Saturday, May 16, 2009

Britain Is Now the Savage Nation

TOWNHALL: American talk show host Michael Savage is banned from entering the United Kingdom. "You've got to be kidding!" was our first thought when we heard this news. But it's no joke. Michael Savage has strong opinions, but he is certainly no terrorist. Yet his name is lumped together with leaders of a Russian skinhead gang who are serving jail time for murdering 20 people, Hezbollah, Kashmiri terrorists, assorted Muslim and Jewish extremists plus a neo Nazi.

On the air for the past 15 years any talk host will undoubtedly make a few comments that offend people, but Savage has certainly never incited anyone to violence. Savage is very successful, reaching an audience of 8.25 million listeners each week. But all Americans should be outraged that the British government has placed him on their 'least wanted' list, banning him from entering the country. This is a blatant assault on freedom of speech.

Since 2005, the U.K. has been able to ban people who promote hatred, terrorist violence or serious criminal activity. On May 5, Britain's Home Office released the names of 16 of the 22 individuals who have been placed on the list since October of 2008. The report describes Savage as: "Controversial daily radio host. Considered to be engaging in unacceptable behavior by seeking to provoke others to serious criminal acts and fostering hatred which might lead to inter-community violence."

"This is someone who has fallen into the category of fomenting hatred, of such extreme views and expressing them in such a way that it is actually likely to cause inter-community tension or even violence if that person were allowed into the country," said Home Secretary Jaqui Smith about Savage.

To place a successful talk host like Michael Savage on the same list as radical Muslim clerics, convicted criminals, and Russian skinheads is beyond outrageous. Yet we hear not a peep being said by the U.S. government and mainstream media in defense of Savage against this outrage. >>> By Floyd and Mary Beth Brown | Friday, May 15, 2009
Anti-capitalist Sentiment in Europe Grows Apace


Germany – Oskar Lafontaine: 'We Want to Overthrow Capitalism'

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: In an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE, Left Party Chairman Oskar Lafontaine speaks about his party's chances in the upcoming elections, its alleged drift to the left and why Angela Merkel needs to work through certain aspects of her communist past. >>> | Thursday, May 14, 2009

BBC: France – Olivier Besancenot: French Rebel with a Cause

The young man dressed simply but smartly in a black shirt and jeans clutches a large microphone in one hand, while the other cuts the air, soars, jabs.

The impish grin has gone and he radiates passion and an air of seriousness - for all the world like the one member of a boy band who has the talent to go solo and live on beyond his good looks. (I owe my colleague John Lichfield, The Independent's superb Paris correspondent, for sparking the comparison.) Olivier Besancenot is the Robbie Williams of French Communism.

"Don't let them tell us that we are after utopia.

"It is" - and he spreads out the word to make a point about the economic crisis - "a pol-i-ti-cal choice: when there is a natural disaster, an earthquake or a war, the state declares a state of emergency. For us the social consequence of capitalism is a natural disaster". >>> Mark Mardell | Tuesday, May 12, 2009
India's Congress-Led Coalition Seen With Strong Lead

Photobucket
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Photo credit: The Wall Street Journal

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: NEW DELHI -- The India National Congress party and its allies appeared heading to a comfortable victory in India's national elections, with opposition parties conceding that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh would be in a position to form the next government.

Congress and its allies were far ahead in vote tallies and projections by a range of Indian news channels. Full results are expected in a few hours. The prospect of a return of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance, which has ruled the country through an economic boom in the past five years, raised the likelihood that India would see a stable coalition government. That has been of crucial importance to companies and investors who are grappling with the impact of the global recession on the world's largest democracy. While India's economy has held up better than most, with growth projected at around 6% this year, it nonetheless has seen a downturn in several important sectors and mass layoffs in industries such as textile and diamond cutting.

The size of the UPA's expected victory was a major surprise. Exit polls from the voting, which has taken place since April 16, pointed to a close race between Congress and main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, which leads the National Democratic Alliance. >>> By Paul Beckett | Saturday, May 16, 2009
Festhalten an Guantánamo-Tribunalen: Obama erntet scharfe Kritik von Menschenrechtlern

WELT ONLINE: Internationale und US-amerikanische Menschenrechtsgruppen sind wütend auf Barack Obama. Mit scharfen Worten verurteilen sie die Entscheidung des US-Präsidenten, die Militärtribunale im Gefangenenlager Guantánamo auf Kuba wieder zuzulassen. Obama rücke auf gefährliche Weise von seinen Reformvorhaben ab, hieß es.

US-Präsident Barack Obama hat mit seiner Entscheidung zum Festhalten an den Militärtribunalen gegen Terrorverdächtige scharfe Kritik von Menschenrechtsorganisationen hervorgerufen. Es handle sich um eine „alarmierende Entwicklung, erklärte am Freitag das Zentrum für Verfassungsrechte in Washington, das sich seit Jahren um eine bessere Rechtsstellung der Gefangenen im US-Lager Guantánamo auf Kuba bemüht. Obama habe vor seiner Wahl die Hoffnung geweckt, mit den „gefährlichen Experimenten“ seines Amtsvorgängers George W. Bush zu brechen.

Das System der Militärtribunale sei „irreparabel fehlerhaft“, erklärte der Direktor von Human Rights Watch, Kenneth Roth. Indem die falsche Idee der Bush-Regierung wiederbelebt werde, rücke Obama auf gefährliche Weise von seinen eigenen Reformvorhaben ab.

Die American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) erklärte, die Militärtribunale zählten zu der „Politik der Folter, der illegalen Haft und der Verweigerung gerechter Prozesse“, die von der Regierung Bush verfolgt worden sei.

Amnesty International warf Obama vor, eines seiner zentralen Wahlversprechen gebrochen zu haben. Die Tribunale, die Obama selbst als enormen Fehler bezeichnet habe, müssten abgeschafft werden, forderte der Vertreter der Menschenrechtsorganisation, Rob Freer. >>> | Samstag, 16. Mai 2009
Vor dem Eurovision Song Contest: Moskau lässt Schwulen-Demo gewaltsam auflösen

WELT ONLINE: In Moskau hat die Polizei eine nicht genehmigte Kundgebung von Aktivisten für die Rechte von Homosexuellen brutal aufgelöst. Die Demonstranten wollten die Aufmerksamkeit aufgrund des Eurovision Song Contests nutzen, um die Menschenrechte für Schwule und Lesben einzufordern.

Photobucket
Bild dank der Welt

Die Moskauer Polizei hat vor dem Finale des Eurovision Song Contest eine Kundgebung von Homosexuellen gewaltsam aufgelöst. Teilweise im Würgegriff wurden am Samstag ein Dutzend Demonstranten aus Russland und Weißrussland vor der staatlichen Lomonossow-Universität abgeführt.

Die Demonstranten hatten bei der nicht genehmigten „Slavic Gay Parade“ Plakate entrollt, auf denen die Einhaltung der Menschenrechte für Schwule und Lesben gefordert wurde. Augenzeugen berichteten, dass Polizisten der Spezialeinheit OMON die Demonstranten jagten und sie in Gefängniswagen sperrten.

Auch der Vorsitzende des russischen Homosexuellen-Verbands, Nikolai Alexejew (31), wurde an Händen und Füßen in ein Polizei-Fahrzeug gezerrt. Die Geschehnisse wurden von zahlreichen Journalisten, darunter auch mehreren Fernsehteams, verfolgt. Die Polizei versuchte, die Medien mit Gewalt vom Ort der Auseinandersetzung zu vertreiben. Die festgenommenen Demonstranten beriefen sich immer wieder auf ihre Grundrechte. „Wir sind friedliche Menschen und wollen so leben wie andere auch“, rief eine Russin. >>> dpa/AFP/ks | Samstag, 16. Mai 2009

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: La police interpelle une vingtaine de gays à Moscou

MANIFESTATION | Une vingtaine de personnes participaient à une manifestation en faveur des droits des homosexuels, quelques heures avant la finale du concours de l'Eurovision.

Une quinzaine de manifestants ont crié "L'homophobie est une honte pour la Russie!" et "Droits égaux pour tous", lors de leur rassemblement non autorisé, avant d'être emmenés par la police anti-émeute.

Une demi-douzaine ont été interpellés un peu plus tard, alors qu'ils cherchaient à parler avec des journalistes, selon un reporter de l'AFP sur place.

Nikolaï Alexeïev, fondateur du site internet GayRussia.ru et principal organisateur de la manifestation, programmée pour coïncider avec la finale de l'Eurovision, se trouvait parmi les manifestants interpellés, ainsi qu'un homme habillé en robe de mariée et un militant gay américain. [Source: TDG] AFP | Samedi 16 Mai 2009
Anger Mounts at Fate of Aung San Suu Kyi

Photobucket
Aung San Suu Kyi. Photo courtesy of TimesOnline

TIMESONLINE: There was a growing international outcry last night about the incarceration of Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese democracy leader, as more details emerged about the incident that led to her transfer to the country’s most notorious jail.

Ms Suu Kyi, winner of the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize, faces up to five years in Insein prison, a high-security institution which houses more than 2,000 political prisoners, after an American swam across a lake and sneaked into her house, where she was less than two weeks from completing a sentence of house arrest.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee, which rarely comments on its laureates, issued a statement saying that her detention in prison was totally unacceptable. Several governments, including Britain, the United States and Singapore, have also condemned Ms Suu Kyi’s treatment.

The wife of John Yettaw, the man who swam to Ms Suu Kyi’s home, said that he had done so once before, last year, but was prevented from seeing the Nobel laureate by her house staff. >>> James Bone | Saturday, May 16, 2009
Oman Navigates Between Iran and Arab Nations

Photobucket
Iranian smugglers operating last month at a port in Khasab, Oman, across the Strait of Hormuz from Iran. The smuggling is aided and taxed by officials in Oman. Photo credit: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: MUSCAT, Oman — As Iran finds itself locked in an escalating cold war-style conflict with Egypt, Saudi Arabia and other Arab nations, the quietly influential Sultanate of Oman has accelerated its cooperation with Tehran, nurturing an alliance that helps empower Iran while highlighting the deep divisions among Arab capitals.

Oman, a strategically vital, insistently pragmatic country, has refused overtures of its larger neighbors to pull away from Iran. Instead, it defied Egypt and Saudi Arabia by declining to join them in boycotting a summit meeting in Qatar in January that was held to support Hamas, the Iranian-backed militant group. The Iranian news agency Fars said that Oman and Iran were close to completing a security pact.

The close ties between Iran and Oman, and the reasons behind them, help explain the West’s failure to cripple Iran with trade sanctions, as well as the inability of Iran’s Arab opponents to build a unified opposition to its growing regional influence.

“For us, this is the expression of being realistic,” said Salim al-Mahruqi, a former Omani diplomat who had served in Washington. He now works for the Culture Ministry here in Muscat, the capital city.

“Iran is a big neighbor, and it is there to stay,” he said.

Oman, like Syria and Qatar, sees in Iran an important political and economic ally that is too powerful and too potentially dangerous to ignore, let alone antagonize. Even the United Arab Emirates, which is battling with Iranian leaders over the title to three Persian Gulf islands, has done little to stop billions of dollars in annual trade with Iran.

Rarely in the news, Oman has long been a pivotal behind-the-scenes player in the region. It is an absolute monarchy, led since 1970 by Sultan Qaboos bin Said, who has fostered a diplomatic approach that gives his nation the unique status of having close ties to both Iran and the United States.

Oman has at times served as a go-between for the two nations, and it has left open the possibility that the United States could use Omani military bases for staging operations in the region.

Unlike Syria and Qatar, which want larger regional roles, Oman is strictly focused on bolstering its domestic stability. Omanis continue the relationship with Iran because of historic ties, because they know it could easily overrun their nation, if it so chose, and because it has for generations been an important commercial partner. >>> By Michael Slackman* | Friday, May 15, 2009

*Mona el-Naggar contributed reporting from Oman.

Friday, May 15, 2009

The British Political Élite and Media Quake in Their Shoes as BNP Show Signs of Making Significant Breakthrough in Upcoming European Election

After years and years of unbridled greed, uncontrolled immigration, Islamization of the United Kingdom, and generally ignoring the wishes of the electorate, are we about to witness a spectacular first: The rise of the far-right in British politics?

Whilst this may be regrettable in many ways, the powers that be cannot say they weren’t warned. People of influence have ignored the wishes of the people for far, far too long. In short, they’ve treated the electorate with disdain and contempt. They have also had a ball. In many cases, on the back of the taxpayer. The ball, however, may soon be over. All good things come to an end.
– ©Mark


THE TELEGRAPH: Nick Griffin, the leader of the British National Party, is poised to become a key figure in the creation of a new far-right group in the European Parliament.

Photobucket
Leader of the British National Party Nick Griffin. Photo courtesy of The Telegraph

Fears are growing he will be at the centre of a wave of victories in next month's elections that would give nationalist parties a firm foothold in Europe.

Searchlight, the international anti-fascist magazine, has suggested they could pass the threshold of 25 MEPs from seven countries necessary to form a European Parliament grouping entitled to public funding worth up to £1 million per year.

Over the last year, Mr Griffin has strengthened links to extremist European groups to prepare the way for a far-right surge at euro elections next month.

High-level Labour sources have told The Daily Telegraph that a high abstention rate, fuelled by popular disgust over the Westminster MP expenses scandal, could lead to the election of at least four BNP MEPs, including Mr Griffin.

Should Mr Griffin be elected in the North West region with at least three colleagues from the North East, East Midlands and London, he would be among those competing to become the leader of Europe's far right.

Other extremist groups in Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy and Slovakia are expected to make major gains during the elections after using the economic crisis to stir up resentment against Roma gipsy minorities.

The French National Front already has four MEPs led by Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was stripped of parliamentary privileges this year because he described Auschwitz as a "detail of history" during a debate in March.

A new political grouping would be eligible for £5 million of public funding over the next five year term of the European Union assembly enabling it to promote political links across Europe and publicise their cause with "information" and conferences.

Gordon Brown and other senior government members are afraid that public disenchantment with politicians and the economic crisis will lead to low turnout during the elections on June 4 and will open the door to the BNP and other far-right extremists across Europe.

"Their strategy is not just ideological but ruthlessly practical," said a spokesman for Searchlight. "If they are able to get group status with their colleagues then they will have access to millions of pounds in resources, paid by the taxpayer, to fund their campaigns." BNP Could Be at Heart of Far-right EU Group >>> By Bruno Waterfield in Brussels | Friday, May 15, 2009
Browsing and Cruising in Gay Damascus

THE MEDIA LINE: In a smoky Internet café tucked away on a Damascus side street, young Syrians sit in front of computer screens browsing websites and listening to the obligatory blend of Lebanese superstar Fairouz and Western pop music.

Huddled around some screens are groups of two or three men, gossiping over racy photos on Facebook, which have been accessed through a proxy that circumvents the national ban of the social networking website.

A few women wearing the hijab type quietly on MSN chat, giggling as they flirt online with the men society prevents them from socializing with in person.

This is a familiar scene throughout the Middle East.

Hidden from the casual eye, however, a different type of browsing is happening. In the back corner, a young man logs on to a gay social website searching for excitement of his own.

In a country known for its all-pervasive secret police, one would expect the gay community to be particularly fearful of persecution by the authorities. Technically, under Syrian law, sodomy is illegal and punishable by up to three years of incarceration. However, the law is rarely enforced.

In general, homosexual men do not describe feeling targeted or watched by the government any more than does the rest of the population.

Fadi,* a gay 22-year-old student at Damascus University, suggests that sexuality is rarely a cause for arrest in and of itself.

But gay men do worry that the information could be used against them if they were to commit a separate crime.

“What we are mostly afraid of is adding information to our file that could be used against us, or put us on special watch with the authorities,” he says.

Overall, however, Syria could be considered one of the region’s most gay-tolerant countries. Some websites targeting gay male travelers go so far as to describe Syria as a “gay paradise” – a blatant exaggeration, though perhaps not in comparison to the situation of gays in many neighboring Arab countries. >>> Marie Kelly | Thursday, May 14, 2009

* The names of all persons interviewed in this story have been changed for their security and privacy.
Turkish Immigrants Cement Islam in Germany

Pope Ends Trip with Mid-East Plea

'No more bloodshed, no more fighting, no more terrorism, no more war'

BBC: Pope Benedict XVI has finished his eight-day pilgrimage to the Middle East, calling for an end to fighting between Israel and the Palestinians.

At a farewell ceremony, attended by Israeli leaders, he called for "no more bloodshed, no more fighting".

He said the Holocaust "must never be forgotten or denied".
Israeli President Shimon Peres thanked him for his visit, calling it a "profound demonstration of the enduring dialogue" between Christians and Jews.

He particularly highlighted the Pope's statement about the Holocaust never being denied, saying it carried "substantive and special weight".

"It touched our hearts and minds."

The Pope, in reply, described the "powerful impressions" he had gathered during his visit.

Meeting Holocaust survivors at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem was "one of the most solemn moments" for him.

"Those deeply moving encounters brought back memories of my visit three years ago to the death camp at Auschwitz, where so many Jews - mothers, fathers, husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, friends - were brutally exterminated under a godless regime."

The "appalling chapter of history must never be forgotten or denied", he said. >>> | Friday, May 15, 2009
Fundamentalists Call for Kuwaiti Women to Boycott Elections

VOA: Kuwaiti voters go to the polls for their parliamentary elections Saturday. Some Kuwaiti Islamic fundamentalists are urging women candidates and voters not to participate in politics, saying it is anti-Islamic. But others are dismissing this claim, saying it is politically motivated. 



Aseel al-Awadi is running for a parliamentary seat. She is a university professor of philosophy at Kuwait University. She says it is time to see reform in Kuwait and no one is going to stop her from running for parliament. 



"I think women have to have a seat in parliament," she said. "It is about time that women have a role in politics in general. Practically speaking women should have representation in parliament, this is one reason. Another reason is [that] I am capable of doing something different in parliament given my credentials."



But some members of Kuwait's Islamic Salafi political party have called for a boycott of women candidates on the grounds that public offices are reserved only for men according to their interpretation of Islam. Walid al-Tabtabaei is a Salafi political member who is a candidate in the elections.

He says having women in positions of power goes against the teachings of Islam. 

He says they are opposed to women being a member of parliament for religious reasons because all the prophets are men not women for good reason and Islam says the burden for office is too great for women. >>> By Mandy Clark | Friday, May 15, 2009
Why the Silence about ‘Islam Day’?

THE DAILY SENTINEL: And just why, we can’t help but ask, is the ACLU not enjoying the sunny beaches of Hawaii at the moment? Or the Grand Junction atheists, for that matter?

They both could find, in our 50th state, a cause that makes prayer before Mesa County Commission meetings a matter of little consequence.

The Hawaii state Senate this week, with only a smattering of lawmakers objecting, passed a bill that proclaims Sept. 24, 2009, “Islam Day.” The bill, which aims to recognize “the rich religious, scientific, cultural and artistic contributions” that Muslims have made to the world, has already passed the Hawaii House of Representatives and now only awaits the signature of the governor to be enacted into law.

No doubt Muslims have made contributions to the world. So have Christians, Jews, Buddhists and members of a lot of other religions. But they, unlike a few Muslims — and there are many more out there like them — didn’t kill more than 3,000 innocent Americans in 2001. We shouldn’t forget that, either.

The last time we checked, we could find no state that officially honors Christians, or Jews, or any other religion we can think of.

The United States has long been know for its tolerance. But tolerance should go only so far. Just ask the ACLU, or our local atheists, both groups that have fought long and hard for separation of church and state. Tolerance, for those groups, stops at the doors to public buildings.

We’ll forgive the local atheists. Hawaii, after all, is far outside their zone of influence, although we hope and expect that they would oppose the measure that is about to become law in Hawaii.

But the silence of the ACLU is perplexing.

It makes us wonder: Does the ACLU support separation of church and state, or simply separation of Christianity and state?
We think we know the answer. [Source: The Daily Sentinel] By The Daily Sentinel | Thursday, May 14, 2009
Taliban "Shaving Beards" to Flee Swat: Army

REUTERS: KOTA, Pakistan - Taliban fighters are shaving off their beards and trying to flee from a Pakistani army offensive in their Swat bastion, the military said on Friday, as it relaxed a curfew to allow civilians to get out.

The army launched an offensive in the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad, last week to stop the spread of Taliban influence which had alarmed the United States and other Western allies of nuclear-armed Pakistan.

More than 900,000 civilians have fled and the United Nations has warned of a humanitarian tragedy unless Pakistan gets massive assistance.

Clashes had erupted in various parts of the region, the military said on Friday, adding it was achieving successes.
It also appealed to civilians to identify Taliban fighters trying to flee.

"We have confirmed reports that these Taliban terrorists, after shaving off their beards and cutting their hair, are fleeing from the area," the military said in a statement.

"We request the people of Swat to identify them," it said, while providing a telephone number for informants to call or send text messages.

Taliban members and supporters usually have long beards and many of them also have long hair. There was no immediate comment from the Taliban about the military's statement. >>> By Junaid Khan | Friday, May 15, 2009
Finanzkrise: Obama prangert Gier und Egoismus der Eliten an

WELT ONLINE: Mit deutlichen Worten hat US-Präsident Barack Obama in einer Rede an der Universität von Arizona amerikanische Eliten kritisiert. Viele Banker an der Wall Street seien wegen kurzfristiger Gewinne und Bonuszahlungen vom Weg abgekommen. Die Universität hatte Obama vorher den Ehrendoktor verweigert.

Photobucket
Rechnet mit gierigen Managern ab: US-Präsident Barack Obama geißelt den Egoismus der Führungskräfte seines Landes. Bild dank der Welt

US-Präsident Barack Obama hat in einer Rede vor Studenten Gier und Egoismus angeprangert. Die USA und die gesamte Welt befänden sich gerade in einer Zeit "außergewöhnlicher Schwierigkeiten", sagte der Präsident auf der Abschlussfeier der Universität von Arizona in Tempe.

Verantwortlich seien dafür größtenteils die politischen und wirtschaftlichen Eliten, sagte Obama vor 63.000 Zuhörern. Statt sich um die Interessen des Landes und die der Bürger zu kümmern, sorgten sich viele Politiker vor allem um die nächsten Wahlen. Viele Banker an der Wall Street seien wegen kurzfristiger Gewinne und Bonuszahlungen vom Weg abgekommen.



Obwohl US-Hochschulen die Redner bei ihren akademischen Feiern in der Regel mit Ehrendoktortiteln auszeichnen, ging Obama leer aus. Die Universität von Arizona hatte dem Präsidenten bereits im Vorfeld eine Abfuhr erteilt und erklärt, er habe für die Auszeichnung noch nicht genug geleistet. >>> AFP/AP/fsl | Donnerstag, 14. Mai 2009
Roxana Saberi est arrivée à Vienne

L’EXPRESS.fr: La journaliste avait été condamnée le 13 avril par l'Iran à huit ans de prison pour espionnage au profit des Etats-Unis. Après des protrestations émanant du monde entier, elle avait finalement été libérée en début de semaine.

La journaliste irano-américaine Roxana Saberi, libérée d'une prison iranienne le 11 mai, est arrivée par avion tôt vendredi matin à l'aéroport de Vienne, en provenance de Téhéran, a constaté une journaliste de l'AFP.

"Je vais passer quelques jours à Vienne, car c'est un lieu calme et relaxant", a-t-elle déclaré à l'AFP juste après son arrivée, sans donner de précision sur la durée de son séjour viennois, ni sur la date de son retour aux Etats-Unis.

Elle était accompagnée de son père, de sa mère et de son frère.

Peu après sa libération, son père, Reza Saberi, avait indiqué que sa famille préparait son retour aux Etats-Unis. >>> Par LEXPRESS.fr avec AFP | Vendredi 15 Mai 2009

VOA: Journalist Roxana Saberi Not Ready to Tell Her Story Yet

American journalist Roxana Saberi has arrived in Austria to recuperate after spending four months in an Iranian prison.



The newly-freed journalist arrived in the Austrian capital, Vienna, early Friday on a flight from Tehran. She was accompanied by her parents.



Saberi told reporters at the airport that she plans to spend several days in Austria and then go to the United States. She said she is not yet ready to talk about her experience, but will do so in the near future, recounting her time in jail, and the events leading up to her detention. 



The 32-year-old journalist, a dual American-Iranian citizen, was arrested in January while buying a bottle of wine, which is illegal in Iran. She was convicted last month of espionage. 



After Saberi's lawyer appealed the court's decision, a judge reduced her sentence and freed her from prison on Monday.



Speaking to reporters Tuesday, Saberi said she had no immediate plans and just wants to relax with her family. >>> By VOA News | Friday, May 15, 2009
Muslim Justice Minister Diddles British Taxpayer

Photobucket
Shahid Malik. Photo: Google Images

TIMESONLINE: Shahid Malik, the Justice Minister exposed as the biggest expenses claimant of all MPs, was forced to step down today to await the outcome of an inquiry into his living costs.

Downing Street said that Gordon Brown asked Sir Philip Mawer, the Prime Minister’s independent adviser on ministers’ interests, to investigate whether Mr Malik’s alleged benefit of a subsidised rent breached the ministerial code.

The announcement by No 10 came minutes after the Labour MP for Dewsbury had refused to apologise, offering instead to donate the cost of his 40ins flat-screen television to a local charity.

He said that his second-home allowance of £66,827 over three years was “one million per cent by the book” and insisted that he would not return any of the money to the taxpayer[.] Shahid Malik Stands Down as Justice Minister after PM Orders Inquiry into His Expenses >>> Philip Webster, Political Editor and Nico Hines | Friday, May 15, 2009
'Shock Jock' Michael Savage Seeks Hillary Clinton's Help over UK Ban

THE TELEGRAPH: A right-wing US "shock jock" has turned to Hillary Clinton in a bid to overturn his ban on entering the UK.

Photobucket
Michael Savage. Photo credit: The Telegraph

Radio host Michael Savage, real name Michael Weiner, was among 16 people "named and shamed" on a Home Office list of undesirables.

He has since said he will sue for defamation and has now written to the US Secretary of State over the matter.

The letter, sent from the Thomas More Law Centre on his behalf, "demands" that Mrs Clinton tells the UK Government to rescind the "arbitrary and capricious" ban.

Mr Savage's name figured on a list which also included former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard Stephen Donald Black, Hamas MP Unis Al-Astal,

Jewish extremist Mike Guzovsky and American anti-gay Baptist pastor Fred Waldron Phelps.

The Home Office described Mr Savage as a "controversial daily radio host considered to be engaging in unacceptable behaviour by seeking to provoke others to serious criminal acts and fostering hatred which might lead to intercommunity violence".

His inclusion on the list of those banned from entry prompted Mr Savage to describe Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, as a "lunatic". >>> Agencies | Thursday, May 14, 2009

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Court Allows Islamic School

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: ONE of the biggest Islamic schools in Australia will be built in south-western Sydney after Bankstown City Council lost an appeal in the Land and Environment Court.

The decision will allow construction of a 1200-student primary and secondary school in Bass Hill, which has been fought by residents since the land was bought in 2006.

It is one of several applications for Islamic schools that have divided communities in NSW, leading to allegations that residents are using town planning arguments such as traffic to cloak racist sentiment.

Bankstown council first knocked back the proposal in 2007 after residents launched a campaign opposing the project.

The group behind the school, Al Amanah College, appealed against this decision. Last December, Senior Commissioner John Roseth of the court approved the plan to build the school on a 18,000 square metre site at Johnston Road. A child-care centre is also proposed.

Finding for the school, the senior commissioner addressed concerns raised by the council, including traffic flow, noise, ecology, the scale and design of the buildings and its social impact.

The judgement also referred to "the elephant in the courtroom" or "whether the council would have raised quite as many contentions as it did if the application had been for an Anglican school". >>> Elicia Murray | Friday, May 15, 2009
Islam erobert Österreich