Friday, November 16, 2007

Photograph: Google Images

Adolf Hitler on Islam

“Hitler had been much impressed by a scrap of history he had learned from a delegation of distinguished Arabs. When the Mohammedans attempted to penetrate beyond France into Central Europe during the eighth century, his visitors had told him, they had been driven back at the Battle of Tour. Had the Arabs won the battle, the world would be Mohammedan today. For theirs was a religion that believed in spreading the faith by the sword and subjugating all nations to that faith. The Germanic peoples would have become heirs to that religion. Such a creed was perfectly suited to the Germanic temperament. Hitler said that the conquering Arabs, because of their racial inferiority, would in the long run have been unable to contend with the harsher climate and conditions of the country. They could not have kept down the more vigorous natives, so that ultimately not Arabs but Islamized Germans could have stood at the head of this Mohammedan empire.

Hitler usually concluded this historical speculation by remarking: ‘You see, it’s been our misfortune to have the wrong religion. Why didn’t we have the religion of the Japanese, who regard sacrifice for the Fatherland as the highest good? The Mohammedan religion too would have been much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness?’ It is remarkable that even before the war he sometimes went on: “Today the Siberians, the White Russians, and the people of the steppes live extremely healthy lives. For this reason they are better equipped for development and in the long run biologically superior to the Germans.’ This was an idea he was destined to repeat in far more drastic tones during the last months of the war." [ Source: Albert Speer: Inside the Third Reich]

Mark Alexander
David Miliband, Regardless of the Wishes of the People of Europe, Committed to Turkey in Europe!

BRITAINUSA: FCO, London, 9/5/2007—David Miliband spoke at Bahcesehir University in Instanbul during his first visit to Turkey as Foreign Secretary.

Read full speech:

This is one of my early visits outside the UK as foreign secretary and this, my first visit to Turkey, is intended to reflect my simple belief: that the relationship between Turkey and the EU represents one of the defining political tests of our time. Get it right, and we can prove wrong those who say we are destined for a clash of civilizations, that East and West, Muslims, Christians and Jews, can find no common ground; get it wrong and we give succour to those who would pull us apart.

So this speech is about building bridges at a time of change. There are new governments in Britain and in Turkey, new challenges facing our countries. But my starting point is our new and shared opportunity: the opportunity to bridge the gap between Europe and Asia.

The last phase of globalization in the 19th century polarized the world. At the beginning of the 19th century, the average citizen in India and China enjoyed around half the wealth of citizens in Western Europe. By the end of the century, they had just one-seventh.

Today, there are massive forces for inequality between people. But there are also very strong forces of 21st century globalization pulling countries closer together. For example, China and India’s economies together represent about a quarter of US GDP. By 2030, they are expected to command a similar share of the global economy as the US. Foreign Secretary David Miliband: Shared Values, Share Future - The Importance of Turkey to Our Common Future (more)

Mark Alexander
David Miliband on the Middle East

Foreign Secretary David Miliband on the Middle East

Mark Alexander
The Profligate Saudi Prince

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Photo of Saudi ambassador Prince Mohammed bin Nawwaf bin Abdul Aziz courtesy of The Guardian

THE GUARDIAN: It is a remarkable shopping list by any standards. And it has landed the Saudi ambassador to Britain with a possible £3m debt, and the embarrassment of having allegations about the ostentatious spending habits of the royal family laid bare.

Bills he is claimed to have run up on an array of luxury amusements include two top-of-the-range Chevrolet 4x4s, a thermal night vision kit for his Hummer H2, dozens of designer watches and jewels, a selection of handguns and two Arab karaoke machines. One takeaway meal came to almost $800 (£391). And then there is the $2,500 item on a trip to a hotel in Casablanca that reads: "Girls: party night 5".

These, and scores of others, are detailed in documents filed to the high court in a claim against the ambassador, Prince Mohammed bin Nawwaf bin Abdul Aziz, a nephew of King Abdullah. Hey big spender: the £3m spree that landed a Saudi prince in a London court (more) By David Leigh and Rob Evans

Court documents: the alleged debts in full (pdf)

More court documents (pdf)

Mark Alexander
Immigration Out of Control: Brits Getting Out in Their Droves

THE TELEGRAPH: Britain is experiencing unprecedented levels of immigration with more than half a million foreigners arriving to live here in a single year, new figures show.

Last year, 510,000 foreign migrants came to the UK to stay for at least 12 months, according to the Office for National Statistics. At the same time 400,000 people, more than half of whom were British, emigrated.

An exodus on this scale - amounting to one British citizen leaving the country every three minutes - has not been seen in the UK for almost 50 years.

Overall in 2006, there were a record 591,000 new arrivals. Only 14 per cent of these were Britons coming home. Immigration out-paces British exodus (more) By Philip Johnston

National Statistics: Emigration from UK reaches 400,000 in 2006 (PDF)

Tegraph Speakers Corner: Why are so many Britons leaving?

Mark Alexander
China Runs “Aggressive and Large-Scale Industrial Espionage Campaign” Against US

THE TELEGRAPH: China is running an "aggressive and large-scale industrial espionage campaign" against American technology, a US congressional commission says, in a report that will exacerbate growing tensions between the two countries.

The hard-hitting report, by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, accused China of backsliding over free trade reforms and of using spies to enable its companies to get hold of technology without having to pay for the research.

"Chinese espionage activities in the United States are so extensive that they comprise the single greatest risk to the security of American technologies," it said, adding that scientists and engineers were enlisted to get hold of secrets "by whatever means possible - including theft". US accuses China of vast industrial spying (more) By Richard Spencer

Mark Alexander

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Irael Braces Itself for Iran Bomb

YNET NEWS: State sources say Olmert orders top cabinet officials to draft proposals for dealing with potential nuclear Iran. Minister Ayalon: 'We must prepare for scenario where all alternatives fail'

Israel is quietly preparing for the possibility of a nuclear-armed Iran despite public pledges to deny its arch-foe the means to pose an "existential threat", political and defense sources said on Thursday.

They said Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has instructed cabinet officials to draft proposals on how Israel, which according to foreign media reports retains the only atomic arsenal in the Middle East, might deal with losing that monopoly.

Israel predicts that Iran's nuclear program could produce warheads by 2009. Western intelligence services say it may take several more years. Israel braces for Iran bomb despite vow to prevent (more)

Mark Alexander
Saudi Gang-Rape Victim Jailed

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Photo courtesy of the BBC

BBC: An appeal court in Saudi Arabia has doubled the number of lashes and added a jail sentence as punishment for a woman who was gang-raped.

The victim was initially punished for violating laws on segregation of the sexes - she was in an unrelated man's car at the time of the attack.

When she appealed, the judges said she had been attempting to use the media to influence them. Saudi gang-rape victim is jailed (more) By Frances Harrison

Mark Alexander
Our World: Islam and the Nation State

JERUSALEM POST: Throughout the world, one of the most prevalent causes of war, terrorism and political instability is the ongoing weakening of the nation-state system. There are several reasons that the nation-state as a political unit of sovereignty is under threat. One of the most basic causes of this continuous erosion of national power throughout the world is the transformation of minority-dominated enclaves within nation-states into ungovernable areas where state power is either not applied or applied in a haphazard and generally unconstructive manner.

While domestic strife between majority and minority populations has been an enduring feature of democratic and indeed all societies throughout history, the current turbulence constitutes a unique challenge to the nation-state system. This is because much of the internal strife between minority and majority populations within states today is financed and often directed from outside the country.

Traditionally, minorities used various local means to engage the majority population in a bid to influence the political direction or cultural norms of the nation state. The classic examples of this traditional minority-majority engagement are the black civil rights movement in the US in the 1960s and the labor movements in the West throughout the 20th century. By and large, these movements were domestic protests informed by national sensibilities even when they enjoyed the support of foreign governments.

Today while similar movements continue to flourish, they are now being superseded by a new type of minority challenge to national majorities.

This challenge is not primarily the result of domestic injustice but the consequence of foreign agitation. The roots of these minority challenges are found outside the borders of the targeted states. And their goals are not limited to a call for the reform of national institutions and politics. Rather they set their sights on weakening national institutions and eroding national sovereignty. Our World: Islam and the nation-state (more) By Caroline Glick

Hat Tip: Jim Ball

Mark Alexander
Iran Has Not Suspended Unranium Enrichment, Says IAEA

BBC: The UN nuclear watchdog has said Iran has provided it with information about its past nuclear activities as agreed under a work plan made in August.

But a new IAEA report also said Iran had not suspended uranium enrichment work as demanded by the UN Security Council and had 3,000 centrifuges.

The US said it proved Tehran continued to defy UN calls to suspend enrichment and should face further sanctions. UN mixed on Iran nuclear report (more)

IAEA Report (PDF)

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FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG:
Interview Norman Podhoretz: Warum wir Iran bombardieren müssen

Mark Alexander
White House Loses Faith in Musharraf’s Leadership

THE TELEGRAPH: The United States has signalled for the first time that President Pervez Musharraf’s days in power may soon end.

American officials have said that the White House is reportedly losing faith in General Musharraf’s leadership.

Until now the general had been a pillar of Washington’s war against terrorism.

But almost two weeks after Gen Musharraf declared a state of emergency, the Bush government is said to be considering what to do in the event of an imminent end to his premiership. US signals Musharraf's days may be numbered (more) By Isambard Wilkinson

Mark Alexander
Russian Cult Threatens Mass Suicide in Cave

THE TELEGRAPH: Around 30 members of a Russian cult have shut themselves inside a remote cave to await the end of the world and are threatening to commit suicide if police intervene, officials and media said today.

"They have covered the entrance and refuse to come out and are threatening to blow themselves up," an official in the local prosecutor's office said by telephone.

"They threaten to detonate a gas tank and blow themselves up." Russian cult threatens mass suicide in cave (more)

Mark Alexander
Genuß gegen Gesundheit

Zum Video: Einschränkung der Freiheit?

Zum Video: ”Konzentrat an Tugenden”

DIE ZEIT: Auf eine Zigarette mit Helmut Schmidt


Mark Alexander
'Islamistische' Attentate in Europa in den vergangenen sieben Jahren

DIE PRESSE (FOTOS): Islamistische Anschläge in Europa

Mark Alexander
Wahhabism, Saudi Arabia, and the Fomenting of Extremism

BBC: BBC Middle East analyst Roger Hardy has spent the last two months investigating Wahhabism, Saudi Arabia's austere brand of Islam.

In the first of a two-part series, to be broadcast on the BBC World Service, he looks at the fierce debate over whether Wahhabism and Saudi petrodollars have fomented extremism.


"The essence of Wahhabism is purity," says Lawrence Wright, author of a Pulitzer-prize-winning book about al-Qaeda.

"They are only interested in purification - and that's what makes them so repressive."

Prince Turki al-Faisal, the former head of Saudi intelligence and former ambassador in London and Washington, dismisses the accusation out of hand.

"From our point of view in the kingdom, there is no such thing as Wahhabism. That's a canard."

Saudis have never cared for the "Wahhabi" label which historically was a term of abuse applied to them by their critics.

They are highly sensitive to the charge that they have used their vast oil wealth to turn an obscure desert sect into a global force. Jihad and the Saudi petrodollar (more) By Roger Hardy

Mark Alexander
King Juan Carlos is Arrogant, Says Chávez

BBC: Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez has accused Spain's King Juan Carlos of "arrogance" after he told Mr Chavez to shut up during a summit in Chile.

However, Mr Chavez said he did not want a political crisis with Spain following the clash - only that Venezuela's head of state be respected.

Later, however, he said political, diplomatic and economic ties with Spain were being closely reviewed. Spain king 'arrogant' says Chavez (more)

Mark Alexander
Even Father Christmas Must Bow to Political Correctness in Sydney

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Image courtesy of Google Images

SYDNEY (AFP) - Santas in Australia's largest city have been told not to use Father Christmas's traditional "ho ho ho" greeting because it may be offensive to women, it was reported Thursday.

Sydney's Santa Clauses have instead been instructed to say "ha ha ha" instead, the Daily Telegraph reported. Santas warned 'ho ho ho' offensive to women (more)

Mark Alexander
A Judge with a Sense of Humour!

THE GUARDIAN: A high court judge who made allegedly mocking remarks about a sheikh involved in a multi-million pound divorce was today ordered to step down from the case.

Giving reasons for the decision, the court of appeal said Mr Justice Singer, a family division judge, had said during the private hearing that the sheikh could choose "to depart on his flying carpet" to escape paying costs.

The judge also said the man should be available to attend hearings "at this, I think, relatively fast-free time of the year".

The court of appeal said the judge had said the sheikh should be in court so "every grain of sand is sifted", and called his evidence "a bit gelatinous ... a bit like Turkish Delight". Judge ordered of divorce case after ‘flying carpet’ jibe (more)

Mark Alexander
UK: Doom and Gloom on the Economic Front

THE GUARDIAN: The governor of the Bank of England issued a stark warning yesterday of a looming economic slowdown as he signalled that the next year will be the toughest for Britain in a decade.

Putting investors on high alert for a sharp fall in share prices, Mervyn King said the period ahead would be marked by slower growth, rising inflation, a weakening housing market and a falling pound. He expressed surprise that global stock markets had so-far shrugged off evidence of the slowdown.

The governor stressed that even the two quarter-point cuts in interest rates pencilled in to the Bank's forecasts would not spare consumers from a painful period of belt-tightening next year - and that the risk was that the UK economy would be even weaker than Threadneedle Street currently expects. Bank's grim warning over UK economy: Rising inflation and weak house market over next year, says King

Mark Alexander
Virginity Fixes: Don’t Waste Taxpayers’ Money on This Nonsense!

THE DAILY MAIL: Women are being given controversial "virginity repair" operations on the NHS, it emerged last night.

Taxpayers funded 24 hymen replacement operations between 2005 and 2006, official figures revealed.

And increasing numbers of women are paying up to £4,000 in private clinics for the procedure apparently under pressure from future spouses or in-laws who believe they should be virgins on their wedding night.

Doctors said most patients are immigrants or British of ethnic origin.

The trend has been condemned by critics as a sign of social regression driven by Islamic fundamentalists. Some countries have made hymen reconstruction operations illegal.

Dr Magdy Hend, consultant gynaecologist at the Regency Clinic, Harley Street, London, who started hymen reconstruction more than 18 years ago in the Middle East and the Gulf, said: "In some cultures they like to see that the women will bleed on the wedding night. If the wife or bride is not a virgin, it is a big shame on the family."

Dr Hend said he was surprised by the "very good response" to the service and said there is "big competition on the market".
Most of his clients, he told More4 News, are in their teens or early 20s.

"They might be British of ethnic background, they might be immigrants, or some people come from abroad, Asia, Middle East, the Gulf, and they don't want to have it done back home," he added.

Dr Hend said demand is increasing, particularly from UK residents.

The operation can involve suturing of a tear in the hymen, such as might be caused by sexual assault, to help healing.

But it can also be conducted as a purely cosmetic procedure. A membrane is constructed, sometimes including a capsule of an artificial blood-like substance.

This operation is intended to be performed within a few days before an intended marriage. Women get 'virginity fix' NHS operations in Muslim-driven trend (more) By James Chapman

Mark Alexander
Imran Khan to Face Terror Charges

THE TELEGRAPH: Imran Khan, the Pakistani opposition leader and former cricketer, was facing terrorism charges yesterday after being arrested in a crackdown on rivals by President Pervez Musharraf.

Mr Khan, who had been in hiding since escaping from house arrest a day after Gen Musharraf declared emergency rule, appeared at a student demonstration in Lahore. He was promptly detained by hardline students and handed over to police, the authorities said.

A senior police official said that Mr Khan, the leader of a small opposition party, would be charged under the Anti-Terrorism Act.
Jemima Khan, his former wife, said the arrest was one more sign that Gen Musharraf had "become one of Pakistan's most brutal and oppressive dictators ever".

The president, meanwhile, set himself on a collision course with the United States by defying demands to lift a state of emergency before holding a general election.

Gen Musharraf, increasingly isolated and reduced to taking a series of autocratic measures to maintain his grip on power, indicated that emergency rule might continue for months. Imran Khan faces terror charges after arrest (more) By Isambard Wilkinson

THE DAILY MAIL:
'I fear for my life', says jailed Imran Khan

Mark Alexander
”Fortress Britain”

THE TELEGRAPH: Train passengers face routine airline-style bag checks and body searches as part of a new counter-terror crackdown announced by Gordon Brown.

He conjured up visions of ''Fortress Britain" as he unveiled a succession of security measures at airports, railway stations, sports venues and other public places.

There is also to be a huge "hearts and minds" drive aimed at diverting young Muslims away from the influence of fanatics. Gordon Brown reveals 'Fortress Britain' plan (more) By Philip Johnston

THE TELEGRAPH:
Actions speak loudest to terrorists, Mr Brown By Michael Burleigh

TELEGRAPH COMMENT:
Balancing liberty with counter-terrorism

THE DAILY MAIL:
Terror crackdown: Passengers forced to answer 53 questions BEFORE they travel By James Slack

NZZ:
Brown will britische Terrorabwehr ausbauen: Konsequentere Überwachung islamistischer Scharfmacher

Mark Alexander
Germany: Extra Payments for Survivors of the Holocaust?

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: Germany has shown the first signs it is willing to talk to Israel about extra pension payments for Holocaust survivors. The original 1952 agreement is no longer sufficient to cover the costs of caring for survivors, says Israel's minister of pensioners affairs.

Germany is showing the first signs of being willing to negotiate with Israel over the thorny issue of extra pension payments for Holocaust survivors.

German government spokesman Thomas Steg said Wednesday in Berlin that if Israel expressed a desire to talk about the issue, then Germany "will not refuse to hold such talks." However, Israel has not yet officially approached the German government over the pensions issue, he said. Germany 'Willing to Discuss' New Holocaust Reparations with Israel (more)

Mark Alexander
US Military Veterans Committing Suicide in Increasing Numbers

TIMESONLINE: More American military veterans have been committing suicide than US soldiers have been dying in Iraq, it was claimed yesterday.

At least 6,256 US veterans took their lives in 2005, at an average of 17 a day, according to figures broadcast last night. Former servicemen are more than twice as likely than the rest of the population to commit suicide.

Such statistics compare to the total of 3,863 American military deaths in Iraq since the invasion in 2003 - an average of 2.4 a day, according to the website ICasualties.org.

The rate of suicides among veterans prompted claims that the US was suffering from a “mental health epidemic” – often linked to post-traumatic stress. America suffers an epidemic of suicides among traumatised army veterans (more)

Mark Alexander
Hamza to Go to the States on Vacation!

THE GUARDIAN: A judge ruled today that the jailed radical Islamic cleric Abu Hamza can be extradited to the US, where he could face terror charges.

The senior district judge Timothy Workman gave his ruling at City of Westminster magistrates court in London today.

Hamza now faces being handed over to US authorities, where he could be tried for 11 charges including involvement in a hostage-taking conspiracy in Yemen in 1998.

Four of the hostages, three Britons and an Australian, were killed when Yemeni troops stormed the militants' hideout.

The American government alleges the cleric was involved in a global conspiracy to wage jihad against the US and other Western countries. Hamza can be tried in US, judge rules By Elizabeth Stewart and agencies

Mark Alexander
Riyad craint une attaque américaine contre l’Iran

LE FIGARO: Craignant les représailles de Téhéran contre ses installations pétrolières, l’Arabie saoudite s’est rapprochée de Moscou, qui a l’oreille des Iraniens dans la crise du nucléaire.

Après avoir misé sur le dialogue, les responsables saoudiens semblent s’être résignés à une attaque américaine contre l’Iran. «Nous nous approchons de plus en plus près d’une confrontation», affirme au Figaro Abdel Mohsen Hakas, le ministre des Affaires sociales. «Le ton de George Bush nous donne à penser qu’il a décidé de ce qu’il allait faire», renchérit Rihab Massoud, bras droit du prince Bandar Ben Sultan, l’ancien ambassadeur saoudien aux États-Unis, très bien introduit outre-Atlantique. Sous-entendu : le président américain ne quittera pas la Maison-Blanche sans avoir «traité» la menace que représente le nucléaire iranien. Riyad craint une attaque américaine contre l’Iran (suivant)

Mark Alexander
Gemeinsam gegen Musharraf

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: In Pakistan haben sich die früher rivalisierenden Oppositionsführer Benazir Bhutto und Nawaz Sharif auf ein Bündnis gegen den amtierenden Präsident Musharraf geeinigt. Dieser bemühte sich unterdessen um die Bildung einer Übergangsregierung, die bis zur geplanten Parlamentswahl am 9. Januar im Amt bleiben soll.

(sda/afp) Die beiden ehemaligen Regierungschefs hätten in einem Telefonat am Mittwoch vereinbart, ihre Differenzen zu vergessen, um einen «gemeinsamen Kampf» für einen Rücktritt Musharrafs zu führen, sagte der Chef von Sharifs Muslim-Liga (Nawaz), Raja Zafar-ul Haq, am Donnerstag der Nachrichtenagentur AFP.

Bhutto habe zugesichert, den Kampf im Land fortzusetzen, bis Musharraf sowohl die Armeeführung als auch das Präsidentenamt aufgebe. Sharif lebt derzeit in Saudiarabien im Exil. Gemeinsam gegen Musharraf: Pakistanische Oppositionspolitiker Bhutto und Sharif schliessen Bündnis (mehr)

Mark Alexander
Charmeoffensive von Saudiarabien

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Am Wochenende findet in Riad die dritte Gipfelkonferenz der Opec seit ihrer Gründung statt; erst am 5. Dezember treten in Abu Dhabi dann die Energieminister der Mitgliedländer zusammen.

Fdr. Vancouver, 14. November

Am nächsten Wochenende findet in Riad eine Gipfelkonferenz der 13 Staats- und Regierungschefs der Organisation der erdölproduzierenden Länder (Opec) statt. Dies ist erst die dritte derartige Konferenz seit der Gründung der Organisation im Jahre 1960. Die erste Konferenz fand 1975 in Algerien statt, die zweite erst 25 Jahre später in Venezuela. Während die beiden früheren Treffen weitgehend hinter geschlossenen Türen stattgefunden haben, ist der Gastgeber der diesjährigen Veranstaltung, der saudiarabische Erdölminister Ali Al Naimi, sichtlich darum bemüht, der Öffentlichkeit und einer seit Wochenbeginn über die Public-Relations-Firma Hill & Knowlton geladenen Schar ausländischer Journalisten ein anderes, offeneres Bild seines Landes und seiner Erdölinfrastruktur zu zeigen. Ob ihm dies gelingt, bleibt dahingestellt. Nach bisherigen Medienberichten ist die angestrebte Offenheit zwar willkommen, aber immer noch sehr selektiv. Charmeoffensive von Saudiarabien: Gipfeltreffen der Opec wirft seine Schatten voraus (mehr)

Mark Alexander

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

A Look Back at the Danish Cartoon Controversy



Pat Robertson
Robert Spencer

Mark Alexander
Deux candidates arabes au cœur de la bataille politique danoise

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Photo grâce à la Tribune de Genève

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Arrivé au pouvoir en promettant un durcissement sur l’asile, le premier ministre Anders Fogh Rasmussen se maintient grâce à une nouvelle campagne contre les étrangers.

Voilà un petit pays à l’économie saine… qui parvient pourtant à se déchirer sur le thème de l’immigration. Ça vous dit quelque chose? Non, il ne s’agit pas de la Suisse, mais bien du Danemark, où les électeurs étaient appelés hier à renouveler leur parlement. Avec seulement 5% d’étrangers au sein d’une population de 5,5 millions d’habitants, la campagne législative s’est plus que jamais focalisée sur cette question brûlante. Avec deux vedettes arabes ultramédiatisées: Naser Khader l’anti-islamiste et Asmaa Abdol-Hamid la gauchiste provocatrice.

De quoi ravir le premier ministre Anders Fogh Rasmussen, arrivé au pouvoir en 2001 sur un programme de durcissement à l’encontre des réfugiés, dont le nombre des nouveaux arrivants a baissé de 80% en six ans. Selon des résultats partiels donnés tard hier soir, sa coalition de centre droit a remporté le vote en obtenant la majorité absolue. Grâce à l’appui, bien sûr, du Parti du peuple danois (PPD), formation populiste d’extrême droite opposée notamment à l’immigration ­musulmane.

Et tant pis si paradoxalement la bonne santé économique du Danemark débouche sur une ­pénurie de bras dans divers ­secteurs. Ni le gouvernement Rasmussen ni même les sociaux-démocrates dans l’opposition ne sont prêts à ouvrir les frontières. Deux candidats arabes au cœur de la bataille politique danoise (suivant)

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL:
Rasmussen's Gamble Pays Off

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Photo of Rasmussen courtesy of SpiegelOnline International

Mark Alexander
Cal Thomas on Islam



Mark Alexander
Top Muslim Scholar in Egypt Defends Himself Against Criticism of His Fatwas

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Photo of the Grand Mufti Sheikh Ali Gomaa courtesy of the BBC

BBC: Egypt's top Muslim scholar has defended himself against criticism for a series of controversial fatwas he has issued.

With tears in his eyes, Grand Mufti Sheikh Ali Gomaa told reporters his religious edicts were never influenced by pressure from the authorities.

Fierce criticism followed his recent ruling that speeding drivers cannot be condemned for killing people who deliberately stand in their way.

It became public days after just such a case involving a police car.

The mufti also offended many by saying that 26 Egyptian illegal migrants who drowned trying to reach Europe were the victims of their own greed rather than martyrs.

Sheikh Gomaa represents the Dar al-Ifta which is the official interpreter of Islamic law in Egypt based on the Koran and teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. Egypt's mufti rejects criticism (more)

Mark Alexander
Challenge to Legality of Decision to End Investigations of BAE

BBC: A pressure group is going to the High Court to challenge the legality of the decision to end investigations into BAE Systems' dealings with Saudi Arabia.

Corner House Research is due later to ask the High Court for permission to seek a judicial review.

It wants to challenge the Serious Fraud Office's decision last year to stop investigations into whether BAE gave money to Saudi officials in the 1980s. BAE inquiry decision challenged (more)

Mark Alexander
Sir Ian Kershaw on the Rise of Hitler

In the same way as the Guardian and Observer misjudged the dangers of the rise of Hitler and Nazi Germany, so, too, are the MSM misjudging the rise of radical Islam. As I, and many others have said, this is the nineteen thirties all over again! "Blind optimism" is exactly what we are experiencing today with the rise of Islam!

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Photo of Hitler at the Nuremberg rally in September 1933 courtesy of The Guardian
THE GUARDIAN: As Hitler shouted his way up the political ranks in Germany, the Guardian and Observer misjudged the extent of his early influence, writes Sir Ian Kershaw

By the time the Nazi party came to prominence by winning 107 seats (18.3% of the votes) in the Reichstag election of September 14 1930, British newspapers could not ignore Hitler and his movement. But, as Brigitte Granzow showed long ago in her book, A mirror of Nazism, the reportage was replete with distortions and misinterpretation.

In an article on September 21 that year, the Observer echoed the widely held belief on the left that Hitler was the creature of big capital. It saw the real dangerman not as Hitler, but as the media tycoon and leader of the German National People's party, Alfred Hugenberg. The "Hugenberg manoeuvres", it stated, had aimed to promote both Communists and Nazis as a vehicle to weaken the organised working classes. "Hugenberg, and not Hitler, will ultimately call the Nazi tune."

A week later, the newspaper dismissed Hitler as "dramatic, violent and shallow", and "a lightweight", seeing him as "not a man, but a megaphone" of the prevailing discontent, fronting a militarist reaction, which would mean the destruction of peace. The newspaper went on to claim, remarkably, that Hitler was "definitely Christian in his ideals", and, even more strangely, that these matched the ideals of German Catholics.

The Guardian thought on September 25 1930 that the exclusion of the Nazi party from Reich government, given its electoral success, was not in the best interests of German democracy and that their involvement would "in the long run ... help to perpetuate this democracy". Blind optimism (more)

YNETNEWS.COM:
Germans don’t owe us a dime: Where’s our pride? Campaign for more German compensation money shameful By Yoram Kaniuk

YNETNEWS.COM:
Germany: No additional reparations for Holocaust survivors By Gil Yaron
Mark Alexander
A National Disgrace

THE TELEGRAPH: Up to 10,000 foreign nationals could be working illegally in the security industry, the Home Secretary indicated yesterday. The figure is double the previous estimate.

Jacqui Smith told MPs that officials were still trying to find out the scale of the fiasco but, despite accusations from the Conservatives of "blunder, panic and cover-up", she denied trying to conceal the problem.

The latest controversy to hit the Home Office centres on the disclosure that sensitive security installations were being guarded by illegal immigrants. They were licensed to work by the Security Industry Authority (SIA), a government agency that checks whether they have a criminal record. '10,000 illegal immigrants' work in security (more) By Philip Johnston

TELEGRAPH COMMENT:
Scandal rooted in failure of border controls By Philip Johnston

Mark Alexander
Imran Khan Arrested in Pakistan

BBC: Pakistani opposition politician Imran Khan has been arrested after making his first public appearance since emergency rule was declared, police have said.

The former cricketer was detained after going to the University of Punjab in Lahore to address a protest by students against President Pervez Musharraf.

Mr Khan was initially held for an hour by students from the Jamaat-e-Islami party after a standoff on the campus.

On Tuesday, Mr Khan said there should be no negotiations with Gen Musharraf.

Mr Khan joins scores of other more powerful opposition politicians already in custody.

The former cricketer is well known around the world from his sporting days, but his Tehrik-i-Insaf party has little support in Pakistan. Khan arrested at Pakistan protest (more)

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Khan arrested in Pakistan

Mark Alexander

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Sarkozy Stands Firm

BBC: France's national rail workers have begun an open-ended strike called in protest at President Nicolas Sarkozy's planned pension reforms.

Rail employees stopped work at 2000 (1900 GMT) and thousands of commuters will be affected on Wednesday morning.

Utility workers are also set to strike. They may be joined by teachers and civil servants on 20 November.

Eurostar says the first train services from London's new St Pancras terminal will be unaffected by the action.

The next few days will be a real test of the French prime minister's nerve, reports the BBC's Emma Jane Kirby from Paris.

"Tomorrow is going to be a hellish day for travellers and perhaps for many days beyond that," Labour Minister Xavier Betrand warned on Tuesday.

That view was echoed by Prime Minister Francois Fillon who told parliament: "Millions of French people will be deprived of their fundamental freedom, the freedom of movement and even perhaps to work." French unions strike over reforms (more)

Mark Alexander
The Picture that Says it All!

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Hat tip to Pedestrian Infidel for this image.


Mark Alexander
Benazir Calls on Musharraf to Quit: “He’s Out of His Depth,” She Says

BBC: Pakistan's detained opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has called for President Pervez Musharraf to step down.

Ms Bhutto made the call after police mounted a massive security operation to prevent a protest march in Lahore, where she is under house arrest.

It is the first time Ms Bhutto has urged Gen Musharraf to quit altogether. Bhutto calls on Musharraf to quit (more)

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Bhutto under house arrest

Mark Alexander
Ensemble contre l’immigration clandestine

LE FIGARO: Le Conseil des ministres conjoint franco-allemand s’est réuni hier à Berlin autour du thème de l’immigration.

Pas de fâcheries cette fois, des compliments et des projets : entourés de leur gouvernement, «Nicolas» et «Angela » ont assuré que le premier Conseil des ministres conjoint qu’ils coprésidaient hier à Berlin ne resterait pas sans lendemains. Dans son souci «d’aller au-devant des gens», la chancelière allemande a annoncé que cette rencontre consacrée à l’intégration se prolongera par un séminaire gouvernemental commun sur les questions d’immigration, au printemps, en France. Dans cette perspective, elle a indiqué que les deux gouvernements joindraient leurs efforts pour «maîtriser les flux migratoires et la lutte contre l’immigration clandestine». «Nous allons avancer ensemble vers une politique d’immigration commune», a affirmé Nicolas Sarkozy. Ensemble contre l’immigration clandestine (suivant) D'Alain Barluet et Pierre Bocev

Mark Alexander