Thursday, February 10, 2011

EXEKUTION IN IRAN: Fall Bahrami – Hinrichtung entsetzt Niederlande

WELT ONLINE: Die Niederlande sind erzürnt über die Exekution einer Landsfrau im Iran. Der Außenminister spricht von der ,,barbarischen Tat eines barbarischen Regimes".

Vor etwas mehr als einer Woche wurde Sahra Bahrami im Iran exekutiert. Die Frau mit niederländischem und iranischem Pass wurde beschuldigt, mit Drogen zu handeln. Das wurde jedoch nie vor einem unabhängigen Gericht bewiesen. Auch ließ es der islamische Gottesstaat nicht zu, dass die 45-jährige Mutter Hilfe von einem Anwalt ihres Vertrauens oder vom niederländischen Konsulat bekam. Der Iran erkennt die doppelte Staatsbürgerschaft nicht an. Zudem wurde sie gezwungen, im iranischen Staatsfernsehen ein Bekenntnis abzulegen. Diplomatischer Konflikt mit Teheran – Den Haag zieht Botschafter ab >>> Autor: Rob Savelberg | Mittwoch, 09. Februar 2011
Nicolas Sarkozy souligne les «racines juives» de la France

LE FIGARO: Le chef de l'État s'exprimait mercredi soir lors du 26e dîner annuel du Conseil représentatif des institutions juives de France.

C'était la deuxième fois depuis son élection que Nicolas Sarkozy participait mercredi soir au 26e dîner annuel du Crif (Conseil représentatif des institutions juives de France). Et si le chef de l'État n'a pas choisi le registre de la «repentance», il n'en était pas très éloigné, quand il a évoqué les épisodes les plus douloureux de la relation de la France avec les juifs, français ou d'ailleurs. «Si la France a des racines chrétiennes, elle a aussi des racines juives», a-t-il affirmé en préambule de son rappel historique. Avant de poursuivre: «La présence du judaïsme est attestée en France avant même que la France ne soit la France, avant même qu'elle ne soit christianisée.»

«C'est ainsi, a déclaré Nicolas Sarkozy, qu'il existe en France des bains rituels juifs contemporains de nos églises romanes et des synagogues aussi ornées que des chapelles baroques. Oui le judaïsme fait partie des racines de la France et chaque Français, quelle que soit sa confession ou son origine, peut en être fier.» >>> Par Judith Waintraub | Jeudi 10 Février 2011
Andalousie : Nuit de flamenco à Grenade

Dans les caves de la cité andalouse, les robes virevoltent et les talons claquent. On y joue, on y chante et on danse le flamenco, la musique des gitans d'Andalousie

Nuit de flamenco à Grenade from Ulysse, la culture du voyage on Vimeo.

Egypt's Army 'Involved in Detentions and Torture'

THE GUARDIAN: Military accused by human rights campaigners of targeting hundreds of anti-government protesters

The Egyptian military has secretly detained hundreds and possibly thousands of suspected government opponents since mass protests against President Hosni Mubarak began, and at least some of these detainees have been tortured, according to testimony gathered by the Guardian.

The military has claimed to be neutral, merely keeping anti-Mubarak protesters and loyalists apart. But human rights campaigners say this is clearly no longer the case, accusing the army of involvement in both disappearances and torture – abuses Egyptians have for years associated with the notorious state security intelligence (SSI) but not the army.

The Guardian has spoken to detainees who say they have suffered extensive beatings and other abuses at the hands of the military in what appears to be an organised campaign of intimidation. Human rights groups have documented the use of electric shocks on some of those held by the army. >>> Chris McGreal in Cairo | Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Marine Le Pen Praises Cameron Stance on Multiculturalism

THE GUARDIAN: Leader of France's National Front has congratulated David Cameron on his controversial speech

The leader of France's National Front has praised David Cameron for what she says is an endorsement of her party's far-right views on multiculturalism and immigration.

Marine Le Pen was elected to lead the National Front last month. She claimed the prime minister's speech on the failures of multiculturalism showed he was taking Britain's Conservatives towards her stance on the issue. "It is exactly this type of statement that has barred us from public life [in France] for 30 years," she told the Financial Times. "I sense an evolution at European level, even in classic governments. I can only congratulate him."

Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, was among European leaders listening to Cameron's speech in Munich at the weekend. He is accused of having played into the hands of rightwing extremists by talking of the failings of multiculturalism within hours of one of the biggest anti-Islam rallies ever staged in Britain.

Cameron called for a new "muscular liberalism", promoting British values and national identity. A policy of "passive tolerance" had only served to encourage Islamist extremism, he argued. >>> David Batty | Thursday, February 10, 2011
Iranian Web Programmer Faces Execution on Porn Charges

THE GUARDIAN: Saeed Malekpour sentenced to death after allegedly confessing under torture

A 35-year-old Iranian web programmer is facing imminent execution in connection with developing and promoting porn websites, charges that his family insist are trumped up.

Saeed Malekpour, a permanent resident of Canada who was arrested in October 2008 after his arrival in Tehran, is convicted of designing and moderating adult content websites, acting against the national security, insulting and desecrating the principles of Islam, and agitating the public mind.

Speaking from Toronto, Malekpour's wife, Fatemeh Eftekhari, said her husband has been informed of the verdict and has been transferred to solitary confinement for the sentence to be administered if the supreme court sanctions it. She says her husband was a web programmer who had written photo uploading software that was used in a porn website without his knowledge. >>> Saeed Kamali Dehghan | Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Ronald Reagan's Children Reject Republican Claims Over His Political Legacy

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The three surviving children of Ronald Reagan have rubbished efforts by Republican presidential hopefuls to claim his mantle as a conservative reformer, branding Sarah Palin "a soap opera".

Celebrations to mark the centenary of the late president's birth have coincided with the need of what critics call a mediocre group of candidates to burnish their reputations to send Reagan-fever jumping to unprecedented levels.

Speaking at a dinner to honour the 40th president, Sarah Palin said she considered herself a "western conservative in the spirit of Ronald Reagan".

Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker who is also considering a run for the White House, compared his Pennsylvania roots to Reagan's in a small town in Illinois and said [the] man who ended the Cold War would have handled the turmoil in Egypt with much more certainty than President Barack Obama. Other potential candidates have lavished praise on Reagan, who died in 2004, and cited him as their chief inspiration.

But asked what she made of Mrs Palin as a potential successor to her father, Patti Davis, Mr Reagan's only surviving daughter, said: "You've got to be kidding me."

Ron Reagan, her younger brother, scoffed: "Sarah Palin has nothing in common with my father. Sarah Palin is a soap opera." >>> Alex Spillius, Washington | Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Senior Lib Dem Sacked for Criticising Controversial Deal for Bankers

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Coalition tensions over bankers’ bonuses have been laid bare with the sacking of a senior Liberal Democrat who criticised a controversial deal announced by George Osborne.

Lord Oakeshott, a close ally of Vince Cable, the Business Secretary, was last night removed from his post as the Lib Dem spokesman on Treasury issues.

His departure from the post came after he condemned the Coalition’s agreement with the banking industry as inadequate and accused Mr Osborne’s team of “arrogance and incompetence”.

Under the deal with the industry, the heads of the taxpayer-backed high-street banks will receive multi-million pound pay and bonus packages for last year.

The Chancellor said it was time to move from “retribution to recovery” and agreed to water down laws which would have identified multi-million pound bank traders.

However, under the terms of the “Project Merlin” deal, the country’s main high-street banks have agreed to increase lending and provide funding for community projects – in return for the Government not vetoing their bonus payments. >>> James Kirkup, and Robert Winnett | Wednesday, February 09, 2011

MAIL ONLINE: Clegg forced to sack Treasury spokesman after he pours scorn on 'weasel' Osborne's deal with banks: The coalition was in disarray over a lending and bonuses deal with Britain's biggest banks as Nick Clegg was forced to sack a member of his frontbench team for an extraordinary public attack on the Treasury. >>> James Chapman and Becky Barrow | Wednesday, February 09, 2011

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: RBS's Stephen Hester and Lloyds' Eric Daniels accept multi-million pound bonuses: The chief executives of state-owned Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group have accepted multi-million pound bonuses on the same day George Osborne unveiled details of a deal with UK banks that should cut pay-outs. >>> Harry Wilson and Andrew Trotman | Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Protesters Demand Mubarak Leave Egypt

Cairo residents getting tired

Islam: The Religion of Peace

Watch BRUTAL video * HERE

HT: FaithFreedom.org >>>

* Viewer discretion is STRONGLY advised. This video is NOT SUITABLE for CHILDREN or for those who have a WEAK STOMACH or CONSTITUTION. It TRULY is BRUTAL!
Disgusting British Politicians! UK Ministers 'Wanted Lockerbie Bomber Released'

BBC: The previous UK government did "all it could" to help facilitate the release of Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi, a report on the case says.

Sir Gus O'Donnell, the country's most senior civil servant, said there was an "underlying desire" to see Megrahi released before he died.

But his report concluded that it was made clear to Libya that the final decision was up to Scottish ministers.

And there was no evidence of Labour pressure on the Holyrood government.

Prime Minister David Cameron, who set up the investigation, said the release had been "profoundly wrong" but added there was no need for a fresh inquiry.

Labour's Gordon Brown, who was prime minister when Megrahi was freed in August 2009, said the decision had been made by Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill and "no-one else".

But Stephanie Bernstein, from the US, who lost her husband in the bombing, told the BBC: "It's disgusting, absolutely appalling. It looks as if the Labour government were acting as attorneys for the Libyans." >>> | Monday, February 07, 2011
Turkey: A Model for the ME?

As countries like Tunisia and Egypt ask themselves what's next, one country in the region has fashioned itself as a role model for successful democracy. The reason? Turkey appears - so far - to have successfully married its secular institutions with a majority Muslim society. Al Jazeera's Anita McNaught has more from Istanbul

Mannequins Wear a Message for Iraq’s Women

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Four mannequins in Western dress in the Kadhimiya neighborhood. Text accompanying the display, put on by a mosque, had an uncompromising message: Men who look at women in such dress become voracious monsters; women who wear it burn through eternity. Photograph: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: BAGHDAD — Vendors around the Kadhimiya mosque in northern Baghdad sell all manner of women’s clothing, from drape-like black abayas to racy evening wear. But on a recent afternoon, Hameed Ibrahim ushered his family toward a different kind of fashion display.

On a raised stage between two shops, four mannequins in Western dress, their blond hair peeking out under colored scarves, stood amid crepe-paper flames. To one side was a banner featuring lust-crazed male ghouls; behind the mannequins, images of eternal suffering.

And at the foot of the stage was a scripture from the mosque.

“Whoever fills his eyes with the forbidden, on judgment day God will fill them with fire.”

For Mr. Ibrahim, it was a message that his wife and daughters — and all Iraqi women — sorely needed. “I brought them here so they can see this,” he said. “Maybe everyone has forgotten about God, and they say that this is progress. Well, I call it depravity.”

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein’s government in 2003, women’s clothing has served as a barometer not just of fashion, but of the current ascendancy of religious values in a once secular society. On this busy thoroughfare, near Baghdad’s largest holy shrine, what might be called the mannequin salvo in the Battle of the Abaya — between secularism and Shariah law — incites heated views on both sides. If revolution in the Arab world is sweeping Cairo’s streets, the smaller strokes here represent forces no less urgent.

Mr. Ibrahim’s wife, who gave her name as Um Noor, or mother of Noor, approved of the exhibit, which has been up for about a month. Like many on the street, she wore a loose-fitting black abaya that covered everything but her face, and she dressed her four daughters in kind.

“This is good because it will make women feel frightened and stop what they are doing and wearing,” she said. “There are some people who are not afraid of God. Let them come and see this.” The clothes on the mannequins were chaste by American or European standards. The sleeves and hems were long, and the necklines were high or covered by scarves. But the message was uncompromising: men who look at women in such dress become voracious monsters; women who wear it burn through eternity. >>> John Leland and Duraid Adnan | Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Protest in Egypt Takes a Turn as Workers Go on Strike

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Striking museum workers outside the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Cairo on Wednesday. Photograph: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: CAIRO — Protesters demanding the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak appeared on Wednesday to have recaptured the initiative in their battle with his government, demonstrating a new ability to mobilize thousands to take over Cairo’s streets beyond their headquarters at Tahrir Square and to spark labor unrest.

As reports filtered in of strikes and unrest spreading to other parts of the city and the country, the government seemed to dig in deeper. Mr. Mubarak’s handpicked successor, Vice President Omar Suleiman, warned on Tuesday that the only alternative to constitutional talks is a “coup” and added: “We don’t want to deal with Egyptian society with police tools.”

But the pressure on Mr. Mubarak’s government only intensified, a day after the largest crowd of protesters in two weeks flooded Cairo’s streets and the United States delivered its most specific demands yet, urging swift steps toward democracy. Some of the protesters had been inspired by an emotional interview with an online political organizer on Egypt’s most popular talk show. >>> David D. Kirkpatrick | Wednesday, February 09, 2011
NACH RAKETENANGRIFF DER HAMAS: Israelischer Luftangriff auf Gaza

Bei einem Angriff der israelischen Luftwaffe sind am Mittwoch mehrere Menschen im Gazastreifen verwundet worden

Egypte : les Palestiniens interdits d'entrée

leJDD.fr: Les services d'immigration égyptiens ont reçu la consigne de ne pas laisser entrer les Palestiniens dans le pays, a indiqué mercredi à l'AFP un de leurs responsables. "Il y a instruction d'empêcher les Palestiniens d'entrer en Egypte. Douze Palestiniens ont été renvoyés vers les pays d'où ils venaient mercredi conformément à ces instructions", a déclaré ce responsable des services d'immigration égyptiens sous couvert de l'anonymat. Un responsable de l'ambassade palestinienne au Caire a confirmé cette interdiction, tout en affirmant qu'il s'agissait d'une mesure temporaire qui ne concernait pas les Palestiniens résidant en Egypte ou mariés à une Egyptienne. [Source: leJDD.fr] | Mercredi 09 Février 2011
Jordan Tribes Criticise Queen Rania's 'Political Role'

BBC: A group of Jordanian tribal leaders has taken the unusual step of urging King Abdullah to curtail what they see as his wife's involvement in politics.

The 36 tribal leaders attacked Queen Rania's Palestinian origins and said she was "building power centres for her own interests".

Following uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, the king has been under pressure to make political and economic reforms.

Last week, King Abdullah sacked his cabinet and appointed a new PM.

"She is building power centres for her interest that go against what Jordanians and Hashemites have agreed on in governing and is a danger to the nation and the structure the state... and the institution of the throne," the statement from the Bedouin chiefs said.

The tribes, from Jordan's East Bank, are usually supportive of the Hashemite monarchy, with members holding important positions in the military and government. >>> | Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Silvio Berlusconi Condemns 'Disgusting' Prosecutors

BBC: Italy's prime minister has said a request by prosecutors in Milan to have him put on trial immediately over his alleged relationship with an underage prostitute is "disgusting".

Silvio Berlusconi said the prosecutors' case was a "pretext" to oust him.

He has denied paying for sex with a 17-year-old girl and abusing his power to get her released by police after she was arrested over another matter.

A magistrate will now decide if there is enough evidence to proceed to trial.

If convicted, the prime minister could face up to 15 years in prison. >>> | Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Mubarak Clan Faces Uncertain Future

MONSTERS & CRITICS: Cairo/Istanbul - The last two men preceding him left office feet first, and their relatives are held by Egyptians in esteem.

Such is how Egyptian President Hosny Mubarak, 82, and his family likely envisioned their future. Things have turned out differently, though. The old patriarch and his wife, Suzanne, who is 13 years his junior, now have to make new plans.

The family fortune, some of which is invested in real estate in the United States and London, will certainly ensure that the Mubaraks continue to live comfortably. They have close ties to Britain because Suzanne Mubarak is the daughter of a British nurse and an Egyptian doctor.

When Mubarak, then Egypt's little-known vice-president, was catapulted into the presidency in October 1981 by Anwar Sadat's assassination, few would have expected him in office 30 years later.

But the former air force commander from the province of Manufia quickly honed his political instincts, and his popular touch was well-received by ordinary Egyptians.

Mubarak speaks the language of the common man, in contrast to his wife, whose origins are less humble. The couple's two sons, Alaa and Gamal, have lived much of their lives in luxury behind high walls and lack this talent.

Gamal in particular, who many believe was being groomed to succeed his father - perhaps at his mother's wish - usually appears quite wooden.

Alaa, the elder son, is a businessman and stays out of the public eye. Like his father, whom he resembles physically, he had two sons. The elder boy, Muhammad, died aged 12 in a Paris hospital in May 2009 after his health suddenly deteriorated. >>> Anne-Beatrice Clasmann | Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Could Radical Islamists Take Over in Egypt?

Amb. Dore Gold on 'Your World'


Ikhwanweb: The Muslim Brotherhood Official English Website >>>