THE TIMES: The Vatican is so anxious about the Pope’s safety during his trip to Turkey this week that it has vetoed use of the traditional “Popemobile”.Mark Alexander
Instead, Pope Benedict XVI will travel in an armour-plated car, with several similar vehicles used as decoys, Joaquin Navarro-Valls, the former papal spokesman, said.
Officials have also drawn up contingency plans for him to wear a bulletproof vest beneath his papal vestments as Turkish authorities mount a huge security operation including rooftop snipers, special forces, helicopters and navy speedboats.
Before his first visit to a Muslim country, the Pope tried to defuse further protests yesterday, sending “cordial greetings” of “esteem and sincere friendship” to “the dear Turkish people” when he addressed pilgrims from his window above St Peter’s Square during Angelus prayers.
Papal aides confirmed that, in a conciliatory gesture to Muslims, the Pope had altered his official programme to include a visit to the Blue Mosque, or Sultanahmet, in Istanbul. Popemobile gives way to armoured car on visit to 'minefield' by Richard Owen
Young and old of Istanbul are happy to roar their disapproval
20,000 Turks protest over visit by Pope by Malcolm Moore
Monday, November 27, 2006
Sunday, November 26, 2006
BBC: Few issues divide the Europeans as much as Turkey.Mark Alexander
Divisions are becoming ever more apparent as the European Union nears the moment of truth in relations with its biggest and poorest applicant country, which also happens to be Muslim.
For EU leaders meeting in Brussels on December 14-15, the question will be how to punish Turkey if it fails to open its ports and airports to traffic from Cyprus. Turkey's promise to do so allowed it to open EU membership talks a year ago.
This week, several European commissioners pushed for the consequences to be spelled out in the Commission's progress report on Turkey.
According to officials, they were Markos Kyprianou of Cyprus, Stavros Dimas of Greece and Jacques Barrot of France.
Others - like Viviane Reding of Luxembourg, Louis Michel of Belgium and Jan Figel of Slovakia - raised serious concerns about the cost of integrating Turkey and the human rights situation.
Turkey's strongest advocates were Peter Mandelson of the UK and Charlie McCreevy of Ireland.
Germany's Guenter Verheugen even argued that Turkey should be treated as a special case.
That is hardly the official German line, but as a former enlargement commissioner, Mr Verheugen was bitterly disappointed when the Greek Cypriots rejected a UN plan that would have led to the reunification of the island in 2004, just days before Cyprus was welcomed into the EU. Turkish bid exposes EU rifts
Friday, November 24, 2006
BBC: British Airways is to review its policy on uniforms in the wake of a row over a worker ordered to stop wearing a cross.Mark Alexander
On Monday, Nadia Eweida, 55, from London, lost her appeal against a decision saying she could not wear the cross visibly at the check-in counter.
The airline's chief executive Willie Walsh said it had become clear BA's uniform policy needed to change "in the light of the public debate".
He said BA would consider allowing religious symbols worn as lapel badges.
He said it was unfair that BA had been accused of being anti-Christian.
Ms Eweida said she was effectively forced to take unpaid leave after refusing to hide the cross symbol she wore round her neck when people of other faiths were allowed to wear visible religious symbols such as headscarves. BA uniform review after cross row
WATCH BBC VIDEO: BA review after cross row
BA to review uniform policy after outcry at ban on cross
Cross to bear
BA responds to backlash by lifting ban on small crosses
With many thanks to Eleanor for drawing this excellent article to my attention:
COMMENTARY MAGAZINE.COM: The oldest Jewish cemetery in England is in Mile End, in the heart of the East End of London. It was created exactly 350 years ago on the orders of the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell, who, overruling his own council, officially readmitted Jews to England for the first time since their expulsion in 1290. I came across it recently while visiting Queen Mary University, where I had once taught history, to give a public lecture.Mark Alexander
The disused cemetery is now marooned on the Queen Mary campus, which is itself an island in the East End, an area long since abandoned by Jews and now populated mainly by Muslims. With its graves dating back to the 1660’s, Mile End is thus a reminder both of the continuity of Jewish life in Britain and of its precariousness. And the reminder is timely, for today the atmosphere in England has become less hospitable for Jews than at any time since Sir Oswald Mosley’s Blackshirts marched through the East End in the 1930’s.
You do not have to go far from Queen Mary University to discover one reason why Jews—and not only Jews—are feeling insecure. Less than a mile away stands the East London Mosque, whose chairman, Muhammad Abdul Bari, is also secretary-general of the Muslim Council of Britain. This makes him, in effect, the chief spokesman for British Muslims. On the eve of the fifth anniversary of 9/11, Bari told the Sunday Telegraph:
Some police officers and sections of the media are demonizing Muslims, treating them as if they’re all terrorists—and that encourages other people to do the same. If that demonization continues, then Britain will have to deal with 2 million Muslim terrorists—700,000 of them in London.
In fact, far from demonizing Muslims, the police have gone to inordinate lengths to accommodate their sensitivities. Scotland Yard now consults self-appointed community leaders like Bari before mounting anti-terrorist operations in “Muslim areas”—thereby risking the possibility that secret information might leak out and compromise public safety. Since the London bombings of July 7, 2005, which killed 53 people, the police have been obliged to keep thousands of Muslims under surveillance while investigating up to a hundred separate conspiracies to commit terror. But rather than expressing shame that such unprecedented measures have been necessary, “moderate” Muslim leaders like Muhammad Abdul Bari have responded with thinly veiled blackmail. As often as not, British support for Israel is invoked as high on the list of Muslim grievances. The message is simple: unless Britain withdraws that support, every Muslim will become a potential suicide bomber.
Such implicit threats have had their effect on the non-Muslim majority. At a dinner after my lecture, a professor remarked, as if it were a generally accepted platitude: “Of course, the only terrorist state in the Middle East is Israel.” Nobody contradicted him. The delegitimization of Israel in the British academic world has become one aspect of a new and more powerful wave of outright anti-Semitism, a phenomenon that has been greatly accelerated by the response to last summer’s war in Lebanon.
In some ways, the new anti-Semitism is much like the old. Consider Jenny Tonge, a legislator from the Liberal Democratic party who gained notoriety two years ago by empathizing publicly with Islamist suicide bombers. She thereby distinguished herself even among the ranks of her fellow Liberal Democrats, who have seized on resentments against Israel and the U.S. with all the zeal of a third party struggling to get noticed in a two-party system. Removed from her party post, though by no means disgraced, she was subsequently honored with a peerage. This summer’s war in Lebanon enabled her to go a crucial step beyond extolling suicide bombers by attacking not only Israel but Jews in general. “The pro-Israel lobby has got its grips on the Western world,” she said in a speech at a party conference in September. Pausing for effect, she added: “its financial grips.” Another pause. “I think they’ve probably got a certain grip on our party.”
The background to this heavy hint about undue Zionist influence on party politics was a scandal involving not the Liberal Democrats but Labor. In particular it was an allusion to Michael Levy, Prime Minister Tony Blair’s special envoy to the Middle East and until recently the Labor party’s chief fund-raiser. In July, during the course of a police investigation into possible corruption, Lord Levy was briefly arrested. (It is unclear whether he will actually be charged with any crime.) The fact that he is Jewish is, of course, irrelevant to the case—but not to Jenny Tonge’s inflammatory insinuation that Jewish money is corrupting British politics. Even so, she got away with it.
A second example comes from the other side of the political spectrum. Sir Peter Tapsell, a senior Conservative member of parliament, claimed at the height of the Lebanon crisis that Blair was colluding with President Bush “in giving Israel the go-ahead” to commit “a war crime gravely reminiscent of the Nazi atrocity on the Jewish quarter of Warsaw.” This obscene equation, another staple of the anti-Semites, was uttered during a televised debate on the floor of the House of Commons. Yet Tapsell, too, got away with it, including in the conservative press; following his lead, the Telegraph published a cartoon depicting two scenes of devastation, one labeled “Warsaw 1943” and the other “Tyre 2006.”
Not only do the Tapsells and Tonges go unreprimanded these days, they are admired and imitated. The loathing of Israel, once confined to oppositional groups, has penetrated to the very core of the British establishment. At the height of the Lebanon war, two peers of the realm reportedly came to blows within the hallowed precincts of the House of Lords. Apparently, Lord Janner, a prominent spokesman for Jewish causes, said something about Israel’s right to self-defense that so enraged the octogenarian Field Marshal Lord Bramall that he was moved to assault his seventy-eight-year-old interlocutor. One might have supposed that, like misogyny, anti-Semitism had ceased to be a characteristic vice of the English upper class; this incident suggests that it is back with a vengeance. Allah's England by Daniel Johnson
Thursday, November 23, 2006
I should like to take this opportunity to wish all my visitors Stateside a VERY HAPPY and BLESSED THANKSGIVING.
Mark AlexanderImage courtesy of Google Images
Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: Pope Benedict XVI has warned the Archbishop of Canterbury the Anglican community's difficulties had put a strain on the Churches' relationship.Mark Alexander
Dr Williams, the leader of the worldwide Anglican Church, is on his first official visit to Rome. Pope warns Archbishop of 'strain'
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
BBC: Lebanon is the most politically complex and religiously divided country in the Middle East, which is what makes it such a potentially explosive factor in an unstable region.
Tiny Lebanon baffles outsiders. Even people in the Middle East find its politics confusing.
Set up by France after World War I as a predominantly Christian state, Lebanon is now about 60% Muslim, 40% Christian.
It has 18 officially recognised religious sects and sharing power between them has always been a complicated game.
Lebanese Muslims have tended to look east for support from the other Arab states and from Iran. The Christians have tended to look west to Europe and the United States. The Lebanese crisis explained
Mark Alexander
Tuesday, November 21, 2006
Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: Pierre Gemayel, a leading anti-Syrian Lebanese minister and Maronite Christian leader, has been killed in the capital, Beirut.Mark Alexander
Mr Gemayel, 34, was shot in his car in a Christian suburb and rushed to hospital, where he died. Lebanese Christian leader killed
BBC: Pierre Gemayel was a scion of one of Lebanon's most prominent Christian political dynasties - although he himself never touched the peaks of power and influence reached by his forebears. Obituary: Pierre Gemayel
WATCH VIDEO: Lebanese minister assassinated
With thanks to Heather for alerting me to this article.
NPR: A mood of nationalist introspection is sweeping over Europe.Mark Alexander
The Sept. 11 attacks, the bombings in Madrid and London, the murder of Dutch filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, the French ghetto riots and violent reactions by many Muslims to the Mohammed cartoons published by a Danish paper, are producing an anti-immigrant backlash bordering on xenophobia. Europe Looks Inward, Tilts to the Right
NZZ: Spätestens nächste Woche muss die Türkei ihre Flughäfen und Häfen für Flugzeuge und Schiffe aus Zypern öffnen. Das fordert die EU, die ihren Zeitplan für die Verhandlungen mit der Türkei einhalten will. EU setzt der Türkei ein UltimatumMark Alexander
Monday, November 20, 2006
Photos courtesy of the BBC
BBC: It was an appropriate venue: an Ottoman Palace on one bank of the Bosphorus, with a view on to a vast bridge linking East and West.Mark Alexander
"If we are to build bridges between civilisations, what better place to begin!" UN Secretary General Kofi Annan remarked in his opening address.
He was speaking to a group of 20 prominent world figures meeting in Istanbul to present him with the findings of more than a year of work.
The high-level group includes Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu and the former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami. Myth and reality feed West-Muslim gulf
BBC: A British Airways (BA) employee has lost her fight to openly wear a cross necklace at work at Heathrow.Mark Alexander
Nadia Eweida, 55, of Twickenham, has been on unpaid leave since her bosses told her she could not visibly wear her cross at the check-in counter.
She found out she had lost her appeal against the decision by BA when she met with the airline bosses on Monday. Woman loses fight to wear cross
WATCH VIDEO: BA defends jewellery ban
THE TELEGRAPH: Tony Blair faced accusations last night that he is wasting nearly £7 billion of taxpayers' money on a failing war on terror after announcing massive sums of British aid to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.Mark Alexander
In the last three days, the Prime Minister and Gordon Brown, the Chancellor, have trumpeted special funding to the three countries totalling £844 million.
This is in addition to the estimated £5 billion cost to British taxpayers of the Iraq war so far, and the £1 billion spent to date on the British deployment in Afghanistan.
The funding announcements came just days after Mr Blair admitted in an interview with al-Jazeera, the English language Arabic television channel, that the 2003 invasion of Iraq was a "disaster".
No 10 officials have since dismissed the response as a slip of the tongue. But yesterday Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state, said military victory in Iraq was no longer possible. Anger at £7bn cost of war by Toby Helm and Brendan Carlin
Throwing good money after bad governance
THE SUNDAY TIMES: Reports of the death of Christianity in this country have been much exaggerated, by me among many others. Even the dear old Church of England is showing a few signs of revival. Some might attribute this change to the Holy Spirit, blowing where it listeth in that irritating way it supposedly has. I would attribute it to competition, pure and simple.Mark Alexander
The example of Islam in this country, for better and for worse, has powerfully concentrated Christian minds. Confronted with Muslim convictions, Christians — and particularly Anglicans — find themselves and their own faith renewed. There is nothing like a strong consciousness of a different identity for clarifying one’s own. Years of milksop tolerance and ecumenical dither have given way, here and there, to a new conviction. The church strikes back! Hallelujah, they're standing up for Jesus by Minette Marrin
Sunday, November 19, 2006
Photo courtesy of BBC
BBC: Thousands of people have taken to the streets of the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, to protest against Monday's visit by US President George W Bush. Indonesia sees anti-Bush ralliesMark Alexander
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Foto dank der Neuen Zürcher Zeitung
NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Fast 10'000 Personen haben am Samstag in Brandenburg friedlich gegen Rechtsextremismus protestiert und erstmals seit Jahren einen Neonazi-Aufmarsch vor dem Volkstrauertag am grössten deutschen Soldatenfriedhof in Halbe verhindert. Neonazi-Aufmarsch verhindertMark Alexander
Photo courtesy of BBC
BBC: Chancellor Gordon Brown has made his first visit to Iraq and has promised an extra £100m ($188m) over three years to help rebuild the country's economy. Brown makes first visit to IraqMark Alexander
Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: Muslim women politicians, business leaders, academics, cultural figures and activists are meeting in New York to try to improve women's rights. Muslim women debate more rightsMark Alexander
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: There were times when Sir David Frost's interview with Tony Blair on al-Jazeera threatened to turn into a quick 40 winks, so languid was the great interrogator's delivery.Mark Alexander
But seasoned Frost-watchers know that this is the moment when the man or woman in the hot seat should be most on his or her guard. The Prime Minister wasn't, and blurted out two monosyllabic words he will have plenty of opportunity to regret. Blair is badly nipped by a vintage touch of Frost by Neil Tweedie
Friday, November 17, 2006
Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: The Dutch cabinet has backed a proposal by the country's immigration minister to ban Muslim women from wearing the burqa in public places.Mark Alexander
The burqa, a full body covering that also obscures the face, would be banned by law in the street, and in trains, schools, buses and the law courts.
The cabinet said burqas disturb public order, citizens and safety. Dutch government backs burqa ban
Burqa ban splits Holland
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