Monday, June 11, 2007

”Sleazeballs”

The Saudi royal family rules Saudi Arabia as a private enterprise: Each and every contract that comes into the country, they get a cut on. We turn a blind eye to all this, yet when Ciaucescu in Roumania did the very same thing, he was disparaged. It was said that he ran the country as a private enterprise, as though the country belonged to him! He took cuts on all business deals coming into the country. This was, rightly, considered to be a dreadful thing. His wealth, of course, was as nothing in comparison with the wealth of the Saudi royal family. Why do we have these double standards? What, I wonder, is the difference? Why is it so different for the Saudis to behave this way than for the then Roumanian élite? We in the West have such a peculiar way of looking at things! Is it any wonder why we have the enemies we do? - ©Mark Alexander

WATCH THE PANORAMA PROGRAMME ON THE ALLEGED BAE CORRUPTION

BBC: For 21 years allegations of kickbacks have swirled round the biggest arms deal in history - Al Yamamah, the 'dove of peace'

Ever since Mrs Thatcher stepped off her plane resplendent in a Tory blue suit and veiled hat to greet the Saudi King and seal the Tornado warplane sale, the story has generated acres of speculation in newsprint and hours of broadcast time.

Rumours about her own son, Mark's role as a broker have featured large in the headlines.

But until Panorama broke the story of secret payments into accounts controlled by Prince Bandar, the former Saudi ambassador to the United States, no journalists had got to the heart of the matter. Princes, Planes and Pay-offs (more) By Jane Corbin (Panorama)

Al-Yamamah Inquiry: Statements

Goldsmith denies BAE cash claim

Mark Alexander
We're in a hole with Islam, but we keep on digging

EDITORIAL: Isn't it funny how politicians, the leaders of the Western world, people who should know an awful lot about the history of Western civilization, know nothing about it, and if they do, they refuse to heed history's caveats? Isn't it funny how these same politicians find it unnecessary to learn about Islam and the history of its relentless growth since its inception 1400 years ago? And isn't it funny how these politicians, knowing we're in a God awful mess with Muslims because of our own folly and weakness, can think of no strategy except one that will get us further and deeper into the mire? The fact of the matter is that we're in a hole - a deep hole! And the hole is getting deeper by the week! Why? Because we refuse to stop digging!

In an article entitled ’Straw urges Turkey EU membership’, dated Sunday, October 2, 2005, Jack Straw predicted that EU nations risk driving Christians and Muslims apart if Turkey is not brought into the fold. No Jack, no! This, on the face of it, seems logical enough; I believe, however, that this is a perfect example of a logical fallacy!

What we need to do to avoid a clash of civilizations is this: We need to give these two worlds their space. Each 'world' has a different Weltanschauung, a different worldview. Therefore, these two civilizations need to learn to respect each other more, but each ‘world’ must be allowed its space to live.

The way that politicians such as Jack Straw are trying to manipulate things, they risk bringing about the clash of civilizations - here in our own backyard!

The Christian world and the Islamic world have always had their great differences. What people like Jack Straw proposes is to bring those two sides together in order to bring about harmony. How logical is that?

Anyone who has ever lived in a household in which two people who can't get on are under the same roof, will know that the sparks fly! If this is true for two people, how truer it will be for millions of people.

The sparks will start flying as soon as Turkey becomes part of Europe. Western Europeans can look forward to the rough ride. Our only hope of some common sense prevailing is with Nicolas Sarkozy. Thankfully, he remains committed to stopping Turkey’s accession. Long live Nicolas Sarkozy! Long live common sense!

©Mark Alexander
Kardinal Lehmann möchte Reziprozität in Sachen Religion: Er will die Freiheit haben, in Saudi Arabien Gottesdienst halten zu dürfen

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Foto von Kardinal Lehmann dank Google Images (Deutschland)
SPIEGELONLINE: Kardinal Karl Lehmann will wissen, wie es um die Religionsfreiheit in muslimischen Ländern bestellt ist. Wenn in Europa repräsentative Moscheen gebaut werden könnten, dann wolle er auch in Saudi-Arabien Gottesdienst halten dürfen, sagte er auf dem Evangelischen Kirchentag.

Köln - Der Vorsitzende der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Kardinal Karl Lehmann, hat nachdrücklich Religionsfreiheit für Christen in islamischen Ländern gefordert. Wenn heute in europäischen Ländern repräsentative Moscheen gebaut werden könnten, "dann möchte ich in Saudi-Arabien Gottesdienst halten dürfen, ohne verhaftet zu werden", sagte der prominente katholische Kirchenführer am Samstag beim Deutschen Evangelischen Kirchentag in Köln. Es sei nicht hinnehmbar, dass etwa Kirchengemeinden in der Türkei keine Grundstücke für ihre Gotteshäuser erwerben dürften. Wirkliche Religionsfreiheit könne nur wechselseitig praktiziert werden. Kardinal möchte in Saudi-Arabien Messe lessen (mehr)

Mark Alexander
US Set to Put BAE Through Its Paces

THE TELEGRAPH: Defence giant BAE Systems is to set up an independent committee to probe its ethics in an attempt to head off a possible investigation by the United States' Congress into allegations it paid bribes to win contracts.
Senior Washington sources said the risk of a political backlash against Britain's biggest defence company in the US was growing.

They said it was likely BAE would have to attend Congressional hearings to answer questions about whether it made illegal payments to win a £40 billion deal, known as Al-Yamamah, with Saudi Arabia in the 1980s.
One source said: "America's defence industry will use this to move on BAE. BAE faces US inquiry into bribery allegations (more) By Katherine Griffiths

Anger at BAE move to set up scrutiny body By Katherine Griffiths

Why BAE wants to attack Saudi bribe claim By Russell Hotten

WATCH BBC VIDEO: BAE payments to Saudi prince

Timeline: BAE corruption probe

Mark Alexander
Has Verheugen Had a ‘Wolfowitz Moment’? Scandal in the EU

TIMESONLINE: Suspicious sleepovers, naked beach games and public holding of hands: is it true love for Günter Verheugen, the most powerful German in Brussels, or simply a creative new approach to shaping EU industrial strategy? And has he been bending the rules?

Mr Verheugen, Vice-President of the European Commission, says that everything is above board but pressure was piling on him last night to come clean about his relationship to his chief of staff – or to step down.

Photographs, taken furtively through a rose bush, show the stooped figure of the Commissioner entering the house of Petra Erler, his 48-year-old chef du cabinet. A second photograph shows him leaving the Brussels flat the next morning with Ms Erler. Mr Verheugen is taking legal action against Bunte, the glossy magazine that published both pictures this week.

The accusation against the Commissioner is that he promoted Ms Erler – a skilled bureaucrat and one of the few East Germans at the upper levels of the Commission – while conducting an affair with her. This he has been vehemently denying for the past nine months. “There was no relationship beyond friendship at the time of the promotion,” Mr Verheugen said in October. “And that remains the situation today.” Germany’s naked EU chief faces Wolfowitz charges over his ‘friend’ (more) By Roger Boyes

Mark Alexander
Guantánamo sollte geschlossen werden, so Powell

NZZ: Früherer US-Aussenminister für Aufgabe des Gefangenenlagers auf Kuba

Der ehemalige amerikanische Aussenminister Colin Powell hat sich im amerikanischen Fernsehsender NBC für die Schliessung des Gefangenenlagers in Guantánamo Bay ausgesprochen. Powell fordert Schliessung von Guantánamo (more)

Mark Alexander

Sunday, June 10, 2007

American University of Egypt Cannot Ban Niqab!

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Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: A court in Egypt has ruled that the American University of Cairo cannot ban women from wearing the niqab - the full Islamic face covering - on campus.

The ruling comes after a lengthy legal battle between the university and a female student, who was told she had to remove the niqab for security reasons.

Supporters of the niqab greeted the ruling as a victory for freedom.

But officials at the university have said it indicates a drift towards Islamic extremism. Cairo campus veil ban struck down (more)

Mark Alexander
Victory Seems to Be Assured for Sarkozy

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Photo of Sarkozy courtesy of the BBC
BBC: Projections after the first round of France's parliamentary elections suggest President Nicolas Sarkozy's party is heading for a landslide.

Polling firms predicted that Mr Sarkozy's centre-right UMP party would increase its majority in the lower house, the national assembly.

Analysts say a big majority would allow the new president to press ahead with his sweeping economic reforms. Sarkozy party ‘set for landslide’ (more)

Mark Alexander
Hero’s Welcome for Bush in Albania

BBC: President George W Bush has become the first US leader to visit Albania, where he enjoyed a hero's welcome. Bush greeted as hero in Albania (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Bush met as a hero in Albania

Mark Alexander
Jonathan Edwards, the Athlete, Loses Faith

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Photo of Jonathan Edwards courtesy of Google Images
THE MAIL ON SUNDAY: Jonathan Edwards has spoken for the first time about his crisis of faith and how it plunged his family into despair.

Just four months ago the former athlete - whose father is a vicar - quit as a presenter of the BBC’s Songs Of Praise, saying he no longer believed in God. I lost my faith in God when I retired, says Olympic hero Jonathan Edwards (more) By Malcom Folley

Mark Alexander
Blair to Make ‘Highly Significant’ Trip to Vatican Before Leaving Office

THE MAIL ON SUNDAY: Tony Blair has discussed becoming a Roman Catholic deacon when he quits office.

The revelation comes as he prepares to meet the Pope amid speculation that he will use the audience in the Vatican to announce his conversion.

In his last foreign engagement, just days before he leaves Downing Street for the final time, the Prime Minister will visit Pope Benedict XVI in what officials say will be a "highly significant" personal mission. Blair ‘may become a Catholic deacon’ (more) By Jonathan Oliver and Martin Delgado

Mark Alexander
Drugs, Sex, and Booze Ensure that the Princes’ Parties Get Into Full Swing!

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: To Western eyes, Saudi Arabia's super-rich royal princes appear a confusing mix of pious Muslims and decadent playboys. But it is their distinctive approach to doing business that is now giving Britain a headache. David Harrison reports

Long after midnight, the party is in full swing, the music loud, the whisky and champagne flowing. In the penthouse suite at a five-star London hotel, six attractive young British women in short, tight dresses that leave little to the imagination, sashay between wealthy princes from Saudi Arabia, flirting and laughing more loudly than the Arabs' witticisms merit.
A silver dish of white powder, with matching spoon, is passed around. From time to time, a couple slips out of the suite only to reappear half an hour later and seek new friends. Others do not feel impelled to leave in order to share intimate moments and settle on a sofa or the four-poster in the main bedroom, oblivious of their fellow party-goers. We did it their way (more)

Mark Alexander
Bandar Lobbied Number 10

THE SUNDAY TIMES: A SAUDI prince, who is alleged to have received £1 billion in payments in the BAE Systems arms deal, personally lobbied Downing Street to get it to drop a criminal inquiry into the contract, claim senior Whitehall officials, writes David Leppard.

Prince Bandar bin Sultan, head of Saudi Arabia’s national security council, met Tony Blair last July at the height of the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) inquiry into claims that BAE had illegally paid huge sums to members of the Saudi royal family.

Bandar is said by a second senior government official to have told Jonathan Powell, Blair’s chief of staff, that the Saudis would pull out of the arms deal, which involved the sale of 72 Typhoon jets, unless the investigation was stopped. He also said intelligence ties in the war on terror would be cut. Bandar lobbied No 10 to drop Saudi bribes inquiry (more)

Mark Alexander
“Mr Blair's last act of dictatorial hubris”

TELEGRAPH LEADER: For the past two elections, Labour's manifesto has been admirably clear on the issue of a constitution for the European Union: "We will put it to the British people in a referendum and campaign whole-heartedly for a Yes vote."

Tony Blair's final act as Prime Minister is likely to be to break that commitment. As we report today, he will sign the new European constitution just before he leaves 10 Downing Street. There will be no referendum. His signature alone will be enough to bind the United Kingdom in perpetuity to the constitution's strictures.

Mr Blair will justify this blatant perfidy by claiming that the document is not a constitution: it is just a "treaty". This is utterly false, as he and his Cabinet know very well. Britain must vote on this 'treaty' (more)

Mark Alexander
For a Change, Something Refreshing Coming Out of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia!

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Photo of Heba Jamal courtesy of Arab News
ARAB NEWS: In the age of modern science and technology, having a specific relevant skill is an edge. Such expertise is usually acquired through hard work and dedication, yet there are a few who may not have invested the time necessary to be imbibed with rare skills. All they need is an inspiration and a good environment. Fashion Beyond Tradition

Heba Jamal

Mark Alexander

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Gegen Bush wurde in Rom groß demonstriert

DIE PRESSE: Bush-Besuch in Italien. Der US-Präsident sprach mit dem Papst über den Irak und den G8-Gipfel. Zehntausende demonstrierten in Rom gegen Bushs Außenpolitik. Es kam zu Ausschreitungen.

US-Präsident George W. Bush ist am Samstag im Rahmen seines Besuchs in Rom von Papst Benedikt XVI. im Vatikan empfangen worden. Der Irak, die Situation in Nahost und der G8-Gipfel in Heiligendamm standen im Mittelpunkt des 35 Minuten langen Gesprächs in der vatikanischen Bibliothek. "Er hat mir den Eindruck eines liebevollen Menschen gemacht", so Bush nach der Unterredung über Benedikt XVI.

Der Papst erkundigte sich über die Resultate des G8-Gipfels. Bush bezeichnete den Gipfel als Erfolg. "Wie Sie wissen, gibt es verschiedene Meinungen, doch alles ist gut verlaufen. Wir haben über die Lage in Afrika diskutiert und starke Initiativen zur Bekämpfung von Aids ergriffen. Wir werden weiterhin in diese Richtung arbeiten", antwortete Bush dem Papst. Großdemonstration in Rom gegen Bush (mehr)

REUTERS (UK):
Anti-Bush demonstrations in Rome after Pope meeting

Mark Alexander
BBC Interfaith Claptrap

WATCH BBC VIDEO: MUSLIMS AND CHRISTIANS UNITE!

Mark Alexander
Merkel und Bush “kommen gut zu recht"

FAZ: 09. Juni 2007 Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU) sieht in der Einigung über die Klimapolitik auf dem G-8-Treffen in Heiligendamm einen Beleg für das gute Verhältnis Deutschlands zu Amerika. Der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Sonntag sagte Frau Merkel: „Die Einigung in der Klimapolitik zeigt: Wir kommen mit Amerika gut zurecht. Aber wir nicken deswegen nicht alles ab, was die Vereinigten Staaten wollen.“ Merkel: Amerika ist unser Partner (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Viewpoints: Tony Blair’s Speech at the international conference on Islam and Muslims (Cambridge University)

THIS SPEECH SHOULD COME WITH A GOVERNMENT HEALTH WARNING: 'READING THIS MAY CAUSE SEVERE VOMITING!'

“I would like to thank Cambridge University and their partners, the Coexist Foundation and the Weidenfeld Institute for Strategic Dialogue for hosting this important conference. As many of you will know, the Cambridge Inter-Faith Programme is at the forefront of innovative teaching and research in terms of the study of world religions, their inter-relations and their relations with secular society.

The first and most obvious question about this Conference here in London is: why? The first and most obvious answer is that Britain is today a country of two million Muslims in a Europe that has over 20 million Muslims. I would like to pay tribute to our British Muslim communities today. In overwhelming part, they make a significant positive and growing contribution to modern Britain.

We have successful Muslims in all areas of our national life - business, sport, media, culture, the professions. We have our first Muslim MPs, first Muslim Members of the House of Lords; hopefully the next election will bring more and hopefully also the first women Muslim MPs.

Secondly, and again obviously as a result of what is happening in the world today, there is an interest and appetite across all sections of society to know more about Islam in all its diversity. This is not, repeat not, about equating interest in Islam with anxiety over extremism. But it explains, in part, the desire to learn about what moves and motivates our Muslim communities.

However, most of all but less obviously, the reason for this Conference is to allow the many dimensions of Islam to speak about themselves in a more considered, more profound way than the short bursts of news coverage normally permit. When I have met groups of Muslims, especially younger ones - and in any part of Britain - of course the normal issues about foreign policy arise. But actually the predominant complaint is about how they believe their true faith is constantly hijacked and subverted by small, unrepresentative groups who get disproportionately large amounts of publicity.

It is the way of the modern media world that what counts is impact. Those willing to come on television and articulate extreme and violent views make so much more impact than those who use the still small voice of reason and moderation.

The principal purpose of this Conference therefore is to let the authentic voices of Islam, in their various schools and manifestations, speak for themselves.

Some of the most distinguished scholars and religious leaders the world over are gathered here. I ask people to listen to them. They are the authentic voices of Islam. The voices of extremism are no more representative of Islam than the use, in times gone by, of torture to force conversion to Christianity, represents the true teaching of Christ.

In doing this, there is yet another purpose: to reclaim from extremists, of whatever faith, the true essence of religious belief. In the face of so much high profile accorded to religious extremism, to schism, and to confrontation, it is important to show that religious faith is not inconsistent with reason, or progress, or the celebration of diversity. Round the world today, along with the images of violence, are the patient good works of people of different faiths coming together, understanding each other, respecting each other.

Religious faith has much to contribute to the public sphere; is still a thriving part of what makes a cohesive community; is a crucial motivator of millions of citizens around the world; and is an essential if non-governmental way of helping to make society work. To lose that contribution would not just be a pity; it would be a huge backward step.

We shall be studying the outcomes of the Conference with the keenest interest. We hope that the discussions over the next two days will produce ideas which we can explore and take forward - perhaps in partnership with some of you here today. We are especially interested to consider how the messages from this Conference can best be conveyed to grassroots communities.

I want to set this Conference in a broader context. Round the world today there is a new and urgent impetus being given to promulgating the true voices of Islam.

This is especially the case in the field of education. When I visited Indonesia last year, a Muslim majority country of over 200 million, I saw at first hand the way in which religious schools there are reforming to equip their students not just with a sound religious education, but also with training to boost their employment prospects. This work challenges the myth that religious schools need only focus on orthodox religious education. The Pakistani Government too has undertaken an ambitious and difficult programme of madrassa reform, encouraging schools to register and develop a common syllabus and basic standards.

In Singapore, new more interactive teaching methods have been introduced by the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore, moving away from teaching by rote to teaching which is specific to age group, more relevant to the wider context in which students live and more lively.

Many in our Muslim communities in the UK are encouraging reform and change in our madrassas here.

The Bradford Council of Mosques has agreed to incorporate citizenship education in the curriculum for their madrassas, an important initiative, which we hope will be adopted right across the country. And it is right to encourage links between schools in the state sector and institutions that provide religious education, given the hugely important role these institutions play in so many children's education and well-being.

But the role of education goes much wider than simply religious education. At the recent Middle East World Economic Forum, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, announced the creation of a groundbreaking $10 billion foundation to promote education in Arab countries. The foundation will focus on human development, supporting and empowering young minds and focusing on research, education and investment in the infrastructure of knowledge. It will provide scholarships for study at world-reputed institutions. In neighbouring Qatar, the Government has invited top international universities to develop an "Education City" with the aim of becoming the beacon of educational excellence in the Arab world.

Many of these initiatives are designed to tap into the ages-old tradition of Islam where - in line with the Koran - knowledge is revered and Muslims urged to pursue it.

Then there are the many signs of political reform in the Muslim world, and the encouragement of women's rights. Suffrage has been awarded to women in Kuwait and women stood for the first time in Bahrain's elections last year.

In Morocco, fifty women have been appointed as state preachers for the first time. They will be able to give basic religious instruction in Mosques and support in prisons, schools and hospitals.

As highlighted by Emine Bozkurt's work, the position of women has improved in Turkey over recent years, with, in particular, a strong emphasis on education for girls.

In Afghanistan, the Afghan Women's Hour is a programme that would have been inconceivable not long ago. It offers girls, their mothers and their grandmothers a place to speak and to listen to one another. The full gamut of issues has been aired: standing for Parliament, learning to read, starting a business, the prevention of maternal mortality.

In Jordan, last month, a conference took place, with the assistance of Queen Rania, to build and empower Muslim female leadership across the Middle East.

There is also a clear move across the world to assert strongly the moderate and true authority of Islam.

In Jordan, in 2004, under the leadership of HM King Abdullah, a statement, the Amman Message was released seeking to declare what Islam is and what it is not, and how it should be manifested.

I was deeply impressed when, the next year, the King convened 200 leading scholars from no less than 50 countries, who unanimously - unanimously - issued a Declaration on 3 basic issues: the validity of different Islamic schools of thought and theology; the forbidding of declarations of apostasy between Muslims; and criteria for the issuing of fatwas - religious edicts - to pre-empt the spawning of illegitimate versions.

This was a clear message that Islam is not a monolithic faith, but one made up of a rich pattern of diversity, albeit all flowing from the same fount. This rich diversity needs to be more clearly appreciated and to inform our public debates more fully.

Also in 2005, the summit meeting of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference issued a declaration and a 10-year action plan. The summit reaffirmed Islam as a religion of moderation and modernity. It rejected bigotry and extremism. It supported work to establish the values of Islam as those of understanding, tolerance, dialogue and multilateralism. It adopted the principles of the Amman Message - as indeed did other gatherings of scholars around the world.

And in 2006 the Topkapi declaration emphasised that Muslims have long played a distinguished part in European history and encouraged them to continue doing so. It stressed the opportunities for Muslims to flourish as full citizens the pluralistic societies which increasingly characterise every country in this continent, especially since the fall of Communism.

I draw four lessons from these and other similar examples.

Firstly, that the role of theology and philosophy is vital to Islam, indeed as it is to any religion, in helping its adherents to engage with the modern world whilst drawing on its core principles.

Secondly, Muslims overwhelmingly want to play a full part in the complex and diverse societies in which they find themselves - both contributing and shaping those societies. Most seek to play a part as loyal citizens of their countries and as loyal Muslims. This is of course contrary to the often crude portrayals in the media or by those who deal only in stereotypes and seek to whip up Islamophobic sentiment.

Thirdly, others in societies in which Muslims are co-citizens must also evolve and adapt in how they respond to the changing nature of their societies. This is a two way street. Each must learn from the other, about the other.

And fourthly, and as a natural consequence of my first three points, the great religions of the world most continue the dialogue between them, and help interfaith work to grow. Greater mutual understanding should be the aim of all of us. And a closer working together to tackle the needs of our shared world - needs which are often pressing and cry out for action.

We publish today the Siddiqui Report on the UK and what more we need to do to encourage the right intellectual and academic debate on these issues here in Britain.

We intend to follow-up on many of Dr. Siddiqui's recommendations and will be providing significant funding to deliver on this commitment.

None of this, incidentally, is designed to screen out a healthy rigorous debate about the controversies of foreign policy.

Many Christians disagreed with the decisions I took over Afghanistan or Iraq.


Leave aside for a moment whether they were the right or wrong decisions. What is damaging is if they are seen in the context of religious decisions.

The religious faith of either country was as irrelevant to the decision as was the fact that the Kosovo Albanians we rescued were Muslims, suffering under a Serbian dictatorship, whose religion happened to be Christian Orthodox; or in helping the people of Sierra Leone, 70 per cent of whom are Muslim.

This point is crucial at a number of different levels. The problem between faiths and communities, as too often in life and in politics, is not where there is disagreement about decisions; but where there is misunderstanding about motives. In turn, this is often derived from a misunderstanding of a deeper sort: a basic ignorance about the other's faith. I was asked the other day by a young person if it was true Muslims wanted to kill all Christians. "No", I said. "And did you know that Muslims revere Jesus as a Prophet?" The youngster was astounded, barely able to believe there are significant passages in the Koran devoted to Jesus, and to Mary. I recommend the book "The Muslim Jesus" to anyone interested in this aspect.

But the point is this: one part of such a Conference is to explain Islam to the world: its common roots with Judaism and Christianity, how it began, how it developed, how far removed it is, from the crude and warped distortion of the extremists.

Where there is ignorance, there is distrust, and sometimes hatred. Understanding is a great healer.

So this Conference is not about Government lecturing the Muslim world, or our Muslim communities. It is rather an opportunity to listen; to hear Islam's true voice; to welcome and appreciate them; and in doing so, to join up with all those who believe in a world where religious faith is respected because faiths respect each other as well as those of no faith; and are prepared in holding to their own truth, not to disrespect the truth clear to others. I wish you well in your deliberations.” [Source: The Prime Minister: 10 Downing Street]

Read the speech in Arabic
Sue Blackmore's Viewpont: Religious belief is inconsistent with reason and corrosive to the human mind - and I don't want to live in a world where it is respected.
"Religious faith is not inconsistent with reason."

I nearly choked on my breakfast when I heard this on the Today programme. These words were spoken by Mr Blair, in his inimitably sincere style. He was addressing an Islamic conference in London, on June 4, and pledging more money to support Islamic studies in British Universities.

When I'd calmed down I went to check, and it really is true. In the full text of his speech, on the No 10 website, he says:
"In the face of so much high profile accorded to religious extremism, to schism, and to confrontation, it is important to show that religious faith is not inconsistent with reason, or progress, or the celebration of diversity."

But religious faith is inconsistent with reason (and much more that we value as well).

I'm not referring to the ordinary kind of faith by which we have faith in another person's honesty, or that taking an aspirin will reduce our headache. I am talking about religious faith, as Tony Blair was too. In this context faith means believing without reason. Indeed, this is precisely how it is defined, for example as "Belief that does not rest on logical proof or material evidence" or in Merriam Webster as "firm belief in something for which there is no proof". Does this make faith inconsistent with reason? I would say yes. Reason demands that you look for evidence and believe accordingly - which is exactly what we do when we trust a friend because they've been reliable in the past, or doubt a rumour until we've checked on the facts.

Faith is corrosive to the human mind. If someone genuinely believes that it is right to believe things without reason or evidence then they are open to every kind of dogma, whim, coercion, or dangerous infectious idea that's around. If someone is convinced that it is acceptable to base their beliefs on what is written in an ancient book, or what some teacher tells them they must believe, then they will have no true freedom of thought; they will be trapped by their faith into inconsistency and untruths because they are unable to throw out false ideas when evidence against them comes along. To Sue Blackmore’s blog: We of little faith: Religious belief is inconsistent with reason and corrosive to the human mind - and I don't want to live in a world where it is respected.
NB: So important has the Muslim world become to the government of the United Kingdom these days that Downing street finds it necessary to make its whole website available in the Arabic language! Not in German, or French, or Italian or Spanish - the languages of our friends in Europe - but in Arabic! Here it is in all its glory: 10 Downing Street in Arabic! - ©Mark Alexander

Mark Alexander
Archbishop of Canterbury Tries to Save Anglican Church from Schism Over Homosexuality

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TIME: For his last official act before a three-month sabbatical, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams chose a joyous one. He ordained the Reverend Canon Humphrey Southern as a new bishop. The ceremony took place in London's St. Paul's Cathedral, and the crowd smiled to see Williams, the tousle-headed, professorial leader of the Church of England and titular head of its global offshoot, the Anglican Communion, reveling in his mellifluous baritone as he prayed, sang and performed the rite of ordination. "Will you strive for the visible unity of Christ's Church?" asked Williams. Answered Southern, "By the help of God, I will."

By the help of God, indeed. Almost from the day he took over in 2002, Williams, now 56, has been attempting to prevent a schism among the world's 79 million Anglicans. It has been a horrible task. Within months of his taking the job, a simmering debate on homosexuality exploded into a brutal battle, pitting some of the wealthiest and most liberal of the church's 38 provinces, notably those in North America, against a larger, more socially conservative group concentrated in Africa and Asia and known as the Global South. At the 1998 edition of the Communion's once-a-decade Lambeth Conference, the concluding language called homosexual practice "incompatible with Scripture." But in 2003 the Episcopal Church, the Anglican body in the U.S., made Gene Robinson, an openly gay man, bishop of New Hampshire. Unlike Roman Catholicism, the Communion lacks definitive doctrine to aid decisive solutions. Nor does it have a universal leader such as the Pope — the Archbishop makes no claims to infallibility and cannot dictate to his flock. The years since have featured a series of angry meetings, threats of secession, half-met demands and unmet deadlines. The next full-scale opportunity to negotiate — or fight on — will be at the Lambeth meeting in July 2008: that is, if Williams can keep all parties on board long enough to attend it. Saving Grace (more) By David Van Biema and Catherine Mayer

Mark Alexander
Es muß eine neue Verhandlungsrunde im Mittleren Osten geben, sagt der Papst zu Bush

DIE WELT: Benedikt XVI. hat bei seinem ersten Treffen mit George W. Bush den US-Präsidenten in die Pflicht genommen: Es müsse eine neue Verhandlungsrunde geben. Unterdessen demonstrierten Globalisierungsgegner gegen Bush.

Der Papst empfing den gläubigen Methodisten und seine Ehefrau Laura am Samstag im Vatikan zu einer Privataudienz, bei der es vor allem um die Themen Frieden und Armutsbekämpfung in der Welt gehen dürfte. Zugleich hieß es, das katholische Kirchenoberhaupt wolle die Frage der Religionsfreiheit im Irak und die schwierige Situation der dortigen Christen ansprechen. Während des Treffens war der Petersplatz für Besucher gesperrt. Zuvor sprach Bush mit Staatspräsident Giorgio Napolitano. Papst verlangt neue Nahost-Runde von Bush (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Sarkozy drohte Bush mit einer vorzeitigen Abreise des Gipfels sollte er nicht einlenken! Scheinbar, in Heiligendamm, soll es hinter den Kulissen heftigen Krach gegeben haben

SPIEGELONLINE: Am Ende einigten sich die G-8-Mächtigen doch noch beim Klimaschutz. Doch hinter den Kulissen soll es heftig gekracht haben: Frankreichs neuer Präsident Sarkozy drohte seinem US-Kollegen Bush damit, vorzeitig abzureisen, sollte der nicht einlenken.

Hamburg - Die Einigung zum Klimaschutz beim G-8-Gipfel in Heiligendamm ist erst nach einer heftigen Debatte zustande gekommen. Dabei habe Frankreichs Präsident Nicolas Sarkozy dem amerikanischen Präsidenten George W. Bush mit einer vorzeitigen Abreise gedroht, berichtet die "Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung" unter Berufung auf ein geheimes Protokoll. Sie stützt sich dabei auf die Aufzeichnungen eines sogenannten Sherpas, eines hochrangigen Regierungsmitarbeiters, der die Debatte direkt verfolgte und Notizen für sein Team anfertigte. Sarkozy drohte Bush mit vorzeitiger Abreise (mehr)

Mark Alexander
*Carne Ross’ Blog on the Possible Corruption Between BAE and the Saudi Government

THE GUARDIAN: The story of possible corruption between BAE and the Saudi government, and how the British government ignored it, is shocking. But we should not regard this episode as an aberration. Instead, it should force us to question the way foreign policy is thought about and practised in government today.

For decades British policy towards Saudi Arabia has been dominated by al-Yamamah, the massive BAE deal to provide aircraft and supplies. When I worked on the Middle East at the Foreign Office in the mid-90s, it was widely assumed that, along with uninterrupted oil supplies, this was what Britain's Saudi policy was "about". Any other concern, whether of human rights or the export of radical Wahhabi Islam, was by and large secondary.

This assumption was never questioned by officials or ministers. It was just the way things were. To think otherwise, that British policy - "our" policy as we called it (though it was never democratically debated, of course) - should be about human rights or Saudi Arabia's contribution to global security, would have been dismissed as naive or fanciful. We were just being realistic. To the blog - We could pay a grave price for our addiction to arms deals: Working at the Foreign Office I saw how exports took precedence over human rights. With the Saudis, this could backfire

* Carne Ross, a former diplomat, runs Independent Diplomat, a non-profit advisory group. He is the author of Independent Diplomat: Dispatches From an Unaccountable Elite Independentdiplomat.org

Mark Alexander
OECD Poised to Resume Inquiry into Why the British Government Abandoned Its Investigations Into the Allegations of Corruption in BAE

THE GUARDIAN: Attorney general urged to clarify role in concealing $1bn payments to prince

The government was last night fighting to contain the fallout over £1bn in payments to a Saudi prince as the attorney general came under renewed pressure to explain how much he knew about the affair.

While in public the government was issuing partial denials about its role in the controversy, in private there were desperate efforts to secure a new BAE £20bn arms deal with Saudi Arabia.

And any hopes that the furore could be halted were dashed last night when the Guardian learned that the world's anti-corruption organisation, the OECD, was poised to resume its own inquiry into why the British government suddenly abandoned its investigations into the £43bn al-Yamamah arms deal. The Bandar cover-up: who knew what, and when? (more) By David Leigh and Rob Evans

THE GUARDIAN:
BAE files: Shah of Iran

Prince used cash in BAE-linked account for palace: Former Saudi ambassador says $17m withdrawal was for legitimate expense

Mark Alexander
Golan Heights in Exchange for Peace?

THE TELEGRAPH: The Israeli prime minister has offered to return the Golan Heights to Syria in exchange for peace, the nation's press reported yesterday.

In a secret communique, Ehud Olmert demanded that in exchange for the return of the strategic highlands, Syria dissolve its alliances with Iran, Hezbollah and Palestinian militant factions who maintain headquarters in Damascus. Israel offers the Golan Heights to Syria (more) By Charles Levinson

Mark Alexander
Icy Times Ahead with Russia

TIMESONLINE: Tony Blair told Vladimir Putin yesterday that the world was becoming more and more afraid of Russia’s behaviour at home and abroad.

And as he left his last G8 summit in Germany Mr Blair predicted a lengthy period of deep freeze in relations between Russia and the West.

The two men, who have been sparring with each other from a distance for weeks, had a tense, hour-long encounter in the Caroline Room at the Kempinski Grand Hotel. Mr Blair emerged alone, a fixed smile on his face.

But when he spoke to reporters later at Rostock airport shortly before flying home he did not attempt to disguise that it had been a hard encounter or that he had been frustrated by the outcome. Blair talks of ‘deep freeze’ after tense encounter with Putin (more) By Philip Webster and David Charter

THE GUARDIAN:
West ‘fearful’ of Russia, says exasperated Blair

THE DAILY MAIL:
'We fear your slide into dictatorship', Blair warns Putin

Mark Alexander
Blair Pushes for Deal with Saudis Despite the Growing Stink

THE TELEGRAPH: Tony Blair wants to sign a new £20 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia before he leaves office later this month despite the mounting row over allegations of secret payments to a Saudi prince, Government sources indicated yesterday.

Saudi Arabia had been on the brink of concluding the deal to supply Eurofighter Typhoon jets to Riyadh when fresh allegations emerged that BAE Systems had paid £1 billion in backhanders to Prince Bandar bin Sultan, former Saudi ambassador to the US.

The Prime Minister still hopes to clinch the deal before he leaves No 10 on June 27 - six months after the Serious Fraud Office was told to drop an investigation into the bribery allegations. Blair fends off row to ‘to press for Saudi deal’ (more) | George Jones

THE TIMES: Pressure mounts for Goldsmith to explain role in arms deal

Mark Alexander
Merkel beschäftigt sich wenig mit der Innenpolitik Deutschlands

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Foto dank der BBC
SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG: Was nach knapp zwei Jahren Kanzlerschaft Merkels zu betrachten ist, ist eine zunehmend brillierende und mutige Auswärts-Kanzlerin und eine nach wie vor tastende und zaghafte Heim-Kanzlerin. Wer nur auswärts stark, aber zu Hause schwach ist, gewinnt keine Fans.

Drei Tage Heiligendamm in zwei Sätzen und einer Frage? Erstens: Angela Merkel hat einen beachtlichen politischen Erfolg zustande gebracht und in der Klima-Vereinbarung US-Präsident George W. Bush mehr abgerungen, als zu erwarten war. Zweitens: Es wird ihr innenpolitisch wenig nutzen. Drittens: Warum gibt es diese Kanzlerin nicht in einer innenpolitischen Ausführung? Die Auswärts-Kanzlerin (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Bush to Meet Pope Benedict for First Time

BBC: US President George W Bush has arrived in Rome, for talks with Italian leaders and his first meeting with the Pope.

Benedict XVI is expected to raise the war in Iraq and the plight of Christians there, as well as the issues of abortion and gay marriage. Bush in Italy for talks with Pope (more)

LE FIGARO:
Premier tête-à-tête entre George Bush et Benoît XVI

Mark Alexander

Friday, June 08, 2007

Ahmadinejad On Israel’s Destruction

WATCH VIDEO: AHMADINEJAD SEES ISRAEL'S END SOON

Mark Alexander
Ban Ki-moon “Shocked and Dismayed” by Ahmadinejad’s Comments About Israel

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Photo of Ban Ki-moon courtesy of Google Images
”The hegemony of Israel had collapsed, and the Lebanese nation pushed the button to begin counting the days until the destruction of the Zionist regime” - Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

BBC: UN chief Ban Ki-moon has said he was "shocked and dismayed" at recent comments by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad about Israel.

Iran's official news agency reported Mr Ahmadinejad saying that the world would soon see Israel's destruction.

He said the war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006 showed for the first time Israel's weakness.

The Iranian leader is a trenchant critic of Israel and has said the Holocaust of European Jewry is a myth. UN condemns Ahmadinejad comments (more)

Mark Alexander
”Inside Radical Islam in the UK”

WATCH VIDEO: INSIDE RADICAL ISLAM IN THE UK

Mark Alexander
”The Unlovable Saudis”

THE GUARDIAN: Willie Morris
[biography]
, the British ambassador from 1968 to 1972, could not stand the Saudis. They were "less lovable than some other people", he said.

The border guards were "rude". Despite their stern official religion, "one can find a minister incoherently drunk in his office before noon". Their oil billions led to a "corruption of character which enables the Saudis to regard the rest of the world as existing for their convenience", he wrote in his valedictory dispatch. [document] The unlovable Saudis (more)

THE GUARDIAN: Attorney-general knew of BAE and the £1bn. Then concealed it

BAE files: Ian Gilmour

Corruption in Saudi Arabia

BAE in Saudi Arabia

What BAE sells

Healey’s machine

Britain and the arms trade

Watch video: Denis Healey [BAE files]

BAE: Goldsmith denies BAE cash claim

Mark Alexander
Blair Determined Not to Let Principles Come in the Way of the BAE-Saudi Deal

TIMESONLINE: Tony Blair’s defiant rejection yesterday of calls for a new corruption inquiry into the al-Yamamah arms deal came only days after Des Browne, the Defence Secretary, was given private assurances from Saudi Arabia that it was pressing ahead with the latest lucrative contract with BAE Systems.

Mr Blair said that a new inquiry would lead to the “complete wreckage” of vital national interests as he faced down calls to reverse his decision to halt a Serious Fraud Office probe into the £40 billion Tornado aircraft deal. BAE inquiry ruled out days after secret trip (more)

Mark Alexander

Thursday, June 07, 2007

”Mittelmeer-Union” ist für die Türkei recht, sagt Sarkozy

SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG: Frankreichs Präsident strebt eine Strategie an, die die Türkei in eine umfassende "Mittelmeer-Union" einbezieht - und aus der EU heraushält. "Die Türkei hat keinen Platz in Europa" (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Putins überraschender Vorschlag

NZZ: Der russische Präsident Wladimir Putin hat am G-8-Gipfel in Heiligendamm für eine Überraschung gesorgt: Nachdem er noch vor wenigen Tagen das geplante US-Raketenabwehrsystem heftig kritisiert hatte, schlug er dem amerikanischen Präsident Bush nun eine Zusammenarbeit vor. Die USA reagierten verhalten positiv auf das Angebot. Putin schlägt den USA gemeinsame Raketenabwehr vor: Überraschender Vorschlag am G-8-Gipfel (mehr)

LE FIGARO:
Bouclier antimissile : la proposition surprise de Poutine

Mark Alexander
Russia to Favour Its Own Workers

BBC: Moscow city authorities are planning to reduce the number of migrants working in the Russian capital.

Mayor Yury Luzhkov says the demands for foreign labour should be lowered in favour of "our own workers". Moscow 'to cut migrant workers' (more) By James Rodgers

Mark Alexander
Muhammad Replaces Jack

THE TELEGRAPH: Rising immigration and older mothers have fuelled a 26-year high in the number of children women are having in England and Wales.

Figures released by the Office of National Statistics show the average number of children has risen for a fifth straight year to 1.87, the highest rate since 1980.

The last decade has seen a 77 per cent increase in births by mothers born outside of the UK, with the figure climbing to almost 150,000, or over a fifth of all babies, last year.

As Britain's demographics change, Mohammed is expected soon to replace Jack as the most popular boy's name. It has already pushed Thomas into third place. Rising immigration fuels 26-year fertility high (more)

Mark Alexander
More Allegations of Corruption: BAE in the Spotlight Once Again

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Photo of Prince Bandar courtesy of Google Images
THE GUARDIAN: The arms company BAE secretly paid Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia more than £1bn in connection with Britain's biggest ever weapons contract, it is alleged today.

A series of payments from the British firm was allegedly channelled through a US bank in Washington to an account controlled by one of the most colourful members of the Saudi ruling clan, who spent 20 years as their ambassador in the US.

It is claimed that payments of £30m were paid to Prince Bandar every quarter for at least 10 years.

It is alleged by insider legal sources that the money was paid to Prince Bandar with the knowledge and authorisation of Ministry of Defence officials under the Blair government and its predecessors. For more than 20 years, ministers have claimed they knew nothing of secret commissions, which were outlawed by Britain in 2002. BAE accused of secretly paying £1bn to Saudi prince (more) By David Leigh and Rob Evans

THE GUARDIAN: BAE Files: Prince Bandar

Bribing for Britain

BAE’s position

BAE’s Corporate Responsibility Report

Read the documents

Campaign against the arms trade

Cast of characters

Who are David Leigh and Rob Evans

Secrets of Al-Yamamah

Prince Bandar: Biography

Prince Sultan: Biography

FINANCIAL TIMES: BAE 'secretly paid' Saudi prince: Bandar received £100m a year, reports say

TIMESONLINE: BAE shares fall amid new bribery allegations

THE TELEGRAPH: Blair: No new BAE probe despite bribe claims

BBC: Saudi prince 'received arms cash'

WATCH BBC VIDEO: Blair on BAE investigation

SUEDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG: Riesiger Korruptionsskandal bringt Regierung Blair in Bedrängnis

LE MONDE: Un prince saoudien aurait perçu un milliard de livres de pots-de-vin de BAE Systems

TIMESONLINE: Blair under pressure over al-Yamamah 'bribes'

Mark Alexander
China’s Internet Censorship Model “Spreading Like a Virus”

THE TELEGRAPH: Dozens of countries are copying China's methods of censoring the internet, Amnesty International said yesterday.
In advance of a live webcast to discuss internet freedom, Amnesty gave warning that censorship was a "virus" that was infecting countries round the world.

Tim Hancock, Amnesty's international campaigns director, said: "The 'Chinese model' of an internet that allows economic growth but not free speech or privacy is growing in popularity, from a handful of countries five years ago to dozens of governments today who block sites and arrest bloggers." Censoring of internet is 'spreading like virus' (more) By Richard Spencer in Beijing

Richard Spencer’s blog: The great firewall of China

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Machen Sie es doch leichter!

NZZ: Die EU-Kommission will die Situation von Flüchtlingen und Asylbewerbern verbessern und schlägt ein Bleiberecht vor: Wer mindestens fünf Jahre legal in einem EU-Land gelebt hat, soll nicht mehr zurückgeschickt werden.

(sda) Die EU-Kommission will mit dem am Mittwoch in Brüssel präsentierten Gesetzesvorschlag an die EU-Staaten die Diskriminierung von Flüchtlingen beseitigen. Denn für andere Personen aus Nicht-EU-Ländern gilt das Bleiberecht bereits.

Zudem werde dadurch die vollständige Integration von Flüchtlingen verbessert, argumentierte EU-Justizkommissar Franco Frattini. Der Gesetzesvorschlag ist Teil eines umfassenden Pakets zur EU-Asylpolitik. Er gehört nicht zum - auch für die Schweiz relevanten - Schengen/Dublin-Gesetzesbestand. EU-Kommission will Bleiberecht für Asylsuchende einführen: Keine Ausweisung mehr nach fünf Jahren
Mark Alexander