Thursday, March 19, 2009

Massenprotest gegen Sarkozys Wirtschaftspolitik: Gewerkschaften fordern weitere Konjunkturspritzen

NZZ Online: Mit Kundgebungen und Streiks haben die französischen Gewerkschaften für verstärkte Massnahmen zur Konjunkturbelebung demonstriert. Zentrale Forderungen waren mehr Kaufkraft und Schutz der Arbeitsplätze. Die Regierung warnte dagegen vor einem vergrösserten Staatsdefizit.

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Protestkundgebung in Bordeaux. Bild (Reuters) dank der Neuen Zürcher Zeitung

Millionen Menschen sind an rund 220 Kundgebungen in Frankreich auf die Strasse gegangen. Es handelte sich um die grössten Proteste seit dem Amtsantritt von Präsident Nicolas Sarkozy. Begleitet wurden sie von Streiks im öffentlichen Dienst, denen sich auch die Beschäftigten vieler Privatunternehmen der Auto-, Elektro- und Energiewirtschaft anschlossen.

Premierminister François Fillon verzichtete wegen des Streiks auf seine Teilnahme an der Eröffnung des EU-Gipfels in Brüssel. Mit Hinweis auf das ausufernde Staatsdefizit lehnte Fillon weitere Massnahmen zur Konjunkturankurbelung oder zur sozialen Absicherung ab. Nach ähnlichen Protesten am 29. Januar hatte Sarkozy den Gewerkschaften 2,6 Milliarden Euro für soziale Massnahmen zugesagt. >>> sda/dpa/afp | Donnerstag, 19. März 2009

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Iowa Kosher Slaughterhouse Supervisor to Be Sentenced on Federal Immigration Charges

SEATTLE TIMES: A supervisor arrested after a massive immigration raid at an Iowa kosher slaughterhouse is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday afternoon in federal court in Cedar Rapids.

DES MOINES, Iowa — A supervisor arrested after a massive immigration raid at an Iowa kosher slaughterhouse is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday afternoon in federal court in Cedar Rapids.

Juan Carlos Guerrero-Espinoza, who supervised four departments at Agriprocessors Inc. in Postville, has pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to hire illegal immigrants and one count of aiding and abetting the hiring of illegal immigrants.

He was arrested last summer following a May raid in which 389 people were arrested. A few months later he struck a plea deal with prosecutors and faces up to 10 years in prison and a $500,000 fine.

Another supervisor, Martin De La Rosa-Loera, was sentenced earlier this month to 23 months in prison followed by two years supervised release. [Source: Seattle Times] Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Pelosi: Immigration Enforcement "Un-American"

MYSTATELINE.COM: San Francisco, CA -- Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi says the enforcement of existing immigration laws is "un-American." Pelosi made the comments before a group of both legal and illegal immigrants and their families in San Francisco recently.

While condemning raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, Pelosi said, quote, "who in [in] this country would not want to change a policy of kicking in doors in the middle of the night and sending a parent away from their families? It must be stopped. What value system is that? I think it's un-American."

Speaking before a mostly Hispanic gathering at a San Francisco church, the Speaker went on to call the immigrants, quote, "very, very patriotic" while telling the crowd they were, quote, "taking responsibility for our country's future."

Not everyone in the crowd was pleased with Pelosi's sentiments.

Rick Oltman, with Californians for Population Stabilization, said he was embarrassed by what Pelosi said.

Oltman charged the speaker with pandering to the crowd by exhorting illegals for taking responsibility for our country's future.

Oltman said Pelosi was insulting American citizens who consider themselves to be patriotic and obey the rule of law. [Source: MyStateLine.com] Copyright 2009 by Newsroom Solutions | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Obama to Visit Turkey on April 6-7: Turkish PM

AFP: ANKARA — US President Barack Obama will visit Turkey on April 6-7, following an invitation from Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to attend a forum aimed at fostering dialogue between the West and the Muslim world.

Erdogan said late Wednesday he had invited Obama to attend a meeting of the Alliance of Civilizations initiative in Istanbul on April 7 and expressed surprise that the US president responded with a proposal also for an official visit to Ankara the day before.

"I didn't expect (an official visit) that soon," Erdogan said in an interview with TGRT television, adding that Obama was expected to attend the Istanbul forum as well.

"The official visit will be probably combined with the Alliance of Civilizations meeting... That is very meaningful for us," he said.

Predominantly Muslim, secular Turkey is a NATO member and a close ally of the United States in a troubled region.

The UN-backed Alliance of Civilizations initiative was launched in 2005 in a bid to help overcome prejudices and misunderstandings between different cultures and religions. It is co-chaired by Turkey and Spain. >>> Copyright © 2009 AFP | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Iran [Says] Uncovers Foreign-backed Internet Plot

REUTERS: TEHRAN - Iran has arrested a number of people accused of setting up anti-religious and obscene web sites as part of a foreign-backed plot to undermine the Islamic Republic, Iranian media reported on Thursday.

The semi-official Fars News Agency listed the initials of 26 people it said were involved in the case but it did not make clear whether all of them had been detained in an operation by the intelligence arm of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards.

They were part of networks supported by foreign security services, it said, without naming the countries.

"These people ... with the aim to take forward the enemies' goals as part of the soft revolution project acted to launch a number of anti-religious, obscene and anti-revolutionary web sites," Fars said. >>> Fredrik Dahl | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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US to Aid in Rescue of Persecuted Yemen Jews

HAARETZ: The United States government is taking part in efforts to extricate Jews in Yemen who have been the subject of physical harassment from their Muslim neighbors.

The rescue efforts focus on 300 Jews from the Yemenite town of Rada, north of the capital Sanaa.

The State Department has maintained a weeks-long dialog with Yemenite authorities over the fate of the country's Jewish community. The issue took on more urgency following the murder this past December of a prominent activist in the Jewish community, Moshe Yaish Nahari.

It is unclear if the U.S. involvement in helping facilitate the Jews' exit from Yemen is the result of an initiative by Washington or an appeal from Israel. The operation is the brainchild of the umbrella group United Jewish Communities, which is being aided by other organizations specializing in absorbing and resettling refugees. >>> By Shlomo Shamir, Haaretz Correspondent | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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BNP Targeting European Parliament Elections

THE GUARDIAN: Recession misery could boost Britain's far-right / Britain's BNP using tactics of European far-right / BNP targeting European parliament elections

LONDON (Reuters) - Far-right politicians in Britain are ready to tap into the misery of millions forced into the ranks of the unemployed during the recession, and are learning new tactics from allies across Europe.

While many voices are raised in support of more left-wing social democracy to counter the unfettered capitalism blamed for the financial crisis, the paradox is that extreme far-right groups may be the beneficiary, as in the 1930s Depression years.

Immigration is rising up the political agenda in Britain, where energy workers staged protests earlier this year about the use of imported foreign labour.

Polls show opinion turning against foreigners who are seen as unwelcome competition for ever more scarce jobs, wages, and social services -- and the far-right British National Party (BNP) is poised to feed on any unrest.

"In terms of support for the far-right, recession is certainly a major factor," said Dr Matthew Goodwin, a research fellow in political science at Manchester University.

"This is an absolutely critical moment. We're in the midst of an economic recession, there are record levels of public concern over immigration, the mainstream parties are pretty much crowding each other out in the centre ground -- and that leaves a lot of space on the fringes of the political spectrum."

Experts say there is now greater cross-border cooperation between far-right parties in Europe which could boost those -- like the BNP -- who lag behind.

The BNP has no representation at national level but its local council strength is growing and it has one seat on the high-profile London Assembly government of the capital. >>> By Kate Kelland | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Uganda: Country to Host World Islamic Economic Forum

ALLAFRICA.COM: Kampala — UGANDA National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (UNCCI) in partnership with the Uganda Government are to host World Islamic Economic Forum (WIEF) in September.

WIEF has established itself globally as a key business platform that has brought together eminent government and business leaders to share current trends and successful strategies in building and maximising businesses. >>> James Odomel | Wednesday, March 18, 2009

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Pope Meets Cameroon's Muslims, Stresses Values

AFP: YAOUNDE — Pope Benedict XVI stressed the common values shared by Christianity and Islam at a meeting with leading members of Cameroon's Muslim community Thursday.

Cameroon "shelters thousands of Christians and Muslims who often live, work and carry out their religious devotions in the same neighbourhood," said the pope in a text distributed to journalists.

They all believed in a single God and shared "fundamental values" such as the family, social responsibility, obedience to God and care for the weak, he added. >>> Copyright © 2009 AFP | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Londonistan Rising

FRONTPAGEMAG.COM: Last month, the British government controversially refused entry to Geert Wilders, enforcing a ban it had placed on the Dutch parliamentarian for his anti-Islam film, Fitna. While Britain works to eliminate the “threat” from the critics of Islam, however, the British government is facing a far greater peril from the spread of radical Islam on its own territory.

The CIA reportedly has warned President Obama that Islamic extremists living in the United Kingdom are now viewed as the greatest threat to the United States. “Around 40 per cent of CIA activity on homeland threats is now in the UK. This is quite unprecedented,” one British official was quoted as saying in The Telegraph.

Further heightening the threat, these extremists are becoming ever more connected with overseas terrorist networks. Dozens of British citizens are believed to have traveled to Somalia, to fight alongside Al-Qaeda-linked Islamic militants seeking to seize the country from the current government. The Somali militants are reportedly receiving funding from the large Somali community in the United Kingdom. British Muslims have also been providing Taliban forces in Afghanistan with bomb parts, while others are thought to have joined the battlefield and fought against the British military.

Britain’s terrorist networks are vast. According to a joint intelligence report by Britain’s Defense Ministry, MI5 and Special Branch, there are thousands of terrorism supporters in the country. These findings echo an earlier warning from the director of MI-5 that there were at least 2,000 people in the country identified as posing a threat to national security. “It is also estimated that there are some 200 terrorist networks functioning in Britain today who are involved in at least 30 plots,” The Telegraph reported in November 2008.

The pool of potential terrorist recruits appears to be growing. In 2008, the non-partisan Center for Social Cohesion released a poll of 1,400 Muslim students in the United Kingdom and found some frightening results. While there was strong support for some moderate beliefs – including the notion that Islam is compatible with democracy and support for gender equality – some 24 percent felt that Allah did not view males and females equally, and 33 percent favored the construction of “a worldwide Caliphate based on Sharia law.” >>> By Ryan Mauro | Thursday, March 12, 2009

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Bin Laden: Topple Somalia's Leader

AL JAZEERA: Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda, has called on the people of Somalia to overthrow Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, their president.

Bin Laden made his comments in an audio recording that was posted on a website on Thursday.

He described Sheikh Ahmed as a person who disowns Islam.

As-Sahab, al-Qaeda's media company, released the tape entitled Fight on, champions of Somalia, in which Bin Laden said: "He [Sheikh Ahmed] must be dethroned and fought."

Bin Laden compared Sheikh Ahmed to Hamid Karzai, the Afghan president, Burhanuddin Rabbani, a former Afghan president, and Ahmed Shah Massoud, a prominent commander who fought during a 10-year war against Soviet occupation in Afghanistan.

"These sorts of presidents are the surrogates of our enemies and their authority is null and void," the Bin Laden said. >>> Al Jazeera and agencies | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Europe Falls Out of Love with Labor Migration

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: With unemployment soaring, many European Union countries want the migrant workers they once attracted to go home as quickly as possible. They are sparing no expense or effort to encourage them to leave.

Chultem Choijusuren was watching television in Ulan Bator when he decided to climb aboard the globalization bandwagon. According to an ad he had seen, companies in the Czech Republic were paying young mechanics "€1,000 a month." Most people in the Mongolian steppes were already familiar with the small Eastern European country. After all, many young people from here had studied in Prague during the two countries' Socialist pasts.

The Mongolian planned to stay in Europe for perhaps half a year, save a few thousand euros, and return home to open his own car repair shop.

Choijusuren is part of the army of migrants that has moved westward from developing countries in recent years, with one in three chosing Europe as their destination. After the European Union's eastward expansion in 2004, tens of thousands of Asians found jobs in Polish, Czech and Slovak factories, where they were welcomed with open arms to fill the jobs that one million Poles and hundreds of thousands of Czechs, Balts, Slovaks and Hungarians had left behind when they in turn migrated to the wealthier EU countries. Ireland, Great Britain and Sweden, unlike Germany and Austria, had immediately opened their borders to citizens of the new member states, and Spain followed suit two years later.

Construction companies and restaurants in these countries were only too pleased to employ the cheap labor from the East. More and more families hired Polish women to clean their houses or nannies with Slavic accents to put their children to bed. The migrants' wages were modest, and yet in some cases three times as high as they were at home. The newcomers sent as much of their earnings home as possible, injecting capital that helped their hometowns gain unprecedented prosperity.

Once the global economic crisis erupted those days were over. Unemployment has risen twice as fast in Great Britain and Spain as elsewhere in Europe. Now the citizens of Western European countries need the jobs themselves, and their governments are resorting to all kinds of tricks and incentives to get rid of the wiling hands they once needed so badly.

Globalization has turned 200 million people into migrant workers in the last few decades. One fifth of them are Europeans, less than one tenth are Africans and 3 percent are from Latin America. Now the trend is reversing itself, a shift that generally affects those who came from Europe's poorest regions and from emerging and developing nations. Officials at the United Nations International Labor Organization (ILO) fear that 30 million people around the globe could lose their livelihoods by the end of the year. >>> By SPIEGEL Staff | Wednesday, March 18, 2009

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Jihad Chic Comes to London

NEWSWEEK: In the city's Muslim neighborhoods, an Afghan reporter finds a few too many uncomfortable reminders of home.

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Photo courtesy of Newsweek

I still don't know who wanted me dead. I was sitting in my car one day last november, not far from my house in the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar, when a group of strangers walked up. One of them pointed a pistol through my window. I remember he wore a turban and shalwar kameez—the tunic and baggy pants common in the area—and he had a long beard, dyed red with henna. He shot me in the chest, hand and arm, and then fled with his friends. Miraculously, none of the bullets hit any arteries or vital organs, and as soon as a doctor patched me up and I was strong enough to travel, I booked a flight to London. I planned to lie low for a while, to rest and seek further medical help for a bullet that was lodged in my arm. But more than that, I just wanted to be somewhere calm and safe, far from AK-toting gunmen, suicide bombers and the daily, random violence of Pakistan's borderlands.

London was a revelation—cold, clean and orderly—but my sense of relief didn't last long. In one of the city's many South Asian neighborhoods, I saw a tall young Afghan who reminded me of my would-be assassin, striding down the street like a bad dream. He too wore a shalwar kameez, and a big turban of white silk was wrapped loosely around his head. His beard was long, and his hair was shoulder length. Anyone dressed like that in Islamabad would be immediately picked up for questioning by the police. I had flown halfway across the world to get away from killers who resembled this young Londoner. I stared after him until he was gone from view.

But as days passed I spotted him again and again. He stood out even in a neighborhood full of Asians dressed in traditional garb—shalwar kameez, saris, abayas. Locals had a nickname for him: Talib Jan. It's a friendly Afghan slang term for a Taliban member, something like GI Joe for Americans. The area's crowded, rundown row houses had become home to hundreds of Afghans who first arrived in England as fugitives from the Taliban's intolerance and brutality. Nevertheless, most of Jan's neighbors spoke of him tolerantly or even approvingly.

In fact, during my three-month stay in England I met a surprising number of Muslims who shared Jan's fascination with the Taliban. The older generation, urbane and relatively well educated, had little love for the extremists. But among some younger men, frustrated and marginalized in British society, I discovered a fury that was depressingly familiar. I met many immigrants who were blatant, vocal and unquestioning in their support for what they imagined to be "jihad." Few seemed troubled by the brutality that characterized Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar's reign, or by his banning of music or girls' education. Indeed, many looked back on Omar's rule as a kind of Islamic utopia, and they eagerly snapped up the Islamist leaflets handed out after Friday prayers at various mosques around town.

I first introduced myself to Jan at one of those mosques. I complimented his taste in clothes: that's how people dress back home in Afghanistan, I said. (I was born in northern Afghanistan; my family fled to Pakistan in 1979 to escape the Soviet invasion.) His fierce appearance to the contrary, Jan turned out to be friendly and outgoing. He listened with interest to my story, but mostly he talked about himself, his Islamist views, his fierce support for the Taliban and his contempt for the Brits and Americans fighting them.

His vehemence surprised me. Twenty-three years old, Jan had been born in eastern Afghanistan and attended a madrassa in Pakistan. The Taliban still ruled Afghanistan when his parents paid a people smuggler to sneak Jan to England at 14. There he applied for and was granted political asylum, claiming that the Taliban had persecuted him and his family. Now he's a legal resident, yet openly cheers for his supposed oppressors to defeat troops from his adopted homeland in Afghanistan. The irony seems lost on him. >>> By Sami Yousafzai | Saturday, March 14, 2009

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Rageh Omaar on Why the West Should Fear the Taliban and al-Qaeda's Hold on Pakistan

THE TELEGRAPH: Stronghold of both the Taliban and al-Qaeda, the wild and lawless tribal border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan forms the crucial battleground in the war on terror. Rageh Omaar reports from the front line.

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Supporters of Pro-Taliban cleric Sufi Muhammad march in Swat's main city of Mingora, Photo (AP) courtesy of The Telegraph

”Over the past two years, I have noticed that there is such a hatred of anything to do with the West throughout much of the tribal areas that the region has changed dramatically…

…Pakistan represents the first realistic prospect for a jihadist movement to capture a nation-state, or at the very least to control large parts of it. It would, in effect, mean that militants would have something approaching a mini-state within the country where the central government's power and influence would be non-existent, and from which they could plan and launch attacks beyond its borders. And Pakistan is not just any nation-state at threat from militant groups, but one that has nuclear weapons, a large population and economic resources; one that borders a vulnerable failed state in Afghanistan where tens of thousands of Nato forces are stationed; and one that also has as its neighbours two emerging economic superpowers, China and India. What is more, Pakistan has a long coastline open to the most economically important stretch of waterway in the world, the Gulf, from which hundreds of tankers supply oil-hungry economies. It is a nightmare scenario from which no country is immune. None of us will escape the consequences of a situation where large parts of Pakistan are politically, militarily and economically controlled by jihadists."
– Rageh Omaar


The stark mountainous northern regions of Pakistan's tribal areas are among the most beautiful landscapes in the world. Yet as Barack Obama's newly appointed special envoy to the region, the famously tough and straight-talking diplomat Richard Holbrooke, has said, Pakistan is the country that scares President Obama and keeps him awake at night more than any other.

On my assignments to Pakistan in the past two years, it has been hard to believe the country's nightmare could get any worse. It has been heartbreaking to see this nation of more than 170 million people convulsed by political violence that its government seems increasingly incapable of halting. From the assassination of Benazir Bhutto to the almost weekly suicide bomb attacks that go unnoticed by the outside world, every strike by the militants is more audacious than the previous one.

The ambush of the Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore at the beginning of this month came at the same time that the four main Taliban groups in Pakistan announced their decision to unite their forces in a concerted military campaign against Nato and government forces in neighbouring Afghanistan. Cricket, as many have observed, is one of the few cultural and sporting pastimes in which all Pakistanis, regardless of class, regional, ethnic or sectarian traditions, can unite around. It is a sport that both the religiously conservative and the Westernised elite enjoy. The aim of the militant attack on Lahore was to undermine this; to make the point that nothing is immune from political violence and that the Taliban's vision for Pakistan is an absolutist one with no room for anything Western, or anything that isn't derived from their literal interpretation of Islam.

More and more of Pakistan is slipping beyond the control of the government. As the Lahore attack showed, even the centres of major cities are vulnerable. Nowhere is the absence of the rule of law more evident than the north-west of Pakistan. The region is officially known as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, a clunky but accurate description of this vast expanse of nearly 11,000 square miles, home to an estimated seven million people whose first loyalty is not to Pakistan but to their tribal community. As its name indicates, this region is nominally administered by the Pakistani government but it has been autonomous and unconquered for centuries. >>> By Rageh Omaar | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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A Pope Who Seems Fallible

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Photo of the Pope courtesy of Tribune de Genève

THE INDEPENDENT: From offending Jews and Muslims to saying condoms could make Africa's Aids crisis worse, Benedict XVI appears destined to blunder

On his first pontifical visit to Africa this week, Pope Benedict XVI set off another storm of controversy when he said that condoms were not only not the solution to the continent's Aids crisis but that they actually "make matters worse".

It was just the latest in an endless succession of high-profile gaffes that have made the brainiest pope of modern times also by a wide margin the most accident-prone.

In previous pratfalls the Bavarian theologian has welcomed back into the Church a bishop who flatly denies the existence of the Nazi gas chambers, refused to sign UN declarations on the rights of homosexuals and the disabled, denied the possibility of inter-religious dialogue after praying in a mosque, insulted Muslims en masse, and failed to mention the Jews while visiting Auschwitz.

Benedict's gaffes are becoming as frequent and predictable as Silvio Berlusconi's. And while Joseph Ratzinger has never cultivated the image of clown and raconteur so dear to the Italian PM, there is something else that the two men share: they wait for the grand occasion, when the world is hanging on their words, to drop their peculiar bombshells.

It was always going to be interesting to hear what Berlusconi had to say, standing alongside Russia's President Medvedev, about newly-elected President Obama. Berlusconi picked that moment to say that Obama "has a good tan". He chose the spotlight of a joint press conference to tell President Sarkozy, sotto voce but audibly, that Carla Bruni was his personal gift to the Frenchman.

Likewise, Pope Benedict picked his first trip to Africa to drop his condom bomb. Given the huge amount of flak the Church has received from Aids campaigners over the years for its failure to endorse the use of condoms in any circumstances, even within a marriage in which one partner is infected, this was not a subject that the pontiff could ignore. >>> By Peter Popham in Rome | Thursday, March 19, 2009

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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Sir Winston's View of Islam


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Roger Scruton – Islam and the West: Lines of Demarcation

THE BRUSSELS JOURNAL: What it is about our civilization that causes such resentment, and why we must defend it.

THE WEST today is involved in a protracted and violent struggle with the forces of radical Islam. This conflict is intensely difficult, both because of our enemy’s dedication to his cause, and also, perhaps most of all, because of the enormous cultural shift that has occurred in Europe and America since the end of the Vietnam War. Put simply, the citizens of Western states have lost their appetite for foreign wars; they have lost the hope of scoring any but temporary victories; and they have lost confidence in their way of life. Indeed, they are no longer sure what that way of life requires of them.



At the same time, they have been confronted with a new opponent, one who believes that the Western way of life is profoundly flawed, and perhaps even an offense against God. In a “fit of absence of mind,” Western societies have allowed this opponent to gather in their midst; sometimes, as in France, Britain, and the Netherlands, in ghettos which bear only tenuous and largely antagonistic relations to the surrounding political order. And in both America and Europe there has been a growing desire for appeasement: a habit of public contrition; an acceptance, though with heavy heart, of the censorious edicts of the mullahs; and a further escalation in the official repudiation of our cultural and religious inheritance. Twenty years ago, it would have been inconceivable that the archbishop of Canterbury would give a public lecture advocating the incorporation of Islamic religious law (shari’ah) into the English legal system. Today, however, many people consider this to be an arguable point, and perhaps the next step on the way to peaceful compromise.

All this suggests that we in the West stand on the edge of a dangerous period of concession, in which the legitimate claims of our own culture and inheritance will be ignored or downplayed in an attempt to prove our peaceful intentions. It will be some time before the truth will be allowed to play its all-important role of rectifying our current mistakes and preparing the way for the next ones. This means that it is more necessary than ever for us to rehearse the truth and come to a clear and objective understanding of what is at stake. I will, therefore, spell out in what follows some of the critical features of the Western inheritance which must be understood and defended in our current confrontation. Each of these features marks a point of contrast, and possibly of conflict, with the traditional Islamic vision of society, and each has played a vital part in creating the modern world. Islamist belligerence stems from having found no secure place in that world, and from turning for refuge to precepts and values that are at odds with the Western way of life. This does not mean that we should renounce or repudiate the distinguishing features of our civilization, as many would have us do. On the contrary, it means that we must be all the more vigilant in their defense. >>> By Roger Scruton | Monday, March 16, 2009

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Thailand Explores Greater Autonomy for Largely Muslim Provinces

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Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. Photo courtesy of Google Images

VOICE OF AMERICA (VOA): A Thai government policy review of the largely Muslim southern provinces is considering granting greater local autonomy with reforms including introduction of Sharia Law through Islamic courts. The strategy is part of efforts to bring to an end a five-year insurgency that has cost more than 3,000 lives.

The policy review began soon after the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva came to office in December. Speaking to foreign correspondents earlier this year, Mr. Abhsit set out the government's policy goals.



"The only long-term solution must be done through a comprehensive package that covers well beyond the security dimensions, but also addresses the issues such as economic development as well as addressing education and cultural diversity in the provinces," he said.

'Total development concept'

The government plan includes setting up a special office headed by a minister in charge of affairs in the Southern provinces. An interim committee of ministers has examined what the government calls a 'total development concept' directed to the three provinces of Pattani, Narathiwat and Yala.



The region is among the poorest in Thailand, heavily reliant on agriculture, especially rubber, as well as mining.



While Thailand's 63 million population is overwhelmingly Buddhist, there are more than six million Muslims, largely living in these provinces bordering Malaysia. 



A Thai government review paper, an English translated copy of which was obtained by VOA, says people in the region consider themselves Pattani Malays rather than Thai.



The review paper calls on government to adopt a strategy that is largely peaceful and suggests a military solution will fail to win local community support, even if it succeeds in imposing control. >>> By Ron Corben, Bangkok | Wednesday, March 18, 2009

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Cat Stevens, il ritorno
"In pace con la mia storia"

LA REPUBBLICA: Gli Anni 70, la conversione, la rinascita come Yusuf Islam. Oggi, un nuovo cd pop. E sul palco userà il suo vero nome. "Quello di Cat Stevens è un marchio legato a molti ricordi positivi"

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Foto di Cat Stevens cortesia di La Repubblica.

"IL NUOVO riprende il discorso musicale da dove Cat Stevens l'aveva lasciato". Parola di Yusuf Islam, che dopo trent'anni sembra aver fatto finalmente pace con il suo passato, con la sua musica e con il suo nome d'arte. Il 5 maggio esce il nuovo album di Cat Stevens/Yusuf Islam, si intitola Roadsinger e lo vede tornare non solo alla musica pop, cosa che ha già fatto nel 2006, quando ha pubblicato An other cup, ma ai suoni e alle atmosfere che negli anni Settanta lo resero una delle star più splendenti dell'universo della musica pop. Il nome resta quello di Yusuf Islam, nome da lui scelto nel 1978, ma in scena l'artista (nato come Stephen Demetre Georgiou) ritorna a presentarsi come Cat Stevens. >>> di Ernesto Assante | Mercoledi 18 Marzo 2009

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Sida : vague d'indignation en France après les propos du pape

LE POINT: La petite phrase de Benoît XVI, lâchée en plein ciel , provoque un tollé en France. "On ne peut pas régler le drame du sida avec la distribution de préservatifs, qui au contraire augmentent le problème", a estimé mardi le pape dans l'avion qui l'emmenait au Cameroun. Mercredi matin, le ministère des Affaires étrangères a sèchement réagi, exprimant sa "très vive inquiétude devant les conséquences de ces propos". Éric Chevallier, porte-parole du Quai d'Orsay, qui s'est refusé à porter un jugement sur la doctrine de l'Église, juge que de tels propos mettent "en danger les politiques de santé publique et les impératifs de protection de la vie humaine." Une prise de position peu diplomatique envers le Saint-Père, également chef d'État du Vatican.

Même indignation dans les rangs de la classe politique française. L'ancien Premier ministre Alain Juppé (1995-1997), qui revendique son "attachement aux valeurs chrétiennes", estime que "ce pape commence à poser un vrai problème." Pour le maire de Bordeaux, "aller dire en Afrique que le préservatif aggrave le danger du sida, c'est une contre-vérité et c'est inacceptable". À l'autre bout de l'échiquier politique, la députée communiste de Seine-Saint-Denis Marie-George Buffet condamne des paroles qu'elle qualifie d'irresponsables et de criminelles. "D'ici 2010, le sida aura tué 30 millions de personnes", rappelle celle qui préside le groupe d'études sida à l'Assemblée nationale. >>> Par Cyriel Martin (source AFP) | Mercredi 18 Mars 2009

TELEGRAPH BLOG: Why the Pope Is Right about Condoms

The usual howls of derision and contempt have greeted Pope Benedict XVI's comments, as he arrived for his first visit to Africa, that the HIV/Aids holocaust there "is a tragedy that cannot be overcome...through the distribution of condoms, which even aggravates the problems." The thrust of his outraged detractors is that he is a cruel and vindictive old man, out of touch with the real world and condemning millions in the undeveloped world to unspeakable suffering and premature death.

So let me stick up for Benedict. He declares that the Church's historic teaching that chastity outside marriage and fidelity within it would prevent the spread of killer diseases such as Aids. Whatever your views on the subject, that simple statement is undoubtedly true. And Benedict is in the truth business.

Catholics hold that Christian truth is passed down through the one, universal and apostolic church and is summarised in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC). There is plenty in there about compassion, the Christian imperative to serve the poor and afflicted and all being created in God's image and equal in Christ.

But it is also a canon of what the Church teaches is God's intention for his creation; it points to the Kingdom of God and what heaven hopes for us. These are divine standards that are indeed impossibly high for us to achieve in a broken and fallen world. But it is the Pope's task to declare that they are there, that we are in sin for falling short this side of eternity and forgiven in God's grace. That is what the Church calls truth. >>> George Pitcher | Wednesday, March 18, 2009

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