Monday, July 06, 2009

Berlin Fashion Week: Gute Figur gemacht

ZEIT ONLINEInternationaler, größer, prominenter: Berlin hat sich als Modemetropole etabliert

Geschafft: Berlin ist Deutschlands führende Modestadt. An mehreren Orten wurde in den vergangenen Tagen hart daran gearbeitet, den Status Quo zu untermauern. Die Bread and Butter vermeldet wie auch die anderen Messen für Fachbesucher, die angestrebte Marke von 80.000 Besuchern erreicht zu haben. Und die zweite große Messe Premium am Gleisdreieck war vor allem am zweiten Tag so gut besucht wie lange nicht mehr. >>> Von Grit Thönnissen | Montag, 06. Juli 2009

SPIEGEL ONLINE: Mode für echte Diven: Guido Maria Kretschmer zeigt Glamour pur*
Video hier anschauen

* Und etwas Islamisches ist nirgendwo zu sehen! Total unauffindbar!
China Riots: 140 Killed and 816 Injured

THE TELEGRAPH: At least 140 people have been killed in rioting in the capital of China's northwestern region of Xinjiang.

Riots erupt in Muslim area of China

The government has blamed exiled Muslim separatists for the area's worst case of ethnic unrest in years.

Hundreds of rioters have been arrested, the official Xinhua news agency reported, after rock-throwing Uighurs took to the streets of the regional capital on Sunday, some burning and smashing vehicles and confronting ranks of anti-riot police.

Urumqi residents were unable to access the internet on Monday, several said. "The city is basically under martial law," accordinding to Yang Jin, a dried fruit merchant.

The unrest underscores the volatile ethnic tensions that have accompanied China's growing economic and political stake in its western frontiers. >>> | Monday, July 06, 2009
There's No Pride in Bashing Gays, Bishop

THE TELEGRAPH: Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali's campaign against homosexuality worries George Pitcher.

If you're reading, Bishop Michael, I really didn't want to have another pop at you about your trenchant and sometimes bizarre views about what constitutes Christian truth. As to the rest of you reading this, I'm sorry if it looks as if whenever Dr Michael Nazir-Ali, who retires as Bishop of Rochester in September, makes a public statement I launch an attack on him. Believe me, the routine is tiresome for me, too.

But his comments in yesterday's Sunday Telegraph, which he is expected to repeat today, that homosexuals should "repent and be changed" cannot pass unchallenged. Or rather, they should not go challenged only by homosexual rights campaigners, such as Peter Tatchell, who you would expect to be somewhat antipathetic to the expressed view.

Because Dr Nazir-Ali is wrong in the eyes of a broad swath of kind and tolerant people of differing sexualities, social mores and of the Christian faith, other faiths and no faith at all. Badly, badly wrong.

I say that I didn't want to have another fight with him because such fights polarise Anglicans, and we're at our best when we're talking. I went to a private lunch recently, to which Dr Nazir-Ali was also invited. He didn't show. The seat next to me went empty. I do hope he didn't bottle it; it's important that religious leaders don't just inhabit comfort zones with friends who share their views.

Dr Nazir-Ali's friends are the Fellowship of Confessing Anglicans (Foca), who this week will try to get the Anglican schism over homosexuality going again, while denying that they are doing any such thing. Had he turned up to our lunch, I would have asked him why he and Foca are so convinced that they know the mind of God better than those who disagree with them and that their interpretation of scripture is with absolute certainty the one and only true one.

When I write about the Church and homosexuality, inevitably I receive messages that read simply "Romans 1:26-27" or "1 Corinthians 6:9", as if that settles something. We can argue scripture until we're at the pearly gates. But the essential difference between Dr Nazir-Ali and me is this: I accept, disappointing as I would find it in my fiery furnace, that he might be right. By contrast, he and his friends cannot accept that I might be right, claim that I can't be a proper Christian, and some of them go so far as to suggest that I'll burn in hell for all eternity.

And there's the real problem: it's an issue of intolerance. Anglicanism has long been characterised by a broad tolerance. But my tolerance of Dr Nazir-Ali and his friends, that they are Anglicans with whom I happen vehemently to disagree, doesn't seem to be reciprocated.

Dr Nazir-Ali is leaving his bishopric, it is said, to develop his ministry among persecuted Christians. That is admirable. Persecution of Christians is a very bad thing. But persecution of homosexuals is a pretty bad thing, too, as is persecution of any part of humanity, all of which he will agree is made in God's image. >>> George Pitcher | Monday, July 06, 2009

TELEGRAPH TV: Same-sex Marriage in Iowa

World's Oldest Bible Published in Full Online

THE TELEGRAPH: The world's oldest surviving Bible, which has been scattered around the globe for more than a century, has been published in full online.

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Along with the Codex Vaticanus, the Codex Sinaiticus is considered the oldest known Bible in the world. Photo: The Telegraph

More than 800 surviving pages and fragments from the The Codex Sinaiticus, which was written in Greek on parchment leaves in the fourth century, have been reunited.

Last year The British Library put The Book of Psalms and St Mark's Gospel online, and now the remaining pages have been made free for public use for the first time.

Along with the Codex Vaticanus, the Codex Sinaiticus is considered the oldest known Bible in the world. Originally more than 1,460 pages long and measuring 16in by 14in, it was written by a number of hands around the time of Constantine the Great.

It offers different versions of the Scriptures from later editions of the Bible, notably in St Mark's Gospel which ends 12 verses before later versions, omitting the appearance of the resurrected Jesus Christ.

The reunification of the book is the culmination of a four-year collaboration between the British Library, Leipzig University Library in Germany, the Monastery of St Catherine in Mount Sinai, Egypt, and the National Library of Russia in St Petersburg, each of which hold different parts of the manuscript.

They hope that by bringing together the digitised pages online, the project will help scholars worldwide to research in depth the Greek text, which is fully transcribed and cross-referenced.

"The Codex Sinaiticus is one of the world's greatest written treasures," said Dr Scot McKendrick, Head of Western Manuscripts at the British Library. >>> Chris Irvine | Monday, July 06, 2009
Obama à Moscou pour progresser sur la voie du rapprochement avec Medvedev

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: MOSCOU | Les présidents américain et russe Barack Obama et Dmitri Medvedev devraient annoncer lundi à Moscou des progrès vers la limitation des armes nucléaires et un accord sur l'Afghanistan.

M. Obama est attendu ce lundi vers 13H20 locales (11h20 en Suisse) à Moscou pour un séjour destiné à relancer les relations avec un partenaire qui reste essentiel mais avec lequel les rapports se sont sévèrement dégradés sous la présidence Bush. Et des progrès vers le désarmement ainsi qu'un accord sur le ravitaillement de la mission afghane mettraient Américains et Russes sur la bonne voie.

Les deux gouvernements ont exprimé leur désir de relancer leurs relations, de remettre les compteurs à zéro selon l'expression de l'administration Obama, et paraissaient soucieux d'en faire la démonstration de lundi à mercredi, quand M. Obama passera avec M. Medvedev mais aussi le Premier ministre Vladimir Poutine plus de temps qu'aucun président américain depuis longtemps. >>> AFP | Lundi 06 Juillet 2009

NZZ Online: Obama in Moskau eingetroffen: Nachfolgeregelung der Start-Verträge auf der Agenda

Der amerikanische Präsident Obama ist am Montag zu seinem Staatsbesuch in Moskau eingetroffen. Im Laufe des Tages hat er zuerst ein privates und anschliessend ein offizielles Arbeitstreffen mit Präsident Medwedew.

Die beiden Präsidenten Obama und Medwedew haben bereits an einem Treffen in London am 1. April dieses Jahres betont, sie [sic] Beziehung der beiden Staaten substanzieller machen zu wollen. Dabei ist vor allem der Start-Vertrag (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) angesprochen, der im Dezember ausläuft. Dessen Nachfolge-Vereinbarung wird auch das zentrale Thema des offiziellen Treffens sein. >>> ii. | Montag, 06. Juli 2009

NZZ Online: Einigung auf weitere Abrüstungsschritte: Obama und Medwedew sollen Vereinbarung in Moskau unterzeichnen

Wenige Stunden vor der Ankunft des amerikanischen Präsidenten Barack Obama in Russland haben sich beide Länder auf eine Erklärung zu weiteren Abrüstungsschritten geeinigt. Dies sagte ein Sprecher des russischen Aussenministeriums am Montag in Moskau.

Das Dokument solle von Obama und Kremlchef Dmitri Medwedew unterzeichnet werden, wie die Agentur Interfax mitteilte. Zum Inhalt der Erklärung wurden keine Angaben gemacht. >>> sda/dpa | Montag, 06. Juli 2009
Obama reste déterminé à discuter avec l’Iran malgré la répression

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: TENSIONS | Barack Obama a assuré dimanche qu’il restait déterminé à engager des négociations directes avec l’Iran, malgré la répression de la contestation des résultats de la présidentielle dans la République islamique.

"Nous avons certains intérêts en matière de sécurité nationale à ce que l’Iran ne développe pas d’armes nucléaires, n’exporte pas le terrorisme et nous avons offert à l’Iran une voie pour rejoindre la communauté internationale." Dans une interview au New York Times (NYT), Barack Obama admet que des dirigeants de l’opposition iranienne ont été arrêtés ou intimidés mais a insisté sur le fait que la répression ne fermerait pas la porte aux négociations. >>> AFP | Lundi 06 Juillet 2009
Mousavi Labelled 'US Agent' as Iran Charges UK Official

THE OBSERVER: Reformist leader attacked by influential editor and embassy worker's lawyer predicts imminent trial

The stakes over Iran's disputed presidential election were raised dramatically yesterday, after a powerful regime hardliner denounced Mir Hossein Mousavi, the candidate officially declared to have lost, as an American agent and demanded that he undergo a public trial.

Hossein Shariatmadari, editor-in-chief of the influential Kayhan newspaper, said Mousavi had committed "terrible crimes", including "murdering innocent people, holding riots, co-operating with foreigners and acting as America's fifth column", in pursuing his claims that last month's re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was rigged.

The accusations - in a newspaper editorial - were the most ferocious yet from regime insiders and may serve notice that preparations are under way to arrest Mousavi and his main allies. Several hundred known reformists and pro-Mousavi supporters have already been detained since the election. The editorial also singled out the reformist former president, Mohammad Khatami, who last week compared Ahmadinejad's re-election to a coup.

"An open court, in front of the people's eyes, must deal with the all the terrible crimes and clear betrayal committed by the main elements behind the recent unrest, including Mousavi and Khatami," Shariatmadari wrote. "Documents and undeniable evidence show that this mission was directed from the outside. All they did and said was in line with the instructions announced by American officials in the past."

The editorial carried added weight given Shariatmadari's position as confidant to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has declared the election result legitimate and called for protests to end. Shariatmadari has been called "the aggressive public face" of Khamenei, who appointed him to his current position.

His outburst fits with the regime's strategy of depicting the demonstrations against Ahmadinejad's re-election as orchestrated by foreign governments, including Britain. It came a day after a Khamenei ally, Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, head of the Guardian Council, said at Friday prayers that Iranian employees of the British embassy in Tehran would be tried after they had "confessed" to helping to organise the protests. >>> Robert Tait | Sunday, July 05, 2009

Sunday, July 05, 2009

Muslim Uighurs Riot as Ethnic Tensions Rise in Western China

THE GUARDIAN: Protests over deaths of workers turn violent as mobs burn buses and attack residents from minorities in western province

Three people were killed during rioting in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang, as thousands of Muslim Uighurs took to the streets during the biggest display of ethnic unrest in recent memory.

The protesters smashed up buses, threw stones through shop windows and assaulted Han Chinese passers-by, according to a witness, who said the spark was the recent killing of Uighur migrant workers in Guangdong, southern China.

Xinhua, the state news agency, said those killed were "three ordinary people of the Han ethnic group." It did not say how they died.

Vehicles were set on fire and traffic guard rails overturned. Bloodied victims were rushed to hospital in the regional capital, Urumqi, as armed riot police moved in to restore order with tear gas, armoured vehicles and road blocks, according to a foreign student in Xinjiang.

A large section of Urumqi was shut off to vehicles tonight , with police manning roadblocks at the perimeter. Witnesses reported large numbers of armed officers inside the cordon. Mobile phone networks appeared to get cut off sporadically.

"There were big ethnic riots - there was a lot of fighting," said one Han resident. "It's not safe – you can't go anywhere near there. They've blocked it all off. You have to be careful." >>> Tania Branigan in Urumqi and Jonathan Watts in Beijing | Sunday, July 05, 2009
Federer ist wieder auf dem Tennis-Thron

TAGES ANZEIGER: Roger Federer eroberte in extremis den Wimbledon-Titel und die Nummer 1 zurück. Federer gewann den dramatischen Final gegen Andy Roddick 5:7, 7:6 (8:6), 7:6 (7:5), 3:6, 16:14.

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Roger Federer und sein Pokal: Zum sechsten Mal bereits ist er Champion von Wimbledon. Bild: NZZ.ch

Die Entscheidung fiel nach vier Stunden und 16 Minuten, als Andy Roddick am Ende seiner Kräfte angelangt war. Roger Federer nützte gleich seinen ersten Matchball. Federer realisierte im 37. Anlauf das erste Break des Nachmittags gegen Roddick. Federer schaffte den Aufschlag-Durchbruch nur, weil Roddick kaum mehr laufen konnte. Bei allen sechs Federer-Punkten im 77. Game produzierte Roddick vermeidbare Eigenfehler, weil er nicht mehr richtig zum Ball stand.

Roger Federer holte seinen sechsten Titel in Wimbledon auch auf glückhafte Art und Weise. Schon nach 80 Minuten drohte die Vorentscheidung gegen ihn zu fallen. Andy Roddick, der phantastisch aufspielte, führte mit einem Satz und im Tiebreak des zweiten Satzes bei eigenem Aufschlag 6:2. Doch Federer gewann sechs Punkte in Serie und schaffte den nicht mehr erwarteten Satzausgleich. Danach befand sich Federer lange im Vorteil. Doch im vierten Satz schaffte wieder Roddick ein Break und kämpfte sich so ins Spiel zurück. Im fünften Satz war während über anderthalb Stunden (95 Minuten) jeder Ausgang möglich, ehe Federer den Service-Durchbruch zum 16:14 schaffte. >>> si | Sonntag, 05. Juli 2009
Die USA stellen sich Israel nicht in den Weg: «Grünes Licht» für allfälligen Militärschlag gegen Irans Atomprogramm

NZZ Online: Die USA wollen «einem anderen souveränen Staat nicht sagen, was er zu tun hat». Mit diesen Worten begründet der amerikanische Vizepräsident Joe Biden die Haltung der USA, die sich einem allfälligen Militärschlag Israels gegen Iran nicht widersetzen würden.

Die USA würden sich einem israelischen Militärschlag gegen das iranische Atomprogramm nicht widersetzen. Das sagte der amerikanische Vizepräsident Joe Biden am Sonntag. Wenn Israel glaube, dass ein Militärschlag nötig sei, könnten die USA «einem anderen souveränen Staat nicht sagen, was er zu tun hat», sagte Biden dem Fernsehsender ABC. >>> ap | Sonntag, 05. Juli 2009
Wimbledon Men’s Final: Roger Federer v Andy Roddick

Watch the match live on BBC here >>>

Or, for those who cannot watch on the BBC iPlayer in their country, click on the following link to listen to the match live here >>>
Leading Clerics Defy Ayatollah on Disputed Iran Election

THE NEW YORK TIMES: CAIRO — The most important group of religious leaders in Iran called the disputed presidential election and the new government illegitimate on Saturday, an act of defiance against the country’s supreme leader and the most public sign of a major split in the country’s clerical establishment.

A statement by the group, the Association of Researchers and Teachers of Qum, represents a significant, if so far symbolic, setback for the government and especially the authority of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose word is supposed to be final. The government has tried to paint the opposition and its top presidential candidate, Mir Hussein Moussavi, as criminals and traitors, a strategy that now becomes more difficult — if not impossible.

“This crack in the clerical establishment, and the fact they are siding with the people and Moussavi, in my view is the most historic crack in the 30 years of the Islamic republic,” said Abbas Milani, director of the Iranian Studies Program at Stanford University. “Remember, they are going against an election verified and sanctified by Khamenei.” >>> Michael Slackman and Nazila Fathi | Saturday, July 04, 2009
British Islamists Plot Against Pakistan

THE SUNDAY TIMES: British militants are pushing for the overthrow of the Pakistani state. Followers of the fundamentalist group Hizb ut-Tahrir have called for a “bloodless military coup” in Islamabad and the creation of the caliphate in which strict Islamic laws would be rigorously enforced.

Members of the group, which describes itself as the Liberation party in Britain but is banned in Pakistan, revealed last week that it had targeted the country as a base from which to spread Islamic rule across the world.

The Sunday Times has obtained the names of a dozen British Hizb ut-Tahrir activists based in Lahore and Karachi, or commuting between Britain and Pakistan. There are believed to be many more.

Tayyib Muqeem, an English teacher from Stoke-on-Trent, said he had moved to Lahore to convert Pakistanis to the movement.

At Lahore’s Superior College, where Muqeem has set up a Hizb ut-Tahrir student group, he said the organisation’s aim was to subject Muslim and western countries to Islamic rule under sharia law, “by force” if necessary.

In a caliphate, “every woman would have to cover up” and stoning to death for adultery and the chopping off of thieves’ hands would be the law, he said.

He added that Islamic rule would be spread through “indoctrination” and by “military means” if non-Muslim countries refused to bow to it. “Waging war” would be part of the caliphate’s foreign policy. >>> Nicola Smith in Lahore | July 04, 2009
Rauchverbot auf Türkisch

NZZ am Sonntag: In zwei Wochen tritt in der Türkei ein Rauchverbot in Cafés und Bars in Kraft. Es gilt auch für die Wasserpfeifen, die eben eine Renaissance erleben.

Griechenland hat den Schritt am 1. Juli gemacht; auch in der Türkei, wo 40 Prozent der Erwachsenen rauchen, gilt ab 19. Juli die letzte und schärfste Stufe eines Rauchverbots. Nach Spitälern und Sportstadien sollen nun Cafés und Bars rauchfrei werden. Das Anfang 2008 beschlossene Gesetz hat in der Türkei erstaunlich wenig Diskussionen ausgelöst. Zu reden gaben einzig die drakonischen Bussen. So sollen künftig etwa Wirte, die kein Schild «Rauchen verboten» aufhängen, umgerechnet 450 Euro zahlen müssen.

Die Sonne brennt an diesem Nachmittag heiss auf Istanbul, zu heiss, um mit der Wasserpfeife im Freien zu sitzen. Doch im vielbesuchten achteckigen Bau mit seinen hohen Wänden und seiner Kuppel wird es nie zu heiss. An den Wänden stehen Bänke, Tische und Hocker, an denen die Raucher mit ihren Wasserpfeifen sitzen. Stammkunden haben im Lokal ihre eigene Pfeife deponiert. Zu ihnen gehört der 40-jährige Teppichhändler Seyhmus. Er würde nie eine Zigarette anrühren. «Ich mag den milden Rauch und das Geräusch, wenn der Rauch durch das Wasser gezogen wird, das ist Harmonie», sagt er lächelnd.

Es gibt eine Reihe ungeschriebener Gesetze, die mit dem Pfeifenrauchen zusammenhängen. Es ist verpönt, sich in einem Raum, in dem Wasserpfeifen geraucht werden, eine Zigarette anzuzünden oder laut zu sprechen. Eine Pfeife kann von zwei Rauchern geteilt werden, doch nur, wenn jeder ein eigenes Mundstück gebraucht. Man gibt den Schlauch auch nicht von Hand zu Hand, sondern legt ihn behutsam auf den Tisch, von wo ihn der andere Raucher ebenso behutsam wieder aufnimmt. Alles geschieht mit orientalischer Gelassenheit. >>> Jan Keetman, Istanbul | Sonntag, 05. Juli 2009
How Sharia Courts Operate in the UK

MAIL ON SUNDAY: In a shabby converted sweetshop in Leyton, East London, a group of burka-clad Muslim women sit in a waiting room. They have an appointment with Dr Suhaib Hasan at his twice-weekly surgery.

The women look worried. There is no talking in the airless reception area - the only sound is a fan purring quietly in the corner as temperatures outside exceed 80F.

Inside, the atmosphere is just as stifling. There are no magazines, television or other diversions. The beige walls are bare except for a flow-chart depicting the process of securing a Muslim divorce, and a picture of Mecca.

This is no GP's surgery or Citizens Advice Bureau. Within these non-descript walls lies the nerve centre of sharia law in Britain, the headquarters of the Islamic Sharia Council, which oversees the growing number of Muslim courts operating in Britain.

For the first time, the Islamic Sharia Council has granted access to a newspaper to observe the entire sharia legal process in Britain. Over several weeks, I was allowed to witness the filing of complaints, individual testimony hearings and the monthly meeting of imams, or judges, where rulings are handed down.

Sharia has been operating here, in parallel to the British legal system, since 1982. Work includes issuing fatwas - religious rulings on matters ranging from why Islam considers homosexuality a sin to why two women are equivalent to one male witness in an Islamic court.

The Islamic Sharia Council also rules on individual cases, primarily in matters of Muslim personal or civil law: divorce, marriage, inheritance and settlement of dowry payments are the most common.

However, in the course of my investigation, I discovered how sharia is being used informally within the Muslim community to tackle crime such as gang fights or stabbings, bypassing police and the British court system.

A few hardline leaders would like it to be taken even further. One told me that Britain should adopt sharia punishments such as stoning and the chopping off of hands to reduce violent crime.

There are 12 councils or courts operating in Britain under Dr Hasan's group, based in London, Birmingham, Manchester, Rotherham and Bradford. Scores more imams dispense justice through their own mosques.

A study last week by the thinktank Civitas claimed that there could be as many as 85 sharia courts in Britain, although Dr Hasan says most of these are not formal courts. But it is certainly a growing network.

In his courts, support staff interview plaintiffs and compile a case study. Judgments are delivered by senior imams at closed monthly meetings and are sent in writing to the concerned parties. Up to 7,000 cases have been handled so far.

The Islamic Sharia Council is listed as a charity but people seeking a divorce, or talaq, must fill in a form and pay a fee. For a man it is £100; for women, it is £250 because the imams say it takes more work to process a woman's application as her word has to be corroborated.

The literal meaning of sharia is 'source of water in the desert', meaning the source of all spiritual life for Muslims. This is not just a code of law, but a way of life.

In sharia-based societies, such as Saudi Arabia or the old Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, crimes against society are punished by beheadings, stoning to death and amputations. Women are kept in purdah and limited to child-rearing and caring for the home.

All Western influences, from alcohol, music, television and movies, are banned. It is a rigid prescription for Islamic life that seeks its guidance from the days of the Prophet in the 7th Century.

In Britain, sharia courts are permitted to rule only in civil cases, such as divorce and financial disputes. Until last year, these rulings depended on voluntary compliance among Muslims. But now, due to a clause in the Arbitration Act 1996, they are enforceable by county and high courts. Sharia law UK: Mail on Sunday gets exclusive access to a British Muslim court >>> Edna Fernandes | July 04, 2009

Edna Fernandes is author of Holy Warriors, published by Portobello Books at £8.99. To order your copy at £8.99 inc p&p, call The Review Bookstore on 0845 155 0713. www.ednafernandes.com
Saudis Give Nod to Israeli Raid on Iran

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Map: Google Images

THE SUNDAY TIMES: The head of Mossad, Israel’s overseas intelligence service, has assured Benjamin Netanyahu, its prime minister, that Saudi Arabia would turn a blind eye to Israeli jets flying over the kingdom during any future raid on Iran’s nuclear sites.

Earlier this year Meir Dagan, Mossad’s director since 2002, held secret talks with Saudi officials to discuss the possibility.
The Israeli press has already carried unconfirmed reports that high-ranking officials, including Ehud Olmert, the former prime minister, held meetings with Saudi colleagues. The reports were denied by Saudi officials.

“The Saudis have tacitly agreed to the Israeli air force flying through their airspace on a mission which is supposed to be in the common interests of both Israel and Saudi Arabia,” a diplomatic source said last week.

Although the countries have no formal diplomatic relations, an Israeli defence source confirmed that Mossad maintained “working relations” with the Saudis.

John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations who recently visited the Gulf, said it was “entirely logical” for the Israelis to use Saudi airspace.

Bolton, who has talked to several Arab leaders, added: “None of them would say anything about it publicly but they would certainly acquiesce in an overflight if the Israelis didn’t trumpet it as a big success.” >>> Uzi Mahnaimi in Tel Aviv and Sarah Baxter | Sunday, July 05, 2009
Iran's British Stooges Are Staring Right at You

THE SUNDAY TIMES: Zahra, an Iranian woman studying at an English university, is in a state of terror. Her husband, an activist in the cause of the defeated Iranian presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, was arrested a fortnight ago, and has not been seen since. Zahra, whose eyes are lined in green, the colour of the country’s reformist opposition, told the BBC: “Why should he be in jail? What was wrong with what we did in Tehran? It was the basic right of all Iranians to take part in the election.” She went on: “They don’t let my husband call me . . . this is torture.”

It is torture for Zahra because she has a good idea of what is happening to her husband. The Iranian state media have been broadcasting a series of “confessions” by demonstrators against the alleged rigging of the presidential vote in favour of the incumbent, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. They all tend to say the same thing: “I admit that I demonstrated under the influence of the BBC, the Voice of America and other foreign media.”

Their identities are not discernible, because their faces have been obscured. The reason for this was made horribly clear by remarks in The Guardian from a shopkeeper friend of an 18-year-old who had been “questioned” by the Iranian security services: “You could tell straight away he had just been released. His face was bruised all over. His teeth were broken and he could hardly open his eyes . . . [Later] the doctor told me that he had suffered rupture of the rectum.”

The shopkeeper quoted his 18-year-old friend to the effect that he had not “confessed” despite several days of beating while being hung from a ceiling with his hands and feet tied together. At that point two men tore his clothes off while a third “did it” – that is, inflicted the assault that ruptured his rectum. He was raped several times in this way, in front of four other detainees, but continued to refuse to sign a confession along the lines suggested by his interrogators.

So when we hear Ayatollah Jannati, chief of the Guardian Council, say of arrested Iranian employees of the British embassy in Tehran, “Naturally they will be put on trial, they have made confessions,” we should be only too aware of what will have been happening to some of Her Majesty’s servants. >>> Dominic Lawson | Sunday, July 05, 2009
Sarah Palin Says She Is Fed Up with Politics

THE SUNDAY TIMES: Sarah Palin, the failed 2008 vice-presidential candidate tipped to run for the White House in 2012, has told close friends she is “out of politics, period” after astounding the Republican party with a theatrical resignation as governor of Alaska.

Palin, 45, burst onto the national political scene less than a year ago as the “thriller from Wasilla” — a moose-hunting ice-hockey mom with five children including Trig, a Down’s syndrome baby — and electrified the party’s Christian conservative base as Senator John McCain’s running mate.

In a bizarre, erratic news conference outside her lakeside home on Friday, Palin held out the promise of a national role in politics when she said she hoped to “fight for all our children’s future from outside the governor’s office”.

Yesterday it emerged that she had told “very close friends” she had no intention of running for president. “She is fed up with politics. She doesn’t like her life. She feels that she needs to raise her family,” said Andrea Mitchell, an NBC News reporter who is married to Alan Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve.

“She really does not want to run for higher office,” Mitchell added. “This is not a case where she is stepping down in order to clear the way for a presidential run.”

Palin’s sudden decision to resign caught some family members by surprise, as well as bewildered staff and supporters. “She didn’t even tell her brother,” said John Coale, a Washington lawyer and political consultant who is close to the governor. A spokeswoman for Palin said quitting the governorship was a “liberating feeling . . . she can’t get out of there fast enough”. >>> Sarah Baxter in Washington | Sunday, July 5, 2009
Change and Repent, Bishop Tells Gays

THE TELEGRAPH: A senior Church of England bishop has called on homosexuals to repent and "be changed" in comments that have infuriated equality campaigners.

The Bishop of Rochester, Dr Michael Nazir-Ali, has defended traditional biblical teachings on homosexuality and said the Church should not be "rolled over by culture".

Dr Nazir-Ali spoke as tens of thousands of people, including Sarah Brown, the Prime Minister’s wife, joined the annual Pride London march to celebrate homosexual culture. A war of words broke out between Labour and the Conservatives over the issue of homosexuality last week after a minister accused the Tories of having a "deep strain of homophobia" running through the party.

The bishop’s controversial comments will reignite the battle over homosexuality in the Church of England ahead of what promises to be a divisive week for Anglicanism.

Tomorrow, a new coalition of evangelical and Anglo-Catholic parishes, backed by Dr Nazir-Ali, will get under way, which critics have claimed is an attempt to create a "church within the church".

The organisers said The Queen, the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, had sent a message to the leaders of the movement saying she understood their concerns about the future of the Anglican Communion. Next weekend the General Synod of the Church of England is meeting at York University. The following week, the Episcopal Church in America is expected to endorse liturgies for single sex marriage and allow more homosexuals to be made bishops.

In an interview with The Sunday Telegraph, Dr Nazir-Ali said: "We want to uphold the traditional teaching of the Bible. We believe that God has revealed his purpose about how we are made.

"People who depart from this don’t share the same faith. They are acting in a way that is not normative according to what God has revealed in the Bible.

"The Bible’s teaching shows that marriage is between a man and a woman. That is the way to express our sexual nature.

"We welcome homosexuals, we don’t want to exclude people, but we want them to repent and be changed." >>> Jonathan Wynne-Jones, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Saturday, July 04, 2009

Saturday, July 04, 2009

En Iran, 20 pendaisons en un jour pour trafic de drogue

LIBÉRATION.fr: Le nombre des exécutions a augmenté ces dernières années, en Iran, en raison d'une campagne censée améliorer la sécurité. Au moins 161 personnes y auraient été exécutées depuis le début de l'année

Vingt personnes, condamnées pour trafic de drogue, ont été pendues en une seule journée, samedi, dans une prison près de Téhéran, a rapporté l'agence semi-officielle Fars.

Les exécutions ont eu lieu dans la matinée, au sein de la prison de Rajaie Shahr, située à Karaj, à une cinquantaine de kilomètres à l'ouest de Téhéran, selon l'agence. Agés de 35 à 48 ans, les condamnés auraient été arrêtés dans une période allant de cinq mois à un an avant leur pendaison.

Fars ajoute qu'ils avaient été interpellés en possession de plus de 700 kg de drogues, dont de l'héroïne, de la cocaïne et de l'opium.

L'Iran est le second pays au monde par le nombre d'exécutions derrière la Chine, selon l'organisation de défense des droits de l'Homme, Amnesty International, mais il est rare qu'autant de condamnés soient exécutés en une seule journée. Il faut remonter au 27 juillet 2008 pour trouver un chiffre plus important: à cette date, 29 personnes avaient été exécutées en Iran pour trafic de drogue, meurtre et viol, selon la télévision.

Les 20 pendaisons de samedi portent à au moins 161 le nombre de personnes exécutées en Iran depuis le début de l'année, selon un décompte de l'AFP effectué à partir de sources de presse. >>> AFP | Samedi 04 Juillet 2009