Monday, June 29, 2009

Anjem Choudary Converts Young, White Schoolboy to the Religion of Peace, Love, Compassion and Mercy at Birmingham Roadshow

MAIL Online: This is the shocking picture of a young, white schoolboy being converted to Islam by a cleric linked to a radical Muslim hate preacher.

The bewildered 11-year-old, who gives his name as Sean was filmed repeating Arabic chants and swearing allegiance to Allah.

The boy is prompted throughout by controversial cleric Anjem Choudary, a follower of exiled hate-preacher Omar Bakri Mohammed.

The incident was filmed during a demonstration by Choudary's Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama'ah group in Birmingham city centre earlier this month.

Choudary, 42, was one of the masterminds behind the protests at the homecoming parade of heroic British soldiers in Luton earlier this year.

He praised protesters who branded British troops 'murderers' and later appeared at a press conference flanked by thugs who took part in the demo.

Choudary defended the young boy's 'reversion' to Islam but admitted his parents were not with him and were not consulted.
He said: 'The child was genuinely interested in Islam.'

'The boy told us he wanted to become a Muslim and, of course, some people are intellectually more mature than they are physically. I don't see there is any harm in this. The shocking picture of a white boy aged 11 being 'converted' to Islam by radical preacher >>> | Monday, June 29, 2009
Britain Has 85 Sharia Courts: The Astonishing Spread of the Islamic Justice Behind Closed Doors

MAIL Online: At least 85 Islamic sharia courts are operating in Britain, a study claimed yesterday.
The astonishing figure is 17 times higher than previously accepted.

The tribunals, working mainly from mosques, settle financial and family disputes according to religious principles. They lay down judgments which can be given full legal status if approved in national law courts.

However, they operate behind doors that are closed to independent observers and their decisions are likely to be unfair to women and backed by intimidation, a report by independent think-tank Civitas said.

Commentators on the influence of sharia law often count only the five courts in London, Manchester, Bradford, Birmingham and Nuneaton that are run by the Muslim Arbitration Tribunal, a body whose rulings are enforced through the state courts under the 1996 Arbitration Act.

But the study by academic and Islamic specialist Denis MacEoin estimates there are at least 85 working tribunals.

The spread of sharia law has become increasingly controversial since its role was backed last year by Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams and Lord Phillips, the Lord Chief Justice who stepped down last October.

Dr Williams said a recognised role for sharia law seemed 'unavoidable' and Lord Phillips said there was no reason why decisions made on sharia principles should not be recognised by the national courts.

But the Civitas report said the principles on which sharia courts work are indicated by the fatwas - religious decrees - set out on websites run by British mosques.

Mr MacEoin said: 'Among the rulings we find some that advise illegal actions and others that transgress human rights standards as applied by British courts.'

Examples set out in his study include a ruling that no Muslim woman may marry a non-Muslim man unless he converts to Islam and that any children of a woman who does should be taken from her until she marries a Muslim.

Further rulings, according to the report, approve polygamous marriage and enforce a woman's duty to have sex with her husband on his demand.

The report added: 'The fact that so many sharia rulings in Britain relate to cases concerning divorce and custody of children is of particular concern, as women are not equal in sharia law, and sharia contains no specific commitment to the best interests of the child that is fundamental to family law in the UK.

'Under sharia, a male child belongs to the father after the age of seven, regardless of circumstances.'

It said: 'Sharia courts operating in Britain may be handing down rulings that are inappropriate to this country because they are linked to elements in Islamic law that are seriously out of step with trends in Western legislation.' >>> Steve Doughty | Monday, June 29, 2009

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Iran Takes Step Towards Scrapping Death Penalty for Apostasy and Stoning [sic]

THE CHRISTIAN POST: In a “positive development” Iran’s parliamentary committee has recommended to remove articles stipulating the death penalty for apostasy from the Islamic Penal Code Bill.
The recommendation has been made by the Iranian Government’s Parliamentary Committee, a UK-based Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) reported.

Ali Shahrokhi of the Legal and Judicial Committee of the Parliament reportedly told the Iranian state news agency (IRNA) of this pronouncement according to a BBC Persian news service report on 23 June.

Mr Shahrokhi also stated that stoning was not ‘in the interest of the regime’. He told IRNA that “Islam has set a strict set of conditions for the implementation of punishments such as stoning, that they can rarely be proven. Hence the legal and judicial commission members concluded that some of these laws are unnecessary to mention.” >>> Robert Williams, Christian Post Correspondent | Saturday, June 27, 2009
Ban the Burqa!


Hat tip: The Anti-Jihadist >>>

TIMES ONLINE:
Why not read this ridiculous article by Daisy Goodwin while you’re at it? >>>
The IoS Pink List 2009

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: It's back - as controversial and, we believe, as necessary as ever. Here is this year's roster of the 101 most influential gay and lesbian people in Britian today

Before we started work on the 10th annual Independent on Sunday Pink List, we asked ourselves again whether we should be doing it at all. After all, in 2009, equal rights are enshrined in law and there are ‘out’ gay men and women at the top of every profession - or rather, they might argue, just men and women at the top of their professions. So, is the list anachronistic? Is it patronising to gay people? We feared it might be - and went in search of a leading gay or lesbian figure to say so. None of those we contacted wanted to. Their verdict? The Pink List remains indispensable, a celebration of a community that is integral to the British way of life.

On the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall riots - and in the week when the National Portrait Gallery launches a major new exhibition of Gay Icons, this list is a celebration of those people who have struggled to get us from there to here. As such, you won’t see anyone “outed” in these pages. If you don't see someone you think should be on the list, it may be that they have asked not to appear. It is also possible that - believe it or not - we have erred and they have been overlooked. >>> | Sunday, June 28, 2009
Miliband Condemns Iran's 'Imtimidation' [sic] Tactics

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: Foreign Secretary David Miliband condemned Iran's "intimidation" tactics today amid reports that eight British embassy staff have been arrested.

Mr Miliband insisted the action against the UK's "hard-working" local employees in Tehran was "quite unacceptable".

"This is harassment and intimidation of a kind which is completely unacceptable," he said.

Mr Miliband indicated that "strong action" would follow if the detentions did not stop.

The comments, at a meeting of foreign ministers in Corfu, came as the diplomatic spat between the UK and Iran intensified in the wake of contested elections.

Tehran has accused the UK and the US of seeking to interfere in its internal affairs after they criticised the heavy-handed reaction to protests by opposition supporters. >>> PA | Sunday, June 28, 2009
Britain's Iranians Add Their Voices

THE INDEPENDENT ON SUNDAY: The brutal security crackdown on the streets of Tehran inflamed feelings on the streets of London last week. Hundreds of demonstrators from the UK's Iranian community besieged Iran's embassy in west London in protest at the repression imposed on their compatriots at home.

Overseas Iranians have rallied in response to the violence in their home country, but the embassy has been the focus of protesters' frustration. Each night, hundreds gathered to denounce Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei. Their message was clear. "Down with Khamenei, death to Khamenei," they chanted loudly.

Their numbers have swelled since the turmoil that has enveloped Iran after the 12 June election. The crowds that congregated last week included a mixture of youths, refugees and professional people.

Even as Ayatollah Khamenei blamed everyone from the British Government to the BBC for the bloodshed, several hundred students rallied in Piccadilly Circus in London in a show of solidarity with their Iranian counterparts. Many held candles for the "the martyrs of the election" – those who have died in the recent violence.

If the embassy witnessed the most fervent protests, elsewhere reaction to events did not lack vehemence. Iranian-owned businesses strung green lights and hung posters declaring support for the democracy movement. >>> By Tim Persinko | Sunday, June 28, 2009
New Dark Age Alert! Britain Is No Longer a Christian Nation The Void Islam Has Been Hoping to Fill!

THE TELEGRAPH: If recent trends are any guide, many Church of England parishes will have been cheered by higher attendances at Easter services. The last published statistics for 2006/7 show rises of 7 and 5 per cent in church going at Christmas and Easter.

But these figures are just about the only signs of hope for the church and certainly not the first green shoots of a revival. Other statistics make for gloomy reading.

Annual decline in Sunday attendance is running at around 1 per cent. At this rate it is hard to see the church surviving for more than 30 years though few of its leaders are prepared to face that possibility.

In the short term we are likely to see more closures of buildings as the church battles to meet a big pension bill, pay clergy, and maintain a large bureaucracy.

To its credit, the church has been successful at getting members to give, but larger donations cannot offset the fall in numbers. At present the church is struggling to maintain 16,200 buildings, many of them old and listed with 4,200 listed Grade I.

If decline continues, Christian Research has estimated that in five years' time church closures will accelerate from their present rate of 30 a year to 200 a year as dwindling congregations find the cost of keeping them open too great.

Perhaps the most worrying set of statistics for the Church of England is the decline in baptisms. Out of every 1,000 live births in England in 2006/7 only 128 were baptised as Anglicans. >>> Rt Rev Paul Richardson | Saturday, June 27, 2009
Abaya Gets a Makeover from John Galliano and Blumarine

THE TELEGRAPH: Top European fashion labels, including John Galliano and Blumarine, have sent models in couture abayas down the runway in an effort to lure wealthy Muslim women.

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The Saks Fifth Avenue Riyadh and Jeddah fashion show at the George V hotel in Paris. Photo: The Telegraph

A horsewoman in a flowing, made-to-measure Islamic gown atop a snorting steed opened the fashion show on Thursday at the George V Hotel in Paris.

Abayas are the body-covering black robes some Muslim women don over their clothing in public, usually accompanied by a head scarf or niqab, the face veil that covers all but the eyes.

Designers who tried their hand at making over the abaya, which is required in Saudi Arabia, included Christian Dior's artistic director John Galliano, French luxury labels Nina Ricci and Jean Claude Jitrois and Italian houses Blumarine and Alberta Feretti.

The show began with a bang, as the carrot-topped cavaliere - decked out in a Galliano-designed abaya exploding with firework of coloured sequins and dangling fringe - rode her mount into the hotel's subterranean salon.

Twenty models followed on foot, wearing abayas heavy with rhinestones or airy in gauzy fabrics.

"I realised that most of the Saudi clients are wearing designer brands, but they're covered by a black abaya," said Dania Tarhini, the show's organiser and a general manager of Saks Fifth Avenue in Saudi Arabia. "It is an obligation to wear the abaya there, but let them feel good about it."

The timing of the Paris show was propitious: four days earlier, Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, struck a nerve in the Muslim world by declaring that full-body veils such as the burka are "not welcome" in France, saying they make women prisoners. A top Muslim group in Britain called Mr Sarkozy "patronising and offensive." Lebanon's most influential Shia cleric called on Mr Sarkozy to reconsider his comments. >>> | Friday, June 26, 2009

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Ahmadinejad warnt den Westen: Reaktionen auf Forderungen der G-8-Staaten nach Ende der Gewalt

NZZ Online: Iran hat die Forderung des Westens, die fundamentalen Menschenrechte zu achten, in scharfem Ton zurückgewiesen. Die Einmischung in die inneren Angelegenheiten seines Landes sei eine Beleidigung, sagte Präsident Ahmadinejad.

«Ohne jeden Zweifel wird die neue iranische Regierung dem Westen entschiedener und machtvoller begegnen», erklärte Ahmadinejad am Samstag laut der staatlichen Nachrichtenagentur Irna. Beobachter gehen davon aus, dass er damit deutlich machen wollte, dass die Kompromissbereitschaft Teherans bei Streitthemen wie dem iranischen Atomprogramm oder der Nahostpolitik geringer als je zuvor sein werde.

Die führenden Industriestaaten und Russland (G-8) hatten sich am Freitag besorgt über die Gewalt gegen Demonstranten geäussert und die iranische Regierung aufgefordert, den Konflikt nach den Wahlen mit friedlichen Mitteln zu lösen. >>> sda/dpa/ap | Samstag, 27. Juni 2009
Jailed Iran Reformists 'Tortured to Confess Foreign Plot'

THE GUARDIAN: Amnesty reports apparent attempt to implicate defeated presidential candidate in conspiracy to overthrow regime

Jailed Iranian reformists are believed to have been tortured in an attempt to force them into TV "confessions" of a foreign-led plot against the Islamic regime.

According to Iranian websites, the "confessions" are aimed at implicating Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, the defeated reformist candidates in this month's presidential poll, in an alleged conspiracy.

Mostafa Tajzadeh, Abdollah Ramezanzadeh and Mohsen Aminzadeh, all Mousavi supporters, are reported to have undergone "intensive interrogation" sessions in Tehran's notorious Evin prison since being arrested in a mass round-up of opposition figures following Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election.

The three, who all served in the government of the former reformist president, Mohammad Khatami, are among several hundred activists, academics, journalists and students detained in a crackdown coinciding with the brutal suppression of street protesters who believe the election was stolen.

Fellow prisoners are reported to have heard screams of pain from Tajzadeh, a former deputy interior minister, and Ramezanzadeh, who was Khatami's government spokesman, during interrogations at Evin's section 209, which is reserved for political prisoners and run by the hardline intelligence ministry. >>> Robert Tait | Friday, June 26, 2009
A Case of Dogma Trumping Truth? Polar Bear Expert Barred by Global Warmists

THE TELEGRAPH: Dr Taylor, who has studied the animals for 30 years, was told his views 'are extremely unhelpful’, reveals Christopher Booker.

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According to the world’s leading expert on polar bears, their numbers are higher than they were 30 years ago. Photo: The Telegraph

Over the coming days a curiously revealing event will be taking place in Copenhagen. Top of the agenda at a meeting of the Polar Bear Specialist Group (set up under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature/Species Survival Commission) will be the need to produce a suitably scary report on how polar bears are being threatened with extinction by man-made global warming.

This is one of a steady drizzle of events planned to stoke up alarm in the run-up to the UN's major conference on climate change in Copenhagen next December. But one of the world's leading experts on polar bears has been told to stay away from this week's meeting, specifically because his views on global warming do not accord with those of the rest of the group.

Dr Mitchell Taylor has been researching the status and management of polar bears in Canada and around the Arctic Circle for 30 years, as both an academic and a government employee. More than once since 2006 he has made headlines by insisting that polar bear numbers, far from decreasing, are much higher than they were 30 years ago. Of the 19 different bear populations, almost all are increasing or at optimum levels, only two have for local reasons modestly declined.

Dr Taylor agrees that the Arctic has been warming over the last 30 years. But he ascribes this not to rising levels of CO2 – as is dictated by the computer models of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and believed by his PBSG colleagues – but to currents bringing warm water into the Arctic from the Pacific and the effect of winds blowing in from the Bering Sea. >>> Christopher Booker | Saturday, June 27, 2009
Fundamentalist Fervour

Watch Journeyman Pictures video: here >>>
Iranian Women: Are They Covering Up?

Watch Journeyman Pictures video here >>>
Freedom for Iran

Watch Journeyman Pictires video: Good Morning Tehran! >>>
A Less Familiar Side of Iran and Iranians

Watch Journeyman Pictures video: Nose Jobs >>>

Watch Journeyman Pictures video: Zoroastrian Worship >>>
Turkey to 'Never Give Up' EU Bid

BBC: Turkey has urged France and Germany to back its bid to join the EU, rejecting calls for a special partnership rather than full membership.

"We will never give up," Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters in Brussels.

Turkey's EU accession talks are going at a glacial pace and risk suspension if Ankara fails to open its ports and airports to Cyprus this year.

France and Germany want to give Turkey a "privileged partnership" with the EU.

But Mr Erdogan insisted "our goal is full membership".

He also said it was "populist and wrong" to use Turkey's bid as an election issue.

Some right-wing parties opposed to Turkey's bid made gains in the recent European Parliament elections. >>> | Friday, June 26, 2009
Belgium Gets First Deputy Wearing Muslim Headscarf

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Mahinur Ozdemir. Photo: Google Images

EURONEWS: In Brussels, Mahinur Ozdemir, 26, has become the first deputy wearing a Muslim headscarf to be sworn into the regional parliament.

Coming the day after French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the burqa was not welcome in France, Ozdemir’s colleagues said it was about personal choice.

After the ceremony, Ozdemir, from the Democrat Humanist Centre, said she wanted to be recognised for her achievements and not her headwear.

“Unfortunately, I have been reduced to nothing more than this scarf, and frankly it is hard to remove yourself from it,” she said. “Underneath this veil there is a personality, there is someone who is engaged, who wants things to change, who wants to move forward and execute lots of projects for the people of Brussels.”

During her election campaign, Ozdemir was targeted by hardline activists due to her headscarf. She served as a member of the municipal council in Shaerbeek, which is known as the “Turkish neighbourhood” of Brussels. [Source: euronews] | Wednesday, June 24, 2009

NZZ Online: Belgien wieder voll im Kopftuch-Dilemma: Streit um Antwerpener Schulen und eine Abgeordnete mit dem Hijab

In Belgien ist die Diskussion um das Kopftuch muslimischer Frauen wieder voll entbrannt. Während in Antwerpen Muslime gegen das Kopftuchverbot an einer Schule protestierten, legte im Brüsseler Regionalparlament die erste Abgeordnete im Kopftuch ihren Eid ab.

Zwei Ereignisse haben in Belgien die Diskussionen um das Kopftuchtragen muslimischer Frauen wieder voll entbrennen lassen. Im Brüsseler Regionalparlament legte die türkischstämmige Christlichsoziale Mahinur Özdemir ihren Eid als Abgeordnete im Hijab ab – eine absolute Premiere in Belgien. Dies rief natürlich in Teilen der politischen Landschaft Widerspruch hervor; die französischsprachigen Liberalen vom Mouvement réformateur (MR) wollten gar die Möglichkeit prüfen, mit einem Vorstoss das Tragen von «religiösen und philosophischen Symbolen» in den Sitzungen aller belgischen Parlamente zu verbieten. Die flämischen Liberalen wiederum fanden, das Parlament sei keine Amtsstelle, und nahmen deshalb am Kopftuch der Abgeordneten Özdemir keinen Anstoss. >>> win. Brüssel | Thursday, June 25, 2009
Beat It You Fanatics! Get Out of My Land!


Hat tip: Always On Watch >>>
Why Does the World Put Up with This Filth?

TIMES ONLINE: A hardline cleric close to the Iranian regime demanded the execution of leading demonstrators yesterday as the opposition ended the week in disarray.

In a televised sermon at Friday prayers in Tehran, Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami called on the judiciary to “punish leading rioters firmly and without showing any mercy to teach everyone a lesson”. He said that those leaders were backed by the United States and Israel. They should be treated as mohareb — people who wage war against God — and deserved execution.

In a clear warning to all other dissenters, he declared: “Anybody who fights against the Islamic system or the leader of Islamic society, fight him until complete destruction.” Leading demonstrators must be executed, Ayatollah Khatami demands >>> Martin Fletcher | Saturday, June 27, 2009

Friday, June 26, 2009

'The Stoning of Soraya M.'

LOS ANGELES TIMES: 'The Stoning of Soraya M.' vividly depicts the violent execution of a woman condemned by religion distorted.

"The Stoning of Soraya M." lives up to its title quite literally -- and rightly so, for it is important to understand just how cruel and drawn-out this ancient form of execution is and how prevalent it remains, not just in Iran, the film's setting, but in countries throughout the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa that follow Islamic Sharia law.

The timing of the film's release is apt, for it serves as a metaphor for the current protests in Iran against the long-standing oppressiveness of the Islamic Republic.

Based on a true story recounted in the late Freidoune Sahebjam's book, "The Stoning of Soraya M." was filmed in a remote mountain village in an undisclosed Middle Eastern country. Jim Caviezel is cast as Sahebjam, an eminent Iranian journalist based in France who is passing through the village when he is accosted by a distraught woman, Zahra (Shohreh Aghdashloo), who prevails upon him to tape the terrible story she has to tell.

Only the day before, her niece Soraya (Mozhan Marnò) was executed in the town square by stoning. Her husband, Ali (Navid Negahban), who has the village leaders in his thrall, had concocted a flimsy and completely false charge of adultery against Soraya, the mother of their four children, so that he can be free to marry a 14-year-old girl; Soraya had refused to divorce Ali because she had no other means of support. >>> Kevin Thomas | Friday, June 26, 2009
«Jackson laisse à ses enfants une montagne de dettes»

Merkel in Washington: Obamas "warme Stelle im Herzen" für Deutschland

WELT ONLINE: US-Präsident Barack Obama hat Deutschland als unverzichtbaren Partner für sein Land bezeichnet. Gemeinsam mit Kanzlerin Merkel bekundete er im Weißen Haus den Willen, die Probleme der Welt anzugehen – von der Lage im Iran bis zum Klimaschutz. Und die Kanzlerin bekam ein ganz persönliches Lob zu hören.

Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU) und US-Präsident Barack Obama haben bei ihrem Treffen in Washington eine enge Abstimmung in internationalen Fragen vereinbart.

Unter den goldenen Kandelabern des East Rooms im Weißen Haus stellte ein sichtlich erschöpfter Obama klar, dass an den Gerüchten über gegenseitige Antipathien zwischen ihm und der deutschen Bundeskanzlerin nichts dran sei.

Er betrachte Deutschland als „einen unserer engsten Verbündeten und als unverzichtbaren Partner“, sagte Obama nach dem Vier-Augen-Gespräch mit Merkel. Die Bundeskanzlerin sagte bei dem gemeinsamen Presseauftritt, sie wolle gemeinsam mit den USA Probleme lösen, „die nicht von einem allein zu bewältigen sind“. Unter anderem wolle man die Friedensbemühungen im Nahost-Konflikt, den Klimaschutz und die Wirtschaftskrise angehen.

Während der Pressekonferenz betonten Merkel und der amerikanische Präsident ihre Einigkeit speziell in Sachen Iran. Auf die Frage, ob er der Forderung des iranischen Präsidenten nach einer Entschuldigung nachkommen werde, erklärte Obama: "Ich nehme Präsident Ahmadinedschad nicht besonders ernst. Er sollte sich vor allem fragen, was er seinem eigenen Volk schuldet“.

Angela Merkel erklärte, man werde sehr genau nach den inhaftierten Demonstranten fragen. Aus ihrer Zeit in der DDR erinnere sie sich sehr genau, wie wichtig es sei, dass die Welt Anteil nehme. >>> Von Mariam Lau | Freitag, 26. Juni 2009
Feindbild: Im Iran sitzt der Hass auf Großbritannien tief

WELT ONLINE: Schuld an den Unruhen sind die Briten – diese simple Behauptung verbreiten die Machthaber in Teheran gern und oft. Sie wurzelt in einer tiefen Feindschaft gegenüber der einstigen De-facto-Kolonialmacht. Die langen Versuche Londons, sich den Iran als Einflusssphäre zu sichern, bieten den Mullahs eine Steilvorlage.

Kein Mittel verstehen die Machthaber in Teheran besser einzusetzen als das tief in der nationalen Psyche verankerte Vorurteil, hinter den Unruhen im Iran stecke nichts weiter als die bekannte Hand der Briten, die sich permanent in die iranischen Angelegenheiten einmischen und eingemischt haben. Das beherrscht die Köpfe der Regierenden in Teheran geradezu wie eine Paranoia.

Den Ursprung des England-Hasses muss man im 19. Jahrhundert ansiedeln, als Persien zur Trophäe wurde im „Großen Spiel“ zwischen dem zaristischen Russland und dem britischen Weltreich um das Herzland Eurasien: Afghanistan, Kaukasus, Persien. >>> Von Thomas Kielinger | Freitag, 26. Juni 2009
Die zu Guttenbergs: Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg im Interview

Escort Patrizia D'Addario Says Berlusconi Party Was ‘Like Harem’

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Photo: TimesOnline

TIMES ONLINE: Silvio Berlusconi faced mounting pressure to come clean about his private life yesterday after revelations that he entertained about 20 women, including two lesbian escort girls, until dawn during a private party at his house in Rome.

Patrizia D’Addario, the Bari prostitute who claims to have recorded footage that proves her encounters with the Prime Minister, gave more details of her first meeting with Mr Berlusconi, saying: “It felt like a harem. And there was only one sheikh. Him.”

She also spoke of the “strange burglary” in which her underwear, computer and the dress she wore to the party were allegedly stolen from her home days after she told a friend of the secret recordings.

It is understood that the video recordings, taken on her mobile phone, show Ms D’Addario in the Prime Minister’s bedroom. She claims that the four-poster bed with white drapes and duvets were given to him as a present by his friend Vladimir Putin, the Russian Prime Minister. A Kremlin spokesman denied that Mr Putin had ever given the Italian leader a bed. >>> Lucy Bannerman in Bari | Friday, June 26, 2009

TIMES ONLINE: Senior Roman Catholic Bishop Calls for Silvio Berlusconi to Resign

A Roman Catholic bishop called for the resignation of Silvio Berlusconi, the first time that such a senior figure of the Church has done so, adding to a growing sense that the crisis over the beleaguered Italian Prime Minister’s private life is out of control.

Monsignor Domenico Mogavero, Bishop of Mazara del Vallo in Sicily and a former senior official in the Italian Bishops' Conference, said that Mr Berlusconi should “consider whether it is opportune to resign in the interests of the country”.

The Prime Minister was further criticised by the Church when Archbishop Angelo Bagnasco of Genoa, head of the Conference, warned against “men drunk on a delirium of their own greatness, who touch the illusion of omnipotence and distort moral values”. >>> Richard Owen in Rome | Friday, June 26, 2009
Shock and Grief Over Jackson’s Death

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Around the country and the world Friday, legions of grief-stricken fans of the King of Pop mourned the sudden death of Michael Jackson with spontaneous flower-laden memorials and emotional tributes, as the autopsy to determine the cause of his mysterious death was scheduled to begin in Los Angeles.

The autopsy would take several hours Friday, but toxicology results could take six to eight weeks, the Los Angeles County assistant chief coroner Lt. Ed Winter told reporters.

Mr. Jackson’s brother Jermaine said on Thursday that the preliminary cause of death was cardiac arrest. The singer, 50, had been rushed to the hospital, a six-minute drive from the rented Bel-Air home where he was living, shortly after noon local time by paramedics for the Los Angeles Fire Department. He was pronounced dead at 2:26 pm.

The Los Angeles Police Department opened an investigation, as a formality and because of Mr. Jackson’s enormous celebrity, a police spokesman said, and detectives began their search of Mr. Jackson’s house Thursday.

Brian Oxman, a former lawyer of Mr. Jackson’s and a family friend, gave interviews expressing his concerns about Mr. Jackson’s health, and saying that prescription drugs might have been a factor in his death Thursday. >>> Sharon Otterman and Liz Robbins | Friday, June 26, 2009

THE TELEGRAPH: Michael Jackson's Family Feared Morphine Overdose



THE TELEGRAPH:
Michael Jackson 'Converts to Islam and Changes Name to Mikaeel' >>> Graham Tibbetts | Friday, November 21, 2008

TIMES ONLINE: Michael Jackson: Martin Bashir Interview Damaged Him Deeply

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Martin Bashir. Photo: TimesOnline

When Michael Jackson agreed to give the television journalist Martin Bashir unprecedented access to his personal life, he believed that it would help him win public sympathy and repair a reputation that had become heavily tarnished over the years.

It had, after all, worked with Diana, Princess of Wales, a figure with whom Jackson identified closely and who had scored a momentous public relations coup with her Panorama interview with Bashir in 1995.

It was to prove a calamitous error of judgement on Jackson’s part.

The admissions he made in the interview about sleeping with children at his Neverland ranch in California would eventually lead to criminal charges and a trial which, despite his acquittal, would cause him a level of damage from which he would never recover.

Jackson was initially persuaded to let Bashir become part of his entourage for eight months by his friend Uri Geller, who said: “Michael liked Martin and he was happy to have him around. I said to him, ‘Michael, maybe it’s time to open up to the world.’”
Jackson did exactly that; and the world did not like what it heard. >>> Valentine Low | Friday, June 26, 2009

YOUTUBE: Thriller


YOUTUBE: Moon Walk


YOUTUBE: Dirty Diana


YOUTUBE: Billy Jean


YOUTUBE: Bad >>>

YOUTUBE: Black or White >>>

YOUTUBE: Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough >>>

YOUTUBE: Off the Wall >>>

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YOUTUBE: Dangerous >>>

YOUTUBE: Liberian Girl >>>
Opinion: The Mullahs Must Go

LOS ANGELES TIMES: Obama is making the same mistake as other presidents -- the only answer is regime change.

Since Iran's controversial and disputed election, President Obama has been noticeably restrained in his reaction. He has flashed his empathy, saying on Tuesday that he was "appalled and outraged" by the regime's brutality, but he has been equally emphatic about not being perceived as meddling in Iran's internal affairs. Despite increasing political heat, even from Democrats and the usually adulatory U.S. media, Obama persists in his low-key approach, clinging to emotive generalizations.

But it is the president's underlying policies that are wrong, not just his rhetoric. Saying that he does not want the "debate" inside Iran to be about the United States is disingenuous at best. Obama's real objective is to launch negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program, in the belief that he can talk Iran out of its 20-year effort to acquire deliverable nuclear weapons. He said it during the 2008 campaign, during his inaugural address and repeatedly thereafter.

Viewed in the light of this near-religious obsession with negotiation, Obama's reticence is entirely understandable: He does not want to jeopardize the chance to sit with the likes of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or the Islamic Revolutionary Guard.

In fact, everything we know about the regime indicates that Iran, and the Revolutionary Guard in particular, will never voluntarily give up its nuclear program, so Obama's policy is doomed to failure. (Inevitably, of course, if negotiations start, Obama would change the definition of success to include accepting a "peaceful" Iranian uranium- enrichment program, which means Tehran would retain its "breakout" capability to quickly produce nuclear weapons -- but exploring this further Obama failure has to wait for another day.)

Accordingly, it is Obama's policy errors, not his rhetorical ones, that should be opposed. Rhetoric itself is not policy but only the adjunct of policy, albeit often an important one. Obama's reticence reflects his larger misjudgment -- the dangerous misconception that there is a negotiated solution to Iran's nuclear threat that can satisfy both Iran and the United States.

Pursuing that objective is perilous for America, its allies and its friends -- in Europe, Israel and the Arab world alike. Moreover, Obama rarely mentions Iran's continuing role as the world's central banker for terrorist groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah, yet this is another threat that negotiation will not eliminate.

Obama's policy, and that of the United States, should be the overthrow of the Islamic revolution of 1979. The massive resistance to the June 12 elections is just another fact supporting that conclusion. >>> John R. Bolton | Friday, June 26, 2009

John R. Bolton, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the author of "Surrender Is Not an Option."
Islam: ‘The Religion of Love, Mercy, and Compassion’

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Sweet soul! Ayatollah Khatami delivering Friday prayers in Tehran. Photo: TimesOnline

TIMES ONLINE: A hardline cleric seen as a mouthpiece of the Iranian regime today demanded that opposition demonstrators be punished “without mercy”.

Even as Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami delivered his uncompromising message at Tehran’s Friday prayers, foreign ministers of the world’s leading industrialised nations issued a statement deploring the regime’s violent crackdown on the protestors and demanded it “stop immediately”.

Mr Khatami’s televised sermon came at the end of a week in which the regime has brutally suppressed all streets protests and rounded up hundreds of opponents for daring to question President Ahmadinejad’s re-election. It conveyed the unmistakable message that no dissent would be tolerated, and that the crackdown would, if anything, intensify.

“I want the judiciary to ... punish leading rioters firmly and without showing any mercy to teach everyone a lesson,” Mr Khatami told worshippers at Tehran university.

He said the judiciary should treat the leading “rioters” as “mohareb” - people who wage war against God. “Based on Islamic law, whoever confronts the Islamic state ... should be convicted as mohareb,” he said. “They should be punished ruthlessly and savagely" to deter others. Hardliner says Iran protesters should be punished 'without mercy' >>> Martin Fletcher | Friday, June 26, 2009
Iran's Turmoil Opens Rift Among Shiites Across Mideast

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Unrest in Iran has opened a theological rift within the Shiite sect of Islam, undermining the Iranian regime's founding dogma that is shared by millions of fellow Shiites across the Middle East.

The concept, known as wilayat al-faqih -- literally "guardianship by a jurist" -- holds that, in an Islamic state, a divinely anointed scholar of Islamic law must exercise unquestioned authority over elected officials and the rest of the government.

Iran's current such incumbent, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, isn't just the top arbiter of the country's affairs. He also serves as the marjaa, or spiritual guide, for many Shiites outside Iran. Mr. Khamenei's image graces billboards in south Beirut, mosques in Shiite shantytowns of eastern Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, and the walls of Shiite lawmakers' offices in Kuwait.

But, in recent weeks, this moral authority -- and the wilayat al-faqih ideology that underpins it -- has been shaken by Ayatollah Khamenei's handling of Iran's disputed June 12 presidential elections.

The Shiites, a minority sect of Islam, split from majority Sunnis some 14 centuries ago. Iran has long been the world's leading Shiite power; 90% of its 66 million people follow the Shiite faith.

With his open support of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Ayatollah Khamenei has departed from his traditional role as a neutral arbiter and consensus-builder. While opposition candidates have alleged fraud during the vote, Ayatollah Khamenei has hailed Mr. Ahmadinejad's re-election as a "divine assessment" and ordered an end to protests. >>> Yaroslav Trofimov in Istanbul and Gina Chon in Najaf, Iraq | Friday, June 16, 2009

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY:
Wilayat al-Faqih (Supreme Jurist Leadership) >>>
Proche-Orient: Le Hamas prêt à dialoguer avec Washington

LePARISIEN.fr: Le chef en exil du Hamas palestinien, Khaled Mechaal, s'est déclaré jeudi favorable à un «dialogue direct et sans condition» avec les Etats-Unis. Il a annoncé la reprise «dans deux jours» des discussions interpalestiniennes au Caire.

«Nous saluons le nouveau discours de Barack Obama à l'égard du Hamas, il s'agit d'un premier pas vers un dialogue direct et sans condition» entre Washington et le mouvement palestinien, a déclaré Khaled Mechaal lors d'un discours attendu à Damas, où il réside.

«Le Hamas ne se fait pas d'illusions face aux discours», a-t-il toutefois ajouté, tout en précisant: «Nous aspirons à un changement sur le terrain qui mette fin à l'occupation» israélienne.

Dans un discours au Caire le 4 juin, le président américain a pressé l'Etat hébreu de cesser la colonisation dans les territoires palestiniens et exprimé son engagement en faveur d'un Etat palestinien aux côtés d'Israël. >>> Leparisien.fr | Jeudi 25 Juin 2009
Arabische Strategie gegen islamischen Terror

BERLINER ZEITUNG: Paris - Die arabischen Länder wollen mit einer arabischen Strategie gegen islamische Terroristen vorgehen. Insbesondere sollen die Geldströme der Terroristen schärfer ins Visier genommen werden, teilte das Sekretariat des Rats der Innenminister der Arabischen Liga in Tunis mit.

Dazu sei am Freitag eine «arabische Strategie des Kampfes gegen die Geldwäsche und die Finanzierung des Terrorismus» beschlossen worden. Die arabischen Länder wollen insbesondere Geldtransfers über das Internet schärfer kontrollieren und Schenkungen und Stiftungen für angeblich karitative Organisationen besser überwachen. Auch auf die Internetkriminalität soll dabei ein schärferes Auge geworfen werden. >>> © dpa | Freitag, 26. Juni 2009
Mehrheit der Ostdeutschen sieht DDR positiv

BERLINER ZEITUNG: Berlin - Die DDR wird von einer Mehrheit der Ostdeutschen heute positiv beurteilt. Dies habe eine repräsentative Umfrage des Emnid-Institutes im Auftrag der Bundesregierung ergeben, berichtet die «Berliner Zeitung».

49 Prozent vertreten demnach die Auffassung, die DDR habe «mehr gute als schlechte Seiten» gehabt. Weitere acht Prozent meinen, man habe damals dort glücklicher und besser gelebt als heute.

Von den befragten Westdeutschen wurde die DDR dagegen mit deutlicher Mehrheit negativ beurteilt. Befragt worden seien 1208 Menschen. Die Entwicklung seit dem Mauerfall werde im Osten eher negativ, im Westen dagegen eher positiv[.] [Quelle: BerlinerZeitung] © dpa | Freitag, 26. Juni 2009
You're Still Jewish – Even If Your Mother Isn't

THE INDEPENDENT: Judges rule that London school's strict admissions policy is in breach of Race Discrimination Act

Britain's Jewish faith schools may have to revise their admission policies after the Court of Appeal ruled that the widely used criteria for selecting pupils breached the Race Discrimination Act.

In a far-reaching judgment, three judges found the well known JFS (formerly the Jews' Free School) in Brent, north-west London, racially discriminated against a 12-year-old boy by denying him a place at the school because his mother was not a recognised Jew.

The ruling was immediately attacked by the Chief Rabbi, Jonathan Sachs, who said he supported an appeal to the House of Lords to try to overturn the judgment so that Jews could "be true to the Jewish faith" by upholding the existing criteria for membership of the Jewish religion. >>> By Robert Verkaik, Law Editor | Friday, June 26, 2009
Obama maintient son offre de dialogue à l'Iran

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Barack Obama s'est dit « choqué » par la répression brutale des manifestations en Iran, mardi, pendant une conférence de presse à la Maison-Blanche. Crédits photo : Le Figaro

LE FIGARO: Zbigniew Brzezinski, ancienne personnalité du parti démocrate américain, assure au Figaro qu'il n'y a pas d'alternative à la main tendue par le président américain.

«Nous devons à la fois montrer de la sympathie pour les aspirations du peuple iranien à la démocratie, tout en affichant notre volonté de négocier avec Téhéran, quels que soient ceux qui sont au pouvoir.» Pour Zbigniew Brzezinski, ex-conseiller à la sécurité nationale de Jimmy Carter entre 1977 et 1981, et qui a aujourd'hui l'oreille de Barack Obama, la politique d'engagement tracée par le nouveau chef de la Maison-Blanche est appelée à se poursuivre, en dépit des dramatiques événements en Iran.

«La ligne a été tracée de façon très claire et très intelligente», estime ce mentor démocrate en géopolitique, âgé aujourd'hui de 81 ans. Il a toujours son bureau au Centre pour les études internationales et stratégiques (CSIS), l'un des principaux think-tanks de Washington. «L'important, insiste-t-il, c'est de ne pas interférer dans la politique intérieure iranienne car cela donnerait aux dirigeants conservateurs de Téhéran des arguments pour accroître la répression contre le mouvement démocratique.» >>> Alain Barluet, envoyé spécial du Figaro à Washington | Jeudi 25 Juin 2009
«Wir Iraner sind anders als unser Regime»

TAGES ANZEIGER: Junge, Alte, Frauen, Männer, Arbeiter, Akademiker – die grüne Bewegung gegen Ahmadinejad und die herrschenden Mullahs umfasst alle Schichten des Iran.

Seit zwei Stunden versucht Mashid ihre Tochter Shirin in Teheran zu erreichen. Sie ist voller Sorge. Aus dem Fernsehen weiss sie, was in der Hauptstadt los ist. Endlich nimmt jemand den Hörer ab. Es ist das Kindermädchen. «Shirin ist nicht zu Hause», sagt sie aufgeregt, «sie ist zu den Moussavi-Leuten gegangen.» Im Hintergrund schreien Shirins Zwillinge. Die Mutter ist entsetzt. «Sie geht zur Demonstration?», ruft sie. Als das Fernsehen später berichtet, dass der Marsch der Opposition gewaltlos verlaufen sei, beruhigt sich Mashid. Sie lacht über das ganze Gesicht. Tränen rollen über ihre Wangen.

Vor 30 Jahren auch demonstriert

Mashid ist 63, doch jetzt sieht sie plötzlich viel jünger aus. «Vor dreissig Jahren habe ich auch demonstriert», sagt sie, «gegen den Schah. Shirin war noch ein Baby.» Angst hatte Mashid damals nicht. Es waren Zehntausende, die auf die Strasse gingen. Sie riefen: «Nieder mit dem Schah!» Manche trugen auch Bilder von Ayatollah Khomeini. Mashid ging oft mit Freunden, weil ihr Mann, ein Architekt, arbeiten musste. Sie wohnten in einem besseren Stadtteil von Mashhad, der zweitgrössten Stadt des Iran, in einem schönen Haus mit einem gepflegten Garten. Als Khomeini über den Schah siegte, war Mashid Feuer und Flamme. An diesem Abend im Januar 1979 feierte die Familie mit Freunden den Sieg der islamischen Revolution mit versteckten Restbeständen von Wodka und Whisky. Was die Zukunft bringen würde, kümmerte sie damals nicht. Hauptsache, der Schah war verschwunden.

Mashid lebt noch heute in ihrem Haus. Als ihr Mann vor zwei Jahren an Krebs starb, erbte sie Bargeld und Grundstücke. Die Erbschaft hat Mashid bei einer privaten Bank für fünf Jahre fest angelegt. Von den Zinsen können sie und ihre Kinder sorglos leben. >>> Von Ahmad Taheri, Teheran | Donnerstag, 25. Juni 2009

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Iranian Film Calls for Change

BBC: The recent death of a female protestor in Iran has become a rallying cry for people across the country and echoes the populist anger seen in the late 1980s at the stoning of a woman for a adultery. Now, the events leading up to her death have been made into a film 'The Stoning of Soraya M'.

We spoke to the Iranian-American actress Shohreh Aghdashloo who stared in the movie and asked her about the political importance of her cinematic performance. Watch BBC video here >>> | Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Iran Doctor Tells of Neda's Death

"We heard a gunshot. Neda was standing a metre away from me... I saw blood gushing out of her chest"

BBC: The doctor who tried to save an Iranian protester as she bled to death on a street in Tehran has told the BBC of her final moments.

Dr Arash Hejazi, who is studying at a university in the south of England, said he ran to Neda Agha-Soltan's aid after seeing she had been shot in the chest.

Despite his attempts to stop the bleeding she died in less than a minute, he said.

Video of Ms Soltan's death was posted on the internet and images of her have become a rallying point for Iranian opposition supporters around the world.

Dr Hejazi also told how passers-by then seized an armed Basij militia volunteer who appeared to admit shooting Ms Soltan.

Dr Hejazi said he had not slept for three nights following the incident, but he wanted to speak out so that her death was not in vain.

He doubted that he would be able to return to Iran after talking openly about Ms Soltan's killing. >>> | Thursday, June 25, 2009
Iranische Regierung setzt Moussavi unter Druck: Opposition berichtet von Verhaftungswelle

NZZ Online: Der iranische Oppositionsführer Moussavi wird nach eigenen Angaben von der Regierung zunehmend unter Druck gesetzt, seine Forderung nach einer Annullierung der umstrittenen Präsidentschaftswahl aufzugeben. Nach Oppositionsangaben ist es zu einer Verhaftungswelle gekommen.

Moussavi solle seine Vorwürfe des Wahlbetrugs fallenlassen und werde auch zunehmend abgeschirmt, hiess es am Donnerstag auf der offiziellen Website des Politikers. Sein Zugang zum Volk sei «völlig eingeschränkt», und er werde zunehmend der Zusammenarbeit mit dem Ausland bezichtigt.

Moussavi will dem Druck jedoch nicht nachgeben und Ahmadinejads Sieg nicht anerkennen. «Es kann keine Lösung sein zu erwarten, dass ich etwas äussere, woran ich nicht glaube», erklärte er auf seiner Website. Nach Angaben der Opposition wurden unterdessen 70 Hochschulprofessoren nach einem Treffen mit Moussavi festgenommen. Über ihren Verbleib sei nichts bekannt. Beobachter werteten die Festnahmen als weiteres Zeichen eines verschärften Vorgehens der Behörden gegen die Oppositionsbewegung. Seit Beginn der Proteste wurden bereits Hunderte von Demonstranten festgenommen. >>> (ap)/bbu | Donnerstag, 25. Juni 2009
Somalia Steps Up Amputations for Criminals

BALTIMORE NEWS: Four men from Somalia have had their hands cut off for stealing phones and guns. 



Hardline Islamists carried out the sentences on the men after they had been convicted in a Sharia court earlier this week. 



Mainly women and children watched as masked men cut off a hand and foot of each of the men with machetes.

Witnesses have said the four men cried for help during and after the amputations.

The four men had reportedly admitted to the robberies, but were given no appeal against their sentence.

The amputations were carried out by members of the al-Shabab group, which controls much of the south of the country. 



Most Somalis traditionally practise a more tolerant form of Islam but President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, who took office in January, immediately allowed Sharia law. [Source: BaltimoreNews.net] | Thursday, June 25, 2009

Comment: here >>>

THE TELEGRAPH:
Somali Islamists carry out public double amputation on 'thieves': Hardline Somali Islamists amputated a leg and a hand from each of four alleged thieves in a public punishment held in the middle of Mogadishu >>> Mike Pflanz in Nairobi | Thursday, June 25, 2009
Obama’s Mistakes: Chancellor Merkel Visits the Debt President

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: The occupant of the White House may have changed recently. But the amount of ill-advised ideology coming from Washington has remained constant. Obama's list of economic errors is long -- and continues to grow.

The president may have changed, but the excesses of American politics have remained. Barack Obama and George W. Bush, it has become clear, are more similar than they might seem at first glance.

Ex-President Bush was nothing if not zealous in his worldwide campaign against terror, transgressing human rights and breaking international law along the way. Now, Obama is displaying the same zeal in his own war against the financial crisis -- and his weapon of choice is the money-printing machine. The rules the new American president is breaking are those which govern the economy. Nobody is being killed. But the strategy comes at a price -- and that price might be America's position as a global power.

In his fight against terrorism, Bush had the ideologue Dick Cheney at his side. "We must take the battle to the enemy," he said -- and sent out the bomber squadrons toward Iraq on the basis of mere suspicion. The result of the offensive is well known.

Obama's Cheney

Obama's Cheney is named Larry Summers. He is Obama's senior-most economic advisor, and like the former vice president, he is a man of conviction. The financial crisis may be large, but Summers' self-confidence is even larger. More importantly, President Barack Obama follows him like a dog does its master.

The crisis, Summers intoned last week at a conference of Deutsche Bank's Alfred Herrhausen Society in Washington, was caused by too much confidence, too much credit and too many debts. It was hard not to nod along in agreement.

But then Summers added that the way to bring about an end to the crisis was -- more confidence, more credit and more debt. And the nodding stopped. Experts and non-experts alike were perplexed. Even in an interview following the presentation, Summers was unable to supply an adequate explanation for how a crisis caused by frivolous lending was going to be solved through yet more frivolity. >>> Gabor Steingart | Thursday, June 25, 2009
Saberi: Iran Can't Go Back: Freed U.S. journalist Roxana Saberi talks with Anderson Cooper about being jailed in Iran and the current protests

Iran developments: June 25: CNN's Ivan Watson reports on the latest developments in Iran

Reporter's Last Hours in Iran: CNN's Reza Sayah discusses what it was like to cover the tension and turmoil in Tehran and his last hours there

The Swan Song of the Islamic Republic

THE HUFFINGTON POST: Whatever happens from this point on, nothing will ever be the same in Tehran.

Whatever happens, if the protest gains momentum or loses steam, if it ends up prevailing or if the regime succeeds in terrorizing it, he who should now only be called president-non-elect Ahmadinejad will only be an ersatz, illegitimate, weakened president.

Whatever happens, whatever the result of this crisis provoked two weeks ago by the enormity of a fraud that serious-minded people can no longer doubt, no Iranian leader can appear on the global scene, or in any negotiation with Obama, Sarkozy, or Merkel, without being haloed, not by the nimbus of light dreamed of by Ahmadinejad in his 2005 speech to the United Nations, but by the cloud of sulphur that crowns cheaters and butchers.

Whatever happens, the Ayatollah Khamenei, Khomeini's successor and Supreme Leader of the regime, tutelary authority of the President, father of the people, will have lost his role as arbiter, will have shamelessly sided with one faction over the others, and will have therefore lost what remained of his authority: "Only God knows my vote," he carefully replied four years ago to those who were already calling upon him to denounce the fraud--"in the name of merciful God, I armor, I hammer, and I dissolve the people," he has responded this time to the naïve who believed he was there to uphold the Constitution.

Whatever happens, the block of ayatollahs who had always succeeded in maintaining a united front, whatever their differences and divergent interests, will have put their ferocious divisions on display: the ones behind Khamenei, approving of the decision to crush the movement with blood; the others, like the ex-President Rafsanjani, leader of the very powerful Assembly of Experts, warning that if the wave of protests were not taken seriously, veritable "volcanoes" of anger would erupt. Others still like the Grand Ayatollah Montazeri who, since his house arrest in Qom, has been calling for a recount and for national mourning for the victims of the repression; and without mentioning the leading religious experts of the "Office of Theological Seminaries" who no longer fear proposing the possibility--what passed for heresy not long ago--of Khamenei's resignation and of his replacement by a "Guidance Council."

Whatever happens, and beyond these internal conflicts, the people will be dissociated from an anemic and fatally wounded regime. >>> Bernard-Henri Lévy, French philosopher and writer | Monday, June 22, 2009

Translated from French by Sara Phenix.
Demonstrationen: Iranische Machthaber beschuldigen jetzt die CIA

WELT ONLINE: Hinter der Protestwelle seit der Präsidentschaftswahl steht nach Ansicht des iranischen Innenministeriums nicht Unzufriedenheit mit der Regierung – sondern der US-Geheimdienst CIA. Die Demonstranten fordern inzwischen nicht nur Neuwahlen, sondern kritisieren die Herrschenden, sogar den geistlichen Führer Chamenei.

Das geistliche Oberhaupt des Iran, Ayatollah Ali Chamenei, hat sich angesichts der Proteste gegen das Wahlergebnis unnachgiebig gezeigt. Die Führung werde nicht „zurückweichen“, erklärte Chamenei am Mittwoch. „Weder das System noch das Volk werden nachgeben.“

Das iranische Innenministerium warf den Demonstranten vor, Unterstützung von den USA, insbesondere dem Geheimdienst CIA, sowie von den Volksmudschaheddin zu beziehen. Viele „Aufständische“ hätten Kontakte dorthin und erhielten finanzielle Unterstützung, erklärte Innenminister Sadegh Massuli nach Angaben der Nachrichtenagentur Fars.

US-Präsident Barack Obama bezeichnete die Vorwürfe als „falsch und absurd“. Teheran versuche mit „einer alten Strategie“ und der Schaffung von Sündenböcken davon abzulenken, dass das iranische Volk um seine Zukunft ringe, sagte Obama. „Das iranische Volk hat ein universelles Recht auf Versammlungs- und Redefreiheit.“

Chamenei hatte sich vergangene Woche deutlich hinter Amtsinhaber Mahmud Ahmadinedschad gestellt, dessen Sieg bei der Präsidentenwahl die anderen Kandidaten anzweifeln. >>> AP/dpa/Reuters/AFP/ks | Mittwoch, 24. Juni 2009
New Dark Age Alert! YouTube Video Shows Church 'Exorcism' of Gay Teenager

THE GUARDIAN: Manifested Glory Ministries denies any wrongdoing but gay advocates demand an investigation

An American church has been condemned over a video showing a 16-year-old boy apparently being exorcised by church leaders trying to cast a "homosexual demon" from his body.

The 20-minute video posted on YouTube shows the teenager lying on the floor, his body convulsing, as elders of a small Connecticut church shout "Rip it from his throat!" and "Come on, you homosexual demon! You homosexual spirit, we call you out right now! Loose your grip, Lucifer!"

Later, the teenager is seen coughing and apparently vomiting into a bag before lying on the ground, limp and covered in a white sheet.

Gay and youth advocates claim the film depicts abuse and are demanding an investigation. But a spokeswoman from Manifested Glory Ministries, which posted the video on YouTube, this week denied any wrongdoing.

"We believe a man should be with a woman and a woman should be with a man," the Rev Patricia McKinney told the Associated Press. "We have nothing against homosexuals. I just don't agree with their lifestyle."

McKinney denied the ritual was an exorcism, describing it instead as a casting out of spirits. She said the church took care of the youth, providing him with clothes. >>> Helen Pidd and agencies | Thursday, June 25, 2009

YOU TUBE: Controversial ‘Gay Exorcism’ by Connecticut Church