, vise à "faciliter la vie" dans la capitale dont le nombre d'habitants devra augmenter à 8,5 millions "dans 10 ans", a déclaré le gouverneur de Riyad, le prince Khaled Ben Bandar Ben Abdel Aziz, lors d'une cérémonie d'attribution des contrats dans la nuit de dimanche à lundi. » | Le Point.fr | lundi 29 juillet 2013

Bill Maher: New Rules – America's Next War


Manning Not Guilty of Aiding Enemy, Faces 100+ Years in Jail on Other Charges


A US military judge has found Army private first class Bradley Manning "not guilty" of aiding the enemy. However, he was found guilty of 19 remaining charges, meaning that he still faces the possibility of over 100 years behind bars.

Bradley Manning Cleared of 'Aiding the Enemy' But Guilty of Most Other Charges

THE GUARDIAN: • Pfc. Manning convicted of multiple Espionage Act violations • Acquitted of most serious 'aiding the enemy' charge • Army private faces maximum jail sentence of 130 years

Bradley Manning, the source of the massive WikiLeaks trove of secret disclosures, faces a possible maximum sentence of more than 130 years in military jail after he was convicted of most charges on which he stood trial.

Colonel Denise Lind, the military judge presiding over the court martial of the US soldier, delivered her verdict in curt and pointed language. "Guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty," she repeated over and over, as the reality of a prolonged prison sentence for Manning – on top of the three years he has already spent in detention – dawned.

The one ray of light in an otherwise bleak outcome for Manning was that he was found not guilty of the single most serious charge against him – that he knowingly "aided the enemy", in practice al-Qaida, by disclosing information to the WikiLeaks website that in turn made it accessible to all users including enemy groups.

Lind's decision to avoid setting a precedent by applying the swingeing "aiding the enemy" charge to an official leaker will invoke a sigh of relief from news organisations and civil liberties groups who had feared a guilty verdict would send a chill across public interest journalism. » | Ed Pilkington at Fort Meade | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

THE GUARDIAN: Bradley Manning: whistleblower or traitor?: The verdict on the WikiLeaks disclosures is the culmination of a process that has presented two starkly contrasting portraits » | Ed Pilkington in Fort Meade | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

LE MONDE: Bradley Manning coupable "d'espionnage" mais pas de "collusion avec l'ennemi" » | Le Monde.fr avec AFP | mardi 30 juillet 2013

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Keine „Unterstützung des Feindes“ durch Bradley Manning: Der Wikileaks-Informant Bradley Manning ist von einem Militärgericht in 19 von 21 Anklagepunkten schuldig gesprochen worden. Freigesprochen wurde er vom Vorwurf der „Unterstützung des Feindes“. Damit droht ihm keine Todesstrafe. » | Von Matthias Rüb, Washington | Dienstag, 30. Juli 2013

In Gefangenschaft: "Mursi geht es gut"


Catherine Ashton, Außenbeauftragte der EU, ist die erste Ausländerin, die den gestürzten Präsidenten Ägyptens an seinem geheimen Aufenthaltsort besuchen durfte. Es gehe ihm gut.

Textbook Praises Islam, Denigrates Christianity


TOWNHALL.COM: A world history book used in an Advanced Placement class is under review by a Florida school board over allegations it favors Islam at the expense of Christianity and Judaism.

State Rep. Ritch Workman told Fox News the Prentice World History textbook rewrites Islamic history and presents a biased version of the Muslim faith.

“The book has a 36-page chapter on Islam but no chapters on Christianity or Judaism,” Workman said. “It’s remarkably one-sided.”

The textbook is being used in an Advanced Placement class in Brevard County schools. The book is on a state-approved list and has been used in the school system for the past three years without any complaints.

Workman said he received a copy of the book and he said it’s clear the authors “make a very obvious attempt not to insult Islam by reshaping history.”

“If you don’t see it from the eyes of a parent, kids are going to take this book as gospel and believe that Christians and Jews were murderous barbarians and thank God the Muslims came along and the world is great,” he said. » | Todd Starnes | Monday, July 29, 2013

Norwegian Mass-murderer Anders Behring Breivik Seeks University Place

THE GUARDIAN: Self-confessed fascist whose terror campaign two years ago killed 77 people has applied to University of Oslo

Norway's oldest and most illustrious university, with five Nobel Prize winners among its alumni, may soon add the self-confessed fascist whose terror campaign two years ago killed 77 people.

Anders Behring Breivik, serving a 21-year sentence in a maximum security prison, has applied to the University of Oslo to study political science, Norwegian television revealed on Monday night.

The university, whose Latin motto is et nos petimus astra – we strive for the stars – said it would consider Breivik's application on its merits.

Ole Petter Ottersen, the university's rector, confirmed that Breivik had applied to study a single topic that would not lead to a degree, but could not go into details on how the application would be treated.

"Prison inmates are allowed to study, and we have a set of rules that we stick to in assessing applications. We don't want to change them — although obviously some people would like them changed," he told the Guardian.

Breivik last summer announced his intention to study politics and write several books. » | David Crouch in Gothenburg | Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Hard Time? Manning Awaits Verdict as US Media Label Him Guilty


A military judge is set to deliver the verdict on US Army whistleblower Bradley Manning later on Tuesday. He could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted of aiding the enemy. His defense argues that Manning leaked classified documents because he wanted to expose war crimes. But when it comes to press coverage of the case in the US, innocent until proven guilty may not apply. RT's Gayane Chichakyan explains.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Shock ‘n’ Roll… Radio DJs Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity Dropped after Ad Boycott

THE INDEPENDENT: America’s two biggest shock jocks just got a shock of their own. In a major blow to their broadcasting dominance, the second-largest radio station owner in the US is said to be dropping both Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity from its airwaves.

According to a report by Politico, Cumulus Media has decided not to renew contracts with the two talk radio titans at the end of 2013, meaning their radio shows will vanish from more than 40 of its stations across the US. » | Tim Walker | Monday, July 29, 2013

Muslim Converts In Mexico Make Up A Diverse, Fast-Growing Community

FOX NEWS – LATINO: MEXICO CITY – When Moroccan national Said Louahabi arrived in Mexico City in 1994, he and fellow Muslims had to attend religious services at the Pakistani embassy because there were no mosques or Islamic centers.

“I started looking for Muslims and a mosque when I first arrived,” Louahabi, an English teacher, told Fox News Latino. “At the time, we met at the Pakistani embassy, and there were only about 80 people — most of us were foreigners.”

Now, Louahabi prays alongside hundreds of other Muslims — foreigners and Mexicans alike — at the three-story Muslim Community Educational Center in the city’s upscale Anzures neighborhood.

Friday prayers at the Islamic Center are given in Arabic and Spanish. The crowd is diverse: Mexican converts to Islam, expatriates, embassy staff from the Middle East, Africa, Pakistan and Central Asia. The Islamic Center even fields a soccer team.

The mosque was packed at a service just before the beginning of Ramadan, the Muslim holy month, this year falling in July.

Many Mexicans who converted to Islam say they’ve been impressed with the religion’s growth in Mexico.

“I used the Internet and books to learn about Islam,” said Mexican convert Alexander Huttanos, an airline pilot who goes by his Islamic name, Ahmed Abbas. “Islam has come a long way in Mexico.”

He actually spent quite a bit of time researching different beliefs and faiths before making a final decision. » | Bernd Debusmann | Monday, July 29, 2013

France Struggles to Separate Islam and the State

ABC NEWS: Riots broke out over a full-face Islamic veil. A woman may have lost her unborn baby in another confrontation over her face covering. Tensions flared over a supermarket chain's ad for the end-of-day feast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

France's enforcement of its prized secularism is inscribed in law, most recently in a ban on wearing full-face veils in public. Meant to ensure that all faiths live in harmony, the policy instead may be fueling a rising tide of Islamophobia and driving a wedge between some Muslims and the rest of the population.

Yet ardent defenders of secularism, the product of France's separation of church and state, say the country hasn't gone far enough. They want more teeth to further the cause that Voltaire helped inspire and Victor Hugo championed, this time with a law targeting headscarves in the work place.

A new generation of French Muslims — which at some 5 million, or about eight percent of the population, is the largest in Western Europe — is finding a growing voice in a nation not always ready to accommodate mosques, halal food and Muslim religious dress. Political pressure from a resurgent far-right has increased the tension. » | Elaine Ganley, Associated Press | Trappes, France | Monday, July 29, 2013

Schweiz: Zugunglück in der Waadt



WIKIPEDIA: Kanton Waadt »

WIKPÉDIA: Canton de Vaud »

WIKIPEDIA: Canton Vaud » [Italiano]

WIKIPEDIA: Vaud » [E]

USA TODAY: Trains crash head-on in Switzerland; dozens hurt » | John Bacon | USA Today | Monday, July 29, 2013

EURONEWS: Swiss train crash leaves 40 injured (+ video) »

'Gaddafi's Son May Face Execution after Show Trial in Libya' - Lawyer


Nearly two years after Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown and killed in Libya - his son, Saif al-Islam, is yet to stand trial for alleged war crimes committed during the 2011 uprising. He's set for a hearing in Libya in August - but International Criminal Court judges fear he won't receive a fair trial there. Libya is meanwhile defying an ICC ruling by refusing to hand him over to the Hague, insisting on trial at home.

First Minister of Scotland: We Will Win Independence Referendum


Scotland is to vote over its independence next year. In case of 'yes' vote the centuries-long union with England will be broken. What are the benefits and the drawbacks of such a move? Sophie Shevardnadze travels to the astonishingly beautiful Shetland Islands to meet with the Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, the flagman of the independence policy.

French Language Police Call Time on 'le binge drinking'

THE GUARDIAN: Culture ministry commission approves use of new phrase, beuverie express, which translates as 'fast drinking'

As long as it was seen as nothing more than an antisocial Anglo-Saxon habit, le binge drinking remained just that: an English term. As a sign of the changing times and the reported spread of the practice in France, however, the country's language police have decreed an official new term.

As of now, binge drinking does not happen in France. Instead, anyone consuming large quantities of alcohol in a short space of time with the intention of getting drunk is engaged in beuverie express.

The phrase, which translates literally as "fast drinking", was given the official approval of the culture ministry's general commission of terminology and neology on Sunday. The commission defined the term as "the massive absorption of alcohol, generally in a group, aimed at provoking drunkenness in the minimum amount of time".

Le Monde further qualified "massive absorption" as "more than 4-5 glasses in less than two hours", but failed to elucidate how big a glass or of what. » | Kim Willsher in Paris | Monday, July 29, 2013

Pope Francis Reaches Out to Gay People, But Ban on Women Priests Stands


Pope Francis indicates gay priests are not unacceptable to the Church. Giving a news conference on board his plane, he said he will not judge somebody who is gay and searches for God. He said the Church's ban on women priests is definitive: 'This door is closed.' But other roles in the Church are acceptable, he added


Related »

Rauchen, trinken und essen – während des Ramadan


TAGESANZEIGER: Im Maghreb begehren immer mehr Jugendliche gegen das Fasten auf. Sie stellen Bilder ins Internet, die sie beim Essen, Trinken und Rauchen zeigen. Wie gehen Muslime in der Schweiz mit dem Verzicht um?

Es ist die Zeit des Verzichts. Während des Ramadan, des neunten Monats im islamischen Mondkalender, gelten für gläubige Muslime strenge Regeln: kein Essen, kein Trinken und kein Beischlaf mit dem Ehepartner – dies von der Morgendämmerung bis zum Sonnenuntergang. Die «innere Dimension» des Fastens geht noch weiter. Man soll sich gänzlich von Sünde freihalten. So wird die Seele gereinigt und geläutert und die Beziehung zu Gott gefestigt.

Daran halten muss sich jeder geistig zurechnungsfähige Muslim ab der Pubertät. Doch gerade in jungen Jahren scheint Verzicht schwierig – vor allem wenn dieser Pflicht ist. Immer mehr jugendliche Muslime in Ländern wie Tunesien oder Marokko wehren sich gegen das vorgeschriebene Fasten – und zwar öffentlich. » | Michèle Widmer | Montag, 29. Juli 2013

Who Am I to Judge Gay Priests? Pope Francis Makes Surprisingly Open Remarks

THE INDEPENDENT: He says gay clergymen should be forgiven and their sins forgotten

Pope Francis reached out to gay people today, saying he wouldn't judge priests for their sexual orientation in a remarkably open and wide-ranging news conference as he returned from his first foreign trip.

"If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?" Francis asked.

His predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, signed a document in 2005 that said men with deep-rooted homosexual tendencies should not be priests. Francis was much more conciliatory, saying gay clergymen should be forgiven and their sins forgotten.

Francis' remarks came Monday during a plane journey back to the Vatican from his first foreign trip in Brazil. » | Nicole Winfield | Monday, July 29, 2013

Sunday, July 28, 2013

India's Grand Mufti Seen Enjoying Concert After Declaring Music 'Un-Islamic'


THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The Grand Mufti of Kashmir has been accused of hypocrisy after he was captured on film enjoying a concert months after he issued a fatwa declaring music un-Islamic.

A video clip of Grand Mufti Bashiruddin Ahmad, the ceremonial leader of Muslims in the state, apparently enjoying an evening of Kashmiri ghazals, musical poems, and Punjabi folk tunes, quickly went viral on YouTube as political leaders accused him of hypocrisy.

"The doublespeak of the Mufti of Jammu and Kashmir is exposed, on the issue of music being un-Islamic," said Digvijaya Singh, general secretary of India's ruling Congress Party. "All religious fundamentalists are experts of doublespeak."

In February an all-girl rock group in Kashmir was forced to disband amid threats from Islamic militants, following the Grand Mufti's statement.

He had proclaimed: "Singing is not in accordance with Islamic teachings. Society cannot be built or developed by doing un-Islamic acts like singing. » | Dean Nelson, New Delhi | Sunday, July 28, 2013

Worries Mount as Syria Lures West’s Muslims


THE NEW YORK TIMES: WASHINGTON — A rising number of radicalized young Muslims with Western passports are traveling to Syria to fight with the rebels against the government of Bashar al-Assad, raising fears among American and European intelligence officials of a new terrorist threat when the fighters return home.

More Westerners are now fighting in Syria than fought in conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia or Yemen, according to the officials. They go to Syria motivated by the desire to help the people suffering there by overthrowing Mr. Assad. But there is growing concern that they will come back with a burst of jihadist zeal, some semblance of military discipline, enhanced weapons and explosives skills, and, in the worst case, orders from affiliates of Al Qaeda to carry out terrorist strikes. » | Eric Schmitt | Saturday, July 27, 2013

Prince George Should Never Be King of Scots, Says Pro-independence Chairman

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Prince George of Cambridge should never be King of Scots, the chairman of the Scottish Independence Group has said in an outspoken attack on the monarchy that provoked a row with Unionists.

Dennis Canavan described the prospect of the newborn child one day being a separate Scotland’s head of state as “an affront to democracy and a complete anachronism.”

The Yes Scotland chairman and former Labour MP said that Scots should instead be offered a second referendum, shortly after next year's vote on independence, asking whether they wanted to retain a hereditary monarchy.

Alex Salmond has tried to persuade Scots to back separation by arguing that the Queen and her successors would automatically remain head of state after separation from England.

But Mr Canavan’s views are shared by other parties who are part of the Yes Scotland campaign for independence, including the Scottish Greens, and a large number of SNP MSPs and members.

Despite the First Minister’s claim the SNP has supported the retention of the monarchy for decades, in 2002 the party published a draft written constitution for a separate Scotland that included a referendum on the issue. Continue reading and comment » | Simon Johnson, Scottish Political Editor | Sunday, July 28, 2013

Reza Aslan on Christianity and Islam


"It is very important to understand that religion is an ever-malleable thing."

'Zealot' Author Reza Aslan Responds to Critics


Reza Aslan, author of 'Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth,' says he wrote the book as a historian, not as a Muslim

Reza Aslan: ‘Zealot - The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth’


Interview on NPR's Fresh Air with Reza Aslan, author of "Zealot - The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth"

'1984 Is Now!': Germans Protest Berlin's Rôle in NSA Spying on Snowden Day


Privacy rights activists have demonstrated across Germany against U.S. worldwide surveilance - and Berlin's role in it. The revelations by Edward Snowden, have ignited public anger among Germans who say that their government let them down - as RT's Peter Oliver reports.

Snowden Ping Pong: Edward Still in Transit Limbo, as US Issues New Threats


There's been a fresh round of diplomatic wrangling over Edward Snowden between Russia and the US - as the world expected the fugitive whistleblower to leave a Moscow airport this week. The Former NSA contractor has been stranded in the transit zone there for a month now - currently waiting for Moscow's decision on his temporary asylum request. RT's Lindsay France recaps all the twists and turns in the Snowden Saga.

Snowden’s Father Says His Son Is Better Off in Russia


THE DAILY CALLER: Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden is better off staying in Russia, his father said on Friday.

No longer believing that Snowden would receive a fair legal trial by the Justice Department, Lon Snowden — Edward Snowden’s father — decided it was best for his son to stay away from the U.S. “until an administration that respects the Constitution comes into office,” the Associated Press reports. » | Josh Peterson | Tech Editor | Saturday, July 27, 2013

Pope Tells Brazilian Church to Keep It Simple and Reach Out to the Poor


THE GUARDIAN: Francis implicitly criticises his predecessor and tells bishops the church looks like 'a prisoner of its own rigid formulas'

Pope Francis drew hundreds of thousands of flag-waving faithful to Rio's Copacabana beach on Saturday for the final evening of World Youth Day, hours after he chastised the Brazilian church for failing to stem the "exodus" of Catholics to evangelical congregations.

Francis headed into the final hours of his first international trip riding a remarkable wave of popularity. By the time his open-sided car reached the stage for the vigil service on Saturday night, the back seat was piled high with football jerseys, flags and flowers tossed to him by adoring pilgrims lining the beachfront route.

The vigil capped a busy day for the pope in which he drove home a message he has emphasizsed throughout the week in speeches, homilies and off-the-cuff remarks: the need for Catholics, lay and religious, to shake up the status quo, get out of their stuffy sacristies and reach the faithful on the margins of society or risk losing them to rival churches.

In the longest and most important speech of his four-month pontificate, Francis took a direct swipe at the "intellectual" message of the church that so characterised the pontificate of his predecessor, Benedict XVI. Speaking to Brazil's bishops, he said ordinary Catholics didn't understand such lofty ideas and needed to hear the simpler message of love, forgiveness and mercy that he said was at the core of the Catholic faith.

"At times we lose people because they don't understand what we are saying, because we have forgotten the language of simplicity and import an intellectualism foreign to our people," he said. "Without the grammar of simplicity, the church loses the very conditions which make it possible to fish for God in the deep waters of his mystery." » | Associated Press in Rio de Janeiro | Sunday, July 28, 2013

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Daring to Believe - Tunisia


Nach Ermordung Brahmis: Tunesier protestieren gegen Islamisten


In der tunesischen Hauptstadt Tunis haben Tausende gegen die Ermordung des Oppositionspolitikers Mohammed Brahmi protestiert. Sie machen Islamisten für das Attentat verantwortlich.

Nordkorea feiert mit riesiger Militärparade


Mit einer gigantischen Militärparade hat Nordkorea den 60. Jahrestag des Waffenstillstands mit Südkorea gefeiert. Der Koreakrieg fand 1953 nach drei Jahren intensiver Kämpfe sein Ende.

Proteste gegen NSA: "Stop watching us!"


Weltweit haben Menschen gegen die NSA und das Prism-Spähprogramm protestiert. In Berlin schlossen sich mehr als tausend Menschen der Demonstration an.

North Korea Stages Largest Ever Military Parade


North Korea mounted its largest ever military parade to mark the 60th anniversary of the armistice that ended fighting in the Korean War, displaying its long-range missiles at a ceremony presided over by leader Kim Jong-Un.


Read the Telegraph article here | AFP | Saturday, July 27, 2013

President Obama Hosts an Iftar Dinner


President Obama hosts an Iftar dinner celebrating Ramadan in the State Dining Room. This is the fifth Iftar that President Obama has hosted, continuing the tradition of hosting Iftars that began annually under President Clinton and was continued by President George W. Bush. The invited guests include elected officials, religious and grassroots leaders in the Muslim American community, and leaders of diverse faiths and members of the diplomatic corps.

Ramadan Message from Nick Clegg, Deputy Prime Minister


Ramadan message from Nick Clegg, Deputy Prime Minister and leader of the Liberal Democrats in Britain. Clegg praises Muslims in Britain as a "voice for peace" following the horrific Woolwich beheading of British soldier, Lee Rigby, by one of their fellow Muslim jihadists.

Ramadan 2013: Message from David Cameron


Prime Minister David Cameron offers his best wishes to Muslims around the world during Ramadan.

Violence Returns to the Streets of Cairo


At least 80 people have been killed in overnight clashes in Cairo, according to the Muslim Brotherhood. Most of the casualties are apparently supporters of the outsted President Morsi, with some reports suggesting they were deliberately targeted by gunmen. Local media also claims that more than a thousand people were injured during what's believed to be the largest protests Egypt has seen in two and a half years.

Friday, July 26, 2013

BBC Documentary: Who Gets the Best Jobs?


Richard Bilton examines the social barriers that have contributed to the UK being more unequal than at any other time in history.

Rand Paul: Obama's Plan to Arm Syrian Rebels Means Siding with Terrorists


Ending the violence, protecting civilians and defending human rights - these are the key issues the Syrian National Coalition plans to discuss during its unofficial forum with the UN Security Council in New York on Friday. But amid all the declared noble causes, the opposition group, which has no official status, reportedly hopes to open up weapon supplies, during a meeting with the US Secretary of State. Senator Rand Paul condemned the idea of arming the rebels, saying this would mean siding with terrorists.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Pope Gives Address on Copacabana Beach – Live


Pope Francis participates in a welcome ceremony on the Copacabana beachfront and addresses young people, on the fourth day of his week-long visit for World Youth Day.

Bradley Manning 'Betrayed His Country' - Prosecutor

BBC: The US soldier who disclosed hundreds of thousands of secret documents to Wikileaks betrayed his country to win fame, a prosecutor has said.

Pte First Class Bradley Manning knew al-Qaeda militants would see the material, a prosecutor said in closing arguments at his court martial.

Pte Manning has already pleaded guilty to 10 of the more than 20 counts he faces, and could face life in prison.

The case is considered the largest-ever leak of secret US government documents.

Last week a military judge refused to dismiss the most serious charge against Pte Manning, aiding the enemy, which carries a life sentence. » | Thursday, July 25, 2013

Full Moon 'Disturbs a Good Night's Sleep'

BBC: A full Moon can disturb a good night's sleep, scientists believe.

Researchers found evidence of a "lunar influence" in a study of 33 volunteers sleeping in tightly controlled laboratory conditions.

When the Moon was round, the volunteers took longer to nod off and had poorer quality sleep, despite being shut in a darkened room, Current Biology reports.

They also had a dip in levels of a hormone called melatonin that is linked to natural-body clock cycles.

When it is dark, the body makes more melatonin. And it produces less when it is light.

Being exposed to bright lights in the evening or too little light during the day can disrupt the body's normal melatonin cycles.

But the work in Current Biology, by Prof Christian Cajochen and colleagues from Basel University in Switzerland, suggests the Moon's effects may be unrelated to its brightness. (+ video) » | Michelle Roberts | Health editor | BBC New Online | Thursday, July 25, 2013

Muslim Demographic Bomb: Muslims Are Not a Minority


CANADA FREE PRESS: The most persistent myth of the Western Dhimmi narrative is that Muslims are a minority and must receive special protection and accommodation. But Muslims are not a minority. There are 1.5 billion Sunni Muslims worldwide, outweighing Catholics as the next largest religious faction at 1.1 billion and Hindus at 1 billion. They are still a minority of the overall population in Western countries, but a demographically trending majority.

In the UK more people attend mosques than the Church of England, that makes Muslims the largest functioning religious group there. Mohammed was the most popular baby name last year, ahead of Jack and Harry. In France, in this generation, more mosques have been built than Catholic churches and in southern France there are already more mosques than churches. Mohammed-Amine is the most popular double name, ahead of Jean-Baptiste, Pierre-Louis, Leo-Paul and Mohammed-Ali.

Belgium, 50 percent of newborns are Muslim and empty Belgian churches are being turned into mosques. The most popular baby name is Mohammed and of the top 7 baby names, 6 were Muslim. A quarter of Amsterdam, Marseilles and Rotterdam and a fifth of Stockholm is already Muslim. The most popular baby name in Amsterdam, Utrecht, Rotterdam and The Hague is… Mohammed.

Europe’s Muslim population doubled in the last generation, and is set to double again. By 2025, (a decade and a half away), a third of all births in the EU will be Muslim. The demographic writing is already on the wall. A third of Muslims in France and Germany are teenagers or younger, as compared to a fifth of the native population. A third of Muslims in the UK and Belgium are under 15 versus a fifth of the native population. Counting all age groups, they’re a minority. But in generational demographics, Muslims are swiftly becoming a majority. » | Daniel Greenfield | Thursday, July 25, 2013

'NSA Criminals, Surveillance Not Part of My America' - Pete Ashdown


The show must go on - that is the message from American lawmakers who have allowed the National Security Agency to continue spying both at home and abroad. A motion to curb its activities was blocked in the House of Representatives by a narrow margin of only 12 votes. Pete Ashdown, owner of small internet company Xmission who refused to give data to NSA, joins RT studio.

Syria Civil War Death Toll Passes 100,000 People


Syria’s civil war has claimed over 100,000 lives, the UN announced on Thursday, after the number of deaths rose by more than 7,000 in just over a month.


Read the Telegraph article here | Barney Henderson | Thursday, July 25, 2013

Insulting the French President No Longer a Criminal Offence


THE GUARDIAN: Change to law pushed through after conviction of man who held up a sign telling then-president Nicolas Sarkozy to get lost

Being rude to the French president is no longer an offence after parliament amended legislation dating back to 1881 in favour of freedom of speech.

Previously any rude remark risked a fine and criminal conviction for "offending the head of state". But the change was pushed through after criticism from the European court of human rights.

In March, the court ruled that France had violated the right to freedom of expression after giving a criminal conviction to a man holding a cardboard sign telling the then-president Nicolas Sarkozy to get lost.

Hervé Eon, 61, a left[-]wing activist, held up his sign as Sarkozy's motorcade drove past during a presidential visit to Laval, western France, in 2008. The small A4-sized cardboard sign did not feature Sarkozy's name but said simply: "Casse-toi pov'con." » | Angelique Chrisafis in Paris | Thursday, July 25, 2013

Spanien: Überwachungskamera filmt die Zugentgleisung


Nicht ein Tag ist vergangen seit dem verheerenden Zugunglück bei Santiago de Compostela. Nun kursiert ein Video im Internet: Der Zug rast mit 190 Km/h in die Kurve – Geschwindigkeitslimite: 80 Km/h. Waggons entgleisen und prallen seitlich in die Wand. Das Video stoppt.

Papst Franziskus begeistert die Massen


Seit gestern ist Papst Franziskus im Rahmen seiner ersten Auslandreise in Brasilien eingetroffen. Am Weltjugendtag in Rio de Janeiro, dem eigentlichen Grund des Papstbesuchs, werden zwei Millionen Menschen erwartet. Doch es gibt auch zahlreiche Proteste gegen die hohen Kosten des Besuchs.