Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Pope ‘Ashamed’ of Abuse by Clergy

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Photo of President Bush meeting Pope Benedict courtesy of the BBC

BBC: Pope Benedict XVI has said he is "deeply ashamed" of sexual abuse by clergy in the US Catholic Church.

The Pope vowed to work to prevent paedophiles from becoming priests as he flew to Washington at the beginning of his first visit to the US as pontiff.

In recent years, the US Catholic Church has paid $2bn (£1bn) to settle clergy sexual abuse cases.

US President George W Bush made the unusual gesture of greeting the Pope on his arrival at Andrews Air Force Base.

During his trip, the Pope will address the UN, celebrate two masses, pray at Ground Zero and visit a synagogue.

The Pope told reporters on board the flight to Washington: "We will absolutely exclude paedophiles from the sacred ministry." Pope ‘Ashamed’ of US Clergy Abuse >>>

BBC:
Pope May Find US on His Wavelength >>>

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Pakistan Parliament Slams Anti-Koran Film and Cartoon

REUTERS: ISLAMABAD - Pakistan's parliament passed a resolution on Tuesday denouncing an anti-Koran film made by a Dutch politician and the reprinting of a cartoon of the Prophet Mohammad in Danish newspapers.

Titled "Fitna", a Koranic term sometimes translated as "strife", the film by anti-immigration lawmaker Geert Wilders accuses the Koran of inciting violence and has drawn condemnation from many Muslim countries, including Pakistan.

Small protests have also been held by hardline Islamic groups in Pakistan, a predominantly Muslim nation of 160 million people, against both the film and the republication of one of the 12 cartoons of the Prophet in Danish newspapers in February.

At least 50 people were killed during violent protests in the Muslim countries in 2006 over the cartoons, which were first published in late 2005. Five of were killed in Pakistan.

"This House strongly condemns the printing and reprinting of the sacrilegious and blasphemous caricatures of the Holy Prophet of Islam and release of an offensive and derogatory documentary on Islam titled 'Fitna'," read the resolution adopted by the National Assembly, parliament's lower house.

The resolution called on the United Nations to take steps to ensure respect for all religions. Pakistan Parliament Slams Anti-Koran Film and Cartoon >>>

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Pat Condell: A Word to Islamofascists


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Wife-Beating in Islam: “Men Have Authority Over Women”


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Daniel Pipes: Europe or Eurabia?

THE AUSTRALIAN: THE future of Europe is in play. Will it turn into "Eurabia", a part of the Muslim world? Will it remain the distinct cultural unit it has been for the past millennium? Or might there be some creative synthesis of the two?

The answer has vast importance. Europe may constitute a mere 7 per cent of the world's landmass but for 500 years, 1450-1950, for good and ill, it was the global engine of change.

How it develops in the future will affect all humanity, especially daughter countries such as Australia that still retain close and important ties to the old continent. I foresee potentially one of three paths for Europe: Muslims dominating, Muslims rejected or harmonious integration.

* Muslim domination strikes some analysts as inevitable. Oriana Fallaci found that "Europe becomes more and more a province of Islam, a colony of Islam". Mark Steyn argues that much of the Western world "will not survive the 21st century and much of it will effectively disappear within our lifetimes, including many if not most European countries".

Such authors point to three factors leading to Europe's Islamisation: faith, demography and a sense of heritage.

The secularism that predominates in Europe, especially among its elites, leads to alienation from the Judeo-Christian tradition, empty church pews and a fascination with Islam. In complete contrast, Muslims display a religious fervour that translates into jihadi sensibility, a supremacism towards non-Muslims and an expectation that Europe is waiting for conversion to Islam.

The contrast in faith also has demographic implications, with Christians having on average 1.4 children a woman, or about one-third less than the number needed to maintain their population, and Muslims enjoying a dramatically higher, if falling, fertility rate. Amsterdam and Rotterdam, in about 2015, are expected to be the first large majority-Muslim cities.

Russia could become a Muslim-majority country in 2050. To employ enough workers to fund existing pension plans, Europe needs millions of immigrants, and these tend to be disproportionately Muslim due to reasons of proximity, colonial ties and the turmoil in majority-Muslim countries.

In addition, many Europeans no longer cherish their history, mores and customs. Guilt about fascism, racism and imperialism leaves many with a sense that their own culture has less value than that of immigrants.

Such self-disdain has direct implications for Muslim immigrants, for if Europeans shun their own ways, why should immigrants adopt them? When added to the existing Muslim hesitations over much that is Western, especially concerns about sexuality, the result is Muslim populations who strongly resist assimilation.

The logic of this first path leads to Europe ultimately becoming an extension of North Africa.

* But the first path is not inevitable. Indigenous Europeans could resist it and, as they make up 95per cent of the continent's population, they can at any time reassert control should they see Muslims posing a threat to a valued way of life.

This impulse can be seen at work in the French anti-hijab legislation or in Geert Wilders's film, Fitna. Anti-immigrant parties gain in strength; a potential nativist movement is taking shape across Europe as political parties opposed to immigration focus increasingly on Islam and Muslims. These parties include the British National Party, Belgium's Vlaamse Belang, France's National Front, the Austrian Freedom Party, the Party for Freedom in The Netherlands and the Danish People's Party.

They are likely to continue to grow as immigration surges ever higher, with mainstream parties paying and expropriating their anti-Islamic message. Should nationalist parties gain power, they will reject multiculturalism, cut back on immigration, encourage repatriation of immigrants, support Christian institutions, increase indigenous European birthrates and broadly attempt to re-establish traditional ways. Europe or Eurabia >>> By Daniel Pipes* | April 15, 2008

* Daniel Pipes (www.DanielPipes.org) is director of the Middle East Forum and Taube/Diller distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University. He is in Australia for the Intelligence Squared debate to take place this evening in Sydney. This article derives from a talk he delivered yesterday to a Quadrant dinner.

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Monday, April 14, 2008

McCain Enters Obama’s “Bitter” Row

BBC: Republican presidential hopeful John McCain has described Barack Obama's comments about "bitter" working-class voters as "elitist".

Mr McCain told reporters that the cultural and religious traditions of small-town Americans were not a response to economic hardship.

Mr Obama's Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, also denounced the comments.

Mr Obama has said his remarks - made at a fundraiser in San Francisco last week - were ill-chosen.

'Cultural traditions'

Mr McCain was talking to journalists assembled for the annual Associated Press meeting.

He said that Americans from "small towns and rural communities" had not "turn[ed] to their religious faith and cultural traditions out of resentment and a feeling of powerlessness to affect the course of government or pursue prosperity".

"Their appreciation of traditions like hunting was based in nothing other than their contribution to the enjoyment of life", he added.

Mr Obama, running against Mrs Clinton to be the Democratic presidential candidate, was accused of taking a condescending view of small-town voters after he was filmed at a private fundraising gathering last week, during which he said he understood why residents of some hard-pressed communities grew angry.

"You go into these small towns in Pennsylvania and, like a lot of small towns in the Midwest, the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing's replaced them," he said.

"And it's not surprising, then, they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations," he added. McCain Enters 'Bitter' Voters Row >>>

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Shirin Ebadi Threatened with Death

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Photo of Shirin Ebadi courtesy of the BBC

BBC: Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner and human rights lawyer Shirin Ebadi has described receiving an increasing number of death threats.

They included notes pinned to the door of her office building in Tehran, warning her to "watch your tongue".

Ms Ebadi, an outspoken critic of Iran's leadership, said she had forwarded the threats to the chief of Iranian police.

She said last month: "When you believe in the correctness of your work, there is no reason to be afraid of anything."

In an interview, she told Reuters news agency that Iran's human rights record had regressed in the past two years, saying more dissidents were being jailed and more people were being executed.

Ms Ebadi, 60, won the Nobel prize in 2003 for her work in defending human rights.

She has received death threats before, but in a statement on Monday, she said: "Threats against my life and security and those of my family, which began some time ago, have intensified."

One of the anonymous, handwritten threats said: "Shirin Ebadi, your death is near."

They warned her against making speeches abroad, and defending Iran's minority Bahai community.

The Bahai faith is an offshoot of Islam, regarded as heretical by Iran's Shia establishment. [Source: Top Iranian Dissident Threatened] | April 14, 2008

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The Pope’s Challenge in the States: Sex Abuse

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Photo of Pope Benedict XVI courtesy of TIME

TIME: Pope Benedict XVI's trip this week to the United States will include high-profile visits to the White House, United Nations and Ground Zero. But no matter what political issues or media angles may be buzzing before take-off, the Vatican tends to stress the pastoral aspect of any papal journey. The six-day itinerary is above all stacked with church services, baseball stadium masses and Catholic institutional encounters to allow the pontiff to tend to his flock, and to the priests and bishops who do the ministering when he's back in Rome.

The American visit, however, poses an unprecedented pastoral challenge for the 80-year-old pontiff. Benedict's is the first papal trip to the United States since the priest sex abuse crisis erupted in 2001. It is a controversy that has left much of the American laity bitterly disillusioned with their Church's leadership. For many of the 67 million American Catholics, how the Pope confronts the lingering fallout from the pedophilia scandal may largely determine the success of this visit.

Benedict's arrival in the U.S. is being seen as a make-or-break moment for Rome to regain the trust of its American flock, the third largest national contingent within a worldwide Catholic Church of 1.1 billion faithful. In recent days, the Vatican has confirmed that on at least one occasion Benedict will specifically address the issue. The Vatican's No. 2 official, Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, told FOX News that the Pope will confront the "open wound" of sex abuse during the April 19 morning mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral for New York-area clergy. It is unclear whether his words will amount to a Mea Culpa similar to those pronounced by John Paul II back in 2000 for the sins of the Church over past centuries, including persecution of Jews and heretics. Brazilian Cardinal Claudio Hummes, who heads the Vatican office for the clergy, sent a letter to bishops around the world in January, urging special prayer sessions for the victims of sexual abuse by priests. The Pope’s Sex Abuse Challenge >>> By Jess Israely in Rome and David Van Biema in new York | April 11, 2008

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Israel Snubs Carter and Declines Security Help

REUTERS: JERUSALEM - Israel's secret service declined to assist U.S. agents guarding former U.S. President Jimmy Carter during a visit in which Israeli leaders shunned him over his plans to meet Hamas, U.S. sources said on Monday.

"They're not getting support from local security," one of the sources said, on condition of anonymity. Israel Snubs Carter and Declines Security Help >>> | April 14, 2008

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Point de vue: Réinventer la charia

MARRAKECH: Asim Siddiqui : Londres - L'archevêque de Canterbury est un personnage remarquablement intelligent et réfléchi. Son intervention du 7 février dernier se voulait une réponse aux problèmes complexes que pose la cohésion communautaire. Il tentait de répondre au sentiment d'aliénation qu'éprouvent certains secteurs des communautés musulmanes britanniques afin qu'ils se sentent mieux intégrés à ce pays.

Si les tabloïds se sont déchaînés, il importe que nous, nous gardions la tête froide. Toute analyse de la charia (principes islamiques de jurisprudence) se heurte à la difficulté suivante: il s'agit d'un concept très vaste, qui englobe à la fois le domaine public et le domaine privé. Il est également susceptible d'une grande diversité d'interprétations. Pour ma part, je serais enclin à affirmer que les objectifs fondamentaux de la charia – protection de la vie, famille, dignité, intellect et propriété – sont tous couverts par la loi britannique. Le but fondamental de la charia est de faire régner la justice. Or ce pays le fait, et plus encore. Pourquoi alors rajouter de la charia à notre système?

Les aspects de la charia auxquels songe l'archevêque se limitent à certains aspects du droit de la famille et du droit patrimonial, c'est-à-dire au domaine des affaires civiles. Nul ne songe à introduire le code pénal dit islamique – aussi, ne perdons pas notre temps à discuter d'une réalité que la plupart d'entre nous refusons déjà pour le monde musulman, et a fortiori pour la Grande-Bretagne.

Parlons donc du droit de la famille et du droit patrimonial, S'agissant de ce dernier, le Royaume Uni procède à une révision de sa législation financière afin de ménager une place aux produits conformes à la charia, tels que les hypothèques halal (conformes aux principes islamiques) et obligations islamiques. Pourquoi? En grande partie pour attirer les milliards de pétrodollars qui flottent en abondance dans les pays du Golfe. Ici, la loi obéit aux réalités de la finance mondiale pour conserver à Londres son statut de capitale financière de premier plan; ce n'est pas ce qui fera de notre ville un « Londonistan ». Réinventer la charia >>> D’Asim Siddiqui*

*Asim Siddiqui est président et administrateur fondateur du City Circle, réseau de jeunes cadres britanniques musulmans, membre de l’ Iraq Commission et de l'Institut international d'études stratégiques.

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Berlusconi: The Comeback Kid

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Photo of Berlusconi courtesy of the BBC

BBC: Veteran centre-right leader Silvio Berlusconi, 71, has a narrow lead in Italy's general election, exit polls suggest.

Mr Berlusconi, a billionaire, is bidding for a third term in office. His main rival is centre-left leader Walter Veltroni, formerly Rome mayor.

Exit polls showed Mr Berlusconi's bloc about 2% ahead for both houses.

The election was held three years ahead of schedule, following the collapse of Romano Prodi's centre-left coalition.

Correspondents caution that it is too early to predict a winner with any certainty.

The new government will be Italy's 62nd since World War II.

Tricky coalition talks are expected in the coming days. The next government faces the task of reviving Italy's ailing economy. Zero growth is forecast for the coming year. [Source: Exit Polls Place Berlusconi Ahead] | April 14, 2008

BBC UPDATE:
Berlusconi Wins Election in Italy >>>

NZZ Online:
Berlusconi gewinnt die Parlamentswahlen: In Italien zeichnen sich klare Mehrheitsverhältnisse ab >>>

LE FIGARO:
Italie : Berlusconi proclame 
sa victoire >>>

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Gathering Storm Weekly Storm Report: Walid Shoebat & Yours Truly Interviewed By Always On Watch and WC


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Pope Will Pray for Terrorists and Call Them to Christianity at Ground Zero

THE TELEGRAPH: The Pope will pray for the redemption of Islamic terrorists when he visits the site of the September 11 attacks in New York next week.

The pontiff will call for terrorists to convert to Christianity, saying: "Turn to Your way of love those whose hearts and minds are consumed with hatred. 

"God of understanding, overwhelmed by the magnitude of this tragedy, we seek your light and guidance". 



The prayer is likely to further incense the Muslim world, which has already attacked the Pope for publicly converting Magdi Allam, a journalist and one of Italy's most high-profile Muslims, at Easter.

Osama bin Laden accused the Pope of trying to provoke "a new crusade" against Islam.

Aref Ali Nayed, a leading scholar and proponent of peaceful relations between the Roman Catholic Church and Islam, said that there were "genuine questions about the motives, intentions and plans of some of the Pope's advisers on Islam".

He said that religious conversion should not be "made into a triumphalist tool for scoring points".

The Pope's first visit to the United States begins on Tuesday. He will visit Ground Zero on April 20 and the prayer is expected to be the emotional high-point of his tour.

The Pope will also ask for "eternal light and peace to all who died" in the tragedy. His prayer will remember "the heroic first-responders: our firefighters, police officers, emergency service workers… along with all the innocent men and women who were victims of this tragedy".

Around 3,000 people died in the attacks on the World Trade Centre, including the 19 hijackers. The prayer will also mention the victims "on the same day at the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania".

The Pope will conclude: "Bring Your peace to our violent world: peace in the hearts of all men and women and peace among the nations of the earth." He will then sprinkle the crater with holy water and bless the site. Pope Will Pray for Terrorists at Ground Zero >>> By Malcolm Moore in Rome | April 14, 2008

Hat tip: Dhimmi Watch

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Falling at the Feet of the Saudis

THE TELEGRAPH BLOG: I’m not sure that people have properly grasped the enormity of the BAE–Saudi affair. I mean, look at the language the high court used. The judges dismissed Labour’s contention that British jobs (let alone national security) would be at risk. It was, they said, a clear-cut case of our criminal justice system buckling under pressure from a foreign power. This ought to be such stuff as hauls down governments, pulverises reputations. Yet, after a day of harrumphing, the newspapers moved on.

Why is the nation not more outraged? “We fear for the reputation of the administration of justice if it can be perverted by a threat,” said the judges. “It is not difficult to imagine what they [the Saudis] would think if we attempted to interfere with their criminal justice system.” Quite.

So why are we taking it lying down? Why are people who normally care about British sovereignty not up in arms that we should have thrown ourselves at the feet of foreign despots?

The answer is that the whole affair has been brilliantly spun as a principle versus pragmatism issue. Unless you have been following the case with unusual interest, you will probably have formed the inchoate impression that it one of those questions that pits hard-headed hommes d’affaires against woolly-minded peaceniks. Seeing a coalition of anti-arms trade Guardianistas arrayed on one side, many Tories have unthinkingly lined up on the other.

In fact, the contention that British jobs or British interests were at stake appears wholly groundless. The judges who have picked over the whole sorry business believe that the Saudi Prince Bandar “went into Number Ten and said ‘get it stopped’”. All the bluster about security was, they thought, “a useful pretext”. Falling at the Feet of the Saudis >>> By Daniel Hannan

THE TELEGRAPH BLOG:
Grovelling to Oil Despots Demeans Us All >>> By Daniel Hannan

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UK: Communities Declining at ‘Fastest Rate Ever’

THE TELEGRAPH: The hastening decline of community life in the countryside is highlighted today in a new Government report.

Nearly half of all neighbourhoods have lost key amenities such as surgeries, post offices, shops and schools in the past four years, figures from Oxford University show.

The report suggests that towns and villages across England are losing basic services at "their fastest rate ever", prompting claims that Labour is overseeing "the slow death of community life".

The news comes after Stuart Burgess, Gordon Brown's "rural advocate", warned that poorer people in the countryside, who already face housing shortages and have little chance of a good education, "form a forgotten city of disadvantage".

The report, published quietly on the Department of Communities and Local Government website last month, reveals which parts of the country have lost out because of their distance from services such as doctors' surgeries and post offices.

It found that 45 per cent of the neighbourhoods in England - 14,493 out of 32,439 - have become more "geographically deprived" since the last such study was conducted in 2004. Communities Declining at 'Fastest Rate Ever' >>> By Christopher Hope, Home Affairs Correspondent | April 14, 2008

TELEGRAPH LEADER:
Our Countryside in Peril >>>

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

Fighting for Free Speech in Turkey

BBC: Hundreds of writers have been prosecuted in Turkey for "insulting Turkishness", but Sarah Rainsford discovers that there are still some people willing to publish controversial books.

It is a very difficult time to be a writer in Turkey.

Last year the prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, was murdered. This year, an ultra-nationalist gang allegedly had the Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk on its hit list.

Both men had been prosecuted for "insulting Turkishness".

Today, many writers once known for their forthright views have fallen silent. But one man is still putting himself on the line in a fight for free speech.

I found Ragip Zarakolu in one of the dimly-lit corridors of the Sultanahmet courthouse waiting to be called for his latest trial.

A small man with grey curls and crinkled kindly eyes, Mr Zarakolu is a publisher on a mission to shatter every taboo in Turkey.

As a result, he once admitted to me with characteristic chuckle he is now the most prosecuted publisher in the country.

This time he is also accused of "insulting Turkishness" under article 301 of the penal code.

The case was opened after he published the work of a British writer. It was the story of the writer's family in 1915, when hundreds of thousands of Ottoman Armenians were deported as traitors during World War I. Turkey's taboos >>>

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BlogTalkRadio: Atlas Shrugs Interviews Ibn Warraq on Fitna


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Receiving a Personal Call from God

BBC: With the number of seminary entrants rising yearly, has the problem of the Roman Catholic Church's ageing priest population been solved?

This weekend is a significant one in the Catholic calendar. It marks Vocation Sunday, an annual day of prayer for vocations into the priesthood and other forms of religious life.

This year, the church has distributed 4,000 posters and other publicity materials to parishes, schools and university chaplaincies across the UK.

Such determination to raise awareness of the possibility of a religious life may seem surprising given recent increases in the number of young men entering the priesthood.

Over the past five years, the number of would-be priests beginning formation, or training, has almost doubled - from an all-time low of 24 in 2003 to 44 in 2007.

"The death of Pope John Paul II and ascension of Benedict XVI were an important time for us", says Father Paul Embery, director of the National Office for Vocation.

"People became more encouraged to make an enquiry into joining the priesthood.

"We're also beginning to recognise a lot of people who have become priests, monks or nuns because they have been asked to do so. Sometimes, just being asked can be a crystallising moment.

"We're regaining the confidence to be able to ask young men to enter the priesthood." Receiving a Personal Call from God >>> By Amy Blackburn, BBC News | April 12, 2008

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Moqtada Sadr: US Will Always Be the Enemy

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Photo of Moqtada Sadr courtesy of the BBC

BBC: Radical Iraqi Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr has said the US will always be his enemy "till the last drop of blood".

Mr Sadr was responding to a statement by US Defence Secretary Robert Gates, who said that all those within the political process were not enemies.

"I have no enemy but you. You are the occupier," Mr Sadr's statement said. Sadr Says US Will Always Be Enemy >>> | April 12, 2008

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Daniel Pipes, I Totally Disagree with Your Conclusion! Islam and Democracy, in My Opinion, Are Immiscible, Immiscible, Immiscible!

Give Muslims Time to Find Democratic Feet >>>

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