Saturday, May 19, 2007

Al Mansour: Once the Upscale Part of Town

TIME: The streets of Mansour have no names anymore. They are identifiable not by what is there now but by what used to be. In the center of the neighborhood, our armored humvee circles around the crater that once held a 20-ft.-tall statue of Abu Jaffar al-Mansour, the 8th century founder of Baghdad; it was pulverized by a homemade bomb in 2005. To keep their bearings, the troops have taken to identifying routes by the names of 1980s heavy-metal bands. We drive down Bon Jovi, where the barbershop used to be, and pass Skid Row, which had the best falafel in town. At the end of the block is Poison, which four years ago was Mansour's commercial hub, lined with restaurants, shops, a gym and even a liquor store. Now every storefront is shuttered, and there isn't a car on the road. The mostly Sunni residents who live in Mansour have their own name for this spot. They call it "the edge of civilization." Saving Iraq’s Glitziest Neighborhood (more)

Mark Alexander
End of US Domination at the World Bank?

FT: The World Bank’s board reconvened on Friday to ensure responsibility for operations was effectively transferred prior to the formal departure of Paul Wolfowitz on June 30.

Mr Wolfowitz’s decision to quit as president late on Thursday ended a turbulent two-year tenure as chief of the world’s leading development institution.

His departure in good health is unprecedented at the World Bank and marks what may be an enduring shift in the balance of power at the institution, hitherto dominated by the US and the president it nominates. Post-Wolfowitz planning begins (more) By Krishna Guha, Eoin Callan, Hugh Williamson and Dan Dombey

Mark Alexander
Web Faces Increasing Censorship Throughout the World

KUWAIT TIMES: LONDON: Internet censorship is growing worldwide, with 26 out of 40 countries blocking or filtering political or social content, a study reported yesterday. The survey carried out by experts at four leading universities found that people in Asia, the Middle East and North Africa were often denied access to information about politics, sexuality, culture or religion. Conducting the first of what is planned to become an annual survey, the experts at the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Harvard and Toronto found that the approach varied according to the country. Internet censorship growing worldwide (more)

Mark Alexander
Carter “disappointed” by Blair’s Failure to Use His Influence with Bush More Wisely

BBC: Former US President Jimmy Carter has criticised outgoing British Prime Minister Tony Blair for his "blind" support of the war in Iraq. Carter attacks Blair’s Iraq role (more)

BBC:
Blair makes surprise Iraq visit

Mark Alexander
Kasparov Calls on EU to Recognise Russia as an Authoritarian Régime

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TELEGRAPH: Garry Kasparov yesterday called on Europe to face up to the fact that Russia is an authoritarian regime, not a democracy.

The chess champion turned activist was prevented from staging a protest as EU leaders met with President Vladimir Putin.

"They should be honest," he told The Daily Telegraph at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport. "Russia is not a democratic regime, it is an authoritarian regime. Putin is not a democrat, they should recognise this. EU must see Putin is not a democrat (more)

Mark Alexander
Human Rights Lawyer Faces Gaol

BBC: A US Navy lawyer faces six months in prison and dismissal from service for sending a human rights lawyer the names of 550 Guantanamo Bay detainees. Guantanamo lawyer faces jail term (more)

Mark Alexander
Marokkanische Monarchie gibt Impuls zur Modernisierung

NZZ: Eine Monarchie alten Zuschnitts gibt die wesentlichen Impulse zur Modernisierung

Weil die traditionellen Parteien schwach sind, hat in Marokko die mit grosser Macht und religiöser Führungsrolle ausgestattete Monarchie die Initiative bei der Modernisierung des Landes übernommen. Wie weit in dieser paradoxen Lage Demokratisierung, Reform der Gesellschaft und Öffnung der Wirtschaft gehen können, ist allerdings offen. König Mohammed VI. – das marokkanische Paradox (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Le gouvernement de Nicolas Sarkozy

LE FIGARO: La composition du gouvernement Fillon a été dévoilée hier. Le premier Conseil des ministres de la présidence Sarkozy s'est tenu dans l'après-midi. Le chef de l'État entend "mener toutes les réformes en même temps".

IMPATIENT d'entrer dans le vif du sujet, Claude Guéant, le nouveau secrétaire général de l'Élysée, s'est présenté avec cinq minutes d'avance sur le perron du palais présidentiel pour lire la liste des membres du premier gouvernement de Nicolas Sarkozy. Trois quarts d'heure plus tôt, François Fillon avait rejoint le président, non pas pour faire du footing, comme la veille, mais pour valider le casting gouvernemental. Sarkozy invite le nouveau gouvernement à agir vite et fort (encore) Par Charles Jaigu et Bruno Jeudy

Mark Alexander
François Fillon promet changement radical

LE MONDE: J'ai le sentiment aujourd'hui (...) d'être en mesure de mettre en oeuvre un changement radical de la vie politique française", a déclaré François Fillon vendredi soir 18 mai sur TF1, lors de sa première intervention télévisée depuis sa nomination la veille comme premier ministre. "L'idée, c'est que nous voulons relancer la croissance", ce qui nécessite "des réformes structurelles", et, a-t-il laissé entendre, de ne pas regarder trop à la dépense dans un premier temps :"C'est sur cinq ans que nous allons réduire le déficit du budget de l'Etat, c'est sur cinq ans que nous allons réduire la dette. Il faut savoir parfois investir un peu pour ensuite faire des économies importantes. C'est ce qu'on avait fait sur la réforme des retraites, on le fera ici pour relancer l'économie de notre pays", a-t-il expliqué.

"Ce sera un gouvernement libre, ce sera un gouvernement ouvert, mais je le dis à la fois aux Français et aux membres de mon gouvernement, ce sera un gouvernement qui mettra en oeuvre scrupuleusement le projet politique" du président Nicolas Sarkozy, a-t-il averti, ajoutant que ce projet avait une "légitimité extrêmement forte" du fait des 53 % obtenus à l'élection présidentielle. François Fillon promet un “changement radical de la vie politique française” (encore)

Mark Alexander

Friday, May 18, 2007

More Cronyism? Blair Could Be A Replacement for Wolfowitz!

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BBC: The US has said it will move "swiftly" to find a replacement for Paul Wolfowitz, who says he plans to quit as head of the World Bank on 30 June.

Mr Wolfowitz will step down after he was caught up in a bitter row surrounding the promotion and salary of his girlfriend, Shaha Riza.

The World Bank said that Mr Wolfowitz had acted in good faith, but admitted that a "number of mistakes" were made.

UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has been mentioned as a possible replacement. US to replace Wolfowitz ‘swiftly’ (more)

Mark Alexander
La vie brillante de politique de Sarkozy en France

François Fillon et sa femme galloise, Pénélope:

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Photo de M et Mme Fillon grâce aux Google Images (France)
Mark Alexander
Is it to be Muhammad, Abdullah or just Mikha'el Jackson?

American pop icon announces intention to convert to Islam, according to sources in Bahrain

YNET NEWS: Does this explain the anti-Semitic comments? American pop star Michael Jackson has officially announced that he has been following the five tenets of Islam and intends to convert to Islam, according to a report on the website of Arab-Israeli newspaper Panorama. Michael Jackson going Muslim? (more) By Roee Nahmias

Mark Alexander
Sheikha Bin Smokin’

KUWAIT TIMES: LOS ANGELES: The first lady of Qatar, a close US ally, argued that Islam has been incorrectly blamed for the rise of extremist violence when the real culprits include poverty, a lack of political freedom and what she called failed US policies. Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al Missned told the Los Angeles World Affairs Council Tuesday that societies worldwide were failing to provide jobs, hope and a feeling of greater good for their citizens. As a result, youth "are seduced by a global culture of violence that is fuelled by cynicism," said Sheikha Mozah, dressed in pants, a business blazer and with her hair covered. ’Islam is not to blame’ (more)

Mark Alexander
Die Bekämpfung illegaler Einwanderung in Europa

NZZ: Die EU-Kommission will die illegale Einwanderung in die Europäische Union dadurch bekämpfen, dass sie nicht nur die Migranten selber bestraft, sondern auch all jene, die solche Personen für sich arbeiten lassen. Wie der zuständige EU-Kommissar Frattini am Mittwoch ausführte, erhofft sich die Kommission davon, eine der wichtigsten Anziehungskräfte der illegalen Migration entscheidend schwächen zu können. Die Strafen, deren Höhe die einzelnen Mitgliedstaaten festlegen könnten, fallen laut dem Richtlinienvorschlag der Kommission in zwei Kategorien. Für Privatpersonen, die etwa eine «illegale» Putzfrau oder Kinderbetreuerin beschäftigen, sollen finanzielle Strafen gelten, wozu neben Bussgeldern auch unterschlagene Sozialabgaben gehören. Im Fall von Firmen sollen neben Geld- auch Gefängnisstrafen die Verantwortlichen davon abhalten, «Sans-Papiers» anzustellen. Gegen die illegale Migration nach Europa (mehr)

Mark Alexander
”A Strike Against Iran Would Be Disastrous”, Says King Abdullah of Jordan

TIMESONLINE: The world is losing its last hope of making peace in the Middle East and could face the real danger that the conflict between Israel and the Arab and Muslim worlds will continue indefinitely, according to King Abdullah II of Jordan. Time running out to end crisis in Middle East, says King of Jordan (more) By Richard Beeston and Michael Binyon

Mark Alexander
Iraq Risks Fragmentation and Collapse, says Report

ALJAZEERA: With its government already largely irrelevant, Iraq is on the "verge of becoming a failed state" that risks collapse and fragmentation, a leading think-tank has warned.

Gareth Stansfield, author of Accepting Realities in Iraq report for the Chatham House research institute in London, said on Thursday: "The coming year will be pivotal for Iraq.

"The internecine fighting and continual struggle for power threatens the nation's very existence in its current form."

The report said multinational forces are struggling to promote security in Iraq. Report: Iraqi state risks collapse (more)

Mark Alexander
Frankreichs Sozialisten wollen Kouchner ausschliessen

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Foto von Kouchner dank Google Images (Frankreich)
NZZ: Neuer französischer Aussenminister soll aus Partei ausgeschlossen werden

Frankreichs Sozialisten haben rasch auf den Eintritt Bernard Kouchners in die neue französische Regierung reagiert. Sie wollen den früheren Gesundheits- und designierten Aussenminister aus der Partei ausschliessen. In der neuen Regierung Fillons sitzen indes auch noch weitere Linkspolitiker. Sozialisten strafen Kouchner ab (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Wolfowitz: "Anständiger Mann mit Herz"

FAZ: Als der amerikanische Präsident George W. Bush im März 2005 den damaligen stellvertretenden Verteidigungsminister Paul Wolfowitz für das Amt des Weltbankpräsidenten nominierte, lobte er ihn als einen „anständigen Mann mit Herz“. Gleichwohl bedurfte es in den folgenden Wochen vieler Gespräche, um im Kreis der mehr als 180 Anteilseigner des multilateralen Kreditinstituts die Widerstände gegen jenen Mann zu überwinden, der außerhalb Amerikas vor allem als „Hardliner“ und als treibende Kraft hinter dem Irak-Krieg wahrgenommen wurde. „Hardliner“ mit Herz (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Mercy in Short Supply in Saudis’ Latest High-Gear Decapitation Spree

GLOBE AND MAIL: WASHINGTON and TORONTO — The fate of two Canadian brothers imprisoned in Saudi Arabia, who could face beheading after a youth died during a schoolyard melee in Jeddah, is sparking a vigorous debate in the Arab news media.

The detention of Mohamed Kohail, 22, and his 16-year-old brother Sultan was a leading story on the website of Al-Arabiya, a popular Dubai-based Arabic TV outlet, attracting more than 100 comments. While some praised Canada's insistence on defending its citizens abroad, most backed the Saudi authorities and said that Canada should respect the Saudi justice system.

"It's the Saudis' right to execute him," one reader wrote in Arabic. "Too bad, Canada. Hard luck."

"They must be executed," said another. Arab world debates fate of Canadian brothers (more) By Alan Freeman and Omar el Akkad

Mark Alexander
Global Warming Gains Momentum

TIMESONLINE: The oceans are losing the capacity to soak up rising man-made carbon emissions, which is increasing the rate of global warming by up to 30 per cent, scientists said yesterday.
Researchers have found that the Southern Ocean is absorbing an ever-decreasing proportion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The excess carbon, which cannot be absorbed by the oceans, will remain in the atmosphere and accelerate global warming, they said.
The reduced ability to absorb carbon is thought to be a result of high winds acting on ocean currents bringing deeper waters that already contain high levels of carbon to the surface. Rapid rise in global warming is forecast (more) By Lewis Smith

THE AUSTRALIAN:
Southern Ocean ‘soaking up less emissions’

LA TIMES:
As a carbon ‘sink’, Southern Ocean may be plugged

LA TIMES:
Farm air pollution targeted

Mark Alexander
Wolfowitz Quits

BBC: Paul Wolfowitz is to quit as president of the World Bank following a bitter promotion row involving his partner.

The global lending body said Mr Wolfowitz would step down on 30 June and that it would begin the search for a successor immediately. World Bank head Wolfowitz to quit (more)

FINANCIAL TIMES:
Wolfowitz steps down as World Bank president

TIMESONLINE:
Wolfowitz resigns after scandal over girlfriend’s pay rise

DIE WELT:
Das Ende des Bush-Kandidaten

LE FIGARO:
Wolfowitz démissionne de la Banque mondiale

Mark Alexander

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Women Are Coming Under Increasing Pressure in Iran

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The burgeoning feminist movement in Iran is coming under increased pressure from Ahmadinejad's hardline regime. Activists who are campaigning to improve women's rights are being harassed, arrested and imprisoned for violating "national security." Tehran Cracks Down on Feminist Movement (more)

Mark Alexander
Saudi Arabia Just Keeps On Beheading and Beheading and Beheading!

KUWAIT TIMES: RIYADH: Saudi authorities yesterday beheaded two Ethiopians convicted of killing a Saudi national in an armed robbery and displayed their bodies in public after the execution, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. The statement, carried by the official Saudi Press Agency, said Ali Mohammed Ali and Adel Adam Aman were found guilty of fatally shooting and robbing Khaled bin Karim bin Bakhash, the owner of a private telephone services center. Saudi displays bodies of two Ethiopians beheaded (more)

LE FIGARO:
Arabie saoudite: 2 Pakistanais décapités

Mark Alexander
Administrateurs de la Banque mondiale travaillent à la finalisation d’un scenario de sortie de Wolfowitz

LE MONDE: Après une crise de six semaines, l'avenir de Paul Wolfowitz à la tête de la Banque mondiale devrait finalement être décidé, jeudi 17 mai. Selon des sources proches de la Banque, les administrateurs de l'institution et les avocats de Paul Wolfowitz travaillent actuellement à la finalisation d'un scénario de sortie permettant au président de démissionner sans perdre totalement la face, car l'institution assumerait une partie des faits qui lui sont reprochés. Paul Wolfowitz négocierait son départ de la Banque mondiale (encore)

Mark Alexander
Mme Fillon: The New French Premier’s Welsh Wife

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Photo of M et Mme Fillon courtesy of the BBC
BBC: She was a south Wales law student who moved to France and met one of the rising young stars of Gallic politics.

Now Penelope Fillon, 51, from the Monmouthshire town of Abergavenny, has become the first British woman to be married to a French prime minister.

Her husband Francois Fillon has been named premier by newly-elected French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Welsh wife of new French premier (more)

TELEGRAPH:
Welshwoman prepares for life in French No 10

BBC:
Profile: Francois Fillon

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Endemic Corruption at the Top in Business and Politics, and the Unfairness of the System

Never in the history of the world has so much been earned by so few; and never in the history of the world has there been so much corruption.

Nowadays, we hear about corruption at the top all the time; indeed, almost on a daily basis, we hear some new titbit about the goings on of this CEO or that, or this politician or that. Political appointments are handed out based on nepotism and cronyism. Fat salaries are paid to people who have little experience, and sometimes even little understanding, of the positions to which they have been appointed.

We hear about this sort of thing all the time: one day it’s the slush fund that BAE is alleged to have set up, the next, it’s the enormous salary raise awarded to one’s fancy woman, yet another, we hear about the extraordinarily extravagant lifestyle of the gay head of Head of British Petroleum (BP), Lord John Browne, the socialist peer, who, it has been alleged, ran that oil company as though it had been his private enterprise, and who financed an extravagant gay lifestyle beyond any normal person’s wildest dreams: private jets to take the gay couple to the place or country of their whim and choosing; three-thousand-pound bottles of claret for lunches; trips to the Salzburg festivals; and so on and so forth. All, of course, on company expenses. Lord John Browne took the term ’gay lifestyle’ and gave it its full meaning! Pity he didn’t think of giving the term its full meaning out of his own pocket. Indeed, so gay was his lifestyle that his gay French-Canadian lover, Jeff Chevalier, couldn’t keep up with Lord Browne and is said to have had to go into therapy!

The evidence coming to light about the goings on at the World Bank apropos of the shenanigans of Paul Wolfowitz paints a depressing picture of corruption at the very top, in places one would hope would be corruption-free. Fat salary increases to one’s bed partner should surely be left to one's colleagues to decide; further, where such vested interests lie, they should be handed out by those other people on the basis of merit, and merit alone.

Then we have all those millions which are said to have been laundered in Switzerland to pay members of the royal family of Saudi Arabia in return for contracts and extensions of contracts pertaining to the Al-Yamamah contract which Mrs Thatcher initiated many years ago. It was a very large contract even then; now it is colossal. Funny that the name of the contract - Al-Yamamah- has such a whiter than white name; for in Arabic, the name means ‘the dove’. Doves, as we all know, have such a pure, often white, connotation. There seems to be little white and pure about the goings on behind the scenes between BAE and the Saudi government. Anyone would think that those already fabulously wealthy Saudi princes needed even more money!

The funny thing is that there are hundreds and hundreds (maybe even thousands and thousands) of ex-employees of BAE who have been treated shabbily. BAE is famous for its bad treatment of any employee who happens to fall foul of their autocratic management style. How many innocent ex-employees of BAE have had their careers washed up because of BAE, I wonder? How many lives has BAE destroyed? How many sacrificial lambs have there been since the inception of this so-called Al-Yamamah contract? One can only hazard a guess.

Then we have the Bush-Saudi connection. The relationship between these two parties seems most unhealthy to me and to many I know. Bush keeps harping on about terrorism and the need to win the war against it. Have you noticed, though, that he avoids calling that same terrorism by its proper name: Islamic terrorism? One can only wonder why.

The sad thing about the ‘war on terror’ is that Bush is all for beating it on the one hand, but on the other is allowing the Saudis to pump untold millions, nay billions, into the US to finance the propagation of Wahhabi Islam, known to be the most pernicious brand of Islam around. On this score, Bush speaks with bifurcated tongue. So Islam-friendly have his policies been over the time he has been in office that Islam has grown in the States like never before. Doesn’t the president realise that Islam is out to destroy the US constitution? Does he not realise that Islam and democracy are totally and utterly incompatible? Does he not realise that Islam is as much a political system as it is a religious one? Can Mr Bush really be that naïve? Or is there something else going on behind the scenes which we, the ordinary people, just don’t get to hear about?

Then we have the vast inequalities of wealth created here in the United Kingdom by no less than a so-called socialist government under Tony Blair’s watch. It has recently been reported that the top echelons of society have seen their riches increase threefold in the past decade! And they call that socialism! That’s ‘Champagne socialism’ if ever I saw it.

Now don’t get me wrong, I am no friend of socialism. Socialism is one of the worst forms of government ever dreamed up by any political thinkers. But nor am I in favour of a form of unbridled capitalism which treats people unfairly. It cannot be right for foreigners to be allowed to come to this country and not be taxed on their earnings from abroad, when ordinary people, you the voters, have to be taxed on any small amount of money you might be able to earn from that self-same source.

In London, there are many who have to slave away for a full week for as little as £400, and often less, whereas there are the fat cats who earn upwards of £46,000 in that very same week!

If the corruption I have referred to is allowed to continue, then we should not be surprised if one of these days the people will turn on the people who govern them. Nor should we be surprised if the pendulum will swing in the favour of socialism in the years to come. Even the very best of parties come to an end, sometime. Our politicians should be aware that people’s tolerance is not infinite. It used to be said that poverty was the breeding ground of communism. In those days, they were speaking of absolute poverty, of course. But I should like to add that relative poverty could also one day become the breeding ground of communism. We should all be aware that this is a distinct possibility. Fairness still counts for something. No sensible person wants to live in a political system that treats the rich differently from the poor. Any country that legislates so much in favour of the rich at the expense of the poor is heading for political turmoil. Those odious systems of government – socialism and communism – are not dead; they are simply lying dormant. And in some countries, most notably in Venezuela, we can see extreme socialism beginning to raise its ugly head even as I write this.

Capitalism is by far the best political system around; though it is far from perfect. The greatest weakness in capitalism is that it plays to man’s greedy nature. In years gone by, this wasn’t such a problem, since in years gone by, the influence of the Church and Christianity were far greater: they acted as a counterbalance to man’s greed, and checked people’s lack of principle, thereby keeping corruption, nepotism, and cronyism in check. Alas, in today’s increasingly secular world, there are few such checks and balances. The Western capitalist world has become a ‘free for all’: you take what you can, when you can.

Corruption, nepotism, cronyism, unbridled greed – these are the sad realities of life in the twenty-first century.

©Mark Alexander
Nicolas Sarkozy: Président de la République

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LE FIGARO: Jacques Chirac a quitté l'Elysée. Après douze ans à la tête de l'Etat, il a remis les codes de la force de frappe nucléaire à son successeur, Nicolas Sarkozy.

Arrivé un peu en avance, à 10h57 exactement, le futur chef de l'Etat a été accueilli par son prédecesseur. Après une poignée de main, ils ont pénétré dans le bâtiment pour la traditionnelle entrevue. La cérémonie de passation des pouvoirs en direct (encore)

En images : les moments-clés de la cérémonie

Nicolas Sarkozy s'installe à l'Élysée, Jacques Chirac s'en va

BBC:
Sarkozy takes office as president

BBC:
Sarkozy pledges new era of change

NZZ:
Sarkozy ins Amt eingesetzt

NZZ:
Sarkozy von Merkel empfangen

BBC:
Action urgent on EU, says Sarkozy

BBC:
EU excited and worried by Sarkozy

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Sarkozy sworn in as president

Mark Alexander
Wolfowitz: The more you dig, the dirtier it gets

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The cronyism that may cost him his World Bank job is also what caused the Iraq debacle.

The executive board of the World Bank mulled a possible vote of no confidence in the leadership of its president, Paul Wolfowitz, this weekend. How did the renowned neoconservative and former deputy secretary of defense, a primary architect of the Iraq war, come to these straits? Is he, as he claims, the victim of a smear campaign by those who dislike his politics? Or do the charges of favoritism and nepotism reflect genuine character flaws?

The small morality play unfolding at the World Bank tells us something significant about how the United States became bogged down in the Iraq quagmire when Wolfowitz was highly influential at the Department of Defense. The simple fact is that Wolfowitz has throughout his entire career demonstrated a penchant for cronyism and for smearing and marginalizing perceived rivals as tactics for getting his way. He has been arrogant and highhanded in dismissing the views of wiser and more informed experts, exhibiting a narcissism that is also apparent in his personal life. Indeed, these tactics are typical of what might be called the "neoconservative style." Paul Wolfowitz’s Fatal Weakness (more) By Juan Cole

Mark Alexander
The Departure of Jacques Chirac

THE AUSTRALIAN: PRESIDENT Jacques Chirac bade an emotional farewell to the French people today, proclaiming his love for "this great ... this magnificent nation" and pride at accomplishing his mission.

“I hand over to Nicolas Sarkozy with pride in a completed duty and great confidence in the future of our country,” said the President, who today closes 12 years in office and hands over to his former subordinate.

“It has been a very great honour to serve you,” he said, talking of the “strength of the link-which has bound me to every one of you”. Chirac departs with a plea for unity (more) By Charles Bremner

DIE PRESSE:
Der Methusalem der Macht sagt adieu

DIE PRESSE:
Sarkozy’s Frau ging nicht zur Wahl

FAZ:
Was die Franzosen nicht wissen durften

Mark Alexander
Wolfowitz: Wolf-like Tactics at the Top

THE TELEGRAPH: Paul Wolfowitz, the embattled World Bank chief, launched into a threatening tirade against members of his staff when news of his controversial pay and promotion package for his girlfriend began to leak out, it emerged yesterday.

The revelation was one of the more damning elements of a 600-page report by a special investigative panel, which concluded that the scandal "had a dramatic, negative effect on the reputation and credibility" of the bank. Wolfowitz ‘threatened bank staff after leak’ (more)

TIMESONLINE: Shift in White House stance leaves Wolfowitz facing exit

FINANCIAL TIMES: White House signals change on Wolfowitz

“I implore each of you to be fair in making your decision, because your decision will not only affect my life, it will affect how this institution is viewed in the United States and the world” - Wolfowitz [Source: THE AUSTRALIAN]

THE AUSTRALIAN: Wolfowitz begs to stay at World Bank

DIE WELT: Zukunft von Wolfowitz in der Schwebe

FAZ: Wolfowitz will sich nur ändern, nicht abtreten

DIE PRESSE: Die Weltabank wird bedeutungslos

Mark Alexander
Ahmadinejad like “a 21st century Adolf Hitler” says Bush. Iran must be stopped from obtaining nuclear weapons, by military means if necessary, says John Bolton

TELEGRAPH: Iran should be attacked before it develops nuclear weapons, America's former ambassador to the United Nations said yesterday.

John Bolton, who still has close links to the Bush administration, told The Daily Telegraph that the European Union had to "get more serious" about Iran and recognise that its diplomatic attempts to halt Iran's enrichment programme had failed.

Iran has "clearly mastered the enrichment technology now...they're not stopping, they're making progress and our time is limited", he said. Economic sanctions "with pain" had to be the next step, followed by attempting to overthrow the theocratic regime and, ultimately, military action to destroy nuclear sites. We must attack Iran before it gets the bomb (more) By Toby Harnden

Ticking down to a nuclear Iran By David Blair

Mark Alexander

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

La France menace d’un groupe terroriste après l’élection de Nicolas Sarkozy

LE FIGARO: Les Brigades Abou Hafs al-Masri ont par le passé revendiqué les sanglants attentats de Londres et Madrid. Un groupe terroriste menace la France après l’élection de Sarkozy (encore)

Mark Alexander
Tony Snow on Wolfowitz: A lot of mistakes were made but they were not a firing offence

BBC: The president of the World Bank, Paul Wolfowitz, is meeting the bank's 24-member executive board to respond to allegations against him.

The meeting comes after the panel said he broke bank rules by helping secure a pay rise for his girlfriend.

The board has the power to dismiss him or could choose to report a lack of confidence in his leadership.

Earlier in the day, the White House said it still supported Mr Wolfowitz, but added all options were still open.

"We've made clear that we support Paul Wolfowitz", said spokesman Tony Snow, but added that the bank's "best interests" also had to be served. World Bank hears Wolfowitz case (more)

Mark Alexander
Sarkozy wird Präsident Frankreichs

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Foto von Sarkozy dank der NZZ
NZZ: Chirac verlässt Elysée nach zwölf Jahren Amtszeit

Zehn Tage nach seinem Wahlsieg übernimmt der Konservative Nicolas Sarkozy am Mittwoch die französische Präsidentschaft. Um 11 Uhr wird er vom scheidenden Staatschef Jacques Chirac im Elysée-Palast empfangen. Der scheidende Präsident hat sich am Dienstagabend mit einem Appell zur Einheit und Solidarität von den Franzosen verabschiedet. Sarkozy übernimmt die Präsidentschaft (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Von den Europäern werden Jüden wieder kritisiert

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Foto dank Google Images
DIE PRESSE: Die Anti-Defamation League befragte 2.714 Personen. Demnach haben viele Europäer haben weiter anti-jüdische Ansichten - vorne weg Polen und Spanier.

Viele Europäer haben laut einer Studie der Anti-Defamation League weiterhin "klassische" anti-jüdische Ansichten und Vorurteile. Solche Einstellungen könnten Antisemitismus und neue Gewalt gegen Juden zur Folge haben, sagte Abraham Foxman, Vorsitzender der US-Organisation, die sich gegen Diskriminierung und Diffamierung von Juden einsetzt, am Montag in Jerusalem. Die Ergebnisse der Studie, für die Menschen in Deutschland, Frankreich, Italien, Polen und Spanien befragt wurden, seien "sehr Besorgnis erregend". Europäer glauben, Juden hätten "zu viel Macht" (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Gerry Falwell Dies

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Photo of Gerry Falwell courtesy of Google Images
BBC: Leading US conservative evangelist Rev Gerry Falwell has died in hospital in Virginia after being found unconscious in his office, his assistants said.

Doctors gave Rev Falwell emergency treatment at Lynchburg General Hospital but could not revive him.

Rev Falwell, 73, survived two serious health scares in 2005 but had a history of heart problems.

He became a figurehead of the religious right in the 1980s, founded the Moral Majority and later Liberty University. US evangelist Gerry Falwell dies (more)

Mark Alexander
Empty Words, or Does the Government Mean Business This Time?

GUARDIAN UNLIMITED: Everyone who applies for a new job should be required to produce their birth certificate or passport as part of a tough new plan to "flush out" illegal immigrants, the Government said.

Even employers who report a worker they suspect is illegal could be hit with a fine of thousands of pounds under the proposals.

Immigration minister Liam Byrne announced proposals for a new system of civil penalties for firms which employ illegal workers, suggesting they should be fined up to £10,000 to cover the cost of deporting someone from Britain.

Mr Byrne said: "What we are proposing here will, I think, flush illegal migrants out.

"We are trying to create a much more hostile environment in this country if you are here illegally. Plan to ’flush out’ illegal workers (more)

Mark Alexander
The West’s Commitment to Freedom of Religion Will Be Its Undoing

The West is faced with an implacable enemy: Islam. This religion is Christianity’s greatest competitor. It was always thus, ever since Islam’s birth in the deserts of Arabia more than 1400 years ago. Islam means ‘submission’: Submission to Allah. In order to become a Muslim, one has to testify that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the messenger of Allah – Allah’s final messenger. This testimony is called the Shahada. After one has testified, usually before an audience and an imam in the mosque, one becomes a Muslim.

The word Muslim comes from the same root as Islam. Islam means ‘submission’, and a Muslim is one who has submitted: submitted to Allah’s will, and one who has accepted that the Prophet Muhammad is Allah’s final messenger here on earth.

The greatest problem for Westerners is that Islam recognizes no separation of religion from politics. Both are one integrated whole. The West, by contrast, based as it is on Judeo-Christianity, is wholly committed to a separation of the religious from the political. Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s. Without such a separation, the West as we know it would cease to exist. It would simply not be possible to have Western-style government were this separation not to be respected.

In recent decades, Westerners have allowed an unprecedented number of Muslims into their countries; indeed, Muslims have come to the West in their droves. Many have been legal immigrants; but so many have not been. They have just slipped in through the back door.

For many years, it was a trickle, so only the few paid any attention to the problem. In recent years, however, that trickle has become a constant flow. As a result, we are now faced with a huge problem: How can we integrate a people professing a faith diametrically-opposed to our own when those very people do not understand the importance of the separation of the religious from the secular, and when those very people refuse to integrate anyway because their religion forbids them to do so? Then there is the added problem that Muslims have a superiority complex: Ye are the best of the peoples evolved for mankind, enjoining what is right, forbidding what is wrong, and believing in Allah. They therefore believe that they are the chosen people, the people chosen by Allah to bring Islam to all corners of the earth and to all its multitudes, to bring them to submission to what Muslims consider the one true faith: Islam.

Integration is difficult for the Muslim, too, since his religion forbids true integration. Muslims are exhorted to set themselves apart from the kufar, or infidels. So not only do we have a problem of integrating these people, but we also have a problem with them because they feel superior to us. This is further complicated by the fact that Muslims do not- will not- recognize- man-made, secular laws. Any man-made law is inferior, very inferior, to the laws as laid out by Allah and the Prophet Muhammad in the Shari’ah.

Westerners are committed to the noble and lofty concept of freedom of religion. In fact, many emigrated from Western Europe to the New World over the centuries simply because they felt that they were unable to practise their religion satisfactorily and without persecution in their own homelands – in Europe.

The fact of the matter today, though, is that this very commitment to freedom of religion is exactly what is endangering the survival of the free West. How can the West survive if it is committed to a concept which will continue to be a thorn in the side of liberty. This very liberty – the liberty of freedom of religion – when extended to a group of people who refuse to accept any separation of the religious from the political, any separation of the temporal from the sacred, is bound to become a problem of colossal proportions in future, especially when the Muslim population of the West will increase explosively due to far higher birth rates in the Muslim population in the West, the so-called Ummah. Added to this, the West is experiencing depressingly low birth rates in the communities of the indigenous population. All Westerners seem to want to do these days is remain free to lead a hedonistic life, free to earn more and more money, and free to fulfil their dreams and aspirations.

It should be remembered that Islam is not simply a religion; rather, it is a political system, with its own economic system based on not using interest rates as are used in the capitalist model. The Islamic economic system is rib’a-free.

In view of the fact that Islam is so political, and in view of the fact that Islam refuses to separate religion from politics, how is the West to survive in its present form for future generations? For our children and our grandchildren and our grandchildren’s children? Are they going to thank us for not acting to stop this increasing Islamization of the West? Are they going to thank us for allowing a religion to grow here in the West which is determined, nay hell-bent, on destroying the very system which has given it the freedom to grow here in the West in the first place?

Were we to be talking about communism or Nazism, two systems which were out to destroy the West as people had come to know it, then there would have been no debate. The political parties propounding these ideas would be closed down – for good. But when it comes to a political party which clothes itself in a deity – Islam – we allow it to flourish, even when that very political party is out to destroy us and the very freedoms we respect and love.

It is high time for Westerners to reassess our commitment to religious freedom, and to reassess our tolerance for all movements and parties that happen to clothe themselves in a deity. If we do not find a way of making this reassessment, then I am sure that the days of freedom and democracy are numbered. We will fall into a form of totalitarianism – Islamic totalitarianism. It’s your choice!

©Mark Alexander
The Soap Opera that has Paris Abuzz

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Photo of Nicolas Sarkozy with his wife, Cecilia, courtesy of Google Images (France)
BBC: Will she or won't she? Paris is abuzz with the question, as voters wonder whether Cecilia Sarkozy will be a full-time First Lady or not, as her husband Nicolas assumes power at the Elysee Palace on Wednesday.

Other nations have soap operas to keep them entertained. France has its own real-life political drama, which has so far kept millions tuned in - from the gripping episodes during the long-term feud between Nicolas Sarkozy, 52, and his former mentor, the outgoing President Jacques Chirac, to the recent cliff-hanger of the sporadic absences of Cecilia from her ambitious husband's side. Sarkozy soap opera grips Paris (more) By Caroline Wyatt

Mark Alexander