Monday, May 03, 2010

Conservative Party in Hock to City, Says Nick Clegg

THE GUARDIAN: Liberal Democrats say Tories' financial dependence on bankers has quadrupled under David Cameron

Nick Clegg will today accuse the Tories of being "completely in hock to the City" as he says the party has quadrupled its dependence on funding from the sector since David Cameron became leader.

Figures produced by the Liberal Democrats today show the Tories have raised more than £15m from companies and individuals connected to the City since Cameron was elected leader in 2005.

The party accepted just £3.9m from the City between 2001 and Cameron becoming leader. Half of the City donors were not recorded donors before then.

Ten percent of the Tory candidates in the coming election are bankers or have worked in the sector, compared with 1.5% of the country as a whole. >>> Patrick Wintour | Monday, May 03, 2010

Osborne Walks a Fine Bank Line

Photobucket
British opposition Conservative party Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, delivered his address to delegates at the Institute of Directors Annual Convention in London on April 28, 2010. Photo: The Wall Street Journal

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: The U.K.'s Conservatives are bashing banks in public. Behind the scenes, though, they're striking a more conciliatory tone with London's financial community.

George Osborne, the Conservatives' candidate to become Chancellor of the Exchequer, has been reaching out to top U.K. bankers to assure them that, despite the party's populist rhetoric, a Conservative government won't declare war on banks, according to people who have heard his pitch. >>> David Enrich and Alistair MacDonald | Monday, May 03, 2010

After bailout, the Barclays Bank Chief’s pay? £63m! And I bet the man's worth every penny! – Mark
New Hakimullah Mehsud Video Threatens Strikes on US ‘Within a Month'

Photobucket
The new video shows Hakimullah Mehsud threatening attacks on the US. Photo: Times Online

TIMES ONLINE: The Pakistan Taleban leader Hakimullah Mehsud, who was believed to have been killed in a US drone attack in January, has threatened attacks against the US in a video apparently made last month, according to the intelligence monitoring group SITE.

The video comes in the wake of the attempted car bombing in Times Square, New York on Sunday and follows another video by Mehsud's terror organisation Tehreek-e-Talebn in which the group claimed credit for the failed attack.

U.S. authorities have played down the potential connection between the Pakistani militant network and the car bomb, saying the group does not have the global infrastructure to carry out such a strike. Tehreek-e-Taleban frequently claim responsibility for terror attacks in which they have no involvement.

In the nine minute video allegedly made on April 4, Mehsud, the man who was once Pakistan's most feared commander makes no specific mention of an attempt on New York but threatens strikes on the United States within a month for the killing of militant leaders.

"The time is very near when our fidaeen (soldiers) will attack the American states in the major cities," says Mehsud, who is flanked by two armed and masked men. >>> | Monday, May 03, 2010

Sunday, May 02, 2010

Dette : Les Grecs renâclent à avaler le remède de cheval imposé par le FMI

Photobucket
Des manifestants grecs se sont mesurés aux forces de l’ordre devant le parlement. Photo : Le Temps

LE TEMPS: L’Eurogroupe – les seize pays de la zone euro – a activé le plan d’aide négocié par le Fonds monétaire international. L’accord porte sur un prêt de 110 milliards d’euros sur trois ans en échange d’un programme d’austérité

Plusieurs affrontements violents et des arrestations ont marqué les traditionnels défilés samedi à Athènes à l’occasion de la Fête du travail. Quelque 20 000 personnes ont participé aux manifestations en guise de protestation contre les mesures d’austérité que le gouvernement grec s’apprêtait à annoncer ce dimanche.

Désormais, c’est fait. Un accord avec le Fonds monétaire international (FMI) est maintenant sous toit. Son contenu a été officiellement dévoilé dimanche par le premier ministre Georges Papandréou au parlement grec. Il a été entériné en fin d’après midi par les ministres des Finances de la zone euro, réunis d’urgence à Bruxelles. «Nous avons décidé aujourd’hui d’activer le plan de soutien à la Grèce», a déclaré Jean-Claude Junker, président de l’Eurogroupe, à l’issue de la réunion. Un sommet extraordinaire des dirigeants des pays de la zone euro est programmé vendredi 7 mai à Bruxelles, mais il ne fera que «conclure le processus».

L’accord porte sur un prêt total de 110 milliards d’euros sur trois ans, dont 80 milliards à un taux d’intérêt de 5% par année à charge de l’Europe et le reste pour le FMI. En 2010, la Grèce devrait percevoir 45 milliards pour honorer ses dettes qui arrivent à échéance. Le pays doit au total 300 milliards d’euros. En contrepartie, la Grèce s’est engagée à mettre en œuvre un programme d’austérité qui lui permettra de maîtriser ses finances publiques dès ces prochaines années. >>> Ram Etwareea | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010
Rompant son silence, Polanski se dit victime d'un mensonge

LE FIGARO: Toujours poursuivi aux Etats-Unis pour avoir eu des relations sexuelles avec une mineure en 1977, le cinéaste franco-polonais continue de clamer son innocence dans une lettre ouverte publiée dimanche.

«Je ne peux plus me taire.» Dimanche soir, Roman Polanski a décidé de rompre le silence dans lequel il s'était muré depuis plusieurs mois en publiant un texte dans lequel il considère que la demande d'extradition dont il fait l'objet aux Etats-Unis «est basée sur un mensonge». «Je ne peux plus me taire parce que les Etats-Unis continuent de réclamer mon extradition plus pour me livrer en pâture aux médias du monde entier que pour prononcer un jugement sur lequel un accord a été pris il y a 33 ans», écrit-il dans cette lettre publiée sur un site Internet dirigé par le philosophe Bernard-Henri Lévy.

«Je ne peux plus me taire car la demande d'extradition aux autorités suisses est basée sur un mensonge», poursuit le cinéaste franco-polonais à propos de son incarcération en dans une prison de Californie durant 42 jours en 1977. Selon Polanski, poursuivi aux Etats-Unis pour avoir eu cette année-là des relations sexuelles avec une adolescente de 13 ans, cette incarcération correspondait à la peine à laquelle il aurait du être condamné et qu'il aurait par conséquent déjà exécutée. >>> Par Bastien Hugues | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010
Le projet d'interdire le voile intégral en France fait polémique au Pakistan

Photo of Saudi King with Women Could Lead to Reform

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: A photograph of the king of Saudi Arabia surrounded by a large group of professional women may mark a breakthrough in the country's society and politics.

Photobucket
The photograph shows King Abdullah and his brother and heir apparent, Crown Prince Sultan, alongside 40 women dressed in abayas. Photograph: The Telegraph

The photograph, showing King Abdullah and his brother and heir apparent, Crown Prince Sultan, alongside 40 women dressed in abayas appeared with little explanation in several newspapers with close ties to the royal family.

The women were described as participants in a "National Dialogue Forum on Society and Health Services".

But the real importance of the picture was its timing. The country is in the middle of a major debate about the future of rules previously strictly enforced by the religious police banning the sexes mixing in public.

The royal family is already believed to have intervened in the argument once.

When the head of the religious police in Mecca gave interviews saying he saw nothing in Shariah outlawing mixing, he was sacked. Two hours later he was reinstated, after, it was rumoured, the direct intervention of a ruling prince.

The photograph of the king "mixing" unabashedly with a group of smiling professional women is all the more important because of two extra pieces of symbolism.

The presence of the crown prince suggests that the king's promotion of the rights of women has the backing of the royal family and is likely to continue after his death.

The king, who is 85, last year opened a science university in his name where mixing is specifically permitted, and appointed the country's first woman minister. >>> Richard Spencer, Middle East Correspondent | Sunday, May 02, 2010
Greece Announces Financial Bailout

Greece Erupts as Men from IMF Prepare to Wield Axe

THE SUNDAY TIMES: Anger is intensifying over cuts to be made as part of the EU deal to save the economy

MAY DAY protests in Greece turned violent yesterday as youths in gas masks and hoods set fire to vehicles, smashed shop fronts and threw molotov cocktails and rocks at police in an explosion of fury over austerity measures they claim will hurt only the poor.

Tourists were cut off from their hotels as thousands of communists, civil servants and private-sector workers converged on a main square in Athens to vent their rage at the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“No to the IMF’s junta,” they chanted as a youth in a black hood produced a hammer to try to smash windows of the luxury Grande Bretagne hotel.

Another painted anti-capitalist slogans on the facade, and demonstrators intervened to prevent him from spraying an Australian woman with paint as she tried to get back into the hotel. Japanese tourists stood taking photographs of the mayhem with mobile phones before being forced to retreat, coughing and sneezing, under a cloud of tear gas.

The violence came as negotiations were concluding between the socialist government of George Papandreou, the IMF and the EU over a multi-billion-euro rescue package for Greece. >>> Matthew Campbell in Athens | Sunday, May 02, 2010
Times Square Evacuated After Bomb Is Found

Obama Delivers Laughs At Dinner

Taliban bekennen sich zu Anschlagsversuch in USA: Keine Hinweise auf «Tat eines Einzelnen»

NZZ ONLINE: Eine pakistanische Taliban-Gruppierung hat sich zu dem versuchten Anschlag in New York bekannt. Das meldete das auf die Beobachtung islamistischer Websites spezialisierte Unternehmen SITE am Sonntag.

Als Grund für den Anschlagsversuch nannte die Gruppe Tehrik-e-Taliban die US-Drohnen-Angriffe in Pakistan. Immer wieder nehmen die unbemannten US-Drohnen Ziele in den pakistanischen Grenzgebieten zu Afghanistan ins Visier, wo die Taliban ihre Rückzugsgebiete haben. >>> sda/Reuters/afp | Sonntag, 02. Mai 2010
General Election 2010: Nick Clegg Defends Immigration Policy

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Nick Clegg said he was ''incredibly angry'' with David Cameron and Gordon Brown over attacks on his party's immigration policy.

The Liberal Democrats' plans to allow illegal immigrants who have been in the UK for 10 years to earn citizenship has been labelled an ''amnesty'' by their political rivals on their election campaigns.

But Mr Clegg today said he was the only party leader with the ''courage'' to confront a chaotic system which had been allowed to exist under successive Labour and Conservative administrations.

Mr Clegg said: ''It makes me incredibly angry that David Cameron and Gordon Brown create a problem ... and are perfectly happy to turn a deaf ear to criminal gangs running amok in our community.

''I'm the only leader who actually wants to do something about it.''

The issue of immigration has been raised throughout the campaign and was the subject of a question in each of the three leaders' debates.

In the final televised showdown Mr Cameron claimed 600,000 illegal immigrants could be given the right to remain and bring a family member to the UK under the Lib Dem proposals.

Speaking to reporters at a campaign event in Burnley, Mr Clegg hit out at the way opponents ''wholly misrepresent'' his plan.

He said: ''Given that neither David Cameron nor Gordon Brown want to actually clear up the mess they created, they don't want to be honest with you.

''I think it's right that the Liberal Democrats are saying we have got to do something about this.

''Do you know what I want? I want to go after the criminal gangs. >>> | Sunday, May 02, 2010

The Immigration Experiment Shows Labour at Its Worst

THE TELEGRAPH: A significant social change was foisted on Britain without our consent, says Alasdair Palmer

Gordon Brown has apologised profusely for calling Gillian Duffy "bigoted" after she asked him what he was going to do about immigration. But for all his very public penitence, Mr Brown's initial reaction reveals what he really thinks of those who are sceptical about immigration's benefits.

The number of people coming to stay in Britain is now nearly four times greater than in 1997: every year, at least 130,000 more people have arrived than left (in 2007, the figure was 248,000). If present trends continue, Britain's population will reach 70 million within the next 20 years.

The influx of migrants, many of whom are not familiar with British norms and traditions – and who have traditions of their own that they are, understandably, not ready to abandon – has already had very significant effects on many communities. Some people like those changes, especially those who employ cleaners, nannies and builders, and who can afford to eat at exotic restaurants. Others don't. Their reaction doesn't have to be based on bigotry, although of course it can be. But you don't have to be a bigot to deplore more overcrowding in schools, or more pressure on housing, health services and transport.

The huge increase in immigration has taken place almost without discussion. It was not mentioned in Labour's manifesto in 1997, nor in 2001. In 2005, it rated scarcely more than a few lines. When Michael Howard, the then Conservative leader, tried to make the subject an election issue, he was accused of racism by Labour – and, of course, "bigotry". The charge was effective in closing down the debate. >>> Alasdair Palmer | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Times Square Car Bomb: Police Investigate South Park Link

THE TELEGRAPH: Police in New York are investigating whether a car bomb in Times Square was targeted on the makers of South Park over a controversial depiction of the Prophet Mohammed.

The device, which failed to detonate, was left near the offices of Viacom, which owns the irreverent cartoon series.

Last month postings on an Islamic website warned the creators of South Park - Matt Stone and Trey Parker - that they could face violent reprisals after an episode of the show featured Mohammed in a bear suit.

A posting on the website of a US-based group called Revolution Muslim warned Stone and Parker that they would “probably wind up like Theo Van Gogh”, the Dutch film-maker who was murdered in 2004 by a Muslim angered by his film about Muslim women.

Images of the Prophet are strictly forbidden in Islam, and Comedy Central, which broadcasts South Park, has banned Stone and Parker from depicting Mohammed in the past. In 2006 the network stopped them from featuring Mohammed in an episode which followed worldwide protests over a caricature of the Prophet by a Danish cartoonist. >>> Nick Allen and Gordon Rayner | Sunday, May 02, 2010

Related videos here and article here
Wegen Burka-Verbot: Prediger fordern Muslime zur Auswanderung auf

WELT ONLINE: Unter islamischen Geistlichen stoßen die Pläne Frankreichs und Belgiens für ein Verbot der Burka auf Unverständnis. Prediger in konservativen arabischen Staaten sprechen von mangelnder Toleranz. Ein saudischer Prediger forderte die Betroffenen auf, sie sollten "das Land des Unglaubens verlassen".

Die islamischen Prediger in den konservativen arabischen Staaten bringen für das in Frankreich und Belgien geplante Burka-Verbot wenig Verständnis auf. Für die meisten von ihnen ist das Verbot des Ganzkörperschleiers ein Ausdruck der Intoleranz gegenüber den Muslimen. Ein Prediger aus Saudi-Arabien rief die Muslime in Belgien sogar auf, auszuwandern.

Scheich Abdurrahman, der in der Al-Diraa-Moschee im Zentrum der saudischen Hauptstadt Riad predigt, sagte: „Wenn ein Muslim seine Religion nicht schützen kann, dann soll er auswandern. Denn das Land Gottes ist groß.“ Der saudische Prediger erklärte weiter: „Wenn die Muslime, die dort leben, die Botschaft ihres Glaubens nicht verbreiten dürfen, dann sollen sie das Land des Unglaubens verlassen.“ >>> dpa/ks | Freitag, 30. April 2010

Verbunden / Liens en relation avec l’article hier / ici
Trailer: 'The God Who Wasn’t There'

Fox News: Bill O'Reilly South Park Muhammad Death Threats



South Park Muhammad Cartoon Sparks Jihadi Death Threats - Ayaan Hirsi Ali



South Park's 200th, Litigious Celebs and Mohammed: Matt Stone and Trey Parker

Arnold Schwarzenegger on Keeping California Cool

Danish FM: World Must Unite Against Iran Nuclear Ambitions

HAARETZ: The international community must present a clear and united front against Iran's nuclear ambitions, Danish Foreign Minister Lene Espersen said on Sunday in a meeting with President Shimon Peres.

Espersen said Denmark has been working within the context of the European Union and the United Nations Security Council to impose harsh economic sanction against the Iranian regime. "It is within everyone's interest to isolate Iran," said the Danish foreign minister.

Peres thanked Espersen for her "sharp and clear voice" on the Iranian threat and the need to impose harsh economic sanctions. He also thanked her for the warmth and generosity Denmark has demonstrated toward Israel. >>> Haaretz Service | Sunday, May 02, 2010
George Papaconstantinou
Le ministre grec des Finances, Georges Papaconstantinou. La Grèce, au bord du gouffre financier, a annoncé un nouveau plan d'austérité prévoyant une réduction de son déficit budgétaire de 30 milliards d'euros sur trois ans en échange de l'octroi d'une aide massive de l'Union européenne et du Fonds monétaire international.

Grèce: le détail du nouveau plan d'austérité

L’EXPRESS.fr: L'Union européenne et le FMI devraient verser à la Grèce une aide de 120 milliards d'euros sur trois ans. En contrepartie, le pays va devoir consentir à d'importants et "durs sacrifices".

30 milliards d'euros. La barre de réduction des déficits est haute pour la Grèce. Mais c'est le prix à payer si elle veut sortir du gouffre financier. Le pays a annoncé un nouveau plan d'austérité prévoyant une réduction de son déficit budgétaire de 30 milliards d'euros sur trois ans en échange de l'octroi d'une aide massive de l'Union européenne et du Fonds monétaire international.

L'aide internationale à la Grèce, qui devrait se monter à 120 milliards d'euros sur trois ans, représente le premier sauvetage d'un membre de la zone euro et vise à empêcher que d'autres pays utilisant la monnaie unique ne soient attaqués sur les marchés et se retrouvent en difficulté.

Pour atteindre le montant de 30 milliards d'euros d'économies annoncé par le ministre grec des Finances Georges Papaconstantinou, les Grecs vont devoir consentir d'importants sacrifices en matière de revenus et accepter un alourdissement de la fiscalité sur la consommation. >>> Par Reuters | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010
Une députée veut interdire la burqa au sein de l’UE

20MINUTES.ch: Une vice-présidente du Parlement européen, chef de file des libéraux (FDP) allemands, a appelé dimanche à l'interdiction du port du voile islamique intégral dans l'Union européenne.

«J'aimerais que l'Allemagne -- et toute l'Europe -- interdisent le port de la burqa sous toutes ses formes», a affirmé Silvana Koch-Mehrin dans une tribune libre publiée par le journal Bild am Sonntag.

En Belgique, les députés ont déjà entrepris d'interdire le port du voile intégral islamique dans les lieux publics, mais l'adoption définitive du projet de loi risque d'être remise en cause par la chute du gouvernement. 


En France, le gouvernement entend lui aussi bientôt présenter un projet de loi en ce sens. >>> afp | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010

Die Burka gehört in Europa verboten

BILD am SONNTAG: Als erste Volksvertretung hat das belgische Parlament ein Vermummungsverbot und damit auch ein Verbot der Vollverschleierung muslimischer Frauen beschlossen – und zwar ohne eine einzige Gegenstimme. Auch andere EU-Länder denken darüber ernsthaft nach.

Ich begrüße diesen Beschluss ganz ausdrücklich.

Ich wünsche mir, dass auch in Deutschland – und in ganz Europa – das Tragen aller Formen der Burka verboten wird.

Wer Frauen verhüllt, nimmt ihnen das Gesicht und damit ihre Persönlichkeit. Die Burka ist ein massiver Angriff auf die Rechte der Frau, sie ist ein mobiles Gefängnis. >>> Von Silvana Koch-Mehrin | Sonntag, 02. Mai 2010
General Election 2010: Islamists in Phil Woolas Slur

SUNDAY EXPRESS: IMMIGRATION Minister Phil Woolas has launched a desperate attempt to save his seat by distributing 45,000 leaflets saying he has had death threats and that he is being targeted by an Islamic group.

He has placed concerns over forms of Islam at the centre of the campaign in Oldham East and Saddleworth, which is becoming the dirtiest of the general election.



The leaflets are in the form of a hard-hitting eight-page newspaper whose front page has a picture of Mr Woolas caught in a rifle’s crosshairs.



They say the Islamic group, which cannot be named for legal reasons, is swamping the constituency with its own leaflets that brand Mr Woolas and his supporters as “bum kissers”.



One leaflet by a smaller group offered a hamper for anyone devising the “most creative” death threat against him, Mr Woolas said. 



He is reporting those threats to the police.

He told the Sunday Express last night: “Mainstream Muslims will be sickened by these people who are giving Islam a bad name. We’ve got to stand up to them.”



The minister, whose majority is about 3,600, believes his Lib Dem challenger Elwyn Watkins, 46, will be the beneficiary of the group’s smear campaign.



Mr Watkins spent the bulk of his business career as a “personal adviser” to a wealthy Saudi sheikh. >>> Ted Jeory, Whitehall Editor | Sunday, May 02, 2010
French Indignant Over Government Plan to Raise Retirement Age

LOS ANGELES TIMES: Despite the uproar, France is not alone in considering such a step. Countries from Britain to Greece are also grappling with declining populations, ballooning government debt and longer life spans.

Reporting from Amiens, France
Didier Remy has spent his life so intent on retiring on his 55th birthday that he and his wife even planned their children accordingly, wanting them to be grown by the time he stopped working.

So pardon a little indignant hand-waving as he ponders the prospect of Nicolas Sarkozy fouling everything up. If the French president has his way, Remy will find it tough to retire with his full state pension in 2015, as he carefully plotted 20 years ago.

"My life was organized around the idea that I'm going to leave work at that age," said Remy, a lifelong employee of France's state-owned railway, whose benefits are the envy of other Frenchmen, never mind long-slogging Americans. "It's my goal. But it rests with the powers that be."

True to form in this protest-rife land, Sarkozy's announcement that he intends to raise the national retirement age sometime this summer sent thousands of demonstrators spilling into the streets last month in opposition. But this time the French are part of a larger tide of anger and anxiety surging across Europe.

With budget deficits ballooning across the continent, and a huge bailout of debt-ridden Greece on the verge of taking place, officials across Europe say they have no choice but to boost retirement ages if they are to tackle a monumental economic problem compounded by declining populations and longer life spans.

But few issues are as sensitive in a region where the right to retire at a decent age, and retire well, is considered almost an inalienable social right. For many here, it's one of the defining elements of their identity as Europeans, part of what they feel makes them different — more reasonable, more humane — from overworked, overstressed Americans. >>> Henry Chu, Los Angeles Times | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Undermining the Faith

LOS ANGELES TIMES: Catholic bashers like to refer to priests as ‘men in dresses.’ It’s just another in a growing number of media cheap shots directed at Pope Benedict XVI.

"Men in dresses." That's who columnist Maureen Dowd blames for decay in "our religious kingdom."

Which men in dresses is she referring too? The ballerinas-in-drag of Les Ballets Trockadero? The Marilyn Monroe lookalikes marching in gay pride parades? Nope. She's talking about Catholic priests.

Lately Dowd, along with half the other columnists in America, has been speculating about what Pope Benedict XVI knew or didn't know concerning clerical abuse of minors back when he was Josef Ratzinger, acting as archbishop of Munich or as head of the Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. And she and her gang seem to find it hilarious that Catholic priests and bishops often wear cassocks or other long traditional robes, especially on formal religious occasions and when celebrating Mass.

It's odd that no one ever uses the word "dresses" to describe the ankle-length liturgical garments worn by Episcopal priests. Nor are Protestant ministers or Jewish rabbis derided as cross-dressers when they don long robes for religious services. Has anyone ever called the Dalai Lama "a man in a dress"? Or Genghis Khan? Not unless you wanted to see your ribcage sliced into salami by a scimitar.

For most of human history long robes on men — whether the togas of Roman senators, the kimonos of Japanese samurai or the black gowns worn by judges and academics today — have been associated with status, dignity and, in the case of the clergy, the sacral separation of religious ritual from the ordinary activities of daily life. Indeed, so redolent of masculinity are those garments that when women enter the professions for which they are worn, they often soften and feminize them. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, for example, wears lace collars with her judicial robes[.] >>> Charlotte Allen | Sunday, May 02, 2010
Times Square Car Bomb Was Act of Terrorism

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: American officials declared that the failed car bomb that forced the evacuation of New York's Times Square was an "act of terrorism."



"Luckily, no one is hurt, and now the full attention of city, state and federal law enforcement will be turned to bringing the guilty party to justice in this act of terrorism," New York Governor David Paterson said.

The bomb, which failed to detonate, was left in a sport utility vehicle close to a Broadway theatre where a production of The Lion King was showing. >>> Nick Allen | Sunday, May 02, 2010

Times Square: "Un acte de terrorisme"

leJDD.fr: David Paterson, gouverneur de l'Etat de New-York, a estimé dimanche que la présence d'une voiture pleine d'explosifs à Times Square relevait d"un "acte de terrorisme". Le quartier est très fréquenté, en particulier le samedi soir, et très prisé des touristes et des amateurs de théâtre. [Source: leJDD.fr] | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010

Related:

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Police Discover Car Bomb in Times Square and Clear Area >>> Al Baker and Karin Henry | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Grèce: Besoin de 60 milliards d'euros par an

leJDD.fr: La Grèce a besoin d'emprunter 60 milliards d'euros par an, a estimé dimanche le président George Papandréou. Le chef de l'État grec, qui vient de conclure un accord avec l'Union européenne et le Fonds monétaire international, a déclaré que "les sacrifices seront difficiles mais nécessaires pour éviter une faillite de l'État grec". Les mesures d'austérité décidées affecteront les employés du secteur public mais aussi les retraités. [Source: leJDD.fr] | Dimanche 02 Mai 2010
Rising Tory Star Philippa Stroud Ran Prayer Sessions to 'Cure' Gay People

THE OBSERVER: Conservative high-flyer Philippa Stroud founded a church that tried to 'cure' homosexuals by driving out their 'demons

A high-flying prospective Conservative MP, credited with shaping many of the party's social policies, founded a church that tried to "cure" homosexuals by driving out their "demons" through prayer.

Philippa Stroud, who is likely to win the Sutton and Cheam seat on Thursday and is head of the Centre for Social Justice, the thinktank set up by the former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith, has heavily influenced David Cameron's beliefs on subjects such as the family. A popular and energetic Tory, she is seen as one of the party's rising stars.

The CSJ reportedly claims to have formulated as many as 70 of the party's policies. Stroud has spoken of how her Christian faith has motivated her to help the poor and of her time spent working with the destitute in Hong Kong. On her return to Britain, in 1989, she founded a church and night shelter in Bedford, the King's Arms Project, that helped drug addicts and alcoholics. It also counselled gay, lesbian and transsexual people.

Abi, a teenage girl with transsexual issues, was sent to the church by her parents, who were evangelical Christians. "Convinced I was demonically possessed, my parents made the decision to move to Bedford, because of this woman [Stroud] who had come back from Hong Kong and had the power to set me free," Abi told the Observer.

"She wanted me to know all my thinking was wrong, I was wrong and the so-called demons inside me were wrong. The session ended with her and others praying over me, calling out the demons. She really believed things like homosexuality, transsexualism and addiction could be fixed just by prayer, all in the name of Jesus." >>> Jamie Doward, Cal Flyn and Richard Rogers | Sunday, May 02, 2010
Andrew M Brown: Why Does Tony Blair Look So Old and Frail?

Tony Blair
Clearly in need of some advice from the Clinique consultant, Tony Blair has visibly aged in a short time. – Mark | Photo: The Telegraph

THE TELEGRAPH – BLOG: Look at this recent photograph of Tony Blair, taken as he returns to campaign for Labour in the election. The former Prime Minister appears to have aged markedly. He looks elderly, frail and wizened. In fact he reminds me of no one so much as dear old Bill Deedes when he was in his eighties. Mr Blair is still only 56 and yet he seems a pale shadow of the vital young man who bounded into Downing Street 13 years ago. Read on and comment >>> Andrew M Brown | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Nick Clegg Is the Candidate of Change

THE OBSERVER – Editorial: The Liberal Democrats offer a prospect of renewal which has been denied them by a grossly unfair voting system

The rotten parliament is dissolved; this week a new one will be elected. Scores of incumbents who fiddled their expenses will be evicted. Many who did not are standing down anyway, too defeated by the public's loathing of politicians to face the campaign trail.

So change is inevitable. Parliament will be full of novice MPs. It might also, if current opinion polls are borne out, be hung.

The Conservatives have spent much energy campaigning against that outcome. They have publicised their irritation that voters could deprive David Cameron of a majority much better than they have explained why he deserves one in the first place.

Mr Cameron warns portentously that a coalition might lead to instability, economic jeopardy and "more of the old politics". Perversely, he also rejects the need to change the current voting system, which has, he says, the merit of delivering clear results. Except this time it might not. What then? Mr Cameron's view is that the system would work fine, if only everyone voted Conservative. This is sophistry draped in hypocrisy. He backs first past the post, while agitating against one of the outcomes that is hard-wired into it. He is campaigning against the voters instead of pitching for their support. He defines change in politics as the old system preserved – but run by the Tories.

The expenses scandal signalled the need for more radical reform. This newspaper has consistently argued that the most effective change would be to introduce a fairer voting system. The current model contains a huge bias towards Labour and the Conservatives, giving them hundreds of safe seats where MPs can complacently ignore voters. Parties then divert money and skew policy towards a handful of tactically important constituencies. Awarding seats in parliament in proportion to votes cast would extend the franchise to millions of people who feel their voices have gone unheard. Deep unfairness radiates out of our voting system and corrupts our politics. This can only be fixed with electoral reform.

If a different system yields more coalition governments, so be it. Mr Cameron ought to appreciate how like coalitions the current political parties already are. Conservative policy expresses the party's agonies in recent years as different factions have competed to graft their priorities on to the leader's mutating creed. >>> Observer Editorial | Saturday, May 01, 2010

The Only Choice for Britain

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH – Editorial: The country needs a Conservative government with a strong majority in order to tackle the enormous challenges it faces, says The Sunday Telegraph

The general election this week offers the country the most significant choice for a generation. Ever since the financial crisis began, it has been clear that Britain faces enormous challenges over the next few years. The new government must stabilise the economy, reinvigorate the private sector and deal with a burden of debt and over-spending that could cripple the public finances. Yet the challenges are not just economic. As our poll today shows, voters are also worried about the consequences of immigration on an unprecedented scale, the state of their schools and hospitals, the weakening of civic society, our military involvement in Afghanistan, and the increasing tide of regulation from Brussels. Such problems demand a strong and vigorous government to tackle them. The question is, which of the parties is best suited to such a task?

Despite the parties' attempts to capture the all-important middle ground, the differences between them are clear. Labour believes that only the state can solve the country's economic and social problems. The Conservatives, by contrast, believe that the growth of the central state is the cause of the problem, not its solution, and want to call upon the invigorating power of citizens and communities. The Liberal Democrats seem to hover uneasily between those two positions: one of the difficulties that Nick Clegg has faced has been to explain exactly where he stands on the critical question of whether we need more or less government intervention in the economy and in our lives.

If you examine the Government's record, there is no doubt that the top-down, target-driven, statist approach has reached a dead end. Since 1997, Labour has added more than a million people to the payroll. Spending has increased by 3.2 per cent per annum, in real terms. Gordon Brown now talks of Tory efficiency savings as irresponsible cuts which will "shrink" or "take money out of" the economy. As David Cameron has rightly pointed out, this is to confuse the economy with the state. Usually, people are better at spending their own money than are officials: it is a basic conservative principle that they should retain as much of it as possible. This also helps stimulate the economy, which is why one of the most convincing Tory victories of the campaign has been their opposition – alongside much of the business community – to the tax on jobs represented by Labour's planned rises in National Insurance.

In defending this position, Mr Cameron has frequently pointed out that there is an enormous amount of waste in government spending that could be cut instead. He is absolutely correct. But efficiency savings, on their own, will not be anything like enough to deal with our abysmal fiscal situation. Mr Brown's reputation for prudence, for making the right decisions on economic issues, has been destroyed by his profligate spending. As a result of the shocking state of our public finances, we face a bleaker economic future than other, similar nations. >>> Sunday Telegraph View | Saturday, May 01, 2010

Related: More endorsements
America's Disappointing Reaction to South Park Censorship

THE TELEGRAPH: America's failure to rise up against the intimidation of cartoonist Molly Norris and South Park animators is a sad sign, says Alex Spillius.

Photobucket
South Park featured an episode where all the founders of the major world religions including Mohammed appeared as a group of crime fighters called the Super Best Friends. Cartoon: The Telegraph

The trouble with terror is that it can be terrifying. Just ask Molly Norris, a cartoonist from Seattle.

As far as we know, she hasn't been explicitly threatened by Islamic extremists, but evidently she feared she might be.

Her error was to post on her website an illustration with many different household objects with speech bubbles all claiming to be the likeness of Mohammed, including a tea cup, a domino and a box of pasta. It was part of a mock campaign to dedicate May 20 as "Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!"

Ms Norris pinged her cartoon to a few bloggers and talked to local radio, saying she [sic] it was "a cartoonist's job to be non-PC."

Quite reasonably, the radio man asked her "are you sure you want to do this?"

Bold as you like, she replied: "Yeah, I want to water down the targets ..."

Ms Norris had launched her pretend promotion in response to the treatment by Comedy Central of Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of South Park, the satirical animated show.

Its 200th anniversary episode featured a parade of celebrities and religious figures it had parodied over the years. Aware of the offence that depicting Mohammed could cause to Muslims, the show's characters debated how to represent the prophet, eventually deciding to hide him in a bear costume.

That prompted a New York-based website, RevolutionMuslim.com, to warn Parker and Stone that "what they are doing is stupid and they will probably wind up like Theo Van Gogh". >>> Alex Spillius in Washington | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Revolution from Greece's Ruins as Crisis Deepens

THE TELEGRAPH: As Greeks face changing their way of life, rioters in Athens clash with police at the start of a very long, painful summer for the country.



The week was already going badly enough for mild-mannered Greek prime minister George Papandreou. After months of insisting that his country would be able to claw its own way out of decades of mismanagement and corruption, his belated SOS to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) ensured that Greece's world famous ruins are now financial, not archaeological.

But then things got worse. Even as Mr Papandreou likened himself to Homer's great survivor, Odysseus, his country's fortunes were being sunk between a modern Scylla and Charybdis: German intransigence over a financial bailout on one side, and market jitters that downgraded Greek bonds to junk status on the other.

On Sunday, however, as the details of an economic life raft from the EU and IMF are due to be announced, Mr Papandreou will be forced to survey not simply the wreckage of the Greek economy, but the beginnings of "cultural revolution" that analysts say his homeland's crisis is set to unleash across the continent of Europe. >>> Harry de Quetteville and Paul Anast in Athens | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Anglican Bishops in Secret Vatican Summit

THE TELEGRAPH: Leading traditionalist bishops in the Anglican Church have secretly told senior Vatican officials that they are ready to defect to Rome, taking clergy with them.

In a move likely to raise tensions between the two Churches, a group of Church of England bishops met last week with advisers of Pope Benedict XVI to set in motion steps that would allow priests to convert to Catholicism en masse.

They are set to resign their orders in opposition to the introduction of women bishops and to lead an exodus of Anglican clerics to the Catholic Church despite Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, urging them not to leave.

It would be the first time for nearly 20 years that large numbers of priests have crossed from the Church of England to Rome, and comes only weeks ahead of a crucial General Synod debate on making women bishops. >>> Jonathan Wynne-Jones, Religious Affairs Correspondent | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Police Discover Car Bomb in Times Square and Clear Area

Photobucket
The scene at Times Square on Saturday night. Photograph: The New York Times

THE NEW YORK TIMES: The police discovered a car bomb in a smoking Nissan Pathfinder in the heart of Times Square, prompting the evacuation of thousands of tourists and theatergoers from the area on a warm and busy Saturday evening.

There was no explosion.

“It appears to be a car bomb left in a Pathfinder between Seventh and Eighth” Avenues on 45th Street, said Deputy Commissioner Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman.

The device, he said, contained “explosive elements” that included “propane tanks, some kind of powder, gasoline and a timing device.”

“This is very much an active investigation,” he said.

Mr. Browne, speaking shortly before 1 a.m. Sunday, said that no one was in custody. “We haven’t identified any kind of a motive,” he said. “It appears to be a car bomb, but we haven’t attached a motive to it."

Mr. Browne said the police were checking security cameras after reports that someone had fled from the car. >>> Al Baker and Karin Henry | Saturday, May 01, 2010

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Violent May Day Protests in Athens

LOS ANGELES TIMES: The rioting signals growing social unrest as the Greek government prepares to announce additional austerity measures to secure rescue loans from the EU and International Monetary Fund.

Photobucket
Demonstrators clash with police outside the Greek Parliament during a massive May Day demonstration by leftist groups to protest austerity measures instituted by the government. Photo: Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Athens

Wielding red flags and hurling crude gas bombs, dozens of militant youths clashed with riot police in central Athens on Saturday, signaling swelling social unrest as the cash-strapped Greek government prepares to announce additional austerity measures required to win rescue loans from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

The clashes came during massive May Day protests called by Greece's powerful trade unions and left-wing political parties in a desperate bid to block the plans for additional wage cuts, tax hikes and pension reductions.

"The bill should go to those who looted this country for decades, not to the workers," said Spiros Papaspirou, head of Greece's powerful Adedy civil servants union. "This is the most savage, unjust and unprovoked attack workers have ever faced."

Saturday's protests drew nearly 20,000 workers to the streets of the capital, bringing traffic and trade to a standstill as demonstrators filed by the Finance Ministry building chanting slogans against the government, the EU and the IMF. >>> Anthee Carassava, Special to the Los Angeles Times | Saturday, May 01,2010
Kadhafi compare la Suisse à al-Qaïda

20MINUTES.ch: Le colonel Mouammar Kadhafi continue sa guerre verbale contre la Suisse.

Dans cet entretien diffusé samedi sur la Toile, Mouammar Kadhafi qualifie la Suisse de «bande, d'Etat en dehors de la communauté internationale». L'arrestation de son fils Hannibal à Genève en juillet 2008 était un «acte de terrorisme»; al-Qaïda procède de la même façon avec ses victimes, ajoute-t-il.

Le dirigeant africain s'en prend aussi à l'aide au suicide, autorisée sur le territoire helvétique. Selon lui, de nombreux candidats au suicide seraient tués à dessein.

Le gouvernement suisse pratiquerait en outre «le blanchiment d'argent à large échelle», et prétendrait se situer au-dessus du droit international. «Cela fait de lui une mafia», estime-t-il, ajoutant: «J'en appelle dès lors au démantèlement de l'Etat helvétique».

Le colonel Kadhafi est remonté contre la Suisse depuis l'arrestation à Genève de son fils Hannibal, accusé ainsi que son épouse de mauvais traitements par ses domestiques. Une réputation bien établie >>> ats | Samedi 01 Mai 2010
Athens’ Tense May Day

Clegg’s Wife’s Style


Rioting Greeks Throw Petrol Bombs at Police

THE TELEGRAPH: Greek protesters have clashed with riot police in Athens as anger about financial reform boils over.

Several hundred protesters waving red flags and wearing red bandannas confronted the police in the Greek capital on Saturday morning.

Two petrol bombs were hurled at the police lines, and armed police fired tear gas to dispel the crowd.

Thousands more demonstrators were due to gather in Athens for a rally called by trade unions and left-wing parties against government austerity plans.

Union leaders are hopeful that the May Day protests will highlight Greek resistance to the wage cuts, tax rises and pension reductions expected to be implemented.

But there were fears that violent anarchist and hard-left factions were intent on wreaking as much havoc as possible. >>> | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Newspapers Desert Labour

STRAIGHTS TIMES: LONDON - BRITISH Prime Minister Gordon Brown's Labour party on Friday lost the endorsement of two leading newspapers, in a further blow to his already dwindling hopes of re-election just six days before polling day.

The Times said it was backing David Cameron's Conservatives for the first time in 18 years, saying Mr Brown was a 'danger' to the economy as it struggles to emerge from a deep recession.

'Mr Brown's pitch at this election is that voters should not risk the recovery by backing the Conservatives. He does not seem to realise that the greatest threat is more of the same,' it says.

'Yes, the economy is in peril. Mr Brown is the danger.' The editorial condemned Labour as 'tired, defensive' and said Cameron 'has shown the fortitude, judgment and character to lead this country back to a healthier, stronger future. It is time, once again, to vote Conservative'.

In a further blow, the traditionally Labour-supporting Guardian newspaper switched its allegiance to the Liberal Democrats, who have enjoyed a huge boost in support thanks to leader Nick Clegg's star turn in TV debates.

'If the Guardian had a vote in the 2010 general election it would be cast enthusiastically for the Liberal Democrats,' the paper said, noting in particular their support for reforming Britain's electoral system. [Source: Straights Times] AFP | Saturday, May 01, 2010

General Election 2010: The Liberal Moment Has Come

THE GUARDIAN – Editorial: If the Guardian had a vote it would be cast enthusiastically for the Liberal Democrats. But under our discredited electoral system some people may – hopefully for the last time – be forced to vote tactically

Citizens have votes. Newspapers do not. However, if the Guardian had a vote in the 2010 general election it would be cast enthusiastically for the Liberal Democrats. It would be cast in the knowledge that not all the consequences are predictable, and that some in particular should be avoided. The vote would be cast with some important reservations and frustrations. Yet it would be cast for one great reason of principle above all.

After the campaign that the Liberal Democrats have waged over this past month, for which considerable personal credit goes to Nick Clegg, the election presents the British people with a huge opportunity: the reform of the electoral system itself. Though Labour has enjoyed a deathbed conversion to aspects of the cause of reform, it is the Liberal Democrats who have most consistently argued that cause in the round and who, after the exhaustion of the old politics, reflect and lead an overwhelming national mood for real change.

Proportional representation – while not a panacea – would at last give this country what it has lacked for so long: a parliament that is a true mirror of this pluralist nation, not an increasingly unrepresentative two-party distortion of it. The Guardian has supported proportional representation for more than a century. In all that time there has never been a better opportunity than now to put this subject firmly among the nation's priorities. Only the Liberal Democrats grasp this fully, and only they can be trusted to keep up the pressure to deliver, though others in all parties, large and small, do and should support the cause. That has been true in past elections too, of course. But this time is different. The conjuncture in 2010 of a Labour party that has lost so much public confidence and a Conservative party that has not yet won it has enabled Mr Clegg to take his party close to the threshold of real influence for the first time in nearly 90 years.

This time – with the important caveat set out below – the more people who vote Liberal Democrat on 6 May, the greater the chance that this will be Britain's last general election under a first-past-the-post electoral system which is wholly unsuited to the political needs of a grown-up 21st-century democracy. >>> Editorial | Friday, April 30, 201

Vote of Confidence

TIMES ONLINE – Editorial: The Conservatives offer an optimistic vision for the renewal of Britain. The electorate has made a call for change and they deserve the chance to answer it

The Times has not endorsed the Conservative Party at a general election for 18 years. For far too much of that time, the Conservative Party turned inward and vacated the ground on which British electoral victory is won — a commitment to the prosperity and liberty fostered in a free-market economy and a sense of justice in an open and tolerant society. Tony Blair’s Labour Party took up the promise of modernity, through its commitment to enterprise and the courage to stand tall in the world. Sadly, over the past 13 years that promise has faded. We all know that Britain can do better: it is surely time to regain our optimism.

This election offers a fundamental choice about the future of this country. It offers a moment to put old-fashioned tribal loyalties, class prejudices and social habits aside. We must choose. Either we are to be a country that has lost confidence in the ingenuity and potential of its people, and concludes that the State must continue to grow to protect us from ourselves. Or we can be a country that cares for the needy but reins in the ever-growing appetite of government and frees up people to grow their businesses, nurture their families and pursue their own hopes and happiness.

At an acutely difficult moment in our history, The Times puts its faith in the people rather than the government. It chooses a strong society, more enterprise and a smaller State. It chooses real, radical change. It chooses renewal. >>> Editorial | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Report: U.S. in Talks to Declare Mideast Nuclear-free Zone

HAARETZ: The United States and Egypt are negotiating a proposal that would make the Middle East a nuclear-free zone, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday, saying the effort was a meant to prevent Iran from disrupting an upcoming UN conference on nuclear nonproliferation.

U.S. officials told the Wall Street Journal that the move could be a significant step toward showing that Washington, who is often criticized of overlooking Israel's reported nuclear arsenal, could be even handed in its attempt to ensure the Middle East is free of nuclear weapons.

"We've made a proposal to them [Egypt] that goes beyond what the U.S. has been willing to do before," senior U.S. officials told the WSJ, adding that they didn't believe that would happen without first achieving major advances in Arab-Israeli peace talks. >>> Haaretz Service | Saturday, May 01, 2010
Muslim Daubs War Memorial But Walks Away from Court Virtually Scot-free

MAIL ONLINE: A Muslim protester who daubed a war memorial with graffiti glorifying Osama Bin Laden and proclaiming 'Islam will dominate the world' walked free from court after prosecutors ruled his actions were not motivated by religion.

Tohseef Shah, 21, could have faced a tougher sentence if the court had accepted that the insults - which included a threat to kill the Prime Minister - were inspired by religious hatred.

But - citing a loophole in the law - the Crown Prosecution Service chose not to charge him with that offence and he escaped with only a two-year conditional discharge and an order to pay the council £500 compensation after admitting causing criminal damage.

Yesterday the decision was attacked by politicians and veterans who were shocked by the desecration of the memorial in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire.

Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, chairman of the Parliamentary Counter Terrorism sub-committee, said: 'This is an outrage against our war dead.'

Shah sprayed the words 'Islam will dominate the world - Osama 
is on his way' and 'Kill Gordon Brown' on the plinth of the memorial in December. Muslim Daubs War Memorial with 'Islam Will Dominate the World' - But Walks Free After CPS Says He Was NOT Racially Motivated >>> James Tozer | Friday, April 30, 2010
Jew Attacked with Knife, Iron Rod in France

YNET NEWS: Anti-Semitic incident in Strasbourg: Man wearing skullcap assaulted by two men in djellabas. Victim hospitalized with serious injuries after being hit in back, stabbed in chest; assailants arrested

A Jewish French citizen was seriously hurt Friday after being assaulted with an iron rod and a knife in the center of Strasbourg.

The DPA news agency reported that the man, 42, was attacked by two men wearing djellabas, robes traditionally worn in North Africa.

Eyewitnesses reported that the Jew, who was wearing a traditional skullcap, was hit in the back with the iron rod by one of the men, while the other stabbed him in the chest. The two assailants were arrested, and one of them was said to be mentally ill.

A representative of the umbrella association for Jewish organizations in the French Alsace region, Pierre Levy, called the incident a "serious anti-Semitic act." >>> Ynet | Saturday, May 01, 2010

Première en Europe: La Belgique interdit le port du voile intégral dans tout son espace public

LE POINT: Sans gouvernement et plongée dans une grave crise politique, la Belgique est néanmoins devenue jeudi le premier pays occidental à interdire le port du voile islamique intégral, avant la France qui prévoit de présenter un texte en mai. Pour une fois unanimes, quelle que soit leur couleur politique ou leur appartenance linguistique, les députés belges ont voté par 136 voix sur 138 députés présents un texte interdisant le port du voile, non seulement dans tous les services publics, mais aussi dans l'intégralité de l'espace public y compris la rue. Deux abstentions ont été comptabilisées. >>> LePoint.fr avec AFP | Vendredi 30 Avril 2010
Sparen ohne Ende in Griechenland: Papandreou stellt Landsleute auf weitere Massnahmen ein

NZZ ONLINE: Der griechische Ministerpräsident Giorgos Papandreou hat seine Landsleute auf weitere Sparmassnahmen eingestellt. Diese seien notwendig, um Griechenland vor dem Bankrott zu bewahren, erklärte er am Freitag vor dem Parlament in Athen.

Auch die EU und der Internationale Währungsfonds (IMF), die derzeit mit Griechenland über Beistandskredite verhandeln, werden von der Regierung weitere Sparanstrengungen fordern. Die Verhandlungen sollen bis zum Sonntag abgeschlossen sein. >>> ddp | Freitag, 30. April 2010
Frankreich will Männer für Burka büssen: Justizministerium teilt Details des geplanten Verbots mit

NZZ ONLINE: Nachdem in Belgien das Burka-Verbot vom Parlament beschlossen wurde, sind auch Details des geplanten französischen Gesetzes bekannt geworden. Demnach soll es vor allem harte Strafen für Männer geben, welche ihre Frauen zum Tragen des Schleiers zwingen.

Das in Frankreich geplante Verbot von muslimischen Ganzkörperschleiern soll mit harten Strafandrohungen kombiniert werden. Männer, die Frauen zum Tragen von Burka oder Niqab zwingen, müssen bis zu ein Jahr Haft und eine Geldstrafe von 15'000 Euro fürchten.

Frauen drohen beim Tragen eines Ganzkörperschleiers gemäss einem Gesetzesentwurf bis zu 150 Euro Strafe. Zusätzlich oder alternativ ist die Verpflichtung zu einem «staatsbürgerlichem Praktikum» angedacht. Bei ihm soll den Frauen vermittelt werden, warum in Frankreich das Verhüllen des Gesichts nicht erwünscht ist. >>> sda/afp | Freitag, 30. April 2010

Men Who Force Women to Wear Burka Would Face €15,000 Fine in France

THE TELEGRAPH: Anyone who forced a woman to wear a burka would face a fine of €15,000 (£13,000), according to leaked extracts of a proposed French law banning the face-covering Islamic veil.

While women caught wearing a burka or niqab would face a €150 penalty, President Nicolas Sarkozy would fine those making others wear them one hundred times that amount, and would sentence them to one year in prison.

"No-one may wear in public places clothes that are aimed at hiding the face," says the text of a new law that is to be presented to parliament in July, according to a copy seen by Le Figaro.

The law would create a new offence of "incitement to cover the face for reasons of gender," the centre-Right daily newspaper reported.

The extracts cited did not say whether the law would contain exemptions for people covering up their faces for popular non-religious purposes such as skiing, nor how these exceptions would be defined.

Legislators decided to impose a much smaller fine on women caught wearing the veil in public "because these women are often victims," one of the authors of the law told Le Figaro on condition of anonymity.

Women caught wearing the full veil could choose to attend a "citizenship course" instead of paying the fine, the paper said. >>> | Friday, April 30, 2010

Related links here and here and here and here
Pauline Hanson Takes Home Off Market

STUFF.co.nz: Former One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has taken her Queensland home off the market, following a backlash against her decision not to sell to Muslims.

Ms Hanson has been forced to shelve plans to sell her million-dollar property in Coleyville, southwest of Brisbane, and move to Britain.

Her decision comes amid widespread outrage, prompted by remarks from the former politician that she's not prepared to sell to Muslims or foreign investors because the buyer has to be compatible with the Australian way of life.

Her LJ Hooker real estate agent, Keith Edwards, on Thursday said he'd received an onslaught of emails and calls following the controversial comments.

"Pauline withdrew the property from the market, and I no longer represent her and LJ Hooker no longer represent her," Mr Edwards told AAP.

"Some of (the emails) have been pretty upsetting...

"I got the abusive and threatening phone calls last night (Wednesday night), I didn't sleep.

"I got swags of abusive emails, with non-returnable addresses, just cowards." >>> AAP | Friday, April 30, 2010
Nick Clegg: We Have Taken Labour's Place in UK Politics

THE GUARDIAN: Exclusive: Liberal Democrat leader rejects tactical voting, and says the race for PM is between him and Cameron

Nick Clegg today makes a bold pitch to Labour voters, claiming that the Liberal Democrats have supplanted Gordon Brown's party to become the natural home of progressive politics in Britain.

In a Guardian interview, Clegg accuses David Cameron of having no agenda for progressive reform of the country, and says the Lib Dems and Labour come from the same historical tradition.

He says he is rejecting all talk of tactical voting and is instead "going for broke" to maximise his party's share of the vote.

Clegg insists that the tectonic plates of politics are shifting, and the choice has distilled down to a vote for his party or a Conservative party that will "cast the country adrift".

The Lib Dem leader appears to suggest that any post-election arrangement with the Tories would be a coalition of convenience rather than principle when he asserts: "There is a gulf in values between myself and David Cameron," adding: "They have no progressive reform agenda at all – only an unbearable sense of entitlement that it's just their time to govern."

During the two years of his leadership, Clegg has successfully maintained a position equally distant from the Labour and Conservative parties, but today he emphasises that the Liberal Democrats have shared progressive history.

His remarks go further than before in suggesting that if he feels the electorate has given him a choice, his instinct will be to form an alliance of some form with Labour. He holds out no hope of securing electoral reform from Cameron. >>> Patrick Wintour, Allegra Stratton and Aida Edemariam | Friday, April 30, 2010
Why Doesn’t Somebody Jail These SOBs?

TIMES ONLINE: The chairman of Britain’s biggest state-owned bank has defended multimillion-pound salaries for senior staff, despite widespread objections.

Sir Philip Hampton told the BBC Today programme that although banking sector remuneration was “astonishingly high”, staff at Royal Bank of Scotland would leave unless they were paid the market rate.

Politicians in each of the main parties have called for caps on bankers’ bonuses and Sir Philip — whose bank is 83 per cent owned by the taxpayer — has a difficult task in persuading the public that they are justified.

Sir Philip conceded that it was difficult to defend the pay gap between most people and some bank staff, but he told the BBC: “If we don’t pay our top people, they leave very quickly. Our top people are very much in demand and we have seen a significant loss of our top people.” RBS chief Sir Philip Hampton defends 'astonishingly high' bankers’ pay >>> Helen Power | Friday, April 30, 2010