Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Sarkozy à Moscou

LE FIGARO: Le président de la République française effectue aujourd'hui et demain sa première visite officielle en Russie.

« DÉFENDRE nos intérêts et dire franchement ce que nous pensons, c'est faisable. » Nicolas Sarkozy, en partant aujourd'hui pour Moscou, aura peut-être à l'esprit ce propos figurant dans le rapport que lui a récemment remis Hubert Védrine sur « La France et la mondialisation ». Cette visite officielle, certainement l'une des plus importantes depuis le début du quinquennat, aura valeur de test pour la diplomatie d'un président qui répète inlassablement que toutes les promesses du candidat Sarkozy seront tenues. Sa campagne, on s'en souvient, avait été émaillée d'engagements annonçant un durcissement à l'égard du Kremlin sur des sujets que Jacques Chirac évitait de mettre publiquement sur la table : la Tchétchénie, les droits de l'homme, le comportement « impérial » de la Russie vis-à-vis de son « étranger proche ». Dès sa prise de fonction, le nouveau président s'était prononcé pour un « dialogue franc, confiant, régulier » avec Moscou. Sarkozy rode sa nouvelle diplomatie à Moscou (suivant) Par Alain Barluet

Mark Alexander
Superreich in Deutschland

WELTONLINE: Die Zahl der Personen und Familien mit mehr als einer Milliarde Euro Vermögen wächst. Laut einem Magazin-Bericht gehören jetzt 122 Namen dazu. Doch an der Spitze stehen zwei alte Bekannte. Und die reichste Frau besitzt immerhin 8,75 Milliarden Euro.

Der Club der deutschen Milliardäre ist so groß wie nie zuvor: Wie das "Manager Magazin" berichtet, verfügen 122 Familien beziehungsweise Einzelpersonen über ein Vermögen von mindestens einer Milliarde Euro. Die Spitzenplätze nehmen dem Magazin zufolge erneut die Aldi-Brüder Karl (87) und Theo (85) mit 17,5 beziehungsweise 17 Milliarden Euro ein. Die beiden Eigentümer von Aldi-Süd und Aldi-Nord gehören auch zu den elf reichsten Menschen der Welt. Die reichste Großfamilie sei Brenninkmeijer (C & A) mit 25 Milliarden Euro. Zuwachs im Club der deutschen Milliardäre (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Terrorist Plots Mount in UK

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Photo of Sir Ian Blair courtesy of the BBC

BBC: The number of terrorist plots in the UK is "mounting" and the "magnitude" of their ambitions growing, Met Police chief Sir Ian Blair has warned MPs.

He was making the case to the Commons Home Affairs committee for extending the current 28-day limit for detaining terror suspects without charge.

Terror law watchdog Lord Carlile told MPs longer detention would not harm relations between Muslims and police.

He said foreign policy was more likely to "radicalise young people".

The government has said the time has come to re-examine the 28-day limit - which was doubled from 14 days in 2005 - because of the complexity and nature of the threat of terrorism. Met chief warns over terror plots (more)

Mark Alexander
Sainsbury’s to Delta Two: No Pensions, No Deal

THE TELEGRAPH: Members of the Sainsbury family will move to block the Qatari bid for the supermarket chain – unless a deal is struck with the group's pension fund trustees.

The Sainsbury family fear that Sir Philip Hampton, the chairman of Sainsbury, plans to recommend a 600p-a-share offer for the retailer from Delta Two – despite the fact that the Qatari-backed investment fund has yet to reach an agreement with the trustees of the Sainsbury pension fund.

A spokesman for the principal members of the family made clear their opposition to a deal unless the pension fund trustees are on board.

"We have consistently made clear the principles on which we would address any offer. Important among these is that the pension scheme is properly looked after," he said.

Without an agreement with the pension fund trustees, the family is expected to oppose the deal. Sainsbury deal hits deadlock over pensions (more) By Richard Fletcher and Ben Harrington

Mark Alexander
Iranian-German Footballer Offends Jewish Community

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: An Iranian-German soccer player who plays for the German national Under-21 side has asked not to play against Israel in a friendly on October 12. The team has accepted his request, angering Germany's Jewish lobby.

An Iranian-born player for Germany's under-21 national soccer team has caused controversy by asking to be excused from playing a match against Israel in Tel Aviv this Friday.

Ashkan Dejagah, 21, said in a statement posted on the German Football Federation's Web site that his reasons for not playing were "of a very personal nature and have to do with my close family."

But the player had previously been quoted in Bild newspaper as saying: "There are political reasons. Everyone knows I'm a German Iranian." Dejagah has dual citizenship. Berlin newspaper B.Z. quoted him as saying: "I have more Iranian than German blood in my veins. Besides, I'm doing this out of respect. After all, my parents are Iranian." Iranian-Born German Soccer Player Refuses to Play Israel (more)

Mark Alexander
The Musings of a President Out of Touch with Reality

TOWNHALL.COM: Whatever else his critics say of him, no one can fault President Bush for failing to go the extra mile in his efforts to show that neither he, nor the United States, is opposed to the Islamic faith, or to Muslim nations.

Last week, the president and Mrs. Bush hosted their seventh Iftaar Dinner, the celebration that breaks the Muslim fast during Ramadan. Immediately after 9/11, the president visited a Washington, D.C., mosque and proclaimed Islam a "religion of peace." He has frequently said that terrorists are not real Muslims, anymore than people who proclaim to be Christian and engage in violence are genuine Christians.

The president is the most openly evangelical Christian and faithful churchgoer since Jimmy Carter. And the evangelical community has mostly embraced him and twice voted for him in overwhelming numbers. But that constituency is likely to be troubled over something the president said in an interview with Al Arabiya television. In an official transcript released by the White House, the president said, "I believe in an almighty God, and I believe that all the world, whether they be Muslim, Christian, or any other religion, prays to the same God." Later in the interview, the president repeated his statement: "I believe there is a universal God. I believe the God that the Muslim prays to is the same God that I pray to. After all, we all came from Abraham. I believe in that universality."

To paraphrase a remark often attributed to the late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, everyone is entitled to his or her own faith, but everyone is not entitled to define the central doctrines of that faith. The doctrines of what is called Christianity not only stand in stark contrast to Islam, they also teach something contrary to what the president says he believes.

It is one thing to try to reach out to moderate and sincerely peaceful Muslims. It is quite another to say the claims of your own faith are of no greater importance than the often contradictory claims of another faith. If we all worship the same God, the president should answer the call of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Osama bin Laden, convert to Islam and no longer be a target of their wrath. What difference would it make if we all worship the same God? The Same God? (more) By Cal Thomas

Mark Alexander
Turning the US into a Nanny State

TOWNHALL.COM: With his book “Nanny State,” Denver Post columnist David Harsanyi has thrown a conservative-libertarian rope around a disturbing political and cultural trend -- the nannification of America by moral busybodies and nitpicking maternalists who use government power to micromanage our personal lives and protect us from ourselves. Whether it’s outlawing trans fats in New York City or tag on school playgrounds, Harsanyi says the “nannyists” among us are not only creating a new culture of dependency on government but also eroding what’s left of our individual freedoms. I talked to the author of “Nanny State: How Food Fascists, Teetotaling Do-Gooders, Priggish Moralists, and Other Boneheaded Bureaucrats Are Turning American Into a Nation of Children” by phone from his offices in Denver. Welcome to the Nanny State – An Interview (more) By Bill Steigerwald

Mark Alexander
More Than 20,000 Girls Under Fifteen at Risk of Genital Mutilation

BBC: More than 20,000 girls under 15 in England and Wales could be at risk of genital mutilation, a charity warns.

Forward, which campaigns against the practice, says health workers and local officials should do more to stop it.

The charity says its estimate of 20,000 girls at risk is conservative because many women are too ashamed or afraid to talk about their experiences.

Female genital mutilation is seen in some communities as an initiation into adulthood for young girls.

Forward founder Efua Dorkenoo said the government had introduced a law against the practice, as part of its child protection policies, which had to be applied at local level.

"We expect that on the ground at local authority level, the health professionals and the schools would be alert to it so they would actually mainstream the prevention into what they do," she said.

Female genital mutilation is practised in a number of mainly Muslim African communities, and the tradition can travel when immigrants settle abroad.

The practice is believed to reduce a woman's desire for sex, and therefore sex outside marriage, and can be carried out on girls as young as four.

The practice has no basis in religion and the victims can face a lifetime of physical or psychological problems.

In some cases the mutilation is carried out here. In others the children are taken to their families' countries in Africa or the Middle East. [Source - BBC: Thousands risk genital mutilation]

FORWARD

Mark Alexander
EU Treaty “Substantially Equivalent” to EU Constitution

BBC: The EU treaty is "substantially equivalent" to the EU Constitution thrown out by Dutch and French voters in 2005, MPs have said.

The European scrutiny committee said it should be "made clear" the UK can keep opt-outs of parts of the document.

The Conservatives said the government was now "morally bound" to hold a referendum on the treaty, as had been promised on the Constitution.

But ministers say the two documents are "substantially" different.

The treaty incorporates some of the old EU Constitution, on which Labour had promised a referendum before it was scuppered by the Dutch and French votes.

The Conservatives argue it is as much as 90% the same. EU treaty 'same as Constitution' (more)

Mark Alexander
Donate Your Organs on Death! It’s a Christian Duty, Says Church

BBC: The Church of England has declared organ donation to be a Christian duty, in keeping with giving oneself and one's possessions freely.

Body parts should not be mistaken for the person themselves, and the best way to treat them reverently is to use them to heal others, the Church said.

It was taking part in a House of Lords consultation on whether there should be an EU-wide position on organ donation.

The Church said it would welcome the creation of a European donor pool. Organ donation a ‘Christian duty’ (more)

Mark Alexander
Up to Seven Years in the Slammer for Stirring Up Hatred of Gays

DAILY MAIL: Stirring up hatred against homosexuals is to become a serious crime punishable with a seven-year jail sentence under a law announced last night.

The legislation - similar to laws already in force outlawing persecution on religious or racial grounds - will make criminals of those who express their views in ways that could lead to the bullying or harassment of gays.

The maximum sentence is longer than the average of around five years handed to rapists.

The announcement widened the rift between opposing supporters of freedom of speech and gay rights.

Christian groups condemned it as "a law to allow Christians to be locked up for what they believe".

But the gay pressure group Stonewall said those who disapprove of homosexuals would have nothing to fear from the law if they express their views in a manner that is "temperate" and "polite".

Justice Secretary Jack Straw told MPs the gay harassment law will be included as an amendment to the Criminal Justice and Immigration Bill currently going before Parliament, though ministers have yet to decide the wording.

Mr Straw said: "It is a measure of how far we have come as a society in the last ten years that we are now appalled by hatred and invective directed at people on the basis of their sexuality.

"It is time for the law to recognise this."

He raised the prospect of extending the law to cover to "transgendered" people and the disabled.

The new law aims to catch those who do not explicitly call for attacks or discrimination against homosexuals, as this is covered by existing incitement laws.

Instead, police will be allowed to pursue those who create an "atmosphere or climate" in which hatred or bullying can be fostered. Officials said it would not prohibit criticism of gay, lesbian and bisexual people or joke-telling. New law means anti-gay comments could lead to seven years in jail (more) By Steve Doughty and James Slack

Jim Davidson axed from Hell's Kitchen after calling gay Brian a 'shirt-lifter' By Paul Revoir

Firemen demoted and fined for shining torch on gay foursome in the bushes By Luke Salkeld

THE NEW YORK TIMES:
Aging and Gay: Fred Riley and Emile Dufoul

Mark Alexander

Monday, October 08, 2007

Fifteen Executions in Afghanistan

BBC: Fifteen people in Afghanistan have been put to death for crimes including murder, government officials say.

They say that the firing squad deaths are the second confirmed executions since the fall of the Taleban in 2001.

Officials say that the 15 were shot at Afghanistan's largest prison Pul-e-Charkhi. The last such executions were in April 2004.

Pul-e-Charkhi is a huge prison complex built in the 1970s on the outskirts of the Afghan capital, Kabul.

Commonplace

Correspondents say the vast and run-down jail is notorious for the disappearance and torture of thousands of Afghans during the country's communist era.

Officials say that the executions took place on Sunday evening according to Afghan law, which stipulates that condemned prisoners should be shot. Fifteen executed in Afghanistan (more)

Mark Alexander
”Death to the Dictator!”

BBC: A rare anti-government demonstration has been held in the Iranian capital during a speech at Tehran University by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

There were scuffles as hundreds of supporters and opponents of the president gathered outside the venue.

Eyewitnesses said police used tear gas to hold the demonstrators back.

Student leaders had challenged Mr Ahmadinejad to meet them after he spoke at Columbia University in the US of the freedoms enjoyed by Iranian students.

The BBC's Jon Leyne in Tehran says all gates to the university were locked and journalists were prevented from entering. Iran president faces rare protest (more)

NZZ: Ahmadinejad in Teheran als Diktator beschimpft: Demonstration bei Rede an der Universität

THE TELEGRAPH: Iranian students attack 'fascist Ahmadinejad'

Mark Alexander
Barosso Reveals All Now: “Europe is an Empire!”



Mark Alexander
Roberts Spencer on the “Islam is Peace” Campaign

With thanks to Die Realität for drawing my attention to this excellent video by Robert Spencer of JihadWatch


British Muslims launch 'Islam is Peace' campaign

Mark Alexander
Is the Party Over for the City of London? Probably Only for the Unlucky Ones

THE TELEGRAPH: Peter Taylor investigates a new report that predicts the credit crisis will see 6,500 financial jobs axed and the total bonus pool cut by 15pc

The City should brace itself for more than 6,000 job cuts and a significant fall in bonuses as the credit crisis weighs down on the financial services industry, according to a leading research group.

City firms will cull 2,000 professional positions by Christmas with employment to fall by 6,500 into 2008, the Centre for Economics and Business Research says in a report released today.

CEBR economist Sarah Bloomfield said one job would be cut for about every two that had been added so far this year.

But the redundancies will have only a small impact on what is otherwise a sector in robust health, with a record 349,100 jobs registered in the City this month.

"It will feel worse than it actually is because the City has become used to adding jobs at breakneck speed," Ms Bloomfield said. Thousands of City workers face redundancy (more)

Mark Alexander
Dispatches: Undercover Mosque

For how much longer are we, the British people, supposed to tolerate this extremely dangerous ideology? The following videos, dear readers, reveal the true Islam. This is Islam!



Part 2


Part 3


Part 4


Part 5


Part 6


Mark Alexander
Spiegel Interview with Israeli Historian Saul Friedländer

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Israeli historian Saul Friedländer, winner of the 2007 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, spoke to SPIEGEL about the importance of victims' accounts in researching the Holocaust and the failure of efforts in Germany to draw a line under the issue.

SPIEGEL: Professor Friedländer, in contrast to other accounts of the history of the Holocaust, in your book "Nazi Germany and the Jews, the Years of Extermination," you give us ample opportunity to hear from the victims through diaries and letters. Why didn't you limit your focus to the history of the perpetrators?

Saul Friedländer: Because that's not enough. We basically still needed a book that went beyond an analysis of German politics and included the environment -- in other words, the churches, the elites, the general population in Germany and in other countries -- and incorporated the voices of the victims, of those who were murdered.

SPIEGEL: Were you interested in the educational effect here, since the horror becomes more vivid this way?

Friedländer: No, many aspects only become clear from an examination of the victims' sources, not from official documents. For instance, the fact that the Jews in Germany and Western Europe didn't know what was going on -- and in Eastern Europe they didn't want to believe what they saw. Take my parents -- after their deportation from France in 1942, a friend wrote to my grandmother, who lived in Stockholm, to say that my parents had been sent to Germany or to a Jewish reservation in Poland. He had no idea that they had been murdered.

SPIEGEL: Would it have changed anything if the victims had known what was going on?

Friedländer: It does makes a considerable difference whether the Nazis murdered millions of people who didn't know what was going to happen to them or killed people who had already assumed the worst.

SPIEGEL: Because it explains why the extermination process went so smoothly?

Friedländer: Yes.

SPIEGEL: The opposite position was held by the recently deceased Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg. "The best way to grasp the reality of the situation," he said, "is to reconstruct events from the perspective of the perpetrators."

Friedländer: I have great respect for Hilberg. He was the classic expert on the machinery of extermination. But he only worked with documents left by the perpetrators and thought that the victims had gone to their deaths like lambs to the slaughter. If you read between the lines, you can even sense the rage with which he writes about the Jews' lack of resistance. But they simply didn't know what was happening. ’The Holocaust Won’t Disappear’ (more)

Mark Alexander
BBC Newsnight to Ask the Question Tonight, “Why Democracy?”

BBC: As international broadcasters begin a season of films about the strengths and weaknesses of democracy - Why Democracy? - the BBC's Paul Reynolds looks at what it means today.

The triumph of democracy in the 20th Century was so great that it is curious that doubts have gathered around it today.

Its success can be judged by recalling the words of the Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev, who told Western ambassadors in Moscow in 1956: "History is on our side. We will bury you." He could not have been more wrong. It was the Soviet Union itself that was buried in 1991.

All this led to the famous, infamous perhaps, statement from the American political scientist Francis Fukuyama in 1992.

"What we may be witnessing is not just the end of the Cold War, or the passing of a particular period of post-war history, but the end of history as such," he wrote.

"That is, the end point of mankind's ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government."

Too optimistic?

The end of the Cold War did see the rapid spread of democracy, especially into the former communist states of Eastern and Central Europe. The European Union advanced to the Russian border. Democracies managed to assert individual rights and create prosperity.

And yet, even as he wrote, some critics felt that Fukuyama was being too optimistic - that the world would in due course resume its weary way.

Some alarms did go off. In the former Yugoslavia, majority voting in the component parts of the federation led not to a democratic agreement but to war. It was a lesson that democracy is about more than majority voting and that defining a majority is not always straightforward. The issue is currently an active one in Kosovo.

There have been disappointments: in the West, Russia is now felt to have strayed too far back to autocratic ways. Africa has not advanced as much as had been hoped - except for the shining example of South Africa. And the great prize of China remains elusive.

The recent crackdown in Burma shows that the struggle for democracy often has a high price.

And there is the threat from al-Qaeda and its followers. This goes beyond a disagreement over foreign policy. Osama bin Laden himself called on the United States to convert to Islam to avoid continued war. Still only two cheers for democracy (more)

BBC:
Newsnight, tonight, will be asking “Why democracy?

It is to be hoped that the Newsnight team will draw the right conclusion!

Mark Alexander
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: ‘War on Terror’ or ‘War on Islam’

With many thanks to Pastorius whose blog entry at the Infidel Bloggers Alliance alerted me to the following excellent video:



Mark Alexander
”Black Day for Swiss Democracy and Freedom of Speech”

THE GUARDIAN:
· Rioters hurl petrol bombs and torch cars in capital
· Fear that riot will increase support for the far right

The Swiss capital of Berne was turned into a battle zone at the weekend when leftwing radicals seized control of the main square outside parliament, routing the main far-right political party two weeks before a general election and catching the Swiss police off guard.

Dozens of protesters were arrested and around two dozen people injured, mostly police officers, as police deployed tear gas, water cannon, and rubber bullets to try to regain control from gangs of highly organised, masked people who turned the small and normally sleepy capital of Switzerland into a scene of devastation.

The clashes on Saturday and the revulsion triggered among mainstream Swiss by the unusual street violence are likely to play into the hands of Christoph Blocher, the tough-talking populist and millionaire industrialist who leads the Swiss People's Party (SVP), the far-right movement tipped to win the elections later this month following a campaign denounced as overtly racist by a United Nations watchdog.

Mr Blocher called a campaign rally of his party in the capital and some 10,000 of his supporters converged on Berne to march to the capital's main square in front of parliament.

But the planned rally was hijacked by up to 1,000 masked street fighters who blocked the SVP's progress, outwitted the police by operating in small groups moving in and out of the crowds, and ransacked the SVP stage and campaign equipment.

The Federal Square, site of a charming Saturday morning flower and vegetable market, resembled a war zone by Saturday night, littered with debris, masonry, shattered glass and torched metal. Switzerland reeling as radicals create havoc at rightwing political rally (more) By Ian Traynor in Berne

THE NEW YORK TIMES:
Immigration, Black Sheep and Swiss Rage By Elaine Sciolino

WATCH SVP VIDEO:
Swiss People’s Party (SVP): Heaven or Hell (Himmel oder Hölle)

Mark Alexander
Britain Sells Out to the Gulf

TIMESONLINE: Delta Two, the fund backed by the Qatari Government, has finished sifting through J Sainsbury’s books, signalling that a firm £10.6 billion offer for one of Britain’s oldest supermarket groups could come as soon as this week.

Sources said that lawyers and bankers for Delta Two had completed their due diligence process last week after gaining access to Sainsbury’s proprietary internal data in September.

Their reports are due to be sent to Delta Two’s financing banks - Credit Suisse, Dresdner Kleinwort and ABN Amro – early this week so that they can reconfirm their loans before Delta Two officially launches its 600p-a-share offer to shareholders.

Meanwhile, Sainsbury’s board is set to meet on Thursday and is understood to be ready to give the offer its recommendation.

The move means that the Qataris are within weeks of sealing only the second take-private deal for a FTSE 100 company, the £11 billion leveraged buyout of Alliance Boots earlier this year having been the first.

Although Delta Two is yet to reach agreement with Sainsbury’s pension trustees and the founding Sainsbury family, the supermarket’s board, led by Sir Philip Hampton, has already said that the offer is recommendable, subject to due diligence and financing. Qatari fund on brink of formal £10.6bn offer for Sainsbury’s (more) By Siobhan Kennedy

Mark Alexander
Indecision Comes as Standard

THE GUARDIAN – Leader: Would it have been so very difficult for Gordon Brown to have spoken plainly yesterday when asked why Britain will not be going to the polls in November, as he had wanted? There was no requirement for an election and there should have been little shame in calling one off, were it not for the fact that he left the decision at least a fortnight too late and went about announcing it through whispers and half-truths and then an evasive and prerecorded interview. He could have announced his decision under live, open questioning at his press conference this morning.

Like a child squirming after being caught out at last over some transgression, the prime minister offered every excuse apart from the obvious truth: that he had wanted and planned for an election and the mandate that would follow it, but that the outcome became uncertain, the late autumn timing unfortunate and the opposition artificially boosted by promises of tax cuts that he had not expected. If he had said this - rather than blustering on about his vision and a spurious duty to consider an election because people had called for it - he might have emerged a less diminished figure. David Cameron had a point yesterday when he said that the public are not fools and see through pretence.

How did a man whose strength lay in his powers as a political strategist allow himself to become trapped in such an obvious way? His advisers are already blaming each other and none now claim to have really wanted a contest. But someone did, because the election had become not just a possibility but something approaching a likelihood - until the Conservative party conference. Government business was adjusted to suit the campaign timetable, with the consequence that announcements on Iraq and public spending will crash into each other when parliament returns and others, on Crossrail and the NHS, were not made to parliament at all. All this serves to damage Mr Brown's claim to be a straight-dealing leader for a country exhausted by political deceit. This was seen as his greatest strength, until now. He’s mortal after all (more)

THE DAILY MAIL:
After the election that never was, Brown faces the music By Benedict Brogan and Jane Merrick

Mark Alexander

Sunday, October 07, 2007

Boris Whistles Dixie: That Means to Say, BS from Boris

THE TELEGRAPH: In a new extract from his brilliant book on Rome, Boris Johnson argues that our anxieties about Islam must not jeopardise the reconciliation between East and West[.]

Fragments of plaster are still falling from the ceiling after the Pope made his famous speech about Islam in September 2006.

Hardly anyone had heard of Manuel II Palaeologus, the old codger he quoted with such explosive results. Not many knew that he was the antepenultimate Roman emperor, or that he lived in what is now Istanbul.

But after six centuries of obscurity, Manuel's views were top of the news.

"Show me what Mohammed brought that was new," said the Pope in Regensburg, "and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith that he preached."

That sentence was taken out of context, flashed round the world, and soon there were riots everywhere from Jakarta to Qom.
The doors of churches were stoved in by mobs. Morocco recalled its ambassador to the Holy See.

Most wretchedly of all, Somali gunmen were so stoked up by the anti-Papal imprecations of the local imam that on Sept 16, shortly before lunch, they pulled up outside a Catholic-run hospital in Mogadishu and fired seven shots into the back of a sweet-faced, 62-year-old Italian nun called Sister Leonella.

It was no accident that the head of the Roman Catholic Church should quote the despairing words of the father of the last Roman emperor.

The views of the present Pope about Islam, or at least the views he cited and from which he at no point dissented in his speech, are very old indeed. They are at least partly dictated by deep underlying accretions of phobia and anxiety.

It is these subconscious layers of prejudice that help to explain how we think about everything from Islamic terrorism to Turkish membership of the EU.

To understand how these attitudes came to be formed, we need to look right back to the time of Manuel II Palaeologus, and the role of Islam in the death throes of the Roman Empire.

Manuel was not a "Byzantine", or at least he would not have understood what you meant by that polemical term, coined in 16th-century Germany.

He was a Roman, a Romaios, and though he spoke in Greek, that was because Greek was a Roman language. His coins still called him "king" and "autocrator", and he was the direct titular heir of Augustus Caesar, in an unbroken tradition going back 13 centuries.

He was the Vice Gerent of God on Earth, the ruler of the Roman Empire - though the Roman Empire over which he ruled had been sliced down to a tiny rump.

By 1391 the position was so bad that Manuel had to give himself up as a hostage to the sultan, the appalling Beyazit, and to go out and watch the Turks on their dreadful business.

He was made a spectator of the Turkish destruction of what had been the heartland of civilisation, and of the Roman world, and Manuel's anti-Islamic appeal has a resonance today, because Turkey is again being considered for membership of the EU.

In so far as there is a problem with the Turkish application, it is little to do with economics. Turkish per capita GDP is bigger than some previous EU entrants'.

It's not about Cyprus, or poverty, or population. It's not even that the Turks have sallow skin, thick eyebrows, or low foreheads, or whatever other prejudiced stereotype you choose.

No, my friends, the reason the richest nations on earth have havered for so long about admitting Johnny Turk to their club is all about - you know - "values".

As the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey, put it breathily on the Today programme: "Surely a European Union has to be more than economic? It has to have common values and so on..."

And as for the Holy Father, Pope Benedict, here is what he said when he was just Cardinal Ratzinger, back in 2004. "Turkey is in permanent contrast to Europe," he said, and admission to the EU would be a mistake.

What these politicians mean, with their nudge-nudge remarks about "values" and "culture" and "Europeanness", is that in the course of that thousand years something rather fundamental happened to the Roman Empire and to Constantinople. That something was Islam.

Adolf Hitler was not a noted classical scholar, but he took a professional interest in the rise and fall of Reichs. "I often wonder," the dictator mused, "why the ancient world collapsed." It is a very good question, and much depends on what you mean by collapse.

Hitler was too busy conquering Belgium to read the works of its greatest historian, but in 1935 Henri Pirenne had produced an answer to the Führer's question. It was called Mahomet and Charlemagne, and though hardly anyone is now willing to defend the argument in its entirety, it has proved one of the most influential works of our time.

Henri Pirenne looked at the barbarian invasions of the western Empire. Where others have seen breakdown and disaster, he was more struck by the continuities.

In spite of their name, the Vandals did not destroy all the Roman villas.

They liked to live in them, and even if there were a few tiles missing, the agricultural system was recognisably Roman. There were still land taxes, and the same latifundia - the big farms - and the same tolls at the markets.

Above all, they benefited from the same great Roman unity - the economic system that was based around Mare Nostrum, the Mediterranean.

Herodotus once came up with a fine metaphor for the Greek cities that ringed the Mediterranean: they were like frogs around a pond, he said; and in many ways that metaphor was still accurate.

The frogs were larger, perhaps, and they were more like Greco-Roman frogs, but they were still all the same species, croaking and communicating across the prosperous inner sea.

And then, says Henri Pirenne, there came the Muslim invasions of the seventh and eighth centuries.

The Persian Empire fell. Egypt was lost. Africa was lost, the breadbasket of the Roman world. The Arabs were completely different in their war aims from the Germanic tribes who had pushed down from the north and sacked Rome.

They didn't want to integrate. They didn't want to buy into that gorgeous Roman civilisation. They didn't aspire to Romanitas, let alone Christianitas. The Germans became Romanised as soon as they entered Romania.

As Pirenne puts it, the Roman became Arabised as soon as he was conquered by Islam.

Onwards and upwards roared the Muslims. Why are we so afraid of Turkey? (more)

Mark Alexander
Don't Wear Dem Dog-Collars No More! They’re Not Safe. Naturally, We Can Only Wonder Why

THE TELEGRAPH: Vicars have been told to stop wearing dog-collars because they increase the likelihood of them being attacked.

Even the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, should abandon the traditional dress, according to the Church of England's security adviser.

A new report warns clergy that the collars make them an "easy target" and says they should adopt more casual clothing in a bid to give them greater safety.

It was commissioned after the murder in March of Paul Bennett, vicar of St Fagan's Church in Trecynon, near Aberdare, who became the fifth cleric to be killed in a decade.

Other safety measures proposed include disguising the whereabouts of the vicarage by taking down signs and ensuring that the front doors of their homes do not have a letter box that people can look through.

However, it is the recommendation that they should cease wearing dog-collars in public that is most controversial. They have been worn since the early 19th century and many priests are not seen without them. Vicars urged to drop 'risky' dog collars (more) By Jonathan Wynne-Jones

Mark Alexander
Kick the Muslim Clowns Out of Medical School!

This latest story about the obstreperousness of trainee Muslim medical students should alarm us all. It is a harbinger of the nightmare that awaits us all in the West as a result of allowing far, far too many Muslims into the Judeo-Christian West, against the wishes of the majority of electors, just to satisfy the needs of commerce for labour, often and usually cheap labour.

It should be obvious to a blind man that this group of people will not fit in with our ways. They expect us to fit in with theirs instead.

It is to be hoped that the medical profession will not give in to these students’ unreasonable demands. These students are clearly not fit for purpose.

The answer to this problem is simple: Anyone refusing to go through proper and complete medical training should be kicked out of the courses, and failed. Period! Patients cannot be expected to have to be treated by half-trained, half-baked doctors, for a half-trained doctor, in reality, is actually no doctor at all!

Our problems with Muslims and Islam are increasing by the day, and it seems that nobody has the courage to deal with those problems head-on. Our problems are not going to go away. On the contrary, they will go on increasing until a solution is found.

Muslims are rapidly turning themselves into undesirables. And it’s no good the authorities blaming the indigenous population for being Islamophobic. If Islamophobia is on the increase, then Muslims only have themselves to blame. The authorities also have to shoulder responsibility for this because they have not been firm enough with these immigrants. They should have read the riot act to them long ago, telling them to fit in or get out – forthwith.

But instead, the powers that be have acquiesced in the growth of Islam in the West, and they have continued to appease Muslims by giving in to their each and every demand and whim; and in so doing these ‘powers’ have increased the antipathy most normal people feel for Muslims.

If something isn’t done about the Muslim problem, then it is only a matter of time before blood will be shed. Not in the operating theatres, but in the streets.

Companies like ‘Boots the Chemist’ and Sainsbury’s are also not without fault, for these companies are also showing their yellow side in allowing pharmacists and girls at the check-outs to discriminate in their shops and stores.

We, the shoppers, should refuse to buy at their retail outlets until they re-normalize their policies, and we should also refuse to be treated by Muslim doctors. Consumers can ‘get picky’ too! - ©Mark
TIMESONLINE: Some Muslim medical students are refusing to attend lectures or answer exam questions on alcohol-related or sexually transmitted diseases because they claim it offends their religious beliefs.

Some trainee doctors say learning to treat the diseases conflicts with their faith, which states that Muslims should not drink alcohol and rejects sexual promiscuity.

A small number of Muslim medical students have even refused to treat patients of the opposite sex. One male student was prepared to fail his final exams rather than carry out a basic examination of a female patient.

The religious objections by students have been confirmed by the British Medical Association (BMA) and General Medical Council (GMC), which both stressed that they did not approve of such actions.

It will intensify the debate sparked last week by the disclosure that Sainsbury’s is permitting Muslim checkout operators to refuse to handle customers’ alcohol purchases on religious grounds. It means other members of staff have to be called over to scan in wine and beer for them at the till.

Critics, including many Islamic scholars, see the concessions as a step too far, and say Muslims are reneging on their professional responsibilities.

This weekend, however, it emerged that Sainsbury’s is also allowing its Muslim pharmacists to refuse to sell the morning-after pill to customers. At a Sainsbury’s store in Nottingham, a pharmacist named Ahmed declined to provide the pill to a female reporter posing as a customer. A colleague explained to her that Ahmed did not sell the pill for “ethical reasons”. Boots also permits pharmacists to refuse to sell the pill on ethical grounds.

The BMA said it had received reports of Muslim students who did not want to learn anything about alcohol or the effects of overconsumption. “They are so opposed to the consumption of it they don’t want to learn anything about it,” said a spokesman.

The GMC said it had received requests for guidance over whether students could “omit parts of the medical curriculum and yet still be allowed to graduate”. Professor Peter Rubin, chairman of the GMC’s education committee, said: “Examples have included a refusal to see patients who are affected by diseases caused by alcohol or sexual activity, or a refusal to examine patients of a particular gender.”

He added that “prejudicing treatment on the grounds of patients’ gender or their responsibility for their condition would run counter to the most basic principles of ethical medical practice”. Muslim medical students get picky (more)

TIMESONLINE:
Fear of giving offence is killing our culture

AND THIS WITH THANKS TO Always On Watch:
Muslim dentist 'made patient cover her head'
Mark Alexander
Saudi Arabia Launches Official Website for Islamic Legal Rulings, or Fatwas

BBC: Saudi Arabia has launched an official website to publish Islamic legal rulings, or fatwas.

The move is apparently an attempt to ensure that fatwas issued by authorised scholars are given prominence.

Visitors to the new website will be able to ask questions on various topics and get replies from the Council of Senior Ulema (Islamic scholars).

Saudi Arabia is an absolute monarchy governed according to a conservative interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.

'Fatwa chaos'

A section of the Saudi site is devoted to the former head of the council, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Baz.

Sheikh bin Baz, who died in 1999, was known for issuing controversial religious rulings.

In 1991, he issued a fatwa prohibiting women from driving cars.

The religious establishment in Egypt has been considering a similar move to publicise official fatwas.

Last month, the head of Egypt's prestigious Al-Azhar University, Ahmed al-Tayeb, said he wanted to establish a satellite TV station dedicated to broadcasting authorised rulings.

The situation at present, he said, was fatwa chaos, with Muslim scholars issuing rulings that clash with the official line of the religious establishment, spreading confusion. [Source: Official Saudi website for fatwas]

Mark Alexander

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Tells Neocons What Not to Do

THE GUARDIAN: Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, has criticised the neoconservatives of the Bush administration and accused them of "potentially murderous folly" for suggesting military action against Syria and Iran.

Dr Williams has just returned from Syria where he met Iraqi Christian refugees,. He warned of a problem of almost unprecedented scale as up to 1.5 million Iraqis have fled to neighbouring countries.

Speaking to the BBC, the archbishop, who opposed the invasion of Iraq from the outset, said: "When people talk about further destabilisation of the region - and you read some American political advisers speaking of action against Syria and Iran - I can only say that I regard that as criminal, ignorant and potentially murderous folly. Archbishop attacks neocons over threat to bomb Iran (more) By Stephen Bates

Mark Alexander
Young Swiss Lad: ”Islam is Cool!”

So what does this young boy find so “cool” about Islam? Is it the fact that women are second-class citizens? Is it the fact that homosexuals are killed? Is it the fact that thieves have their hands chopped off? Is it the fact that adulteresses are stoned to death (whilst adulterers will probably get away with it)? Is it the fact that criminals will be beheaded in the public square? Is it the fact that people caught drinking alcohol will be whipped? Or is it the fact that Muslims feel superior to non-Muslims?

This ‘Bursch” (lad, youth, young fellow) needs to get with the story!



Islam in Switzerland

Mark Alexander
London’s Mega Mosque



Mark Alexander
Caution! An Intellectual Heavyweight: Bush on Islam



THE WHITE HOUSE:
Bush's Quotes on Islam

COMPARE THIS WITH A TRUE INTELLECTUAL HEAVYWEIGHT'S VIEWPOINT: CHURCHILL ON ISLAM

How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries! Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy. The effects are apparent in many countries. Improvident habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or live.…A degraded sensualism deprives this life of its grace and refinement; the next of its dignity and sanctity. The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property, either as a child, a wife, or a concubine, must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men.

Individual Moslems may show splendid qualities ... but the influence of the religion paralyses the social development of those who follow it. No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith. It has already spread throughout Central Africa, raising fearless warriors at every step; and were it not that Christianity is sheltered in the strong arms of science, the science against which it had vainly struggled, the civilisation of modern Europe might fall, as fell the civilisation of ancient Rome.
[The River War, first edition, Vol. II, pp. 248-50.] [Source]

You decide who has got it right!

Mark Alexander

Friday, October 05, 2007

Ayaan Hirsi Ali Without Protection

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Photo of Ayaan Hirsi Ali courtesy of the BBC

BBC: The Dutch government says it will no longer pay for bodyguards to protect Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somali-born former MP and outspoken critic of Islam.

Ms Hirsi Ali earlier this week returned to the Netherlands from the US, where she has been living for the past year.

The Dutch justice ministry said it could not justify paying for Ms Hirsi Ali's protection while she was abroad.

She continues to receive protection while in the Netherlands, where Islamic militants have threatened her life.

"When Ms Hirsi Ali is in the Netherlands, protection measures will be taken for her on the basis of recent threat evaluations," the Dutch Justice Minister, Ernst Hirsch Ballin told parliament in a letter.

Ms Hirsi Ali could no longer be regarded as a representative of the Netherlands after she resigned as an MP in 2006, Mr Hirsch Ballin said.

"In stepping down, Ms Hirsi Ali's status changed. Since this time she has no longer served in an official function for the Dutch state," he said.

Her current status did not warrant "any place for protection abroad", he added. Dutch withdraw security for ex-MP (more)

Mark Alexander
Women Are Vulnerable and Should Be Protected According to the New Constitution in Turkey

With many thanks to Robert Spencer of JihadWatch for it was on his great website that I first read the following article:

BBC: Women's groups in Turkey have condemned a new draft constitution, saying it sets the country back years in terms of gender equality.

A new civilian constitution is being prepared to replace the current one, introduced after a 1980 military coup.

The document describes women as a vulnerable group needing protection.

The proposed constitution has already sparked fierce debate with a clause to allow women to attend university wearing the Islamic headscarf.

Speaking on Tuesday, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan assured critics the new draft constitution will reflect the values and needs of all groups of society.

'Patriarchal society'

More than 80 women's groups have come together to voice strong opposition to the draft constitution, calling it a major step backwards for equal rights.

The current constitution in Turkey obliges the government to ensure equality for all - a clause that women's groups fought hard to include.

The new draft removes that, describing women instead as a vulnerable group in need of special protection. Women condemn Turkey constitution (more) By Sarah Rainsford

Mark Alexander
Ein verrückter Vorschlag von einem verrückten Führer

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Foto von Ahmadinejad dank der Presse

DIE PRESSE: "Kanada und Alaska haben derart große Landschaften. Warum können die Israelis nicht einfach dorthin umgesiedelt werden?", sagt der iranische Präsident.

Der iranische Präsident Mahmud Ahmadinejad fordert die "Verlegung" des gesamten Staates Israel vom Nahen Osten nach Nordamerika. "Kanada und Alaska haben derart große Landschaften, warum können die Israelis nicht einfach dorthin umgesiedelt werden und sich dort mit den jährlichen Zuwendungen von 30 bis 40 Milliarden Dollar eine neue Existenz aufbauen", sagte Ahmadinejad am Freitag bei einer anti-israelischen Demonstration in Teheran.

"Entfernung aus der islamischen Welt"

Der iranische Staatschef hatte schon vor zwei Jahren einen ähnlichen Vorschlag zur "Entfernung des Staates Israel aus der islamischen Welt" unterbreitet. Damals wollte er den neuen israelischen Staat auf deutschem oder österreichischem Boden errichten.

Im Rahmen der anti-israelischen Demonstrationen am Al-Quds-Tag (Jerusalem-Tag), dem letzten Tag des Fastenmonats Ramadan, stellte Ahmadinejad neuerlich das Ausmaß des Holocaust in Frage. Der Iran "betrachtet Hitler und die Henker des Zweiten Weltkriegs als schwarze und dunkle Gestalten", sagte er. "Aber die iranische Nation hat eine Frage, und so lange es darauf keine klare und vernünftige Antwort gibt, wird sie bestehen bleiben." Ahmadinejad will Israel nach Nordamerika "verlegen" (mehr)

Mark Alexander
No Total Ban on Niqab in British Schools

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DAILY MAIL: Veils will not be banned in schools, ministers have decided.

Guidelines issued by the Government yesterday state that heads 'may be justified' in outlawing religious dress that covers pupils' faces.

But ministers stopped short of issuing an outright ban on full-face Islamic veils, saying it was up to schools to decide uniform policy for themselves.

The guidance led to accusations that the Government had only confused the issue and left heads 'walking a tightrope'.

It means that schools could still face legal challenges if they attempt to outlaw garments such as the niqab, which covers the entire face apart from a slit for the eyes. Muslim pupils won't face outright ban on wearing the veil (more) By Laura Clark

Mark Alexander
Archbishop Speaks of Iraq Damage

BBC: The Iraq conflict has wreaked "terrible damage" on the region - far more than has been acknowledged, the Archbishop of Canterbury has said.

Dr Rowan Williams said "urgent attention" was needed to stabilise the country. His comments followed a visit to Syria to meet Iraqi refugees.

He said talking to the refugees had been "heartbreaking and harrowing".

A survey published in September 2007 suggested that up to 1.2m people might have died because of the Iraq conflict.
'Liberty and dignity'

Speaking following his visit, Dr Williams said: "The events of the last few years have done terrible damage in the whole of this region and many people, I know, do not see the cost in human terms of the war which was unleashed.

"Security that will enable these people to return to Iraq depends on a settlement for the whole of that country guaranteeing the liberty and dignity of every minority."

About half a million refugees have fled Iraq for Syria since the conflict began in 2003.

Dr Williams said many of the people he had met told him they left the war-torn country because their families had been kidnapped, executed or told they would be killed unless they paid ransoms.

The archbishop added that the refugees had told him their circumstances were desperate and unsustainable, with no hope either of a safe return to Iraq or of citizenship in Syria or elsewhere. [Source BBC: Archbishop speaks of Iraq damage]

Mark Alexander
Changes Afoot in the Judicial System of Saudi Arabia

BBC: Saudi Arabia has announced an overhaul of its judicial system, including the allocation of $2bn (£981m) for training judges and building new courts.

The reforms, by royal decree, will lead to the creation of a supreme court, an appeals court and new general courts to replace the Supreme Judicial Council.

Reformers have welcomed the measures, which they say will improve human rights and help modernise the country.

They complain that the current judicial system is often opaque and arbitrary.

Until now, Saudi judges have had wide discretion to issue rulings according to their own interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.

The judiciary has also long resisted the codification of laws or the reliance on precedent when making a ruling.

Defendants also do not have recourse to appeal and often have no right to proper legal representation.

Unchecked powers

The new reforms announced by King Abdullah are aimed at addressing some of these perceived failings and at introducing safeguards such as appeal courts that can overturn decisions by lower courts, the BBC's Heba Saleh says. Saudis to overhaul legal system (more)

Mark Alexander
Prof Eagleton, the Marxist Who Just Doesn’t Get It, Engages in an Ad Hominem Attack on Martin Amis to Try and Prove His Point

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Martin Amis under attack by the Marxist Professor Eagleton

THE TELEGRAPH: A battle has broken out between two of the country's literary titans with one, the prominent Marxist intellectual Terry Eagleton, accusing the other, the novelist Martin Amis, of being Islamophobic.

Prof Eagleton says that Amis has abandoned traditional Western values of liberalism following the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Centre. 

In an introduction to the 2007 edition of his classic book, Ideology: An Introduction, Prof Eagleton attacks the views of "Amis and his ilk" for taking up cudgels against Islam instead of propounding tolerance and understanding.

The attack also extends to Amis's novelist father, the late Kingsley Amis.

Prof Eagleton calls Kingsley Amis "a racist, anti-Semitic boor, a drink-sodden, selfhating reviler of women, gays and liberals".

He adds: "Amis fils has clearly learnt more from him than how to turn a shapely phrase".

Prof Eagleton, a Marxist literary critic for 30 years, has increasingly turned his pen against Left-leaning writers for selling out to the Establishment, but his new introduction reserves special scorn for Amis Jnr, the author of novels such as London Fields and Money.

The spark is a controversial essay written by Amis last year, the day before the fifth anniversary of the bombing of New York's Twin Towers, in which he said that "the Muslim community will have to suffer until it gets its house in order".

In The Age of Horrorism, Amis argued that fundamentalists had won the battle between Islam and Islamism.

The novelist suggested "strip-searching people who look like they're from the Middle East or from Pakistan", preventing Muslims from travelling, and further down the road, deportation. Martin Amis essay 'like work of BNP thug' (more) By Nigel Reynolds, Arts Correspondent

Mark Alexander
The Non-Doms of London

TIMESONLINE: Wednesday night. Cipriani, off Berkeley Square. A quiet family party at the back are speaking heaven-knows-what and eating Italian comfort food at £65 a head. A posse of hungry-looking money men in suits swallow champagne before being shown to their table. They are distracted (as am I) by two beautiful women sinking bellinis at the bar. And through the revolving door comes a man with a name like Davos. He has a furry torso busting out of his blazer, and a Blancpain watch the size of a beer mat.

Federico, the maître d’, goes through an elaborate pretence of not knowing who Davos is, then yells at the white-jacketed staff to fix him his usual apéritif and seat him at table 28.

Are these the creatures I have been looking for? The favoured ones, whom fate has blessed with money and the taxman with the mother of all loopholes? Are these the people who have made London the most cosmopolitan and expensive city in the world; the steel-smelting, penthouse-collecting Brahmins of 21st-century Eurasia? The people who, though they pay little UK tax, may contribute as much as £5 billion to the economy in other ways? Are these the wildly rich, non-domiciled UK residents known to their accountants as non-doms?

One of Federico’s colleagues has rashly confirmed as much over the phone. Another close observer of the scene has identified this place, along with Annabel’s and the George nightclub, as prime non-dom party locales. But they are safe here. Federico will only shrug. “This is London,” he says. “They come from everywhere.”

Of course they do. But London should not kid itself. It’s not Gordon Ramsay who secures for W1 the continued patronage of Roman Abramovich and Boris Berezovsky. It’s not the Royal Ballet (as far as we know) that induced one Qatari to pay £100 million for an as-yet unbuilt flat on Hyde Park. And it’s certainly not the weather that attracts the foreigners who comprise roughly half the hedge-fund managers in London, the hedge-fund capital of the world.

Above all, it’s the tax system, which takes 40 per cent of the average middle-class family’s earnings but only token amounts off non-doms, and then only if they are honest. This is the system that, in April, led the IMF to bracket London with Bermuda as an “offshore financial centre” (translation: tax haven).

Yet it is also a system that, for all its apparent iniquities, has put the international ultra-rich in the service of UK plc to the extent that we may no longer be able to manage without them. As one sage has put it, for Britain to tinker with its non-dom laws would be like Saudi Arabia giving up its oil.

Even so, tinkering is what both main political parties plan to do, with incalculable consequences.

On Monday, George Osborne thrilled the Conservatives with his promise of an end to inheritance tax as we know it, and he promised to fund this promise with a £25,000-a-year levy for the privilege of non-dom status. He claimed that this could raise up to £3.5 billion.

Osborne’s pledge has triggered a furious political row over non-dom numbers. Broadly defined, non-doms include all foreigners in Britain. No one knows how many there are, let alone how many would find it worthwhile to pay the levy rather than pay UK tax on all their worldwide income. The Shadow Chancellor put the figure at 150,000. Labour hit back with 15,000 – but the Treasury has since disowned the smaller figure, and so has much of the high-end accountancy profession. Brass tax: the truth about non-doms: Will the super-rich flee if Britain dares to tax them? By Giles Whittell

Mark Alexander

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Audacity! Saudi Arabia Plans to Lecture the West on Human Rights!

BNP: The “Human Rights Commission” of Saudi Arabia, a country where slavery was formally abolished as late as the 1960s and is still practiced more or less openly (it is permitted under sharia law), now plans to lecture Europeans on Islamophobia as part of the jihad to bring Europe under the sword of this medieval desert faith. In an address to be made at a Arab-European conference in Denmark later this month the Saudi delegation will demand an end to the way terrorism is linked with Islam and ways of combatting “Islamophobia”.

In 2005, Saudi Arabia was designated by the United States Department of State as a Tier 3 country with respect to trafficking in human beings. Tier 3 countries are "Countries whose governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so."

In Saudi Arabia:

• Employers rape and beat their migrant workers.
• Women’s rights are non-existent and account for just 5% of the workforce.
• Women are not allowed to vote.
• Homosexuals are liable to be flogged or executed.
• There is no freedom of privacy.

In addition Saudi Arabia is the biggest sponsor of Wahhabism – the fundamentalist form of Sunni Islam which preaches that the Salafis (Wahhabis) are the chosen ones destined for heaven and everyone else, Shi’a Muslims, Jews, Christians and others are all non-believers.

The Euro-Arab Dialogue, which this is a part of, was established in the 1970s and is rapidly progressing towards the goal of merging Europe with the Arab world. The European Union is thus formally negotiating the surrender of an entire continent, without asking their peoples about it and without even mentioning this in the major media. It is one of the greatest betrayals ever recorded in the history of Western civilisation. Saudi Arabia plans to lecture the West on human rights (more)

BNP:
Saudi money suppresses free speech in the UK

ARAB NEWS:
Human Rights Commission to Address Muslim Rights Issues in Europe

Mark Alexander
US Cannot Fight, Says Mottaki of Iran

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Photo of Mottaki courtesy of the BBC

Washington's military commitments to Iraq and Afghanistan would hamstring an attempt to wage war on Iran, the Iranian foreign minister has said.

"Our analysis is clear: [the] US is not in a position to impose another war in our region, against their taxpayers," Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters.

He warned Washington against making such a "mad decision". Iran says US too tied up to fight (more)

WATCH BBC VIDEO:
Iran Warns US Over War

Mark Alexander
The Real Islam Revealed

With many thanks to Always On Watch for alerting me to this very important and powerful video, and also to Lionheart:


Jewish Task Force

Mark Alexander
Ayaan Hirsi Ali ‘Forced’ to Return to the Netherlands because of the Cost of Protection from Islamists

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Fear of fanatical Islamists prompted Ayaan Hirsi Ali to leave the Netherlands, her adopted home, and now she has been forced to return. Paying for her bodyguards in the United States is too expensive for the Dutch government -- what a disgrace.

There are exactly five people that the Dutch government has to protect against death threats from radical Islamists.

This sort of protection is expensive. Society bears the costs because freedom of opinion, a cornerstone of our culture, is on the line. The extremists, for their part, are prepared to risk their own lives to kill those under government protection.

The costs of protection are completely disproportionate to the outcome: the continued existence of our values and norms.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali is the sixth person granted protection by the Dutch government. She began receiving threats when, as a Dutch citizen and member of the parliament, she spoke out critically against political Islam. After the so-called "passport scandal," when the Dutch minister of immigration and integration threatened to confiscate her passport after Ayaan had been accused of lying about her name and birth date when she first arrived in the Netherlands, she moved to the United States, which precipitated a sharp upswing in her career within only a few months. She wrote a bestseller and landed a job at the American Enterprise Institute. But as a Dutch citizen, Ayaan does not qualify for protection in the United States under US laws and regulations.

Contrary to what many in the Netherlands believe about the success of her autobiography, she is not wealthy. She could not pay for the kind of protection she needs out of her own pocket -- no matter how much she would like to do so. Besides, the Dutch government apparently failed to find the right US officials with whom they could have reached an agreement. Under a decision by Justice Minister Ernst Hirsch Balin, the protection paid for by the Dutch government expired on Oct. 1. Ayaan returned to the Netherlands, because without protection she doesn't have a day left to live. 'We Are Making Fools of Ourselves in the Eyes of the World' (more) By Leon de Winter in Amsterdam

Mark Alexander