Monday, October 19, 2009

Medizintourismus: Deutsche Luxus-Medizin für reiche Araber

WELT ONLINE: Tausende wohlhabende Araber lassen sich in Deutschland behandeln: Kliniken in Aachen, Hamburg oder München haben dafür eigens luxuriöse Abteilungen eingerichtet – inklusive Dolmetscher und Spaßprogramm. Doch das lukrative Geschäft mit den Medizintouristen bekommt nun Billigkonkurrenz.

Es war ein ebenso ungewöhnliches wie rentables Geschäftsmodell: Viele deutsche Kliniken hatten sich in den vergangenen Jahren auf die Behandlung wohlhabender arabischer Medizintouristen spezialisiert. Nun jedoch weht ihnen der Wind ins Gesicht. Wirtschaftskrise, Schweinegrippe, Billigkonkurrenz aus Asien, aber vor allem der rasante Aufbau medizinischer Versorgung in den Golfanrainerstaaten führen dazu, dass der finanziell lukrative „Golfstrom“ bald versiegen könnte. Was bleibt für die deutschen Klinikbetreiber, wenn die arabischen Luxusmedizintouristen zu Hause bleiben? >>> Von Klaus Vogt | Sonntag, 18. Oktober 2009
US-Regierung legalisiert Marihuana als Medizin: Verzicht auf Strafverfolgung nach Bundesrecht

NZZ ONLINE: Die US-Regierung will neue Regeln zum Marihuana-Konsum aus medizinischen Gründen vorstellen. Die gesetzlichen Regelungen einzelner Bundesstaaten sollen dazu anerkannt werden.

Die amerikanische Regierung beendet die rechtliche Unsicherheit beim Marihuana-Konsum aus medizinischen Gründen, der in 14 Bundesstaaten zugelassen ist. In diesen Fällen soll es künftig keine Strafverfolgung nach Bundesrecht mehr geben, wie aus dem Justizministerium in Washington verlautete. >>> ap | Montag, 19. Oktober 2009
Bosnia 'on Brink of New Civil War'

THE TELEGRAPH: Bosnia is heading for a new civil war as a constitutional crisis threatens to cause the collapse of the political system, the country's leaders have warned.

The concerns have been triggered by Bosnian Serb leaders who have stepped up their demands for independence with a warning the country is no longer "sustainable".

The growing ethnic divisions have raised fears of a return to the fighting which claimed the lives of up to 110,000 people between 1992 and 1995.

Senior European and US officials have called an emergency meeting in Sarajevo on Tuesday to meet the country's leaders to find a solution.

The crisis centres on attempts to overhaul the constitution which was imposed on the country in 1995 in the wake of the war.

Since then Bosnia has been made up of two semi-independent entities – the Serbs' Republika Srpska and the Muslim-Croat Federation.

The two are linked with weak central institutions whose functioning is often obstructed by ethnic rivalries. >>> Bruno Waterfield | Monday, October 19, 2009
Saudi Woman Seeks Divorce After Husband's Guantanamo Phone Slur

THE TELEGRAPH: A Saudi woman is seeking a divorce after she found out that her husband had nicknamed her 'Guantanamo' on his mobile phone.

The woman made the discovery while examining the list of contacts in her husband's phone when he left it at home one day, the Al-Watan newspaper reported. >>> | Monday, October 19, 2009
Hamas Patrols Beaches in Gaza to Enforce Conservative Dress Code

THE GUARDIAN: Lawyers resist campaign to make Palestinian society more Islamist

A mounted Hamas officer rides along the beach at Gaza City, on the lookout for infringements of Islamic dress codes. Photo: The Guardian

It began with a rash of unusually assertive police patrols. Armed Hamas officers stopped men from sitting shirtless on the beach, broke up groups of unmarried men and women, and ordered shopkeepers not to display lingerie on mannequins in their windows.

Then came an effort to force female lawyers to abide by a more conservative dress code, and intense pressure on parents to dress their daughters more conservatively for the new school term. Last week police began enforcing a new decree banning women from riding on motorbikes.

For the first time since Hamas won Palestinian parliamentary elections nearly four years ago, the group is trying to Islamise Gazan society. In public, Hamas leaders say they are merely encouraging a social moral code, and insist they are not trying to imitate the religious police who operate in some other rigid Islamic countries. But to many it feels like a new wave of enforcement in what is already a devoutly Muslim society.

Asmaa al-Ghoul, a writer and former journalist, was one of the first to run up against the new campaign. She spent an evening with a mixed group of friends in a beachside cafe in late June. After dark, she and another female friend went swimming wearing long trousers and T-shirts. Moments after leaving the water they found themselves confronted by a group of increasingly aggressive Hamas police officers. "Where is your father? Your husband?" one officer asked her. Ghoul, 27, was told her behaviour had not been respectable. Five of her male friends were beaten and detained for several hours.

"I believe our society is secular, but some Islamic parties want to change the idea of this society to make it religious," she said. She does not wear a headscarf, a choice that is increasingly rare for women in Gaza and generally confined only to those living in the wealthier areas of Gaza City. She routinely suffers taunts from other Palestinians as she walks from her home to her favourite coffee shops. "We're just afraid to be ourselves in the street," she said. "Hamas uses Islam in the mosque to try and control people's hearts." >>> Rory McCarthy in Gaza City | Sunday, October 18, 2009
Last-ditch Bid to Prevent BNP Appearance on Question Time

THE INDEPENDENT: Hain warns BBC of threat of legal challenge after inviting Griffin on to programme

Peter Hain, who has written a letter to the corporation warning it will run a 'serious risk' of a legal challenge if it allows Nick Griffin to participate. Photo: The Independent

A cabinet minister has launched a last-minute bid to block the leader of the British National Party (BNP) from appearing on BBC 1's Question Time. Peter Hain, the Welsh Secretary, who has already criticised the BBC for including the far-right party in this Thursday's programme, has written a letter to the corporation warning it will run a "serious risk" of a legal challenge if it allows Nick Griffin to participate.

The BNP leader apparently accepted last week that his party's constitution may breach race-relations legislation. Mr Griffin agreed to use "all reasonable endeavours" to change his party's rules barring black, Asian and Jewish people, after being taken to court by the Equality and Human Rights Commission. It has agreed not to accept new members until its membership rules are altered.

However, its constitution will not be reformed before next month, while the case against it has been adjourned until January. In a letter to the BBC's director general, Mark Thompson, Mr Hain said that the corporation would be offering coverage to an illegally constituted party by handing Mr Griffin a place on Thursday's Question Time panel. The BBC maintains that its decision to invite Mr Griffin was made to fulfil its obligation to offer impartial coverage after the BNP won two seats in the European parliament in June. >>> Michael Savage, Political correspondent | Monday, October 19, 2009
'The Berlin Wall Was a Monster': Berliners describe how their city was divided by the wall and how a few risked their lives to escape from east to west

Watch Guardian video here | Rebecca Lovell, Francesca Panetta and Christian Bennett | Monday, October 19, 2009

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Nick Griffin: Sikhs and Hindus Support BNP

THE TELEGRAPH: Nick Griffin has claimed that his Question Time invitation marks the BNP's arrival "in the British political system", as he argued that some Sikhs and Hindus now support the far-right party.

The BNP leader, who is due appear on BBC One's flagship political debate programme this week, said that many ethnic minority Britons agreed with the party's hard-line opposition to immigration.

Amid increasing public scrutiny of the BNP's racist policies, Mr Griffin contrasted "civically British" minority communities who lived here "legally and legitimately", with Islamic "colonists" who wanted to impose their views on the rest of society. >>> Matthew Moore | Sunday, October 18, 2009
Blair for President? 'Not Necessarily a Good Idea,' Says His Former Adviser

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: And polls throughout Europe – and 38,000 petition signatories – agree. Jane Merrick reports on the gathering momentum to stop the former PM

Tony Blair's former chief adviser on the EU has misgivings about the ex-prime minister becoming President of Europe, as the campaign to overturn his bid gathers pace.

Sir Stephen Wall – one of the key architects of the post of EU president – said a high-profile figure such as Mr Blair was "not necessarily a very good idea" and cast doubt on his ability to build consensus among EU leaders. A figure from a smaller state would send a "unifying signal", he added.

The surprise intervention came amid growing signs that a President Blair would not be welcomed by ordinary citizens of Europe, despite their leaders showing support.

Research by The Independent on Sunday suggests a democratic discrepancy between voters and national leaders – who wield the votes for the new president. The findings are supported by a European-wide petition to stop Mr Blair taking the post, which comes with a string of perks. Nearly 38,000 people have signed the petition, yet he remains a favourite with bookmakers and with a growing number of EU leaders.

After the IoS asked readers' opinions last week, hundreds responded – and those saying No to Mr Blair outnumbered Yes by 20 to 1. His role in the Iraq war was the main complaint. As the process for choosing a European Council president draws to a close later this year, Mr Blair is expected to appear before the Chilcot Inquiry into the Iraq war.

Comments from readers and petitioners suggest that Mr Blair appears to have misjudged the public anger that still exists over Iraq. Last night sources close to the former prime minister claimed he remained focused on his job as Middle East envoy and was "really enjoying his new life".

The EU president, a role created by the Lisbon Treaty, will be decided before the end of this year, with only Vaclav Klaus, the Czech president, yet to ratify the charter. Despite voters' opposition, EU leaders appear to be inching towards acclamation of Mr Blair at a meeting in Brussels in December. Yet Sir Stephen, who criticised Mr Blair over Iraq, said in an interview with the journal European Voice that the ex-PM would not be suitable if the post was designed for consensus-building in the 27-nation bloc.

Sir Stephen was the UK's permanent representative to the EU between 1995 and 2000, before working as Mr Blair's European adviser until 2004. During his time at No 10, Sir Stephen helped devise the posts of president and European foreign affairs representative.

Asked about the possibility of a high-profile figure such as Mr Blair as president, Sir Stephen said: "[That] is not necessarily a very good idea." >>> Jane Merrick | Sunday, October 18, 2009

Leading Article: We Won't Get Fooled Again

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: Tony Blair has many fine qualities. He can be a brilliant advocate; and he has a gift – although he found its limit – for finding agreement among apparently incompatible interests. His supporters also put forward other qualifications for the post of President of the European Council: he has experience of working with European institutions; as Prime Minister he sought to engage Britain more constructively in the European Union – again within limits; and, whatever the critics might say, he is well known and respected among world leaders.

However, The Independent on Sunday cannot support his undeclared candidacy for the job that is now almost certain to be created. This is not simply a matter of his decision to join the American invasion of Iraq. That was an error of judgement, and an important one. It must count against him in consideration for any leadership position. But the Iraq war also undermines Mr Blair's claim to be a unifying force. The issue itself was divisive, pitting the governments of the European Union against each other. When the choice between Britain's relationship with America and its relationship with the rest of Europe became unfudgeable, Mr Blair chose America, which speaks volumes about his instincts.

Mr Blair rode roughshod over popular opinion across Europe, and misled people at home. He used information selectively to help persuade Cabinet and Parliament of the case for military action. As we say, he was a forceful advocate, sometimes stretching the facts to the utmost in order to make his case. His lawyerly persuasiveness may be useful in presenting Europe's case to the rest of the world, but it is not necessarily the ability that makes for the best chairman of summits of European leaders. As we report today, this is the view of none other than Sir Stephen Wall. ... >>> | Sunday, October 18, 2009

Tony Blair’s High Profile Hurting His Chances in Bid to Lead Europe

TIMES ONLINE: Tony Blair’s chances of becoming Europe’s first president have suffered a setback as his critics begin to build their case against him.

As more countries declare their hand on Mr Blair’s perceived suitability, a row is intensifying over exactly what job the former Prime Minister — or anybody else — will take up if and when the Lisbon treaty is ratified. Smaller countries led by Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands — the Benelux trio — want a narrow, chairman-style role for EU summits; Silvio Berlusconi and President Sarkozy believe that the president should become the grandiloquent face of Europe.

The Times, which contacted all 27 member states to gauge the strength of support for Mr Blair, found that he appears to be suffering from being the most prominent name linked to the new role, with his high profile deterring some EU members from picking him in case he ignores them and their interests.

One ally said: “Tony Blair has become both the benchmark and a target. But until he knows what the job involves he cannot make a decision about it.”

Poland is preparing to publish a paper calling for the role of president to be limited, The Times has learnt, echoing an earlier demand from the three Benelux countries, which was seen as an anti-Blair move. The Benelux countries want the new role of EU foreign minister to become the real global statesman.

In addition, this week the French President appeared to distance himself from Mr Blair when he acknowledged that several EU states wanted someone from a country that participated in the euro.

Only three EU leaders have come out publicly for Mr Blair: Mr Berlusconi, Brian Cowen of Ireland and Gordon Brown, who has said that he will support him if he decides to stand. At present Mr Blair is the international envoy to the Middle East and although his interest in the European post is widely known, it is understood that he is unlikely to want a purely Brussels-based bureaucratic job. >>> David Charter | Saturday, October 17, 2009

Stop Blair ! Petition against the nomination of Tony Blair as "President of the European Union" >>>

Opposition Grows to Tony Blair's Bid for E.U. President

TIME: Here's a riddle: What unites French Socialists and British Conservatives, brings feminists together with the editors of prurient tabloid newspapers and gives shared purpose to a clutch of small European countries and more than 37,000 signatories to an online petition? Answer: Tony Blair. Across Europe, natural adversaries and strange bedfellows are finding common purpose in their efforts to stop Britain's former Prime Minister from assuming the role popularly known as president of Europe.

When Ireland and Poland ratified the Lisbon Treaty earlier this month, that left only Czech President Vaclav Klaus holding out against the document that is designed to re-engineer the European Union's institutions to better match the realities of its expanded membership. Once Klaus signs the treaty — frantic efforts are afoot to try to persuade him to do so — the E.U. can start its highest-level executive-recruitment search to date. The treaty would create two top E.U. jobs: president of the European Council and High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, effectively the E.U.'s foreign minister. Blair is seen as front runner for the presidency.

You might think Blair's international cachet would be cause for British hearts to swell with pride, but some of his most bitter opponents are homegrown. Opinion polls point to an expected Conservative victory in British parliamentary elections in May 2010, and the Tories will campaign on a Euroskeptic platform that has already seen them withdraw from the main Conservative grouping in the European Parliament to cobble together an anti-federalist alternative. They dislike the idea of a high-profile, high-powered E.U. president such as Blair, who would surely increase the influence of Brussels. But many Tories also feel personal animus toward the politician whose electoral success consigned them to the wilderness for so long. "Having President Blair would put us in a state of permanent warfare if we won the election. I cannot stress how serious this is," an unnamed Tory source recently told Britain's Daily Telegraph newspaper. >>> Catherine Mayer, London | Wednesday, October 15, 2009
Ein Hauch von Glamour in Bagdad: Lippenstift und modische Accessoires: Irakische Frauen begehren gegen die Islamisten auf

NZZ am SONNTAG: Siham Antoine war der Star unter den Stylistinnen des Iraks. Nach dem Terror islamistischer Hardliner wagt sie nun einen trotzigen Neuanfang.

Der Föhn schnurrt wie eine Katze. Es riecht nach Haarfarbe, Shampoo und schweren Parfums. Eilig trippelt Siham Antoine zu einer Kundin, lockert einen Streifen der Alufolie und prüft den Zustand der Farbe. Skeptisch wirft ihr die Kundin einen Blick in dem grossen Spiegel zu. «Grossartig, grossartig», sagt Antoine entzückt. Sanft tätschelt sie der Kundin auf die Schultern. «Meine Liebe, du wirst schön sein wie Ishtar», säuselt sie ihr ins Ohr. Ein schöneres Kompliment als den Vergleich mit der babylonischen Gottheit gibt es für eine Frau im Irak kaum.

Siham Antoine verspricht ihren Kundinnen Luxus. «So war es früher, und so soll es heute sein», sagt sie. Kampfeslustig schürzt sie die Unterlippe ihres knallrot geschminkten Munds. Ihr Salon «Mina und Dina» galt einst als eine der besten Adressen in Bagdad. Doch sunnitische und schiitische Extremisten machten in den letzten Jahren auch vor den Schönheitssalons nicht halt. Sie sprengten zahlreiche Studios in die Luft, etliche Stylistinnen wurden umgebracht. Make-up und modernes Aussehen ist in den Augen der selbsternannten Sittenwächter westliches Teufelszeug, nur der Ehemann sollte seine Frau unverschleiert zu Gesicht bekommen. Viele Salon-Besitzerinnen übten ihr Handwerk nur noch im Verborgenen aus.

Christinnen wie Antoine traf die Gewalt gleich doppelt. Sie wurde nicht nur wegen ihres Berufs, sondern auch wegen ihres Glaubens verfolgt. Im Frühjahr 2006 erschossen Unbekannte ihren Neffen, kurz darauf wurde der Mann ihrer Nichte ermordet. Zwei ihrer Mitarbeiterinnen verloren ihre Brüder. Antoine floh zuerst nach Jordanien und später nach Dubai. Pariser Chic und Stacheldraht >>> Inga Rogg, Bagdad | Sonntag, 18. Oktober 2009
Iran : attentat suicide contre des Gardiens de la révolution

LE FIGARO: Au moins 20 personnes, dont cinq commandants de l'armée religieuse iranienne, ont été tués.

Attentat-suicide contre le pouvoir en Iran. Cinq commandants des Gardiens de la révolution, l'organisation paramilitaire aux ordres du Guide suprême iranien, ont été tués dans un attentat-suicide qui a fait vingt morts et une quarantaine de blessés.

Les faits se sont produits dans une région proche de la frontière irano-pakistanaise, au sud-est du pays. Les commandants des Gardiens se trouvaient à l'intérieur d'un véhicule et se rendaient à une réunion quand un assaillant a fait sauter les explosifs qu'il avait en sa possession, faisant sauter leur véhicule. >>> | Dimanche 18 Octobre 2009

Selbstmordanschlag auf Revolutionsgarden im Iran

WELT ONLINE: Unter den 20 Opfern sind auch fünf ranghohe Kommandeure. Noch ist unklar, wer für den Anschlag verantwortlich ist. Verdächtigt wird die sunnitische Organisation Dschundallah (Brigade Gottes), die schon mehrfach Anschläge gegen die Revolutionsgarden und schiitische Ziele im Südosten des Landes verübte.

Bei einem Selbstmordanschlag im Südosten des Irans sind nach Angaben der staatlichen Nachrichtenagentur IRNA mindestens 20 Menschen getötet worden. Unter den Opfern seien fünf ranghohe Kommandeure der Revolutionsgarden, berichtete IRNA.
Zahlreiche weitere Menschen wurden verletzt. Die Kommandeure fuhren dem Bericht zufolge zu einem Treffen in der Region Pischin an der Grenze zu Pakistan, als sich der Attentäter in die Luft sprengte.

Zu der Bluttat bekannte sich zunächst niemand. Der Verdacht fiel auf die sunnitische Organisation Dschundallah (Brigade Gottes), die schon mehrfach Anschläge gegen die Revolutionsgarden und schiitische Ziele im Südosten des Landes verübt hat. >>> AP/lac | Sonntag, 18. Oktober 2009

Iran Guard Commanders Are Killed in Bombings

THE NEW YORK TIMES: RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — At least five commanders of Iran’s elite Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps were killed and dozens of others left dead and injured in two terrorist bombings in the restive region of the nation’s southeastern frontier with Pakistan, according to multiple Iranian state news agencies.

The coordinated attacks appeared to mark an escalation in hostilities between Iran’s leadership and one of the nation’s many disgruntled ethnic and religious minorities, in this case the Baluchis. The southeast region, Sistan-Baluchistan, has been the scene of terrorist attacks in the past, and in April the government put the elite Guards Corps in control of security there to try to stop the escalating violence.

Iranian officials have accused foreign enemies of supporting the terrorist insurgents and repeated that charge Sunday, a day before Iran is set to meet for another round of sensitive talks on its nuclear program with several Western countries.

“There is no doubt that this violent and inhumane act was part of the strategy of foreigners and enemies of the regime and the revolution to destroy unity between Shias and Sunnis and create divisions among the unified ranks of the great Iranian people,” said a statement issued by the Revolutionary Guards through the official IRNA news service.

A terrorist group calling itself Jundallah — or Soldiers of God — took responsibility for the attacks, according to the state-owned Press TV. The group is made up of ethic Baluchis, who can also be found in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and has taken credit for other attacks in the region in recent years.

The Jundallah has ties across the border into Pakistan, and Iranian officials say it has been encouraged, financed and armed by the United States. >>> Michael Slackman | Sunday, October 18, 2009

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Geert Wilders Visits the UK; Dangerous, Militant Muslims Demonstrate

Leading Article: Pakistan Finally Takes on the Monster It Created

THE INDEPENDENT: This is a battle that Islamabad should have embarked upon long ago

This week it became brutally clear that Pakistan is effectively at war. A series of brazen assaults by jihadis on police stations, army garrisons and civilian targets across the country in recent days have claimed 160 lives. The military, meanwhile, is preparing for an assault on the militant stronghold of Waziristan.

The death toll is destined to rise further. There will be more casualties, more bombings and more turmoil in this nuclear-armed nation. This battle against a diffused guerrilla force is likely to take years, rather than months. But we need to be absolutely clear about one thing: this is not a struggle that the Pakistani state can avoid. Indeed, it is one that it should have embarked upon a long time ago.

For the best part of two decades, successive Pakistani governments tolerated the growth of Islamist militias (both in the western tribal regions and in the Punjab) in the belief that these groups were useful proxies in the regional strategic struggle with India. The country's intelligence services even funded and armed them. Just as dangerously, the authorities allowed the religious fundamentalists to establish hundreds of schools which churned out indoctrinated recruits to swell the ranks of the militias. The leaders of the Afghan Taliban were trained in such establishments.

The Pakistani authorities believed they could control these fanatics. They were wrong. Earlier this year when the Pakistani Taliban moved into an area only 100km from the capital Islamabad and began to impose their own brutal penal code on its inhabitants, the penny finally dropped among Pakistan's leaders that they had created a monster. >>> | Saturday, October 17, 2009
Leading Article: A Bad Week for Free Speech

THE INDEPENDENT: How could it have come to this? We live in a country where respect for free speech and the written word is centuries old, yet legislators in other countries feel they must pass laws protecting their citizens' liberties against British judges. In California, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed a law giving legislators the power to block libel judgments passed in the British courts. Three other American states have similar laws, all prompted by a judgment against the US author Rachel Ehrenfeld.

In her 2003 book Funding Evil, Dr Ehrenfeld accused a Saudi banker of providing financial support for al-Qa'ida and Hamas. Dr Ehrenfeld's book was not published in Britain, but about 20 copies were bought online through UK-registered websites, and some content was available online. On that flimsy basis, the aggrieved banker cleverly chose to sue Dr Ehrenfeld in London, where his case was heard by our most eminent libel judge, David Eady, who ordered the writer to pay £30,000 damages to the banker and his two sons, plus costs. >>> | Saturday, October 17, 2009

Sarkozy Blasts Swiss Justice Over Polanski Arrest

DAILY EXPRESS: French leader NICOLAS SARKOZY has offered his support to detained sex offender ROMAN POLANSKI, insisting a 76-year-old man should not have been arrested for crimes he committed 32 years ago. >>> | Saturday, October 17, 2009
Geert Wilders: "Islam is a Fascist Ideology"

Vaclav Klaus Says It Is 'Too Late' to Stop Lisbon Treaty

THE TELEGRAPH: The Lisbon Treaty has taken another step towards becoming law across Europe after the Czech president, Vaclav Klaus, effectively abandoned his attempts to stall it.

Mr Klaus, the sole remaining leader in the European Union not to have signed the document, conceded that despite his personal opposition to the treaty, it was now too late to stop it.

He also dismisssed speculation that he would try to hold off formally signing the document after the forthcoming British general election next year. Such a move would pave the way for a future Conservative government to hold a referendum on the treaty, which could derail the entire plan if it delivered a "No" vote. But Mr Klaus said: "I will not and cannot wait for the British election. They would have to hold it in the coming days or weeks."

In an interview with Czech newspaper Lidove Noviny, he added: "I do not consider the Lisbon Treaty to be a good thing for Europe, for the freedom of Europe, or for the Czech Republic.

"However, the train has already travelled so fast and so far that I guess it will not be possible to stop it or turn it around, however much we would wish to."

Mr Klaus, an admirer of Margaret Thatcher, had won plaudits from fellow Eurosceptics for his staunch criticisms of the treaty, which he fears will usher in a European federal state that will curb the sovereign rights of smaller countries like the Czech Republic.

In past speeches, he has drawn comparisons between post-Lisbon Europe and the grim life of Czechs during Soviet rule, likening distant diktats from Brussels to those from Communist apparatchiks in Moscow. >>> Colin Freeman | Saturday, October 17, 2009

Osama bin Laden: Sunflower Enthusiast with a Passion for Fast Cars

THE TELEGRAPH: Osama bin Laden's first wife has given a revealing insight into the complex character of the man behind the world's most wanted terrorist.

Najwa bin Laden has published a memoir claiming he was a contradiction of personality traits.

She reveals he was a disciplinarian who would beat his children for showing too many teeth when they smiled, but maintained a passion for sunflowers and fast cars his first wife has said.

He also banned the use of electrical appliances in his home and tried to toughen up his sons by making them climb desert mountains without water.

Details from the home life of the founder of al Qaeda have emerged in the book Najwa has written with his fourth son Omar.

Growing Up Bin Laden charts his journey from teenage newly-wed to the face of international terrorism, revealing along the way that he was fond of mangos and the BBC.

Alongside details of his domestic life, the memoir portrays a man who became increasingly severe as he was pursued by the Western powers. >>> Ben Farmer in Kabul | Friday, October 16, 2009
Glen Jenvey Embraces Islam



Glen Jenvey >>>
Ed West: Isn't a March for Sharia in London Bad for 'Community Relations'?

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOG: While the media castigate the “far-Right” Geert Wilders for daring to speak up for fascistic ideas like freedom of speech, gay rights and parliamentary democracy, this event in London seems to cause barely a ripple – the March for Sharia to be held in Trafalgar Square on October 31. As the group Islam4UK says:
Undoubtedly, Islam and the Shari’ah have reached new heights in the United Kingdom, Muslim communities up and down the country have brought forth a culture and system that is not only superior to the British way of life but also a shining example of what true subservience to Almighty God can bring to a society drowning in disbelief and oppression.

Recent months have been particularly debilitating for the British population who have struggled to get by as basic necessities such as food, clothing and shelter have become more cumbersome to obtain. The MPs’ expenses scandal that shocked the nation unfortunately also demonstrates the cruel indifference the British government has towards its citizens and moreover how they appear to be more concerned with wasting public money on personal frivolities than investing it for the betterment of society.

As a result of this perpetual malaise, Islam4UK with the help of sincere Muslims launched a series of Islamic Roadshow’s that provided a real answer to the problems faced by the British community; with over 16 different locations already hit including, Birmingham, Slough, Lewisham, Peckham and Green Street, approximately 70 men and women have embraced Islam, reinforcing the dire need for Shari’ah in contemporary Britain.
The event is organised by Anjem Choudary, the Islamist fanatic. It sounds harsh, but unlike Wilders, Choudary really is a menace to our society, which would resemble hell on earth if he had any say in its running. But most of all he’s a menace to British Muslims, not because he’s a crazy voice in the wilderness but because he isn’t – rather he’s part of a large and powerful worldwide movement that threatens much of the world. Finish reading and comment >>> Ed West | Friday, October 16, 2009