Thursday, October 16, 2008

UE : Sarkozy plaide pour
 une gouvernance économique

LE FIGARO: Le président français juge nécessaire de poursuivre «le cercle vertueux» de la coordination économique engagé à la faveur de la crise financière par les partenaires européens, qui ont répondu plutôt positivement à son appel.

Après que l'Eurogroupe a adopté le plan de sauvetage des banques, Nicolas Sarkozy tient à rester au cœur de l'action européenne. Le chef de l'Etat a annoncé jeudi qu'il prendrait avant la fin de l'année des «initiatives» pour la coordination de la politique économique des 27 pays de l'UE. Le président en exercice de l'Union européenne juge en effet nécessaire de poursuivre «le cercle vertueux» engagé à la faveur de la crise financière.

«J'ai plusieurs idées en la matière (mais) ce n'est pas le moment, ce n'est pas le lieu de les mettre sur la table», a-t-il indiqué lors de la conférence de presse clôturant le sommet européen de Bruxelles. «L'émergence du gouvernement économique de l'Europe, qu'on attend depuis si longtemps, qui a commencé dimanche dernier (lors du sommet de l'Eurogroupe à Paris, Ndlr), il ne faut pas l'arrêter. La question, en tant que président du Conseil, que j'ai posée aux chefs d'Etat et de gouvernement, c'est : si on a pu apporter une réponse coordonnée à la crise financière en Europe, ne faudrait-il pas apporter une réponse coordonnée à la crise économique en Europe ? Du point de vue de la présidence française, la réponse est oui, oui, oui. Est-ce que c'est pour l'instant l'unanimité : non, non, non». >>> S.P. (lefigaro.fr), avec AFP | 16.10.2008

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Radical Islam in Britain


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Christopher Hitchens: Islam in Britain after 7/7

Part 1:


Part 2:


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London Hosting Book Show on Kingdom and Islam

ARAB NEWS: RIYADH: An international book show on Islam and Saudi Arabia will start in London today to enhance understanding between the West and the Kingdom.

Ghainaa Communications and Studies is organizing the show in collaboration with Saudi student clubs and schools in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

"The show is designed to give a clearer view about Islam and Saudi Arabia, and will remove any misconceptions in the West," said Mohammed Al-Bishr, head of the research team overseeing the project. "This is the second show of its kind after the one held in Riyadh last year."

He added that the books to be displayed are in English and French and would tackle issues often raised in Western media about Islam and the Kingdom.

Al-Bishr noted that 77 scholars, intellectuals, politicians and media persons from the Kingdom, the rest of the Arab world, Russia, Japan, Greece, France and the United States have taken part in the project. He added that the participants expressed unbiased viewpoints on contemporary issues concerning Islam and Saudi Arabia. London Hosting Book Show on Kingdom and Islam >>> Md Rasooldeen | Thursday, October 16, 2008

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Melbourne, Australia: Muslim Students Demand Their Own Prayer Facilities

HERALD SUN: UP TO 1000 Muslim students at RMIT* are protesting against sharing a multi-faith prayer room with Christians, Jews and worshippers of other faiths.

RMIT Islamic Society vice-president Mohamed Elrafihi said the university had promised Muslim students their own prayer room at the Swanston St campus.

Five refurbished multi-faith prayer rooms -- including a foot-wash room for Muslims and a prayer room with Arabic signs and oriented towards Mecca -- were opened to students earlier this year.

But Mr Elrafihi said the Islamic-themed prayer room can be booked by other religions, which would interrupt evening Muslim prayer times.

Islamic students have refused to use the new facilities, insisting one room be dedicated for use by Muslims.

"We have nothing against multi-faith, we support multi-faith," Mr Elrafihi said.

He said RMIT had misled international students in previous promotions about Muslim prayer facilities.

"The Muslims were promised a dedicated room and that was taken from them. That has caused a lot of stress," Mr Elrafihi said.

While refusing to use the new prayer facilities for the past eight months, up to 600 Muslim students have been worshipping outdoors each Friday in nearby Bowen St, or on other days on the lawns outside RMIT's prayer halls in part of the old Melbourne jail. Muslim Students Protest about Prayer Room at RMIT >>> Mark Dunn | October 14, 2008

*Melbourne University

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Free to Think for Themselves

THE GUARDIAN: I enjoyed a rare privilege last Friday, October 10 (which was world day against the death penalty), attending a gathering of brave and principled people to whom the death penalty might be applied in a number of countries around the world because of their beliefs or lack of them. This was the conference organised the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain to discuss apostasy – the "crime" of which all members of the Council are guilty – and associated questions about the place of religion and free thought in civil society.

The members of the Council of Ex-Muslims are people who, having thought things through for themselves, have put aside the religion they were made to accept as children – a common enough feature of the adult attainment of reason among many – but in this case the religion is Islam, which regards apostasy as punishable by death.

I wonder how many reading these words have sat in a gathering of people not a few of whom have received death threats because they think for themselves, and who have chosen a path not only personally dangerous but full of difficulty in relation to their families and communities – and who have done so because of reflectively chosen principle. It is a striking experience. In our relatively peaceful and tolerant western dispensations, disagreements of principle are rarely matters of murder; which is why some people find themselves incapable of grasping what last Friday's gathering signified.

The symbolic import of the conference was great; the substance of the discussions was absorbing and important. It was about the nature of apostasy, the freedom to choose whether or not to have a religion, and to criticise religion whether or not one subscribes to it; the question whether there should be one and the same law for all or whether Britain's Muslim minority should be allowed to apply sharia law to itself; and the question of faith schools, religious education and creationist doctrine. The themes all related to the place of the individual in civil society, and whether religious doctrine should be allowed to impose itself on those unwilling to be governed by it or – as with children – powerless to resist it.

The conference was opened by the head of the Iranian Secular Society, Fariborz Pooya, and addressed by the extraordinary and courageous Maryam Namazie, spokesperson of the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain, who subjected Islamism – political Islam – to scrutiny, arguing that it serves as an agency of Islamic states with serious implications for the lives, rights and freedoms of individuals, many of whom have left their countries of origin precisely to escape the repressive political and social climates there – countries with "moral police" and the death penalty for, among others, gay people, lovers who engage in extra-marital sex and people who reject religious orthodoxy.

A source of frustration for many is that they are lumped into "the Muslim community" whose self-elected spokespeople are more representative of the Islamic states that many in their "Muslim community" have fled: which is why the Council of Ex-Muslims makes a point of calling itself this, to reinforce the point that not everyone who was born into a Muslim community has to be permanently forced into homogenised membership of it. Another reason is to encourage the many closet "apostates" in that community that there is life and succour outside it. Free to Think for Themselves >>> AC Grayling | October 16. 2008

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The Third 2008 Presidential Debate: John McCain versus Barack Obama (Full Version)


THE NEW YORK TIMES: McCain Presses Obama in Final Debate

Senator John McCain used the final debate of the presidential election on Wednesday night to raise persistent and pointed questions about Senator Barack Obama’s character, judgment and policy prescriptions in a session that was by far the most spirited and combative of their encounters this fall.

At times showing anger and at others a methodical determination to make all his points, Mr. McCain pressed his Democratic rival on taxes, spending, the tone of the campaign and his association with the former Weather Underground leader William Ayers, using nearly every argument at his disposal in an effort to alter the course of a contest that has increasingly gone Mr. Obama’s way.

But Mr. Obama maintained a placid and at times bemused demeanor — if at times appearing to work at it — as he parried the attacks and pressed his consistent line that Mr. McCain would represent a continuation of President Bush’s unpopular policies, especially on the economy.

That set the backdrop for one of the sharpest exchanges of the evening, when, in response to Mr. Obama’s statement that Mr. McCain had repeatedly supported Mr. Bush’s economic policies, Mr. McCain fairly leaped out of his chair to say: “Senator Obama, I am not President Bush. If you wanted to run against President Bush, you should have run four years ago.” >>> By Jim Rutenberg | October 15, 2008

THE TELEGRAPH: US Presidential Debate: John McCain Attacks Barack Obama as High-spending Liberal

Republican nominee Senator John McCain has fulfilled the wishes of his supporters, aggressively demanding that Senator Barack Obama explain his relationship with a 1960s radical and attacking his Democratic rival as a high tax, high-spending liberal.

Saving their sharpest encounter for the final debate, the US presidential candidates offered clear differences in their visions for the country one of them will be soon be governing.

Much of their disagreement centred around an Ohio plumber, Joe Wurzelbacher, whose recently confronted Mr Obama about the higher taxes he would face under the Democrat’s plans. Several times both candidates addressed their comments to "Joe the Plumber" – "if you are watching".

Slipping further behind in the polls, Mr McCain came out fighting and repeated to Mr Obama's face some of the most negative campaign allegations about the Illinois senator.

He demanded to know the full extent of Mr Obama’s relationship with Bill Ayers, now an education professor who was the founder group of anti-Vietnam War militants called the Weather Underground that bombed government buildings in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

"I don't care about an old washed-up terrorist, but as Senator Clinton said in her debates with you, we need to know the full extent of the relationship with you," said Mr McCain. >>> By Alex Spillius in Hempstead, New York | October 16, 2008

BBC:
McCain and Obama in Tense Final Debate >>> | October 16, 2008

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Dubai Beach Sex Lands British Pair in Jail

THE GUARDIAN: A British man and woman were today jailed for three months after being convicted of having sex on a Dubai beach.

Vince Acors, 34, of south-east London, and Michelle Palmer, 36, of Oakham, Rutland, were arrested on Jumeirah beach in the early hours of July 5, having met that night at a £60 all-you-can-drink champagne brunch.

As well as jailing the pair, Judge Hamdi Abul Kharr fined them 1,000 dirhams (£155) and ordered their deportation after they had completed their jail sentences.

Prosecutors said the pair were seen having sex on the each after being dropped off by a taxi.

But Palmer, who works on [sic] the emirate as a publishing executive, claimed they were "just kissing and hugging".

The pair's lawyer, Hassam Matter, had said witness statements, including one from a police officer, were wrong.

He said medical examinations proved Palmer did not have sex.

Matter said the pair were "upset" by the prison sentence and he would appeal against the verdict. Dubai Beach Sex Lands British Pair in Jail >>> Elizabeth Stewart and agencies | October 16, 2008

BBC: Dubai: Britons Guilty of Having Sex on the Beach

A British man and woman have been sentenced to three months in jail in Dubai after being found guilty of having sex on a beach.

Michelle Palmer, 36, of Oakham, Rutland, and Vince Acors, 34, of Bromley, south-east London, were arrested on 5 July.

The pair had denied charges of public indecency and having unmarried sex.

They were fined 1,000 dirhams (£160;$350) and will be deported after serving their sentences.

The pair were not at Dubai's Court of First Instance to hear the ruling but had been ordered not to leave the emirate.

Their defence lawyer Hassan Matter had insisted they would be proved innocent and said they were upset by the verdict.

"We are making an appeal against the verdict. They have not been arrested and taken into custody yet," he said. Sex-on-Beach Trial Britons Guilty >>> | October 16, 2008

Watch BBC video: A guide to acceptable behaviour in Dubai >>>

THE TELEGRAPH:
British Couple Jailed for Sex on Dubai Beach >>> By Ben Leach | October 16, 2008

Watch BBC video: Migrant workers abused in Dubai: There is growing evidence of the abuse of Asian and African domestic workers in Dubai, one of the richest destinations in the world: Christian Fraser reports from Dubai >>> | October 16, 2008

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Something Sure to Upset Muslims: The “Virtual Strip Search” at Airport Security

MAIL Online: New 'strip search' full body scanners being trialled in Australia will show people's private parts, officials have admitted.

But to spare their blushes, the faces of passengers will be blurred.

Domestic travellers leaving Melbourne airport over the next six weeks will be asked to test the new security scanners that can see through clothing.

The X-ray backscatter body scanner has been described by critics as a "virtual strip search."

The scanner is similar to one that was trialled at Paddington station in London in 2006 in direct response to the tube bombings in July 2005.

Similar systems have also been tested at Gatwick airport.

Cheryl Johnson, general manager of the Office of Transport Security, said:' It will show the private parts of people, but what we've decided is that we're not going to blur those out, because it severely limits the detection capabilities. '

'It is possible to see genitals and breasts while they're going through the machine, though,' she admitted[.] Airport Admits ‘Strip Search’ Body Scanners WILL Show People Naked >>> By Richard Shears | October 15, 2008

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Publishers Seek New Talent in Arab World

THE GUARDIAN: Western publishers are launching a drive to tap the Arab world for new stars, hoping to bridge the language gap with more than 200 million native Arabic speakers - and make money from selling books.

Bloomsbury announced at the Frankfurt Book Fair yesterday that it is to launch a new Arabic-language publishing house, Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing, in partnership with the Gulf state. "The emphasis so far in Qatar has been on literacy, and our second challenge is how to move from literacy to literature to create a culture," said Abdel-Rahman Azzam, a spokesman for Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al-Missned, the emir's consort and the chair of the Qatar Foundation.

The venture hopes to find new talent to build on the success of Egypt's Alaa Al-Aswany and Afghanistan-born Khaled Hosseini, whose respective novels The Yacoubian Building and The Kite Runner have been international bestsellers.

Azzam said the Arabic literary world was on the cusp of a boom similar to that enjoyed by India, home of this year's Booker prize winner, Aravind Adiga.

Western interest in Arabic literature has been growing despite a paucity of published new works. Arabic is the fifth-most spoken language worldwide, with 206 million native speakers. Many feel that globalisation and the domination of English have negatively affected their native tongue. But Gulf oil and gas wealth - and the competitive urge to create and buy signature international brands - has opened up possibilities. Publishers Seek New Talent in Arab World >>> Alison Flood in Frankfurt and Ian Black | Thursday, October 16, 2008

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Chicago: Group Places Ads for Islam on Buses

UPI: CHICAGO -- A Muslim group called Gain Peace has spent nearly $30,000 to place ads for Islam on Chicago Transit Authority buses serving the city's North Side.

The move is part of a monthlong campaign to dispel popular misconceptions about the religion, the Chicago Tribune reported Wednesday.

Though most people interviewed by the Tribune said they hadn't noticed the ads, Gain Peace is calling the campaign a success. Group Places Ads for Islam on Buses >>> | October 15, 2008

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Jörg Haider Was Drunk at the Time of the Fatal Crash

MSNBC: Aide says far-right politician was above legal limit when car veered off road

VIENNA, Austria - Austrian far-right politician Joerg Haider was drunk at the time of his fatal car crash, his spokesman said Wednesday.
Stefan Petzner said Haider's blood alcohol level was significantly above the legal limit when he crashed his car early Saturday in the southern province of Carinthia, where he was governor. Police said his high-powered Volkswagen Phaeton was speeding at twice the posted limit when it veered off the road, crashed and flipped.
Petzner said he felt obliged to confirm widespread speculation that the former Freedom Party leader was intoxicated. Austria’s Haider Was Drunk during Fatal Crash >>> AP | October 15, 2008

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Saudi Arabia: Two More Filipinos Face Execution

INQUIRER.NET: MANILA, Philippines -- A day after an overseas Filipino worker (OFW) was beheaded in Jeddah for killing a Saudi national, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on Wednesday said it is closely monitoring the capital case of two more OFWs that is now going through final court procedures.

In a press conference, Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs Esteban Conejos said the case is one of 34 in varying court stages that the DFA is monitoring. He did not name the two OFWs or where they are.

"Since January 2006, the department under my watch has handled 64 probable death-row cases. Of the 64, 24 have been commuted. Of the remaining 40 cases, 34 are already filed in court and the rest are still in preliminary investigation stage," he said.

Since then, he said the other unsuccessful attempt to have a death sentence commuted was that of Reynaldo Cortez, who was executed June 2007.

At the same time, Conejos said the Philippine government has sent a note verbale to the Saudi government for the possible repatriation of the remains of Jenifer Bidoya, who was beheaded Tuesday afternoon. Saudi Arabia: Two More Filipinos Face Execution >>> By Veronica Uy | October 15, 2008

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Islamic Challenge to Indonesia’s Democracy

Gains by radical parties around the globe highlight democracy’s ongoing vulnerability to anti-democratic movements. Indonesia – with its free press, stable economy, free elections, tolerant and inclusive policy – is no exception. But in local Indonesian politics, the radical Islamic Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) has made dramatic gains, with extremists pressing for dress codes, Koran reading tests, laws based on sharia and other religious standards. “The PKS has taken just 10 years to transform itself from a bit player to a major force in national politics,” explains author Sadanand Dhume. Politics driven by fear, disunity among moderates due to policy differences or personal ambitions, along with governments that succumb to corruption and fail to provide basic services can boost extremist parties. Dhume warns that extremism eventually leads to a downward cycle, stifling scientific inquiry, open debate on policies and economic investment. He concludes that a moderate path requires vigilant respect for multiculturalism, tolerance and individual rights. – YaleGlobal

YALE GLOBAL ONLINE: Democracy remains highly vulnerable to determined anti-democratic movements

WASHINGTON: Against the backdrop of carnage at Islamabad’s Marriott hotel, terrorist attacks on the US embassy in San’a and the Indian embassy in Kabul, and the resurgence of Al Qaeda in Algeria, few places in the Muslim world appear as placid as Indonesia. It’s been three years since the country’s last major terrorist bombing; Al Qaeda’s local affiliate, Jemaah Islamiyah, is on the run. Democracy has blossomed: Parliamentary and presidential elections scheduled for 2009 will be the third consecutive free ballot since the end of General Suharto’s 32-year reign in 1998. Both the president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, and the principal opposition leader, Megawati Sukarnoputri, reflect the principles of tolerance and inclusiveness bequeathed to the country by its founding fathers at independence. The Indonesian press is Southeast Asia’s freest, its cinema the region’s most vibrant.

Beneath the surface, though, Indonesian society is in ferment. Earlier this year, clerical diktats and repeated mob violence forced the government to effectively ban the Ahmadiyya, a beleaguered Islamic sect considered “heretical” by some Muslims for revering its founder alongside the prophet Mohammed. In June, in an incident rich with irony, members of the vigilante group Islamic Defenders Front, wielding bamboo staves, attacked peaceful demonstrators rallying for religious freedom at the National Monument, an iconic symbol of Indonesian unity. Dozens of district governments have enacted sharia-inspired regulations including mandatory dress codes, compulsory Koran reading tests for students and couples seeking to marry, and vice squads loosely modeled on those in Saudi Arabia and Taliban-era Afghanistan. In September, protesters from the Hindu island of Bali took to the streets to force parliament to postpone passage of a so-called anti-pornography bill whose broadly worded restrictions on clothing and artistic expression could potentially penalize Balinese culture and jeopardize its tourism-dependent economy. Bali contributes the lion’s share of Indonesia’s tourism earnings, estimated at $5.3 billion in 2007. Islamic Challenge to Indonesia’s Democracy >>> Sadanand Dhume | October 15, 2008

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Jesse Jackson on Obama’s America

Photobucket
Photo of Barack Hussein Obama courtesy of Google Images

NEW YORK POST: Evian, France - PREPARE for a new America: That's the message that the Rev. Jesse Jackson conveyed to participants in the first World Policy Forum, held at this French lakeside resort last week.

He promised "fundamental changes" in US foreign policy - saying America must "heal wounds" it has caused to other nations, revive its alliances and apologize for the "arrogance of the Bush administration."

The most important change would occur in the Middle East, where "decades of putting Israel's interests first" would end.
Jackson believes that, although "Zionists who have controlled American policy for decades" remain strong, they'll lose a great deal of their clout when Barack Obama enters the White House.

"Obama is about change," Jackson told me in a wide-ranging conversation. "And the change that Obama promises is not limited to what we do in America itself. It is a change of the way America looks at the world and its place in it." The O Jesse Knows: Jackson on Obama’s America >>> Amir Taheri | October 14, 2008

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BBC Should Go Easy on Islam and Muslims According to BBC Director General, Mark Thompson. At Taxpayers’ Expense, of Course!

Photobucket
Mark Thompson, Director General of the BBC, courtesy of The Telegraph

Mark Thompson appears to be unaware that many Muslims are out to destroy Western civilization. Or is this fact of little consequence to the man? What a ridiculous, soft, appeasing attitude he has!

For God’s sake (not Allah’s) don’t use public funds to tread softly softly on the enemy like this. Did the BBC go easy on Hitler and the Nazis in the late Thirties and Forties? Of course not. But then, that was an altogether different time – a time when people had strength and courage, and the determination to overcome the forces working against them.
- ©Mark


THE TELEGRAPH: Islam should be treated more sensitively by the media than Christianity, according to the director general of the BBC.

Mark Thompson claimed that because Muslims are a religious minority in Britain and also often from ethnic minorities, their faith should be given different coverage to that of more established groups.

His comments come after the comedian Ben Elton accused the BBC of being scared of making jokes about Islam, while Hindus have claimed it favours Muslims over other religions.

But Mr Thompson, speaking at the annual public theology lecture of the religion think-tank Theos, insisted the state broadcaster would show programmes that criticised Islam if they were of sufficient quality.

The director general, whose corporation faced accusations of blasphemy from Christians after it allowed the transmission of the musical Jerry Springer -The Opera, also said his Christian beliefs guided his judgments and disclosed that he had never watched the Monty Python film Life of Brian which satirises the story of Jesus.

In his speech last night, Mr Thompson claimed there are now more programmes about religion on BBC television and radio than there have been in recent decades, whereas coverage has declined on ITV.

But asked whether it was correct that the BBC "let vicar gags pass but not imam gags", as Elton claimed, he admitted it did take a different approach to Islam, which has 1.6million followers in Britain, compared to its approach to the Church of England or the Roman Catholic Church.

Mr Thompson said: "My view is that there is a difference between the position of Christianity, which I believe should be central to the BBC's religion coverage and widely respected and followed.

"What Christian identity feels like it is about to the broad population is a little bit different to people for whom their religion is also associated with an ethnic identity which has not been fully integrated. BBC Boss Says Islam Should Be Treated More Sensitively than Christianity >>> By Martin Beckford, Religious Affairs Correspondent | October 15, 2008

MAIL ONLINE: The BBC Will Tackle Islam Differently to [sic] Christianity … and We Won’t Make Jokes about It, Admits Director General

BBC director general Mark Thompson has admitted that the broadcaster has to tackle Islam differently to [sic] Christianity and is reluctant to broadcast jokes about it.

He suggested that coverage needed to consider the feelings of Muslims because they are a religious minority, and had not fully integrated in to British society.

Mr Thompson was responding to comments made by comedian Ben Elton earlier this year who accused the BBC of being too scared to joke about Islam.

He said the corporation was too concerned with political correctness to poke fun at imams but were happy to satirise vicars.

Speaking at an annual theology lecture for religious think tank Theos, Mr Thompson said: 'My view is that there is a difference between the position of Christianity, which I believe should be central to the BBC's religion coverage and widely respected and followed.

'What Christian identity feels like to the broad population is a little bit different to people for whom their religion is also associated with an ethnic identity which has not been fully integrated.

'There's no reason why any religion should be immune from discussion, but I don't want to say that all religions are the same. To be a minority I think puts a slightly different outlook on it.'

Elton made his comments earlier this year in an interview with Christian magazine Third Way when he was asked if too much deference was shown to religious people.

'I think it all starts with people nodding whenever anybody says, 'As a person of faith ...',' he said.

'And I believe that part of it is due to the genuine fear that the authorities and the community have about provoking the radical elements of Islam," he said.

'There's no doubt about it, the BBC will let vicar gags pass but they would not let imam gags pass. They might pretend that it's, you know, something to do with their moral sensibilities, but it isn't. It's because they're scared. I know these people.'

However Thompson's admission was met with derision by Christian and media groups.

Stephen Green, director of Christian Voice, said: 'Mr Thompson seems to be saying that because Islam is a minority religion it should be treated with kid gloves.

'This is ridiculous. All religions should be treated with equally and with the same approach. I think the reality is that the BBC treats coverage of Islam and Muslims differently because it is terrified of offending them. It is political correctness. The BBC is simply not bothered about offending Christians despite the majority of this country being of that faith.'

John Beyer, director of Mediawatch, said: 'All religions need to be treated in the same way, otherwise how can the BBC claim to be impartial?

'I think that any approach to religious debate and discussion that is not impartial is not what the BBC should be doing.' >>> By Liz Thomas | October 15, 2008

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Muslim Convert Admits Attempted Suicide Terror Attack

Photobucket
Photo of Nicky Reilly, now known as ‘Mohamed Abdulaziz Rashid Saeed-Alim’, courtesy of The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH: A Muslim convert has admitted trying to blow himself up at a shopping centre with a home-made nail bomb.

Nicky Reilly, 22, who uses the Muslim name Mohamed Abdulaziz Rashid Saeed-Alim, pleaded guilty to launching the failed attack on a busy family restaurant at the Princesshay shopping centre in Exeter in May this year

Reilly researched how to make a bomb, acquired the components and made three devices using caustic soda, paraffin and aluminium foil, along with nails, which he had put in glass soft drink bottles.

But when he attempted to assemble one of the soft drink bottle bombs in the toilet cubicle of the restaurant it exploded in his hands.

Reilly appeared at the Old Bailey via a video link and pleaded guilty to attempted murder at the Giraffe restaurant.

He also admitted engaging in preparation for terrorism in that he researched targets and how to make bombs and prepared three of them in the restaurant.

Two charges under the Explosives Act were not put to him because prosecutor Stuart Baker told the court that they were alternatives to the more serious charges. Muslim Convert Admits Attempted Suicide Terror Attack >>> By Duncan Gardham, Security Correspondent | October 15, 2008

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

European Dhimmi Alert! Sarkozy Shows His Appeasement, His Weakness, His Stupidity!

BRUSSELS JOURNAL: The French government is strongly advocating the teaching of Arabic language and civilization in French schools. Not surprising, considering the number of Arabs and Muslims in France, and the unctuous deference with which they are treated by officials, beginning notably with Nicolas Sarkozy, who cannot praise enough the splendor of Arabic contributions to the world.

The French National Assembly was the scene of a meeting earlier this month of the first Conference on the Teaching of Arabic Language and Culture, attended by a variety of interested parties. There was much wearisome blather about the need for "dialogue."

In his message to the participants, French President Nicolas Sarkozy called Arabic the "language of the future, of science and of modernity," and expressed the hope that "more French people share in the language that expresses great civilizational and spiritual values." Sarkozy: Arabic Is the Language of the Future >>> From the desk of Tiberge | October 14, 2008

Hat tip: Tundra Tabloids >>>

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Strache Claims to Be Haider's Heir in the Third Camp

WIENER ZEITUNG: FPÖ leader Heinz-Christian Strache has said that he sees himself as the only heir of former BZÖ leader and Carinthian Governor Jörg Haider in the so-called "Dritte Lager" or right-wing Third Camp of Austrian politics.



The "Dritte Lager" includes right-wing, nationalist and economically-liberal voters in Austria and is the country’s third big camp after Social Democrat (SPÖ) and People's Party (ÖVP) members and sympathisers, respectively.



Strache said that the BZÖ had represented only Haider himself after he split from the FPÖ and formed the BZÖ in 2005.



Strache added that he was inviting "all reasonable forces", voters and politicians to support the "solid path of the FPÖ".



Strache expressed appreciation for the work of his former mentor Haider, with whom he fell out before the BZÖ was founded.

Strache said that Haider had created a new style of politics and made the FPÖ into a strong party.



Strache claimed that he was very pleased that he had had an opportunity to discuss issues with Haider in a meeting last week. Strache, however, ruled out reunification of Austria’s right-wing parties. [Source: Wiener Zeitung] | 14. October 2008

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And Now for Some Good News! Internet Use ‘Good for the Brain’

BBC: For middle aged and older people at least, using the internet helps boost brain power, research suggests.

A University of California Los Angeles team found searching the web stimulates centres in the brain that control decision-making and complex reasoning.

The researchers say this might even help to counter-act the age-related physiological changes that cause the brain to slow down.

The study features in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.

As the brain ages, a number of changes occur, including shrinkage and reductions in cell activity, which can impact on performance.

It has long been thought that activities which keep the brain active, such as crossword puzzles, may help minimise the impact - and the latest study suggests that surfing the web can be added to the list.

Lead researcher Professor Gary Small said: "The study results are encouraging, that emerging computerized technologies may have physiological effects and potential benefits for middle-aged and older adults.

"Internet searching engages complicated brain activity, which may help exercise and improve brain function." Internet Use ‘Good for the Brain’ >>> | October 14, 2008

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Folgen der Finanzkrise: Isländer horten Nahrung

SUEDDEUTSCHE: Angst vor dem Staatsbankrott: Die Isländer fürchten die Zahlungsunfähigkeit ihres Staates und decken sich mit dem Nötigsten ein. Die Lebensmittelpreise steigen bereits - bald könnte Nahrung knapp werden.

Islands Kaufrausch der vergangenen Jahre hat längst ein Ende gefunden. Nun setzt in diesen Tagen ein letzter Spurt auf die Geschäfte ein - einige Ladenbetreiber melden doppelt so hohe Umsätze. Der Ursprung ihres Handelns bereitet allerdings Grund zur Sorge: Die Isländer decken sich mit Lebensmitteln ein - bevor das Land möglicherweise Bankrott anmelden muss. Folgen der Finanzkrise: Isländer horten Nahrung >>> | 14. Oktober 2008

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Amnesty Condemns ‘Horror’ of Saudi Executions

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Photo of a beheading in Saudi Arabia courtesy of Google Images

THE GUARDIAN: Poor foreign workers bear the brunt of "the stark horror" of Saudi Arabia's secretive death penalty system, Amnesty International said today, with a Saudi citizen up to eight times more likely to escape execution through a "blood money" payment than a foreigner.

Foreign nationals, mostly Asians and Africans, who face capital trials in the conservative kingdom are frequently unable to understand court proceedings if they are not Arabic speakers, are often not represented by a lawyer and are routinely held for long periods in harsh conditions and coerced into false confessions.

"Poor foreign workers are literally paying with their lives when accused of capital crimes in Saudi Arabia," said Amnesty International's UK Director Kate Allen. "Frequently bamboozled by secretive and unfair trials conducted in a language they don't even understand, they go to their deaths with little assistance from their home countries and little mercy from a grossly unfair Saudi justice system."

The Saudi authorities do not provide statistics on the use of the death penalty but Amnesty recorded at least 1,695 executions between 1985 and May 2008. Of these, 830 were foreign nationals and 809 Saudis (with the nationality of 56 unknown). Foreigners make up about a quarter of the country's population of 28 million.

Executions are currently carried out at an average of more than two per week, most by beheading and many in public. Two beheadings last Sunday brought to 74 the number carried out this year. Last year a record 153 people were executed, compared with 37 in 2006. The previous record, of 113, was in 2000.

Saudi Arabia is one of the few states in the world with a high rate of executions for women. It is also one of the few to execute people for crimes they committed when they were still under the age of 18. Amnesty Condemns ‘Horror’ of Saudi Executions >>> Ian Black, Middle East Editor | October 14, 2008

GMA News.TV: Saudi Arabia: Filipino and Saudi Man Executed

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Saudi authorities have announced the beheading of a Saudi and a Filipino man.

The Interior Ministry says Finansho Ladion, from the Philippines, was convicted of murdering a Saudi man in the holy city of Mecca by suffocating the man and piercing his neck with a pen.

Saudi national Fahd al-Shadoukhey was convicted of theft and rape while under the influence of alcohol. >>> AP | October 14, 2008

More on the executed Filipino >>> GMANews.TV | October 14, 2008

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Gaffney: The Jihadist Vote

THE WASHINGTON TIMES: Last week, Barack Obama's campaign was burned yet again for its dalliance with Islamists - those who embrace Islam's repressive theo-political-legal code known as Shariah and who are working for its triumph in the West in general and the United States in particular. The episode is but the latest indication that the Democratic candidate hopes to win the White House by relying, in part, on the Jihadist vote.

NBC reported Thursday that the Obama campaign's latest radical "Muslim outreach coordinator," Mouha Husaini, met last month in one of Washington's Northern Virginia suburbs - the heart of what has been dubbed the "Wahhabi Corridor" - with her predecessor, Mazen Asbahi (who had to resign this summer due to his own associations with Shariah). Even more problematic was the presence at the Springfield event of two prominent Muslim Brotherhood operatives: Mahdi Bray of the Muslim American Society (MAS) and Nihad Awad of the Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR).

As I pointed out in a debate on Tuesday (transcript) with a man associated with both organizations and arguably the Bush administration's senior Muslim official, Suhail Khan, the Brotherhood is an instrument the Islamists have been using to foster a Fifth Column in America. Its stated purpose in this country is to "destroy Western civilization from within."

According to NBC, even other attendees expressed concern that the Obama campaign was reaching out to such "politically radioactive" individuals as Messrs. Bray and Awad.

Unfortunately, this is hardly the only association of this type. Others include the following:

-- A Federal Election Commission (FEC) employee has reportedly been warning for months about evidence that the Obama campaign has received as much as $200 million almost half of his total donations, in amounts less than $200. That is below the threshold for donor information Mr. Obama has chose to report to the FEC - unlike the Clinton and McCain campaigns which have reported all donor information.

Of the $200 million, between $30 million and $100 million are from the Mideast, Africa and other places Islamists are active. It is unclear whether - as seems likely - these funds come not only from Wahhabis, Muslim Brotherhood types and jihadists of other stripes but from non-U.S. citizens. Such contributions would be not only worrying but illegal.

Although the FEC has studiously ignored the problem to date, the matter finally appears to be the subject of a formal complaint by the Republican National Committee. Unfortunately, even if the commission finally bestirs itself to investigate the facts, it seems unlikely to render a finding before the jihadists' and others' votes are counted.

-- Another question yet to be resolved is whether Mr. Obama is a natural born citizen of the United States, a prerequisite pursuant to the U.S. Constitution. There is evidence Mr. Obama was born in Kenya rather than, as he claims, Hawaii. There is also a registration document for a school in Indonesia where the would-be president studied for four years, on which he was identified not only as a Muslim but as an Indonesian. If correct, the latter could give rise to another potential problem with respect to his eligibility to be president.

Curiously, Mr. Obama has, to date, failed to provide an authentic birth certificate which could clear up the matter. Gaffney: The Jihadist Vote >>> Frank Gaffney | October 14, 2008

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Grande riforma religiosa in Marocco

LA VOCE: I cambiamenti sono stati annunciati dal re in persona dopo una fatwa che autorizzava matrimoni con bambine di 9 anni

Da adesso in poi i consiglieri religiosi verranno inviati ai 4 angoli del paese per “vegliare” sugli imam


Rabat - Il re del Marocco Mohammed Vi ha recentemente rivelato i principali aspetti di una grande riforma dell’Islam nel suo paese. Riforma che verte soprattutto sugli Ulema, gli esperti in religione, coloro che danno un indirizzo interpretativo al sacro Corano, gli imam, ossia le persone che, all’interno di una moschea, guidano nella preghiera i fedeli, e le stesse moschee. Grande riforma religiosa in Marocco >>> Massimo Alberico | 14.10.2008

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CBN: Geert Wilders Defends Anti-Islam Warnings


Hat tip: Baron Bodissey at Gates of Vienna

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Monday, October 13, 2008

As Europe Slumps, Is the Far Right Rising?

TIMESONLINE: The death of Jörg Haider has cast a light on the resurgence of facsist politics in Austria and Italy

The death of the Austrian far-right politician Jörg Haider has again focused world attention on his country's ambivalent attitude to its Nazi past. The son of an SS officer, Haider won notoriety by praising Hitler's welfare policies and describing concentration camps as work camps. None of this seemed to bother Austrian voters, who gave him and his fellow-travellers a third of the vote in the last elections.

In Italy, too, right-wing politicians have recently showed signs of a positive attitude to the fascist regime run by Mussolini from 1922 to 1945. The election of Gianni Alemanno as Mayor of Rome was greeted by supporters shouting “Duce! Duce!” - the name taken by Mussolini and Hitler, while the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has declared that his movement is “the new Falange”, in a reference to the Spanish fascists of Franco's day.

What drives the radical politicians of the new Right is, in the first place, hostility to immigrants, a feeling that is likely to get worse as the European economy slides into recession. Added to this are fears of the collapse of law and order. The rhetoric of fascism provides a handy symbol for the far Right's determination to deal firmly with immigrants and criminals. It contrasts with the complacency of conventional politicians in Italy and Austria who for decades after the Second World War cosily arranged everything for their own benefit in coalition governments built on political compromise.

This collapsed in Italy a few years ago, and seems to be collapsing in Austria today. In both countries, support for the far Right offers voters the most obvious means of giving voice to their protest and disillusion.

Such rhetoric arouses little public hostility because Austrians and Italians have never felt guilty about their fascist past, as the Germans have. In Germany today you will see former concentration camps turned into sombre monuments to the murderous cruelty of Nazism; small brass plates in the pavement outside houses and shops whose Jewish owners were driven out in the 1930s, with the names of those owners inscribed on them; a monument to Jewish victims of Nazism installed at the centre of the capital city, Berlin. The Nazi past is everywhere, and people's rejection of it is universal and comprehensive.

True, in parts of the former East Germany, the far Right has made some headway, building on popular resentment, especially among the young and unemployed, of the economic shock therapy administered after its absorption into the West in 1990. But it has always remained on the fringes of politics, completely ostracised by the mainstream.

Not so in Italy and Austria, where the far Right is an acceptable coalition partner for leading parties, and few seem troubled by its positive references to the national past. As Europe Slumps, Is the Far Right Rising? >>> Richard J. Evans | October 14, 2008

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L'islam radical se cherche une voie dans la république laïque d'Azerbaïdjan

LE FIGARO: Des centaines de jeunes Azerbaïdjanais sont partis étudier en Arabie saoudite ou chez le grand voisin iranien. Des dizaines de mosquées se sont construites, financées par l'Iran ou les pays arabes du Golfe.

Gamet Souleymanov souffre encore des éclats de grenade incrustés dans son flanc droit. Il y a deux mois, le jeune imam de la mosquée Abou Bakr conduisait la prière quand une grenade jetée par une fenêtre a atterri au milieu des fidèles. «J'ai voulu la couvrir de mon corps, mais je n'en ai pas eu le temps. Mon heure n'était pas venue. Deux personnes ont été tuées.» Barbe courte, souriant et élégant en polo et pantalon noirs, Gamet Souleymanov est le leader d'un mouvement salafiste sunnite. Parti dès l'indépendance étudier au Soudan puis en Arabie saoudite, il cherche à inculquer aux Azerbaïdjanais la vision intégriste de l'islam saoudien. Selon lui, «la moitié des Azerbaïdjanais sont sunnites», contrairement aux estimations qui donnent habituellement 30 % de sunnites, héritage de l'empire ottoman, et 70 % de chiites, à cause de la proximité de l'Iran.

Gamet Souleymanov se dit apolitique, sauf quand il s'agit de dénoncer «les visées de l'Iran, qui veut faire de l'Azerbaïdjan un État chiite». La plupart des Azerbaïdjanais, citoyens d'une république laïque, réservent la religion aux enterrements. Mais depuis la chute de l'empire soviétique, des mouvements s'intéressent à ce réservoir de croyants et à leur potentiel d'influence. Des centaines de jeunes sont partis étudier en Arabie saoudite ou chez le grand voisin iranien. Des dizaines de mosquées se sont construites, financées par l'Iran ou les pays arabes du Golfe.

Le pouvoir, après avoir laissé faire, a expulsé la plupart des religieux saoudiens ou iraniens, et favorise les imams turcs, proches des Azerbaïdjanais par la langue et la culture et jugés plus modérés. Gamet Souleymanov et sa mosquée, financée, selon lui, par un milliardaire koweïtien, avaient survécu aux purges. Mais voilà : depuis l'attentat, elle reste fermée par les autorités, officiellement pour les besoins de l'enquête. En outre, «plus de deux cents fidèles ont été agressés par les policiers, et leur barbe rasée de force», affirme le religieux. L'islam radical se cherche une voie dans la république laïque d'Azerbaïdjan >>> P.P., Bakou | 13.10.2008

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Peres tente de calmer des violences entre Juifs et Arabes

LE FIGARO: Dans la petite ville de Saint Jean d'Acre, en Israël, communautés juives et arabes s'affrontent depuis jeudi dernier. 700 policiers sont toujours en état d'alerte.

«On a toujours vécu en bonne entente, mais je crois que cette fois c'est terminé», lâche une habitante de Saint-Jean d'Acre. Cette petite ville d'Israël est le théâtre d'affrontements entre Juifs et Arabes depuis bientôt cinq jours. Le président israélien Shimon Peres s'est rendu lundi dans la ville pour s'entretenir avec les différentes parties afin d'appeler à la tolérance.«Nous sommes appelés à vivre côte à côte, et un avenir brillant attend Saint-Jean d'Acre» a-t-il martelé.

Et d'ajouter : «J'ai été surpris de l'ampleur des appels à la coexistence pacifique émis par les dirigeants des deux bords». Il a aussi rendu hommage à la police «qui a dû empêcher l'extension des violences, tout en évitant de faire de victimes». 700 policiers sont toujours déployés sur place, alors que la tension est toujours palpable, malgré un retour au calme dimanche soir. Depuis le début des émeutes, 54 personnes des deux bords ont été arrêtées pour atteinte à l'ordre public et douze sont encore détenues.

Saint-Jean d'Acre, ville de 52.000 habitants de Galilée, qui fut la capitale des Croisés, est composée à un tiers d'Arabes. Les deux communautés cohabitent depuis toujours dans le calme dans des quartiers distincts. Mais dans la nuit de mercredi à jeudi dernier, cette cohabitation a volé en éclat. Peres tente de calmer des violences entre Juifs et Arabes >>> L.D. (lefigaro.fr) avec AFP | 13.10.2008

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Israel: „Der Haiderismus lebt auch ohne Haider weiter“

DIE PRESSE: Für Historiker Segev war Haider das „ekelhafte Österreich“.

JERUSALEM. Der Unfalltod des Kärntner Landeshauptmanns Jörg Haider erregt die israelischen Gemüter deutlich weniger als der jüngste Wahlerfolg der österreichischen Rechtsaußenparteien. Während sich die meisten Medien auf die schlichte Nachricht über den Autounfall beschränkten, wagte die Tageszeitung „Haaretz“ die These, dass der Tod Haiders möglicherweise „den Weg zu einem vereinten extremen rechten Lager in Österreich ebnen könnte“. Die auflagenstärkste Tageszeitung „Yediot Achronot“ widmete sich als einzige ausführlich der Person Haiders, den sie als „geistigen Enkel Hitlers“ bezeichnete.

Lebhaft und zahlreich reagierten die Leser der Online-Ausgaben beider Blätter, wobei von gelangweilt bis boshaft alles vertreten ist. Von einer „gerechten Strafe“ ist dort die Rede, und „Ooops, Haider ist tot, aber wen interessiert das schon?“ „Möllemann, Haider, wer ist der nächste?“, fragt ein Blogger, während ein anderer direkt den Mossad, Israels Geheimdienst, hinter dem Unfall vermutet.

Doch Israel habe weder einen Nutzen von Haiders Tod noch Grund zur Freude darüber, meint der Jerusalemer Historiker und Autor Tom Segev. „Ich habe schon immer gedacht, dass Haider nicht uns, sondern Österreich den größten Schaden antut.“ Der könne auch durch sein Ableben nicht repariert werden. „Der Haiderismus lebt auch ohne ihn weiter.“ Dass fast ein Drittel der österreichischen Wahlberechtigten Nazi-Parteien gewählt hätten, „ist für Österreich schrecklich, nicht für mich.“ Israel: „Der Haiderismus lebt auch ohne Haider weiter“ >>> Susanne Knaul | 12. Oktober 2008

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The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Gebundene Ausgabe) >>>
Australia: Dissatisfaction with Immigration Intake Rising

ABC NEWS (AU): As the Rudd Government continues to accept record numbers of migrants, dissatisfaction with Australia's immigration intake is rising for the first time since the early 1990s.

This financial year the Federal Government plans to accept close to 204,000 migrants.

However a paper by Dr Katherine Betts, an associate professor of sociology at Swinburne University, reveals growing voter disquiet about Australia's intake.

"In 2004, 34 per cent of voters thought that the intake should be reduced," Dr Betts said.

"In 2007, after the last election, 46 per cent thought it should be reduced. That was an increase of 12 percentage points.

"It is quite unusual that opposition to the immigration intake should rise during a period that was economically rosy, because you have to remember the people responded to this in late November and early December last year.

"What we do find is that concerns about affordability of housing really jumped over that period between '05 and '07.

"What we are looking at here is a period when immigration numbers have been really very high and population growth been quite sharp. Like in 2002 the population grew by 237,000. In 2007 it grew by 332,000.

"So it has really grown quite fast and that is fast enough for people to actually see the effects of it. Especially in pressure points like Sydney and Melbourne, where most of the migrants go." Dissatisfaction with Immigration Intake Rising >>> | October 13, 2008

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Washington DC: Homophobic Muslims Brutally Attack Gay Men


Hat tip: Jihad Watch

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Jersey: 16-Year-Olds to Vote in Island Elections

First it was Austria; now Jersey is following suit. One has to question the judgement of people who wish to lower the voting age to sixteen. Further, one needs to ask oneself some pretty fundamental questions, too.

Are sixteen-year-olds really mature enough, and politically savvy enough to make sound judgements at the poles? Some will be, of course; but the law shouldn’t be changed to accommodate the few exceptions. My guess is that the majority of sixteen-year-olds today are far from mature enough to make shrewd political decisions.

In years gone by, sixteen-year-olds, because many of them went out to work at a far younger age, were arguably much more politically-savvy than our mommy-coddled youngsters of today.

It is to be hoped that this trend does not continue. Poltics is a serious business; and a little experience of life goes a long way in helping people make solid political decisions.
- ©Mark


THE GUARDIAN: New voting age shows increasing support for lowering the voting age across the continent, Electoral Reform Society says

Young people aged 16 and 17 will be able to vote for the first time in forthcoming elections on the island of Jersey this week.

The island voted to lower the minimum voting age from 18 to 16 in July 2007 but the change in the law hasn't been exercised until now. The age group makes up 2% of a population of around 90,000 people, with over half of the island registered to vote in the elections on Wednesday.

Derek Gray, the chair of the privileges and procedures committee, which was charged with reform in the States, the name by which the government of Jersey is known, said: "Guernsey and the Isle of Man have already lowered the voting limit but we're not following the leader, we actually want to engage with our young people. Sixteen and 17-year-olds already have a lot of responsibilities like getting married, so it seems logical they should be able to vote. Jersey 16-Year-Olds to Vote in Island Elections >>> Jo Adetunji | October 13, 2008

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Islamic Banking Not Immune from Global Financial Crisis

Economic Woes, Commodity Slump Could Hit Islamic Banks >>>

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Hanged for Being a Christian in Iran

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Photo of Rashin Soodmand courtesy of The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH: Eighteen years ago, Rashin Soodmand's father was hanged in Iran for converting to Christianity. Now her brother is in a Mashad jail, and expects to be executed under new religious laws brought in this summer. Alasdair Palmer reports.

A month ago, the Iranian parliament voted in favour of a draft bill, entitled "Islamic Penal Code", which would codify the death penalty for any male Iranian who leaves his Islamic faith. Women would get life imprisonment. The majority in favour of the new law was overwhelming: 196 votes for, with just seven against.

Imposing the death penalty for changing religion blatantly violates one of the most fundamental of all human rights. The right to freedom of religion is enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and in the European Convention of Human Rights. It is even enshrined as Article 23 of Iran's own constitution, which states that no one may be molested simply for his beliefs.

And yet few politicians or clerics in Iran see any contradiction between a law mandating the death penalty for changing religion and Iran's constitution. There has been no public protest in Iran against it.

David Miliband, Britain's Foreign Secretary, stands out as one of the few politicians from any Western country who has put on record his opposition to making apostasy a crime punishable by death. The protest from the EU has been distinctly muted; meanwhile, Germany, Iran's largest foreign trading partner, has just increased its business deals with Iran by more than half. Characteristically, the United Nations has said nothing.

It is a sign of how little interest there is in Iran's intention to launch a campaign of religious persecution that its parliamentary vote has still not been reported in the mainstream media.

For one woman living in London, however, the Iranian parliamentary vote cannot be brushed aside. Rashin Soodmand is a 29-year-old Iranian Christian. Her father, Hossein Soodmand, was the last man to be executed in Iran for apostasy, the "crime" of abandoning one's religion. He had converted from Islam to Christianity in 1960, when he was 13 years old. Thirty years later, he was hanged by the Iranian authorities for that decision.

Today, Rashin's brother, Ramtin, is also held in a prison cell in Mashad, Iran's holiest city. He was arrested on August 21. He has not been charged but he is a Christian. And Rashin fears that, just as her father was the last man to be executed for apostasy in Iran, her brother may become one of the first to be killed under Iran's new law. Hanged for Being a Chrsitian in Iran >>> Alasdair Palmer | October 11, 2008

RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE: Praise for British Foreign Secretary’s Condemnation of Iran Apostasy Bill

The British Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, Rt Hon David Miliband, MP, has condemned a draft bill currently making its way through the Iranian Parliament, which would codify the death penalty for apostasy. His views have been welcomed by the CSW human rights group.

David Miliband commented yesterday that he “deplore[d] the way in which the Iranian Parliament is… now discussing a draft penal code that would set out a mandatory death sentence for the crime, quote unquote, of apostasy.” He went on to say that “If adopted, [the legislation] would violate the right to freedom of religion, which is also an important basis of any civilised society.” >>> Staff Reporter | October 9, 2008

ASSOCIATED PRESS: EU Worried about Freedom of Religion in Iran

PARIS — The European Union said Friday it is "very worried" about what it sees as a deterioration of religious freedom in Iran.

A statement from the French Foreign Ministry on behalf of the EU says pressure has increased on religious minorities in the Islamic Republic in recent months, with arrests in the Christian and Baha'i communities. France currently holds the EU presidency.

The statement Friday also said that religious minorities, including Sufi and Sunni Muslims, undergo "regular persecution" such as the confiscation of their property, profanation of their prayer spaces and violence.

The EU says it also is concerned about the possibility the Iranian parliament could pass a bill to make apostasy a crime punishable by death.>>> AP | September 26, 2008

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Sharia Law? Not Fit for Purpose!

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Photo of Sadiq Khan courtesy of Mail Online

MAIL Online: A Labour Muslim minister has warned that Islamic law is too unsophisticated for Britain.

Sadiq Khan said women could be ' abused' by sharia courts, which may give unequal bargaining power to the sexes.
He said: 'The burden is on those who want to open up these courts to persuade us why they should.'

Mr Khan, who was made a community cohesion minister in this month's Government reshuffle, rejected the argument that the courts could operate in the same way as the Jewish Beth Din courts.

He said Muslim life in Britain was not advanced enough to run a similar religious legal system.

The MP for Tooting in South London added: 'I would be very concerned about sharia courts applying in the UK.

'I don't think there is that level of sophistication that there is in Jewish law.'

He also said that sharia courts would discourage Muslims from developing links with other cultural and ethnic groups.

In February Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, gave his support for the courts in Britain, saying that the legal recognition of them 'seems unavoidable'.

Mr Khan, who is a human rights lawyer and one of only a handful of Muslim MPs, said: 'The requirement to learn English is not colonial. English is a passport to participation in mainstream society - jobs, education and even being able to use health services.

'Having poor English creates multiple barriers to work,' he writes in the pamphlet for the left-of-centre Fabian Society. Sharia Law Is 'Not Fit for the UK', Says a Labour Muslim MP >>> | October 12, 2008

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Imran Khan Says Islam Is Not the Enemy

Photobucket
Photo of Imran Khan at Brisbane's Eidfest courtesy of Courier Mail

COURIERMAIL.COM.AU: IN a speech in Brisbane Imran Khan has attacked Western leaders for linking Islam and terrorism to create hatred - and Muslim leaders for allowing them to do so.

The Pakistani cricketer-turned-political leader made an impassioned plea for Queensland's Muslim community to spread the true message of their religion to the broader society.

In a speech at Brisbane's Eidfest – celebrating the end of Ramadan – Mr Khan said: "After 9/11, suddenly Islam and terrorism have become synonymous. It's partly the fault of Muslim leadership and partly it's the fault of a well-planned conspiracy through which a new imperialist agenda has been pushed under the smokescreen of fighting Islamic terrorism.

"Everyone must understand terrorism is never caused by religion. The roots of all terrorism lie in politics and so do the solutions.

"When (US President) George Bush and (former British prime minister) Tony Blair talk about radical Islam . . . the man in the street in the West is suspicious of all Muslims." Imran Khan Says Islam Is Not the Enemey >>> Daryl Passmore | October 11, 2008

My Essay:
It’s the Religion, Stupid! >>>

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Papa: Con l’islam dialogo nel rispetto dignità persone

LAREPUBBLICA.IT: Il Papa auspica "un sincero impegno nel favorire un reciproco dialogo" fra cristiani e musulmani "nel rispetto della dignita di ogni persona umana". Lo afferma in un messaggio inviato in occasione dell'incontro a Castel Gandolfo tra cristiani e musulmani promosso dal Movimento dei Focolari sul tema "Amore e Misericordia nella Bibbia e nel Corano". Nel telegramma inviato tramite il cardinale Tarcisio Bertone, il Papa "invoca Dio altissimo e misericordioso perche' continui a guidare sempre cammino umanita' su via giustizia e pace". [Fonte: La Repubblica] 11.10.2008

TENDENZE ONLINE:
Islam; Benedetto XVI: Dialogo nel rispetto della dignita' umana >>> 11.10.2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback – Italy)
The Face of the United Kingdom in 2008: Oxford at Prayer!

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Photo courtesy of the TimesOnline

TIMESONLINE: A woman leading Muslim prayers? Why not, says the head of an education centre in Oxford. Much that is 'forbidden' is not outlawed by the Koran

British Muslim history will be made in an Oxford hall next Friday. For the first time in Britain, a woman Muslim scholar will publicly lead men and women in prayers, and deliver the khutba, or sermon.

Taj Hargey, the chairman of the group sponsoring the event at the Muslim Educational Centre of Oxford (Meco), fully expects controversy. “This is going to be a major step forward in women’s rights,” he said in an interview at Wolfson College, Oxford, of which he is a member. “But it will provoke discontent from conservatives — from the Wahhabis and their fellow travellers.

The literalists interpret certain Hadith, sayings of the Prophet, as meaning that women can’t lead a community. But for us, the golden rule of Islam is that whatever is not specifically prohibited is permitted.”

He is right to expect a storm: three years ago, when Amina Wadud, the American Muslim professor due to speak on Friday, led a mixed prayer service in New York, she faced criticism and death threats. Next week, the topic of Wadud’s sermon will be justice, and it is justice that Meco seeks in promoting the event.

“Since the criterion for leading prayers is knowledge of the Koran, there’s no reason \ [sic] Amina Wadud shouldn’t do it,” Hargey said. “Her Koranic knowledge is superior to that of most men.”

From Inayat Bunglawalla, of the Muslim Council of Britain, the response to the forthcoming prayer service is a terse “No comment”. And he questions how representative Hargey is. “We have no dealings with Taj Hargey,” Bunglawalla said. “His organisation has no affiliation with mainstream groups in this country.” Liberal Taj Hargey Dares to Challenge Prohibitionist Islam >>> Carla Power | October 11, 2008

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The Archdhimmi of Canterbury to Join Christian and Muslim Scholars in Cambridge for the Promotion of Peace!

SUNDAY EXPRESS: The Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams is to join Christian and Muslim scholars for the start of a conference aimed at promoting understanding between the two faiths.

Dr Williams and the Grand Mufti of Egypt Sheikh Ali Gomaa will be among those addressing A Common Word, a conference at Cambridge University involving academics from around the world.



The event coincides with the first anniversary of the publication of A Common Word Between Us and You, a letter from 138 Islamic scholars, clerics and intellectuals.



Addressed to Pope Benedict XVI and other Christian leaders, the letter warned that the survival of the world could be at stake if Muslims and Christians could not make peace with each other. 



"If Muslims and Christians are not at peace, the world cannot be at peace. With the terrible weaponry of the modern world - with Muslims and Christians intertwined everywhere as never before - no side can unilaterally win a conflict between more than half of the world's inhabitants. 



"Our common future is at stake," the letter said. "The very survival of the world itself is perhaps at stake."



The scholars also used quotations from the Bible and the Koran to illustrate similarities between the two faiths, such as the requirement to worship one God and to love one's neighbour. 


In a letter of response published earlier this year, Dr Williams welcomed the document as a "significant development" in relations between Christians and Muslims. Faith Leaders Promote Peace >>> | Sunday October 12, 2008

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