Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Desalination No Answer to Water Shortage

GENEVA (Reuters) - Removing salt from sea water to overcome a worldwide shortage of drinking water could end up worsening the crisis, environmental group WWF warned on Tuesday.

Desalination, the filtering and evaporation of sea water, is very energy-intensive and involves significant emissions of greenhouse gases that scientists say are a factor in the shrinking supplies of freshwater, the Swiss-based group said.

Spain, Saudi Arabia, Australia and other arid countries should rely more on water conservation and recycling and avoid huge desalination projects that have been linked to pollution and ecosystem damage. WWF says desalination no answer to water crisis (more)

Mark Alexander
Sarkozy and Zapatero Form New Alliance and Call for a “Single Legal Personality” for Europe!

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Photo courtesy of The Telegraph
THE TELEGRAPH: The Government was in chaos over the European constitution last night as a damaging rift opened between Tony Blair and Gordon Brown over whether a referendum may be necessary to approve plans to hand more power to Brussels.

Only two days before a crucial summit that will decide whether the EU takes greater control over British policy on justice, policing and foreign affairs, open disagreement over tactics broke out at the very top of government.

Last night the Tories said the rights of the British people to be governed by their own Parliament were being put at risk by "confusion" and "bad feeling" caused by the long drawn out handover of power from Mr Blair to Mr Brown.

Mr Blair's problems mounted further when President Nicolas Sarkozy of France dashed hopes of a new Anglo-French accord over the constitution and instead joined Spain to demand a massive extension of EU powers. EU reform chaos as Blair and Brown disagree (more) By Toby Helm and Bruno Waterfield

Mark Alexander

Monday, June 18, 2007

Tony Blair

BBC: Tony Blair has always stood out from the crowd.

At school he drove his teachers to distraction, constantly questioning their authority. At university, he acted out his rock star fantasies as the lead singer of a band.

Few at that stage would have predicted a career in the sober world of politics, even though Blair's charisma and ability to charm people were evident from an early age.

The story of his rise to power is certainly not a rags to riches tale - he was born with every advantage in life - but it is no less remarkable for that.

It is the story of how a middle class, privately-educated barrister - the son of a would-be Tory MP - went on to become the most successful leader in the history of the Labour Party, profoundly changing it and the country in the process.

And how a man once seen as a lightweight - preoccupied with his own image and popularity - became one of the most powerful and controversial figures on the world stage. The Tony Blair story (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Tony Blair's time at the top

Mark Alexander
”The Truth About Muhammad”: The Koran is a Fraud!



BUY: 'The Truth About Muhammad'

Mark Alexander
Salman Rushdie





BUY: Shalimar the Clown

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Rushdie knighthood condemned

Mark Alexander
A Health Insurance Model America Cannot Afford to Ignore

THE BOSTON GLOBE: MASSACHUSETTS isn't the first place to mandate that everyone buy insurance as a way to achieve universal health coverage, and it isn't the first to get queasy about seeing through that solution.

Like Americans, the Swiss were not eager to accept the double principles of universal coverage and a mandate on individuals to purchase health insurance. It took almost a century and political debates as contentious as those in the Massachusetts Legislature before these two elements were added to the Swiss system in 1996.

What made a very reluctant Swiss population finally accept (by a small majority of 52 percent) such a fundamental change? Prior to the individual mandate, insurers were largely unregulated and could reject older people or those in poor health or charge them very high premiums. As a result, lifetime coverage was uncertain and health insurance was increasingly unaffordable for people with low incomes.

The goals of the Swiss reforms sound familiar to Massachusetts: Cover everyone, make insurance more affordable for low and moderate income people, and control health care costs. The individual mandate was combined with insurance market reforms that require Swiss insurers to offer a standardized, comprehensive benefit package defined by the federal government. Individuals can choose from products that have different deductibles (ranging from $240 to $2,050), and they have the right to change health insurers every year. Federal subsidies are available to low and moderate income people to make coverage more affordable.

Eleven years later, Switzerland has achieved its goal of universal coverage: Everyone has access to the same comprehensive health insurance coverage, at the same premiums, and to the same quality of medical care. The Swiss example on health insurance reform (more) By Béatrice Schaad Noble

Mark Alexander
Gaza’s Christians Appeal for Help in the Face of Muslim Extremists

THE JERUSALEM POST: Christians living in Gaza City on Monday appealed to the international community to protect them against increased attacks by Muslim extremists. Many Christians said they were prepared to leave the Gaza Strip as soon as the border crossings are reopened.

The appeal came following a series of attacks on a Christian school and church in Gaza City over the past few days.
Father Manuel Musalam, leader of the small Latin community in the Gaza Strip, said masked gunmen torched and looted the Rosary Sisters School and the Latin Church. Gaza’s Christians fear for their lives (more) By Khaled Abu Toameh

Mark Alexander
New Zealanders Urged Not to Visit Fiji

THE NEW ZEALAND HERALD: Prime Minister Helen Clark today vowed that further sanctions against Fiji would be considerable and she urged New Zealanders to reconsider before taking up cheap holidays.

Miss Clark told reporters that Cabinet today talked about the response to the expulsion of High Commissioner Michael Green and decisions would take about a week.

"There are some other things that can be done," she said.

"What Fiji's done is a serious and significant act. Our response must be serious and significant and we are not going to be rushed into that."

Fiji's interim Prime Minister Commodore Voreqe (Frank) Bainimarama accused Mr Green of interfering in Fiji's domestic affairs -- a charge New Zealand rejects. Clark urges NZers not to visit Fiji ahead of further sanctions (more)

Mark Alexander
Separation of Church and State

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD: Opinion - The debate about religion and politics in Western societies - concerning that which belongs to Caesar and that which belongs to God - is as old as democracy and is unlikely to be resolved. After all, the debate itself is part of the democratic process. However, the discussion about church and state has intensified in recent years due, in part, to the rise of Western atheism.

Most recently in Australia the focus has been on the Catholic Church, in particular two of its leaders - Cardinal George Pell in Sydney and Archbishop Barry Hickey in Perth. On Friday Lee Rhiannon, the leader of the NSW Greens, sought to have Pell investigated for contempt of Parliament. It is most unlikely Pell will be found guilty of contempt. Separation of church and state is fundamental - when it suits (more) By Gerard Henderson

Mark Alexander
Pope Calls for an End to All Conflicts

THE SCOTSMAN: POPE Benedict made one of his strongest peace appeals yesterday, calling for an end to all wars and saying the people of the Middle East had had enough of "the horrors of combat, terrorism and blind violence".

The Pope made his appeal at the birthplace of Saint Francis of Assisi, who abandoned a life of luxury to embrace poverty, peacemaking and preaching. Papal plea to end conflicts (more)

Mark Alexander
Muslim World All Het Up Over Knighthood for Salman Rushdie

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Photo of religious students burning effigies of the Queen and Salman Rushdie courtesy of Times Online
TIMESONLINE: Salman Rushdie should be denied his knighthood because it is an insult to “the sentiments of Muslims across the world” and is creating religious hatred, the Pakistani parliament said today.

Muslim hardliners burnt effigies of the Queen and Rushdie and shouted “Kill him, kill him”, when news of a knighthood for the author of ‘The Satanic Verses’ in the Queen’s Birthday Honours reached the Pakistani city of Multan.

Iran - which forced the writer into a decade in hiding after issuing a fatwa against him in 1989 - has also condemned the honour. Strip Rushdie of his honour, demands Pakistan (more)

THE GUARDIAN:
Rushdie knighthood ‘justifies suicide attacks’

Mark Alexander
Adieu François!

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Photo grâce à Google Images (France)
LE FIGARO: Elle s’est expliquée lundi matin sur France Inter sur sa séparation d’avec François Hollande, mais dit ne lui garder "aucune rancœur ou rancune". Ce dernier assure que cet évènement n'aura "pas de conséquence politique".

« Nous avons décidé de ne plus être ensemble ». Ségolène Royal, sur France Inter, a confirmé lundi la séparation du couple qu’elle formait avec François Hollande, annoncée dimanche soir. Dans une interview réalisée samedi matin mais qui n’aurait du être diffusée que mardi, l’ex-candidate socialiste revient sur cette rupture qu’elle ne « commentera sur aucun autre média ». Une révélation qui ne devait pas intervenir dimanche soir, mais lundi matin, Ségolène Royal ne souhaitant pas interférer avec les résultats. "Il y a eu des fuites qui ont brisé le calendrier" a indiqué Thierry Masure, le journaliste de l'AFP qui a recueilli la confidence de Ségolène Royal le 9 juin, la veille du premier tour des législatives. Ségolène Royal : "Nous avons décidé de ne plus être ensemble" (suivant) Par Laurent Suply et Samuel Potier

WELTONLINE:
Als Ségolène Royal ihren Mann hinauswarf

NZZ:
Trennung «ohne politische Folgen»: Hollande äussert sich über das Ende seiner Beziehung zu Royal

TIMESONLINE:
France’s warring political couple separate

THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD:
Royal splits from partner and goes after his job

FAZ:
Ohne Rücksicht auf François

Mark Alexander
The Potential “Dire Consequences” for World Peace Posed by Turkey: It Could "Set the World on Fire"

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Flag of Turkey courtesy of Google Images
SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: In Turkey, the military and the government are engaged in an all-out struggle for power. The country is deeply divided, and decidedly unstable. Turkish writer Ahmet Altan describes his country's paradoxes and warns of the potentially dire consequences.

Turkey is moving toward a great -- and possibly final -- settling of accounts. But it is not the feared divisions of race or religion which are at play here. The country is crippled by a more fundamental and dangerous divide (more...). The "cultural divide" reigning throughout the Republican years has become very deep indeed.

Currently in Turkey, there is, on the one hand, a great mass of people who leave their shoes at the door before entering the house; whose women cover their heads; whose men go out in the street in pajamas; whose teenage boys frequent coffeehouses while girls live under a completely repressive rule; people whose homes are lit with cheap florescent bulbs; who enjoy a type of music somewhere between folk and arabesque; who have perhaps never read a book, never danced, never been to a restaurant as husband and wife, never gone to the theater; who have little education and profess strong religious beliefs.

On the other hand, there are those who went to high school at Robert College, with its girls' lyceum; who have danced at college parties or weddings, who go to movies, who read books, though not a lot; who are relatively well-educated; whose taste in music ranges from pop to classical; whose homes are decorated relatively tastefully; whose women don't cover their heads; who may not permit their teenage girls to date but look the other way when they do; who believe in God but pay little attention to prayers; who drink alcohol in mixed company though they may not know much about wines; who follow newspapers, watch talk shows, feel they are more progressive than the first group and live largely Western lives. The Turkish Threat to World Peace (more)

Mark Alexander
The Shrinking World of Food

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Photo of the Ayme family of Tingo, Ecuador courtesy of TIME
TIME: Originally the food of emperors, the cuisine known as kaiseki is the pinnacle of Japanese eating—and few restaurants serve a more refined menu than Kikunoi, in the former imperial capital of Kyoto. The experience begins before a single plate is served, with the setting: a tatami-mat room, bare save for the tokonoma, the alcove in the corner that displays a single scroll of calligraphy and a seasonally appropriate flower, today a lily. Then the food begins to flow, course after course of carefully trimmed portions, delivered by a kimono-clad server: a single piece of sea-bream sushi wrapped in bamboo leaf, a tiny grilled ayu fish with water-pepper vinegar, fried prawns and bamboo shoots with an egg-yolk-and-cream sauce. Kaiseki dining is the product of centuries of cultural evolution, but though Kikunoi is high-end—as the bill will indicate—its cuisine is meant to be a grand elaboration of the basic Japanese home meal: rice, fish, pickles, vegetables and miso soup, artfully presented in small, healthy portions.

"I believe that Japanese cuisine is something embedded in Japanese people's DNA," says Kikunoi's owner, Yoshihiro Murata. That may be true, but it's a legacy under assault, increasingly crowded out by fast, convenient, Westernized food. These days, Murata says sadly, his college-age daughter doesn't see much difference between cheap restaurant food and the haute cuisine he makes. "I think that in Japan, people should eat good Japanese food," he says. "But they are far away from it."

Japan is not alone. Food and diet are the cornerstones of any culture, one of the most reliable symbols of national identity. Think of the long Spanish lunch followed by the afternoon siesta, a rhythm of food and rest perfectly suited to the blistering heat of the Iberian peninsula in summer. Think of the Chinese meal of rice, vegetables and (only recently) meat, usually served in big collective dishes, the better for extended clans to dine together. National diets come to incorporate all aspects of who we are: our religious taboos, class structure, geography, economy, even government. When we eat together, "we are ordering the world around us and defining the community most important to us," says Martin Jones, a bioarchaeologist at Cambridge University and author of the new book Feast: Why Humans Share Food.

Even the traditions we learn from others we adopt and adapt in ways that make them our own. Japan received chopsticks from China and tempura from Portugal. Tomatoes, that staple of pasta and pizza, arrived in Southern Europe only as part of the Columbian Exchange (so-called because of Christopher Columbus' journeys to the New World, where tomatoes originated). "A lot of what we think of as deeply rooted cultural traditions are really traceable back to global exchange," says Miriam Chaiken, a nutritional anthropologist at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. How the World Eats (more) By Bryan Walsh

Mark Alexander
Let the People Decide!

TIMESONLINE: We must not be cheated of the promised vote on Europe

On Thursday, June 5, 1975, the United Kingdom held its only, referendum on Europe. This was to endorse the British membership of the European Community, which had already been ratified by Parliament in 1971; the treaty of accession had been signed on January 22, 1972.

The referendum put the question in this form: “Do you think that the United Kingdom should stay in the European Community (the common market)?” It has since been objected that this formulation was biased in two ways: by referring to “staying in”, it put the public preference for the status quo on the side of a “yes” vote; by referring to the “common market”, it implied that this was all that Britain was joining. The merger of the European institutions had taken place as far back as 1967. There has never been a referendum on joining the European Union. That body was created only in 1993, under the Maastricht treaty.

The result of the referendum in 1975 was decisive. England recorded a 68.7 per cent “yes” vote, on a 65 per cent turnout. Scotland had a 58.4 per cent “yes” vote; Wales 64.8 per cent. The only negative votes were in the Scottish fringes, with the Western Isles voting “no” by 70.5 per cent.

However, all this is a long time ago. The parents and grandparents of the present generation voted to stay in the common market 32 years ago; that does not tell us much about public attitudes to constitutional changes in the European Union in 2007. No one now aged less than 50 could have had a vote in 1975. Angela Merkel’s dream; Britain’s nightmare (more) By William Rees-Mogg

Mark Alexander
Clear Win for Sarkozy But No Landslide

THE TELEGRAPH: Nicolas Sarkozy's centre-right UMP party won a majority in the parliamentary elections in France last night but it failed to pull off the landslide "blue tsunami" many had predicted.

In a shock defeat, Alain Juppé, the powerful ecology minister and government number two, lost his seat in Bordeaux to a Socialist party candidate. The opposition Socialists did not suffer the record slump that many had predicted, according to early results.

The results were a blow to Mr Sarkozy, who has appeared to be unstoppable since his presidential victory on May 6. But his party's victory should still give him enough room to start pushing his reforms through parliament. Setback for Sarkozy in parliamentary elections (more) By Henry Samuel

REUTERS:
Sarkozy wins poll despite resurgent left

THE TELEGRAPH:
Royal and Hollande separate after 29 years

NZZ:
Dämpfer für Sarkozy-Lager: Überraschende Gewinne der Sozialisten

Mark Alexander
Multicultural BBC Attacked for Being Anti-Christian, Pro-Liberal, Pro-Left, Politically Correct, Anti-Conservative, Anti-American, Pro-Islamic, and Anti-Capitalist

THE DAILY MAIL: The BBC is criticised for its liberal leanings in an official report published today, leading to claims that the corporation is "institutionally biased".

BBC bosses have been attacked for not reflecting a "broader range of views" and not thinking outside of its Left-leaning "comfort zone" in its programming.

The report, commissioned by the BBC, also attacks the way the corporation has pandered to politically motivated celebrities such as Bob Geldof and allowed schedules to be hijacked by special interest groups promoting trendy issues.

As part of the report's investigations, senior figures at the corporation were forced to admit it was guilty of promoting Left-wing views and an anti-Christian sentiment. Lambasting for the 'trendy Left-wing bias' of BBC bosses (more) By Paul Revoir

THE TELEGRAPH:
The BBC can't kick its addiction to bias By Damian Thompson

Mark Alexander

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Gianfranco Ferré ist gestorben

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Foto dank der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung
FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: 17. Juni 2007 Die Modewelt trauert um Gianfranco Ferré. Der weltberühmte italienische Couturier starb am Sonntag im Alter von 62 Jahren in einem Mailänder Krankenhaus an einer Hirnblutung. Der am 15. August 1944 in Legnano bei Mailand geborene Designer war am Freitagabend in kritischem Zustand auf die Intensivstation gebracht worden. Sein Zustand hatte sich seither stetig verschlechtert, berichtete die Nachrichtenagentur Ansa unter Berufung auf enge Miterbeiter Ferrés.

Der rundliche Designer mit dem markanten Vollbart zählte zu den bekanntesten Modemachern Italiens. Weil er zunächst Architekt werden wollte und auch in der Mode durch klare Linien bestach, wurde er auch „Architekt der Mode“ genannt. Ferré hatte 1978 seine erste eigene Damenkollektion präsentiert. Meist ließ er sich bei seinen Entwürfen von Eindrücken seiner Reisen nach Indien inspirieren. Statt schriller Extravaganz wartete der Couturier mit tragbar-femininer Mode auf. Gianfranco Ferré ist tot (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Blair, President of Europe? 64% of Germans, 60% of Britons and 53% of French Respondents Say He Would Not be Good for the Job, According to an FT/Harris Poll

FT: Tony Blair, the British prime minister, could end up swapping Downing Street for a job as the first full-time European Union president, under a plan being actively touted by Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president.

Mr Sarkozy is understood to have discussed the idea with other EU leaders ahead of next week’s European summit, Mr Blair’s last major international event as prime minister.

His support for Mr Blair taking on a big European job is a remarkable sign of Anglo-French rapprochement since Mr Sarkozy replaced Jacques Chirac as president last month. Push for Blair as new EU president (more) By George Parker in Brussels, John Thornhill in Paris and James Blitz in London

Mark Alexander
Hamastan in «Schock»

NZZ: Mit der Machtübernahme der radikalislamistischen Hamas im Gazastreifen wird die politische Spaltung der Palästinenser zementiert. Zwei verschiedene palästinensische Welten hat es aber schon lange gegeben.

«Wir stehen noch unter Schock», sagt Fahdi Adwan. Als erwache er aus einem Albtraum, ohne zu wissen, ob er wirklich vorbei sei. Drei Tage und drei Nächte hat der 28-jährige Palästinenser sich mit seiner Frau, dem 18 Monate alten Sohn und der dreijährigen Tochter, in seiner Wohnung verkrochen.

Die Familie lebt in unmittelbarer Nähe der Kommandozentrale der palästinensischen Sicherheitskräfte in Gaza. Um dieses Symbol der Macht von Präsident Abbas und seiner Fatah haben die Hamas-Milizen die Entscheidungsschlacht gegen die Abbas-treuen Truppen geführt. «Die Explosionen, der Granatenbeschuss, das Maschinengewehrfeuer und dann noch der Stromausfall liessen die Kinder vor Angst schreien, sie haben nicht geschlafen und nicht gegessen.» Hamastan und Fatahland: Kontrolle der Hamas über den Gazastreifen zementiert Spaltung der Palästinenser (mehr) Von 
Silke Mertins

Mark Alexander
Carnival Atmosphere in Rome at the Gay Pride Parade

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Image courtesy of Google Images

BBC: Tens of thousands of gay rights activists have marched through the streets of Rome, demanding more legal recognition for same-sex couples.

Colourful banners at the Gay Pride parade urged Italy's government to override the Vatican's objections to granting gay couples greater rights.

The march ended at the official seat of the Pope as bishop of Rome.

The Vatican has attacked a proposed law giving more rights to unmarried couples - both heterosexual and homosexual. Rome marchers demand gay rights (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Rome hosts Gay Pride parade

Mark Alexander
Europa und Amerika brauchen einander

WELTONLINE: Europa pflegt Klischees von Amerika. Und die USA stecken wegen Europa voller Minderwertigkeitskomplexe. Der amerikanische Schriftsteller Louis Begley beschreibt für WELT ONLINE diese Geschichte der Missverständnisse. Und er stellt fest: Präsident Bush hat Schande über die Nation gebracht. Wir können nicht ohne einander (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Nur mässige Beteiligung in den Parlamentswahlen Frankreichs

NZZ: Für die zweite Runde der Parlamentswahlen in Frankreich zeichnet sich bloss eine mässige Beteiligung ab. Bis 17 Uhr hatten 50 Prozent der Wahlberechtigten ihre Stimme abgegeben. Bei der Präsidentschaftswahl vor sechs Wochen waren es um diese Zeit bereits 75 Prozent.

(sda/dpa/afp) Bei der zweiten Runde der Parlamentswahl in Frankreich zeichnet sich eine relativ schwache Wahlbeteiligung ab. Gegen 17 Uhr hätten knapp 50 Prozent der Wahlberechtigten ihre Stimme abgegeben, teilte das Innenministerium am Sonntag in Paris mit. Mässige Wahlbeteiligung in Frankreich: Zweite Runde der Parlamentswahlen (mehr)

LE MONDE:
Participation en légère hausse aux législatives par rapport au premier tour

BBC:
Sarkozy party wins in French poll

TIMESONLINE:
Sarkozy honeymoon fades as the voters reject his ‘blue tidal wave’ By Charles Bremner in Paris

Was Sarko sloshed?

Mark Alexander
Iran Angered by Queen’s Knighthood for Salman

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran accused Britain on Sunday of insulting Islam by awarding a knighthood to Salman Rushdie, whose novel "The Satanic Verses" prompted the late Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to issue a fatwa death warrant for him.

The Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman said Rushdie, awarded for services to literature in the Queen's birthday honours list published on Saturday, was "one of the most hated figures" in the Islamic world. Iran condemns knighthood for author Rushdie (more)

WELTONLINE:
Iran protestiert gegen Rushdies Ritterschlag

Mark Alexander
Blair: Président d'Europe entière?

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Photo of Sarkozy and Blair showing their mutual sympathie: Blair tickled pink by Sarkozy's comment. Sarkozy to Blair: My goodness, Tone, hasn't your tummy grown!
THE MAIL ON SUNDAY: "Nicolas Sarkozy is very keen to see his friend Tony Blair in an influential position after he steps down as Prime Minister” - French government source

Tony Blair has been accused of 'knifing' Gordon Brown by holding secret discussions about a job as the first ever President of the European Union.

The Prime Minister was entertained in Paris by new French president Nicolas Sarkozy at an upmarket restaurant called Thiou, where they agreed a joint agenda on Europe.

French political sources have confirmed that President Sarkozy is keen for Mr Blair to take on a full-time paid role as the 'face' of the EU after he quits Downing Street.

But such an appointment would be a disaster for the Chancellor, who has long struggled to escape from the shadow of his political rival.

And Eurosceptic campaigners warn that the prospect of a lucrative post-retirement job in Brussels would compromise Mr Blair's ability to strike a good deal for Britain at this week's European summit, when EU leaders meet to agree a new treaty.

Critics claim this will effectively be a full-scale European Constitution by the back door. Revealed: Secret meeting where French President offered Blair EU President job (more) By Jonathan Oliver and Peter Allen

Mark Alexander
Prince Bandar’s Daughter Received “Honeymoon of a Lifetime” at BAE’s Expense, Says Peter Gardiner

THE SUNDAY TIMES: THE British arms firm BAE Systems secretly paid nearly £250,000 for a honeymoon for the daughter of Prince Bandar, the Saudi Arabian prince at the centre of bribery allegations.

A senior BAE executive authorised the payments, allowing Bandar’s daughter to enjoy a six-week honeymoon in luxury resorts in Singapore, Malaysia, Bali, Australia and Hawaii. The couple stayed in five-star hotels costing up to £4,000 a night and had a private jet trip to the Great Barrier Reef.

Peter Gardiner, managing director of the travel agency that organised the honeymoon, said: “BAE instructed me to give Bandar's daughter and her husband the honeymoon of a lifetime at BAE’s expense. Who says that big business doesn’t have a heart?” BAE paid for luxury Saudi honeymoon (more) By David Leppard

SAUDI EMBASSY: Prince Bandar

WIKIPEDIA: Prince Bandar

PBS: Prince Bandar: Interview

BBC: BBC Profile: Prince Bandar

THE GUARDIAN: 'This is an extremely serious allegation ... ': Prince Bandar's statement

MUCKRAKER: Crooked Bank May Be Tie Between Prince Bandar, Big Defense Contractor

DEMOCRACY NOW: Did Bush Cut Secret Oil Deal With Saudis Ahead of 2004 Election?

THE GUARDIAN: Prince used cash in BAE-linked account for palace: Former Saudi ambassador says $17m withdrawal was for legitimate expense By David Leigh and Rob Evans

Mark Alexander
Limiting Immigration: Tearing Up the Race Card. “Integration” and “Cohesion” Are Back in Vogue. But Still No Mention of Islam and Shari’ah

THE SUNDAY TIMES: For years the baleful shade of Enoch Powell silenced debate about immigration numbers, however rational. Playing the numbers game, as it was called, was always associated with the even more shameful misdemeanour of playing the race card.

As recently as November 2003, David Blunkett as home secretary blithely announced that he could not see the need for a limit on immigrants, nor did he think there was a maximum number of people that could be housed in this country.

This astonishingly silly comment passed almost without protest; it was expressing the unthinking orthodoxy of the day. It was fortunate perhaps that Blunkett and the government believed that numbers didn’t matter, since they hadn’t the slightest idea what the numbers were.

The director of enforcement and removals at the Immigration and Nationality Directorate admitted last year that he had not “the faintest idea” how many illegal immigrants were living here. Not only has the government lost control of this country’s boundaries; until recently it didn’t think that mattered.

How quickly things change in politics. Now even the most right-on Labour figures are playing the numbers game, with the race card up their sleeves. Last month Margaret “Enver” Hodge appeared to be doing just that with her announcement that indigenous people in her constituency of Barking felt justly aggrieved that they could not get council housing, while recent immigrants could. They had indeed “a legitimate sense of entitlement” that should not be overridden by new immigrants. The wind was clearly changing. Should we limit immigrants to Europeans? (more) By Minette Marrin

Mark Alexander
Tony Blair to Sign Britain Up to EU Human Rights Charter

THE SUNDAY TIMES: Tony Blair is preparing to cave in to pressure to sign up Britain to a sweeping new human rights charter.

The prime minister is ready to do a deal over the European charter of fundamental rights this week amid fears that plans for a treaty to replace the failed European Union constitution will collapse if he refuses to compromise.

However Downing Street is pessimistic about the general prospect of a successful outcome to the EU summit, starting in Brussels on Thursday.

The charter sets out a series of rights and privileges in areas from the workplace to benefits. As well as enshrining the right to strike, it allows all employees to limit their weekly working hours, a law that does not apply in Britain at present. Blair to do deal over EU charter (more) By Isabel Oakeshott and Nicola Smith

Mark Alexander
Beware! First It Was Your Fags, Now It’s Your Guns! Bloomberg to Make Bid for the White House

THE SUNDAY TIMES: IT started as a small group of American mayors worried about gun violence. It has since grown into a vociferous national organisation that has challenged the powerful US gun lobby and boosted speculation about the presidential prospects of Michael Bloomberg, the mayor of New York.

The latest recruit to Bloomberg’s coalition of Mayors Against Illegal Guns is Patricia Tucker, the widow of a North Carolina sheriff who was shot in the face by a teenager on probation for an earlier offence. He was found to have bought a shotgun from a dealer who allegedly should have refused the sale.

Tucker appeared last week in a new advertising campaign aimed at Congressional allies of the National Rifle Association, the defender of American gunowners’ rights. Bloomberg’s assault on one of Washington’s most powerful lobbying groups has marked him out as both a target for right-wing critics and as a bold, energetic campaigner whose immense personal wealth might enable him to side-step the traditional primary-filled path to the White House.

As the billionaire founder and majority owner of the Bloomberg media empire, the mayor is considering spending $1 billion of his personal fortune on an independent campaign in the 2008 White House race. Bloomberg has gun lobby — and the presidency — in his sights (more) By Tony Allen-Mills

Mark Alexander
Church of England Blasted for Being “Institutionally Racist”

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: The Church of England is "institutionally racist", a damning internal report has concluded.

Ethnic minorities are being marginalised in parishes and black and Asian clergy have little chance of reaching the Church's higher echelons, says the study, to be released this week.

It warns that too little has been done to tackle "institutional racism" - the phrase used to devastating effect by Sir William Macpherson, the former High Court judge, in his findings on the bungled police investigation into the murder of the black teenager Stephen Lawrence.

The report, commissioned by the archbishops of Canterbury and York, is expected to spark a fierce debate at next month's General Synod in York. Delegates will be asked to examine the clergy's failure to "integrate and utilise" the gifts of ethnic minorities. Church of England 'institutionally racist' (more) By Jonathan Wynne-Jones

Mark Alexander
Black to Black: Powell to Back Obama's White House Bid

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: One has held high office in both the United States armed forces and President George W Bush's Republican administration. The other, a Democrat, is seeking to become America's first black president.

Now Washington is buzzing with talk that Barack Obama, the candidate for the White House, and Colin Powell, the former general and secretary of state, may join forces.

Last week, Mr Powell revealed that he has been advising the senator from Illinois on foreign policy - provoking a flurry of speculation about the plans and ambitions of both men.

Mr Powell, 70, who left office in January 2005 under a cloud left by the war in Iraq, has served three Republican presidents, but made clear that he is considering backing a Democrat to succeed his former boss, George W Bush. Powell ready to jump on Obama bandwagon (more) By Tim Shipman

Mark Alexander
Agents of the Enemy? BBC “Sorry” for Calling Jerusalem the Capital of Israel

"Licking the arse of the Arabs?"

THE JERUSALEM POST: The BBC apologized this week for referring to Jerusalem as Israel's capital, and promised not to repeat "the mistake," following a complaint by four British organizations.

Arab Media Watch, Muslim Public Affairs Committee, Friends of Al-Aksa and the Institute of Islamic Political Thought sent a joint complaint to the BBC after a presenter on its Football Focus program on March 24 mentioned that Jerusalem was Israel's capital and "historic soul."

The BBC's Editorial Complaints Unit posted a response on its Web site: "The reference was a passing one in a context where the focus was on sport, not politics. While recognizing the sensitivity of the issue of the status of Jerusalem, the ECU took the view that the program-makers had taken sufficient action by acknowledging the error and rectifying the Web site." BBC sorry for calling Jerusalem capital of Israel (more) By Jonny Paul

Mark Alexander

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Illegal Immigrants Employed In Sarkozy’s Residence

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Photo courtesy of the BBC
BBC: French police have launched an inquiry into how two illegal immigrants came to be employed at an official residence used by President Nicolas Sarkozy.

The two men from Mali, who were renovating a house in Versailles, were arrested this week for having false residency papers.

They have now been released but could face prosecution or deportation.

Mr Sarkozy, who became president in May, has a reputation for being tough on illegal migrants.

He has promised to deport thousands of people without residency papers in 2007. Sarkozy illegal immigrant probe (more)

Mark Alexander
The New Puritanism: Have We Become a Nation of BOF’s?

TIME: I have just drunk three-quarters of a bottle of red wine for lunch, all on my own. It is not something I ever do nowadays, though there was once a time when I did it quite regularly in the company of other journalists. But I did it today because, having been asked to write about the rise and fall of the liquid lunch, I was in nostalgic mood.

In London's Fleet Street, in the old days — by which I mean up to about 20 years ago — drinking at lunchtime was prodigious. Three-quarters of a bottle per person would not have been considered a lot. Even two bottles would have been thought unexceptional. And while journalists were probably the heaviest drinkers among London's white-collar workers, they were not alone in liking a bibulous midday meal. Bankers and businessmen, publishers and authors, politicians and civil servants all shared this weakness in varying degrees.

Now, of course, you would be hard-pressed to find anyone in any profession in Britain — let alone in more abstemious countries — who orders more than a Diet Coke or a bottle of mineral water at lunchtime; anyone taking even a single glass of wine with his meal can expect disapproving looks. So shocking has the idea of the liquid lunch become that one wonders how it could ever have existed. Second-Glass Citizens (more) By Alexander Chancellor

Mark Alexander
Gaza: “Fatah Militants Storm Parliament”

BBC: Hundreds of Fatah gunmen have stormed Hamas-controlled institutions in the West Bank, including the Palestinian parliament building in Ramallah.

The gunmen reportedly tried to seize the Palestinian Legislative Council's second deputy speaker, Hassan Khuraishah, but staff intervened.

Fatah supporters also took over the Hamas-controlled council in Nablus.

The clashes came after Fatah was ousted from Gaza by Hamas, ending a week of clashes which left more than 100 dead. Fatah militants storm parliament (more)

Mark Alexander
Arab Nations Condemn Hamas and Back Abbas

BBC: Arab nations have condemned the latest infighting in Gaza, pledging fresh support for the embattled Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

His Fatah faction has been ousted from Gaza by rival Hamas militants, ending a week of fierce feuding in which at least 100 people died.

After talks in Cairo, Arab League foreign ministers urged Hamas and Fatah to end their rivalry and co-operate.

A key Hamas leader earlier said he remained willing to work with Mr Abbas.

Khaled Meshaal, Hamas's political leader, who lives in exile in Syria, said Mr Abbas remained the "legitimate" president.

However, Hamas declared as illegal an earlier decree by Mr Abbas that replaced its Prime Minister, Ismail Haniya. Arab League condemns Gaza 'crime' (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Gaza: Arab nations back Abbas

Mark Alexander
Prince William to Quit Army Early to Learn the “Art of Kingship”

THE DAILY MAIL: Prince William will leave the Army to become a full-time working royal in just 18 months, it can be revealed.

The second in line to the throne will finish his military training at the beginning of 2009 and plans to devote himself to charity work as well learning about the "art of kingship".

He insists, however, that he will not become what he describes as a "full-time meet and greeter", like other members of the Royal Family. William 'will quit Army early to learn how to be king' (more) By Rebecca English

Mark Alexander
Episcopal Church Moves One Step Closer to Splitting the Anglican Communion over Gay Issue

THE GUARDIAN: The impending division of the worldwide Anglican communion came a step closer yesterday as the rift over the way the church deals with homosexuality descended into acrimony.

The US Episcopal church rejected the demands of the rest of the church, headed by Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, that it should fall into line by refusing to conduct blessing services for gay couples or elect more gay bishops and allow disaffected conservative US congregations to have their own leadership. Anglican split comes closer as US church rejects demand over gays (more) By Stephen Bates

Mark Alexander
Debate in White House over Approach to Iran Intensifies

NEW YORK TIMES: WASHINGTON, June 15 — A year after President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced a new strategy toward Iran, a behind-the-scenes debate has broken out within the administration over whether the approach has any hope of reining in Iran’s nuclear program, according to senior administration officials.

The debate has pitted Ms. Rice and her deputies, who appear to be winning so far, against the few remaining hawks inside the administration, especially those in Vice President Dick Cheney’s office who, according to some people familiar with the discussions, are pressing for greater consideration of military strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities.

In the year since Ms. Rice announced the new strategy for the United States to join forces with Europe, Russia and China to press Iran to suspend its uranium enrichment activities, Iran has installed more than a thousand centrifuges to enrich uranium. The International Atomic Energy Agency predicts that 8,000 or so could be spinning by the end of the year, if Iran surmounts its technical problems. Strategy on Iran Stirs New Debate at White House (more) By Helene Cooper and David E. Sanger

Mark Alexander