Mark Alexander
Wednesday, May 02, 2007
KUWAIT TIMES: LONDON: Islamic finance, so described because of its adherence to sharia law, has a bright future in a world awash with petrodollars and with growing interest from traditional banks, experts say. According to the American credit agency Standard and Poor's, assets in the sector have grown to $500 billion, driven by growth of more than 10 percent per year for a decade. It is also benefiting from gathering interest in the eyes of the public, as trade and investment between East and West improves.
"Mounting demand around the world for sharia-compliant financial products and services is fuelling the Islamic banking industry's buoyant expansion," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Anouar Hassoune in a report published this week. Sharia-compliant products appeared in their modern form in the mid-1970s with the foundation of the Dubai Islamic Bank, and the Islamic Development Bank, opposed to investments in certain industries and the paying of interest (riba in Arabic). 'Halal' finance attracts scores (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
Islamic finance
KUWAIT TIMES: NEW YORK: Press freedom around the world deteriorated last year due to coups, attempts to stifle political opposition and regulate use of the Internet, a leading watchdog said in a report yesterday. US-based Freedom House outlined what it said were particularly troubling trends in Asia, the former Soviet Union and Latin America, in a report that warned that democracy as a whole would likely suffer. "Press freedom is like the canary in the coal mine," the group's executive director Jennifer Windsor said in a statement. Press freedom around the world in decline (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
freedom of the press
NEW YORK TIMES: Peter J. Gomes has been at Harvard University for 37 years, and says he remembers when religious people on campus felt under siege. To be seen as religious often meant being dismissed as not very bright, he said.
No longer. At Harvard these days, said Professor Gomes, the university preacher, “There is probably more active religious life now than there has been in 100 years.”
Across the country, on secular campuses as varied as Colgate University, the University of Wisconsin and the University of California, Berkeley, chaplains, professors and administrators say students are drawn to religion and spirituality with more fervor than at any time they can remember. Matters of Faith Find a New Prominence on Campus (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
belief,
Christianity,
college campuses,
faith,
religion,
US
Lord Browne, chief executive of petroleum giant BP, and one of Britain's most successful businessmen, has resigned after he was exposed as having lied about his private life.
He had been expected to stand down shortly, following shareholder dissatisfaction with his performance and a series of disasters - including an oil spill in Alaska and the tragic Texas refinery fire which resulted in 15 deaths - but what prompted Lord Browne's sudden resignation was the revelation that he lied in court about how he met his former male partner - a lie he has now acknowledged and for which he has apologised.
The way the two men met cannot be revealed, because of a ban imposed by the Court of Appeal in March. Suffice to say that they met in a perfectly legal manner, even though Lord Browne apparently found it embarrassing and did not want it to become public knowledge.
In marked contrast to the vicious homophobia directed against gay public figures in the 1980s, it was not Lord Browne's same-sex relationship that forced him to step down, nor BP's recent tarnished environmental and safety record. It was his dishonesty and his attempted cover-up that forced him out. Down and out in the City
Out in the macho world of oil
Mark Alexander
Labels:
gay at the top
TIMESONLINE: The US Department of Justice (DoJ) is in talks to establish whether it can launch a formal inquiry into alleged bribery and corruption in BAE Systems, The Times has learnt.
Mike O’Brien, the Solicitor-General, acknowledged that the UK’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has met the DoJ to discuss allegations of corrupt practices by BAE.
The DoJ is understood to be looking into whether it has the jurisdiction to pursue BAE over payments allegedly made to win defence contracts from foreign governments. The British Government terminated a similar investigation by the SFO in December amid fears that it would cause a breakdown in relations with Saudi Arabia.
The SFO has six continuing investigations into BAE, involving contracts won from South Africa, Chile, Romania, Tanzania, Qatar and the Czech Republic. Last week it emerged that an official at the US Embassy in London had complained formally to the British Government over the decision to stop the SFO’s Saudi investigation. US seeks to pursue BAE over claims company paid bribes (Read on) by David Robertson
Mark Alexander
Photo courtesy of Google Images
Zwei Irrtümer prägten zwanzig Jahre lang die Debatte: Deutschland sei „kein Einwanderungsland“ lautete die konservative Überzeugung. Als Zeichen von Buntheit und Vielfalt (“Multikulti“) interpretierten Linke Integrationsversäumnisse und Wirklichkeitsverweigerung der Einwanderer. Beide Seiten fochten - letztlich ohne nennenswertes Ergebnis - ideologische Streitereien aus. Wirklichkeit überwindet Wunschdenken Von Peter Carstens
Mark Alexander
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Photo courtesy of Times Online
The firm, which said it accepted Lord Browne's resignation with the "deepest regret", said the chief executive would lose his entitlement to a leaving package worth £3.5m and a potential £12m in shares. BP Chief Resigns Over Gay Lover Story (Read on)
THE TELEGRAPH: Lord Browne resigns after revelations he lied in court about gay lover by Joshua Rozenberg
THE TELEGRAPH: Lord Browne of Madingley's resignation statement
Mark Alexander
BBC: The constitutional court in Turkey has annulled last Friday's parliamentary vote to elect a new president.
The only candidate, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, failed to win the required majority after a boycott by secularist opposition parties.
The parties, which accuse Mr Gul of a hidden Islamist agenda, asked the court to rule that there was no quorum.
The government says despite the ruling it will try to achieve a quorum with a new vote on Wednesday. Turkey's presidency vote annulled (Read on)
Mark Alexander
BBC: Nearly 600 people have been arrested in Istanbul as police launched a dramatic clampdown on left-wing demonstrators trying to hold a May Day rally.
Officers fired tear gas and used batons to stop the crowd marching to Taksim Square, where they were due to mark the 30th anniversary of "Bloody May Day". Hundreds detained in Turkey rally (Read on)
WATCH BBC VIDEO: Clashes at Turkey rally
TIMESONLINE: Appeal for calm as markets get jitters over Turkey crisis
Mark Alexander
Labels:
demonstrations,
Turkey
NZZ: Ruf nach Rücktritt des Regierungschefs
Israels Regierungschef Olmert reagiert mit bemerkenswerter Sturheit auf den Bericht über seine Rolle im Libanon-Feldzug. Darin gebe es aber kein einziges positives Wort, das sein Verbleiben an der Macht rechtfertige, schreibt die Zeitung Haaretz. Die Rufe nach seinem Rücktritt kommen inzwischen nicht nur aus den Medien sondern auch aus seinem eigenen Kabinett. Olmert in Israel zunehmend auf verlorenem Posten (mehr)
LE FIGARO: Israël : Ehud Olmert poussé vers la sortie
Mark Alexander
LE FIGARO: Le leader du Front national a appelé ses électeurs à "s’abstenir massivement" pour le second tour de l'élection présidentielle.
Dans un discours fleuve au cours duquel il a longuement rendu hommage à Jeanne d’Arc, Jean-Marie Le Pen n’a pas donné de consigne de votes pour le second tour de la présidentielle. "J'invite les électeurs qui m'ont fait confiance à n'accorder leur suffrage ni à Mme Royal, ni à M. Sarkozy et à s'abstenir massivement", a-t-il déclaré, place de l’Opéra, à la fin du défilé du 1er mai. Le Pen : "ni Royal, ni Sarkozy" au second tour (encore)
LE MONDE: Jean-Marie Le Pen appelle ses électeurs à "s'abstenir massivement" le 6 mai
Mark Alexander
KUWAIT TIMES: RIYADH: A Mauritanian convicted of rape and a Saudi convicted of murder were beheaded by the sword in Saudi Arabia yesterday, the interior ministry said. Mohammed Al-Mami Baba Ould Baba, who was found guilty of breaking into three houses and raping an unspecified number of women, was executed in the Muslim holy city of Medina, said a ministry statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency. Saudi Arabia beheads rapist and murderer
Mark Alexander
Labels:
beheading,
Saudi Arabia
KUWAIT TIMES: Body language occupies a dramatic place in the Arab culture since misinterpreting or using a sign that elsewhere means one thing, or even nothing at all, could in Kuwait lead to a faux pas. Body language across the Middle East is distinctly different and diverse, thus it is strongly recommendable to be learnt for the sake of avoiding unintentional insults. Hand Talk: Communicating physically (Read on) by Velina Nacheva
Mark Alexander
Labels:
Arab body language
TIMESONLINE: An alleged madam accused of running a prostitution ring for the power elite of Washington vowed yesterday to reveal dozens of high-profile names in what is shaping up to be the biggest sex scandal in the US capital for more than a decade.
Deborah Jeane Palfrey, who handed the telephone numbers of up to 15,000 clients to a US television network last week, said that she would identify as many well-known figures as possible to subpoena them as defence witnesses.
Ms Palfrey’s list of telephone numbers, that weighs in at 46lb (21kg) and has landed like a bombshell in political Washington, has already cost one deputy to Condoleezza Rice, the Secretary of State, his job and thrust another official — the Pentagon adviser who coined the term “shock and awe” — to the heart of the scandal. ’Madam’ threatens to name and shame (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
scandal,
Washington
BBC: Virginia governor Timothy M Kaine has tightened the state's gun laws in response to the killing of 32 people at Virginia Tech earlier this month.
Mr Kaine issued an executive order banning people found to be dangerous and ordered to have involuntary mental health treatment from purchasing guns. Virginia closes firearms loophole (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
US gun laws
Monday, April 30, 2007
Photo of Mr Wolfowitz courtesy of Google Images
In a statement to a panel of World Bank directors, the embattled chief said he was the victim of a "smear campaign".
Mr Wolfowitz was defending himself against accusations that he pushed through a huge pay package for his girlfriend without the Bank's consent.
The committee is due to report to the Bank's board of 24 representatives, who will decide on the president's fate.
Mr Wolfowitz has apologised for his actions, vowing to stay on to complete what he called "important work".
Earlier, US President George W Bush said he believed Mr Wolfowitz "ought to stay" in his job. I will not resign, says Wolfowitz
Mark Alexander
Photo courtesy of SpiegelOnline International
Mark Alexander
Labels:
Germany,
transatlantic relations,
US
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Hitler's years in the German army during World War I have long been a mystery due to the lack of eyewitness accounts. Now a memoir written by a forgotten German author of fantastic literature has been rediscovered -- and sheds new light on the Führer. Eye-Witness Account of Hitler’s WWI Years Found (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
Germany,
Hitler,
World War I
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The threat of an army coup hangs over Turkey in a dispute about a presidential election that has once again exposed the country's deep divide between secularists and Islamists. Analysts hope the constitutional court will reduce tensions by annulling the vote and prompting fresh parliamentary elections. Alarm Grows over Political Crisis in Turkey (Read on)
Mark Alexander
Labels:
Islamism,
Secularism,
Turkey
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