SPIEGEL ONLINE: Joachim Gauck bekräftigt seine Forderung, Deutschland solle international mehr Verantwortung übernehmen. Im Kampf für Menschenrechte sei es manchmal erforderlich, "auch zu den Waffen zu greifen", sagte der Bundespräsident in Norwegen.
Berlin - Deutschland sollte nach Ansicht von Bundespräsident Joachim Gauck nicht pauschal die Beteiligung an Militäreinsätzen ausschließen. Zu einer aktiven Politik zur Konfliktlösung gehöre es auch, "den Einsatz militärischer Mittel als letztes Mittel nicht von vornherein zu verwerfen", sagte Gauck zum Abschluss seines Norwegen-Besuchs in einem Interview mit Deutschlandradio Kultur. » | dab/dpa/AFP | Samstag, 14. Juni 2014
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Is It Possible for ISIS to Overrun Baghdad?
Labels:
Baghdad,
Iraq,
ISIS,
Shepard Smith
Krauthammer Sounds Off about Obama's Approach on Iraq Crisis
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Charles Krauthammer,
Iraq
It Would Be a Major Disaster for Britain and the US to Intervene in Iraq
And the upsurge of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant across northern Iraq is a pointer to what is likely to happen in Afghanistan once Nato pulls out its combat troops at the end of this year.
Whether we like it or not, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were serious strategic mistakes.
We destroyed the repressive regime of Saddam Hussein but opened the door for Islamic fundamentalists.
Saddam was an evil man but he opposed fundamentalism and he kept it under control.
After the invasion we destroyed the Iraqi army and Iraq’s security apparatus.
This allowed Islamic fundamentalism to get in and make very serious inroads into the Iraqi Government architecture.
We sowed the wind and now we are reaping the whirlwind. Read on and comment » | Major Charles Heyman | Saturday, June 14, 2014
Friday, June 13, 2014
US Considers Military Help in Iraq amid Growing Violence
US and Iran Join Fight against Sunni Jihadis of Isis in Iraq
The United States and Iran are moving rapidly to defend Iraq from rampaging Sunni Islamist insurgents, with Washington urgently considering air strikes on the jihadi militants and Tehran dispatching its foremost powerbroker to help arrange the defence of Baghdad.
Senior US officials told the Guardian that an air campaign was under serious discussion, possibly targeting fighters not just in Iraq but in Syria, where they have seized swaths of territory in the past two years. President Barack Obama said that decisions would be taken in the "days ahead".
Iran, meanwhile, moved to defend its own interests in its western neighbour, sending Major General Qassem Suleimani, an éminence grise of the Iranian revolutionary guards, to Baghdad to meet militia leaders and tribal chiefs in control of the Iraqi capital's vulnerable western approaches.
The scramble by two staunch adversaries to shore up the embattled Iraqi authorities underscored how seriously they take the situation in a country in danger of fragmentation as a result of this week's sudden advance by fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis). » | Martin Chulov in Baghdad, Spencer Ackerman in New York and Paul Lewis in Washington | Friday, June 13, 2014
Obama May Have to Agree Deal with Iran as Islamists Sweep South
President Barack Obama is under growing pressure to set aside years of hostility and start co-operating with Iran to counter the jihadist threat engulfing Iraq and its capital, Baghdad.
Ten years after his predecessor, President George W Bush, declared “Mission Accomplished” in Iraq, the Obama administration was openly admitting it might have to recommit to the use of military force to reunite the country and check the long-term menace of the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham.
Britain too was offering counter-terrorism expertise that would mean it working alongside not just Iraqi troops but Shia militias and even Iranian special forces, only recently considered among the greatest threats to British interests in the region.
Iran has already sent units of its Revolutionary Guard to Iraq to help defend Baghdad from the onslaught being waged by ISIS, a Sunni jihadist al-Qaeda offshoot, according to reports emerging from Baghdad and Tehran.
State media quoted President Hassan Rouhani, the Iranian president, as telling the Iraqi prime minister Nouri al-Maliki: “The Islamic Republic of Iran will apply all its efforts on the international and regional levels to confront terrorism.” » | Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent, and Robert Tait in Jerusalem | Friday, June 13, 2014
Labels:
al-Qaeda,
Barack Obama,
caliphate,
Hassan Rouhani,
Iran,
Iraq,
ISIS,
Nouri al-Maliki,
Revolutionary Guard,
UK,
USA
Vormarsch der Dschihadisten
Die Dschihadisten haben die wichtigsten Städte im Norden des Iraks eingenommen und sind dabei auf wenig Gegenwehr gestoßen. Nun rücken die Wagenkolonnen des „Islamischen Staats im Irak und (Groß-)Syrien“ in Richtung Bagdad vor. Ein paar tausend Dschihadisten haben ausgereicht, um in wenigen Tagen im Osten der arabischen Welt eine neue Lage zu schaffen. Mit ihrem Blitzkrieg stoßen sie das Tor zu einem viel größeren Krieg in der Region weit auf. Was in Syrien begonnen hat, kann sich im Irak noch blutiger fortsetzen: der Konflikt zwischen Sunniten und Schiiten, zwischen Saudi-Arabien und Iran. » | Rainer Hermann | Freitag, 13. Juni 2014
Labels:
Dschihad,
Irak,
Iran,
Saudi Arabien,
Syrien
Iraq Crisis: Generals in Army 'Handed Over' Entire City to Al-Qaeda[-]inspired ISIS Forces
Military deserters have painted a devastating picture of the inability of the Iraqi army to stand and fight, telling The Telegraph how entire divisions surrendered Mosul, Iraq's second city, without firing a single shot.
Speaking from the Kurdish city of Erbil, the defectors accused their officers of cowardice and betrayal, saying generals in Mosul "handed over" the city over to Sunni insurgents, with whom they shared sectarian and historical ties.
With Sunni insurgents now threatening the capital Baghdad the eyewitness accounts from the deserters' reveal how sectarian enmity has, in the space of mere weeks, destroyed the Iraqi national army, which the US government spent billions of dollars to build. (+ video) » | Ruth Sherlock, and Carol Malouf in Erbil, Lauren Williams in Doha | Friday, June 13, 2014
Labels:
Iraq,
Iraqi Army,
ISIS
A Bad Spring for America
Labels:
Bill O'Reilly,
Talking Points,
USA
Obama: Ultimately Up to Iraqis to Solve Their Problems
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Iraq
Inside Story: Iraq: Should Neighbours Be Worried?
Labels:
Inside Story,
Iraq
'Iraq Chaos Is Tony Blair’s Legacy’: Intervention by Ex-PM in 2003 Destabilised the Country and Left It Open to Extremism, Says Home Office Minister
MAIL ONLINE: Government 'rules out' new Iraqi campaign despite major Jihadist threat / Al Qaeda militants have seized large areas of northern Iraq / Norman Baker said Iraq was stable under Saddam 'in a vile sort of way'
The disaster unfolding in Iraq was branded ‘Tony Blair’s legacy’ last night as Britain ruled out military intervention.
Though Islamist extremists are threatening to seize Baghdad, Foreign Secretary William Hague said Britain was ‘not contemplating’ any form of action, and Nato chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said there was no role for the alliance.
US President Barack Obama insisted his country had an interest in stopping jihadists taking control and said he was looking at ‘all options’, including drone strikes.
Iraq is facing a return to its darkest days after al Qaeda-linked militants seized a huge swathe of the Iraq’s northern region and vowed to press on to the capital. Read on and comment » | James Chapman | Thursday, June 12, 2014
The disaster unfolding in Iraq was branded ‘Tony Blair’s legacy’ last night as Britain ruled out military intervention.
Though Islamist extremists are threatening to seize Baghdad, Foreign Secretary William Hague said Britain was ‘not contemplating’ any form of action, and Nato chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen said there was no role for the alliance.
US President Barack Obama insisted his country had an interest in stopping jihadists taking control and said he was looking at ‘all options’, including drone strikes.
Iraq is facing a return to its darkest days after al Qaeda-linked militants seized a huge swathe of the Iraq’s northern region and vowed to press on to the capital. Read on and comment » | James Chapman | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Labels:
George W Bush,
Iraq,
Saddam Hussein,
Tony Blair
Germany Ordered to Pay £40 Million in Compensation to Jewish Family
DAILY EXPRESS: GERMANY has been ordered to pay a Jewish family whose chain of department stores was seized by the Nazis €50 million (£40 million) in compensation.
The Schocken family lost several shops in the east of the country after Hitler embarked upon his "Aryanization" of German businesses in 1938.
A Berlin tribunal awarded the family €30 million (£24 million) - the value of the businesses owned by brothers Simon and Salman Schocken - plus another €20 million (£16 million) in interest.
The German state can appeal the decision at Lepzig's federal administrative court in Leipzig, the tribunal said in a statement.
Michael Newman, chief executive of the Association of Jewish Refugees said: "It shows that as we come up to 70 years since the end of the war there remains a number of significant travesties that are only now being settled."
Salman also founded Schocken Books in pre–war Berlin before moving the company to the United States and palestine. » | Benjamin Russell | Friday, June 13, 2014
The Schocken family lost several shops in the east of the country after Hitler embarked upon his "Aryanization" of German businesses in 1938.
A Berlin tribunal awarded the family €30 million (£24 million) - the value of the businesses owned by brothers Simon and Salman Schocken - plus another €20 million (£16 million) in interest.
The German state can appeal the decision at Lepzig's federal administrative court in Leipzig, the tribunal said in a statement.
Michael Newman, chief executive of the Association of Jewish Refugees said: "It shows that as we come up to 70 years since the end of the war there remains a number of significant travesties that are only now being settled."
Salman also founded Schocken Books in pre–war Berlin before moving the company to the United States and palestine. » | Benjamin Russell | Friday, June 13, 2014
Kampf gegen Dschihadisten: Großajatollah ruft Iraker zu den Waffen
Bagdad - Er ist seit mehr als zwei Jahrzehnten der ranghöchste schiitische Geistliche im Irak. Nun hat Großajatollah Ali al-Sistani seine Landesleute zum Widerstand gegen die sunnitischen Dschihadisten aufgerufen. Die Bürger sollten zu den Waffen greifen und "ihr Land, ihr Volk und ihre heiligen Stätten verteidigen" sagte ein Sprecher Sistanis beim Freitagsgebet in der Schiiten-Hochburg Kerbela. Wer könne, solle sich den Sicherheitskräften im Kampf gegen die Dschihadisten der Terrorgruppe Islamischer Staat im Irak und Syrien, kurz Isis, anschließen. » | vek/kes/AFP/AP/Reuters | Freitag, 13. Juni 2014
Labels:
Irak
What Is Going On in Iraq and Why?
Labels:
Iraq
Inside the Extreme Group Taking Over Iraq's Major Cities
Labels:
Iraq,
ISIL,
ISIS,
Shepard Smith
Glenn Beck On What's Plaguing America
Labels:
Glenn Beck,
Sean Hannity,
USA
Is the Obama Administration Finished?
Does Obama Understand Iraq May Soon Be an Islamist State?
FOX NEWS: Iraq is a shambles. The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the Al Qaeda off-shoot that now controls nearly a third of the nation, continues to run amok.
It’s way past time for the White House to get its head in the game. The disaster unfolding in Iraq and Syria could very quickly spiral into a much, much bigger problem. And some problems are so big that even our president can’t spin his way out.
At the top of the list of what the administration should be worrying about—and preparing to deal with—is the potential for an endless three-way civil war in Iraq. With Sunni, Shia and Kurds fighting one another, it would look something like the civil war in Syria—on steroids. » | James Jay Carafano | FoxNews.com | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Labels:
Baghdad,
Barack Obama,
Iraq,
Islamist state,
theocracy,
White House
Iraq Crisis: Baghdad Prepares for the Worst as Islamist Militants Vow to Capture the City
THE INDEPENDENT: Collapse of Shia-dominated regime could provoke Iranian intervention
Iraq is breaking up. The Kurds have taken the northern oil city of Kirkuk that they have long claimed as their capital. Sunni fundamentalist fighters vow to capture Baghdad and the Shia holy cities further south.
Government rule over the Sunni Arab heartlands of north and central Iraq is evaporating as its 900,000-strong army disintegrates. Government aircraft have fired missiles at insurgent targets in Mosul, captured by Isis on Monday, but the Iraqi army has otherwise shown no sign of launching a counter-attack.
The nine-year Shia dominance over Iraq, established after the US, Britain and other allies overthrew Saddam Hussein, may be coming to an end. The Shia may continue to hold the capital and the Shia-majority provinces further south, but they will have great difficulty in re-establishing their authority over Sunni provinces from which their army has fled. » | Patrick Cockburn | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Iraq is breaking up. The Kurds have taken the northern oil city of Kirkuk that they have long claimed as their capital. Sunni fundamentalist fighters vow to capture Baghdad and the Shia holy cities further south.
Government rule over the Sunni Arab heartlands of north and central Iraq is evaporating as its 900,000-strong army disintegrates. Government aircraft have fired missiles at insurgent targets in Mosul, captured by Isis on Monday, but the Iraqi army has otherwise shown no sign of launching a counter-attack.
The nine-year Shia dominance over Iraq, established after the US, Britain and other allies overthrew Saddam Hussein, may be coming to an end. The Shia may continue to hold the capital and the Shia-majority provinces further south, but they will have great difficulty in re-establishing their authority over Sunni provinces from which their army has fled. » | Patrick Cockburn | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Oklahoma Tea Party Candidate Claims: ‘Stoning Gays Was a Law That Came Direct from God’
THE INDEPENDENT: Facebook post quoted biblical verse sanctioning the execution of homosexuals
A Tea Party candidate running for office in Oklahoma has appeared to endorse the practice of stoning gay people to death.
Last year, Scott Esk, who is in the race to represent the 91st district in the State House, responded to a friend’s Facebook post about the Pope’s stance on gay people by copying and pasting Bible verses including Leviticus 20:13, which describes homosexuality as “detestable” and demands gay people be “put to death”.
When asked by another Facebook user whether he supported executing homosexuals by stoning, Mr Esk replied: “That goes against some parts of libertarianism, I realise, and I’m largely libertarian, but ignoring as a nation things that are worthy of death is very remiss.” » | Tim Walker | Los Angeles | Thursday, June 12, 2014
A Tea Party candidate running for office in Oklahoma has appeared to endorse the practice of stoning gay people to death.
Last year, Scott Esk, who is in the race to represent the 91st district in the State House, responded to a friend’s Facebook post about the Pope’s stance on gay people by copying and pasting Bible verses including Leviticus 20:13, which describes homosexuality as “detestable” and demands gay people be “put to death”.
When asked by another Facebook user whether he supported executing homosexuals by stoning, Mr Esk replied: “That goes against some parts of libertarianism, I realise, and I’m largely libertarian, but ignoring as a nation things that are worthy of death is very remiss.” » | Tim Walker | Los Angeles | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Labels:
homosexuals,
Oklahoma,
Tea Party,
USA
Thursday, June 12, 2014
Streit um EU-Kommissions-Chefposten: Cameron giftet gegen Juncker
SPIEGEL ONLINE: "Juncker wurde von niemandem gewählt": Im Machtkampf um den künftigen Chef der EU-Kommission greift Großbritanniens Premier Cameron den konservativen Spitzenkandidaten in der "Süddeutschen" scharf an.
Berlin - Neue Verbalattacke von David Cameron: Im Streit um die Wahl des neuen EU-Kommissionschefs wettert der britische Premier gegen den vom EU-Parlament favorisierten Christdemokraten Jean-Claude Juncker. "Juncker kandidierte nirgendwo und wurde von niemandem gewählt", schreibt Cameron in einem Beitrag für die "Süddeutsche Zeitung". "Die Bürger, die zur Wahl gingen, wollten ihren Europaabgeordneten wählen, nicht den Kommissionspräsidenten." » | mxw/AFP/dpa | Donnerstag, 12. Juni 2014
Berlin - Neue Verbalattacke von David Cameron: Im Streit um die Wahl des neuen EU-Kommissionschefs wettert der britische Premier gegen den vom EU-Parlament favorisierten Christdemokraten Jean-Claude Juncker. "Juncker kandidierte nirgendwo und wurde von niemandem gewählt", schreibt Cameron in einem Beitrag für die "Süddeutsche Zeitung". "Die Bürger, die zur Wahl gingen, wollten ihren Europaabgeordneten wählen, nicht den Kommissionspräsidenten." » | mxw/AFP/dpa | Donnerstag, 12. Juni 2014
Obama Ponders as Iran Sends Troops to Iraq
President Barack Obama answers questions on violence in Iraq during his meeting with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott |
Barack Obama was under mounting pressure to send military help to Iraq as Iranian forces were reported to have joined Baghdad’s government to quell an al-Qaeda-inspired uprising.
A defensive president, accused by Republicans of squandering the security gains won in Iraq by US forces, insisted that he was looking at “all the options” to prevent the country unravelling.
But even as he spoke, Iran seemed poised to steal the initiative by sending troops to fight what its president, Hassan Rouhani, described as the “terrorist group that is acting savagely” in Iraq.
Reports emerged that two battalions of Iran’s feared Revolutionary Guards were already in the country, where the government’s forces have shown little stomach for combat. Iran’s willingness to put troops on the front line will give it a strategic advantage in Iraq over America, which at most would offer only air strikes. The US State Department last night ruled out “boots on the ground”.
The developments of the past 72 hours raises the prospect of two bitter enemies – Iran and America – fighting the same foe, albeit for different goals. » | Colin Freeman | Thursday, June 12, 2014
My comment:
Bush and Blair should have left Saddam Hussein where he was. Saddam was a man who understood how to keep a modicum of order in Iraq. He understood his people, his country. Bush and Blair did not. They were naïve fools. They ventured forth where angels would have feared to tread.
As a result of Bush and Blair's folly, we now have this situation to deal with. How many more young people––US soldiers and British soldiers––will have to lose their lives in this cesspit?
Bringing democracy to Iraq was never on the cards. Had Bush and Blair understood the nature of the Middle East and the nature of Islam, they would never have tried to impose it upon those benighted people.
Obama, bringing home the US troops prematurely, has made matters ten times worse. Obama is a fool of a man. He dresses well and talks a good line, but the end product is just the same: He's totally inept at best, and sinister at worst. The man should be impeached for his total and utter mishandling of the situation. The sooner Americans rid themselves of this fool, the better it will be for America, and the better it will be for the West too. – © Mark
This comment appears here too.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Iraq
Exodus of US Troops from Iraq as Chaos Spreads
An ISIL militant posing with the trademark Islamists' flag after they allegedly seized an Iraqi army checkpoint in the northern province of Salahuddin |
A growing sense of panic was gripping Iraq last night as the al-Qaeda uprising in the country’s north led to US contractors being evacuated from the region and European countries ordering their citizens to leave Baghdad.
With militants threatening to advance on the capital, signs emerged of diplomats making preparations to leave the country in the event of civil war erupting.
Three planes carrying American diplomats and contractors stationed at a training mission at an Iraqi airbase in Balad, north of Baghdad, flew out amid fears that the base could be surrounded by the militants. Germany ordered all its citizens to leave the Iraqi capital, as did Turkey, which has already had 80 people kidnapped by the militants, including the consul to the northern city of Mosul.
British officials said they had no immediate plans to evacuate staff from Baghdad’s heavily guarded “Green Zone”. As troops stood guard at the city’s northern flanks, queues formed at the main airport while banks saw large number of customers attempt to withdraw money. Last night the internet also went down in Baghdad for an hour, adding to the atmosphere of unease. » | Colin Freeman | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Prisoner Exchange an Impeachable Offense for Obama?
Militants Take Major Iraqi Cities, Vow March On Baghdad
Repent or Die: Al-Qaeda Forces Announce Rules for Iraqi Territory They Now Control
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: ISIS, the al-Qaeda group that has swept through northern Iraq, releases list of rules that citizens must live by: [sic] including 'repent or die'
The Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham has set out a list of rules for residents of Mosul as it seeks to impose its Islamist rules on Iraq's second city.
Referring to the area by its ancient name, Nineveh, the group says it has a clear set of instructions for the remaining occupants of the city and surrounding area.
Firstly it tells "anyone who is asking," who its members are and what it is about: "We are soldiers of Islam and we've taken on our responsibility to bring back glory of the Islamic Caliphate."
All Muslims in the city have been instructed to attend mosque for the five daily prayers.
It confirms that it seized up to half a billion dollars from the Mosul branch of the Bank of Iraq but states it can be trusted with the funds.
Any one of its members who breach[es] this promise will have their hands cut off.
"No drugs, no alcohol and no cigarettes allowed," it added. » | Damien McElroy | Thursday, June 12, 2014
The Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham has set out a list of rules for residents of Mosul as it seeks to impose its Islamist rules on Iraq's second city.
Referring to the area by its ancient name, Nineveh, the group says it has a clear set of instructions for the remaining occupants of the city and surrounding area.
Firstly it tells "anyone who is asking," who its members are and what it is about: "We are soldiers of Islam and we've taken on our responsibility to bring back glory of the Islamic Caliphate."
All Muslims in the city have been instructed to attend mosque for the five daily prayers.
It confirms that it seized up to half a billion dollars from the Mosul branch of the Bank of Iraq but states it can be trusted with the funds.
Any one of its members who breach[es] this promise will have their hands cut off.
"No drugs, no alcohol and no cigarettes allowed," it added. » | Damien McElroy | Thursday, June 12, 2014
UK Schools Inspector: Gender Segregation OK for Muslim Children
BREITBART: Britain's school inspection organisation Ofsted has told its inspectors that segregating boys and girls in the classroom is acceptable in Muslim schools and need not be criticised.
The Times reports that inspectors have been sent instructions saying that boys and girls “may well” be seated separately in classrooms in Islamic faith schools and that this should not be seen as discrimination – a claim that should doubtlessly anger equal rights campaigners, though may indeed be ignored by cultural relativists.
Music and art classes may also be “restricted”, it said, even though they are requirements in the national curriculum. The guidance also says that girls being required to wear headscarves should be an expression of their identity, rather than oppression. » | Nick Hallett | Thursday, June 12, 2014
The Times reports that inspectors have been sent instructions saying that boys and girls “may well” be seated separately in classrooms in Islamic faith schools and that this should not be seen as discrimination – a claim that should doubtlessly anger equal rights campaigners, though may indeed be ignored by cultural relativists.
Music and art classes may also be “restricted”, it said, even though they are requirements in the national curriculum. The guidance also says that girls being required to wear headscarves should be an expression of their identity, rather than oppression. » | Nick Hallett | Thursday, June 12, 2014
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Militants on the March in Iraq: Will US Be Drawn In?
Norwegen will keine Bettler mehr
NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Bettler sollen ab 2015 von den Strassen Norwegens verschwinden. Auf lokaler Ebene könnten schon diesen Sommer Verbote eingeführt werden, die Grossstädte wollen noch zuwarten.
Zehn Jahre nach der Aufhebung eines landesweiten Bettelverbotes will Norwegen ab 2015 wieder ein entsprechendes Gesetz einführen. Gemeinden, die nicht bis zum nächsten Sommer warten wollen, können schon ab 1. Juli ein lokales Bettelverbot in ihren Polizeidistrikten in Kraft setzen. Darauf hat sich am Dienstagabend die aus der konservativen Höyre und der populistischen Fortschrittspartei (FrP) bestehende Regierung in einer ungewöhnlichen Allianz mit der oppositionellen Zentrumspartei verständigt. Die drei haben gleichzeitig beschlossen, betroffene Menschen mit zielgerichteten sozialen Massnahmen zu unterstützen. Konkret sollen jene Länder in Osteuropa, aus denen die meisten Bettler stammen, mit EWR-Geldern unterstützt werden. » | Ingrid Meissl Årebo, Stockholm | Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014
Zehn Jahre nach der Aufhebung eines landesweiten Bettelverbotes will Norwegen ab 2015 wieder ein entsprechendes Gesetz einführen. Gemeinden, die nicht bis zum nächsten Sommer warten wollen, können schon ab 1. Juli ein lokales Bettelverbot in ihren Polizeidistrikten in Kraft setzen. Darauf hat sich am Dienstagabend die aus der konservativen Höyre und der populistischen Fortschrittspartei (FrP) bestehende Regierung in einer ungewöhnlichen Allianz mit der oppositionellen Zentrumspartei verständigt. Die drei haben gleichzeitig beschlossen, betroffene Menschen mit zielgerichteten sozialen Massnahmen zu unterstützen. Konkret sollen jene Länder in Osteuropa, aus denen die meisten Bettler stammen, mit EWR-Geldern unterstützt werden. » | Ingrid Meissl Årebo, Stockholm | Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014
Radikale Kämpfer für einen Gottesstaat
Islamische Fundamentalisten haben die zweitgrösste irakische Stadt Mossul erobert. Bei den Kämpfern handelt es sich nach Angaben der Sicherheitskräfte um Angehörige der Gruppe Islamischer Staat im Irak und der Levante/Gross-Syrien (ISIS), die im Januar bereits Falludscha eingenommen hatte. Ebenso wie im Irak kämpft die sunnitische Organisation auch im Bürgerkrieg in Syrien gegen die schiitische Regierung. » | wid/sda | Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014
Labels:
Gottesstaat,
Irak
Irak: Die ganze Region taumelt in die Krise
Vor zwei Wochen klassifizierte die türkische Regierung die in Syrien und im Irak operierende Extremistengruppe Islamischer Staat im Irak und in der Levante (Isil) erstmals als Terrorgruppe. Zuvor hatte sie die Terroristen jedoch – nach Auffassung der meisten Beobachter – jahrelang frei ein- und ausreisen lassen und sie wahrscheinlich sogar bewaffnet. Ankaras Kalkül war dabei, die Extremisten würden im Syrien-Krieg den Diktator Baschar al-Assad stürzen. Danach würde man sie schon in den Griff bekommen.
Das war alles falsch kalkuliert: Isil erwies sich als zu schwach, um zu siegen, gleichzeitig aber als zu stark, um gebändigt werden zu können.
Nun haben die Terroristen auf einen Schlag mehrere Orte im Irak erobert. Baidschi, wo sich eine wichtige Raffinerie befindet, und die nordirakische Regionalmetropole Mossul. Auch Tikrit, die Heimat des früheren irakischen Dikators Saddam Hussein, wurde angegriffen und teilweise erobert. Dort gibt es starke sunnitische paramilitärische Kräfte. (+ Video) » | Von Boris Kálnoky | Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014
Labels:
Irak
Iraq Army Capitulates to Isis Militants in Four Cities
Iraq is facing its gravest test since the US-led invasion more than a decade ago, after its army capitulated to Islamist insurgents who have seized four cities and pillaged military bases and banks, in a lightning campaign which seems poised to fuel a cross-border insurgency endangering the entire region.
The extent of the Iraqi army's defeat at the hands of militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (Isis) became clear on Wednesday when officials in Baghdad conceded that insurgents had stripped the main army base in the northern city of Mosul of weapons, released hundreds of prisoners from the city's jails and may have seized up to $480m in banknotes from the city's banks.
Iraqi officials told the Guardian that two divisions of Iraqi soldiers - roughly 30,000 men - simply turned and ran in the face of the assault by an insurgent force of just 800 fighters. Isis extremists roamed freely on Wednesday through the streets of Mosul, openly surprised at the ease with which they took Iraq's second largest city after three days of sporadic fighting.
Senior government officials in Baghdad were equally shocked, accusing the army of betrayal and claiming the sacking of the city was a strategic disaster that would imperil Iraq's borders.
The developments seriously undermine US claims to have established a unified and competent military after more than a decade of training. The US invasion and occupation cost Washington close to a trillion dollars and the lives of more than 4,500 of its soldiers. It is also thought to have killed at least 100,000 Iraqis. Read on and comment » | Martin Chulov and Fazel Hawramy in Irbil | Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Inside Story: Extremism in British Schools?
ISIL: Rising Power in Iraq and Syria
Benghazi Victim's Uncle: 'Hillary Clinton Is A Serial Liar'
Labels:
Benghazi,
Hillary Clinton
White House Playing Politics With US National Security?
Labels:
Afghanistan,
Bowe Bergdahl,
White House
Iraq Crisis: Militants Attack Tikrit After Taking Mosul
Officials say militants are now in control of some parts of Tikrit - Saddam Hussein's hometown which lies just 150km (95 miles) north of Baghdad.
Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki has vowed to fight back against the jihadists and punish those in the security forces who have deserted.
The insurgents who attacked Mosul are from the ISIS group.
It is not confirmed who is attacking Tikrit but one report said there was also fighting further south in Samarra.
ISIS - the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which is also known as ISIL - is an offshoot of al-Qaeda.
It controls considerable territory in eastern Syria and western and central Iraq, in a campaign to set up a militant enclave straddling the border. (+ video) » | Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Neues Terrorregime im Irak: Wer kann, flieht
Am Ende gelang den irakischen Regierungstruppen nicht einmal mehr der geordnete Rückzug. Als die Kämpfer der Terrorgruppe "Islamischer Staat im Irak und in Syrien" (Isis) Mossul stürmten, flohen Tausende Soldaten in Panik. Manche von ihnen rissen sich auf der Flucht Richtung Nordosten ihre Uniformen vom Leib, bevor sie in die benachbarte kurdische Autonomieregion türmten. » | Von Christoph Sydow | Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014
Labels:
Dschihadisten,
Irak,
ISIS,
Mossul
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Texas: Republikaner fordern Therapien für Homosexuelle
Die Republikaner im amerikanischen Bundesstaat Texas wollen Homosexuelle künftig mit psychologischen Therapien „heilen“ - und müssen für diesen Beschluss heftige Kritik einstecken. Die knapp 10.000 Parteimitglieder nahmen den Punkt bei ihrer jährlichen Versammlung in Fort Worth ins Parteiprogramm auf, berichtete CNN am Montag.
Das Programm erkennt eine „wiedergutmachende Therapie und Behandlung“ für alle Patienten als rechtmäßig und effektiv an, die „nach Heilung und Ganzheit ihres homosexuellen Lebensstils streben“. Kein Gesetz und keine Anordnung dürfe den Zugang dazu behindern. In der medizinischen Fachwelt werden jedoch Therapien, die auf eine Änderung der sexuellen Orientierung abzielen, einhellig abgelehnt. » | Montag, 09. Juni 2014
Labels:
Homosexualität,
Texas,
USA
Saudi King's Ex-wife Speaks Out
Labels:
Jeddah,
King Abdullah,
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia's Secret Uprising
Saudi Prince Has No State Immunity from £12 million 'Secret Wife' Claim, Court Rules
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Decision by London court opens the way for a potentially embarrassing court case involving a British woman who claims she was secretly married to the late king of Saudi Arabia
A British woman who claims she was secretly married to King Fahd of Saudi Arabia has won a key victory in a multi-million pound legal battle as the High Court rejected a "state immunity" claim by the late monarch's son.
Janan Harb, 65, told the High Court in London that she wed King Fahd when he was a prince and an interior minister in 1968, but that she was forced to leave the country several years later, before he ascended to the throne.
She claims she is owed a lump sum of £12 million which was promised to her 11 years ago, plus the ownership of two high-value apartments in central London.
Lawyers for Prince Abdul Aziz, the king’s son, argued he had “state immunity” and the court had no jurisdiction to try Mrs Harb’s claim.
But Mrs Justice Rose threw out the prince’s argument, opening the way for a full hearing which risks embarrassing the House of Saud by exposing details of life inside what Mrs Harb has previously described as a royal harem, as well as new claims about their business dealings. » | David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent | Monday, June 09, 2014
A British woman who claims she was secretly married to King Fahd of Saudi Arabia has won a key victory in a multi-million pound legal battle as the High Court rejected a "state immunity" claim by the late monarch's son.
Janan Harb, 65, told the High Court in London that she wed King Fahd when he was a prince and an interior minister in 1968, but that she was forced to leave the country several years later, before he ascended to the throne.
She claims she is owed a lump sum of £12 million which was promised to her 11 years ago, plus the ownership of two high-value apartments in central London.
Lawyers for Prince Abdul Aziz, the king’s son, argued he had “state immunity” and the court had no jurisdiction to try Mrs Harb’s claim.
But Mrs Justice Rose threw out the prince’s argument, opening the way for a full hearing which risks embarrassing the House of Saud by exposing details of life inside what Mrs Harb has previously described as a royal harem, as well as new claims about their business dealings. » | David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent | Monday, June 09, 2014
Don't Threaten Me Over Juncker Appointment, Angela Merkel Warns David Cameron
Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, has warned David Cameron not to "threaten" her over the appointment of an arch-federalist as President of the European Commission.
Mr Cameron has warned that the appointment of Jean-Claude Juncker could make Britain more likely to leave the European Union in a referendum in 2017.
Mrs Merkel said that "threats" went against the "European spirit" and as she gave her public support for Mr Juncker, the former President of Luxembourg.
Mr Cameron said that if Europe fails to heed his calls to reform it will be "unhelpful" ahead of his pledged referendum on Britain's membership of the European Union in 2017.
He believes that the appointment of Mr Juncker, the former Prime Minister of Luxembourg, will damage his attempts to convince the British public that Europe should stay in the EU. » | Steven Swinford, Senior Political Correspondent, in Harpsand, Sweden | Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Al-Qaeda Seizes Iraq's Third-largest City as Terrified Residents Flee
Al-Qaeda seized control of Iraq's third biggest city on Tuesday, freeing thousands of comrades in a series of jailbreaks and sparking a mass exodus of refugees.
The assault on the city of Mosul, 225 miles north west of Baghdad, saw the Iraqi army retreat to the outskirts after a sustained assault by men armed with heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
As well as seizing the main governorate building - forcing the city's governor to flee - the gunmen were also reported to have gained control of three different jails, numerous police stations and an airport, where several military planes and helicopters were based.
The loss of the city, home to around one million people, is potentially a huge challenge to the Iraqi government, which has been struggling to quell a regalvanised al-Qaeda insurgency for more than two years.
Terrified residents of Mosul spoke of seeing militants raising al-Qaeda's black flag from buildings, and of newly-released prisoners running through the streets in yellow jumpsuits. » | Colin Freeman, agencies | Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Monday, June 09, 2014
Marine Le Pen and Father in 'Unprecedented' Attacks on Each Other
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Jean-Marie Le Pen fends off accusations of racism after commenting on Jewish singer
An unprecedented family feud has erupted at the heart of France's far Right between Marine Le Pen, leader of the Front National, and her father and FN founder, Jean-Marie, over his alleged anti-Semitism.
The filial slanging match has seen Miss Le Pen accuse her father of damaging the party with perceived racist comments while he has blamed her for turning France's main far Right party into an insipid "bizarre" grouping "without substance".
On Sunday, the 85-year old Mr Le Pen, who already has several race hate convictions, had sparked political outrage, even from within his own party, for pledging to make an "oven load" of the Jewish singer Patrick Bruel – interpreted as a reference to the furnaces used by the Nazis to dispose of their victims.
Mr Bruel is a vocal FN critic.
In a spectacular departure from the usual family unity, Miss Le Pen joined the chorus of criticism of her father, who is an MEP and the party's honorary president, saying he had committed a "political mistake". » | Henry Samuel, Paris | Monday, June 09, 2014
An unprecedented family feud has erupted at the heart of France's far Right between Marine Le Pen, leader of the Front National, and her father and FN founder, Jean-Marie, over his alleged anti-Semitism.
The filial slanging match has seen Miss Le Pen accuse her father of damaging the party with perceived racist comments while he has blamed her for turning France's main far Right party into an insipid "bizarre" grouping "without substance".
On Sunday, the 85-year old Mr Le Pen, who already has several race hate convictions, had sparked political outrage, even from within his own party, for pledging to make an "oven load" of the Jewish singer Patrick Bruel – interpreted as a reference to the furnaces used by the Nazis to dispose of their victims.
Mr Bruel is a vocal FN critic.
In a spectacular departure from the usual family unity, Miss Le Pen joined the chorus of criticism of her father, who is an MEP and the party's honorary president, saying he had committed a "political mistake". » | Henry Samuel, Paris | Monday, June 09, 2014
Princess Letizia: The Commoner Who Could Save Spain's Tarnished Crown
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Can Princess Letizia, a divorced ex-TV journalist, restore credibility to the troubled Spanish monarchy, asks William Langley
"It is a common proverb, beauteous princess,” quoth Spain’s national bard, Cervantes, “that diligence is the mother of good fortune.” Princess Letizia Ortiz, the country’s 41-year-old queen-to-be, is certainly beauteous and has worked diligently to be accepted, but, phew!, does her husband need some good fortune.
Later this month, Felipe de Borbón, a hulking, ex-Olympic sailor, will take over the shambolic remnants of what used to be Europe’s most admired royal family. Tens of thousands of disenchanted Spaniards have already taken to the streets to demand the end of the monarchy, and the country’s equally unpopular government is under pressure to hold a national referendum on becoming a republic.
The abdication last week of Felipe’s 76-year-old father, King Juan Carlos, merely threw into stark relief the crisis that has been raging around the Zarzuela Palace for years. Spain’s economic woes have made all the country’s institutions look culpable, and as the old taboos against criticism of the royal family crumbled, Juan Carlos came increasingly to resemble a cardboard king, saying the right things for public consumption while covertly protecting his own interests.
Outraged by tales of scandal, profligacy and the king’s alleged womanising, the public demanded a change. While Felipe, 46, will assume the formal burden, it is, to a great extent, Letizia upon whom the monarchy’s survival now depends. A former television journalist from relatively humble roots, she is broadly popular – but not with everybody. Sections of the Spanish media, driven either by jealousy or the desire for a good story, have portrayed her as cold and manipulative and cast doubts on her fairytale story. » | William Langley | Saturday, June 07, 2014
Letizia d'Espagne : cette reine que les monarchistes détestent »
"It is a common proverb, beauteous princess,” quoth Spain’s national bard, Cervantes, “that diligence is the mother of good fortune.” Princess Letizia Ortiz, the country’s 41-year-old queen-to-be, is certainly beauteous and has worked diligently to be accepted, but, phew!, does her husband need some good fortune.
Later this month, Felipe de Borbón, a hulking, ex-Olympic sailor, will take over the shambolic remnants of what used to be Europe’s most admired royal family. Tens of thousands of disenchanted Spaniards have already taken to the streets to demand the end of the monarchy, and the country’s equally unpopular government is under pressure to hold a national referendum on becoming a republic.
The abdication last week of Felipe’s 76-year-old father, King Juan Carlos, merely threw into stark relief the crisis that has been raging around the Zarzuela Palace for years. Spain’s economic woes have made all the country’s institutions look culpable, and as the old taboos against criticism of the royal family crumbled, Juan Carlos came increasingly to resemble a cardboard king, saying the right things for public consumption while covertly protecting his own interests.
Outraged by tales of scandal, profligacy and the king’s alleged womanising, the public demanded a change. While Felipe, 46, will assume the formal burden, it is, to a great extent, Letizia upon whom the monarchy’s survival now depends. A former television journalist from relatively humble roots, she is broadly popular – but not with everybody. Sections of the Spanish media, driven either by jealousy or the desire for a good story, have portrayed her as cold and manipulative and cast doubts on her fairytale story. » | William Langley | Saturday, June 07, 2014
Letizia d'Espagne : cette reine que les monarchistes détestent »
Spanish Royal Family's Popularity Boosted by King Juan Carlos's Abdication in Favour of Prince Felipe
Spains royal family has become more popular among Spainiards following the abdication of Juan Carlos for his son Crown King Felipe VI.
Overall, 55.7 per cent of those polled in the June 3-5 survey by Sigma Dos supported the institution of the monarchy in Spain, up from 49.9 per cent when the same question was posed six months ago.
57.5 per cent believed the prince could restore the royal family’s lost prestige.
An overwhelming majority of Spaniards believe the new king, Felipe VI, would make a good monarch and more than three-quarters believe King Juan Carlos was right to hand over the throne to his son.
The poll, published in Spain’s right-leaning daily El Mundo newspaper on Monday, is likely to encourage the departing King, who announced a week ago that he hoped the change would usher in a “new era of hope”. » | Fiona Govan | Monday, June 09, 2014
King Juan Carlos: 'I Don't Want My Son to Grow Old Waiting Like Prince Charles'
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Spanish monarch reportedly expressed a desire to hand the throne to heir while Prince Felipe was still a young man to stop him "withering" like Prince Charles
King Juan Carlos told courtiers that he wanted to abdicate in favour of his son because he did not want his heir to “grow old waiting for the throne like Prince Charles”.
The 76-year-old monarch, who announced last Monday that it was time for “a younger generation to step into the front line,” is said to have been influenced in his decision to abdicate by the situation of the Prince of Wales, who at 65 is the oldest heir to the British throne for 300 years.
It emerged on Sunday that King Juan Carlos had privately told those close to him that he felt it was right to pass the throne on while his heir was still a young man.
“I do not want my son to wither waiting like Prince Charles,” he reportedly told Rafael Spottorno, chief of the royal household, according to a report in Spain’s daily El Mundo newspaper. » | Fiona Govan, Madrid and Matthew Holehouse | Sunday, June 08, 2014
King Juan Carlos told courtiers that he wanted to abdicate in favour of his son because he did not want his heir to “grow old waiting for the throne like Prince Charles”.
The 76-year-old monarch, who announced last Monday that it was time for “a younger generation to step into the front line,” is said to have been influenced in his decision to abdicate by the situation of the Prince of Wales, who at 65 is the oldest heir to the British throne for 300 years.
It emerged on Sunday that King Juan Carlos had privately told those close to him that he felt it was right to pass the throne on while his heir was still a young man.
“I do not want my son to wither waiting like Prince Charles,” he reportedly told Rafael Spottorno, chief of the royal household, according to a report in Spain’s daily El Mundo newspaper. » | Fiona Govan, Madrid and Matthew Holehouse | Sunday, June 08, 2014
Worlds Apart: ’Militaries Outdated, They Should Go Like Cannibalism & Slavery’ Peace Researcher Dr Jan Oberg
Labels:
Dr Jan Oberg,
Worlds Apart
Marine Le Pen: EU Robbed Us of All Liberties, We Should Fight to Get Them Back (Full Interview)
Labels:
EU,
Marine Le Pen,
SophieCo
London Council 'Targeted in Trojan Horse-style Islamist Takeover Plot'
LONDON EVENING STANDARD: A London MP today warned of the risk of a 'Trojan Horse'-style Islamist plot to infiltrate councils in the capital amid claims of schools being targeted in Birmingham.
As Ofsted criticised five schools at the heart of the row, Labour's Jim Fitzpatrick said there is a risk of "race politics" taking hold after the re-election of controversial mayor Lutfur Rahman in Tower Hamlets.
He said Labour had rejected "several hundred" applications from people the party believed could be "extremists" trying to infiltrate the borough's politics, as well as expelling party members during the past five years. » | Robin De Peyer | Monday, June 09, 2014
As Ofsted criticised five schools at the heart of the row, Labour's Jim Fitzpatrick said there is a risk of "race politics" taking hold after the re-election of controversial mayor Lutfur Rahman in Tower Hamlets.
He said Labour had rejected "several hundred" applications from people the party believed could be "extremists" trying to infiltrate the borough's politics, as well as expelling party members during the past five years. » | Robin De Peyer | Monday, June 09, 2014
Trojan Horse Ofsted Report: Live
My comment:
My God, these parliamentarians tie themselves up in knots trying not to criticise Islam. They keep splitting hairs about the distinction between Islam and Islamism. They argue about these things as though they were arguing about how many fairies can dance on the head of a pin.
Why the hell don't these cowards find their gonads and do something drastic about this problem? For indeed only drastic action will solve this problem. If this sort of thing is not STAMPED OUT NOW, ONCE AND FOR ALL, this country will be unrecognisable in just a few short years.
The so-called political élite in this country have behaved in a treasonous manner vis-à-vis the indigenous population: They have given our country away to foreigners who have no intention of integrating into our way of life, and without the consent of the people.
No amount of money will solve this problem. This is not a matter of courses and guidance. The fact of the matter is that Muslims do not wish under any circumstances to integrate into our way of life. They see our way of life as being inferior to the Islamic way. They don't call us infidels for nothing!
The distinction that these idiotic and cowardly politicians try to make between Islam and Islamism is a phoney distinction. An Islamist is a devout Muslim – a person who follows his 'religion' to the letter. Nothing and no-one will change this fact.
Muslims will never properly integrate into our society. Being guided by their prophet, the Koran, and the Sunnah, it's not even an option for them. So wake up, parliament! – © Mark
This comment appears here too.
Sunday, June 08, 2014
SS Songs and Antisemitism: The Week Golden Dawn Turned Openly Nazi
Golden Dawn supporters wave party and Greek national flags during rally outside parliament on 4 June. |
It has been a bad week for democracy in Athens. All around this great Greek city, the politics of hate now lurk. On Friday I got a taste of it in the tiny Italian-style cafe I frequent off Syntagma Square.
It arrived in the form of two middle-aged men, both supporters of the neo-fascist Golden Dawn – and, by their own account, the holders of university degrees, well-travelled and well-informed. Over espressos, they began to engage in an animated discussion about all that is wrong with Greece.
The first, a self-described businessman decked out in designer suit, brogues and silk tie, blamed the country's economic collapse on malfeasance, corruption and uncontrolled immigration. "The only way to teach our filthy politicians is to bring in Golden Dawn," he trilled, his eyes locked in a fierce glare. "These gentlemen are patriots, proud Greek nationalists, and they know how to deal with the scum, the foreigners who never pay taxes, who steal our jobs, who have taken over our streets."
Dismissing charges that Golden Dawn is a criminal gang masquerading as a political group, the second – a self-described government employee – said the far right was the best response yet to the great Jewish conspiracy of an interconnected banking system that has come with globalisation. "Let's not forget all the faggots and the Jews, the wankers who control the banks, the foreigners who are behind them, who came in and fucked Greece," he insisted. "The criminals who have governed us, who have robbed us of our future, of our dreams, need a big thwack." » | Helena Smith | Saturday, June 07, 2014
Labels:
Athens,
Golden Dawn,
Greece,
Nazism
We Can't Avoid the Threat of Islamism
David Cameron was extremely angry that the Coalition’s final legislative programme before next year’s general election was pushed from the top of the news agenda last week by “May vs Gove”.
Despite the very public split between Michael Gove, the Education Secretary, and Theresa May, the Home Secretary, at the level of policy, their differences on how best to deal with Islamic extremism are more about emphasis and nuance than radically different approaches.
Beyond last week’s stories about leaked letters and statements from the ministers’ supporters is a profoundly serious argument about what must be done in order to ensure that Muslim communities in Britain adopt British values, and are integrated into British society.
It is not just an argument about how to prevent terrorism inspired by religious fanaticism. It is also about the future of our culture, and how to ensure that it does not fragment into a series of segregated and separate groups united only by their mutual suspicion and distrust.
That is the nightmare scenario that just about everyone wants to avoid. It is one conjured up as a serious possibility not just by political parties such as Ukip and pressure groups such as Migration Watch, but also by academic researchers who study the impact of immigration. » | Alasdair Palmer | Sunday, June 08, 2014
Saturday, June 07, 2014
‘Bergdahl Has Converted to Islam and Now Describes Himself as a Mujahid’: Bombshell Docs Allegedly Describe Soldier’s Time in Captivity
According to the reports, Bergdahl’s status with his captors changed over time. After he once escaped his captors for five days, he was recaptured and placed in a metal cage, the documents reportedly say. At other times, he appeared to maintain a friendly relationship with them. (+ video) » | Oliver Darcy | Thursday, June 05, 2014
Radical Islam in Secular Schools: Now the Shocking Truth Emerges
TELEGRAPH BLOGS – DAMIAN THOMPSON: "Students' understanding of the arts, different cultures and other beliefs are limited." That's one of the complaints about Birmingham schools made by Ofsted in their leaked report. It sounds like a relatively mild criticism.
Not so. What the Trojan Horse scandal has revealed is that leaders of the Muslim community in Birmingham have been creating a Wahhabi-inspired counterculture in secular, not faith, schools.
Put simply, the interpretation of Islam that's sweeping through the Muslim world, thanks to Saudi money, seeks to deprive children of any exposure to the arts, which it condemns as idolatrous. Even listening to music is haram, forbidden. The underlying teaching is that the arts, by seeking to create beauty, blaspheme by detracting attention from the only source of true beauty, Allah, which can be appreciated only in the natural world he created. » | Damian Thompson | Saturday, June 07, 2014
Not so. What the Trojan Horse scandal has revealed is that leaders of the Muslim community in Birmingham have been creating a Wahhabi-inspired counterculture in secular, not faith, schools.
Put simply, the interpretation of Islam that's sweeping through the Muslim world, thanks to Saudi money, seeks to deprive children of any exposure to the arts, which it condemns as idolatrous. Even listening to music is haram, forbidden. The underlying teaching is that the arts, by seeking to create beauty, blaspheme by detracting attention from the only source of true beauty, Allah, which can be appreciated only in the natural world he created. » | Damian Thompson | Saturday, June 07, 2014
The Queen in Paris: Flower Market Honour for Her Majesty
The Queen was paid the ultimate compliment by the people of Paris on Saturday when a flower market was named after her to reflect the “enormous affection” the French have for her.
In the city that executed France’s own monarch in 1793, the unlikely cry of “Long Live the Queen!” echoed around what is now known as the Queen Elizabeth II Flower Market.
Her Majesty received the honour from the city’s Mayor, Anne Hidalgo, on the final day of her State visit to France.
“This reflects the enormous affection of Parisians,” said Ms Hidalgo.
“It gives me great joy to give this lovely flower market your name.”
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh were clearly moved by Ms Hidalgo’s gesture in the square near Notre Dame Cathedral.
Despite the excited crowds cheering on the Queen, who was dressed in light pink dress and hat, not everybody was happy about the new name of Marche [sic] aux Fleurs - Reine Elizabeth II. » | Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter | Saturday, June 07, 2014
Labels:
France,
Paris,
Queen Elizabeth II,
state visit
D-Day Anniversary: Queen 'Stirred' by Commemorations
On the 70th anniversary of the Normandy landings the Queen travelled to the French coast with the Duke of Edinburgh, and spent the day with other heads of state honouring the actions of veterans and their fallen comrades.
Later at a banquet to mark her three-day state visit to France, the monarch described how the day's commemorations had left Philip and herself "filled with emotions".
She added: "With sorrow and regret, remembering the loss of so many fine young soldiers, sailors and airmen; with pride, at the sheer courage of the men who stormed those beaches, embodied in the veterans among us; and with thankfulness, knowing that today our nations are free and sovereign because allied forces liberated this continent from occupation and tyranny. » | Friday, June 06, 2014
Friday, June 06, 2014
Hillary Clinton May Have to Ditch Her Megarich Wall Street Friends If She Is to Make Another Run at the Presidency
THE INDEPENDENT: The former Secretary of State's ties to the banks that almost brought down the US economy may leave her vulnerable to challenges from the liberal left of the Democratic Party
Hillary Clinton might want to take the back door into Goldman Sachs, the investment house, in lower Manhattan on Friday. As she girds for the launch of her vaunted new book next week and thereafter – maybe, probably – a run at the presidency, fresh pictures of her on Wall Street will be unwanted.
Concern is growing among Hillary backers that her closeness to the banks that almost brought down the economy in 2008 could open her to potentially perilous challenges from the liberal left of the Democratic Party. Not helping has been a series by the leftist Mother Jones magazine highlighting those ties. » | David Usborne | New York | Thursday, June 05, 2014
Hillary Clinton might want to take the back door into Goldman Sachs, the investment house, in lower Manhattan on Friday. As she girds for the launch of her vaunted new book next week and thereafter – maybe, probably – a run at the presidency, fresh pictures of her on Wall Street will be unwanted.
Concern is growing among Hillary backers that her closeness to the banks that almost brought down the economy in 2008 could open her to potentially perilous challenges from the liberal left of the Democratic Party. Not helping has been a series by the leftist Mother Jones magazine highlighting those ties. » | David Usborne | New York | Thursday, June 05, 2014
Labels:
Hillary Clinton,
Wall Street
Israël lâché par ses alliés
LE POINT: Les États-Unis, l'Europe, la Russie, la Chine et l'Inde ont reconnu le gouvernement d'union nationale palestinien. Un camouflet pour Netanyahou.
Un mardi noir. C'est probablement ainsi que Benyamin Netanyahou se souviendra de ce 3 juin. En l'espace de quelques heures, et quasiment les unes après les autres, les grandes puissances ont annoncé soutenir le gouvernement palestinien d'unité nationale qui avait prêté serment la veille devant le président Abbas. Les premiers à ouvrir le bal de cette reconnaissance internationale furent les États-Unis. Vinrent ensuite l'Union européenne, les chefs de diplomatie de la France et de la Grande-Bretagne, le secrétaire général de l'ONU puis la Russie. Mais aussi la Chine et l'Inde. Deux pays qui n'ont posé aucune condition à leur soutien. Tandis que les gouvernements américain et européens fondent leur coopération avec le nouveau cabinet palestinien sur l'adhésion de ce dernier à trois principes : renoncement à la violence, respect des accords déjà signés et reconnaissance d'Israël. Des principes que Mahmoud Abbas et son Premier ministre, Rami Hamdallah, se sont engagés à respecter. » | Danièle Kriegel, corresponndante du Point à Jérusalem | vendredi 06 juin 2014
Un mardi noir. C'est probablement ainsi que Benyamin Netanyahou se souviendra de ce 3 juin. En l'espace de quelques heures, et quasiment les unes après les autres, les grandes puissances ont annoncé soutenir le gouvernement palestinien d'unité nationale qui avait prêté serment la veille devant le président Abbas. Les premiers à ouvrir le bal de cette reconnaissance internationale furent les États-Unis. Vinrent ensuite l'Union européenne, les chefs de diplomatie de la France et de la Grande-Bretagne, le secrétaire général de l'ONU puis la Russie. Mais aussi la Chine et l'Inde. Deux pays qui n'ont posé aucune condition à leur soutien. Tandis que les gouvernements américain et européens fondent leur coopération avec le nouveau cabinet palestinien sur l'adhésion de ce dernier à trois principes : renoncement à la violence, respect des accords déjà signés et reconnaissance d'Israël. Des principes que Mahmoud Abbas et son Premier ministre, Rami Hamdallah, se sont engagés à respecter. » | Danièle Kriegel, corresponndante du Point à Jérusalem | vendredi 06 juin 2014
Israel gerät international in Isolation
Jerusalem. Benjamin Netanjahu kämpft auf einsamem Posten gegen die neu angelobte palästinensische Einheitsregierung. Anstelle der erwarteten internationalen Verurteilung wegen der Beteiligung der islamistischen Hamas an der Palästinenserregierung gerät Israels Premier selbst ins Visier der Weltöffentlichkeit. In Jerusalem zürnt man über die US-Entscheidung, mit der palästinensischen Übergangsregierung zu kooperieren. Dabei hat US-Außenminister John Kerry versprochen, das Technokratenkabinett unter Beobachtung zu halten. Saeb Erekat, der palästinensische Chefunterhändler, drohte Israel zudem mit rechtlichen Schritten. Die Palästinenser würden sich dazu an die „für Kriegsverbrechen zuständigen internationalen Institutionen“ wenden. » | Die Presse | Donnerstag, 05. Juni 2014
D-Day Anniversary: Live
Labels:
D-Day Anniversary,
Normandy
Thursday, June 05, 2014
La reine Elizabeth II, méga-star
La reine déchaîne toujours les passions. " Ce que je ressens ? De la joie et un peu de stress", résume Mathilde, une étudiante, âgée de 17 ans. |
D'un pas sûr malgré ses 88 ans, un bouquet de fleurs à la main, Elizabeth II, souriante et vêtue de blanc, quitte la gare du Nord à Paris. La reine entame en "guest star" une visite d'État qui va la conduire des plages du Débarquement aux ors républicains de l'Élysée. Arrivée en Eurostar accompagnée de son mari le prince Philip, la souveraine britannique, vêtue d'une robe crème et d'une veste blanche à liséré noir, coiffée d'un chapeau de la même couleur et portant des gants noirs, est accueillie par une foule de quelque 300 personnes, avant de s'engouffrer dans une Bentley noire. "C'est merveilleux qu'elle soit là !" dit, un drapeau canadien à la main, Margaret Kittle, visiblement émue, dont le mari a pris part à la Seconde Guerre mondiale au sein de la Royal Air Force. "Parmi tous les dirigeants qui seront demain sur les plages, c'est la seule à avoir connu la guerre", fait-elle valoir. (+ vidéo) » | Source AFP | jeudi 05 juin 2014
Labels:
France,
l'Élysée,
la reine Elizabeth II,
Paris,
visite d'État
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)