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Friday, February 14, 2014
Islam v. West? : 'Major Civilizations on Collision Course'
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Valentine’s Day Is Banned by the Religious Police in Saudi Arabia
THE JOURNAL: But people still buy chocolates and roses in secret.
RED ROSES LURK hidden in flower shop back rooms and heart-shaped chocolates are sold under the counter, but Saudis still manage to buy Valentine’s gifts and defy the religious police.
Florist Hussein came up with a simple solution to a ban on red tokens of love: he filled his window with white roses, orange irises and violet hydrangeas.
“I’ve hidden everything red in the shop, so when a religious police patrol comes along, they find nothing to complain about,” he said.
Anti-Valentine’s Day patrols by the Muttawa religious police, formally known as the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, started on Wednesday.
They began entering premises stocking chocolates, flowers and souvenirs to warn proprietors against selling anything red or heart-shaped and linked to the annual “infidel celebration” of matters romantic. » | © AFP | Friday, February 14, 2014
RED ROSES LURK hidden in flower shop back rooms and heart-shaped chocolates are sold under the counter, but Saudis still manage to buy Valentine’s gifts and defy the religious police.
Florist Hussein came up with a simple solution to a ban on red tokens of love: he filled his window with white roses, orange irises and violet hydrangeas.
“I’ve hidden everything red in the shop, so when a religious police patrol comes along, they find nothing to complain about,” he said.
Anti-Valentine’s Day patrols by the Muttawa religious police, formally known as the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, started on Wednesday.
They began entering premises stocking chocolates, flowers and souvenirs to warn proprietors against selling anything red or heart-shaped and linked to the annual “infidel celebration” of matters romantic. » | © AFP | Friday, February 14, 2014
Labels:
Muttawa,
Saudi Arabia,
Valentine's Day
Valentine's Day 'Leads to Fraud and Baby-dumping', Says Malaysia's Islamic Watchdog
A number of Acehnese Muslim senior high school students students hold a protest against Valentine's Dat celebrations in Banda Aceh, Indonesia |
Malaysian Islamic authorities took their annual swipe at Valentine's Day Friday, calling it a threat to Muslim values, but 138 couples took part in a mass wedding to mark the date.
In its official Friday sermon text distributed to mosques in the Muslim-majority country, the Malaysian Islamic Development Department blamed Valentine's Day for everything from alcoholism to abortion.
"Social ceremonies such as this are a stepping-stone towards greater social ills such as fraud, mental disorder caused by alcohol, abortion and baby-dumping, and other negative ills that can invite disaster and moral decay among youths," it said.
Known by its Malay-language acronym JAKIM, the department is an official watchdog of Muslim values. It regularly denounces Valentine's Day as encouraging vice and promiscuity. » | AFP | Friday, February 14, 2014 | Valentine’s Day
Labels:
Islamic values,
JAKIM,
Malaysia,
Valentine's Day
Thursday, February 13, 2014
La Belgique, premier pays à élargir l'euthanasie aux mineurs sans limite d'âge
LE FIGARO: Malgré l'opposition de l'Église catholique et des voix dissonantes dans le corps médical, 73 % des Belges sont favorables à la légalisation de l'euthanasie pour les mineurs, sans âge minimum.
La Belgique est devenue jeudi soir le premier pays d'Europe à permettre aux enfants atteints de maladie incurable de choisir l'euthanasie sans âge minimum, afin d'abréger leur souffrance. Seuls les Pays-Bas disposent jusqu'ici d'une loi comparable, mais elle ne s'applique qu'aux mineurs de 12 ans et plus..
La question de la «capacité de discernement» d'un enfant confronté à la douleur et à une mort certaine a été l'un des rares sujets de controverse d'un débat très serein, tant pour la classe politique que dans la société civile. La réalité, exprimée par les praticiens, est que les pédiatres et les infirmiers répondaient déjà dans l'illégalité à la demande des enfants en fin de vie, souvent relayée par des parents eux-mêmes anéantis par un combat sans espoir.
Malgré l'opposition de l'Église catholique et des voix dissonantes dans le corps médical, 73 % des Belges sont favorables à la légalisation de l'euthanasie pour les mineurs. Le vote de la loi par la Chambre des représentants ne faisait plus guère de doute depuis quelques jours. Dans ce royaume de tradition catholique, seule une minorité de députés - chrétiens-démocrates, quelques libéraux et extrême droite flamande du Vlaams Belang - restaient résolus contre le texte. Le gouvernement a laissé la liberté de vote. » | Par Jean-Jacques Mevel | jeudi 13 février 2014
La Belgique est devenue jeudi soir le premier pays d'Europe à permettre aux enfants atteints de maladie incurable de choisir l'euthanasie sans âge minimum, afin d'abréger leur souffrance. Seuls les Pays-Bas disposent jusqu'ici d'une loi comparable, mais elle ne s'applique qu'aux mineurs de 12 ans et plus..
La question de la «capacité de discernement» d'un enfant confronté à la douleur et à une mort certaine a été l'un des rares sujets de controverse d'un débat très serein, tant pour la classe politique que dans la société civile. La réalité, exprimée par les praticiens, est que les pédiatres et les infirmiers répondaient déjà dans l'illégalité à la demande des enfants en fin de vie, souvent relayée par des parents eux-mêmes anéantis par un combat sans espoir.
Malgré l'opposition de l'Église catholique et des voix dissonantes dans le corps médical, 73 % des Belges sont favorables à la légalisation de l'euthanasie pour les mineurs. Le vote de la loi par la Chambre des représentants ne faisait plus guère de doute depuis quelques jours. Dans ce royaume de tradition catholique, seule une minorité de députés - chrétiens-démocrates, quelques libéraux et extrême droite flamande du Vlaams Belang - restaient résolus contre le texte. Le gouvernement a laissé la liberté de vote. » | Par Jean-Jacques Mevel | jeudi 13 février 2014
Labels:
Belgique,
euthanasie
Boris Johnson Is One of Us, Claims Ancient Russian Ethnic Group from Sochi Region
Meet the ancestors: Circassians in Sochi sport traditional headwear – that bears a remarkable similarity to Boris Johnson's blond-mop hairstyle |
Elders of the Circassian community — famous for their blond hair, blue eyes and “warrior-like” demeanour — have invited the Mayor to visit them in Southern Russia.
They offered to help Mr Johnson, who has no plans to attend the Winter Games, track the roots of great-great-grandmother Hanifa Fered, who they say originates from the region.
His ancestor was one of 1.5 million Circassians — or Adygea — to flee the area now known as Sochi in the 19th century as Russia conquered it.
Hanifa crossed the Black Sea to the Ottoman Empire — present-day Turkey — but was sold as a slave on arrival, a fate that befell many Circassian women who were considered to be among the world’s most beautiful (Miss International Australia 2013, Felicia Djamirze, is Circassian).
The story has been passed down the Mayor’s family: Hanifa was bought as a concubine, and later married, Mr Johnson’s great-great-grandfather Ahmet Hamdi Kemal, a beeswax merchant from the village of Kalfat. Their son Ali Kemal, a journalist, poet and politician, married his Anglo-Swiss wife Winifred in London before returning to Turkey. He was murdered during the Turkish War of Independence. » | Will Stewart in Moscow and Pippa Crerar | Thursday, February 13, 2014
Labels:
Boris Johnson,
Sochi
Britain Must Act over Uganda's Anti-gay Bill or Risk Watching an Exodus
Masked Kenyan supporters of the LGBT community stage a protest against Uganda's anti-gay bill in front of the Ugandan High Commission in Nairobi, Kenya |
Uganda is facing an exodus of its gay population if the country presses ahead with a controversial bill that allows life imprisonment for homosexuality.
Gay activists in the country believe that large numbers of Ugandan gays will flee if President Yoweri Museveni fails to veto the bill, which could otherwise become law by the end of next week.
The Ugandan leader has been urged by Britain and other Westerns nations to block the bill, but is under pressure from conservatives in his parliament, which voted by a majority in favour of it in December.
In an interview with The Telegraph, Frank Mugisha, a leading Ugandan gay activist, said that hostility to gays in Uganda had increased since the vote, and that many would leave the country altogether if Mr Museveni failed to exercise his veto. Britain, which ran Ghana as a protectorate until 1962, would be an obvious destination to seek asylum in, both because of its colonial links and its reputation as a liberal country for gays to live in. » | Colin Freeman | Thursday, February 13, 2014
George Osborne: Sharing the Pound with Scotland Is 'Not Going to Happen'
La Belgique autorise les mineurs à choisir l'euthanasie
Au parlement belge, les députés ont tranché en faveur de l'euthanasie pour les mineurs, sous strictes conditions |
Les députés ont adopté le texte jeudi matin 13 février malgré l'opposition de certains pédiatres et de la hiérarchie catholique.
La Belgique est le deuxième pays au monde, après les Pays-Bas, à autoriser sous de strictes conditions l'euthanasie pour les mineurs. Là où le législateur néerlandais à prévu un âge minimum de 12 ans, les élus belges ont opté pour la notion, plus flexible, de «capacité de discernement». » | ats,afp/Newsnet | jeudi 13 février 2014
Labels:
Belgique,
euthanasie
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Hollande-Obama, tandem transatlantique
Michelle Obama, François Hollande et Barack Obama, le 11 février, lors du dîner d'État organisé à la Maison Blanche en l'honneur du chef de l'État français |
Entre la chaleur de l'accueil, les fastes du dîner d'État et les éloges appuyés d'Obama à l'exemplarité du couple franco-américain en matière de coopération diplomatique et militaire, la visite de Washington aura été une bouffée d'oxygène pour François Hollande, loin des tracas de la politique française et de ses records d'impopularité. » | Par Laure Mandeville | mercredi 12 février 2014
LE FIGARO: Magie, amitié, caviar et bœuf aux échalotes, au menu du dîner d'État : François Hollande a été accueilli en grande pompe par le couple Obama, lors d'une réception à la Maison-Blanche mardi soir. » | Correspondante à Washington | Par Laure Mandeville, Rosa Chevassu | mercredi 12 février 2014
The Queen and I – Interview with Farah Pahlavi
Retourkutsche: EU will Zuzug von Schweizern bremsen
DIE PRESSE: Nach der Volksabstimmung, mit der die Schweiz die Einwanderung vor allem aus EU-Ländern begrenzt, denkt Brüssel über Gegenmaßnahmen nach.
Von wegen "nicht gleich losschlagen", wie es EU-Parlamentspräsident Martin Schulz gefordert hatte: Die EU denkt bereits fieberhaft über Retourkutschen nach, nachdem die Schweizer sich am Sonntag in einem Referendum knapp mit 50,3 Prozent für eine Einschränkung der Personenfreizügigkeit ausgesprochen hatten. 20.000 Stimmen hatten den Ausschlag gegeben.
EU-Kommissionspräsident José Manuel Barroso hat nun unverhohlen gedroht, dass Schweizer künftig ebenfalls nicht mehr ohne weiteres in EU-Ländern wohnen und arbeiten könnten: „Im Sinne der Gegenseitigkeit ist es nicht richtig, dass Schweizer Bürger die unbeschränkte Personenfreizügigkeit in der Europäischen Union haben“, sagte Barroso in einem Interview mit der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters. Konkrete Strafmaßnahmen nannte er aber nicht. „Es ist unfair, dass ein Land alle Vorteile hat und seinen Partnern nicht dieselben Vorteile gewähren will“, betonte der Politiker. » | APA/Reuters/SDA/red. | Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2014
Von wegen "nicht gleich losschlagen", wie es EU-Parlamentspräsident Martin Schulz gefordert hatte: Die EU denkt bereits fieberhaft über Retourkutschen nach, nachdem die Schweizer sich am Sonntag in einem Referendum knapp mit 50,3 Prozent für eine Einschränkung der Personenfreizügigkeit ausgesprochen hatten. 20.000 Stimmen hatten den Ausschlag gegeben.
EU-Kommissionspräsident José Manuel Barroso hat nun unverhohlen gedroht, dass Schweizer künftig ebenfalls nicht mehr ohne weiteres in EU-Ländern wohnen und arbeiten könnten: „Im Sinne der Gegenseitigkeit ist es nicht richtig, dass Schweizer Bürger die unbeschränkte Personenfreizügigkeit in der Europäischen Union haben“, sagte Barroso in einem Interview mit der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters. Konkrete Strafmaßnahmen nannte er aber nicht. „Es ist unfair, dass ein Land alle Vorteile hat und seinen Partnern nicht dieselben Vorteile gewähren will“, betonte der Politiker. » | APA/Reuters/SDA/red. | Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2014
Labels:
Abstimmung,
EU,
immigration,
Schweiz
Türkei: Zwei Jahre Haft für "Beleidigung" Erdogans
DIE PRESSE: In der Türkei wurden 17 Regierungsgegner verurteilt, weil sie bei einer Protestaktion Regierungschef Recep Tayyip Erdogan kritisiert haben
Wegen "Beleidigung des Ministerpräsidenten und fehlender Reue": Medienberichten zufolge hat die türkische Justiz am Mittwoch zweijährige Haftstrafen gegen 17 Regierungsgegner verhängt. Die Demonstranten hätten im Jahr 2012 bei einer kleinen Protestaktion in der Stadt Eskisehir den islamisch-konservativen Regierungschef Recep Tayyip Erdogan kritisiert. Eine Berufung ist laut "Hürriyet" unzulässig.
Der Zeitung zufolge hätten die Regierungsgegner bei der Protestaktion Erdogan als "Diener des Internationalen Währungsfonds" und "Diener der Bosse" kritisiert. Der lautstarke Protest gegen die Gesundheitspolitik der AKP-Regierung sei vom Gericht in Eskisehir als "Beamtenbeleidigung" ausgelegt worden. » | APA/AFP | Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2014
Wegen "Beleidigung des Ministerpräsidenten und fehlender Reue": Medienberichten zufolge hat die türkische Justiz am Mittwoch zweijährige Haftstrafen gegen 17 Regierungsgegner verhängt. Die Demonstranten hätten im Jahr 2012 bei einer kleinen Protestaktion in der Stadt Eskisehir den islamisch-konservativen Regierungschef Recep Tayyip Erdogan kritisiert. Eine Berufung ist laut "Hürriyet" unzulässig.
Der Zeitung zufolge hätten die Regierungsgegner bei der Protestaktion Erdogan als "Diener des Internationalen Währungsfonds" und "Diener der Bosse" kritisiert. Der lautstarke Protest gegen die Gesundheitspolitik der AKP-Regierung sei vom Gericht in Eskisehir als "Beamtenbeleidigung" ausgelegt worden. » | APA/AFP | Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2014
Labels:
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan,
Türkei
British People Too 'Uninformed' to Vote in EU Referendum, Top Eurocrat Claims
DAILY EXPRESS: BRITISH people do not know enough about the European Union to decide whether or not to stay in it, a top Brussels official has claimed.
European Commission vice-president Viviane Reding also questioned the ability of Britons to vote in EU elections, as she claimed 70 per cent of UK laws are made by the European parliament.
Mrs Reding said the truth about what happens in Europe is often "completely distorted", which meant voters did not have the facts they needed at the ballot box.
She also insisted the European parliament was the "most powerful" within the union because it made or was jointly responsible for most new laws.
During a question and answer session in London, Mrs Reding urged Britain to spend more time debating EU membership before the possible future in/out referendum.
"Do the people who are asked to vote know what they are going to vote about?" she said.
"I don't care what kind of personal decision you take, the only thing I care for is that you take an informed decision, whatever your decision be."
She said Britain was not using its "tradition of debate" over Europe, adding: "I really wonder why. Because you are on the verge of having maybe a national decision, to take very important decisions." » | Alison Little and Jane Mathews | Tuesday, February 11, 2014
European Commission vice-president Viviane Reding also questioned the ability of Britons to vote in EU elections, as she claimed 70 per cent of UK laws are made by the European parliament.
Mrs Reding said the truth about what happens in Europe is often "completely distorted", which meant voters did not have the facts they needed at the ballot box.
She also insisted the European parliament was the "most powerful" within the union because it made or was jointly responsible for most new laws.
During a question and answer session in London, Mrs Reding urged Britain to spend more time debating EU membership before the possible future in/out referendum.
"Do the people who are asked to vote know what they are going to vote about?" she said.
"I don't care what kind of personal decision you take, the only thing I care for is that you take an informed decision, whatever your decision be."
She said Britain was not using its "tradition of debate" over Europe, adding: "I really wonder why. Because you are on the verge of having maybe a national decision, to take very important decisions." » | Alison Little and Jane Mathews | Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Labels:
EU,
EU referendum,
UK,
Vivian Reding
105mph Wind Recorded as Gales Batter Britain
THE GUARDIAN: Wales hit by record wind speed as Thames is set to rise to highest level in 60 years
Strong winds continued to batter the UK on Wednesday, causing disruption to road and rail networks and leaving 21,000 people without power.
A top wind speed of 105mph was recorded in Aberdaron in north-west Wales, and Western Power Distribution said electricity supplies had been hit in south Wales, the south-west and the west Midlands. Gusts of 92mph have already been recorded in the Mumbles on the Gower Peninsula, south-west Wales, the weather forecaster Meteogroup said.
Clifton suspension bridge in Bristol was briefly closed for the first time in its history, and the storms have also brought a number of trees down. Coastal areas could also be battered by large waves, the Met Office said.
The Environment Agency warned that the Thames was set to rise in places to its highest levels in more than 60 years, causing severe disruption to communities in Windsor, Maidenhead and Surrey. » | Haroon Siddique, Matthew Weaver and agencies | Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Strong winds continued to batter the UK on Wednesday, causing disruption to road and rail networks and leaving 21,000 people without power.
A top wind speed of 105mph was recorded in Aberdaron in north-west Wales, and Western Power Distribution said electricity supplies had been hit in south Wales, the south-west and the west Midlands. Gusts of 92mph have already been recorded in the Mumbles on the Gower Peninsula, south-west Wales, the weather forecaster Meteogroup said.
Clifton suspension bridge in Bristol was briefly closed for the first time in its history, and the storms have also brought a number of trees down. Coastal areas could also be battered by large waves, the Met Office said.
The Environment Agency warned that the Thames was set to rise in places to its highest levels in more than 60 years, causing severe disruption to communities in Windsor, Maidenhead and Surrey. » | Haroon Siddique, Matthew Weaver and agencies | Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Labels:
Bristol,
floods,
gales,
Maidenhead,
River Thames,
storms,
Surrey,
UK,
Wales,
Windsor
Inside Story: Squeezing Out Switzerland's Immigrants
Labels:
EU,
immigration,
Inside Story,
Swiss referendum,
Switzerland
Inside Story: The Islamic Revolution Turns 35
Labels:
Inside Story,
Iran,
Iranian Revolution
Al Jazeera World: Escape in Istanbul
Labels:
Al Jazeera World,
Istanbul,
Turkey
'Fantastic Day for Democracy!' Switzerland Narrowly Votes to Curb EU Immigration
Labels:
EU,
immigration,
Swiss referendum,
Switzerland
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